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A09383 A commentarie or exposition, vpon the fiue first chapters of the Epistle to the Galatians: penned by the godly, learned, and iudiciall diuine, Mr. W. Perkins. Now published for the benefit of the Church, and continued with a supplement vpon the sixt chapter, by Rafe Cudworth Bachelour of Diuinitie Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Cudworth, Ralph, 1617-1688. 1604 (1604) STC 19680; ESTC S114465 595,047 756

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publish and declare whome God calleth by Examination of parties for life and doctrine by Election and by ordination This is for substance all that the Church can doe and all this is allowed and prescribed by the lawes of this Church and land And therefore our callings for their substance are diuine whatsoeuer defects there be otherwise This assurance that our callings are of God is of great vse It makes the Minister to make a conscience of his dutie it is his comfort in trouble Isa. 49. 2. 2. Cor. 2. 15. And to the hearers it is a meanes of great reuerence and obedience 12 For neither receiued I it of man neither was I taught it but by the reuelation of Iesus Christ. The meaning is this Paul here saith he receiued not the Gospel of man because he receiued not the office to teach and preach the Gospel from any meere man For here he speakes of himselfe as he was an Apostle and then an Apostle properly is said to receiue the Gospel when he receiues not onely to know and beleeue it but also to preach it And he addes further that he was not taught it that is that he learned the Gospel not by the teaching of any man as formerly he learned the law at the feete of Gamaliel The last words but by the reuelation of Iesus Christ carrie this sense but I learned and receiued it of Christ who taught me by reuelation Further Reuelation is twofold one ordinarie the other extraordinarie Ordinarie is when Christ teacheth men by the word preached and by his spirit In this sense the holy Ghost is called the spirit of reuelation Eph. 1. 17. Extraordinarie is with the word preached and that foure waies First by voice Thus God taught Adam and the Patriarkes The second by dreames when things reuealed were represented to the minde in sleepe The third is vision when things reuealed are represented to the outward senses of men beeing awake The fourth is instinct when God teacheth by inward motion and inspiration Thus did God vsually teach the Prophets 2. Pet. 1. 21. Now the reuelation which Paul had was not ordinarie but extraordinarie and that partly by vision partly by voice and partly by instinct Act. 9. 22. It may here be demanded where Christ was whether on earth or in heauen because Paul heard his voice saw him visibly I answer he was not on earth but in heauen and that Paul both saw and heard him it was by miracle whereas Stephen in like manner saw Christ he saw him not on earth but standing at the right hand of God in heauen for otherwise the opening of the heauens had bin a needles thing These wordes then are a confirmation of the former verse on this manner The authoritie whereby I teach and the doctrine which I teach I first receiued and learned it not of man but immediatly of Christ therefore the Gospel which I preach is not humane but diuine and preached not by humane but by diuine authoritie In the scope and sense of the words many points of doctrine are contained The first that Christ is the great Prophet and Doctour of the Church Math. 17. 6. Heare him and 23. 8. One is your Doctour namely Christ. And he is called the great shepheard of the sheepe Hebr. 13. 20. His office is in three things The first is to manifest and reueale the will of the father touching the redemption of mankind Ioh. 1. 18. 8. 26. This he hath done from the beginning of the world the father neuer speaking and appearing immediately but in the baptisme and transfiguration of Christ and this he doth to Paul in this place The second is to institute the Ministerie of the word and to call and send Ministers As my father sent me so send I you Ioh. 20. 21. He it is that giues some to be Pastours some to be teachers Eph. 4. 11. And thus appoints Paul to be an Apostle The third is to teach the heart within by illuminating the mind and by working a faith of the doctrine which is taught He openeth the vnderstandings of his Disciples that they may vnderstand the Scriptures Luk. 24. 45. Thus here he inlightneth and teacheth Paul Furthermore it must be obserued that this office of teaching is inseparably annexed to the person of Christ and is by him accordingly exequuted euen after his ascension as appeares in the conuersion of Paul And therefore Isai saith they shall be all taught of God Isa. 54. 13. As for the Ministers of the Gospel they in teaching are no more but instrumēts of Christ to vtter and pronounce the word to the eare this is all they can doe Therefore Paul saith he that plants or waters is not any thing but God that giueth the increase The teacher then properly in the ministerie of the new Testament to the very ende of the world is Christ himselfe This must teach vs reuerence in hearing Gods word and care with diligence in keeping of it Hebr. 2. 1 2 3 c. Secondly this teacheth vs that they which imbrace not the Gospel among vs are contemners of Christ and shall indure eternall condemnation Ioh. 3. 18. Hebr. 12. 25. Thirdly if we want vnderstanding we must pray to Christ for it and because we haue so excellent a teacher we must pray vnto him that he would giue vnto vs hearing eares that is hearts tractable and obedient to his word that we may be fitte disciples for so worthie a master The second is that there be two waies whereby Christ teacheth those that are to be teachers One is immediate reuelation the other is ordinarie instruction in schooles by the means and ministerie of man The like saith Amos I was neither Prophet nor sonne of a Prophet but the Lord sent me to prophecie to Israel Amos 7. 14. The third point is that They which are to be teachers must first be taught and they must teach that which they haue first learned themselues 2. Tim. 3. 14. Abide in the things which thou hast learned Christ taught that which he heard of the father the Apostles that which they heard of Christ ordinarie ministers that which they haue learned of the Apostles This is the right Tradition and if it be obserued without addition or detraction the Gospel shall remaine in his integritie Here our Auncetours are greatly to be blamed who haue not contented themselues with that which they haue learned of the Apostles but haue deliuered things of their owne which they were neuer taught Hence sprang vnwritten traditions and the corruption of religion Againe such are here to be blamed that take vpon them to be teachers of the Gospel and were neuer taught by reuelation or by any ordinarie way Thirdly priuate persons are much more to be blamed that broch and deliuer such doctrines and opinions as they themselues neuer learned by any ministery For teachers themselues must first learne and then teach The fourth point is that they which are to be teachers
in thrall bondage but the very night after the former time was expired nothing no not the raging sea could stoppe their deliuerance Exod. 12. 41. God promised deliuerance after 70 yeares captiuitie to the Israelites in Babylon When this time was expired Daniel praied and at the very beginning of his supplications the decree of God for deliuerance came forth Dan. 9. 23. The vision of God saith the Prophet is for an appointed time Hab. 2. 1. and so is the promise This must teach vs to be content if after much praying we finde not the fruit of our praiers because there is an appointed time for the accomplishing of them In this respect Dauid saith that his eyes failed and he was hoarse in praying Psal. 69. 4. The second question is what is meant by the giuing or sending of the spirit Ans. Without any alteration or change of place it signifies two things The first is Order betweene the persons whereby the Father and the Sonne worke mediately by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost immediatly from them The second is that the Spirit doth manifest his presence by diuine effects in vs. In this respect he is saide to be sent or giuen of the Father and the Sonne The third point is In what order is the spirit giuen For it seemes that we first of our selues beleeue and then receiue the spirit Ans. Men are saide to receiue the spirit when they receiue some new gift of the spirit or the increase of some old gift Ioh. 20. 22. Againe to speake properly faith and the receiuing of the spirit are for time both together For first of all we heare the promise of God then we beginne to meditate and to applie the saide promise to our selues to striue against doubting and to desire to beleeue and in doing of all this we receiue the spirit To beleeue is the first grace in vs that concernes our saluation and when we beginne to beleeue we beginne to receiue the spirit and when we first receiue Gods spirit we beginne to beleeue And thus by our faith receiue we the spirit and thus also the spirit dwells in vs by faith Eph. 3. 17. And we must not imagine that we may or can beleeue of our selues without the operation of the spirit The fourth point is for what ende we receiue the spirit Ans. For sixe For illumination of our mindes 1. Ioh. 2. 27. 1. Cor. 2. 12. for regeneration whereby the Image of God is restored in vs Ioh. 3. for the gouernment of our counsells wills affections actions Isa. 11. 1. Rom 8. 14. for the effecting of that coniunction whereby we are vnited to Christ our head 1. Cor. 6. 17. for consolation Rom. 8. 16. lastly for confirmation in our faith and euery good dutie 2. Cor. 1. 22. Eph. 1. 13. This receiuing of the spirit is one speciall ende of our redemption and therefore it is most necessarie for vs to haue the spirit of God dwelling in vs. If we haue not the spirit we are not Christs and without it we can doe nothing We must for this cause doe such things whereby we may obtaine and receiue a plentifull measure of Gods spirit Repent saith Peter and ye shall receiue the holy Ghost Againe we must carefully retaine and preserue the grace of the spirit in vs by meditation in the word of God by earnest and frequent praier by auoiding all such acts in word or deede that may make a breath in conscience for whatsoeuer offends conscience quenches the spirit Lastly by sauouring the things of the spirit Rom. 8. 5. that is by thinking on things spirituall by affecting of them and delighting in them 15 Brethren I speake as men doe though it be but a mans couenant when it is confirmed no man doth abrogate it or adde any thing thereto 16 Now to Abraham and his seede were the promises made He saith not and to the seedes as of many but and to thy seede as of one which is Christ. 17 And this I say that the law which was 430 yeares after cannot disanull the couenant that was before confirmed of God in respect of Christ that it should make the promise of none effect 17 For if the inheritance be of the law it is no more by promise but God gaue it vnto Abraham by promise In these words Paul meetes with a second Exception or obiection made against that which he here principally stands vpon namely that the blessing of Abraham is conuaied to the Gentiles and that by Christ. The obiection may be framed thus The promise made to Abraham cannot now pertaine to the Gentiles because the law was added to it and by the law it is abrogated and therefore the Gentiles are to be iustified and faued by the obseruation of the law To this obiection Paul makes a double answer One is that the promise cannot be abrogated the second that if it might be abrogated yet the law cannot doe it The first he confirmes on this manner The Testament of God confirmed cannot be abrogated The promises made to Abraham and his seede which is Christ are his Testament confirmed Therefore they cannot be abrogated The proposition is expressed in the 17. verse and is confirmed by comparison thus The testament of man after it is confirmed may not be abrogated much lesse the testament of God v. 15. The minor is propounded in the 16. and 17. verses Now I come to speake of the words as they lie Brethreu Paul had before called them fooles and that iustly because they fell from the doctrine which he taught them to an other Gospel And yet here he calls them brethren And hence let vs learne that in diuision of iudgement and opinion there must be no diuision but vnitie of affection It is and hath bin alwaies the plague of the Church that diuision of heart and affection there takes place where any diuision is in iudgement though men erre of infirmitie This cuill causeth more to be condemned for heretikes then indeede ought to be it maketh schismes where none should be it maketh dissentions to be incurable which otherwise might be cut off And therefore if dissentions in iudgement arise we must remember to suppresse enuie hatred pride selfe loue and let Christian loue beare sway Againe here we see it is lawfull to speake in Sermons as men doe so it be done after the example of Paul with these cautions First it must be done sparingly and soberly without ostentation Secondly it must be done vpon a iust cause as when the sayings of men serue to conuince the hearers and that in their consciences Thirdly a difference must be made betweene the word of man and the word of God least in adding one to the other the word of God loose his grace and excellencie Lastly Gods word onely must be the foundation of the doctrine which is taught and the word of man is to be added in respect of our infirmitie to giue light or to conuince That which Paul
is whence springs our adoption The answer is plaine in the words from the obedience of the sonne whereby he stood in subiection to the law Here the question of all questions is answered namely what is that thing by which and for which a sinner is iustified before God and saued Ans. The Obedience of the sonne of God made man and made vnder the law for vs. For this is it that frees vs from vnder the law and giues vs the Adoption of sonnes And this alone is it whereby we stand before the Tribunall seat of God which also we are to oppose to the iudgement of God to hell death and condemnation Therefore our common people erre that looke to be saued by their good deedes that is by their good meaning and dealing They thus tread the blood of Christ vnder their owne feete and become Iesuses or Sauiours to themselues Secondly they erre that teach iustification by the essentiall iustice of the Godhead of the sonne for that it is incommunicable and they which are iustified by it are also deified Thirdly the Papist erreth which teacheth iustification partly by remission of sinnes and partly by that which we call inward sanctification which is imperfect and mixed in this life with our corruption and therefore vnfit to absolue and acquit vs before God It may be said what must we doe that we may be iustified and saued by this Obedience of the Mediatour Answ. In the old Testament when a man had sinned he brought a sheepe or an oxe to the doore of the Tabernacle and when the Priest cut the throat of it the partie laid his hand vpon the head of it Exod. 29. 10. And hereby he signified that the beast had done no hurt and that he as a guiltie malefactour had deserued death Now all this was done in figure And it teacheth vs that we miserable sinners must come to God that we must bring our sacrifice with vs namely the lambe of God which is the sonne of God made man made vnder the law that we must present this lambe and the oblation thereof to the father for vs laying our hands on the head of it that is confessing ourguiltinesse and that we haue iustly deserued death and perdition from the presence of God In the last place we must intreat the Lord to accept the blood of the lamb for vs and the whole obedience of the Mediatour Thus shall we be iustified and saued Thou wilt say I will therefore doe this when I am dying I say againe let it be thy daily exercise to the very death Thou wast seauen yeares in learning of thy trade thinke not therfore in an houre or two to worke thy reconciliation with God If thou art many yeares in learning such things as are done by the strength of nature thinke not to attaine to things aboue nature when and howe thou wilt It is a rule receiued of all men that they must blesse themselues now the right way to blesse thy selfe is to plead-guiltie before God and to intreat him to accept the obedience of the Mediatour for thee Uers. 6. Sonnes that is such as inioy the libertie of sonnes Sent forth a speach borrowed from Embassadours which are sent forth with instructiōs what they shal say or do it signifies that the spirit reueales nothing but that which is the will of the father sonne Ioh. 16. 14. Crying making vs to crie Rom. 8. 26. For if the words be taken properly the spirit must pray to it selfe Abba the next word is the exposition Father The sense The father hath sent forth the spirit of his sonne vnto you this spirit sent forth dwels in your hearts dwelling in your hearts it makes you pray to God as to a father● and all this it doth because you are indeed sonnes of God The scope The question is whether beleeuers of the newe Testament be seruants to the law or children Paul answers no and he giues two reasons The first was in the former verses the second in this And it is drawne from the signe thus Yee haue receiued the spirit crying Abba father therefore ye are sonnes indeede In the words I consider fiue things the person sent forth the spirit of the sonne the person sending God the manner of sending the place whither the spirit is sent your hearts the office of the spirit Crying Abba Of the first the spirit of the sonne it is who is sent forth He is so called first because he proceeds by communication of substance or godhead not onely from the father but also from the sonne Secondly because in his manhood he is annointed and filled with the Holy Ghost aboue measure thirdly because by his death he hath merited the giuing and sending of the Holy Ghost vnto vs. Moreouer the spirit of the sonne is here described First he is a person subsisting of himselfe in that he is said to be sent forth secondly he is a diuine person and no creature because he dwels in the hearts of all beleeuers thirdly he proceeds from the father and the sonne from the father because he is sent of him from the sonne because he is the spirit of the sonne The vse By this we learne that the Intercession of Christ is of force with God For he praied for the sending of the spirit and it is accomplished Read Ioh. 14. 16. And it is a superfluous doctrine to teach the Reall presence of the flesh of Christ in the Sacrament For Christ is departed from vs in respect of his manhood because the spirit is sent Ioh. 16. 7. Thirdly that which the spirit inwardly teacheth is the same with that which the sonne hath reuealed by the Ministerie of the Prophets and Apostles because the spirit is the spirit of the sonne Read Ioh. 16. 14. Doctrines then concerning saluation that are beside or contrarie to the Scriptures as a great part of the Romish religion is are not reuealed by the spirit of God but are the fictions of the deuill The person sending is God that is the father in these words God sent forth the spirit of his sonne Where marke the distinction of the persons in Trinitie There is the father the sonne the spirit of the sonne And here remember that this action of sending forth argues not superioritie in the person sending nor inferioritie in the person sent for equals may send each other by common consent but it argues Order and a distinction of persons in respect of their beginning For the father is of none the sonne is of the father and the Holy Ghost is of both and hence it is that he is sent of both The manner of this sending forth was on this sort We may not imagine that in this sending there was any change of place for the Holy Ghost is euery where But he is said to be sent forth when he manifests his presence by his diuine operation or by speciall supernaturall gifts in the hearts of beleeuers as by the
the most of vs are barren trees that beare no fruit but the bad fruits of the flesh and therefore we may iustly feare the curse that God laid vpon the figgetree Luk. 13. 7. and looke euery day to be stocked vp Matth. 3. 16. Againe good workes are made acceptable to God euen by his grace and therefore they are called the fruits of the spirit and hence it is that they are acceptable to God Rom. 15. 16. We that are by nature wild branches must be taken out of old Adam and set into Christ and after our inscition draw a new sappe and life from Christ namely his spirit and then our actions shall be fruits of the spirit and consequently acceptable to God Lastly hence it followes that free will of it selfe is like a dead or rotten peece of wood and that it beares no fruit but as it is quickned by the spirit Ioh. 15. 5. Thus much of the propertie now follow the kindes of the workes of the spirit Loue It may be demaunded how it is a fruit of the spirit Ans. First the spirit of God workes faith then regeneration then loue 1. Tim. 1. 5. Loue follows faith because we must know first that we are loued of God before we can loue God 1. Ioh. 4. 19. And loue follows regeneration because till the will and affections be changed there is no place for loue The Papists then erre who teach that the first act of loue that is the inclination to loue God and man aright is in nature and that the second act namely the exercise of loue is from the spirit Againe they erre in that they teach that Charitie or loue is the formall righteousnes of a Christian. For it is a fruit that follows regeneration The loue here mentioned is either of God or of man The loue of God is an holy affection whereby we loue God in Christ for himselfe There are three speciall signes whereby it is discerned I. a desire of fellowship with God and Christ and the holy spirit and therefore to be much and frequent in the vse of the word and praier because in the word God speaks to vs and in praier we speake to him II. To loue the word of God aboue all earthly treasure and to tread our owne wills vnder foote and to desire that Gods wil may be preferred in all things 1. Ioh. 2. 5. There are many houses among vs where the cards and tables are walking but the Bible is seldome or neuer seene And this argues the want of loue III. The loue of them that loue God and Christ. The loue of our neighbour is to loue him simply in and for the Lord and for no other by-respect The signe of this loue is to loue not in word but indeede And this is to loue indeede to shew loue and to do good when we are wronged and abused to them that wrong vs and abuse vs. Ioy Ioy is twofold ioy of glorie after this life and the ioy of grace in this life and it stands in three things The first is to reioyce in the true acknowledgement of God that he is our god and reconciled to vs in Christ. The second is to reioyce in the worke of our regeneration The third is to reioyce in the hope of eternall glorie This ioy of grace hath a double fruit First it moderates all our sorrows and makes vs reioyce in the middest of our afflictions 1. Thess. 5. 16. Secondly it causeth men to reioyce at the good of their neighbours Rom. 12. 15. And this ioy is here meant specially For ioy is here opposed to enuie and emulations This fruit shewes that we are most of vs bad trees For the ioyes of the world be for the most part in iniquitie and in the workes of the flesh And it is our common sinne not to reioice but to pine away with griefe as Cain did when we see Gods blessing vpon our brother Peace It is a care and desire to maintaine concord as much as may be if it lie in vs. Rom. 12. 18. It is an excellent vertue For the kingddome of God stands partly in peace Rom. 14. 17. For the maintenance of peace obserue two rules I. Neither take offence nor giue offence Abraham chose rather to lose his right then to offend Lot Gen. 13. and so did Christ. Matth. 17. 27. II. Seeke to edifie one another either doe good or take good Rom. 14. 19. Long-suffering is to moderate our anger and desire of reuenge when many and great wrongs are done to vs. It is an excellent fruit but it takes very hardly in these parts For our manner is a word and a blow a word and a stabb a word and a writte Set and sow this plant in the forrowes of your hearts that the weede of reuenge ouergrow it not vse these remedies I. Gods commandement forbids rash anger Iam. 1. 19. for it is a degree of murder II. The example of God who is slow to anger and of Christ who is meeke and lowly Math. 11. III. All wrongs done to vs by men come by Gods prouidence to which we are to subiect our selues IV. The goodnesse of God who forgiues more to vs then we can forgiue V. There is danger of Gods anger For vnlesse we forgiue we are not forgiuen And we craue forgiuenesse as we forgiue VI. It is the dutie of loue to suffer and beare 1. Cor. 13. VII It is a point of iniustice to reuenge our selues for then we take to our selues the honour of God and against all equitie we are both the parties and iudge and witnesse and all VIII We are often ignorant of the mindes of men in their actions and of the true circumstances thereof and so may easily be deceiued Obiect I. Anger is a sudden affection therefore it cannot be ruled Ans. Meanes are to be vsed before hand when we are quiet then shall we better restraine it Obiect II. It is hard for flesh and blood to doe this Ans. We are more then flesh and blood For we haue the spirit of God els we are but hypocrites Gentlenesse Gentlenesse is to giue good speech and to shew good countenances euen to them that wrong vs and abuse vs without any minde or desire to reuenge Rom. 12. 14. Eph. 4. 32. The curtesie of the world in the cappe and the knee and all the complements of humanitie is commonly seuered from good affection and it is often the maske of enmitie and therefore it is but a worke of the flesh Right curtesie is with an honest heart to blesse when we are wronged Goodnesse It is a vertue whereby we communicate to others the good things that are in vs for their good and benefit It is prescribed by Paul in other tearmes when he saith Communicating to the necessities of the Saints Rom. 12. 13. Question I. What are we to communicate Answ. The gifts of our minde our temporall goods yea our liues too if neede be 1. Ioh. 3. 16. Question II. Why
deale with God and that they are to receiue the doctrine taught not as the word of man but as the very word of God as the Thessalonians did 1. Thess. 2. 13. The want of this consideration is the cause that some contemne the ministerie of the word and others are not touched and mooued in hearing Againe here is set downe the right manner of dispensing the word which must not be for the pleasing of men but of God Hence it appeares that Ministers of the Gospel must not be men-plea 〈…〉 nor applie and fashion their doctrine to the affections humours and dispositions of men but keepe a good conscience and doe their office The Lord tells Ieremie he must not turne to the people but the people must turne to him Ierem. 15. 19. Thus God shal be with them and they shal bring forth much fruit And the people must know it to be a good thing for them not to be pleased alwaies by their Ministers The ministerie of the word must be as a sacrificing knife to kill and mortifie the old Adam in vs that we may liue vnto God A sicke man must not alwaies haue his minde but he must often be crossed and restrained of his desire and so must we that are sicke in our soules in respect of our sinnes It is a fault therefore of men that desire to be pleased to haue matters smoothed ouer of their teachers This is Dauids balme which he wisheth may neuer be wanting to his head Psal. 141. 5. The ende of this verse sets downe a memorable sentence That if we seeke to please men we cannot be the seruants of God Hence I gather that our nature is full of rebellion and enmitie against God because they which please men cannot please God Againe here is set downe what is the hurt that comes by pride and ambition It keepes men that they cannot be the seruants of Christ. Ye beleeue not saith Christ because ye seeke glorie one of another Ioh. 5. 44. Ambition so fills the minde with vanitie and the heart with worldly desires that it cannot thinke or desire to please God Wherefore he that would be a faithfull Minister of the Gospel must denie the pride of his heart and be emptied of ambition and set himselfe wholly to seeke the glorie of God in his calling And generally he that would be a faithfull seruant of Christ must set God before him as a Iudge and consider that he hath to deale with God and he must turne his minde and senses from the world and all things therein to God and seeke aboue all things to approoue his thoughts desires affections and all his doings vnto him Lastly the profession of the seruant of God is here to be obserued in the example of Paul who saith Doe I now preach men and doe I yet please men as if he had said I haue done thus and thus I haue preached the Traditions of man heretofore and I haue pleased man in persequnting the Church of God but I doe not so still neither will I. And he that can say the like with good conscience I haue sinned thus and thus heretofore but now I doe not neither will I sinne as I haue done is indeede the seruant of God v. 11. Now I certifie you brethren that the Gospel which was preached by me was not after man The meaning is this that it may the better appeare that I haue iustly accursed them which teach any other Gospel and iustly reprooued you for receiuing it I giue you to vnderstand that the Gospel which I preached was not after man that is not deuised by man or preached of me by mans authoritie but it was from God and preached by the authoritie of God And this sense appeares by v. 10 and 12. In these words is laid downe the reason of the conclusion or the assumption of the principall argument which was on this manner If I be called to teach and that immediatly of God and my doctrine be true then ye ought not to haue reuolted from the Gospel which I preached but I was called to teach immediatly of God and my doctrine is true The first part of this assumption is here set downe and handled to the ende of the second chapter and the conclusion as we haue heard was set downe in the premises Hence two maine points of doctrine that are of great consequent may be gathered The first is this It is a thing most necessarie that men should be assured and certified that the doctrine of the Gospel and the Scripture is not of man but of God This is the first thing which Paul stands vpon in this Epistle It may be demanded how this assurance may be obtained I answer thus For the setling of our consciences that Scripture is the word of God there be two testimonies One is the Euidence of Gods spirit imprinted and expressed in the Scriptures and this is an excellencie of the word of God aboue all words and writings of men and Angels and containes 13. points The first is the puritie of the law of Moses whereas the lawes of men haue their imperfections The second i● that the Scripture setteth downe the true cause of all miserie namely sinne and the perfect remedie namely the death of Christ. The third is the Antiquitie of Scripture in that it fets downe an historie from the beginning of the world The 4. is prophecies of things in sundrie bookes of Scripture which none could possibly foretell but God The 5. is the confirmation of the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles by miracles that is works done aboue and contrarie to the strength of nature which none can doe but God The 6. is the consent of all the scripture with themselues whereas the writings of men are often at iarre with themselues The 7. is the confession of enemies as namely of heretickes who in oppugning of scriptures alleadge scriptures and thereby confesse the trueth thereof The 8. is an vnspeakable detestation that Sathan and all wicked men beare to the doctrine of scripture The 9. is the protection and preseruation of it from the beginning to this houre by a speciall prouidence of God The 10. is the constant confession of Martyrs that haue shedde their blood for the Gospell of Christ. The 11. is that fearefull punishments and iudgements haue befallen them that haue oppugned the word of God The 12. is holinesse of them that professe the Gospell The last is the effect and operation of the word for it is an instrument of God in the right vse whereof we receiue the testimonie of the spirit of our adoption and are conuerted vnto God And yet neuerthelesse the word which conuerteth is contrarie to the wicked nature of man The second testimonie is from the Prophets and Apostles who were Embassadours of God extraordinarily to represent his authoritie vnto his Church and the pen-men of the holy Ghost to set downe the true and proper word of God And the Apostles aboue
the world be worse then the life of a beast Againe in these words who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me the nature and propertie of iustifying faith is set down which is to Applie the loue of God and the merit of the passion of Christ vnto our selues And therefore the Papists are deceiued who say that hope applieth and not faith It may be alleadged that Paul speakes these words priuately of himselfe Ans. He speakes them in the name of all beleeuers Iewes and Gentiles For as we may see in the former verses that which concerned Peter and the rest of Christian Iewes he applies to himselfe least his speech should seeme odious Againe it may be obiected that all beleeuers cannot say thus Christ hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me Ans. If the minde be fixed on Christ and there be also a will and indeauour to beleeue and apprehend Christ there is faith indeede For God accepts the true and earnest will to beleeue for faith We are not saued for the perfection of our faith but for the perfection of the obedience of Christ which faith apprehendeth The Israelites which looked vpon the brasen serpent with one eye or with a squint-eye with halfe an eye or dimme sight were healed not for the goodnes of their sight but for the promise of God The poore in spirit are blessed Now they are poore in spirit who finde themselues emptie of all goodnes emptie of true faith full of vnbeleefe and vnfainedly desire to beleeue So then if we greeue because we cannot beleeue as we should and earnestly desire to beleeue God accepts vs for beleeuers Againe in these words who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me S. Paul sets downe the reason or argument which faith vseth in the minde regenerate to mooue men to liue to God And the reason is framed thus Christ loueth thee and hath giuen himselfe for thee therefore see thou liue to God Read the like Rom. 12. 1. and 2. 4. and Psal. 116. 12. By this we are to take occasion to consider and to bewaile the hardnes of our hearts who doe not relent from our euill waies and turne vnto God vpon the consideration of his loue in Christ. The waters of the Sanctuarie haue long flowed vnto vs but they haue not sweetned vs and made vs sauerie therefore it is to be feared least our habitations be at length turned to places of nettles and saltpits Eze. 7. 11. 21 I doe not abrogate the grace of God for if righteousnes be by the law then Christ died without cause The meaning Grace in Scriptures signifieth two things the free fauour of God and the gifts of God in vs. And where the holy Ghost intreates of iustification grace in the first sense signifies the good will and fauour of God pardoning sinnes and accepting vs to life euerlasting for the merit of Christ. 2. Tim. 1. 9. Eph. 2. 8. And in this sense is the word vsed in this place And when Paul saith I doe not abrogate the grace of God his meaning is I doe not make void or frustrate the grace of God in respect of my selfe or in respect of other beleeuers by teaching the iustification of a sinner by saith alone He addes If righteousnes be by the law that is if a sinner be iustified by his owne obedience in performing the law then Christ died without cause The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 freely translated without cause hath a double signification One is when it signifies as much as without price or merit Math. 10. 8. Ye haue receiued freely giue freely The second is when it signifies rashly without iust or sufficient cause as Psal. 69. 4. Mine enemies hate me freely as the Seuentie translate that is wrongfully or without iust cause Thus here is Christ said to die freely that is in vaine or without cause because if we be iustified by obedience to the law then Christ died in vaine to make any satisfaction to the law for vs. These words are an answer to an obiection The obiection is this If thou teach that a sinner is iustified onely by his faith in Christ then thou abolishest the grace of God The answer is negatiue I doe not by this doctrine abrogate the grace of God And there is a reason also of this answer If we be iustified by our owne fulfilling of the law then Christ died in vaine to fulfill the law for vs. The vse First let vs marke that Paul saith he doth not abrogate the grace of God and why because he will suffer nothing in the cause of our iustification to be ioyned with the obedience of the death of Christ. And hence we learne what is the nature of grace It must stand wholly and intirely in it selfe Gods grace cannot stand with mans merit Grace is no grace vnlesse it be freely giuen euery way Rom. 4. 4. To him that worketh the wages is giuen not of grace but of desert Rom. 11. 6. If election be of grace then not of workes els is grace no grace Grace and works of grace in the causing of iustification can no more stand together then fire and water By this we are admonished to be nothing in our selues and to ascribe all that we are or can doe to the grace of God Againe here we see our dutie and that is to be carefull not to abrogate the grace of God vnto our selues But how is that done Ans. We must strippe and emptie our selues of all righteousnesse and goodnesse of our owne euen to the death and withall hunger and thirst after Christ and his righteousnes Math. 5. 6. Luk. 1. 35. Thirdly Paul here sets downe a notable ground of true religion That the death of Christ is made voide if any thing be ioyned with it in the worke of our iustification as a meanes to satisfie Gods iustice and to merit the fauour of God Therefore the doctrine of iustification by workes is a manifest errour For if we be iustified by the workes of the law then the iudgement of the holy Ghost is that Christ died without cause Againe the doctrine of humane satisfactions is a deuice of mans braine For if we satisfie for our selues then did Christ by death satisfie in vaine Thirdly it is a false and wicked though a colourable inuention to say that Christ by his death merited that we should merit by our workes For if we merit by workes Christ died in vaine to merit by his owne death This is the sentence of God who cannot erre Lastly here we see the Church of Rome erreth in the foundation of true religion because it ioyneth the merit of mans workes and the merit of the death of Christ in the iustification of a sinner And therefore we may not so much as dreame of any reconciliation to be made with that religion for light and darknes cannot be reconciled nor fire and water Here the Papists answer that Paul in this text speakes against them that looked to be iustified by
blessed in himselfe and giuing blessednes to all other And the beleeuers that were before Christ or after him are the ●eede of Abraham in respect they are set into Christ who is principally the seede mentioned in this text When Paul saith ordained by Angels in the hand of a Mediatour he makes a declaration of that which he had saide before by an Euident signe on this manner That the law serues to discouer transgressions it appeares by this that the Iewes could not abide to receiue the law immediatly from God but it was deliuered by Angels and receiued by the hand of a Mediatour and this argues mans guiltines and his disagreement with God because a Mediatour is of two at the least and of two beeing at difference betweene themselues The law is said to be ordained or disposed by Angels because they were attendants on God in the Mount when the law was deliuered Secondly they were witnesses and approouers of the deliuerie Thirdly it may be the voice of God whereby the law was published in the hearing of all the Israelites was vttered and pronounced by the ministerie of Angels for the holy Ghost saith the word spoken by Angels was stedfast Hebr. 2. 2. that is the law It may be said all this prooues not that Angels ordained the law Ans. Often in Scripture the worke or action of the principall Agent is ascribed to the instrument or minister The Saints are saide to iudge the world 1. Cor. 6. whereas indeede they are no more but witnesses and approouers of this iudgement In the same manner Timothie is said to saue himselfe and others 1. Tim. 4. 16. The last trumpet is sounded by Angels Matth. 24. 31. and it is called the voice of an Archangel and the trumpe of God 1. Thess. 4. Moreouer Paul saith the law was deliuered by the hand of a Mediatour that is of Christ as some thinke but that cannot be for the hand of a Mediatour signifies the ministerie and seruice of a Mediatour and this seruice is inferiour to the seruice of Angels because the law was deliuered by Angels and receiued of them by a Mediatour Therefore the Mediatour here mentioned is Moses who stood betweene the people and God in the deliuerie of the law Deut. 5. 5. It may be obiected that there is but one Mediatour Christ 1. Tim. 2. 8. Ans. Mediatour of reconciliation is onely one and that is Christ and Moses is a Mediatour onely in the relating and reporting the law from God to the Israelites Paul addes that a Mediatour is not of one that is that euery Mediatour is of two at the least and of two at variance and disagreement And he saith further that God is one that is alwaies the same and like himselfe without change And the reason of the speach is this Paul hath taught that the law was giuen by a Mediatour and that this declared a difference betweene God and man Now it might be said where is the fault in this difference and who is the cause of it Paul saith not God but man because God is alwaies one and the same The vse In that the law is for transgressions we are taught to examine and search our hearts and liues by the law of God Zephan 2. 1. Fanne you O nation not worthie to be loued Lam. 3. 40. Let vs search our hearts and turne againe to the Lord. That we may the better examine our selues foure rules must be obserued The first when any one sinne is forbidden in any commandement of the law vnder it all sinnes of the same kind are forbidden all causes of them and all occasions The second a commandement negatiue includes the affirmatiue and binds vs not onely to abstaine from euill but also to doe the contrarie good The third is that euery commandement must be vnderstood with a curse annexed to it though the curse be not expressed The fourth is that we must especially examine our selues by the first and last commandements For the first forbids the first motions of our hearts against God and the last forbiddes the first motions of our hearts against our neighbour though there be no consent to doe the euill which we thinke Paul saith of himselfe that the commandement Thou shalt not lust was it that especially humbled him Rom. 7. According to these and other rules which now I omit we must with speciall care examine our selues The want of this dutie causeth men to rot away in their sinnes without remorse or true repentance and it is the cause that so many men profit so little in hearing the word preached because they know not what sinne meanes neither can they search aright their consciences and liues Moreouer after we haue begunne to practise this dutie we must often as occasion shall be giuen renue it to the end Consider Dauids example Psal. 119. 59. Where Paul saith that the law is added till Christ we see that the Legall ministerie of death is abolished now and that we are vnder the Ministerie of the spirit and life And for this cause we in these last daies that are Ministers of the word must preach the doctrine of saluation plainly to the very consciences of men 2. Cor. 4. 1. Againe the people of these daies ought to abound in knowledge and their obedience should be answerable to the measure of their knowledge And if after much preaching in these daies of light the Gospel be hid as it is to very many who remaine still in ignorance and disobedience it is a fearefull signe vnto them of their condemnation 2. Cor. 4. 4. In that the law of God was ordained or deliuered by Angels we are put in minde to reuerence it and to esteeme it as a treasure Secondly we are to feare to breake the least commandement of the law because the angels that were ordainers of the law doe no doubt obserue the keepers and the breakers of it and are readie prest to be witnesses and reuengers against them that offend Steuen vpbraids the Iewes that the law was giuen by the dispensation of Angels and yet they brake it Act. 7. 53. Thirdly if thou offend and breake the law repent with speede for that is the desire and ioy of Angels They that deliuered the law reioice to see the keeping of it Lastly if thou sinne and repent not looke for shame and confusion before God and his angels Because Moses was a mediatour to the Iewes Papists gather that therefore Angels and Saints may be mediatours Ans. It sollowes not Moses was ordained a mediatour so are not they Moses was present with the Iewes and had fellowship with them whose mediatour he was Saints are absent in heauen and Angels though they be about vs haue no fellowship with vs. Moses was mediatour but once and that onely in one thing Saints are made continuall mediatours Lastly Moses was mediatour in relating reporting the law from God to the people Saints and Angels are made mediatours to relate and report our praiers and
if he fall into any offence of frailtie yet doth he not make a practise of sinne as the wicked and vngodly doe It may be saide the Galatians and all the Galatians are the children of God but what is that to vs Ans. They among vs that professe true saith in Christ with care to keepe good conscience are likewise to hold themselues to be children of God He beleeues not the Gospel that doth not beleeue his owne adoption For in the Gospel there is a promise of all the blessings of God to them that beleeue and there is also a commandement to applie the said promise to our selues and consequently to applie the gift of adoption to our selues When we are bidden to say Our father we are bidden to beleeue our selues to be children of God and so to come vnto him Therefore with Paul I say that all we that truly beleeue in Christ and haue care to lead a good life all I say are indeede the children of God The vse Comforts arising by this benefit are many First if thou be Gods child surely he will prouide all things necessarie for thy soule and bodie Math. 6. 26. Our care must be to doe the office and dutie that belongs vnto vs when this is done our care is ended As for the good successe of our labours we must cast our care on God who will prouide that no good thing be wanting vnto vs. Psal. 34. 10. They that drowne themselues in worldly cares liue like fatherlesse children Secondly in that we are children we haue libertie to come into the presence of God and to pray vnto him Eph. 3. 12. Thirdly nothing shall hurt them that are the children of God The plague shall not come neere their tabernacle they shall walke vpon the lyon and the aspe and tread them vnder foote Psal. 91. 13. All things shall turne to their good Rom. 8. 28. And the rather because the Angels of God pitch their tents about them Lastly God will beare with the infirmities and frailties of them that are his children if there be in them a care to please him with a Purpose of not sinning Malach. 3. 7. If a child be sicke the father or mother doe not cast it out of dores much lesse will God The duties First if ye be Gods children then walke worthie your profession and calling Be not vassalls of sinne and Satan carrie your selues as kings sonnes bearing sway ouer the lusts of your owne hearts the temptations of the deuill and the leud customes and fashions of this world When Dauid kept his fathers sheepe he behaued himselfe like a shepheard but when he was called from the sheepefold and chosen to be king he carried himselfe accordingly So must we doe that of children of the deuill are made the children of God And if we liue according to the lusts of our flesh as the men of this world doe whatsoeuer we professe we are in truth the children of the deuill Ioh. 8. 44. 1. Ioh. 3. Secondly we must vse euery day to bring our selues into the presence of God and we must doe all things as in his sight and presence presenting our selues vnto him as instruments of his glorie in doing of his will This is the honour that the child of God owes vnto him Mal. 1. 6. Thirdly our care must be according to the measure of grace to resemble Christ in all good vertues and holy conuersation For he is our eldest brother the first borne of many brethren and therefore we should be like vnto him 1. Ioh. 3. 2 3. Fourthly we must haue a desire and loue to the word of God that we may grow by it in knowledge grace and good life For this is the milke and foode whereby God feedes his childrē 1. Pet. 2. 2. Such persōs thē amōg vs that haue no loue or liking of the word but spend their daies in ignorāce securitie shew themselues to be no children of God The child in the armes of the mother or nurce that neuer desires the brest is certenly a dead child Lastly we must put this in our accounts that we must haue many afflictions if we be Gods children for he corrects all his children And when we are vnder the rodde of correction we must refigne our selues to the will and good pleasure of God This is childlike obedience and this must be done in silence and with all quietnes then God is best pleased The internall meanes of Adoption is Faith in Christ. And for the better conceiuing of it three questions are to be propounded The first what a kind of faith is this Ans. A particular or speciall faith and it hath three acts or effects The first is to beleeue Christ to be Jesus that is a Sauiour the second is to beleeue that Christ is my or thy Sauiour the third is to put the confidence of heart in him When Thomas felt the wounds of Christ he said My Lord and my God and thereupon Christ said Because thou hast seene thou beleeuest Ioh. 20. 29. Here marke that to beleeue Christ to be my Christ is faith Against this speciall faith the Papists obiect three arguments The first is this Euery speciall faith must haue a speciall word of God for his ground but there is no speciall word that thy sinnes or my sinnes are forgiuen by Christ therefore there is no speciall faith Ans. We haue that which in force and value is equiualent to a speciall word namely a generall promise with a commandement to applie the said promise to our selues Secondly I answer that the word and promise of God generally propounded in Scripture is made particular in the publike Ministerie in which when the word is preached to any people God reueales two things vnto them one that his will is to saue them by Christ the other that his will is that men should beleeue in Christ. And the word thus applied in the publike Ministerie in the name of God is as much as if an Angel should particularly speake vnto vs from heauen The second Argument Speciall faith say they is absurd because by it a sinner must beleeue the pardon of his sinnes before he hath it in as much as faith is the meanes to obtaine pardon Ans. The giuing and the receiuing of pardon and faith are both at one moment of time for when God giues the pardon of sinne at the same instant he causeth men to receiue the same pardon by faith For order of nature faith goes before the receiuing of the pardon because faith is giuen to them that are to be ingrafted into Christ and pardon to them that are in Christ for time it doth not and therfore this second argument is absurd The third Argument The full certentie and perswasion of Gods mercie in Christ followes good conscience and good workes and therefore faith followes after Iustification Ans. There be two degrees of faith A weake faith and a strong faith A weake faith is that against which doubting much preuailes in
which there is a sorrow for vnbeleefe a will and defire to beleeue in Christ with care to vse good meanes and to increase in faith Strong faith is that which preuailes against doubting and it is a full perswasion or resolution of the loue and mercie of God in Christ. This second degree of faith follows iustification vpon the obseruation and experience of the prouidence and goodnes of God but the first degree of speciall faith before named for order goes before iustification and for time is together with it The second question is when faith beginnes first to breede in the heart Ans. When a man beginnes to be touched in his conscience for his sinnes and vpon feeling of his owne spirituall pouertie earnestly hungers and thirsts after Christ and his righteousnes aboue all things in the world Christ saith I will giue to him that thirsteth of the well of the water of life freely Reuel 21. 6. This promise declares that in thirsting there is a measure of faith To eate and drinke Christ the bread and water of life is to beleeue in him and to hunger and thirst hauing as it were a spirituall appetite to Christ is the next steppe to this eating and drinking Therefore this must be remembred that professours of the Gospel yea teachers of the same that want this sense of their vnworthines and this thirsting are farre wide what gifts soeuer they haue For they are not yet come to the first steppe of true faith The third question is how faith in Christ is reuealed in the heart Ans. It is not faith to conceiue in minde a bare perswasion that Christ is my Sauiour and thereupon to thinke to be saued But faith in Christ is conceiued in the spirituall exercises of inuocation and repentance When I see mine owne sinnes and Gods anger against me for them by the law when I see mine owne guiltines I draw my selfe into the presence of God making confession of mine offences and praier for the pardon of them and in this praier I striue against mine vnbeleefe I will desire and endeauour to assent to the promise of God touching forgiuenes and withall I purpose with my selfe to sinne no more This is my daily practise and thus is faith truly conceiued and confirmed Againe faith is conceiued in the vse of holy meanes namely the Preaching of the word and Sacraments For in hearing receiuing the Lords Supper to meditate vpon the promise of mercie and in meditation to applie the said promise to my selfe is the right way to conceiue true faith Therefore it must be remembred that faith conceiued without the exercises of inuocation and repentance or conceiued without the vse of the word and Sacraments as commonly it is is not true faith but an Imagination or fiction of the braine which will faile in the ende The third point to be considered is the signe or the outward meanes of Adoption and that is Baptisme It may be demanded how Baptisme can be a marke or signe of the child of God considering all sorts of men are partakers of it Ans. Baptisme alone is no marke of Gods child but baptisme ioyned with faith for so must the text be conceiued All ye Galatians that beleeue are baptised into Christ. For Paul had said immediatly before Ye are the sounes of God by faith Againe the Scripture speaking of baptisme comprehends both the outward and the inward baptisme which is the inward baptisme of the spirit Math. 3. 11. and 1. Pet. 3. 21. And thus is baptisme alwaies an infallible marke of the child of God It may further be demanded what are the markes of the inward baptisme Ans. The new birth whereby a man is washed and cleansed by the spirit of God hath three speciall markes The first is the spirit of grace and supplications Zach. 12. 10. that is the spirit of regeneration causing men to turne to God and withall to make instant praier and supplication for mercie and forgiuenes of sins past The second is to heare obay the voice of god in all things Ioh. 8. 47. 10. 27. The third is not to sin that is not to liue in in the practise of any sinne after this new birth is begunne 1. Ioh. 3. He that is borne of God doth not commit sinne He may faile in this or that speach and doe amisse in this or that action but after his calling and conuersion the tenour and course of his life shall be according to the commandements of God And this is a speciall marke to discerne the inward baptisme Some alleadged that hauing long agoe beene baptised with water yet they feele not the inward baptisme and therefore they feare that they are not the children of God Ans. If there be in thee a sorrow for thy corruptions and sinnes past if thou hast a purpose to sinne no more if thou auoidest the occasions of sinne and fearest to offend if hauing sinned thou liest not in thy sinne but recouerest thy selfe by new repentance thou art verily borne of God and baptised with the baptisme of the holy Ghost Others alleadge that although they haue bin baptised yet they feare they haue no faith and therefore they thinke they are not the children of God Ans. If there be in thee a sorrow for thine vnbeleefe a will and desire to beleeue and a care to increase in faith by the vse of good meanes there is a measure of true faith in thee and by it thou maist assure thy selfe that thou art the child of God Others againe alleadge that they haue long made praier vnto God and that according to his will and yet their praiers haue not bin heard and therefore they often doubt they are not Gods children Ans. If thou canst pray though thy praier be not heard according to thy desire content thy selfe For the praier of the heart is the marke of the spirit of adoption Rom. 8. 16. 26. And by it thou maist know that thou art the child of God Thus then we see what is the infallible marke of the child of God namely baptisme ioyned with true faith in Christ or the outward baptisme ioyned with the inward baptisme of the spirit The vse Many auouch the present Church of Rome to be the true Church of God and that because they say in it there is true baptisme which is a marke of the church of God But they are deceiued for baptisme in the church of Rome is seuered from true faith or from the Apostolike doctrine and the outward baptisme is seuered from the inward baptisme For they of that Church ouerturne iustification by the meere mercie of God which is the principall part of the inward baptisme Againe the ten Tribes retained circumcision after their Apostasie yet for all that condemned to be no people of God Ose. 1. 9. The light in the lanthorne pertaines not to the lanthorne but to the passengers in the streete euen so the Confession of faith in the Symboll of the Apostles and
righteousnes and iudgement and then he will bring vpon them all that he hath spoken Gen. 18. 19. to the Israelites he saith that they must turne and obay and then he will make all his promises and couenants good Deut. 30. 1. 6. and Isa. 1. 16 17 19. To the Iewes Peter saith Repent first and then they shall be baptized for the remission of sinnes Act. 2. 38. 42. And Philip saide to the Eunuch If thou beleeuest with all thy heart thou maist be baptized Act. 8. 37. The vse By this order we see that the commandement to beleeue and to repent is more large and generall then the promise of mercie in Christ. For the commandement is giuen to all hearers to turne and beleeue and the promise is made onely to such hearers as doe indeede turne and beleeue therefore it is a falshood to imagine that the promise of saluation belongs generally to all mankind Againe by this order it appeares that Repentance belongs to baptisme and it is one of the first things that are required and therefore it is follie to make Repentance a distinct meanes of saluation and a distinct sacrament from baptisme Thirdly if it be demanded why so many persons that haue bin baptized liue for all this as if they had not bin baptized in the common sinnes of the world like prophane Esaus and yet doe comfort themselues in their baptisme Ans. They doe not know and consider the Order which God vsed in couenanting with them in baptisme but they deale preposterously ouerslipping the commandement of repenting and beleeuing and in the first place lay hold of Gods promise made to them in baptisme This is the cause of so much prophanesse in the world Againe there be many persons that haue bin baptized who neuertheles cannot abide to heare and read the word of God and the reason is because they obserue not the order of their baptisme first of all to become disciples and then to lay hold of the promises of God They likewise are to be blamed that bring vp their youth in ignorance For they are baptized vpon condition that they shall become disciples of Christ when they come to yeares of discretion And they are by this meanes barred from all the mercies of God for we must as good disciples obay the commandement that biddes vs turne and beleeue before we can haue any benefit or profit by any of the promises of God Lastly we are here taught in the working of our saluation to keepe the Order of God which he hath set downe vnto vs in baptisme which is first of all to turne vnto God according to all his lawes and secondly vpon our conuersion to lay hold of the promises of God and the confirmation thereof by the sacraments Thus shall we find comfort in the promises of God and haue true fellowship with God if we beginne where he beginnes in making of his couenant with vs and end where he ends And this we must doe not onely in the time of our first conuersion but also afterward in the time of distresse and affliction and at such times as by frailtie we fall and offend God In a word if for practise we alwaies keepe our selues to this order we shall find true comfort in life and death It followes Baptizing them into the name or in the name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost These words signifie first to bap tize by the commandement and authoritie of the Father Son and holy Ghost secondly to baptize by and with the inuocation of the name of the true God Whatsoeuer ye doe in ward or deede doe it in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ that is by the in vocation of the name of Christ. Col. 3. 17. Thirdly to baptize in the name c. signifies to wash with water in token that the partie baptized hath the name of God named vpon him and that he is receiued into the houshold or familie of God as a child of God a member of Christ and the temple of the holy Ghost Thus Iacob faith in the adoption of Ephraim and Manasses Let them be mine and let my name be called vpon them Gen. 48. 5. 16. And Paul saith that the Corinthians might not be named and distinguished by Paul Cephas Apollos because they were not baptized into their names but into the name of Christ. 1. Cor. 1. 13. And this I take to be the full sense of the phrase Here we see what is done in baptisme the Couenant of grace is solemnised betweene God and the partie baptised And in this couenant some actions belong to God and some to the parties baptised Gods actions are two The first is the making of promise of reconciliation that is of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting to them that are baptised and beleeue The second is the obsignation or sealing of this promise and that is twofold outward or inward The outward seale is the washing by water and this washing serues not to seale by nature but by the institution of God in these words baptize them c. and therefore Paul saith cleansing the Church by the washing of water in the word Eph. 5. 26. The inward sealing is by the earnest of Gods spirit Eph. 1. 13. The action of the partie baptized is a certaine stipulation or obligation whereby he binds himselfe to giue homage to the Father Son and holy Ghost This Homage stands in faith whereby all the promises of God are beleeued and in Obedience to all his cōmandements The signe of this obligation is that the partie baptized willingly yeelds himselfe to be washed with water It is not saide in the name of God but in the name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost to teach vs the right way to know and to acknowledge the true God This Knowledge stands in sixe points all here expressed The first is that there is one God and no more For though there be three that are named yet there is but one name that is one in authoritie will and worship of all three And elswhere men are said to be baptized into the name of the Lord. Act. 10. 48. The second is that this one true God is the Father Sonne and holy Ghost A mysterie vnsearchable The third that these three are really distinct so as the Father is first in order the Sonne the second and the holy Ghost not the first or second but the third The fourth is that they are all one in operation Ioh. 5. 19. and specially in the act of reconciliation or couenant making For the father sends the sonne to be our Redeemer the sonne workes in his owne person the worke of redemption and the holy Ghost applies the same by his efficacie The fift is that they are all one in worship for the Father Sonne and holy Ghost are ioyntly to be worshipped together and God in them The last is that we are to know God not as he is in himselfe but as he hath reuealed himselfe vnto vs in
the sacrament is administred And that it may conferre grace some say that the saide action hath vertue in it for this purpose which passeth away when the action is ended others say it hath no vertue in it but that Gods vsing of the action eleuates it and makes it able to conferre grace But this doctrine is a fiction of the braine of man Iohn the Baptist Math. 3. 11. makes two baptizers himselfe and Christ and he distinguisheth their actions his owne action is to wash with water and the action of Christ is to wash with the holy Ghost This distinction he would not haue made if he by the washing of water had conferred the holy Ghost Paul saith Christ sanctifieth his Church by the washing of water through the word Eph. 5. 26. Baptisme therefore doth not conferre grace because the bodie is washed with water but because when it is washed the word of promise is beleeued and receiued The Apostles are called fellow-workers with God 1. Cor. 3. 9. and yet in the worke of regeneration and in giuing of life they are not any thing v. 7. Peter saith directly that the washing away of the filth of the flesh doth not saue but the stipulation that a good conscience makes to God 1. Pet. 3. 21. The worke of creation is from God immediatly and onely now regeneration is a worke of creation and therefore it is of God immediatly and not immediatly from the sacrament and mediatly from God The flesh of Christ is eleuated and exalted aboue the condition of all creatures neuertheles vertue to giue life is not in the flesh of Christ but in the godhead much lesse then shall the sacraments haue vertue in them to conferre grace Faith is said to iustifie yet not by his owne vertue for it doth not cause our iustification but serue as a meanes to apprehend it when it is caused by God how then shall the sacraments cause iustification Lastly if the outward washing of the bodie be eleuated aboue his naturall condition in the administration of baptisme then so oft as the outward element is vsed in any sacrament there is a miracle wrought and Ministers of sacraments are workers of miracles which may not be said Againe their doctrine is erronious in that they teach that the outward act in the Sacrament performed by the Minister cōfers grace where there is no gift of faith to receiue that which is conferred contrarie to that saying Ioh. 1. 12. As many as receiued him he gaue this power to be the sonnes of God Indeed they say there must be faith and repentance to dispose the partie but this disposition serues onely to take away impediments and not to inable vs to receiue that which God giueth The vse We must not thinke it sufficient that we come to the Church heare Gods word and pray contenting our selues in the worke done For thus shall we deceiue our selues but in doing these acts of religion we must in our hearts turne vnto God and by faith imbrace his promises otherwise the best actions we doe shall be vnprofitable vnto vs. Heb. 4. 2. Againe if the vsing of the element in the sacrament doe not conferregrace then be assured that charmes and spells be the words neuer so good haue no vertue in them to doe vs good but by diabolicall operation The last question is whether baptisme imprint a Character or marke in the soule which is neuer blotted out Ans. In scripture there is a twofold marke of distinction one visible the other inuisible Of the first kind was the blood of the paschall lambe in the first passeouer for by it the first borne of the Israelites were marked when the first borne of the Egyptians were slaine Of this kind is baptisme for by it Christian people are distinguished from Iewes Turkes and infidels The inuisible marke is twofold The first is the eternall Election of God 2. Tim. 2. 19. The foundation of God stands sure and hath this seale The Lord knowes who are his By vertue of this Christ saith I know my sheepe Ioh. 10. And by this the Elect of all nations are marked Apoc. 7. and 9. The second is the gift of regeneration which is nothing els but the imprinting of the image of God in the soules of men and by this beleeuers are said to be sealed Eph. 1. 13. 2. Cor. 1. 22. And baptisme is a meanes to see this marke in vs because it is the lauer of regeneration The Papists haue deuised another worke which they call the Indeleble character and they make it to be a distinct thing from regeneration and they say it is imprinted in the soules of all men good and bad and remaines in them when they are condemned What this marke should be they cannot tell some make it a quality some a relation but indeed there is no scripture for it the truth is it is a meere fiction of the braine of man The sixt point to be handled concernes the Necessitie of baptisme Here we must put difference betweene the Couenant of grace and baptisme which is the confimation or seale of the couenant To make couenant with God and to be in the said couenant is absolutely necessarie to saluation for vnles God be our God and we the seruants of God we cannot be saued Baptisme it selfe is necessarie in part first in respect of the commendement of God who hath inioyned vs to vse it secondly in respect of our weakenes who haue neede of all helps that may confirme our faith Yet baptisme is not simply necessarie to saluation for the want of baptisme when it canbe had doth not condemne but the contempt of it when it may be had and the contempt is pardonable if men repent afterward for the children of beleeuing parents are borne holy 1. Cor. 7. 14. and theirs is the kingdome of God and therefore if they die before baptisme they are saued The theese vpon the crosse and many holy martyrs haue died without baptisme and are in the kingdome of heauen It is obiected that the male child which is not circumcised must by God commandement be cut off from the people of God Gen. 17. 14. and therefore he that is not baptised must also be cut off Ans. The text is spoken and meant not of infants but of men of yeares who beeing till then vncircumcised despise the ordinance of God and refuse to be circumcised And this appeares by the reason following for he hath made my couenant void now infants doe not this but their parents or men of yeares Secondly the speach of Christ is obiected Ioh. 3. 5. Except a man be borne of water and the holy Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdome of God Ans. Christ alludes to the washings of the old testament Ezech. 36. 25. and withall giues an exposition of them on this manner Thou art a Pharisie and louest much washing but if thou wouldest enter into the kingdome of heauen thou must be washed with cleane water that is
borne anew by the holy Ghost Againe I answer that if the words be meant of baptisme they carrie this sense The kingdome of heauen doth not signifie life eternall but the Church of the new Testament and that in his visible estate Mark 9. 1. and baptisme makes men visible members of the Church and regeneration by the spirit makes them true and liuely members Here then baptisme is made necessarie not in respect of eternall life but in respect of our admission and entrance into the Church whereof it is now the onely meanes The seauenth point is touching the Circumstances of baptisme which are fiue The first concernes the persons which are to administer baptisme of whome I propound foure questions The first is whether not onely Ministers of the word but also lay-persons as they are called or meere priuate men may administer baptisme Ans. Ministers of the word onely For to baptize is a part of the publike Ministerie Matth. 28. 18. Goe teach all nations baptizing them And marke how preaching and baptising are ioyned together and things which God hath ioyned no man may separate Againe he that must performe any part of the publike Ministerie must haue a calling Rom. 10. 14. Hebr. 3. 5. but meere priuate persons haue no calling to this busines And whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne now the Administration of baptisme by priuate persons is without faith For there is neither precept nor fit example for it in the word of God The example of Zippora is alleadged Exod. 4. 28. who circumcised her child Ans. The example is many waies discommendable For shee did it in the presence of her husband when there was no neede shee did it in hast that shee might haue preuented her husband shee did it in anger for shee cast the foreskin at the feete of Moses And it seemes shee was no beleeuer but a meere Madianite For shee contemned circumcision when shee called her husband a man of blood by reason of the circumcision of the child v. 26. and in this respect it seemes Moses either put her away or shee went away when he went downe to Egypt Againe it is obiected that priuate persons may teach and therefore baptize Ans. Priuate teaching and Ministeriall teaching are distinct in kind as the authoritie of a master of a familie is distinct in kind from the authoritie of a Magistrate A priuate person as a father or master when he teacheth the word of God he doth it by right of a master or father and he is mooued to doe it by the law of charitie but Ministers when they teach are mooued to teach by speciall calling and they doe it with authoritie as Embassadours in the roome and stead of Christ. 2. Cor. 5. 21. Againe though a priuate man might dispense the word alone yet doth it not follow that he may administer both the word and the seale thereof both which are ioyned in baptisme and ioyntly administred The second question is whether baptisme administred by a wicked man or an here●●ke be indeede true baptisme Ans. If the said partie be admitted to stand in the roome of a true pastour or minister and keepe the right forme in baptising according to the institution it is true baptisme The Scribes and Pharisies the chiesest doctours of the Iewes were not of the tribe of Levi but of other tribes and they were indeede euen the best of them but herelikes and Apostataes and consequently to be deposed and excommunicate neuertheles because they were in the place of good teachers and fate in Moses chaire that is taught sundrie points of Moses doctrine therefore Christ saith heare them Math. 23. 1. And to this effect was the conclusion of the Churches in Africa against Cyprian Vpon the same ground the same answer is to be made if it be demanded whether baptisme administred by him that cannot preach be of force or no It were indeede to be wished that all Ministers of holy things were preachers of the word neuerthelesse if such as preach not stand in the roome of lawfull pastours and keepe the forme of baptisme it is baptisme indeede The third question is whether an Intention to baptise be necessarie in him that baptiseth Ans. If the word of Institution come to the Element it is a sacrament whatsoeuer the minister intend Paul reioyced that Christ was preached though many preached him of enuie or contention intending no good Phil. 1. 16. And the Priest in the Masse pronouncing the words of consecration if he intend not to consecrate in Popish learning there is no consecration and thus the bread eleuated is meere bread and not the bodie of Christ and consequently the people adore not Christ but an idol The intention therefore of the minde is not necessarie so be it the Institution be obserued And the efficacse of the sacrament depends not on the will of man but on the will of God The last question is what is the dutie of the Minister in baptising Ans. He stands in the roome of God and what he doth according to the Institution it is as much as if God himselfe had done it with his owne hand from heauen And therefore whē the Minister applieth water which is the signe pledge of grace to the body he doth withall applie the Promise of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting to the partie baptised And that is as much as if God should say to the partie calling him by his name I freely giue vnto thee the pardon of thy sinnes and life euerlasting vpon condition thou keepe the order set downe in baptisme which is to turne vnto me and to beleeue in Christ. Here we see a ground of speciall faith for if God for his part by the hand of the Minister applie the promise of mercie vnto euery particular beleeuer euery particular beleeuer is againe by a speciall faith to receiue the promise Againe the consideration of this which God hath done for vs in baptisme must mooue vs seriously to turne vnto him according to all his lawes and by faith of our hearts to apprehend his mercifull promises and to rest on them For when God shall speake vnto vs particularly and as it were assure vs of his mercies with his owne hand and seale we must needs be much mooued and affected therewith The second circumstance is concerning the persons to be baptised and they are all such as be in the Couenant in likelihood or in the iudgement of charitie For the seale may not be denied to them that bring the tables of the couenant And they are of two sorts Men of yeares and Infants Men of yeares that ioyne themselues to the true Church are to be baptised yet before their baptisme they are to make confession of their faith and to promise amendment of life Act. 2. 38. and 10. 38. And thus places of Scripture that require actuall faith and Amendment of life in them that are baptised are to be vnderstood of men of yeares Infants of beleeuing
gift of illumination faith regeneration life sense and motion are the gifts of the spirit and so are ciuill vertues but the sending of the spirit is onely in respect of such gifts as are bestowed in the Church in the receiuing of which the spirit is acknowledged The place or mansion of the spirit is the heart that is the minde will and affection The heart is the very sinke of sinne yet that doth the spirit choose for his abode Hence we learne 1. That the beginning of our newe birth is in the heart when a newe light is put into the minde a newe and heauenly disposition into the will and affection 2. The most principall part of our change or renouation is in the heart where the spirit abides The end of all teaching is loue out of a pure heart good conscience and faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1. 5. 3. The beginning and principall part of Gods worship is in the heart He that serues God in the righteonsnesse of his heart in peace and ioy in the Holy Ghost is accepted Rom. 14. 17. 4. In our hearts no wicked or carnall thought will desire or lust must raigne but onely Gods word and spirit For thy heart is the house where the spirit dwels and he must be Lord of his owne house 5. Aboue all things keepe watch and warde about thy heart and fill it with all good cogitations desires that it may be a fit place of intertainment for the spirit who is as it were an Embassadour sent from the great God vnto thee The last thing is the office of the spirit which is to make beleeuers Crie Abba Here I consider 4. things 1. The meanes whereby this Crie is caused 2. The nature of it 3. To whome it is directed 4. The manner of direction For the first in the effecting or causing of this Crie there are 4. workes of the spirit The first is Conuiction when a man in his iudgement and conscience is conuicted that the scriptures of the Prophets and Apostles are indeed the word of God To this purpose there are many arguments which nowe I omit This conuiction is a common worke of the spirit yet necessarie because much Atheisme lies lurking in our hearts which makes vs call into question euery part of the word of God The second worke is Subiection whereby a man conuicted that the scripture and euery part of it is the word of God subiects himselfe in his heart to the commandement of God which bids him turne to God and beleeue in Christ. And this second is a worke of the spirit of grace proper to the elect The third is the Certificate or testimonie of the spirit which is a diuine manner of reasoning framed in the mindes of them that beleeue and repent on this manner He that beleeues and repents is Gods child Thus saith the Gospel But I beleeue in Christ and repent at the least I subiect my will to the commandement which biddes me repent and beleeue I detest mine vnbeleefe and all my sinnes and desire the Lord to increase my faith Therefore I am the child of God This is the practicall syllogisme of the H. Ghost It is the testimonie of the spirit that we are the sonnes of God it is the earnest of the spirit and the seale whereby we are sealed to the day of our redemption and it containes the certentie ofspeciall faith The fourth thing that followes vpon this Testimonie is Peace of conscience Ioy and affiance in God And from this affiance comes the crying here mentioned whereby euery true beleeuer with open throat as it were cries vnto god the father This doctrine is of great worth it is the hinge vpon which the gate of heauen turnes and therefore to be remembred The vse By this we see a manifest errour in the Popish religion which teacheth that we can haue no other certenty of our saluation in this life but that which is probable or coniecturall that is a certentie ioyned with feare suspicion and some doubting Certentie in respect of God that promiseth feare doubting in respect of our owne indisposition But this doctrine is false For they which are Gods children receiue the spirit crying Abba and this crying argues affiance or confidence in God By faith we haue confidence in God and entrance with boldnesse Eph. 3. 11. and boldnesse is opposite to feare and excludes doubting in respect of our selues Againe by this doctrine we see it is ordinarie and possible for all that beleeue and repent to be certainly assured that they are the children of God For if they haue the spirit of God crying in them as all Gods childrē haue they cannot but perceiue this crie and withall they haue the testimonie of the spirit in them which is the ground of this crie Rom. 8. 16. And seeing this is so we must be admonished to vse all meanes that we may be assured that we are the children of God 2. Pet. 1. Giue all diligence to make your Election sure Paul bids rich men lay vp a good foundation against the time to come 1. Tim. 6. 18. And this foundation must be laide not in heauen but in the conscience God of his mercie hath made a couenant or bargaine with vs that beleeue and repent in this bargaine he hath promised to vs pardon of our sinnes and life euerlasting let vs then neuer be at rest till we haue receiued earnest from the hand of God and haue his promise sealed vnto vs by the spirit in our hearts You will say what shall I doe to be assured that I am Gods child Ans. Thou must examine thy selfe of two things The first is whether thou art conuicted in thy iudgement that the Scripture is indeede the word of God if thou art not yet conuicted then inquire and vse meanes that thou maist indeed be conuicted otherwise all is in vaine Secondly inquire whether thou dost indeed and in good earnest submit and subiect thy will to the cōmandement of God which bids thee beleeue in Christ and turne vnto God For if thou canst say that thou dost will to beleeue and will to repent if thou shew this will indeede in the vse of good meanes if thou condemne and detest thy vnbeleefe and all other thy sinnes thou hast receiued the earnest of the spirit and thou art indeede the child of God And this assurance shall be vnto thee of great vse For it will make thee reioyce in afflictions and it will worke patience experience hope Rom. 5. 5. It will make thee despise this world it will take away the feare of death and kindle in thy heart a desire to be with Christ. Touching the nature of this crie it stands in the desires and groanes of the heart directed vnto God And these desires may be distinguished from all carnall desires by three properties First of all they are in the hearts of them that are turned to God or at the least beginne to turne vnto him For God heareth
on the Lords day But this doctrine seemes not to stand with the fourth commandement It seemes to be a truth more probable that euery seauenth day in the weeke must be set a part in holy rest vnto God for this is the substance of the fourth commandement And it is also very probable that the Sabbath of the new Testament is limited and determined by our Sauiour Christ to the Lords day For Paul and the rest of the Apostles obserued the first day of the weeke for a Sabbath day Act. 20. 7. and he saith Whatsoeuer ye haue heard and what ye haue seene in me that doe Phil. 4. 9. Againe it was the decree or constitution of Paul that the collection for the poore should be the first day of the weeke at Corinth now this collection in the Primitiue Church followed preaching praier sacraments and it was the conclusion of all other exercises in the assemblie 1. Cor. 16. 2. And this first day of the weeke is called the Lords day Apoc. 1. 11. and it is so called because it was dedicated and consecrated to the honour of Christ our Lord. And who is the author of this Dedication but Christ himselfe the Lord of the Sabboth It is alleadged that the Sabbath and the commandement touching the Sabbath is Ceremoniall and vpon this ground they take libertie keep no Sabbath at all But the truth is that the commandement touching the Sabbath is not wholly Ceremoniall It may be the first words Remember the Sabbath day to sanctifie it and the words In it thou shalt doe no manner of worke c. are spoken of the Iewes Sabbath but the wordes Sixe daies shalt thou labour and the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God are morall and containe a perpetuall truth Therefore the words of Paul must be conceiued with an exception of the Sabbath day which is the seuenth day in euery weeke which day Christ hath limited by his Apostles to the Lords day The vse This text of Paul discouers vnto vs a great part of the superstition of the Popish Church in the obseruation of holy daies First beside the Lords day they appoint many other sabbaths whereas it is the priuiledge of God to appoint an ordinarie day of rest and to sanctifie it to his owne honour Secondly they bind mens consciences to the obseruation of their holy daies which Paul here forbids and Col. 2. 16. Thirdly they place the worship of God in the obseruation of their holy daies but God is worshipped in vaine by mens precepts Matth. 15. Fourthly they place a great holines in their festiuall daies more then in other daies Fiftly they dedicate many of their holy daies to the honour of Saints and Angels whereas the dedication of ordinarie and set daies is a part of diuine or religious worship Lastly their holy daies for number are more then the festiuall daies of the Iewes and thus they bring people into their old bondage nay to a greater bondage then euer the Iewes indured in respect of daies and times It may be said that the Church of the Protestants obserue holy daies Ans. Some Churches doe not because the Church in the Apostles daies had no holy day beside the Lords day and the 4. commandement inioynes the labour of sixe daies Indeede the Churches of England obserueth holy daies but the Popish superstition is cut off For we are not bound in conscience to the obseruation of these daies neither doe we place holines or the worship of God in them but we keepe them onely for orders sake that men may come to the Church to heare Gods word And though we retaine the names of Saints daies yet we giue no worship to saints but to God alone And such daies as contained nothing in them but superstition as the conception and assumption of the virgin Marie we haue cut off Thus doth the Church with vs obserue holy daies and no otherwise Indeede the ignorant multitude among vs faile greatly in the obseruing of daies For they greatly solemnise the time of the birth of Christ and then they keepe few or no markets but the Lords day is not accordingly respected and men will not be disswaded from following of faires on that day Againe to obserue daies of good bad successe according to the constellations of the heauens is an heathenish fashion to be auoided For it is here condemned in the Galatians Here therefore we must be put in minde not to obserue the planetarie houres for men suppose that the houres of the daie are ruled by the planets and hereupon that some houres are good and luckie as they say and some vnluckie that men are taken with planets and borne vnder vnluckie planets But these are heathenish conceits Neither must we respect our Horoscope or the time of our birth and the constellation of the heauens thē as though we could hereby know what should befall vs to the end of our daies And we must not put difference of daies as though some were luckie vnto vs and some vnluckie according to the course of the starres The like I saie of the Criticall daies that is the 7. and the 14. daie after that a man beginnes to be sicke For they are groūded vpon the aspects of the moone which are not to be regarded And the Climactericall years are not to be obserued as dangerous and dismall The obseruatiō of the signes is of the same nature For the 12. signes are nothing els but 12. parts of the first mooueable which is but a supposed heauen Therefore there is no danger in the thing but in our conceit We are to feare God and not to feare the starres neither are we to make differences of daies in respect of them as though the affaires we take in hand should prosper the better or the worse in respect of their different operation Gods commandement is Feare not the signes of heauen Ierem. 10. 2. And good reason For no man can by learning knowe the operation of the starrs because their lights and operations are all mixed togither in all places vpon earth and therefore no obseruation can be made of this or that starre more then of this or that hearbe when all hearbes are mixed and compounded togither Againe the operation of the starres is by their light and light hath no operation but in heat or cold moisture or drinesse In this respect though we may well obserue the full and the change of the moone it is foolishnesse to ascribe the regiment of our affaires to the starres they beeing matters contingent which depend on the will and pleasure of man Lastly it is a great ouersight to hold sundrie of the starres to be malignant and infortunate in respect of vs whereas they are the creatures of God and their light serues for the good of man In a word we are not to make difference of daies neither in respect of holines nor in respect of good or badde successe V. 11. I am afraid
may be well done good ends must be propounded and we must be constant in the good which we doe And thus Paul saith it is a good thing to be iealous 19. My little children of whome I trauell in birth againe till Christ be formed in you 20. I would I were nowe with you that I might change my voice for I am in feare of you Paul hath said before that his iealousie ouer the Galatians was good because it was in a good cause and it was constant not only in his presence but euen in his absence and this he declares here by two signes his loue now in his absence in the 19. verse and his desire in the second verse The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated I trauel in birth signifies not only the trauel of the woman at the birth of the child but also the painefull bearing thereof before the birth And the words haue this sense O ye Galatians once heretofore I bare and brought you forth when I first preached Christ vnto you and because now ye are reuolted from my doctrine I am constrained once againe to beare you and to trauell with you in my Ministerie till by the operation of the Holy Ghost the right knowledge and the true image of Christ defaced by the false Apostles be once againe reformed and restored In these words my little children Paul takes to him the condition of a mother and he signifies his most tender and motherly affection to the Galatians It is the fashion of mothers when their children prosper and doe well to reioyce when they are sicke or die to mourne exceedingly and to be mooued with pitie and compassion The Galatians deserued no loue at Pauls hand for their Apostasie was very foule yet because there were some good things remaining in them and there was hope of recouerie he inlargeth his bowels towards them and shewes his loue with compassion If this be the case with Paul then great is the loue and compa 〈…〉 ion of God to his children If the child be sicke and froward the mother doth not cast it forth of the dores but shee tenders it and carefully lookes vnto it much more then will the Lord haue pittie and compassion Here then a maine comfort is to be remembred if we be of the number of them that beleeue in Christ haung vice hauing a care to please God our weakenesses and falls of weakenesse doe not abolish the mercie of God but are occasions to illustrate the same The weekenesse of the chide stirs vp compassion in the mother and Dauid saith as a father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion on them that feare him and marke the reason for he knowes our frame that we are but dust Psal. 103. 14. When Paul saith I trauell he signifies the measure of his Ministeriall paines that they were as the trauell of a woman with child and this he shewes plainely in the particulars 2. Cor. 11. 23. Elias that was sent in his time to restore religion was at length so wearied in this businesse that he desired the Lord to take him out of the world 1. King 19. 4. The paines of the prophet Isai made him crie My leannes my leannes Ieremie cries my bellie my bellie signifying that his griefes and his paines in the Ministerie were as the paine of the Colicke By this we see that they haue much to answer for before God that are in this calling and yet take little or no paines therein And that they which take the most paines come farre short of their dutie Againe when he saith I trauell he signifies the dignitie of the ministerie that it is an instrument appointed of God for the worke of regeneration for Paul compares himselfe to a woman in trauell and the worke of his ministerie to the trauell it selfe whereby children are borne to God This serues very well to stoppe their mouthes that condemne the vocall and externall ministerie When he saith I trauell againe he teacheth that if men fall after their first initiall repentance there is still a possibilitie of mercie and place for a second repentance We must forgiue till seaventie seauen times Mat. 18. 22. Much more will god doe it The parable of the prodigall son shewes that they which fall frō God after their calling and first conuersion may againe by newe repentance be recouered An obiection Pauls second trauell presupposeth a second regeneration in the Galatians and if they are borne againe the second time then in their Apostasie they fell wholly from god Answ. When Paul saith J trauell againe he doth not presuppose any second spirituall generation for the child of God is but once begotten to the Lord and Paul here calls the Galatians little children because euen in the time of their fall the seede of God still remained in their hearts And because the image of Christ was againe to be reformed and restored in the Galatians in this respect he saith I trauell againe of you The end of Pauls ministerie is expressed in the words till Christ be formed in you that is till as it were the counterfeit or image of Christ be stamped and imprinted in your hearts This image hath two parts The first is a Right knowledge of Christ in respect of his natures and offices as they are set forth in the word This knowledge was defaced in the Galatians when they ioyned workes with Christ for then they made him to be an imperfect Sauiour The second part of this image is a Conformitie with Christ Rom. 8. 29. It is twofold conformitie in qualitie and conformitie in practise Conformitie in qualitie is againe twofold The first is a Conformitie to the death of Christ when the vertue thereof works in vs a death of sinne and when we suffer as Christ suffered in silence contentation obedience subiecting our selues to the will of God The second is a conformitie to the resurrection or life of Christ and that is when we liue not onely a naturall but also a spirituall life which is to submit our selues to be ruled by the word and spirit of Christ. Conformitie in practise is when we carrie ourselues as Prophets in the confession of the name of Christ in teaching exhorting and admonishing one another as Priests to offer our bodies and soules in sacrifice to God as spiritual kings bearing sway ouer the lusts and corruptions of our own hearts And thus is Christ to be framed in the hearts of men The vse Here we see the end of all preaching is to make sinnefull men to become new creatures like vnto Christ this is the drift of the ministerie and the doctrine that tends to this purpose is sound and wholesome Againe here we see that in the new Testament there is but one rule and order for all men and that is the rule of Christ Take vp thy crosse and follow me and for this cause the Ministerie serues to frame Christ in the hearts of all beleeuers
see the fidelitie of Paul if he had sought himselfe his honour profit or pleasure he would not haue taught any doctrine that should haue caused persecution The like minde must be in all teachers nay in all beleeuers who are to receiue the Gospel for it selfe without respect to honour profit or pleasure Paul addes further in way of defence that the scandall of the crosse was not abolished Hence it followes that the Gospel must be preached though all men be offended God must not be displeased though all men be displeased Act. 5. 29. Indeede Christ pronounceth 〈◊〉 woe against them by whome offences come but that is meant of offences giuen and not of offences taken of which Christ hath an other rule Matth. 15. 14. Let them alone they are the blind leaders of the blind Againe by the offence of the Iewes we see the mind of men who cannot be content with the death and passion of Christ vnlesse they may adde workes or something els of their owne for their iustification and saluation Thus doe the Papists at this day and the like doe many of the ignorant people among vs that will be saued by their good dealing and their good seruing of God Touching the imprecation in the 12. verse three questions are to be propounded The first is whether Paul did well thus to curse his enemies I answer yea for first we must put a difference betweene the priuate cause of man and the cause of God Now Paul accurseth the false Apostles not in respect of his owne cause but in respect of the cause of God and not as his owne enemies but as the enemies of God Secondly we must distinguish the persons of euill men Some are curable and some againe are incurable of whose saluation there is no hope Now Paul directs his imprecation against persons incurable And he knew them to be incurable by some extraordinarie inspiration or instinct as the Prophets and the rest of the Apostles did in sundrie cases and hereupon he curseth sometime euen particular persons as Alexander the copper-smith 2. Tim. 4. 14. Thirdly we must distinguish the affections of men Some are carnall as rash anger hatred desire of reuenge c. some againe are more spirituall and diuine as a zeale of Gods glorie and of the s●●tie of Gods church Now Paul in pronouncing the curse is not carried with a carnall affection but with a pure zeale of Gods glorie and with the same spirit by which he penned this Epistle The second question is whether we may not curse our enemies as Paul did Ans. No for we haue not the like spirit to discerne the persons of men what they are and our zeale of Gods glorie is mixed with many corrupt affections and therefore to be suspected We in our ordinary dealings haue an other rule to follow Matth. 5. blesse and curse not If we dare goe beyond the limitts of this rule we must heare the speach of Christ ye know not of what spirit ye are Luc. 9. 55. The third question is how we should vse the imprecations that are in the psalmes of Dauid as Psal. 109. and in other places of scripture Ans. they are to be directed generally against the kingdome of the deuill and they are further to be vsed as Prophecies of the holy ghost comforting his Church and procuring a finall sentence vpon the enemies of God The word which is translated disquiet is to be considered for it signifies to put men out of their estate and to driue them out of house and home as enemies doe when they sacke and spoile a towne By this we se that the doctrine of iustification by workes or by the law is a doctrine full of danger and peril because it puts men out of their estate in Christ and ber●aues them of their saluation in heauen Therefore let all men flie from the religion of the Papist as if they would flie from an armie of Spaniards or Turkes Contrariwise they that would prouide well for themselues and their posteritie and plant themselues in a good estate must take this course They must cōsider that there is a citie of God in heauen the gates and suburbes whereof be vpon earth in the assemblies of the Church that this citie hath many roomes and habitations many liberties that the law wherby this citie is ruled is the whole word of God specially the doctrine of the Gospell In this citie is all happines and out of it there is nothing but woe and misery Enter therfore into the suburbes of this citie of God as ye professe the Gospell so subiect your mindes and consciences and all your affections to it and be doers of it in the exercise of faith repentance new obedience Thus shall you haue a good estate in Christ ioyfull habitation in heauen 13. For brethren ye haue bin called to libertie only vse not your libertie as an occasion to the flesh but by loue serue one another The first part of the Epistle touching the faith of the Galatians is ended and here beginnes the second part touching good life and it continues from this verse to the 11. verse of the sixt chapter In it Paul doth 2. things first he propounds the summe of his doctrine then after makes a particular declaration of it The summe of all is propounded in this 13. v. in which Paul first setts downe the ground of all good duties and then 2. maine rules of good life The ground is in these wordes brethren ye haue bin called to libertie And it must be noted that as these wordes are the foundation of that which followes so are they also the reason of that which goes before and therefore Paul saith for brethren c. The 2. rules are in the words following One in these vse not your libertie as an occasion to the flesh the other in these doe seruice one to another by loue In the ground of all good duties namely the calling to libertie 4. things are to be considered 1. who calls 2. who are called 3. what is the calling of God 4. why it is here mentioned by Paul To the first who calles I answer God the father in Christ by the spirit for he is absolute Lord of all his creatures therfore he may call out of the kingdome of darknes into his owne kingdome whome he will And it is God alone that calleth the things that are not as though they were Rom. 4. 17. The second is who are called Ans. All they that any waie answer the calling of God for Paul saith indifferently of all the Galatians that they were called Now men answer the calling of God some in profession some in heart some in both And all these are said to be called yet with some difference The calling of God is directed first of all and principally to the Elect and then in the second place it pertaines to them which are not Elect because they are mixed in societie with the Elect. And hence
ariseth a distinction of the calling of god sometime it is operatiue because God signifies and withall workes his will in the Elect sometimes againe in respect of others it is only significatiue when God reueales his will to men but spares to worke it for iust causes knowne to himselfe The third point is what is the calling to libertie Ans. An action of God translating men from the kingdome of darknes to his owne kingdome It hath 2. parts inuitement and admission Inuitement is when God offers remission of sinnes life euerlasting to them that beleeue outwardly by the preaching of the Gospell inwardly by the inspiration of heauenly desires Admission is when men are entred into the kingdome of grace and it is either outward or inward Outward admission is made in baptisme Inward admission is when men are taken out of olde Adam and by faith ingrafted into Christ for by this ins●tion into Christ men are made reall members of gods kingdome The last question is why Paul mentions the calling to libertie in this place Ans. It is the ground of all comfort by it Paul comforts the Corinthians 1. Cor. 1. 9. Againe it is the ground of good life Therefore Peter saith be ye holy as he that hath called you is holy 1. Pet. 1. 15. And Paul walke worthie the calling wherewith he hath called you Eph. 4. 1. If the calling of god doe not mooue vs to amendement of life nothing will doe it We in England haue heard the calling of god more then 40. yeares and yet very few of vs are mooued to change and amend our liues This shewes our Atheisme and vnbeleefe here is almost nothing but heauing shouing and lifting for the world Some are held captiues of their couetousnes some of their pride some of their damnable and fleshly lusts and all this shewes that few or none so much as dreame of a calling to spirituall libertie The first Rule followes Only vse not your libertie as an occasion to the flesh The sense Flesh hereby the Papists vnderstand Sensualitie or carnall appetites but hereby is ment the corruption of all the powers of the soule euen of reason and conscience Paul saith that the wisdom or vnderstanding of the flesh is emnity to God Rom. 8. 7. fleshlines therefore pertaines to the vnderstanding Againe he saith of some that they are puffed vp in the mind of the flesh Col. 2. 18. and he willes the Ephesians to be renewed in the spirit of their minds Eph. 4. 23. The meaning then of the rule is this vse not the benefit of spirituall libertie as an occasion to the flesh to liue according to the flesh Here I consider three things what is the abuse of libertie where is this abuse to be found and what is the right vse thereof The first question is what is the abuse of Christian libertie Ans. To vse it as an occasion of fleshly and carnall libertie that is done 3. waies The first is when men make more things indifferent thē god euer made Thus the Corinthians vsed fornication as a thing indifferent 1. Cor. 6. To many in these daies drunkennes and surfetting is but a thing indifferent Men vse not to distinguish a thing indifferent and the vse of it but they commonly thinke that if the thing be indifferent in it selfe then also the vse of it is indifferent Thus all abuses of meat drinke apparrell all rioting and gaming dicing and carding c. are excused by the names of things indifferent Secondly our libertie is abused by an immoderate vse of the gifts of god The vse of them is immoderate 3. waies first in respect of time as when Diues fared deliciously and was arraied in rich attire euery day Thus many gentlemen and others offend when they turne recreation into an occupation Secondly the gifts of god are immoderatly vsed in respect of themselues as when men Exceed in eating and drinking as the prophet saith Deut. 29. 19. adding drunkennes to thirst Thirdly in respect of the callings and conditions of men for euery man is to vse the gifts of God according to his place and condition They then offend that beeing but meane persons liuing by trades yet for their diet and apparrel are as great gentlemen gentlewomen Thirdly liberty is abused when the blessings of God are made instruments and as it were flagges and banners to display our riot vanitie ostentation pride for this cause sundry things whereof some are indifferent in themselues are condemned Isai 3. 16. The second question is where is this abuse Ans. Euen among vs in England It is the fashion of men to take vnto themselues a Toleration of sinning some vpon the pacience of God others vpon the doctrine of the gratious Election of God saying that they will liue as they list because if they be Elected to saluation they shall certenly be saued whatsoeuer they doe And some there be that take occasion to continue in their sinnes vpon the mercy of God in the death and passion of Christ. A certen dweller in this towne of Cambridge made awaie himselfe In his bosome was found a writing to this effect that God did shew mercie on great grecuous and desperate sinners and therefore he said that he hoped of mercy though he hanged himselfe Of this mind are many ignorant persons who perseuering in their sinnes yet perswade themselues of mercy because they haue heard that Christ died for mankind And thus the death of Christ is as it were a licence or letters patents to commit sinne Againe great is the abuse of meat drinke and apparell To Elias there came an Angell and said arise and eate 1. King 19. 7. but to the men of our daies there had need come an Angell and saie cease to eate cease to drinke cease to game The third questiō is what is the right vse of Christian libertie Ans. It stands in 2. things first of all we our selues must be renewed and sanctified To the pure all things are pure Tit. 1. 15. The person must first please God before the action can please him The second is that beside the lawfull vse of the creatures we must haue a spirituall holy vse of thē The lawfull vse of the creature I call the politick vse therof cōmonly allowed takē vp among men The spirituall vse is whereby we receiue vse the creature as from the hand of god the father in Christ according to his will and word And the Godly are not to seperate the one vse from the other but are bound by vertue of the 3 commandement to take vp an holy vse of euery gift of God When Noe came out of the Arke so● soone as he sett foote vpon the earth he built an altar offered sacrifice and called on the name of God not only for this end to worship god but also to sanctifie the earth and all the creatures of God vnto his vse The like did Abraham when he come into the land of Canaan And
others Lastly in that spirituall men especially the holy men of God and ministers of his word are the Lords surgeans to bind vp the broken and raise those that are fallen as also his physitians to restore those that are in a spirituall consumptiō of grace we ought to make great account of thē haue them in singular loue for their worke sake 1. Thes. 5. 19. For if we must honor the bodily Physitian as Syracides saith Eccles. 38. vers 1. who cureth but the diseases of the bodie how much more ought we to honour spirituall physitians which cure the spirituall maladies of our soules The fourth and last point is the manner how we must restore laid downe in these words in the spirit of meekenesse Meekenes is the setling or quieting of the minde freeing it from perturbation especially in repressing the reuengeful affection A meeke and quiet spirit are ioyned together 1. Pet. 3. 4. A notable example hereof we haue in Moses who beeing prouoked in stead of anger shewed meekenes It further makes a man to yeeld of his right and not to prosecute the matter in rigour and extremitie and so it is opposed to seueritie 1. Cor. 4. 21. Shall I come vnto you with arodde or in loue and the spirit of meekenesse Hence ariseth another propertie it bridleth the tongue and the outward man either by silence as Christ being prouoked wa● dumme and opened not his mouth Isay 53. 7. was silent and answered not a word Luk. 23. 9. or by a soft and gentle answer which asswageth wrath Pro. 15. 1. There is great reason why men should restore their brethren in all meekenesse for without it there is nothing but swelling and faction but troubles and tragedies Againe as meekenesse is necessarie for euery Christian Coloss. 2. 12. Tit. 3. 2. so it is most necessarie for him that would fruitfully and effectually reprooue Hence it is that the Apostle commands vs to Instruct the● in meekenesse that are contrarie minded 2. Tim. 2. 25. Motiues to inforce this dutie are these First the exhortation and example of Christ to be followers of him 1. Cor. 11. 1. who was lowly and meeke Math. 11. 29. for he wa● ledde as a sheepe to the slaughter and like a lambe dumm● before his shearer so opened he not his mouth Isa. 53. 7. When he was reuiled reuiled not againe when he suffered he threatned not 1. Pet. 2. 23. as it may appeare by that meeke answer If I haue euill spoken beare witnesse of the euill but if I haue well spoken why smitest thou me Ioh. 18. 23. Paul hath no stronger argument to exhort the Corinthians then by the meekenesse and gentlenesse of Christ. 2. Cor. 10. 1. Secondly it is a vertue which God doth make great account of 1. Pet. 3. 4. A ●eeke and quiet spirit is before God a thing much set by Thirdly God hath made excellent promises to them that are of a meeke and humble spirit that he will guide them in iudgment and teach them his waies Psal. 25. 9. That they shall be hid in the day of the Lords wrath Zeph. 2. 3. That they shall inherit the earth Math. 5. 5. Fourthly consider the comfortable effects the good that comes thereby A soft meeke and milde answer turneth away wrath Prou. 15. 1. Meeke and gentle behauiour heapeth coles of fire vpon our enemies head Rom. 12. 20. A soft to●g●e breaketh the bones Prou. 25. 15. See the example of Gideon appeasing the Midianites Iudg. 8. 1. c. and Abigail pacifying Dauid 1. Sam. 25. Fiftly without meekenesse we cannot sauingly heare the word either read or preached Iam 1. 21. It is further said we must restore in the spirit of meeknes The word spirit is added because it proceeds from the spirit of god who is both the worker and continuer thereof as on the contrarie the spirit of iealousie Numb 5. 14. the spirit of errour 1. Ioh. 4. 6. the spirit of vncleanesse Zach. 13. 2. the spirit of giddines Isa. 19. 14. the spirit of slumber Isa. 29. 19. are so tearmed because they proceede from a wicked spirit So quicke motions sudden perturbations strong affections proceeding either from the spirit of God or of Sathā are tearmed by the name of spirit Hence we learne that the holy Ghost is author not onely of meeknes but of all sanctifying graces and therefore is called the spirit of wisedome and vnderstanding the spirit of counsell and strength the spirit of knowledge and of the feare of the Lord Isa. 11. 2. Secondly this teacheth vs that all true vertues are wrought onely by the operation of Gods spirit in vs for though there be diuersities of gifts yet it is the same spirit 1. Cor. 12. 4. and therfore the vertues of the Heathen are but glittering sinnes Thirdly that when we see the gifts or graces of God in our selues or others we returne all the praise and glory to God from whome they proceede ascribing nothing to our selues Fourthly this shewes to whome we must haue recourse in our neede namely not to the virgin Marie nor any Saint who stand in as great neede of the fauour of God as our selues but to God alone who is the fountaine of grace Ierem. 2. 13. Lastly in that the spirit is set before meekenesse it shewes that the spirit of God is present with his graces to inspire them to cherish and increase them Therefore the commandement Quench not the spirit 1. Thess. 5. 19. is to be obeyed if we will retaine the graces of God Thus much of the dutie The reasons vsed by the Apostle to enforce this dutie follow to be considered they are two The first is implyed in the word Brethren which is of great force to perswade vs to vse moderation lenitie and gentlenesse Abraham could vse no stronger argument to pacifie Lot then this Let there be no strife betweene thee and me for we are brethrē Gen. 13. 8. Moses vsed it as a motiue to accord two Ebrewes Sirs y● are brethren why doe you wrong one to another Act. 7. 26. For it is a shame that those whome nature hath so neerely conioyned should be so farre disioyned in affection But the reason beeing taken from spirituall brethren such as are not onely brethren in the flesh but also in the Lord hauing the same God for their father the same Church for their mother Christ for their elder brother beeing begotten by the same immortall seede washed by the lauer of one newe birth conglutinate by the sinewes of the same faith nourished by the milke of the same word is so much the stronger by how much grace is a strai●er bond then nature therefore Paul would haue vs restore one another in the spirit of meekenesse because we are brethrē Nay persons excommunicate are not to be accounted as enemies but to be admonished as brethren 2. Thess. 3. 15. The reason why men vse no more mildnesse in their reproofes is because they forget themselues to
highest heauen and made them fall like thunderbolts into the lowest hell To man for as Dauid saith it is like a gri●●ous burden too heauie for him to beare Psal. 38. 4. To God for the hypocriticall and ceremoniall seruice of the Iewes was such a burden vnto him that he was wearie to beare it Isa. 1. 14. Behold I am pressed vnder you a● a cart is pressed that is full of sheaues Amos 2. 13. To the creatures who groane vnder this burden beeing by mans sinne subiect to vanitie and corruption Rom. 8. 20 21. Hence it followeth then that those which feele not the waight burden of their sinnes are dead being aliue as Paul speaks in another case 1. Tim. 5. 6. Thirdly we are not to wonder that sinne beeing so heauie a burden should be made so light a matter by carnall men for it is a spirituall burden and therefore no maruell though it be not ●elt of them that are all flesh and no spirit Fourthly this shewes that the more a man doth feele the burden of his sinnes the greater measure of grace and spirituall life he hath and the lesse he feeleth it the more he is to suspect himselfe that the graces of God doe wane and decay in him For corruption is not felt by corruption but by grace therfore the more a man doth feele the burden of his owne corruption● the more grace he hath Fiftly by this we see that the greatest part of the world are dead in their sinnes in that they haue no sense nor feeling of this heauie burden There is indeede great crying out of the stone in the reynes because it is felt to be a great ●orment to the bodie but there is little or no complaining of the stone in the heart because men want spirituall life and sense to discerne it All men can take pittie vpon a beast if he lie vnder his burden and will be readie to helpe him vp againe But all haue not the like sight and sense of the spirituall burden of sinne not sympathy of the miserie of their brethren groaning vnder it Sixtly whereas Paul saith Euery man must beare his owne burden he meeteth with the prophanenesse and Atheisme of our time when men make a mocke at the day of iudgement the strict account that euery man is to giue for himselfe The Iewes were woont to ●east at the threatnings of God denounced by the Prophets and to call the visions of the Prophets o●us Iehouae the burden of the Lord in a merriment vsing it a● a by-word Ierem. 23. 34 36 38. Thereby signifying that the threats of God were but vaine bugs or scarre-crowes which might perhaps terrifie children but could not hart them The like prophanenesse infidelitie atheisme hath crept into the mindes of many who otherwise pro●esse the Gospel which they testifie by their speeches in saying they are sure sinne is nothing so ougly hell is not halfe so hotte nor the deuill hal●e so blacke as preachers say they are or if they be they are sure they shall not goe loaden alone with the burden of their sinns but shall haue cōpany shall perhaps abide the brunt as well as their fellows But alas they know not that the burdē of sinne is intollerable that it will eternally presse thē down to the gul●e of hell that they shall neuer be able to be ridde or eased of it Seuenthly we are here admonished to take heede of euery sinne for there is no sinne so small but hath his waight and such a waight as will presse downe to the bottomlesse pit Ro. 6. 23. And though some be greater then others and sinke a mā deeper into condemnation yet many small sinnes will as easily condemne as a few great Like as sands though but small in quantitie yet beeing many in number will as soone sinke the ship as if it were laden with the greatest burden Eightly seeing the guilt and punishment of sinne is so heauie a burden we are to ease and disburden our selues thereof And that we may doe this we must labour to feele the intollerable waight of it pressing and oppressing the conscience Therefore as those who in their sleepe are troubled with the Ephialtes or mare feeling as it were a great mountaine lying vpon them and pressing them down would giue all the world the waight might be remooued So we feeling the waight and burden of our sinnes are to labour to be disburdened and eased thereof this we shall doe by our repentāce toward God and faith in Christ. Math. 11. 28. Come vnto me all ye that are wearie and laden and I will ease you ver 6. Let him that is taught in the word make him that hath taught him partaker of all his goods In these words the Apostle laieth downe an other rule touching the maintenance of the ministerie and competencie of allowance for the ministers of the word for it seemeth that the ministrie among the Galatians was at that time much neglected at least not so respected as it ought In handling of the rule I will first shewe the meaning of the words secondly the reasons of the rule thirdly the obiections against it lastly the doctrine and vses that are to be gathered from it The meaning Let him that is taught The word translated taught signifieth him that is catechized or taught familiarly by word of mouth or liuely voice as when children are taught the first principles of religion But here it hath a larger signification as Oecumenius hath well obserued for him that is any way taught and instructed whether it be in the first principles and rudiments or in points of greater difficultie whether plainely and familiarly as catechizers vse to doe or more profoundly for the instruction of the learned Taught in the word What needes this addition may some say is there any catechizing without the word Answ. The Apostle addeth in the word to shew that he meaneth not so much the doctrine of Christian religion contained in the scriptures as the doctrine of the Gospel which by an exoche or peculiar excellencie is called the word Act. 16. 6. They were forbidden of the holy Ghost to preach the word in Asia which is expounded v. 10. to be the preaching of the Gospel Thus it is vsed Act. 14. 25. when they had preached the word in Perga Mark 4. 14. The sower soweth the word And so in sundrie other places And it is further called the word of the kingdome Matth. 13. 19. because it teacheth what is the kingdom of grace and glorie and because it beeing beleeued or as the Apostle speakes beeing mingled with faith in our hearts doth make vs freedenizens of the kingdome of grace in this life and doth aduance vs to the kingdom of glorie in the life to come Secondly it is called the word of God because he is the author of it and no creature man or angel 1. Thess. 3. 13. Thirdly the word of saluation Act. 13. 26. because
wherewith to maintaine themselues And we must consider the reason why Paul commandeth all that are instructed in the word to make them that instructed them partakers of their goods to wit because in Pauls time and long after the Church was not endowed with lands or goods whereby the Ministerie might be vpholden neither had it publike Christian Magistrates but was vnder cruell tyrants in persecution and therefore those that were taught in the word were to maintaine their teachers by liberall cōtribution otherwise they might starue but now the Church beeing greatly inriched they may without contribution be sufficiently maintained of the Church goods And that it is much more conuenient for the Ministers to be maintained by set stipends arising from goods proper to the Church then by voluntarie contribution it may appeare by this in that it cuts off sundrie inconueniences which in voluntarie contributions either cannot be or are hardly auoided First slatterie and suspition of flatterie in beeing thought to haue some persons in admiration because of aduantage Secondly the poorer sort are no way disgraced by this meanes as they should be in contributions except they did giue ratably as the rest Thirdly dissembling and deceit in making as though they receiued little when as they haue much is cut off in a set stipend Fourthly the euill disposed would not so easily cast off their minister and seeke a new that would teach for lesse or would giue nothing at all if they were touched to the quicke and galled for their sinnes Fiftly ostentation in some in giuing much and disdaining those that giue lesse Sixtly suspition of couetousnes and filthie lucre in the ministers in seeming to take of those to whome they ought to giue Seauenthly disgrace of the ministerie in gathering themselues or sending others to gather the peoples liberalitie from dore to dore Lastly a set stipend comes nearer the order appointed by God in maintaining the Priesthood vnder the Leuiticall law In the next place I will answer the common obiections that are made to the contrarie by such as thinke it is as easie a matter to say seruice in the church as to do seruice in the house to stand at the altar of God as to follow their masters plough to preach in the pulpit as to talke in the tauerne I. Obiect 2. Thess. 3. 10. They which will not worke must not eate But Ministers neuer plow nor sow nor hedge nor ditch nor vse any painfull labour for of all men they haue the easiest liues their greatest paines is to read ouer a few bookes or to speake a few words once or twise a weeke Therefore they are not to be maintained Ans. There is a twofold labour one of the bodie another of the minde now albeit the ministers doe not wearie themselues in bodily labour yet they are not therefore idle for the labours of the minde doe faire exceede the labours of the bodie they are more painefull they spend the spirits more they consume naturall moisture and bring old age sooner The holy Ghost calleth the ministerie the worke of the ministerie Eph. 4. 12. nay a worthie worke 1. Tim. 3. 1. therefore Paul saith that those Elders are worthie double honour that labour in the word and doctrine 1. Tim. 5. 17. and he exhorts the Thessalonians that they would know them that labour among them and that they haue them in singular loue for their works sake 1. Thess. 5. 12 13. Hence it is that the Scripture doeth vsually compare the worke of the ministerie to the most toylsome labour that may be as to the work of the husbandman to setting to plowing to sowing to reaping to the labour in the vineyard and the minister to a builder to a shepheard that watcheth his flocke to a soldiour that fighteth in the warres c. Againe we may not iudge of the painfulnes of the calling by the outward appearance for so a man would thinke a King had the easiest life of all when as the truth is the toyle which he takes and the cares wherewith he is possessed doe exceede all other cares if a man knew the trauaile that is required to the welding of a scepter and the paine that is taken in wearing of a heauie crowne he would hardly stoope downe to take the one into his hands or to set the other vpon his head The master builder doth not hewe the stones nor worke the morter nor carrie the rubbish nor any such drudgerie but onely standeth by directeth the workemen yet his labour is double to any of theirs The master of the ship a man would thinke were idle and did nothing he stands not to the tackling he stirreth not the pumpe he driueth not the oares he soundeth not the deepe he rideth not the ropes but onely sitteth still at the sterne and looketh to the pole-starre and guideth the compasse yet his labour passeth all the rest were it not for him the shippe would runne her selfe vnder the water or strike vpon the rockes or be split vpon the sands or fall soule with another as marriners speake Euen so for all the world fareth it with the Ministers of the word they seeme to sit still to be at ease to doe nothing and yet their labour is double and treble to other mens bodily labour except they be vnfaithfull and doe the worke of the Lord negligently II. Obiect Paul laboured with his hands in making of Tents Act. 18. 3. that he might not be chargeable to any Act. 20. 34. 2. Thess. 3. 8. Therefore Preachers are to maintaine themselues by their handy labour not be chargeable to the Church Ans. Pauls example prooueth not that the minister ought to liue by the labour of his hāds for first himselfe receiued a contribution of the Philippians when he was absent frō them Philip. 4. 16. When I was in Thessalonica ye sent once and afterward againe for my necessitie Therefore if Paul receiued exhibition from other churches where he did not labour it is lawefull for the ministers to receiue of those whome they doe instruct Secondly consider the reasons why Paul would not take wages of the Church of Corinth some others I lest he should be a burden vnto them 2. Thess. 3. 8. We wrought with labour and trauell day and night because we would not be chargeable to any of you 2. Cor. 11. 9. In all things I kept and will keepe my selfe that I should not be grieuous vnto you II. That he might giue a president or example to others to tread in his steppes 2. Thess. 3. 9. Not but that we had authoritie but that we might make our selues an example to them to follow vs. III. That he might manifest what his end was in teaching the Gospel not to seeke himselfe but the saluation of his hearers 2. Cor. 11. 14. I seeke not yours but you And vers 19. We doe all things for your edification Philip. 4. 17. Not that I desire a gift but the fruit which may
boasteth not but onely of his Apostolicall calling and his faithfull discharge thereof to the end he may stoppe the mouthes of the false Apostles Thus to confesse the good things we haue to the glorie of God beeing vrged thereunto is lawfull boasting nay it is sometime necessarie making much for the maintenance of the Gospell as Pauls boasting made much for the good of the Church of Corinth Againe there is a twofold lawfull boasting one before God another before men Rom. 4. 2. Of the former the Apostle speakes in this verse of the latter in the 2. Cor. 12. He gloried not in the testimony of a good conscience before god but onely before men Before God he glorified in nothing but in the sauing knowledge of Christ and him crucified And whereas it may besaide that this his boasting in regard of the false Apostles as also his glorying in the testimonie of his conscience 2. Cor. 1. 12. and in his infirmities 2. Cor. 11. 30. were not in the crosse of Christ. I answer they were for his glorying ouer the false Apostles in teaching freely was in the good and prosperous successe of the Gospel which is the doctrine of the crosse and his glorying in the testimonie of his conscience in that it was washed by the blood of the crosse as Paul speakes Coloss. 1. 20. In his afflictions in that they were the afflictions of Christ and he by them made conformable to him But it will be said that he gloried in his reuelations in his paines and trauell in preaching the Gospel and in the multitude of Churches which he had planted Ans. First he did it beeing vrged thereunto secondly he did it to defend his calling and the credit of the Gospel and therefore this boasting was not vnlawfull nay it was necessarie and in the Lord. For when we are compelled we may confesse the good things we haue if we doe it sparingly and for the edification of others that they may be bettered by our example and that they seeing our good workes may glorifie God our heauenly father Matth. 5. 16. Here we see what glorying is Vnlawfull namely when men ascribe vnto themselues either that which they haue not or more then they haue or as proceeding from themselues their wisdome strength industrie in sacrificing to their owne netts and burning incense to their owne yearne Habac. 1. 16. or in boasting of them without necessarie cause either for their owne vaine glorie as Nebuchodonosor did Dan. 4. or not for Gods glorie as Herod did Act. 12. And if this glorying be so greata sinne surely boasting in wickednes as Doeg did Psal. 52. 1. must needes be most damnable as when the greatest swearers and swaggerers count themselues the best companions the greatest Idolaters and superstitious persons most religious the greatest oppressours surfeters drunkards fighters most valiane and couragious c. Now this may be done three waies either ignorātly as whē Paul gloried in his cruel persecuting of the Saints before his cōuersion Act. 26. 11. or presumptuously when men glorie in wickednes notwithstanding they be perswaded in conscience that it is euill and then it is the sinne of Sodom Isa. 3. 9. or malitiously to despite God and then it is the sinne against the holy Ghost The second point to be considered in the words is the thing wherein he will glorie called here the Crosse of Christ Sane in the Crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ. The words in the originall translated saue are exceptiue as if he should say I will glorie in nothing except in the crosse of Christ and exclusiue onely in the crosse of Christ and in nothing els Albeit they are sometime aduersatiue as Gal. 2. 16. and Apoc. 21. 27. There shall enter into it no vncleane thing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but they that are written c. where the words are not exclusiue for then it would follow that some which worke abomination should enter into heauen but aduersatiue as Matth. 12. 4. and Luk. 4. 20. which may serue by the way to cleare the text Ioh. 17. 12. Those thou gauest me haue I kept and none of them is lost but the child of perdition that is but the child of perdition is lost For the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as I take it are not so well translated by the exceptiue coniunction nisi as by the aduersatiue sed seeing here is no exceptiō made of Iudas as though he had beene giuen to Christ afterward had fallen away which exposition must needes be made if the words be read nisi filius perditionis Further by the Crosse of Christ the Apostle vnderstandeth synecdochically the all sufficient expiatorie and satisfactorie sacrifice of Christ vpon the crosse with the whole work of our redemption in the sauing knowledge where of he professeth he will glorie and boast For Christ is made vnto vs wisdome righteousnes that as it is written He that glorieth should glorie in the Lord euen to make boast of him all the day long as the Psalmist speaketh And the reason why Paul professeth that he will glorie onely in the Crosse of Christ is because Christ crucified is the treasurie and storehouse of the Church seeing that in him are hid not onely the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Coloss. 2. 3. but of bountie and grace Ioh. 1. 16. and of all spirituall blessings Eph. 1. 3. For first by Christ crucified we haue reconciliation with God remission of sinns acceptation to eternall life Secondly we haue the peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding peace with God with Angels with men with our selues with the creatures Thirdly we recouer the right and title which we had in the creation to all the creatures and blessings of God 1. Cor. 3. 22. Fourthly all afflictions and iudgements cease to be curses and punishments and become either trialls or corrections Lastly death it selfe is no death but a sleepe for all that die in the Lord are said to sleepe and to rest vpon their beddes Isa. 57. 2. Indeede if we looke vpon death through the glasse of the Law it is the very downefall to eternall destruction but if we consider it as it is changed by the death of Christ it is but a passage from this trans●torie life to eternall life Christ by his death hath taken away sinne the sting of death so that though it seaze vpon vs yet hauing lost it sting it cannot hurt vs. So that in a word in Christ crucified are all things that a man can glorie of If we would glorie in knowledge and wisdome He is the wisdome of the father seeing that all treasures of wisdome and knowledge are hid in him and therefore Paul desired to know nothing among the Corinthians but brist and him crucified 1. Cor. 2. 2. for this knowledge is eternall life Ioh 17. 3. If in the loue and fauour of great men by him we are highly aduanced into the loue fauour of god Eph. 1. 6. If in
els but to haue the faith of our Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons Iam. 2. 1. The second conclusion is that the new creature is the onely thing that is acceptable to God Circumcision c. ●●aileth nothing but a new creature By the new creature the Apostle vnderstandeth the image of God or renouation of the whole man both in the spirits of our minds and in the affections of our hearts which is also called the new man We shall the better conceiue it by the contrarie namely by the old man which is want of knowledge in the minde and delight in ignorance want of subiection and conformitie in the will and rebellion withall want of holines in the affections and pronenes to euill The new man then is the restoring of all these defects For the vnderstanding hereof consider that there are three things in the soule The substance of the soule the faculties or powers of the soule and the qualities of these faculties Now neither the substance nor faculties are lost by the fall but onely the qualities of the faculties as when an instrument is out of tune the fault is not in the substance of the instrument nor in the sound but in the disproportion or iarre in the sound therefore the qualities onely are renewed by grace These qualities or habits are either in the Vnderstanding or will and affections The qualitie in the vnderstanding is knowledge Coloss. 3. 10. Ye haue put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him In the will and affections they are principally two righteousnes and holines both which are in truth and synceritie without all hypocrisie Eph. 4. 24. Put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnes and true holines where holines and righteousnes are opposed to concupiscences and lusts of the old man Truth which hath relation to both to spiritual guile and dissimulation so that each of these qualities haue two parts a want of the contrarie euill and a positiue qualitie or habit of goodnes Holines respecteth god and containeth all duties of pietie contained in the first table Righteousnes respects man and the creatures and compriseth all the duties enioyned in the second table Truth respecteth the manner how both the former are to be practised viz. with an vpright and sincere heart free from all hypocrifie and deceit These three making a perfect harmonie in all the faculties of the soule Holines performing all the duties of pietie righteousnes the duties of humanitie truth seasoning both the former with sinceritie But may some say how is the new creature opposed to all externall things or said to be of any force in the kingdome of Christ seeing it is not auaileable to iustifie a man before God ' beeing stained with manifold imperfections For answer whereof we are to know that outward things are sometime opposed to Christ and his righteousnes as Coloss. 3. 11. There is neither Iew nor Grecian circumcision nor vncircumcision c. but Christ is all and in all things sometime to faith as Gal. 5. 6. Neither circumcision auaileth any thing nor vncircumcision but faith which worketh by loue sometime to the new creature or sanctification as in this place and 2. Cor. 7. 29. Circumcision is nothing c. but the keeping of the commandements of God But the sense is all one for they are opposed to Christ as to the matter of our iustification to faith as to the instrument apprehending it to the new creature as to the signe of them both Further whereas both here and 2. Cor. 5. 17. the image of god is called a new creature or as it is in the original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a new creation the meaning is not that either the substance or faculties of the soule are created a new but that the worke of regeneration is wholly to be ascribed to God alone not as though we were stocks or stones without life or motion but because God doth create these new qualities in vs quickning vs when we were dead in sinne and working in vs both the will and the deede Philip. 2. 13. If regeneration then be a new creation it must needes follow that before our conuersion we were not onely dead but euen flat nothing in godlines and grace By which we see what to iudge of the Semi-pelagian heresie which teacheth that a man by an internum principium may dispose himselfe to will that which is truly good and that man is not starke dead in sinne but onely sicke or wounded and halfe dead as the man which fell among theeues Luk. 10. or as a prisoner that is shackled and manackled who can walke of himselfe if his fetters be taken from him so we if Christ loose the chaines of our sinnes haue power of our selues to mooue our selues Which doctrine we know is most iniu●ious to the mercie of God and most derogatorie to the merits of Christ seeing it makes him in the worke of our saluation to be but causa removens prohibens which as Logicians teach is but causa sine quâ non which in truth is no cause at all So that they make themselues their own Sauiours and Christ to be but an instrument whereby they saue themselues for if he doe but remooue the impediment they without any more adoe are able to mooue and act themselues When as the conuersion of a sinner is as great a worke as the creation of heauen and earth for Paul calleth it here a new creation Nay here is a greater power required if I may so speake then that whereby the world was created For though an infinite power be required as well to the creating of the great world as the recreating or regenerating of the lesse world as our Sauiour Christ signifies Mark 2. 9. Whether is it easier to say to the sicke of the palsie Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee or to say Arise take vp thy bed and walke yet the holy Ghost seemeth of the two to make it more difficult to create a new hart then a new world in that speaking of the creation of the world he saith it was made by the word of God By the word of the Lord were the heauens made Psal. 33. 6. or by his fingers when I consider the heauens the workes of thy fingers Psal. 8. 3. or by his handes Psalm 102. 25. The heauens are the workes of thy hands But the redemption of man and the conuersion of a finner is said to be wrought by the arme of God Marie in her Magnificat saith He hath shewed strength with his arme Luk. 2. 51. nay he was faine to set his side to it and it made him shed many a teare and sweat as it were drops of blood trickling downe to the ground Luk. 22. 44. Before our conuersion we are like the drie bones Ezek. 37. for as when the winde of God came vpon them bone came to bone and were ioyned with sinews and couered with
but onely by the Latin church as might be prooued by manifold testimonies if it were a thing necessarie to be stood vpon Neuerthelesse howsoeur this inscription cannot be defended yet it may be excused and tollerated as a title of distinction to distinguish them from the other epistles As we see the Iewes diuiding the olde testament into 4. parts the first they called the law or 5. bookes of Moses the 2. the former prophets viz Ioshua Judges 2. bookes of Samuel 2. bookes of the Kings the 3 the later prophets as Esay Ieremie Ezechiel and the small prophets the 4. they called Kethubim which in English is as much as the scriptures not as though those 11. bookes were more properly scripture then the Pentateuch of Moses or the bookes of the former and later prophets but onely for distinction sake they were so called And they are tearmed of the 70. and of the Greeke church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is holy writts not because they had a peculiar holines proper to them aboue other parts of Gods word seeing all scripture is equally giuen by diuine inspiration nor as though the amanuenses of these bookes were more holy then the other pen-men of the holy Ghost nay contrarily it is doubted by some of Salomon who penned three of these bookes whether he were elected or reiected whereas it is not doubted of the rest but onely as I haue alreadie said to put a note of distinction betwixt them and other bookes in naming of them as Hugo de S. Uict hath well obserued In this sense this title Canonicall may be giuen to these Epistles without danger but if we shall vnderstand it in any other sense we shall be so farre from beeing able to defend it that we shall not be able to excuse it The second title which is giuen them is that they be called Catholike which inscription is as vnfit as the former for they are so called as some would haue it because they were writtē and directed to the whole Catholike Church consisting both of Iewes and Gentiles But that is not true seeing Iames chap. 1. 1. directeth his Epistle onely to the 12 tribes that were dispersed and not to the Gentiles And Peter who was an Apostle of Circumcision 1. Epist. 1. 1. writeth onely to the strangers the Iewes that dwell here and there throughout Pontus Galatia Cappadocia Asia and Bythinia Others thinke they are tearmed Catholike for that they were not sent to one man or familie or citie or countrey but generally to the whole bodie companie and societie of the Iewes wheresoeuer dispersed ouer the whole earth But neither in this sense can they fitly or truly be tearmed Catholike forasmuch as two of these seuen viz. the second and third of Iohn were written to particular persons the one to the elect Ladie the other to Gains And by this reason the Epistle to Timothie that to Titus and Philemon may be called Catholike as well as these Againe be it graunted that they were all directed to all the Iewes yet I see not why the Epistle to the Ebrewes may not as well chalenge this title to be called Catholike as any of these seuen considering it was written to all the Iewes and onely to the Iewes Thirdly others affirme them to be called Catholike because they containe Catholike doctrine such as appertaineth to all men generally of what estate place condition or calling so euer they be But in this sense all Pauls Epistles may be called Catholike Epistles For whatsoeuer is written is written for our learning that we through patience and consolation of the Scriptures might haue hope Rom. 15. 4. Secondly the word Catholike is not so ancient for Pacianus an auncient father saith it was not vsed in the Apostles daies His wordes are these Sed sub Apostolis enquies nemo Catholicus vocabatur esto sic fuerie vel illud indulge cum post Apostolos haereses extitissent diuersisque nominibus Columbam Dei atque reginam lacerare per partes sciudere niterentur nonne cognomen suum pleb● Apostolica p●stulabat quo incorrupti populi distingueret vnitatem ne intemeratam Dei virginem error aliquorum per membra laceraret that is But thou wilt say vnder the Apostles no man was called Catholique well be it so yet admit this withall when after the Apostles there were heresies and men beganne to rend in peeces and diuide gods done and Queene by sundry different names did not the Apostolike people require their surnames whereby they might distinguish the vnitie of the vncorrupt people least the error of some should rend in sunder gods vndefiled virgin where we see Pacianus doth freely grant that this surname Catholike was not in vse in the time of the Apostles Which testimonie Baronius doth notably dissemble in shewing the originall of this name out of Pacianus affirming but not proouing it to be as ancient as the Apostles Now this errour hath not onely befallen the Latin and Greeke copies but the Syriacke likewise as may appeare in the title prefixed before the most ancient Syrian trāslation where we shal find these words The 3. Epistles of the 3. Apostles before whose eyes our Lord was transfigured Iames Peter Iohn In which inscription be couched 2. soule errours First in that this translator maketh but 3. epistles of James Peter and Iohn whereas there are sixe he omitting the 2. of Peter the 2. and 3. of Iohn as also that of Iude as no part of holy scripture therfore the Syriack church as I haue alreadie said doth not receiue these Epistles into their Canon vnto this day The second is in that he affirmeth Iames before whom our S. Christ was transfigured in mount Tabor to be the author of this epistle For that Iames before whome Christ was transfigured in the mount was Iames the sonne of Zebedeus and brother of Iohn Matth. 17. 1. After sixe daies Iesus tooke Peter and Iames and Iohn his brother and brought them vp into an high mountain and was transfigured before them Which Iames could not possibly be the penner of this epistle for he was slaine by king Herode long before the destruction of Ierusalem and the dispersion of the 12. tribes Acts 12. v. 2. About that time Herode the kinge stretched forth his hand to vexe certaine of the Church and he slew Iames the brother of Iohn with the sword Therfore Iames the author of this epistile was Iames the sonne of Alphaeus For to faine an other Iames the brother of our Lord as some haue done is childish seeing it is plaine by sundry places of the N. T. that there were but two of that name mentioned in Scripture Iames the sonne of Zebedeus called Iames the greater and Iames the sonne of Alphoeus brother to Iude called the lesser and brother of our Lord. GRATIAS TIBI DOMINE IESV COMMON PLACES HANDLED IN THIS Commentarie The first figure shewes the page the second the line 1 HOw a man may