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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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thee to life the vaile is still on thy heart and thou wilt not suffer it to be remooued that the glorious light of Iesus Christ should shine vpon thy soule But marke thy fearefull estate all this while For whosoeuer thou art that perceiuest not the mightie power of the word in thy chaunge and conuersion be thou sure it is mightie in working thy ouerthrow and confusion For God neuer speaketh but to saluation or perdition the words of his mouth returne not in vaine they are the sauour of life or of death they binde or they loose they be the sentence either of absolution or of condemnation oh then thou that louest thy soule deceiue not thy selfe for if the Gospel be hid now beeing a word so fit to teach thee and thou hauing bin so long taught and yet remainest vntaught still vnchanged still inwardly vnreformed still outwardly it cannot but be a fearefull brand that thou art as yet in the state of perdition and that the God of the world hath blinded thine eyes vnto destruction And ●l●tter not thy selfe in a course of securitie because perhapps thou seest not thy danger for this word cannot quicken thee but thou shalt perceiue it but it slayeth men insensibly so as if thou findest not the life of grace wrought by it thou hast great cause to feare and flie thy present estate 3. The last vse is directed against the Papists who hold that the Scriptures are 1. imperfect without tradition 2. obscure and difficult For the former Bellarmines position i● that all necessarie doctrine concerning faith and Christian life is not contained in the Scriptures but many things of this kind that is necessarie things are to be supplyed out of the traditions either of the Apostles or of the Church And for the second he affirmeth that the Scriptures are not so plaine and easie to bee vnderstood as that they be sufficient in themselues to decide the controversies of faith without the authoritie and expositions of the Church nay rather are so obscure that euen in things necessarie to be knowne they cannot without the instruction of the Church be vnderstood no not of faithfull men Against both which blasphemous positions this one of our Apostle opposeth it selfe in that the word was euer fitted to the instruction of beleeuers and did euer sufficiently instruct them in all ages according to the age and state of the Church Nay this word beeing perfectly fitted and sufficient for the instruction of the Church when yet there were but the fiue books of Moses are they not now much more sufficient and perfect seeing the expositions of the Prophets and the writings of the Euangelists and Apostles are added Obiect But as then the Scripture was imperfect without the writings which after were added so is it now without the decrees constitutions and traditions of the Church To which I answer that the written word was neuer imperfect for when the newe Testament was added vnto the old it was made not more perfect but more cleare for euen then it was entire if not in so many words yet in the same sense and substance of doctrine Let them a●ke then what the Scripture speaketh of this and that as the Baptisme of children of Maries virginitie after Christs birth of purgatorie or what by the Scripture we may thinke of the vncircumcision of women of infants dying before the 8. day of the sauing of the heathen c. I answer if the things of which they inquire be either false or fabulous as that of purgatorie or not necessarie to saluation as that of Maries virginitie the question is not of them it is no impeachment vnto the Scriptures to omit them wherein we see many of the words and facts of Christ himselfe omitted but if they aske of things more necessarie if they be of absolute necessitie these are taught fully and expressely as the substance of all Christian religion But for necessarie circumstances and inferiour truth about them the Scripture often entending to prouoke our studie and diligence is not so expresse and yet is not wanting in teaching them but by proportion and analogie As in the example of baptizing of children it is by proportion and consequence taught in Scripture though not in so many syllables as seeing that circumcision was administred to children so by proportion may children 2. Christ calleth them 3. affirmeth that they belong to him and his couenant and therefore the seale belongeth vnto them 4. the Apostles baptised whole housholds wherein doubtlesse were many children Obiect But Apostolike men who writ the Scripture had no commandement to write the word or if they had they had no intention to write a perfect rule to all the world but writ occasionally either some historie as the Euangelists or epistles and letters as the Apostles according to the condition of seuerall Churches or men to whom they writ Ans. ● They spake and writ not by priuate motion but by instinct which is equiualent to a commandement 2. Although they writ occasionally yet were they so guided by Gods prouidence that whatsoeuer things the Church ought to beleeue is clearely and largely deliuered in their writings So as we may conclude this point with this sure rule That the wise prouidence of God hath so furnished the Scriptures with sufficiencie and cloathed them with perfection that whatsoeuer they can alleadge to the contrarie they are either contained in the Scriptures or they are not necessarie As for the obscuritie of Scripture We graunt not that the Scriptures be obscure but that many things in them are difficult The Rhemists vpon 2. Pet. 3.16 that all Scripture is difficult especially Pauls Epistles whereas Peter saith onely that some things in Pauls Epistles were hard to be vnderstood and not all his Epistles Againe they forget that the same Apostle Peter speaking of the Scripture saith that it is a light shining in a darke place Now when we speake with the Scriptures that some things are difficult we must take with vs these three caueats 1. That this difficultie proceedeth either from the maiestie and high excellencie of the things of God contained in them or else from the lownes and weakenesse of man whether vnregenerate or regenerate The vnregenerate person beeing in his naturall estate is endued onely with a naturall vnderstanding so as the things of God are beyond his reach and compasse they are foolishnesse to him he cannot conceiue of them The regenerate although he hath an inward light of the spirit which the other wanteth yet these things euen to him are reuealed but in part after an vnperfect manner and in vnperfect meanes vntill that perfect come so as the best man is partly ignorant of the nature of the things themselues besides his failing in the meanes as the knowledge of the tongues his studie meditation and labour herein 2. Whereas they say that this obscuritie is in things necessarie to be knowne the truth
of a word in season require a learned tongue how much more doth the whole office require an Ezra a man prompt in the law of the Lord a workeman indeed and such a one as need not be ashamed And can we thinke that the Lord sendeth any other doth he vse to send a message by the hand of a foole surely if he send any he maketh them first able Ministers of the new Testament not of the letter but of the spirit In the old Testament if he raised vp any extraordinarie persons vnto this worke what spirit what power what deepe vnderstanding what resolution manifested they as that they seemed rather pettie Gods then men both in the exact knowing although by reuelation and making knowne things meerely to come as also in the powerfull resisting of sinne euen in Kings themselues and the greatest vpon earth Such were Moses Elias Isay Ieremie c. If ordinarie Ministers they also are first fitted yea though they were but inferiour Levites and Priests both to be the peoples mouth vnto God to put incense before the Lord as also to be Gods mouth to the people to teach Iacob Gods iudgement and Israel his law But if high Preists they must be such as whose lips must preserue knowledge and such as who can resolue the people when they seeke vnto his mouth in the difficult cases of the law of God for he is the messenger of the Lord of hosts Mal. 2.7 In the new Testament accordingly if the Church haue need for a time of extraordinarie Ministers such as are Apostles Euangelists euangelicall Prophets such are raised and to such is giuen by the spirit the word of wisedome that is a more excellent reuelation and more speciall and immediate instinct and assistance of the spirit together with more eminent authoritie in explaning the mysteries of Christ. If ordinarie Pastors bee raised by God by the same spirit is giuen to them the word of knowledge that is by diligence in the Scripture they obtaine such knowledge as that they are able to make Christ knowne vnto others although they be farre inferiour to the former Where this word of knowledge is wanting that commission is not sealed from God The Eunuch could reade well enough euen as many among our people can and yet he could not vnderstand without a guide and how could he haue been a guide vnto him except a blind guide that could doe no more then himselfe could namly reade perhaps without vnderstanding also God sent him no such guide but a Philip a mightie man in the Scriptures and full of the power of God Vse Let euerie man whom this doctrine concerneth examine hereby the truth of his calling whether he hath receiued the word of wisdome or no which finding he shall boldly say with Ieremie of a truth the Lord hath sent me and runneth not before he be sent 2. It is a great motiue to thankefulnesse wheresoeuer such able Ministers are planted where God giueth learned tongues that can exhort according to wholesome doctrine learned Ezraes skilfull in the lawe of the Lord eloquent Apolloes mightie to convince by the Scriptures the gainsayers Whereas pitifull is their want who in this regard are as men cast out of Gods sight wanting the blessed meanes of an able ministerie for in such places godlinesse must needes be vnperswaded vice vnresisted truth vntaught falshood vnconvinced there people cannot but lie open to become a pray to the deuill a spoile to his wicked instruments a shop for all wicked practises In such places seducers and wicked Iesuites the verie heads to imagine and hands to execute all mischiefe lurke as in the vaults of safe conduct practising daily to withdrawe men from alleagiance to our heauenly and earthly Gods and Kings such soiles lie vnder the heauie wrath of God as to whome no sinne commeth amisse If there be no knowledge of God in the land needs must there be varietie yea an inundation of most fearefull sinnes and consequently of heauie iudgements into which both Prophets and people who haue sinned together shall fall together for where vision faileth people are nakedly laid open to all the curse of God and when Israel had beene a long season without the true God without the Priest to teach and without the lawe no meruaile if there were no peace to him that went out and in implying both these points that without true teaching without the true God and without God without peace and blessing Oh that men therefore could prize the blessing where it is and so bewaile it where it is wanting as that by all good meanes they labour the procurement and presence of it Doctr. 3. All this abilitie in the Minister must be had out of the Scriptures seeing the Apostle affirmeth that by holding fast the faithfull word he shal be able to both these maine works of the ministerie In like manner our Apostle teacheth Timothie not onely in generall how the Scriptures are able to fit the man of God to euery good work of his ministerie but reckoneth vp also all the particulars of his dutie that no man might doubt but that it fitteth him vnto all And indeede the Scriptures are a rich treasurie which affoardeth abundantly things both newe and old he that would read the writings speeches and doings of the auncient fathers let him reade the Scriptures diligently they be a storehouse wherein a man may furnish himselfe vnto all 1. doctrine all of it beeing written for our instruction 2. vnto all consolation for through the comfort of the Scriptures we haue hope and Dauid affirmeth that if he had not found comfort in the lawe he had perished in his trouble 3. vnto all resolution of doubts by which alone Christ himselfe resolued the case of diuorce Math. 19. and the Sadduces in the case of the resurrection Mat. 22. 4. vnto all strength in temptation by which sword of the spirit alone Christ vanquished all Satans assaults Mat. 4. 5. And for the other branch of conuincing the aduersarie The Scriptures are fitly compared by the auncient vnto Dauids scrip whence he fetched out the stone wherewith Goliah fell vnto the ground they be the onely hammer of heresies Whatsoeuer controuersies Christ and his Apostles met withall they brought the deciding of them vnto the Scriptures although they might haue otherwise confuted falshoods and by their miracles haue confounded their aduersaries When the Priests and Scribes disdained Christ because the people sung Hosanna vnto him he presently prooueth his diuinitie out of the Scriptures So Peter prooued out of the Scriptures Act. 2. and 3. and Paul euerie where that Christ was the Messiah and Sauiour of the world out of Moses and the Prophets Apollos was a man eloquent and mightie in the Scriptures but not by his eloquence did he mightily and with vehemencie confute the Iewes but shewed by the Scriptures that Iesus was the Christ. Vse
Apostles vntill Christs comming againe and especially the proceedings pride and fall of Babylon the great whore with all the kingdomes of Antichrist the holy Ghost could not but foresee what labours and trauailes Satan and his instruments would take to weaken and impaire the credit and authoritie of this aboue all other books wherein he preuailed so farre as euen some true Churches called the truth and authoritie of it into question and therefore it is worth the marking with what a number of confirmations this booke aboue all other in the Scriptures is backed First the author of it is set in the forefront or face of it The Reuelation of Iesus Christ who professeth himselfe to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first and the last the beginning and ending which is which was and which is to come euen the Almightie so in the seuerall Epistles to the Churches in seuerall stiles he challengeth them to be his Thus saith he 1. that holdeth the seauen starres in his right hand 2. he that is first and last which was dead and is aliue 3. which hath the sharpe two edged sword 4. which hath eyes like a flame of fire and his feete like fine brasse 5. which hath the seauen spirits of God and the seuen starres 6. he who is holy and true who hath the key of Dauid who openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth 7. he who is Amen the faithfull and true witnesse the beginning of the creatures of God Secondly the instrument or penman his seruant Iohn the Euangelist the Apostle the Diuine who for the further and more full authority of it repeateth his name at least fowre times saying I Iohn Thirdly to omit many in the last chapter are fiue testimonies heaped together that if it were possible no man might be found so obstinately wicked as euer to doubt of it but that he that shold stād against the truth of it might euen gainsay the shining of the sunne it selfe 1. of the Angel 2. of God himselfe the Lord of the holy Prophets 3. of Iesus Christ Behold I come shortly c. 4. of Iohn I Iohn heard and saw all these things 5. the protestation of Iesus Christ vers 18. I protest if any man shal adde or diminish from these things of this booke God shall adde all the plagues of it against him and take away his part out of the booke of life Now had this booke neuer to haue bin oppugned there had not needed such strong and frequent confirmations neither would the holy Ghost haue bin so earnest in a needles matter The like we might teach out of particular examples How earnest is the Apostle in the poynt we haue in hand beeing the very foundation of Christianity not here only but elswhere in his writings when he saw that men would ioyne the law and gospel circumcision and baptisme Gal. 5.2 Behold I Paul say vnto you if ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing and vers 3. I testifie againe vnto you and 4. ye are abolished from Christ and fallen from grace he could not satisfie himselfe in his vehemencie against such a doctrine as this was Nay the sonne of God himselfe hath left vs his owne example in this point of wisdome who was wont in his teaching vnto diuerse more necessarie truths to prefix his Amen Amen I say vnto you which is in sence all one with this of our Apostle if we consider the speach though in the speaker and manner of speaking was wonderful difference himselfe beeing the author and Amen it selfe euen the faithfull and true witnesse and all other so farre only true as they testified from him And so he often shutteth vp his speach with he that hath eares to heare let him heare and then let him that heareth or readeth consider such sayings carrie salt with them and for such the Lord planted the eare more especially Vse 1. To teach Ministers in matters of weight to deale so soundly as the conscience of the hearer may be as firmely stablished in the truth taught and perswaded as if an angel from heauen should come and teach an other doctrine he may be held accursed so as the verie hearts of the hearers may say this is a faithfull doctrine and saying for thus as the Gospel is the word of truth so shall it be held in much certenty by the professors of it And it is a fault blame worthie in many Ministers who when they are occasioned by the place in hand to speake of some controuerted or most necessarie truth either for idlenes because they will not so much trouble themselues or for vnfaithfullnesse avoide by declining and shunning such truths the displeasure of the times which godly Ministers must swallowe that the truth opposed may be setled in the hearts of men not to speake of such as are infamously guiltie of some vices vnrepented of and vnreformed which maketh them balke and betray necessarie truths which in that regard they dare not mention 2. It is a great fault of hearers and worthie amendement who cannot well indure to heare of points in controversie especially betweene the Papists and our selues whereas their vnderstandings and iudgements are so farre from beeing stablished in the certaine truth of such things as euery winde or blast of the skulking Iesuite or Papist is able to vnsettle them in great matters and turne them off their grounds Now if it bee the teachers part to insist especially in such needefull points as are most opposed and hardlyest yeelded vnto it must needes be the hearers to provoke themselues to the right discerning of such differences for neither doe the contentions of the teachers so much concerne themselues as their hearers neither ende they in themselues but in the hearer See we not how if neuer so grosse or slender a point of carnall libertie be contended about it will carrie the applause almost of all men with i● Is it meete then that any Saint of God be a looker on and not rather according to the commandement that euerie one should contend for the faith once giuen and can they contend vnlesse they be taught how and here instructed with weapons This admonition is the more needfull in these dayes so full of danger by the seduction of Papists separators libertines which swarme euerie where the daily encrease of all which is not more incredible then lamentable 3. We learne hence how to conceiue of the point and doctrine in hand seeing the wisedome of Gods spirit vseth to speake to the worth of the thing and by such prefaces and markes of speciall worthinesse pointeth to some weightie and needfull point vsing here another stile then if he should speake of mint and cummin and some smaller points of religion We meet not in euery precept with an oyes or warnword but where we do we must conceiue such not the motes but the beames of our religion
would first entertaine the true religion as by those many ceremonies enioyned might more specially appeare and by Iacob we may iudge of the other Patriarkes who would not giue Dinah to Hemors sonne vnlesse the whole family were circumcised Secondly it must be considered whether the partie be an absolute Papist or onely Popishly affected in some points as namely whether he or shee erre in maine and fundamentall points of faith or in lesse dangerous opinions If the partie prooue tractable and erre onely in smaller points as suppose some superstitious obseruations of daies meates foolish and rash vowes or such like suckt in by reason of corrupt education although I would wish a man to make a better match for himselfe yet I cannot condemne it as vtterly vnlawfull neither in this question commeth such a one vnder this commandement of the Apostle But if the partie be a limbe of the Pope drinking in with greedinesse the poysoned cuppe of his heresies and such a one as is turned off the foundation by holding iustification by workes freewill to good Popish traditions of equall authoritie with Scripture and such like here the precept holdeth A Protestant may not marrie with such a partie The reasons are these 1. The nature of marriage much more then of friendship is a communion and fellowship in diuine and humane things Now what communion can be betweene truth and falsehood Secondly Gods example who in the beginning ioyned not two of diuerse religions besides the commandement is not to be vnequally yoked and to marrie alwaies in the Lord not against him And if a Christian may not by bodily coniunction become the member of an harlot much lesse of an idolater who goeth an whoring from God after many lovers Thirdly marriage is called the couenant of God both because he maketh it in heauen and watcheth how it is entred and carried by married persons in the earth Now how can he thinke his marriage to be made by God who hath a limbe of Satan and Antichrist laid by his side or rather that himselfe hath not wilfully profaned the name and couenant of God as Iudah did by marrying the daughter of a strange God Malac. 2.11 Fourthly there is certen danger of seduction by such a partie and therefore it is a presumptuous tempting of God to match with ●●ch a one And can there be a stronger reason giuen then this which is the Lords owne for the strengthening of his owne prohibition Deut. 7.3 Thou shalt not make marriages with them for they will cause thy sonnes to turne away from mee and the same reason is rendred in renewing the precept Iosh. 23.11 Plentifull is the Scripture in examples to this purpose Salomon to whom the Lord appeared many times fell by meanes of his outlandish wiues to idolatrie and who thinketh himselfe wiser then he Ioram at the instigation of his wife forsooke the Lord he had the daughter of Ahab to wife and he did euill in the sight of the Lord. But most pregnant is that example of Israel who marrying with Moab was presently ioyned to Baal Peor and for this sinne were slaine in one day fowre and twentie thousand Num. 25.9 And let him that thinketh himselfe to stand on the surest ground consider whether his disposition be not such as standeth in neede of such a companion as may rather further him in pietie then any way alienate him from the wayes of God Fifthly ordinarily the Lord followeth such matches with visible plagues sometimes without the family sometimes within according to that threatning by his Prophet that he wil cut off master and seruant that shall doe this A publicke execution hereof we see in the flood which for this sinne drowned the olde world Gen. 6.2 and Ezra confesseth with weeping mourning and ren●ing his haire that for this sinne especially Master and seruant We our Kings and our Priests haue beene deliuered into the hands of the Kings of the lands vnto the sword into captiuitie into spoile and into confusion of face And within the family by Gods iustice it often commeth to passe that the wiues of Esau the daughters of Heth were not more grieuous to Iacob and Rebecca then the persons so vnequally yoked are betweene themselues Sixtly such persons as thus contract themselues bewray 1. That they more regard other vaine things as wealth beautie friends then the feare of God and practise of pietie which onely hath the promise of prosperitie 2. That they want that godly affection which delighteth in the godly and abhorreth the familiar conuerse and much more mariage societie with the wicked and proclaime to all men howsoeuer they would seeme to be what indeed they are 3. That they are destitute of godly zeale which professeth hatred to idolaters and idolatrie yea of all other most hateth that sinne and the appearance of it as the Lord himselfe doth 4. That they want wise consideration and due respect of themselues in not caring to whome they become one what a griefe and burden is it to think that the husband or wife is as yet the child of the deuill that I am a member of this person who is not a member of Christ 5. The Church of God is little beholding vnto them for bringing in an idolater among them and so polluting the bodie of Christ and blemishing the congregation of God among whom such a thing should not once be named as becommeth the holy and vndefiled spouse of Christ. 6. If that be true which our Church affirmeth that vsually spirituall and carnall fornication goe together let him blame himselfe who finding vnfaithfulnes in the couenant of marriage did not duely consider whether euer that partie would be true to him who playeth false with God or whether the faithfulnesse and loue to God should be the breeder and nurse of true loue and faithfulnesse to himselfe Obiect But all this while you compare the Papists with the heathen or Cananites betweene whom there is no comparison Answ. The Popish idolatrie is as grosse as euer was any for they worship the wodden crosse and peices of bread with religious worship and why is Rome called Egypt Sodome Babylon but because it is a source into which all heathenish idolatrie runneth and why is it called an hibitation of deuils if any thing can be spoken worse of any heathenish idolatrie it shall not be the worst 2. Our danger is more from them then any or all the heathen 3. The endes of avoiding them are the same with any other heretike namely to preuent infection and seduction Obiect But the Papist professeth the same faith with vs. Answ. In word he doth but in deed he renounceth the whole foundation of religion and this is a more reall deniall Obiect But so doe many hypocriticall Protestants and yet you dare not say but we may match with them Answ. Many there are who as we haue heard professe they knowe God but in their
way in writing to the Iewes but because he knew his person and name to be merueilously hated at Ierusalem and that he was growne into great contempt among the enemies of the Gospell from whom he had separated whose furie he gaue place vnto and would not excite by adding his name beeing desirous that they should entertaine the naked truth for it selfe And howsoeuer it is a vaine thing to be peremptorie in defining it to be Pauls yet is it more vaine to conclude it none of his because it wants his name for by the same reason it hauing no bodies name they might conclude it to be no bodies nay rather vpon this occasion wanting his name it is liker to be his 2. From Pauls example euery Christian man may learne to be readie to giue his name to the Gospel and like a child of wisedome by a bold profession to iustifie it vpon euery iust occasion many are too indifferent herein and loth to be knowne disciples of Christ the shame it is of many professors in such a sunneshine day as this to cast themselues with Nicodemus into the night A seruant of God This is a title which all the Apostles delight in for thus also Peter Iames Iude in the beginning of their Epistles stiled themselues which is not to be vnderstood in a generall sense as Reu. 7.3 for thus not onely they but all Christians nay more all creatures euen the worst are some way seruiceable vnto God in executing his will but it here specially respecteth that office and function to which they were set a part expressed more particularly in the next words and an Apostle Doctr. This beeing the first title whereby the Apostle would get himselfe authoritie teacheth That the very name of a seruant of God is full of honour and authoritie The Apostle comparing the glorie of Christ with the glorie of the Angels Heb. 1.14 advanceth them as farre as possibly he can that Christ his glorie beeing so much more excellent then theirs there described might be most highly exalted and yet the highest ascent of their honour which he can rise vnto is to title them ministring spirits standing about God from which seruice they are honoured with glorious names of thrones dominations powers Rulers principallities and although the Scriptures most vsually vnder this title expresse the low and humble condition of Christ who tooke on him the forme of a seruant yet also thereby the Lord would sometime signifie his great glorie as Isa. 42.1 Behold my seruant I will lea●e vpon him mine elect in whom my soule delighteth The Apostle Paul when he would prouoke himselfe to magnifie the free mercie of God toward himselfe maketh this the ground of his glorie and reioycing that God had counted him faithfull and put him in his seruice Vse 1. This serues to teach ministers their dutie that seeing the Lord hath so highly honoured them as to draw them so neere vnto himselfe as it were admitting them into his presence chamber yea vnto his councell table they are in way of thankefulnesse more straightly bound to two maine duties 1. diligence 2. thankefulnesse First diligence in wholly giuing vp themselues and strength in the dispatching of their masters businesse whose now wholly they are their eare is boared neuer to depart from him so as now they may not seeke or serue themselues but take themselues to be as the ciuill law calleth seruants 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such as sustaine no person but are become dependances and adiuncts yea indeede reasonable instruments in the hand of their master If motiues would stirre vp our diligence vnto the worke of God we want not a multitude as 1. this master hath most absolute power of life and death ouer his seruants 2. his eie is euer ouer them which prouoketh euen eie-pleasers to quicknesse 3. the fruit of diligence is the sauing of our selues and others 4. blessed shall that seruant be whom the master shall finde so doing 5. without this thou shalt become the vnprofitable seruant that shall be bound hand and foote and cast into hell the seruice is difficult as beeing an haruest an husbandrie a building a planting all which require labourers and painfull workemen it is the diligent hand that bringeth these workes to a commendable passe nay more it is a sighting with spirituall weapons against mightie and malitious enemies and requireth quicknesse and courage This busines needeth not whole armies of such souldiers as we reade of 1. Sam. 17.24 who ranne away when they sawe Goliah a farre off one poore and contemptible Dauid who is as good as his word when he saith Thy seruant will goe and fight with the Philistim v. 32. brings the businesse more happily forward then a nation of the former in whom we see the picture of the euill and slothfull seruant whose ende the Euangelist recordeth to be fearefull The second dutie is faithfulnesse It is required of euery dispenser that he be found faithfull and this faithfulnes must appeare 1. in gaining disciples not to himselfe but vnto Christ Iohn was a faithful seruant to Christ he must increase and I must decrease and Paul I seeke not yours but you but this was to present them as virgins vnto Christ. The lawe of equitie concludeth that whatsoeuer the seruant gaineth should become the masters But the world is full of vnfaithfull seruants who when they should come in their Masters name come in their owne Gehezi runnes after Naaman for talents of gold and change of raiment and saith his master sent him 2. In seeking to please and approoue himselfe vnto his master and not to other men Thus was Moses faithfull but as a seruant in all the house of God nay Christ himselfe is herein preferred Heb. 3.2 that he was faithfull to him that appointed him But wherein was this faithfulnes seene In Moses in that he did all things according to the patterne in the Mount In Christ in that his doctrine was not his but his fathers neither did he any thing of himselfe but all that his father taught him that spake he and all that he sawe the father doe that did he This same was the faithfulnesse of the Apostles also who preached onely what they had heard and seene of Christ and deliuered onely what they had receiued and this must be the faithfulnesse of vs their successors the Pastors and teachers to the ende of the world Vnto which we may bee mooued not onely in that we haue such a cloude of worthie examples but also in that we serue a good master one full of faithfulnesse readie to retribute our fidelitie with infinite advantage a farre more foreceable argument to bind vs vnto God then that of the Apostle to binde seruants to faithfull seruice of beleeuing masters And lastly because our master standeth in neede of our faithfulnes now when the most haue forsaken him I meane not onely the Clergie of Rome
the duties of it are called not onely angels but co-workers with Christ in the saluation of men Doctr. 2. Whosoeuer would finde comfort in themselues or cleare and iustifie their callings to others or doe good in that place of the body wherein they are set must be able to prooue that they are not intruders but pressed by this calling and commandement of God that as Paul performed euery dutie in the Church by vertue of his extraordinarie calling so they by vertue of their ordinarie For can any man thinke that a small aduantage to himselfe which our Apostle doth so dwell vpon in his owne person and that in euerie Epistle making his calling knowne to be committed vnto him not of men nor by men but by Iesus Christ See Gal. 1.1 and cap. 2.7 Eph. 3.2 1. Thess. 2.4 The necessitie of this commandement appeareth 1. because it implyeth a fitnesse in the persons so commanded for the Lord sendeth not a message by the hand of a foole for this is as he that cutteth off the feete A Prince would not send an ambassador who is onely able to reade his message out of a paper euerie poste might doe that but one of parts and gifts by whom the message might carrie all the grace it possibly could Euen so the Lord sendeth the tongue of the learned some Ezra some Apollos men mightie in the Scriptures and full of authoritie in regard both of life and doctrine In the consecration of Aaron and his sonnes we read that they must be sitted two waies 1. they must be washed with water that is purged from the euills which might corrupt and blemish their callings 2. instructed and furnished with gifts and they two sorts 1. of graces as wisdome vnderstanding c. signified by the garments with which they were to be arrayed 2. of sweete smell the which both by holy doctrine and life they were to diffuse in the Church signified by the sweete oyle powred on their heads v. 12. These onely are sanctified and set apart by the Lord to serue before him Exod. 29.4 2. This commandement imposeth a necessitie to performe the duties of the calling the acknowledgement of which breedeth conscience and willingnesse therein not for the profit and commodities but because the dispensation is committed vnto him Paul seeing that necessitie was laid vpon him denounced a woe against himselfe if he should not preach the Gospel not for the vaine applause of men but to please God which tryeth the hearts 1. Thess. 2.4 3. This commandement maketh the function and works of it powerfull fruitful in the hearts of all men euen the greatest and whereas such as haue not their commission sealed from the Lord finde not their sacrifices burnt by God but often labour all day and all night and catch nothing yea themselues with their worke perish together the tongues which the Lord armeth from aboue are cheines vnto authorities linkes of iron to binde Nobles and Princes and bridles euen to the deuils themselues yea not seldome by vertue hereof Princes and people may stand vp in apologie and iust defence of a poore man whom the Lord reporteth as Ier. 26.15 He is not worthie to die for he hath spoken to vs in the name of the Lord. 4. This commandement bringeth much comfort in all troubles raised vp against men whilst they endeauour in the faithfull execution of this most thankles office amongst men which otherwise might well be taken for so many plagues wherewith God followeth him who runneth vnsent for such is Gods grace as he neuer commādeth but includeth also a promise of blessing to the obseruer and namely of speciall protection which is so necessarie for such as are dispatched to encounter against Satan and the wickednes of the world so as hereby the heart is fenced and strenghthened against the malice of Satan and men which while the sonnes of Seeva wanted we see how mightily Satan who easily espied their want of commission preuailed against them Vse 1. Let no man presume to take vpon him any office in the Church vncalled no man taketh this honour to himselfe Christ himselfe must be appointed of his Father Vse 2. Let none content himselfe with the calling of man separated from Gods calling for this was the guise of the false Apostles against whom our Apostle opposeth himselfe and calling almost euery where who were called of men but not of God Vse 3. In all other callings let men be assured they haue Gods warrant both in the lawfulnesse of the callings themselues and in their holy exercise of them passing through them daily in the exercise of faith and repentance not forgetting daily to sanctifie them by the word prayer Doctr. 3. Ministers may and ought to be more or lesse in the commendation of their calling as the nature and necessitie of the people to whom they write or speake do require As the Apostle here magnifieth his authority in that he is a seruant of God 2. an Apostle of Iesus Christ 3. that he receiued his Apostleship by commission and commandement of Christ himselfe and 4. all this while hath by sundrie other arguments amplified the excellencie of his calling the reason of all which is not so much to perswade Titus who was before sufficiently perswaded of it but partly for the Cretians sake that they might the rather entertaine this Doctrine so commended in the person of the bringer and partly because many in this I le lifted vp themselues against him and Titus as men thrusting in their sickles into other mens fields too busily or else if they had a calling yet taking too much vpon them both in correcting disorders and establishing such nouelties among them as best liked thē so as here beeing to deale against false Apostles peruerse people and erronious doctrines as in the Epistle we shall further see he is more prolixe and loftie in his title otherwise where he met not with such strong opposition he is more sparing in his titles as in the epistles to the Coloss. Thessal c. So was it the pride of the false Apostles that made him say By the grace of God I am that I am and that grace of his which is in me was not in vaine and they are Ministers I am more in labours more abundant c. Vse In our daies when the basest of men account so basely of the Ministerie as the most abiect and despised calling will it not be thought very seasonable to insist vpon the iust excellencie and dignitie of this calling can it be thought vnequall if we take more care then vsuall of freeing it from contempt which is more then euer The faithfull Ministers of Christ can and doe thinke as basely of themselues as any man can thinke or speake of them and if they aduance their calling it is not pride nor pleasure vnto them but they are compelled vnto it as Paul I was a foole to boast of my selfe but
him in possession The Apostle gathereth a flocke of the wild beasts of the forrest the Pastor must staie to feed and attend vpon that flocke the Apostle must change his place vpon immediate commandement the Pastor may not for he must be readie at all assaies to feed the flocke depending vpon him 1. Pet. 5. he must alwaies present himselfe as a patterne and example vnto it 1. Tim. 4.12 except we will say that the ordinarie Ministerie of the Gospel is not as straitly bound to dutie as the ordinarie Minister of the law for the Priests must alwaies be readie in the Temple to answer all doubts as Ely 1. Sam. 1.9 to keepe in the holy fire and lights to receiue all sacrifices and oblations to renew the bread before the Lord yea and for this end was that institution that the Priests might not dwell farre from the Temple but their houses were builded close to it according to the patterne of Dauid 1. Chro. 28.13 Yet so as by the Churches call a Pastor whose gifts are found fit for such a purpose may be sent from his place if in the interim it be sufficiently prouided for either to gather a Church or reduce such as haue gone astraie See 2. Chron. 17.7.9 2. Note That Paul departing from Creta leaueth them not at sixe seauens neither neglecteth the busines and worke he had in his hands but leaueth Titus to perfect that which he had begunne Herein teaching vs that euery man whome the Lord hath called to doe good in his Church and whose conscience stirreth vp his care must finde in himselfe this holy desire that the Lords plow be euer followed his building euer reared his worke euer furthered by all but especially so farre as lyeth in his power by his owne meanes and that both in the places abroad as also where he liueth Paul careth not onely for the Churches where he becommeth but where he hath beene and this was the ground why he left Timothie at Ephesus 1. Tim. 1.3 and Titus here at Creta vpon which occasion he wrote both these Epistles So should euery man in his place whom God honoureth to be the beginning of any good thing imitate that worthy Nehemiah in his care Remēber me O God blot not out my kindnes that is suffer not thy worship restored by my meanes in Ierusalem to be defaced and much lesse abolished In like manner if a man be called from his place so as he must leaue it to another his care must be that it be furnished with a fit man Eliah when he was to be taken vp walking with Elisha whom he knew was to be his successor by prayer obtained for him an hard request namely the doubling of his owne spirit vpon him Memorable is the speach and practise of Moses who when the Lord had bid him goe vp into the Mount and see the land and then die he neglecteth himselfe and forgetteth after a sort his owne present death and breaketh out into prayer for the people O Lord God of spirits appoint a man ouer the congregation 1. that he may be instructed to go in and out 2. least this people be as sheepe without a shepheard Neither would Christ himselfe the mirrour of grace ascend vp into heauen before he had appointed furnished men for the building vp of his bodie his earnest charge to Peter and in him to all the Disciples and their successours that if euer they lou●d him they would feed his sheepe sheweth the care of this great shepheard of our soules Men need not be prouoked to prouide for their children while yet they are with them that it may be well with them after their departure and should not spirituall fathers doe the like for their children to whom they are tyed by a strayter bond Fearefully sinne they against this example who while they craple and couple liuings together that they may fill their owne bellies and haue there portion in the fleece and fat neither staie themselues to teach as they ought nor yet leaue any Titus behind them of whose sufficiencie we heard before to redresse things that remaine but offer the sheepe of Christ to the wolfe and sell soules for peeces of siluer and morsells of bread The men of God were wont to extend their care for Gods people with neglect of themselues euen to the time of their departure yea and after although they might seeme to be loosed by remoouall or at least by death but these feele no waight of such an heauie burthen which presseth them euen for the present 3. Note That the Apostle thus sending Titus he will haue him consider the end of his calling and placing both to prouoke himselfe to diligence as also to obtaine for him more libertie and authoritie in that Church where he had left him and it was no more then needed for to goe about to innouate and reforme a whole Iland hauing an hundreth cities in it and bring new offices and officers among them might both exasperate the one and altogether discourage the other to both seeme a thankles busines But now if Titus shall thinke with himselfe This is the end of my calling wherein God requireth my faithfulnes and if the Cretians shall conceiue within themselues for this end was Titus placed amongest vs both to settle things that are wanting and to reforme things that are amisse this consideration could not but mooue and perswade both of them to a mutuall and comfortable consent in the busines of Christ and a louing entertainment one of the other Which teacheth that that man who would Christianly and comfortably carrie himselfe through any calling must euer haue the end of it in his eye The Magistrate must set before ●is eie that he is the Minister of God for mens wealth and that therefore he must not carrie the sword for naught but necessitie lyeth vpon him to execute the iudgements of God The Minister must propound before him his end which is the gathering together of the Saints hence a necessitie is imposed vpon him and wo to him that not ayming at this end preacheth not the Gospel The priuate man must set before him the publike and common good and in his whole course aime at that The efficacie of which argument is such as that the Lord himselfe most vsually vrgeth it in stirring vp men to the right receiuing and vse both of spirituall blessings as also the holy fruition of temporall mercies How doth the Lord vrge his people to the pure vse of his holy ordinance of marriage otherwise then from the three ends of it 1. in that thence they must expect an holy seed 2. for auoyding of fornication 3. from the comfort of a fit helpe and a comfortable companion Mal. 2.14 compared with 1. Cor. 7.2 and Gen. 2.18 So as looke what Mordecai said of Hesters aduancement Who can tell whether thou art come to the kingdome for this time let euery man say
himselfe either stand still like a statue in the way or else like the creuise goeth backward but he must in nothing giue offence least his Ministerie be blamed yea more he must be an example to the ●●ocke so Paul enioynes Timothie to be to them that beleeue an example in word conuersation loue spirit faith purenes euen as he set himselfe an example to Timothie 2. Tim. 3.10 But thou hast knowne my doctrine manner of liuing purpose faith long suffering loue and patience for this example hath the force of a rule either good or bad Peters example constrained the Gentiles to do like the Iewes and Barnabas was drawen in with him see also 1. Pet. 3.1 Now not needing further motiues to prouoke Ministers to labour after good life we will onely mention some meanes whereby euery of them may become vnreprooueable 1. Labour with thy heart to set it selfe still in the presence of God and this will be a meanes to keepe it order whereas otherwise an vnruly heart will breake out one time or other 2. Haue a care of a good name as well as a good conscience not so much for thy owne as for Gods glorie neither because thy selfe but others stand much vpon it 3. Auoid occasions of sinnes appearances of euill seeing thy motes become beames 4. Studie to doe thy owne dutie diligently meddle not with other mens matters 5. Curbe and couer thy own infirmities buffet thy bodie and bring it in subiection 6. Daily pray for thy selfe with desire of the prayer and admonition of others Thus oughtest thou that art a Minister set thy selfe a coppie vnto men howsoeuer the most rent such coppies out of their bookes as too precise and exact Vse 3. How men are to conceiue of Ministers not as of men without sinne or infirmities as the Apostles confessed they were mortall men subiect to the same infirmities with others and to acknowledge the goodnes of God in keeping them altogether not from all sinne yet vnreprooueable that is vntainted of greiuous crimes whereby his name and this calling should be highly dishonoured which were it well considered of men we should not heare such outcries against euery infirmitie in the person of the Minister as though the verie calling could exempt him from sinne which we see the calling of the very Apostles could not doe Husband of one wife Hauing ●eard what is generally required of euery Minister that he be vnblameable Now we are with the Apostle to descend to those priuate vertues which concerne his economicall administration And those in this verse are two the former concerning himselfe in preseruing his owne chastitie the latter respecteth the persons within his family namely his children ouer whom he is to exercise Christian authoritie gouerning them as a father who is a Minister framing them to dutie towards God and himselfe and trayning them vp carefully in the doctrine both of faith and good manners For 1. concerning their religion it is required that they be faithfull children 2. For their manners they must be 1. temperate 2. obedient And both of these declared in their contraries whereof they must be free as 1. they must not be slandred of riot which is a lauish wasting and a needles spending of goods 2. Not disobedient but such as will endure the yoke These two vertues must especially be exercised of euery one that is to be a Minister of Christ the former of which beautifieth his owne person the latter graceth his family and both of them adorne his calling and profession To vnderstand the former aright we must first remooue the false interpretations and 2. propound and establish the true sense and then come vnto the doctrines And first where the Apostle requireth that the Minister be the husband of one wife the Papists interpret it most ridiculously in an allegorie affirming that Pauls meaning is that an Elder must haue but one wife and that must be his Church But the scope of the place is not to answer the question whether one minister may haue two Churches or no but what a one he ought to be for the gouernement of himselfe and his that is to be set euer any people 2. What meaneth it that this husband must haue faithfull children if he may not haue a wise other then the Church If it be said that by these children must be meant the faithfull and the children of God begotten in the Church I answer that the same Apostle to Timothie cutteth the sinewes of all such cauills where he expoundeth the same precept necessarily to be meant litterally and not in this allegorie by the reason of it annexed for if he cannot gouerne his owne house how shall he gouerne the house of God Secondly others say he must be the husband of one wife onely and that after the first he may not haue a second Which opinion Montanus and Tertullian extended to all sorts of men the Grecians after restrained it to the Clergie and the Romanists were readie inough to take it vp and stil reserue it among the rest of their rubbish But that also is as grosse and false exposition For 1. he that marrieth a second wife after the decease of the first if he keepe himselfe faithfully vnto her is still but the husband of one wife seeing the lawe of the former is by God dissolued 2. It is a generall commandement that if the brother die without children his next brother was to marrie his brothers widow and raise vp seed vnto him Now as in the other tribes so doubtlesse happened it among the Leuites and therefore the Leuite although a widower was to marrie his brothers wife Obiect If it be here said that we now are in precepts deliuered to Ministers of the newe Testament and are not to square our selues vnto that speciall administration of the old I answer that the generall precepts of the newe Testament affirme no lesse as He that cannot containe let him marrie and to all widowes the Apostle giueth leaue to marrie so in the Lord and that that is of generall perpetuall equitie to men as well as women and to all sorts of men as to one kind is plaine by Rom. 7.3 The woman if the husband be dead is free from the law of the man so as she is not an adulterer if shee take another man To which truth many of the fathers accord Thirdly an other sleight of the Papists must be auoided who haue thus corrupted it If any haue beene the husband of one wife and now be not he may be a minister but the spirit of God changeth no tenses here and the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be supplyed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lastly neither must it be vnderstood so as the Minister must of necessitie be the husband of one wife and may not liue single for though all cannot receiue Christs speach concerning continencie yet some there are to whom it is giuen and to them his
hearts God giues them ouer to beleeue and broach doctrines besides the word all their learning hindreth not nay rather armeth them to sticke fast to falshood and errors and to defend doctrines of much loosenesse and libertie Especially the iudgement of God is come vpon the Romish Church to the vttermost who because they lay this for a ground of their doctrine that this word is not of it selfe faithfull and certaine vnlesse the Church and Councels and the Pope authorize it to mens consciences and that any other word thrust vpon the Church by the former authoritie is euery whit as faithfull as this hence is their whole religion a mysterie of iniquitie and delusion hence comes in intercession of Saints worship of images prayer to and for the dead pilgrimages here purgatorie hereafter reuelations masses bread-worshippe propitiatorie sacrifices mixture of Moses and Christ which is a doctrine cutting them off from Christ who haue before cut off the authoritie and credit of the Scriptures which are the word of Christ which fearefull iudgement let it mooue euerie Timothie and Titus carefully to keepe the worthie thing which is committed vnto them 2. Euerie Minister is taught hence to hold him vnto this faithfull word for so he shall deliuer not things doubtfull and vncertaine but such as men may leane vnto rest and as we say write vpon And this is insinuated by our Apostle that that is a faithfull ministerie which holdeth it selfe vnto a faithfull word such as is the sure anchor of mens soules against which hell gates cannot preuaile Such was the ministerie of the true Prophets Ieremie saith of a truth the Lord hath sent me and bidden me speake these things of the Apostles who deliuered such things as they receiued of the Lord and commanded vs that if an angel from heauen or a deuill from hell should bring not a contrarie but a diuerse doctrine from that to hold him accursed yea of the Sonne of God himselfe who said my word is not mine but my fathers What horrible blasphemie then is daily practised in the Popish Churches whose teachers calling these faithfull words a nose of waxe send men to dumbe idols the teachers of vanities and lies yea to Apocryphall writers to fathers councels Bishops and Popes as though the Scriptures had lost all their faithfulnesse or as though the canons decrees summes and sentences of men were more stable then that eternall truth that shall out-last heauen and earth Was this a faithfull word in Pauls time and is it not so still doth the sonne of the eternall father pronounce of his fathers word that it is not onely true but truth it selfe and that not one iot of it can passe or faile and is it any other then the voice of Antichrist which shall say that it is no certaine word at least to me vnlesse the Church say so Shall the spirit of God call it a sure word of the Prophets and Apostles and a word of truth and shall we heare a wicked and lying spirit come out of hell and say that this stabilitie and truth dependeth vpon man whereas let God be true and euerie man a lyar and that if those men whom they tearme the Church change their minds or any sense in the Scripture so doth the holy Ghost also Let these owles flie the light of the Scriptures as such as loue to liue in darkenes carnall religion must haue carnall props like lips like lettice we say and such a Church such lawes As for vs let vs as it standeth vs in hand hold vs vnto this faithful word and not in stead of it deliuer the vnfaithfull words of men whether Philosophers or fathers or schoole-men And is it not good reason that we should be tied to this word when euen the Prophets and Apostles were Isai must take a role and write and binde the testimonie and seale the lawe among the disciples the commandement to Ieremie was preach the words that I shall tell thee In the newe Testament they must heare Moses and the Prophets Paul was separated to preach that Gospe● which was promised before by the Prophets and accordingly he witnessed that he spake nothing besides the things foretold by the Prophets Againe what ministeriall worke is it which this word doth not most naturally and happily effect for this is a sure instrument to beget faith Ioh. 17.20 and to confirme it Act. 15.32 to conuert soules Psal. 19.7 and to saue soules Iam. 1.22 Now vnto hearers this doctrine affoardeth also speciall vse of instruction 1. If it be so faithfull a word euerie man must attend vnto it 2. Pet. 1.19 we haue a surer word to which yee doe well that yee attend 2. To lay vp this word surely as beeing the sure euidence of thy saluation and of thy heauenly inheritance among the Saints Men locke vp their euidences or convaiances of land in sure and safe places delight often to read in them suffer no man to cousen them of them whatsoeuer casualtie come these are by all meanes possible safegarded and shall any man carelesly neglect such an euidence as this is without which he hath no assurance of saluation nor the tenure out of his idle conceit of one foote in heauen a lame man if he hold not fast his staffe falleth and whosoeuer looseth his part in the word looseth his part in heauen 3. Here is a ground of thankfulnesse in that the Lord hath not onely vouchsafed vs life and glorie and immortalitie when we were dead and when nothing could be added to our miserie but hath also giuen vs such a constant guid and direction therunto we might either haue groped after him in palbable darknes or haue had such direction as might haue affoarded vs lesse assurance and comfort but now beleeuers knowe assuredly that they were loued of the father before the foundation of the world and out of that loue chosen vnto life that the Sonne was sent to ransome them from sinne and present them iust before his Father that his spirit is sent out to regenerate them and to further and finish their sanctification that by his prouidence they are supplied in all their good that by his power they are protected from all their euills He might haue brought vs to heauen and neuer haue let vs know any of these comforts in earth yet would he not so slenderly leaue his Church but as our Sauiour noteth he hath spoken and written this word that our ioy might be more full which is one generall vse of the whole word of God Now what can we doe lesse then in way of thankfulnes 1. yeeld vp our selues to be directed by this faithfull word 2. Beleeue it in whatsoeuer it commandeth threatneth or promiseth in that it is such a faithfull word and hereby we set also our seale vnto it 3. Constantly cleaue vnto it in life and in death and not to be so foolish as
they stirre vp others to tast also with them how sweete and good God is in it These cannot come as men vse to come but will be reuerent in the cōgregations where such words are vttered as Abraham when God spake vnto him fell on his face they will not rush vpon the reading of it in publike nor priuate without some lifting vp of the heart and some gesture signifying that inward reuerence 2. This argueth it a deuillish and wicked practise to elevate the due estimation and authoritie of the word either in the Scriptures or in the Ministerie once said Satan hath God indeed said c. So the Papists speake basely of the word in the Scripture calling it imperfect obscure contentious a waxen nose an inken diuinitie c. and therefore well may the letter of the Scripture be with them but the life of it is farre from them In like sort many profane wretches debase the word in the Ministerie conceiuing it as a vaine word without profit and boldly speake of preaching as of talking and others mutter because there is so much preaching plainely shewing by their speaches that they neuer knew the sweetnes of it in their soules and therefore as yet haue no part in it nor in that life which it hath brought to light Doctr. 4. Whereas the Apostle is not contented that the Minister should teach but exhort also it ●eacheth Ministers to labour for this gift whereby an edge is set vpon their doctrine wherewith as with a goad they pricke on the affections of those that are vnder the yoke of Christ. A difficult thing it is for teaching is an easie taske in comparison of it and yet so necessarie as that all the ministeriall worke is called by this name Act. 13.15 If yee haue any word of exhortation say on So Barnabas his whole sermon is called an exhortation to shew that he that laboureth not in this point faileth of all his dutie Whence are all those precepts that the Minister should teach and exhort 1. Tim. 6.2 and giue all diligence as well to exhortation as to reading 1. Tim. 4.13 For the profitable performance of which 1. euery Minister must labour for conscience of his dutie 2. for a pitifull heart toward sinners 3. for experience of that he teacheth that he may haue a flame in his own heart to kindle others by Vse Many men thinke they need not be taught but if they did not they need exhortation Others thinke it sufficient to be taught in generall tearmes but to be vrged by exhortation were to saue them whether they will or no. But it is not sufficient to know what is good but to be led on to the practise to which that we may be prouoked the best of vs while we are in our race need spurrs For as Paul writ of Christians the slownes and weaknes of whom he knew required exhortation as well as doctrine so that Christian that ●eeth not his deadnes and continuall backslidings knoweth no good by himselfe yea he that perceiueth not a spirituall heauinesse and slumber daily oppressing him without this meanes nay and with it also that soule is cast on sleepe at least if it be not dead in sinne Besides the truth is there is much knowledge euery where and so little conscience as if knowledge and conscience could not stand together but if men did make conscience of all the duties they know yet were exhortation still needfull seeing nothing was more vsuall with the Apostles then to stirre vp in beleeuers such graces as they thankfully acknowledged in them 1. Thess. 1.3 the Apostle thankfully remembreth their diligent loue and yet cap. 3.9.10 by a wise rhetoricall preterition exhorteth them vnto it Doctr. 5. Whereas the Apostle addeth that exhortation must goe with wholesome Doctrine we note that then is exhortation powerfull and profitable when it is firmely grounded vpon sound and wholesome doctrine then it carrieth due weight with it then is it agreeable to this apostolicall precept yea to that generall practise of al the Apostles whose manner was in all their Epistles first to laie downe plainely the doctrine of faith and saluation and then to perswade and exhort vnto the entertainement of it and to testifie that entertainment by the fruits of faith and loue For example After Paul writing to the Romans had disputed the doctrine of Iustification not by workes in the three first Chapters but by faith in the two next and of sanctification in the three next and of predestination in the three next In the 12. Cap. and so to the 14. verse of the 15. Chapter he exhorteth to good workes and Christian duties vnto the verie epilogue and conclusion The whole Epistles to the Corinths is a mixture of doctrine and exhortation In the Epistle to the Galatians after he had disputed the doctrine of the righteousnesse of faith which the false Apostles had wrung out of their hands after his manner in the fifth chapter and sixt he exhorteth them to the studie of good workes So in all the Epistles may be obserued that after the doctrinall part followeth the hortatorie And as for the particular practise hereof in particular cases both in propheticall writings Christs sermons and sayings and in the Apostles Epistles it would be infinite to obserue Vse As this Doctrine affoardeth direction to Ministers to carrie their exhortations leuell with the doctrine truly raised from the word that they be as goads to pearce and prouoke to dutie which not obserued the speach will be verified a sea of words but scarce droppes of matter so doth it authorise euery hearer to examine the exhortations framed vnto them that if they finde the Messengers of God exhorting them from wholesome doctrine they may acknowledge more then a speach or perswasion of man euen such a doctrine and ordinance as the Apostle iudgeth fittest for the saluation of man Which if any shall dare to refuse as accounting it with many at this day a liplabour of man or if any shall deeme and repute it an impotent meanes to raise men to the grace of life I can say no more nor lesse of such then the Apostle Paul to the hardned Iewes that put the word from them that they iudge themselues vnworthy of life eternall One day to their cost shall they know that all the force of the word lyeth not in the Ministers tongue and that his words are more then winde as they esteeme them Ier. 5.13 And improoue them that gainsay it These gainesayers are of two sorts either such as contradict the wholesome doctrine by teaching false and vnsound doctrine whether Iewes Pagans Heretikes or false teachers or else such as contradict it by their wicked manners and conuersation as a number of counterfeit Christians who dare not open their mouthes against such a cleare light and manifest truth but in their liues whereas it commandeth puritie they are filthy and impure whereas it
Christians he will haue dispersed among the persecutors some Saints in Neroes house some Protestants among the Papists for in the darkest ages euen in their Abbyes and Fryeries he raised vp alwaies some one or other from age to age to witnesse against them that their error and wickednesse should not haue that securitie on both sides which it desireth 4. We haue euen gracelesse men taxing our wickednesse as here the Cretians had that as Corazin by Sodome and the Iewes by the nations so Christians by Turkes and Protestants in many things should be condemned by the Papists themselues the former beeing so superstitiously reuerent at the name and mention of God the other so painefull and industrious as Baals preists lancing themselues for their idolatries 5. The Lord need not send so farre a● Cittim and Kedar to condemne vs but as here by our owne prouerbs as by our owne mouthes might be iudge vs what a number of deuillish prouerbs amongst vs bewray the vngodlinesse of mens hearts as euery man for himselfe and God for vs all and young Saints old Deuils and which is the worst and most generall godlines is made but a by-word and a note of reproach euery where vnder the title of puritie and precisenesse 6. And yet if men were so wilfull as to be blinde at all these yet can they not as many striue to doe put out all naturall principles but euen the light of naturall knowledge and conscience will wrap them vnder condemnation and they shall not be able at the barre of Gods righteous iudgement to plead not guiltie for euen their owne thoughts shall accuse them 7. But the greatest condemnation of all is that the light of grace is come and yet men loue darknes more then the light In which regard it shall be easier for Sodome then many peoples and townes professing the Gospel nay Publicans and harlots shall enter before many Christians yea the Heathen that neuer heard of Christ as soone as thousands baptized into the name of Christ because they knew and did many things of the law and not knowing the law were a law to themselues but numbers are sonnes of Belial lawlesse persons that scorne both Law and Gospel whom the Lord will prouoke and iudge by such a foolish people as the Heathen were Pitifull is it to see the disorders of Christians which would haue made the Heathens to haue blushed if a man will not now sweare no small oathes drinke his sences away spend out his daies in idlenesse and iollitie in pride and riot companie and gaming such a one is cassiered out of all companie he is a man fitter for a cloister then the common Christians of our age the Heathens did not thus Theirs were workes of darknes indeed but both in themselues and the doers but now they are become actions of the nooneday which the Heathen would haue bin ashamed of at midnight Which plainely prooueth that the light was giuen and is that many might become more blind more obstinate more hard hearted and impenitent against that great day of iudgement Many will plead at that day that they came to Church heare the word as others did and liued after it so neare as God would giue them grace But answer will be made them that though hereby they came to a further knowledge of God yet God neuer came to take knowledge of them for they desired not to know the waies of God but slipt in or were by law or for forme and fashion forced to Church and then all their hearing brought them such knowledge as not only made them more excuseles but liable to more stripes but not to such as was effectuall to preuaile against their lusts for they stil detained the truth in vnrighteosnes that is resisted the word they heard by lewd and gracelesse liues and behauiours 2. Let no man say my sinne shall lie hid and it is in secret or twilight no no there is witnesse inough to conuince thee of the most secret of them all the eies of God the voice of thy owne conscience which will be as a thousand witnesses yea the Lord who hath moe waies to the wood then one hath giuen to all creatures tongues eares eyes and hands against sinners The shed blood of thy brother shall call for vengeance the timber and stone in the wall cryeth out of oppression and crueltie the rust of the gold and siluer against the wretched couetousnes of miserable men and so in the rest Doctr. 2. The second thing to be obserued in this preface is that this testimonie was not fetched from any of Gods Prophets but from one of their owne Whence we learne that it is not simply vnlawfull to alleadge the saying of a profane man in a sermon For 1. all truth is the Lords and where it may serue for his glorie it may not be reiected neither skilleth it so much in what ground the hearb grow or what gardner set and planted it so as it heale we grant that if the King of Ammons crowne be fit for the King of Ierusalem that he may take it and weare it 2. There may be sometimes necessitie of the testimonie of profane writers and quotation of Fathers As 1. in case of grammer that the true sence and meaning of a word phrase or sentence may be the clea●er which if it cannot be so easily done out of the Scriptures themselues then may a Minister descend to humanitie and by earthly means teach things heauenly 2. In case of conuiction of error whether in doctrine or manners In doctrine when any controuersall point is handled well may we free the truth of noueltie by shewing the consent of it with the ancient Church for hereby 1. the weake and new conuerts are more confirmed 2. the calumnies of the aduersaries are cut off who commonly boast that all antiquitie standeth for and with them In manners the conuiction is of 1. Christians or 2. Heathens If of Christians then such allegations may be vsed by way of exprobration or sharpe reproofe so the Lord himselfe sendeth his people to the Iles of Chittim and Kedar to see if any of the nations dealt so with their gods yea to the oxe asse crane storke pismire c. If we be to deale with Heathens or Atheists who are not easily mooued with the authoritie of the Scriptures then can we conuince them no otherwise then by such testimonies of their owne which they make most account of and so the Apostle dealing with Athenians Epicures Stoiks Cretians by the testimonie of Menander Aratas Epimenides conuinced their wickednesse Thus for the clearing of Gods glorie and his truth as Paul saith all things are ours Scripture art nature c. Now because there accreweth a great hurt to the Church by the abuse of this example we must carefully obserue some cautions in such allegations I will name three 1. Whereas the former cases are not frequent such allegations must be rare
and sparing As Paul in all his bookes adding vnto his 14. Epistles if that of the Hebrewes be his his sermons and defences in the Acts of the Apostles vsed only three short Aphorismes neither out of the iust causes prealleadged Neither did euer Moses though learned in all the learning of the Egyptians vse any nor Abraham nor Iob nor Daniel mixed any of their Chaldean knowledge nor any of the Prophets Nor Christ nor any other of the Apostles but onely Paul the doctor of the Gentiles who were better acquainted with Heathen writers then the Scriptures before whom alone he vsed them wounding them with their owne weapons 2. These allegations must be vsed soberly without affectation Paul himselfe teaching vs that the right manner of preaching standeth partly in concealment of humane skil partly in demonstration of the spirit And hereof he rendreth two reasons 1. Because the doctrine of the Gospel must sauour still of the crosse be abiect and despicable and so resemble Christ himselfe the author of it who neuer sought his owne glorie but departed from it for the saluation of his bodie 2. Least the faith of beleeuers should be in the wisedome of men and not in the power of God that is least men should ascribe that to humane eloquence and wisedome and gifts of men which is proper to the simplicitie of the Gospel True it is as the Apostle obserued the more pompe the lesse power and the more earthen the vessels are knowne to be the better is the treasure knowne to be heauenly 3. They may not be vsed to prooue points of Doctrine or manners for the word is a sufficient and sure ground for proofe of all such points but rather illustrate and giue a more euident declaration of the truth and more clearely to reprooue and conuince falsehood and error For to vse mens authoritie to prooue Gods truth were to set vp a candle against the sunne or as if a cryer of a proclamation signed by the Kings hand and seale should say thus will the King haue it and such and such of his guarde These cautions quite ouerthrowe the common vse of such allegations at this day wherein men are immoderate yea infinite in euery sermon vpon all occasions and to euery purpose and people Hence it is that Arbanah and Ph●rphar riuers of Damascus are more frequented then all the waters of Israel Fathers Philosophers and Poets are lowde in many sermons when the Prophets Apostles and the Sonne of God himselfe is silent And all this is laid vpon this one practise of the Apostle and no other commandement or practise can be alleadged in all the Scripture but his And therefore we will looke a little nearer vnto it and search how farre the Apostle hath propounded himselfe a patterne for our imitation And to omit that scruple whether we may lawfully imitate him except we had such extraordinarie gifts as he had and such inspiration as whereby he was able to make profane sentences holy wheras we finding a profane sentence cannot but leaue it so If we shall take libertie to vse them as the Apostle did I take it no man can from thence directly conclude the lawfulnesse of that manner of preaching which is taken vp by verie many For 1. If we vse them as the Apostle did they should neuer come in sermons in our Church-congregations for he neuer vsed them but either in conferēces or disputations or as here in a personall Epistle 2. Neuer before Christians who reiect not but desire the testimonies of Scripture for he did not but before the Gentiles and Heathen which refused the Scriptures 3. Not often in one sermon and in euery point for he did verie seldome onely thrice in many sermons disputations and all his writings put together 4. Neuer in points of doctrine or manners for proofe as inconsideratly they are the Apostle neuer so detracted from the sufficiencie of the Scriptures 5. Neuer with their names prefixed to get credit and authoritie or for ostentation which euery good Christian see men doe for so neuer did the Apostle 6. Not at all times and in all places nor euer in the Vniuersitie as men most do for at Corinth the Apostle is so farre from vsing them that he verie sharply reprehendeth the practise there 1. Cor. 1.17 For there was most danger of all And thus we see how farre we may take libertie or haue ground to imitate the Apostle in this practise The allegations of men for their practise are either weak or impertinent As 1. their large discourses in praise of humane learning wherin they fight with their owne shadowes for want of other aduersaries For who discommendeth it doth he that praiseth gold dispraise siluer or doe not we acknowledge it a necessarie handmaid vnto diuinitie but an Agar still who if she presume to step into Sarahs place must be cast out of doores Obiect None speake against them but such as are ignorant and not able Answ. Not to speake of the loudest sound of emptiest vessels they are not in themselues spoken against but seeing there may be no composition in the holy oyle neither may the Lords feild be plowed with an oxe and an asse nor sowne with diuerse seeds we desire moderation and restraint to the former rules that the voice of God may sound in the Church and not the voices of men Obiect But it is lawfull for the Israelites to rob the Egyptians Ans. But it is not lawfull to make a calfe of those earings and set it vp for a God Obiect But these adorne a Sermon Answ. Oh that our eyes were so spirituall that we could see that wonderfull bewtie in the pure word of God What an vnwise man were he that would not content himselfe with a Iewell of infinite price all of gold pearles and precious stones except he carrie it to the painter to paint it Let Christs voice put forth it selfe and his sheepe will heare it and follow him As for the persons alleadged be they neuer so holy or profound they are sufficiently honoured in beeing the friends of the bridgroome though they be not the bridgroome himselfe and for the persons alleadging them let them remember that he is not praised in this busines whom men commend but he that is praised of God So much of the preface Now we come to the Testimonie it selfe Wherein the Poet chargeth his countrimen with three maine vices 1. That they were giuen to lyes and falsehood The Cretians are alwaies lyars 2. That they were of brutish and belluine condition voide of the guidance of reason euill beasts 3. That they were giuen to idlenes and intemperance slow bellies For the first of these Why he charged them of lying although we need not enquire the occasion that the truth of his testimonie besides the Apostles subscription may appeare in history which recordeth that the bodie of this people was giuen ouer to inuent beleeue and receiue any fable or lie neuer
rules 1. So to exhort as that the consciences of men may conclude that euen there where he perswadeth and entreateth he hath power to command and terrifie though in his loue he lay downe that power for the present 2. That he doe not there exercise lenitie where the case requireth seueritie nor mildnesse when the case requireth the worke of seruent zeale As first where sinne waxeth bold the Minister must put on boldnesse If a calfe stand before Moses it is a case wherein the mildest man vpon the earth must forget his meekenesse and cloath himselfe with zeale for the glorie of God Sometimes the Minister is to deliuer the word as it were in a soft and still voice and sometimes he must change his coppie and lift vp his voice like a trumpet to shewe Iudah his sinne and the people of God their transgression Secondly when admonition and exhortation will not serue to cut off sinne but there is rather a reioycing in it Here Paul himselfe will put on his authoritie 1. Cor. 5.2 13. put away from you that wicked man Thirdly when the ministerie is or is like to be drawne into contempt then especially must it put on power and authoritie This was the practise of the Apostles who were forced often partly by the low estimation of the simple and ignorant who esteemed of the preaching of the Gospel but as foolishnes and partly by the malitious oppositions of the false Apostles who depraued their ministerie as weake and vnlearned to be long in the challenging of their calling power and authoritie see 2. Cor. 10.2.8 c. Vse 1. Ministers must labour wisely to discerne betweene persons and actions as Ioseph did betweene the persons and causes of Pharaohs butler and baker and speake differently to the tractable and stubborne children and seruants must not be dealt with alike Christ spake not to the Priests and people alike nor Iohn Baptist to the Iewes and Scribes alike nor Paul to the Galatians and Ephesians alike but Gods mouth must separate the pretious from the vile Compassion must be had vpon some but not all others must with feare be pulled out of the fire neither may the Publican and Pharisie looke for the same sentence and iudgement 2. Whereas men cannot endure preachers who leaue exhortation to thunder out damnation let them know that if their sinnes be growne bold as an harlot and the word of meeknes cannot preuaile against them we must then come with a rodde and not the spirit of meeknes otherwise as Christ was most meek in his life and doctrine so should his Ministers be also The third point in the verse is the vertue commended to the practise of young men and that is the grace of sobrieeie which moderateth the minde in the lusts and affections in generall and is not to be restrained to that outward sobrietie which is opposed to intemperance in meat and drinke for it is taken for graunted that intemperance must be nipt in the head and broken in the shell before it be hatched and outwardly produced into the life This appeareth 2. Tim. 2.22 where Paul in other words prescribeth the same dutie vnto Timothie flie the lusts of youth not meaning thereby such vncleannes and lasciuious filthinesse wherewith gracelesse young men were carried away for Timothie was now of such grauitie as befitted an Euangelist but he would preuent in him all that violent course and carriage of affections vnto which that hotter age is more propense not fearing that Timothie would breake out into filthy vncleannes of lusts so much as least his youth should carrie him to rashnesse pride selfe conceit and so cause him to fall through too much confidence Now how fitly is this precept directed to young men the sinne of whome is the strength of lusts Salomon himselfe ascribeth this to their age to carrie much indignation wrath griefe in the heart and much euill in their flesh that is many noysome and troublesome lusts wherewith through their heate they are assayled Of their presumption and ouerweening themselues wee haue instance in the young man All these haue I kept from my youth Of their want of consideration and experience in another young man who heedlessely went on to destruction as an oxe to the slaughter or a foole to the stocks euen so went he Of their rage and heat with vnadvised rashnes in Rehoboams yonger counsellers stirring vp their master to needles terrors and threats Of their prodigalitie and vncleannes in the younger brother called the prodigall sonne who spent all vpon harlots all which things are not spoken to free other ages from such inordinate lusts for naturall corruption is not idle in any age but incessantly is hatching euill motions and actions but of all ages youth is most fertill and abounding as the fattest grounds with weedes with all wicked inclinations vicious and raging affections and there is no vice vnder the sunne vnto which it is not after a speciall sort subiect that it is a singular fauour of God for a youth so innocently to passe ouer his younger yeares as that some notable blot or inconuenience cleaue not to him which perhaps long after craues his seruice or addeth vnto his sorrowes But if these be not reasons weightie enough to drawe young men to this grace of sobrietie we might adde many moe As 1. to satiate ones selfe with his owne wayes argueth an heart declined from God Prou. 14.14 2. The Lord himselfe mocketh vnbridled youth Eccles. 11. which is a most seuere iudgement for God neuer laugheth at vs but we haue cause to weepe that which men laugh at as a tricke or touch of youth or some light slippe the Lord laugheth at because it is to be brought to a more righteous iudgment and consistorie 3. What a fearfull sinne and iudgement it is to be giuen vp to a mans owne hearts lusts se● Rom. 1.26 and Ier. 9.14.15 4. The commandement of God Eccles 11. Put away anger c. Oh but we shall depriue our selues of the pleasure of our liues but the wise man hath an answer readie that youth and morning is but vanitie that is soone gone and without great heed lost irrecouerably Now the meanes to attaine this vertue First beginne at the heart be sober minded get an humble heart which will frame to an humble carriage in behauiour speech apparell for the smalnesse of a man in his own eyes crosseth those ouerweenings and ouerdeemings of youth whereby they thinke they knowe more can doe more and better then the auncient it will make them suspect all their counsells which if Rhehobams young men had done they had preuented that great rent of the kingdom at that time it will make them sit silent before the elder and suffer themselues to be lead by their experience Secondly consider that these inward lusts are great sinnes though they neuer breake out into externall actions which naturall men see not so to be and therefore
from heauen and in such glorie as neither the tongue can vtter nor the mind of man can conceiue called in the Scripture the glorie of his Father that is such as is proper to the Father to himselfe and the blessed spirit and not to any creature communicable 2. This is a glorious appearing not onely in regard of Christ himselfe but euen in regard of his elect also who shall appeare with him in glory Matth. 19.28 When the Sonne of man shall sit in the throne of his maiestie we which haue followed him in the regeneration shall sit with him 1. Ioh. 3.2 We know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him For then we shall haue not onely redemption of our soules which euen here we haue in part but euen the full redemption of our bodies also and both in soule and bodie receiue our inheritance euen the crowne and kingdome of glorie Quest. But how shall this glorie of Christ appeare to be so bright Ans. Our Apostle saith that it shall appeare to be the glorie of the mightie God Christ is called a mightie God first simply in himselfe beeing of equall might authoritie and power with his Father and therefore Psal. 47.2 he is called an high Lord and terrible and a great King ouer all the earth for that these titles belong to Christ the effects of his gouernment following in the next words declare Secondly comparatiuely in respect of Magistrates and others that are called Gods for Christ is not a God as they be by office or participation for so he should be but a weake and little God whereas he is a mightie God both in his nature and essence and who is God like our God saith the Psalmist Thirdly in regard of this his appearance for although he shall exercise his iudiciarie power and appeare as the Sonne of man yet shall he be mightily declared to be the Sonne of God much more then by his resurrection from the dead the personall vnion of his diuine and humane nature shall shine out as the sunne in his strength which while he liued vpon earth was vayled and hid And thus it shall appeare 1. In his humane nature he shall appeare the head of the Church his bodie Ephes. 1.22 2. His power shall be such as shall subdue all things vnto himselfe and put them vnder his feete euen Satan sinne hell death and damnation Revel 20.14 1. Corinth 15.28 Now his glorie cannot but be proportionable to his power hence we read of the glorie of his power 2. Thess. 1.9 3. Hee shall come with such attendants as no man is able to behold the glorie of the least of them for he shall come with thousand thousands of his Angels beeing his Ministers the glorie of all whome he shall so farre surmount as the sunne doth the lesser starres in brightnesse 4. Hee shall sit vpon his great white throne Dan. 7.9 great as beeing infinitely more glorious then Salomons white yuorie throne and white answerable to the puritie and perfection of the iudge and iudgement and beeing set he shall after the summons giuen to all flesh and presented before him declare and iudge not only open sinnes committed from the beginning but also his godhead manifesting the same to his minde euen the secrets of hearts which none but God can doe and then proceed to the pronouncing of a most righteous sentence according to the qualities of the persons presented the which sentence once vttered it shall stand without all gainesaying for all eternitie In all these then shall he shew himselfe as the sonne of man so also the mightie God Now because this appearing is set out to be so glorious and fearefull in that the person of this iudge shall be clothed with all his roabes of glorie and maiestie least the godly hereby should be terrified and discomfited least they should by reason of their sinnes and infirmities be afraid and loath to behold this glorie and least that they beeing in themselues so base and abiect should beginne to conceiue that they should be contemned or neglected of him who shall shew himselfe so glorious the Apostle for the comfort of such addeth that although he be a mightie God yet is he also our Sauiour and will not in all his glorie forget himselfe so to be neither can neglect those for whose saluation he paid such a price as was his dearest blood Where also by the way note that these two titles the mightie God and our Sauiour are not of two subiects as some heretikes haue held laboring thereby to elude this so pregnant a testimonie of the diuinitie of Christ the weight of which so pressed them as that they were gladde to flie to a miserable s●ift of disioyning them by a colon that so disioynted the former of them might more probably be attributed vnto the Father and the latter vnto the Sonne But the Apostle professedly as foreseeing how Satan and his instruments would oppose the place vseth but one article to note but one subiect to whom both the predicates most truely and properly agree The like example we haue 1. Cor. 15.24 So much of the meaning Now follow the instructions of the verse Doctr. 1. The doctrine of the Gospel truly receiued lifteth vp the heart to waite for Christs second appearing for seeing of the good tidings which the Gospel bringeth the greatest and best part are behind vs and seeing God hath not his perfect glorie from vs nor in vs neither we our perfect happinesse here below and seeing further it were a bootlesse thing for vs to serue God here by faith and loue if we could passe no further in assured hope and setled desire of a better life therefore doth this doctrine teach vs not only that the full redemption of the sonnes of God from sinne Satan temptation and teares is behind but also raiseth the eye of the mind to behold and the affections of the heart to long after the time wherein these things shall be reuealed wherein we shall walke by sight and not by faith and in a word wherein our saluation now begunne shall be perfected and we enioy the haruest of those good things the first fruits whereof haue here contented vs. To the confirming of which truth it is first to be noted that the Scripture speaketh in such phrases as if the whole worke of the Gospel were no other then to raise vs vnto this blessed expectation 1. Pet. 1.3 Who hath begotten vs againe to a liuely hope c. that is we who before were strangers and without hope are now through the mercie of God by the Ministerie of the Gospel regenerated and so restored to the hope of an inheritance not fading immortall reserued in the heauens Coloss. 1.23 If yee be not mooued away he saith not from the Gospel but from the hope of the Gospel namely those sweete promises of life which are the verie matter of the Gospel Secondly the whole doctrine is called
the curse On the contrarie let the naturall children of the Church 1. know them 1. Thess. 5.12 that is both in heart accknowledge them the Ministers of Christ and in affection loue them as his Ministers accounting their feete bewtifull 2. render them double honour 1. Tim. 5.17 in which precept the holy Ghost hath made 1. reuerence 2. obedience 3. thankfulnes 4. comfortable maintenance their due from their people Secondly Ministers are hence taught so to order their liues and doctrine as they lay not their pers●ns open to reproach nor prostitute their authoritie vnto contempt and so loose it both from themselues and others For this is the way for Ministers to winne authoritie and reuerence in the hearts of men by their liues and doctrine to become examples vnto the flocke And thus shining in the puritie of doctrine and conuersation they shew themselues starres in the right hand of Christ. The point beeing formerly prooued we will only note a threefold vse of it First to confute the Popish teachers who haue deuised another way to free themselues from the contempt of the laytie namely by inuesting their Bishops and clergie into ciuill authoritie and Magistracie by furnishing them with wealth and abundance yea superfluitie of state and pompe by distinguishing them from other men by strange fashions of apparell miters crosyer staues rings and bables that if Titus had bin such a Bishop this had beene a needlesse precept for who durst haue despised him but he should soone haue heard of him But the word teacheth that it is no politicke deuise that maintaineth the estimation of a Minister or Ministrie but the holy carriage both of the doctrine and liues of the Ministers euen as the Apostle also speaketh of Deacons that by ministring well they get themselues a good degree and great libertie in the faith Secondly this ground laieth heauie things to the charge of the idol-ministerie who for any gifts for teaching are many of them inferiour to boyes and girles of seauen yeares old and wofull it is to thinke how many places are serued or starued rather with Ieroboams priests who were raked out of the basest of men the iust subiects of reproach and contempt And others the sonnes of Eli who by the wickednesse and dissolutnes of their courses not only stinke themselues but make the seruice and worship and word of God to be abhorred men mistake their marke when they say that it is often preaching which maketh it dispised but because it is so often preached by such leud men it looseth the grace and power of it in the hearts of men Thirdly when men thus teach and thus liue purely and innocently and yet are despised let them not thing it strange nor be discouraged for they haue done their dutie and taken the right course to get reuerence and authoritie Let men at their perill now despise them the Lord will not refuse to honour them and if they cannot in earth yet are they sure to shine in heauen And thus by the assistance of God haue we absolued this second Chapter to him be therefore praise for ouer Amen CHAP. III. PVt them in remembrance that they be subiect to the principalities and powers and that they be obedient and readie to euerie good worke IN the former Chapters the Apostle hath beene carefull that Titus should in his ministerie propound the seuerall offices and duties of Christianitie vnto seuerall estates and conditions of men Now in this Chapter he will haue him teach more generall and more publike duties which concerne no estate more then other but all Christians of what estate and condition soeuer they be wherein he taketh vp the greatest part of the Chapter vnto the 9. verse II. The second part of the Chapter warneth Titus how to carrie himselfe more respectiuely 1. in contentious questions 2. in dealing with heretikes both which abounded in those dayes in the 9 10. and 11. verses The third part containing the third part namely the conclusion of the whole Epistle remembreth some priuate and personall matters which is ended with the accustomed apostolicall salutation Concerning the first of them These generall duties are 1. propounded in 1. and 2. verses and 2. confirmed and vrged in the sixe following They are propounded in this method and order First Titus must instruct all Christians in their duties towards Magistrates Secondly in the mutuall duties one towards an other The former taketh vp the first verse wherein two things are to be considered 1. the manner of propounding the precept 2. the substance of the doctrine it selfe wherein wee must speake 1. of the duties required which are two 1. subiection 2. obedience Secondly of the persons 1. to whome 2. from whome they are due But first we must returne to the manner of propounding this lesson in these words Put them in remembrance The Apostle saith not teach them or exhort them as before but put them in remembrance wherein Titus is inioyned two things 1. To call backe into their mindes this lesson euen the old doctrine concerning authoritie and subiection vnto magistracie which is not abolished vnto beleeuers implying that it is no newe doctrine but renewed 2. Often to inculcate and beate vpon this point for great and waightie reasons For 1. by nature all men desire libertie and to cast off the yoke of God corrupt reason wil be readie to conceiue all men one mans children and why should not one be as good as an other we came all out of one Arke and perhaps among Christians some Chore or other will be readie to say what is not all the congregation of the Lord holy 2. The Iewes in these times wherein the Apostle writ stood much vpon many temporall priuiledges as vpon Abraham the Temple the lawe c. and were stiffe and loath to stoope to the authoritie of the Gentiles 3. The Christians of Iewes and Gentiles stood as much vpon spirituall priuiledges not thinking it inough to be set free from the thraldome of Sathan and bands of sinne and so be made spirituall kings vnto God and the lambe vnles also by a boundles Christian libertie they might be at their owne hands to do as they listed without the knowing of any subiection 4. This also confirmed their error that they more respected mens persons then Gods ordinance for because in these dayes they sawe the most of the Magistrates heathen men and enemies to Christ and his gospel they thought it a most vnworthie thing that they beeing beleeuers should still be commanded and remaine subiect vnto them the weakenesse of which ground we haue discouered in cap. 2.9 for on the same commandement seruants presumed on more libertie then was mee● euen to the casting off of their subiection at least to vnbeleeuing masters The instructions which I will note out of this manner of deliuering the precept are two Doctr. 1. The scope of the ministerie is to put men in minde and keepe in them the
could delight in Gods statutes they would not forget them 3. They neuer vse the right meanes of remembring the word and yet they complaine of forgetting it for before they heare they prepare not themselues by repentance nor by prayer for the spirit to teach them nor after they take no paines by meditation repetition or conference to make the word their owne it is not worth any such labour and therefore complaine no longer of thy memorie but of thy sinnefull securitie negligence and profanenesse accuse thy selfe and bewayle thy sinne who hast suffered thy memorie and mind to be taken vp with olde worne lusts and delights with reckonings of summes of money with earthly profits and commodities and thus hast spent thy dayes in the forgetfulnesse of God And for time to come performe the forenamed duties carefully and although thou canst not remember euerie particular thou hearest yet God by his spirit will fasten so much in thy memorie as shall be meet for thee to practise and sufficient for thy comfort especially when thou shalt stand in greatest need of it as in temptation danger distresse in the day of thy death and iudgement But suffer now in thy prosperitie the things belowe to take vp thy senses it shall be iust with God in the day of thy darkenesse and miserie to leaue thee without the comfort of any one place of Scripture that what thou wouldst not take vp into thy mind when thou mightest thou shalt not be able then when it is offered and thou gladly wouldst So much of the manner of deliuering this doctrine now we come to the matter of it In the matter consider 1. the duties required which are two 1. subiection 2. obedience The difference I take to be this The former is an acknowledgement of subiection vnder which Gods ordinance hath necessarily put a man which therefore he cannot resist for it is vsed in Scripture commonly not only to note that inferioritie which the Lord hath laid on wiues seruants children inferiours and subiects which in verie naturall light cannot but be acknowledged Gods ordinance but also that powerfull subduing euen of such as are vnwilling and resisting for the same word is vsed there where it is said that Christ subiected and subdued all things vnder his feete and the Apostle Rom. 13.5 fastneth this necessitie vpon it it is necessarie to be subiect The latter rather intendeth a free and voluntarie obedience vnto the lawful commandements then such necessarie subiection vnto the persons which may be considered as an effect of the former and a branch of the same roote for where there is a conscience of subiection there will be cheerefulnes in obedience The second point in the matter and substance of the precept is the persons first to whom the duties belong namely all Magistrates who are here distributed into 1. principalities 2. powers The former of which two meaneth those who haue primarie and plenarie power vnder God and by their proper power and command administer within their seuerall dominions such are Kings Cesars and cheefe gouernours in free states The latter signifieth such as exercise delegated authoritie and hold from those higher powers such are vicegerents or viceroyes vnder the King presidents of prouinces Le●f●enants ouer countries Mayors of citties or townes c. Thus are Magistrates ranked into Kings and those that are in authoritie 1. Tim. 2.2 and into Kings and those that are sent of them 1. Pet. 2.12 Thus subiection and obedience is due to them both euen to the latter aswell as to the former and because these are sometimes meane men as the other are often bad men the text calleth vs to turne our eyes from the persons and fixe them especially vpon the ordinance of God which maketh these duties their right for here is a metonymie of the adiunct it is not said let them be subiect to Princes as those that haue power from them but to principalities and powers as though he had said let them not looke so much to the men exercising rule and power as vnto the power and ordinance it selfe and seeing there is no power but of God let them submit themselues vnto euery ordinance of man for the Lords sake Secondly the persons from whom these dues must be paid are all Christians in generall without exception for the Apostle includeth them all in the word them and therefore clergie as well as laytie yea euery soule must be subiect to the higher powers if euery soule then the clergies as well as others Doctr. 1. Christianitie eateth not vp Magistracie nor destroyeth gouernment and ciuill authoritie but ratifyeth confirmeth it for Christians are here called to subiection and obedience to ciuill authoritie The reason is 1. the kingdome of Christ is not of this world his authoritie deuideth not ciuill inheritances his crowne and scepter detract not from earthly crownes and scepters his weapons are not carnall the keyes of his kingdome are no temporall iurisdiction he could both be the true lawfull King of the Iewes and yet conuey himselfe away when they would haue giuen him his right 2. For one ordinance of God to destroie another would argue want of wisedome in God the ordainer the very thought whereof were blasphemous The orders of Christ in his Church then cannot bring confusion in the commonwealth for then the Lord should not be a God of order but of confusion nay on the contrarie for the Churches sake which he loueth he keepeth order and maintaineth gouernment in common wealths that his Church while it is a gathering in the world might find safe harbour therein and this doue of Christ haue place where to set without danger the soale of her foote 3. Moses so wisely from God constituted both ecclesiasticall and politicall ordinances as that the one was so farre from violencing the other as one of them could not stand without the other and was Christ the Sonne any lesse wise a law-giuer in his Church then was Moses a seruant Vse 1. This doctrine meeteth with that wicked opinion of Anabaptists and Libertines who hold that Christians need no Magistrates nor ought to be subiect vnto any and why so 1. Because they are the Lords freemen 2. They are the iust who need no laws but are a law to thēselues 3. They need no protection but the Lords 4. Their badge is loue which suffreth and couereth all things and therefore they may not reuenge nor resist euill by carrying before the Magistrate But for the first the libertie of the Lords free men in this life is spirituall and inward and no●●utward and bodily till the life to come For the second if the law be not made against them yet it is for them and their good for suppose they do no euill yet may they suffer much wrong and euill without defence of law so as the old saying will here be true Kings were ordained for men and not men for
Kings and especially for good men as the shepheard for the sheep and not principally for the wolues Besides the supposition is nought for though they be iust yet they are so but in part and therefore sometimes they follow their priuate affections and do wrong and need the law to vrge them to do right For the third although beleeuers be vnder the protection of God who suffreth not an hayre to fall from their heads without his prouidence yet may we not strip his prouidence from the meanes which serue it of which this is a speciall one And for the fourth true it is that loue couereth all things but by couering must be meant 1. A fauourable construction of all things which in right reason may be well con●●ered for a man may not put out his eyes and affection may not so ouermaster sence as to call manifest darknes by the name of light 2. A passing by smaller infirmities and priuate offences as one that would not take knowledge of them 3. Such a couering as may cure also for loue is wise and herein most louing when in taking notice of an iniurie it turneth it selfe to the discipline of the partie sometimes by louing admonition in all lenitie and sometimes by mercifull seueritie in sharper reprehension yea and if that take no place in proceeding further to discouer the sores to skilfull surgions according to the quality of the offence to the bench either of the church or commonwealth and this is no impreachment vnto loue as we see in God himselfe who chasteneth vnto amendment whom he loueth Againe Christians may not returne euill for euill but rather beare two blowes then giue one and suffer a double iniurie then offer one but yet this hindreth not but that a Christ●an may lawfully defend himselfe although he may not offend and hurt another for we may not thinke our selues so straitly bound to the letter as the right sence of such precepts for euen Christ himselfe hauing a blow on one cheeke turned not the other but was readier and would haue done it before he would haue returned the wrong as he might Lastly Christians may not reuenge But reuenge is twofold either lawfull or vnlawfull This latter is priuate reuenge done by a mans selfe or by the help of the Magistrate when a man seeketh to right his wrong with the hatred and wreckling himselfe vpon the person or any other sinister end and this must be farre from a Christian. But there is a publike reuenge put in the hands of the Magistrate who is the Minister of God to take vengeance on the euill doers and this may be prosecuted in a good manner and for a good end without hatred of the partie offending yea and executed according to the constant orders laws of the countrie agreeable to Gods word and this execution is nothing else but the manifestation of Gods vengeance and righteous sentence Vse 2. This doctrine further meeteth with all those common slanders raised by Satan and his instruments against Christ and his kingdom and ordinances by which the deuill hath most powerfully preuailed against the Church in all ages namely by perswading ciuill gouernours that Christs kingdome is the greatest enemie to their states and kingdomes and such an enchocher as will at length vnlesse it be warily preuented pull downe their greatnesse This imputation hath the father of lyes euer laid before the eyes of great ones to alienate the minds of Princes and people from the same for the euidence of which how hath hee made it goe for currant that whereas all errors are easily tolerated and countenanced onely true religion and the professors of it haue been the causes of all stirres and tumults as though the doctrine and teachers of the Gospel of peace carried nothing else but fire and swords where they goe By what other meanes did Haman incense king Ahashuerosh against the Iewes but by telling him of a dispersed people dwelling apart from others hauing lawes which yet were Gods owne different from all other people and they would not obey the kings laws and therefore it was not for the kings profit to let them liue By what other meanes did the Chaldean courtyers incense Nebuchadnezzar against the three companions of Daniel but by imitating their contempt of him and his edict These men haue not regarded thy commandement nor will serue thy gods nor worship thy image which thou hast set vp By what other means did Rehum and Shimshai and their companions hinder the building of the temple then by writing vnto Artashast that if the Iewes had once fortified themselues within walls they would be rebellious as of old and would pay neither toll tribute nor custome and that they wrote thus much because they would not see the kings dishonour In the new Testament how haue Christians standing out for the lawes of Christ against Antichrist beene alwaies charged that they were the onely subuerters of the place where they liued and the direct contradictors of the decrees of the Caesars vnder whom they liued How often was Paul accused by the Stoicks in Athens by Demetrius by Tertullus that he was a pestilent fellowe a moouer of sedition among all the Iewes thorough the world and a sect-master And it is no meruell if the members and ministers of Christ be thus dealt with in the world seeing the head himselfe was not onely accused and condemned but executed for that he was an enemie to Caesar and a moouer of sedition Our eyes haue seene and read and our eares haue heard how Popish spirits haue euer beene readie to charge the Protestants in seuerall countryes to haue attempted to wrest the sword out of the Princes hand Harding chargeth Luther to haue animated Thomas Munzer the rebels preacher in Thuringia wheras Luther plainly calleth him the preacher of Sathan so the Rhemists call M. Calvin one of the principall rebels of his time and affirme the Protestants consistories the shoppes of rebellion This hath euer beene the cunning of Sathan to preuent the accusation of others in the things wherein himselfe is most guiltie for those that knowe Popish doctrine can easily discouer it to be none of Christs nor his Apostles because it wresteth all Princes authoritie out of their hands and mooueth their subiects to rebellion and such as knowe the state of Rome and Rhemes knowe where the shoppes stand in which all conspiracies and rebellions haue beene and are daily forged and then where would they lay them but vpon Protestants who hence shewe themselues taught by Christ because if Satan himselfe should come to accuse yet could he not say truely that euer any such thing was found in their hands Did not Charles the ninth of Fraunce giue out that the most bloodie massacre that euer the sunne sawe was done for the conspiracie of the Protestants against him and the kingdome whereas it was onely a Popish and perfidious plot long before laid against the liues
of those deare children of God And where should the gunpowder treason haue beene laid if the blowe had beene giuen had not Satan deuised shoulders which had borne a many such malitious imputations before But notwithstanding such bug-beares whereby Satan would scare men from the sincere imbracing of the truth and entertaining of the ordināces of Christ as the greatest enemies of states and kingdoms let vs be wise hearted and bold to giue Satan the lie seeing the sincerest preachers and professors of the Gospel are so far from denial of the right of Princes as that the doctrine which they bring establisheth their power in their hands rather like the workemen of Salomon who built the Temple and built his throne too And let Protestant preachers and professors carrie this garland and tryumph against all Popish spirits that although the enemies of the truth haue narrowly in all ages sifted them to finde iniquitie in them that thereby they might iustly get the ciuill sword drawne against them yet haue they found no such thing in them Vse 3. If Christian religion confirme ciuill authoritie then the way to bring men to become subiect to superiours is to plant the Gospel and take order that it may preuaile amongst them The teaching and practise of true religion is the conseruant cause of commonwealths because it is a principall meanes to bind vnto obedience without which all politike courses fayle and are found by experience too weake It is not power it is not policie that will still subdue and keepe vnder a rebellious people without the power of the word in their consciences for till obedience be willingly yeelded vnto God it can neuer be conscionably and then not constantly yeelded vnto his Leiftenant This may be a ground of our prayer that the Lord would be pleased to put into the hearts of our gouernours that the Gospel may be throughly planted in Ireland for this is the most direct way to subdue the rebels and bring the whole countrie vnder willing and free subiection Doctr. 2. Euerie Christian must yeeld obedience and subiection vnto Magistrates and higher powers To the explaning of which point three things must be opened 1. who must must be subiect 2. wherein 3. wherefore The first of these was touched before where we affirmed that all sorts of men cleargie as well as laietie must be subiect Romish policie that they might become the absolute libertines of the world and carrie their bad matters vnder a cloud that secular eyes should not prie into them hath withdrawne the neckes of the cleargie from vnder ciuil power and will be iudged by none but their compeares which is as if a theife should be tried by a quest of cutpurses and therefore when they meete with that generall conclusion Let euery soule be subiect they beate their wittes as beeing at a stand but seeing something must be bolted out for a shewe one Pope saith that the person of the speaker is excepted in giuing such preceps whereupon it commeth to passe that Paul and Peter and consequently their successors while they call for subiection of others are themselues exempted from it a silly and weake shift as though Christ did not pay tribute for Peter as for himselfe and as though Paul pleaded not before and appealed to a ciuill iudge Act. 25.11 Another procter of theirs by euerie soule will haue meant onely animall men that is secular and worldly but spirituall men and the cleargie are still exempted as though the Popish cleargie were become and all vanished into spirits or as if where Luke saith that there were in the shippe 376. soules it must needes be concluded they were all secular and animall men among whom Paul and Luke were or as if they were all naturall and animall men in the Arke because it is said there were in all eight soules of which Noah was one who was a preacher of righteousnesse much like the poore proofe of that Iesuite who because Paul would not haue the Corinths goe to lawe vnder the vniust but vnder the Saints surely concludeth that this must be vnder the Bishops for is it not likely that that Epistle was written onely to Bishops because it was sent to the Saints yet vpon such grounds as these hath their cleargie cast off the yoake of obedience these many 100. yeares cleane against the expresse word of Scripture and the vniuersall practise of holy men yea the Sonne of God in the Scriptures Aaron the high Priest must obey Moses Ahimelech when wicked Saul sent for him to slay him obeyed him beeing summoned he came and appealed not from the vniust sentence of death so did Christ so did his Apostles and so must and ought their successors vnto the ende yet sometimes as it is seene in all tenures which are not from God men knowe not what to hold to after the Popish cleargie hath challenged their exemption and authoritie by diuine right from the word beeing pressed they forget themselues and claime it iur● humano that is from the priuiledges don●tions and exemptions of Princes and Emperors wherein besides that they should not haue suffered the Princes by departing from their right to breake Gods commandement for Princes haue not power to loose him from obedience whom God hath bound as also by flying to a priuiledge as their best and last refuge is plainly implyed what of due by the lawe of God and nature belongeth vnto Princes from them The second point is wherein and how farre we ought to obey Magistrates Answ. Euery Christian is bound to take heede to the mouth of the king in all things and so farre as he hath power to command Now because the ciuill Magistrate is alwaies bound to command in the Lord and 2. is the father of our bodies after a sort and of all our outward man hence two grounds of great moment are concluded The former is that euerie man must obey all possible commandements which are not against the lawe of nature and the lawe of God for the Magistrate in all his commandements as well as executions must be the Minister of God onely vrging that vpon his subiects which God himselfe whose place he sustaineth would vrge It is said of Cyrus that he must be Gods sheepeheard and he shall performe not his owne but all my desire The iudgement is not mans but Gods and it is the honourable style of Princes to be assistants to the ruler of the whole earth neither is this to denie any supremacie to Princes to tie them to the tables of which God hath made them the keepers but it is to ascribe vnto them such soueraigntie vnder God ouer all causes and persons Ecclesiasticall and Ciuill as that they may not depose the care of Church or Common-wealth as a thing wherein they will not be wearied but must prouide that sincere and vncorrupt doctrine be published in all their Churches that the Sacraments be duely and seasonably administred
according to Christs institution that the whole worship of God be purged from humane traditions and superstitions that the Church discipline be executed according to the word of God that not onely thefts murthers adulteries forceries which euen heathen kings haue rooted out of their countries be punished but also blasphemies cursings atheisme heresie drunkennes Sabbath-breaking c. In a word we yeelde vnto the soueraigne power soueraigne authoritie to driue all sorts of men Ecclesiasticall and Ciuill to all those duties religious or secular which God hath laid vpon them and according to their care herein haue they beene commended or disallowed in the Scriptures Now that Princes should not command but according vnto God the Lord hath appointed them meanes as 1. The booke of the lawe to be by them continually to iudge of all matters according to the mouth of the Lord and to frame and execute their lawes according to the same 2. The ministerie to explane and lay open and put them in mind of their dutie out of that booke For these two Magistracie and Ministerie serve one an other as the left hand the right But here Ministers must take heede that they take no more vpon them then to aduise and aduertise from the Lord seeing this is one maine difference betweene Magistracy and Ministerie that although one haue an eye to the other in that Magistracie must stablish the Ministerie and the Ministerie direct Magistracie yet neither of them may execute the other Moses and Aaron must communicate their counsels and labours but both must knowe their owne standing After them Iosuah must ioyne with Eleazer Dauid the king must take advise of Nathan and Gad the Prophets Iosiah with Huldas so long as Iehoidah the Priest liueth to direct Ioas he prooueth well but after his death he waxeth worse And Vzziah will seeke the Lord in the dayes of Zachariah the Priest but afterward degenerateth and groweth verie naught and vnlike vnto himselfe Thus as formerly we haue stablished the regall power ouer all persons Ecclesiasticall as wel as others so now haue we also ouer all causes Ecclesiasticall as well as Ciuill with this onely exception vnder Christ who must still be acknowledged the soueraigne Lord and King of his Church to rule it by his own word and lawes according to which direction while they square their gouernement as Moses did all in the temple by the patterne shewed in the mount happy are the people happie is their gouernement happie are themselues in their administration but thrice happie shall they be in their account Quest. But all this while you onely bind the Prince to the lawes of Christ in gouerning the Church doe you giue him no power to make Ecclesiasticall lawes and constitutions of his owne Answ. Yes but concerning this point I thus conceiue that Ecclesiasticall lawes are of two sorts 1. Such as prescribe both the matter and manner of the worship of God and the whole substance of Church gouernement which are all the lawes of Christ himselfe made to his hand 2. Other Ecclesiasticall lawes which remaine for the supreame power to make are of two sorts 1. Either edicts for the authorizing and commanding the excution of the former lawes for the building and repairing of the Church that it may be a louely spouse of Christ. Or 2. such constitutions as are circumstantiall and in things meerely indifferent which may varie according to the variablenes of times places and dispositions of Churches and here he hath power to make Church-lawes of his owne so as the rules of the word be not transgressed concerning things indifferent And I thinke this a truth not denied by any In performing both these latter Kings and Queenes are called nursing Fathers and nursing Mothers to the Church Now follows the second ground to be laid for the resoluing of the former point namely that seeing Kings are of power to doe what they list although not euer lawfully in regard of the lawes of God or nature yet safely in respect of his subiects who may not violently resist their persons or proceedings for who shall say vnto him what doest thou in this regard they may and sometimes doe command vnlawfull and vniust things and inflict grieuous and heauie burdens vniustly whether must obedience and subiection be yeelded them or no Ans. The conclusion is It is neuer lawfull to resist or rebell or vse any violence against a lawfull Magistrate for this were to rise vp in armes against the ordinance of God and consequently against God himselfe The Apostle Peter indeede calleth it an humane ordinance or creature but not in regard of the author as if it were deuised by man but of the ende because it is ordained of God for man as the proper subiect and for his profit as the proper ende of it And therefore though Popish Friers and factors stand within Corahs tents with poisoned daggers digging out the life-blood of Christian Princes and especially the Iesuites those cursed Shebaes which make no bones by themselues and others most treacherously to slay their kings and masters yet Dauids heart smote him when he made but a slight assault vpon the skirt of Sauls garment because he was the Lords anoynted teaching vs by his example another lesson then by violence to helpe our selues if we could doe it out of the vniust commandements and executions of those whom God hath set in eminence and authoritie aboue vs. But here we must take direction how to carie our selues towards lawfull Magistrates commanding or imposing vnlawfull things For consideration must be had whether the command bind vs to doe or to suffer and beare any vniust thing If the former enioyning vs to doe that wherof we haue not good ground to do it of faith here the supreame power of all must be obeyed and the prince only in and for the Lord for so Cesar must haue Cesars as God may haue Gods Daniel and his fellowes deliberated not to answer the King but boldly and readily professed that they would neuer worship his Image they would submit themselues to his furie but durst not to his commandement The Martyrs in Queene Maries time whose mention and memorie is honourable resisted not nor rebelled they willingly and ioyfully gaue their bodies to the flames but still professed against the idolatrous worship and doctrine established by law In Ieroboams time those which could conforme themselues to the edict of the calues were doubtles counted obedient and had the grace of the times and it went hard with others that durst not saue their labour but repayred to the Temple still but the Lord condemneth and accursed such wicked obedience and bringeth euill vpon all Israel for it No power on earth can make the conscience safe in the doing of a thing vnlawfull although in a thing indifferent conformed to the rules of the word the Princes law is a binder It is a weake speach therefore to say I do this and that
slew his Master wicked Iesabel could obserue the ruine of such treacherous conspirators Our owne Chronicles are full of rare examples of Gods iudgements our eyes haue seene not a few vpon such The strange discouerie of Percies conspiracie may not be forgotten nor let that wickednes and the iust vengeance of God vpon the actors neuer be put out from vnder heauen Neither is this only an humane obseruation but an infallible extract and conclusion out of the word Prov. 24.21 My son feare God and the King and meddle not with the seditious for their destruction shall rise suddenly and who knoweth the ruine of them To these reasons might be added that it is the brand of Libertines and carnall Gospellers to despise gouernment and speake euill of maiesties and dignities c. Vse 1. Popish religion is a flat enemie to the lawe of God and nature the professor of which must before he be the Popes darling sweare flat contrarie to this subiection euery yeare and almost day giues experience of this truth Besides their doctrine is full of trayterous positions and their bookes which they daily send in amongst vs are stuffed with poisoned invectiues to bring our Princes and nobles into contempt pitie it is so many of them are so openly suffered to the offence of the good and the casting further backe of those that be bad It is not my dutie to speake or write what Lipsius in his posthumus epistles hath foolishly bolted out against the Lords anoynted ouer vs but this I say the booke is too much set by and if a Papists tongue can staine or slaunder I affirme there are fewe of our nobles whom Costerus hath not lately maliciously slandered the practise among them I acknowledge common but the thing among vs to be lamented is that both that and other such bookes are so common 2. This subiection is the rather to be vrged vpon all because the deuill seeketh by all his cunning and power to weaken this ordinance and bring it into contempt which is euident in that men dare not take such libertie of speach aginst the supreame and highest yet how ordinarie is it for men to waigh themselues and their worthinesse with those that are sent from the highest yea and s●icke not to make odious comparisons with them that lay his office aside he is as good and better then he but the deuill hath nowe the hold he would haue for while the eie is vpon the person and not vpon the place steppeth in this equalitie and this equalitie shaketh off subiection before he come to such tearmes of defiance Others breake out into speeches beseeming the authors euen Chore and his companie rather then any Christian Ye take too much vpon you Moses and Aaron whensoeuer the magistrate administreth not according to their minds and let the Magistrate when he will set himselfe to reforme the congregation as Moses did this corruption of mens hearts will not long lie hid which beeing so great and Satans malice no lesse Ministers must the rather be much and often in this doctrine as Titus was here commanded Readie to euerie good worke That they speake euill of no man that they be no fighters but soft shewing all meekenesse vnto all men Now we come with the Apostle vnto the second sort of those generall duties which are required of euerie Christian and these be the mutuall duties one towards another the which we may best conceiue in this order 1. generally propounded in these words readie to euerie good work which I knowe some restraine vnto the cheerefull performing of the Magistrats lawfull commands to the confirming of which sense perhaps that needles copulatiue and is inserted into our English not found in the Greeke text But the precept is entire of it selfe and seuerall from the other before and as I take it both parallel vnto that generall phrase cap. 2.14 zealous of good workes and contrarie to that cap. 1.16 reprobate to euerie good worke Secondly more specially both 1. by remoouall of the lets of concord and loue which are two 1. euill speaking 2. fighting or quarelling 2. by entertaining such vertues as are the nurses and cherishers of Christian concord amongst men of which the Apostle nameth two of the principall The former is Christian equitie which carieth the minde equally and indifferently freeing it from passion and perturbation that it may conceiue the best of persons and actions The latter is Christian lenitie gentlenes or meekenesse which euen in taking notice of the faults and vices of others couereth so farre as is good for the partie and also in the spirit of loue and meekenesse cureth and seeketh to restore such an offender And as the two former vices were prohibited in regard of all men so these two vertues are not so nakedly propounded but that their obiects also are by the Apostle noted in the last words where the Apostle saith that we must be equall and mild not only to those in authoritie who may else returne our frowardnes with vntolerable displeasure nor onely to our friends and familiars or such as by the bond of nature or seruice may claime such dealing from vs neither onely to Gods friends and beleeuers but to all men indefinitely euen those to whome out of the bond of Christianitie we are nothing bound those who in themselues deserue no such thing but the contrarie at our hands in a word those who are not onely our enemies but Gods after a sort beeing as yet without and not brought vnto the faith which last words may not slightly be ouerpassed because they lay a notable ground and make way vnto the verses following For this first generall exhortation the scope is that euery Christian ought to keepe with him a propensitie and disposition to euerie good worke whether it concerne God or himselfe or others for the Apostle hauing called vs to giue God Gods and Caesars to Caesar that the body of Christ might be without rent as his coate was without seame and that there might be a sweet harmonie and concent in the Christian commonwealth he now calleth to the practise of a common principle and lawe in nature namely to giue euerie man that right which God hath giuen him and Christians are not onely debters vnto Magistrates but to the meanest and weakest to whom the common bond of nature and humanitie hath knit vs so as no man can say of any man I owe him nothing The like practise of our Apostle we may elsewhere obserue as Rom. 13. where hauing in many verses required subiection and tribute due vnto Princes in the 7. and 8. verses to shut vp his exhortation withall he wisheth to giue to euerie man his due tribute to whome tribute custome to whome custome feare to whom feare honour to whom honour but loue to all men owe nothing to any man but loue which is such a desperate debt as a man can neuer discharge himselfe of The like doth
of their owne displeasure and sometimes out of their sonnes misdemeanours doe disinherit their heires but the Lord cannot growe into such displeasure with his children as ●ue● to cast them out whome in his Christ he hath once admitted into his house If his sonnes sinne against him he will visit their sinnes and scourge them with the rodds of men but his mercie and truth will he neuer take from them Now of the tenure by which we hold life eternall namely of hope I haue spoken twise before in this Epistle at large chap. 1.2 2.13 to which the reader may looke backe onely in a word note that it is a mark of a man set into this new condition to hope and wait for the blessed inheritance in heauen 2. Cor. 5.2 We sigh desiring to be clothed with our house from heauen 2. Tim. 4.8 the description of the godly to be those that loue the appearing of Christ. And if all creatures groane with vs for the time of their deliuerance how ought we much more for whom such things are prepared Hence it followeth 1. that it will not stand with a conuerted heart to linger after the things of this life or to make his heauen vpon earth or to haue equall affection to earth as heauen 2. nor to neglect the meanes whereby this hope is confirmed whether outward offring as the Gospel ministerie word Sacraments or inward receiuing as faith vnfained working in obedience Ver. 8. This is a faithfull saying and these things I will thou shouldst affirme that they which haue beleeued in God might be carefull to shew forth good workes The first words of this verse beeing as it were a finger pointing to some excellent matter some take to be a preface making way and winning attention to the sequel of the verse others thinke it to be an epiphonema or graue shutting vp of that matter which immediately goeth before as giuing consent and acclamation vnto the most weightie and necessarie doctrine of free iustification by the grace of God in Christ which doctrine because the Apostle by the spirit of prophesie did foresee would be most strongly opposed he purposely by a vehement asseueration strengtheneth as also the doctrine of Christian hope which although it be not of things seene yet is it of things so faithfull and firme in respect of the promise as the Christian soule may without wauering and doubting relie and leane it selfe vpon the faithfull accomplishment of it But I take it the words may not vnfitly be referred to the whole doctrine propounded both before and after there beeing the same scope of both for what new thing is the Apostle to teach which he had not taught and vrged before and what particular is expressed in the verse which formerly hath not beene deliuered to young and old men and women servants and other all which estates after their conuersion vnto the faith are in speciall called to readines in euerie good worke vers 1. and to what other ende are those large descriptions of our twofold estate but to strike on the same string that howsoeuer we could not in the former attaine to any fruitfull conuersation yet now in the latter it were a shame not to adorne our profession and calling and what other end learned we of the appearing of grace but that vngodlines and wordly lusts beeing denied we should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world So as I say the Apostle setteth a seale vnto his whole doctrine that it is true and faithfull most vndoubted and certaine in it selfe and most worthie of all our credit and faith seeing nothing can be truelyer spoken nothing more profitably beleeued nothing more comfortably practised then the truth here deliuered vnto vs. Quest. But are not other doctrines true and faithfull yea as true as this and is not all Scripture of diuine inspiration Answ. Yes neither doth our Apostle oppose the truths of Scripture as though one were more or lesse true then another but in more necessarie or more questionable truths he setteth here and there a marke or pointng hand both to vrge the authoritie and necessitie of the one and also to force men more easily to yeeld vnto the truth of the other Example hereof we haue 1. Tim. 1.15 in such a fundamentall point as is saluation onely by Christ to be opposed by so many hundreth heretikes it is no maruell if we see some starre set by it or a light held ouer it that none may passe by it vntill they haue diligently waighed and fully resolued vpon the truth of it In like manner beeing to entreat of the difficult labour care and work of the ministerie from which women as not beeing capable of it are interdicted and of the excellencie of the function which no man might either rashly take vpon him or negligently execute beeing lawfully called and beeing further to set downe a certaine rule vnto which all the lawefull callings in the Church are to be conformed In such a waightie matter as is the preseruation of the Church and pietie he prefixeth a worthie preface 1. Tim. 3.1 This is a true saying if any man desire the office of a Bishop he desireth a worthie worke But where the Apostle doth all these things as in this place he could with lesse reason depart from his ordinarie manner Doctr. The Ministers of God must teach euerie truth reueale the whole counsell of God and keepe nothing backe but some truths must be dwelt vpon and more auouched then others and namely such as are either more necessarie or more contradicted This is the wisedome of the spirit of God himselfe who by his penmen distinguisheth of truthes and hath neither prefixed Behold in the beginning of euerie sentence nor affixed his Selah in euerie ones ende but onely in truths more observable and remarkeable then the rest Which point may receiue a generall confirmation from this obseruation that the penmen of Scripture beeing to write the historie of things past because they were of facts more vndeniable as things running into the sences of men they stand not so much vpon ratifications and asseuerations yea a number of historicall books there are the authors of which are not known to the church But when they come to write prophesies of things to come and things in reason more improbable then the authors name his kinred his calling with other circumstances of time place and persons seruing to confirme and conuince the truth of prophesies are registred And if these truthes were either more necessarily then ordinarie concerning the Church or more liable to opposition and exception then was much more caution and confirmation vsed To avoide multitude of examples whereby this point might be strengthened I will onely insist in that prophesie which more neerely concerneth vs that liue now in the newe Testament namely of the Reuelation The which booke because it describeth the state of the Church from the time of Iohn the last of the
Tim. 1.14 Hold fast vnto it Habac. 2.18 Cusanus Canon law a fitter rule for the Popish religion then Canonicall Scripture Isa. 8.1.16 Ier. 19.2 Luk. 16.29 Rom. 1.2 Act. 26.26 People must attend to the faithfull word Hold it fast as the euidence of saluation Be thankfull for it Testifie this thankfulnes The word is euery way fitted for the instruction of the faithfull Reasons 1. Cor. 12 7. cap 14.3.4 Eph 4.11 Heb. 4.12 There is no learning to this to edifie withall The s●●plest ought to be exper● in the Scripture beeing fitted to their capacitie Wisdome is easie to him that will vnderstād I may point with my finger but I cannot giue the eyes to see what I point at Aug. prolog lib. de doct Christ. No imperfection or want in the Scriptures 1 ●om lib. 3. cap. 3.4 1. ●om lib. 3. cap. 1.2 Pro re nata Adoro plenitudinem scripturae Tertull. cont Hermog 2. Pet. 1.19 Some things in Scripture difficult how and why The sunne is seene by his owne light 1. Tim. 6.3 Who be the teachers of holy doctrine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doctr. Euery man must become a learner of this doctrine Heb 6.1 An examination whether we haue beene as fit to learne as this doctrine is fit to teach 2. Pet. 1.8 cap. 3.18 The men of God in speaking of the word haue euer set some marke of excellencie vpon it Reasons As men seele the word in their hearts so their mouthes speake of it Gen. 17. Scripturas non simpliciter id est ad esse ecclesiae sed ad bene esse solū necessarias nec tamen sufficientes disputat Bellar. de verbo dei lib. 4. cap. 4. What to iudge of the Popish spirit speaking basely of the Scriptures Ministers must set an edge on their doctrine by exhortation Pectus facit disertos People must endure the word of exhortation see also Coloss. 1.4 collat with 3.14 Then is exhortation powerfull when it is grounded on wholesome doctrine Act. 13.46 Ministers must resist resisters of the truth Notes of him that resisteth the truth Eph. 5 1● Prou. 25.12 Act. 4.2 Isa. 66.2 A minister ought to be a man of knowledge Ezra 7.6 2. Cor. 3.6 Deut. 33.10 1. Cor. 12.8 A dumb minister cannot be Gods messenger Act. 8.31 Ier. 15.2 If darknes be in the mountaines it cannot but be in the vallies Chrys. Hose 4.1 vers 4.5 2. Chr. 15.3.6 The Scriptures furnish a man excellently to euery ministeriall dutie 2. Tim. 3.16 17. Matth. 21.16 Act. 26.22 Act. 18 24. Veritas index sui obliqui The Scriptures make the Ministers mouth a sharpe sword Isa. 49.2 The vaile is ouer the heart of the Papist not ouer the Scriptures Aug. epist. 2●3 Error in life commonly a ground of error in doctrine 2. Thess. 2.10 Reasons 2. Pet. 2.1.10.12 Act 13.8.10 3. Ioh. 9. No maruaile if many ministers resist the truth for many are disobedient Rev. 3.2 2. Cor. 11.25 They spend much labour in vaine who are disobedient to the doctrine themselues teach Ier. 3.15 Praecordia False teachers deceiue mens minds 4. waies Three properties of error The best fence against false teachers Vt poena peccati non vt pectatum 1. Tim. 4 1. 2. Tim. 3.1 Deut. 13.3 Gal. 2.7 Rom. 15.8 Matth. 15.24 Vse and ends of circumcision Heb. 10.1 Heb 9.22 Gal. 3.28 Gen. 17.10 Luk. 1.42 Ier. 21.21 Coloss. 2.10 Gal. 5 2. The greater the danger the plainer must be the reproofe 2. Tim. 4.14 Conditions of plaine reproof three Sundrie plaine reproofes condemned Iob 41.10 The Archseducers of the people of God Popish teachers their successors prooued Ier. 23. The holding of whole Poperie cutteth off a man frō Christ. Iam. 2.21 cap. 3.5 Philip. 3.2 Poperie ought not to be tolerated where it can be abolished Gregor de Val. Populus Christianus tenetur obsistere arctissimo conscientiae vinculo extremo animarum periculo si praestare rem possit Creswel Haeresi nunquā decrit ratio cap. 3.11 2. Tim. 2.14 Faithfull teachers must timely oppose themselues against seducers 1. Tim. 3.9 Haec si non possis ne sis Epis●opus Theoph. It is rather to be wished then hoped that all ministers should be of one mind Ier. 1.18 Matth. 10.34 Matth. 3.12 Act. 18.17 1. Cor. 15.14 Gal. 2.21 Whether a mā may be saued that erreth in a fundamentall point Aliud est non credere aliud nolle credere Implicite praeparatione animi Many are called few are chosen Ruth 1.14 Iob 41. Many set out of Egypt who neuer come at Canaan Seducers secretly in●ect creepe into houses Iude 3. Matth. 23.14 2. Pet. 2.2 Iesuitical frogs creepe into euery blind corner Why God suffereth such hurtfull men Reasons Deut. 13.3 Error is exceeding infectious 2. Tim. 2 1● Matth. 16.22 Gal. 2.13 M●sters of families must keepe out popish profane p●rsons if they would not haue their houses infected An heart set vpon gaine will feed it selfe by falshood Micha 3.5.11 Ezek. 13.18 19. 2. Pet. 2.3 2. Cor. 2.17 Multo aequanimius decē millium animarum ferunt lacturam quam decem solidorum Nicol Clemangis de Pontif. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A minister may be plaine in his reproofe Isa. 1.21 Exhibete vos matres fovendo patres corripiendo extendite vbera sed producite verbera Rom 9.1 A minister must be wise in his plainnes Hest. 4.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 palam ●ario 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 apud veteres fuerunt fanorum antistites interpretes oraculorum teste Festo Cicero What kind of prophet was Epimenides 1. Sam. 19.20 2. king 9.1 Differences betweene the Prophets of God and the Prophets of the Gentiles Numb 12.6 Rev. 1.10 Dan. 8.27 The Gentiles had their prophets so called to witnes against their impi●tie So Bucer said of Seneca Rom. 2.14 The Lord hath a number of witnesses against hypocriticall and profane professors of Christ. Witnesse that worthie booke Catalogus testium veritatis Not simply vnlawfull to alledge the saying of a prophane man in a sermon Reasons Foeliciàs oppugnabunt propugnabunt qui in Gentilis sapientiae x●sto spatiis aliquot confectis ad sacram hanc militiam veluti tyrocinio quodam proluserint Tilenus Iulian forbad the Christians the reading of heathen Poets and Orators least they shold alledge their authoritie against the heathens For saith he they thrust vs through with our owne fathers Cautious in such allegations 1 Cor. 2.17 Non in coetu ecclesiastico Augustine confesseth that while he continued in the pride of his heart he disdained the holy Scriptures and thought thē nothing to the eloquence and knowledge he found in the bookes of the heathen as Tullie and others but after he saw himselfe he knew also that all humane eloquence Philosophie in cōparison of thē were no better then bladders stuft with wind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plut. Falshood in word and deed condemned by the light of nature They