Selected quad for the lemma: work_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
work_n covenant_n grace_n justification_n 7,486 5 9.7652 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A17385 A commentary upon the three first chapters of the first Epistle generall of St. Peter VVherin are most judiciously and profitably handled such points of doctrine as naturally flow from the text. Together with a very usefull application thereof: and many good rules for a godly life. By Nicholas Byfield preacher of Gods Word at Isleworth in Middlesex. To which is now newly added an alphabeticall table, not formerly published. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653.; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Commentary: or, sermons upon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the ten first verses of the third chapter of the first Epistle of S. Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the first chapter of the first Epistle generall of Peter. aut 1637 (1637) STC 4212; ESTC S107139 978,571 754

There are 15 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

or no. Quest. But how may I know that I am won effectually now at this time of remorse or now that I resolve to take a new course Answ. Thou art right and effectually converted if these things following be true of thee 1. If thou be inwardly abased and humbled in the sight of thine owne vilenesse if in thine owne eyes thou discerne thy selfe to be a foole and unapt for Gods kingdome and if thy sins be a sensible lo●d and burthen unto thee of which thou art weary Mat. 5.3 11.29 1 Cor. 3.18 and thy pride and conceitednesse be subdued 2. If thou have overcome the world 1 Iohn 5.4 5. 2.15 and canst shew it by forsaking the fellowship of ungodly persons 2 Cor. 6.17 and canst deny the carnall counsell of carnall kindred Mat. 10. and canst hold on this course notwithstanding the reproaches will be cast upon thee and others Esay 8. 59.15 1 Pet. 4.5 and dost find that thy taste in earthly things is marred so as thou dost not find that favour in them thou wast wont to doe Rom. 8.5 3. If nothing can heale thee of those remorses thou feelest but the Word and Ordinances of God Hosea 6.1 2. If merry company carnall counsell or time will heale thee without spirituall medicine thou art not right 4. If thou have attained to an es●imation of Jesus Christ above all things accounting him only precious and findest that thy heart striveth to settle it selfe in the trust upon him and his merits Phil. 3.8 Gal. 6. 1 Pet. 2.6 5. If thou have a spirit without gu●te Psal. 32.2 and that will appeare 1. By thy desire to bee godly and religious more than to seeme so Rom. 2.26 2. By thy desire to be rid of all siu and to be turned from all thy transgre●●ions Ezech. 18.30 setting thy selfe against thine owne iniquity 2 Sam. 22.24 If thou feele a combat within thee the spirit striving against the flesh as well about inward sinnes as outward against the very evill that cleaves to thy best workes and against those sinnes that thou most lovest or have beene most gainefull or pleasing to thee Gal. 5.17 3. This will be clearer if thou desire to forsake thy sinnes in thy youth or prosperity while thou couldest yet securely commit them 4. If thou keepe thy goodnesse in all companies as well when thou art absent farre as when thou art present with such as are religious Phil. 2.12 doing righteousnesse at all times Psal. 106.2 6. If thou love the house of God above all the places in the world and that thy thirst after meanes continue and last and be renewed after the food of thy soule as thy stomacke is afte● thy bodily food Psal. 26.8 84. Iob 23. 12. Psal. 119.20 7. If thou honour them that feare the Lord and are religious above all the people in the world discerning betweene the righteous and the wicked contemning vile persons and joyning thy selfe to the godly as the people thou wilt live and die with and as the best companions of thy life Psal. 15. Mal. 3.17 Psal 16.3 1 Iohn● 14 8. If the vaile be taken off thy heart so as thou canst heare as the lear●ed and understand spirituall doctrine that before was harsh and foolishnesse to thee 1 Cor. 2.14 2 Cor. 3.15 16 18. Esay 51.6 9. If thou find that thou canst not sin Marke it the Apostle Iohn saith he that is borne of God cannot sin he meanes he cannot sin as he was wont to doe for either God crosseth him still and hinders him or he finds that he cannot affect his sin so heartily or commit it with his full consent or with his whole heart as he was wont to doo 1 Iohn 3.9 the power of sinning is marred and dissolved in him Now that this worke may prosper if you find your selves any way effectually won be advised then to looke to these rules following 1 Take heed of smothering of doubts aske the way to heaven and seek resolution in things of so high importance as your Vocation Justification Sanctification and Salvation are Ier. 50.4 2 Looke to it what teachers and what doctrine you heare choose that food for your soules that is most wholesome be not carryed away with the inticing words of mans wisedome 3 Be carefull to humble your soules in secret judging your selves for your sins before the Lord. Be not sleight in this great worke though you have repented yet repent still till your hearts be fully settled and the power of your corruptions broken rest not upon common hopes or probabilities or the good opinion others have of you but lay a sure foundation for your owne faith and hope Ier. 31.20 4. Come constantly to the light that it may be manifest that your workes are wrought in God and let the Word of God be the light to your feet and lanthorne to your pathes Iohn 21.22 Psal. 50. Gal. 6.16 What remaines now but that I should beseech you to returne unto God with all your hearts Give your selves to God he will keepe that which you commit to him till the day of Christ. Let not our words be as water spilt upon the ground Oh that the Lord would bow the heavens and come down amongst you and take possession for himselfe and perfect the worke he hath begun in some of your hearts Remember the covenant you have made with God in the Sacrament made it I say over the dead body of your Saviour Now is the axe laid to the root of the tree now or never beare fruit This is the day of salvation say you This is the day the Lord hath made for our conversion God is gracious if you turne to him with all your hearts and just if you prove false in his covenant Though grace in you be but as the smoaking flaxe yet it shall not be quenched the Lord establish his worke I● you hold out to the end you shall be saved That they which obey not the word The persons that may be won are described by these words as a Periphrasis of carnall persons men that are not in Christ and so may note either such husbands as were Gentiles or such husbands as were carnall Christians If by those husbands be meant unbeleeving Gentiles a question may be asked viz. how the Gentiles are said to disobey the Word of God seeing it was never given unto them For answer we must understand that at this time the Word was brought among the Gentiles by the Apostles and other Ministers of the Gospel and therefore now they are bound to obey it as well as any others and this was the condemnation of a world of them that light was come amongst them and they loved darknesse rather than light Otherwise considering the Gentiles without the Law brought to them they shall be judged not by the Law written which they had not but by the Law of nature which they had in their hearts Rem 2.15 16. Now if by these words be
of mercy from God noted by the sprinkling of the mercy seate 7. times 2. The intercession of Christ noted by the incense heated by the burning coales of his owne ardent affection Ver. 12 13. 3. The perfection of Christs mediation in that no man is joyned with him nor must any man be present Ver. 17. 4. The extent of the benefits to all the Elect noted by the sprinkling of the blood upon the foure hornes of the Altar The Use of all may be briefly both for instruction and consolation For instruction 1. To the people who should be above all things carefull to seeke the comfort of the application of Gods favour in Jesus Christ oh wee must above all things by faith keep this sprinkling of blood as is said of thē Heb. 11.28 2. Ministers should hence take notice of the maine end of preaching which is to sprinkle blood upon the hearts of the people that they may both be setled in the knowledge and assurance of their right in Christ and the covenant of grace and likewise purged in their consciences from dead workes we doe little by preaching if we beget not reformation and assurance in the hearts of the people he preacheth not that sprinkles not 2. For Consolation Be not fearefull Christs blood will protect thee as safely as ever did the blood of the paschall lambe the children of Israel Be not doubtfull of the efficacy of it For if the blood of buls and goates c. could purifie in respect of legall cleansings how much more shall the blood of Christ who by the eternall spirit offered up himselfe to God purge thy conscience from dead workes and make attonement for all thy sins cleansing thee from all unrighteousnesse Heb. 9.13 14 15. 1 John 1.7 Be not discontent with thy condition thou hast what was merited and purchased with blood how little soever it seeme in thy eyes But especially be not unthankfull for such a singular way of mercy but with all gladnes of heart rejoyce above all things in Christ him crucified for thee Hitherto of the persons saluted the forme of the salutation follows Grace and peace be multiplied to you It was the maner in their salutations to wish to their friends that which they accounted a chiefe happinesse to them So doth the Apostle here wishing the multiplying of grace and peace Grace and peace Grace must be considered two wayes 1. First as it is in God and so it is his free love and gracious disposition to shew mercy in Christ. 2. Secondly as it is in man and so it notes either the gifts of their minde or their condition or estate in Christ and so the faithfull are said to be under grace and not under the Law Peace is both inward and outward Inward peace consists in the contentation and rest of the soule and so it is both the rest of the conscience from terrors and the rest of the heart from passion● and perturbations Outward peace is nothing else but prosperity or an estate free from unquietnesse and molestation and adorned with needfull blessings Grace and Peace are the two principall things to be sought and wished in this world when Christ comes to inrich the world hee comes with grace and truth Iohn 1. he cannot be miserable that hath th●se two nor happy that wants them altogether Which may be a singular comfort to a Christian in grace and peace is his portion and he may goe boldly to the throne of God in the intercession of Christ to beg either of these in his need Heb. 4. ult God may deny him other things but he will never deny him grace peace And therefore also Christians should joy in the grace of God wherein they stand Rom. 5.3 and be resolved in themselves that the grace of God is sufficient for them 2 Cor. 12.9 Especially they should praise and esteeme and glorifie the grace of God It is all God askes for as it were at our hands even to honour him by praising his grace and free love to us Ephes. 1.6 Woe unto wicked men that neglect the grace of God what shall it profit them to gaine the world which yet they doe not and want grace and peace but especially why doe they not let Christians alone with their portion why doe they trouble them in their peace and despight them for their grace can they not follow their pleasures lusts profits honors c. and let Christians live quietly by thē who desire but liberty to enjoy grace with peace There is something also to be noted from the order of placing grace must bee had before peace there can bee no peace to the wicked and hee is undoubtedly wicked that hath not the grace of God Be multiplied Grace and Peace is multiplyed 1. First when the number of gracious persons is increased This is to be sought and prayed for 2. When the kindes of grace and peace are all had For there is the manifold grace of God 3. Thirdly when the measures and degrees are augmented The Husbandman would faine have his seed increase and the tradesman his trade so would the ambitious man his honors and preferments c. Even so should the Christian be ambitious and covetous in his desires that his grace and peace might increase Quest. What should we doe that grace and peace might be multiplied Answ. 1. Be sure it be true grace else it will never increase 2. Thou must increase in ●eeknesse and humility For God will give more grace to the humble Iam. 4.8 and the meeke shall have abundance of peace Psal. 37.6.11 3. If thou wouldest have thy grace and peace increase thou must be constant much in the use of all the ordinances of God which are the meanes of grace and peace As thou measurest to God in the meanes so will God measure to thee in the successe thou must be much in hearing For grace is in the lips of Christ Psal. 45.3 and much peace shall be to them that love Gods lawes Psal. 119. and thou must goe often unto God by prayer who gives grace and glory and will withhold no good thing Psal. 84.12 2 Thess. 1.11 12. Runne by faith to Christ who is the Prince of peace Esay 9.6 and stirre up the grace of God that is in thee For thou hast not received the spirit of feare but of power 2 Tim. 1.7 4. Thou must not perplex thy heart with the cares of this life but in all things goe to God by prayer and cast all thy care upon him so shalt thou have peace that passeth all understanding to keep thy heart and minde Phil. 4. 6 7. Thou must make much of the beginnings of desires joy liking and care of the meanes of godlinesse and not let them goe out so as thou shouldest fails of the grace of God or receive those graces in vaine 6. Thou must be resolved upon it to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live righteously and religiously
whether my obedience be right or no seeing I cannot have true grace else Answ. I might answer out of other Scriptures that a childe of God may know his obedience is right by two things 1. Because God heares his prayers Ioh. 9.39 Psal. 66.18 2. Because thou hast hyred thy selfe by covenant to doe Gods works as a servant of righteousnesse and thou dost worke as a servant every day Rom. 6. But I answer out of this text Thou maist know thy obedience i● right because thou hast these foure things 1. Thou makest the truth thy guide and dost obey for the truths sake and commest to the light as Ioh. 3.21 2. Thy obedience is from thy heart and with thy heart it is inward as well as outward 3. Thy obedience is in all things 1. Though it be against thy profit c. Heb. 11.8 2. In the least commandements 4. Thy obedience is in all places 1. As well absent as present Phil. 2.12 2. Before the wicked as well as the godly 3. Before the meanest Christian as well as the greatest Through the spirit Our sanctification was first wro●ght by the Spirit of God and it is of the assistance of the Spirit that we doe performe obedience to the truth of God For 1. It is the Spirit that quickens us and raiseth us in the first resurrection Ioh. 3.5 2. It is the Spirit that leads us into the truth ●●d enlightens us Ioh. 14. 3. It is the spirit that sets us at liberty from the bondage of corruption we have lived in 2 Cor. 3.17 and kils the deeds of the flesh Rom. 10.11 4. It is the Spirit that makes us mourne when wee faile of ●bedience Zach. 12.12 5. It is the Spirit that sheds a●●oad the love of God in our hearts by which we are inflamed with desire to obey Rom. 5.5 It baptizeth us with fire Mat. 3. 6. It is the Spirit that makes us finde a rellish and sweetnesse in spirituall things Rom. 8. 7. It is the Spirit that worketh in us the particular graces that adorne our obedience Gal. 5.22 yea by the Spirit the Lord works our works for us it causeth us to obey Ezech. 36. Esay 26. Psal. 90. 8. It is the Spirit that shews us the recompence of reward to incourage us to obey 1 Cor. 2.10 The Use is 1. For information for hereby it is evident 1. That the godly have Gods Spirit Rom. 8.9 2. That there can be no absolute free-will in man seeing it is not by his owne power that he doth obey Gods will 3. That the holinesse a Christian hath in this life is of singular worth Wee use to esteeme the work by the workman And if wee admire them that can make us faire houses clothes faces c. how much more should we admire the workmanship of the Spirit of grace that purifies and makes our soules faire It is a better piece of workmanship then is shewed in making of the world 2. It should teach us 1. To be more carefull of sinning seeing wee shall thereby vexe or grieve or tempt the Spirit of God in us yea and deface his workmanship 2. To stir up our selves to undertake the work of godlinesse seeing we have the Spirit to assist us which is a Spirit of power 2 Tim. 1.7 Vnto the unfained love of the brethren One chiefe end of our sanctification is that wee might ever after live with all holy love together God hath purifyed us to this end that wee might love the godly above all others after we are converted That which is chiefly to be done of us is the duty of brotherly love In these words three things are to be observed 1. That the godly are brethre● 2. That we must love the godly above all others and that we were converted to that end Our chiefest fruit after conversion is to shew our love to them 3. That God cannot abide faining in this love 1. For the first the godly are brethren Col. 1.2 1 Tim. 6.2 Mat. 23.8 borne of the same wombe 1 Pet. 1.23 adopted of the same Father Eph. 4.5 brought up in the same family Eph. 3.17 estated in the same inheritance Rom. 8.17 written amongst the living in the same City with the writing of the same house of Israel Esay 4.3 executing the same office of Prophets and Priests to God Rev. 1.7 1. The Use is first for information We see the godly though despised in the world yet are people of a great kindred The meanest Christian hath as good friends as the greatest Potentate Grace works as it were a consanguinity with all the Saints 2. For instruction and it should teach us divers things to doe and avoid Are the godly thy brethren Then 1. Live familiarly with them visit them be not a stranger unto them Act. 15.36 2. Doe what thou dost faithfully for them Ioh. 3.5 3. Defend one another by words and works ye are brethren let not a godly man be wronged if thou canst help it 4. Supply their wants with a brotherly affection Iam. 1.15 1. Ioh. 3.17 The things we must avoid 1. Wee must take heed of contention Gen. 13. and this contention is either 1. Publike suites 1 Cor. 6. 2. Private quarrels or discords Ob. But they doe me wrong Sol. 1. Admonish them of it Mat. 18.18 L●v. 19.17 2. Be not unadvisedly angry Mat. 5.22 3. If they repent forgive them even seventy times Mat. 18.21 and be quickly reconciled Mat. ● 23 24. 2. Call no man Rabbi or father on earth M●● 23.8 9. The Angels refuse it Rev. 19.10 22.9 3. Speak not evill one of another Rom. 14.10 Iam. 5.9 4.11 It is the devils property to accuse the brethren Rev. 12.10 4. Be not ashamed of them for Christ is not ashamed to owne them as brethren Heb. 2.10 5. Have them not in respect of persons The poore are brethren as well as the rich Iam. 2. Though they be in tribulation yet they be companions in Gods kingdome as well as we Rev. 1.9 6. Lastly Superiours Magistrates Ministers Masters of families must take heed of tyranny and contempt for they rule their brethren The godly must be loved above all others this is a maine end of our sanctification Rom. 13.8 Col. 3.14 Eph. 4.16 1 Ioh. 3 11● 4.21 The Use is first for reproofe of worlds of people that neglect this love of the godly which should be as the life of their lives yea contemne them yea and reproach them they love none worse then the godly Quest. But how shall I know who are godly Answ. Thou maist know them 1. By their innocency they beare their fathers image 2. By their love to Gods house and the Word 3. By their language 1 Ioh. 4.5 ● 4. By the opposition of the world Quest. What good should I get by them Answ. 1. By sorting with them thou wilt be protected from many judgments which else would fall on thee Sodome had been spared for ten
in our repentance Luk. 4.44 Act. 6.20 Every tree must not only beare fruit but his own fruit proper to his kind as the proper fruit of rich men is mercy and if they had never so many praises otherwise that they were courteous wise just chaste c. yet if they be not mercifull their workes are not good workes Ninthly his workes must bee full before God It was an objection against the Church of Sardis that her workes were not perfect or full before God therefore she is threatned if she repent not to feele the heavie hand of God Rev. ● 1 2. No● as I conceive a mans workes are not full when he is not carefull of every good worke which he knowes concernes him as for instance if a man pray and yet be not carefull of hearing the Word his prayers are abomination to God because his workes are not full There be some duties which he makes no conscience to obey in though he know they be required hee that turneth away his eares from hearing the Law his prayers are abominable Pro. 28.9 If a man would be never so carefull about Gods service and yet make no conscience of the works of mercy required of him his sacrifice is not accepted Hos. 6.6 7 c. Thus the long prayers of the Pharisees will not be regarded if they devoure widowes houses Mat. 23. and so on the other side if a man were never so mercifull a man if he were not also a religious man in the things of Gods service his workes would not abide triall before God they were not good because they were not full And for this reason the workes of civill honest men are not good such were Pauls workes Phil. 3.6 which hee accounts but drosse and dung in comparison vers 8. of such as these Thus of the rules of good workes the kinds follow The vulgar commonly when they heare of good workes thinke of nothing but almes and hospitality or other courses of shewing mercy Now though it be true that workes of mercy be good workes yet they are but one sort of good workes whereas the Christian is bound to be ready to every good work 1 Tim. 3.17 and therefore it will bee profitable to informe our selves of the many wayes by which we may do good workes for thereby such Christians as are not able to give almes may see a way how to enrich themselves in well-doing other wayes These then are the sorts of good workes First to beleeve is a good work yea it is instead of many good workes yea in some sense it is to us instead of the works of the whole Law as it is a means to lay hold on all the good works that ever Christ Jesus did To put on the ●ord Jesus is a good worke in a high degree and so every act of faith in all the passages of a mans life is a good worke for this is the worke of God to beleeve as our Saviour shewes when hee gives that for answer for such as asked what they must doe to doe the workes of God Ioh. 6.28 Rom. 13.12 13 14. This is clearly acknowledged in these other Scriptures 1 Thes. 1.3 2 Thes 1.11 Secondly all workes of piety are good workes all workes of worship that is such workes by which a man doth service to God are all in the number of good workes and so to pray to fast to heare the Word to receive the Sacraments c. are good workes for godlinesse hath the promises of this life and of the life to come and therefore it is profitable to all things 1 Tim. 4.8 And these workes must needs be accounted good workes for they are deare works the blood of Christ was poured out that wee might be cleansed from dead workes to serve the living God Heb. 9.14 Thirdly all workes of repentance all that a Christian doth about his humiliation or reformation are evangelically good workes as if he confesse his sinnes and do execution upon his sinnes if hee make satisfaction for his trespasses to men if he reforme himselfe or his houshold or his charge these and the like are all good workes 2 Chron. 19.3 Fourthly to suffer for a good cause is reckoned in the number of good workes as to forsake father or mother house or land wife or children liberty or life for Christs sake and the Gospels it is in the number of those good things that shall have a good reward Mat. 19.29 Ier. 31.16 Ruth 2.11 12. Fifthly workes of mens particular callings whether in the Common-wealth or Church or family or any vocation or trade of life so workes of Justice are good workes and to obey Magistrates is called well-doing vers 14. of this chapter so to preach the Gospel is a good worke 1 Tim. ● 1 So in the family for parents to bring up their children well is a good worke 1 Tim. 5.10 yea the labours of servants in the family are such workes as shall have reward of God as well as workes of piety Esa. 6. Col. 3. Sixthly workes of mercy are good workes whether it bee spirituall mercy to instruct admoni●h or reprove or comfort Psal. 140. or whether it be outward mercy in giving lending visiting defending the poore or the like All confesse these to be good workes Act. 9.16 But that almes may be a good worke these three rules must be observed First that it be given of goods well gotten else no good workes Secondly that he that gives it have a good eye to distribute where there is need for to keepe a good house and to entertain russians and drunkards and gamesters is not a good work nor hospetality because here is not a good eye Thirdly almes mu●t be given to a good end not for the praise of men or to merit thereby Mat. 6. Thus of the kinds of good workes The questions follow Quest. 1. How can any workes done by any man in this life be accounted good seeing there is none that liveth and sinneth not yea all our workes even the workes of the most righteous are as a menstruous cloth Esa. 64.6 For ans●er hereunto I say It is true that if God looke upon the best workes of the most godly in this life and examine them by the rigour of his covenan● which he called His covenant of workes then no flesh living can have comfort of his workes but all will appeare lothsome as a menstruous gar●ent But the workes of the beleeving Christians are otherwaies to bee considered of for First they are tried by the covenant of grace by the benefit of which covenant he is delivered from the rigorous perfection of the Law his uprightnes is accepted instead of perfection he is now no more under the Law but by Gods grace and acceptation his workes are taken as if they had been perfect Secondly he hath the benefit of Christs intercession who presenteth his workes before God covering the evill of them and tendring them to God who accepts
Christian from the false and from him that is no Christian at all God makes his count by righteousnesse Rom. 10. To professe the true religion to understand the Word to beleeve it with historicall or temporall faith to talke of the Word to receive Baptisme and the signes of the Covenants or the like makes not an essentiall difference It is obeying the Word proves us to be true Christians Not the hearers but the doers of the Word are acknowledged for just persons Mat. 7.26 27. Iames 1.22 23 24. But that we be not deceived in our obedience we must know that unto sound obedience divers things are required as 1. That his obedience be from the heart Rom. 6.17 2. That his obedience ariseth from the love of God and the hatred of sin as it is sin and not from carnall and corrupt ends Deut. 30.20 Iosh. 22.5 Mat. 4.19 3. That his obedience be in all things with respect to all Gods Commandements though it be against his profit ease credit or the like Heb. 11.8 Gen. 22.12 Psal. 119.6 Exod. 15.26 4. That he doth righteousnesse at all times that he continue in his obedience and obey at all times that is constantly and not for a fit Psal. 106.2 Hos. 6.5 Gal. 5.7 2 Kings 18.6 I●m 1.23 5. That he make conscience of obeying the least commandement as well as the greatest Mat. 5.19 6. That obeyes the commandements of the Gospel about beleeving in God and Jesus Christ as well as of the Law that practiseth obedience of faith and lives by faith 2 Thes. 1.8 Rom. 1.5 Mat. 16.16 11. It is to bee noted that the Apostle useth faire language when hee speaketh even of carnall men He gives not these carnall husbands reproachfull words but onely saith they obey not the Word and the reason may be because the conscience of a man is not won by the terror of words but by the evidence of the matter And besides the Apostle did not thinke it fit that wives should bee humoured in the violent dispraises of their husbands It is not profitable for inferiours to conceive much of the hatefulnesse of the sins of superiours 12. Religion doth not binde wives to account carnall husbands to bee religious They may know that they are carnall and yet not sin against their husbands in such judgement so as they judge by infallible grounds for though the wife must love her husband with matrimoniall love above all other men yet shee is not bound to beleeve that he is the best man in the world Lastly it is a great affliction to a Christian wife to have a carnall husband Till she have won him shee is but in a distressed estate for other wicked men she might shun and so avoide the discomfort ariseth from seeing and hearing their wickednesse but an evill husband shee cannot nor ought not to depart from him though shee must avoide his sinne 1 Cor. 7. and from such a husband shee cannot have the helps shee should have from a husband that could dwell with her as a man of knowledge Besides the many waies in which such a husband may or will hinder her in the course of godlinesse besides it cannot but bee a great griefe to her to thinke of their parting out of this world that the one of them must goe to hell and that the companion of her life when he dies if he repent not must be an eternall companion of devils 13. Good wives may have ill husbands such wives as are truly religious and obedient may have husbands that will not obey the Word of God and that ariseth sometimes from the improvidence or ill providing of parents Many parents that have children that obey them and will bee ruled by them doe dispose of them for carnall ends to carnall or ill disposed husbands Sometimes from the hypocrisie of such men as feare God but prove not so when their wives enjoy them Sometimes from an unruly affection in good women who though they know the men they choose to bee carnall yet they will have them though it prove to their owne continuall woe and affliction Sometimes from a speciall corruption of nature in some husbands who either are loving husbands and yet but carnall men or are good men but bad husbands Sometimes it ariseth from the speciall grace of God to the wife who though she was carnall when shee married the carnall husband yet afterwards is converted and effectually called and this was the case of such women ●as the Apostle seemes here to write to Sometimes it falls out by a speciall and unavoideable providence of God though all meanes have beene used to trie or prevent this evill in the husband for marriage being to be reckoned amongst outward things God for reasons knowne to himselfe and alwaies just will give ill husbands to good wives And contrariwise it may be God knowes that if some good wives had better husbands they would prove worse wives or both husband and wife would be more unapt for the kingdome of God 14. Unequall matches ought to be avoided as much as may be and that may be gathered from the maner of the Apostles speaking in that he saith If any obey not the Word If any as if he would import that it is a case he desired might be very rarely found amongst Christians They also may be won We reade in Scripture of divers kinds of winnings there is a spirituall winning or gaining and there is a worldly winning About the spirituall winning we reade of the winning of Christ Phil. 3.8 which is the worke of a particular beleever labouring and wrestling with God in the use of his ordinances to obtaine by the gift of his free grace Jesus Christ for his justification and sanctification and finall salvation Likewise we reade of the winning of grace and spirituall gifts and so godlinesse is called gaine and the good servants are said to win or gaine more Talents to the Talents they had And this gaine is gotten by a spirituall trading in the diligent emploiment of the gifts the godly have to get them encreased We reade likewise of the winning of other mens soules in many places and that is done either by the Preachers of the Gospel conquering the hearts of their hearers to the obedience of the Word of Christ and unto sound conversion or else it is done by private persons that by their examples and good carriage or by their admonitions or counsels doe perswade and incline others to a liking of a new life or to humiliation and reformation of some particular faults We reade likewise of worldly gaine and winning when men by their sports strive for prizes or in their trades labour for lucre and gaine Now this latter kinde of gaine differs greatly from the former both in the matter of the gaine and in the manner of seeking it for there is no comparison betweene the gaine of grace and godlinesse and the gaine of riches and honour the one is transitorie the
the Messias to come 2. By the whole ceremoniall law and service For all those were shadowes of Christ to come But the Gospell is said to be hid and concealed from ages and generations c. Rom. 16.26 Eph. 3.5 Col. 1.26 The text is as it is now It did appeare but not so clearly But how doth this doctrine of the Gospell differ from other Scripture especially from the law 1. In the manner of revelation The law is written in some sort in the heart of man Rom. 2.15 but the Gospell now may not be knowne to nature but revealed by Christ Mat. 16.17 2. In the subject of doctrine The Law tels us what we should be but not how we can be so Now the Gospell shews us a full and sufficient righteousnesse in Christ that will be availeable The Law saith pay what thou owest doe this and thou shalt live But the Gospell saith beleeve the promise and thou shalt be saved 3. In the continuance of the force of it The gospell is an everlasting gospell God will never alter his mind whereas he hath changed his mind for the covenant of works But is it the Ministers duty onely to publish the gospell in that the Apostle saith by them which preached It is chiefly For to produce the effects before mentioned it is his calling who hath commission from God to be his embassador yet private persons may comfort one another with these things But is the gospell onely effectuall when it is preached It is most effectuall then and that is the ordinary meanes God hath appointed 1 Pet. 1. ult The Uses are First for Ministers and so 1. For consolation For the excellency of the subject exalts the dignity of their calling they are trusted with a very glorious embassage Rom. 15.16 17. 16.26 therefore never be ashamed of it Rom. 1.16 and this was taught by Christ himselfe Mat. 4.13 and those Eph. 3.4 2. For Instruction Therefore to serve God in their spirits even with their whole hearts Rom. 1.9 and suffer all things rather then hinder the Gospell 1 Cor. 9.12 Paul saies It is better for mee to dye then to make my glorying void Secondly for the people 1. For instruction 1. To pray for their teachers that God would open their mouthes and make their hearts fat with his goodnesse herein Eph. 6.19 and to esteeme them as Rom. 1● 15 2. To receive it with all gladnesse and power yea and affliction too 1 Thes. 1.4 5. 2. For terror to wicked men that contemne or neglect so great salvation this is preached for a witnesse against worlds of them Mat. 24.14 The anger of ●od will be revealed from heaven against them Rom. 1.18 God will search mens hearts both for desires and care and for contempt too 1 Thes. 2.4 Act. 15.7 8. and at the day of judgement the terrible vengeance of God shall fall upon them 2 Thes. 1.8 1 Tim. 1.9 10 11. This makes their judgement greater Thus of the lesse principall The most principall cause is the holy Ghost sent downe from heaven By the holy Ghost sent downe from heaven The meaning is to affirme that the things propounded in the Gospell are the more eminent because they were effected by the very holy Ghost This that is here ●●id that the holy Ghost was sent from heaven was first and principally fulfilled in the dayes of the Apostles and chiefly then also in the day of Pentecost as is shewed in the second of the Acts. But secondarily it is true of all faithfull Ministers that the holy Ghost works wonderfully from heaven in the power of the Gospell Ghost It is an old English word and signifieth a spirit and the Spirit of God is called an holy Ghost or spirit 1. for distinction sake and 2. by effect For Gods Spirit is holy that is it hath all holinesse and it hath it in it selfe not by illumination from any other higher cause and so are not the spirits of men and Angels holy mens spirits have sinne in them on earth and the Angels and blessed soules in heaven have no holinesse but what they received 2. Gods Spirit is holy by effect For it his proper work to sanctifie the elect and so to work holinesse upon the spirits of men by spirituall regeneration But why is Gods Spirit called a holy Spirit rather ●hen wise or mercifull c First when we call him holy we comprehend all that in it for wisdome and mercy are but parts of holinesse Secondly in respect of us and his working in us it is a most proper word for it notes his working in the Elect above all reprobates F●r a man may be a wise man and yet per●sh Mat. 11 2● 1 Cor. 1.19 and a man may give all his goods to the poore and yet it is nothing 1 Cor. 13.3 but now if a man be made a holy man hee is sure to be saved Well then the first doctrine is that Gods Spirit is a holy Spirit which may serve for divers uses 1. To exalt in us a further sense of Gods goodnesse that is pleased to put his Spirit within us seeing our hearts are so uncleane and his Spirit so holy 2. It may humble u● and feare us from sinne if we belong to Christ we carry about with us the Spirit of Christ Rom. 8.9 Now think of it then thou canst not sin but thou hast a witnesse and a Judge within thee Besides the very respect of the holy Ghost should move thee to feare sinne for sinne grieves the holy Ghost and hinders his work of sealing thee up to the day of redemption Eph. 4.30 3. It should encourage u● in the works of mortification for Gods Spirit hath his name of holinesse and though it be never so hard yet by the Spirit wee shall be made able in some measure to mortifie the deeds of the flesh Rom. 8.10 and to walk in Gods statutes Ezech. 36.27 Secondly if we consider why the holy Ghost is h●re named wee may learn that the holy Spirit of God is the first and chiefe cause of all that grace which either Ministers or people enjoy in the gospell Which may first comforts us against all the impediments of the gospell Oh might some men have thought a 100. yeares agoe how is it possible to bring downe the power of Antichrist why by the Spirit of Christs mouth he will consume him 2 Thes. 2. In the mouth of Christ in the preaching of the Gospell there is a Spirit even the Spirit of God which will doe more then 10000. armed men to pull him downe Oh might some one think I shall never understand or never remember so many holy comforts and instructions why the Spirit of God will teach us to profit and leade us into all truth and help our infirmities when wee deale with God and his ordinances and pull downe those strong holds which Sathan hath to hinder the obedience
shall suffer for anothers workes further then he is some way 〈◊〉 of it But how can infants be iudged according to their works We understand not clearly how the proceedings shall be with infants it is evident that corruption of nature can make even infants children of 〈…〉 Psal. 51. and the covenant of God with the faithfull doth 〈◊〉 even their seed also Besides the Spirit of God doth supply externall works by internall sanctification in the elect infants But how shall poore men doe that are not able to doe good works It is an error to think that there are no good works but giving of almes For the obedience to Gods law in any commandement is a good worke works of piety to God are good works and so are the works of a particular calling It is a good worke to provide for a mans family and so to deale iustly with men is a good worke Besides there are many works of mercy which the poorest Christian may doe hee may pray for others or reprove or comfort or instruct c. The Uses may be collected out of the severall Scriptures where this doctrine is taught as 1. In Iob 7.2 We should long for that day seeing it is the day of paying wages 2. Iob 34.11 14 15 19 20 to 25. It should terrifie the mightiest sinners seeing God will not spare but without respect of persons iudge every mans works and if a temporall iudgment so affright all sorts as is reported Ezech. 7.27 how much more should this last iudgement 3. Psal. 62. ult We should daily think of this day of reckoning and not suffer any doubt against it For it will certainly be so 4. Prov. 24.12 Two things are inferred 1. That wee should not faint in the day of adversity 2. That without trifling we should doe good and shew mercy when we have occasion 5. The Prophet Ieremy useth this doctrine as a meanes to stirre up their hearts to a more awefull feare and admiration and adoration of that God whose eyes behold the waies of all men and whose iustice will reward according to their works 6. Our Saviour Christ useth it to excite the care of saving our soules and to work in us a contempt of life and this world and to deny our selves and take up our crosse and follow him Mat. 16.27 7. The Apostle Paul Rom. 2.7 useth this doctrine 1. To fright and terrifie three sorts of men viz. 1. Hypocrites ver 1 2 3. 2. Impenitent hard-hearted sinners ver 4 5. 3. Contentious and froward adversaries of well-doing ver 8. 2. To incourage the godly in all well-doing ver 9 10. 8. In the 2 Cor. 5.10 it serveth to inforce 1. Walking by faith ver 7. 2. Care to be accepted of God ver 9. 3. Desire to be absent from the flesh and present with the Lord ver 8. 4. Diligence in Ministers with all power to perswade with their hearers ver 11. 9. In the Eph. 6.8 9. it is used 1. To comfort servants 2. To warne masters ver 9. So it is also Col. 3.24 26. 10. In Rev. 22.11 12. it is used to upbraid the pertinacie of wicked men in sin and to incourage the godly in all perseverance in well-doing 11. Lastly you see how the Apostle make a use of it viz. that we should passe the time of our sojourning here in feare And thus of the doctrine of the second reason Pa●e the time of your sojourning here in feare These word containe the inference or use of the former doctrine viz. it should imprint in us such a sense of our mortality as should stir up in us a daily care and feare in the spending of our time we are to live in the world These words a●firme f●ure things 1. That we are but sojourners 2. That we have but a time to sojourne 3. That this time passeth 4. That therefore we ought to spend the time in feare Sojourners This word may be taken either literally or mystically if it be taken literally it must be referred to the provinciall Jews so it may import two things 1. That Gods children in this life may be so driven from their native abodes that they may be compelled to live in strange places 2. That though the Lord suffer the Jewish Nation to be under a so●e dispersion for the time yet the time will come when they shall be gathered home together in great glory though now they are but sojourners But it is rather to be taken mystically and so it is to be referred to all the Elect who in respect of their absence from their heavenly Canaan are but soiourners at best in this world Heb. 11. Psal. 39. There may be some difference put betweene a home-dweller a stranger and a soiourner The dweller is perpetually resident and is at home The stranger staies but for a short time and is from home Now the soiourner differs from them both for he hath some setled abode but it is not at home as the dwellers is nor is it for so short a time as the strangers is Now if in this strict sense we should stand upon the words then in this world dwellers are no men strangers are wicked men and soiourners are godly men But it is evident that this word sojourner is taken promiscuously for any abode that is from home for Luke 24.18 it is taken for a stranger in the strictest sense and Act. 7.19 it is taken for a sojourner in the strictest sense But usually it is a word that notes the condition of the godly absent from their heavenly happinesse and imports an allusion to the childrenof Israel living in Aegypt absent from Canaan and so our Aegypt is the world our Canaan is heaven our soiourning is our entertainment in this world The world is like Aegypt and our entertainment like the children of Israel in Aegypt For 1. Pharaoh the Devill doth with all cruelties oppresse the g●dly 2. As Aegypt was full of enchaunters so is the world 3. As Aegypt abounded with superstitions so doth the world with ign●rance and all sorts of vaine observations ●ut the similitude will more appeare in the use The consideration of this that the godly are in this world as Israel soiourning in Aegypt may afford both matter of Instruction and matter of Consolation For Instruction it should teach us divers duties 1. Not to seeke unto our selves great things in this world Ier. 46. 2. To study to be quiet and meddle with the world no more then wee must needs 3. To please our selves or rest in no prosperity but to expect alterati●● never trusting the favour of the Aegyptians the men or this world For th●y will change 4. To have recourse to the promises of a better life and live by faith and wait for the time of our changing 5. Live separate from the conversation of worldly men as Israel did in Goshen 6. Endure much with patience and commit all to God Secondly this similitude imports
the wicked 2 Corin. 6.16 and take heed that they learne not the manners of other nations Levit 20.24 Fourthly the Law of God must be in their hearts For they should bee a wise and understanding people above all men and this is the signe of Gods people Esa. 51.7 Deut. 4.6 And it is Gods covenant to write his Lawes in their hearts Ier. 31.33 Fifthly they must avoid Idols and keepe Gods Sabbath this God requires perpetually Levit. 26.1 2 3 11 12. and graciously accepts when hee findes this care Esa. 56. with protestation against those that will not keep his Sabbaths Ier. 17. Sixthly they must walke confidently in the trust upon Gods goodnesse and covenant with them as the godly resolved Mic. 4.5 All people walke in the name of their god and therefore wee will walke in the Name of the Lord our God for ever and ever resolving to cleave to God in a perpetuall covenant Ier. 50.4 5. Seventhly they should approve themselves to bee Gods people by their language their language should be a pure language not speaking lies a deceitfull tongue should not be found in their mouthes and their words should be gracious such as might minister grace to the hearers Zeph. 3.9 13. Eph. 4. Col. 4. Eighthly they should be patient in all adversities as being of Moses mind that it is better to suffer affliction with Gods people than to enjoy the treasures of Egypt Heb. 11.25 Ninthly they should obey according to all that God commands them shewing a respect to all Gods Commandements seeing they serve God and not men and that all dissimulation will bee open before his eyes Ierem. 11. vers 4. And thus of the second way of comparison In the last words of the verse their estate is considered in relation from God to them And so in the state of nature they were not under mercy but in the state of grace they are now under mercy Not under mercy Doct. All the time that men live without repentance for their sinnes and faith in Jesus Christ they live without the mercy of God They are not under mercy God loves them not nor regards them they are children of wrath Eph. 2.3 and the wrath of God abideth on them Ioh. 3.36 Yea though the Lord be exceeding mercifull in himselfe and to the faithfull yet by no means will he cleare the guilty Exod. 34.6 Num. 14.18 Now this not being under mercy imports divers things First that their sinnes are not forgiven or pardoned Secondly that their soules are not healed of their originall diseases but they live still in their blood Thirdly that they are liable unto all sorts of judgements and those which are upon them came from the wrath of God which hateth them c. Fourthly that they are in danger of eternall condemnation in generall that they live and lie under the forfeiture of the covenant of workes and have no part in Christ or the covenant of grace Use. The use should be therefore to teach wicked men to take heed how they presume of Gods mercy they may deceive themselves but God will not be mocked Gal. 6.7 For such things as they are guilty of the wrath of God comes upon the children of disobedience Eph. 5.5 They that live after the flesh shall die Rom. 8.13 For the more distinct understanding of this point foure things would be considered of First that wicked men are exceeding apt to plead Gods mercy though it belong not to them and doe not beleeve that God will deale so with them as they are threatned Secondly that God directly declared himselfe that he will not shew mercy or pity towards divers sorts of offenders Thirdly that the things men usually object will not be availeable to deliver them from Gods wrath Fourthly what sorts of men in particular God will not be mercifull unto For the first that men are apt to plead Gods mercy when it belongs not to them is apparent through the whole course of Scriptures to have ever been in the disposition of most wicked They blesse themselves in their hearts when their iniquity is found worthy to be hated Psal. 36.2 They live at ease and put farre away the evill day from them Amos 6.1 3. They cry Peace peace when sudden destruction is made to come upon them 1 Thess. 5.3 For the second that God will not be mercifull to many a man that lives in the visible Church is manifested by many Scriptures as Deut. 29.19 Ier. 16.5 Ezek. 5.11 and 7.4 9. and 8.18 Hos. 1.6 and 2.4 and in many other places For the third their excuses and pretences are all vaine for First if they stand upon their greatnesse in the world it is certaine that riches will not availe in the day of wrath Ioh 36 18 19 c. Secondly nor will it helpe them to be borne of godly Ancestors for rather than God will be tied to the wicked seed of Abraham hee will raise up children of the stones to Abraham Mat. 3. Thirdly nor can multitude priviledge them For though hand joyne in hand yet sinne shall not goe unpunished and God turnes nations of men into hell Psal. 9.17 Fourthly nor will their outward serving of God serve their turne It is bootlesse to cry The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord if men redresse not their wayes Ier. 7.4 8 9 10. Fifthly nor will it helpe them that some Ministers speake comfortably to them and by their preaching they may expect mercy for God will judge those Prophets that strengthen the hands of the wicked The stubborne people were never a whit the safer when the Prophet told them they should have peace and no evill should come unto them but the Lord protesteth that the whirle-wind of his fury should fall grievously upon the head of the wicked for all that Ier. 23.15 19 20. that at length they should consider it perfectly and the Lord threatneth that he will rent the wall of security which the Prophets have built with untempered morter that hee will rent it even with the fierce wind of his furie and there shall bee an overflowing showre in his anger to consume it Ezek. 13.10 to 15. Sixthly neither may the patience of God prove that he meanes to shew expected mercy for though a sinner prolong his dayes an hundred times yet it shall not be well with the wicked nor ought hee to settle his heart the more freely on his sinne because sometimes it is not speedily executed for God will find a time to set his sinnes in order before him and then hee may teare him in pieces and none can deliver him Eccles. 8.11 12 13. Ps. 50.19 Seventhly neither will it ease them that there are so many promises of mercy in Scripture for they are limited And besides in divers places where mercy is promised the Lord explaines himselfe by shewing that hee will not cleere the wicked Exod. 34.7 as was alledged before so Nahum 1.3 and v. 7. compared with the 6. Eighthly
them for the love hee beares to his Sonne And thus wee read in Scripture that Christ presents the prayers of the Saints Besides that the Christian may not thinke too vilely of his workes but be comforted in the Lord concerning them let him further consider these things First that his good workes have the Spirit of Jesus Christ which is in him for the fountaine of them 1 Cor. 12.11 Esa. 26.12 Secondly that the blood of Jesus Christ was shed not onely for his justification but also for his sanctification Heb. 9.14 Thirdly that though his workes are not good effectu yet they are good affectu they are good in desire his desire was to have them as good as God himselfe did require And this God is pleased to accept as if the worke were perfectly done Quest. 2. What are workes good for in that they are called good workes Answ. I answer first affirmatively they are good 1 To testifie our thankfulnesse to God for all his benefits in respect of which we are debte●s unto God Rom. 8.12 2 To assure the truth of our faith as the fruits of faith Mat. 7.17 1 Tim. 1.19 Iames 2. 3 To witnesse our election and to make our calling sure 2 Pet. 1.10 4 To discharge our duty of obedience unto which we are bound even in the covenant of grace 5 To further the edification of our brethren whom we helpe both by example and by well-doing to them 6 To winne wicked men to a better estimation of our Religion and to stop their mouthes as here so vers 15. 7 To glorifie God as is in this place mentioned 8 They are good to make us capable of rewards from God in heaven Heb. 10.36 Rom. 2.7 8. yea and in this life too 2 Tim. 4.8 Secondly I say they are not good 1 To justifie us before God as it is at large proved by the Apostle in the Epistle to the Romans and Galatians onely they are good to justifie us before men Iam. 2. 2 Not to merit or deserve heaven by them mens evill workes do merit punishment for the wages of sinne is death but our good workes cannot merit both because the Scripture denies it expresly Eph. 2.8 as also to omit other reasons because the nature of merit casteth away our workes for there must be three things in a worke that must merit First it must be a free worke that was not due by any debt whereas our workes are a part of ou● duty and we owe more to God than we can doe Luk. 17.9 Rom. 11.35 Secondly the worke that should merit must be profitable to him of whom wee would merit but no goodnesse of ours can reach to God to profit him Psal. 16.3 Iob 22.2 Thirdly the worke that must merit must be of equall value with the thing that is given for it but neither our sufferings nor our deeds in this life can be worthy of the glory that is to be revealed Rom. 8.18 and therefore is eternall life called The gift of God Rom. 6 2● The uses follow and are especially for instruction for this doctrine of good workes should teach us First to take notice of this doctrine and as we are carefull to beleeve so to be carefull to maintaine good workes and hereby to confute the malicious Papists that falsly charge us to deny and disgrace good workes Tit. 3.8 14. Secondly every man should bee ready to doe good workes yea to every good worke since they are required of God and are so many waies good and serve us for such excellent uses yea wee should bee zealous of good workes wonderfull eager and desirous to inrich our selves that way Tit. 3.1 2.14 yea wee should hereby shew that wee are indeed wise Christians and well skilled in the use of our Religion Iam. 3.13 and not men onely but women also should be forward in good workes 1 Tim. 2.10 It is their best apparell which should be a speciall motive to them that are so carefull of their attyre And indeed good workes are to be desired and laboured for as the best apparell of any Christian yea they are his armour too Rom. 13.13 yea they are a principall way for his inriching and preferment 1 Tim. 2.20 so as it is a great curse upon a Christian to have no minde to do good workes to bee reprobate to every good worke Tit. 1. ult Thirdly since there are so many things necessary to the constitution of a good worke Christians should in stead of prying into the lives of others every one trie his owne workes and turne often to the light that it may bee indeed manifest that his workes are wrought in God Gal. 6.4 for one day every mans workes shall be tried in the fire when times of triall by great afflictions either upon mens Consciences or otherwise come that mans workes that never seeme glorious and praise worthy will be rejected and cast away even by our selves as vile and unprofitable Besides at the best in our prosperity if the most of our workes be tried by the fire of these rules of Gods Word it is much to be doubted that our workes will burne though upon our repentance for the evill that cleaves to our best workes our selves may bee saved in the day of the Lord. Let Christians therefore be carefull that they lose not the things which they have wrought Now a Christian may lose his workes divers waies First if he be but a Christian in shew he may nay he shall lose all he doth The Pharisees lost all their workes because they were done in hypocrisie Secondly the Christian that hath some kindes of heavenly gifts and temporary graces by falling away in the time of temptation loseth all that hee had wrought before God requires patient continuance in well-doing Rom. ● 8 Thirdly the true Christian may lose what hee wrought if he doe his workes without respect of these Rules If it be not manifest that his works are wrought in God they are lost to him so many of his workes as are so wrought Besides he loseth the comfort of all that he hath wrought and the sense of it if he fall into grosse sinne after calling for so long time as he continueth in sinne without repentance Thus of good workes Which they shall behold It is manifest from hence that good workes may and ought to be so done as that men may see them It is not true that all good workes must be hid from the view and beholding of other men This may seeme strange because the Pharisees were blamed for doing their workes to be seene of men but yet it may be easily and plentifully proved I will first prove it and then explaine it For proofe our Saviour Christ requires that the light of mens good workes should shine that men may see their good workes Mat. 5.16 Christians in respect of their practice should be as shining lights in the midst of a froward and crooked generation Phil. 2.15 16. They must
looke so precisely to the manner as well as to the matter of Gods will Ephes. 5.15 Secondly we must therefore increase in the knowledge of his will Col. 1.10 for the more things are to be done or the more exactly God wills us to doe the more care wee must have to increase our knowledge and study his will since all must be just so as he wils to have it Thirdly wee should bee stirred up to pray for our selves and one for another seeing it is such a hard thing to live a Christian life and to please God Marke with what force of words the Apostle prayed about this point Heb. 13.20 21. Now the God of peace that brought againe from the dead our Lord Iesus that great shepherd of the sheepe through the bloud of the everlasting Covenant Make you perfect in every good worke to doe his will working in you that which is well-pleasing in his sight through Iesus Christ to whom bee glory for ever and ever Amen Quest. But can a Christian be so exact as to answer the patterne to doe just so as God wils him Ans. 1. He may for the substance of the obedience though not for all the degrees or circumstances 2. He may doe it in desire he must set his patterne before him as that he desires to follow and strives as well as he can and is vexed because hee cannot doe it and with God if we have alwayes done as much as well as we did desire to doe he accepts the desire for the deed but it is certaine of the most of us in the most things that wee have neither done the things right nor brought the desiring to doe them and therefore it is just with God if wee lose what we have wrought Doct. 7. That in some cases God would have us take notice of his will in more especiall manner he hath certaine speciall wils there are some things that he doth as it were more stand upon than other things and these speciall wils of God we must heedfully take notice of as for instance 1 Thess. 4. a●out avoyding fornication this is the will of God hee meaneth his speciall chiefe will so about thanksgiving 1 Thess. 5.18 where the Apostle urgeth the will of God as a thing that God would above many other things have done Above all things give thanks for this is the will of God c. So our Saviour Christ notes in his owne occasions an especiall will of God Ioh. 6. 39 41. So here God doth in a speciall manner will us to obey Magistrates and to silence wicked men by well-doing Use. The use should be to teach us to marke what things God doth specially require of us and to apply our selves to his will that the Lord may take pleasure in us say of each of us as he did of Cyrus He is the man of my will which is here explained Hee is the man that executeth my counsell Esay 46.11 It was Davids singular glory that he would doe all Gods will whatsoever speciall service God had to doe David was ready to execute it Acts 13. For herein lyeth the triall of a sound Christian he doth the will of his heavenly Father and ●ests not in talking of Religion onely and professing it Mat. 7.21 Rom. 2.11 1 Ioh. 2.17 And in particular in this text we see there be two things that God would faine have us doe to silence wicked men and stop their mouthes First he would have us so to behave our selves that we keepe out of their danger in respect of the lawes of Magistrates Secondly and then to live such a discreet and profitable life that they may see that we differ from all other sorts of men in the goodnesse of our conversation If we would doe what might be specially pleasing to God wee must bee carefull of these two things Doct. 8. Lastly we may here note that the will of God may bee knowne effectually though it be not knowne distinctly The Apostle is sure this is the will of God and yet there is no booke chapter nor verse quoted nor can any particular place be alledged that these precise words doe expresse God's will but in as much as the meaning is to be found in the scope of many places of Scripture therefore it may be well so called The will of God Thus of the authority of this rule The matter of it followes which is well-doing With well-doing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word is not the same with that in the former verse for here it is a participle of the present time and notes the continuall custome of well-doing and gives us to understand that if ever wee would effectually silence wicked men wee must bee continually exercised in well-doing Our good works though of great excellency yet worke but a sudden blaze the effect of them will be quickly ended or soone put out and then will wicked men returne to their old course of reproaching if they be not daily confuted by the still fresh and new fruits of a Christian wee must bee full of new and good fruits Iam. 3.17 and never weary of well-doing The sense of the word then is this as if it were rendred thus This is the will of God that they are daily exercised in doing good should put to silence foolish men for the originall word doth note the person as well as the good done which affords another doctrine Doct. 2. God would have good men that are full of good fruits to enter into the lists against wicked men to vanquish and silence them which implyes that God would not have formall Christians or hypocrites to meddle with the quarrell of Religion for they will spoile all in the end when their hollownesse and hypocrisie is discovered they will make foolish men raise and blaspheme worse than before Such are fit to plead for and defend Religion as be manfull and full of good works And therefore the weaks Christians should not be over-busie and fiery in meddling with wicked men or putting themselves forward to defend sincerity till their works could plead for them before we set on to be great talkers for Religion we should provide good store of good works by which wee might demonstrate the truth and power of godlinesse in us Of well-doing in it selfe I have intreated before onely before I passe from it me thinkes it is lamentable that our hearts can bee no more fired to the care of it Oh that we were once brought but to consent from the heart with confirmed purpose to set up a course by our lives to win glory to our Religion We see how faine God would have us doe so and it would plague wicked men that would faine raile at us nothing would more confute them And besides other Scriptures shew no life aboundeth more with stedfastnesse and contentment than a life fruitfully spent especially how can wee be still thus carelesse if wee remember the great recompence of reward in another world Oh
before did signifie our sin-guiltinesse and were as an obligation and hand-writing against us Col. 2.14 Secondly they were a badge to distinguish the Jewes from all other nations Gen. 17.13 14. Thirdly they were shadowes and typicall adumbrations of Christ and his benefits Heb. 9.9 10. and 10.1 4. Fourthly they were as a Tutor or Schoole-master to instruct and keepe them under in the minority of the Church Gal. 4.1 2. Now all these uses are abolished by Christ For our condemnation is taken away by Christ and so the hand-writing is cancelled Col. 2.14 and the Gentiles and Jewes are made all one people Ephes. 2.14 15. and Christ the substance and body is come and therefore the shadowes must vanish Col. 2.17 and the heire is as it were now at age and therefore needs not Tutors and Governors Gal. 4.1 2 3. As for the freedome of Christians from the Judiciall Lawes that must bee understood with a distinction for so many of the Judiciall Lawes as did agree with the common politicall law of Nature are in force only so much of the Judiciall Law as did onely concerne the singular and particular policy of the Jewes is abolished Where the reason of the Law is universall the Law bindes all where the respect and reason of the Law is fitted onely to the condition of that people there the Law is●abolished Sixthly from servile feare unto which we are and were in bondage by Nature and so we are freed from the servile feares of the grave of men of death there was a spirit of bondage in us by nature wee durst not come into Gods presence and legall terrours did lye at the doore of our hearts to drive us to despaire of mercy or acceptation But when Faith came then the spirit of bondage went away and the hearts of Christians are emboldened with spirituall liberty and firme confidence taking delight in the Law of God in the inner man Rom. 8.15 Luke 1.74 And there was likewise in us by Nature a feare of the reproach and rage of men and the oppositions and scornes of the world from which Gods children are so delivered that many times they have contemned the uttermost fury of Tyrants as Daniel and his companions and the Martyrs and the Patriarchs and Moses c. and from the feare of death We were all in bondage to it all our life but now Christ hath delivered us by destroying him that had the power of death Heb. 2.14 15. This of the first point what we are forced from Now for the second what we are free to and therein are divers comfortable considerations First we are free to the favour and fellowship of God the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost 1 Ioh. 1.3 7. 1 Cor. 1.9 Ioh. 17 21. 2 Pet. 1.4 1 Ioh. 5.24 Secondly we are free to the Communion of Saints wee are fellow Citizens with the Saints we are written in the writing of the house of Israel and acknowledged as members of the Congregation of the first-borne This is an Article of our Faith Ephes. 2.20 and 3.6 and 4.4 5. Heb. 12.18 c. Thirdly we are free to all the promises of Grace those rich and precious promises we may safely imply they are ours 2 Pet. 1.4 Ephes. 3.6 Fourthly we are free of Gods chamber of Presence we may goe in when we will and aske what we will and it shall be done unto us wee are free to put up as many petitions and suits as we will wee are free to the Throne of Grace Heb. 4.16 Ephes. ● 12 and so in generall wee are free in the whole House of God even to the use of all his ordinances Ioh. 6.36 Fiftly we are free in respect of things indifferent and all things are indifferent that are neither commanded nor forbidden in the Word of God all the restraints that in the time of the old Testament lay upon any creature are now taken off so as all the creatures of God are good and lawfull All things are pure to the pure Titus 1.15 1. Tim. 4.4 Rom. 14. so are dayes meats garments c. So as now Christians may use them or omit them freely Note what I say use as well as omit For some are so singular or simple as to thinke Christian liberty doth only make reference to omit but not to use meats garments dayes or indifferent ceremonies whereas they restraine Christian liberty that forbid the use of those indifferent things as well as they that dislike the omitting only in using men must take heed as hath been shewed before of the opinion of merit worship or necessity to holinesse or salvation which is that which is condemned by the Apostles Uses The Use may be first for humiliation to wicked men for hereby is implyed that they are in great bondage and not free for howsoever it is true that every wicked man in Christian Churches is freed from that yoke of Moses lawes yet in all the rest they are in danger still and bondage They stand bound by the covenant of works to the absolute keeping of the Law because none have the benefit of the new covenant till they be in the same and so all their saylings of the perfect fulfilling of the Law are imputed to them and they are under the execration and all the curses of the Law They are i● bondage to the tyrannie of their owne sinnes and have the divell intrenched in strong holdes in their soules They would bee troubled to know that the divell did possesse their bodies and yet doe not consider that the divell doth certainely possesse their soules every wicked man is possessed Besides they are in bondage by these servile feares they dare not set their hearts in Gods sight It is a death to them nor dare they for Religions sake displease men and the feare of death is like a continuall death to them and for all this they are never helped till their hearts be turned to God Secondly we may hence gather the difference between the liberty of the New Testament and that in the Old In the old Testament godly men were free from the rigour and curse of the Law and from the dominion of sinne and power of the divels and from servile fearest onely in the new Testament there are these three things added 1. That the doctrine of liberty in the former things is more cleere and more generally revealed 2. That we are freed from the Mosaicall Lawes 3. That we have liberty in things indifferent A third Use may bee for instruction to teach men to trie their interest to this freedome For such men onely are made free that beleeve in Christ Ioh. 1.12 and resolve to continue in the Word Ioh. 8.31 and are weary and heavie loaden Mat. 11.29 and are throughly turned to God 2. Cor. 3.16 17. Lastly our Christian liberty may be a great comfort to our hearts if wee consider seriously the great miseries we are freed from and the great priviledges we are
hearts break that is they let the doctrine runne out and never thinke of it when they are gotten out of the Church Heb. 2.1 Or else they have resisted the light of the truth so long that God hath now delivered them over to a spirit of slumber lest they should convert and he should heal them Mat. 13.15 16. Isa. 6.10 Secondly in some the world is the cause of it For either they are entangled with the examples of the multitude especially of the wise Ones and great Ones of the world 1 Cor. 1.26 27 28. Or else they are affrighted with the evill reports with which the good way of God is disgraced in the world Act. 28.22 Or else they are insnared with respect of their carnall friends they are loth to displease father or mother or sisters or brothers or any they have great hopes from or dependance upon Mat. 10.35 37. 1 Pet. 4.2 Or else they have so much businesse to doe and so many cares about their worldly affaires they cannot be at leisure ●o long as to thi●ke they cannot bring their lives into order Mat. 13.22 Luke 17. Or else they live at hearts-ease and prosper in their estate and so desire not to alter their course of life and so their prosperity destroyes them Pr● 1.32 Thirdly in some men the cause is the lust after some particular wickednesse of life in which they live either secretly or openly which sinne is the very Idol of their hearts and hinders a good resolution Fourthly in some the cause is conceitednesse they are pure in their owne cic● and yet are not cleansed they rest in the outward profession of religion and the feare of godlinesse and regard not the sound power of it in their lives Lastly in all unregenerate men there are three causes why they are not perswaded to a religious life First the one is the forgetfulnes of their death therefore their filthinesse is still in their skirts because they remember not their latter end Lam. 1.9 Secondly the other is that they are dead in sin What should hinder the conversion of multitudes at once but that we preach to congregations of dead men Thirdly the divell workes effectually in all the children of disobedience striving to hide the Gospel from them and the glory of a righteous life that so they might perish 1 Cor. 4.4 And thus of the second Use. Use 3. Thirdly such as consent to obey and feele themselves raised from death to life and are now desirous to spend their daies in a religious and righteous course of life must observe all such rules as may further them and establish them in an orderly and fruitfull conversation Hee that would live in righteousnesse must thinke on these directions following as the very gates of righteousnesse First he must give over all needlesse conversation with vaine persons and profane men hee must shunne their company as he would such as have the plague running upon them hee must not come neere them as is urged Pro. 14.15 For what fellowship can bee between righteousnesse and unrighteousnesse 2 Cor. 6.14 Depart from me ye evill doers saith David for I will keep the commandements of my God Psal. 119.115 Secondly he must redeeme time he must buy time from his worldly occasions and settle such an order in his worldly estate or outward estate that he may provide to serve the Lord without distraction abstayning from all things that may intangle him or interrupt him Eph. 5.16 1 Cor. 7.29 35. and 9.28 2 Tim. 2.4 He must provide to him time for Gods service and for commerce and fellowship with the godly and for works of mercy Thirdly he must be wise for himselfe that is he must in all the meanes hee useth for or in religion especially apply what hee can for his owne use and study himselfe and to understand his owne way and provide whatsoever he doe for his justification and sanctification and finall salvation Pr● 9. 12. and 14.8 And to this end he must meddle with his owne businesse and take heed of being a busie-body in other mens matters so much as in his thoughts 1 Thes. 4.11 12. And he must also avoid vaine janglings and doubtfull disputations in religion and quarrels that tend not to his edification but to shew wit or science Tit. 3.9.1 Tim. 6.20.2 Tim. 2.23 And he must keep his eye straight upon the mark to proceed directly and distinctly in building himselfe up in knowledge and grace not losing his time or going about but keeping a straight path to supply what he wants and grow in what he hath Pro 4.25 Ier. 31.32 Hee must take heed of uncertaine running but bee sure to take accounts of himselfe for all his courses to see that hee goe very straight towards the mark and finally hee must not respect company to goe the pase of other men but run as if hee alone were to obtaine striving to excell 1 Cor. 9.24 and 14 12. Fourthly he must esteeme the Word above all treasures Psal. 119.72 Mat. 1● and take hold of the instruction thereof as that must bee the very life of his life Pro. 4 1● For by the Word doth God sanctifie us and make us righteous Ioh. 17. And he must order his whole course of life so as that he may see the meanes of all his actions from the Word he must live by the rules of Scripture that will live righteously Gal. 6.16 Now that he may doe thus he must looke to divers things First that he place no confidence in the flesh neither trusting upon his owne wit nor carnall reason nor gifts nor yet yeelding himselfe to be a servant to any mans humour or opinions or example or commandement Secondly he must provide to live so as he suffer not a famine of the powerfull preaching of the Word hee must labour for the meat that perisheth not Ioh. 6.27 and so exercise himselfe in the Word morning and evening that the Word may dwell plenteously in him Psal. 1.2 Col. 3.16 Thirdly he must take heed of adding any more sinnes or duties than are discovered in the Word and of detracting from any thing that is forbidden or required there Psal. 30.6 detesting conceitednesse and singularity having his conversation in all meeknesse of wisedome Iam. 3.13 Fiftly he must daily lift up his heart to God to seeke a way of him whose glory it is to teach to profit and who giveth his Spirit to lead men in the paths of righteousnesse Psal. 23. Esay 48.17 Sixtly he must remember the Sabbath day to sanctifie it For this will be both the meanes and the signes of his sanctification and true righteousnesse It is the market day for the soule Esay 58.13 14. Exod. 31.13 c. Seventhly he must haste to the comming of Christ hee must dispatch his worke as fast as he can and to this end he must cast about to finde out waies of well-doing and when he hath any projects or opportunities of well-doing he must not
sake that he may see it comes from the force of religion in her a good wife discreet provident carefull to please meeke such an one as his heart may trust in her and delight in her Wives that be foolish wastfull idle froward or busie-bodies if they have never so much shew of religion yet they are not fit for this worke to win any body much lesse their husbands Secondly she must looke to her conversation in things of her religion that therein she behave her selfe as becommeth religion Tit. 2.3 and so she must take heed of conceitednesse and contempt of others or neglect of her calling upon pretence of duties of her religion and looke to it that she be not her selfe guilty of any knowne fault unreformed and withall she must strive to shew the power of her godlinesse in good fruits labouring to abound in good workes 1 Tim. 2.10 both at home and abroad being pitifull mercifull ready to help them that are in misery according to her power and in the things she hath liberty to dispose of Other things follow in the three next verses Verse 2. While they behold your chaste conversation coupled with feare IN these words is contained the second thing the Apostle chargeth upon wives in his exposition viz. A chaste conversation with feare so ordered as their husbands may daily behold it and observe it in them Where the Apostle implies what the husbands will doe viz. they will observe the conversation of the wives and expresseth what the wives ought to doe viz. in conversation to shew chastitie coupled with feare First then we are to consider of that which is implied viz. what the husband will doe and this is imported in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 While they behold While they behold The originall word signifies to observe and prie into a thing to finde out the secrets of it and so it notes That carnall men such as these husbands were doe watch and marke the conversation of such as be religious to observe all they can in them that professe true religion Thus they watched David and Christ and Daniel and so doe they all the godly and thus they imploy themselves in spying and marking the wayes of the godly sometimes out of the naughtinesse of their hearts supposing godly men to be like unto themselves and therefore hope to find out wickednesse in their practise sometimes out of malice lying in wait to find out any fault in their carriage of which they may accuse them and vilifie them in the world and sometimes they doe thus as compelled by the force of their naturall conscience which gives glory to the graces of God in the conversation of true Christians while they observe in them that holinesse which they find not in themselves or other carnall men And therefore the Use should be to teach all that professe religion to looke carefully to their waies and walke circumspectly that they give not occasion of offence but rather carry themselves so as to make proofe of their sincerity and good conversation by their workes Secondly from hence we may gather also That a Christian must looke to his justification before men as well as to his justification before God for as God beholds his waies so doe men and he is bound to seeke his justification from men as well as his justification from God And therefore as the Apostle Paul had taught the justification of a sinner before God so the Apostle Iames urgeth the justification of the godly man before men which this Apostle imports in this place when he requires such a conversation as may compell carnall men to say they are just men So our Saviour Mat. 5.16 Quest. What can carnall men see in the conversation of the godly to make them give glory to God or the truth Answ. By the good conversation of true Christians they gather the goodnesse of the law or religion which they professe And besides they thence gather that they are not hypocrites but are religious indeed whence they see what power their religion hath over them in all their waies And further the scandall of reproaches cast upon the godly is often by the observation of their conversation utterly removed in the hearts of such carnall men as set themselves throughly to observe and marke the course of the godly Your chaste conversation The word here translated Chaste in all other places of the New Testament is translated Pure and so shewes that it ought to be accepted here in a larger sense than the word chaste doth import yet so as chastity is a part of the purity of a Christian. Doct. A pure conversation is required in all true Christians yea even in women as well as men That purity is required is manifest by divers Scriptures yea to be examples in purity 1 Tim. 4.2 It is the chiefe fruit of the wisedome is from above Iam. 3.17 A pure heart is required 1 Tim. 1.5 and a pure conscience 1 Tim. 3.9 and pure hands 1 Tim. 2.8 And that it may be had is apparent for our Saviour saith Yee are all pure Iohn 15.3 Quest. How can a man in this world be pure can any man be without sinne Answ. No there is no man that sinneth not In many things wee sinne all James 3.2 Who can say I have made my heart cleane and am pure from my sin Pro. 20.9 And If any man say he hath no sin he is a liar and the truth is not in him 1 John 1.10 And yet though in that sense no man is pure yet in other senses the godly man may be called pure and is bound even by the Gospel to purity as 1. In respect of some particular offence A godly man may be so pure as to abide the triall of God himselfe as David wills God to judge him according to his righteousnesse and the innocency of his hands meaning in that point of false or treacherous dealing against Saul which was charged upon him Psal. 3.4 5. 18.15 2. In respect of imputation every beleever is perfectly pure all his sins are as if they had never beene and Christs righteousnesse is his and in that righteousnesse of faith he is perfectly pure before God himselfe Rev. 19.8.14 3. In respect of men he may be pure in conversation though not in respect of God and so he is pure when he is unrebukeable and unblameable amongst men And this ought to be found in the conversation of every Christian to live without offence and without rebuke Phil. 2 15 16. 4. There is a pure conversation in respect of God not that we can converse without sin but God is pleased for Christ his sake to account our conversation pure when it hath divers prints and markes of his true grace in us And so Christian purity hath in it many things 1. Separation from impure men Psal. 1.1 2 Cor. 6.17 2. The desire of purity in the perfection of it God accounts his servants pure because
not the duties of wives though they did never so much good other wayes yet they have not the praise of well-doing unlesse they doe their duties to their husbands the like may be said of Magistrates Ministers Husbands Parents Servants c. 7. Confidence in the flesh mars good duties when men trust to their own wits reason skill or any gifts and doe not all they doe in the name of Jesus Christ Col. 3.17 Phil. 3.3 and in particular conceitednesse and to be wise in themselves and proud will mar any action All should be done in meekenesse of wisedome 8. Inconstancie shames any action when we are wearie of well-doing or wavering or decline and goe backwards their righteousnesse being as the morning dew Quest. Can any thing we doe be well done seeing all our righteousnesse is as a menstruous cloth Esay 64.6 Answ. Our workes in themselves are none well done but by Gods indulgence assured unto us in the new Covenant where he 1. Accepts the will for the deed It is well done when our desire and endevour is to doe it as well as we can 2. He beholds the worke in Christ and for his intercession passeth by the evill that cleaves to our best workes 3. He regards it as proceeding from his owne Spirit in us who causeth us to doe good and worketh our workes for us as in the instance of prayer Rom. 8.26 Thus of the fourth observation Doct. 5. From the maner of the terme in the originall which hath a continuall respect to the present time and imports a continuall well-doing I note That a Christian should strive to be alwaies doing good he should let no time passe without well-doing 2 Tim. 2.21 2 Cor. 9.8 Psal. 106.2 Col. 3.10 1 Thes. 5.15 1 Tim. 5.10 And that for many reasons 1. Because he hath so little time left to worke in He should walke in the light while he hath the light the night will come when no man can worke and the rather since he hath lost so much time in doing workes of darknesse he should now redeeme the time Eph 5.15 1 Pet. 4.2 3. 2. Because he is Gods servant and therefore should be alwaies working Rom. 6. yea he is Gods Sacrifice therefore should he be wholly devoted to the doing of good Rom. 12.1 3. Because we have our taske set us and ever the more worke we doe the sooner we shall fulfill the measure prescribed us 4. Because hereby we shall much glorifie God Mat. 5.19 and silence wicked men 1 Pet. 2.12 15. 5. Because God is faithfull and will not forget our workes and labour we shall be rewarded accordingly If we sowe sparingly we ●hall reape sparingly 2 Cor. 9. Heb. 6.11 Gal. 6.9 God giveth us richly to enjoy all things in this world 1 Tim. 6.17 and our continuance in well-doing will be marvellously rewarded in heaven Rom. 2.7 Now that we may doe much good we must p●ay God to establish us in every good word and worke 2 Thes. 2.17 and withall we must furnish our selves with directions out of the Scriptures and studie the rules of life there prescribed 2 Tim. 3.10 17. Iames 3.17 and then we must be sure to make use of all the opportunities of well-doing And be not affraid with any amazement These words may be diversly referred and so diversly expounded If they be referred to the exhortation to subjection to their husbands in the maner before shewed then the sense may be that they should not feare that they should be misused if they were subject or else it limits the maner of subjection that they should not be subject only for feare or out of basenesse of mind feare should not be the ground of their obedience but conscience of Gods Commandements and love to their husbands If they be referred to the example of Sarah they may be taken either as a promise or as a condition as a promise thus If they imitate Sarah in well-doing they need not be affraid of the troubles of a married estate for by this course those troubles will be prevented or the tribulation they shall have in the flesh will not be great Or they may bethe second as a condition of their filiation if they will be Sarahs daughters then they must learne of Sarah to beare the troubles and afflictions may befall them and their husbands without disquietnesse and amazement Sarah could leave her owne countrey and was a comfort to her husband and we never reade that shee any way discouraged her husband or complained of miserie though she was faine to live in many strange places and had not at any time any certain abode any where But I thinke the words may be interpreted in generall as containing a prohibition of excessive feares and consternation of mind which is often found in women to the great offence and disquieting of their husbands The word translated Amaz●ment notes such a perplexitie of minde in which one is almost at his wits end and therefore the Verb of which this Noune is derived is used in the New Testament only in these cases as in the cases of rumours of wars or seditions readie to seize upon a people Luke 21.9 or in the case of a conceit that one sees a ghost or spirit Luke 24.37 And such as either of these doe women sometimes fall into and this the Apostle forbids He doth not forbid all feare for they must feare their husbands Ephes. 5. ult and they must feare God 2 Cor. 7.11 Nor doth he severely taxe that naturall fearefulnesse in women which followes their sexe but only such desperate vexations or passions as suffer them not to make use of their trust in God or love to their husbands Quest. What causes can there be imagined why these Christian wives should be in danger of any such consternation of minde Answ. The Apostle might well imagine divers causes of this frailtie 1. They had husbands that were Infidels which might be a great grievance to them and besides those husbands might perhaps absolutely forbid them or labour to restraine them from the exercises of Christian Religion which might put them into a great strait 2. Their profession of Christian Religion might bring upon them many tribulations and persecutions which women are not so able to beare 3. It may be the Apostle had observed that women were apt to fall into these desperate fits of passion and grieving when they were crossed by their husbands or servants or children Sure it is that many women now a daies if their husbands doe but crosse them in reasonable things they will cry and grieve as if they would die in the vexation of their hearts These strange humours and perplexities and desperate fits the Apostle absolutely forbids hee would not have any of them found in a Christian wife Ver. 7. Likewise ye husbands dwell with them according to knowledge giving honour unto the wife as unto the weaker vessell as being heires together of the grace of life that your
trespasse against 〈◊〉 And that we shall be i● we soundly 〈…〉 r●les If we know any fault by our brother and feele that it doth tempt us to alienation we must then remember the charge given Levit. 19.17 which is not to suffer our hearts to hate him but give a vent unto our hearts by a plaine and discreet reproofe 2. We should be soundly settled in judgement that there are infirmities in the best though we know them not and so to looke for it as when they doe breake out we should shew our selves ready to beare their infirmities and forbeare them if they be meere frailties choosing rather to crosse our selves than to irritate or provoke them in their weakenesse Rom. 15.1 2. 3. If any brother trespasse against us we should shew our selves easie to be entreated and willing to practise the rule given by our Saviour even to forgive him if he offend unto seventy times seven times when he saith it repenteth him Mat. 18.21 4. If we have done any wrong we should make haste to be reconciled and seeke it with willing acknowledgement and readinesse to make satisfaction Mat. 5.23 24. Only we must remember about this doctrine of the love of the brethren that there are three caveats to be looked to 1. That we misplace not our affections upon false brethren for there are false brethren that will creepe in privily many times for corrupt ends Gal. 2.4 2 Thes. 3.13 2. That if any brother be scandalous or walke inordinately or will not be subject to the forme of doctrine and the publike ministerie then such a one is to be avoided only he must be admonished as a brother 2 Thes. 3.6 15. 3. Servants are charged to looke to it that they be obedient and subject notwithstanding this doctrine that their Masters are brethren 1 Tim. 6.1 Pitifull The word rendered Pitifull in the Originall signifies rightly bowelled or such as have true or right bowels and so it is to be referred to mercy and is more than other Scriptures expresse when they require bowels of mercy for here it is required that these bowels be right In Mat. 25. men are sentenced to condemnation for not shewing mercie In other Scriptures it is shewed that though they doe shew mercy yet if some things be not looked to it will not be accepted as Mi●h 6.8 there is required not only mercy but the love of mercy and Mat 6. the Pharisees did workes of mercy and yet our Saviour finds fault with them because they were done to be seene of men and in 1 Cor. 13.2 the Apostle saith If a man give all that he hath to the poore and want love it is nothing So here the Apostle requires not mercy only but that their bowels be right in mercy and about this rule therefore two things are to be explicated 1. What bowels of mercy means 2. What right bowels imports For the first Bowels of mercy imports 1. Truth in shewing mercy that it be not in ceremony or word only but in deed that the heart shew mercy as well as the tongue 2. Love that our mercy proceed from hearty and Christian affection to the partie 1 Cor. 13.2 not of constraint nor with wicked thoughts or griefe of heart Deut. 7.7 8. to 12. 3. Tendernesse of affection that we be affected as if our selves were in want Rom. 12.16 4. Cheerefulnesse in expressing our mercy to such as are in misery who are sometimes as much refreshed with the respect we shew to their persons as with the supply we bring to their estates Men in misery should be comforted as well as relieved 5. The practice of secret mercy as well as open even to thinke of them and provide for them and to provoke others to mercy and to pray for them when they know not of it even when wee are gone from them still to shew them mercy For the second our Bowells are right in shewing mercy 1. If we be prepared unto such good works and so both our eares should be prepared that they may be open to the cry of the poore Prov. 21.13 and the matter of mercy should be made ready And to this purpose it were an excellent course if Christians would lay up weekly a part of their gettings which they would consecrate to God that it might be ready when there were need 1 Cor. 16.1 2. and further if we be as God is mindfull of mercy and doe exercise it speedily without delay Prov. 3.27 28. 2. If we looke not for too much beholdingnesse from them that are relieved The rich must not rule over the poore nor the borrower become a servant to the lender Prov. 22 7. 3. If we have a good eye Pro. 22.9 and shew it by dispensing of our mercy to such as have most need and to such as are best affected in religion if there be choise 4. If wee doe workes of mercy out of goods well gotten for God hates robbery though it were for burnt offerings Esay 61.8 5. If it bee for right ends as not for merit or the praise of men Mat. 6. 2 Cor. 9.19 6. If we be full of mercy rich in mercy much in mercy abundant in mercy not onely to our power but sometimes and in some cases beyond our power Wee must open our hands wide Deut. 15.8.1 Tim. 6.18 2 Cor. 8.2 9. good measure and pressed downe Luk. 6.8 if we give not sparingly 7. If we be discreet so to ease others as we burthen not our selves 2 Cor. 9.14 15. 8. If we exercise our selves in every kind of mercy both spirituall and corporall in giving lending visiting clothing feeding instructing admonishing comforting c. 9. If we be constant and not grow wearie of well-doing Gal. 6. The use may be first for reproofe and confutation of divers sorts of men 1. Of the Papists that brag of their good workes in this kind to whom it may be granted that they shew workes of mercy and perhaps have bowels of mercy but they are not right bowels both because with the Pharisees they doe their works to bee seene of men and with opinion of justification and salvation by the merit of their workes and besides though they shew compassion to the bodies of men yet are they without all true compassion to the soules of men 2 Of the house keeping of many Protestants that brag of their great Hospitalitie and good house keeping when their entertainment is either spent upon the rich or else in the profane abuse of the good creatures of God by drunkennesse or else in the entertainment of disordered and lewd persons 3. Of the great neglect of mercy in the most men that either shew not mercy at all or not bowels of mercy or not according to the rules given before especially such as hide themselves from the poore Esay 58.7 and use shifts and excuses to avoide such supplies as are necessary for the furtherance of the reliefe for the poore in such places as