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A14185 Lectures upon the vvhole Epistle of St. Paul to the Philippians, deliuered in St. Peters Church in Oxford: by the reuerend and faithfull seruant of Christ Henry Airay ... and now published for the vse of Gods Church by C.P. ... Airay, Henry, 1560?-1616. 1618 (1618) STC 245; ESTC S100494 890,650 1,118

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skill what is pure what not either in doctrine life or manners and then knowing that let vs care and studie to be pure and sincere and without all leauen of corruption either in doctrine life or manners The third thing wherefore the Apostle prayed that the Philippians might abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement was that they might be without offence .1 that they might not stumble at any thing but hold on in a constant course without stumbling or slipping ba●ke or standing at a stay vntill the day of Christ when their constant perseuerance should be rewarded For the Apostles desire was 1. that they might be able to discerne things that differed what were corrupt and bad and what were pure and good 2. That being able to discerne and try all things they might keep that which were good and might be pure from all leauen of corruption 3. That being pure from all leauen of corruption they might keepe a constant course in their puritie without stumbling or shrinking backe or standing at a stay and for these causes he praied that they might abound more and more in knowledg● c. Whence I obserue a third imployment very behouefull for all Christians namely that being in a good course they hold on without stumbling or standing or shrinking being pure and cleare from all leauen of corruption they keep themselues so vntill the day of Christ Are yee so foolish saith the Apostle to the Galathians that after yee haue begun in the spirit Gal. 3.3 yee would now be made perfit by the flesh The Galathians had embraced the Gospell and obeyed the truth but now through certaine false Apostles they had fallen from the pure doctrine of Christ and admitted some corruptions of that doctrine And therefore the Apostle reproues them sharply and tells them that it is no course for a Christian to begin in the spirit and to end in the flesh but hauing begun in the spirit by embracing the pure doctrine of Iesus Christ they should end in the spirit and hold fast that pure doctrine which they had embraced euen vntill the day of Christ So that hauing obeyed the truth we are not to yeeld to any corruptions of the truth or to let our hold slip but to hold fast the same vnto the end It is for the dogge to returne to his owne vomit and for the sowe that was washed to returne to her wallowing in the mire but the man that hauing put his hand to the plough looketh backe Luk. 9.62 he is not apt to the kingdome of God Being in a good way wee must with our Apostle still endeuour to that which is before and follow hard toward the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus But I haue lately spoken to this purpose and therefore now the time being past I will not farther trouble you Onely with the Apostle I pray that your loue may abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement c. LECTVRE XII PHILIP I. Verse 11. Filled with the fruits of righteousnes which are by Iesus Christ vnto the glory and praise of God IT remaineth now that we come vnto the fourth and last end here mentioned wherefore the Apostle praied that the Philippians might abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement and that was that they might be fruitfull in all good works set downe in these words Filled with the fruits In which words I note 1. the measure of good works which the Apostle wisheth to be in the Philippians which is pressed downe and shaken together euen that they may be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse 2. The definition of good works in that they are called the fruits of righteousnesse 3. The fountaine whence or author from whom good works if indeed they be good works are and that is Iesus Christ 4. The end whereunto good works if indeed they be good works doe tend and that is vnto the glory and praise of God So that besides the maine point which is the Apostles desire that the Philippians might be full of good works here hence wee may know all the causes of good works The materiall cause or matter and substance of good works is hereby known that they are called the fruits of righteousnesse for this sheweth that the very matter and substance of good works is those good actions which as good fruit grow and spring out of the righteousnes of God in vs. The formall cause or reason which causeth our works to be good works is hereby likewise knowne that they are called the fruits of righteousnesse for this sheweth that the reason why our works are good works is because of their conformitie vnto the law of God because they are done in righteousnes according to the righteous law of God The efficient cause or author from whom good works are is hereby knowne that it is said that they are by Iesus Christ for this sheweth that Iesus Christ worketh in vs whatsoeuer works are good agreeable to the righteous law of God The finall cause or end of good works wherunto they are to be referred wherfore they are to be done is hereby knowne that it is said that they are by Iesus Christ vnto the glory and praise of God for this sheweth that the end wherefore we are to abound in euery good worke is the glory and praise of God that his name thereby may be glorified These are the things which these words seeme vnto me to conteine Now let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence for our farther vse and instruction The first thing then which here I note is the rich grace wherewith our Apostle would haue the Philippians to abound in good works for he praied that they might abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement as for other ends before spoken of so for this that they might be filled with the fruits of righteousnes that they might abound in euery good worke My obseruation hence is that we are not onely to doe the things that are good and to worke the works of righteousnes but we are to abound in euery good worke to be filled with the fruits of righteousnes To doe good and to haue our fruit in holines and righteousnes is a thing much vrged and often commanded by the Holy Ghost in the scriptures and it is so cleare a case that it cannot be denied or shifted but that we are to do the things that are good to worke the works of righteousnes Yet so cūning are we to deceiue our selues that if at sometimes we haue done some things well we thinke we haue obeyed the voice of the Lord herein though we come far short of being filled w th the fruits of righteousnes The Holy Ghost therfore to meet with our foolish wisdom and to cleare the point plainely sheweth in many places of the scripture that as wee are to shew forth good works so we are to
of displeasure feare to be too forward ●n confessing Christ and professing his name and therefore ●raw backe the shoulder and shrinke at euery blast of winde Now the confession which must spring from this root is ●hat Iesus Christ is the Lord the Lord and therefore his ho●our not to be giuen to another the Lord and therefore to ●e serued in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our ●●fe Thus saith God the Lord Esa 42 5.8 euen he that created the hea●ens and spread them abroad c. to wit Christ Iesus I am ●he Lord this is my name and my glory will I not giue to another neither my praise to grauen images Where wee see how our Sauiour Christ both challenged that vnto himselfe to bee the Lord and plainly auoucheth that he will not giue his honour to another Hee then that confesseth Iesus Christ to bee the Lord and yet giueth his honour vnto another doth onely i● words confesse that which indeed and in truth he doth de●● Let them looke vnto this that make their praiers and supplications vnto the Saints in heauen that worship images crosses 1 Joh. 2.2 or what reliques soeuer Wee haue an aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the iust and he is the reconciliation for our sinne● He sitteth at the right hand of God and liueth euer to make intercession for vs. Whosoeuer then praieth vnto or vseth the intercession of any other be it Saint or Angell he giueth Christ his glory to another As also he doth who doth worship any other but God and him whom hee hath sent Iesus Christ seeing it is said Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God 〈◊〉 him only shalt thou serue He likewise that confesseth Iesus Christ to be the Lord and yet serueth him not in holinesse and in righteousnesse all the dayes of his life his confession is in vaine because in deed and in truth he denieth that which in words hee doth confesse A sonne honoureth his father Malac. 1.6 and a seruant his master If I th● saith the Lord by his Prophet be a father where is mine ●●nour and if I be a master or a Lord where is my feare When●● it is most plaine that feare and obedience to his will belo●geth to the Lord. They certainly vnto whom the Lord by his Prophet thus spake confessed the Lord which they plainly afterwards shew taking their reproofe hardly and saying Wherein haue wee despised thy name But because they fear● not the Lord whom they confessed because they walked not in his wayes nor kept his commandements therefore the● confession was as no confession the Lord regarded them not but his wr●th was kindled against them This men and brethren is a thing needfull for vs to looke vnto We would be loth so deeply to be charged as not to confesse Iesus Christ to be the Lord. But if he be the Lord where is his feare Whe● wee confesse Iesus Christ to be the Lord wee confesse him 〈◊〉 be the sole rightfull commander of vs and our selues to be his seruants him to haue all power ouer vs and our selues wholly 〈◊〉 be his What meaneth then such neglect of conforming ●ur selues according to his most holy will and of yeelding ●bedience vnto that which daily wee are taught and which ●ee know to be his will If we giue our members as weapons ●f vnrighteousnesse vnto sinne which should be as weapons ●f righteousnesse vnto God whatsoeuer confession we make ●ee are the seruants of sinne we are not the seruants of Christ ●●e Lord and wee are like to those or whom I spake before ●●at professe they know God but by their workes doe denie ●im O my brethren if yee did indeed confesse Iesus Christ to ●e the Lord your soules would be filled with gladnesse when our mouthes were filled with this confession yea your very ●earts would be warme within you when your tongues were ●●us talking that Iesus Christ is the Lord your wils would be ●amed to his will your feet would reioyce to come into the ●ourts of his house and to runne the way of his commande●ents Iesus Christ is the Lord denie him not before men Luk. 12 9. ●or he that shall denie him before men shall be denied before ●he Angels of God And certainly hee beleeueth not that ●ares not confesse him Iesus Christ is the Lord confesse ●im so to be and giue not his honour to any other to men or Angels much lesse to stockes or stones Confesse him to be ●he Lord and serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all ●he dayes of your life This confession becommeth the Saints ●f God and this is a good confession before God And euer ●emember that that they which will not now thus confesse ●esus Christ to be the Lord shall then in that last and great ●ay be forced to confesse that Iesus Christ is the Lord when he shall iudge his enemies on euery side and render to the wicked according to the wickednesse of their wayes Vnto the glory of God the Father Here is the issue of all ●uen of our subiection vnto Christ and of our confession that ●esus Christ is the Lord. All this redoundeth to the glory of God the Father for he that honoureth the Sonne Joh. 5.23 honoureth ●he ●ather and he that honoureth not the Sonne honoureth not the Father for the Father is in the Sonne and whatsoeuer is done vnto the Sonne is done also to the Father Let vs the● so subiect our selues vnto Iesus Christ let vs so confesse his to be the Lord as already wee haue beene taught God hath created vs Esa 43.7 formed vs and made vs for his glory Seeing the●● our subiection vnto Christ Iesus and our confession or be glorious name in such sort as hath beene taught is vnto the glory of God the Father let vs be subiect vnto him in all obedience to his will and let vs out of an vnfained faith confesse that he is the Lord euen our Lord. LECTVRE XXXII PHILIP 2. Verse 12. Wherefore by beloued as yee haue alwayes obeyed or as in my presence only but now much more in 〈◊〉 absence c. WHerefore my beloued c. In these word now following wee haue the conclusion o● the Apostle his exhortation vnto the Philippians set downe by way of applying Christ his humilitie and obedience vnto his Father vnto their vse and instruction and consequently vnto ours In this conclusion of the Apostle his former exhortation the Apostle againe exhorteth the Philippians and in them vs first vnto humble obedience towards God vers 12.13 secondly vnto humble and modest conuersation towards our neighbour vers 14.15.16 and thirdly he addeth as a reason why he thus exhorteth them the comfort and ioy which they shall bring vnto him in the day of Christ if they so walke as he exhorteth them vers 16.17.18 In the first exhortation which is vnto humilitie and obedience or humble obedience towards God wee haue first to consider the
giuen of God by grace in Christ Iesus are no way of our selues To take a little view thereof ●e Lord by Ioel exhorteth or commandeth saying Ioel 2.12 Turne vnto mee with all your heart with fasting weeping and mour●● and yet Ieremy sheweth plainly that conuersion vnto the ●●d is wholly the gift of the Lord when hee thus praieth ●uert thou mee and I shall be conuerted Ier. 31.18 for thou art the Lord God Likewise our Sauiour Christ exhorteth Mat. 11.28 Come vnto all yee that are weary and laden and I will ease you and yet sheweth plainly that to come vnto him is wholly from Father when he thus saith No man can come vnto mee Ioh. 6.44 ex●● the Father which hath sent mee draw him In another place exhorteth saying Take heed and beware of couetousnesse Luk. 12.15 to doe thus is wholly from the Lord as the Prophet shewby that his praier vnto the Lord Ps 119.36 Incline mine heart vnto thy ●●●nies and not to couetousnesse Generally the Prophet ex●eth to flie from euill and to doe the thing that is good 37.27 Iames telleth vs that to doe good is wholly from the ●d saying Euery good and perfect gift is from aboue Iam. 1.17 and com●●h downe from the Father of lights c. The like is to be said ●eproofes Ma● 16.14 Christ reproued the eleuen of their vnbeleefe hardnesse of heart and yet the Prophet sheweth that it is Lord that taketh away the stonie heart out of our body EZ 36.26 giueth vs an heart of flesh and the Apostle that faith is gift of the Lord. The like is to be said of all precepts pro●●e● threatnings reproofes admonitions exhortations and like in holy Scripture The Lord vseth them all as meanes to worke his owne will in vs and giueth vnto vs whatsoeuer he requireth of vs He setteth downe lawes and statutes 〈◊〉 as if it were in our owne power to keepe them but that 〈◊〉 may know what to aske of him and with the Prophet to 〈◊〉 O be gratious vnto thy seruant that I may liue and keepe thy 〈◊〉 He promiseth good things to those that will obey him not 〈◊〉 if it lay in vs to obey him if our selues would but that b●● may worke such a will in vs by his promises He admonish●● and exhorteth vs not as if we were able of our selues to w●● or do the things but that so we may looke into our own ●e●nesse and turne vnto him and he may heale vs. You see 〈◊〉 how vaine their whole reason drawne from admonitions exhortations and the like in generall is for that neither 〈◊〉 argue any power in vs of our selues to doe good neither a●● they needlesse and vaine because they are the meanes wh●● by the Lord worketh in vs both to will and to doe that whi●● we are commanded and exhorted Now to the reason de●● in particular from this exhortation in briefe I answer that a●beit the Apostle exhort vs to worke out our owne saluation yet it doth not follow that it is at all in our power so to do Fo● as it followeth in our Apostle it is God which worketh in 〈◊〉 both to will and to doe euen of his good pleasure The Apostle therefore exhorteth vs to make an end of our owne saluation not for that we are able to doe so but to teach ●●flie vnto him who worketh in vs both the will and the de●● euen of his good pleasure Now let vs make this vse of that which hath beene spok●● for the resoluing of this doubt It is not in our owne pow●● we see to flie the euill we are forbidden to doe the good 〈◊〉 are commanded or to embrace the vertuous and godly 〈◊〉 whereunto we are exhorted but wholy from grace on●ly from the Lord. So often then as wee heare or read any p●●cepts or lawes in the booke of God let vs therein ackno●ledge our duties and seeing it is not in our power to keep them let vs flie vnto our God and pray to him Lord g●●● me grace to do that thou commandest and then comma●● mee what thou wilt So often as we heare or read any pr●mises or threatnings let vs therein acknowledge our o●● frowardnesse and seeing it is not in vs to bend at promises threatnings vnlesse he touch vs with his holy spirit let vs 〈◊〉 vnto our God and praie vnto him Lord take from mee ● hard and stony heart and giue me for it a soft and fleshie ●●rt that thy promises and thy threatenings may worke in 〈◊〉 obedience to thy will So often likewise as wee heare or ●●de of admonitions or exhortations let vs therein acknow●●●ge our owne infermities and seeing we cannot of our selues 〈◊〉 or do the thing whereunto wee are exhorted let vs flie to our God and pray vnto him Lord frame my will accor●●●g to thy blessed will that I may doe what thy will is And conclude this point seeing we cannot run this rase where●o the Apostle exhorteth vs but God must worke in vs both 〈◊〉 will and the deede let vs flie vnto our God and pray vn him Lord sanctifie mee with thy holy spirit that by thy ●ce guiding mee I may walke in those good workes which ●●u hast ordained mee to walke in vnto my liues end LECTVRE XXXIV PHILIP 2. ●ers 12.13 With feare and trembling For it is God which worketh in you both the will and the deede euen of his good pleasure WIth feare and trembling From these words some there are that gather that vncomfortable doctrine of the vncertaintie of our saluation Rhem. in loc affirming it to be pride and presumption to dare to be so bold as to be assured of our saluation and cleane contrary to the teaching the Apostle in this place So that the meaning of the A●●stle by their iudgements in this place is this that we should worke our saluation that yet wee should alwaies doubt of ●●r saluation But how farre this is wide of the Apostles meaning may easily appeare by those manifold Scriptures whe●● by the certainety or our saluation is affirmed and consequ●●●ly this vncomfortable doctrine of the doubting of our sal●●tion is vtterly ouerthrowne I am sure Iob. 19 25.26.27 saith Iob that m●●●deemer liueth and he shall stand the last vpon earth and though after my shinne wormes destroy this body yet shall I see God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 flesh whom I my selfe shall see and mine eies shall behold and 〈◊〉 other for mee Lord how this holy man so assureth himselfe of his saluation that he beates vpon it as if hee could ●●satisfie himselfe with any words but fills his mouth with●● ioycing hereat amidst all his afflictions Rom. 8.38 I am sure saith ●● my Redeemer liueth I shall see God in my flesh I my selfe shall 〈◊〉 him mine eies shall behold him none other for mee but I my 〈◊〉 shall behold him He doth as fully assure himselfe of his saluation as if he were already in full
the Apostle plainly sheweth that being made lights wee ought to walke as children of the light approuing that which is pleasing vnto the Lord hauing no fellowship with the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse but reprouing them if not by word for that wee cannot all at all times doe yet at least by the example of our holy and vnblameable life But of this wee shall haue more occasion anon to speake Let this suffice to be spoken generally why the faithfull children of God are called lights and of the instructions which the reasons thereof may minister vnto vs. Secondly here I note two qualities attributed to these lights mentioned by the Apostle The first they shine in the middest of darknesse in the middest of a naughtie and crooked nation Secondly they hold out vnto others the light that is in them euen the word of life shewing it selfe in the integritie of their conuersation Whence I note two properties necessarily requisite in all the faithfull children of God the one is that they haue light in themselues the other is that they communicate it to others Touching the first light yee know is not called light vnlesse it haue light in it selfe in whatsoeuer darknesse it shine The faithfull children of God then if they will be as here they are called lights they must still so looke vnto themselues and their owne wayes that howsoeuer they walke amongst the children of darknesse yet they suffer not that light which is in them to be darkened but that they shine as lights in the world amongst them whose hearts are set on mischiefe The Sunne when it setteth forth as a Giant to runne his course casteth forth his beames and they are dispersed throughout all places of the earth And albeit often times it light and shine vpon most loathsome and filthy places yet still doth it remaine in his owne puritie not at all defiled therewith Herein these lights I meane the faithfull children of God must resemble this light of the Sunne It cannot be that they should not at all conuerse with wicked and vngodly men for then they must goe out of the world 1 Cor. 5.10 as the Apostle saith but herein they must be as lights though they liue amongst wicked and vngodly men yet must they keepe themselues vnstained of the corruptions which are in the world through lusts though they haue to doe with prophane and impure men yet must they retaine still within themselues the puritie of the sonnes of God And therefore the Apostle in the place before alleadged thus exhorteth Haue no fellowship with the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse Hee doth not simply forbid all fellowship with the children of darknesse but with the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse such as are gluttonie and drunkennesse chambering and wantonnesse strife and enuying and the like with the filthinesse of these and the like fruits of sinne hee would haue vs not to defile our selues For what fellowship as saith the Apostle hath light with darknesse Surely no more than hath righteousnesse with vnrighteousnesse the beleeuer with the Infidell or Christ with Belial If then we be such lights as here the faithfull children of God are tearmed no question wee hate all fellowship with the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse and if we haue fellowship with the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse then wee are no such lights A rule whereby yee may quickly trie and examine whether ye haue that light in your selues which yee heare the faithfull children of God should haue in themselues Light where it is expelleth all darknesse If then yee haue the light of the sonnes of God within your selues yee haue no delight in the workes of darknesse Now what the workes of darknesse are yee know out of the Apostle euen gluttonie and drunkennesse chambering and wantonnesse strife and enuying and generally all the workes of the flesh euen whatsoeuer things are such as the doing whereof may not well abide the light Examine your selues of these things and condemne your selues that ye be not condemned of the Lord. If any of you be tainted with any of these things purge out this old leauen that ye may be a new lumpe cleanse your vessels from these filthy dregges I meane your selues from these pollutions of sinne that ye may be an holy Temple vnto the Lord. True it is God alone is light without any darknesse and there is no childe of God whose light is not dimmed with some darknesse But this is no ground for thee that therefore thou maist wallow in wickednesse and maist delight thy selfe in the workes of darknesse Thou if thou wilt be the childe of God thou must come as neere vnto God as thou canst as hee is light without darknesse so thou must striue thereunto And therefore thou must striue to abandon all sinne and wickednesse thou must be carefull to walke honestly as in the day thou must approue in thine heart and in thy word and in thy workes that which is pleasing to the Lord. And this if thou doest whatsoeuer is wanting shall be imputed vnto thee and the light that is in Christ Iesus shall be thine and expell whatsoeuer darknesse is in thee Suffer therefore the same words of exhortation that the Apostle vseth to the Ephesians Eph. 4.17 Walke not henceforth as others doe in vanitie of their minde c. And againe with the same Apostle I say vnto you Rom. 13.12 The night is past the day is at hand let vs therefore cast away the workes of darknesse c. Haue light in your selues and communicate the light that is in you vnto others which is the second qualitie mentioned here by the Apostle The second qualitie which I noted here in these lights in the Philippians is that they held forth the word of life vnto others How Not so much in word and talke as that by the example of their life they gaue plaine proofe that the word of life dwelt in them plenteously Whence I noted another qualitie necessarily requisite in all the children of God which is that they haue not only light in themselues but they also communicate the same vnto others The children of God must not thinke it enough to keepe themselues vnspotted of the world but they must by word and deed and example of life helpe to pull others out of the fire The Prophet describing the wicked man by certaine fruits of the flesh amongst other things saith he When thou sawest a theefe Ps 50.18 thou runnest with him and hast beene partaker with the adulterers But the faithfull seruant of God must not only be no such man as will runne with others vnto mischiefe but hee must reproue the sinnes of vnfaithfulnesse either by word or at least by example of life that either by word or by example of life hee may reclaime the wicked from the wickednesse of his wayes The Sunne yee know keepeth not his light vnto it selfe but communicateth it to the benefit of all creatures vnder heauen The Moone and
in comming to him to Rome in bringing with him that releefe which the Philippians sent vnto him and in ministring vnto him in prison such things as he wanted A seruice well called the worke of Christ because commanded by Christ and performed to the seruant of Christ for Christ his sake Againe in that the Apostle in the end of the verse saith to fulfill that seruice c. the Apostle his meaning is not thereby to note any fault in the Philippians as if they had beene any way wanting vnto him but therein he commendeth Epaphroditus his faithfull and painefull performance of that seruice which they if they had beene present with him would haue done but now could not because of their farre distance from him The whole reason is indeed drawne from the commendation of Epaphroditus His commendation is that he took such paines with him and for him that it had been like to haue cost him his life and that hee made not so much reckoning of his life as he did of discharging that trust that was reposed in him and performing that seruice which the Philippians themselues would haue done if they had beene present This I say is the commendation which the Apostle here giueth him and for this cause he willeth them to receiue him in the Lord with gladnesse Whence I gather this generall obseruation that it is a very commendable thing in the seruants of Christ not to regard their liues vnto the death but to hazard their liues for the worke of Christ which either Christ hath commanded them to doe in their place whatsoeuer or which for Christ his sake they are to performe vnto any seruant of Christ What thing more commendable or memorable in Esther Ester 3.13 then that when the Kings decree was past against the Iewes to roote out to kill and to destroy all the Iewes 5.1 both yong and old children and women in one day she put her life in present danger to deliuer her people For it was a matter of death by the law for one not called to come into the inner court vnto the King 4.11 Yet for this worke of God the deliuerance of his Church from the deuouring sword shee put her life in most eminent danger and went in into the King 16 which was not according to the law We see it likewise registred vnto the view of all posteritie touching the Apostles that their liues were not deare vnto them so that they might fulfill their course with ioy that they were ready not to be bound onely but also to die for the name of the Lord Iesus that howsoeuer they were threatned yet they would not cease to preach in the name of Christ Iesus And whiles this Epistle shall be read Epaphroditus his praise shall not die for hazarding his life for the worke of Christ in releeuing Paul his necessitie when he was in prison and ministring vnto him such things as he wanted Yea and what if we should not onely hazard our liues but giue vp our liues for any worke of Christ Haue we not a sure promise He that loseth his life for my sake saith our Sauiour shall saue it Matth. 10 39. 1 Reg. 17. If therefore Eliah or any of the poore children of God be an hungred want to satisfie their hunger though we haue but an handfull of meale in a barrell and a litle oyle in a cruse for our selues and for our familie and though we haue no more hope of sustenance but euen to die when that is spent and eaten yet let vs with that good widow of Sarepta straine and hazard our selues that they may be somewhat releeued If Paul or any godly brother in Christ bee in prison though our watchings and care and paines and trauaile with them and for them bee not without manifest danger of our health and happily of our life yet let vs with godly Epaphroditus by all these hazard our selues and our liues for their good and such things as may be needfull for them If any brother be sicke though it be with some danger let vs visit him and comfort him If for the worke of our ministerie we be so pressed that in our selues we receiue the sentence of death as our holy Apostle was often pressed yet let vs not shrinke but let vs declare vnto the people all the words of the Lord and speake of all the iudgements of his mouth In a word in whatsoeuer worke of Christ for I doe not now speake of this worke alone here mentioned but in whatsoeuer worke of Christ which he hath commanded vs in our places to doe or which being done for his sake hee accounteth as done for himselfe let vs be bold in the Lord let not our liues bee dearer vnto vs then the performance of his will but let vs hazard our liues for the worke of Christ But here the doubt may be made and the question demanded whether we are alwaies to hazard our liues for the worke of Christ whether in some worke of Christ we may not sometimes withdraw our selues from danger and prouide for our health for our liues As for example whether we may not forbeare the visiting of the sick when the sicknes is pestilentiall and contagious whether in such times we may not prouide for our health for our liues The question I know is hard and the doubt not easily answered neither will I take vpon me the decision of the doubt only I shew my opinion and willingly submit it to the iudgement of others Touching priuate men therefore I meane such as whose place and office doth not necessarily require a more publike care then of themselues of their own family they may in my iudgment spare themselues and not hazard their health or their liues but for the time withdraw themselues from the danger especially if such reasonable order be taken for the sicke as that by comming vnto them they may more endanger themselues others then doe them good My reasons are these 1. By the law of Moses we see that those that were troubled with any contagious disease as with the leprosie Leu. 13 46. they were commanded to dwell apart and to haue their habitation without the campe and in places where they came to cry I am vncleane I am vncleane Which doth plainely shew that all were not to come vnto them but both they were to giue warning vnto others and others were to take warning by them lest happily they should be infected by them if they should come vnto them Againe howsoeuer in such cases we could be content to hazard our selues and our owne liues yet may we and we ought to haue care ouer our owne houshold and ouer that charge that is committed to vs. 1 Tim. 5.8 For if there be any saith the Apostle that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold be denieth the faith and is worse then an infidell We must then prouide for
ye had neede to looke vnto it for the sicknesse is vnto death euen vnto the second death Haue ye surfeited of it and had too much of it quaisie stomackes and quickly surcharged Soone we haue too much of that whereof we can neuer haue enough When our Sauiour had told the woman of Samaria that whosoeuer should drinke of the water that he gaue him should neuer be more a thirst sir saith she giue me of the water that I may not thirst nor come hither to draw Joh. 4.14.15 Beloued we haue told you that the word which we bring vnto you is the word of life the word of your Saluation the word of your reconciliation and yet what slacknesse and negligence is there in comming to the hearing of this word few there are that come to beg this heauenly Manna few that come to take it when we reach it out vnto them Beloued againe we tell you that the knowledge of Christ Iesus wherein our hearts desire is to instruct you is your enterance into the possession of eternall life and Saluation it is as much as your life Saluation is worth will you liue the life of God in this life and for euer in the life to come come then and learne to know Christ Iesus come and learne to know what great things he hath done for you and what duetie againe he doth require of you If you be rich in this knowledge ye are rich indeed if ye be instructed in this knowledge ye are learned indeed if ye be mightie in this knowledge ye are mightie indeed If ye haue this ye want nothing if ye want this ye haue nothing O ye that will be rich and wealthy seeke after these riches ye that will be wise and learned seeke after this learning ye that will be great and mightie seeke to be mightie in this knowledge Whatsoeuer other wealth and riches ye haue whatsoeuer other wisedome or learning whatsoeuer other might or power all things are but losse and dung in comparison of the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus know him and know all things know not him and know nothing As therefore ye loue your saluation in Christ Iesus so labour to come vnto and to grow vp in the knowledge of Christ Iesus To know him is life eternall not to know him is death eternall Why will ye die when by the power of him ye may liue If yee know not ye shall die but know and liue One word of that which is added Of Christ Iesus my Lord. What doth the Apostle meane to call Iesus Christ his Lord Was he his Lord alone Was he not their Lord also to whom he wrote Why doth he not say of Iesus Christ our Lord If hee had liued now and spoken thus hee should haue had many such questions as these and he should haue beene sure of many sharpe censures for thus appropriating this title of Iesus Christ the Lord vnto himselfe But thus he spake in the vehemencie of his affection And if hee had now liued would hee haue spoken otherwise No though he had beene called Puritan for his paines I obserue it the rather to note what a strange humour wee are now growne vnto for if any man shall now say Forsake mee not O Lord my God Be mercifull vnto mee O Lord my God I thanke my God for his mercies I thinke all things losse for the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus my Lord is hee not nicked in the head by and by and noted for such a man Yea now it is almost come to passe that let a man be religious deuout in praier reuerent in hearing the word carefull to meditate thereon afterwards one that feareth an oath one that cannot patiently heare corrupt communication one that will not runne into the same excesse with others a Puritan I warrant him A pitifull case that a man speaking as the holy Ghost speaketh and doing as all men are commanded to doe should be branded with an odde and odious name I wish that we would all of vs both frame our speeches as the Holy Ghost hath taught vs and our actions as the Holy Ghost hath commanded vs more than we doe If any shall seeme vnto himselfe pure and holy the Lord shall iudge him wicked and impure But let euery one of vs study to be pure holy in all our words and in all our workes and let euery one of vs labour by all meanes to haue this testimonie sealed vnto our soules that Iesus Christ is our Lord. O Lord our God we humbly thanke thee for that knowledge of thy Son which thou hast already vouchsafed vnto vs. Vouchsafe we beseech thee to encrease in vs this knowledge daily more and more Open our dime eies we beseech thee that we may daily more and more see the excellencie and the vantage of this knowledge that so we may daily more and more grow vp in all loue thereof Purge vs we beseech thee of all such affections as may be any hinderances hereunto that so growing vp daily more and more in thee at length we may reigne with thee in the kingdome of thy sonne Christ Iesus for euer LECTVRE LV. PHILIP 3. Verse 9. And that I may be found in him i. not hauing mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ c. NOw the Apostle goeth on beating still vpon the same reason why he counteth all his workes whatsoeuer and whensoeuer done and all outward things whatsoeuer to be but losse and dung I doe iudge them saith he to be dung euen contemptible and loathsome being so farre from being loth to lose them as that I despise and loath them why that I may winne Christ that is that I may haue the fruition and the possession of Christ in this life by faith and that I may be found in him in that last and great day how found in him to wit not hauing mine owne righteousnesse not clothed with mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law that is by the obseruation and workes of the Law but being clothed with that righteousnesse which is not through workes but through the faith of Christ euen the righteousnesse which is of God through faith that is which God doth impute vnto mee through faith in Christ Iesus So that yee see the Apostle still runs vpon Christ Christ Christ for Christ for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ that he may winne Christ that he may be found in Christ he thinkes all his workes all things absolutely to be losse and iudgeth them to be dung I iudge them to be dung Here he plainly renounceth all confidence in all things without Christ whatsoeuer and plainly disclaimeth all vantage all merit all righteousnesse by his workes That I may winne Christ Here is the cause why he disclaimes all righteousnesse by his workes because otherwise he could not winne Christ for he doth it that he may winne Christ and may be found in him
him that he will haue vs to ●ake speede to come vnto him and he will inlarge our hearts ●hat we may runne the way of his commandements and so ●ome vnto him Such is the marke set at the end of our Chri●tian race not a dead marke which helpeth the runner no●hing in his race but drawing vs vnto himselfe that where he 〈◊〉 there we may be also This was the marke that the Apostle ●anne at and this is the marke that we should runne at to ●now him perfitly and the vertue of his resurrection c ●hereby we might attaine to the resurrection c. Here then we learne why it is that so few runne as they ought in the Christian race The most part of men haue an other marke that they runne at Some runne at riches some at honors some at pleasures some at ease some at skill and knowledge in the things that are done vnder the Sunne and on these things are their eyes set and their mindes wholly bent But the least summe make Christ Iesus the marke whereat they runne to know him is the thing whereon the fewest mindes are bent He is farthest out of light and farthest out of minde with the most men Not running then a● the right marke how can we but runne amisse Beloued yee see what the marke is whereat we should ayme in the whole course of our life Let the children of this world pricke at their seuerall markes as they list but let vs follow hard towards the marke Christ Iesus He is that marke whereat if we be Christians we should ayme in our whole race Let our eyes be still set and our mindes alwaies bent vpon him If wee walke towards him he will direct our goings in his paths 〈◊〉 for his owne names sake A better marke we cannot haue and another marke we ought not to haue There is no running if we runne as we ought but to him neither any running to him but by him Let vs therefore by him runne vnto him and in all things let vs still looke vnto him The race is well runne when at the races end we come to such a marke and well may we runne through cold and nakednes through stripes and imprisonments and all kinde of difficulties to come to such a marke whereunto we can no sooner come but straight we haue the prize for which we runne euen glory and immortalitie in the highest heauens Let vs therefore so runne that we may obtaine let vs runne till we come vnto the marke that we may obtaine the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus And let this suffice to be spoken touching the second qualitie of runners The third qualitie of runners whereby the Apostle makes proofe of his incessant running in his Christian race is this that runners keeping in minde the price for which they runne make haste vnto the marke for the price that they may obtaine In this also the Apostle professeth that hee matched euen the best runners in the last words when he saith that 〈◊〉 followed hard toward the marke for the price of c. In which words by the price is signified that inheritance immortall and vndefiled which is reserued in heauen for vs and it is called ●e price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus because it 〈◊〉 the glory of Gods children whereunto God from on high ●●th called vs in Christ Iesus As therefore the Apostle before ●rofessed that he ranne and lookt not backe to that which was ●ehinde and that he ranne and gaue not ouer to follow that ●hereon his eyes were alwaies set so now he professeth that ●e ranne and hastned his running for to obtaine the price of ●●ory and immortalitie in the heauens whereunto hee was ●●lled by God in Christ Iesus All sufficient proofes that the ●postle came apace as he that desired to obtaine Hence then I obserue that life euerlasting and glory in the ●eauens is the price and reward of our holy and constant run●ing in our Christian race Which our Sauiour signifieth ●hen vnto them that endure hatred persecution and contu●elies for his sake he saith Reioyce and be glad Mat. 5.12 for great is your ●●ward in heauen Our Apostle likewise sheweth the same ●here he saith Rom. 2.6 7. that God will reward euery man according to his ●orkes to them which by continuance in well-doing seeke glory ●●d honor and immortalitie eternall life Col. 3.23.24 And to the Colossians ●●so where speaking vnto seruants he saith whatsoeuer yee doe ●e it heartily as to the Lord knowing that of the Lord yee shall re●●iue the reward of the inheritance All which places and many ●ther which might be produced to the like purpose doe ●lainely shew that eternall life is the reward of our holy ●alking with God in such good workes as he hath ordeined ●●at we should walke in them A notable price to runne for ●nd a notable incouragement vnto the runner For can we ●unne for a better price then for eternall life in the heauens Or can a better reward for our incouragement in our Chri●●ian race be giuen vs than eternall life in the heauens How ●hould not this make vs to prouoke one another vnto loue ●nd good workes How should not this make vs runne the ●ace of a holy life breaking through all impediments and ●ot intermitting our course vnto the end But here we must know that though we run for this prize ●et this prize is not giuen vs for the merit of our running and ●hough this prize be the reward of our running yet doe wee not merit this reward for our running Rom. 9.16 For it is not in him th● willeth nor in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercie The Lord in mercy hath set downe this prize of our running and in the like mercie giues it vnto him that runnes out vnto the marke but not for the merit of his running This one place at this time may serue for a full proofe of this point The Apostle ranne for the prize but it was for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus He doth not say for the prize that was due vnto him albeit it was due vnto him though not for his merits sake yet for the promise sake made in mercie but he ranne for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus Which in that it was the prize of the high calling of God it is plaine that it is giuen in mercie by him that hath called vs in mercie and likewise in that it is the prize c. in Christ Iesus it is plaine that it is giuen in merc●● through Christ Iesus in whom onely we are called vnto glorie and life euerlasting It is ordained then that wee should runne for this prize for no man obtaineth it but he that runneth for it and therefore the Apostle ranne for it but it is the prize of our high calling to be the sonnes of God giuen vs
deuoure widowes houses that for such and such lands or summes of money or releefe to such and such places will promise so many praiers for so many dayes or yeeres for you or your friends Who are they that to maintaine their triple Crowne maintaine also the wicked Stewes Who are they that make gaine godlinesse and doe all that euer they doe in deed and in truth for the maintenance of their state and of their bellies It is easily knowne who they be and it is as easily hereby discerned that they are false teachers whosoeuer they be Take heed then and beware of them follow them not neither walke as they doe for howsoeuer they haue God in their mouthes yet sound their hearts and trace them in the paths wherein they walke it wil● be found that their God is their bellie if either that bee thei● God which they loue best or that be their bellie which they measure by their pleasure profit and ease But doe they alone make their belly their God Doe not all they that more seeke their owne then that which is Iesus Christs make their bellie their God Or are there not many carnall Gospellers that doe so How many are there that intrude themselues into this holy calling not with any purpose to worke in the Lord his vineyard but onely to feede vpon the portion of the Leuites How many are there that withdraw their shoulders from the burthen as much and as often as they can and take as little paines in this worke as they can seeking more their owne ease then that which is Iesus Christs How many are there that being bewitched with the loue and troubled with the cares of the world are so carefully occupied about the things of this life that they intend not the worke of the ministerie seeking more their owne profit than that which is Iesus Christs how many are there that preach Christ rather through strife and enuie than of good will rather in hope of preferment for their paines than of any desire to gaine them that heare them vnto Christ rather in any other respect almost than in an holly zeale of the glory of our God Surely many such carnall Gospellers there be whose God is indeede their belly which like vnto the sonnes of Eli so turne aside after the loue of their bellies and of their pleasures that either they forget or else care not for the law of their God But take heede and beware of them for yee may not walke as they doe Yea generally they make their God their belly that either serue their bellies when they should serue their God or care more for the feeding of the bellie than for the knowledge of God or so serue God as he doth serue their bellies Looke then well amongst you that none of you be such as are then a looking to your profits or pleasures or other things of this life when ye should be looking vnto the seruice of your God that none of you be such as care more for the things of this life than for the knowledge of Gods wil out of his holy word that none of you be such as measure your seruice vnto the Lord by his ministring vnto you such things as are needfull for the maintenance of this life for such do make their God their bellie either caring more for the things of this life than for God or else only so caring for God as they are occasioned by the things of this life A foule and grosse Idolatrie to make our bellie our God And therefore let vs take heede that neither we commit such Idolatrie nor follow the example of such as commit such Idolatrie The fourth thing which the Apostle noteth in these inordinate walkers is that their glorie is to their shame Whereby the Apostle signifieth that the vaine glorie and estimation which they sought after amongst men neglecting the true glorie of Christ Iesus should turne to their confusion and shame Which branch also of the Apostles reason might well serue for a sufficient reason to moue the Philippians not to follow the example of these but to follow him and such as walked so as they had him for an ensample Hence then I obserue another note of false teachers and inordinate walkers which is vainely to seeke after glorie and estimation amongst men neglecting the glorie of God after whose example we may not walke for that their glorie shall be turned into shame Ioh. 5.44 How can ye beleeue which receiue honour one of another saith our Sauiour and seeke not the honour that commeth of God alone In which place is shewed that this vaine seeking after honour and glorie amongst men is the very root of infidelity And therfore it is said of certaine chiefe rulers that in a generalitie beleeued in Christ because of the miracles which he did but not indeede truely beleeue that they did not confesse Christ And the reason is added for they loued the praise of men more than the praise of God Ioh. 12.43 So that the ambitious seeking of praise amongst men is the very bane in all sorts of men both of faith and of euery fruit thereof And a iust thing it is with God that they which seeke the praise of men and not of God haue their praise with men but not with God and that with God their glorie be turned into shame Will ye then know who by this note may be descried at this day to be false teachers that knowing them ye may not follow them nor walke as they doe Marke who they are that seeke honor and glorie amongst men but seeke not the honour that commeth of God alone who is it that exalteth himselfe against all that is called God or that is worshipped sit as God in the temple of God and shewing himselfe that he is God Who is it that is araied with purple and skarlet and guilded with gold and precious stones and pearles and hath a cup of gold in her hand full of abominations and filthinesse of her fornication where with she make all the Nations of the earth drunke Who is it that glorifieth her selfe and liueth in pleasure and saith in her heart I sit being a Queene and am no widdow and shall see no mourning And what shall become of all this pompe and glorie Apoc. 18.8 her plagues shall come at one day death and sorrow and famine and she shall be burnt with fire for strong is the Lord God which shall condemne her Take heede then and beware how ye follow this beast or them that haue receiued the beasts marke Their glorie which they seeke with men they haue but their glory shall be turned into confusion and shame And I wish that they were the men alone that seeke the praise of men but not of God But are there not many carnall Gospellers that may be branded with that marke Are there not many that in a vaine affectation of their owne praise more then Gods studie rather to
Church so reformed but hath somewhat amisse 286 All Christians are to striue to be like minded in the Lord. 289 Contentions to be auoided 299 Humilitie a preseruatiue against contention and vaine-glory 305 Christ Iesus a perfect patterne of humilitie 315 The obedience of Christ the ground of all our comfort 325 Christian confession of Christ necessarie 363 To begin in the spirit is not sufficient vnlesse we continue 396 Doubting of saluation a desperate and vncomfortable doctrine 402 We are to passe the time of our dwelling here in feare 411 Murmuring against God or men forbidden Christians 420 How Christians may liue blamelesse in the midst of a crooked nation 438 All the faithfull are lights in the world 443 The glory of Gods Minister is the gaine of soules 456 The issue of all actions is in the hand of God 467 A great sinne in Ministers to seeke their owne more than Christs 478 Superiors in place or gifts ought not to contemne their inferiors 503 The Ministry is a painefull labour 507. and a warfare 512 Children of God neuer quite rid of sorrow in this life 546 The Ministers of Christ are to be entertained with all respect 549 Christians are not to respect their liues for the worke of Christ 558 CHAP. III. THe Minister of God is to temper his speech according to the quality of his hearers 568 The ioy of Christians must be in the Lord. 572. 7 6 False teachers are diligently to be auoided 589 Christians in some cases may lawfully stand vpon their owne commendations 624 Conuersion workes an alteration in the whole man 632 Good workes are no part of our righteousnes before God 634. 659. 674 The best of our workes are but losse or dung and how 637. 661 The knowledge of Christ Iesus is excellent and precious 649 To renounce our owne righteousnes is both difficult and yet necessarie 657 Righteousnes imputed and inherent in iustification cannot stand together 671 We are iustified by righteousnes imputed 677 Experimentall knowledge of Christ necessarie to a Christian 684 To be afflicted for Christ is an aduantage 700. 707 The best of Gods Saints in this life come short of perfectiō 716. 735 Gods children may be certainely assured of their saluation 726 Christians are to striue toward perfection 721. 729. 747 Life eternall the reward of our Christian race 753 God alone opens the heart to attend vnto the word 774 In our Christian imitation we are to make choice of the best examples 790 It is not alwaies safe to follow a multitude 808. 905 The reward of the impenitent is damnation 815 We are here but pilgrims our Citie is aboue 832 Christ will certainely come the second time to iudgement 843 The faithfull desire and long for that comming 846 Christ will raise vp his children from the graue to glory 854 CHAP. IV. MInisters to instruct and admonish publikely priuately 736 It is a Christian dutie to compose quarrels contentions 738 Christians are to reioyce in the Lord in all estates 756 For vnities sake we are to yeeld of our right 774 The prouidence of God is euer neere his children to succour them in troubles 791 Worldly and distrustfull care by all meanes to be auoided 800 Thanks-giuing vnto God a necessarie Christian dutie 809 Whatsoeuer thing● are true honest c. we are to practise 826 Practise must be ioyned with profession 848 The Minister should be a patterne of holines to his people 850. 796 Gods graces are not alwaies alike manifest in his children 869 We are charitably to censure the slips of our brethren 869 We are to be cōtent with that estate wherin God hath placed vs. 875 The power of doing any good is from Christ 892 Ministers are to partake of our temporall things 901 Good workes further our reckoning in the day of Christ 915 Workes of charitie are sweet smelling sacrifices 923 God will surely recompence what good soeuer is done vnto his Saints 929 Alwaies in all things God is to be praised 939 ERRATA PAg. 117. for Sauiour read sauour p 153. in whatsoeuer good deleatur p. 245 secrets read streets p. 249. conuersion r. conuersation p. 404. promises read praemises p. 493. was a mother read was as a mother p. 500. courses of Gods house read courts p. 590. Martyn read Martyr p. 751. viri fraetres deleatur p. 769. diuine eyes read dimme eyes p. 809. Et hoc sciamus fortiorem c. deleatur Chap. 4. in the beginning for folio 721. read 865. 866. and so forwards to the end LECTVRES ON THE WHOLE Epistle of S. PAVL to the PHILIPPIANS LECTVRE I. CHAPTER I. Verse 1. Paul and Timotheus the seruants of Iesus Christ to all the Saints in Christ Iesus which are at Philippi with the Bishops and Deacons 2. Grace be with you and peace from God our Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ WHEN first it pleased the Lord to call me to this set worke in this place by reason of my short time to deliberate I chose for the time that text of scripture which was appointed to be read for the Epistle the next Sabbath beginning at the 5 verse of the 2 chapter of this Epistle purposing afterward to make choise of some other scripture which happily might better fit this place But so it pleased the Lord to dispose that I should goe forward euen throughout the Epistle vnto the end and the last day conclude my obseruations therevpon in your hearing Now I haue thought good againe to begin with that whereof I haue made an end that so if the Lord will the meaning of this whole Epistle and the doctrines thereof may in good time be deliuered in your hearing Paul and Timotheus I shall not neede to speake much touching the occasion wherevpon the Apostle wrote this Epistle because I haue already spoken almost of all the things that occasioned it The Philippians hauing heard of the Apostles imprisonment at Rome sent their Minister Epaphroditus vnto him with reliefe from them to supply his necessities Wherevpon Epaphroditus comming to Rome told the Apostle the state of the Church at Philippi how that there were false Apostles crept in amongst them which vrged circumcision and the works of the Law and that the Philippians constantly withstood them The Apostle therefore to commend their constancy for their further incouragement therevnto to arme them against the false teachers for their cleare satisfaction in the points which they vrged and to giue them thanks for their great liberalitie towards him wherein they shewed their care for him wrote this Epistle vnto them Wherein as in all other his Epistles is 1. set downe the inscription 2. the salutation 3. the body of the Epistle it selfe In the inscription 1. we haue the persons saluting 2. the persons saluted The persons saluting are described 1. by their proper names and then by a title of dignitie commune to them both The names of the persons saluting are Paul and Timotheus Paul called also sometimes Saul the
is this thing whereof we now speake Hee will as it shall be for his glory continue vs in the fellowship which wee haue in the gospell if wee continue to aske it in faith and faint not This then may teach vs of what weight and moment our continuance in the fellowship of the gospell is It is not a thing which hapneth by fortune or which humane policie effecteth but onely it is of God and therefore alwaies in all our praiers we are to pray vnto him for it Let vs therefore pray vnto the Lord without ceasing for this grace let vs neuer forget to commense this suite in our praiers vnto God let vs alwaies pray for it and not faint The fift thing which here I note is that the Apostle praied for the Philippians with gladnes because of their growth in godlines and in the knowledge of Iesus Christ by the worke of his ministery Whence I obserue a necessary care which ought to bee in the whole Church I meane in all them that are taught in the word and that is that they so profit and increase in all knowledge and iudgement in all godlinesse and holy conuersation that their Pastors and Teachers may pray for them with gladnes Such a care it may seeme that the Romanes had vnto whom the Apostle giueth this testimonie that their faith which was published and their obedience which was come abroad much gladded him Rom. 1.8 Such a care it may seeme that the Colossians had vnto whom the Apostle giueth this testimonie that though he was absent in the flesh yet was he present with them in the spirit reioycing and beholding their order and their stedfast faith in Christ And such a care ought all the people of God to haue that they which watch for their soules as they that must giue accounts vnto God for them may now pray for them with gladnes and afterwards giue their accounts for them with ioy and not with griefe But this care is not common among the people for where the Pastor in an holy care for his people praieth for them he praieth for them in many places with great heauinesse with heauinesse I say for their neglect and contempt of the word with heauinesse for their ignorance in the things that belong vnto their peace and vnwillingnesse to bee instructed therein with heauinesse for their vngodly conuersation and vnchristian walking with heauinesse for spending his strength in vaine and for nothing amongst them Hee praieth but his soule mourneth because hee cannot gaine them vnto Christ Iesus he praieth but his soule mourneth because they runne and needs will runne headlong to the deuill So litle care commonly there is of profiting by the ministery of the word amongst them that are taught in the word Beloued let it neuer be said so of you but let your care be that they which labor in the word amongst you may pray for you with gladnes Jam. 1.21 Lay apart all filthinesse and superfluity of maliciousnes and receiue with meeknes the word that is graffed in you which is able to saue your soules Follow the truth in loue and in all things grow vp into him Eph. 4.15 which is the head that is Christ Let your conuersation be such as it becommeth the gospell of Christ and striue to increase in all good things with all godly increasing for so and so onely shall we haue cause to pray for you with gladnesse Lastly in that the Apostle hauing taught the Philippians the way of truth giueth thanks for them praieth for them and that with gladnesse because of the fellowship c. Hence I obserue a duty of the Pastors of the Church which if time had giuen leaue and the place had beene so conuenient should principally haue beene stood vpon and that is that the Pastors are not onely to teach their people with the wholesome word which cannot be reproued but they are also to pray for them that the word may haue a blessing among them that they may grow and increase thereby in all knowledge and holinesse to the Lord they are to be glad in their soules for their profiting in the word of grace and they are to giue thanks vnto God on their behalfe when they see their order their stedfast faith in Christ their growth in godlines and righteousnes and holy conversation This should be and might be and I wish it were and if it be not it is their perill in whom it faileth to be LECTVRE V. PHILIP I. Verse 6. And I am perswaded of this same thing that he that hath begun this good worke in you will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ NOw giue mee leaue briefly to note one thing further from those words and that is that both our thanksgiuing and our praying are alwaies to bee vnto God Our thanksgiuing because all deliuerance in dangers all comfort in troubles all helpe in time of neede all spirituall graces in heauenly things and all corporall blessings whatsoeuer are from him the father of all mercies and giuer of all goodnesse for euery good giuing and euery perfit gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the father of lights Iam. 1.17 He vpholdeth all such as fall Psal 145.14 15 16. and lifteth vp all those that be downe the eyes of all waite vpon him and he giueth them their meat in due season he openeth his hand and filleth all things liuing with plenteousnes He killeth and maketh aliue bringeth downe to the graue and raiseth vp 1 Sam. 2.6 maketh poore and maketh rich bringeth low and exalteth He is our rocke and fortresse our strength and shield 2 Sam. 22.1 and he that deliuereth vs in all time of danger He is the father of mercies 2 Cor. 1.3 and the God of all comfort which comforteth vs in all our tribulation that we may be able to comfort them which are in any affliction by the comfort wherewith we our selues are comforted of him 4. He succoureth vs when we are tempted and suffereth vs not to be tempted aboue that we be able 1 Cor. 10.13 but giueth the issue with the tentation that we may be able to beare it He created vs Esay 43 7. Act. 17 28. Eph. 1. formed vs and made vs for his owne glory In him we liue moue and haue our being Hee blesseth vs with all spirituall blessings in heauenly things in Christ hauing chosen vs in him predestinate vs to be adopted through him redeemed vs through his blood iustified vs and sanctified vs washed and cleansed vs from our sinnes in him and begotten vs by faith vnto a liuely hope in him In one word he is all in all things vnto vs. Vnto whom then should wee sacrifice the calues of our lips Col. 3.11 and offer the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiuing but vnto him of whom through whom and for whom are all things and by whom we haue all blessings in good things and deliuerance from all
God forgotten to be gracious and will he shut vp his louing kindnesse in displeasure And againe Lord why abhorrest thou my soule and hidest thy face frome mee Lord where are thy old louing kindnesses thy terrors doe I suffer with a troubled minde thy wrathfull displeasure goeth ouer me and the feare of thee hath vndone mee His reall continuance ye see seemeth to be cut off and himselfe to be separated from the Lord but by his gronings and cries it appeareth that his holy desire still remained Pauls care likewise was interrupted and his reall continuance remitted when hee was so exalted through the abundance of reuelations 2 Cor. 12.7 that there was giuen vnto him a pricke in the flesh euen the messenger of Satan to buffet him yet in that he then besought the Lord thrise that that messenger of Satan might depart from him 8. it appeareth that this his holy desire still remained And this holy desire of perseuering is it which the Lord accepteth and then is he said to giue vs this grace of perseuerance when hee giueth vs a perpetuall will and desire of perseuering in that grace wherein wee stand howsoeuer the very act of perseuering by sinne tentation or other trouble seeme to be cut off and quite failed sometimes euen in the dearest of Gods children Here then is a notable comfort for the broken and contrite heart for the humbled and afflicted soule For tell me ô thou distressed soule hath the spirit sometimes witnessed vnto thy spirit that thou wast the childe of God Hath the loue of God sometimes beene so shed abroad in thine heart that thou hast verily perswaded thy selfe of the loue of God towards thee Hast thou sometimes beene delighted in the law of thy God and felt the sweet comforts of God in Christ Iesus in thy soule Why then is now thy soule so heauy and why is it so disquieted within thee Why doe thoughts arise in thy heart and why doth the sleepe depart from thine eyes O waite vpon the Lord and put thy trust in him for hee that hath begun a good worke in thee will performe it vntill the day of Christ Iesus He hath said it by his holy Apostle and shall he not doe it The strength of Israel will not lie 1 Sam. 15.29 nor repent for he is not a man that he should repent He hath begun a good worke in thee euen of his loue and his mercy towards thee and as himselfe so his loue is vnchangeable so that whom hee loueth once he loueth vnto the end O but therefore thou art troubled because he doth not seem to continue his louing kindnes towards thee Thou feelest not that ioy in the Holy Ghost that comfort in Gods loue which thou wast wont to finde thou art euen dead vnto the life of God Well did not Dauid cry out Lord where are thy old louing kindnesses where are thy former mercies Did he not pray restore me to the ioy of thy saluation and renue a right spirit within me And againe O quicken mee according to thy word quicken me according to thy louing kindnesse So that thou seest there hath no tentation taken thee but such as appertaineth to man euen such as haue ouertaken men after Gods owne heart But tell me doth it not greeue thee that thou doest not feele that assurance that comfort that ioy that thou wast wont to finde in thy God through Iesus Christ Doest thou not desire and long to feele that assurance comfort ioy that thou wast wont to finde in thy soule O yes it is thy doubtings that trouble thee and comfort which thou longest for Well then good enough It is a broken and contrite heart that greeueth at his sinnes Psal 51.17 that greeueth at his wants that the Lord loueth and a troubled spirit troubled at the cogitation of his slips and imperfections is a sacrifice acceptable vnto him And againe this holy desire of any grace is the grace it selfe A desire of comfort is a great part of comfort and a desire of perseuering is a chiefe part of perseuerance and hee that desireth any grace of God tending to saluation shall surely haue it For so Christ hath promised saying I will giue to him that is a thirst of the well of the water of life freely Apoc. 21.6 which is the same with that in the Prophet where it is said Ho euery one that thirsteth come yee to the waters Esay 55.1 and yee that haue no siluer come buy and eat come I say buy wine and milke without siluer and without money Comfort then your selues be of good comfort in the Lord all yee that thirst after and desire the things that belong vnto your peace Let not your sinnes or your wants and imperfections too much cast you downe or dismay you What if he will haue you to saile by hell to heauen He that continueth this holy desire in you will not suffer his mercies vtterly to faile from you for euer Heauinesse may endure for a night for a short season but ioy commeth in the morning after a while heauinesse is turned into ioy and sackcloth into the garment of gladnes Where he hath begun he will make an end and scattering this cloud he will shew vnto thee the light of his holy countenance In the meane time let that holy desire which is in thee be a pledge of his loue vnto thee and assure thy selfe he shall fulfill all thy hearts desire and restore thee to thy wonted ioyes againe LECTVRE VI. PHILIP 1. Vers 7. As it becommeth me so to iudge of you all because I haue you in remembrance that both in my bands and in my defence and confirmation of the Gospell you all were partakers of my grace THe second thing which heere I note is that God and God only had begunne that good worke of embracing the Gospell in them would as the Apostle was perswaded performe it vnto the end For once it plaine that the Apostle meaneth that God had begunne this worke in them and would performe it vnto the end and in that he saith not I am perswaded that God but that hee which hath begun c he plainely implieth that God only begunne that good worke in them and would performe it vnto the end For if any other but he onely had intermedled therein how should the Philippians haue plainely vnderstood the Apostle to speake of God when he said that he c. He if any other had had any hand heerein might aswell be vnderstood of that other as of God Hence then I obserue that both the beginning and the perfiting of our obedience to the Gospell and indeed of euery good worke in vs is only from God And to this the writings of the holy Ghost euery where agree The Apostle speaking in generall saith what hast thou that thou hast not receiued 1 Cor 4 7. no gift no grace no good at all but we receiue it from God
imaginations of the thoughts of mans heart are onely euill continually Gen 6 5. and there is no feare of God before his eyes Rom 3 18. This then is it wh●ch we say that man before he be renued by the spirit of grace hath no power or faculty at all I say not to worke or doe ought at all for this were indeede to transforme him into a stocke or stone but to doe any thing that is good for it is God and God only that worketh in him both the good will Phil. 2.13 and the good deede euen of his good pleasure He enlightens the eyes of our vnderstanding and corrects our froward wils and then being renued by the spirit we vnderstand the things of the spirit of God and we will the things that are good and we runne the way of Gods commandements but euer with this necessary limitation onely by God Hee maketh vs vnderstand and will and runne as we ought and we vnderstand and will and runne as we ought Here ●hen first learne to beware of such as either tell you that man is able of himselfe to keepe the Law and to merit euerlasting life a grosse and now outwo●ne errour I hope or that man is able of himselfe to beginne that is good howsoeuer he be not able to perfit it but by the helpe of the Lord or that man being preuented by grace is then able by the helpe of grace ayding his weake nature to worke out his owne saluation for all these errors as Dagon must needs fall to the ground be●ore this testimonie of the spirit and doctrine of the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost by the mouth of the Apostle saith that it is God which hath begun a good worke in vs and that he which hath begun it will go forward with it and performe it vnto the end What then if a man shall tell you that it is in man both to begin and perfit that which is good Or that it is in man to begin that is good though not to perfit it Or that it is in man by the helpe onely of God to doe that is good Let God be true and euery man a lyer Rom. 3.4 that he may be iustified in his words and ouercome when he is iudged Neither beginning nor ending nor increase of any thing that is good is of our selues as of our selues but he beginneth and he which beginneth performeth and perfiteth and none but he euen God onely It is the meere and onely grace and mercy of God not which aideth our nature being weakned but which changeth it altogether in qualitie bringing vs out of darknesse into light out of the power of Satan vnto God and translating vs from the death of sinne vnto the life of righteousnesse in Christ Iesus It is the meere and onely grace of God not which maketh an end of our saluation alone but wherein our saluation wholy doth consist Let no man therefore through va●ne and flatte●ing words deceiue you as if you your selues were somewhat when indeed you are nothing but learne and know and euer hold this for a sure ground that God onely beginneth increaseth and perfiteth our obedience to the gospell and euery good worke in vs. 2. Let the Minister and Preacher of the word hence learne what he may assume vnto himselfe in the fruits of his labors by the worke of his ministery Are his people reconciled vnto God brought vnto the obedience of the gospell begotten in the faith of Christ Iesus grounded and stablished in the truth instructed in the way of God perfitly c. He is not to take this honor vnto himselfe as if he had done these things for this hath God onely done and it is his worke as it is written and they shall be all taught of God Esay 54.13 Ioh. 6.45 If we be taught in the word he hath taught vs by his spirit if wee beleeue in Christ it is his gift by his spirit if we be reconciled vnto God hee hath reconciled vs vnto himselfe by Iesus Christ c. Hee I say doth all things onely not immediatly by himselfe but by the ministerie of his seruants And albeit he because he worketh not by his spirit but by the ministerie of his seruants sometimes vouchsafe them this honor that they beget men through the gospell and that they saue them that heare them yet is this onely his worke and onely vouchsafed by him vnto them because in this worke he vseth the worke of their ministerie Let not the Minister then dare to assume vnto himselfe that honor which onely belongeth vnto the Lord. This is his honor that in the great worke of mans saluation he vseth his ministerie and by him as his instrument worketh what he will Let this therefore be his glory and reioycing that the Lord by his meanes will saue his people and bring them to that inheritance which lasteth for euer in the heauens and let him so speake as his Minister out of his word that so he may be indeed a meanes to turne many to righteousnes 3. Hence you may learne in what account and regard yee are to haue the Ministers of Christ Iesus True and most true it is as already yee haue heard that God onely beginneth euery good worke in vs and likewise confirmeth and strengthneth vs and maketh vs to abound therein more and more But he doth it as also yee haue heard by their ministerie whom he hath separated for the gathering together of the Saints and for the edification of the body of Christ Ye are therefore so to thinke of vs as of the ministers of Christ and disposers of the secrets of God by whom he hath appointed to open your eyes that yee may turne from darknes to light and from the power of Satan vnto God that ye may receiue forgiuenesse of sinnes and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith in Christ Iesus by whom he hath appointed to reueale his will vnto you and to fill you with the graces of his holy spirit and by whom he hath appointed to bring to passe all the good pleasure of his will in you And if any man thinke not thus of vs it is because he knoweth vs not neither him that hath sent vs nor what great works the Lord worketh what great mercies the Lord sheweth vnto his children by vs. But let this for this time serue to stirre vp and to warne your pure mindes that yee so thinke of vs as yee ought and as it becommeth them that are taught in the word to haue them which labour among you and admonish you in singular loue and reuerence for their works sake The third thing which here I note is that the Apostle saith that he was perswaded that he that had begun this good worke of embracing the gospel in them would performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ or as he speaketh to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 1.8 would confirme them in it vnto the end that
fruitfull in all good works to haue our whole conuersation holy to shew forth the fruits of the spirit in our whole spirit soule and bodie throughout our whole life this we cannot brooke and this is a thing wherein the Preacher may well striue with vs but wherein he shall not preuaile with vs. For here it is with vs as it was with the yong man in the Gospell who soothed vp himselfe as if hee had beene as good a man as liued till it was said vnto him Math. 9. If thou wilt be perfit goe sell that thou hast and giue it to the poore and thou shalt haue treasure in heauen but then he hung downe the head and went away sorrowfull so we many of vs while it is said doe that which is good let your conuersation be honest haue your fruit in holinesse we comfort our selues as hauing obserued these things but when it is said abound in euery good worke be yee filled throughout your whole man and throughout your whole life with the fruits of righteousnesse then we hang downe the head and all the exhortations in the world will not preuaile thus farre with vs. That the Lord shall open his hand and fill vs with plenteousnesse in all good things we can brooke it very well but where is he that is filled with the fruits of righteousnesse to the glory and praise of his name Some one Tabitha it may be may be full of good works but with the rest it is well if they be not as bad as the worst Let vs beloued now that we know what we should be striue vnto that which should be Let vs as we should be be trees of righteousnes filled with the fruits of righteousnesse As as we are purged by Christ Iesus to be a peculiar people vnto him zealous of good works so let vs abound in euery good worke Let vs not onely flie that is euill and doe that is good but as men sanctified throughout in spirit soule and bodie let our whole life and conuersation be such as becommeth the Gospell of Christ Iesus The more fruit we beare the better trees we are the more by our fruits we glorifie God the Father the more sure we are that we are branches of the true vine Christ Iesus Let vs therefore giue all diligence vse all holy meanes and pray that we may abound more and more in the knowledge of Gods will that we may discerne things that differ that we may be pure and without offence vntill the day of Christ filled with the fruits of righteousnesse and being fruitfull in all good works The next thing which here I note is that the Apostle calleth good works the fruits of righteousnes For it is as if he had said filled with good works which are the fruits of righteousnes therefore called the fruits of righteousnes because they spring from righteousnes as the fruit from the tree The obseruation then hence is that good works are the fruits of righteousnes Righteousnes that is the tree and good works they are the fruit of the tree so that as first must be the tree and then the fruit so first we must be righteous euen by the righteousnes of God in vs before we can doe the works that are good Now what is our righteousnes before God Our Apostle telleth vs in the third chapter of this epistle vers 9. euen that righteousnesse which is through the faith of Christ for as Abraham beleeued God it was imputed to him for righteousnes so our faith in Christ Iesus who is made of God vnto vs wisdome and righteousnes and sanctification and redemption is accounted vnto vs for righteousnes before God First then we must beleeue in Christ Iesus whom God hath set forth to be a reconciliation through faith in his bloud before we can doe any works acceptable vnto God and being iustified by faith in Christ then are our works good and acceptable vnto God And to this our Apostle giueth testimonie where he saith Vnto the pure all things are pure Tit. 1.15 but vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing is nothing pure but euen their mindes and consciences are defiled In which words by pure he meaneth them whose hearts are purified by faith in Christ Iesus as the antithesis in the next clause sheweth where he expresseth whom he meaneth by impure men euen vnbeleuing men Hence then it is plaine that when once our hearts are purified by faith in Christ Iesus not onely the things which by the law are counted vncleane are cleane and pure vnto vs but our works also are good and holy but till our hearts be purified by faith in Christ Iesus neither any of the things which by the law are counted pure are pure vnto vs neither is any worke of ours good but how good soeuer it be in shew yet it is indeed abominable before God To the like purpose is that of the Apostle Heb. 1● 6 where he saith that without faith it is impossible to please God where the Apostle shewing the dignitie and excellencie of faith amongst other things commendeth it for this that by it as Henoch did we please God but without faith saith he it is vnpossible that any worke of ours whatsoeuer should please God So that our works if they be good they are the fruits of righteousnes euen of the righteousnes which is of God through the faith of Iesus Christ otherwise if they spring not from that roote they are not good Here then first learne to beware of them that tell you that our good workes are that righteousnesse whereby we are iustified before God Yee see the Apostle tel eth you that they are the fruites of righteousnesse Aswell therefore may they tell you that the fruite of tree is the tree as that our good workes are our righteousnesse before God Let God bee true and euery man a lier If hee haue said that they are the fruites of righteousnesse then assure we our selues that they are spirits of error that tell vs that they are our righteousnesse Secondly hence learne to beware of them that tell you that men not begotten in the faith of Christ Iesus are able to doe the things that are good and pleasing vnto God for either you must not belieue the holy Apostle or rather the holy Ghost speaking by the mouth of the Apostle or else you must know that they onely do the things that are good and pleasing vnto God that are iustified by faith in Christ Iesus for this the holy Apostle hath said That good workes are the fruites of righteousnesse Either then our good workes must spring and proceed from the righteousnes of God by faith in Christ Iesus in vs or else they are not good so that they onely that are iustified by faith in CHRIST IESVS doe the things that are good And therefore they that tell you otherwise they are led by the same spirit of error tha● they are who tell you that by our workes
we are iustified before God Thirdly let this teach vs how to examine our workes whether they be good or no. Are they the fruites of righteousnesse Do they proceed from a true and liuely faith in Christ Iesus Is the fountaine pure whence they spring and their end good whereunto they tend Then bee bolde they are good workes Otherwise if there bee no such warrant for them seeme they neuer so good yet they are not good Examine but our works according to this rule and surely we will not all of vs be found full of good workes The third thing which here I note is that the Apostle saith that these fruites of righteousnesse wherewith hee would haue the Philippians filled are by Iesus Christ Whence I obserue the Author of euery good worke in vs and that is Christ Iesus by the grace of his holy spirit 2 Cor. 3.5 for as the Apostle saith We are not sufficient of our selues to thinke any thing as of our selues but our sufficiencie is of God Now if of our selues we be not sufficient to thinke a good thought but that must onely be suggested by Gods spirit then how shall wee bee sufficient of our selues to doe any thing that is good Nay our Apostle tels vs in the next Chapter 13. that it is God which workes in vs both the will and the deed euen of his good pleasure Neither thought of the heart nor affection of the will nor worke of the hand but if it be good it is by the operation of the holy spirit in vs. Nay take an argument euen from hence Good workes they are the fruites of righteousnesse Now doth the fruite of a tree bud or grow by the labour or skill of man Nay hee planteth and watereth but God onely giues the fruite in due season Right so it is not in man to doe that is good but if he doe that is good it is of God Worke of himselfe he may and to worke that which is euill hee is too proane of himselfe but if he worke any thinke that is acceptable vnto God it is wholly by the spirit of God And why That God may be all in all and that he may haue the glorie of all Let this sufficiently warne vs to beware of them and arme vs against them that would perswade vs that wee are able of our selues to doe that is good at least if wee be holpen by grace If wee thinke or will or doe any thing that is good whatsoeuer fruite of righteousnesse it is that is in vs it is by Iesus Christ not of our selues for then we had wherein to reioyce in our selues but only of his good pleasure that by his good spirit worketh it in vs. This our Apostle telleth vs and this wee learne from him and if any man preach vnto vs or teach vs otherwise then this that wee haue receaued let him bee accursed Secondly let this teach vs vnto whome all praise is ●ue for whatsoeuer good is in vs. Whatsoeuer good is ●n vs it is by Iesus Christ So that our song is alwaies to ●e as the song of the Angels in the Apocalips Praise Apoc. 5.13 and honour and glorie and power be vnto him that sitteth vpon the ●hrone and to the lambe for euermore His name is to bee blessed and the power of his spirit is to bee acknowledged in whatsoeuer good in whatsoeuer good worke is wrought in vs. The last thing which here I note is touching the end of good workes which as they are by Iesus Christ as the author and worker of them in vs so they are to be done to the glorie and praise of his name Whence I obserue vnto what end our workes must be done if they be good and that is vnto the glorie and praise of God Ye know that of the Apostle where hee saith Whether yee eate 1 Cor. 10.31 or drinke or whatsoeuer ye doe doe all to the glorie of God As also that of our Sauiour where he saith Matth. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your father which is in heauen And that of Peter 1 Pet. 2.12 where he saith Haue your conuersation honest amōg the Gentiles that they which speake euill of you as of euill doers may by your good workes which they shall see glorifie God in the day of the visitation By which and many other places which might be alleaged to this purpose it appeareth that the end whereunto our workes if they bee good must bee referred must be the glorie and praise of God that thereby he may be glorified both by vs and by others which see our good workes Here then first we learne not to credite any that shall tell vs that any action of any vnregenerate man can be good For what is the end of such men in their actions Is it the praise and glorie of God Nay it is their owne praise and the praise of men which they seeke after in all the most glorious things that they doe But hence wee learne that so our workes are good works if they be by Iesus Christ vnto the glorie and praise of God Secondly hence we learne that the end of our good workes is not to be that thereby we may merite heauen but that thereby God may bee glorified Nay if our workes bee thereby to merite heauen they cannot be to the glorie and praise of God For how much so euer is giuen to merite so much is taken from the glorie of God Either therefore we must renounce all merite or else whatsoeuer we say our workes are not to the glorie of God Thirdly this teacheth vs whatsoeuer we doe to do it to the honour and praise of God Let this therefore bee our end in all that euer wee doe that thereby God may be glorified and let vs know that so onely that which we doe is good if we do it to this end LECTVRE XIII PHILIP I. Verse 12. I would yee vnderstood brethren that the things which haue come vnto me are turned rather to the furthering of the Gospell 13. So that my bands in Christ are famous throughout all the iudgment hall in all other places 14. Insomuch that many of the brethren in the Lord are boldened through my band and dare more frankly speake the word WE haue spoken of the Apostles exordium or entrance to his Epistle and therein of such things as whereby he testified his loue towards the Philippians thereby to winne their attention vnto him and likewise of such obseruations as that scripture offered together with such vses and instructions thence as seemed most behouefull for 〈◊〉 Now in the rest of this chapter is set downe the Apo●●les narration Wherein first he tells them of his pre●●nt state how at this present when he wrote vnto them ●atters stood with him and this he doth from vers 12. 〈◊〉 19. Secondly hee tells them for hereafter what his ●ope is namely that
Iesus Eph. 4.1 So that being Saints by calling we are to labour to be Saints in life and conuersation As then is our calling as is our profession so are we to labor to lead a life agreeable to our calling agreeable to our profession and professing the Gospell of Christ Iesus to lead a life agreeable to the Gospell of Christ Iesus And why The reasons are very cleare As 1. that the Gospell of Christ Iesus be not euill spoken of Tit. 2.5 euen as young women are taught to be discreete chaste keeping at home good and subiect to their Husbands that the word of God be not euill spoken of For what readier way to cause the profane and wicked to blaspheme the Gospell of Iesus Christ then when the Professors of the Gospell liue not according to the Gospell Rom. 2.21.22.23.24 Thou that preachest a man should not steale dost thou steale saith our Apostle thou that saist a man should not commit adulterie dost thou commit adulterie thou that abhorrest Idols committest thou sacriledge thou that gloriest in the law through breaking the Law dishonourest thou God for the name of God is blaspheamed among the Gentiles through you And if it may be said vnto vs thou that professest the Gospell of Iesus Christ doest thou lead a life which becommeth not the Gospell of Iesus Christ shall not the Gospell of Iesus Christ be blasphemed and euill spoken of among the profane Atheists and miscreants of this sinfull world through vs yes surely they shall say vnto vs as the Gentiles did to the children of Israell which poluted Gods name among them EZ 36.20 These are the people of the Lord these are the Professors of the Gospell these be the fruits of their holy profession and of the Gospell amongst them 2. They that professe the Gospell of Christ are to labour to liue agreeably thereunto that they may adorne the Gospell of Christ Iesus in all thing and winne others by their holy conuersation vnto righteousnesse and holinesse Tit. 2.10 euen as seruants are taught to shew all good faithfulnesse that they may adorne the doctrine of God our Sauiour in all things and as Peter exhorteth saying 1 Pet. 2.2 haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which speake euill of you as of euill doers may by your good workes which they shall see glorifie God in the day of visitation For when they that feare not the Lord shall see our good workes then shall they be brought to glorifie God our father which is in heauen when they shall see that as our profession is holy so our life also is holy then shall they beginne to suspect their owne wayes and to turne vnto the Lord as that place of Peter maketh plaine where he exhorteth the wiues to be subiect to their husbands 1 Pet. 3.1 and why that euen they which obey not the word may without the word be wonne by the conuersation of the wiues Whence it plainely appeareth that by the holy conuersation of them that are religious and godly be they men or women they that haue no good will vnto the word are oftentimes wonne vnto the obedience of the word 3. They that professe the Gospell are to labour to liue as becommeth the Gospel because of the commandement Mat. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your father which is in heauen because of the promise as many as walke according to this rule of the Gospell peace shall be vpon them and mercie Gal. 6.16 and vpon the Israel of God because it becommeth citizens of heauen to haue their conuersation in heauen and them that are called to the knowledge of God to walke as the children of God and because it is the lesson which their profession should teach them as the Apostle witnesseth saying T it 2.11.12 the grace of God which bringeth saluation to all men hath appeared and teacheth vs that wee should denie vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and that we should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world looking for the blessed hope c. In one word so onely the Gospell is the glad tidings of thei● saluation vnto the Professors of the Gospell if their conuersation be as it becommeth the Gospell of Christ and therefore they are to labour that their conuersation be such as becommeth their profession This then may serue for a iust reproofe of many carnall Gospellers in our day For many Gospellers there are by profession but not many that lead such a life as becommeth the Gospell of Christ many there are that professe they know God not many that shew forth the fruite thereof in an holy conuersation such as our Apostle speaketh of where he saith they professe that they know God Tit. 1.16 but by workes they denie him and are abominable and disobedient and vnto euery good worke reprobate So that it may be said of Gospellers as one said of Doctours many Doctours few Doctours many in name few in deed so many Gospellers few Gospellers many in name and few in deed many in profession few in practise many in word few in worke many in tale few in life and conuersation For is it not said of many that make a very great profession of the Gospell and of religion that they are hard men vnmercifull men men that grinde the faces of the poore and sell the needie for shoes as the Prophet speaketh Are there not many such that are noted to be Vsurers Oppressors Extortioners and the like Is it not said of many such that they are as ready to portion and to couenant for their dues with their Pastor as any men that they are as ready to turne their Tenants a grasing as any men that they are as ready to ioyne house to house to lay field to field and to enclose all vnto themselues as any men Is it not said that the complaint of the poore and fatherles and widow is taken vp as much against them as against any men I would it were not said in Gath noised in the secrets of Ashkelon I wish the prophane Atheist the superstitious Papist and the couetous worldling could not iustly twite vs with it Alas beloued do we not see and consider that thus we make our God to be blasphemed our profession to bee slandered and the Gospell of Christ Iesus to be euill spoken of for our sakes Doe we not see and consider that Atheist and Papist and euery earthly minded man makes his vantage of these things and thinkes his owne waies well patronaged by our waies Doe wee not see and consider that by such our life and conuersation the froward and obstinate are hardened the weake are offended and the edge and courage of many much cooled and abated If such spots and staines in our life did only touch our selues yet were we to looke vnto them because without holinesse of life no man shall
see the Lord. But when men seeing that we make a good profession Heb. 12.14 and yet liue nothing accordingly thereunto thereupon take occasion to speake euill of our profession of our religion of the Gospell of Christ Iesus how carefull ought we to be of our life and conuersation Woe to the world saith our blessed Sauiour because of offences it must needes be that offences shall come Mat. 18.7 but wo be to that man by whom the offence commeth And surely if by our life not answerable to our profession wee shall bring a slaunder vpon our religion our profession vpon the Gospell if by our life some shall be weakened others hardened the edge of others abated and others turned out of the good way then woe shall be vnto vs because of such offence in our life I doubt not but such as obserue these things in vs and fill their mouthes with talking of them both are guiltie of as crying sinnes themselues and most iniuriously taxe many of vs of these things But the more ready they are to obserue and to taxe without a cause the more carefull wee are to be that they haue no iust cause of taxing Let vs therefore beloued as we professe the Gospell of Christ so labour to liue as becommeth the Gospell of Christ As the Gospell teacheth vs to be holy so let vs be holy in all manner of conuersation as the Gospell teacheth vs to walke in the light so let vs walke in the light and haue nothing to do with the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse as the Gospell teacheth vs to loue God and one another so let vs loue God aboue all things and our neighbour as our selfe as the Gospell is the Gospell of peace so let vs be at peace with all men as the Gospell is true so let vs speake the truth euery man vnto his neighbour and lie not one vnto another c. Otherwise wee walke not as becommeth the Gospell of Christ In a word let vs not be hearers or professors of the word onely but doers also of the same least wee deceiue our selues Againe as this note may serue for the iust reproofe of such as professe well but liue not so well so may it also serue for a iust defence against the vniust slaunder of our aduersaries who beare the world in hand that holinesse of life is a matter that we neuer vrge that wee make no great reckoning of Your selues haue heard and can witnes how often since this very exercise hath begunne you haue beene vrged to runne forward in the race of righteousnesse and to make an end of your saluation with feare and trembling to labour to be blamelesse and pure and the sonnes of God in the middest of a naughtie and crooked nation to haue your conuersation in heauen to communicate vnto the necessities of the poore and distressed Saints to abound in loue in knowledge and in all iudgement to be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse and to striue to be pure and without offence vntill the day of Christ And now ye heare that if ye haue fellowship in the Gospell your conuersation is to bee as it becommeth of Christ Know them therefore to be of their father the Deuill who was a liar from the beginning and is the father thereof And suffer not your selues to bee deceiued by them who when they cannot otherwise preuaile against the truth fall to slaunder the professors of the truth And let this suffice to bee noted from the Apostles generall exhortation whence ye see that such as professe the Gospell of Iesus Christ should labour by all meanes to lead such a life as becommeth the Gospell of Christ But what will it serue the turne for a time in the presence or company of such and such persons to make a shew of such a life and conuersation as hypocrites doe which doe all that they doe to please men No and therefore the Apostle saith Let your conuersation bee as it becommeth the Gospell of Christ that whether I come and see you or else be absent and onely heare of you I may heart and see that in sinceritie and truth which I desire Whence I obserue that the life and conuersation of such as professe the Gospell of Iesus Christ is to be framed not after the will of man but after the will of God not to please men but to please the Lord that whether man be present or absent their life bee such as it ought to be Gal. 1.10 If I should please men saith the Apostle I were not the seruant of Christ The Apostle speaketh it of preaching the doctrine of the Gospell that if he should apply himselfe to the humors of men and preach things pleasing vnto them he should not please God which tryeth the heart But it may also very well be applyed vnto the life and conuersation of men that if we shall only frame our liues vnto mens likings and for the time only seeke to please them our life shall not be such as becommeth the Gospell of Christ And therefore the Lord himselfe sharply reproued it in Ezechiels hearers where he saith EZek 33.31 My people sit before thee and heare thy wordes but they will not doe them for with their mouthes they make ieasts their heart goeth after their couetousnes Where ye see the Lord taxeth Ezechiels hearers to bee such as when hee preached vnto them sate as his people and hearkened vnto their Prophet carried themselues well in his presence but in their hearts ranne after their couetousnesse and out of his presence made but a mocke of all that he spake vnto them And this was one of the sinnes wherefore the Lord threatned to lay the land desolate and waste Let this then teach vs to beware of hypocrisie It is not for vs to come vnto this place here to kneele vs downe on our knees to knocke our breasts to lift vp our eyes vnto Heauen to sit and hearken vnto the Preacher and when wee goe hence to make a mocke at the things that were spoken or to forget them or notwithstanding whatsoeuer shew of godlinesse we made in the Church in our houses to returne vnto our vomite For what else is this but here to play the hypocrites and here to make a shew of godlinesse the power whereof at home we denie And what is vnto hypocrites but a woe In the ordering therefore of our life let vs not depend vpon mans presence or absence but in a religious feare of the Lord let euery one of vs so walke as becommeth vs knowing that whether man see vs or see vs not yet God seeth vs and considereth all our waies It is the presence and pleasure of the Lord that wee are to looke vnto Let our life therefore and our conuersation be as in his presence and such as may please him howsoeuer wee please or displease men And let this suffice to bee noted touching the qualitie of such a conuersion as
shall also raigne with Christ That persecution then causeth perdition to the aduersaries and saluation vnto vs it is of God who in iustice rendreth vnto them as they haue deserued and for his promise sake rendreth vnto vs as he hath promised For this yee must here note and vnderstand that persecutions afflictions sufferings and wrongs by aduersaries are in themselues and in their owne nature punishments of sinne as is also death and hereby God in iustice might punish our sinnes and our iniquities for if hee should bring vpon vs the bloudy persecutions of such Tyrants as were Nero Domitian and the rest of those cruell persecutors in the Primitiue Church he might thus plague vs for our offences and himselfe be iust in all his wayes and holy in all his workes But vnto vs his beloued ones and his redeemed these things are not that which in themselues and in their owne nature they are and which in Gods iustice they might be vnto vs euen punishments of our sinnes but onely fatherly corrections and louing chastisements whereby in mercy God exerciseth vs represseth sinne in vs and bowlteth the branne of corruption out of vs here in the body of this flesh And as vnto vs in mercy death is made of God not that which in it owne nature it is a punishment of sinne but an entrance and passage vnto life so in mercy hath hee promised that afflictions persecutions and the like shall be vnto vs not that which in their owne nature are the beginnings of greater miseries but fore-runners of our saluation in the day of Christ Iesus It is not then of the nature of suffering persecution yee see but it is of God that persecution betokeneth vnto vs saluation that saluation is recompenced vnto vs which are troubled He in mercy hath promised that so it shall be and therefore so it shall be and it is a righteous thing with him that it be so The vse which our Apostle here teacheth vs to make hereof is as of the former not to feare persecution by the aduersaries which oppose themselues against the truth and against vs for the truths sake for seeing God turneth their persecution and rage against vs to their perdition and to our saluation why should wee feare them Whatsoeuer therefore they practise against vs let vs rest and repose our selues in our God He shall stretch out his hand vpon the furiousnes of our enemies but his right hand shall saue vs he shall recompense the aduersaries their wickednes and destroy them in their owne malice but hee shall wipe all teares from our eyes and after wee haue drunke of the brooke in the way lift vp our head aboue all our aduersaries Againe is it of God that persecution causeth vnto vs saluation This then may farther teach vs that by suffering persecution we doe not merit saluation For if it be of merit that our sufferings bring saluation vnto vs then it is not of God but the cause is in our selues and if it be of God then is it not of merit nor is the cause of our saluation in our selues Not according to the workes which we doe or sufferings which we suffer but according to his mercy he saueth vs for neither haue we wherein to reioyce by works nor are any sufferings of this present time worthy of that glory which shall be shewed vnto vs nor is there any other name vnder heauen whereby we may be saued but onely by the name of Christ Iesus He that reioyceth therefore let him reioyce in the Lord of whom it is that our persecutions and sufferings worke vnto our saluation And let this bee spoken of this third motiue or reason whereby yee see that we are not to feare the aduersaries because God recompenseth their persecution vnto them with perditi●n and vnto vs with saluation It followeth For vnto you it is giuen c. These words are both a proofe of that which went immediatly before and a fourth motiue likewise to perswade the Apostles former intendment Immediatly before he had said that God in persecution gaue them a token of their saluation The proofe here is Vnto you it is giuen of God by grace to suffer for Christ his sake therefore in suffering God giueth you a token of your saluation or thus sufferings for Christ are testimonies of grace vnto you of God therefore they are arguments and tokens of saluation vnto you of God And as thus these words serue for proofe of that so are they a notable motiue to perswade the Philippians not to feare the aduersaries for thus out of the Apostles words I frame the motiue Who will be afraid of a singular gift of God but to suffer for Christ his sake is a singular gift of God to you therefore yee are not to feare persecution by the aduersaries And that to suffer for Christ his sake is a gift of God hee sheweth à pari from the like as to beleeue in Christ is the gift of God so to suffer for Christ both gifts of God and vnto whom the one is giuen the other may not seeme strange For vnto you it is giuen to wit by grace for so the word signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for ●hrist that is in Christ his cause not only that yee should beleeue in him as others professe they doe but also to suffer for his sake which many others shrinke to doe Euen both these faith in Christ and persecution for Christ his sake are the gift and grace of God towards you Here then first I note that the Apostle saith it was giuen by grace vnto the Philippians to beleeue in Christ Whence I obserue that faith in Christ is the gift of God by grace Which also Christ himselfe teacheth vs where he saith No man can come vnto me except it be giuen him of my Father Joh. 6.65 Whereby hee meaneth that no man can come vnto him that is can beleeue in him and his Gospell except it be giuen him of his Father For so by comming vnto him diuers times in that chapter is meant beleeuing in him a● when it is said He that commeth vnto me shall not hunger and he that beleeueth in me which expoundeth the former 35. shall neuer thirst and againe Him that commeth vnto me I cast not away which is all one with that 37. He that beleeueth in me shall not perish So that it is cleare that when our Sauiour saith that no man can come vnto him except it be giuen him of the Father the meaning is that no man can beleeue in Christ except it be giuen him of God And to the Hebrues Christ Iesus is called the author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12.2 And wherefore was it that when Christ preached and when his Apostles and Disciples preached some beleeued and others beleeued not but because vnto some he gaue grace to beleeue and not vnto others For only they vnto whom it is giuen of God to beleeue doe
were ●nder the law and as the same Apostle saith to the Romanes Rom. 8.4 That the righteousnesse of the law might be fulfilled in vs. Seeing ●hen it was for vs that Christ was humbled and that hee was obedient vnto the law and vnto the death great reason it is ●hat his humility and obedience should be a sufficient motiue to perswade vs vnto humilitie and obedience in the whole course of our life Should it bee my brethren a sufficient motiue vnto vs and why is it not Why it is not I know not but that it is not euery man seeth it Our high conc●●●●● our selues whether it be of our wisedome or of our riche or of our honour our contentions and vaine-glory our delight in our owne waies and our neglect to walk in the waie● of the Lord these and the like testifie vnto our faces that Christ his humility and obedience little preuaile with va●● perswade vs vnto these holy duties O my brethren let this be an healing of our errour So often as wee heare or read that Christ thus humbled himselfe for vs that he became man for vs that he bare our infirmities that he was led as a sheepe v● to the slaughter for vs that he made his soule an offering for our sinne and that he made his graue with the wicked in his death for vs let these be so many remembrancers vnto vs to plucke downe our proud peacockes feathers to put away wrath contention pride vaine-glory and in all meeknesse of minde to submit our selues one vnto an other and all of v● vnto our God So often as we heare or read that Christ became obedient vnto his Father in all things that the law required of him that he fulfilled all righteousnesse and neuer gaue ouer to doe the will of his Father till hee had tasted and drunke of deaths cuppe and all for vs let this suffice to sl●● vs vp to walke in all dutifull obedience vnto our heauenly Fathers will Yea let vs thus hereupon resolue with our selues and say vnto our owne soules hath the sonne of God my Christ and my God vouchsafed to descend from his high throne of glory to be clothed with my flesh and my skinne to suffer hunger cold pouerty and manifold tentations for mee to be slaundered reuiled buffeted spit vpon condemned nailed on the crosse and to be buried for me and shall beare my selfe aboue my brethren shall I walke with a st●●● necke and disdaine my inferiors or shall I not make my selfe equall to them of the lowest degree and passe the time of my dwelling here in feare and in all lowlinesse of minde Hat● the sonne of God my Christ and my God fulfilled all righteousnesse done his fathers busines and yeelded all obedience vnto his father for mee and shall I kick against him with ●e heele shall I draw my necke from vnder his yoke and re●●se to walke in the waies of his lawes or rather shall I not ●nforme my selfe in all obedience to his holy will and doe at which is good and right in his eyes This vse wee should ●ake of Christ his humility and obedience vnto his father ●●d to this end he maketh it the ground of his exhortation in is place It followeth Wherefore my beloued The 2. thing which I obserued in ●ese words of the Apostle was his kinde and louing entrea●e of the Philippians signified in that he calleth them his be●●ued Which kinde entreatie of them he vseth the rather to ●inne them to harken vnto his exhortation Here then is a ●te for vs whom God hath set apart vnto the holy worke of ●s ministery to wit that we should not onely bee carefull to struct them that heare vs in the wholesome words of truth at that likewise we should seeke in all kinde and louing sort ● winne them vnto that wherein we doe instruct them Here●pon are those kinde and louesome speeches so often vsed in ●e writings of the Apostles my brethren my beloued my babes ● little children dearely beloued deare brethren I beseech you ●ethren by the mercies of God and the like Not to speake of ●ther places this one place of our Apostle might suffice suf●●ciently to instruct vs in this lesson where the Apostle doth ●ot onely exhort the Philippians to walke in the way of godli●esse with humblenesse of mind and in obedience vnto God ●nd strengthen his exhortation both by the example of their ●wne former obedience and by the example of Christ his ●umility and obedience but in all kinde and louing sort hee ●roposeth his exhortation calling them his beloued that so ●e might the rather winne them to harken to his exhortation or euen so the dispensers of God his holy mysteries should ●ot onely labour in a godly care to teach them that heare ●hem the words of truth in all euidence of the spirit and to ●onfirme and strengthen the same out of the sacred worth of ●ruth but further they should seeke with all kinde speaches ●nd in all louing manner to lead them foorth vnto the waters of comfort and to bring them vnto Christ Iesus And here happily a man that should long beate vpon this point and to large it to the full might haue great applause in many place especially there where the exception against their Teacher i● that he is too sharpe and that hee presseth the iudgement of God against sinne too sore and too vehemently Here the●● I beseech you a lesson for you that are hearers our of thi● place As we that are the ministers of the Lord for your comfort are hence taught to striue in all kinde and louing sort to bring you vnto Christ Iesus so you that heare vs are likewise he●●● to learne so to cary your selues as that we may speak vnto you as vnto our brethren and vnto our beloued If the loue ● God be not in you indeed how can wee speake vnto you a vnto our beloued If your honour not God nor keepe his commandements how can we speake vnto you as vnto 〈◊〉 children If ye be not ioyned with vs in one faith and in one hope in Christ Iesus how can wee speake vnto your as to o● brethren Nay I say more vnto you if ye know not vs that labour amongst you and are ouer you in the Lord and ad●●nish you if ye haue vs not in singular loue from our works sa●● how can we speake vnto you as vnto our beloued If when 〈◊〉 labour to beget you in the faith and to present you before God blamelesse in that day you either stoppe your eares the voice of our charming charme we neuer so wisely or speak euill of vs as of euill doers can wee speake vnto you as v●● our babes and little children If you embrace not the tr●● which we preach vnto you but rather hate vs for the message which we bring vnto you can we speake vnto you as vnto on deare brethren Nay certainely if yee will haue vs to co●● vnto you
tongues full of deceit c. So vnpure that euen our mindes and consciences are defiled so vntoward that wee cleane peruert the straight waies of the Lord and in stead of giuing our members weapons of righteousnesse vnto God making them weapons of vnrighteousnesse vnto sinne and in stead of seruing God altogether yeelding our selues seruants vnto sinne Most miserable and wretched is our state darknesse without light igno●rance without vnderstanding foolishnesse without wisedome before such time as all mists of darknes ignorance and foolishnesse be expelled by the bright beames of Gods holy Spirit and we brought vnto the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God Yea and such thou standest as by nature thou art whosoeuer thou art that sleepest in sinne and delightest in vnrighteousnesse making no conscience of thy waies but treasuring vnto thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath and of the declaration of the iust iudgement of God But thou that fearest God and walkest in his waies consider from what bondage into what freedome the Lord hath brought thee how of a childe of wrath of death and of hell he hath brought thee into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God and made thee an Heire of euerlasting glory how he hath sanctified thy corrupt will and heart and vnderstanding how hee hath new moulded thee and framed thee and renewed thee how hee hath begotten thee againe not by flesh and bloud but by the immortall seed of his holy word consider these things I say and let them be as goades and spurres vnto thee to stirre thee vp as vnto thankefulnesse to thy God so vnto obedience to his will Hath he made thy darknesse to be light walke not in the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse Hath hee freed thee from the bondage of sinne flie from sinne as from a Serpent and haue nothing to doe with the stoole of wickednesse Hath he sanctified thy will and all the powers and faculties of thy soule glorifie thou thy God with all the powers and faculties of thy soule Hath he washed and cleansed thee both in thy body and in thy spirit glorifie thy God both in thy body and in thy spirit So shall the King haue pleasure in thy beauty so shalt thou make true and right vse of thy naturall corruption and of thy regeneration by God his spirit and so shalt thou shew thy selfe to be the sonne of God without rebuke in the middest of a naughty and crooked nation LECTVRE XXXVII PHILIP 2. Verse 15. Among whom ye shine as lights in the world holding foorth the word of life AMong whom ye shine c. In this last clause of the Apostles former reason we haue a notable commendation of the Philippians which the Apostle so truely giueth vnto them that withall in the wisdome of God giuen vnto him hee doth implie a duty or an exhortation that they shew themselues to be such as hee commendeth them to be insomuch that some read these words thus among whom do yee shine as lights c. Their commendation ye see is that they shine amongst that naughty and crooked people with whom they liue euen as lights which shine in darknes and which hold forth the word of life to giue light to them that sit in darknes they are called lights shining lights lights shining in the midst of a naughty and crooked nation lights holding forth the word of life vnto others The whole forme of speach seemeth to be drawne from those high places by the sea-coast whence continually lights and fires are set out for the direction of sea-men into the hauen and safest entrance For euen such the Apostle here commendeth the Philippians to be lights which shined in holinesse of life vnto them that sate in darknesse round about them by the direction of which their light they might come into the hauen of euerlasting rest where they might find rest for their soules Now let vs see what we may obserue hence for our vse 1. In that the Apostle calleth the Philippians light I note the singular prerogatiue and honour of all the faithfull members of Christ Iesus For that which the Apostle here giueth to the Philippians belongeth to all the faithfull All the faithfull children of Christ are called lights shining lights lights shining in the world Now for our better instruction how they are called lights we are to vnderstand that there are foure speciall lights mentioned in the holy Scriptures The 1. is that light Christ Iesus the light of the world and the brightnesse of his father This light by a principall prerogatiue is called that light that true light which lighteth euery man that commeth into the world that sonne of righteousnesse that starre of Iacob that day spring from an high that brightnesse of his fathers person 2. The word of God in many places of the Scriptures is tearmed a light as where it is said Thy word ô Lord is a lanthorne vnto my feete Psal 119.105 2 Pet. 1.19 and a light vnto my pathes As also where the godly are commended by the Apostle Peter for that they attend vnto the sure word of the Prophets as vnto a light that shineth in a darke place By this light the holy Ghost illuminateth the blindnesse and darknesse of our grosse vnderstandings and directeth vs in the waies of God which leade vnto saluation 3. The Apostles and Ministers of Christ Iesus are called lights as where our Sauiour saith vnto them yee are the light of the world Mat. 5.14 Which glorious title is giuen vnto them both because of that testimonie which they giue vnto that true light the euerlasting sonne of God Christ Iesus and because of the Gospell of Christ Iesus which they preach vnto vs. 4. All the faithfull members of Christ Iesus all Christians are called lights as where the Apostle telleth the Ephesians that they were once darkenes Eph. 5.8 but are now light in the Lord and therefore exhorteth them to walke as chrildren of the light and in this place of our Apostle where they are called lights in the world shining among the sonnes of darknesse and holding forth the word of life Now the faithfull are called lights in these respects 1. In respect of Christ Iesus that true light which lighteneth euery man that commeth into the world inasmuch as he hath vouchsafed to communicate his light vnto vs and by the bright beames of his holy Spirit shining into our hearts to expell thence the thicke mists of blindnes darknesse and ignorance For whatsoeuer light the faithfull haue they haue it from him who hath light in himselfe and of himselfe and in whom is no darknesse They borrow their light from him euen as the Moone and the starres doe borrow their light from the Sunne in the firmament For hee is the sonne of righteousnesse which springing from an high hath through the tender mercy of our God visited vs to giue light to them that sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death and to
guide our feete into the way of peace and so farre as this light shineth vnto them their darknes is turned into light and they are tearmed lights of that light which they haue from this sonne of righteousnesse So that when the holy Ghost calleth the faithfull lights hee noteth therein the fellowship which they haue with Christ Iesus from whose most cleare light they borrow their light 2. The faithfull are called lights in respect of the word inasmuch as they beleeue and embrace and professe the holy word of God which hee hath ordained to be a lanthorne vnto our feete and a light vnto our steps For albeit it be the son of righteousnesse alone by the bright shining beames of whose holy Spirit our darkenesse is turned into light and we made lights in the world yet because we receiue this light by the ministerie of the word therefore both the word itselfe is called light and they likewise that receiue the word with gladnesse and walke in the light thereof are called lights For as much then as the faithfull professe the holy word of God ordained to bee the rule of our life and our direction in matters of religion in respect of this profession they are called lights 3. They are called lights in respect of their life and conuersation inasmuch as by the holinesse of their life and integritie of their conuersation they shew themselues to be exempted and deliuered from the power of darknesse Both their workes in respect of the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse are called lights and themselues glorifying God by these workes are called lights Now see what instructions these things may minister vnto vs. 1. In that the faithfull are called lights not from any light in themselues as of themselues but from that light which they haue and borrow from Christ Iesus that sonne of righteousnesse this may teach vs what we are without Christ Iesus euen darknesse without light men sitting in darknesse and in the shadow of death For looke into the best things that wee haue Our reason what is it but grosse darknesse our wisedome what is it but meere foolishnesse Our vnderstanding what is it but blinde ignorance for the naturall man 1. Hee on whom this sonne of righteousnesse hath not yet shined perceiueth not 1 Cor. 2.14 nay he cannot perceiue by all the reason wisdome and vnderstanding that he hath the things of the spirit of God Eph. 5.8 And therefore the Apostle writing to the Ephesians telleth them thus yee were once darknesse to wit before the sonne of righteousnesse had shined vpon them but are now light in the world now that the sonne of righteousnesse had shined vpon them their darknesse was turned into light Where he most plainely sheweth what is the state of all men both before and after that the sonne of righteousnesse haue shined vpon them before they are darknesse after they are light O what a good and gracious God then haue we who when we sate in darknesse and in the shadow of death gaue vs this light and so translated vs out of darknesse into light Not vnto vs ô Lord not vnto vs but vnto thy name giue the praise for that thou hast called vs out of darknesse into thy maruellous light When we walked in darkenesse thou madest vs to see a great light and when we dwelled in the land of the shadow of death thou diddest cause the light to shine vpon vs. We were once darknesse but now we are light Blessed bee thy name ô Lord which hast changed our darkenesse into light 2. In that the faithfull are called lights in respect of the word which they professe and in the light whereof they walk this may teach vs how precious the holy word of God ought to be vnto vs. If walking after the direction of the word wee onely walke in the light then iudge ye how we walke without the word Surely without it we walke in darknesse and know not whether we go no more then the blinde or blind-folded man who not discerning his way quickely wandereth out of his right path and walketh into euery by-path and runneth himselfe vpon euery danger For by the word alone we descry euery by-path we see euery danger that is to be auoided and vnderstand the glory that is prepared for vs at the end of our iourney And yet as if their we loued darknesse better then light or else know not that by the ministerie of the word of darknesse we are made light in the Lord wee care not for the word we regard it not wee let it passe as a tale that is told A hard saying truely but yet as true as hard For if we shall consider our great slacknesse in comming or our great negligence in hearing or our great carelesnesse to lay vp in our hearts the things that we haue heard all these will witnesse what account we make of the word euen no more then of a tale that is told Otherwise how should it be which hath beene obserued that since this exercise begunne not halfe of that congregation which should be here present haue beene assembled in this house of the Lord at any one Sermon Againe a great slacknesse in comming of those that doe come howsoeuer they may be obserued which either come too late or depart too quickly from this holie exercise yet who knoweth how many depart hence as little edified and instructed as when they came hither A great negligence in hearing Againe who is he that hauing heard the word doth afterward thinke or meditate with himselfe of the things that he hath heard and laieth them vp in his heart to make them the rule and direction of his life A great carelesnesse to make that vse we should of that wee haue heard And what else doe all these argue but that we make no more account of the word than of a tale that is told Well whatsoeuer account we make of it either we must walke in the light of this word or else we cannot be such lights as here the faithfull members of Christ Iesus are said to be either this word must be a light vnto our paths or else we can be no light in the Lord either the Lord must goe before vs in this word as in a pillar of fire or else wee shall be made a prey vnto our enemies the world the flesh and the deuill who seeketh continually like a roaring Lion whom hee may deuoure Thirdly in that the faithfull are called lights in respect of their holy life and conuersation this may teach vs what manner of conuersation will best become vs if wee will be lights in the world The light of our holinesse of life and integritie of conuersation must so shine before men that they may see our good workes and glorifie our Father which is in heauen Yee were once darknesse saith the Apostle to the Ephesians but are now light in the Lord Ephes 5.8 walke as children of the light In which words
place to be willing to giue vp his life for them Joh. 10.11 The good shepheard saith our Sauiour giueth his life for his sheepe Christ himselfe was indeed this good shepheard here spoken of who when wee were yet sinners died for vs. But herein likewise he set before vs a paterne how we should approue our selues to be good shepheards Nothing should bee so deare vnto vs as the good of them ouer whom the Lord made vs ouerseers persecution and banishment stripes and imprisonments yea the losse of life it selfe must rather bee indured then their saluation be neglected What then are wee simply to giue vp our liues for our flockes What if they be such as will bee glad thereat and rather then faile will themselues persecute vs yea and take our liues from vs Such sheepe indeed there are as persecute their shepheard and desire if they can to make him wearie of his life But this is that which now from our Apostle we teach that if our death may bee for the enlarging of Christ his kingdome and for the confirmation and encrease of their faith vnto whom we haue preached the Gospell then we are not to loue our liues vnto the death What then because our death may be for the confirmation of their faith are we to offer our selues vnto death Nay wee may not seeke death nor willingly runne our selues into danger But if the will of the Lord be such that by our bloud wee seale that testimony which we haue giuen to Christ Iesus and so confirme our brethren in the things that they haue heard and learned by our ministery we are not to shrinke at it but willingly to embrace it Yea but the cuppe of death is bitter how then can we be glad and reioyce in it True happily we should not greatly reioyce in that violent and vntimely death being considered in it selfe But knowing that our bloud is the seede of the Church and that by our death and persecution many are made more bold to professe the Gospell of Christ Iesus wee should be glad and reioyce in the fruit that we know comes to the Church by our death and persecution And thus our Sauiour by precept hath taught vs to doe saying Mat. 5.11.12 Act. 5.41 Blessed are yee when men reuile you and persecute you c. reioyce and bee glad for great is your reward in heauen Thus the Apostles likewise haue taught vs by example who when they had bin cast in prison and afterwards beaten departed reioycing that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for Christ his name As they by precept and example haue taught vs so ought wee to reioyce in tribulations and persecutions to be glad though we be offered vp vpon the sacrifice of their faith who by our ministerie haue belieued Should then the saluation of your soules and the confirmation of your faith be so deare vnto vs euen dearer then our owne liues How ought ye then to be affected towards vs and our ministerie It was a notable testimonie that the Apostle gaue vnto the Galathians Gal. 4.15 wherein he bore them record that if it had beene possible they would haue pluckt out their owne eies and haue giuen them to him Nothing more deare then their eyes and yet so neere had their soules beene knit vnto him in reuerence and loue for the Gospells sake that they would haue giuen him their very eies to haue done him good Shall I say that ye ought to be thus affected towards vs I say not so but I say that ye ought so to thinke of vs as of the ministers of Christ and disposers of the secrets of God Yee ought to thinke of vs as of the Embassadors for Christ and that we pray you in Christs stead as though God did beseech you through vs. In a word if we ought to lay downe our liues for our sheepe our sheepe ought to heare our voice And certainely if we were so liuely and Christianly toucht with a feeling of the sweetnesse of the word of life as we should be if the powerfulnesse thereof had so seasoned and seazed vpon our soules as it ought then would we heare his voice and obey him and follow him we would reuerence and regard him for the truths sake which he preacheth It is said of Lydia that when she had heard Paul preach and the Lord had so opened her hart that she belieued the things that Paul spak she was so desirous that Paul and those that were with him should come into her house and abide a while with her that she neuer left them till she had constrained them Act. 16.15 If yee haue iudged mee to be faithfull to the Lord saith she come into mine house and abide there and she constrained vs saith Luke It seemes besides other purposes which shee had that she thought her house would be the better if she might get them into it Not many Lydiaes I wish we might haue such hearers as Peter had that when they had heard vs would be pricked in their hearts and say vnto vs men and brethren what shall we doe Act. 2.37 such as would be so carefull to heare what we speake that they would lay the same vp in their hearts and digest it in their soules Our desire is as I said ere while that our labour in the word may not be vnto you in vaine but that by our ministery we may offer you vp as liuing sacrifices holy and acceptable vnto God If we ought not to spare our liues vnto the death for you yee ought so to heare the word of vs that yee grow vp in faith and loue and euery good worke If wee ought to poure out our bloud for an offering for you for the confirming of your faith ye ought first by faith through our ministery to be made a spirituall sacrifice vnto God that so our soules may be poured out as a drinke offering vpon the sacrifice of your faith For both these are implied here in our Apostle Wee heare what Pastor and people should doe and wee see in daily experience what they doe euen both so little answerably vnto that they should doe that it may be as truly now said as it was in the Prophets time like Pastor like people But I will not now stand farther to open and cut vp these soares Consider only in a 〈…〉 me I beseech you a reason which mee ●hinkes may be gathered from these words for the stirring vp of both Pastor and people vnto that they should doe If ye marke it both the obedience of their faith which are gained vnto Christ by the ministerie of the word and likwise the martyrdome and death of those that giue their liues for their sheepe are by a borrowed speech called sacrifices and offerings Though I be offered there the Apostle his death is called an offering vpon the sacrifice and seruice of your faith their faith whereunto by his seruice and ministery they had
obeyed is called a sacrifice Now what sacrifices be these These be the sacrifices of the new Testament these bee liuely sacrifices and holy and acceptable vnto God and these together with the sacrifice of praise and of the workes of loue are the only sacrifices which now Christians are to offer vnto their God An end of all other sacrifices was then when Christ cried vpon the crosse it is finished These onely remaine and these are our reasonable seruing of God How should not this stirre vp both Pastor and people to doe that they should In the Pastor his burning zeale to giue his life for his people in the people their obedience of faith by the ministery of their Pastors are their holy and Christian sacrifices and their reasonable seruing of God And these sacrifices are now no lesse to be offered by vs in the new Testament then were those sacrifices of beasts and other like things to be offered in the old Testament and surely are farre more acceptable vnto God then were they But I promised only to speak of this in a word Now a word likewise of that that followeth For the same cause c. In these words the Apostle armeth them against sorrow if he should be offered vp vpon the sacrifice of their faith As he would be glad and reioyce with them if their faith should be confirmed by his death so hee would haue them likewise to be glad and reioyce with him if hee by his bloud should seale the testimony of their faith What then must we be glad and reioyce when our best Pastors and teachers are taken from vs Did not the Church well when Steuen was stoned to death Act. 8.2 to make great lamentation for him Yes no doubt they did well and whensoeuer the Church is depriued of any worthy member especially of any worthy Pastor and Teacher there is iust cause of great sorrow And the Apostle alloweth a moderation in lamenting for the dead so that we sorrow not as they that haue no hope 1 Thes 4.13 And it was a part of Iehoiakims plague that he should be buried like an Asse and none to make lamentation for him The meaning then is not that we should reioyce and be glad and not mourne simply at the death of our best Pastors and Teachers but that wee should bee glad and reioyce at the fruite which comes to the Church by their death if they suffer martyrdom for the confirmation of the brethrens faith For seeing their constancie and their cheerefulnesse to seale that truth with their bloud which they taught and preached this should both make vs reioice that God giueth such strength vnto his Saints and likewise confirme vs in the faith of Iesus Christ and further animate vs patiently to endure whatsoeuer tribulations for Christ his sake The Apostle himselfe would not no doubt reioyce simply in his suffering and death but in that onely thereby God should be glorified and Gods children strengthened So we are to reioyce not simply that our Pastors and Teachers are taken by the hands of Tyrants and racked and martyred but in that God vouchsafeth thus to conforme them to the image of his sonne and to make their bloud the seede of the Church so that thereby both the faith of them that are already in the Church is confirmed and others likewise are brought vnto the faith Here only wee are to looke to this caueat that we do not iudge of a martyr only by his suffering but further by the cause of his suffering For not the suffering but the cause of his suffering makes him a Martyr If he suffer death for the testimonie of Christ Iesus his death is well called a martyrdome And in his death we are so to reioyce as already ye haue heard Thus farre of the reasons enforcing obedience to those exhortations which the Apostle inferreth vpon the example of Christ his humility and obedience which the Apostle laid as a most strong and sure ground of his exhortation vnto humblenesse and lowlines of minde LECTVRE XXXIX PHILIP 2. Verse 19.20 And I trust in the Lord Iesus to send Timotheus shortly vnto you that I also may be of good comfort when I know your state c. AND I hope in the Lord Iesus In this latter part of this Chapter the Apostle his desire is to comfort the Philippians and indeed to confirme them that they should not bee troubled though they liued in the middest of a naughty and crooked nation as it appeareth they did ex vers 15. but that they should grow forward from grace vnto grace that when hee should heare of them he might heare of them to his comfort To comfort them therefore he 1. promiseth to send Timothy vnto them a man whom themselues knew to bee a faithfull minister of Christ Iesus and to loue them sincerely 2. He putteth them in hope of his owne comming shortly after vnto them 3. He telleth them that now he sendeth their faithfull minister Epaphroditus vnto them and the causes why By all which things as the Philippians were iustly to be comforted so were they so many caueats to warne them that neither Timothy nor hee nor Epaphroditus might finde any cause of griefe or discomfort amongst them when they should come vnto them In his promise to send Timothy vnto them I note 1. his promise to send him 2. the reason why he sent him rather then any other In his promise 1. I note the holy limitation thereof 2. The promise 3. The end of sending him Touching the 1. Paul doth not absolutely promise to send Timothy vnto them but saith he I hope in the Lord Iesus c. It is to bee vnderstood that at this time when the Apostle wrote these things he was in prison at Rome where Timothy ministred vnto him and serued him in such things as he needed Now it seemes he was in hope shortly to bee deliuered out of prison and then his certaine resolution was first to send Timothy vnto them and then shortly after himselfe to come vnto them But how the Lord would dispose of these things he knew not Onely hee knew that the heart of Nero who had cast him in prison was in the hand of the Lord Iesus to dispose of as seemed best to his godly wisedome and so he loued them that he hoped the Lord Iesus would deliuer him out of prison and bring him vnto them Because therefore he knew not certainely how it would please the Lord to dispose of these things hee doth not absolutely promise to send Timothy vnto them but inasmuch as his loue to them made him to hope the best hee saith I hope in the Lord Iesus c. The lesson which hence wee haue to learne is this in all things whatsoeuer we purpose to doe still to depend vpon the will and pleasure of the Lord Iesus not resolutely to set down this or that will I doe but with these or the like conditions and limitations I
of Christ Iesus on● towards another And if in whomsoeuer they be the gifts and graces of God are by all men to be acknowledged and to be honored then surely especially in the Ministers by them that are Ministers of Iesus Christ with them howsoeuer in place they be aboue them This point might be much inlarged and what the practise is might be obserued and most worthly reproued if this place were as fit for the vrging as the time requireth the vrging of this point But my especiall desire and purpose is in this place to insist and stand vpon such things as may be most for your vse LECTVRE XLIII PHILIP 2. Verse 26. For he longed after all you and was full of heauinesse because yee heard that he had beene sicke IT remaineth now that we proceede vnto the causes why the Apostle sent Epaphroditus now presently vnto the Philippians if first we shall obserue one or two notes from one or two of those titles wherewithall the Apostle honoureth him in the 25. verse Amongst those titles wherewithall the Apostle honoreth Epaphroditus yee see how he calleth him his companion in labour In labour In what labour In the preaching of the Gospell of Christ Iesus and in the building vp of his body by the worke of his ministerie What then Is preaching of the Gospell of God such a labour Is the worke of the ministerie and the teaching of the people in the waies of God such a matter that it is to be counted or called a labour Surely no in many mens account it is not An easie matter and no labor at all for a Minister to speake an houre vnto his people What paines can this take him What toyle can be in this worke No more but turne the cocke and then the water gushes out He is either worth litle or else too too dainty that will not come at euery call vnto the people to preach to them Thus many account this worke litle or no labour Well is cunning in a race where there is striuing for the maistery or for the winning of the price or of the crowne that they runne for is thi● any labour They in those Countries where this running is much vsed can tell that it is a labour And how often doth the Holy Ghost compare the worke of the ministerie vnto this running in a race To goe no farther for proofe we heard and spake of this comparison in the 16 verse of this chapter Phil. 2.16 where the Apostle exhorted them vnto their duties both towards God and men that he might reioyce in the day of Ch●ist that he had not runne in vaine nor laboured in vaine that he had not runne nor laboured in vaine what is that that is that hi● preaching amongst them had not bin in vaine vnto them Againe is the worke of the husbandman whose worke hath end but is continually either dunging or tilling or reaping or gathering in the fruits of his ground or hedging or ditching or the like is this any labour The husbandman knoweth and we can easily imagine that it is a labour And doth not the Holy Ghost sometimes call the Ministers of the Gospell Gods husbandmen and you that heare Gods husbandry and oftentimes compare them vnto husbandmen We together saith the Apostle are as Gods labourers 1 Cor. 3 9. and yee are Gods husbandrie and Gods building Where it appeareth by the antithesis betweene the Minister and the people that the Minister is called Gods labourer that is Gods husbandman euen as the people are called Gods husbandrie And in the latter Epistle to Timothie the Minister is plainly compared vnto an husbandman 2 Tim. 2.6 whose portion it is to labour before he receiue the fruits Againe is the worke wherein men through painfulnesse and earnestnesse doe euen wearie themselues is it any labour If any be then certainly that is And doth not the holy Ghost so speake of the Ministers worke as of a worke wherein they euen weary themselues with hard labour Wee beseech you saith the Apostle that yee know them which labour among you 1 Th. 5.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and are ouer you in the Lord which labour that is which painfully and earnestly labour amongst you till they be weary But what need moe proofes for this point The Minister that will speake plainly to the vnderstanding of his people that will speake soundly vnto the heart of his people that will speake in the euidence of the spirit vnto his people that cares what and to what purpose he speake vnto his people must certainly labour both for speaking plainly and soundly and in the euidence of the spirit and for speaking to good purpose Nay what part is there of his ministerie which is not full of labour Ier. 1. To plucke vp to root out to throw downe to build and to plant all workes of the Minister all great workes and all workes full of labour So that whatsoeuer account men make of the worke of the ministerie and of the preaching of the Gospell of Christ Iesus it is a worke full of labour no lesse painfull to the minde then is the worke of the husbandman or artificer to the body and consequently the Apostle well called Epaphroditus his companion in labour euen in a painfull labour in preaching the Gospell of Christ Iesus This should teach the people ouer whom the Lord hath made them ouerseers willingly to yeeld vnto them whatsoeuer dutie by the Law of God or man belongeth vnto them whether it be of maintenance for their liuelihood or of reuerence vnto their persons And first for their maintenance it is the Apostle his disputation in the former to the Corinthians that those which sow vnto others spirituall things should reape their carnall things 1 Cor. 9.11 If wee haue sowen vnto you spirituall things saith the Apostle is it a great thing if wee reape your carnall things 13. Doe yee not know that they which minister about the holy things eat of the things of the Temple and they which wait at the Altar are partakers with the Altar So also 14. saith the Apostle by way of application hath the Lord ordained that they which preach the Gospell should liue of the Gospell For as the Apostle had said before 7. Who goeth a warfare any time at his owne cost or who planteth a vineyard and eateth not of the fruit thereof or who feedeth a flocke and eateth not of the milke of the flocke As if he should haue said no man doth so The reason whereof he bringeth out of the Law of Moses 9. For it is written saith he in the Law of Moses Thou shalt not muzzell the mouth of the Oxe that treadeth out the corne In which whole disputation that being presupposed and taken as granted which I haue proued namely that the worke of the ministerie is no idle speculation but a painfull and hard labour yee see how the Apostle inferreth thereupon as I now
and of their mortalitie Wherby also ye may easily discerne in what a different sort the Lord layeth on this rodde on the godly and on the vngodly on the one as a father on the other as a iudge on the one in loue on the other in wrath on the one to chastice and correct on the other to punish and reuenge on the one to reforme the wickednesse of their waies on the other to recompence them their wickednesse on the one to saue them from death and hell on the other to bring them to the pit of destruction Hence then may the children of God receiue notable comfort in all their sicknesse and in all their visitations For O thou 〈◊〉 of God and seruant of the most high is the hand of thy God vpon thee art thou sicke This is no other cup then ●paphroditus hath drunke before thee or then is common vnto thee with all the sonnes of God And albeit thou maist seeme vnto thy selfe that thou art not priuiledged from the wicked and vngodly because thou drinkest of the cup of his wrath because thou art visited with sicknes as well as they and perhaps more then they yet plucke vp thine heart be not discouraged but be of good comfort For hee doth not rebuke thee in his anger neither doth hee chastice thee in his displeasure but as a mercifull and louing father in tender loue and in great compassion by this his gentle hand and louing correction he calleth thee to remembrance of thy waies and lets thee see what thou art and whether thou must Thy heart is not sound and right with thy God thou art negligent in doing of his will thou hast walked in some by-path wherein thou shouldest not haue walked thus louingly and mildly he correcteth thee that thou maiest reforme the wickednesse of thy waies and there may be an healing of thine error Againe thou art walking where and whether thou shouldest not thus he staieth thee that thou runne not thy selfe vpon the rockes and that thou make not shipwracke of faith and a goood conscience Againe thus he trieth thee that thy faith and thy patience being tried thou maist be made like vnto pure and fine gold purified seuen times in the fire Againe thus he giueth thee full triall of his mercifull goodnesse towards thee comforting thee with the ioy of the holy Ghost in the bedde of thy sicknesse giuing thee patience to endure his crosse confirming thy faith in Christ Iesus and assuring thee of the hope of thy saluation Lastly thus he putteth thee in minde of thy selfe that thou shouldest not forget thy God or thy selfe but remembring that thou art both sinnefull and mortall shouldest shake of sinne and so number thy daies that thou mightest apply thine heart vnto wisedome O how should not the remembrance of these things comfort thy soule when thou liest sicke vpon thy bedde Beloued in the time of health let vs thinke of these things and in the day of sicknesse let vs not be discouraged I haue stood the longer vpon this point because the time seemeth vnto me so to require Many of our brethren the Lord hath already taken vnto himselfe many in many places are presently sicke and sharpely visited and when our turne shall be hee onely knoweth who maketh sicke restoreth vnto health In the meane time let our health be to the glory of his name and in the time of sicknesse let vs comfort our selues with these things I might here note the time when the Lord lay this his rod of sicknesse vpon Epaphroditus which was euen when he was faithfully and painfully occupied in the worke of Christ when he was carefully discharging the trust reposed in him by the Church of Philippie when hee was ministring vnto the holy Apostle lying then in prison such things as he wanted Let it not therefore seeme strange vnto vs if when we are faithfully labouring in the workes of our calling euen then the Lord strike vs with any rodde or visit vs with sicknesse Which note I doe the rather now point at by the way because the manner of some is vpon such occasions to make wonderfull ill collections As for example the Preacher confuting a point of popish doctrine groweth to be so sicke that he is forced to breake off and to come downe before he can end the point What is the collection Did not ye see say some that are popishly affected how the Lord did euen controll his discourse and by his iudgement vpon him gaue sentence on our side Another example the Iudge from his seate of iustice pronouncing sentence against the wicked Traitor or vilemalefactor presently or quickly after falleth sicke and happily not long after dieth What is the collection Thus say some hath the Lord giuen iudgement vpon him for such iudgement as he gaue against others And thus because their foolishnesse cannot reach vnto the depth of Gods counsell and wisedome in his visitations they condemne them whom the Lord hath not condemned and iudge that as vnholy and ill which the Lord approueth as holy and good Whatsoeuer he doth is holy and good and if he chastice vs with his rods euen then when wee are doing his will who shall aske him a reason of that he doth Let vs therefore learne to submit our selues vnto the Lord and let vs beware how we iudge of things according to our owne reason and imagination least happily we condemne that which the Lord hath not condemned But my meaning was only to touch this by the way Now a word of the extremity of his sicknesse Very neere vnto death Here was the extremity of his sicknesse Epaphroditus had beene sicke and so sicke that hee was very neere vnto death euen without all hope of recouerie of health in mans sight and iudgement Whence I note the wonderfull counsell and wisedome of our God who oftentimes brings his children euen to the gates of hell and thence calls them to the pit of destruction and thence fetches them to deaths doore so that there is but a steppe betweene them and death and thence deliuers them Ioseph was cast into the deepe dungeon and his feete set fast in the stockes and thence the Lord deliuered him Ionas was cast into the sea and there the Lord kept him aliue Daniel was throwne into the denne of Lyons and there the Lord rescued him and deliuered him from the teeth of the Lyons The three children were cast into the hot firie-furnace and there God prouided for them that the fire had no power ouer them to burne no not an haire of their head But most befitting our present purpose is the example of that good King Ezechias who was so sicke that all Physitions as we say in a case of extremitie gaue him ouer and there was no hope of life insomuch that the Prophet Esay came vnto him and said vnto him Thus saith the Lord Esa 38.1 put thine house in an order for thou salt die and not liue Here was
this dutie then studie to amend that which is amisse and learne so to be affected one towards another as that ye will reioyce with them that reioyce and againe weepe with them that weepe Againe it may be that the Apostle was sorie that by his occasion their Minister and Teacher was so long absent from them And therefore now when Epaphroditus was sent backe againe vnto them he was the lesse sorowfull But this being onely a coniecture my purpose is not to ground any obseruation thereupon Onely this neither may the example of the Apostle be any president for any to deteine the Minister from his charge neither may the example of Epaphroditus be to any Minister any president to absent himselfe from his charge For Epaphroditus was now absent from his people being sent by them to Minister to the necessities of the holy Apostle so that albeit he was absent from them yet was hee labouring for them euen in the worke of Christ as the Apostle speaketh in the last verse of this chapter How then can this example help them who absent themselues either for idlenesse and their owne ease or vpon other pretences which haue no lawfull warrant Againe his staying there with the Apostle was not so much by the Apostle his deteining of him as by the Philippians charge that he should stay with him and by the sickenesse wherewith God visited him How then can this example bee any warrant vnto them whom deteine Ministers from their charge either for their owne pleasures sake or in some other respect which hath no better warrant I wish that both these men would bee as sorie for deteining Ministers from their charge as it is likely the Apostle was and likewise that the Ministers as sorie for being absent from the●r charges as it is likely Epaphroditus was This were a president worthy the following the other is a president without all ground or shadow of any semblance But I purposed onely to touch this by the way Now followeth the Apostle his request for Epaphroditus Receiue him therefore in the Lord c. The Apostle hauing shewed the causes why he sent Epaphroditus vnto the Philippians now commendeth him vnto them and maketh request for him that they would entertaine him at his returne as they ought shewing withall a reason in the next verse why they should doe so In this verse 1. He sheweth how they ought to receiue and entertaine him in particular 2. How they ought to entertaine all Ministers generally being such as he was First touching the entertainment of him in particular the Apostle willeth them to receiue him first in the Lord then with all gladnesse In that he willeth and exhorteth them to receiue him in the Lord his meaning is that they should receiue him not as a priuate friend not as one sent from him whom for his sake they should vse kindly but as the seruant of the Lord and as one sent euen by God himselfe vnto them For herein the Apostle may in part seeme to allude vnto that extremitie of sicknesse whence he could not possibly haue beene deliuered but onely by Gods mercy on him And therefore now he was sent vnto them not so much by the Apostle as by the Lord who onely did saue his life from death Againe in that he exhorteth them to receiue him with all gladnesse his meaning is that as he longed after them all so they should all receiue him with all gladnesse euen with exceeding ioy for his comming vnto them For so the same words that are heere vsed are well translated Iam. 1.2 Here then we are taught how to intreat and entertaine and receiue the Ministers of the Lord first in the Lord that is as seruants of the Lord and sent by God vnto vs. So the Apostle giueth testimonie vnto the Galathians that they receiued him where he saith But yee receiued me as an Angell of God Gal. 4.14 yea as Christ Iesus And that they are so to be honored and accounted of he againe sheweth where he saith 1 Cor. 4.1 Let a man so thinke of vs as of the Ministers of Christ and disposers of the secrets of God And why are they so to be thought of and so to be honoured The reason is plaine they are the Embassadors of Christ Iesus in Christ his stead beseeching vs that we would be reconciled vnto God So saith the Apostle Now then saith he we are embassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you through vs 2 Cor. 5.20 we pray you in Christ his stead that yee be reconciled vnto God Now Embassadors yee know are to be receiued as the Prince from whom they are sent so that the Ministers of Christ are to be receiued euen as Christ Iesus And therefore our Sauiour saith He that receiueth you receiueth me Mat. 10.40 and he that receiueth mee receiueth him that sent mee Againe Embassadors yee know speake not in their owne name but in the Princes name that sent them so that the Ministers of Christ are to be heard as Christ whose Ministers they are And therefore our Sauiour saith He that heareth you heareth me Luk. 10.16 and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me And yet see how hardly we are brought to receiue and harken to this instruction Indeede it grieueth mee to see how the Ministers of the Lord are receiued euen in this auditorie Euery fit opportunitie hath beene taken to put you in minde of these things And what neerer are yee then at the first Are the Ministers of Christ Iesus to be receiued in the Lord and for the Lord Are they the Embassadors of Christ Iesus and therefore to be receiued and to be heard as Christ Iesus How happens it then that some will not at all almost come to heare them that some come so slackly to heare them and that some turne their backs vpon them and will not stay to heare them If the Embassador of an earthly Prince should be vsed in such like sort would not sharpe stormes and sore displeasure follow vpon it And shall the Embassadors of the King of heauen and King of Kings be so vsed and will not his anger and heauy displeasure be kindled at it If we sought our honour we might well goe without it seeing the Lord cannot haue it But we seeke not our owne honour but the honour of him that sends vs euen the honour of Christ Iesus whose word we preach vnto you We would be honored for the words sake and therefore we would haue the word much more honoured And therefore we call you vnto the hearing of the word euen of the word of life euen of the word of your saluation But how preuaile we Those that will not come what should I speake vnto them I iudge them not there is one that iudgeth them Of such as doe come some come so seldome that it may seeme they come when their leisure from other
our owne as for their wealth in good sort and things necessarie to this life so for their health and therefore auoide such occasions as whereby wee might bring their health in danger Againe we haue many examples in the holy Scriptures of that great Eliah of our Sauiour Christ Iesus of the blessed Apostles and of many others that did for the time auoide such dangers as otherwise would haue ouertaken them and did not alwaies thinke it meete to hazard themselues in euery occurrent danger Which reason I doe the rather in this place bring because if they might then much more priuate men sometimes may for the time withdraw themselues from danger Now if here it be obiected and said that auoiding of sicknesse and other dangers is an argument of distrust in God and therefore we may not withdraw our selues in such times I answer that it is no sure argument The wicked indeede withdraw themselues in such times of danger because they distrust in God and thinke that God either cannot or will not helpe them and deliuer them from the danger and such auoiding of sicknesse or other danger is wicked and vngodly The children of God therefore withdraw themselues because they know that it is lawfull to vse such remedies against dangers as are lawfull and good and such auoiding is lawfull Againe if it be said that to auoid at such times is to no purpose because God hath certainly decreed whom to take and whom to leaue at such times and none but they alone shall die I answer that in like sort it may be said that it was to no purpose for Iacob to send into Egypt to buy corne Gen. because God had certainly decreed to saue him and his familie from the famine Act. 27. and likewise to no purpose that Paul should keepe the mariners from flying out of the ship by boat lest all should perish because God had decreed to saue all them that sailed with them And yet wee see that both Iacob sent into Egypt and Paul caused the souldiers to cut off the ropes of the boat both vsing such meanes as God had ordained whereby to bring his will to passe and therein leauing vs an ensample to doe the same Againe if it be said that it is a scandall so to withdraw our selues I answer that it is a scandall taken not giuen Againe if it be said that whereas wee should loue our neighbours as our selues thus wee doe forsake them and so leaue the rule of loue and charitie I answer that to leaue them for a time when there are either some of their friends or some others prouided for the nonce to looke vnto them is not to forsake them neither is against the rule of loue and charitie Nay it were very preposterous loue and charitie so to be deuoted vnto this or that priuate friend as by that occasion to bring in danger a whole familie or charge whatsoeuer committed vnto them Neither doe I know any thing which can be brought to crosse that which hath beene said touching priuate mens auoiding of dangers which may not as easily be answered Now touching publike men Magistrates and Ministers the doubt is somewhat more difficult To instance in Ministers to shew mine opinion in briefe in my iudgement the Ministers are first and principally to looke vnto the good of the whole Church and then vnto the good of euery particular member thereof If there bee many Ministers of one Church some one by lot or common consent may be deputed to regard the sicke and the rest may auoid the danger But if there be but one he is so to be carefull for the sicke as that the rest of the Church may not be depriued of his ministerie Hee may and must comfort the sicke and goe vnto them in such sort and so neere as hee well can without danger and againe he may and must auoid manifest danger for the good of the rest of the Church so much as he can without impietie Neither may too much feare withdraw him too much from danger neither through too much boldnesse may hee thrust himselfe too much into danger for by too much feare hee is more slow to the worke of Christ then he should be and by too much boldnesse he more endangereth both himselfe and the Church then hee should To conclude the whole point therefore howsoeuer it be most true that it is a very commendable thing in the seruants of Iesus Christ to hazzard their liues as Epaphroditus did for the worke of Christ yet sometimes both priuate and also publike men may withdraw themselues from danger in such sort as already hath beene shewed Another particular obseruation hence I gather which is this that releeuing them that are in bonds and in prison and ministring vnto the necessities of Gods Saints vpon earth is a worke of Christ for so the Apostle in this place as wee see calleth it It is I say a worke of Christ such a one as hee commandeth Heb. 13.3 and loueth and rewardeth Remember them that are in bonds saith the holy Ghost by the Apostle as though yee were bound with them and them that are in affliction as if yee were also afflicted in the body 1 Tim. 6.16 And to Timothy the Apostle saith Charge them that are rich in the world that they be ready to giue and glad to distribute laying vp in store for themselues a good foundation c. Againe how the holy Ghost loueth this worke may appeare by that of Paul 2 Tim. 1.16 where he saith The Lord giue mercy vnto the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed mee and was not ashamed of my chaine c. and by that where the Apostle saith Heb. 13.16 To doe good and to distribute forget not for with such sacrifices God is pleased Againe how Christ rewardeth this worke wee see in the Gospell where setting the sentence of the last iudgement he saith Mat. 25.34 Come yee blessed of my Father c. Contrariwise how the Lord hateth the neglect of this dutie of ministring vnto the necessities of his poore Saints on earth wee may see both by the example of that churlish Nabal of whose badnesse this is especially registred as most hatefull vnto the Lord 1 Sa. 25.10 that he would not releeue the necessitie of Dauid being in distresse but sent away his seruants with crooked and churlish answers and likewise by the example of the rich man in the Gospell of whom likewise this is especially registred as most hatefull vnto the Lord Luk. 16.19 that when Lazarus lay at his gate full of sores and desired to be refreshed with the crummes that fell from the rich mans table the dogges came vnto him and did more for him then the rich man would doe and likewise by the testimonie of Iohn where hee saith Whosoeuer hath this worlds good and seeth his brother haue need 1 Ioh. 3.17 and shutteth vp his compassion from him how
dwelleth the loue of God in him As if the Apostle should haue said Whatsoeuer shew this man makes the loue of God dwels not in him neither he loueth God nor God loueth him Men and brethren what should more stirre you vp vnto this holy worke of releeuing of Gods poore Saints a thing so needfull now to be vrged and pressed what I say should more stirre you vp vnto it then this which hath already beene said It is a worke of Christ which Christ commandeth which hee loueth and liketh which Christ highly rewardeth and vnmercifulnesse to the poore he hateth and detesteth As euery man therefore wisheth in his heart so let him giue vnto the poore Saints not grudgingly or of necessitie for God loueth a cheerefull giuer 2 Cor. 9.7 If it be a worke of Christ it well beseemeth thee if thou be a Christian if he haue commanded it it stands thee vpon to obey it if he loue and like it thou hast great cause to moue thee to it if for his mercies sake he reward it thou hast great reason to be occupied in it and if he so hate the neglect of it it behoueth thee not to be negligent in it As therefore euery man hath receiued of the Lord so let him be ready to giue according to that he hath Hee that hath mercy on the poore Pro. 19.17 lendeth vnto the Lord and the Lord will recompence him that which hee hath giuen And blessed is hee saith Dauid Psal 41.1 that considereth the poore and needie the Lord shall deliuer him in the time of trouble Consider what I say and the Lord giue you a ●ight vnderstanding in all things and fill your hearts full of all knowledge that yee may abound in euery good vnto the glory of God the Father to whom with the Sonne and the holy Ghost c. Laus omnis soli Deo THE THIRD CHAPTER LECTVRE XLVIII PHILIP 3. Vers 1.2 Moreouer my brethren reioyce in the Lord. It grieueth me not to write the same things vnto you and for you it is a sure c. THe holy Apostle hauing in the first chapter of this Epistle first signified his good minde towards the Philippians by retaining them in perfect memorie by his longing after them all from the very heart roote in Iesus Christ and by his praying for them and hauing afterward exhorted them that they should not shrinke for his imprisonment because thereby the Gospell was confirmed and not diminished In the second Chapter as we haue heard he first exhorted them vnto humility that putting apart all contention and vaine glory they would haue euen the same minde that was in Christ Iesus who being God humbled himselfe to be man and became obedient to the death euen the death of the Crosse and was therefore highly exalted c. 2. Hauing grounded certaine exhortations vpon that example of Christ his humilitie and obedience as 1. That they would runne forward in that race of righteousnesse wherein God had freely placed them through Iesus Christ making an end of their saluation with feare and trembling and then that they would doe all things with their neighbours without murmuring and reasonings that they might be blamelesse and pure and the sonnes of God c. The Apostle I say hauing grounded these exhortations vpon that example of Christ his humilitie and obedience 2. For their comfort and confirmation against certaine false Apostles crept in amongst them hee both promised to send Timothy shortly vnto them and likewise that himselfe would shortly after that come vnto them and besides sent their Minister Epaphroditus presently vnto them Now in this 3. Chapter the Apostle instructeth the Philippians in the things wherein the false Apostles laboured to seduce them and so armeth the Philippians against them till his comming vnto them by confuting that false doctrine which they deliuered The doctrine which the false Apostles deliuered was that not Christ alone and faith in his name but circumcision also and the workes of the law were necessarie vnto iustification and saluation Which doctrine the Apostle doth at large confute in the Epistle to the Galathians because they had suffered themselues to be seduced and bewitched by it But here because the Philippians had manfully withstood it and giuen it no place amongst them the Apostle very briefly confuteth it and proueth that our righteousnesse is onely by Christ and faith in his name not at all by the works of the Law The principall parts of this Chap●er are three 1. He exhorteth them to beware of false Teachers verse 2. and instructeth them in that truth which the false Apostles gainesay vers 3. 2. The Apostle proposeth himselfe as an imbracer of that truth touching mans righteousnesse which they were to embrace à vers 4. ad 15. Lastly hee exhorteth them to embrace and hold fast the same truth with him and to walke as they haue him for an ensample from vers 15. to the end of the Chapter Now before he come to the handling of any of these principall parts 1. He setteth downe this exhortation reioyce in the Lord as a conclusion of that which went before as a ground of that which followeth 2. He excuseth h●mselfe for writing now the same things by epistle which before he had taught them by word of mouth That the exhortation is set downe partly by way of conclusion of that which he had spoken before may appeare by the entrance vnto it in that he saith Moreouer c. For it is as if the Apostle had thus said hitherto ye haue been full of heauines partly for my bonds and imprisonment Phil. 1.12.14 partly for Epaphroditus your minister his sicknes Now for my bonds they ●s I haue told you haue turned rather to the furthering of the Gospell inasmuch as many of the brethren in the Lord are boldned through my bonds to speake the word and now so it is that I am in good hope shortly to be deliuered from my bonds and to come vnto you Again for Epaphroditus God hath had mercy vpon him and now he is returned vnto you in good and perfect health What therefore now remaineth my brethren but that ye be glad and reioyce in the Lord in the Lord I say whom before I haue described vnto you in that Lord who being in the forme of God thought it no robberie to be equall with God yet made himselfe of no reputation and tooke on him the forme of a seruant c. Reioyce for that there is no other cause but that ye should reioyce but reioice in the Lord who became man for you died for your sinnes rose againe for your iustification setteth at the right hand of God to make request for you vnto whom euery knee in that day shall bowe and confesse that he is the Lord reioyce in him Againe it is partly set downe as a ground of that which followeth as if the Apostle should thus haue said I haue already as in a glasse
presented vnto your view the great mysterie of godlinesse euen God manifested in the flesh iustified in the spirit 1 Tim. 3.16 seene of Angels preached vnto the Gentiles belieued on in the world and receiued vp into glory He it is and he alone it is that is made of God vnto you wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption that hee that reioyceth might reioyce in him Reioyce therefore in him and beware of such as teach you to reioyce in any thing but in him Thus ye see how this exhortation is partly a conclusion of that which went before and partly a ground and foundation of that which followeth The excuse which followeth is to meete with that conceit which the Philippians happily might haue vpon his often admonition First by word and now by writing to beware of false Apostles For thus the Apostle thought they might conceiue and thinke with themselues you haue often when you were with vs admonished vs of false Apostles and Teachers when you taught vs and preached vnto vs Christ Iesus you ceased not to warne vs to beware of such as would seeke to seduce vs from that truth which you taught vs and wee haue beene diligent so to doe neither haue we giuen place to any of their doctrines And therefore you needed not to haue troubled your selfe this admonition needed not to vs The Apostle therefore to meete with this telleth them that for him it is no griefe or trouble to him at all to write the same things vnto them which before hee had taught them by word of mouth and for them hee telleth them that it is a sure and a safe thing that they be often admonished of false Teachers that so they may be the more warie of them Thus much for the vnderstanding of these words Now before wee proceed any farther let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence For our vse and instruction The 1. thing which here I note is the maner how the Apostle doth exhort the Philippians which is in most milde and kinde and good sort speaking vnto them as vnto his brethren yea calling them his brethren not that they were his brethren naturally according to the flesh by carnall generation but his brethren in Christ begotten in one wombe of the Church the spouse of Christ vnto one God the father of our Lord Iesus Christ and father of vs all by one immortall seed the word of God through one spirit whereinto we are all baptized borne by spirituall generation not of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Exhorting then the Philippians whom hee had begotten in the faith vnto Christ by his ministerie hee speaketh vnto them as vnto his brethren in Christ most mildly and kindly and louingly So we see he doth in the second Chapter and twelfth verse where exhorting them to humilitie and obedience and to finish their saluation with feare and trembling hee speaketh thus vnto them wherefore my beloued as ye haue alwaies obeyed c. So in the next Chapter he ioyneth both these together and a great deale more and saith Therefore my brethren beloued and longed for my ioy and my crowne c. Most milde and louing exhortations And wherefore vseth hee such mildnesse in his exhortations vnto them No doubt the rather to winne them to hearken vnto him and vnto that whereto hee exhorteth them For as sharpe and bitter words often stirres vp striefe and anger so a soft tongue milde and louing speeches much auaile to effect that which a man desires Here then is a lesson for vs whom God hath set apart vnto the holy worke of his ministerie that we should not onely be carefull to instruct ●hem that heare vs in the wholesome words of truth but that a meeknesse also of spirit wee should exhort them vnto the things that belong vnto their peace A thing practised by Christ himselfe and practised likewise by the Apostles of Iesus Christ as by many places in the new Testament it may easily appeare Here then happily you will say vnto me how is it then that many of you are so sharpe and eager in speech how is it that ye follow not the practise of Christ and of his Apostles We are indeed sometimes sharpe wee come sometimes with a rodde as the Apostle speakes yea sometimes we bring an axe with vs and lay it to the roote of the tree to cut it downe that it may be cast into the fire sometimes we pluck vp and roote out and throw downe sometimes wee strike and wound and kill and herein wee follow the practise of Christ and of his Apostles Would it not seem a sharp speech vnto you if we should lift vp our voices and crie Mat. 12.34 Ioh. 8.44 O generation of vipers how can ye speake good things when yee are euill or if ●e should say ye are of your father the Deuill and the lusts of your father ye will doe or if we should say ye fooles Luc. 11 40.42.43 c. did not hee that made that which is without make that which is within also or if we should come with woe vpon woe vnto such and such men And yet speaking thus we should speake no otherwise then our Sauiour Christ did Did not the Apostle likewise vse sharpe peaches vnto the Galathians when he said vnto them Galat. 3.1.3 O foolish Galathians who hath bewitched you that yee should not obey the truth are ye so foolish that after ye haue begunne in the spirit yee would now be made perfit by the flesh And did not Iames likewise vse great sharpnes boldnes of speach against richmen saying Iam. 5.1.2.3.4.5.6 Go to now ye rich men weepe and houle for your miseries that shall come vpon you c. ye haue liued in pleasure on the earth and in wantones ye haue nourished your hearts as in a day of slaughter ye haue condēned killed the iust and he hath not resisted you therefore we be sometimes somewhat rough and sharpe ye see we do not therein swarue from the rule and practise of Christ or his Apostles Eccles 3.1.3 To all things saith the Preacher there is an appointed time and a time to euery purpose vnder the heauen A time to slay and a time to heale a time to breake downe and a time to build c. So I say there is a time to bee rough and sharpe and there is a time to be milde and gentle there is a time to strike and wound and there is a time to comfort and to heale The same God that came in a soft and still voice vnto Eliah 1 Reg. 19.12 Num. 16.32 Leuit. 10.2 and not in the earthquake not in the fire came vnto Korah Dathan and Abiram in the earthquake and vnto Nadab and Abihu in the fire and the one sort were deuoured by the earthquake and the other sort by the fire When men are hardened in sinne and will
vnto that righteousnesse which is of God through faith to the end I say that he might bring the Iewes from those outward things of the flesh vnto the inward knowledge of Christ Iesus he raised vp to this purpose this holy Apostle that he being a manfully furnished with all prerogatiues in all such outward thing● as they reioyced in might both be of greater authoritie with them and likewise haue the greater possibilitie to draw them from workes vnto grace from the law vnto Christ For if it had beene so that he had perswaded them to renounce all confidence in the flesh and to reioyce onely in Christ Iesus hauing himselfe no cause of confidence in the flesh they might happily lightly haue esteemed him and thought that because himselfe had nothing touching the flesh whereof to reioyce therefore he enuied them and perswaded them to renounce all confidence in the flesh But when now they should see that he that thus perswaded them was one that had greater cause of confidence in the flesh then had the best of them they must needs likewise see that surely his perswasions proceeded from a certaine and sound iudgment and not from any conceited opinion or hatefull enuy So we see that to teach men that pleasures and sumptuous buildings and riches and possessions and the like were all but vanitie and vexation of the spirit he stirred vp Salomon who hauing had his fill of all kinde of pleasures which either his eye Eccles 2. or his heart could desire and hauing built goodly houses and great workes and hauing gathered great riches and treasures and gotten large possessions aboue all that were before him in Ierusalem was so fit to teach that lesson that he saying of all those things that they were but vanitie and vexation of the spirit the truth thereof might the rather be beleeued So likewise when the Church had sate now a long time in the darknesse of Romish Egypt and had beene bewitched as with many other grosse errors so with this of iustification by workes and merits of their owne making we see that to purge the Church of these pestilent diseases he raised vp not many yeares ago in Germanie that reuerend Luther who hauing beene a long time more pharisaicall and zealous in those monkish waies and doctrines then the common sort of his order and hauing liued as Erasmus witnesseth Epist lib. 5. Melan. l. 6. Wolsac so that none of all his enemies could euer charge him with any note of iust reprehension might so much the rather preuaile with the Church to draw them from those dreames and dregs of superstition and idolatrie wherein they were drowned And thus oftentimes it seemeth good to the wisdome of our God to the end that he may the rather draw his people either from errors in opinion or corruptions in life to raise vp of themselues some such as haue as deeply beene drencht in those errors which they maintaine and delighted asmuch in those follies which they follow as they themselues that when they shall disclaime such and such errors or renounce such and such follies the rest may the rather hearken vnto them and be induced by them to disclaime their errors and to renounce their follies Whence I make this double vse 1. This may teach them whom it hath pleased the Lord to reclaime from error in opinion or folly in life to consider why the Lord hath thus in mercy dealt with them and accordingly to performe such duties vnto the Lord as are required of them Art thou then called out of the darknesse of Romish Egypt vnto the glorious light of the Gospell of Iesus Christ Art thou freed from the bondage of that Romish Pharaoh into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God by the day-starre arising in thine heart It is a great mercy of the Lord vnto thee thus to deliuer thy soule from death and thy feete from sliding But consider thou whether the Lord hath not also in wisdome done this that thou hauing beene nusled vp in their superstitious errors and as egerly maintained them as they shouldst now labour to draw them out of darknesse into light and from vaine confidence in the flesh to reioyce in Christ Iesus What doest thou know but that the Lord therefore suffered thee for a while to sit in darknes and in the shadow of death that when afterward the day-starre should ●rise in thine heart thou mightest both labour the more with them and likewise be in the better possibilitie to preuaile with hem Follow thou therefore the example of this holy Apostle and labour to weyne them as from other their errors so from confidence in their workes and in merits of their owne making that they may reioyce wholly in Christ Iesus and onely put their trust in his name Againe hast thou haunted with vaine persons and beene delighted in the companie of the wicked hast thou runne with a theefe when thou sawest him and beene partaker with the adulterers hast thou giuen thy money vnto vsury or taken reward against the innocent haue thine hands wrought or thy feete runne vnto or thy thought deuised or thy heart consented vnto this or that sinne or iniquitie and hath the Lord now reclaimed thee It is a great mercy of the Lord no doubt vnto thee But consider thou whether the Lord hath not also in wisdome done this that thou mightest draw them with whom sometimes thou sortedst thy selfe vnto a reformation of their waies What knowest thou but that he hath reclaimed thee from such and such inordinate waies that hauing walked with them thou mightest be the meanes of reforming them As it hath pleased the Lord therefore to reclaime euery man from any error in opinion or folly in life so let him labour to reforme such errors or follies in them whom hee knowes to be intangled with them euer remembring that of our Sauiour vnto Peter when thou art conuerted strengthen thy brethren Luk. 22.32 and likewise that that he which converteth a sinner from going astray out of his way Iam. 5.20 saueth a soule from death and hideth a multitude of sinnes 2. This may teach them that are as yet holden with any error in opinion or folly in life to hearken vnto those whom the Lord hath raised euen of themselues to admonish them of their errors or of their follies For thus they should consider with themselues He was so affected as now I am and had as great skill and will to maintaine those things which now he doth oppugne as I haue and if the Lord haue now reuealed vnto him that which as yet he hath kept hid from mine eyes who am I that I should not hearken vnto him Againe he was so delighted as now I am and did runne after such sinnes and iniquities as he now speaketh against as now I doe and if the Lord haue now so lightned his eyes that he both seeth the folly of his owne waies and calleth me from the like
the Pharisies where he telleth them that the Publicans and harlots shall goe before them into the kingdome of God Matt. 21 31. The meaning is not that the wicked and lewd life of the Publicans and harlots did more commend them vnto God then did the religious and strict life of the Pharisies but thereby our Sauiour giueth them to vnderstand that because of their conceit and confidence in their owne righteousnesse they were further from the kingdome of God then were the greatest sinners that were so that there was more hope of the greatest sinners that were that they would sooner come to repentance and sooner come vnto him then would they that had confidence in their owne workes and in their owne righteousnesse The more confidence then that we haue in our owne workes and in our owne righteousnesse the more strangers wee are from Christ and his righteousnesse If wee cleaue wholly to our workes as thinking to be iustified or saued by them wee are wholly separated from Christ Iesus and haue no part in that saluation which is by grace through faith in his name or if wee clea●● in part vnto our workes then doe wee diminish the glory of Christ Iesus Nay I say more if wee cleaue in part vnto our workes wee haue no part in Christ or in saluation by him Which I take it is plaine by that of our Apostle verse 3. of this chapter where hee saith Wee reioyce in Christ Iesus a●● haue no confidence in the flesh as if he should haue said If we● should haue confidence in the flesh then should wee not reioice in Christ Iesus The conclusion then must needs bee that all our workes by reposing confidence in them how good soeuer they seeme to be are indeed losse and hurtfull vnto vs. For what more hurtfull then to withhold vs from comming vnto Christ vnto these of the Apostle let mee adde a 3. respect wherein also euen all our workes generally are but losse and dung which is in respect of the quality of our works in themselues For if our best workes should be weighed in the ballance of the sanctuarie they would be found too light if they should be examined after the strict rule of Gods iustice they would make vs lift vp our voices with Dauid and say Psa 143.2 enter not into iudgement with thy seruant ô Lord for in thy sight shall no man liuing be iustified Iob. 14.4 For who can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse there is not one that can do it How good therefore how righteous and holy soeuer we be yet must we know that all our righteousnesse is but as filthy clouts out of the Prophet Es 64.6 Whether therefore we compare our workes and our righteousnesse by workes with the knowledge of Christ and the righteousnesse which we haue by faith in his name or whether we respect the reposing of any part of our confidence in them or whether we respect our workes in themselues if they should be examined by the Law of God we see that they are no vantage but losse and as the Apostle tearmeth them dung Which doctrine how true and likewise how necessary it is the Apostle his insisting and beating vpon it doth euidently shew For ye see that the three seuerall repetitions hereof taketh vp this whole verse almost What then doe we condemne good workes doe we make this account of them that so we may banish them out of the country So some tell you but most vntruely For in all places wee exhort all men that they abound in euery good worke and we giue all encouragement thereunto Wee tell you that good workes are the way which God hath ordained that we should walke in vnto heauen and that without holinesse of life no man shall see the Lord wee tell you that God commandeth them that God rewardeth them that God is well pleased with them and that they are truely good workes though they be not perfectly good workes yea wee tell you that they are accounted vnto vs as perfectly good because whatsoeuer imperfection is in them is for Christ his sake couered and not imputed vnto vs. Thus wee haue learned and therefore thus we tell you Also we tell you that yee are not to repose any confidence of your saluation in them but all in Christ Iesus that they are to bee counted but losse and dung in comparison of the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus and of his righteousnesse that our workes be they neuer so good doe not make vs righteous before God that wee are saued not of workes but by grace through faith in Christ Iesus and that none of all our workes can abide the seueritie of Gods iudgement much lesse merit any grace at Gods hands Thus also we haue learned and therfore thus also we tell you And doe we condemne good workes because wee teach you the truth touching good workes We desire and we pray that ye may abound in all knowledge and in euery good worke but we are iealous that ye should not grow to an ouerwening conceit of them Good workes must be done but we must not trust to be iustified or saued by them because that honour onely belongeth vnto God Let this teach vs to renounce all confidence in our owne workes and in our owne righteousnesse whatsoeuer and to beware of them that tell vs that our workes are meritorious and worthy of heauen For if wee flatter our selues with a proud and pharisaicall conceit of our owne righteousnesse by our workes Luc. 18.14 we shall depart home iustified as the Pharisie W● must therefore come vnto Christ as the Publican confessing our owne vnrighteousnesse and acknowledging our owne nakednesse in our selues if we will be cloathed with the long white robe of his righteousnesse For hee filleth the hung●e with good thing● but sendeth away the rich emptie Hee came not to cal or to clothe the righteous in their own conce●● but he iustifieth the wicked and clotheth the naked For hee respecteth the humble and lowly but for the proud he beholdeth them a farre off Let vs therfore humble our selues in our selues and only reioyce in Christ Iesus If we do any thing that is good it is not of our selues but onely from grace and if we receiue a reward for any good that we doe it is not for the merit of the worke but of the mercie of the Lord for we must still hold that rule of our Sauiour that when wee haue done all that we can yet must we say Luc. 17.10 we are vnprofitable seruants we haue done that which was our dutie to doe Now vnprofitable seruants what merit they Or they which onely doe their duty what merit they Surely other merit of any works we know none but of death If therefore we will bee made righteous before God let vs renounce all merit of grace by our owne workes all confidence in our owne righceousnes Let vs abound in euery good worke but
and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption that there is no condemnation vnto them that are in Christ Iesus and that by faith in him we are made one with him and he with vs all this and much more touching Christ we know by the glorious light of the Gospell which hath shined in our hearts ● Pet. 1.19 And this is that knowledge which the Apostle here calleth the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus Excellent indeed aboue all other knowledge and excellent euen as much as our life and saluation is worth And this knowledge of Christ is compared by the Apostle Peter vnto the day starre An excellent knowledge and such as is so much more glorious then the knowledge of Christ by the law as is the light and brightnesse of the day-starre more glorious then the light and brightnesse of a candle The third knowledge of Christ is in heauen when wee shall see him face to face which is the most excellent knowledge of Christ of all the rest For then shall we see him as he is then shall we enioy the continuall fruition of his presence then shall we see the name written vpon his thigh The King of Kings and Lord of Lords then shall that knowledge which is now onely in part be fully perfited And this knowledge of Christ is compared vnto the Sunne in her brightnes and is as much more excellent then the second as the second is then the first Now the knowledge of Christ Iesus of which the Apostle here speaketh is not this last nor the first knowledge of Christ but the second which he calleth excellent both in it selfe and in respect of his first knowledge of Christ For he had before a generall and obscure darke knowledge of Christ by the bookes of Moses and the writings of the Apostles being brought vp at the feete of Gamaliel but that was nothing in respect of this this was the excellent knowledge and for this excellent knowledge sake he counted both his former knowledge and all things else to be but losse and dunge Now how all things are to be iudged losse and dunge for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ Iesus that is in the next place to be considered Birth kinred nobilitie wealth learning knowledge holinesse of life righteousnes temperance sobriety and the like euen all outward things and all our workes whatsoeuer are all to be iudged losse and dunge for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ Iesus What then Must we renounce birth kinred nobilitie and the like Must we make away our wealth and riches and vow a voluntarie pouertie Must we remit all care of learning and knowledge and in stead thereof imbrace ignorance Must we leaue of to follow after holinesse of life righteousnesse temperance sobriety and the like Must we cease from good workes if we will be partakers of the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus No such matter Paul needed not to renounce his tribe his kinred his noble parentage neither was he to grow dissolute or negligent in the obseruation of the commandements and ordinances of the law that he might come to the knowledge of Christ His circumcision was commanded his tribe and kinred were worthy prerogatiues and his workes done according to the law were very commendable He was not therefore simply to renounce or clearely to abiure all those things but onely to renounce all confidence in these things if he would be a Christian Right so it is to be said generally Is any man noble and great by birth and parentage So were many godly kinges of Israel and Iudah But therein we may not secure our selues as if therefore we needed to feare no euill Is any man rich and wealthy So was Abraham and Lot but if riches increase let no man set his heart vpon them let no man trust in vncertaine riches Is any man holy righteous which feareth God and aboundeth in euery good worke So were the Saints of God therefore renowned in the holy scriptures and let him that is such be such still He that is holy let him be holy still and he that is righteous let him be righteous still Yea let euery man labour and striue still more and more to increase in all knowledge and vnderstanding in euery good thing and in euery good worke But let no man reioyce or put any confidence of his saluation in these things but as it is written He that reioyceth let him reioyce in the Lord. How then are all these outward things to be iudged losse and dunge Certainely not in respect of the substance of the things or of the good workes which are done For the things such as we haue spoken of as honour riches wisdome learning knowledge and the like are the good gifts and blessings of the Lord thankfully to be enioyed and vsed to his glory and likewise good works are commanded and rewarded by God and are well-pleasing in his sight as the Apostle witnesseth where he saith Heb. 13.16 To doe good and to distribute forget not for with such sacrifice God is pleased It is not then in respect of the substance of these outward things that they are to be iudged to be losse dunge but they are to be iudged losse and dung in respect of any confidence to be reposed in them for better it is that we wanted them then that we should repose any trust or confidence in them For besides that they are as a staffe of reede on which if a man leane it will breake into shiuers and hurt him confidence in them doth stay vs and hinder vs from comming vnto Christ and reposing that confidence in him which we ought to haue in him Which is plainely proued by that of the Apostle and that of our Sauiour which I mentioned the last day For the Apostle maketh this the reason why the Iewes submitted not themselues vnto the righteousnesse of God because they went about to stablish their owne righteousnesse Rom. 10.3 They saith he being ignorant of the righteousnes of God and going about to stablish their owne righteousnesse submitted not themselues to the righteousnesse of God What was the cause of their blindnesse and ignorance of the righteousnesse of God What was the cause why they submitted not themselues vnto the righteousnesse of God Here it was they went about to stablish their owne righteousnesse they had a great conceit of their owne workes done according to the Law they thought themselues righteous by them and therefore they cared not for comming vnto Christ nor sought not after the righteousnesse of God in him And this was the very cause why our Sauiour told the Pharisies that the Publicans and the harlots should goe before them into the kingdome of God The Pharisies had a proud conceit Mat 21.31 and a very great confidence in their owne righteousnesse insomuch that they iustified themselues aboue all other men And therfore our Sauiour hereby giues them to vnderstand that they are farther from the kingdome
the workes which go before and the workes which follow after faith For those are euill these are good workes those proceede from an impure heart these from an heart purified by faith those cannot please God these are pleasing and acceptable vnto God those are in iustice rewarded with death these are in mercy rewarded with life those euen the very best of them haue the nature of sinne and are wholly vnholy these are in part holy and may truely be called our inherent righteousnesse But for any part in that righteousnes whereby we are made righteous before God euen these workes which are the fruits of faith they haue no part at all in it They cannot hide or put away our sinnes they cannot endure the seueritie of Gods iudgement here they must giue place here they are to be iudged losse and dung The reason then why our very best workes are no part of our righteousnesse before God is because that in euery such view and examination of them they are to be iudged losse and euen dung So the Apostle counted such workes as he did euen then when he wrote these things and therefore much more are we to make the same account of whatsoeuer good workes we doe after that our hearts be purified by faith in Christ Iesus The exception which is taken against this doctrine from this place by some is this they say the Apostle doth not here speake of such workes as he did after he belieued but onely of such workes as he did before he belieued before his conuersion vnto Christ and therefore that hence nothing can be gathered against iustification by workes done after faith in Christ Iesus But how peruersly they falsifie the meaning of the Apostle your selues may easily iudge by that which already hath beene spoken For the Apostle hauing spoken in the former verse of such workes as he did before he belieued affirming of them that howsoeuer they seemed vantage vnto him before his conuersion vnto Christ yet afterwards hee counted them no vantage but losse for Christ his sake doth in this verse speake not onely of them but of all his workes generally whatsoeuer and whensoeuer done saying yea doubtlesse I thinke all things but losse c. It cannot be denied but that he spake in the former verse of such works as he did before he belieued And when he addeth vnto that this generall terme yea doubtlesse I thinke all things but losse doth he speak only of such workes as he did before Nay hauing spoken before of workes onely done before faith in this generall tearm● he includeth all workes both done before and after faith and iudgeth them all to be but losse and dung Againe as he said before that when once he came to the knowledge of Christ Iesus he counted those things losse which before seemed vantage vnto him so now he saith in the present that hee doth thinke all things but losse that he doth iudge all things to bee dung Which cannot otherwise be meant then of his present opinion and iudgement touching such workes as now presently he did Neither can it be said that is his present iudgement indeed but of such workes only as he did before he belieued For it is as himselfe saith his present iudgement as of such workes so of all workes generally the generall tearme being therefore added to comprise not onely those which hee had spoken of before but all others also For reply vnto which answere they crie out vpon vs for blasphemie and a●ke question vpon question to make some shew that they iustly charge vs with blasphemie For whereas we say that good workes done after faith are here meant by the Apostle and are iudged by him to be but losse and dung they aske whether we call the fruits of the spirit dung whether Paul gloried of dung when he said I haue fought a good fight I haue finished my course 2 Tim. 4. I haue kept the faith from henceforth there is laid vp for me a crowne of righteousnesse which the iust iudge shall giue me in that day What crown of righteousnesse is due vnto dung what iust iudge will vouchsafe to giue a crowne vnto dung what thankes wee owe vnto God for creating vs in Christ Iesus vnto good works if they be nothing else but dung And for conclusion they say that if the good workes of the faithfull be but losse and dung then are not good workes to be done or liked but to be disliked and neglected Thus they triumph in their iuglings and make a shew as if all they spake were Gospell whosoeuer said otherwise did nothing else but blaspheme But will ye see how they deceiue the world with a vaine shew of words wherein there is no substance All this faire flourish which they make is quickly beaten downe by that one distinction whereof I haue often told you and whereof they are not ignorant In good workes therefore we must vnderstand that there are 2. things to be respected the one their substance the other their qualitie The substance of the work I call the action it selfe is iudging the fatherlesse relieuing the oppressed defending the widow feeding the hungrie and the like The qualitie of the worke I call the confidence which men haue to be made righteous before God and to be saued by such workes Now these workes I say according to their substance are good as to iudge the fatherlesse to relieue the oppressed to defend the widow to feed the hungrie and the like are good workes holy workes workes commanded by God and workes rewarded by him But in respect of any confidence to be iustified before God by them or the like or to be saued by them they are to be iudged but losse and dung because as it is written he that reioyceth must reioice in the Lord which being so the answere to their demands is as possible as they thinke it impossible i. most easie 1. Therefore where they aske whether we call the fruits of the spirit dung we answere no. But we say that those good workes which according to the substance of the action are the fruits of the spirit are in respect of any merit or confidence to be reposed in them of righteousnesse or saluation by them to be iudged losse and dung Secondly where they aske whether Paul gloried of dung when he said I haue fought a good fight c. we answere no. He glorieth in his faithfulnesse and constancie in the worke of his ministerie not as putting any confidence of his righteousnesse or saluation in them for so they should be but dung but because he knew that his labour should not be in vaine in the Lord. Thirdly where they aske what crowne of righteousnesse is due vnto dung we answere none for the crowne of righteousnesse is due vnto our good workes not as they are from vs but as they are the worke of Gods spirit in vs neither so for any merit in them but only for his
through the faith of Christ c. he would be clothed in that day with Christ his righteousnesse imputed vnto him by God through faith that he might be iudged by it and receiue his reward according to the merit of it This righteousnesse is sometimes called the righteousnesse of faith because by faith in Christ we are made partakers of this righteousnes sometime the righteousnesse of God because it is the meere gift of God who doth impute it vnto vs through faith in Christ sometimes the righteousnesse of Christ because it is his and onely inherent in him Hee would be found in that day hauing this righteousnesse Hence then I obserue that the righteousnesse whereby wee are accounted righteous before God is the righteousnesse of Christ or of faith or of God which soeuer ye will make it This also the Apostle hath euery where Rom. 3.24.25 We are iustified freely by grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus whom God hath set forth to be a reconciliation through faith in his bloud Againe Gal. 2.16.3.11 know that a man is not iustified by the workes of the Law but by the faith of Iesus Christ Againe that no man is iustified saith the Apostle by the Law Eph. 2.8.9 it is euident for the iust shall liue by faith And againe by grace are ye saued through faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of God not of workes lest any man should boast himselfe Yea euery where almost the holy Ghost witnesseth that we are accounted righteous before God not for our owne workes or deserts but onely by grace through faith for the merit and obedience of our Lord and Sauiour Christ Iesus This then is our righteousnes before God that God through faith in Christ Iesus imputeth not our sins vnto vs but imputeth Christ his righteousnesse vnto vs reckoning the righteousnesse of his obedience vnto the Law vnto vs as if wee had fulfilled the righteousnesse of the Law in our flesh and for the merits of his sufferings wiping all our sinnes out of his sight remembrance So that Christ his righteousnesse alone is our righteousnesse before God which because God doth impute vnto vs freely by his grace through faith therefore the Apostle saith it is God that iustifieth God then iustifieth his grace onely moueth him not any of our workes Christ and his righteousnes is the righteousnesse whereby we are iustified faith is the instrument whereby onely wee are made partakers of his righteousnesse I know that there are dogges which barke against this truth affirming that the righteousnesse whereby we are iustified is not only imputed vnto vs but inherent in vs. But this one place may serue to descrie this their madnesse It is of God imputed by him vnto vs therefore not inherent in vs. It is through faith therefore not inherent in vs. It is through the faith of Christ therefore really inherent onely in Christ It is not our owne but onely by faith in Christ therefore not really inherent in vs. If they vrge the Apostle Iames his authoritie to proue that the righteousnesse whereby we are iustified is inherent in vs because he saith that a man is iustified by workes we answere that the Apostle there speaketh not of that righteousnesse whereby man is made righteous before God but only sheweth that by a mans workes hee is knowne and declared to be iustified by faith so that the Apostle maketh not workes in that place the causes but onely the fruites and effects of iustification If they reply that it is a sufficient proofe that we are iustified by workes because we are iustified by faith which is a worke we answer that iustification is attributed to faith because of Christ and his righteousnesse which it receiueth not because it is a worke of ours For as it is a worke of ours so it is not without some doubting but is imperfect as also our knowledge and loue are and so iustification is not attributed vnto it but onely as it taketh hold vpon Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse which is our perfect righteousnesse Whatsoeuer therefore they say l●t vs know that the righteousnesse whereby we are accounted righteous before God is only inherent in Christ Iesus and is not ours but only by imputation inasmuch as God doth impute it vnto v● through faith in Christ Iesus Let this teach vs to beware of such Deceiuers as tell vs that we are not iustified before God by Christ his righteousnesse alone but by workes also Rom. 8.1 And seeing it is Christ his righteousnesse alone whereby we are made righteous before God let vs reioyce in Christ Iesus alone and let vs iudge all our best workes whatsoeuer to be dung that we may be found in that day not hauing our owne righteousnesse c. Why should it be thought iniurious vnto man to giue all the glory of our righteousnesse or saluation vnto Christ Iesus Why should it not rather be thought iniurious vnto Christ Iesus to giue any part of our righteousnes or saluation vnto mans works or merits Too much cannot be taken from man neither can too much be giuen vnto Christ for he is all in all vnto vs our wisedome and righteousnesse our sanctification and redemption he is the reconciliation for our sinnes by him and through him and for him we haue all that we haue and vnder heauen there is no name giuen whereby wee may be saued but onely by the name of Christ Iesus Let vs therefore giue vnto him that which is due vnto him let not man rob him of his honour Let vs follow after peace and holinesse and righteousnes and euery good worke and let vs know that thi● labour shall not be in vaine vnto vs in the Lord. But let vs know that it is God alone that iustifieth vs by grace th●ough faith not imputing our sinnes but Christ his righteousnesse vnto vs and so making his righteousnesse ours as our sinnes were made his to wit by imputation only To knit vp the last obseruation in a word will you know how to be found in Christ in that day A matter worthy your knowledge For there shall be no condemnation vnto them that then shall be found in him If then wee will be found in Christ in that day we must bee found righteous to be iudged by it And thus farre the matter goeth hard with vs all being all of vs full of vnrighteousnesse and vngodlinesse What is then the righteousnes wherein we must be found to be iudged by it in that day Not our owne for that would sinke vs deep but the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus How shall we be found it this righteousnesse in that day If wee renounce all confidence in our owne righteousnesse as losse and dung and trust perfectly on the grace of God that is brought vnto vs by the reuelation of Iesus Christ Let this then be our comfort that we shall not be iudged in that day by our owne righteousnes but
vs by the power of Christ his death and resurrection The third vantage then which the Apostle reckons vpon by disclaiming al righteousnes by his own works and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus is that hereby he shall know the vertue of Christ his resurrection in himselfe whereby he shall daily more and more die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse which vertue of his resurrection he greatly desired to know and which otherwise he could not know So that it is as if the Apostle had thus said I doe iudge all my owne workes whatsoeuer to be but dung and quite renounce all confidence in my owne righteousnesse to the end that being iustified by the righteousnesse of Christ through faith in him I may know and daily more and more feele in my se●●e by the powerfull operation of the Holy Ghost the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection whereby I may die vnto sinne and liue vnto God in righteousnes and true holinesse Thus much for the sense Now for the obseruations And that I may know the vertue Here first I note the Apostles great desire to know and to feele in himselfe by the worke of the holy Ghost the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection He reckoned this knowledge amongst the chiefe vantages which he had in Christ Iesus and for this vantage sake he made no reckoning at all of his owne righteousnesse by any workes that hee had wrought Such a longing and thirsting desire hee had to know the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection He knew Christ his death and resurrection that he died and was buried and that hee rose againe the third day but hee desired to know the vertue of his death and resurrection He knew likewise this vertue of Christ his death that thereby he had vanquished sinne death and the deuill and this vertue of his resurrection that thereby hee had purchased for him righteousnesse life and euerlasting saluation but he desired to know and to feele in himselfe the death of sinne by the vertue of his death and the life of righteousnesse and holinesse by the vertue of his resurrection This vertue also of Christ his death and resurrection he knew in that hee felt in himselfe by the power of the spirit a dying vnto sinne and a liuing vnto righteousnesse but hee desired to feele this vertue of his death and resurrection in himselfe daily more and more that hee might daily more and more die in the old man and be quickened in the new man that in euery combat betweene the flesh and the spirit the flesh might daily more and more be subdued to the spirit Whence I obserue what a vehement and earnest desire there should be in vs all to know and to feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection and in whom there is some feeling thereof to know and to feele it in themselues daily more and more Wee all of vs know that Christ died for our sinnes and that he rose againe for the full accomplishment of our iustification wee know that by the power of his death wee are deliuered from the first and from the second death from the death of sinne in this life and from the death of damnation for sinne after this life and that by the power of his resurrection wee haue our part both in the first and in the second resurrection in the first resurrection from sinne vnto righteousnesse and in the second resurrection from the power of the graue vnto life euerlasting Wee know that wee are buried with Christ by baptisme into his death that like as he was raised vp from the dead by the glory of the Father so wee also should walke in newnesse of life We know that if we be grafted with Christ to the similitude of his death dying vnto sinne by the power of his death euen so wee shall be to the similitude of his resurrection liuing vnto God by the power of his resurrection These things I say wee know at least we should know and I wish that they were farre better and more knowne then they are But there is a further knowledge of the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection which in our soules wee must long and thirst after This is the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection that we must long and thirst after to know and to feele in our selues the death of sinne and the life of God to know and to feele in our selues that the strength of sinne is abated in our flesh and that the life of God is renewed in the spirit of our minde to know and to feele in our selues a loathing of sinne and a loue of righteousnesse to know and to feele in our selues a mortification of the flesh with the affections and the lusts and a quickening in our spirit by the fruits of the spirit to know and to feele in our selues that delight which sometimes wee tooke in vnrighteousnesse in vncleannesse in couetousnesse in pride in crueltie in contention or the like sinnes to be cooled and a desire to liue righteously and soberly and godly in this present world to bee kindled in vs. For hereby we know in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection if we feele in our selues this mortification of the old man and this quickening in our inner man when his death workes the death of sinne in vs when his resurrection workes the life of God in vs then wee know in our selues the vertue of his death and resurrection The sacrament hereof is the sacrament of baptisme for when wee are baptized wee are baptized into the similitude of his death that like as he died once for sinne so we should euer die vnto sinne and into the similitude of his resurrection that like as he rose from the dead so wee which were dead in sinne should not henceforth serue sinne but liue vnto God in righteousnesse and true holinesse Euen our baptisme doth witnesse vnto vs that so many of vs as are baptized into Christ Iesus wee should die vnto sinne and liue vnto God in righteousnesse and true holinesse Which death vnto sinne and life vnto God seeing the holy spirit of God doth worke in vs by the power of Christ his death and resurrection how should we not most earnestly desire to know and to feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection But doe wee desire to know and to feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection Doe we with our Apostle in this place reckon this knowledge amongst our chiefest vantages Nay alas we know it not neither care we to know it for what dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto God is there amongst vs In whom is the strength of sinne abated and the life of God renewed in the spirit of his minde Doth the Atheist leaue his Atheisme and embrace godlinesse Doth the couetous person leaue off to set his affection on the things which are on the earth
shall most vndoubtedly be so many witnesses against vs to the encreasing of our iust condemnation Thus much of this note The 2. thing which I note is from the person of him that exhorted the Philippians which was Paul their Apostle who had taught them the truth in Christ Iesus and had wa●ked in all holy conuersation amongst them Whence I obserue that the Ministers of Christ are not onely to teach the truth of Christ Iesus with vncorrupt doctrine with grauitie integrity and with the wholesome word which cannot be reproued but withall to be such examples vnto their flockes as that they may say with the Apostle Be ye followers of me and of such 〈◊〉 walke so as ye haue me for an example This our Apostle required of Timothie 1. Tim. 4.12 where he said vnto him Let no man despise thy youth but be vnto them that beleeue an ensample in word in conuersation in loue in spirit in faith and in purenesse And likewise of Titus where he said Tit. 2.7.8 aboue all things shew thy selfe an ensample of good workes with vncorrupt doctrine with grauitie integr●●● and with the wholesome word which cannot be reproued that hee which withstandeth may be ashamed hauing nothing concerning yo● to speake euill of And that which the Apostle required of Ti●othy and Titus and in them of all the Ministers of Christ ●●at the Apostle requireth of all where he saith 1 Pet. 5.2.3 feed the flocke 〈◊〉 God which dependeth vpon you caring for it not by constraint but ●illingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready minde not as though yee ●ere Lords ouer Gods heritage but that ye may be ensamples to the ●●●cke And this the very names giuen vnto them in the holy ●cripture requireth of them in that they are called a citie set 〈◊〉 a hill that is looked vnto farre and neere lights that must ●ine before men by good workes shepheards that must feed 〈◊〉 the word and by example guides that must direct by the ●holesome word of truth and by holinesse of life watchmen ●●at must not faile to giue warning both by doctrine and by ●fe c. Yea the diuersitie of the dispositions of their flock re●uireth this of them For though Lydia attend vnto the ●●ings which Paul speakes and hearing beleeueth though ●●me receiue instruction by hearing the holy word of life yet ●ust they generally be drawne on both by the wholesome ●ord and by example of an holy life or else they will profit ●ut little or nothing at all For so it is generally that the Mi●isters life and behauiour is regarded as much if not more as ●●is doctrine And doth not reason it selfe require that as the ●nowledge of Gods will is first reuealed vnto them and by ●heir ministerie vnto the people so they should bee the first ●nd most forward in the execution of euery Christian duty 〈◊〉 the end that it may appeare that they teach others no ●ourse of life but that which they themselues do with all care●●lnesse walke in yes surely both precept and the names ●iuen vnto them and the nature of them that are to be instru●ted and reason it selfe requireth this of Christ his Ministers ●hat they feed the flocke of God which dependeth on them ●oth by the holy word of truth and likewise by holy exam●le of life And doing thus their example of life of all o●hers that liue with vs ought to be followed The sheepe of ●ll others ought to heare their Pastors voice and they that are ●o be led in the way are to follow of all others them that are ●ppointed to be their Guides when their shepheards their Guides shine as holy lights before them and hold out the word of life vnto them Exception I know will easily be taken and I wi●h it might not iustly be taken but it will bee excepted and said that if Ministers were such as now we speake of yee would follo● them and walke as ye had them for an ensample But how few such Ministers be there How many bee there that are both wicked in life and vnable to teach How many be there of those that doe teach that though they can speake smoothly and finely as they thinke yet do more hurt by their lewd and wicked example of life in one yeare then their doctrine 〈◊〉 doe good in their whole life True it is the complaint is too iust of too many and better it had beene they had beene stifled in their cradles then thus they should haue opened men● mouthes against them to the scandall of their calling For though they shall say in that day Lord Lord haue wee not prophecied in thy name for I let the lewd and vnlearned beasts go and leaue them to their iudgement that runne before they be sent though I say they shall say in that day Lord Lord haue we not prophecied and preached in thy name y●● shall it be said vnto them Mat. 7.23 I neuer knew you depart from me ye● that worke iniquitie Whatsoeuer they preached if they wrought iniquitie they shall not be able to stand in the iudgement nor in the congregation of the righteous But beloued it standeth you vpon to looke vnto it ho● iust your exception is against his life whose doctrine is sound For oftentimes the Ministers of Christ which teach the truth purely are charged to offend in example of life when as in truth their life is no way to bee reproued But admit that his life be not answerable to his teaching this should be no reason for thee to giue lesse credit or obedience to the doctrine of truth which he deliuereth For our Sauiour hath taught thee to hearken vnto him if he sit in Moses seate Mat. 23.3 and to doe as he saith though thou may not doe as he doth if hee say well and doe not accordingly It is his doctrine not his life that thou must looke vnto O but thou wilt say why should I beleeue him or doe as he saith when he doth cleane contrarie himselfe surely that which he saith is but for fashions sake he knoweth some neerer way to heauen then he tels vs of else he would neuer doe cleane contrary and therefore th●● ●ilt venture aswell as he and doe as he doth how bad soeuer 〈◊〉 be Well dally as thou list in a matter of no dalliance If ●hen he saith well and doth ill thou care not what he say but ●o as he doth thy bloud shall be required at his hands but ●●ou shalt die in thy sinnes and see thou what thou hast gai●ed by thy dalliance I wish indeed that no such exception ●●uld iustly be taken against the doctrine or life of any in the ●inisterie For certainely such as both by the wholesome ●ord and by an holy life preach vnto the people be the holy Ministers whose labours are found fruitfull But if their life 〈◊〉 not agreeable to their teaching doe ye take heed how ye ●eglect the word of saluation
can we except we abide in Christ the Lord. Nay if we continue not in the Lord and in the faith and knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ it is a plaine argument against vs that whatsoeuer shew we make in the flesh yet indeed we neuer walked in the truth So the Apostle Saint Iohn plainely argueth 1. John 2.19 where he saith They went ou● from vs but they were not of vs for if they had bene of vs they would haue continued with vs. But this commeth to passe that it might appeare that they are not all of vs. Where ye see that Apostataes and such as fall away from the faith and from the truth of Christ Iesus are proued plainely to be hypocrites and neuer indeed to haue walked in the truth by this argumen tbecause they continued not in the truth which they had learned and receiued As therefore the precept or exhortation both of our Sauiour and of our Apostle requireth this dutie of vs that wee continue in the Lord and in the faith and knowledge of Iesus Christ so this also that it may appeare that we were truly rooted in Christ Iesus and that we walked in the truth And now see whether the same reason do not vrge vs vnto this dutie whereby the Apostle then vrged the Philippians thereunto for are there not now many that would separate vs frō Christ Iesus Are ther not now many euill workers that teach vs to repose confidence in the merite of our workes and not to reioyce onely in Christ Iesus many that teach iustification to be by our owne righteousnesse which is of the Law and not by the alone righteousnesse of Christ Iesus through faith many that teach perfection of sanctification in this life otherwise then we are taught by the Gospell of Christ Iesus many that teach vs to be otherwise minded touching the vantage and merite of workes touching the righteousnesse of Christ through faith ●ouching the perfection of sanctification in this life then was ●his Apostle of our Lord Iesus Christ Yes many such decei●ers there are as heretofore we haue heard creeping in e●ery corner and leading captiue simple men and women af●er their owne lusts And therefore the vrging of this dutie ●uen for that cause is now necessarie vnto vs that Christi●ns at this day continue in the Lord and in the faith and ●nowledge of Iesus Christ so as they haue bene taught out of the writings of the Prophets and Apostles and so as they ●aue done by the illumination of the Spirit through the mi●isterie of the word A doubt or two will here haply be moued First whe●her it be in vs to continue in the Lord if wee will or it be ●holly and onely from grace without anie power of our ●wne Whereunto I answer Iohn 6.44 That as no man can come vnto Christ except the Father draw him making him of vnwilling ●illing by putting his holy Spirit into him so no man can abide and continue in him but only by the grace of the same Spirit Phil. 2.13 For it is God that worketh in vs both the will and the deed euen of his good pleasure of his owne free grace that he may be all in all and that all the glorie of our saluation may be g●uen vnto him alone Why then doth the Apostle exhort vs to continue in the Lord if it be not in our owne power if we will being holpen by grace to continue in the Lord Which is as if it should be said If the fruite and increase of the earth be wholly the blessing of the Lord then why doth the husbandman manure and till his ground and bestow such paines and trauell therein Or as if it should be said If faith be wholly the gift of God then why are we so called vpon to come and heare the word preached For as he giueth corne and wine and oile and all things else needfull for this life but yet by such meanes as he hath ordained thereunto and againe as faith is the gift of God alone but yet giuen vs by the meanes of hearing the word preached 1. Cor. 1.8 so the Lord which confirmeth vs vnto the end worketh in vs this holy gift of perseuerance and continuing in him but by such holy admonitions and exhortations as he will haue vsed to that purpose For admonitions and exhortations are not therefore vsed to imply any power in our selues to doe the things we are exhorted vnto but because they are the meanes whereby God worketh his good graces in vs. And they do and may rather put vs in mind of our vnablenesse then of our ablenesse to do the things that we are exhorted that seeing we cannot of our selues will or do the things whereunto we are exhorted as to come vnto the Lord to continue in the Lord therefore we should flie vnto him and pray vnto him that he would draw vs vnto him that he would confirme vs vnto the end and that he would frame our wils according to his blessed will that we may by him do what his will is To continue then in the Lord is the grace of Gods holy Spirit and the exhortation thereunto is very needfull both because it is the meanes whereby the Lord will worke his grace in vs and to set vs vnto the Lord to beg that of him which of our selues we are no way able to do A second doubt also may be moued Whether it can be that such of Gods children as are in the Lord should not continue in the Lord Whereunto I answer that such of Gods children as are graffed in the true oliue may for some while seeme like vnto withered branches the graces of Gods Spirit may for a time decay in them and lie smothered so that they appeare no more then the fire vnder the ashes or imbers So we may see in Dauid who hauing committed murder and adulterie walked on a long time and was neuer touched with any remorse for such his grieuous sinnes so that for the time he might seeme to be as a withered branch So we may see in Peter many eclipses of the graces of Gods Spirit when he disswaded Christ his passion when he denied Christ his maister and that with an oath when he fled from his Maister when he dissembled for feare of them of the circumcision and drew Barnabas also into the like dissimulation c. So we may see in Demas who for a time left Paul and embraced this present world and yet afterwards became again a fellow-helper with Paul In other holy persons the like may be shewed in whom the graces of God haue for a time decayed and they bene like to withered branches But they cannot finally fall from grace but he that hath begun a good worke in them Phil. 1.6 Ioh. 10.28 will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ For hath not he himselfe said I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them
that here he thus spoke as he thought by the rule of charitie For what saith the Apostle in another place of charitie 1. Cor. 13.7 namely that it beleeueth all things and hopeth all things yea and where it seeth certaine fruites and effects of election and saluation there it is certainly to be perswaded of election and saluation Our Apostle therefore seeing how faithfully those his fellow-labourers had laboured in the worke of the Ministerie with him in the planting of the Church at Philippi how constantly they had walked in the truth notwithstanding the great opposition that was against them how vnblameably they had had their conuersation amongst men in charitie thus he iudged that their names were in the booke of life And this may verie well stand with the other that the Lord onely knoweth who are his For that which properly belongeth vnto the Lord absolutely and by himselfe to know whose names are in the booke of life that the Apostle assumeth not to himselfe but seeing the fruites of their election in their liues he by the rule of charitie thus iudgeth of their saluation that euerlasting life was surely sealed vp for them with God To come then vnto my note the thing which here I note is the Apostles charitable iudgement of his fellow-labourers in the Gospell of Christ Iesus By their fruites he iudged that they were branches of the true vine vpon their holy profession and constant endeuor to increase the kingdome of Christ Iesus he pronounceth that their names were written in the booke of life Whence first my obseruation in generall is that the children of God not onely may and ought certainly to be perswaded of their owne saluation in Christ Iesus but further that they are by the rule of charitie to assure themselues of the saluation of such of their brethren as walke in the truth hauing their conuersation honest For albeit this be most true that not any can be so certaine of any other mans election or saluation as of his owne because he feeleth onely in himselfe the testimony of the Spirit witnessing vnto his spirit that he is the sonne of God and because onely in himselfe he knoweth his faith towards God and his loue towards all Saints not onely by the outward fruites thereof but like wise by the inward motions thereof which he feeles in his owne soule yet may the children of God by such outward fruites and effects of their election as they shall see in their brethren according to the rule of charitie iudge that they are the chosen children of God and heires of saluation So we see that the Apostle writing to the Romanes Corinthians Ephesians writeth vnto them as Saints by calling sanctified in Christ Iesus chosen in him before the foundation of the world and predestinated to be adopted through Iesus Christ vnto God And why did he thus iudge of them Euen because of their communion with the Saints in the Gospel of Christ because of the testification of their faith and of their loue towards all Saints whereby they shewed themselues to be partakers of the fatnesse of the true oliue Christ Iesus So Peter writing vnto the strangers that dwelt here and there throughout Pontus Galatia Cappadocia Asia and Bithynia calleth them the elect of God And why Euen because of their constant faith constant loue and constant abiding in the Church of Christ Iesus So Iohn calleth them vnto whom he wrote the sonnes of God and the Lady vnto whom he wrote the elect Ladie because they continued in the Church and walked in the truth Do we then see in our brethren the outward fruites of an holy vocation of regeneration and sanctification Do we see them make an holy profession of the blessed truth of Christ Iesus giue good testimonie of a sincere faith in Christ Iesus walk in holy obedience towards God and loue towards their brethren faithfully labour in the workes of their calling and denying vngodlinesse and worldly lusts liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world Of such we may and are to perswade our selues that they are reserued vnto the same inheritance in heauen with vs and of them we may say that they are the sonnes of God elect in Christ Iesus our Lord vnto eternall saluation prepared to be shewed in the last times And besides this that the holy Ghost by the mouth of the Apostles warranteth vs hereunto the rule also of charitie directeth vs so to do For as before we heard Charitie beleeueth all things 1. Cor. 13.7 charitie hopeth all things Which yet is not so to be vnderstood as if charitie were foolish rashly to beleeue euery thing that is told and there to hope where there is no cause of hope for that the Wiseman maketh a note of a foolish man Prou. 14.15 where he thus saith The foolish will beleeue euery thing But so charitie beleeueth all things and hopeth all things as that it keepes it selfe within the rule of pietie wisedome and religion If the thing displease God be repugnant to the truth be hurtfull or disgracefull to any of Gods children charitie beleeueth it not hopeth it not But where there are good tokens of Christianitie plaine signes of a sincere faith euident testimonies of an holy obedience there surely the rule of charitie bids vs beleeue and hope the best and there we may be bold to say that they are the sonnes of God that their names are written in the booke of life And is it not our Sauiours rule that we should iudge of the tree by the fruite for that a good tree bringeth not forth euill fruite Mat. 7.18 nor an ill tree good fruite If it beare grapes will any man iudge it to be a thorne if it bring forth figs will any man iudge it to be a thistle Nay by the fruite the tree is knowne what it is and if the fruite be good it may thereby be knowne that the tree is good Right so if we haue our fruite in righteousnesse and holinesse it may thereby be knowne that we are the branches of the true vine Christ Iesus Whether then we looke vnto the example of the Apostles or vnto the rule of charitie which the Apostles followed or vnto that rule of Christ to discerne of the tree by the fruite we see that the children of God may not onely perswade themselues of their owne saluation in Christ Iesus but further also may certainly iudge of the saluation of their godly brethren Now see viri fratres men brethren the great necessitie that there is that we should be thus perswaded one of another euen so great as that without it the bond of peace loue and Christianitie cannot be maintained For how can we loue them of whom we haue no hope that they shall be heires of the same saluatiō with vs How can we haue peace with them of whom we are not perswaded that they are at peace with God How can we pray with them and
lying Ephes 4.25 and speake euery man truth vnto his neighbour Is it a truth in our deeds and in the waies of our life We are to be as Nathaniels Iohn 1.47 true Israelites in deed in whom is no guile not to make shew of one thing and in truth to be another thing Whatsoeuer truth it is it ought to be so precious vnto vs as that with the Apostle we should say 2. Cor. 13.8 We cannot do any thing against the truth but for the truth we cannot hold of errour against the truth we cannot lie to falsifie the truth we cannot dissemble to make shew of others then the truth is we are Let this one reason for this time serue to presse this point Christ is truth as himselfe saith Iohn 14.6 I am the way the truth and the life and whatsoeuer he spake was truth and for the truth for no guile was euer found in his mouth 1. Pet. 2.22 we are the sonnes of him who is truth that is of God we are redeemed by him who is truth that is by God we are regenerate and borne againe by the Spirit of truth we are called to the knowledge of the truth and so we shall dwell with God for euer if we speake the truth from our heart As then we will haue him who is true and truth it selfe to be our God and our selues to be his people and heires of his kingdome we are to thinke on and to do whatsoeuer things are true Are we then to thinke on and to do whatsoeuer things are true First let this teach vs to take heede and beware of errours in religion whereby the truth of the Gospel of Christ Iesus is peruerted Whosoeuer saith it if it be a truth it is to be maintained but if it be an errour from the truth whosoeuer saith it it is to be reiected If Fathers Councels Church and all say it if it be an errour what is that to me But if it be a truth be it Arrian or Lutheran or Papist or Protestant that saith it what is that to me No authoritie may giue warrant to an errour neither may any mans person or profession preiudice a truth but whatsoeuer is true we are to thinke on it and do it whatsoeuer is erroneous we are not to thinke on it nor to do it What shall we say then vnto them that wholly build vpon the Church the Church and euer runne on vs with open mouthes the doctrine of the Church the doctrine of the Church and this Church forsooth is the Church of Rome What shall we say vnto them that hauing laid downe and taught a truth afterwards perceiuing themselues therein to concurre with Caluin did therefore reuoke it and turned the truth into an error We say vnto them as Esay said vnto the Iewes in his time Esa 8.19.20 Should not a people enquire at their God To the law and to the testimonie if they speake not according to this word it is because there is no light in them The thing that we aske is what is a truth according to the word what is an errour from the word not what the Church teacheth or what Caluin saith If they can shew that the things which their Church teacheth are true we professe our willingnesse to embrace whatsoeuer things are true and if Caluin say the truth why should they reiect it because he sayeth it Learne you to discerne betweene truth and error and looke not so much who sayeth it as whether it be true or erroneous that is said If the Church or some speciall professors of the truth agree vpon a truth it may verie well sway with vs. But howsoeuer men say a truth in religion is therefore to be receiued because it is a truth and an error therefore to be reiected because it is an errour If it be a truth receiue it if an errour reiect it Againe are we to thinke on and to do whatsoeuer things are true Let this then teach vs to put away lying out of our mouthes Whatsoeuer things are true we are to speake them in their due times and places but whatsoeuer things are lies and falshoods there is no time or place for the speaking of them For all lying is of the diuel and he is the father thereof Ioh. 8.44 And fearefull is the iudgement that lying draweth on with it for whosoeuer saith Iohn worketh abomination or lies Apoc. 21.27.22.15 shall not ent●r into the heauenly Ierusalem and againe Without shall be dogs and enchanters and whoremongers and murtherers and idolaters and whosoeuer loueth or maketh lies And therefore the holy Ghost very often very carefully forbiddeth it saying Lie not one to another Coloss 3.9 Eph. 4.25 seeing that ye haue put off the old man with his workes and againe Cast off lying c. And yet see how men loue rather to lie then to speake truly as if they had rather runne with the diuell then walke in truth with God One desperately lyeth in despite of the truth and boasteth himselfe of his lying Another lieth hoping so to conceale his sins as he hath fallen into and so addeth iniquitie to iniquitie Another lieth but it is forsooth in ieast and he meaneth no harme by his lying And another lieth but it is forsooth greatly for the behoofe and good of his friend or else he would not doe it Thus lying which the Lord so much hateth euery where aboundeth And though none indeed can yet some thinke they may pleade pardon for their lying The desperate lier it may be hopeth not for nor reckoneth vpon any pardon He hath made a couenant with death and with hell he is at agreement And what pardon he hopeth for I know not that to conceale his other faults and sinnes also lieth But if two sinnes be not to be bound together because in one we shall not be vnpunished then what hope of impunitie when vnto other sinnes is added also lying Now for lying in ieast no man I thinke will say that it is either a lesse fault or more pardonable then an idle word and yet we see our blessed Sauiour tels vs Mat. 12.36 that of euery idle word that men shall speake they shall giue account thereof at the day of iudgement And as for lying for the behoofe and good of our friend the Apostle thereby plainly condemneth it in that we may not do euil by his rule that good may come thereof Rom. 3.8 So that we may not lie at all for as much as no lie is of the truth Some kind of lying is lesse faultie then other 1. Ioh. 2.21 but no lie is of the truth and we are to speake euery man truth vnto his neighbour Let vs therefore cast off all lying euen all kind of lying For the lying lips are an abomination to the Lord Prou. 12.22.19.5 and their iudgement sleepeth not For a false witnesse shall not be vnpunished and he that speaketh
of Vines Who saith the Apostle planteth a vineyard and eateth not of the fruit thereof How much more should they that plant and worke in the Lord his vineyard eate of the fruits of their owne labours Thirdly by an argument taken from them that are occupied about cattell Who saith the Apostle feedeth a flocke and eateth not of the milke of the flocke How much more should they that feede the Lord his flocke with the sincere milke of the word be fed by them with temporall food Fourthly by an argument taken from the testimonie of Moses where he saith 9. Thou shalt not muzzell the mouth of the oxe that treadeth out the corne for that was the fashion in Palestina how much lesse should their mouth be muzled maintenance be denied them that labour in the Lord his husbandrie Fiftly by comparing spirituall things with temporall things 11. If saith he we haue sowen vnto you spirituall things is it a great thing if we reape your carnall things that is things necessarie for the maintenance of this life Sixtly by an argument taken from the allowance of the Priests of the old Law 13. Do ye not know saith the Apostle that they which minister about the holie things 14. eate of the things of the Temple and they which waite at the Altar are partakers of the Altar so also hath the Lord ordained that they which preach the Gospell should liue of the Gospell Thus ye see a large proofe of this point in that one place by many arguments Many other places there are pregnant also to this purpose Galat. 6.6 as when it is said Let him that is taught in the word m●ke him that hath taught him partaker of all his goods as also where it is said 1. Tim. 5.17 The Elders that rule well are worthy of double honour especially they which labour in the word and doctrine by which terme of double honour many do vnderstand reuerence and things necessarie for the maintenance of this life The point is so cleare that to doubt of it is to doubt of the truth of the Scriptures which in so many places giue so euident testimony thereunto Which may serue to admonish many of vs of a necessarie duty wherein we vse great slacknes Some of vs can be very well content neither to be taught in the word not to giue any maintenance to the Preachers of the word And these are men altogether senslesse without all feeling of God or godlines in whose hearts the day-starre of righteousnes hath not yet risen that they should know or thirst after the things that belong vnto their peace Others of vs could be better content a great deale to giue something to stay the Ministery of the word that so we might continue in our ignorance and sleepe in our sinnes then to haue the word preached vnto vs. And these are men not sicke but dead in sinne desperately wicked and vnto euery good worke reprobate Others of vs can be content to hearken to them that labour in the word and doctrine and that they should preach often but care not how little to heare of allowance toward their maintenance If they speake of the Ministers duty of the assiduitie and diligence which they ought to vse of the necessitie that lieth vpon them to preach the Gospel of the woe that is vnto them if they do not preach the Gospel we like them well and commend them much But if they speake of their owne maintenance of their allowance due on our parts vnto them what say we then Then forsooth they tell their owne tales they preach for themselues Math. 10.8 Nay we can dispute very wel against them out of the Scriptures in this point and tell them that freely they haue receiued and freely they must giue 2. Thess 3.8 and that Paul laboured with his owne hands because he would not be chargeable to them whom he taught But see how herein we deceiue our selues He that saith Freely ye haue receiued freely giue doth he not immediately after say that the workeman is worthie of his meate What then doth our blessed Sauiour crosse himselfe God forbid And yet either we must say so or else that the former words make nothing against the maintenance of Ministers especially the latter words being both so plaine in themselues and likewise alledged by the Apostle for the Ministers maintenance 1. Tim 5.18 For the meaning then of those words first I say that they are to be vnderstood of working miracles which gift as the Lord freely bestowed on his Apostles and Disciples for a time for the better gaining of men vnto the faith so he would haue them freely shewed forth vpon men that as Elizeus the Prophet could by no meanes be wrought to receiue any thing of Naaman the Syrian for healing his leprousie so whatsoeuer sickenesse they should heale whatsoeuer miracles they should worke they should not be wrought to take any thing for it Secondly if any man shall contend that the words are to be vnderstood of the Lords worke generally that as freely they haue receiued the grace so freely they do the worke then I expound the words by that of the Apostle Peter that they are to feede the flocke of God which dependeth on them 1. Pet. 5.2 caring for it not by constraint but willingly not for filthie lucre but of a readie minde Surely it is no way the meaning of those words that they that labour in that holy worke should be debarred of wages for their labour Neither doth the example of the Apostle labouring with his owne hands at all make against the maintenance of the Ministerie by the Church First he professeth that he wrought with his hands not for that he ought so to do for he proueth that they ought to haue ministred vnto him but that they might haue no exception against him Secondly the example of the Apostle herein is no way to presse vs for that he needed not as we to attend vnto reading but being immediately taught of God and furnished with all knowledge in the third heauen he was able at all times to teach the way of God perfectly though he wrought with labour and trauell night and day But we cannot intend manuarie matters and do the duties of our calling Our duty is to attend vnto reading to exhortation 1. Tim. 4.13 and to doctrine and the Church is to minister vnto vs necessary maintenance How cunningly therefore soeuer we thinke we can dispute against the maintenance of the Minister by the Church yet do we but deceiue our selues therein This is true generally that whatsoeuer we say or dispute we will giue as little to his maintenance as may be we will withhold from him as much as we can we thinke that wel gotten that is saued from them and we thinke euerie little too much that they haue Beloued I haue no cause but to perswade my selfe better things of many of you Onely
ten for one that neuer praise the Lord for his mercies May not the Lord now take vp the complaint of Malachie and say A sonne honoreth his father and a seruant his maister If I then be a Father where is mine honour And if I be a Maister where is my feare May he not say An holy nation worshippeth their God and good children honour their father If I then be your God where is my worship If I be your Father where is mine honour I doubt not but there are who with the Prophet say Thou art my God Psal 118.28 and I will thanke thee thou art my God and I will praise thee But is it one of ten Nay might we not go into a citie and with Abraham beginne at fiftie and come downe to ten and yet not finde ten such there We haue certaine words of course which we vse as to say God be blessed God be praised I thanke God I praise God but commonly they come but from the lippes It is not with vs as it was with Marie that we can say My soule doth magnifie the Lord Luke 1.46 and my spirit reioyceth in God my Sauiour For though we blesse God with our mouthes yet do we dishonour him in the wayes of our liues If ye say with them in Malachie Mal. 1.9 Wherein haue we despised thy name wherein haue we dishonoured our God I tell you in that ye haue profaned his holy Sabboths And if ye say vnto me Wherein haue we profaned them I tell you out of the Prophet In that therein ye haue done your owne wil and not the wil of the Lord For not to speake of your absenting of your selues some of you from your Churches on that day when ye should come thither as it were to his Schoole there to heare his voice to learne his most holie will and to be instructed in the things that belong vnto our peace not to speake of your fruitlesse and vnnecessarie talking on that day in your houses or at your doores or as ye walke abroad when ye should either meditate with your selues or conferre with others of the things that ye haue heard at the Church out of the word not to speake of your running vp and downe with your wares of your selling of your wares euen in open shop and of doing the workes of your calling on the Sabboth day when ye should be either preparing your selues in all holie reuerence to the hearing of the word or else be present in the congregation at the hearing of the word or else be meditating or conferring of the things that ye haue heard not I say to speake of these and many such like things whereby the Lord his Sabboths are profaned in that your owne wil is onely done and the Lord his wil neglected what wil ye say vnto piping and dancing and drinking and lording and ladying and may-gaming on that day Is this the Lord his will or is it your owne will Nay is it not to oppose your selues against his will He requires of you on that day to do his will and not your owne will but ye do your owne will and not his will Can ye pleade ignorance in this behalfe Nay ye haue bin taught what is his will for this day and that this is not his will but as much repugnant to his will almost as can be And therefore is your sinne the greater because being taught in these things ye haue refused to hearken and to obey and chosen rather to follow the wayes of your owne heart O but ye tooke onelie the euening vnto these delights Yea but the euening is a part of the Lords day wherein he looketh to be serued as well as ye looke to be serued by your seruants on the working daies in the euening The whole day is to be consecrated vnto the Lord so that that whole day we ought to employ either in an holie preparation to his seruice or in hearing or reading or meditating or conferring of the holie word of God and not otherwise What no honest recreations and delights lawfull on that day First these whereof we now speake are not such but vnhonest and vngodly Secondly for those that are such it is doubted whether they be lawfull on that day For if worldly but necessarie duties be forbidden when we should attend on the Lords worke because we cannot be wholly occupied in both much more things which seeme but for pleasure are then to be abandoned Beloued being occasioned at this time to speake of our dishonouring of God whom we ought to praise and honour alwayes and in all things I haue instanced onely in this one point of our dishonouring of God both because the profanation of the Sabboth is one of the greatest dishonours of God and one wherein we too too much and too too grossely offend Nehe. 13.18 Did not your fathers said Nehemiah to the rulers of Iudah breake the Sabboth and our God brought all this plague vpon vs and vpon this citie yet ye increase the wrath vpon Israel by breaking the Sabboth Consider your owne waies in your hearts and be thinke your selues well whether amongst other our sins the breaking of our sabboths haue not broght heauy plagues vpon vs. And do ye yet increase the wrath vppon Israel by breaking his Sabboth Marke well what I say and the Lord giue you a right vnderstanding in all things The Lord is alwayes and in all things to be honoured and praised Let vs not in this or any other thing dishonour his holy Name Let vs in all things glorifie God through Iesus Christ and let vs alwayes haue that Song in our mouthes Praise and glorie and honour and thankes and power Apoc. 7.12 and might be vnto our God for euermore Amen And as our Apostle concludeth this his Epistle with praise vnto the Lord so let vs remember to praise God euen our Father for that it hath pleased him so often to assemble vs together to heare a great part of it opened vnto vs and thence to be instructed in the things that belong vnto our peace The beginning of this worke was his worke and the continuance of it is his worke vnto him therefore euen God our Father be praise for euermore Amen Salute all the Saints c. Now in the end of this Epistle the Apostle addeth salutations from himselfe and others vnto the Philippians which manner also he vseth almost in the end of all his Epistles And first he remembreth his owne salutations vnto them saying Salute all the Saints c. Secondly he remembreth the salutations of his brethren and fellow labourers in the Gospell vnto them saying The brethren c. Thirdly he remembreth the salutations of all the rest of the Saints that were at Rome vnto them saying All the Saints c. Lastly he shutteth vp all and sealeth as it were his letter with that vsuall prayer which he vseth both in the beginning and in the end of all
which we haue by this holy sacrament of the Lords Supper for the strengthning and increasing of our faith Many things yee see here are fully to assure our faith that we should not doubt but as surely as we receiue the bread and wine into our bodies to become wholly ours so withall our soule receiueth Christ together with his passion and righteousnesse to be wholly ours as surely as if we had wrought them in our owne persons Yea such assurance our faith groweth vnto by the vse of this holy Supper as that now we know by the powerfull operation of Gods holy spirit within vs that God is in vs indeed and that now Christ is ours and we Christs and that together with Christ we haue all things euen all the benefits of our saluation And the more that our faith is strengthned hereby the more also is this feeling knowledge of Christ increased in vs so that together with the growth of our faith there is a growth of this knowledge Seeing therefore this knowledge of Christ groweth as our faith in Christ groweth and seeing our faith is so strengthned and increased by the holy vse of this holy Supper let vs so often as we are called vnto this holy table prepare our selues with all holy reuerence and feare to the celebration of these holy mysteries Great is the benefit that here we doe receiue if we eat of this bread and drinke of this cup worthily for then we eat spiritually the flesh of Christ and drinke his bloud then we dwell in Christ and Christ in vs we are one with Christ and Christ with vs and these things are so sensibly represented vnto our eyes and taste as that our faith is fully assured thereof so that henceforth we know by the working of the spirit that Christ is ours together with whatsoeuer is his But if we present our selues at these holy mysteries without due preparation and examination of our selues we haue no such benefit but rather we are guilty of the bodie and bloud of our Lord and Sauiour Proue therefore your selues whether you are in the faith whether yee feele your hearts assured by the spirit of God that the punishment of your sinnes is fully discharged in Christ and that whatsoeuer Christ hath done pertaineth not onely to others but euen to you also If you beleeue these things and know these things though it be not without some doubts and without some imperfections behold by the vse of this Supper your weake faith and imperfect knowledge shall be strengthned and increased But if as yet yee haue no such faith in Christ no such knowledge of Christ then may yee not presume to present your selues at this holy table The vse of this Supper is for the confirmation and strengthning of our faith it is not for the begetting of faith in vs but that being begotten by the word is by the word and the vse of the Sacrament thus confirmed The last thing which hence I obserue is that if we will haue this experimentall knowledge of Christ in our owne soules by faith in Christ Iesus then must wee renounce all confidence in our owne merits and in our owne righteousnesse whatsoeuer For wherefore is it that men trust in their owne merits and in their owne righteousnesse Wherefore is it that men make reckoning to be iustified and saued by the worth of their owne workes Wherefore is it that men grow to a pharisaicall pride and conceit of themselues as if they had somewhat in themselues that might abide the tryall Surely it is because of the want of this feeling knowledge of Christ They neuer felt in their owne soules the sweetnesse of Christ the comforts of Christ the treasures of Christ They know not by experience in their owne soules that Christ is all in all vnto them they know not what Christ is made of God vnto his children They haue a knowledge of Christ but the knowledge of Christ hath not seazed vpon their soules and therefore they doe not know the full sweetnesse of Christ and the full worth of Christ For if they knew in their owne soules that Christ were made of God vnto them wisdome and righteousnesse sanctification and redemption they would onely reioyce in Christ Iesus and haue no confidence in the flesh But therefore they reioyce in the flesh and haue confidence in their owne workes and in their owne righteousnesse because they know not Christ If therefore we will know Christ with a sauing knowledge and a feeling knowledge of him in our selues we must vtterly renounce all confidence in our owne merits and all trust in our owne righteousnesse whatsoeuer What shall we say then vnto them that stand vpon the merit and worth of their owne workes and of their owne righteousnes Surely euen thereby they shew that howsoeuer they say they know Christ yet they haue not this experimentall knowledge of him in their owne soules for if they had they would know such infinite treasures of all spirituall graces to be hid in him as that they would minde nothing without him To conclude this point therefore let these trust in their merits let those follow their vaine delights and pleasures let these seeke after riches let those spend their whole time in the studie of humane knowledge but let vs studie to know Christ If we haue this feeling knowledge of him in our owne soules then come pouertie come sicknes come famine come sword come persecution come affliction come aduersitie come what crosse can come our soule notwithstanding all these is at quiet rest and in him we haue comfort enough against all these In him because we know him we know that treasures enow and comforts enow are hid for vs whatsoeuer trouble or aduersitie we finde in the world Let vs therefore studie to know him and because faith is the roote of this knowledge let vs vse with all religious reuerence those meanes whereby faith is either wrought or confirmed And because confidence in our owne merits and righteousnes is an enemie to this knowledge let vs renounce all such confidence and reioyce onely in Christ Iesus that we may know him c. LECTVRE LVIII PHILIP 3. Verse 10. And the vertue of his resurrection and the fellowship of his afflictions c. THat I may know him and the vertue That is and that I may know the vertue of his resurrection .i. that I may daily more and more feele in my selfe the vertue of Christ his death resurrection .i. that I may daily more more die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse by the power of the spirit which raised vp Christ Iesus from the dead For by resurrection in this place I vnderstand both Christ his death and resurrection and by the vertue of Christ his death and resurrection I vnderstand not that power whereby Christ ouercame death and rose againe from the dead but that regeneration that dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto righteousnesse which the Holy Ghost worketh in