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A22481 A commentarie vpon the epistle of Saint Paule to Philemon VVherein, the Apostle handling a meane and low subiect, intreating for a fraudulent and fugitiue seruant, mounteth aloft vnto God, and deliuereth sundry high misteries of true religion, and the practise of duties Ĺ“conomicall. Politicall. Ecclesiasticall. As of persecution for righteousnesse sake. ... And of the force and fruit of the ministery. Mouing all the ministers of the Gospell, to a diligent labouring in the spirituall haruest ... Written by William Attersoll, minister of the word of God, at Isfield in Suffex. Attersoll, William, d. 1640. 1612 (1612) STC 890; ESTC S106848 821,054 582

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A COMMENTARIE VPON THE EPISTLE OF SAINT PAVLE TO PHILEMON Wherein the Apostle handling a meane and low subiect intreating for a Fraudulent and Fugitiue Seruant mounteth aloft vnto God and deliuereth sundry high Misteries of true Religion and the practise of Duties oeconomicall Politicall Ecclesiasticall As Of Persecution for Righteousnesse sake Of Christian Equity and Moderation Of Gods free Grace forgiuing offences Of Houshold Gouernment and priuate possessions Of the Conuersion of Sinners and Communion of Saints Of Faith and good workes Of Friendship and Suretiship Of Prayer and Hospitality Of the Gospell and Almes-deedes Of Gods Prouidence And of the force and fruit of the Ministery ¶ Mouing all the Ministers of the Gospell to a diligent labouring in the spirituall Haruest and the people to a conscionable attending to the word of Saluation as to Gods high and holy ordinance for our conuersion with assured hope of his wonderfull blessing vpon the sound Preaching of the one and the sauing hearing of the other Written by WILLIAM ATTERSOLL Minister of the word of God at Isfield in Sussex Luke 17. 3. ¶ Take heede to your selues if thy Brother trespasse against thee rebuke him and if he repent forgiue him ¶ Printed at London by William Iaggard 1612. TO THE RIGHT WORshipfull Sir THOMAS PELHAM Baronet encrease of GRACE in this life and eternall GLORIE in the life to come AGesilaus King of Lacedemon when one praised a certaine Orator that he could stretch out small matters at large and length and amplifie them with many words both fitly and fully answeared him But I cannot a Plut. Apotheg thinke him a good Shoo-maker that would put a great and wide Shoo vpon a slender foote There be many I feare who considering the shortnesse of this present Epistle and comparing it with the largenesse of my Exposition will bee ready to suppose and surmise through the fore-stalling of their preiudicate Opinion that to a little Citty I haue set vp wide Gates and to a slender body haue fashioned a wide Garment both which are faulty and vnfit But if these partiall Iudges would weigh the cause aright in iust and equal Ballances without the corrupt affections of Malice or Enuy I doubt not but they will rather thinke that to a great Foot I haue fitted and applied a little Shoo. For this Epistle Written to Philemon though it be short in words and comprehended in a little compasse yet if wee regard and respect as we ought to do either the pithy and profound substance of the matter or the cunning or rather curious Art of Paul the writer or the great and glorious Maiesty of God the Endighter which shineth and sheweth it selfe euen in the least things we shal be constrained to confesse that this is a right great Epistle and as b Macrob. comment in Som. Scipion. lib. 2. cap. 5. one saith in another case Verborum parua sed rerum foecunda and the Interpretation of it very breefe both in regard of the Worthinesse of the Argument and the Wisedome of the Spirit that appeareth therein A Diamond may be little yet it is of great price The eye is small yet it seeth farre The heart is little yet is it the life of the body It pleaseth God to shew forth the greatnesse of his power in the least works of his hands And as Merchants that cast Accounts c Vellei Pateri hyster lib. 1. comprize greater summes in shorter roome so doth the Apostle handle most weighty Matters Mysteries within the slender compasse of a few Verses that we should rather weigh the worke then number the words He seemeth no where to reason more exquisitely and to deale more pregnantly then in this place Euery word almost hath the force of a Motiue and seasoning his cause with Wisedome and his doings with Art he so creepeth into Philemons bosome and closeth with him at a suddaine that by no meanes hee can start from him Sometimes by louing Titles Sometimes by Artificiall insinvations Sometimes by fauourable preuenting of Obiections Sometimes by Rhetoricall perswasions Sometimes by earnest Preparations Sometimes by Charitable Mittigations Sometimes by strong Obligations Sometimes by deepe Protestations Sometimes by fit Reuocations and sometimes by forcible Arguments as it were by so many courteous Congies and vehement Adiurations hee dealeth and preuaileth in such sort with him d Liuy histor lib. 45. as Popilius the Romaine Ambassador against Antiochus King of Syria who hauing deliuered his message from the Senate made a circle about him with his rod and charged him to put off all delayes and giue him present answere before hee departed out of it Thus doth the Apostle lay his Net and cast his Chaine about Philemon that he hampereth him fast and holdeth him close before he is aware of any such matter This Philemon to whom the Epistle is directed was a Wealthy man a Cittizen of Colosse the Host of the Church who had a Seruant named Onesimus he hauing pilfered and purloyned some of his Maisters goods fled away from him and the Church that was in his house For whatsoeuer the care and diligence of the Gouernors be lewd persons do oftentimes shroud themselues vnder their Roofe But comming to Rome no better then a fugitiue hee heard Paule preach the Word which is as e Ier. 23 29. an Hammer to breake in pieces the stony hearts of vnregenerate men and f Rom. 1 16. the power of God to saluation to all that beleeue so that he acknowledged the falt he had committed and desired to be reconciled to his Maister whom hee had offended He being thus gained to the Faith g Gualt hom 1. in Philemon and kindely and courteously entreated by Paule Who becommeth all thinges to all men h 1 Cor. 9 22 that by all meanes he might saue some is by him sent back with these Letters of Commendation and intercession for him pleading his cause as it were at the barre effectually crauing pardon for him earnestly and teaching i Gualt hom 2 in Philemon thereby that no man albeit of the lowest sort and condition truly repenting ought to be despised and contemned He went away Vnprofitable he returned Profitable he went away k Gualt hom 5 in Philemon Peruerted he returned Conuerted hee went away a Seruant he returned a Brother Before he heard Paule preach hee was a Theefe but when he had heard him he became as his Naturall Sonne l Phile. ver 10 as he is not ashamed to call him and account him in this Epistle Question Vpon this occasion of this Seruants flying away and be-taking himselfe to his heeles a question may be demanded which also of some m Paraeus in Genes cap. 39. is handled whether it bee lawfull for bond-slaues that are bought with money such as the state of Seruants in those daies for the most part was to runne away from their Maisters forasmuch as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 7 21. If thou mayest be free
we dare do not so much only as we ought to do not considering how lawfull it is but how powerfull we are how weake they are All the prophane Histories are full of worthy examples of many Seruants who are commended for their trust and faithfulnesse Wittinesse and Courage Might and Magnanimity to all posterity and haue not doubted to giue their liues to death in their Maisters quarrell It is not therefore much to bee maruelled at that the Apostle perceiuing how t Heb. 4 12. Mighty the word had bin in Operation vpon Philemons Seruant doth account him as his Sonne and seeketh to reconcile him to his Maister in which respect he was willing and desirous to haue u Phile. 13 14 kept him with him to Minister vnto him He claimeth some authoritie ouer him being his spirituall Father howbeit because he was not only his Sonne but also another mans Seruant he would not retaine him without his Maisters knowledge Let them not therefore for their low degree be contemned nor haue the meanes of instruction denied vnto them Thus I haue set downe to thy view Christian Reader the scope of this Epistle wherein the Apostle in a narrow compasse doth couch together many Mysteries of our Religion which I haue laboured to lay open in this Commentary And howsoeuer the worke is growne in bignesse extended in length vnder mine hands more then at the first I purposed and intended yet I hope the manner of handling heerein obserued shall easily recompence thy labour bestowed in reading I cannot in few words comprehend the matters that are heere and there dispersed throughout the Booke Among many other these points are principally handled Touching affliction for the truth and persecution for righteousnesse sake Touching Christian Equity and Moderation Touching Gods free grace forgiuing offences Touching houshold Gouernment and Priuate possessions Touching the conuersion of Sinners and the Communion of Saintes Touching Faith and Good Workes Touching Friendship and Surety-ship Touching Prayer and Hospitality Touching the Gospell and Almes-deeds Touching Gods prouidence and of the force fruite of the Ministry as is more at large to be seen in the Table of the doctrines Accept I pray thee the paines I haue taken in the discussing of these points pardon the escapes if any be into which I haue fallen as in trauelling so long a iourney it is easie to fall into a slumber and wheresoeuer thou vnderstandest the hand of God to haue beene with me in publishing the truth giue him the glory ascribe the praise vnto his great name to whose grace goodnesse I commend thee Thine in our common Sauiour William Attersoll A BRIEFE RECAPITVLATION OF ALL THE DOCTRINES HANDLED AT LARGE IN THIS EPISTLE Out of the Praeface THe course of the Gospell cannot bee stopped but will haue his passage in the world page 1. The Argument and occasion of the Epistle together with the vses thereof page 7. Verse 1 and 2. Doct. 1. Good things must be followed and sought after earnestly and feruently not coldly and carelesly pag. 9 Doct. 2. It is no disgrace or reproch to the Seruants of God to bee cast into prison for the Gospels sake pag 12. Doct. 3. The persecutions of all true Christians are the persecutions of Christ Iesus when they are imprisoned for Christs sake page 15. Doct. 4. All good duties to God or man are better doone by the helpe of others then alone by our selues pa 21 Doct. 5. A christian friend wil performe any christian duty to his friend page 25. Doct. 6. Christian women should be helpers vnto their husbandes as heires together of the grace of life page 29 Doct. 7. The calling of a Minister is a painfull and laborious a needefull and troublesome calling page 33. Doct. 8. It is the duty of all house-holders to teach and instruct their families that belong vnto them page 38 Verse 3. Doct. 1. The free fauour and mercy of God in Christ Iesus is first and aboue all other things to be desired and prayed for page 48 Doct. 2. Such as are in Gods fauor haue his blessings flowing vnto them and following them page 55 Doct. 3. All blessings temporall and eternall are to be craued from God alone in Christ Iesus page 61 Verse 4 and 5. Doct 1. Men ought to take cause of great ioy to see others growe and proceed in good things page 68 Doct. 2. It is the nature of faith to apply the mercies and promises of God to our owne selues page 76 Doct. 3. It is the duty of the faithfull to pray not onely for themselues but also for others page 82 Doct. 4. True Religion must not onely bee inwardly beleeued but also outwardly confessed and openly professed page 86 Doct. 5. Faith and Loue are the cheefest thinges that commend a man to God and his Church page 95 Doct. 6. Faith in Christ and Loue to the Saints do alwaies go together in all the seruants of God pag. 99. Doct. 7. Christ must be the Obiect of our faith we must looke vnto him and depend vpon him page 106 Doct. 8. The workes of mercy are especially and aboue before others to be shewed to the poore Saints that are godly 111 Doct. 9. Such as truely beleeue in Christ and belong to him are Saints page 117 Verse 6 and 7. Doct. 1. It is our duty to stir vp our selues and others to encrease in good things page 126 Doct. 2. The guifts which we haue receiued must not lye hid in vs but be employed to the good of others 140 Doct. 3. The goodnesse of God bestowed vpon our selus or others must be published abroad and made known to others page 142 Doct. 4. The spiritual graces of God bestowed vpon others doe giue occasion of ioy to the Saints pa. 147 Doct. 5. The workes of mercie are to bee shewed to the poore distressed Saints page 154 Verse 8 and 9. Doct. 1. The Office of the Pastour and Minister of God is an Office of power and authority vnder christ 163 Doct. 2. Gentle meanes are to bee vsed rather then seuere to perswade men to holy duties page 172 Doct. 3. Superiors in guifts or age or both are to bee reuerenced and regarded aboue others pa. 177. Verse 10. Doct. 1. The least and lowest member conuerted to Christ must not bee contemned or condemned page 184 Doct. 2. The same affection that is betweene the Father and the Sonne ought to be betweene the Minister the people committed vnto him 189 Doct. 3. The preaching of the word is the ordinary meanes and instrument of our conuersion and regeneration page 205 Verse 11. and 12. Doct. 1. Christian religion maketh a man profitable and helpfull vnto others that before hath been iniurious and hurtfull page 227. Doct. 2. In godly religious and reformed families are many times vngodly obstinate and vnreformed persons both Children and Seruaunts page 237 Doct. 3. Former Offences albeit great and heynous vppon true repentance are to bee
delight hath the Nurse then to see her child liue in health grow vp in strength and stature and prosper in the world So there is no comfort like to this comfort no ioy like to this ioy no delight like to this delight to behold the haruest of the Lord the sheepe of Christ the Children of God to flourish and to encrease more and more to grow from faith to faith from grace to grace b Ephe. 4. 13. vntill they all meet together vnto a perfect man and vnto the measure of the age of the fulnes of Christ Hence it is that after the Apostle had testified his ioy and thankes to God for the faith and loue of the Colossians he addeth c Col. 19. 10. for this cause we also since the day we heard of it cease not to pray for you and to desire that ye might be fulfilled with knowledge of his will in all wisedome and spirituall vnderstanding that ye might walke worthy of the Lord and please him in all thinges being fruitfull in all good workes and increasing in the knowledge of God and let vs by this example comfort our selues in such as increase in good thinges and pray for such as are comming forward We liue in a decaying and declining time wherein many haue forgotten their first loue we see the cold season and Winter of all Godlines wherein men are frozen in the dregs of Sinne. Wee may behold with our eyes if we be not starke blinde a generall wasting languishing and consumption of the heate and heart of Religion If then in this common pining of the vital parts we may discerne any reuiuing and refreshing to appeare or any flourishing of Godlines which seemed dead at the root to spring vp let it be a comfort vnto vs and teach vs to giue God the glory who maketh light to come out of darkenesse and life to arise out of death This serueth to reproue those that neuer desire the profiring of their people nor regard what their estate and how their standing is in heauenly thinges they neuer consider whether they goe forward or backward whether they grow vpward or downe-ward to Heauen or to Hell to God or to the Deuill to Saluation or to damnation These are they that feed themselues to the full but regard not to feed the flocke ouer which the holy Ghost hath made them ouerseers These are they that liue of the Alter but care not to minister at the Alter they will be sure to reape carnall things but they haue no conscience to sow spirituall thinges They liue of the Gospell but they will not preach the Gospell The Apostle testifying his longing and thirsting after the saluation of the Church said I seeke not yours but you But these men if they would speake the truth from their hearts might say we seeke not you but yours we care not what become of you so that we may find the sweetnes of that which is yours How farre are these from the zealous affection of the same Apostle who became all thinges to all men if by any meanes he might saue some he teacheth that a necessity lay vpon him to preach the Gospell and denounceth a woe vpon himselfe if he preach not the Gospell Let vs all in our places follow his example and pray vnto God to giue the grace of conuersion to turne the hearts of men to the sauing knowledge of the Gospell and where he hath granted this mercy let vs pray him to encrease it more and more and to continue it vnto the day of Iesus Christ Vse 2. Secondly as the growing in good thinges is matter of ioy so on the other side it is caused of great sorrow and griefe of heart when the professors of the saith and hearers of the word and such as seemed louers of the truth do not profit but reuolt do not goe forward but goe backward do not grow better and better but become worse and worse It must not seeme strange that great sorrow ariseth vnto the seruants of God when men do not profit in good thinges We see what worldly sorrow is found in worldly men that causeth death the least occasion of losse the least feeling of trouble the least crossing of their humors can draw from them abundance of teares But such as are led by the spirit of God are spiritually minded d 2. Cor. 7. 10. they haue godly sorrow that causeth repentance vnto saluation not to be repented of This was in the Prophet Dauid when he saw a decay in Godlines and a growing in wickednesse e Psal 119. 136. mine eyes gush out with Riuers of water because they keepe not thy law This was in the Prophet Ieremy f Ier. 9. 1. and 4. 19. O that mine head were full of water and mine eyes a fountaine of teares that I might weep day and night for the slaine of the Daughter of my people This was in Christ our Sauiour when he came neere to Ierusalem he beheld the Citty and wept for it g Luke 19. 41. 42. O if thou hadst euen knowne at the least in this day those thinges which belong vnto thy peace but now are hid from thine eyes This was in the Apostle Paule when he saw the reuolting and back-sliding of the Galathians h Gal. 4. 19. and 5. 7. O my little Children of whom I trauaile in Birth againe vntill Christ be formed in you I am in feare of you least I haue bestowed on you labour in vaine ye did runne well who did let you that ye did not obey the truth This is a speciall note to discerne and distinguish true Pastors from hirelings and faithfull shepheards from Wolues for the true Ministers of Christ are inwardly touched and grieuously pained to behold the present sinnes of the people and the future iudgments of God hanging ouer their heads This is a great griefe of heart and goeth neere them to see so little growth of Godlines so little fruit of their labours so great encrease of all vngodlines This reproueth those that make a mocke of sinne and can laugh as heartilie at the committing of iniquitie as at the best ieast and the greatest sport If we begin once to laugh at sinne we will not make any conscience to commit it When once we do not sticke to ieast at it we will quickly come to it in good earnest When we can make a play of it there is but a short step to put it in practise The very Heathen i Plutar. in Solone Valer. Maxim lib. 2. Cap. 6. saw thus much that had but halfe an eye that if they suffered euill to be committed merrily and in sport they should finde it practised in their earnest contracts common affaires And many of the heathen by other Heathen are commended k Tacit. in his description of Germany among whom vices were neuer laughed at But how many are there among vs that would be counted and are indeed called Christians
6. Faith Loue do alwayes go together We learne hereby that faith and Loue are allwaies coupled together faith is not without Loue nor Loue without faith but faith and Loue goe together in all the seruants of God and can neuer be seperated and put asunder When Paule praied for the Thessalonians he remembred these two z 1. Thes 1. 3. to be in them their effectuall faith and their diligent loue It is said of the Church gathered together after the assention of Christ a Acts. 2 44. that all they which beleeued were in one place and had all things common Such as were true beleeuers were also commoners together such as had Faith in Christ had Loue toward the Saints This Luke sheweth more plainly afterward b Act. 4. 32. The multitude of them that beleeued were of one heart and of one soule neither any of them said that any thing of that which he possessed was his owne but they had all thinges common Heere we see Faith and the manifestation of Faith by the fruits of Charity ioyned together To this purpose the Apostle saith c Gal. 5. 6. In Iesus Christ neither Circumcision auayleth any thing neither vncircumcision but faith which worketh by Loue. Heere also he coupleth Faith with Loue in one Yoake declaring that Faith is effectuall in the duties of Loue. So the Apostle Iohn teacheth that faith in Christ and Loue one toward another are thinges euer ioyned together d Iohn 3. 23. This is then his Commandement that wee beleeue in the Name of his sonne Iesus Christ and loue one another as he gaue Commaundement And the Apostle Iames speaking of the effectuall faith of Abraham whereby he beleeued and was iustifyed declareth that e Iam. 2. 22. the Faith wrought with his workes and through the workes was the Faith made perfect All these Texts and Testimonies of Scripture serue to teach vs that our faith must be accompanied with Loue and the one not deuided from the other Reason 1. The truth heereof will better appeare to euery one of vs If wee consider the Reasons For first they are as the Tree and the Fruite as the Roote and the Branch as the Fountaine and the Streame as the cause and the effect Faith is the Tree the Roote the Fountaine the cause Loue is the Fruite the Branch the Streame the effect The cause and the effect are Relatiues and haue relation and reference either to other● so that the cause cannot be without his effect nor the effect without his cause and therefore both these must goe together The Prophet describeth the blessed man f Psal 1. 3. to be like a Tree planted by the Riuers of Waters that will bring forth her friute in due season whose Leafe shall not fade so whatsoeuer he shall do shall prosper Reason 2. Secondly faith separated from Loue or Loue separated from faith is a false faith and a false Loue. Faith without Loue or separated from the fruits of Loue is dead and without life a naked name without the thing an empty shaddow without substance a dead carcasse without breath It is nothing worth without Loue. The Apostle saith If a man had all faith so that he could remoue Mountaines g 1. Cor. 13. 1. 2. and had not Loue it were nothing he should be as sounding Brasse or a tinkeling Cymball So we read in the Epistle of Iames i Iames 2 20. That the Faith which is without workes is dead it is a Bastard Fayth a counterfet Faith an idle Faith which is no true Faith indeede but onely in Name For as a painted hand is no hand so a seeming Faith is no Faith Againe Loue without Faith is without his right order yea without his life soule his true cause and forme and so not good but euill not approued but reiected of God k Heb. 11 6. Rom. 14 23. For without Faith it is vnpossible to please God and whatsoeuer is not of Faith is sinne All workes of Iustice Mercy Righteousnesse to releeue the poore to feed the hungry to cloath the naked without Fayth are nothing worth nay all these beautifull shewes are beautifull sinnes except they be seasoned with Faith Againe to afflict thy soule to humble thy selfe to heare the word to receiue the Sacraments without Loue that is to do the duties of the first Table and to neglect them of the second Table is but Hypocrisie and maketh vs abhominable in the sight of God Seeing then Faith and Loue are as the cause and the effect that liue together seeing they loose their Names and Natures being disioyned and diuided one from another wee see it euidently and strongly to appeare that Faith in Christ and Loue to the Brethren as Mother and Daughter are ioyned together in euery true Christian Vse 1. The Vses are now to be considered First seeing these two guiftes are coupled together one with another it followeth that they must neuer be separated in a Christian man He that is ioyned with the head must also bee ioyned with the members and hee that hath his part in the Communion of Saints hath his fellowship also with Christ If it be a generall rule deliuered by Christ l Math. 19 6. that the thinges which God hath coupled together no man must separate it holdeth in this particular that Faith and Loue are not to be disioyned and dismembered forasmuch as God hath lodged them as two ghests in one house locked them vp as two Pearles and Iewels in one Closset It is a rule published by the m Cicer. de offic lib. 2. Heathen that all Vertues are knit together in one Chaine so that he which hath one hath all of them hee that wanteth one of them wanteth all so is it with this worthy paire of Heauenly graces we must not haue a Faith without Workes nor Workes without Faith but our Faith must be fruitfull to bring forth Workes and our Workes must bee thankfull to confesse them to be receyued from Faith Our Faith worketh by Loue our Loue liueth by Faith our Faith respecteth Christ our Loue respecteth the Saints Thus must these two be found in euery one of vs for they meete together in all such as shall be saued This n Titus 3 8. made the Apostle say in his Epistle to Titus Chap. 3. This is a true saying and these thinges I will thou shouldest affirme that they which haue beleeued God might bee carefull to shew forth Good-Workes These thinges are good and profitable vnto men Let vs examine our owne hearts whether we finde these two graces in vs which must bee as two twins that reioyce and take delight to bee together or two Sisters that accompanie one with another like Martha and Marie in one house so must these be two Vertues in one heart Hence it is that the Apostle Iohn saith in his first Epistle o 1 Iohn 4 20 21. If any man say I Loue
how Faith is alone and how it is not alone how it goeth with Loue and when it goeth not with Loue. It is alone in our Iustification it is not alone in our godly conuersation It is alone in receiuing Christ it is not alone in furnishing a Christian mans life nor sufficient to adorne him with such graces as God requireth to be in his person for all other vertues must be in him Vse 3. Lastly seeing Faith and Loue are alwaies linked together in one man this ouerthroweth another Doctrine of the Church of Rome which teacheth that Faith may be without Charity and separate from good workes For the true and iustifying Faith of Gods elect can be no more without workes then the fire without heate the water without moysture the sand without heauines the Sunne without brightnes the soule without life or the good tree without good fruit Neither let them pretend the d Iam 2. 17 Apostle Iames to colour this their fancy as though it proued that a man may haue Faith without Charity For he speaketh in that place of a dead Faith not a liuely Faith of a false Faith not of a true Faith of the Faith of the Deuils not of the Faith of Gods elect of Faith in outward profession not in the inward affection He sheweth that e verse 17. Faith if it haue no workes is dead and againe f verse 20. 26. Faith without workes is dead he likeneth such a Faith to the Faith of the Deuils and therefore it cannot be a iustifying Faith vnlesse they will make the Deuils good Catholiques and partakers of saluation He resembleth this Faith to the good words of him that wisheth well to a poore man but doth nothing at all for him he speakes him faire but he doth not succour him And as the body that breatheth not is dead so Faith that bringeth not forth good workes is dead Now a dead Faith is no Faith it is Faith in name but not in Nature The Philosophers g Arist polit lib. 1. cap. 1. teach that when the body is dead there shall be neither foot nor hand but onely a likenes of name as a man tearmeth a hand of wood or stone a hand so in like sort is a dead hand called an hand or a dead man a man because howsoeuer they are not the same yet they retaine the shew and shaddow of the name but al true parts of the body are defined by their Office and faculty Thus doth the Apostle call a dead faith by the name of faith whereas indeed it is no more true faith then a dead man is a liuing man Hence it is that some of the Popish writers teach that Iames by the name of h Iam. 2. 26. spirit vnderstandeth not the soule but the breath and that he fitly compareth workes to breath and faith to the body i Caietan com on Iam. 2. 26. because as the body of a liuing creature if it breath not is dead so faith if it bring forth no workes is dead for breathing is an effect of a liuing body and working is the proper effect of a liuing faith we say therefore that there is a faith which may be without Charity and there is a faith that cannot be without Charity There is a generall faith which beleeueth that there is one God and giueth assent that the Scriptures be true which goeth no farther this we confesse may be and oftentimes is without good workes But there is a faith that worketh by Loue which can neuer be seperated from Charity and good workes but wheresoeuer it is there is infallibly and inseparably ioyned vnto it the Loue of God and man k Phil. 1. 11. bringing forth the fruits of Righteousnesse which are by Iesus Christ to the glory and praise of God If we haue this true faith l Act. 15. 9. which purifieth the heart it will be rich and plentifull in all good workes and teach vs to shew the fruites of Loue to our Bretheren There hath beene a long contention and much adoe in the Church how to reconcile Paule and Iames together the one aduancing faith and the other good workes Paule saith m Rom. 3. 28. we are iustified by faith and not by the workes of the Law Iames saith wee are iustifyed by n Iam 2. 24. workes and not by faith onely These sayings by faith and not by faith by workes and not by workes seeme one directly opposite and contrary to the other This difference is onely in the letter not in the matter in shew not in substance in words not in meaning and the Doctrine which now wee haue in hand will helpe easily to accord them nay there cannot be a better reconciliation then when we ioyne them together in the practise of our liues and conuersations Let vs ioyne the liuely Faith of Paule with the Good-workes of Iames let vs bring them both into action and so we shall be iustified by S. Paules faith before God and by S. Iames Workes before men Thus the places will easily be made one which seeme different the one from the other For although Paule do commend Faith yet he dooth not condemne Workes and albeit Iames do commend Workes yet he doth not condemn Faith and therefore as they teach both so we must practise both we must be voyde of neyther of them Seeing they preach both we must know that both are required of vs. This ouerthroweth two sorts of men first Papists and then Libertines The first reproofe First the Church of Rome do vs great wrong and iniury both in falsly slandering vs and in filling the eares of the simple and ignoraunt people with lyes that our Doctrine is a Doctrine of liberty and licentiousnesse that wee teach men or at least open a gap to men to liue loosely and lewdly and that we are enimies to Good-workes whereas in verie deede we do the cleane contrarie as this Doctrine among a thousand others may beare witnesse which now wee deale withall teaching vs that Faith must alwaies go with Works that Faith purifieth the heart and giueth victory ouer the world Wee teach that Christ is not onely our Iustification but also our Sanctification We charge men to beware that they vse not the liberty of the Gospell as a cloak of maliciousnesse We teach them to serue the Lord with feare in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of their life Wee will men to let their light so shine before men that they seeing their Good-Workes may glorifie their father which is in heauen This is no Doctrine of liberty nor openeth a window to all wickednesse and yet this is our Doctrine which is so plaine and euident a truth n Stapl. de Iustif pag. 334. that some of our hottest aduersaries are driuen to acknowledge it But who are they that haue this leisure to pry and search into the liues of others abroad and are ignorant of themselues and their owne Doctrine
glory in the names of Christians we would be accounted Christs we take vpon vs the Title of Saints and yet we are not carefull to bring foorth the fruits of Christians and to lead a sanctified life All Trees in the beginning when the world was created were made fruitfull nothing was barren nothing fruitlesse If we be the Garden of God we must be rrees of righteousnesse k Psal 92 13. and beare much fruite euen in our old age Many that are barren in bearing good fruit are too fruitful in bringing forth the vnsauoury fruits of the flesh which the Apostle nameth Gal. 5. who may iustly feare the curse that God l Luke 13 7. laid vpon the Figtree and euery day look to be hewne downe and cast into the fire It is not enough for vs to bee fruitful but we must labour to be more fruitfull It is not enough to bee holy but we must be more holy It is not enough to be Saints but we must encrease in sanctification This the Prophet sheweth in the Psalme m Psal 92 12. The righteous shall flourish like a Palme tree and shall grow like a Cedar in Lebanon Such as be planted in the house of the Lord shall florish in the Courts of our God they shall stil bring forth fruit in their age they shall be fat and flourishing Where we see that Gods Children are neuer void of the fruits of faith but haue them in them to their endlesse comfort Other Trees oftentimes fall to degenerate and grow out of kinde and if they do holde out yet age maketh them decay and dye albeit you digge and dung and water them neuer so much it cannot keepe them from wasting and withering it is not so with the faithfull which are planted in his Church as it were in his Garden euen in their old age they bring forth abundance and store of fruit albeit they bee neuer sold yet they shall neuer be barren but yeeld a plentiful increase being continually watered by the working of the spirit To this purpose Christ speaketh in the Gospell m Iohn 15. 1 2 I am the true Vine and my Father is t●e Husbandman euery branch that beareth no fruite in me hee taketh away and euery one that beareth fruit he purgeth it that it may bring forth more fruite And in the Reuelation of Iohn he saith n Reuel 22 11 He that is vniust let him be vniust still and hee that is filthy let him be filthy still he that is righteous let him be righteous still and he that is holy let him be holy still On the other side there is no comfort to prophane persons that are irreligious that are meere naturall men that find no change in them that are not bettered by the meanes afforded vnto them from God that keepe the spots of the Leopard and the skin of the Blackamoore continually vpon them These walk in the flesh and sauor nothing but of the flesh and therefore of the flesh shall reape corruption This is that which the Author to the Hebrewes speaketh o Heb. 6 7 8. The earth which drinketh in the raine that commeth oft vpon it and bringeth forth hearbes meet for them by whom it is dressed receiueth blessing of God but that which beareth Thornes and Briars is reprooued and is neere vnto cursing whose end is to be burned Where hee compareth those that continue in faith and bring forth the fruits of faith to good ground that answereth the labour of the husbandman but such as forsake the faith and a good conscience he resembleth to euill ground these bring foorth nothing but the vnfruitfull works of darknesse as it were so many thornes Thistles and therefore are neer to cursing consuming So the Prophet Esay notably expresseth this p Esay 65 20. There shall be no more there a child of years nor an olde man that hath not filled his daies for he that shall be an hundred yeare old shall die as a young man but the sinner being an hundred yeares old shall be accursed The faithfull in Christs kingdom shal flourish through his gifts be blessed of God but such as are vnfruitfull are accursed albeit they seeme for a time fresh and flourishing yet they are no better in the sight of God then dead carkasses and stinking carrions So that we see there can be no comfort without sanctification Vse 4. Lastly as all they that are in Christ are Saints so it is our dutie to vse the fellowship and to delight in the Communion of Saints abhorring renouncing separating and with-drawing our selues from all vngodly and vnlawfull societies of men in the world The q Psal 16 3. 119 63. delight of the Prophet was in the Saints He professeth himselfe to be a companion of al them that feare the Lord and keep his precepts The coniunction communion of the faithful is threefold in piety in amity in glory In piety because the harts of the faithful are ioyned together in faith in the feare of God In amity because they loue togither as children of the same father knowing that heerby we shal be known to be the disciples of Christ if we loue one another In glory because they are heirs of the same kingdom where are many mansion places prepared for thē If we desire to be partakers with the children of God in eternall happines in the heauens as al men wil seeme desirous of blessednes we must be vnited to them in a godly life in Christian loue we are willing to hear of felicity but we care not for the practise of piety or for walking in charity Balaam that was hyred with the wages of iniquity to curse the people of God whē he saw the goodly order among them cried out r Num. 23 10 Let my soule die the death of the righteous and let my last end be like his He desired to communicate with the godly in eternal life but he would not ioyn with them in a reformed life But it is necessarily required of vs to be linked to them in loue to be of one heart and to be ioyned with them in godlynesse to be of one faith if euer we look to enioy with them the same inheritance of immortality Such therefore as will neyther be friends and familiars with them but hate and abhor them worse then a Dog or a Serpent nor be Worshippers of God with them reforming their liues repenting from dead-Dead-works but follow the lusts of the flesh with greedines and draw iniquity as with cartropes must know that they shut out themselus from the kingdom of heauen shal not ascend with them into the mountain of God Now as the faithful delight in those that are faithful and the godly in such as are godly so they account it a great griefe to be among the vngodlie where they shall see much iniquity and heare God dishonored feel themselues many waies indangered This made
the Prophet lament his owne condition r Psal 120 5 6 7. Woe is to me that I remaine in Meshech dwell in the tents of Kedar my soule hath too long dwelt with him that hateth peace I seeke peace when I speake thereof they are bent to warre These corrupt and contagious societies are manifold in the world which we are to auoid more then a place of infection that may indanger the body among the which there is a knot and band of such leud companions and loose mates as accompany together in drinking gaming swearing whoring rioting reuelling and railing at all religion and at the seruants of God that are the professors of religion This society in euill is to be found in euery place but this society is not of God but of the deuill it is not the communion of Saints but the company of sinners that make a practise of all wickednes Againe there is another sort who albeit they bee not so fully fouly disordered yet are as far from the kingdom of God For when they should accompany the faithful in the assembly of the Saints they keep company with their catle beasts swine When the faithful on the lords day are going into the house of God they are going into their fieldes when they should be with their brethren they are looking on their bullocks shew no more conscience to religion then if they had no other soules then their Swine or dogs haue A lamentable case that such prophanesse shold be found in places where the precious word of God is preached and yet it were easie to point out such prophan persons among vs. These haue the harts of Esau ſ Heb. 12. who preferred a messe of pottage before his birthright If these be busie in their bargaining and buying or be with their friends gossips at home it is held no good maners to part company Many of our poore brethren in other places would greatly reioyce to heare the word that are barred from it and wold giue god thanks if they might be suffred publickly to professe it with freedom of heart and liberty of conscience which we proudly and scornfully cast from vs as a contemptible thing And yet if a suruey of most of our parishes were made a view taken of them it is to be feared that both these sorts would take vp the greatest company and the fewest sort be found of those that with good honest harts attend to the word with diligence and reuerence These men that thus absent themselues from the church of God deserue to be separated from the Saints and Sacraments from the word and prayers that they may learne not to be so prophane and be ashamed of their euill 6 That the fellowship of thy faith may be made effectuall that whatsoeuer good thing is in you through Christ Iesus may be knowne 7 For wee haue great ioy and consolation in thy loue because by thee Brother the Saints bowels are comforted The method and meaning of the words IN this place we haue the shutting vp of the entrance of this Epistle Wee heard before how Paul gaue thanks to God for Philemon he praied for him that daily he praised greatly his Faith toward Christ and his Loue toward the Saints that is the poore and distressed christians These words do depend vpon the fourth verse For we must know that the Apostle goeth not on in the praise and commendation of Philemon begun in the former verse magnifying his Faith and Loue whereof hee had heard by the report of the Church but they agree with that which he had spoken before namely that he is mindfull of him in his Prayers For if it bee asked for what cause did hee pray for Philemon The answer is to the end that his Faith shewing forth good fruites might not be found counterfetted but approued to be true We haue therefore in these two verses these two things to consider first what was the matter of his prayers what was the substaunce and contents of them to wit that he might manifest his Faith not to lye ydle but to be extended to others Secondly the reason why he made that the matter of his praiers wherefore he prayeth that his faith might be effectual Touching the first point which is the matter of his praiers he craued two things first that his faith might bee made common to many the benefit of it might comfortably flow to the refreshing of many soules For although faith haue her secret and hidden dwelling in the hart yet the fruits of it are imparted to others Secondly that it might be effectual now faith is effectual when it worketh by Loue bringeth foorth good works to the releeuing of others as if the Apostle shold haue said that thy Faith by communicating it selfe to others not remaining with thy selfe alone may more more shew the vertue force and power therof in al goodnes Thus he praieth not only for grace but for the increase of grace to be giuen vnto him Then he declareth wherein this effectuall faith standeth consisteth to wit in the acknowledging of those good things which were in him that so they may be brought into the light to be seen of al men to be felt of those that were in need For the apostle Iames as we haue shewed calleth that not an effectual or liuing faith t Iames 2 20. but a dead idle faith which is not declared and professed by works In the last place he addeth through Iesus Christ wherby he meaneth that whatsoeuer good thing we haue in vs we haue it by christ without whom we haue nothing that is good Touching the second point which is the reason why he praieth for an effectuall Faith in him because the loue that appeared to be in him had wrought great ioy and gladnesse of hart in him which loue of his he commendeth by the effect The bowels of the Saints were comforted through him This fact of his the Apostle commendeth first by the consideration of the persons to whō his loue was manifested not to those out of the church but to the saints For charity to the Saints is to be commended inasmuch as it cannot be bestowed on a better subiect they do stand in the place of Christ who accepteth of our loue liberality as extended toward himselfe Secondly his loue is commended by the name of bowels wherby the extreame necessity of the Saints is signified who were as it were pained in their bowels and inward parts Now the great pouerty penury of those vpon whom we bestow our charity increaseth and maketh it the greater Thirdly u Math. 11 28 the word of comforting refreshing and cherrishing the heart is a matter of great commendation For it is no smal thing to comfort and strengthen the weak and feeble and to giue rest to the soul body that hath bin tost trobled with much affliction Thus doth
the Apostle set forth the fruits of Philemons loue most effectualy This is to be obserued of vs concerning the method and meaning of these words which are thus much in effect If thou wouldest more fully know the cause of my giuing thanks and the remembrance of thee in my praiers surely it is this that as God in mercy hath bestowed vpon thee a true sauing faith so my earnest desire and humble request is vnto him that the offices fruits and duties of thy faith may bee more and more communicated and fitted to the benefit of the poore Saints that so whatsoeuer good thing is to be found in thee through the grace and working of Iesus Christ may bee acknowledged manifested and published abroade to the glory of God the comfort of the faithful and the prouocation of others For indeed thy loue giueth me great occasion of much ioy because thou my brother dost not only cheere the Saints and reioycest them but cause their very harts and bowels euen their secret and inward parts to be refreshed reioyced Diuers points to be obserued out of these Verses But before we handle the doctrines arising in this diuision it shal not be amisse a litle to examine the force of the words and the maner that Paule hath obserued in the penning of them First obserue that he saith not simply thy faith may bee made effectuall but The fellowship of thy Faith that the fruit thereof might redown and returne to many Secondly he saith not barely That his Faith might be knowne but Euery good thing that is euery grace that was in his heart because when Faith is made knowne to others and brought into sight open light many other guifts of the Holy-Ghost are made knowne as Loue Patience Liberality and such like For the grace of Faith is neuer alone in the heart but is garded with a troope and company of all other vertues and when it commeth as it were out of the doores it commeth abroad with a band and traine of all other graces Thirdly he declareth the author and cause of all these blessings from whence they proceed to wit from Christ that we shold learne not to thinke or speake of any benefite without making mention of Christ Fourthly he draweth an argument or reason why hee prayed for the efficacy of his Faith from the former experience of his Loue which was as effectuall as his Faith teaching that the experience of grace already giuen should mooue vs to begge and craue the encrease of that Grace and a perseuerance and continuance in that grace and therefore wee must not bee so simple or sencelesse to imagine when we see grace bestowed vpon any man that we haue no more neede to pray for the encreasing and growing of that grace For wee must know that there are degrees of grace there is a first Grace there is a second Grace Now that Grace may bee multiplyed and a continuall encrease and accesse to it may be added we must make daily praiers we must pray that we may haue Faith and when we haue it we must not be secure but pray that it may be effectuall and working by loue Last of al in the commending of Philemons liberality x Theophil in hunc locum he dooth not nakedly say that he gaue to the poore but To the poore Saints for all that are poore are not poore Saints many are poore that are wretched and vngodly and haue no part of sanctification neither doth he say onely that he gaue to the Saints but he refreshed them and not only that he refreshed the Saints but the very bowels of the Saints Now let vs come to the Doctrines That the fellowship of thy Faith may bee made effectuall Heere the Apostle remembreth the matter and substance of his prayer what it was that hee besought and requested of God where we see hee affirmeth that it consisted in this that the fruits of his Faith might be encreased continually augmented Doctrine 1. It is our dutie to stirre vp our selus others to increase in good things We learne from this place that it is the duty of all men earnestly to desire wish and procure the good of others and to stirre vp our selues others to encrease in the graces of Gods spirit The growing and proceeding of our brethren in the best things should be sought for of vs. When Moses had word brought vnto him that som in the host did prophesy that is had receiued notable gifts of the spirit for the guiding and directing of his people he saide a Num. 12 29 I would to God that not only these but that all the Lords people were Prophets and that he would poure out his spirit vpon them The Apostle writing to the Thessalonians saith b 1 Thess 4 1. Furthermore I beseech you Brethren and exhort you in the Lord Iesus that ye encrease more and more as ye haue receiued of vs how yee ought to walke and to please God They had encreased already exceedingly they had gained in the Faith and were growne to a perfect age they receiue this Testimony and commendation c 1 Thess 1 6 7 8. 2 13. 5 1 2. 4 9 10. 3 10 11 that they became followers of the Apostles of the Lord They receiued the word in much affliction with ioy of the Holy-Ghost They were as ensamples to all that beleeue in Macedonia from them sounded out the word into al quarters they receiued it not as the word of men but as it is indeede the word of God which worketh in them that beleeue Touching the times and seasons he had no neede to write vnto them because they knew perfectly that the day of the Lord should come as a theef in the night Touching brotherly loue they had no neede he should write vnto them for they were taught of God to loue one another yet he prayeth to God still to encrease them and make them abound in loue one towardes another and toward all men yea he desired exceedingly night and day that he might see their face and might accomplish that was lacking in their faith Heereunto tendeth the exhortation that Paule giueth to Timothy d 1 Tim. 4 14 15. Despise not the gift that is in thee which was giuen thee by prophesie with the laying on of the hands of the company of the Eldership these things exercise and giue thy selfe vnto them that it may be seene how thou profitest among all men When the writer to the Hebrewes had reprooued the sluggishnesse of that people hee addeth e Heb. 6 1. Therefore leauing the Doctrine of the beginning of Christ let vs be led forward vnto perfection not laying againe the foundation of repentance from dead-workes and of Faith toward God All these places of Scripture serue to teach vs the truth of this Doctrine that we must all labour to perfection that wee may be perfect as our heauenly Father is
is sweeter then the Hony it is purer then the Gold it is better then the Pearles more nourishable then meate more forceable then the Leauen more profitable then the Raine more comfortable then the Dew that falleth vpon the Herbs It is able to make a Blinde man see a Crooked man straight a Bond man free a poore man rich a sicke man whole nay a dead man it is able to make aliue againe This is a great worke it is a wonderfull Miracle that God worketh in the time of the Gospell We are borne dead in sinnes g Ephe. 2 1. and trespasses without Faith without Repentance without Grace without God without Hope without Sanctification without Saluation but the Word of God is able to bring restoring of sight to the blinde deliuerance to the Captiue liberty to the bruised healing to the broken hearted and life to the dead This is noted as the end of Paules calling and sending to Preach the Gospell h Act. 16 18. To open their Eyes that they may turne from darknesse to light and from the power of Sathan vnto God that they may receiue forgiuenesse of sinnes and an inheritance among them that are sanctified by Faith in Christ Iesus Thus also the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrewes writeth i Heb. 4 12. The word of God is liuely and mighty in operation and sharper then any two-edged sword and entreth through euen vnto the diuiding asunder of the soule and the spirit of the ioynts and the marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart If any aske the question how it hath this power I answer not by any inherent quality in it selfe nor by any force it receiueth from man that preacheth it but from the Supernaturall power of God k Gal. 2. and Psal 19 7 8 13 who is mighty in the hearts of men reioycing the heart conuerting the Soule giuing wisedome to the simple graunting light vnto the eyes and keeping from presumptuous sinnes by it Reason 2. Secondly that way whereby God worketh Faith in vs by the same meanes he beginneth our new-birth and maketh vs his owne Children But the ordinary meanes to worke Faith in vs is the preaching of the word For how shall they l Ro. 10 14 17 call on him in whom they haue not beleeued And how shall they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard And how shall they heare without a Preacher And how shall they Preach except they be sent So then Faith is by hearing and hearing by the word of God We see heereby that Faith is the cause and beginning of repentance we see also that Faith is wrought by the word and therfore by necessary consequence repentance must come by the word Here are three things offered to our considerations the Word Faith and Regeneration Regeneration is a fruit of Faith Faith is an effect of the Word the Word is preached by the Minister Now it is a true rule m Causa causae est causa causati that the cause of the cause is also the cause of the effect and therefore the preaching of the Word beeing the cause of Faith which causeth Repentance and Regeneration must also needes be the cause of Repentance and of Regeneration Reason 3. Thirdly it is the ordinance of God to worke this good worke of Regeneration in vs because we cannot by our wisedome or any naturall guifts in our selues though most esteemed in our owne eyes and greatly magnified by others attaine sanctification of life or beleeue vnto saluation This the Apostle testifieth 1 Cor. 1. and maketh this the reason why God will saue vs by the hearing of Faith preached n 1 Cor. 1 21. Seeing the World by it owne wisedome knew not God in the wisedome of God it pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to saue them that beleeue There is a double knowledge of God and a double way to know him one Naturall the other Spirituall Naturall by the sight of the Creatures by the view of the world by beholding the heauens o Psal 19 1. Rom. 1 19. which declare the glory of God whereby the eternity the Maiesty the power the wisedome the greatnesse the goodnesse of God doe appeare Spirituall by hearing and hearkning vnto the word of God which not onely beareth witnesse to those essentiall properties of God more sufficiently and fully then the former but setteth down distinctly the Trinity of the persons and the mercy of God toward the elect promised and performed vnto them for Christs sake Naturall reason is blind in the matters of God and though it may serue to make vs without excuse it cannot suffice to bring vs to saluation without a farther and better guide So then the Lord to make the wisedome of the World foolishnesse and to gaine glory to his owne Name and to shew that he hath vouchsafed that grace mercy to vs which he denyed to the wisest among the Gentiles that were learned and skilfull in all humane knowledge but were vtterly ignorant of his Word hath raised vp to vs a light which they neuer saw and made vs to heare the sound of a voyce which they neuer heard Seeing therefore the word preached is of so great force that it causeth Faith in vs which all the wisedome of the World could neuer worke it followeth that this word of God is the ordinarie cause or Instrument of our conuersion and saluation This is so plain so pregnant a truth that it is greatly to be wondred that any should stumble or stagger at it and that all doe not submit themselues vnto it Obiections brought to proue preaching not to be the ordinarie meanes to beget faith But because doubts arise and Obiections are made against this point and principle plainly proued and firmely established by reasons out of the Scripture let vs see what they are and how they may be answered Obiection 1. First of all it is obiected that there are other meanes effectuall to worke Faith and to bring to Repentance as afflictiō or priuat admonition Touching affliction such as liued in Idolatry in ignoraunce in vncleannesse that fauoured wholly of the flesh and nothing at all of the spirit haue bin brought to confesse and forsake their sinnes and to humble them-selues vnder the mightie hand of God some being afflicted in body p 2 Chron. as Manasseth others troubled in Conscience feeling the wound of the spirit groaning vnder the stroke of Gods iudgements q Actes 9 6. as Paule in his conuersion haue by this meanes had Faith and Repentance giuen vnto them And touching priuate exhortation it is made auayleable to turne vs to God Hence it is that the Apostle teaching that a beleeuing Husband may with a safe Conscience vse the company of an vnbeleeuing Wife and a beleeuing Wife vse the companie of an vnbeleeuing husband so that the one ought not depart from the other hee vseth this Reason
q 1 Cor 7 12 13 16. For what knowest thou O Wife whether thou shalt saue thy Husband Or what knowest thou O Man whether thou shalt saue thy Wife So the Apostle Peter setting downe the wiues duty toward her husband saith r 1 Pet. 3 1 Let their wiues be subiect to their Husbandes that euen they which obey not the word may without the word be wonne by the conuersation of their wiues Where we see that some are won to the Faith without the preaching of the worde Answere I answere it is true that God blesseth and sanctifieth many meanes beside the preaching of the word to the good of his Children as Meditation Conference priuate instruction Prayer feare of Hell and such like Notwithstanding many that are conuerted to God are deceiued in the meanes and instrument of their conuersion For albeit such as are afflicted are brought to know themselues and to acknowledge the damnable estate wherein they stood yet it is not the affliction it selfe that wrought their conuersion The trouble that they sustained and endured whether it were in body or in mind or in both was sent by the goodnesse of God vpon them to bring them to a loue of the word who before loathed it and made no account or reckning of it This is it which the Apostle teacheth Å¿ Rom. 3 20. That by the Lawe commeth the knowledge of sinne So affliction may lay before vs the knowledge of our sins but it cannot take them away it may shew vs our wound but it cannot help vs and heale vs it may cast vs downe but it cannot raise vs vp it may bee a Schoole-maister to bring vs to Christ but it cannot make vs partakers of Christ It is like a sharpe Needle which doth not nor cannot sow the cloth but it is necessarie to prepare the way for the thred or it is like an eating or a fretting corrasiue which cannot cure but yet it is profitable to make the way for the healing medicine So the afflictions that God layeth vpon vs may bring vs to the sight and knowledge of our sinnes and to the consideration of the miseries which we deserue and to the feeling of the flashes of hell fire but they cannot worke Faith in vs nor assure vs of pardon nor apply to vs the promise of God touching the remission of sinnes It maketh a good beginning but it cannot bring the worke to perfection The like may bee saide of priuate admonition and a godly conuersation which the Apostles teach may be meanes of saluation to others it is not spoken to lessen or weaken the authority or efficacy of publicke preaching as if it were not the ordinary meanes to conceiue nourish and encrease faith in vs neither is it simply to be vnderstood that they are able to conuert the soule but onely that they are good occasions fit inducements and profitable helpes to drawe vs and allure vs to a liking and louing and longing after faith For when a man that is not a Christian but an Infidell beholdeth the holy pure chast conuersation of his Wife after her calling to the knowledge of the truth and hir subiection and obedience toward himselfe he may be mooued to embrace the Christian Religion whereof he seeth such worthy fruites We haue a notable example heerof in u Ioh. 4 39. 42 the woman of Samaria who perswading the men of the Citty to go out and heare Christ they saide vnto her after they hadde heard his preaching Now we beleeue not because of thy saying for we haue herd him our selues and know that this is indeede that Christ the Sauior of the world The exhortation of this woman preuailed with them to heare Christ and by their hearing they were conuerted she was the cause of their hearing their hearing was the cause of their beleeuing shee was the Instrument that brought them to Christ and hee wrought Faith in them when they vvere brought vnto him Obiection 2. Secondly it is saide that reading is preaching and therefore it is a sufficient meanes of saluation To this purpose they quote Actes 21. Moses of olde time hath in euery City them that preach him seeing he is read in the Synagogue euery Saboth day Loe say they he is preached when he is read therfore the bare reading must needs be preaching yea some adde it is better then preaching because when they heare the Scriptures read they knowe it is the word of God but when they heare preaching it is mens exposition and interpretation and they know not whether it bee true or false sound or vnsound right or wrong Answere I answere this obiection falleth of it selfe and it is ouerthrowne by that whereby it is sought to be strengthned For if reading be preaching then reading cannot be better then preaching inasmuch as nothing can be better or worse then it selfe It is not denied but the word Preaching may in a general sence include not only the reading of the word x Marke 1 45. 5 20. 7. 36 but any other way of declaring and publishing the power truth glory and workes of God Rom. 2 20 21. Psal 19 1 2. but then it is not vsed as wee take the word in the state of the question For wee meane by preaching the expounding of the Scripture according to the proportion of faith applying thereof according to the capacity of the hearers And thus they are set downe in the place alledged before as two distinct things one accompanying and following the other according to the ordinance of God and practise of the seruants of God Hence it is that the Apostle giueth this as a duty and direction belonging to Timothy y 1 Tim. 4 13. Till I come giue attendance to reading to exhortation and to Doctrine So it is sayde in the booke of Nehemiah z Nehe. 8 7 8. The Leuites caused the people to vnderstand the Law and the people stood in their place and they read in the Booke of the Law of God distinctly and gaue the sence and caused them to vnderstand the reading Likewise when Christ came to Nazareth where he had beene brought vp and went into the Synagogue on the Saboth day he stood vp He opened the Booke a Luke 4 17. and read the Scripture then he closed the Booke he sate downe the eyes of all of them were fastned on him and he began to preach vnto them Thus also wee see that when the Apostle Paule wrote his Epistle to the Romaines hee excused himselfe that hee could not come to preach vnto them b Rom. 1 11 15 14. For he longed to see them that he might bestow some spirituall guift among them and acknowledged himselfe a debter to the Grecians and to the Barbarians to the Wisemen and vnto the vnwise so that as much as lay in him hee was ready to preach the Gospell to them also that were at Rome Whereby we see that preaching and hearing are
of Paul toward Onesimus who was as deare vnto him as his owne bowels and therefore would haue him so receiued and respected as hee would receiue and respect his owne bowels Where we see that together with his petition he bewraieth and discloseth his affection toward him for whom hee maketh request This teacheth vs partly that to the end our request and commendation may take place and worke in him whom we beseech and entreat wee ought to shew our loue and make manifest our deare affection for him in the manner of making of our suit and supplication and partly that whosoeuer is truelie turned vnto God and repenteth of his sinnes from the bottome of his heart ought to be dearely beloued of vs yea albeit he were a Seruant a Fugitiue and one stained with much wickednesse For a sound conuersion of the hart doth blot out all reproach from the penitent and raseth out of our minds all remembrance of former offences as if they had neuer beene committed These are the generall obseruations now let vs discend to the particular doctrines Which in times past was to thee vnprofitable but now very profitable both to thee and to me We heard before that in these wordes one Argument is included to perswade Philemon to receiue his Seruant which is because howsoeuer he had beene vnprofitable now he was turned to be most profitable In which Wordes the Apostle maketh an allusion to name Onesimus which in the originall signifieth profitable It is an vsuall and common thing in the Prophets to allude to the Names of Men and Women of Citties and Countries and from thence to draw some profitable consideration and conclusion that thereby they may mooue to some vertue or condeme some vice or giue warning of some iudgement or set forth some mercy of God The like it were easie to shew in the New-Testament So in this place the Apostle putting Philemon in hope of receiuing profit by him alludeth to the Name of Onesimus that is profitable In like manner z Sophocles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one of the Heathen Poets vsing this Name hath a wise and worthy sentence The gifts of Enemies are not guifts nor profitable The last word is the same with the Name of this Seruant wherefore it is as much as if the Apostle should haue saide I doe not feare and doe not thou doubt but he will behaue himselfe answerable to my expectation and commendation giuen of him beseeming the profession of the Faith worthy his owne Name and will approoue himselfe vnto thee to be a right Onesimus that is thrifty and profitable Before he was Onesimus in name now he is so in deede before he held the Title now hee hath the truth before thou sawest the shaddow now thou shalt see the substance thou hast had experience of his vnprofitablenesse now shalt thou haue the benefit of the profit that he bringeth with him being made a new Creature in Christ Iesus We learne from hence a Doctrine 1. Christian religion maketh a man profitable and helpefull to others that before hath beene iniutious and hurtfull that Christian Faith or Religion of a man vnprofitable maketh him profitable and of one vnfit maketh him fit to euery good woorke The conuersion of men to the true Faith worketh the greatest change and alteration that can be and maketh them good profitable and helpefull vnto others that haue beene before vniust iniurious cruell and hurtfull This appeareth by the Prophesie of Esaias b Esay 11 6 7. where hee sheweth That the Wolfe shall dwell with the Lambe and the Leopard shall lie with the Kidde and the Calfe and the Lyon and the fat Beast together and a little Childe shall leade them the Cow and the Beare shall feede and their young ones shall lie together and the Lyon shall eate Straw like the Bullocke the Suckling Child shal play vpon the hole of the Aspe and the weined Childe shall put his hand in the Cockatrice hole These things are not litterally to be vnderstood but he meaneth by these Beastes men of a rauenous and brutish Nature who when they shall bee brought into the Kingdome of God and Church of Christ they shall lay aside their wicked and Woluish properties and become louing gentle kind and curteous one to another This the Apostle teacheth Ephe. 2 11. c Ephe. 2 11 12 13. Col. 1 21 22. Remember that ye being in times past Gentiles in the Flesh and called vncircumcision of them which are called Circumcision in the Flesh made with handes that ye were at that time without Christ and were Aliants from the Common-wealth of Israell and were Strangers from the Couenants of promise and had no hope and were without GOD in the World but now in Christ Iesus ye which once were farre off are made neere by the blood of Christ It is noted in the Words of the Prophet and of the Angell d Mal. 4 6. Luke 1 17. That Iohn the Baptist by the power and force of his Ministry shall turne the hearts of the Fathers to the Children and the disobedient to the wisedome of the iust Men to make ready a people prepared for the Lord. This truth is farther confirmed vnto vs by sundry examples as by the example of Paule toward others and others toward Paule Let vs looke vpon the example of Paule no man is ignorant that before his conuersion to the true Faith of Christ he was e 1 Tim. 1 13 1 Cor. 15 9. Actes 9 1 2. a bloody Persecuter an horrible Blasphemer and a cruell Oppressor one that made hauocke of the Church of God and sought to ouerthrow Religion but after hee was called to the knowledge of Christ he was turned into a new man he became gentle vnto all hee thirsted after their Saluation which is the sincerest Testimony of the soundest loue The like affection we see in the Iayler after his conuersion He had executed his office with all rigour and extreamity f Actes 16 24 33. He cast the Apostles into the inner Prison und made their Feete fast in the Stockes because hee would be more sure of them but immediatly after the feeling of the Earthquake the hearing of Paule the opening of the Prison the preaching of the Faith and turning of his heart He tooke them the same houre of the night and washed their stripes and was baptized with all that belonged vnto him Whereby we see the fruit of his vnfained loue after the truth of his vnfained conuersion Before he shewed his cruelty now he testifieth his Charitie before he manifested his rage now he declareth his Religion before we heard of his fury now we see his Faith The Iewes that crucified the Lorde of glory and shed innocent blood euen the blood of the Sonne of God g Act. 2 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47. when they were exhorted to amend their liues and to saue themselues from that froward Generation they receiued his word they
they are done more then what is done This is it which the Apostle expresseth 2 Cor. 8 12. If there bee first a willing minde it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that a man hath not This layeth before vs the abundant kindnesse of God who albeit he be a spirit euery way perfect yet he accepteth our lame and defectiue seruice Our duties shall be all acceptable in his sight though they bee performed in great weakenesse and mingled with many imperfections which were sufficient to cause them to be reiected and refused if we be carefull to do them in the truth and vprightnesse of our hearts and with chearefull and ready minds All things must be done in loue and this must bee considered in all the workes of our hands This ministreth a double comfort First vnto such as are of poore and lowe degree to consider that GOD regardeth the heart more then the hand and our willingnesse more then our worke Hence it is that euen seruants whose condition is lowest in the family and which meddle not in great matters or in waighty affaires or in excellent works yet are charged with this affection and in sincerity to behaue themselues in those inferiour duties x Col 3 22 23 Ephes 6 5. Seruants be obedient vnto them that are your Maisters according to the flesh in all things not with eye-seruice as men-pleasers but in singlenesse of heart fearing God and whatsoeuer ye do do it heartily as to the Lord and not to men Where he sheweth that seruants must do their duties not as seruing for the penny or ayming at the filling of their belly or contenting themselues to please their maisters eie but euen as seruing God looking for a recompence from him knowing that he hath placed them in that estate requireth those things in truth and sincerity to be performed as vnto him For the Lord doth not see as man seeth he doth not look to the outward action but he beholdeth with what hart al things are done and therfore measureth according to euery mans deed whether he be high or low rich or poore Lord or Seruant The best hart hath the best recompence the worst hart hath the worst wages There is a great difference between work and work some are great some litle some beautiful some base some high some mean some low but whatsoeuer I do if I do it chearfully as seruing my master Christ that looketh vpon me albeit my calling be neuer so simple as to wash dishes to wipe shooes to scoure the spit to sweep the house I please God therein as well as he that manageth a kingdom that ministreth Iustice that preacheth the gospel True it is the work is greater to rule the affairs of State then to remain in the kitchen yet he shal be better accepted of God that performeth these smal things hartily then he that doth the greatest works grudgingly either drawn by importunity or cōpeld by necessity Thus it doth fal out that a poor seruant carrying this mark and testimony with him is more acceptable to the Lord then he that hath done greater things to the iudgment of the eie to the shew of the world and to the sight of men Secondly this serueth as a singuler comfort to euery one of vs that groane vnder the burden of sin that feele the weaknesse of our faith and are dismaied at the smalnesse of our sanctification Wee know how busie Satan is to watch his aduantage of our infirmities and imperfections to perswade vs that we haue no faith at all that we are without repentaunce without grace and without regeneration because we feele great defects and many wants in our best workes and our best gifts But this must comfort vs that God accepteth of that measure that he hath giuen vs euen according to that which we haue not according to that which we haue not A weak faith shal be as auayleable to apprehend Christ as a strong faith If we haue a desire and an hungering after grace z Psal 145 15 and 10 17. He will fulfill the desires of them that feare him he also will heare their cry and saue them God hath assured vs that as hee hath begun his good worke in vs so he will finish his work and in his good time bring it to perfection When we finde any dulnesse and vntowardnesse in our selues if we hate and dislike them and labor to profite and grow forward in sanctification God accepteth our willingnesse and readinesse though our strength be not answerable to our desire or the outward worke answereable to our hart For God is faithful and will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue the strength that he shal giue vs and the Lord Iesus is a merciful Highpriest who will not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoking flax Let vs al therefore looke that a willing and ready mind be found in vs. Againe this must be considered in all things If we come to hear the word and to exercise the duties of Gods worship if we do it for fashion sake for feare of the law for the praise of men or for custom they are nothing worth they ought to be performed in obedience to God in loue of his ordinance in delight of his worship in singlenesse of heart and in an earnest affection to the meanes of our saluation The like we might say of giuing of almes and liberality toward the poore if they be not bestowed with promptnesse of minde with compassion of heart and with feeling of the wants of those that craue our helpe they are nothing at all respected of God nor they that distribute thē rewarded of him Vse 2 Secondly seeing only that duty which is done freely and not by compulsion deserueth due commendation this reproueth al those things that are don vpon wrong grounds and euil foundations It is not enough to doe a good thing but we must do it well It is not sufficient to do those things that are godly but we must do them in a godly manner Let euery one heerein carefully examine his soule and try his owne heart whether hee do the duties of his calling vnwillingly vncomfortably and vpon necessity for feare of danger for auoyding of shame for keeping of his credit for praise of the world or such like causes which are all false motiues or whether he do them hartily and chearfully as in the sight of God before whom all things are naked open This is to be considered as well of the Minister himselfe as of the people that heare him and are partakers of his labours The calling a The Minister must preach willingly and of a readie minde of the Minister is an high and mighty calling he is the Steward of God and a watchman ouer the people for whose soules hee must giue an account in that great day of the Lord. It is not enough for vs to labour among them though wee should worke and
our mouths to instruct them we shall haue deafe Children and deafe Seruants that will stoppe their eares against all good admonition that is offered vnto them If we be bound in a double Band common and speciall and doe performe a single dutie vnto them it will follow that as they owe vnto vs a two-folde dutie generall and particular the generall of all mankinde the particular of Seruants they will perform● a single and maimed and vnperfect seruice Thus much shall suffice for this Doctrine and diuision 17 If therefore thou account our things common Receiue him as my selfe The order of the words HItherto we haue spoken of the former reason drawne from the Apostles action of sending him backe to his Maister together with the conuincing and confuting of the two obiections that might be made against the receiuing of him one touching the retaining of him with himselfe the other touching the Seruants departure from his Maister Now followeth the second reason of the second sort taken from the person of Paule and it is of his communion with Philemon and the participation of the same heauenlie guifts and graces with him This reason is first handled and then another Obiection is preuented The reason is in this 17. Verse the preuention is the two next following to wit the 18. and 19. Verses This reason heere vsed is breefely propounded and yet nothing is omitted which may carrie any force of Argument to perswade and asswage Philemon For he inferreth out of the former wordes wherein he hath commended Onesimus not so much to be accounted as a Seruant as to be receiued as a Brother that hee is worthy to be forgiuen and withall he insinnuateth and signifieth that hee was necessarilie ioyned with him in these bandes of mutuall loue that hee could not be separated and deuided from him whereby it must come to passe that one of these will followe eyther thou must loue vs both or else for euer refuse vs both If thou hate him thou canst not loue me or if thou loue me thou must not hate hate him This reason is thus framed If we haue fellowship together in all common blessings then receiue him But we haue fellowship together in all common blessings Therefore receiue him The first proposition of this reason is in the beginning of this verse If therefore thou account our things common receiue him The conclusion is amplified and made manifest by a comparison of the like Receiue him as my selfe The meaning of the words Thus much of the Method now let vs see somewhat concerning the meaning of the words which are few and not hard When the Apostle saith If thou account our things common the words in the originall are If thou haue mee a Fellow or partaker that is One in common with thee whereby he expresseth his singular affection to this poore fugitiue Seruant and maketh his cause and this request all one so that to reiect him was as much as if he reiected Paule and on the other side to embrace and receiue him is accounted by him as done to himselfe Againe when he craueth to haue him receiued by receiuing we must vnderstand not onely the entertaining of him into his seruice and the taking of him home into his house but therein also he requesteth of him to forgiue him his offences committed against him and to think well of him as of a Brother in Christ Lastly when he addeth As my selfe he meaneth louingly friendly hartily as thou wouldst doe me if I came vnto thee As if he should haue said seeing no man denieth to his companion and familiar friend any thing that is honest and iust it cannot stand with that loue and familiarity that hath euer beene betweene thee and me to deny me this reasonable request but we haue beene and are most deare and inward friends communicating one with another all good things so that I haue accounted thee another my selfe and thou hast accounted me another thy self and therefore I doe not doubt but thou wilt receiue him againe into thy fauour as if he were another Paule or as a member of his body Sundry obseruations arising out of this Verse This is to be marked and considered concerning the meaning The words in this verse are not many but the obseruations are not few that might be concluded and collected out of the same First of all many may maruaile that the Apostle is so earnest vehement and importunate for a Seruant and especially for such a Seruant Surely feare of hard and seuere dealing might haue moued Onesimus to distrust and despaire and therefore he vseth all meanes to hold him vp to cherrish his faith and to further the good work begun in him being as yet a young plant a new conuert as a ioynt newly restored and hauing yet a tender conscience whereby he prouoketh vs and all others to seek tenderly the vpholding maintaining confirming and comforting such as haue giuen witnesse of their true repentance not to quench the smoaking Flaxe nor to breake the bruised Reed For seeing we are with all mildnesse to receiue vnto vs such as are weake in the faith woe vnto them that stay them that are comming forward and lay stumbling blockes in their way to bring them backe and to cause them to returne to their vomit with the Dog and to the wallowing in the mire like the Sow that was washed And seeing the sinner is thus to be helped which hath approued his conuersion vnto vs that we are to make intercession vnto others to obtaine pardon for the penitent we are admonished that they are much more fauourably handled and carefully to be receiued and gently to be remitted by our selues Secondly we see that to the old request he addeth a new reason for we shal neuer finde in this Epistle his petition barely and nakedly propounded He hath vsed diuers Arguments before to perswade Philemon yet heere we haue another annexed to moue him to grant it without denyall or resistance This giueth instruction to the Ministers of the Gospell to teach the truth soundly and substantially as that the consciences of the people may be wel grounded and throughly setled therein When matters of weight and importance are in question they must not deale rawly they must not vse weake proofes and vnsufficient reasons whereby men may be rather hardned in their errors then helped out of their errors Thirdly the Apostle doth not simply say If our things be common as hee might haue done but if thou account them common and vs to haue a communion betweene our selues declaring thereby that it is not enough to know a truth vnlesse we also yeeld vnto it as vnto a truth It is one thing to know what is good and another thing to embrace it in our practises It is one thing to know what is euil and another to refuse it in our actions We must labor not onely to haue our minds cleered our vnderstandings and our iudgments rectified to see
as seeke to be iustified by the Law are fallen from Grace Therefore the Apostle Paule saith Rom. 11. There is a remnant according to the election of Grace e Rom. 11 5 6 and if it be of Grace it is no more of workes or else were Grace no more Grace but if it be of workes it is no more Grace or else were worke no more worke This serueth to confute the Romish Doctrin giueth vs iust cause to come out from among them and to make a separation from them as being no true Church of God For in asmuch as they take away the foundation and cheefe pillers whereupon the house of God standeth they pull it downe and bring it to ruine We see how they exclude Grace and bring in Merrit They establish a two-fold kind of Merit and both of them as they vnderstand them plants of their owne setting but meere Strangers in the Garden of the Scriptures and therefore shall fall according to the Doctrine of Christ who saith f Math. 15 13 Euery Plant which mine heauenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted vp One sort is the g A two-folde merrit taught in the Church of Rome merrit of the person the other is the merrit of the worke The merrit of the person they make to be a dignity in the person wheredy hee is esteemed worthy of eternall life and this they say is found in Infants dying after Baptisme who though they want the merit of good workes yet they want not the merrit of their persons by which they receiue the Kingdome of heauen The merrit of the worke is a Dignity or excellency in the worke in it selfe whereby it is fitted and inabled to deserue life euerlasting Hence it is that they teach that the worke and the deed are meritorious two waies first by Couenant because God hath made a promise of reward vnto them Secondly by their owne Dignity because Christ hath merited that our workes should merrit A strange opinion and a strange language and manner of speaking neuer heard of in the Booke of God As for vs wee renounce all personall merrits that is all merrits within the person of any meere man also all merrits of workes done by any meere man whatsoeuer The true merrit whereby we looke for the fauour of God and life euerlasting is to be found in the person and workes of Christ alone who is the treasurie and store-house of all our merrits Obiection But heere some man might obiect and say The promise of reward is made to them that beleeue and worke therefore our workes doe merrit for merrit and reward be Relatiues Answere I answere there is a double reward one of Merrit the other of Mercy Euery good worke be it neuer so little done in Faith done to the glory of God done in that manner that he commaundeth shall bee rewarded but the reward is not giuen for the worthinesse of the worke but through the liberality of him that hath promised Hence it is that eternall life is called an Inheritance The obedient Childe hath promise from his Father to be his Heire and to inherit his Lands Goods and Possessions after his decease yet not for his obedience sake but because his Father loueth him and in kindnesse and compassion preferreth him before others Let it suffice vs to haue the Kingdome of Heauen as a free inheritance and not dreame as Hirelings that we shall haue it as an hire and Wages of our worke for then we shall be deceiued of our hope and expectation It is a vaine confidence to set vp such an high price of our workes as thereby to make them able to buy Heauen These men do know neither the weakenesse of their owne strength nor the vnworthinesse of their owne workes nor the wretchednesse of their owne persons nor the excellency of Gods Graces nor the praise of his glory whereof he is iealous which hee will not giue to any other They are like to Simon Magus h Actes 8 18. who offered to buy the guifts of God for his Money as a purchase or like to the i Math. 6 7. Heathen that looke to be heard for their much babling sake or like to Seruants that doe all for their hire So these Merit-mongers will haue no Heauen except they may haue it as their hire and as a penny-worth for their penny they will not be indebted vnto God nor beholding vnto him for it As for vs we value not our good workes at so high a rate we know their imperfections we craue eternall life as a Sons portion and an inheritance freely promised vnto vs and freely bestowed vpon vs. Indeede it is the will and pleasure of God that wee should labour and bring forth good workes to expresse our thankfulnesse to him that hath adopted vs for his Children and after our labour receiue the inheritance yet we cannot deserue it by our obedience and we haue a better claime vnto it by being Sonnes then working as Seruants We confesse that the reward shall be giuen of bounty not of necessity by guift not by debt by promise not by desert by Gods acceptation not through our perfection As for the Papists that glory in their owne workes let them take heede they do not deceiue themselues and whilst they rob God of his honour let them beware they doe not robbe themselues and depriue themselues of the honour promised to the Saintes and whilst they challenge and lay claime to euerlasting life as to the Wages of Seruants let them in time looke to themselues least they be denyed the Inheritance that belongeth vnto Sonnes Vse 3. Lastly seeing all Gods guifts come from him to vs of Grace and Mercy It is our dutie aboue all things to desire Mercy and to craue the free guiftes of God The Children of God whensoeuer they presented themselues into his presence they haue stripped themselues of all thinges they haue renounced all priuiledges of the flesh they haue acknowledged their owne vnworthinesse and haue craued nothing but his fauour and to bee satisfied with his Image This we see in the Prophet Dauid Psal 6. k Psal 6 3. 6. 63 3 4 5. My Soule is sore troubled but Lord how long wilt thou delay Returne ô Lorde deliuer my Soule saue me for thy mercies sake He desireth nothing but of Mercy hee pleadeth nothing but fauour hee standeth not vppon his owne righteousnesse he willeth not God to respect him according to his owne worthynesse Againe Psal 63. Thy louing kindnesse is better then life therefore my lippes shall praise thee thus will I magnifie thee all my life and lift vp mine hands in thine Name my Soule shall be satisfied as with Marrow and fatnesse and my mouth shall praise thee with ioyfull lippes Where hee preferreth the goodnesse of God before all things in Heauen and Earth whiles he aduanceth it aboue life signifying thereby that his life could not bee pleasant vnto him and that he would
good course a long time and dedicated their young yeares as it were bringing their first fruites to God who notwithstanding haue turned out of the way when they haue beene going out of the World Euen as it falleth out sometimes that such as haue failed safely in the wide Sea and kept an vpright course that they haue escaped the dangers of stormes and tempests and Rockes and quicke-sandes haue notwithstanding beene cast away in the very Hauen through negligence and security and want of heed taking so is it with many that haue stood out in daungerous times when the Windes haue blowne and persecutions haue beene hot who in calme weather and peaceable times in their latter times haue suffered shipwracke and haue dashed the Barkes of their Soules against the vaine-pleasures and vanities of this World which drowne Men in perdition and destruction Hence it is that the Apostle writing to the Thessalonians prayeth vnto God for them in this manner m 1 Thes 5 23 Now the very GOD of peace sanctifie you throughout and I pray God that your whole Spirit and Soule and Body may be kept blamelesse vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ. Hee saw they had neede of Gods gratious assistance euen vnto the last breath of their body to vphold them and to keepe them in his feare Let vs therefore remember what the Prophet speaketh of those that are truely regenerate Psalme 92 12 13 14. The righteous shall flourish like a Palme Tree and shall grow like a Caedar in Lebanon such as bee planted in the House of the Lorde shall flourish in the Courts of our God they shall still bring forth Fruit in their age they shall be fat and flourishing If we be in the number of these men described in this place alwaies fruitfull in good thinges and neuer barren of heauenly graces we shall be assured that we shall neuer be remooued Trees as we see by experience grow barren when they grow old but such as are planted in the House of God must be most fruitfull in their age But with many it is cleane contrary the more old in age the more old in sinne and sapped in all sorts of wickednesse This is a searefull signe and prognosticate of a finall Apostacy when our ending is not answerable to our beginning Obiection But heere some man may say Can the faithfull fall away for euer Can they loose their Faith altogether Answere I answer such as liue in the Church and seeme to themselues and to others to haue faith may fall away but such as haue the faith of Gods elect can neuer fall away God doth stablish them in Christ 2 Cor. 1 12. And they are kept by the power of God through faith vnto saluation 1. Pet. 1 4. So that our life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3 3. The gifts and calling of God are without repentance and he that hath begun this good worke in vs will also finish and perfect it vntil the day of Iesus Christ Phil. 1. 6. We are persawaded that neither life nor death nor Deuill nor any meanes whatsoeuer shal be able to separate vs from the loue of God Notwithstanding we must beware of carnall security least these guifts of God be weakened and diminished in vs for albeit they cannot dye yet they may decay and decrease and we may fall though not fall away and our Faith may be lesse though not vtterly lost Christ Iesus hath somewhat against the Angell of the Church of Ephesus o Reuel 2 4. because hee had left his first loue He was not finally fallen from Grace but is highly praised for his patience and perseuerance but is charged to haue slacked his course and to haue cooled his zeale and therefore hee is not saide to haue lost his Loue but to haue left his first Loue so that they were not so earnest so seruent and so zealous as they were at their first Conuersion Wee haue therefore continuall neede to be often in prayer that wee may euer-more encrease in heauenly Graces and bee preserued by the power of God that we be not ouercome by the power and subtiltie of Sathan who desireth nothing more then our Destruction nothing lesse then our good and saluation 25 The Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ be with your Spirit Amen The order of the words Hitherto of the first part of the Conclusion which is the salutation sent from others Now of the salutation that commeth from him-selfe which is as his last farewell and shutting vppe of the whole Epistle and as it were a solemne taking of his leaue of him and the rest which is thus much in effect Grace bee with your Spirit The first part or former word is amplified and enlarged by the efficient cause from whence it commeth and proceedeth to wit Christ Iesus who is also declared by that Soueraigne Authoritie which he hath ouer all Our Lord. Lastly the whole Prayer is garnished with a certain exclamation of heartie wel-wishing to them in the last word Amen Thus much touching the Order The Interpretation of the words Let vs come to the Interpretation of the Words and search out the meaning of them by other places of Scripture Wherein we are to consider what is meant by grace why it is called The Grace of our Lord Iesus why he is called A Lord. why Our Lord what is meant by Spirit what is meant by your Spirit and lastly what is meant by this word Amen First touching Grace whereof we haue spoken before Verse 3. we must vnderstand that there is a two-fold Grace mentioned in the word of God p Called Gratia gratū faciens One which maketh a man gracious and acceptable to God which is the free fauour and loue of God whereby he is well pleased and exceedingly contented with his elect in Christ his beloued sonne which is in God himselfe and in no Creature whatsoeuer either Saint or Angell The other is Grace freely q Called Gratia gratis data giuen to men both common to the elect and Reprobate or proper to the elect onely which are supernaturall and sauing graces The former is called the first Grace which is no inharent quality in vs but an essential property in God and the cause of all graces in vs and the Fountaine of all benefits that flow vnto vs. Thus it is taken in many places as Rom. 1 7. and 3 24. and 4 16. and 11 6. The latter is called the second Grace because it is deriued from the former as we see 1. Iohn 1 16. and 1. Pet. 1 14. and 5 10. and 2. Pet. 3 18. Now in this place I vnderstande it of the fauour and Loue of GOD with the which hee beganne his Epistle before and with which heere he closeth it vppe ending euen as hee made his entrance Secondly hee calleth this The Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ for two Causes first because he is the fountaine of it he is
but the Labourers are few pray ye therefore the Lord of the Haruest to thrust forth Labourers into his Haruest Where we see he calleth the Ministers of the Gospell Labourers in the Haruest-fielde and gatherers of the Lords Corne. We see what great paines men take in Haruest and how necessary Labourers are when the Corne is ripe and ready to be reaped The Apostle Paule speaking of himselfe and the rest of the Apostles saith q 1 Cor. 3 9. We together are Gods Labourers And in another place r 1 Tim. 5 17 The Elders that rule well is worthy of double honour specially they which labour in the word and doctrine Heerevnto agreeth that which he writeth in another Epistle Å¿ 2 Tim. 2 15. Study to shewe thy selfe approued vnto God a worke-man that needeth not to be ashamed diuiding the word of truth aright All these testimonies teach vs this truth that the office of the Ministery is not so much a dignity as it implyeth a duty it is not onely an honour but a burthen it is not onely a Title of renowne but a work of labour Reason 1. This will better appeare if wee marke the Reasons following First the ordinance of God appointeth that euery calling should eate their Bread in t Gen. 3 19. the sweate of their browes that is should be industrious and painefull in their seuerall vocations whether it be in bodily or in spirituall labour The bodily calling requireth bodily labour the spirituall calling requireth spirituall labour Idlenesse and negligence in any u Ier. 48 10. worke of the Lord is accursed An idle hearer that ioyneth not practise is abhominable a loose and carelesse professor that addeth not obedience is a bad professor Reason 2. Secondly the Ministers of God fight the Lords spirituall battels for vs by their prayers care watchfulnesse faith and the whole Armour of God by opposing and setting themselues against Heritiques Atheists Worldlinges Schismatiques Wicked men and all thinges that exalr themselues against God Is not this a great worke of great labour to resist the budding and growing of so many sinnes as daily rise vp as men that striue with the whole Earth To labour in study in word in doctrine in zeale in watching According to that which the Apostle saith x 2 Cor. 11 27 28. I was often in wearinesse and painefulnesse in watching often besides the things which are outward I am combred daily and haue the care of all the Churches who is weake and I am not weake Who is offended and I burne not How did Moses fight in prayer y Exod. 32 31 and labour in zeale for the people of Israell when hee stood in the gap and stopped the wrath of God that was kindled against them If then we would reason from the generall to the speciall waying the purpose and appointment of God who hath annexed labour to euery calling or consider that the Ministers of the word are the Souldiers of God to fight his battels against sinne and sinfull men in both respects we may conclude that the calling of the ministery is an office of great necessity and of much labour Vse 1. This doctrine teacheth vs and offereth vnto vs diuers Vses First let vs learne to acknowledge the worke of the Ministry to bee a worke of great diligence painefulnesse and labour if it be performed as it ought to be We must keepe backe z Act. 20 27 28. nothing from the people but shew vnto them the whole counsell of God We must lay the Foundation of Religion among them and build constantly vpon it which cannot be done without faithfulnesse If wee take heede to our selues and to all the flocke whereof the holy Ghost hath made vs Ouer-seers to feede the Church of God which hee hath purchased with his owne bloud we shall find our function to be full of labour and sweating to receiue much euill intreating and hard entertainement heere in this World The Apostle teaching the duty of the hearers toward their Ministers saith a 1 Cor. 3 1 2. Let a man so thinke of vs as of the Ministers of Christ and disposers of the secrets of God and as for the the rest it is required of the Disposers that euery Man be found faithfull So he teacheth in another place b 1 Tim. 3 1. This is a true saying If any Man desire the office of a Bishop he desireth a worthy worke Where he sheweth indeede that the calling is a worthy calling but it requireth also worthy labouring This will farther appeare vnto vs if we consider the Titles that are giuen vnto them They are called Builders that are continually busie in building hewing tough Timber and squaring rough stones No Timber no Stones of themselues so vnfit for building as we are by Nature to be coupled together and to grow vnto an holy Temple in the Lord. They are called Souldiers they are alwaies fighting or looking for their enemies and drawing out the Sword of the Spirit c Ephe. 6 17. which is the word of God Is any calling vnder Heauen more necessary then the profession of a Souldier in time of danger And when an assault is made or the battels ioyne is any profession more painefull Sometimes they are called Husband-men Is not the life of the Husband-man a painefull life and is not the ending of one worke the beginning of another Doth not euery season of the yeare bring his seuerall trauell So that no calling is accompanied with more labour and lesse ease Sometimes they are called Watch-men who stand continually on their watch Tower to discry the comming and approaching of the Enemy Sometimes they are called Shepheards abiding in the fielde and keeping watch by night ouer their flocke they are in the day consumed with heate and with Frost in the night and their sleepe departeth from their eyes Seeing therefore the Ministers aie builders of the Lordes house Souldiers in the Lordes Campe Husbandmen in the Lords fielde Watch-men in the Lordes Citty and Shepheardes ouer the Lordes flocke which hee hath redeemed with his precious blood we must all confesse that the Ministry of the word is a worke of great labour if it be discharged aright For this if wee know not by practise wee may see by experience that to study with constantnesse to meditate with earnesse to instruct with diligence to exhort with carefulnesse to reproue with zeale to comfort with cheerefulnesse to conuince with boldnesse to watch ouer the people with a godly d Heb. 13 17. ouer-sight as they that must giue accountes for their Soules to conceiue godly anger and great sorrow for sinne to pray in publike and priuate to goe in and out before the people of God in the doctrine of Faith and in example of life to prepare themselues to handle the word and to deliuer it with power and euidence of the spirit with earnest affections being thus prepared I say to performe all these duties
Children of God c Psal 123 3. Haue mercy vpon vs ô Lord haue mercy vpon vs for we haue suffered to much contempt This is the direction that the Apostle Iames giueth d Iames 5 5. If any of you want wisedome let him aske of God which giueth to all men liberally and reprocheth no man and it shall be giuen him This is that which the Apostle both teacheth and craueth The Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ the loue of God and the Communion of the Holy Ghost be with you all The like we see vsed by the Apostle Iohn Reuel 1. 4. All which testimonies serue directly to teach vs that what blessings soeuer we want we must beg them of God and of him onely Reason 1. Let vs see the Reasons to confirme vs in this truth First God is the fountaine of all good thinges and the Well-spring of all graces whatsoeuer Hee is a most bountifull and liberall Giuer none can helpe vs but he alone If hee shut his handes who can open them If hee stoppe his eares who can heare If hee turne awaie his eye from vs who can see our wantes If hee close vp his heart who can shew mercie Hence it is that the Apostle saith e Rom 11 36. For of him and through him and for him are all thinges to him bee glory for euer Amen And Iames in the first Chapter of his Epistle Iam. 1. 17. f Iames 1 17. Euery good giuing and euery perfect guift is from aboue and commeth downe from the Father of lights with whom is no variablenesse neither shaddow of turning Reason 2. Secondly the three persons in Trinity doe worke ioyntly together euen from the first beginning of our creation to the last finishing of our saluation It is said all things were made by the Sonne g Iohn 1 3. and that without him nothing was made that was made the Spirit also did sustaine and vphold that confused Lumpe which was the matter of the vniuersall so that they are said and set downe to be Creators as well as the Father In the worke of our saluation the Father willeth it and electeth vs the Sonne meriteth and deserueth it the Holy Ghost applyeth and appropriateth it This is it which Christ himselfe h Iohn 5 17. 16 13. saith Ioh. 5. My Father worketh hitherto and I worke And Chap. 16. When he commeth which is the Spirit of truth he will lead you into all truth So we might say the like touching the guifts of Sanctification and Iustification the Father forgiueth and washeth away sinne by the blood of Christ through the sprinkling of the Spirit he mortifieth sinne by the power of the death of Christ through the working of the Holy Ghost he raiseth vnto newnesse of life by the power of Christes Resurrection applyed by the Spirit hee iustifieth vs by the righteousnesse of Christ imputed and appropriated vnto vs by the Spirit Seeing therefore that God is a most munificent and liberall giuer rich vnto all and niggardly to none and seeing these three persons beeing one God doe worke ioyntly together in all things touching the creation of the World and the saluation of man and the redemption of our Soules it followeth whensoeuer we want any guifts needefull for Soule or body for this life or the life to come we must aske the supply of them at the handes of God onely the Father the Sonne and holy Ghost Vse 1. Now let vs handle the Vses breefely that arise from hence First we see that it is necessary for all that would pray aright and would obtaine that which they desire to be well instructed in the Vnity of the Godhead and the Trinity of the persons and to know the distinct properties of the persons without the vnderstanding whereof wee worship not the true God but an Idoll Our Sauiour in his conference with the Woman of Samaria chargeth the i Iohn 4 12. Samaritans to worship they know not what so doe many in our dayes both Heretiques and ignorant persons they call vppon God confusedlie but they haue no particular knowledge of God at all We must conceiue no otherwise of God in our minde then he hath expressed in his word The scripture teacheth to knowledge to beleeue to worship one God and him onely If we conceiue or imagine or receiue a multiplicity of Gods wee turne the truth of God into a lie and we erect vnto our selues so many Idols Againe the same Scripture setteth before vs three persons in that Godhead the Father which is the first person in the Trinity of himselfe the Son which is the second person begotten of the Father the holy Ghost which is the third person proceeding from the Father and the Sonne The Father is God the Sonne is God the holy Ghost is God and yet these three persons are not three Gods but one onely God And heere we haue in this place a notable Testimony of the God-head of the Sonne where the Apostle desireth and prayeth for grace and peace to be giuen to Philemon and his Wife to Archippus and the Church not onely from God the Father but from the Lord Iesus Christ This had bin monstrous horrible Idolatry and blasphemy Lastly if Christ had not bin in Nature Maiesty and glory equal with the Father hee of whom and from whom we craue spirituall and eternall gifts k Iohn 1 16. And of whose fulnesse we receiue and grace for grace must be confessed and beleeued to be God but such is Christ Iesus and therefore let this be an article of our Faith written in our hearts acknowledged with our mouth and confessed in the Church for euer that Christ is true God Vse 2. Secondly all good things are to be craued of God whether it be the supplying of his graces or the remoouing of our troubles we are taught to goe immediatly to God by Christ whensoeuer he blesseth vs and to returne vnto himselfe the praise of his owne worke This duty being required it serueth to meete with many corruptions that are too common in the world It conuinceth such Heathnish minded men as are of dead harts and haue no spark of the life of Gods Spirite in them that receiue and swallow vp daily diuers blessinges yet neuer looke to GOD that blesseth them but wee are like vnto the Swine that goe groueling to the ground like the Horse and Mule that haue no vnderstanding at all and so vse all the profites and pleasures of this life without any acknowledgement and consideration from whence they come and of whom they haue receiued them l Ezek. 32 6. or like vnto the Israelites when they had forsaken God They sate downe to eate and drinke and rose vp to play or as c Gen. 25 34. Esau He did eate and drinke he rose vp and went his way he filled his paunch and such was his prophanenesse that hee was touched with nothing These men doe daily deuour infinite
Hab. 2 4. The iust shall liue by his owne Faith Faith is the worke of the Spirit in the heart of man so that if it must be in the hearts of euerie one of vs it followeth that it must bee speciall Reason 2. Secondly true Fayth giueth sound comfort and worketh peace with God this is the property of that Faith which we must haue in vs. But comfort commeth vnto vs by hearing of a promise made to others not belonging to our selues What consolation of heart can this worke in vs to know that others shall bee saued This the Apostle speaketh of Heb. 6. God willing more abundantly h He. 6 17 18 to shewe vnto the heyres of promise the stablenesse of his counsell bound himselfe by an Oath that by two immutable thinges wherein it is vnpossible that God should lye we might haue strong consolation which haue our refuge to lay hold vpon that hope that is set before vs. No man receyueth comfort by the riches of another himselfe being poor or by the honor of another himselfe liuing in disgrace can so no man can feele any comfort by the Faith of another so long as he wanteth Faith himselfe to apply Christ vnto himselfe Seeing then that euery man must attaine to saluation by his owne faith which is able to minister comfort vnto him in the time of neede we see that Faith consisteth in applying the mercies of God vnto our owne selues Vse 1. The Vses of this Doctrine are now to bee considered and stoode vpon that so wee may vnderstand how to apply this applying of Fayth vnto our selues First this confirmeth the forme and manner of speech vsed in the Articles of Fayth wherein euerie one is taught to say I beleeue in God Not We beleeue in God For howsoeuer wee are to pray for others as well as for our selues and are taught to say Our Father which art in Heauen yet when the question is of our Fayth wee must say not We beleeue but I beleeue We pray for others but we beleeue for our selues The like is to be sayde of euerie principle of Faith euerie man must holde them all and beleeue them all This ouerthroweth the Doctrine of the Church of Rome which teacheth a generall and implicite Faith to bee sufficient for vs to Iustification and Saluation For they teach if a man can say I beleeue as the Church beleeueth though hee know not how or what the Church beleeueth though hee vnderstand nothing though he be able to apply nothing vnto himselfe hee hath a good faith and by that faith may be saued Answereable to this Diuinity i Bellar. de iustif lib. 1. cap. 7. are the Iesuites and Schoole-mens damnable and diuellish positions which maintaine that the people are not bound to know what the matters of Faith bee that ignoraunce is better then the knowledge of them that they neede not enquire after them and that Faith is better defined by ignorance then by knowledge Hence it is that they commend the Colliars Faith k Apol. translated by Staplet part 1. page 53 who as the tale is told being at the point of death and tempted of the Deuill what his Faith was Aunsweared I beleeue and die in the faith of Christs Church but being againe demanded what the faith of Christs Church was that faith said he that I beleeue in and thus the deuill getting no other aunswere was ouercome and put to flight This fable hath beene so long told and related among them that now themselues begin to beleeue it to be a truth as a lyar by often telling an vntruth beginneth to thinke it may be a true tale This Colliars faith is the popish Creed which being founded in ignorance is too weake a shield to quench the fiery Darts of the Deuill and to resist his tentations Thus true faith is suppressed ignorance is set on foote by these ignoraunt Teachers who as they are blinde themselues so they would put out the eyes of others They require no knowledge of the things we pray for l Rhem. annot on 1 Cor. 14. on Luke 12 11. but preferre ignorance they require no ability to professe the perticular points of our faith but in grosse and general This ignorance is plentifully condemned in the Scriptures We are taught m Col. 3. 16. 1 Pet. 3 15. that the word must dwell plentifully in vs and that we must be able to giue an account of the hope that is in vs to them that shall require an aunswere of vs. We are taught n Math. 22 29 Rom. 15 4 Hebr. 5 11. Iohn 5 39. that ignorance is the Mother of all euill the roote of all error the cause of all vnbeleefe and that whatsoeuer things are written afore hand were written for our learning that wee might haue comfort and beleeue Thus do these enemies of God and his people take from them their sword when they should go to fight and strip them of their Armor when they should enter the battell like Theeues that put out the Candle which serueth to discouer them To conclude let vs know that an ignorant faith is no faith for where there is no knowledge there can bee no faith But such as liue in the Church of Rome being blindly led of blinde Teachers doo know nothing to their comfort they haue the key of Knowledge taken from them they are nuzled and encouraged in ignoraunce they heare it magnified and extolled vnto the skies Some of them pretend the reading of the Scriptures in the mother tongue and in the translation that all may vnderstand to bee a principall cause of heresie Another shameth not to auouch that it was the inuention of the Deuill to permit the people to read the Bible Another blusheth not to write that he knew certaine men possessed of a Deuill because being but Husbandmen they were able to discourse of the Scriptures They teach that it is Heresy for a Lay-man to dispute in a point of faith These men speake not by the spirit of God but vtter the Deuils language and instruct the people in the Colliars Creed It is written of Timothy o 2 Tim 3 15. that hee was trained vp of a childe in the knowledge of the Mysteries of Religion It is written p Deut. 29 29 that the things reuealed belong to vs and to our children In former times the Doctrines of godlynesse and seuerall points of religion were knowne of all and the lowest of the people reasoned of them q Chryso hom 3 in Lazarum Aug. tract 21. in Ioh. and their Byshops exhorted thē thereunto asking why they are vttered if they may not be known Why they haue sounded if they may not bee heard And wherefore are they heard but that we should vnderstand them Vse 2. Secondly seeing it is the very forme of faith to receiue and apply this teacheth that it is not enough for men to haue an hystorical faith to belieue those things
Churches for the most part on the Lords day assemble at one houre wee come together at one time a blessed houre a blessed time the best houre the best time in the whole Weeke O how should wee loue it how should we desire it how should wee delight in it Then do wee pray for the Church then the Church prayeth for vs then are wee mindfull of our Brethren then are our Bretheren likewise mindfull of vs then is God mindfull of vs all Then we call vpon God for his Saints then doo the Saintes vpon the earth call vppon God for vs then dooth GOD heare vs all both them and vs them for vs and vs for them This is a sweete Harmony and pleasant agreement when wee do thus with one minde and with one mouth glorifie God and with a feeling of Gods mercie can cry out ſ Psal 84 1 2 O Lord of Hoasts how amiable are thy Tabernacles My soule longeth yea fainteth for the Courts of the Lorde for mine heart and my flesh reioyce in the liuing God On the other side great is their wickednesse and prophanesse that do not affect such times of publicke Prayers they shewe themselues to bee beastly minded and led●… with the wicked Spirit of the Deuill into all abhominations neyther may such looke to finde any benefite or feele any comfort by the Prayers and supplications in those places and at such holie times powred out It is a great priuiledge belonging onely to the faithfull to haue right and interrest in the Churches Prayers It is not so with the wicked so long as they abhorre such meetings which are the most fruitful seasons when God with a gracious dew doth raine vpon his inheritaunce they are as barren trees and as withered branches that are reserued for the fire of Gods vengeance and heauy indignation This is it which the Prophet sayeth t Psal 129 8. They which go by shall not say the blessing of the Lord be vpon you or We blesse you in the name of the Lord. So long therefore as they remaine in this contempt of God and of his Religion the prayers of the Church shall not auayle them 3. Lastly it reproueth such as neglect this duty and whereas they should pray for others do curse and ban them and wish all euil to come vpon them The Prophet Ieremy complaineth that hee had neyther bought nor solde among that contentious people u Ier. 15 10. and yet euery one did curse him These men loue cursing and therfore it shall come vpon themselues and enter into their soules and as they loue not blessing so it shall bee farre from them We are commaunded x Math. 5 44 to loue in stead of hating to do good instead of hurting to pray instead of persecuting and to blesse insteade of Curssing But of this Doctrine wee haue spoken more at large y Vpon the exposition of Numb 21. else-where and therefore will I heere passe it ouer and proceede vnto that which followeth Verse 5. When I heare of thy loue and Faith which thou hast towardes the Lord Iesus and toward all Saints In these words the former Thankes-giuing is amplified by another circumstaunce containing the cause wherefore the Apostle gaue thankes to his God for him and did make mention of him in his Prayers because he had heard by the report of the Brethren howe great Faith and Loue were in him Heerein we haue these particulars to be considered First hee reduceth the principall pointes of saluation to two heads Faith and Loue. In these standeth the happinesse of the godly by these a Christian man is perfected for they are the chiefe graces of the Holy-ghost Secondly he beginneth with Loue and placeth it before Faith Faith indeed is more precious but it is inward and hidden in the heart and in Nature and order goeth before Loue but hee first nameth Loue because it is better knowne to vs better seene of vs and is as the Touch-stone to try our Faith For though the cause be more worthy then the effect yet the effect is more perspicuous and manifest so Faith being the cause of works is more excellent but Loue as an effect is more euident Thirdly wee see that albeit Faith be set in the last place for the reason rendered before yet Fayth is first defined and so the order somewhat inuerted Now it is described and declared by his Obiect that it respecteth Christ Iesus Last of all hee defineth loue which he aplieth to the Saints albeit it extend to Infidels to reprobrates to prophane enemies whom also we are to loue yet a speciall maner of loue is due to the Saints which are members of the same body with vs. For euen as God loueth all mankind and all the workes of his hand who as hee created them so he preserueth them feedeth them giueth them fruitfull seasons filleth their hearts with ioy and gladnesse and maketh his Sun to shine vpon them and the raine to fall vppon them to make them without excuse but he loueth his Church with a speciall loue not onely giuing them temporall blessings but such as do accompany saluation the one hee loueth as his creatures the other both as his creatures and his Children so are wee to loue all mankind as our owne flesh but not in an equal degree with the faithfull who are tied together in a straighter band because there is not mutuall loue betweene the godly and vngodly neither do they grow vppe into one body But the godly are charged to loue one anoth●… and they are made the members of Christ and heyres with vs of eternall life and therefore loue is especially and principally to be shewed to the Saints that is vnto the Elect which ought to be aboue all the creatures in the world deere vnto vs z Why the elect are called Saints who are called Saints for two causes First because they are purged clensed from their sinnes by the blood of Christ Secondly because they are framed and fashioned by the spirit of God to an holy life and godly profession and conuersation Thus much touching the order interpretation of the words Now let vs see what doctrines arise from hence for our instruction and edification When I heard of thy Loue and Faith The Apostle doth not say heere that he saw and beheld or was an eye-witnesse of the Faith and fruits of the faith of Philemon but that he heard of them by the report of the Brethren Paule at this time as we haue shewed liued at Rome and Philemon dwelled at Colosse many Miles distant the one from the other yet his faith was published and his loue manifested throughout the whole worlde which necessarily inferreth that he openly professed them and made it knowne what religion he was of For if Philemon had not shewed boldly his faith and witnessed a good confession before many witnesses it had beene vnpossible that Paule being so farre from him should haue heard of it
Doctrine 4. True religion must be openly confessed professed Heereby wee learne that faith and the fruits thereof must be openly professed True Religion must not onely bee inwardly beleeued and in the heart acknowledged but must outwardly be confessed and professed in the world before men We see this in Daniell and the three Children hee was cast into the Lyons den they into the hot fiery furnace because they thought it not sufficient to worship God closely and secretly in their hearts but publickly declared what God they serued and what religion they embraced The Apostle writing to the Hebrewes calleth Christ Iesus a Heb. 3 1. 10 23. 13 15. the High-Priest of our profession that is of the trueth which we professe and beleeue And afterward he saith Let vs keep the profession of our faith without wuuering And againe Let vs by him offer the sacrifice of praise alwaies to God that is the fruite of the lippes which confesse his name This duty of acknowledging and confessing the truth haue all the seruants of God practised made conscience of from the beginning giuing witnesse to God his truth When the Apostles were conuented before the counsel they did not hide their faith but said b Acts 4 8. 19 20. 5 30. Ye Rulers of the people and elders of Israell forasmuch as we this day are examined of the good deede done to the impotent man to wit by what meanes he is made whole be it known vnto you all and to al the people of Israell that by the Name of Iesus Christ of Nazareth whome yee haue crucified whom God raysed againe from the dead euen by him dooth this man stand heere before you whole And when they were charged to ho de their peace and to speake or teach no more in the Name of Iesus they aunsweared Whether it bee right in the sight of GOD to obey you rather then GOD iudge ye for wee cannot but speake the thinges which wee haue seene and heard The Apostle Paule vseth this boldnesse of speech before Felix c Acts 24 14 15. I confesse vnto thee that after the way which they call Heresie so worship I the God of my Fathers beleeuing all thinges which are written in the Law and in the Prophets c. And as the Apostle himselfe practised this dutie so Timothy is commended and praised by him for the same d 1 Tim. 6 12 13. Fight the good fight of Faith lay holde of eternall life whereunto thou art also called and hast professed a good profession before many witnesses wherein also hee followed the steppes and example of Iesus Christ which vnder Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession All these as a clowd of witnesses serue to confirme vs in the assured truth of this doctrine that God requireth this duty of vs to confesse his word boldly to manifest our faith openly to shew our Religion publickely that so wee may confesse before the Lord his louing kindnesse and his wonderfull works before the sons of men Reason 1. And howsoeuer these Testimonies may serue and suffice for the strengthning thereof yet it shall appeare more plain and euident vnto vs if we waigh the Reasons First the profession of our faith hath a great promise of a rich reward ioyned with it and added vnto it and the starting backe from it as a deceitful bow hath a sore threatning of a grieuous curse following after it It is that which our Sauiour teacheth his Disciples whom he sent out as Sheepe among Wolues and foretelleth them of afflictions and persecutions that should be raised against them e Math. 10 32 23. Marke 8 38. Luke 9 26. 12 8. Whosoeuer shall confesse me before men him will I confesse also before my Father which is in Heauen and whosoeuer shall denie me before men him will I also denie before my Father which is in Heauen It is an hard matter to stand when the storme falleth and to confesse Christ in time of daunger when persecuters arise and enemies shewe themselues but the earnest consideration of this that Christ will confesse vs in the glorie of his Father and before the Angels of God will be a forcible meanes and motiue to put life and courage into vs to enable vs and perswade vs to this practise For what can be more right and reasonable and stand better with the Lawe of equity then that the seruant should not feare to professe what Maister hee serueth who will know him and confesse him when he is entred into his glory If a Prince should come to a man among a great company and single him out by name if he should acknowledge him among a thousand others and speake kindly vnto him it woulde encourage him to liue and die in his quarrell euen so seeing Christ Iesus the sonne of God and the heire of al● things will at the last day do vs this honour to confesse vs to be his owne children and giue vnto vs the Crowne of glory how should we bee stirred vp in loue to him againe and strengthned in the inward man to waxe bold in the faith and feruent in spirite to giue out a cleare Testimonie before all the worlde whose Seruants wee are and in all troubles to cleaue vnto him with full purpose of heart On the other side wee must bee terrifyed from denying him least hee bee ashamed of vs and denie vs before his Father which is in Heauen Reason 2. Secondly confession is a necessary fruit and consequent of faith where true Faith is in the hart there wil follow confession with the mouth This is it which the Prophet speaketh in his owne experience f Psal 116 10. I beleeued therefore did I speake for I was sore troubled This is made a note of Faith what it beleeueth it speaketh albeit the confession of the truth be accompanied with daunger And least any should imagine this to be peculiar to the Prophet not common to others the Apostle draweth it likewise vnto himselfe g 2 Cor. 4 13. Because wee haue the same spirit of faith according as it is written I beleeued and therefore haue I spoken We also beleeue and therefore speake He that is afraid to confesse Christ hath no true faith but he that beleeueth in him will not be ashamed of him and his Gospell Reason 3. Thirdly the Faith of Christes true Religion is a most glorious thing containing in it the great praise and glory of Gods wisedome power mercie and righteousnesse and it deliuereth the matter of mans saluation and eternall happinesse This was it that mooued the Apostle to preach the Gospell freely and boldly h Rom. 1 16. I am not ashamed of the Gospell of Christ for it is the power of God vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth to the Iew first and also to the Grecian Seeing therefore Christ hath promised to confesse vs before his Father seeing faith is manifested and shewed by
confession and lastly seeing the Gospell of Christ is the instrument of Gods power to woorke in vs saluation it followeth that the Religion of God and the gospel of Christ must not onely be beleeued in heart and embraced in Iudgements but also bee confessed by the mouth and professed in the practise of an holy life Obiections answered Against this truth somewhat may be obiected First if true Religion must openly bee confessed then such as are dumbe and cannot speake can haue no Religion if Confession be a fruite of faith then they must of necessitie want Faith that want the vse of the tongue Answere I answere the Doctrine must be vnderstood of such as haue the vse of the tongue giuen them to glorifie God If God haue giuen vnto vs the freedome of speech hee requireth this dutie at our hands If hee haue giuen vs no more then a sanctified and faithfull heart let vs honour him with the holy Meditations thereof he will exact no more of vs then hee hath giuen vnto vs. Hence it is that the Prophet Dauid sayeth or rather the Lorde himselfe by the Prophet Psalme 81. i Psal 81 10. Open thy Mouth wide and I will fill it In like manner it is sayde k Rom. 10 17 That Faith commeth by Hearing and Hearing by the worde of God yet can God extraordinarily giue faith to those that are deafe and haue not their hearing who is not bound to the outward sences nor tieth his graces to the outward eares but supplieth those wants by the working of his holy spirit to the endlesse comfort of such as haue those infirmities Obiection 2 Againe the Apostle sayth Rom. 14 22. Hast thou Faith Haue it with thy selfe before God Where we see hee seemeth to say that it is sufficient if we haue Faith inwardly in the heart albeit no confession followe outwardly with the mouth Answere I answere the Apostle in this place speaketh of another thing to wit of a perswasion touching Christian liberty in things indifferent as if hee shoulde say Art thou strongly perswaded and assured that all Meats are lawfull to Christians Be it so yet vse it betweene God and thine owne Conscience and hurt not thy Neighbour with it nor offend thy weake Brother by it This serueth nothing at all to maintaine a dumbe Religion without open Confession which some would willingly bring in considering as one l Tertullian sayth that he which doth dissemble faith doth deny it Obiection 3. Lastly it is Obiected that Religion is better to bee concealed that we may giue no offence vnto others and auoyde the troubles that ariseth by Confession Answere I aunswere that is no offence giuen to men but a greeuous sinne committed against God who requireth the profession of his trueth And the Apostle Paule was readie to suffer bandes and imprisonment yea euen death it selfe for the profession of the Gospell of Iesus Christ Thus much breefely shall suffice in answere of the Obiections that are made Vse 1. Now let vs see and marke the Vses that arise from hence First wee learne who are to bee accounted true Christians and true Beleeuers to wit such as shew soorth their Fayth by their Confession It is not left to our owne choyse whether wee will make a solemne and sound profession of the Faith or not no more then it is at our libertie whether wee will beleeue or not or whether wee will bee saued or not It is required of all that belong to God to confesse his name and maintaine his Religion All men must confesse that would be confessed before the Father Christ Iesus will neuer beare and endure that seruant which is ashamed of his seruice The Prophet prophesying of the Kingdome of Christ and shewing how they should grow and multiply as the grasse of the field maketh this as a fruite of their conuersion to the Faith l Esay 44 5. One shall say I am the Lords another shall bee called by the name of Iacob and another shall subscribe with his hand vnto the Lord and name himselfe by the name of Israell This the Apostle m Ro. 10 9 10 also teacheth Rom. 10. If thou shalt confesse with thy mouth the Lorde Iesus and shalt beleeue in thine heart that God raised him vp from the dead thou shalt be saued for with the heart man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse and with the mouth man confesseth to saluation So our Sauiour doth not make it proper to his disciples but common to all to confesse him and his words before men And he doth not say whosoeuer shall confesse mee in heart but with his tongue not inwardly but outwardly not secretly but openly For albeit the Faith of the heart be the principall thing and cheefely required of vs yet the confession of the mouth must not bee separated from it This reprooueth such as account this open confession of the truth to bee of no absolute necessitie but a meere thing indifferent left to our liberty to be practised or not to bee practised These are those Libertines that woulde liue as they list and make it no matter of what Religion they be For if it be indifferent whether wee professe Religion or not it is indifferent whether we beleeue or haue faith and let them hold it indifferent also vnto them whether the Lord Iesus doo professe to know them or not Againe we see that it is not enough for vs not to denie Christ but there is required of vs a farther dutie euen to confesse him before men It is required of a dutifull son to confesse his Father with a sound and vpright hart but yet he must not deny his father before men if he would haue his Father confesse him So is it the part of a true Christian to beleeue to righteousnes and to confesse to saluation Euery one would seeme willing and desirous to be saued but if we looke to be partakers thereof Christ must know vs for his seruants and he will not acknowledge vs in his kingdome vnlesse heere we make confession of him If we will not heere know him he wil say to vs heereafter I know you not depart from me n 2 Tim. 2 12. If we deny him he will deny vs If we be ashamed of him take heede least he also bee ashamed of vs. The Theefe that was vpon the Crosse made open confession of his faith reproued the blasphemy of his Companion and called vpon Christ for saluation Luke 23. he rebuked his fellow saying o Luke 23 40 42 43. Fearest thou not God seeing thou art in the same condemnation We are indeed righteously heer for we receiue things worthy of that we haue done but this man hath done nothing amisse And he sayd vnto Iesus Lord remember mee when thou commest into thy Kingdome And albeit hee were a Theefe and a Malefactor for which hee suffered death yet is not Christ ashamed of him hee doth not stoppe his eares
his Religion where they cannot but heare God dishonoured his trueth blasphemed his seruants slandred and reuiled and yet make as though they heard nothing or saw nothing or could speake nothing for they stop their eares and close their eyes and shut their mouths to the discountenancing of Religion and the encouraging of euill persons How many are there that make the true professors of the word and the faithfull Seruants of God a common by-word and their Table-talke at their bankets and meetinges Wee are at such times ashamed of Christ of our faith of our religion of any matter that may tend to the edification of our soules but wee are not ashamed of the workes of the Deuill and of the fruits of darknesse We are not ashamed to fill our tables what shall I say with spewing nay worse then spewing with open blasphemy and swearing with slandering and reuiling of our brethren Such were the enemies that Dauid had experience of they reioysed and assembled themselues against him y Ps 35 15 16 and 69 12 13 the verie abiects tare him and ceased not with the false scoffers at bankets gnashing their teeth against him When he prayed daily vnto God and the zeale of his house did euen eate him vp hee became a Prouerbe vnto them they that sate in the gate spake of him and the drunkards sang songs of him When wee see godly men thus handled and their profession in our meetings taunted let vs open our mouths in the cause of the dumbe let vs giue glory to God in the midst of our assemblies and not suffer the faithful to be so foulely traduced and Religion it selfe through their sides to be nipped and despighted Let vs follow the counsell of the Wise man z Prou. 31 8 9 24 10 11 Open thy mouth for the dumbe in the cause of all the children of destruction Open thy mouth iudge righteously and iudge the afflicted and the poore We are willed according to our places and power by all lawfull meanes to helpe the afflicted and to succour the distressed We must not be faint-hearted and afraide to speake for them This is it which the Prophet teacheth a Psal 22 22. I wil declare thy name vnto my Brethren in the middest of the Congregation will I praise thee This is a duty to be practised of vs so often as we see our Brethren reuiled their profession taunted and Religion it selfe slandered I heare of thy loue and faith We haue heard before the commendation of Philemons profession so that Paule being farre remoued from him yet had notice of it Now wee are to consider wherein his profession stoode and wherefore he is commended The things for which hee is praised are these two Faith and Loue. He might haue named many other graces and gifts of God his knowledge his temperance his patience his meeknesse his gentlenesse his goodnesse his long-suffering but these are the cheefe and principall these perfect a Christians mans saluation For our happinesse standeth and consisteth in two things partly in our Communion with Christ our head and partly in our coniunction and fellowshippe with the members of Christ Faith is that which vniteth vs with Christ our head loue ioyneth vs together one with another which are the members of his body Doctrine 5. Faith and loue do commend a man to God his Church From hence wee learne that the cheefe things that commend a man to God and his Church are faith in Christ and loue to the Saints of God Among all the guifts of God which bring vnto vs a good report the principall are to be a beleeuer in Christ and to shew forth the fruits of mercy This appeareth in all the examples of the Fathers and Patriarkes of elder times that liued both before the flood and since the flood euen vnto the comming of Christ for by it a Heb. 11 2. our Elders were well reported of By Faith Abell offered vnto God a greater Sacrifice then Caine by the which he obtained witnesse that he was righteous God testifying of his gifts by the which faith also he being dead yet speaketh By faith was Enoch b Heb. 11. 5. 39 translated that he should not see death neyther was he found for God hath translated him for before he was translated hee was reported of that he had pleased God It is saide of Abraham that aboue hope he beleeued c Rom. 4 18 22. 1 8 and 16 4. vnder hope it was imputed to him for righteousnesse The Apostle speaking of the Romaines saith d Colos 4 1. I thank my God through Iesus Christ for you all because your Faith is published throughout the whol world And afterward he greeteth Aquila and Priscilla his fellow-helpers in Christ Iesus who for his life were ready to lay downe their owne neckes to whome not onely he gaue thankes but also all the Churches of the Gentiles So hee giueth thankes to God e 1 Thes 1 3. when he heard of the faith of the Colossians which they had in Christ Iesus and of their loue toward all Saints he praiseth God without ceasing remembering the effectuall Faith and diligent loue which were found in the Church of the Thessalonians All these examples teach vs this truth that it is faith and loue and such like graces of Gods spirit wherby we receiue a good report as that wherewithall we are accepted of God and become renowned in the Church Reason 1. The Reasons follow to confirme this Doctrine First they giue vs good acceptaunce and approbation with God and man because they are euident markes and notable Testimonies of our election and perseuerance They are as two eare-markes to know and discerne whose Sheepe we are Hence it is that the Apostle making mention of the Thessalonians in his Prayers who had shewed the effectuall faith and diligent loue the patience of their hope in our Lorde Iesus Christ in the sight of God euen our Father hee addeth f 1 Thes 1 4 Knowing beloued Brethren that ye are elect of God So the same Apostle writing to the Phillippians g Phil. 1 6. saith That because of the fellowship which they had in the Gospell he was perswaded of this same thing that God which had begun this good worke in them would performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ For howsoeuer the faithfull haue a new name giuen vnto them and written in them h Reuel 12 17 which no man knoweth sauing he that receiueth it yet do the godly after a sort know and vnderstand the election of others the calling of others the iustification of others True it is they are assured of their owne election to eternall life more certainly by the inward Testimony of the spirit neuerthelesse wee haue some knowledge of the election of our Brethren by outward signes and tokens Now there are two things to bee considered the knowledge and iudgement whereof is hard and hidden the one
God and hate his Brother hee is a Lyar for howe can hee that loueth not his Brother whom hee hath seene Loue God whom hee hath not seene And this Commaundement haue wee of him that he that loueth God should Loue his Brother also Where hee teacheth that the loue of God and the loue of our Bretheren are knit together with such a fast knot as can neuer bee loosed and dissolued the Workes of the first Table cannot be pulled assunder from the Workes of the second Table The Apostle Peter moouing the dispersed Iewes to giue dilligence to make their Election sure and their calling certaine that so they might neuer fall away p 2 Pet. 1 5 6 7. exhorteth them To ioyne Vertue with their Faith and with Fayth Knowledge and with Knowledge Temperance and with Temperance Patience and with Patience Godlinesse and with Godlynesse Brotherly Kindnesse and vvith Brotherly kindnesse Loue. These Christian graces of Gods Spirit he would haue in them and not onely to be found in them but to abound in them and not onely some of them but they must endeuour to get them all and to ioyne one of them to another that so we may bee fruitfull in all good Workes It is not therefore enough for vs to haue one guift alone and then think we are well Let vs not flatter our selues and boast of our Religion to say wee haue Faith or Knowledge or Temperance or Loue. Hee that hath but one of them hath indeede none of them We must haue many or else wee cannot assure our selues that we haue any at all For as hee that is reformed in one sinne is reformed in all knowne sinnes and he that truely repenteth of one truely repenteth of all so hee that hath obtayned one gift hath gotten many One sinne commonly goeth not alone so one Vertue goeth not alone When Fayth commeth there commeth a Traine with it it is as a Royall Queene that neuer trauaileth abroad without her traine Faith layeth holde vpon Christ in whome q Col. 1 19. 2 3. all Treasures of Knowledge Wisedome are hidden Whosoeuer possesseth him and hath him dwelling in his heart hee possesseth all thinges If then wee by attending on the ordinance of God haue gotten Faith r Rom. 20 17. which commeth by hearing and hearing by the Word so soone as Faith is entred a great multitude and mightie Armie of Gods Graces stande about vs and throng at the doore of our hearts as it were striuing and thrusting which of them shoulde enter first and they neuer giue ouer vntill they bee all come in and haue taken vp their lodging there neuer after to bee dislodged and dispossessed of that place Let vs not therefore bee so sparing and niggardly to thinke one grace of God sufficient for vs we serue a liberall Lorde and bountifull Maister that offereth to make vs partakers of all his Treasures and to bestow vppon vs all the riches of his house We may put our hands into his Coffers and store our selues with plenty and aboundance Wee see howe they that couer their houses Å¿ Plaut in Trinum Benefacta benefactis alijs pertegito ne perpluant do lay Tile vpon Tile or Stone vpon Stone or Strawe vppon Straw so thicke that it may not raine thorow and that they may be defended from winde and weather so should it bee with vs that are setting vppe a Christian building when we haue laide a good foundation wee must couer our houses with a strong couering wee must lay Grace vppon Grace and ioyne Vertue to Vertue that though the stormes of tentations beate vpon vs yet they may not preuaile against vs though the Raine of afflictions fall vpon vs yet it may not enter into vs and although the Windes of wickednesse doo oftentimes blow vpon vs yet they may not ouer-turne and ouerthrow vs. Vse 2. Secondly seeing Faith and Loue go together and dwell together we are put in minde of a notable dutie and are thereby directed to prooue our Faith by our Loue and our Loue by our Faith and to make one of them serue to assure the other The cause wil proue the effect and the effect will manifest the cause We may proue fire by the heat and the heat by the fire a good tree by his fruit the fruit by his tree Many wil seeme faithful religious they will glorify that they beleeue boast of their piety and godlinesse yet come to their liues you shal find therein no fruits of mercy no works of charity no tokens testimonies of their loue appearing in them This mans religion is in vaine his faith is in vaine his shew of godlinesse is in vaine for pure t Iam. 1 27 2 16. Religion and vndefiled before God the Father is this to visit the fatherles widdowes in their aduersity to keep himself vnspotted of the world And the same Apostle in the next chapter teacheth That it shal not profit any man to say he hath Faith when his Faith bringeth forth no Good-workes Againe many will shew some fruites of Loue to their Brethren in Almes in liberality in giuing vnto the poore in dealing iustly and vprightly and yet haue no faith they doo them as naturall men mooued by a naturall affection or stirred vp by vaine glory or hunting after the praise of men or constrained by the lawes of Princes or fearing the reproach of the world or seeking the merit of their owne saluation All such haue their reward according to their worke but not according to their hope They haue their reward already they must look for no other they haue it among men they shall loose it with God they haue the applause of the world but they must passe another doome in the life to come Such faith before spoken of without loue is but a shadow of faith and such loue without faith is but a shadow of loue both are naught and nothing worth if they be assunder The roote ioyned to the Tree are both good and make the branches fruitfull but seperate the one from the other pull the root from the Tree and you destroy them both you kill them both This is that vse u Iames 2 18. which S. Iames vrgeth chap. 2. Some man might say Thou hast the Faith and I haue workes shew me thy faith out of thy workes and I will shew thee my faith by my workes Whereby we are taught to try the truth of our faith the sincerity of our loue that we be not deceiued in the one or in the other But how shall this triall be made Surely by making one the Touchstone to the other laying one to the other and waighing one in the ballance with the other For the Apostle willeth the vaine Christian who hath nothing but the name of faith to glory in like a poore Begger that boasteth of great riches to shew the goodnesse of his Faith by the fruits of Good-workes or else his
faith will appeare to be no faith and his claime to be a false vsurpation So then if thou wilt prooue thy selfe a true Christian and to be iust before God through faith in Christ it is not enough to take vnto thee the Title of fayth and to boast of such a beleefe as the Deuils haue and euery reprobate may haue but thou must be content to haue thy inward faith examined and tried by thy outward workes whether it be the true faith or not For a true Faith is alwayes ioyned with loue and bringeth forth Good-workes as necessarily as a good Tree bringeth forth good fruits An euill Tree bringeth forth euill fruits but a good Tree hath good fruite comming from it From this coniunction of these two superiour vertues to wit Faith and Loue the Rhemists in their translation and other Romanists in their disputations do debate and conclude against a fundamentall point of Christian Religion on this manner If Faith be not alone but ioyned with Loue Then Faith alone doth not iustifie But Faith is not alone but ioyned with Loue Therefore Faith alone doth not iustifie To this Obiection I answere they make an equiuocation in these words Faith alone If they meane by Faith alone a dead faith as Iames dooth which is voyde of workes then they speake nothing to the purpose for wee neuer allowed of such a faith we neuer taught iustification by such a faith But if they meane as they should if they reason against vs that in the act of Iustification there is required hope and charity or any more then the hande of faith which is the onely instrument to take hold of Christ if they ioyne vnto this any of their workes we deny their assertion and cannot admit of such iustification For we beleeue and hold it as a sound foundation of our religion that faith without any workes doth iustifye forasmuch as it dooth alone apprehend the mercies of God and apply the merits of Christ whereby wee are iustified so that if the question be what we must oppose between the Iustice of God and our sinnes why he doth not execute the curse of the Law against vs wherefore he is reconciled toward sinners and receiueth them into fauour and how they stand as iust before his Throne Heere works haue no place which are vnperfect which are stained and defiled so that both we and our workes must be accepted for another namely for Christs sake whome faith receiueth and so putteth him and his benefits into our soules True it is Faith and Loue are alwayes ioyned in one Christian they are required to perfect him and to bring him to saluation Thus Faith is necessary Hope is necessary Charity is necessary they must all concurre in one subiect meet togither in the same person so that no beleeuer must be without any of them Thus we confesse they are neuer alone he that is without Hope and Charitie is also without Faith and whosoeuer hath a liuely Faith hath likewise an effectuall Hope and a fruitfull Loue. Neuerthelesse howsoeuer they be ioyned and must bee ioyned in the practise of a Christian life yet they are not ioyned nor cannot be ioyned in the act and Article of Iustification The eye in the head alone seeth not the eare not the mouth not the tongue and yet it is neuer alone in the head but ioyned with others The hand in the body alone serueth to handle and to take the meate whereby we are fed and norished yet it is not without the arme without the foote without the eye without the head Euery part and member of the bodie in his place is necessary and all serue to perfect the body without which it were maimed and vnperfect but euery member hath his seueral office and function so is it with the gifts and graces of God all are and ought to be ioyned together to make vp a perfect Christian and he must be furnished with them to make him compleat and absolute to euerie good worke but euery gift hath his seuerall obiect and Office The property of the eye is to see of the hand to handle of the foote to walke so the Office of Faith is to make vs iust the office of Hope is to make vs wait the office of Loue is to make vs mercifull We doo not separate Faith and Good-workes from the exercise of a Christian mans life but in the office of Iustification and acquitting of vs in the presence of God Faith in her Office is alone as Loue likewise is in hers but in our practise in our persons they must be ioyned A Prince albeit in her estate Throne she be alone yet she goeth not without her traine and Maids of Honor waiting about her and attending vpon her Faith when shee layeth holde on Christ and receyueth the promise is as it were vpon her Throne of estate and in her proper calling ioyning vs to God Neyther do wee ascribe our Iustification to faith for it selfe or as it is a work and quality in vs as if it were any part of our Iustice or righteousnesse as if we were iustifyed partly by the merits of Christ and partly by the worthinesse of our own faith for that were to seek Iustification in our selus which is the Doctrine of the church of Rome but we are iustifyed no otherwise by our faith then wee are fed by our hand Now how doth the hand nourish the body Not because it is meat to feed the dy but because it receyueth and applyeth vnto it the meate whereby it is sustayned Euen so Faith iustifyeth and giueth life not because it is our Iustification either in whole or in part but because it receyueth Christ to be our righteousnesse and life in whom x Acts 26 18 We haue remission of sinnes and an inheritance among them that are sanctified and reserued to eternall life So then wee ascribe Iustification to our faith no otherwise then as it is the meanes or Instrument to apprehend and receiue the mercies of God the merits of Christ and the promises of the gospell Thus we teach that faith is the y Aug. tract 50 in Iohan. hand which we stretch to heauen to take hold of Christ and to embrace him sitting at the right hande of his father It is the mouth whereby we eate and drinke Christ z August tract 26. in Iohan. because to beleeue in him is to eate him It is the stomacke whereby we digest him a Tertull. de resurr carnis because he is to be digested by Faith It is the foote whereby wee enter the possession of all the benefits of Christ and so farre b Bernard Ser. 32. in Cantio we possesse them as wee walke towardes them By Faith it is that we touch Christ and so receiue Christ c Cypria Epist 2. lib. 2. for looke how much Faith we bring to receiue so much we draw of the abundant graces of God To conclude therefore we see
at home Fot it is their Religion that is a broaching of lies and of all liberty to do euill as all men by the light of Nature not blinded with the loue of error might soone espy Behold therefore some kinds of their Catholick Faith taught by their holy Mother the Church They teach the lawfulnesse of deposing Princes and discharging their Subiects of their allegeance and obedience toward them This Doctrine filleth Kingdomes and Countreyes with Treasons and Rebellions and alloweth Traitours and Assassinates and Murtherers of them at the Popes pleasure They doo teach and allowe the worship of Images and bowing downe to Stockes and Stones whereby the people are drawne away from the liuing God to palpable Idolatry as common experience hath declared o Polid. Virg. de inuent rer lib. 6 cap. 13. and some of themselues haue confessed They publish at large the benefit of Pardons which may easily be procured for money which open wide the Flood-gates of al vngodlynesse For who will spare to commit sinne that is able to redeeme it with his purse Yea this emboldned certaine p Chemni exam conc Trident de poenit men to rob the Popes pardoner who before hand had giuen them a pardon to commit the next sinne though it should bee a great sinne They teach touching the Sacrament of the Lordes Supper that a Dogge or Mouse or Swine or any Beast eating a consecrated host eateth the very flesh and bodie of our Sauiour q Treatise of the Sacram. in the conclusion as I haue shewed else-where They maintaine the filthy Dunghill of Stewes and Brothell-houses which giueth allowance vnto open whoredome and vncleannesse yea they say it is good for a r Hard. against the Apology Common-wealth and the Pope tollerateth the Curtezans in Rome and in other places vpon a yearly rent to practise and professe Bawdry Vnto this rablement of their Catholicke conclusions Å¿ See White of the way to the true Church we might adde many others which suffice to discouer what the holinesse of the Romish Religion is and to direct vs to come out of it betimes least partaking with the same sinnes we also partake in the punishments The second reproofe Secondly this coniunction of these two Vertues ouerthroweth the carnall loosenesse of all Libertines such as are Hypocrites and vaine boasters of Faith which thinke it sufficient to speake of Faith and to boast that they beleeue These men doth the Apostle Iames plainly reproue in his Epistle teaching that where there is want of works t 1 Tim. 1 5. there is also want of Faith of a true Faith which is the right Faith Wee must therefore examine our Faith by the fruits and prooue our beleeuing by our working We haue many such in our daies that glorie of their Faith and boast that they are of a right beleefe and yet lay them to the triall and examine their liues what they are and we shall finde them to be lyars against the truth and deceiuing their owne soules Knowe therefore that our faith is as our liues are A good life a good Faith a dead life a dead Faith an vnfruitfull life an ydle Faith And thus much of Faith and Loue ioyned together Now let vs speake of them seuerally as they are described first touching Faith and afterward touching Loue. Faith in Christ The first Vertue which is heere commended to bee in Philemon is Faith which is saide to respect Christ This Faith is a guift of God whereby we apprehend Christ and his benefits beleeuing the remission of our sinnes and our reconciliation with God Marke therefore that the faith heere set forth is saide to be toward Christ and Christ who is the proper obiect of Faith dooth also point vs vnto the Father who willeth and ordaineth our Saluation Redemption Reconciliation and Saluation and to the Holy-Ghost who applyeth and appropriateth to the elect these benefits which are willed by the Father and merrited by Christ Doctrine 7. Christ is the obiect of our Faith So then when the Apostle saith of Philemon that his faith was in Christ hee teacheth that true faith looketh vnto Christ dependeth vpon him trusteth and resteth in him for saluation and not vpon any creature in heauen or earth Our faith must direct vs to Christ to beleeue in him to haue recourse to him and to looke for saluation from him as the Israelites did health from the Brazen serpent This is proued vnto vs by many consents of the word of God The Apostle Iohn in his Gospell a Iohn 1 12. 3 16 17 20 6 29. 3 14 15 and 12 44 46. and 14 12. offereth plentifull Testimonies of the truth as Chap. 1 12. As many as receiued him to them he gaue prerogatiue to be the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue in his name And Chap. 3. God so loued the world that hee hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life And again Chap. 17. I pray not for these alone but for them also which shall beleeue in me through their word So before in the third Chapter As Moses lift vp the Serpent in the Wildernesse so must the sonne of man be lift vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue eternall life Thus he speaketh in another place This is the worke of God that ye beleeue in him whom he hath sent When Phillip saide to the Eunuch If thou beleeuest with all thine heart thou mayst be baptized He answered b Acts 8 37. 16 31. I beleeue that Iesus Christ is that sonne of God So Paule and Silas willed the Keeper of the prison to beleeue in the Lord Iesus Christ and he should he saued And the Apostle Gal. 2. teacheth That a man is not iustified by the Workes of the Lawe c Gal. 2 16. but by the faith of Iesus Christ euen we I say haue beleeued in Iesus Christ that we might be iustified by the Faith of Christ All these places of Scripture plainly instruct vs in this principle of our holy religion that Faith must be in Christ in whom it findeth a sure ground to rest vpon Reason 1. The Reasons are to be marked and considered which confirme this Doctrine First because the worke of saluation is wholly and onely wrought by him and no part thereof is reserued to any creature in whole or in part To be called Iesus is as it were the proper name of Christ who is a perfect and absolute Sauiout beginning continuing and finishing our saluation This is it d Acts 4 12. which Peter preacheth Among men there is no other name giuen vnder heauen whereby we may be saued but by the Name of Iesus And the author to the Hebrews saith that he e Heb. 7 25. is able perfectly to saue them that come vnto God by him seeing he euer liueth to make intercession for them Thus
may appeare by examining the common practise of our common professors by these six notes First true Faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the word preached as the Apostle sheweth Rom. 10. How shall they cal vpon him in whom they do not beleeue q Rom. 10 14 How shall they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard how shall they heare without a Preacher and how shall they preach except they be sent This place is not vnfitly called a Ladder that reacheth to Heauen whereby as by certaine steppes we climbe vp to heauen God sendeth the Minister preacheth the people beleeueth The same Apostle asketh the Galathians r Gal. 3 2. Iohn 17 20. Whether they receiued the spirit by the workes of the Law or by the hearing of Faith But the Faith which many talke and boast of is conceiued and conceited without the preaching of the worde for they cannot abide it they will not attend vnto it they regard not to heare it True it is if they be asked whether they haue Faith or not they will thinke it a straunge question and maruell that we shold make doubt thereof they suppose themselues to haue a sound Faith in Christ but how come they by this faith They say they beleeue in Iesus Christ for their saluation and yet they liue in a perpetuall neglect and continuall contempt of the publicke Ministerie of the word Such is their beleeuing as is their hearing and their Faith is aunswerable to their attending It is a great foolishnesse worse then madnesse for any man to imagine to attaine to Faith by any other meanes then God hath ordained When God hath sayde that the ordinary way to obtaine Faith is by the preaching of the worde wilt thou in the high pride of thy ignorant heart say I can haue Fayth without preaching This is to crosse the ordinance of God and to thinke thy selfe wiser then God For although all haue not Faith that ordinarily heare yet ordinarily none haue faith that doo not heare If then we would haue Faith we must seeke it as God hath appointed where it is to be found and when it is to be found let vs be diligent hearers attentiue hearers constant hearers and then we shal see the blessing of God vpon vs that we shall be sauing hearers Secondly true Faith is also ioyned with Prayer to God and with repentance from dead workes for how shall they call vpon him in whom they doe not beleeue And the Apostle Å¿ Acts 15 9. Peter teacheth that Faith purifieth the hart Paule exhorting the Elders of Ephesus saith t Acts 20 21 That he witnessed both to the Iews and to the Grecians the Repentance toward God and faith toward our Lorde Iesus Christ It was the substance of Christs Sermons which he preached when hee came into Galile u Marke 1 15 The Kingdome of God is at hand repent and beleeue the Gospell But there are many amongest vs that professe Faith which haue a Faith of another kinde and Nature it is not ioyned with inuocation of Gods name they make no Conscience to call vpon him they haue not the Spirite of Prayer that cryeth in their hearts Abba Father it worketh not in them conuersion of heart a turning of the minde a chaunge of life they boast of Faith but they remaine the same men they were before a deade life a deade Faith a prophane life a false Fayth that will in the end deceyue them Thirdly true Faith worketh in vs an holy contentation in our estate and teacheth vs to depend vpon Gods prouidence touching Food Raiment and all things necessary for this present life This Christ our Sauiour teacheth vs from the example of the Fowles of the Heauen of the stature of our body of the Lillies of the fielde from the grasse of the earth what doo pensiue thoughts distracting and distrustfull cares auaile to sustaine vs or preserue our life Wherefore seeing the Birdes are nourished our stature is encreased the Lillies are beautified the Grasse is cloathed by the power and prouidence of God x Math. 6 30. and 8 20. Shall hee not do the same much more to you O ye of little Faith Faith therefore maketh vs rest vpon God want of Faith taketh away all trust in him But many among vs that will needes boast of Fayth in Christ want this Faith in his prouidence for they dare not trust GOD with their life they doo not depend vpon him for their liuing they are affraid he will leaue them and forsake them they do not beleeue he will bee a mercifull and gracious God vnto them they haue not that affiance confidence reposed him that naturall children haue in their Parents A Childe doth not wearie him-selfe with matters of the World hee dooth not fore-cast for manie yeares hee is not intangled and choaked with earthly Cogitations all his care is cast vppon his Father hee trusteth vppon him hee knoweth hee will prouide for him and so passeth his dayes without distrust or dispaire And shall wee not be ashamed to bee sent to Schoole to learne of little Children that depend vpon their Father whereas we haue not learned to lift vppe our eyes vnto our Father that dwelleth in the Heauens but vse vnlawfull meanes and vngodly shifts to helpe our selues A plaine argument that wee haue not that Faith which we falsely imagine and vainely imagine our selues to haue Fourthly true Faith is the Mother of loue and maketh vs liue in peace one with another the Apostle y Gala. 5 6. Paule teacheth That Faith worketh by loue And Iohn in his first Epistle saith z 1 Iohn 3 23 This is his commandement that we beleeue in the name of his son Iesus Christ loue one another But many that wil seeme to haue faith in Christ shew no fruits of loue toward their Brethren they are not careful if it be possible and so farre as lieth in them to haue peace with all men they do not seeke after peace and ensue it but liue in hatred and contention in malice and enuy and least of all do affect the children of God An enuious Faith is no Faith and therefore let such men looke vnto it Fiftly true faith is mingled with doubting and vnbeleefe with wauering and feare and oftentimes strongly shaken and assayled as with a mighty Tempest This we see in the Father of him that was possessed with an vncleane spirit he was readie to rest vpon Christ but he felt the fruite of his owne corruption the spirit was willing but the flesh was weake he found a fight within himselfe betweene Faith and Infidelity When he considered the infinite power of Christ that was able to cast out Satan and to binde the strong man he was moued to beleeue On the other side when he saw the strangenesse the continuance the incureablenesse of his sonnes disease when he marked that the Deuill tooke him tare him cast him into the fire to burne him
die but if ye mortifie the deeds of the body by the spirit ye shal liue for as many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God And in another place Å¿ 2 Cor. 5 15. Thus we iudge that if one be dead and he died for all that they which liue should not henceforth liue vnto themselues but vnto him which died for them and rose againe Sanctification goeth alwayes before glorification Euerie one would be glorified but euery one wil not be sanctified euerie one would liue with God but euery one will not dye to sinne euery one would receiue the victory but euery one will not fight the battel But let vs not be deceiued God is not mocked If we would attaine to saluation we must first haue sanctification we must be Saints in this life if we look to be Saints in glory heerafter we must be Saints vpon the earth if we would be Saints in heauen wee must first make a beginning before we can come to the ending We must take paines wee must labour hard and sweate much before we can come to our iourneyes end Let vs therefore take heed we do not make a mocke of the Saints least we mocke at our owne sanctification and consequently neglect nay despise our owne saluation If we make any account of holinesse of life let vs not cast it out as a reproch to bee holy Let vs consider that this is the will of God euen our sanctification it is not therefore his will that wee should delight in prophanesse and vngodlinesse And as for those that are scorned and abused or rather not they indeede or their persons flouted and contemned but their Faith their Religion their Sanctification let them not hang downe their heads and be discouraged but walke boldly through good report and euill report and be so farre from shrinking back for these taunts reuilings that rather we should prepare our selues for an harder battell an hotter encounter We haue not yet resisted vnto blood Remember what our Lorde and Maister hath endured the reproach of the world the slaunders of the vngodly the mockings of the malicious the shame of the crosse and what not We must not looke to fare better then he we must not thinke to be entertained otherwise then he was If this be the worst that they can say by vs if this be the greatest fault they can report of vs that we are Saintes and holy persons let vs not be discomforted but rather comforted heerein that God is glorified in vs his name is honoured and the mouth of Iniquity is stopped hauing nothing to detect vs off nothing to obiect against vs. The enemies of Daniell howsoeuer they watched all occasions and sought all opportunities to betray him and destroy him yet the greatest crime they had to charge him withall t Dan 6. 11. and 3. 12. was that he prayed to his God three times a day and made supplication vnto him The Caldeans had no other fault to charge the Iewes to haue committed then that they would not bow downe vnto an Idol If they could haue found any other matter to accuse them of as Malefactors their malice was so great to their profession and to their persons for their professions sake that they would not haue spared and held their peace But this was the glory of these seruants of God that they suffered not for their sinnes and deseruings but for their faith and a good conscience This was it wherin the Church and faithfull comforted themselues Psal 44. If we haue u Psal 44. 20 21 22. forgotten the name of our God and holden vp our handes to a strange God shall not God search this out For he knoweth the secrets of the heart Surely for thy sake are we slaine continually and are counted as sheepe for the slaughter This is that place which the Apostle alludeth vnto Rom. 8. Whereby he comforteth the people of God in their afflictions whereby we see what is the portion and condition of the Saintes in this life they are sheepe not wolues they are afflicted they doe not afflict they are killed they do not kill they are killed not because they haue forsaken and renounced God but because they would not forsake him and renounce him They are slaine not for their owne sinne but because they would not commit sinne against God If this be our case and condition that we are reproached for our righteousnesse and religion and if we x 1 Pet 4 13. 14. be railed vpon for the name of Christ we haue cause to reioyce in asmuch as we are partakers of his sufferinges and shall be partakers of his glory yea blessed are we for the spirit of glory and of God resteth vpon vs which on their part is euill spoken off but on our part is glorified Let vs comfort our selues and our bretheren with these thinges Vse 2. Secondly seeing all the faithfull liuing in the world are Saintes this serueth to conuince the Church of Rome who appropriate the word Saintes to those that are dead and honour none with this title that liue vpon the earth but such as are departed out of this life and being famous for miracles are Canonized by the Pope whom they account as a God vpon the earth Hence it is that they adde farther that our Church cannot be an holy Church because there was neuer yet any Saint or holy man of it approued to be such by miracle or any other euident token They renounce our Church because it is no holy Church and they conclude it is not holy because we haue no Saints that are in it or euer were of it First lct vs speake of our Saintes and then somewhat touching their Saintes whereof they boast so much and in whom they glory so greatly Touching the former the Prophets Apostles and holy men of the first Churches were professors of the same faith that wee beleeue as appeareth by the Scriptures by which we offer to be tried in al controuersies but our Aduersaries will not deny these to be Saintes and such Saintes as haue beene approued by miracles Againe we haue in our Churches true beleeuers iustified by the bloud of Christ and sanctified by the spirit of God and therefore are Saintes by calling as we haue shewed before We haue the fruites of sanctification as necessary effects of a liuing faith we profit daily in repentance from dead workes we labour more and more for y Col 2 2. 5. Rom 8 16. the full assurance of vnderstanding and stedfast faith in Christ for our redemption But such as liue in sin and walk in the flesh haue not the spirit of Christ they are not of our church they are no true Saints they may bee among vs but they are not of vs. As for the popish Saints which are found in their Golden Legend so called and stand in redde letters in their Kalenders it is no maruell if we do not account
perfect and endeuour to drawe on others to perfection Reason 1. Let vs see the Reasons First Christian profession is a way in which men must not stand still but must walke and go forward in the way they must not stay in one estate but be alwayes stirring forward So when the Apostle had exhorted the Thessalonians to encrease more and more hee addeth f 1 Thess 4 1. As yee haue receiued of vs how ye ought to walke and to please God We are now in this life in our iourney we must not thinke that we are come to our iournies end which cannot be before our liues end As then they that haue a great iourney to go do not rest till they come to their iourneyes end so must it be with vs we must make hast on our way and be swift in our race The way which we are to go is our profession the Traueller that entreth into the way is euery true Christian the end of our iourney is the entrance into life the iudge of our going and giuer of the victory is God He that standeth stil can neuer come at his iournyes end it is he that goeth in his way runneth in his race that shall receiue the crowne of euerlasting happinesse Reason 2. Secondly Christians are compared to Children Children are alwayes growing in age encreasing in stature going forwarde in knowledge and in Wisedome if they do not prosper and proceede we commonly call them and account them Vrchins and Changelings So must wee grow in grace vntill we come to a perfect aged man in Christ The Prophet speaking of the faithfull that were zealous in the worship of God saith g Psal 84 7. They goe from strength to strength So the Apostle exhorteth that we h 1 Cor. 14 20. should not be Children in vnderstanding but as concerning maliciousnesse we should be Children but in vnderstanding we should be of ripe age He would haue vs as Children and he would not haue vs as Children he would haue vs Children in malice but he would not haue vs Children in knowledge Wee see they fall out i Terent. in Hecyr pueri inter sese quàm pro leuibus noxis iras gerunt for light offences because the minde is weake that ruleth and guideth them one word will raise anger and another word will make them friends and therefore though they fall out quickly yet their falling out is farre from malice and they are easily reconciled Thus hee would haue vs to bee children but in wisedome in knowledge and in vnderstanding he would haue vs to be of ripe age proceede in these gifts as we do in our yeares No mans life standeth at a stay let vs encrease in the other as we doo in this that so the graces of God may bee perfected in vs. Reason 3. Thirdly we must so walke in our way and hasten to our iournies end that we may obtaine the prize Hee that k 1 Cor. 9 25. Math 24 13. Reuel 2 26 27. 3 5 12. ouer-commerh and holdeth out to the latter end onely shall bee saued Hee that giueth ouer is a faint souldier a weake Worke-man a slow runner a feeble wrastler We must so fight that we may ouercome we must so worke that we may rest we must so runne that we may obtaine we must so wrastle that we may receiue the Crown we must so proue Maisteries that wee may win the victory Staying in one state is a token of reprobation and reiection from God they are cast into a spirite of slumber and drowsinesse they sleep in security and cannot see their way This did the Prophet prophesie and this doth the Apostle testifie to be true concerning Israell l Rom 11 8. God hath giuen them the spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and eares that they should not heare vnto this day Seeing then that our profession is the way wherein we are to walke toward the heauenly Ierusalem seeing we must be like Children that grow in age and yeares and lastly seeing we must labour to obtaine the Crowne to winne the victory to receiue the price and to get the wages it followeth that we all must endeuour to go forward and to bring others forward toward the Kingdome of Heauen Vse 1. The vses remaine to be handled that we may haue the profit of this Doctrine First we learne that God hath a iust action and suit to commence against all idle bellies and vnprofitable Drones that be Truants and no proficients in the Schoole of Christ The church of God is the Schoole of Chrst he is the Maister all of vs are or should be his Schollers We are brought forth into the world that when we come to yeares of vnderstanding we may be Schollers in his Schoole If any of vs put our Children to a free Schoole to be taught if they should still stay and stand in the lowest forme and neuer a whit proceede in learning we would iudge them either void of ordinary diligence or destitute of ordinary capacity We looke when we set them to Schoole that they should encrease in learning We haue a common prouerbe that Schollers of all other haue the best conscience that whereas others neuer thinke they haue enough they thinke they haue to much for their mony But let vs see how it fareth with vs who are likewise Schollers in the best Schoole that euer was the Church of God and haue the best Master that euer was to wit Christ himselfe God hath put vs to Schoole to learne at the mouth of Christ who hath committed vs to Pastors and teachers as to his Deputies to be instructed It is required of vs that we grow in knowledge in faith in zeale in obedience and in all the workes of sanctification If we be good Schollers we must grow forward and ascend higher we must proceed from grace to grace and from one step to another But alasse how many are there in our congregations who hauing liued vnder the Gospell that offereth saluation to men all the daies of their life and continued ten twenty thirty forty yeares hearing the word of God sounding in their eares m Ephe 4 14. yet are no wiser in Religion then a young Child and are no forwarder then when they first stepped and entred into the Schoole-house of God I doubt not but they are wise in matters of the world but in the booke of God and in matters of their saluation they haue no knowledge They receiue the grace of God in vaine and are Dunses and Dwarfes in this Schoole of Christ without growing and encreasing in Godlinesse They are not in truth able to say vnto their owne Soules I haue receiued some greater measure of knowledge I haue attained better strength of Faith I haue found some increase in Godlinesse I haue felt some care and conscience to please God Nay we may truely say that many are more ignorant in knowledge more lewd
in life more backward in good thinges more prophane in heart more contemning the word of God and loathing the meanes of saluation then they were in the beginning of their dayes This is our estate and condition most lamentable and fearefull and yet wee can complaine of Idle boyes and sluggish Schollers that thinke they take to much learning for their money and neuer consider that we are the men and that the prouerbe concerneth our selues God will enter into iudgement with vs and if we be not learners in his Schoole he will remoue vs and discharge vs out of his Schoole It had beene better for vs that we had neuer knowne God that we had neuer receiued his truth nay it had beene better for vs that we had neuer beene borne or beene borne Turkes and Canibals Pagans and Infidels then to haue the Gospell among vs and not to heare it or to heare it and not to learne by it or to learne by it and not to obey it and grow daily in the practise of it This appeareth by the greeuous threatnings denounced by Christ our Sauiour against those Citties where his word had beene preached and professed and his great miracles had beene wrought and shewed n Mat. 11. 21. 22. 23. 24. Woe be to thee Corazin woe be to thee Bethsaida for if the great workes which were done in you had beene done in Tyrus and Sidon they had repented long agone in sackecloth and ashes but I say vnto you it shall be easier for them at the day of iudgement then for you And thou Capernaum which art lifted vp vnto Heauen shalt be brought downe to Hell for if the great workes which haue beene done in thee had beene done among them of Sodome they had remained to this day But I say vnto you that it shall be easier for them of the Land of Sodome in the day of iudgement then for thee He compareth heere Corazin and Bethsaida with Tyre and Sydon likewise Capernaum with Sodom that is the places where Christ had dwelled where the Gospell had beene offered where many of his miracles had beene manifested with such Citties as neuer had the Law neuer heard the Gospell neuer saw the Prophets neuer knew the Doctrine of saluation but liued in ignorance and in idolatry And in this comparison he teacheth that such Townes and Villages as haue had the preaching of the word and the ministry of the Gospell among them shall receiue greater punishment in the day of iudgement then other poore blind wretches that neuer had these meanes offered vnto them We would all of vs thinke it a very harsh and homely comparison and farre from all likely-hood of truth if I should compare vs euen vs of Isfield with Sodome and Gomorrah wee know o Ezek. 16. 49. how foule and filthy these places were we confesse they are loathsome in our eyes and odious in our eares we know that for their wickednesse they p Gen. 19 ●4 were destroyed with fire and brimstone from heauen and yet I say vnto you in the name of God from the warrant of his sacred word by which we shall all be iudged that if we liue in this contempt of the truth that is preached vnto vs and do not bring forth the fruits of the Gospell it had been better we had beene borne Sodomites and Gomorrheans for our iudgement shall be greater and our punishment heauier because our sinne is heinouser No sinne greater then the contempt of the Gospel as no mercy is greater then the peaceable enioying of the liberty of the Gospell and therefore no reward of sinne shall be more horrible So that we may truely say from the mouth of Christ it shall be easier for Sodome in the day of iudgement then for our Village Let vs apply this to our selues and lay it to our heartes to worke in vs true repentance Corazin Bethsaida and Capernaum had many priuiledges and might glory as much as we in the fauours vouchsafed vnto them and yet they are vpbraided by Christ with their vnthanke-fulnesse toward the Gospell so that the case of Sodome is made better Take heed therefore least we contemne the Gospell and so committing one of the greatest sinnes wee make our selues guilty of the greatest iudgementes that can fal vpon mankind The contempt of the Gospell hath brought the heauy hand of God vpon the Iewes that were Gods owne people Let vs not be high minded we are no whit better but rather feare least God spare not vs and tremble vnder his grieuous but yet righteous iudgements who spareth not those that are deere vnto him when they sinne against him Vse 2. Secondly we are bound to vse the meanes that may further these guiftes in vs that is the ministry of the word which being reuerently vsed hath a promise of blessing It is a light vnto our feet and a lanthorne vnto our paths it setteth vs in our way and directeth vs vnto our iourneies end The Apostle teacheth q 1 Cor 3. 6. that Paule planteth Apollos watereth but it is God that giueth the encrease to wit by the planting and watering of the Ministers The Husbandman tilleth and toyleth about his ground he soweth his Corne but he cannot make it spring vp nor send the earely and latter raine So is it with the Ministers of the Gospell the Lordes Husbandmen they must labour in his field which is the Church that the people may grow in faith and grace This reproueth those that attend not to the ordinance of God with care and diligence but neglect the worke of the Lord in them They will not suffer themselues to be ploughed and tilled that grace may grow in their hearts as Corne doth in the Fieldes They say they increase and proceed in the waies of Godlinesse but they will not vse the meanes which God hath ordained and therefore they do deceiue themselues He that heareth not at all doth not grow at all he that heareth negligently groweth slowly in any good thing For as we sow so we shall reape Againe this checketh the dulnesse and drowsinesse of such as when they haue begun in the spirit would end in the flesh which say the word is profitable and necessary to gather a Church but not to continue it to begin faith but when it is begun and begotten in vs we need not heare still we haue faith already by the preaching of the word we shall not therefore need to frequent the preaching of it still we haue that wrought in vs which the word is appointed to worke These men vnder a colour of hauing faith do scorne and deride the preaching of faith But the word is not onely the immortall seed to beget vs but wholesome food to sustaine vs it is milke for such as are weake and strong meate for such as are of riper yeares He neuer had faith by the word that seeketh not the strengthning of it by the word It is not enough to haue saith but we must
possesseth it it tormenteth his minde it wasteth his bodie it fretteth his minde it shortneth his dayes and it destroyeth his soule It setteth him on worke to backbite and slaunder his Neighbour and to denie him all duties of humanity So then enuy hatred and back-byting alwayes go together as three Cankers and euill sores that consume the bodie hurt the good Name lessen the guifts and repine at the goods of our Brethren And if it be euill to enuy the guifts of God our eye should not bee euill because the Lords eye is good Much more euill is it to scorne mocke and disgrace the guifts of God in his Seruants as prophane Beasts and Heathnish Atheists doo in these dayes saying you are an holy Brother you are a Saint you are a man of God This sitting downe in the seate of Scorners is woorse then dwelling in the foule and irkesome Caue of enuie and therefore let vs beware thereof Let vs praise the guiftes of GOD in whomsoeuer wee finde them whether in Friend or enemy Vse 4. Lastly seeing we should all seeke to profite our selues and others in godlynesse we must know that it is our dutie to stirre vp the guifts of God in vs that we do not burie them as in a Graue we must exercise the guifts that we haue by continuall practise Vse maketh men prompt and readie want of vse maketh men vntoward Let vs take heed we do not quench the spirite and grieue him The spirit of God is in many respectes resembled to fire which purgeth some things consumeth other things and heateth other thinges So doth the Spirit of God purge consume and warme It refineth and purifieth vs as mettall is from drosse it wasteth and consumeth sinne in vs as straw and stubble it kindleth in vs the heate of zeale and warmeth vs when we are frozen in our sinnes Now as the Spitit is compared to fire so our sins are likened to Water Water wee know will quench the Fire Sinne will quench the Spirit Let vs therefore blowe this Fire let vs kindle the Coales of it let vs stirre vppe the Brandes and put more matter to it that it die not The Priestes in the time of the Law n Leuit. 6 5. 9 24. and 10 1 were appointed to maintaine the Fire vppon the Altar day and night that it should neuer goe out because it was from Heauen and they were forbidden to offer straunge Fire So the Apostle warneth Timothy and o 2 Tim. 1 6. putteth him in remembrance that hee stirre vp the guift of GOD which is in him by the putting on of his handes Obiection But heere some man may Obiect If the Spirit it selfe may be lost then much sooner and easier the lesser guifts Answere I answer the Spirit of Faith and regeneration can neuer be quite lost for the faithfull and regenerate are begotten not of mortal but of immortall seede their knowledge is like the light of the Sun the others are like the brightnesse of the lightning and flashing in the ayre which shineth for a season and by and by vanisheth and fadeth away True it is the best gifts may decay but not die they may be weakned but not quite wasted they may be lessened but not vtterly lost They may seem to perish and be wholy gone in time of tentation as we see in Dauid Peter and many others yet euen then they remaine in them though not felt as fire couered in the ashes or as the light ouer-shaddowed with a cloud This the Apostle Iohn testifieth saying p 1 Iohn 3 9. Whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not for his seede remayneth in him neyther can hee sinne because hee is borne of God Where hee teacheth that Faith and Loue of Holynesse are neuer lost which serueth to the comfort of the Godly not to nourish securitie of the Flesh in themselues The fellowship or communication of thy Faith Heere we see how the Apostle in the matter of his Prayer which hee vsed for Philemon intreated for the communicating and fellowship of his gifts that is that they should flow and yssue out to the good and benefit to the profit and bettering of others Doctrine 2. The guiftes which we haue receiued must tend to the good of others This teacheth vs that the guifts and blessings of God whether temporall or eternall bestowed vpon any must not lye hid or dead but be vsed and employed to the good of others and so yeelde a fellowship and communion to others Whatsoeuer good things we haue receyued we must haue them not for our selues alone but for the good of others This we are taught in the Parable of the Scribe taught of God vnto the Kingdome of Heauen q Math. 13 52 and 25 14. Luke 19 13. hee is likened to an House-holder which bringeth foorth out of his Treasure thinges both new and old His olde and new store must not be kept to himselfe but be brought forth and serue for his fellow Seruants So in the parable propounded Luke 19. this appeareth A certaine Noble-man went into a farre Countrey to receiue for himselfe a Kingdome and so to come againe and hee called his tenne Seruants and deliuered vnto them tenne peeces of Money and sayde vnto them Occupy till I come And afterwarde the first came saying Lorde thy peece hath encreased tenne peeces and the second sayde thy peece hath encreased fiue peeces The Apostle likewise sheweth that all the guifts of Wisedome Knowledge Faith Prophesying the guiftes of healing the operation of great works the discerning of spirits the diuersity of toongs the interpretation of tongues r 1 Cor. 12 7. are distributed to euery man seuerally to profit withall and for the good of the whole body And speaking of such as haue temporall thinges hee chargeth Timothy to charge them that are rich in this world that they be not high-minded nor trust in vncertaine riches but in the liuing God who giueth vs abundantly all things to enioy that they do good and be rich in Good-workes and bee ready to distribute and communicate All blessings therefore are to bee communicated and distributed to others they ought not to be laid vp in a Napkin or be buried in the earth or be couered vnder a bushell as the manner of many men is Reason 1. The Reasons of this truth are to be sought out and considered of vs. First we are seruants vnto all to do them good and to further their saluation True it is the faithfull are most free being set at liberty by Christ from the cursse of the Lawe and from the Dominion of sinne according vnto the saying of Christ Iohn 8. If the Sonne make Å¿ Iohn 8 36. you free you shall bee free indeede Notwithstanding this freedome it is a part of their dignity to be the seruants of God and a part of their duty to bee seruants to men to seeke their good to procure their benefite to further their edification
example of life If wee had learned since wee entered into Christianity but nowe a little and then a little heere a Precept and there a Precept we might in short space haue attained to a great measure of vnderstanding and bee daily fitted to Gods Kingdome But alas such as should bee olde in Faith are verie Babes and Children a thing greatly disgracefull and reproachfull to their yeares condition The Apostle chargeth the Corinthians h 1 Cor. 14 20 Ephes 4 14. that they should not be Children in vnderstanding as concerning maliciousnesse hee would haue them Children but in vnderstanding to be of ripe age Whereby wee see that aged persons do quite degenerat from that which they ought to be when they remaine voyde of knowledge and destitute of spirituall Wisedome and suffer many that are young in yeares to ouertake them yea to ouer strip them and go many degrees before them If a man should binde his sonne an Apprentise to some Science or Occupation and when he had serued his time should be to seeke in his trade and bee neuer a whit the more his Crafts-maister in the ending of his yeares then he was at the beginning we would thinke hee had lost his time and complaine of the iniury of the Maister or of the carelesnesse of the Seruant If a Father should put his sonne to Schoole and hee alwayes continue in the lowest Fourme and neuer ascend higher wee woulde iudge great negligence to be eyther in the Maister or in the Scholler Behold the Church of God is the Schoole of Christ and the best place to learne the Science of all Sciences if we haue liued long therein some of vs twenty some thirty some forty yeares and some longer and yet be no wiser in Religion then a childe of seauen yeares old i Heb. 5 12. is it not ashame for vs and may wee not bee condemned of great negligence in the matters of our saluation Let vs examine our selues how wee haue profited and compare our proceeding in knowledge with the length of time that God hath graunted vnto vs. He may iustly require great things of vs and challenge at our hands much fruite who hath affoorded vnto vs great meanes for our growth and encreasing in all good things Verse 10. I beseech thee for my son Onesimus whom I haue begotten in my bonds The order of the words HItherto we haue spoken of the description of Paule crauing to be heard and respected in regard of his age and office which is the second part of the sentence before remembred Now we are to obserue the third point which is concerning Onesimus whom he setteth forth first by a note of relation My Sonne then by the cause Whom I haue begotten in my bonds The Apostle in this Verse beginneth to enter into his suite shewing for whom he doth intreat and afterward for what he doth entreate To his request hee annexeth diuers reasons first because he begat him that is brought him by the preaching of the Gospell to the true Christian faith and therefore he is earnest to intreat for him Secondly because his Maister should now finde him profitable vnto him that is faithfull trusty and seruiceable for so will true Christian seruants be whereas such as are vngodly will be vnfaithful and such as haue not the feare of God before them cannot answere the trust that is reposed in them for Conscience sake Thirdly because Paul loued Onesimus tenderly and deerely as his owne bowelles not as a seruant but as his son not onely as a Brother but as his owne bowels This is the order of the words The meaning of the words Let vs breefely see the Interpretation of this Verse and reserue the rest to his proper place First of all when hee calleth Onesimus his sonne hee meaneth it not in respect of the naturall birth and generation but of the spirituall and super-naturall So that by a borrowed speech he meaneth one brought to his Faith by his Ministry Likewise when he saith Whom I haue begotten the meaning is whom God by mee did effectually call to embrace and beleeue the Gospell It is not the worke of a mortall man to frame and reforme the soule vnto the Image of God He onely nameth himself as the author of his regeneration which he doth not to oppose himselfe to God but only to shew what God doth by the ministry of man Lastly when he addeth In my bonds he meaneth when he was a prisoner and lay in prison This Verse according to this exposition of the wordes is thus much in effect as if he had said Hauing thus prepared thee for that which I am to intreate from thy hands if now thou wouldst know the party or person for whom it is surely it is thy runnagate seruant Onesimus and vpon these grounds he is my spirituall sonne for I haue begotten him in the time of my captiuity to the true profession and obedience of the Gospell Obseruations out of this Verse Before wee come to handle the Doctrines and instructions arising out of this verse it shall not bee amisse to set downe diuers profitable obseruations that may be considered First we see heer a Rhetorical repitition of the same word I beseech thee being aged and a prisoner I beseech thee for my Sonne Onesimus This redoubling of his prayer and intreating vsed also k 2 Cor. 10 1 2. elsewhere sheweth the desire and manifesteth the earnestnesse of his minde he was not colde in his suite as if he regarded not whether hee obtained it but prosecuted it with his whole desire and full purpose so that he contenteth not himselfe once to beseech him but beseecheth him againe Secondly we see that the person of him whom we will commend to any man hath great force to moue him and to preuaile with him to graunt vnto vs that which we craue and desire at his handes Wherefore whosoeuer would be commended vnto any must looke to himselfe that he haue in him somewhat woorthy commendation For as another mans mouth shoulde praise vs not our own so the matter of praise must be in our selues A false praise is a true dispraise and a wrongful commending is a reall discommending The praise that commeth from others must proceede from a due desert in our selues If the Apostle had not found a great alteration he would neuer haue giuen this commendation to Onesimus Thirdly we see an example in Paule of wonderfull humility and lowlinesse of minde See heer the difference betweene Paule the Apostle and the proud Byshop of Rome Paule beseecheth where he might command but he commaundeth where he hath no warrant to beseech For the Pope vsurpeth authoritie ouer Princes and Kinges hee cursseth and banneth hee threatneth and thundereth out his excommunications It is not so with our Apostle for such is his exceeding modestie and mildnesse of Spirit that he abaseth himselfe to bee a false and fugitiue seruant whom hee embraceth as his owne
are to be learned of vs. Obiection 1. First our Sauiour sayeth Math. 23 9. Call no man your Father vpon the earth y Mat. 23 9 10 for there is but one your Father which is in heauen Bee not called Doctours for one is your Doctor euen Christ If then God onely be our Father and no man is to bee called by this name either we must account the Ministers Goddes which were blasphemy or debarre and deny them this Title which were contrary vnto other Scriptures Answere I answere Christ doth not in these words forbid the denomination but restraine the ambition of men as appeareth by the conclusion of the words Verse 12. Whosoeuer will exalt himselfe shall bee brought lowe and whosoeuer will humble himselfe shall be exalted Hence it is that the Apostle calleth himselfe z 1 Tim. 2 7 1 Cor. 4 15. as well the Doctor of the Gentiles as the Father of the Corinthians It is one thing to haue the name and another thing greedily to hunt after it and proudly to challenge it to our selues Besides touching the fountaine of our first birth and the foundation of our faith and regeneration he is our onely Father we ascribe it to no man vpon the earth But euen as touching our naturall being hee hath ordained subordinate causes as his Instruments and fellow-workers to beget vs and bring vs into this world and to giue vs life a Exod. 20 12. whom he doth honor with the titles of Fathers and Mother So touching our new birth although it be the sole worke of the spirite and therefore proper to God yet because he worketh it by the word Sacraments the preaching and dispensation whereof he hath committed to the Ministers and appointed to be conueyed to men by their meanes he dooth communicate to them the appellation of Fathers as those whom he vseth to bring vs beget vs vnto God So then Paul so giueth himselfe the name of Father as that he neither robbeth God nor taketh from him the least iot of the honor that is due to his name For it is a common rule that they are not contrary which are subordinate When one is vnder another and inferiorly ordered ordained to another there is a good agreement betweene them God is the choise cause Paule is the Instrumentall Obiection 2. Againe the Apostle depresseth and derogateth from the Ministerie and sayth b 1 Cor 3 6 7 I haue planted Apollos watered but God gaue the encrease So then neither is he thar planteth any thing neyther he that watereth but God that giueth the encrease How then doth it come to passe that he doeth there so much debase them and heere so greatly honour them as to make them fellow workers yea fellow-fathers with God He may seeme to be vnconstant as a Reede shaken with the winde and to lift vp and cast downe at his owne pleasure Answere I answere the contrariety is not in the wordes of the Apostle the difference is in the persons with whom he dealeth and to whom he writeth So there seemeth a contradiction betweene Paule and Iames in the matters of Faith and Good-works c Rom. 3 20. Iames 2 24. Gal. 2 16. Paule saith We are not iustified by workes Iames saith We are iustified by Workes Paule saith We are not iustified but by Faith Iames sayeth We are not iustified by Faith onely Heere is a shew of dissention but it is onely in shew not in trueth for then in one of them should be no truth The Reason why they vse a different order of teaching is the diuersity of the Schollers which they instructed and the contrary affection of such as they taught and informed Paule had to do with Iusticiaries that sought to be iustified partly by faith and partly by works partly by Christ partly by themselues partly by somwhat in another and partly by somwhat in themselues partly by the merits of another and partly by their own strength and merits Iames had not to do with such persons but with Libertines and loose liuers which confessed in wordes free Iustification thorough Faith in Christ yet they were deceiued and had not learned that all those that are iustifyed are also sanctified that all that are in Christ are become newe Creatures that they are borne anew and walke not after the flesh but after the spirit and therefore thought workes needlesse and fruitlesse Thus Paul dealt in this place If at any time he saw so much honour giuen to the Ministers as that Gods honour was diminished or any way obscured and so hee robbed of his glory then hee pulled downe their estimation that God might haue his right and be vnto vs all in all But if on the other side they were debased and disgraced as in these dayes they are whereby the word also was abhorred and God the Author of it and the ordainer of them dishonoured they ought to haue their due they are to magnify their office and to be esteemed as the Ministers of Christ As for example when we haue to deale either with the Anabaptists that wait for reuelations and vtterly reiect the Ministry Ministers of the worde or with those prophane Atheists of our time who contemn them and count them idle and of no vse and so haue no regard of them or respect vnto them wee are to shew in what an high calling God hath seated them He saith of them d Math. 10 20 It is not you that speake but the spirite in you He saith of them He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me He saith of them Whose sinnes ye remit they are remitted whose sinnes ye retaine they are retained This serueth to stop the mouthes of carnall men and alloweth vs to know our selues when the worlde will not know vs or acknowledge vs. But when we haue to deale with those of the Church of Rome who make their Pope a God on earth and set their Cardinals and Clergy aboue the word we are to be taught what the Ministry is of it self being separated from the spirit of God an empty sound without force and a bare Instrument without effect in the hand of the workeman that can do nothing of it selfe but as it is vsed and applied by the worke-man Thus much of the remoouing of such Obiections as might hinder the vse and profit of this Doctrine Vse 1. Now let vs come to consider the Vses which are either general belonging ioyntly both to the Pastors people or special belonging to either of them First seeing the Minister and people ought to loue as Father and Sonne it teacheth them to cut off all occasions of discord and diuision and to nourish loue and mutuall concorde one with another It may bee many occasions may arise which if by wisedome they be not smothered and suppressed in the beginning they are as little sparkes that quickly break out into a flame and the flame
not wtiting and reading and therefore as the Apostle when hee wrote did not preach so the people when they read did not heare Moreouer if we should reason a little farther with such as preferre simple reading before sound preaching how do they know that the worde which they heare read is the word of God For the Scipture inspired of God is the Originals the Hebrew of the olde Testament the Greeke of the newe Testament in other tongues it speaketh not but by an interpreter for from these two tongues and languages the Scriptures were turned and translated by men into the French by Frenchmen into the Dutch by Dutchmen into the English by Englishmen and so of all other Nations So that when we read or heare read the Scriptures in our owne tongues wee read and heare read the translations of men as when this word is preached we hear the expositions and interpretations of men And hence it is that the translations euen the best translations which are among vs may be amended and corrected according as it pleaseth God to giue greater sight and better insight into those learned Languages and as time discouereth the wantes and imperfections of them But the Scriptures themselues are free from all errour no weaknesse can be discouered in them they cannot bee made better by the iudgement of men or by length of time For al Gods workes are pure and perfect and no man can controule any thing in them If this be true may some say that the translations of the Scriptures are in some sort the worke of man how shall the people know when they haue and heare the worde of God and when they haue and heare the word of man This may seeme to leaue them in a maze and mammering and to hang their Faith vpon the will of men that they shall not knowe what to beleeue I aunswere they must haue in all doubts that arise and in all Controuersies that do trouble them they must haue I say recourse to their faithfull and learned Pastors whose care ouer them and loue vnto them may giue them hope that their senses are exercised in the wise discerning betweene good and euill Whereby by the way we may see the necessitie of hauing Pastours and Teachers able to teach to conuince to correct to instruct to comfort to resolue such doubts and demaunds as are mooued vnto them Besides the people of God haue for their direction both the helpe of comparing one place of Scripture with another and the assistance of the spirit to lead them vnto all truth that shall be necessary for them to saluation Moreouer if we should demaund of these men that are wise in their own eyes how they know the word read to be the holy Scripture what will they answere Will they say by the authoritie of the Church or by the testimony of the spirit But whatsoeuer they speake they must speak against themselues If they say by the Church the Church also setteth foorth the preaching of the Gospell and chargeth vs to heare the same at the mouth of the Minister Will they say by the Spirit the same Spirit will lead them into all truth and open their hearts to attend the preaching Ministry if they be led by the spirit of God Wherefore to conclude and to returne to the former obiection such as hold reading to be preaching or better then preaching are either such as are Idoll-Shepheardes that cannot preach or idle Shepheards that will not preach or ignorant people that cannot iudge or carnall Gospellers that regard not to heare or such conceited sluggards as liue vnder a reading Ministry These are they that condemne the Priests and Prophets nay Christ and his Apostles of want of wisedome and discretion to choose the best meanes or of ignorance to knowe and vnderstand what is most profitable or of malice and enuy to hide from them that which is most profitable or of malice and enuy to hide from them that which is most auaileable for their soules health For if reading be better they are to bee blamed that vse the worse and refuse the better Surely they would neuer haue preached at all if the naked reading had beene as effectuall Moreouer the reading Minister by this reason should be the best Minister reading a better guift then preaching yea euery childe might be a better Minister then he that preacheth the word And then what should we do with Vniuersities and Schooles of Learning which are the Nurses and Seminaries of the Church to traine vp able men and to furnish them with giftes of knowledge But the guiftes which Christ bestowed for the edification of his Church when hee ascended on high and ledde Captiuitie Captiue c Ephes 4 11 12 13. are all preaching guifts The want of guifts which the Prophets complaine to haue beene in the guides of the people d Esay 56 10. was not of reading and reciting the words out of the booke but the guifts of preaching and expounding the Scriptures Hence it is that God reiecteth those that be ignorant as vnfit and vnable Instruments of saluation e Hosea 4 6. My people are destroyed for lacke of knowledge because thou hast refused knowledge I will also refuse thee that thou shalt be no Priest to me And in another place f Mal. 2 7. The Priests lips should preserue knowledge and they shall seeke the Lawe at his Mouth for hee is the Messenger of the Lord of hoasts Lastly the preaching of the word is acknowledged confessed to be the onely g Esay 49 22. 2 Chron. 15 3. essential mark of the Church so that it alone is of force to worke faith and saluation Obiection 3 Thirdly if reading of the Scriptures be not an ordinary meanes to worke Faith in Christ and Repentance from dead works as well as the liuely preaching of them it will follow that the Ministers themselues want the ordinary meanes because they by reading doe furnish themselues to preach to others but seldome do heare others preach Answere I answere they want not the ordinarie meanes from their owne preaching though they haue no other though they heare no other They haue faith before they enter into that calling but it is confirmed by their owne Ministry Hence it is that the Apostle mouing Timothy to giue himselfe to reading to be diligent in exhortation to plant sound Doctrine and to encrease in such guiftes as were bestowed vpon him addeth h 1 Tim 4 16 Take heede to thy selfe and vnto learning continue therein for in doing thus thou shalt saue both thy selfe and them that hear thee Where we see he sheweth that his Ministry should be a meanes not only to saue others but to saue himselfe And there is no faithfull Minister but in reprouing he reproueth himselfe in teaching he teacheth himself in threatning he threatneth himselfe in comforting hee comforteth himselfe in strengthning others he strengthneth himselfe yea hee findeth and feeleth his owne
danger of thy life it may be taken from thee and thou from it which maketh it to bee but a shadow of true gaine But the profit of godlinesse is of a contrary Nature if once we haue gotten this Pearle the Theefe cannot steale it the moth cannot corrupt it the Sea cannot drown it the rust cannot fret it the Land cannot loose it the length of time cannot consume it the greatnesse of danger cannot take it from vs the vnfaithfulnesse of seruaunts the subtlety of enemies the fraud of false Brethren the force of the mighty the violence of the Oppressor the partiality of the Iudge the wresting of the Lawe can neuer depriue vs or debarre vs of this benefite yea b Cicer. pro Archia poeta that which an Heathen man saide once of humaine learning may more truly and iustly be spoken of godlinesse which indeed is true learning the which whosoeuer wanteth what Ornaments of Nature and Art soeuer otherwise he hath is vtterly vnlearned nay a starke foole It will follow vs as a sweete guide abroad to solace vs it will stay with vs a pleasant companion to delight vs at home it will lye with vs as a bed-fellow in the night to teach vs whereon to meditate it will sit downe with vs as a guest at the Table to direct vs it wil bee with vs as a skilfull Physitian in sicknesse to comfort vs it will sticke and stand to vs in prosperity to humble vs it will cleaue fast to vs in aduersity and in the euil day to refresh vs it will waite vppon vs in death it will descend with vs into the graue it will ascend with vs into heauen and alwayes follow vs from place to place as the shadow doth the body This made the Apostle Iohn say Blessed are they that die in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Reuel 14 13. To conclude therefore so often as wee thinke of true Religion or remember the day of our conuersion we must think with our selues that we made the most blessed change that euer was made and hold this for a firme and sure principle that no gaine is like to this gaine no profit like to this profit Vse 2 Secondly seeing Christian Religion planted in the heart of a man maketh him good and helpfull to others who before was vniust and vnprofitable let euery one proue his effectuall calling and true conuersion by earnest seeking after the good of others and by a carefull abstaining from hurting troubling and wronging of others It is to be chosen as a better thing to suffer then to offer wrong to receiue then to requite to take then to giue Obadiah liuing in Ahabs Court is commended for the manifestation of his Faith by his Workes as the Tree that sheweth what it is by the fruites hee hid c 1 Kin. 18 13 the Prophets of God from the sword of the persecutor and fed them in the Caue in the time of famine The Prophet affirmeth and assureth that such shall dwell in the Tabernacle of the Lord and rest in his holy mountain as make much d Psal 15 4. of those that feare the Lord and honour them whome God hath honoured To this purpose the Apostle setteth this downe as a certain signe of our adoption that God accepteth vs as his sonnes and daughters to wit our loue to the Saints e 1 Ioh. 3 14 We know that we are translated from death to life because we loue the Brethren Euery one must be able to shew the soundnesse of his faith and the truth of his conuersion by the fruits of his calling f Math. 3 8. and by the workes of regeneration and amendment of life An iniurious man that loueth himselfe but not another that hath no care to doe good to his Brother but to himselfe onely is not yet truely conuerted to God nor deliuered from the bondage of sinne nor made a member of Christ nor engrafted into the true Church nor endued with the grace of sanctification he is yet in the flesh and not in the spirit he is yet in death not restored to life he is the bondslaue of Sathan not brought into the liberty of the sonnes of God For where there is no change in conuersation there can bee no assurance of true conuersion The meditation of this point must enter deeply into our harts teach vs to try our selus whether as yet we born again by water and the spirit or not Whosoeuer can say thus I haue beene in bondage to sin now I am set free I haue beene the prisoner of Satan now I am at liberty I haue liued vnprofitably to God vnprofitably to my selfe vnprofitably to others now I haue learned to lead my life to the honour of God to the benefite of my brethren and to the comfort of mine owne soule whosoeuer I say can say thus may be assured of his conuersion and turning vnto God and that God hath begun his good worke in him which hee will finish at the appearance of Iesus Christ Let vs all therefore know and consider that it is required of vs to repent of sinnes to turne to God to chaunge our hearts and to amend our liues that so we may bring forth the fruits of righteousnesse and expresse our obedience to the Gospell To be without the fruits of the Gospel is to denie the Gospell and to be without godlinesse of conuersation is to be without Christ and to bee without an heart inwardly sanctifyed and without a life outwardly regenerated is to be without faith It had beene better for vs that we had neuer had the Gospell offered vnto vs then to haue it to contemne it It had beene better we had alwayes remained in darknesse then to haue light come among vs and not to walke in the light It is a worthy exhortation that the Apostle maketh to the Thessalonians g 1 Thess 5 5 6 7 8. Yee are all the Children of light and the children of the day we are not of the night neither of darkenesse Therefore let vs not sleepe as others do but let vs watch and be sober for they that sleepe sleepe in the night and they that bee drunken are drunken in the night but let vs which are of the day be sober putting on the Brest-plate of faith and loue and of the hope of saluation for an Helmet It is not euery h Math. 7 21. one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdom of heauen but he that hath an earnest and carefull endeuour to do his will It is not enough for vs to bee called a Christian to beare the name of a Protestant to renounce the name of a Papist to make shew of the true Religion and to be an hearer of the word we haue learned better things and must giue an account of a farther dutie Obiection We will say peraduenture we hate and detest all the blinde and erroneous
because Loue seeketh not her owne but the good of others Secondly as wee see selfe-loue checked and controuled so they are condemned that place brotherly loue in faire wordes and gentle speeches and yet many faile in these and cannot affoord them as if euery worde of their mouth were worth Gold whereas in such is no sound Religion but a vizard onely of holinesse True loue must be shewed in the fruits in sustaining helping pittying releeuing those that craue our releefe and are in necessity The Apostle teacheth them that are destitute of true faith that shroud themselues vnder the profession of the Gospell and yet are not able to make demonstration thereof by their workes A good Tree bringeth foorth good fruit If the Tree bring forth either no fruite or euill fruite it is an euill tree If we haue onely good words and either no workes at all or euil workes it is a plaine argument we are not yet in the number of true beleeuers z Gal. 5 6. neyther are endued with that faith which worketh by loue Hence it is that the Apostle Iames saith a Iam. 2 15 16 If a Brother or a Sister be naked and destitute of daily food and one of you say to them Depart in peace warme your selues and fill your bellies notwithstanding ye giue them not those things which are needfull to the body what helpeth it Euen so the Faith if it haue no workes is dead in it selfe If then we content our selues to giue the Almes of faire wordes which are but empty shewes it sheweth that we are barren trees full of leaues but voyd of fruite and it shall minister as little comfort to our hearts as it dooth releefe to their bodies We are taught to visit Christ in his members and apply our selues to do them good that in the last iudgement we may finde that mercie and compassion at the hands of Christ which wee haue shewed to the members of his body To giue kinde words is not that feruent loue which heere is commended vnto vs. Lastly it reproueth such as giue themselues to fraud and deceite to cruelty and oppression to subtilty and circumventing their brethren to lying vsing false Waights and Measures For if this should be the rule of our loue that it ought to be feruent we should examine our owne hearts whether wee would haue another man to deceiue and oppresse vs by forgery falshoode The Apostle reprooueth all such wrongfull and iniurious dealing and as a Prophet of God denounceth seuerely certain iudgement vpon such wickednesse b 1 Thess 4 6. Let no man oppresse or defraud his Brother in any matter for the Lord is an auenger of all such things as we also haue told you before time and testified It is common and wicked Obiection May I not do with mine owne as I list who shall hinder me to vse mine owne as I thinke good This is the common argument of Harlots Drunkards and other beasts which ought not to be in the mouths of Christians Let them vse it that are out of Christ let vs bee ashamed of such prophanenesse and ignorance For indeed thou hast nothing that is thine owne thou art but a Steward and the time shall come when thou must giue an account of thy Stewardship because thou mayst be no longer Steward Vse 3. Lastly seeing all are to be loued but especially such as haue bin conuerted by vs it teacheth vs to further their saluation that haue beene brought into the way by vs and neuer to forsake them vntill we haue brought them to their iournies end For what a vaine thing were it to finde a man wandering out of his way and going astray from the right path and when he hath brought him backe to leaue him without farther direction Or what an vnnaturall part were it for a Mother to bring forth her Childe into the worlde and then to take no more care of it neither to wash it in water nor to wrap it in swathling Clowts nor to haue any compassion vpon it but to cast it out into the open field The loue of Moses his Mother was greater toward him c Hebr. 11 23. Exod. 2 3 4. who being borne was hidden three moneths from the cruelty of the Egiptians and being put among the Bul-rushes in the water was watched by his Sister to see how God would prouide for his deliuerance euen so it standeth vs vpon hauing beene made blessed meanes and Instruments of the good of others to be assistants vnto them and to further their saluation as God shall enable vs. It is the part of a good Worke-man not to leaue his worke vnperfect A good Physitian will not leaue his patient when he hath doone but halfe his cure An Husbandman will not giue ouer when he hath halfe sowne but will labour vnto the end Hee that dooth but halfe builde an house is but halfe a Carpenter He that entreth into Christianity and beginneth wel is but halfe a Christian the greatest part of the worke remaineth behind Let vs all follow the example of God when he began the great worke of the Creation of the world he left not his workemanship vnfashioned and vnfinished but in six dayes fully accomplished it to the glory of his name And as he did in the generation of his creatures so he doth in their regeneration c Iohn 13 1. Those whom he loueth he loueth vnto the end This is it which the Apostle teacheth d Phil. 5 5. I am perswaded of this same thing that he that hath begunne this good worke in you will performe it vnto the day of Iesus Christ As then God neuer leaueth him whom once he loueth so shold we haue a care of those that we haue moued to imbrace the truth and watch ouer them for their good The Minister must preach sound Doctrine in loue to the soules of men that he hath vndertaken the charge of for whom he is to giue an account in the great day Wee see the Apostles hauing taught the Gentiles planted a Church among them did not cast off all care of them nor thinke themselues to haue discharged a sufficient duty toward them but knowing the malice of Satan the deceit of false Teachers and the frailty of mans nature e Acts 14 22. They returned back to confirm them in the faith and to settle them in that truth which they had receiued of them When Peter professed great loue to Christ f Iohn 21 15. he willed him to manifest it by feeding of his Sheepe and Lambes the greater his diligence was in feeding the flocke of Christ ouer which hee was made a principall Watchman the greater duty he performed to Christ himselfe When Agrippa the King had heard the defence that Paule made for himselfe and the confirmation of his calling by the heauenly vision that apeared vnto him he said g Acts. 26 28 29. Almost thou perswadest me to become a Christian But
great vnthankfulnesse deny corporall benefits so that it cannot be expressed how well he hath deserued of that person whom he hath won by the word to God c Col. 1 13. And deliuered him by his Ministry from the power of darkenesse and translated into the Kingdome of his deare Sonne Thirdly we may obserue in the Apostles correcting of his former grant that as he is commended that doth his duty that is required of him freely and willingly so he is worthy to be praised and commended that doth not goe about to wring and wrest a benefit against a mans will though it be due debt and a bounden duty but laboureth by all meanes that it may be voluntary and not vpon necessity for hereby it commeth to passe oftentimes that he not onely getteth a benefit but winneth his heart and good will that giueth it and many times it falleth out that the minde of the giuer is more to be respected then the guift it selfe as we see in the poore Widdow mentioned in the Gospell d Luk. 21 2 3. who casting into the treasury two mites is said to haue giuen of her penury more then all the rich men that bestomed of their superfluity Thus much of the generall obseruations Now let vs come to the particular Doctrines I would haue retained him with me that for thee he might haue ministred vnto me in the bonds of the Gospell The Apostle in these wordes doth claime both Philemon and Onesimus to owe vnto him being in bondes their seruice and comfortable administration Indeede he senderh his Seruant backe to him yet he seemeth closely and secretly to insinuate that hee would take it thankfully at his handes and receiue it as a guift most welcome vnto him if Philemon would returne him to him againe and that he should deserue more praise if of his owne accord and liberality he would haue sent back his Seruant now restored vnto him of whose helpe and Ministery he had so great neede The Seruants of Christ that suffer for his Name are to be succoured by what duties soeuer we can For seeing the banishing of our persons the whippings of our bodies the spoiling of our goods the impairing of our good Name and many other reproaches and afflictions doe accompany the preaching and profession of the Gospell whosoeuer shrinketh back from suffering them and refuseth to be partaker of them when God calleth him to beare witnesse vnto the truth he renounceth the Gospell forsaketh his Brethren and separateth himselfe from Christ The defence of the Gospell is common to all and euery man must be an helper to the truth Therefore the man that suffereth persecution for Gods cause and the Gospels is not to be accounted as a priuate person but as one that dischargeth a publike duty of the whole Church and therefore the care of him generally lieth vpon the shoulders of all those that professe the faith Doctrine 1. Euery Christian is bound to serue the common good of the Church by what meanes soeuer God hath inabled him From hence we learne that help succour and seruice is a due debt from all that truely are religious to them that suffer for the Gospell and for righteousnes sake We see how Paul requireth it of Philemon and Onesimus that they should in his bondes Minister vnto him and helpe him in his distresse The vertue heere required is that fruit of loue by which a man becommeth a Seruant to euery one for their good within the compasse of his calling So then euery Christian is bound to serue the common good of the Church and of them that haue need therein by his guiftes by his goods by his wisedome by his authority and by what other meanes soeuer God hath inabled him This is commaunded by by the Apostle Gal. 6. While e Gal. 6 10. we haue time let vs do good vnto all men but specially to thē that are of the houshold of faith So the same Apostle setteth out loue by his effect f 1 Cor. 13 5. Loue seeketh not her owne things but the good of others it suffereth all things it endureth all things The Church of the Hebrewes is commended for the notable fruits of their loue shewed vnto the Saints that thereby they might be encouraged to go forward and to hold out vnto the end g Hebr. 6 10. For God is not vnrighteous that he should forget your worke and labour of loue which ye shewed toward his Name in that ye haue ministred vnto the Saints and yet Minister This we read to haue beene the practise of the Primitiue Church in time of extreame misery and the hard weapon of necessity pressing sore vpon them h Actes 4 33 34 35. Great grace was vpon them all neither was there any among them that lacked for as many as were Possessers of Landes or Houses sold them and brought the price of the things that were sold and laid it down at the Apostles feet and it was distributed vnto euery Man according as he had neede The examples of the godly are worthy to be considered who haue shined in the world by this vertue as by a light in dark places Obadiah ministred to the Prophets in the time of Famine and in the daies of persecution i 1 King 18. Neh. 1. and 5. He did not onely hide them from the rage of the enemy but supplyed their necessitie Nehemiah imploied himselfe for the good of Ierusalem by his authority power wealth and credit that he had with the King This was in Paul as he testifieth of himselfe k 1 Cor. 9 19 Though I be free from all men yet haue I made my selfe Seruant vnto all Men that I may win the moe So that he was ready to offer vp himselfe vpon the Alter of their Faith Likewise he requireth of the Widdowe 's imployed in the Church-seruice to attend vpon the sick that they should be of this good report As l 1 Tim. 5 10. to haue lodged Strangers to haue washed the Saints feet to haue Ministred to them that are in necessity So the Church of Thyatira is commended by Christ for the performance of this duty m Reu. 2 19. I know thy workes and thy loue and seruice and faith and thy patience and thy workes and that they are moe at the last then at the first This is so generall a duty that the Apostle Paule expresseth it among the common fruits of Faith Rom. 12. Be affectioned to loue one another with n Ro. 12 10 11 brotherly loue in giuing honour goe one before another Not slothfull to doe seruice feruent in Spirit seruing the Lord. No man is exempted from this duty be hee neuer so high is is no disparagement but a great aduancement euen of the honour and glory of Princes as the Prophet teacheth o Esay 49 23. Kings shall be thy nursing Fathers and Queenes shall be thy Nurses they shal worship thee with their faces toward the
helpfull and seruiceable to Gods people shall finde them as their remembrancers to God who will not forget the labour of their loue and the duty of their seruice This ought to bee a notable encouragement vnto vs not to deale niggardly toward the Saints nor to withhold from them the fruits of our loue seeing nothing shall be lost that is bestowed vpon them but we shall receiue an hundred folde into our bosome grace for grace loue for loue blessing for blessing mercy for mercie For this comfort and consolation will arise to them that doe good to Gods people they shall haue fauour with God they shall gaine a good report with the world and they shall purchase the sweet sauour of a good name as of a precious oyntment among the Saints and shall stirre them vp to intreate Gods manifold mercies for them Iehoiada that good High-Priest was so honoured of the people for suppressing the tyranny of Athalia for setting vp the kingdome of Ioash and for restoring the true religion of God that he was accounted a common Father of the Countrey and they gaue him the burial of a King r 2 Chron. 24 15 16. for they buried him in the Citty of Dauid with the Kings because he had done good in Israell and toward God and his house So the apostle Paul declaring that Onesiphorus had done him great seruice prayeth vnto God for him ſ 2 Tim. 1 16 17 18. The Lord giue mercie vnto the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chaine but when he was at Rome he sought me out diligently and found me The Lord grant vnto him that he may finde mercy with the Lord at that day Whereby we may gather that the benefites bestowed vpon the Saints shall not perish although they themselues cannot requite thē for though they want ability to pay them yet they want not harts to pray for them yea the Lorde will not onely haue pitty of them that take pitty of his people but he will shew mercy to their housholds because when Paule praiseth the bountifulnesse and zeale of Onesiphorus he wisheth well for his sake to his whole family The blessing of God shall not rest onely vpon the head of the iust but it shall descend into his whole house such is the loue of God toward those that be his If the consideration of this great promise and rich recompence of reward doe not pricke vs forward to exercise the workes of loue and fruits of compassion we are more then blockish and brutish On the other side such as haue beene not helpfull but hurtful not industrious but iniurious not seruiceable but vnprofitable to Gods people when God shall visit them either with publicke calamities or priuate iudgements their owne Consciences shall gall them and gnaw vpon them when they remember their owne works which shall prouoke men to speak euill of them cause them to pray against them and constraine them to call vppon God to worke their confusion This we see in Paul the Apostle in the latter end of the same Epistle t 2 Tim. 4 14 Alexander the Copper-smith hath done me much euill the Lord reward him according to his workes Thus doeth the Prophet Dauid deale oftentimes in the Psalmes u Psal 74 2 3. Thinke vpon thy congregation which thou hast possessed of old on the rod of thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed and on this mount Syon wherein thou hast dwelt lift vp thy stroakes that thou mayst for euer destroy euerie enemy that doth euil to the Sanctuary Thus wee see the people of God haue from time to time prayed against the malicious enemies of the Church that sought the ruine and destruction thereof Their prayers are of great force enter into the eares of the Lord of hostes whether it bee to obtaine mercies vpon the friends of the Church or to draw downe vengeance vppon the aduersaries thereof that oppresse it with cruelty and blaspheme the name of God which is holy throughout all ages and generations There is no greater honour that we should desire or delight in then to be called the friends of God and the seruants of the Church If we be the seruants of God wee must also account our selues the seruants of the Church The Prophet Dauid did esteeme the faithfull that were in Ierusalem as his Brethren So on the contrary side there cannot a greater dishonor and reproach befall vs then to be reputed the enemies of God and his people For if wee set our selues against his people that are his portion and inheritance hee will no otherwise deale with vs then with his enemies If God come against vs as his enemy we shall not be able to preuaile we cannot stand before him but shall be as stubble in the fire and as chaffe before the winde Vse 4. Lastly seeing God requireth seruice to his Church at our hands to do all good to them by all good meanes it is our dutie to enquire and learne the estate of the distressed Church that we may knowe and bee informed where and when and how it is afflicted How many are there that neuer thinke vpon the people of God to do them good but forget their affliction and oppression The Butler of Pharaoh did not remember Ioseph but forgate him and the kindnesse he shewed toward him when they were prisoners togither who had said vnto him x Gen. 40 14 23. Haue me in remembrance with thee when thou art in good case and shew mercy I pray thee vnto me and make mention of me to Pharaoh that thou mayst bring me out of this house So when Zachariah the sonne of Iehoiada whom we mentioned before was for preaching the truth and denouncing the iudgements of God from his mouth oppressed with enuie and ouerborne by the might of the Rulers the King woulde not deliuer him out of their hands y 2 Chron. 24 21 22. but commanded him to bee stoned with stones and remembred not the kindnesse that his father had done to him but slew his son This is the common course and current of the world wee will not see the afflictions of the poore Saints but turne away our eyes from them or if wee cannot choose but see them we quickly forget them as if wee had neuer eyther beheld them or knowne of them This is one misery of the faithful that men do not regard them when they are in misery The Lord hath determined that there shall be alwayes some obiects offered vnto vs and set before vs to exercise the fruits of our Faith and Loue. He hath saide that the poore wee shall alwayes haue with vs and such as stand in need of our helpe and comfort It is in easie thing to boast of Faith and Loue but if we will be assured that we haue true Faith indeed we must shew it by our workes which are the fruites whereby it is knowne We must not turne away our
haue nothing of vs. This is the reason vrged by the Apostle to the Corinthians l 2 Cor. 9 7. As euery man wisheth in his heart so let him giue not grudgingly or of necessitie for God loueth a chearefull giuer Now that which the Apostle speaketh of charity and of almes may as truely be spoken of euery dutie that God requireth of vs. When wee pray we must call vpon God chearefully for he loueth a cheerefull prayer When we giue thankes to his name for blessings receiued wee must thanke him chearefully for he loueth a chearful giuer of thankes and albeit these be notable parts of Gods worship and excellent duties commaunded of him and required of vs yet without this chearfulnesse they are as a dead thing not regarded Reason 2. Secondly our obedience vnto God must bee answereable to the obedience of Christ that hee performed to his Father for hee hath therein giuen vs an example and taught vs how to obey The maner of his obedience was willing and done of his own accord not extorted and wrested from him for then it could not haue beene accepted of God nor merritorious for vs nor praised in him Hence it is that the Apostle saith m Heb. 10 9 10. Then saide he Loe I come to do thy will ô God he taketh away the first that hee may establish the second By the which will we are sanctified euen by the offering of the body of Iesus Christ once made Thus Christ himselfe speaketh in the Gospell n Iohn 10 17 18. Therefore dooth my Father loue me because I lay downe my life that I might take it again No man taketh it from me but I lay it downe of my selfe I haue power to lay it down haue power to take it againe Where he sheweth that the cause wherefore he suffered was not because Caiphas conuented him or the witnesses accused him or Pilate condemned him or the Iewes executed him but because it pleased his Father and himselfe to make himselfe an offering for sinne For except hee had died willingly all his aduersaries had bin too weake to work any thing against him o Iohn 18 6. as appeareth in euidently the Garden when hee cast them all downe to the ground with a word of his mouth Heere is set down a pattern for vs to follow we must performe the like obedience that he did as his was voluntarily and willing so ought ours likewise to be that it may be acceptable in the sight of God Reason 3 Thirdly the things that are not done in Faith and Loue are sinne For without faith it is vnpossible p Heb 11 6 to please God And though I had the guifts of prophesy and knew al secrets and al knowledge yea if I had al faith so that if I could remoue mountaines q 1 Cor. 13 2 3 and had not loue I were nothing though I feede the poore with all my goods and though I giue my body that I bee burned and haue not loue it profiteth nothing So then we see that no dutie is acceptable without Faith and Loue. But nothing done vnwillingly vncomfortably or hypocritically can be done in Faith and Loue. And therefore such duties as are thus perfourmed haue no life nor vertue in them to giue them any grace or acceptation with God Reason 4 Lastly God knoweth our hearts and seeth hovv vve bring our guifts offer our offerings He looketh not vpon the outward vvorke but regardeth the intent of the heart When Caine brought vnto God an oblation of the fruites of the ground r Gen 4 5. he had no regard to him nor to his offring because he savv the hollownesse and hypocrisie of his heart This is the reason that Dauid vseth to perswade Salomon his sonne to haue a care to learn and to practise the will of God 1 Chro. 28 8. And thou Salomon my sonne know thou the God of thy Father and serue him with a perfect heart and with a willing minde for the Lord searcheth all harts and vnderstandeth al the imaginations of thoghts if thou seeke him he will be found of thee but if thou forsake him he will cast thee off for euer Where we see the Father carefull for the future good of his son mooueth him to endeuour and striue to know God by learning what he willeth to serue him vprightly and willingly by practising as hee enableth because our thoughts are not hidden from the all-seeing eye of God and because he offereth himselfe to them that seeke him but forsaketh them that refuse him when he is offered We may easily deceiue the eye of man that looketh only to the person and beholdeth only the outward worke but it is vnpossible to deceiue the searcher of hearts If then we gather al these reasons into a short sum and set them as in a Table before our eyes if we consider that God loueth a chearfull seruice that Christ performed a willing obedience that faith and loue giueth acceptance to the work and lastly that God giueth recompence according to the heart which he knoweth we see that the strength of them will beare the ful waight of this conclusion that the duties of our Religion must not be performed constrainedly but freely not grudgingly but chearefully not vnwillingly but readily not of necessity but voluntarily Vse 1. Now we are to make Vse of this Doctrine First seeing no man must performe any holy duty to God or man vpon compulsion or against his will but with all his minde and might we learne that euery action or dutie is accounted of by God not according to the greatnesse of the worker or outwarde shew of the worke but according to the will and affection of the dooer it is the manner of dooing that God more accepteth then the action or deede it selfe A Childe in his obedience to his Father is esteemed for his reuerent louing obedient and dutifull heart and not for the greatnesse or worthines of his worke For what can he do when hee hath endeuoured to the vtmost to pleasure his Father So is it with vs when we haue done all that wee can we must confesse we haue bin vnptofitable seruants and therefore God more respecteth the intention then the action the Worke-man then the worke the affection then the effect Mary is commended of Christ t Luke 7 47 and 21 3 4. because shee loued much The poore widdow that cast into the treasury one mite is praised by Christ aboue the rest that offered of their substance and superfluity He that giueth a cup of cold water in the name of a Disciple to a Disciple u Math. 10 42 shall not loese his reward What is the bestowing of a Mite Or what is a cup of colde water Are they of themselues in themselues considered any thing worth Or can they deserue to be accepted No in no wise but God accepteth the manner more then the matter how
those offences which they haue forsaken This is the reason touched by the Apostle mentioning the transgression and conuersion of the incestuous person who washed away with his teares the guiltinesse of his sinne he saith p 2 Cor. 2 6 7 It is sufficient vnto the same man that hee was rebuked of many so that now contrary-wise ye ought rather to forgiue him and comfort him c. If then it be sufficient to reproue then to reuile and reproach is more then sufficient euen superfluous and vnprofitable and vncharitable as wee noted before Reason 3. Thirdly whensoeuer our Brethren repent we are bound to testify our forgiuenesse of them and to bring a cloak to couer the foulenesse and deformity of their offence But so long as wee publish them abroad and proclaime them in the eares and audience of others it is very plaine we doe not forgiue them so long as we remember them to their discredit and reproach wee do not couer them It is that reason which wee heard before out of the Apostle where he instructeth the Corinthians in Christian meeknesse and moderation toward him that offended and repented that had falne and was risen againe and chargeth them to esteeme it enough that he was reproued q 1 Cor. 2 7. so that now they should confirme their loue toward him and freely forgiue him Seeing therefore that loue couereth the multitude of sins seeing it sufficeth to reproue the sinner and that it is a duty belonging vnto vs to testifye our forgiuenesse of him that sinneth we may from all these considerations as from euident consequences conclude that the sins of our brethren committed and repented of ought not aboue measure to be stretched and augmented but rather mittigated and lessened by vs. Obiection Before we come to the Vses of this Doctrine it shall not be amisse to answere some Obiections First the Euangelist Mathew called to bee an Apostle r Math. 10 3. calleth himselfe a Publican for in numbering vp the twelue he mentioneth himselfe Mathew that Publican Answere I answere the office of a Publican was no vnlawfull calling and therefore not of that Nature that falleth within the compasse of this Doctrine that we haue in hand True it is in regard of the abuse of the Office the name of the Officer was becom odious ſ Math. 9 11. and therefore the Publicans and Sinners are oftentimes ioyned together Now their Office was to be Collectors of the Toll and tribute imposed vpon them by the Romains which was as lawfull for thē to gather as for the people to pay Hence it is that Iohn the Baptist doth not exact of the Publicans that came vnto him to leaue their office but exhorted them to beware of bribery oppressions t Luke 3 13. Require no more then that which it appointed vnto you So then the condition of a Publican the prosession of a Christian may both stand together so that a man conuerted to the faith may hold the office and bee called by the Name without any disgrace of his outward or inward calling Obiection 2. The Prophet denounceth a fearful wo against al those that cal u Esay 5. 20. euil good or good euil which put darknes for light light for darknes If then we are to speak of a penitents sins fauorably not to deal rigorously with a Conuert it seemeth to giue liberty to vtter a lie to smother the truth Answere I answer it is one thing to speake of the nature of the sinne and another thing to speake of the conuerted sinner The sinne is one thing but the Conuersion maketh it another When we speak of the Nature of the sinne and the offence against God we are not to lessen or diminish it but when we consider it in the person that hath repented the shame and reproch is done away so that we may speake of it with all gentlenesse and mercy toward them Obiection 3 The Scripture often mentioneth the vncleane life of Rahab and albeit she turned to God forsooke her filthinesse and ioyned her selfe to the people of God yet she is branded euermore with the name of an Harlot So the Apostle saith to the Hebrewes x Heb. 11 31. By Faith the Harlot Rahab perished not with them which obeyed not when she had receiued the spies peaceably In like maner Iames speaketh y Iames 2 25. Was not Rahab the Harlot iustified through workes when she had receiued the Messengers sent them out another way Answere I answer this is not mentioned to her reproach but spoken to their praise she is not vpbrayded with it but commended because she had forsaken it We see heereby what shee was before her calling she is not reproached with it after her calling Thus our Sauiour speaketh in another place to the cheefe Priests and Elders of the people Verily I say vnto you z Math. 21 31 that the Publicans and the Harlots goe before you into the kingdome of God Where he meaneth that they were such as the Apostle speaketh of the Corinthians but nowe they had giuen ouer that life Thus he saith of his Myracles that he had wrought a Math. 11 5. The blinde receiue sight the halt do walke the Leapers are cleansed the deafe heare and the dead are raised vp These men while these infirmities were vpon them could not be deliuered from them but he sheweth what they had been and what they were they had beene diseased but now were restored So in Rahab the Apostles testifie what she had beene to wit an Harlot and what she is not any longer an Harlot but a true beleeuer with the people of God It is added therefore not any way sounding to her defaming but to shewe the greatnesse of Gods compassion and the soundnesse of her conuersion Vse 1 The Vses remaine to be stoode vpon that the Doctrine may serue to our comfort and instruction First we learne from hence a notable point of Christian wisedom to esteem of all men as they are and not as they were according to their present estate wherein they remaine and not according to the condition wherein they liued in times past It skilleth not what they haue bin we must consider what they are The Apostle reckning vp many horrible sinnes committed by the Corinthians in the darke night of their ignorance he saith b 1 Cor. 6 11 Such were some of you but now ye are washed now ye are sanctifyed Where we see he maketh a flat opposition betweene their former estate before their calling and their estate after their conuersion and setteth a difference betweene that which they were once and that which they are now He saith such they were he doth not say such they are they were but nowe are not because they had repented The like we see in his affection towards one perticular member of that Church of whom we spake before while he continued
therefore seeke to blaunch the foulenesse and filthinesse of it to which they are so continuallie accustomed But howsoeuer these men account of sinne and whatsoeuer they call it they shall find that the lessening of it is the way to encrease it and the diminishing of it is the meanes to make it greater If we would haue our sinnes and offences not to come into account we must forsake them and repent of them Thirdlie it reprooueth such as disclose and reueale a Penitents confession When our Brethren in the anguish of their Soules and in a feeling of the horror of sinne haue sought peace and comfort at our handes and haue discouered their offences that trouble them to vs as the sicke man doth his disease to the Physition that hee may bee healed it is our dutie to comfort them not to disgrace them to conceale them not to reueale them to hide them not to publish them and blaze them abroad to their disgrace and discredit True it is when euill is opened vnto vs e Alexand. Hal. part 4. Quest 28. membr 2. art 2. Siluest in Confess 3. nume 2. not past or present but to be done afterward as if a man confesse his determination and resolution to commit Murthers we are not tied to couer and conceale it but are bound to manifest and make it knowne This sheweth the wonderfull abuse of the Church of Rome committed in holie thinges and thinges supposed by them to be holie The Sacrament of the Lordes Supper is most horribly prophaned of them which being instituted in remembrance of the death of Christ to assure vs of our spirituall communion in him and of our spirituall nourishment from him is often receiued of them to combine them together in wickednesse and to take securitie thereby one of another not to reueale the Treasons and Conspiracies that are plotted among them Thus it is in the supposed Sacrament of Pennance when they would reueale the hidden mischeefe and poysons of their hearts to the Priestes and Iesuits their Confessors they will seeme to doe it by way of confession that so it might be as it were locked vp and sealed with this Seale as a secret neuer to bee disclosed and discouered Thus is confession become nothing else but a couer of Treason and Rebellion But when our Brethren being afflicted in Conscience and wounded with the Darts of Satan and the poyson of sinne shall accuse themselues and confesse some haynous sinne committed that lyeth heauy vpon them and can find no comfort in concealing of it but greater horror thereby are brought to the gates of Hell and like to be swallowed vp in despaire when they shall I say confesse to the glorie of God and the shaming of themselues the wickednesse of their hearts and handes we are not to vtter it to others to their disgrace but by all meanes we can to couer it in secret and silence For as we f Iam. 5 15. are to acknowledge our faults one to another and to pray one for another so we are in loue to conceale the falles one of another and not to open them in choller and mallice to their reproach Lastly this reproueth our remisnesse and wretchlesnesse in dealing with recusant Papists the members of the Pope and Popish Church who because we would not offend them we speake of them honourably and giue them the Name of Catholikes and honour them with the Title of the Church whereas wee should giue them their right and call them by their propper Names of Idolaters and enemies of the Grace of God and disturbers of the State We haue many among vs that are ready to ioyne with them and to giue them the right hand of fellowship who can bee content to mingle together God and Baall Christ and Beliall light and darkenesse the Temple of God and an Idoll But as we beleeue the High-priest of Rome to be the very Anti-christ described in the Scripture so we also hold that the Church of Rome is a false and Bastard-Church and no true Church of Christ Iesus who not onely haue shaken but razed downe the very foundations of Religion maintaining the worshipping of Images and the merrits of workes by making a mocke of Christes merits and satisfaction by deuising other Mediators and by presuming to offer him vp an vnbloody Sacrifice to God the Father Let vs not therefore halt betweene g 1 Kin. 18 21 two opinions nor go about to reconcile those thinges which can neuer hold or hang together The false Apostles would ioyne the Law and the Gospell together the workes of the Law and the grace of Faith in the matter of Iustification which can neuer be the one destroying and pulling down the other because h Rom. 11 6. if it be of grace it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace but if it be of workes it is no more grace or else were worke no more worke So we haue those that dreame of an vnion between Christ and Antichrist but if the Lord be God follow him if Baall be he then goe after him No man can serue both these Maisters so contrary one from the other so that whosoeuer cleaueth to the one forsaketh the other Verse 16. Not now as a Seruant but aboue a Seruant euen as a Brother c. Heere is a singular commendation of Onesimus expressed by many steps and degrees the one ascending and climbing aboue the other He was not onely as a Seruant but aboue a Seruant not onely as a Brother but a beloued Brother not onely deare to Paule but much more to Philemon himselfe This is so much the more worthy praise and commendation nay of wonder and admiration as the disposition of Seruants in those times was lewd and licentious who albeit they had good and godly Maisters yet they were light-fingered and light-footed and vpon euery occasion they were apt to run away from them i Gen. 16 6. as appeareth in Hagar that liued in the house of Abraham when Sarah began to deale roughly with her immediatlie she fled from her Seeing therefore it was so rare a thing among those kinde of men to finde any well minded and disposed the Apostle maketh the more account of him and would haue his Maister to make account of him As if he should reason thus Him who in Christ Iesus is become thy Brother thou oughtest carefully to tender and dearely to loue But Onesimus is now by his vnfained conuersion become thy Brother Therefore receiue him Heere we see the Apostle reasoneth for Onesimus to haue him receiued and respected aboue an ordinary Seruant because hee was truely conuerted and had in him a good measure of Grace and was become a true and sound Christian Doctrine 4. The more grace appeareth in any the more should they be tendered and regarded of vs. We learne from hence that the more Grace appeareth in any the more should they be tendered and regarded of vs whether
pretenses or excuses or delayes shal auaile vs. Then shal the poore begger appeare without his rags the rich Glutton without his Robes Couetous Indas without his bagges Crafty Gehazi without his money Proud Haman without his Honor Aspyring Absolon without his Ambition Murthering Caine without his Weapon Cunning Achitophell without his Pollicy The Kings of the earth must lay downe the glory of their Crownes and the dignity of their Scepters the Nobles must renounce the Ensignes of honor and all persons must set aside outward respects of honor and dishonor of glory and shame of fauor and contempt Neuerthelesse it is to be obserued that albeit these men must stand before the throne of God without these respects that they made their chiefest felicity yet they shall not appeare without their cruelty bribery treachery blasphemy couetousnes such like impiety for their euill works shal follow them cleaue fast vnto them Let vs therefore neuer think to escape when we shal com naked before the eternal Iudge as euer we came into the world more naked then we departed out of the world for wheras some haue their Coffins to couer them others their Tombs to beutify them and all men their winding sheets to wrap their Carkasses in whē the Lord shal descend with thousands of his Angels they shal not haue a rag or a poore fig-leafe to hide their shame Let vs seek while we haue time to put on Christs righteousnesse as a Garment that we may be able to stand before the sonne of man and receiue the glory prepared for vs before the foundations of the earth were laide Specially to me how much more then vnto thee both in the flesh and in the Lord. We haue heard how the Apostle accounteth and how he would haue Philemon account of Onesimus to wit aboue a Seruant euen as a beloued Brother In these words he vrgeth him farther and sheweth that hee had more cause to respect him and greater reason to loue him then himselfe had because he was ioyned to him by more bands whereof two he nameth one of the flesh as being his seruant the other in the Lord as being his brother Paule was mooued to respect him onely in regarde of the common fayth and therefore he saith if he were not so much a Seruant as a Brother to him much more hee ought to bee so to his Maister not because hee was his seruant as other seruants are but because he was the Lords seruant so that hee was bounde to loue him both for the Lordes sake and for his owne sake Doctrine 6. The more bands reasons are giuen vs to care for any the more we are bound to care for him Heereby there is offered to our considerations this Lesson to bee learned that the more bandes and reasons are giuen vnto vs of God to care for anie the more wee are bound to care for him and to respect him A professor of the Gospell is more to be regarded then he that is wirhout One of the same Nation more then a stranger one of our own Kindred more then another farther from vs a Neighbour more then one that dwelleth manie Miles from vs one of a mans house more then him that is out of his house a Kinsman conuerted to the faith becom a true and perfect Christian more then a Kinsman not conuerted A Child that hath the sparks of grace in him more then a Childe voyde of them a Seruant fearing God more then a Seruant in the same family that doth not feare God nor regard his worde nor make Conscience of the meanes of his saluation Abraham loued Isaac the sonne of Promise hauing more graces in him f Gen. 21 9 10 14. 25 5 6. more then Ishmael the son of the bond-woman and a scoffing wretch and more then all the Sonnes of Keturah to whom he gaue guifts and sent them away Wee see this in the dealing of Abraham toward Lot his Nephew he would suffer no contention to rest among them and when he heard he was taken prisoner he would not haue stirred for the wicked sinners that dwelt in Sodome but hee armed his seruants to recouer him out of the hands of his enemies This is it which Salomon teacheth g Prou. 27 10 Better is a Neighbor that is neere then a Brother farre off The Apostle teacheth this truth when he giueth this precept While wee haue time let vt do good to all men h Gal. 6 10. but especially to them which are of the houshold of faith And in another place i Tim. 5 4. If any Widdow haue Children or Nephewes let thē learne first to shew godlinesse towardes their owne house and to recompence their Kindred To this also we are directed in the fift Commandement when we are commanded to Honour Father and Mother Wherby appeareth the truth of this doctrine that it standeth with Gods ordinance to haue the most care of those and to shew the greatest fruits of loue vnto them to whom wee are bound in the greatest and neerest bands Reason 1. The Reasons being wisely considered will make this plainely to appeare vnto vs. It is a generall sentence deliuered by Salomon in the booke of Ecclesiastes k Eccl. 4 9 10. Two are better then one and a threefold Cord is not easily broken Wheresoeuer there are stronger Cordes to tye vs and moe bandes to ioyne vs together our Loue ought to bee the more greater one towardes another Manie stickes make the greater Fire and many stringes the better Musicke Reason 2. Secondly it is a thing verie well pleasing in the sight of God to consider what meanes he hath affoorded to encrease mutuall loue and societie one with another This is the reason vrged by the Apostle to perswade the Children and Nephewes of poore Widdowes to take care for their Parents according to their ability l 1 Tim. 5 4. Because that is an honest thing and acceptable before God Now we are bound vnto them by many effectuall Reasons as it were with barres of Iron and bandes of Brasse to nourish those that haue nourished vs that haue fedde vs that haue cloathed vs that haue begotten vs and brought vs into the world so that wee must acknowledge it both right and reasonable Reason 3. Thirdly such as breake these bands cast away these Cords from them do set themselues against the Doctrine of Christ and may be sent to schoole to the Infidels nay to the brute beasts which are not voide of a certaine naturall affection This the Apostle teacheth m 1 Tim. 5 8. If there be any that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold he denieth the faith is worse then an Infidell For howsoeuer they professe the Faith in words yet in deede and in truth they deny it But God is delighted with our workes not with our words and looketh vpon the substance not the shewe of our Religion
which are by my Ministry preserued to euerlasting life and thou canst not sufficiently esteeme of thy Redemption and Saluation effected and merited by Christ but manifested applied and warranted vnto thee by my preaching and the graces of God bestowed vpon me for the effectuall conuersion of the elect Obseruations offered vnto vs in these words Thus wee haue seene the order of the wordes and haue learned the meaning of them It remaineth according to the maner and Method before propounded to gather from hence such obseruations as are intimated vnto vs and might be largely handled of vs. First of all obserue with me that the Apostle returneth heere to a consideration of that which might be obiected so that we see it is the duty of the Ministers not onely barely to teach the truth but to remooue doubtes to answere Obiections to put away Impedimentes and to cleere al difficulties that may sticke in the mindes of the hearers and hinder the beleeuing and embracing of the truth deliuered vnto them For howsoeuer our care be to teach plainely and euidently yet the carnall reason of a naturall man ministreth many cauilles and questions whereby diuerse scruples remaine in the hearts of the people as dangerous stumbling blockes to turne them out of the right way to stay their course from running with a right foot in the paths of righteousnesse Wherefore it standeth vs vpon to consider diligently what may be alleaged against the truth that is taught by vs and to make a plaine answere vnto the same This we see in euery Epistle practised by the Apostle When he had taught free iustification a Rom. 3 20. 21 22 27 28 31. by faith apprehending Christ without the workes of the Law the Iewes might haue obiected If the law do not iustifie then it was giuen in vaine it is abolished it serueth to no purpose He knew this would be concluded and therefore he preuenteth it saying Doe we then make the Law of none effect through faith God forbid yea we establish the law And afterward b Rom. 5. 20. with Chap. 6. 1 2. hauing taught that where sinne abounded there grace abounded much more if he had rawly and barely left the matter thus propounded a man might haue obiected If this be true that there grace aboundeth where sinne hath abounded then sinne seemeth to be the cause of Gods glory and then why do we not sinne fully and freely that thereby the glory of God may be magnified Wherefore he vnloseth this knot in the words and chapter immediately following What shall we say then Shall we continue still in sin that grace may abound God forbid How shall we that are dead to sinne liue yet therein Likewise to the same purpose he speaketh againe for hauing proued that sinne shall not haue dominion ouer vs c Rom. 6 14 15. because we are not vnder the law but vnder grace considering with himselfe that prophane men might abuse the grace and liberty of the Gospell to commit sinne with greedinesse hee replieth What then shall we sinne because we are not vnder the law but vnder grace God forbid c. The like we see practised in other places When hee hath taught the Ephesians to loue their Wiues as their owne bodies yea euen as Christ loued the Church and addeth that this d Ephe. 5 32. is a great secret or mystery a man might aske do you speake this of the loue that ought to be betweene the Husband and the Wife or of the loue that is betweene Christ and his Church he answeareth I speake concerning Christ and concerning the Church In like manner deliuering a rule to the Church that Widdowes should bee chosen to attend vpon the sicke and those that were diseased he would haue none vnder threescore yeares of age set a part to this Office he addeth e 1. Tim. 5 9 11. But refuse the younger Widdowes for when they haue begunne to wax wanton against Christ they will marry hauing damnation The Apostle knowing that these wordes might haue beene wrested wrongfully and applyed contrary to his meaning for one might haue said what haue they damnation for marrying Is marriage the cause of damnation He resteth not so but answeareth the point they haue damnation for denying and breaking their first faith This wisedome is to be put in practise of all the Ministers of Gods word wee must be able not onely to teach but to conuince and to fore-see what may be obiected against that which we haue deliuered So then the Ministers must be men of knowledge throughly furnished to conuince the aduersaries and replenished with store both new and old to ouerthrow all spirits of contradiction that seeke to subuert and destroy the faith of many And it belongeth to the people to resort and repaire to their Ministers thus quallified for resolution of doubts wherewith they are troubled f Mal. 2 7. Math. 2 4. considering with themselues that the Priests lips must preserue knowledge and that the people are to seeke the law at their mouthes because they are the Messengers of the Lord of Hoastes Secondly we see againe in the first wordes of hurting and owing that there is vsed a certaine mitigation For whereas he might haue called him a Theefe and Runnagate he expresseth them vnder much milder names calling his robbing and flying away an hurting and debt declaring thereby how gentle and easie an hand how louing and charitable an heart we ought to beare toward the penitent We are not to aggrauate the slippes and fals nor augment the sinnes and offences of our brethren nor to vrge them and set them out in their colours to the vttermost nor to follow them with extremity but it is our duty to deale mercifully with such sinners as are vnfainedly and truely turned vnto God g Three rules to be obserued to moue vs to deale mercifully toward the penitent remembring alwaies these three thinges First that we are subiect to the like sinnes and may be ouertaken with the same offences through the tentations of Sathan and the corruptions of our owne nature Hence it is that the Apostle admonisheth vs h Gal. 6 1. to restore such as haue fallen euen with the spirit of meeknesse considering also our selues least we also be tempted Secondly that as we are subiect to fall so we haue offended as greatly against God as they if not in the same kind and after the same manner so that if he should enter into iudgement with vs who could stand in his presence or answeare him one of a thousand This is it which Christ Iesus laid to the charge of the proud Pharisies when they brought before him the woman taken in adultery he said vnto them i Iohn 8 7 ● Let him that is among you without sinne cast the first stone at her who when they heard it being accused of their owne consciences went out one by one beginning at the eldest euen to the last Thirdly
distaste and dislike al the rest of Gods mercies o Gen. 41 4 7 Euen as the euill-fauoured and leane-fleshed Kine did eate vp the well-fauoured and fat Kine or as the thin and blasted eares of Corne deuoured the rancke and full eares in the dreames of Pharaoh Let vs not therefore burne with a desire of an higher estate but labour to finde our hearts and mindes throughly setled in that large and liberall portion which we haue in present possession by the good hand of God toward vs. Fourthly that the Lord doth not alwayes actually bestow vpon his Children the riches and wealth of this World but nurtereth them vp to depend whollie vpon his faithfull promise who hath giuen them his word that hee will not leaue them nor forsake them And in the meane season he worketh in their hearts a patient bearing of the wants and necessities of this life but in the end he will bestow vpon them eternall blessings that neuer shall haue end and heauenly graces that neuer shall decay Fiftly that one drop of Gods fauour toward vs is better worth and more of value then this whole World that is but vaine and transitory If wee cannot rest in this fauour of God in the want of outward thinges it is most certaine we haue not yet learned truely to prize and rightlie esteeme the fauour of God Such as cannot bee content to forgoe and forsake earthlie things neuer truelie felt the forgiuenesse of sinnes Let vs learne to rest in the least tast and touch of the grace and fauour of God whatsoeuer it bringeth with it whether wealth or want whether plenty or pouerty whether prosperity or aduersity Lastly we must remember that Nature is content with a little so that if we haue food and raiment we ought to be content as we noted before This was the vow of Iacob when he went from his Fathers house while he was in the way to Haran p Gen. 28 20 21. If GOD will be with me and will keepe me in this iourney which I goe and will giue me Bread to eate and Cloathes to put on so that I come againe vnto my Fathers house in safetie then shall the Lord be my GOD. There are two pointes of mans life his entring into the World and his going out of the world the space comming between both these receiueth many changes and alterations many differences and diuersities Some are poore and some are rich some noble some vn-noble some high and some low The beginning of all is equall the end of all also is equall touching this life for as we brought nothing into this world so we can carry nothing away with vs We came q Iob 1 21. naked out of our mothers womb and naked we shall return thither The time betweene our rising and falling our birth and death is of short continuance and therefore we ought not to be carefull to heape vp Riches r Psal 49 17. For as much as we shall take nothing away when we dye neyther shall our pompe descend after vs. If a Man haue neede of one onely Pot or Pitcher of Water it is small wisedome and great vanity to try to draw vp a whole streame If a little prouision will serue for the iourney and voyage that we vndertake it is a needelesse and bootlesse thing to hoard and heap vp great store of furniture for a small occasion Let vs therefore take heede of all excesse and content our selues with the moderate vse of outward blessinges enioying such thinges as we haue with cheerefulnesse and thankfulnesse bearing the want of such thinges as we haue not with patience and meekenesse depending vpon GOD for his blessing in all thinges that any way concerne and belong vnto vs. To loue Riches is a token of a base and abiect minde to couet and desire them when we want them is a signe of a wretched and miserable minde to vse them well to our priuate commoditie and the publike vtilitie when we haue them is a Testimonie of a commendable and contented mind Vse 3 Lastly we learne from this Doctrine to take good heede that we do not abuse our propertie and dominion of those guiftes that God hath giuen vs bestowing them onely to our priuate vse and with-holding the comfort of them from others to whom they ought of right to be imparted and imploied For albeit the possession of them bee ours yet there is an vse of them belonging to the Saints the property of goods and the communion of Saints standing together Whensoeuer we haue these outward thinges we must not with-hold them when they may profit the Church and refresh the Saints We must not be couetously and corruptly minded like Naball who when Dauid and his Men were in necessitie in the Wildernesse saide Å¿ 1 Sam. 25 11 Shall I take my Bread and my Water and my Flesh that I haue killed for my Shearers and giue it vnto Men that I know not whence they are Hee challengeth all as proper to himselfe his Bread is his his Water is his his Flesh is his all is his he hath nothing for Dauid nothing for his Seruants nothing for others This we see in the dealing of Laban toward Iacob he saith vnto him These Daughters are my Daughters these Sons are my Sonnes these Sheepe are my Sheepe and all that thou hast is mine He challengeth all to himselfe he leaueth nothing to Iacob Gene. 31. 43. The Apostle Iames teaching vs to prooue our Faith by our workes saith t Iam. 2 15 16 If a Brother or a Sister be naked and destitute of daily foode and one of you say vnto them Depart in peace warme your selues and fill your Bellies notwithstanding ye giue them not those thinges that are needfull what helpeth it Whereby we see that mercifulnesse to our poore and needy Brethren is commaunded so that as we beleeue a communion to be among all true professors so we are charged to be as the Cloudes that drop downe the sweete shewers vpon the Hearbes as liuely Fountaines of Water that flow out plentifully to the vse of others as fruitfull Trees bringing forth store to feed others We must consider that we are but Stewards of our goods that are lent vs for a time for which wee are to giue an account and of which wee are to giue a yearely rent to the cheefe Lord which his poore Children are appointed to receiue at our owne handes whom we are bound to releeue with our goods He hath saide u Math. 26 11. The poor ye shall alwaies haue with you but me ye shall not alwaies haue This duty is oftentimes required and beaten vpon in the word of God This appeareth in the practise of Iob who being accused falsely of his three friends to be an Hypocrite is compelled to boast after a sort of his workes as the fruits of his Faith and the assured Seales of his vnfained profession x Iob 29 12 13. I
a note of an vnthankefull heart to obtaine a benefit and not to acknowledge it to receiue a guift and not to praise and commend the giuer This is it which the Apostle teacheth 2. Cor. 1 9 10 11. speaking of the afflictions which came vpon him in Asia whereby hee was pressed out of measure passing strength so that he doubted altogether euen of life We receiued the sentence of death in our selues because wee should not trust in our selues but in God which raiseth the dead who deliuered vs from so great a death and doth deliuer vs in whom we trust that yet heereafter he will deliuer vs so that yee labour together in Prayer for vs that for the guift bestowed vpon vs for many thankes may bee giuen by manie persons for vs. In which words he declareth that as he had experience in the time past of the mercy of God in the deliuerance which was giuen vnto him so he hopeth of the like assistance of his spirit if that the Corinthians would be mindfull of him in their prayers Where we see he ascribeth much to their Prayers and yet so much as that he would haue the glory of his deliuerance to be giuen onely to God and thankes to be rendered vnto him A point worthy to be considered of vs and a duty needfull to bee performed by vs. As he hath promised and we haue prayed so when he hath payed hee is to be praised Praise is comely and well becommeth the Saintes of God the want whereof taketh away the comfort and sweete fruite of his blessinges from vs. It is a great offence to be vnthankefull vnto men but farre greater to God in whom we liue and moue and haue our being Wherfore whensoeuer we haue opened our mouthes vnto God let vs returne the Calues of our lips vnto him and neuer shew our selues more ready to ask then we are willing to praise and magnifie the Lord who hath granted that which wee haue asked And heereby we may try our selues whether we be truly thankfull vnto him or not I shall be freely giuen or bestowed vpon you The Apostle in this place vseth a word deriued from grace so that it signifieth to be giuen by Grace Thus the r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 word is taken in sundry places of the Scripture as Rom. 8. If hee haue giuen vs his owne sonne how should he not with him ſ Rom. 8 32. 1 Cor. 2. 12. Gal. 3. 18. giue vs all things else And 1 Cor. 2. We haue receiued the spirit which is of God that wee might knowe the thinges that are giuen to vs of God So likewise Galath 3. God gaue the inheritance to Abraham by promise The meaning of the Apostle is thus much in effect the Prayers of the Saintes shall preuaile with God and beeing offered vp for my deliuerance shall not returne to them without comfort nor ascend to him without effect nor concerne mee without effect Notwithstanding albeit they shall not goe emptie away but haue their full force and power yet it is to bee acknowledged and Learned that they so obtaine as that my deliuerance is to bee wrought out by the free guift of his Grace not by the merit and desert of your prayers Doctrine 3. The guifts of God bestowed vpon his seruants come from his free grace not frō our deserts From hence wee learne that the guifts of God bestowed vppon his Seruants come from his free grace not from our deserts from his mercie not from our merites from his Goodnesse not from our Worthinesse This is set downe in the second Commaundement of the Lawe Exodus 20 6. where the Lorde promiseth eternall life vnto the Keepers of the Commandements yet they must not looke to obtaine it as a due desert For hee will shew Mercie vnto thousandes to them that loue him and keepe his Commaundements Faith is an excellent guift and a notable meanes to bring vs to eternall life t Iohn 3 36. For he that beleeueth in the Sonne hath eternall life and hee that obeyeth not the Sonne shall not see life but the wrath of GOD abydeth on him We see then the necessitie of hauing a liuely Faith because to beleeue in Christ bringeth with it eternall life yet it is not for the merite of our Faith but for the Mercie of God and the Merit of Christ apprehended by Faith u Rom. 6 23. inasmuch as Eternall life is the free guift of God The like we may say of Prayer we haue a comfortable promise that if we aske we shall receiue if we seeke we shal finde not because our Prayers do deserue acceptation and therefore when Daniell prayed vnto God he confesseth that x Dan. 9 7 8 9 righteousnesse belongeth vnto the Lord but vnto vs open shame because we haue sinned against him Whereby we gather that although our prayers are not without effect yet they preuaile not by any excellency is sound in them and therefore he saith Compassion and forgiuenesse is in the Lord our God albeit we haue rebelled against him Thus also we might perticularly speake of al the good ordinances of God and the good duties that proceede from vs as the sauing hearing of the word the fruitfull receiuing of the Sacraments such like holy exercises of our Religion inasmuch as he doth accept them and is well pleased in the performance of them howbeit not through our worthinesse that doe performe them but thorough his goodnesse that doth commaund them thorough his mercie that doth approoue them thorough his promise that doth receiue them and thorough his liberality that doeth reward them Reason 1. If wee would know the Causes and Reasons why the Graces of God are freely bestowed vpon vs and nothing giuen in our deserts First let vs consider that all matter of boasting is taken from vs and God will haue the glory of his owne workes and the praise of his mercie If he should take anie thing of vs he should loose so much of his owne glory and we would bee readie to ascribe our sanctification and saluation to our owne selues This doth the Apostle set downe at large in sundry Epistles for speaking of Abraham he saith y Rom. 4 2. and 23 27. If Abraham were iustified by workes he hath wherein to reioyce but not with God And hauing shewed before that God accepteth of the faithfull making him iust and without blame by imputing of Christes righteousnesse vnto him he confirmeth it by the end of Iustification which he maketh to be the glory of God saying Where is then the reioysing It is excluded By what Law Of Workes Nay but by the Law of Faith As if hee should say If we were iustified either by our owne Workes wholly only or partly by Faith and partly by workes then the glory of our iustification should be wholly giuen to our selues or at least not wholly giuen vnto God To this purpose he speaketh in the Epistle to the Ephesians
z Ephe. 2 8 9. 1 5 6. By grace are ye saued through Faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of God not of works least any man should boast himselfe God will haue the glory of our iustification he will be accounted and acknowledged to bee the Iustifier and Sauiour of vs he hath not left vs to iustifie our selues nor to be our owne Sauiours as shall better appeare afterward Reason 2 Secondly there are no such properties in any mans workes as that they cannot merit or proceed from any other fountaine then Grace Let vs therefore see a What properties must be found in workes to make them merritonous what properties are necessarily required in workes to make them merritorious First they must be done of a man of himselfe by himselfe but we haue nothing of our owne to giue him but are most poore men and meere beggers and can but pay God with his owne The workes that are our owne are sufficient to deserue his wrath but haue no power at all to procure his fauour For in our selues we are wretched and miserable poore naked and destitute of all goodnesse so that it is truely saide by the Apostle Paule b 1 Cor. 4 7. Who separateth thee And what hast thou that thou hast not receiued If thou hast receiued it why reioysest thou as though thou hadst not receiued it Without him therefore we can do nothing it is he that must work in vs the will and the deede Secondly they must be such workes as are not due vnto him they must not be due debt they must come from our owne free will they must be such as God cannot iustly challenge at our hands But whatsoeuer we do we do as poore debters nay we are worse then poore debters wee are miserable Bankrupts we haue nothing we haue lesse then nothing to pay Our Sauiour hath a worthy sentence to this purpose Luke 17 10. When ye haue done all those things that are commanded you say we are vnprofitable seruants we haue done that which was our duty to do And what could Adam do and offer vnto God in his innocency but that which was his duty and whereunto he was bound vnto his Maker for his Creation and other blessings bestowed vpon him Thirdly the worke must be done to the benefit and profit of him from whom we looke to be repayed But our goodnesse and well-doing reacheth not to the Lord Psal 16. We may benefit men but wee cannot benefit our maker from whom we haue receiued life and limbe soule and body all that we haue but we can giue him nothing Now they that cānot giue anie thing to God can deserue nothing from him but wee cannot giue any thing to God according to the saying of Paule e Rom. 11 35. 36. Who hath giuen vnto him first and he shall be recompensed For of him and through him and for him are all things to him be glory for euer Amen therefore it is euident that wee cannot deserue Fourthly whatsoeuer is vnperfect cannot stand in the presence of the most iust and perfect God we must bring nothing before him but that which is absolute and able to beare and sustaine his wrath But all that we doe offer or can offer vnto God is maimed and vnperfect such are our best Workes our Prayers our Meditations our Hearing so that our righteousnesse is like a f Esay 64 6. menstruous cloath Whatsoeuer proceedeth from vs is foule and faulty no man is able to satisfie the Iustice and rigor of the Law according to that of the Apostle g Rom. 3 10 12 20. There is none righteous no not one they haue all gone out of the way they haue beene made altogether vnprofitable there is none that doth good no not one and therefore by the workes of the Law shall no flesh be iustified in his sight Wee must all entreate for pardon and forgiuenesse of our euill Workes and not stand vppon the perfection and sufficiencie of our good workes Lastly the worke and the reward must be in proportion equall for if the reward be more then the worke it is not a rewarde of desert but a guift of good will The Apostle saith Rom. 8 I account that the afflictions of this present time are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed vnto vs. Thus then we reason Nothing can deserue but that which is equiualent to the thing deserued but nothing that we can do can equall or deserue the guiftes the least guift of God So then albeit we had some-what to giue and that wee were not as most naked and needy beggers yet it cannot be compared or correspondent to that which we receiue For grace and glory are vnvalewable and vnmatchable no price can purchase them no mony can buy them no merits can match them So then whether we consider that GOD will haue the glory of all his workes or that there is a great disproportion betweene Mercy and Merits in both respects we conclude that the guiftes of GOD giuen vnto his faithfull seruants proceede from his free grace not from our free will so that they are not deserued of vs but bestowed vpon vs. Vse 1. This Doctrine being thoroughly strengthned let vs see what Vses may be grounded from thence First we learne from hence that seeing God giueth not by desert but of his mercy that whatsoeuer we haue obtained and receiued by any prayer or other meanes from the hand of God wee must ascribe all to the glory and praise of his name and acknowledge him to bee the Author and giuer True it is we are commanded to call vpon the Lord and to put vp our suits and supplications vnto him and when we haue praied and God hath heard our prayer we must not thinke that wee haue well deserued to speed in our desires and say For my righteousnesse the strength of my Prayers I haue gotten this or that but as we vse the meanes so we must acknowledge that God findeth such faults in our best prayers that he might curse vs rather then blesse vs and condemne vs rather then heare vs and withall consider that in hearing vs he respecteth more that which is in himselfe then any thing that is in vs he is moued rather of his owne mercy then any absolutenesse that he can see in our well-doing Let vs therefore meditate vpon our owne wants and albeit we vse those helpes and Instruments that he hath appointed yet let vs giue him all the glory to whom it is wholly due When a great multitude of enemies came against Iehoshaphat he set himselfe to seeke the Lord and proclaimed a fast through out all Iudah They asked counsell of the Lord and prayed vnto him yet when God had giuen them the vpper hand they blessed not themselues but the Lord they praised not their owne zeale but his mercy and they ascribed not the victorie to their fasting and prayer but
If a man see his Corne that is in the fielde stand at a stay and not shoote forward he conceiueth little hope of any plentifull Haruest If we set a Scholler to Schoole and he alwaies continue in the same forme and neuer come forth in his learning we will by and by coniecture he will prooue a Dunce Or if we see a Child that doth not grow in strength and stature we vse to say he will neuer be a tall man he will neuer be but a Dwarfe So is it with all those that haue Å¿ Ieremy 4 4. had the plough of Gods word brought in among them and the ground of their hearts sowed with the precious and immortall seed t Luke 8 11. of the word and their hearts moystned with a gratious raine u Deut. 32 2. as it were the showre vpon the hearbs and yet continue dry and barren without any fruit it is to be feared that they will shortly fall backe and wither away If we haue beene brought vp in the Schoole of Christ and haue heard the x Acts 13 25. Lecture of the Law and Prophets nay of Christ and his Apostles read vnto vs and often sounding in our eares and yet find no accesse of knowledge or encrease of obedience we may looke euery day to be thrust out of this Schoole yea to see the Schoole dissolued and turned to another vse If we haue had both y 1 Cor. 3 2. Heb. 5 13 14. Milke and Meate brought vnto vs and placed at the Table of the Lord full fraught with all delicates z 1 Pet. 2 2. And yet neither as New-borne Babes desire that sincere Milke of the word that we may grow thereby nor yet know that strong meat belongeth to them that are of age that in the end we may a Ephe. 4 13. all meete together vnto a perfect Man and vnto the measure of the age of the fulnesse of Christ certainely we shall alwaies remaine as Children wauering and carried about with euery winde of Doctrine by the deceit of men and with craftinesse whereby they lay in wait to deceiue But if wee feele the weakenesse of our Faith and the rest of the Graces of Gods Spirit and vnfainedly desire the encrease and supply of them he will fulfill our desire and we shall know to our endlesse comfort that our desire is not in vaine yea to feele the weaknesse of Grace is of Grace to see the weakenesse of Faith is of Faith and that which is yet more hee accepteth the desire to beleeue in Christ as Faith it selfe the desire to repent from dead works as repentance it selfe the desire to be reconciled to God as reconciliation it selfe They are pronounced b Math. 5. Blessed that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse because they shall be satisfied Whosoeuer is a thirst hath promise made vnto him c Reuel 12 6. Iohn 7 38. That he shall haue the Well of the Water of life freely giuen We know by a naturall feeling what hunger and thirst is and when wee are hungry when thirsty and when not Properly we are d who are said to hunger after righteousnesse hungry when we are empty and thereby waxe faint and feeble and finding both our emptinesse and weakenesse desire meate to satisfy and content vs. Properly we are thirsty when we feele a drowth or drynesse in vs and desire some drinke to refresh vs. In like manner and by good proportion they are said to hunger and thirst after righteousnesse that feele they want it and would faine haue it If wee feele our selues to be out of Christ and doe long after the blood of Christ to be redeemed with it and to be iustifyed by it then we truely doe hunger after Christ Thus much touching this Doctrine which ariseth onely by comparing this Salutation with other Scriptures Demas and Luke my fellow-helpers In these wordes also by conference of other places ariseth a good instruction to vs that professe the Gospell of Christ Iesus For this is he of whom he was forsaken as he sheweth 2. Tim. 4 10. e 2. Tim. 4 10. Demas hath forsaken me c. Hee is called in this place a fellow-helper of Paul yet the vanity of this world drew him backe being ouercome with the toyle and trouble that accompanied the professors of the truth and the preachers thereof He doth not meane that he had cleane renounced the Gospell and was become a back-slider and cut off from the Church as a rotten member but he shrunke backe for his aduantage or because he was loath to suffer aduersity with the people of God as it he should haue said he preferred the loue of the world before the loue of God But whether euer he recouered himselfe or not and renounced the world which he ouermuch loued we haue not so full and faire a warrant as we haue for Marke seeing Paule endeth with forsaking of him and the Scripture leaueth him in the imbracing of this present euill world so that his repentance is vncertaine vnto vs. Beholde heere how this man is set as vpon a Stage or Scaffold a and marke of infamy branded vpon him for euer so long as the world shall continue and the name of Christ Iesus shal be preached because he withdrew himselfe from the paines and publishing of the Gospell and from the company of Paule waxing dainty and delicate louing his owne ease and pleasure too much Doctrine 3. Many that seeme forward in the profession doe afterward fal backward From hence we learne that many which seeme faithfull and forward in the profession doe afterward fall backe and giue ouer Such as seemed to haue life in them are become dead such as seemed to haue heat in them are starke cold such as did runne a great pace and led the way to others doe now some of them stand still many runne back-ward and others doe wander out of the way and others hinder those that would enter into the right way These first giue their names to Christ and afterward shake handes with the world and imbrace the friendship thereof We see this truth verified vnto vs by sundry examples and lamentable experience of all times Iudas was chosen to be one of the twelue Apostles yet he fell away dangerously and desperately he became a Traitor and a Deuill according to the saying of our Sauiour f Iohn 6 7. Haue not I chosen you twelue and one of you is a Deuill To this purpose the Apostle Iohn describeth such back-sliders Chap. 2. g 1 Iohn 2 19. They went out from vs but they were not of vs for if they had beene of vs they should haue continued with vs. Heereunto commeth the Parable propounded by Christ Math. 21 28. h Mat. 21 28. A certaine man had two sonnes and came to the elder and said Sonne goe and worke to day in my Vineyard but he answered and said I will not yet afterward he repented himselfe and
be extended to all 86 A fruit of loue to admonish 27 We must loue most where God loueth most 112. Not the vngodly most 115 Loue betweene Pastour and people 192 193 Loue those that haue conuerted vs 261 Loue one another 332 355. It is a Christians badge 356 355 Loue God aboue all 340 Loue to the Saints must be feruent 254 257. What it is 256. The manner how we must loue 257 258 Long life a punishment to the vngodlie 308 Losses See comfort in losses Lowest member in the Church must bee respected 184 329 The low estate comforted 1●0 Luke-warme 433 M A Magistrate sustaines two persons 247 Man by Nature sociable 22 A Martyr who is 19 20 Markes of Christ what 18 Marriage must be in the Lord. 32 English Martirs canonized by the Pope were deuillish Traytors 121 Mankind stand in neede one of another 83 Masse 93 Maintenance of the Minister 400 Maner of doing God accepts more then the deede 284 Maisters must pray for their Families 241. They haue comfort in teaching them 242. they are Ministers in their owne houses 45 Meditations to mooue vs to Prayer 462 Necessary after hearing 220. For Patrons 222 A meane to be kept 76 Meanes must be vsed to bring vs to faith 108 109. To further his guifts in vs 129 Members we are one of another 173 Mercilesse men 276 Mercifull men 280 Meritorious workes 458 Merits taught in the Church of Rome 463 Ministers calling painfull 33. they must not entangle themselues in worldlie things 37. They must seeke cheefely the profit of their people 70. It is a greefe to see them go backward 71 Ministers must preach willingly 286. They are Gods Instruments to conuert Soules 165. They must be maintained 287. Giuen to Hospitality 444. Being idle their guiftes are diminished 136 they haue no right to be maintained 137 Ministers must loue the people as Children 194 They must be faithful 216 They shall giue an account for soules 216. They haue comfort in labouring 242 Ministry a worthy calling 165 Ministers are Gods Ambassadours 171 How to be esteemed 171. They must vse mildenesse and gentlenesse 172 173 Mitigation of offences required 363 Three rules belonging thereto Ibid. Mishapen Children See Children deformed Monkish life See Solitary Mocking the Ministers 204 Multitude no rule to try truth 90 N Name that is good onely the godly haue 96 It hath many enemies 427. Euill men haue an euill Name 96. Against such as take away the good Name of the godly 96 Vngodlinesse brings a blot to mens names 97. ciuil men are ignorant of a good Name Ibid Seeke aster a good name 97. how many waies men are deceiued in it Ibid Wherein a good name consisteth 98 The enemies to it Ibid Naturall condition what 299 Negligence in Religion 11 Neglect of Prayer 456 Neighbour who is 256 Nicodemus 481 Niggardlinesse See Couetousnesse Non proficients 128 324 Non residency what it is 194 Notes to proue men voide of Faith 108 Nouatians 317 O Obiections answered pretending that ministers liue idely 35. that they need not heare that haue faith already 130 Obiections against instructing families 40. of them that say they spend nothing but their owne 115. Of miserable men against liberality 158 190. of Non residents 197 Obiections brought to prooue preaching not the ordinary meanes of regeneration 207 Obiections of Anabaptists 265. 367 Obiections made against forgiuing offenders 246. against vsing salutations 247 Obligations lawfull 385 Occasions of doing good must be sought 31. of contention must be cut off 251 Odious tearmes not to be vsed against the penitent 311 Offences of penitents not to be aggrauated 293. they are to be forgiuen 243 Offences forgiuen two wayes 247. they will arise many wayes 487 Old age honourable 178 Old men instead of Fathers 18. their Duties and sins 181 491. their long life is a testimony of Gods mercy 182 Oppression 393 Opportunity 444 Order in praying for blessings 505 Ouer-seers of the Church 221 Outward blessings recompenced with inward 305 P Painims religion what 156. they regard not the poore Ibid Papists no friends to Princes 266. falsely called Catholicks 322. they seuer faith and loue 102 104. they slander vs about Good-workes 105 Parents of deformed children comforted 311 316. they must not reproue their children for good thinges 328. they must pray for their families 241 Pardon open for penitents 217 Pastors ioy 69 Pastors and people are as Father and son 189. they are tied to a particular charge 199. not to discourage people that are forward 329 Pastors of meane guifts must bee heard 203 Patrons admonished 221. whence they had their names Peace giuen to the faithfull 55 58 The three Persons in Trinity worke our saluation 61. the distinction betweene them must be knowne 62 Peace is brought by the Gospel 264 Penitent persons not to be reproached 317. their confession not to be reueiled 321. abuse of the church of Rom therein Ibid. ●alse perswasion of Faith set downe by certaine notes 108. Peters being at Rome vncertaine 46● disagreement of Popish writers about it 471 Persecutions of Christians are the persecutions of Christ 15 Popish Idolatry like the Gentiles 63 Popishe assertions touching the Scriptures 78 Pope held to bee the Saint-maker 121. he is enemy to Princes 266 Popish deuotion 288. Martyrs 10. Religion which giues liberty to sin 105 Church what it is 470. The Popes Supremacy 470. his Saints 120 Poore Saints to be relieued 154. What those poore are 161. Poorest beleeuer is rich 189. the godly are specially to be respected 1●1 Pray for the free passage of the gosp 3●… Praier necessary 63. 437. it must bee made to God for others 82. it is a part of spirituall armour 83. the vse of it ibid. other mens to be intreated 84. We must pray for spirituall strength 91. and for spirituall things 505 Praier what it is 447. it is a medicine against all diseases 83. how made vnprofitable 461. what is required in it 449. why God defers to heare 453. Popish prayers Idolatrous 452 Prayer heard two waies 453 Prayer contemned 454 Prayer to Saints 454. It robbeth God of his honor 155. It cannot merit People must maintaine their Ministers 38. They must delight the heartes of their Teachers 73. They must not thinke it enough not to hurt them 74. They come to entrap them Ibid Howe many waies they grieue their Pastors 75 People must employ their guifts 139. They must not despise the Ministry of the word 170. They must honor their Pastors 202. They must attend theyr owne Pastors 203. they are in the ministers debt 402 Poore vnthankfull 412 Precisenesse not to bee obiected against Professors 93 Presence of the Pastour necessary 190 191. Preaching of the word the meanes of regeneration 205. A token of Gods loue 215 Preachers preach to themselues as well as to others 210 Preaching Ministery necessary to saluation 213 Preparation before hearing 219 Priuiledges of the godly 58 Profession of Faith See Confession
eye-sore vnto our selues Such as are dull and backe-ward themselues cannot abide those that are forward They that are ignoraunt thinke all others to haue too much knowledge They that are cold and slothfull in the matters of God do carpe and cauill at the zeale which they see in others and thinke them to bee too hasty too earnest too praecise Hence it is that oftentimes the Husband checketh the Wife the Father controuleth the Sonne and one Friend tebuketh another as running too fast and shooting beyond the marke Howsoeuer this is not greatly to bee feared in our daies wherein few runne at all many stand still wherein fewe shoot at the marke yet if it were so it is better to be a little too forward then to bee too backward to haue a little too much zeale then to be stark cold as many or luke-warme as the most are We see this in the state of a mans bodie it is easier to worke an euacuation of that which is too much then to procure a restitution of that which is too little It is an easier cure to purge our grosse superfluous humours when they abound then to repayre and restore Nature when it is decaying and consuming It is much easier to take away the sharpnesse of an edge tool then to set a sharp edge on that which is blunt dulled It is easier to pull downe a part of the building which is ouer-much then to lay a new foundation If there be one among vs that seeketh to be too iust and aymeth at a righteousnes aboue the Law there are a thousand that come too short and fayle in that which is required of them It is a most blessed thing to keepe the Golden meane betweene too much and too little It is easier to bring him that is in the excesse to the meane then to reduce him to the meane that is in the defect When a man lyeth dead in sinnes and trespasses and hath no sparke of the life of God in him to bring such an one to true godlinesse is as it were to raise him from the dead When a man lieth languishing and consuming by little and little and all good things begin to decay in him so that he is growne starke cold nothing is harder then to restore such a one it is as much as to worke a wonder and miracle But when our zeale is growne to be a little too hot and our edge made somewhat too sharpe it requireth no great labour it asketh no great paines to reduce vs backe againe and to make vs returne home the way by which we went There is no cause therefore that wee should so rashly and out-ragiously beare our selues toward those that climbe vp a step too high and beare them-selues a little too forward let vs rather examine our selues and consider whether we do not our selues many wayes faile of our duties so that wee may say and say truely we are vnprofitable seruants Let vs neuer enuy or grudge at the good of others remembering alwayes that what grace soeuer is graunted to one member is giuen to the whole bodie and to euerie particular member of the body As he that doth good to the eye doth good to the whole body the benefite redowndeth to the hand and foot Thus it is in the mystical bodie of Christ a Rom. 12 5. Wee being many are one bodie in Christ and euerie one one anothers Members Wee see in the Actes of the Apostles b Acts 11 18. when the Disciples had heard that Peter was called and warned by an Heauenly Vision to preach to Cornelius and other Gentiles they helde their peace and glorifyed God saying Then hath God also to the Gentiles graunted Repentance vnto life Thus much of the Ioy and Thankes-giuing of the Apostle Now let vs see to whom hee gaue thankes set downe in the next wordes I giue thankes to my God Heere is the first illustration of the Apostles Thankesgiuing declaring to whome it is made to wit to God The Apostle giuing Thankes and praising God hee calleth him his God He saith not simply I giue thankes to God but particularly I giue thankes to my God He calleth him his God and applyeth the promises of the gospel made to all that beleeue peculiarly and especially to himselfe Doctrine 2. It is the nature of faith to apply the promises and mercies of God to our owne selues Whereby we see for our instruction that the nature and property of a true and liuely faith is to aprehend and apply God and his promises particularly to our selues It is a duty required of vs to labor for that faith which may be as an hand to lay holde on the mercies of God and to appropriate them vnto our selues This we see in the vow of Iacob a Gen. 28 21. If God wil be with me and wil keep me in this iourny which I go and wil giue me Bread to eate cloaths to put on so that I come againe vnto my Fathers house in safety then shal the Lord be my God This speciall application we see oftentimes in Dauid b Psal 22. 1. 104 1. My God my God why hast thou forsaken me And againe O Lord my God thou art exceeding great The same appeareth in Thomas one of the twelue when Christ who will not breake the bruised Reed nor quench the smoaking Flaxe had respect to the weakenesse of his Fayth and bad him see the print of the Nayles in his handes and put his Finger into his side hee cryed out c Iohn 20 28. Thou art my Lord and my God This Christ practiseth himselfe and teacheth others when he sayde to Mary d Iohn 20 17. Touch me not for I am not yet ascended to my Father but go to my Bretheren and say vnto them I ascend vnto my Father and to your Father and vnto my God and to your God The Apostle Paule speaking of Christ and the benefites which he reapeth by him saith e Gal. 2 20. I am crucified with Christ but I liue yet not I any more but Christ liueth in me and in that I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith in the sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me And in another place f 1 Tim. 1 12. I thanke him which hath made mee strong that is Christ our Lord for he counted me faithfull and put me in his seruice All these consents of the holy Scriptures serueth to confirme vs in this truth that true Fayth standeth in a particular applying of the generall promises of the Gospell Reason 1. The Reasons will make this yet more manifest vnto vs. For first euerie one that shall bee saued must haue a particular Faith of his owne and not satisfie himselfe with the Faith of another No man can be saued by another mans beleeuing no more then be nourished by another mans feeding The Prophet Habbakuk teacheth this point euidently saying g