Selected quad for the lemma: authority_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
authority_n apostle_n church_n peter_n 5,721 5 7.6949 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

laudas paenam at non ostendis causam Let no man suffer as a thiefe as a murtherer as a busie bodie in another mans matters it seemes there was a rout of them then but now a rable of them but if any suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but glorifie God on that behalfe It is a glorious thing to bee CHRISTS prisoner and to say with St. Paul for the hope of Israel am I bound with this chaine The second person saluting is annexed to him which is Timothie His mother was a Iewesse and a believer his father a Grecian Eunice his mother had brought him up in the holy Scriptures from a child him he styles his brother when he writes to him he calls him his Sonne because he writes with him he honours him with the title of brother Vt hoc negotium utriusque nomine authoretur that his request being commenced in the name of them both might bee armed with greater authoritie Hee was his brother not only in the faith in generall but in the Ministery in speciall One is your Doctour which is CHRIST and all yee are brethren Sosthenes our brother Saint Peter whom the Papists will have to be head of the Church and LORD over all the Apostles calls Saint Paul his brother though he came Postliminio after him It is said of our blessed Saviour hee is not ashamed to call us brethren and shall we be ashamed to call one another brethren All the faithfull are brethren we have one father and mother too but after a more speciall manner in an honourable office are the Ministers brethren Some are in higher places as the reverend Bishops some in lower as the inferiour Ministers yet all brethren the Maior and Aldermen are brethren the Iudges and Sergeants are brethren Bishops are to be honoured as Fathers inferiour Ministers to be esteemed of as brethren Meis conservis loquor tanquam obediens servus sayes Saint Ambrose Quanto sublimitas notior tanto humilitas pretiosior The higher the place the more precious is the humilitie of the Person I have knowne diverse Bishops that have used their inferiour brethren with greater humanitie humilitie and courtesie then many arrogant Schismaticall preachers would use their superiors Brethren should not be so Lord-like one over another that was a fault in S. Chrys. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was too supercilious Brethren love accord support one another 1. Accidentally they may hate as Cain hated Abel Esau Iacob that is unnaturall naturally they love one another so should we if the people must have us above all abundance in love for our workes sake then we that be the workemen must abound in love one towards another else we are hinderers of the worke 2. Brethren accord sometimes there is discord among them nay rara est concordia fratrum brethren seldome agree that is the Divells pollicie and our corruption nature conjoynes them together So it should be with us in the ministerie CHRIST sent his Disciples two and two not one by one wee should not sever our selves one from another but be linked together one with another We should be like the Muses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they should be together as in place so in affection all Ministers are tanquam chordae in Cythara Colligatae as strings in a Lute tyed together and sounding together that will make a sweete harmonie Oh that all the Ministers in England did accord together in points of doctrine and in rites and ceremonies 3. Brethren support one another wee should not bee underminers but underproppers one of another frater à fratre adjutus est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So it is in the 70. A brother helped of a brother is as a strong and high Citie we should support the good name and the goods one of another brethren must not be like the scoales in a ballance one up and another downe we must not goe about to pull downe one another in our Sermons but to set up one another It is the manner of some labourers almost in every Sermon to declame against ministers because they know it to bee a plausible theme to the people whose servants they are as one told Demosthenes being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 men-pleasers rather then God-pleasers The persons saluted 1. The house-holders 2. The household The house-holders the man and the woman the man is described ex nomine ex amore ex labore 1. By his name his name was PHILEMON Saint Hierom de nominibus hebraicis deriveth it from the Hebrew mire donatus wonderfully gifted of Spalal mirabile Nathan donatus Indeed his gifts were admirable or phi-lechem os panis corum the mouth of their bread But why may it not be a Greeke name He especially being a Grecian of Colosse Col. 4.12 PHILEMON quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our friend Gaius was the Churches hoast he the Churches friend in the same kinde too all that professed the name of CHRIST were welcome to him he was a friendly entertainer of them all 2. He is set forth by love not active but passive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that our dearly beloved above others our especiall friend not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they may be dilecti that deserve no love as our enemies they be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which deserve love in respect of the rare qualities and excellent vertues wherewith they bee adorned as PHILEMON was Some say he was Nobilis a noble man surely he was Dives a rich man in faith and in good workes too that was a load stone to draw love unto him Last of all hee is described ex labore by his labour fellow-labourer not in the harvest of the ministery pray you the Lord of the harvest to send forth labourers into his harvest but in the generall harvest of Christianitie Fuit cooperarius Evangelij non praedicatione sed facto he was a fellow-labourer in the Gospell not by preaching but by doing non praedicando sed praedicatores reciplendo not by preaching but by receiving the preachers Carthusian enlarges it further non fuit praedicator sed fidelium sustentator he was not a preacher but the sustainer and nourisher of the faithfull Fuit magnus quidem Christianus a Christian of great note They that put to their helping hand any kinde of way for the furtherance of the Gospel are the Ministers fellow-labourers that edifie their brethren in the most holy faith that exhort one another while it is called to day that comfort one another that are as bells to toll others to Christ are the Preachers fellow-labourers So was the Woman of Samaria that called the whole Citie to Christ those women that ministred to Christ of their owne substance Priscilla and Aquila tent-makers which expounded to
is to the company of the faithfull in thy city which may well be Corinth for it was a factious citie full of Sects and Schismes The vulgar translateth it Scripsi forsitan peradventure I had written But Erasmus guesseth shrewdly and truely The word Forsitan was foisted by some unlearned Clarke into the text I wrote saith Saint Iohn to the Church And he speakes it by the way of a Prolepsis Gajus must reply Why Didst thou not write to us all this while about the entertaining of these men I wrote saith Saint Iohn but my writing was not regarded This Epistle of Saint Iohns is not now extant no more peradventure are some which Saint Peter and Saint Paul wrote But wee have so much Scripture by divine providence as is sufficient to salvation we neede not flie to unwritten verities Now let us take a view of the partie resisting He is described by his name and by his peevish quality His name was Diotrephes Some read Dietrepe Quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 overturning God then it fits him well for he was an overtwharter of God and all godlinesse but it is Diotrephes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nourished by God And Homer cals Kings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iupiters nurse children and indeede God hath a speciall care of Kings This man had a glorious name Conveniunt rebus nomina saep● suis. Sometimes men have sutable names The Name of Iesus agreed wonderfull well to our blessed Saviour for he saves us from our sins and there is no Saviour besides him Timotheus and Philotimus were both answerable to their names both pure worshippers of God But some times mens names are different from their doings Iudah is a good name of Iudah a praiser of God yet he that betrayed Christ had that name Simon is a good name Shamaang Obedience yet Simon Magus was disobedient the fountaine of all heresies So this Diotrephes had a good name but he himselfe was a bad man Good names may be meanes to make men good but they doe not make them good without the blessing of God Almightie 2. He is described by a vicious qualitie that was in him hee loved to have the preeminence among them Hee doth not say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that hath the preeminence but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that loves preeminence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 riches are good but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the love of riches is naught Wine is good but the love of wine is naught He that loveth wine shall not be rich Love it we may moderately but not immoderately The world is good and all things that be in it as they be the creatures of God but the love of the world is evill The upmost places in the Synagogues were good but the Pharisees were evill to love them Eminencie in the Church is good but wee must not love it desire it affect it with a proud minde and ambitious heart as Diotrephes did A paritie in the Ministery is dangerous It is the mother of Sects and Schismes Ex aequo super omnes Ecclesiae fortitudo solidatur Sed Petrus caput constituitur ut Schismatis tollatur occasio The solliditie of the Church is equally founded upon the doctrine of all the Apostles yet Saint Peter was made the head of the Church for the avoiding of Schisme Neverthelesse there is not one Oecumenicall Bishop over the whole world or over all Christendome Major est authoritas orbis quam urbis saith the same learned Father The authoritie of the world is greater than the authority of one citie Vbicunque fuerit Episcopus Wheresoever a Bishop is whether at Rome at Eugubium at Constantinople at Rhegium at Alexandria or at Tais ejusdem est meriti ejusdem sacerdotij he is of the same desert and the Priesthood is the same yet there must be Bishops to have authority over others to preserve the peace of the Church to see that all doe their duties in their severall places and to be as a wall of defence for them that be under them If there were not some in high places in favour with Kings and Princes the rest of the Clergie would soone be troden under foote as the little rivers submit themselves to the greater so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith St. Basil it is necessary it is profitable for the inferiour Ministers to subject themselves to the superiour as were Aaron and his sonnes so sayes S. Hierom are Bishops Priests or Elders Aaron was above his sonnes and Bishops are above them yet both under God and the King let not them that be above 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contemne them beneath in the vallyes let not them that be below carry themselves insolently towards them above Bishops and Priests saith Ignatius sunt tanquam chordae in Cithara colligatae as strings tyed together in an harpe if they jarre there will be unpleasant musicke Preeminence is laudable the affectation of it is damnable to be called a Bishop is commendable Sed velle vocari to will it to have an irresistible will to it is discommendable they that will be rich fall into divers snares and temptations so they that will be in high places whether God will or no ensnare themselves ere they be aware There be many retinacula pulbackes to hold us from that 1. It is devill-like he was high enough at the first he would needes be higher therefore he was cast low into the bottomelesse pit of hell and all proud aspiring persons fall into the condemnation of the devill 2. It is not Christ-like he was called to it he intruded not himselfe he invites us to humility by precept Learne of me I am humble and meeke by practise he washed his Disciples feete though he were Lord of all yet he became a servant to all he respecteth it in his followers when they stood upon greatnesse hee sends them to a little child to learne to be little he that is greatest among you let him be your servant 3. It is the joy and glory of all good ministers that they have beene no intruders I have not thrust in my selfe to be a Prophet to this people Lord thou knowest the Lord of the harvest must thrust labourers into the harvest none must thrust in himselfe 4. It is a weighty charge an heavie burden hee that desireth the office of a Bishop desireth a worthy worke Opus non dignitas labor non deliciae opus per quod humilitate decrescat non fasti gio intumescat It is a worke not a dignitie a labour not a delicacie a worke I say that should make a man decrease by humilitie not increase and swell in pride a worke for the which a fearefull account is to be made they watch over your soules as they that must give an account if God call us to that worke let us entreate him to give us strength in some measure to discharge it let us
of Canaan as if he had beene present at the distribution of it Gen. 48.22 Shechem a portion or the name of a City called Sichem which fell to the tribe of Ephraim Ios. 13. The seventie translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that select and famous Sichem Iishtaku Gnal Rosh Hammittah an open jarre the latter being a staffe to beate the former out of doores How agreeth this with the Hebrew it is one and the same word with a little alteration the diversity may arise on the affinity of the vowels Mittah a bed Matteh a rod and both may be true Hee worshipped upon the beds head and he worshipped on the top of his staffe too Inclining upon his pillow towards the bed head being weake and aged he held his staffe in his hand too and leaning on it he worshipped God He did worship towards the bed head because being bed-red he could no other than lye on his pillow Vpon which way soever it stood on the beds head or on the top of his staffe both may stand together 2. This was before the other Gen. 47. ult the blessing Gen. 48. It is very like he leaned often on his staffe and worshipped God not only after Iosephs promise but also when he had blessed all his Sonnes when he pluckt up his feete into the bed he might leane on his staffe and worship Or it may be an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is frequent in the Bible Worshipped He praised God for this and all other his mercies hee prayed for their speedy deliverance out of Aegypt that they might be planted in the promised land 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because he blessed them with a singular blessing Ephraim with one Manasseh with another Super utrumque proprium benedictionem fudit posuit minorem ante majorem Haymo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As the Apostle leaveth the Hebrew and followes the seventie So the Papists may leave the Hebrew and the Greeke and follow the vulgar translation 1. That is not of as great authority as the Seventy 2. When the Seventie differ in sense from the Hebrew the Apostles follow it not The Iesuites he worshipped the end of his staffe that is the top of Iosephs Scepter reverencing the authority he had in Aegypt So that was fulfilled the Sunne the Moone eleven Starres did obeysance to Ioseph Hyperius addeth that in Ioseph a type of Christ he worshipped Christ. 1. Ioseph was most loved of them all 2. He was stript of his Coate 3. Sold into Aegypt 4. Cast into Prison 5. Advanced to great honour So was CHRIST 1. Ioseph being but Viceroy had no Scepter Gen. 41.40 2. Hee should rather have reverenced his Sonnes authoritie at his first comming then at his last departure out of the world 3. Rather publikely than in a private house 4. That had beene no great testimony of faith for even unbeleevers honour the Magistracy 5. The preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will not admit that interpretation hee worshipped upon the top of his rod not the top of his rod. 6. This makes nothing for religious worshipping of Images or God at or before the crucifix and Images The occasion of blessing them was ministred by Iosephs bringing of them to him Genesis 48. ver 1. hee having intelligence of his Fathers sicknesse repaires presently to him with his two Sons that they might bee partakers of their Grandfathers blessing they were borne of the daughter of Potipherah Prince of On a woman that was a stranger from the common-wealth of Israel and not in the Calendar of GODS people they had been nourished in Aegypt where the worship of the true God was in a manner abolished Therefore he is desirous that Iacob a famous Patriarke a man deepe in GODS bookes might blesse them ere hee dyed for his blessing was GODS blessing Ioseph being ruler of the land of Aegypt no doubt had purchased great lands and Lord-ships for them hee was like to leave them money enough that they should want no earthly blessing yet because all these were not worth a straw without the blessing of God hee is most carefull to procure this to them which they were to receive from the mouth and hands of Iacob Fathers are carefull enough to provide outward things for their Children to lay up bagges of Gold and Silver for them to leave them houses and lands Sheepe and Oxen and such like but as for GODS blessing that is the least thing they take thought for This is to build without a foundation for the blessing of God is all in all Therefore above all things procure that to your Children Why doth not the Holy Ghost rather say by faith he blessed his owne Sonnes 1. Because this is greater By the eye of faith hee did not onely foresee what should happen to his owne Children but also to the Children of his Child 2. They being his owne immediate seed were engraffed into Israel already There might be some question of Iosephs Sons because they were the seed of a strange woman therefore it is said that Iacob by faith blessed them and by vertue of this blessing inserted them into the stocke of Israel 2. Here we learne that honour and preferments come neither from the East nor from the West but from GOD. Hee sets up one and pulls downe another Ephraim was the younger yet here in Iacobs blessing as it were by Gods owne hand he is advanced above Manasseh Ioseph himselfe was one of the youngest of all his brethren hated of them cast into a pit sold to the Madianites throwne into prison where hee lay till the yron entred into his soule who would have thought that this abject this poore prisoner should be ruler of all Aegypt yet so it came to passe Saul seeking his Fathers Asses lighted on a kingdome which he never sought for David was taken from following the sheepe great with young and made ruler of Israel Hester a poore banished maide fatherlesse and motherlesse became a Queene this is the Lords doing and it ought to be mervailous in our eyes It hath a double use 1. It must pull downe the Peacocks feathers of all them that be mounted aloft not to be proud of those high places whereunto they are exalted It was not chance and fortune that set them in the throne of dignity it was not simply their owne witt and wisedome their great variety of learning their policie and forecast paines and diligence the favour of their friends that promoted them but the good will and pleasure of GOD Almighty What hast thou beest thou never so great which thou hast not received Therefore swell not in pride in respect of the gift but thanke the giver of it 2. This must represse the envy of inferiours Is another man aloft and art thou beneath digitus Dei est Is thy younger brother in a more worshipfull and honourable place then thou as Ephraim got the start of Manasseh is
mother only is mentioned Exod. 2.2 shee did it with the consent of her husband Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because his Grandfather was alive then and had an hand in the businesse their names we have Exod. 6.20 Amram and Iochabed Brought up in the Citty who goe not much abroad to be scorched of the Sun Act. 7.20 divinitus venustus by the disposition of God Nineveh a City Gedolah laelohim 2 Cor. 10.4 But are they so highly to bee extolled for that is it a worke of faith to respect beauty A naturall man might have done that His beauty was one motive but not all faith was the greatest He was by the gift of God of extraordinary beauty In the which by faith they saw an expresse Image of God that hee was like to prove some rare and notable instrument Hyperius affirmeth that as Simeon Luk. 2. by the revelation of the spirit knew CHRIST to bee the Messiah so his Parents by his beauty that he should be the deliverer of the people but there is no certainty of that they did not sticke in the outward baauty that was as Gods hand to lead them to higher matters they did it not in a naturall affection Others loved their Children and had fayre Children Simiae suum pulchrum but by faith Decree or ordinance The King ordained on paine of death The King had given a streight charge that the Male Children should be drowned but they looked to the King of Kings that was able to preserve them from his fury Though it were the hazzard not of their goods alone but lives too they looked to Gods promises that they should multiply that out of Israel should come a deliverer and the Messiah too therefore they will not drowne their Male-child They did not so feare it as that it should hold them from the preservation of their Child Three moneths not three dayes or three weekes yet at three moneths end they commit him to the water then their faith began to stagger Some thinke they did it in faith too being assured that God would deliver him Exod. 2.4 If he had beene in danger they would have taken him home againe They were the first and all that wee read of that kept their Children against the Kings decree That they hid him three moneths was commendable All that whyle they were in feare and hazarded their lives but that at the three moneths end they expose their Child to the wide world that argues a weakenesse in them yet this weake action this weake faith of theirs is registred to their commendation God alloweth and commendeth a weake faith he doth not quench the smoaking flaxe nor bruise the broken reed he chides Peter for his weake faith ô thou of little faith but he doth not cast him away for it Though a Child be weake yet the Father loves it so doth our heavenly Father us though he find weakenesses in our best actions There was a weakenesse in the Mid-Wives when they preserved the Children with a lye there was a weakenesse in Abraham when hee thought he could not be safe unlesse he dissembled there was weaknesse in the Parents of Moses in thrusting their Child at length out of doores there is weakenesse in our praying hearing of Sermons in our giving to the poore and maintenance of the word preached in our preserving of our Children in dangers and calamities yet if these things bee done in sincerity though there be weakenesses in them they are accepted at the hands of God in Christ. Let that encourage us in all good actions though they be stained with some imbecillities 2. Beauty is a precious pearle a picture of the heavenly Appelles a singular ornament wherewith God hath graced his Children Ioseph was a fayre person and well favoured Gen. 39.6 David 1 Sam. 16.12 Daniel and his fellowes The base fare they had could not impaire their beauty This the LORD in wisedome hath used for the preservation and advancement of his Children Moses beauty was a load-stone to draw the favour of Pharaohs daughter to him It was as a stirrope for Hester to mount up to a Kingdome yet for all that let us not dote too much upon externall beauty 1. Though some of GODS Children have it yet all have it not it is not proprium quarto modo Ebedmeleck the blacke-more was no fayre man neither be they all the Children of GOD that have it Absalom was a beautifull man not a blemish in his whole body yet a wicked man who by all probability never set a foote into the kingdome of heaven and many a filthy strumpet is fayrer than an honest woman 2. It is a transitory gift here to day gone to morrow beauty is a goodly flower yet there be many wormes to consume it sicknesse griefe old age c. Let us chiefely desire that beauty that lasteth for ever 3. Let us consider there is a double beauty the one outward the other inward the one proper to Gods elect the other common to the reprobate together with them The Kings daughter is glorious within Psal. 45.13 It is the inward beauty of the heart that is acceptable to God Let us all pray to God for that to bestow it on us that is better then the beauty of all Ladies in the world this is the true beauty Prov. 31.30 3. It is spoken comparatively not simply they did not so feare the Kings commandement that they should banish the commandement of the King of Kings out of their minde The King said drowne the child God said save the child from drowning What are not Kings to be feared have I not said yee are Gods a King is a certaine God on the earth therefore to be feared and reverenced he carrieth not the sword in vaine sayes the Apostle Balaams Asse feared when he saw the Angels sword and shall not we feare that glittering sword of authority in the hand of Kings and Princes they are rather to be condemned then commended for not fearing the Kings Commandement The answer is easy Wee must distinguish betweene the authority and the commandement of a King There is no power but it is of God but there may be a commandement which is not of God Feare the power the throne the dignity the authority of a King the office of a King but feare not every commandement of a King if wee be sure they are against plaine Scripture In doubtfull things we must believe that our Governours are wiser than our selves VERSE 24. BEfore we have spoken of his Parents faith now let us speak of his owne faith In Moses there are three notable things which are as shrill trumpets to sound forth his faith 1. A voluntary crosse undertaken by him 24.25 26. 2. A necessary crosse imposed on him 27. 3. An institution of a perpetuall Sacrament among the Iewes 28. In the voluntary Crosse 1. A fact committed by him 2. The causes of it which are three election 25. judgement 26. faith The fact was a refusall
house and Temple Remember that our God is a God of peace let us be peaceable Wee have had the Title now to the effect the raising up of Christ from the dead elementia in collatione pacis potentia in suscitatione filij The party raised is set forth 1. By his Sovereignty 2. By his Name 3. By his Office For his Sovereignty He is our Lord. Ye call me Master and Lord. Not every one that sayeth to me Lord c. He created us He redeemed us He hath marryed us to Himselfe therefore we are to call Him Lord as Sarah did Abraham For His Name it is IESUS the onely SAVIOUR of the world There is no other name whereby wee can be saved but by the Name of IESUS Moses was the giver of the Law yet not he but Iosuah brought the people into Canaan So they be not the workes of the Law but Christ alone that carryes us into heaven the celestiall Canaan For His Office Hee is the Shepheard of the sheepe Cyrus my Shepheard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where observe 1. What manner of Shepheard he is 2. How hee comes to bee our Shepheard If ye will know what manner of Shepheard he is he is a great one There be little Shepheards as the Rectours Curates of every Congregation but Hee is the great Shepheard 1. Great in the extent of the flocke the universall Shepheard of the whole Church throughout the world the Shepheard of Iewes and Gentiles so is none but he 2 Great in authority The sheepe are His Hee ownes them Simon feede my sheepe feede my lambes Peter as other Pastors feede them but the sheepe are Christs Iob had 7000. sheepe he had many Shepheards that kept them yet the sheepe were Iobs So Christ hath many thousands of sheepe in Christendome in the world Sundry Shepheards he places over them yet the sheepe are Christs not ours 3 Great in the charge which hee hath taken on him hee is the Shepheard of soule and body too the great Shepheard of our soules 1 Pet. 2. ult He hath care of body and soule too 4 Great in humility the King of Kings yet hee abased himselfe to be a Shepheard 5 Great in knowledge Iohn 10.3 6 Great in love and kindenesse Hee gave Himselfe for the sheepe 7 Great in power none can take them out of his hands All the Divells in hell all the wicked men on the earth cannot cozen him of one sheepe Be thankefull to God for this great Shepheard Of whom of the sheepe that is the righteous They are most fitly resembled to sheepe 1 Sheepe are humble Learne of Me I am humble and meeke 2 Sheepe are harmelesse be as innocent as Doves as harmelesse as sheepe 3 Sheepe are profitable for backe and belly 4 They are ruled by their Shepheard So whatsoever thou commandest us we will doe 5 Sheepe are lead into pastures and folds 6 They are obnoxious to many dangers to Wolves Briers Theives Dogges So many are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord delivers them out of all Happy are the sheepe that have such a Shepheard But how came He to be Shepheard Sayd the chiefe Captaine with a great summe of money obteined I this burgeship But it cost Christ a greater summe even His bloud whereby the everlasting covenant is confirmed Acts 20.28 The wine in the Lords Supper is a lively representation of this bloud The wine is red So was the bloud of CHRIST the wine is powred out into the cup So the bloud of CHRIST was powred forth for our sinnes The grapes are pressed before there is any wine So was CHRIST Wine comforts a man hee hath given him wine to make him a glad heart So the consideration of the bloud of Christ that was shed for the remission of our sins is a singular comfort to the soules of Christians By this bloud He came to be the Shepheard of the Church and this is that bloud that ratifies GODS everlasting Covenant The Covenant I am thy GOD and the GOD of thy seede is an everlasting Covenant Such as the man is such is his bond and word It is good dealing with honest men A man may be bold to build on their word And such as GOD is such is His Covenant an everlasting GOD and an everlasting Covenant of His Kingdome there shall bee no end and of His Covenant there shall be no end As He is our GOD now So he will be for ever Let this stay us up when we are ready to faint in all distresses This is that great Shepheard of the sheepe which GOD hath brought againe from the dead But was hee not able to bring himselfe from the dead Yes verily He raised up this Temple Himselfe He presented Himselfe alive Acts 1.3 Yet in respect of His humanity GOD is sayd to have brought Him from the dead which He did after a glorious manner the Angels waiting on the Sepulcher the earth trembling the graves opening sundry of the Saints rising with Him and appearing to many Our Saviour truely dyed on the Crosse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All the breath went out of His body it was wrapt up in linnen cloathes layed in the Sepulcher there it continued three dayes and nights yet God brought Him againe from the dead Hee was seene of His Apostles and others fourty dayes together they beheld the print of the nailes in His hands and feet they eat and dranke with Him and looked on Him when Hee went into Heaven Even so the same God shall bring us againe from the dead The Head is risen therefore the members shall rise the first fruits are in the barne of Heaven therefore we that are the second fruits shall be gathered thither The husband is in Heaven therefore the wife shall be in Heaven Where I am they also that believe in mee shall bee there Hee brought CHRIST from the dead the third day there was an extraordinary reason in that because His Sacred body might see no corruption Our bodies corrupted with sinne must lye putrifying in the earth till the day of Iudgement Adventus Domini clavis resurrectionis then wee shall meete CHRIST in the ayre and bee translated with Him into His Kingdome of glory Christs resurrection is a pledge of ours VERSE 21. WEE have heard of the person to whom he prayes now to the thing for which he prayes It is perfection in all good workes the which is first set downe then amplified It is comprised in these words make you perfect c. Hee doth not say in faith but in workes workes are a demonstration of faith shew me thy faith by thy workes Except your righteousnesse exceede the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall not enter into the Kingdome of heaven Their righteousnesse was to say not to doe Matth. 23.3 ours must be to say and doe too else wee shall not set a foote into the Kingdome of heaven Not every one that sayeth unto mee Lord Lord c. Therefore
goodnesse let us not fret at it carry a spight against the Preacher but let us say blessed be thou ô man of God and blessed be thy Counsell blessed be God that sent thee to us c. Thus we should suffer even with thankesgiving the word of exhortation The reason is because he hath beene briefe in it I have not beene long rubbing of your soares I have told you of it in a word Therefore suffer it rather Yet now adayes some unwise hearers commend longitude hee stood upon it long againe and againe he was an houre two three houres peradventure he might have spoken as much in a quarter of an houre A wise and pithy brevity should be more welcome to us if wee were judicious hearers Suffer them that wisely in a few words in the spirit of love and meekenesse exhort you to that which is good VERSE 23. GOod newes He is set at liberty that is loosed Timothy which by the mother is an Hebrew Acts 16.1 he was in bonds somewhere though it bee not expressed in 〈◊〉 Scripture for the which they sorrowed therefore he signifies 〈◊〉 to them With whom if he come shortly I will see you Why he was in bonds at this time Heb. 10.34 1. He might 〈◊〉 there bonds past not present 2. This may bee spoken with a ●●cret condition understood though not expressed If I bee de●●vered too When we heare of the deliverance of our brethren out of any ●anger wee should be glad of it If the foote bee delivered of a ●orne that was in it the head rejoyceth at it Wee are members 〈◊〉 of an other let us rejoyce at the deliverance one of another Doe 〈◊〉 heare that any was greivously sicke and is delivered let it doe 〈◊〉 hearts good Doe we heare of the delivery of any Christians 〈◊〉 of the hands of the Turkes Papists and other enemies of the ●ospell let it be joyfull and acceptable to us To this end would 〈◊〉 have them to take knowledge of Timothies deliverance and so ●ould we doe VERSE 24. WHom they should salute 2. From whom they should receive salutations 1 Their Spirituall Rulers and Governours then 〈◊〉 whole body of the Church Not onely they in Rome but in all ●ie that professe the Gospell of CHRIST Salutations are 〈◊〉 of love now the Ministers and Preachers of the Word are be love above common Christians we should have them in sin●●r love for their worke sake therefore they are to bee saluted 〈◊〉 others If ye send Commendations to a Towne especially member the Minister Salute all unlesse they be professed ene●●es to CHRIST and the Gospell bid them not then God speede ●therwise salute all but chiefely them that have the oversight of 〈◊〉 people they must have the first place in our salutations VERSE 25. HEE concludes with a blessing The grace of our LOR● IESUS CHRIST that is the love and favour o● Christ be with you all Amen Even so in the shutting up of this Epistle doe I take my leav● of you Many excellent points of Doctrine many necessary an● profitable exhortations have beene delivered to you out of it it 〈◊〉 even the body and marrow of religion Now the Grace of GO● bee with you GOD give you grace from His Spirit to think on them to practise them to His glory in this life that yee ma● bee partakers of His everlasting glory in the life to come Amen A COMMENTARIE VPON The second Epistle of St. IOHN VERSE 1. THat these two Epistles be S. Iohns as well as the former the similitude of style and of affection doth evince the style is S. Iohns and they be written with S. Iohns affection The three Epistles differ thus In the first he entreats of the love of God and our neighbour joyntly together In the second of that to God more specially by it selfe In the third of our love to our neighbour more particularly The first was written to all Christians in genreall the second to a woman the third to a man The parts of this Epistle are these 1. The inscription of it 2. The contents of it verse 4. The inscription conteines a description in the 2 former verses a precation in the third In the description 1. He describes himselfe which is the writer 2. The persons to whom he writeth he describes himselfe by his office The Elder the persons to whom he writeth are the mother and the children He describes the mother severally 1. By her inward estate elect 2. By her outward a Lady He describes them both joyntly together by his entire love to them which is first averred in regard of himselfe 2. Enlarged in regard of others in this verse 3. Illustrated by the procreant cause of it in both verse 2. THE ELDER THere was another called Iohannes presbyter Iohn the elder to whom some ascribed both these Epistles So writeth Hieronymus de viris illust yet he himselfe is not of that opinion Nay citing a testimonie out of these Epistles he doth in plaine termes attribute them to S. Iohn the Evangelist Clangat tuba Evangelica filius tonitrui quem Iesus amavit plurimùm qui è pectore salvatoris doctrinarum fluente potavit Let the Evangelicall trumpet sound the Sonne of thunder who from the breast of our Saviour drunke in abundantly as it were rivers of heavenly doctrine He doth not entitle himselfe an Apostle but an Elder 1. Because he speakes not with authority like an Apostle but talkes with her familiarly as a father with his daughter 2. Because he was knowne throughout all Asia after a kinde of excellencie by the name of Elder He hath the title of an Elder 1. for his age in outliving all the Apostles 2. for his Wisedome that commonly accompanieth old age the Senate was termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an assembly of auncient men 3. for his grave and discreete carriage 4. and chiefely for his office in the Church Ministers are usually called elders St. Paul left Titus in Creta to ordaine Elders in every Citty The Elders that rule well are worthy of double honour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a young plant may not be made a minister but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a young man may Though he be a young Timothy yet he is an Elder and to be honoured for his office much more the reverend Prelats of the Church Alexander the mighty Monarch did great honour to Iaddus the high Priest Constantine the religious Emperour esteemed highly of the Bishops at the Councell of Nice he made them his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he would have them sit downe by him and placed them at his owne table Valentine the Elder called Ambrose his father Ambr. de vita valent Valentine the younger though an Arrian rose up to him in token of reverence when he came into the consistory No doubt but this Laay honoured Iohn with her heart so ought wee to doe the Elders of the Church If they be