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A09434 A godlie and learned exposition upon the whole epistle of Iude, containing threescore and sixe sermons preached in Cambridge by that reverend and faithfull man of God, Master William Perkins, and now at the request of his executors, published by Thomas Taylor, preacher of Gods word ; whereunto is prefixed a large analysis, containing the summe and order of the whole booke, according to the authors owne method, to which are further added, foure briefe tables to direct the reader ... Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Taylor, Thomas. 1606 (1606) STC 19724.3; ESTC S100865 274,393 200

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reformed resisteth plainly saying I will not haue this man to rue ouer me I desire none of his waies This loue then comes from grace 1. Ioh. 4.7 Loue commeth from God 1. Tim. 1.5 it hath his beginning from a pure heart true faith and good conscience Which must bee maintained against the Papists who say that nature affoordeth the inclination but grace the practise whereas indeed grace giueth both Thirdly consider the vse of loue It is the instrument and companion of true faith which worketh by loue Galath 5.6 The proper worke of faith is to lay hold on Christ this faith as a hand can of it selfe doe but when it commeth to the practise of morall duties it can no more worke without the grace of loue then a hand which can lay hold alone and of it selfe receiue and retaine can cut any thing without an instrument Whence it appeareth that faith in iustification is alone but in the life of man it worketh by loue and whereas it hath bin taught for many hundred yeeres that loue is the life of faith that is vn●rue for it only testifieth that faith hath life It is alleaged that as the bodie without the spirit is dead euen so faith without workes is dead therfore workes are the soule and giue life to faith But this consequence from this comparison is not good because the soule is not properly the soule of the bodie but of the man and so it proueth not that loue is the soule of faith Again the word Spirit there betokeneth the breath without which the body is dead and thus is the comparison to be returned that as breath maketh not a man liuing but sheweth him to be aliue so loue maketh not faith liuing but testifieth it so to be yea indeed is the fruite and effect of faith as breath is of life More particularly this grace of loue is two-fold first that whereby man loueth God secondly that whereby man loueth man In the former note two points first what it is namely a motion of the heart whereby it is affected to God causing it to be well pleased in God and his workes for himselfe as also to seeke fellowship with God so much as it can Secondly note the measure of this loue which in Scripture is double first that which the law requireth and that is the full measure of loue loue in the highest degree when man loueth God with all his soule with all his strength and all the powers of the whole man so as in man no loue can be aboue it vnto this all men are bound yet no man since the fall can attaine Secondly that which the Gospell describeth standing in an vnfained will and true endeuour to loue God with all the heart all the strength and all the powers which is a smaller measure than the former yea and a qualification and moderation of it yet to none but those that are in Christ. Wherby we come to the right vnderstanding of diuers places of scripture as 2. King 23.25 of Iosiah 2. Chron. 15.15 all Iudah sought the Lord with their whole hart These and such other places must be vnderstood as they are qualified by the Gospell in that they willed and endeuoured by all good meanes to seeke God yea this text also must be vnderstood of this second measure seeing the former being in the highest degree cannot be multiplied no not if men were glorified The second kinde of this loue is that whereby man loueth his neighbour which is a certaine diuine and spirituall motion causing the heart as the former both to be wel pleased in man for God that is because he is Gods image and his owne flesh as also to powre out it selfe and communicate goodnes to his neighbour in wishing speaking and hoping the best of him Wherein by the way obserue a plaine difference betweene faith and loue faith is a hand but to pull Christ to our selues loue is a hand also but opening it selfe and giuing foorth vnto others In this loue of the neighbour consider these three things first the order of it The order that hath been taught for many hundred yeeres is that first wee must loue our selues and then others from this ground Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe for the rule say they must goe before the thing ruled But this is not found seeing worthie then haue been commended in Scriptures for louing others as well yea and better than their owne selues so Dauid loued Ionathan 1. Sam. 20.17 Christ loued his enemies better than himselfe these began not with themselues yea indeed the right beginning of loue is in God and then as a man is a more principall instrument of Gods glorie hee must be for God preferred in our loue aboue our selues Thus euery man is bound to loue and preferre the life of his Prince aboue his owne see the perfect rule of direction herein Ioh. 13.34 Secondly note the manner of it set downe in that precept Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe that is as wee are cheerfull and free to practise the dutie of loue to our selues so must we doe it to others for this precept aimeth at the manner rather than the rule of our loue to man for that is as Christ hath loued vs. Thirdly the kindes of it it is two-fold first single when men loue others but are not repaid with loue againe yea when a man loues his enemie but is not loued again The second is mutuall loue that is when loue is requited with loue called in Scripture brotherly loue see Philip. 2.2 1. Cor. 1.10 when men are of one iudgement like minded speak● one thing and one soule is as it were in many bodies The second point is the multiplication of loue which the Apostle prayeth for vpon good ground because it ioyneth man to God and man to man and so becommeth as it is called the bond of perfection the bond of the Church Common-wealth of al societies 1. Cor. 13. Loue ed●fieth that is it helpeth to build the kingdome of God yea it constraineth men to all good duties in their particular callings Qu. But how shall this loue be multiplied Ans. By certaine meditations and practises The meditations are many first on Gods cōmandement Be seruants one to another in loue Gal. 5.13 Secondly of Gods image which al men should beare in loue 1. Ioh. 3.16 Thirdly of the fellowship of the faithfull hauing all one father one brother one saluation all linked by one spirit Ephes. 4.4 Fourthly of the loue of God Ioh. 13.35 which hereby we shall be assured of 1. Ioh. 3.14 The practises also are diuers first wee must labour to be assured of Gods loue to vs and encreased vpon vs Ephes. 5.2 Secondly the law of nature must teach vs to doe as we would be done vnto Thirdly our care must be more to loue than be loued for to loue is a vertue in our selues to be loued i● the vertue of another Fourthly pray daily for
not hauing the spirit of God then euery one hath power to receiue the spirit of God Ans. This is no good reason but is all one as if because a bankrout is blamed for not discharging his debts to his creditors another man should conclude that surely he is therefore able to pay them But these wicked men were blamed here first because they professed Christ but yet had not his spirit secondly because that in Adam they were the causes that they were borne without the spirit of God and so made themselues vnfit to receiue him Secondly if naturall men bee iustly condemned much more those that are worse than they as Atheists prophane persons those which contemne the assemblies and neglect the meanes of their saluation and yet looke for saluation as wel as others The Gentiles who were without the law doe the things of the law by nature Rom. 2.24 and yet many that professe the name of Christ and liue vnder the Gospell goe not so farre as those naturall men in doing the things of the law so as euen those Heathens and naturall men shall rise vp in iudgement and condemne many a professor of Christ of whom euen many come short of the Diuell himselfe who beleeueth and trembleth and yet not a few professors neither know what the Diuell beleeues neither through h●rdnes of heart can tremble at the iudgements of God as he can doe Thirdly those come farre short that think themselues in state good enough because they liue ciuilly and deale iustly and neighbourly as they say for the naturall man can doe this and yet shall be condemned no plea shall stand at the great day of the Lord but that which assureth of the pardon of sinne sealed vp with the blood of Christ. Let a mans outward and ciuill righteousnes be neuer so great yea if it could be equall to the righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharisies which for outward appearance was without all exception yet if hee bring not a righteousnes exceeding that he can neuer be saued Fourthly in that the naturall man is blamed for being a naturall man this ouerthroweth all merits of congruitie which the Papists boast of because a mans person not being accepted before God all his works are sinnes the worke neuer pleaseth God till the worker first please him Fifthly euery professor of Christ must strip the naturall man and become a spirituall person that is such as the spirit of God dwelleth in for first as the Father worketh our saluation by giuing Christ and his merits so must the holie Ghost by applying the same vnto vs else can we looke for no saluation Secondly as the soule giueth life to the bodie which else were dead so the spirit of God is the soule of our soules and quickneth them with new life being dead in sinne Thirdly wee can neuer know that wee are in Christ or belong vnto him but by the presence of the spirit in our hearts 1. Ioh. 3.24 Hereby we know that he abideth in vs euen by the spirit that he hath giuen vs. Quest. But how shall a man know whether hee hath the spirit or no Ans. Let him examine himselfe first whether he inwardly loue and feare God in his word of promise and threatning secondly whether he subiect his heart and life vnto him thirdly whether his heart be continually lift vp in inuocation and thanksgiuing All these are the workes of the spirit of God and they which 〈◊〉 of the spirit thus sauour and ●ffect the things of the spirit Rom. 8. Quest. But I feare I haue not the spirit how shall I obtaine it Ans. By vsing the meanes of reading the Word meditation and prayer especially Luk. 11.13 Your heauenly father giueth the holy Ghost to th●● that desire him Psal. 143.5.6 I meditate in all thy workes and stretch foorth my hands vnto thee Vers. 20. But ye beloued edifie your selues in your most holie faith praying in the holy Ghost IN this verse vnto the end of the 23. are set downe some meanes whereby all beleeuers may be fitted to the maintenance of the faith and true religion vnto the which the Apostle hath in the former part of the Epistle perswaded These meanes are contained in fiue rules here prescribed first concerning Faith secondly Loue thirdly Hope fourthly Meekenes fifthly Christian seueritie the first of which is contained in this twentith verse which is that they should build themselues vpon their faith which is not barely propounded but inforced and vrged first by a motiue in this word most holy faith secondly by the meanes of it which is prayer praying in the holy Ghost In the rule note two things first that faith is a foundation secondly that the dutie of beleeuers is to build vp themselues vpon this foundation Concerning the former first is may be demanded what is here meant by faith Ans. Here by faith is not so much meant the gift of faith as the matter of it namely the doctrine of faith and religion comprised in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles in which sense it is said that the Ephesians were built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles that is vpon their doctrine Ephes. 2. The same was the rocke confessed by Peter vpon which Christ promised to build his Church and yet in the second place we must not exclude the gift it selfe for although the doctrine be a foundation in it selfe yet it is not so to vs vnlesse we beleeue it and applie it to our selues by this gift If any man aske what doctrine is this I answer the summe of it may be reduced to three heads the first whereof concerneth mans miserie by his sinne originall and actuall as also the dangerous fruits thereof The second the redemption of man from this miserie and his freedome by Christ. The third the thankefulnes which man oweth for this deliuerance and ought to testifie and expresse in newnes of life Hence learne first what is the infallible marke of the true Church whereby it may be discerned from the false and Apostaticall Church and that is the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles for this being the very foundation of the Church where it is there the Church must needes bee and this note of it selfe is sufficient to point out the true Church wheresoeuer Secondly seeing faith is the foundation of the Church and not the Church the foundation of faith beware hence of a damnable doctrine of the Popish Church which teacheth that there can be no certainty of the points of religion no nor of the Scriptures themselues but onely by the iudgement of the present Church of Rome and that Church must giue what sense soeuer she pleaseth to the Scriptures else hath it none wherein they play the part of preposterous builders laying the foundation in the top of the building Thirdly it may be demaunded how any doctrine becommeth a foundation vnto the saluation of men Answ. Properly to speake God and Christ is our foundation and
Apostle calles his good purpose Rom. 8.28 yea to shew the freenes of this grace it is thence denominated and called the election of grace Secondly the meanes of this calling which in the Lords hands are diuers whereof some prepare to calling othersome are instruments of it as first the reading of the Scriptures seruing to bege●● generall historicall faith Secondly afflictions in bodie goods name friends or otherwise tending to humble a man and prepare his heart as soft ground Thirdly the denouncing of Gods iudgements and threats of the law which sends to hell but giues no grace these are generall preparatiues others are instruments to effect inward calling as the preaching of the glad tidings of the Gospell which is the most principall and effectuall meanes of this speciall and effectuall vocation and to this Paul ascribes it as 2. Thess. 2.14 whereunto he called you by our Gospell that this is true consider a two fold worke of this Ministerie when it is powerfully applied to the hearts of men First it openeth the very heart of a man and laies him out to the beholding of himselfe shewing him that by his detestable sins he hath made himselfe more vgly in Gods eyes than any Toade can be in mans whereby he is prepared not to lie asleep in this estate but vnto the second worke which is to apprehend and applie the blood and merits of Christ exhibited in the Gospell for the washing and bathing of his sinfull soule that so he may be saued from wrath Thirdly the persons that are called those are mentioned Rom. 30. namely those whom hee had before predestinate those he called which seemes to be expounded in Acts 13.48 So many as were ordained to life euerlasting beleeued that is were called vnto the faith all therefore are not called It pleaseth some to teach another doctrine namely that God for his part calls all men effectually and giues them a power to beleeue if they will but the difference say they is in the will of man to prooue which they bring this comparison The Sunne shines on waxe and clay equally the waxe is softned but the clay is hardened But this is not true out of the Scriptures for it is not giuen to all to vnderstand the mysteries of the kingdome Matth. 13.11 these things are hid from most of the wise of the world and reueiled vnto babes Matth. 11.25 Knowledge is giuen to some not to others and consequently faith for they which haue not knowne cannot beleeue Fourthly the time of this calling The particular time of any mans calling is not reueiled but laid vp in the secret counsell of God in whose hands times and seasons are yet the extent of the time is large enough though stinted euen the time of this life some at the sixt houre some at the ninth and others at the eleuenth c. but not after because that then all means of calling men cease Now because men know not the date of their daies it behoues them out of hand to striue to enter not to deferre from day to day alleaging that some are called at the twelfth houre but accept of the Lords call while it is yet the acceptable time If the Lord now say Seeke my face let thy heart answere as an eccho which ●akes the word out of the mouth thy face O Lord I will seeke Psalm 27.8 such a pleasant harmonie God is delighted with If he say as the Prophet speaketh Behold now my people they are presently readie to answere Behold now our God and the rather because the Lord will be free and not stinted by thee that either he should call thee in thy crooked yeeres or not at all he will not be prescribed vnto extraordinarily to call thee at the twelfth houre as he did the theefe on the crosse when thou howlest vpon the bed of thy sorrow and gaspest vpon thy death-bed Therefore while it is called to day let vs heare the voyce and harden our hearts no more Fiftly wherein doth this effectuall calling stand Both in the outward and inward calling because the former is often in the meanes giuen to Nations people men at least to make them without all excuse but the second being secret and inward whereby the Lord makes a mans heart inwardly answere the outward calling possesseth him with a willing mind stedfastly to beleeue in the Lord Iesus and with an endeuour to please the Lord in all things thus is the heart pearced Psal. 40.6 the heart of stone changed into an hart of flesh that is made tractable and pliable Ezech. 11.19 and an heart which is a sacrifice accepted of God such an hart was Lydia● Act. 16.15 when God had opened it it was heedfull and attentiue to the words of Paul this hart can rellish the sweete promises of the Gospell and no other Sixtly the excellencie of this calling which wee shall perceiue by these considerations First in that it is a great work as was the creation of man at the first Rom. 4.18 so the Apostle maketh it 2. Cor. 4.6 he that at the beginning called light out of darknes the same hath shined in our hearts c. that as God cals the first time and dead creatures come foorth to life so with no lesse powerfull voyce the Lord cals the second time the heart of man dead in sinne and it is quickened with the life of God Secondly this effectuall calling goes beyond the worke of our creation for here a man is taken out of the first Adam and set into the second and at the same instant power is giuen to beleeue being in time both together though in order faith is first and then ingrafting wherein is not onely a bare priuation as in the creation when God called things that were not as though they were but here is a plaine resistance and rebellion God calling not onely things that are not but things that would not and refuse to be Thus to raise a man out of the blood of Christ is more than to raise Eue out of Adams side to raise a dead soule from the death of sinne farre more glorious and powerfull than to raise a dead bodie from bodily death to raise a man to supernaturall life farre greater than to a naturall onely Thirdly this calling ratifies all our couenants with God Men in their Baptisme enter couenant with God but often start from it and will not stand to it so as the couenant is onely made but when as a man is effectually called the couenant is not onely made but truly accomplished and that on mans part Vse Seeing we are called of God himselfe in the ministerie of the word for Paul calles it Phil. 3.14 an high calling we must labour to ioyne the inward calling with it which is higher than that by hauing first a griefe because we cannot beleeue secondly a readie mind thirdly an endeuour to beleeue fourthly a sorrow because we beleeue no more and faile so much in the seruice
receiue it First God giueth it vnto vs when he giueth vs Christ himselfe for it is giuen with him and it is made ours when God in mercie esteemeth iudgeth and accounteth it to be ours for it is ours by imputation which appeareth by these two reasons First as Christ is made out sinne so are we made his righteousnes 2. Cor. 5.21 but hee is made our sinne by imputation and therefore his iustice being inherēt in him is made ours by imputation Secondly as the first Adams disobedience is made ours so Christs the second Adams obedience is ours Rom. 5.17.18 but that is ours by imputation and therefore Christs obedience also Secondly to make this obedience ours we must receiue it and that can be onely by faith which is the hand of the soule receiuing into it the things that are giuen vs of God where note by the way that a sinner is not iustified by the dignitie of his faith but as it is an instrument whereby Christs obedience is applied vnto the soule III. Point What workes are excluded from iustification Ans. The workes of Morall and Ceremoniall law workes of nature and grace That euen workes of grace are excluded appeareth by these reasons First a sinner must so bee iustified that all cause of boasting may be cut off Rom. 3.27 But if a man were iustified by workes of grace he might boast still yea though hee acknowledge the workes to be of God see the Pharisies example Luk. 18. Secondly if a man were iustified by the workes of the law then our iustification should stand by the law but that it doth not Rom. 4.14 for then the promise were made voide yea the tenour of that whole Chapter prooueth that Abraham hauing store of good workes was yet iustified by faith without the works of the law the which thing also that obiection in chap. 6.1 witnesseth What then shall we continue in sinne drawne out of the fiue former chapters thus If a man may be iustified by faith without workes we may continue in sinne which obiection were no obiection if that had not been the intent of the Apostle to prooue iustification by faith onely without the workes of the law Thirdly Paul was not iustified by any workes 1. Cor. 4.3 I know nothing by my selfe yet am I not therby iustified where he noteth two things of himselfe first that hee had a good conscience within him secondly that he was not thereby iustified where hee debarreth all works of grace Fourthly we are saued by grace without workes these workes excluded are workes of grace for they are all such as God hath prepared to walke in Ephes. 2.8 Fiftly a man must first be iustified before he can doe a good worke and therfore works follow iustification and cannot cause it Yea and as all workes are excluded so al vertues also excepting faith are here reiected For as in a man that standeth to receiue a gift no part doth any thing to receiue it but the hand yet hauing receiued it all other parts testifie thankfulnes the tongue the feete and all the bodie euen so wee receiue the matter of our iustification by faith alone not by hope or loue but after the receiuing of Christ these with the other graces work and shew themselues The second point in this ground is the weight of it appearing herein that he that ouerthroweth it ouerturneth the faith Rom. 4.14 If they of the law be he●res of life faith is made voide and the promise of none effect And Galath 2.21 If we be iustified by workes Christ died in vaine Aduersaries hereof First the home-aduersarie is the common sort of ignorant people and all naturall men who with the young man say What shall I doe to be saued They say they will be saued by faith in Christ but when it commeth to the point they will be doing somewhat and stand much vpon their good meaning and righteous dealing Secondly the forreine enemie is the Popish doctrine Romish religion which teacheth that there be two iustifications First when a man of an euil man is made a good man this is by grace of the holy Ghost put into the heart the latter is whereby a man is made of good better which is by good workes But what Church soeuer holdeth this is fallen from grace This is a peremptorie sentence will some say and no generall Councell hath so determined Ans. The more is the pitie But Gods word hath peremptorily determined it Galat. 5.4 They are abolished from Christ and fallen from grace whosoeuer will be iustified by the law as the Romane Church at this day They say our doctrine maintaineth loosenes of life by excluding all workes from iustification Ans. Though we exclude the best works from iustification yet we debarre them not from Christian conuersation but therein require them as fruits of the spirit plentifully Ob. But it is absurd say they that one man may be iustified by the righteousnes of another Ans. Adams sinne is made ours and they marueile not at it what greater absurditie is it that the second Adams obedience answering to the first Adams sinne should bee ours in like manner The 16. ground is this Except a man be borne anew of water and of the hol●e Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdome of God Ioh. 3.5 In which obserue first the meaning secondly the weight thirdly the aduersaries In the first consider two points first what it is to be borne againe secondly of what necessitie it is For the former wee must know that there must bee in him that is borne againe three things first a reall change from one estate to another Secondly there must be a roote from whence this change may arise Thirdly a new life First the chaunge is when a man of a meere naturall man is made a new man not in regard of his bodie or soule or powers of them all which a man retaineth the same after his regeneration but in regard of Gods image restored and renewed by Christ Ephes. 4.24 This is the restoring of that new qualitie of righteousnes and holines lost in Adam for so the Apostle describeth this new birth in the place alleaged This change is attributed to water and the holy Ghost wherein by water our Sauiour alludeth to some speeches of the old Testament as Ezech. 36.25 where the Prophet speaketh of the clensing of the Church by powring cleane water vpon it that is infusing new graces into the heart which take place of the old corruption And by the holy Ghost he sheweth that this clensing of vs is by the inward working of the holy Ghost Obiect But it will be said if a man bee a new man hee must haue a new soule Ans. This new qualitie of righteousnes and holines is as it were a new soule for in a regenerate man there is a bodie soule and besides the spirit which is the grace of sanctification opposed to flesh and
off him he was neuer at it he neuer saw it and yet is truly the Lord of it and may say of it it is his owne by vertue of the donation Euen so God in his word giueth Christ and his merits to the beleeuer who as he hath receiued him by faith so he retaineth him by grace by vertue of which donation and acceptation a man may as truly say Christ is his as though he were now in heauen alreadie with him yea so firme and certaine is this ingrafting that it once being made can neuer be dissolued but is euerlasting for the root liuing and abiding for euer so also doe the branches being set into the same and that by the hand of the good husbandman God himselfe The second thing required in a tree of righteousnes is life which is not the naturall life of other plants but spirituall and eternall for eternall life beginneth euen in this life Galath 2.20 Now I liue yet not I now but Christ liueth in me and this life is by the faith in the Son of God and then wrought in vs when the same minde which was in Christ whilest hee was vpon earth is also in vs Philip. 2.5 for hee conueyeth his owne disposition into his members in part who are daily made conformable vnto him of which conformitie the Apostle maketh two parts Rom. 5.6 First a conformitie vnto him in his death that looke as he died for sinne so ought his members vnto sin and as he by his death subdued sinne and obtained victorie ouer it so ought they daily to be nibling in the abolishing and mortifying of that sinne which presseth them downe and hangeth so fast vpon them vntill the day of their full conquest and finall deliuerance Secondly a conformitie vnto him in his Resurrection that as he rose againe from the graue so should they from the graue of their sinnes and as hee rose to liue for euer so ought they by vertue of his resurrection to liue to God in newnes of life as those that looke to liue foreuer with him Thirdly the tree of righteousnesse must bring foorth fruites to testifie the life of it called Galath 5.22 fruites of the spirit and there reckoned vp Loue peace ioy long suffering gentlenes goodnes faith meekenes temperance Phil. 1.11 Paul prayeth that the Philippians might be filled with the fruites of righteousnes that is the duties of the Morall law contained in the first and second Table Fourthly a tree of righteousnes must bring foorth good fruites such as are pleasing vnto God Quest. How shall a Christian bring forth good fruits Ans. First good fruit must come from a good heart an heart penitent and truly turned to God Mat. 3. Bring foorth fruites worthie amendement of life 1. Timot. 1.5 Loue out of a pure heart Secondly it must be brought forth with intention will purpose and endeuour to obey God in his commandements which the heart must respect Thirdly the end of this fruite must be the glorie of God not seeking our selues but Gods honour In Leuit. 19.23 God requireth that the trees should bee circumcised which was thus performed The three first yeeres the fruite was to be cast or fall away the fourth it was to bee dedicated to the Lord and the fifth yeere the Israelites might eate of the fruite euen so wee must first cast away in respect of our selues our fruites and dedicate them vnto the Lord so he shall taste of them with delight and not before Fourthly it must bee brought foorth to the good of others as trees beare fruites not for themselues but for men so our fruites must bee intended not so much for our priuate good as the common good of the Church and Common-wealth Doct. 2. Seeing the faithfull are not such corrupt trees but of Gods owne planting they haue here first a ground of comfort in the middest of sorrow sicknes yea and death it selfe for being ingrafted into Christ the whole man is preserued safe found in him yea the dying bodie nay the dead bodie and that which is rotting in the graue is planted into him and is to liue againe in him who alwaies liueth and will raise it to life eternall at the last day Trees in winter are dead to mans sense yet because the rootes of them liue and haue in them sappe and moysture in the spring they shall bud blossome and beare fruite againe euen so the rotten body at the time of refreshing shall reuiue againe and become a glorious plant putting off mortalitie and corruption no more to be subiected thereunto againe than the roote into which they are set who hath for his members chased them away Secondly seeing we must be planted and cannot attaine this growth by nature we must detest and abhorre our selues in dust and ashes renounce and bewaile our naturall condition and be at no rest till wee feele our selues set into Christ by liuing the life of the Sonne of God For know we not that Christ liueth in vs except we be reprobates Thirdly our Church hath herein resembled Iudah hauing been for many yeres a plant of Gods delight who hath hedged and fenced it by his fauourable protection but many yea the most branches are barren bearing no fruite others beare lesse fruite than they haue done being withered and fallen back what will be thinke we the end hereof Surely the axe being alreadie laid to the roote of the tree shall cut downe whatsoeuer branches beare not foorth good fruite and they shall be cast into the fire It standeth vs then in hand to become more fruitfull before we be cut downe Fourthly hence let euery man learne subiection vnto God in all his crosses and afflictions wee are trees or branches at least of the Vine the Father is the husbandman and looke a● the husbandman loppeth cutteth 〈◊〉 pruneth yea and almost cutteth downe his trees to make them more fruitfull so dealeth the Lord with his children who therein are to rest well contented for he chasteneth them for their good that although no chastisement seemeth ioyous for the present yet it bringeth afterward the pleasant fruite of righteousnes to those that are exercised thereby Twice dead and plucked vp Some hence gather this that wee are once dead in Adam by originall sinne and secondly after regeneration or ingrafting into Christ by some grieuous sinne wounding the conscience to death and hence conclude that a man regenerate may die againe and fall from grace vrging for their purpose that in Rom. 11.20 Through vnbeleefe they were broken off and thou standest by faith be not high minded but feare But this cannot be so vnderstood for by twice dead is meant dead certainly or dead twice once in Adam by originall sinne and the second time dead by their owne actuall sinne As for that place in Rom. 11. I answere there are two kindes of planting first outward secondly inward The outward is when God giueth the word vnto a people with other his ordinances and
vncleane that is noisome and full of hur● and poison Morall is when any creature is vsed against Gods law and commandement separating i● from the vse of man as to marrie within any of the degrees prohibited Leu. 19. commeth within this vncleannes Thus a man borne of vncleane seed is vncleane Iob 14. Ceremoniall is when the creature being cleane it in owne nature yet in some other respects by vertue of Gods prohibitiō becommeth vncleane Thus were certaine beasts and fowles and dead bodies vncleane not in their nature but in some respects which especially were three first in regard of touching secondly of tasting thirdly of sacrificing in which respects th●y might not bee vsed Now the creature might be hated not in regard of it self or as i● i● the good creature of God but as farre as this ceremoniall vncleannes was fa●●●ed vnto it it being prohibited in this or other respects by God 2. Quest. But why should any m●n hate the flesh or garments of another seeing this ceremoniall vncleanne● was no sinne yea to burie the dead corpes was a dutie to be performed necessarily and so necessarie was it to touch them and for garments they were naturall and no more sin to touch them than to eate or drinke Ans. Although legall defilement was not alwaies a sin yet i● was alwaies an euill and prefigured the defilement of men by originall sinne and besides vpon Gods prohibition was to be hated Secondly although the defilement it selfe was no sinne yet hee that wittingly without cause did touch or meddle wi●● th● thing defiled did sinne because God commanded the contrarie Secondly out of the second part of the similitude in that we are to 〈◊〉 the company of obstinate offenders it may be demanded whether wee may keepe any companie or haue any fellowship with an obstinate sinner Ans. The familiar companie with such is forbidden but all companie is not absolutely forbidden for in two cases it is lawfull to accompanie with such a one first to doe him good with conference instruction 〈◊〉 admonition an heretike must be once or twice admonished and if he bee not then reclaimed he must be auoided Titus 3.10 Secondly when a man is bound to such a one by the bond of ciuill societie as for example if a man ●●re by the Church excommunicated y●t a wife must performe the dutie of a wife the childe of a childe the seruant of a seruant for th●se diuine ordinances abolish not but establish ciuill societies Then I say familiar companie must bee denied to such obstinate sinner● but not all companie as when by the same we can either reclaime them or else to performe some ciuill dutie toward● them Vse First we see here what was the end of ceremoniall vncleannes and that was ●o represent that spirituall vncleannes in the whole man by originall and actuall sinne in thought word and deede Z●ch 13.1 In that day shal ●h●re be a fountain● opened to the ho●se of Dauid and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem for sinne and for vncleannes whereby is signified such an vncleannes wherby not only our selues are defiled wholy but whatsoeuer we touch meddle withall which is infected by reason of that dwelling sinne in vs e●en as it was which in the law was ●ouched by a polluted and vncleane person This consideration should ca●se vs to looke into the filthines of our hearts which if we could or did see as it is both in it selfe and in the vile 〈◊〉 which without intermissiō it sendeth out it would make vs humble our selues and neuer bee at rest vntill this fountaine of the blood of Christ were set open vnto vs and we euen plunged into it and so clensed from this vncleannes whereof the vncleannes of the flesh was but a figure and ●●adow 2. Vse We learne how to vnderstand the Cōmandements of the Moral law namely not only according to the letter and bare words in which they are propounded which mention the maine sinnes only against God and man but by a Synecdo●he in the mentioned sinnes all of that kind as all occasions also motiues and inducements thereunto as here the Apostle wisheth the Saints to hate the flesh yea the garments spotted so wee are to hate the sinne itselfe yea and all the kindes and all the occasions of the same 3. Vse Hence wee haue a direct way wherein all beleeuers are to walke first we must hate the companie and societie of manifest and obstinate sinners who will not bee reclaimed Secondly all their sinnes not communicating with any man in his sinne we must haue no fellowship as with the workers so wi●h the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse Thirdly all occasions and inducements vnto these sinnes Fourthly all apparances of wickednes 1. Thess. 5.22 that is which men in common iudgement account euill and all this must proceed from a good ground euen from a good heart ha●ing sinne perfectly that is all sin as Dauid Psal. 139. I hate them with a perfect h●●r●d and not as some who can hate some sinne but cleaue to some other as many can hate pride but loue couetousnes or some other darling sinne but wee must attaine to the hatred of all before wee can come to the practise of this precept besides that all sinnes are hateful euen in themselues A needfull dutie to be heedfully regarded in these daies wherein are so few hate●s of the flesh and so many haters of those that hate it so many that are so farre from hating the appearances of euill that many sins themselues are swallowed vp and made no bones of horrible blasphemies must now credit mens speeches the breach and violating of the Sabbath in iourneying is 〈◊〉 good a seruice of God 〈◊〉 horsebacke 〈◊〉 neede be or as he requireth 〈◊〉 r●●●inge also fightings and such work● of the flesh are notes of valour and spirit and so in other Thus men who professe religion in word denie it in deed seeing true religion standeth not onely in the hatred of the sinnes themselues but euen of all occasions and apparances of them because God hath commanded them to be hated 4. Vse As the Iewes being not to come neer the houses nor touch the vncleane if they did touch any such thing they were vncleane and polluted and for that cause must wash their bodies and chaunge their garments yea if they did but suspect that they had defiled themselues they were presently to bee purified so wee being defiled with any knowne sinnes or suspecting any vnknowne our next course must be to the bloud of Christ the Lauer of the Church suing vnto God by prayer that our sins may be therewith washed away wee must put off our garments that is the olde man with his lusts and put on the wedding garment that is Christ Iesus with his righteousnes daily proceeding in the duties of sanctification for he that hath washed himselfe had need stil ha●e his feete washed that is daily renew his repentance and bring daily fruits
corruption of nature Rom. 8.10 This is as it were the soule of a soule renewed Secondly that a man may come to this estate there must be some root and beginning whence this change may arise and that is no other than Christ crucified the Redeemer and Mediatour of whose bodie beleeuers are members of his flesh and of his bones Ephes. 5.30 for looke as Eue was made of the side of Adam so is euery beleeuer of the blood of Christ and as euery man so farre as he is a sinfull man springeth from the first Adam so doth euery man so farre as he is renewed spring from the second Adam Christ Iesus Now that a man may spring out of Christ he must first being taken out of the wilde Oliue the old Adam Rom 6.5 be set and ingrafted into the second Adam as a new stocke and that by faith wrought in the heart by the spirit of God by which incision hee receiueth from Christ two things first in regard of his soule holines secondly in regard of bodie incorruption seeing that the whole man is vnited vnto Christ and so both soule and body receiue immortalitie and glorie Thirdly in this new birth there must be a new life by which if any liue not he is not borne again for the distinct knowledge of which life wee must distinguish of life life is vncreated and created vncreated life is the life of God yea God himselfe of which kind this is not Created life is either naturall or spirituall Naturall is that which we liue by naturall meanes as meate drinke sleepe physicke c. of which kind this new life is not but this is that spirituall life whereby a man in this life is ruled by the spirit of God according to the word and it standeth in two thinges First when the spirit dwelleth in the heart Secondly when the spirit ruleth the hart or more plainely this life hath two degrees First when a man beginneth to sauour affect and will spirituall things loueth them and chiefely affecteth them Rom. 8.5 when they haue some sauour and rellish vnto him Secondly when a man in all estates liueth by a iustifying faith and ordereth his life thereby The iust man saith Abacuke liueth by faith and this is as it is truly called life eternall the beginning and first degree of which euerie beleeuer hath possession of euen in this life The second point in this ground is the weight of it for which obserue the necessitie of the new birth in the former words where it is said that without it a man shall neuer see the kingdome of God much lesse enter into it No man is in Christ and so consequently out of state of saluation who is not a new creature 2. Cor. 5.17 No outward prerogatiue can bring a man in request with God vnlesse hee be a new creature Gal. 6.15 It is a constant truth of Christ Ioh. 13.8 If I wash thee not thou hast no part in me The third point is The Aduersaries who are first euery man by nature the wisedome of whom herein is enmitie with God For euery one naturally is willing to yeeld vnto God some externall seruice and ceremoniall worship as in the Church to draw neere to God with their lippes but when they should come to their renewing and the mortifying of their lusts O then they storme and swell and cast off this yoke because they say it abridgeth them of their ease libertie and pleasure and they cannot bee their owne men for it Secondly the Romane religion which for many hundred yeres hath stood in ceremoniall and bodily actions rites gestures apparrell and most of all in outwarde penance borrowed partly of the Iewes and partly of the Heathens but all this doctrine of the new birth of mortifying hidden lusts and deniall of a mans selfe is dead and buried among them little hereof is spoken or written in the great volumes of their greatest Clerks But the doctrine which is from God is spirituall as God himselfe is and most concerneth the inner man Secondly they are great aduersaries hereof in teaching that man though captiue to sinne hath a power in his nature whereby if the holy Ghost free him he can of himselfe will and doe that which is good which if it were so then he is but in part new and so is no new man Secondly a regenerate man must be a new creature now creation is a framing of something out of nothing not of something into somthing Thirdly thus a man should be but halfe dead and so could not be borne againe but onely strengthened euen as a man in a swoune of whom wee cannot say properly he is reuiued because hee was not dead but recouered The 17. ground is out of Galath 5.1 Stand fast in the libertie wherewith Christ hath made you free For the meaning of which we must know that Christian libertie which wee are exhorted to maintaine standeth in a double freedome First from the Morall law secondly from the Ceremoniall From the Morall law two waies first from the curse of the law Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ. Secondly from the rigour of it which requireth personall and perfect obedience this rigour is moderated by Christ whence followeth a freedome also from iustification by workes Rom. 5.1 Galath 5.4 The second freedome is from the Ceremoniall law which hauing an end put to it by Christ bindeth no man but our libertie is procured to vs in meates drinkes and all things indifferent with good conscience seeing to the pure all things are pure Tit. 1.25 Where we are commaunded to stand fast wee see the weight of it to be such as it may not be departed from nor forsaken for then we become debters againe to the whole law and so are fallen from Christ. Aduersaries hereof are first the Libertines as the Family of loue who being as they say deified are so carried by the holie Ghost that they cannot sinne no though they should commit fornication but no man is freed from obedience to the law by Christ although hee be from the curse and rigour of it Secondly all that take libertie to sinne because they say God in Christ is mercifull but Christ freed from sinne not vnto it Thirdly the Romane Church holding that the Pope hath power to make lawes binding conscience properly prescribing such things to be done the obseruing of which is the worship of God and meritorious as on the Popish fasting daies yea and Wednesdaies and Fridaies not to eate flesh euen this law bindeth the conscience of a Papist and such abstinence they say is a worke of merit and a worship of God But it will be said that Princes and Magistrates make such lawes of meates drinkes apparell and must be obeyed Ans. These lawes bind not conscience but the outward man Secondly they do not abrogate our libertie but moderate the ouer common vse for the common good but Popish