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A10650 An explication of the hundreth and tenth Psalme wherein the severall heads of Christian religion therein contained; touching the exaltation of Christ, the scepter of his kingdome, the character of his subjects, his priesthood, victories, sufferings, and resurrection, are largely explained and applied. Being the substance of severall sermons preached at Lincolns Inne; by Edward Reynoldes sometimes fellow of Merton Colledge in Oxford, late preacher to the foresaid honorable society, and rector of the church of Braunston in Northhampton-shire. Reynolds, Edward, 1599-1676. 1632 (1632) STC 20927; ESTC S115794 405,543 546

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libertie and made himselfe a servant unto all to the Jew as a Jew to the Greeke as a Greeke to the weake as weake and all things to all that by all meanes he might save some and so further the Gospell One while he used Circumcision that he might thereby gaine the weake Jewes another while hee forbade Circumcision that he might not misguide the converted Gentiles nor give place by subjection unto false brethren Who is weake saith he and I am not weake who is offended and I burne not His care of mens soules made him take upon him every mans affection and accommodate himselfe unto every mans temper that hee might not offend the weake nor exasperate the mightie nor dis-hearten the beginner nor affright those which were without from comming in but be All unto All for their salvation The same love is due unto all but the same method of cure is not requisite for all With some Love travelleth in paine with others it rejoyceth in hope some it laboureth to edifie and others it fear●th to offend unto the weake it stoopeth unto the strong it raiseth it selfe to some it is compassionate to others severe to none an enemy to all a mother But all this it doth non mentiendo sed compatiendo not by belying the truth but by pitying the sinner It is not the wisedome of the flesh nor to bee learned of men The Scripture alone is able to make the man of God wise unto the worke of Salvation Thirdly with meeknesse for that is the childe of wisedome Who is a wise man saith Saint Iames let him shew out of a good conversation his workes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with meeknesse of wisedome and againe the wisedome which is from above is pure peaceable gentle easie to be intreated full of mercie The Gospell is Christs Gospell and it must be preached with Christs spirit which was very meeke and lowly When the Disciples would have called for fire from heaven upon the Samaritanes for their indignitie done unto Christ hee rebuked them in a milde and compassionate manner Ye know not what spirit ye are of A right Evangelicall Spirit is ever a meeke and a mercifull Spirit If a man saith the Apostle be overtaken in a fault ye which are spirituall restore such an one in the spirit of meekenesse and againe In meekenesse saith the Apostle instruct those that oppose themselves if God peradventure will give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth Lastly with faithfulnesse in as much as the Gospell is none of ours but Christs whose servants and stewards we are Christ was faithfull though hee were a Son over his owne house and therefore might in reason have assum'd the more liberty to doe his owne will much more doth it become us who are but his Officers to be faithfull too not to dissemble any thing which the estate and exigence of those soules committed to our charge shall require us to speake not to adde diminish or deviate from our commission preaching one Gospell in one place and another in another but to deliver onely the Counsell of God and to watch over the soules of men as they that must give an account Againe since the Gospell is Christs owne Power wee must all learne from thence two duties first to receive it as from him with the affections of subjects which have been bought by him that is first in hearing of the word to expect principally his voyce and to seeke him speaking from heaven This is the nature of Christs sheep to turne away their eares from the voyce of strangers and to heare him Two things principally there are which discover the voice of Christ in the ministerie of the word First it is a spirituall and heavenly doctrine full of purity righteousnesse and peace touching the soule with a kind of secret and magneticall vertue whereby the thoughts affections conscience and conversation are turned from their earthly center and drawne up unto him as Eagles to a carcasse Secondly it is a powerfull an edged a piercing doctrine If the word thou hearest speak unto thy conscience if it search thy hart if it discover thy lusts if it make thy spirit burne within thee if it cast thee upon thy face and convince and judge thee for thy transgressions if it bind up thy sores and clense away thy corruptions then it is certainly Christs word and then it must bee received with such affections as becommeth the word of Christ. First with Faith if we conferre with flesh and bloud we shall be apt ever to cavill against the truth For hee that rejecteth Christ doth never receive his word A fleshly heart cannot submit unto a heavenly Doctrine Christ and his Apostles did every where endure the contradiction of sinners But yet hee claimeth this honour over the consciences of men to over-rule their assents against all the mists and sophisticall reasonings of the flesh The Apostles themselves preached nothing but either by immediate commission from him or out of the Law and the Prophets But his usuall forme was Verily I say unto you noting that hee onely was unto the Church the Author and fountaine of all heavenly Doctrine that unto him onely belongeth that authoritative and infallible Spirit which can command the subscription and assent of the conscience that hee onely can say with boldnesse to the soule as hee did to the Samaritan woman Beleeve mee And that therefore no authority either of men or Churches either Episcopall Papall or Synodicall can without open sacrilege usurpe power to over-rule the faith of men or impose any immediate and Doctrinall necessity upon the conscience in any points which are not ultimately and distinctly resolv'd into the evident authority of Christ in his word S. Paul himselfe durst not assume Dominion over the faith of men nor S. Peter neither suffer any Elders amongst whom hee reckoneth himselfe as an Elder also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to over-rule or prescribe unto the heritage of God It is onely Christs word which the hearts of men must stoope and attend unto and which they must mingle with faith that it may bee profitable unto them that is they must let it into their hearts with this assurance that it is not the breath of a man but the message of Christ who is true in all his threatnings and faithfull in all his promises and pure in all his precepts that hee sendeth this ministerie abroad for the perfection of the Saints the edification of his Church and therefore if they bee not hereby cleansed and built up in his body they doe as much as in them lieth make void the holy ordinance of God which yet must never returne in vaine The word of God doth effectually worke onely in those that beleeve It worketh in hypocrites and wicked hearers according to the measure of that imperfect faith which they have but it worketh not
first workes lest so excellent a priviledge be removed from us There is no wrath that is wrath to the uttermost but that which depriveth a people of the Gospell and taketh away their Candlesticke from them Thirdly it notes unto us the difference of the two covenants the one out of Sinai and the other out of Sion At first the Law proceeded out of Sinai wherein though the end were merciful yet the manner was terrible and therfore the effect nothing but bondage but after it was sent out of Sion with the Spirit of grace and adoption observed with cheerefulnesse and libertie as by those that know God will spare them as a man spareth his childe that serveth him for in my bond-slave I looke to the perfection of the worke but in my son to the affection and disposition of the heart Lastly it notes unto us that the seat of saving truth the custodie of the promises and Gospell of salvation doth still belong unto Sion to the Church of God Out of the Church there is no Gospell and therefore out of the Church there is no salvation The Apostle saith of children which are borne out of the Church that they are uncleane unto the Church above all congregations of men belongeth this excellent priviledge to be the Treasurer of the riches of Christ and to hold forth the Word of life unto men In which sense the Apostle saith that it is the pillar and the ground of truth not that which giveth being to the Church for the Law must not faile nor perish nor that which giveth authoritie imposeth a sense canonizeth and maketh authenticall is a judge or absolute determiner of the truth for in that sense the Church is held up by the Word and not that by it for the Church is built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles namely upon that fundamentall doctrine which they have laid But the Church is the depositary of the truth that orbe out of which this glorious light shines forth unto it appertaines the Covenants and the giving of the Law and the service of God and the promises Her office and her honour it is to be the Candlesticke which holdeth up the Word of truth to set to her seale unto the evidence and excellencie thereof by her ministery authority consent and countenance to conciliate respect thereunto in the mindes of aliens and to confirme it in the mindes of beleevers to fasten the nailes and points thereof like masters of the assemblies under one principall Shepherd which is Christ in the hearts of men not to dishonour it by their usurped authority above it for by that meanes all controversies of religions are turned not into contentions of doctrine that that may be rested in which doth appeare to have in it most intrinsecall majestie spiritualnesse and evidence but into factions and emulations of men that that sect may bee rested in who can with most impudence and ostentation arrogate an usurped authority to themselves but by their willing submission thereunto to credit it in the affections of men and to establish others in the love and obedience thereunto for the authoritie of the Church is not Autoritas jurisdictionis an authority of jurisdiction above the Scriptures but onely Autoritas muneris an authoritie of dispensation and of trust to proclaime exhibite present the truth of God unto the people to point to the starre which is directed unto by the finger but is seene by the evidence of its owne light To hold forth as a pasquill or pillar that Law and Proclamation of Christ the contents whereof we discover out of it selfe In one word that place sheweth the duty of the Church to preserve knowledge and to shew forth the truth of sacred Scriptures out of themselves but not any infallibilitie in it selfe or authority over others to binde their consciences to assent unto such expositions of Scripture as derive not their evidence from the harmonie and analogie of the Scriptures themselves but only from Ipse dixit because the Church hath spoken it To conclude this point we are to note for the cleere understanding of the office of the Church concerning the holy Scriptures First that some things therein are Hard to be understood as Saint Peter speakes either by reason of their allegoricall and figurative expressions as the visions of Ezekiel Daniel Zechary c. or by reason of the obscure and strange connexion of one part with another or of the dependance thereof upon forren learning or the like but then we must note that the knowledge of such things as these are not of absolute necessitie unto salvation for though the perverting of hard places be damnable as Saint Peter telleth us yet that ignorance of them which groweth out of their owne obscurity and not out of our neglect is not damnable Secondly some things have evidence enough in the termes that expresse them but yet are Hard to be beleeved by reason of the supernaturall quality of them As when we say that Christ was the Sonne of a Virgin or that he died and rose againe there is no difficultie in the sense of these things it is easily understood what he that affirmeth them doth meane by them All the difficultie is to bring the minde to give assent unto them Thirdly some things though easie in their sense to be understood and it may be easie likewise in their nature to be beleeved are yet Hard to be obeyed and practised as repentance and forsaking of sinne c. Now according unto these differences wee may conceive of the office and power which the Church hath in matters of holy Scripture First for hard places in regard of the sense and meaning of the place it is the dutie of the Church to open them to Gods people with modestie and moderation and therein God alloweth the learned a Christian libertie with submission of their opinions alwayes to the spirits of the Prophets so long as they doe therein nothing contrary to the Analogie of faith to the generall peace and unity of the Church to the rules of charitie pietie loyaltie and sobrietie to abound in their owne sense and to declare for the further edifying of the Church what they conceive to be in such difficult places principally intended And further than this no Church nor person can goe for if unto any man or chaire there were annexed an infallible spirit enabling him to give such a cleere and indubitate exposition of all holy Scriptures as should leave no inevidence in the Text nor hesitancie in the mindes of men how comes it to passe that hitherto so many difficulties remaine wherein even our Adversaries amongst themselves doe give severall conjectures and explications and how can that man to whom so excellent a gift of infallibilitie is bestowed cleere himselfe of envie and abuse of the grace of God who maketh not use thereof to expound the Scriptures
the same spirituall truth and power towards the Church therefore all the faithfull who are any where by these multitudes of Preachers taught what the truth is in Iesus doe all by the secret sway and conduct of the same Spirit of Grace whose peculiar office it is to guide his Church in all necessary and saving truth with an admirable consent of heart and unitie of judgement incline to the same end and walke in the same way acknowledging no monarch over their consciences but CHRIST nor any other ministeriall application of his regall power in the Catholike Church but onely by severall Bishops and Pastours who in their severall particular compasses are endowed with as plenary and ample ministeriall power as the Pope and his Consistorie within the See of Rome Secondly that Peter was Prince and Monarch Rocke and Head in this Vniversall Church and that hee alone was custos clavium and all this in the vertue of Christs promise and commission granted unto him Thou art Peter and upon this Rocke will I build my Church feed my sheep feed my Lambs unto thee will I give the Keyes of the kingdome of heaven In which respect Baronius calleth him Lapidem primarium the chiefe stone and againe though Christ saith hee bee the Author and moderator of his Church yet the Princedome and Monarchie hee hath confer'd upon Peter and therefore as no man can lay any other foundation than that which is layd namely Christ so no man can lay any other than that which Christ hath layd namely Peter And it is wonderfull to consider what twigs and rushes they catch at to hold up this their monarchy Because Peter did preach first therfore he is Monarch of the Church By which reasō his monarchie is long since expir'd for his pretended successors scarce preach at all And yet if that may bee drawen to any argument it proves onely that hee was Lapis primus the first in order and in forwardnesse to preach Christ as it became him who had three times denied him but not Lapis primarius the chiefe in dignity and jurisdiction over the rest● and why should it not bee as good an argument to say that Iames had the dignity of precedence before Peter because Paul first names Iames and then Cephas and that in a place where hee particularly singles them out as pillars and principall men in the Church as to say that Peter hath jurisdiction over Iames and the rest because in their Synods and assemblies hee was the chiefe speaker Because Peter cured the lame man that sate at the gate of the Temple therfore hee is universall monarch By which reason likewise Paul who in the selfe same manner cured a creeple at Lystra should fall into competitiō with Peter for his share in the monarchie But the people there were not so acute disputants as these of Rome for though they saw what Paul had done yet they concluded the dignity and precedence for Barnabas they called him Iupiter and Paul Mercury Againe because Peter pronounced sentence upon Ananias therfore hee is monarch of the universall Church and why Paul should not here likewise come in for his share I know not for hee also passed judgment upon Elimas the sorcerer and we no where finde that hee derived his authority or had any commission from Peter to doe so And surely if by the same Apostolicall and infallible Spirit of Christ which they both immediatly received from Christ himselfe S. Paul did adjudge Elimas to blindnesse by the which S. Peter adjudged Ananias to death I see not how any logick from a parity of actions can conclude a disparity of persons except they will say that it is more monarchicall to adjudge one to death than another to blindnesse Againe because Peter healed the sick by his shaddow therefore Peter is monarch of the universall Church and even in this point Paul likewise may hold on his competition for why is not the argument as good that Paul is Monarch of the Church because the handkerchiefs and aprons which came from his body did cure diseases and cast out Divels as that Peter is therefore monarch because by the overshaddowing of his body the sick were healed But the truth is there is no more substance in this argument for Peters principality than there is for their supposed miraculous vertue of images and relicks of Saints because the shaddow which was the image of Peter did heale the sick for that also is the Cardinals great argument Againe because Peter was sent to Samaria to confirme them in the faith and to lay hands on them that they might receive the holy Ghost and to confound Simon Magus the sorcerer therfore hee is primate of the Catholike Church and hath monarchicall jurisdiction And yet the Pope is by this time something more monarchicall than Peter for he would thinke skorne to bee sent as an Ambassador of the Churches from Rome to the Indians amongst whom his Gospell hath been in these latter ages preached and doubtlesse they would bee something more confirmed than they are by the soveraigne vertue of his prayers and presence But alas what argument is it of monarchie to be sent by others in a message and that too not without an associate who joyned with him in the confirmation of that Church and if the confuting or cursing of Simon Magus were an argument of primacy why should not S. Pauls cursing of Elimas and Hymeneus and Alexander and S. Iohns of Cerinthus be arguments of their primacie likewise Againe because Paul went up to Ierusalem to see Peter therefore Peter was monarch of the Catholick Church And why should not by this argument Elizabeth bee concluded a greater woman than the virgin Marie and indeed the lady of all woman because the blessed Virgin went up into the hill countrie of Iudea and entred into the house of Zacharias and saluted Elizabeth but wee finde no argument but of equality in the Text for hee went to see him as a brother but not to doe homage to him or receive authority from him as a monarch else why went he not up immediately to Ierusalem but staied three years and preached the Gospell by the commission hee had received from Christ alone and how came S. Paul to bee so free or S. Peter to bee so much more humble than any of his pretended successors as the one to give with boldnesse the other with silence and meeknesse to receive so sore a reproofe in the face of all the brethren as many yeares after that did passe betweene them Certainly S. Paul in so long time could not but learne to know his distance and in what manner to speake to his monarch and primate By these particulars wee see upon what sandy foundation this vast and formidable Babel of Papall usurpation and power over the Catholike Church is erected which yet upon the matter is the sole principle of Romish religion upon which all their
faith worship and obedience dependeth But wee say that as Peter was a foundation so were all the other Apostles likewise Eph. 2.20 Revel 21.14 and that upon the same reason For the Apostles were not foundations of the Church by any dignity of their persons as Christ the chiefe corner stone was but by the vertue of their Apostolicall office which was universall jurisdiction in governing the people of Christ universall commission in instructing them and a Spirit of infallibility in revealing Gods will unto them throughout the whole world And therefore as Peter had the keyes of the Kingdome of heaven to remit or retaine the sinnes of men so likewise had the other Apostles Ioh. 20.23 That Christs charge to Peter feed my sheepe feed my lambes is no other in substance than his commission to them all goe teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost And that the particular directing of it unto Peter and praying for him was with respect unto his particular onely by way of comfort and confirmation as being then a weake member not by way of dignity or deputation of Christs owne regall power to him in the visible Church For all the offices of Christ are intransient and uncommunicable to any other in as much as that administration and execution of them dependeth upon the dignity of his person and upon the fulnesse of his Spirit which no mortall man or immortall Angell is capable of But all this is not enough to bee granted them for the raising their authority But then thirdly we must grant them too that Peter thus qualified was Bishop of Rome for proofe wherof they have no Testimonie of Holy Scriptures but onely humane tradition Cui impossibile non est subesse falsum So that in this which is one of the maine principles they build upon their faith cannot bee resolved into the word of God and therefore is no divine faith Fourthly that hee did appoint that Church to bee the monarchicall and fundamentall see to all other Churches for hee was Bishop as well of Antioch as of Rome by their owne confession And I wonder why some of his personall vertue should not cleave to his chaire at Antioch but all passe over with him to another place Fifthly that hee did transmit all his prerogatives to his successors in that chaire By which assertion they may as well prove that they all though some of them have been sorcerers others murtherers others blasphemous atheists were inheriters of S. Peters love to Christ for from thence our Savior inferres feed my sheep to note that none feed his sheepe but those that love his person Lastly that that long succession from S. Peter untill now hath ever since been legall and uninterrupted Or else the Church must sometimes have been a monster without a head Wee grant that some of the Ancients argue from succession in the Church but it was while it was yet pure and while they could by reason of the little space of time betweene them and the Apostles with evidence resolve their Doctrine through every medium into the preaching of the Apostles themselves But even in their personall succession who knoweth not what Simonies and Sorceries have raised divers of them unto that degree and who is able to resolve that every Episcopall ordination of every Bishop there hath been valid since therunto is requisite both the intention and Orders of that Bishop that ordained him These and a world of the like uncertainties must the faith of these men depend upon who dare arrogate to themselves the prerogatives of Christ and of his Catholike Kingdome But I have been too long upon this argument Againe this point of the stabilitie of Christs Kingdome is a ground of strong confidence comfort to the whole Church of Christ against all the violence of any outward enemies wherwith sometimes they may seeme to bee swallowed upon Though they associate themselves and gird to the battle though they take counsell and make decrees against the Lords anointed and against his spouse yet it shall all come to nought and be broken in pieces all the smoake of hell shall not bee able to extinguish nor all the power of hell to overturne the Church of God and the reason is Immanuel God is with us Esai 8.9 10. That anointing which the Church hath received shall deliver it at last from the yoke of the enemie Esai 10.27 Though it seeme for the time in as desperate a condition as a dry stick in the fire or a dead body in the grave yet this is not indeed a sepulture but a semination Though it seeme to bee cast away for a season yet in due time it will come up and flourish againe Zechariah 3.2 Ezekiel 37.11 And this is the assurance that the Church may have that the Lord can save and deliver a second time Esai 11.11 that hee is the same God yesterday and to day and for ever and therfore such a God as the Church hath found him heretofore such a God it shall finde him to day and for ever in the returnes and manifestations of his mercy Which discovers the folly and foretels the confusion of the enemies of Christs Kingdome they conceive mischiefe but they bring forth nothing but vanity Iob 15.35 They conceive chaffe and bring forth stubble Esai 33.11 They imagine nothing but a vaine thing their malice is but like the fighting of briars and thornes with the fire Esai 27.4 Nahum 1.10 like the dashing of waves against a rock like a mad mans shooting arrowes against the Sunne which at last returne upon his owne head like the puffing of the fanne against the corne which driveth away nothing but the chaffe like the beating of the winde against the saile or the foming and raging of the water against a mill which by the wisedome of the artificers are all ordered unto usefull and excellent ends And surely when the Lord shall have accomplished his worke on mount Sion when hee shall by the adversary as by a fanne have purged away the iniquity of Iacob and taken away his sinne hee will then returne in peace and beauty unto his people againe Looke on the preparation of some large building in one place you shall see heapes of lime and morter in another piles of timber every where rude and indigested materials and a tumultuary noise of axes and hammers but at length the artificer sets every thing in order and raiseth up a beautifull structure such is the proceeding of the Lord in the afflictions and vastations of his Church though the enemie intend to ruine it yet God intends onely to repaire it Thus farre as Donec respects Christs Kingdome in it selfe Now as it respecteth the enemies of Christ it notes First The present inconsummatenesse of the victories and by consequence the intranquillity of Christs Kingdome here upon the earth All his enemies are not yet under his feete Satan is not yet shut up