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A47642 A practical commentary, upon the two first chapters of the first epistle general of St. Peter. By the most reverend Dr. Robert Leighton, some-time arch-bishop of Glasgow. Published after his death, at the request of his friends Leighton, Robert, 1611-1684. 1693 (1693) Wing L1028A; ESTC R216658 288,504 508

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know that this divine adoption is not a mere outward Relative Name as that of men The sonship of the Saints is here and often elsewhere in scripture express'd by new Generation and new birth They are begotten of God Io. 1.13 1. Io. 2.29 There is a new being a spirituall life communicated to them they have in them of their Fathers spirit and this is derived to them through Christ and therefore called his spirit Gal. 4.6 They are not onely accounted of the family of God by Adoption but by this new birth they are indeed his Children partakers of the divine nature as our Apostle expresseth it Now though it be easie to speak and hear the words of this Doctrine yet the truth it self that is in it is so high and mysterious that it is altogether impossible without a portion of this new nature to conceive of it Corrupt nature cannot understand it what wonder that there is nothing of it in the subtilest Schooles of Philosophers when a very doctor in Israel mistook it grossely Io. 3. It is indeed a great mystery and he that was the sublimest of all the Evangelist and therefore call'd the Divine the soaring Eagle as they compare him he is more abundant in this subject than the rest And the most profitable way of considering this Regeneration and Sonship is certainly to follow the light of those holy writings and not to jangle in disputes about the order and manner of it of which though somewhat may be profitably said and safely Namely so much as the scripture speaks yet much that is spoke of it and debated by many is but an useless expence of time and paines What those previous dispositions are and how far they go and where is the march or point of difference betwixt them and the infusion of spirituall life I conceive not so easily determinable If Naturalists and Physicians cannot agree upon the order of ●ormation of the body's parts in the womb how much less can we be peremptory in the other If there be so many wonders as indeed there be in the naturall structure and frame of Man how much richer in wonders must this divine and supernaturall Generation be see how David speaks of the former Psal. 14.15 Things spirituall being more refin'd than Materiall things their workmanship must be far more wonderfull and curious But then it must be with a spirituall eye There is an unspeakable lustre and beauty of the new Creature by the mixture of all divine Graces each setting off another as so many rich severall colours in embroidery but who can trace that invisible hand that works it so as to determine of the order and to say which was first which second and so on whether Faith or Repentance and all Graces c. This is certain that these and all graces doe inseparably make up the same work and are all in the new formation of every soul that is born again If the wayes of Gods universall providence be untraceable then most of all the workings of his Grace in a secret unperceivable way in this new birth He gives this spirituall being as the dew which is silently and insensibly formed and this Generation of the sons of God compar'd to it by the Psalmist they have this originall from heaven as the dew Io. 3.3 Except a man be born from above he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God And 't is the peculiar work of the spirit of God as he himself speaks of the dew to Iob. Iob. 38.28 hath the Rain a Father or who hath begotten the drops of the dew The sharpest witts are to seek in the knowledge and discovery of it as Iob speaketh of a way that no fowl knoweth and which the vultures eye hath not seen Iob. 28.7 To contest it much how in this Regeneration he works upon the will and renews it is to little purpose providing this be granted that it is in his power to Regenerate and Renew a Man at his pleasure And how is it possible not to grant this unless we will run into that Error to think that God hath made a Creature too hard for himself to Rule or hath willingly exempted it and shall the works of the Almighty and of all others especially this work wherein he glories most fail in his hand and remain Imperfect shall there be any abortive births whereof God is the father shall I bring to the birth sayes he and not cause to bring forth No no sinner so dead but there is vertue in his hand to revive out of the very stones Tho the most impenitent hearts are as stones within them yet he can make of them children to Abraham He can digg out the heart of stone and put a heart of flesh in its place otherwayes he would not have made such a promise Io. 1.13 Not of flesh nor of the will of Man but of God If his soveraigne will is not a sufficient principle of this Regeneration why then sayes the Apostle St. Iames Of his own will begat he us and he addes the subordinate Cause by the word of truth which is here called the Immortall seed of this new birth Therefore 't is that the Lord hath appointed the continuance of the Ministry of this word to the end that his Church may be still fruitfull bringing forth sons unto him That the Assemblies of his people may be like flocks of sheep coming up from the washing none harren amongst them Though the Ministers of this word by reason of their employment in dispensing it have by the Scriptures the Relation of Parents imparted to them which is an exceeding great dignity for them as they are called co-workers with God And the same Apostle that writes so calls the Galatians his little Children of whom he travell'd in birth again till Christ were formed in them and the Ministers of God have often very much pain in this travel yet the priviledge of the Father of spirits remains untouched which is effectually to beget again these same Spirits which he creates and to make that seed of the word fruitful that way where and when he will The Preacher of the Word be he never so powerful can cast this seed only into the Ear his hand reaches no further and the hearer by his attention may convey it into his head but 't is the Supream Father and Teacher above that carries it in to the heart the only soyl wherein it proves lively and fruitful One Man cannot reach the heart of another how should he then renew its fruitfulness If natural births hath been alwayes acknowledged to belong to Gods prerogative Psal. 127.3 Lo Children are an heritage of the Lord and the fruit of the womb is his reward And so Iacob answered wisely to his Wife 's foolish passion am I in Gods stead how much more is this new birth wholly dependant on his hand But though this word cannot beget without him yet 't is by this Word that he begets and ordinarily not
nothing but holiness and urges it most pressingly upon all that receive it This is the very life of divine Faith touching the Mysteries of Salvation firmly to believe their Revelation by the Spirit of God this the Word it selfe testifies as we see and it is really manifest in it it carries the lively stamp of divine Inspiration but there must be a spirituall Eye to discern it he that is blind knows not that the Sun shines at noon but by the report of others but they that see are assur'd they see it and assur'd by no other thing but by its own Light To ask one that is a true Believer how know you the Scriptures to be divine is the same as to ask him how know you Light to be Light The Soul is nothing but Darkness and blindness within till that same spirit that shines without in the Word shine likewise within it and Effectually make it Light but that once done then is the word Read with some measure of the same spirit by which it was written and the Soul is ascertain'd that it is divine as in bodily fight there must be a meeting of inward Light Viz. the visuall spirits with the outward Object The spirit of God within brings Evidence with it and makes it self discernable in the word this all arguments all Books and study cannot attain unto it is given to believe No Man knows the things of a Man but the spirit of Man 1. Cor. 2.11 But how holds that here for if a Man speak out the things that are in his spirit then others may know them But the Apostle's aime is there to conclude that the things of God even such as were Revealed in his Word could not be known but by his own spirit ' it s so though Revealed yet they remain still unreveal'd till the spirit teach within as well as without Because intelligeable by none but by those that are the private Scholers and Hearers of the holy Ghost the author of them and because there are so few of these therefore there is so little reall Believeing amongst all the noise and profession that we make of it who is there if you will believe them that Believes not and yet truely there is too much Cause to continue the Prophets regret who hath believed our Report Learn then to suspect your selves and to finde out your own Unbelief that you may desire this Spirit to teach you inwardly those great Mysteries that he outwardly Reveals and Teaches by his Word Make use of that promise and press the Lord with it They shall be all taught of God But 2. There is here the Matter of this Doctrine which we have in three severall Expressions 1. That which is Repeated from the foregoing Verse 't is the Doctrine of Salvation that 's the end of it and 2. The Doctrine of sufferings and glory of Christ as the means 3. The Doctrine of Grace the spring of both And 1. Salvation the onely true Doctrine of true happiness which the wisest of naturall Men have grop't and sought after with much earnestness but with no success they had no other then the dark Moon light of Nature and that is not sufficient to find it out onely the Sun of Righteousness shining in the Sphere of the Gospel brings Life and Immortality to Light 2. Tim. 1.10 No wonder that naturall Wisdom the deepest of it is far from finding out the true method and way of cure seeing it cannot discover the disease of miserable Mankind Viz. the sinfull and wretched Condition of nature by the first Disobedience Salvation expresses not only that which is Negative but Implies likewise positive and perfect Happiness thus forgiveness of sins is put for the whole nature of Iustification frequently in scripture 't is more easy to say of this unspeakable Happiness what it is not then what it is there is in it a full and final freedom from all Annoyance all tears are wip'd away and their fountain dryed up all feeling and fear or danger of any the least evil either of sin or punishment banish'd for ever no Invasions of Enemies no robbing nor destroying in all this holy Mountain no voice of complaining in the streets of the new Jerusalem here 't is at the best but interchanges of Mornings of joy with weeping of sad evenings but there there shall be no Light no need of Sun nor Moon For the glory of the Lord shall lighten it and the Lamb shall be the Light thereof Well may the Apostle as he doth here throughout this Chap. lay this Salvation to Counter ballance all sorrows and Persecutions and whatsoever hardships can be in the way to it The soul that is perswaded of this in the midst of Storms and Tempests enjoys a Calme Triumphs in Disgraces grows Richer by all its Losses and by Death it self attaines this Immortall life Happy are they that have their eye fixed upon this Salvation and are longing and waiting for it that see so much of that brightness and Glory as darkn● all the lusture of Earthly things to them and makes them trample upon those things which formerly they admir'd and doted on with the rest of the foolish world Those things we account so much of are but as rotten wood or Glow-wormes that shine onely in the night of our Ignorance and Vanity so soon as the Light beam of this Salvation enters into the soul it cannot much esteem or affect any thing below it and if those glances of it that shine in the Word and in the Soul of a Christian be so bright and powerfull what then shall the full sight and real possession of it be The worker of this Salvation whom the Prophets and Apostles make the summe of all their doctrine is Jesus Christ and the summe of that work of Redemption as we have it here is his Humiliation and Exaltation His Sufferings and the Glory that followed thereupon now though this serve as an Encouragement to Christians in their Sufferings that this is the way by which their Lord went into his Glory and is true also of Christ mysticall the Head with the Members as the scriptures often teach us Yet I conceive 't is here main●ly intended as a summary of the work of our Redemption by Jesus Christ relateing to the salvation mention'd Verse 10. And as the Cause for the Effect so 't is put for it here The Prophets enquired and prophecied of that Salvation How By searching out and foretelling the Sufferings and Glory of Christ His sufferings then and his after Glories are our Salvation His sufferings is the purchace of our Salvation and His Glory is our assurance of it He as our head having Triumph'd and being Crown'd makes us likewise sure of Victory and Triumph Having entered possession to glory makes our Hope certain this is his prayer that where he is there we may be also and this his own assertion the glory which thou gavest Me I have given them Ioh. 17.22 24. this is
tribulation sayes St. Paul and here our Apostle insists on that to verifie the subsistance of this Joy in the midst of the greatest afflictions 4. Spiritual Grief that seems most opposite to this Spiritual Joy prejudgeth it not for there is a secret delight and sweetness in the tears of Repentance a Balm in them that refreshes the Soul and even their saddest kind of mourning viz. The dark times of Desertion hath this in it that is some way sweet that those mournings after their Beloved who absents himselfe is a mark of their Love to him and a true Evidence of it and then all these spiritual sorrowes of what nature soever are turn'd into Spiritual Joy that 's the proper End of them they have a natural tendency that way 5. But the Natural Man still doubts of this Joy we speak of because he sees and hears so little of it from them that profess to have it and seem to have best right to it If we consider the wretchedness of this Life and especially the abundance of Sin that 's in the World what wonder though this their Joy retire much inward and appear litle abroad where all things are so contrary to it and so few that are capable of it to whom 't were pertinent to vent it Again we see here 't is Vnspeakable it were a poor thing if he that hath it could tell it all out And when the Soul hath most of it then it remains most within it self and is so inwardly taken up with it that possibly it can then least of all express it 'T is with Joyes as they say of Cares and Griefs Leves Loquuntur ingentes stupent The deepest waters run stillest true Joy is a sollid grave thing dwells more in the heart then the Countenance whereas on the Contrary base and false Joyes are but superficial skin-deep as we say they are all in the face Think not that it is with the godly as the Prophet sayes of the wicked that there is no peace to them and the LXX Reads it no Ioy. Certainly 't is true There is no true Joy to the wicked they may revel and make a noise but they Rejoyce not the Laughter of the fool is as the crackling of thornes under the pot a great noise but little heat and soon at an End There is no continuing Feast but that of a good Conscience Wickedness and real Joy cannot dwell together as the very Moralist Seneca hath it often and at large but he that can say the Righteousness of Jesus Christ is Mine and in him the favour of God and the hope of Eternal Happiness hath such a light as can shine in the darkest Dungeon yea in the dark valley of the shadow of death it selfe Say not thou if I betake my self to the way of Godliness I must bid farewel to gladness never a merry day more no on the contrary never a truly Joyful day till then yea no dayes at all but night to the soul till it entertain Jesus Christ and his kingdom which consists in those Righteousness Peace and Ioy in the Holy Ghost Thou dost not sacrifice Isaac which signifies Laughter as St. Bern. but a Ram. Not thy Joy but filthy sinful delights that end in Sorrow Oh seek to know in your Experience what those Joyes mean for all describing and commending it to you will not make you understand it but taste and see that the Lord is good you cannot see and know it but by tasting it and having tasted that goodness all those poor Joyes you thought sweet before will then be bitter and distasteful to you And you that have Christ yours by Believing know your happiness and Rejoyce and Glory in it Whatsoever is your outward Condition Rejoyce alwayes and again I say Rejoyce for Light is sow● to the Righteous and Ioy for the upright in heart Verses 10 11 12. 10. Of which Salvation the Prophets have enquired and searched dilligently who prophesied of the Grace that should come unto you 11. Searching what or what maner of time the Spirit of Christ which was in them did signifie when he testified before hand the sufferings of Christ and the Glory that should follow 12. Vnto whom it was revealed that not unto themselves but unto us they did Minister the things which are now reported unto you by them that have Preached the Gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent down from Heaven which things the Angels desire to look into IT is the Ignorance or at least the Inconsiderance of Divine things that makes Earthly things whether good or evil appear great in our Eyes Therefore the Apostles great aime is by representing the Certainty and Excellency of the Belief and Hope of Christians to his afflicted Brethren to strenthen their minds against all discouragements and oppositions That they may account nothing too hard to doe or suffer for so high a Cause and so happy an End 'T is the low and mean thoughts and the shallow perswassion we have of things that are spiritual that is the Cause of all our Remisseness and Coldness in them The doctrine of Salvation he mention'd in the former verse at the End of our Christian Faith is illustrated in these words from its Antiquity Dignity and infallible truth 'T is no more Invention for the Prophets enquir'd after it and foretold it in former ages from the beginning Thus the prejudice of novelty is removed that usually meets the most ancient truth in its new discoveries Again 't is no mean thing that such Men as were of unquestion'd Eminency in Wisdom and Holiness did so much study and search after and having found out were careful not only to publish it in their own times but to record it to posterity and this not by the private motion of their own spirits but by the Acting and Guidance of the Spirit of God which sets likewise the truth of their Testimony above all doubtfulness and uncertainty But taking those three Verses entirely together we have in them those three things testifying how Excellent the Doctrine of the Gospel is 1. We have the Principal Author of it 2. The matter of it 3. The worth of those that are exercis'd about it viz. The best of Men the Prophets and Apostles in administring it and the best of all the Creatures the Angels in admiring it The first Author is the absolutely first the Spirit of God in the prophets Ver. 11. in the Apostles Ver. 12. but Ver. 11. The spirit of Christ there is the same spirit that He sent down on his Disciples after his Ascending to Glory and which spoke in his Prophets before his Descending to the Earth It is the spirit of Christ proceeding joyntly from him with the Father as he is the son of God and dwelling most richly and fully in him as the son of Man The Holy Ghost is in himself Holiness and the Source and worker of Holiness and Author of this holy doctrine that breaths
disparages not their extraordinary Visions and Revelations and that which is added that the Spirit of Christ was in them and did foretel the things to come It was their constant Duty and they being sensible of their duty made it their constant Exercise to search into Divine Misteries by Meditation and Prayer yea and by Reading such holy writers as were already extant in their times as Dan. 9. and 10. For which Cause some taking the word actively Conceive Daniel to be call'd there a Man of desires because of his great desire and dilligent search after the knowledge of those High things And in this dilligent way they constantly waited for these Revelations which sometimes when it seem'd good unto the Spirit of God were imparted unto them Prophesie resideth not say the Hebrew Doctors but in a Man that is great in Wisdom and Vertue whose affections overcome him not in any worldly things but by his knowledge he overcometh his Affections continually on such a Man the Holy Spirit cometh down And his Soul is associated to the Angels and he is changed to another Man thu● Maimonides 'T was the way of the Prince of darkness amongst the Idolatrous Gentiles to speak either through senseless Statues or where they uttered his Oracles it was by such profane Prophets as he had to cause them in a fury tumble forth words they understood not and knew not what they said but the Spirit of God being Light and the Holy Prophets Inspired with it they being dilligent attendants on its Motions and Searchers of the Misteries of Salvation understood well what their business was and to what purpose tended those things of the Kingdom of Christ which they by Inspiration did foretel and therefore bended their thoughts this way praying and searching and waiting for Answers studying to keep the passage as it were open for the beams of those Divine Revelations to come in at not to have their Spirits clogg'd and stopt with earthly and sinful Affections endeavouring for that calm and quiet Composure of Spirit in which the voyce of Gods Spirit might be the better heard Thus Psal. 85.8 and Hab. 2.1 In both which places followes an excellent Prophesie Concerning Christ and that Salvation which he wrought for his People Were the Prophets not exempted from the pains of Search and Inquiry that had the Spirit of God not only in a high measure but after a singular manner how unbeseeming then is slothfulness and Idleness in us whether is it that we judge our selves advantag'd with more of the spirit then those holy men or that we Esteem the Doctrine and Misteries of Salvation on which they bestow'd so much of their labour unworthy of ours these are both so gross that we will be loath to own either of them and yet our laziness and negligence in searching after those things seems to charge us with some such thought as one of those You will say this concerns those that succeed to the work of the Prophets and Apostles in ordinary the Ministers of the Gospel And it doth indeed fall first upon them It is their task indeed to be dilligent and as the Apostle exhorts his Timothy to attend on reading but above all to study to have much Experimental knowledge of God and his Son Jesus Christ and for this end to disentangle and free themselves as much as is possible from lower things to the search of heavenly Misteries Prov. 18.1 As they are called Angels so ought they to be as much as they can attain to it in a constant nearness unto God and attendance on him like unto the Angels and look much into these things as the Angels here are said to do to endeavour to have their souls purified from the affections of sin that the light of Divine truth may shine clear in them and not be fogg'd and misted with filthy vapours to have the Impressions of God clearly written in their breasts not mix'd and blurr'd with earthly characters seasoning all their readings and common way of studies with much Prayer and divine Meditation They that Converse most with the King and are inward with him know most of the affairs of state and even the secrets of them that are hid from others and certainly those of Gods Messengers that are oftenest with himself cannot but underdand their business best and know most of his meaning and the affairs of his Kingdom And to that End 't is confess'd that singular dilligence is requir'd in them but seeing the Lord hath said without exception that his secret is with them that fear him and that he will reveal himself and his saving truths to those that humbly seek them Do not any of you your selves so much injury as to barr your selves from sharing in your measure of the search of these same things that were the study of the Prophets and which by their study and publishing them are made the more accessible and easie to us Consider that they doe concern us universally if we would be saved for 't is Salvation here that they studied Search the Scriptures sayes our Saviour Ioh. 5. And that is the motive if there can be any that may be thought in reason pressing enough or if we doe indeed think so For in them ye think to have Eternal life And it is there to be found Christ is this Salvation and that Eternal life and he adds further it is they those Scriptures that testifie of me These are the Golden mines in which alone the abiding treasures of Eternity are to be found and therefore worthy all the digging and paines we can bestow on them Besides their Industry in this enquiry and search there is here expressed their ardent affection to the thing they Prophesied of and their Longings and Wishes for its Accomplishment viz. The coming of Jesus Christ the promised Messiah the top of all their desires the great Hope and the Light of Israel No wonder they desired his day that had so much joy in the seeing it So far off as over the head almost of two thousand years Faith overlooking them and foreseeing it so in Abraham his heart danc'd for joy Ioh. 8.36 Abraham saw my day and Rejoyced And this is conceived to be the meaning of those Expressions in that mistical Song as they suit those times of the Jewish Church breathing out her longings for the coming of her Beloved his speaking by the Prophets were his voice as afar off but his incarnation was his coming near and kissing his Church with the kisses of his mouth as Cant. Chap. 1. Verse 1. and to omit other expressions throughout the Song the last Chapter Verse 1. is tender and pathetical Oh that thou wert as my Brother c. and the last words of it Make hast my Beloved and be thou like a Roe or a young Hart upon the Mountain of Spices And when this salvation came in the fulness of time we see how joyfully good old Simeon embraces it and thought he had seen
Cherubims wonder how guilty man escapes their flaming swords and Reenters paradise The Angels see that their Companions that fell are not restor'd but their room fill'd up with the spirits of just men and they envy it not which Mistery the Angels desire to look into and this is added in the close of these words for the extolling of it The Angels look upon what they have seen already fulfill'd with delight and admiration and what remains namely the full accomplishment of this great work in the end of time they look upon with desire to see it finish'd 't is not a slight glance they take of it but they fix their eye and look stedfastly on it viz. That mistery of godliness God manifested in the flesh and 't is added seen of Angels The word made flesh drawes the eyes of those glorious Spirits and possesses them with wonder to see the Almighty God-head joyn'd with the weakness of a Man yea of an Infant He that stretcheth forth the heavens bound up in swadling cloaths And to pass all the wonders of his life this is beyond all admiration that the Lord of Life was subject to death and that his Love and Rebellious mankind moved him both to take on and lay down that life 'T is no wonder the Angels admire those things and delight to look upon them but 't is strange that we do not so They veiw them stedfastly and we neglect them either we consider them not at all or give them but a transient look half an eye That which was the great business of the Prophets and Apostles both for their own times and to convey them to us we regard not and turne our eyes to foolish wandering thoughts which Angels are ashamed at They are not so concern'd in this great mystery as we are They are but mere beholders in comparison of us yea they seem rather to be losers someway that our nature in it self inferiour to theirs is in Jesus Christ exalted above theirs Heb. 2.16 We bow down to the earth and study and grovell in it take into the very bowels of it and content our selves with the outside of the unsearchable riches of Christ and look not within it but they having no will nor desir● but for the glory of God being pure flames of fire burning onely in love to him are no less delighted then amazed with the bottomless wonders of his wisdom and goodness shining in the work of our Redemption 'T is our shame and our folly that we lose our selves and our thoughts in poor childish things and trifle away our days we know not how and let these rich mysteries lye unregarded they look up upon the deity in it self with continuall admiration but that they look down to this mystery is another wonder We give them an ear in publick and in a cold formal way stop Conscience's mouth with some religious performances in private and no more But to have deep and frequent thoughts and to be ravish'd in the meditation of our Lord Jesus once on the cross and now in glory how few of us are acquainted with this We see here excellent Company and Examples not onely of the best of Men that have been but we have them fellow-servants and fellow-Students if that can perswade us we may all study the same Lesson with the very Angels and have the same thoughts with them this the soul doth that often entertains it self with the delightfull admiration of Jesus Christ and the Redemption he hath wrought for us Verse 13. Wherefore Gird up the loyns of your mind be sober and hope to the End for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the Revelation of Iesus Christ. THe great error of Mans mind and the cause of all his Errors of Life is the diverting of the soul from God and turning down-ward to in feriour confidences and comforts and this mischoyce is the very root of all our miseries therefore the maine end of the holy word of God is to untye the hearts of Men from the world and reduce them To God as their onely rest and solid comfort and this is here the Apostles mark at which all the preceeding discourse aimes it all meets and terminates in this exhortation Wherefore gird up the loyns of your mind c. In the words are those 3 things 1. the great stay and comfort of the soul which the Apostle repeats and represents to his afflicted brethren 2. his Exciting them to the right apprehension and confident Expectation of it 3. the Inference of that Exhortation The matter of their comfort is the grace which is brought to them at the Revelation of Iesus Christ. some for grace read joy having as it seem's for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the words are not more near one to an other than the things they signify Grace and joy but ' its most commonly thus read The estate of Grace and that of glory are not onely so inseparably connexed but so like one to the other yea so essentialy the same that the same expressions in scripture do often fit both of them and so fit them that it is doubtfull for which of the two to understand them but the hazard is not great seeing they are so near and so one grace being glory begun and glory grace compleated both often called the Kingdom● of God So grace here brought to them is either the doctrine of grace in the Gospel wherein Jesus Christ is reveal'd and that Grace in him for all the whole tenour of the Covenant of Grace and every Clause of it holds in him His precious name runs throw it all 't is the Grace of salvation to be fully perfected at the last and clearest Revelation of Jesus Christ and for this rather I take it here for that the Apostles nearest foregoing words were concerning that and it is set up here as the object of hope which though often put for faith yet in its proper notion looks out to that which is to come This is the last act of Grace and yet still it is called by it self and not turn'd into the name of merit notwithstanding all the obedience and all the sufferings of the Saints that have gone before it yea even the salvation to be revealed to them is called Grace but 't is needless to insist on this for certainly none that partake of Grace will be of another mind or ever admit the mixture of the least notion of self deserving Though much dispute hath been bestow'd on this and Questions multiplying in the disputants hands as is usuall in Controversies one growing out of another yet truely I think the debate in this to be but waste 't is not onely against the voyce of the scriptures and of Grace it self in the soul but even against sound Reason to imagine any meriting properly taken in any mere Creature at his Creators hands who hath given him his being of which gift all his services and
unvail'd and appear what they are indeed before Men and Angels 't is a poor thing to be approved and applauded by Men while God condemns to whose sentence all men must stand or fall Oh seek to be approved and justified by him and then who shall condemn 'T is no matter who do How easily may we bear the mistakes and dislikes of all the world if he declare himself well-pleas'd with us It is a small thing for me to be judged of Man or mans day he that judgeth me is the Lord. Saith the Apostle But these evils are here particularly to be put off as contrary to the right and profitable receiving of the word of God for this part of the exhortation Laying aside Desire look's to that which follows and is specially so to be considered There is this double task in Religion When a Man enters to it he is not only to be taught true wisdom but he is withall yea first of all to be untaught the Errours and wickedness that are deep rooted in his mind which he hath not only learn'd by the corrupt conversation of the world but brought the seeds of them into the world with him and they improve and grow indeed by the favour of that example that is round about a Man But they are orginally in our nature as it is now they are connaturall to us besides continuall custome which is another nature There is none comes to the School of Christ suiting the Philosopher's word ut ta●ula rasa as blank paper to receive his doctrine but on the contrary all scribl'd and blurr'd with such base habits as these malice hypocrisie envy c. Therefore the first work is to raze out these to cleanse and purifie the heart from these blotts those foul characters that it may receive the impression of the image of God And because it is the word of God that both begins and followes forth this work draws the lineaments of that divine Image on the soul therefore to the receiving this word aright and this proper effect by it the conforming of the soul to Jesus Christ which is the true growth of the spirituall life this is prerequir'd that the hearts of them that hear it be purged of these such and like impurities malice hypocrisie c. These are so opposite to the profitable receiving of the word of God that while they possess and rule the soul it cannot at all embrace those divine truths While it is fill'd with such guests there is no room to entertain the word They cannot dwell together by reason of their contrary nature the word will not mixe with th●se the saving mixture of the word of God in the soul is that the Apostle speaks of and gives the want of it as the cause of unprofitable hearing the word Heb. 4.2 the mixing of it with saith For by that the word is concocted into the nourishment of the life of grace united to the soul and mix'd with it by being mix'd with faith as the Apostle's expression imports That 's the proper mixture it requires but with these qualities here mention'd it will not mix There is a naturall antipathy betwixt them as strong as in those things in nature that cannot be brought by any means to agree and mingle together Can there be any thing more contrary than the good word of God as the Apostle calls it and those evil speakings Than the word that is of such excellent sweetness and the bitter words of a malignant tongue Than the word of life and words full of deadly poyson For so slanders and diffamings of our brethren are And is not all malice and envy most opposite to the word that is the message of peace and Love how can the gall of malice and this milk of the word agree Hyp●crisie and guile stand in direct opposition to the name of this word that is called the word of truth and here the very words shew this contrariety sincere milk and a double unsincere mind These two are necessary conditions of good nourishment 1. That the ●ood be good and wholesome 2. That the inward constitution of them that use it be so too And if this fail the other profit's not This sincere milk is the only proper nourishment of spiritual Life and there is no defect nor undue quality in it but the greatest part of hearers are inwardly unwholesom diseas'd with the evils here mention'd and others of the like nature and therefore either have no kind of appetite to the word at all but rather feed upon such trash as suite with their distemper as some kind of diseases incline those that have them to eat Coales or Lime c. Or if they be any wayes desirous to hear the Word and seem to feed on it yet the noxious humours that abound in them make it alltogether unprofitable and they are not nourish'd by it as this evill of malice and envying so ordinary among Men and which is most strange amongst Christians as an overflowing of the Gaul possesses their whole minds and not only they are not nourish'd by the word they hear but are the worse by it their disease is fed by it as an unwholsom stomach turns the best meat it receives into that bad humour that abounds in it Do not they thus that observe what the Word sayes that they may be the better inabled to discover the failings of others and speak malitiously and uncharitablely of them and vent themselves as is too common This word met well with such a one's Fault and this with anothers Is not this to feed these diseases of Malice Envy and evill-speakings with this pure milk and make them grow in stead of growing by it our selves in grace and holiness Thus likewise the hypocrite turnes all that he hears of this word not to the inward renovation of his mind and redressing what 's amisse there But only to the composing of his outward carriage and to inable himself to act his part better to be cunninger in his own faculty a more refin'd and expert hypocrite not to grow more a Christian in deed but more in appearance only and in the opinion of others Therefore it is a very needfull advertisment seeing these evils are so natural to Men and so contrary to the nature of the word of God that they be purg'd out to the end it may be profitably receiv'd A very like exhortation to this hath the Apostle S. Iames and some of the same words but in another Methapor Iam. 1.21 Wherefore lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness and receive with meekness the ingrafted word He compares the word to a plant of excellent vertue the very tree of life the word that is able to save your souls but the only soyle wherein it will grow is a heart full of meekness a heart that is purg'd of those Luxuriant weeds that grow so rank in it by nature they pluck up and throw them out to make place for this
word And there is such a necessity of this that the most approv'd teachers of wisdom in a human way have requir'd this of their Scholars that to the end their minds might be capable of it they should be purified from vice and wickedness for this reason the Philosopher judges young Men unfit hearers of morall Philosophy because of the abounding and untamedness of their passions granting that if those were compos'd and order'd that they might be admitted And it was Socrates his custome when any ask'd him a question to be inform'd by him before he would answer them he ask't them concerning their own qualities and course of life Now if Men require a calm and purified disposition of mind to make it capable of their doctrine how much more is it sutable and necessary for learning the doctrine of God and those deep mysteries that his word opens up 't is well express'd in that Apocryphal Book of Wisdome that forward thoughts separate from God and wisdom enters not into a malitious soul no indeed that 's a very unfit dwelling for it and the very Heathen could say the mind that is impure is not capable of God and divine things Seneca Therefore we see the strain of that book of Proverbs that speaks so much of this wisdom it requires in the first chap. That they that would hear it do retire themselves from all ungodly customes and practices And indeed how can the soul apprehend spirituall things that is not in some measure refin'd from the love of sin that abuses and bemires the minds of Men and makes them unable to arise to heavenly thoughts Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God sayes our Saviour not only shall they see him perfectly hereafter but as they can receive him he will impart and make known himself unto them here so Iohn 14.23 This is it that makes the word obscure namely the filthy mists within whereas on the contrary he will in just judgement hide himself and the saving truth of his word from those that entertain and delight in sin The very sins wherein they delight shall obscure and darken the light of the Gospel to them that though it shine clear as the Sun at noon-day they shall be as those that live in a dungeon they shall not discern it And as they receive no benefit by the word that have these evils here mention'd reigning and in full strength in them so they that are indeed born again the more they retain of these the less shall they find the influence and profit of the word for this exhortation concernes them they may possibly some of them have much remainder of these corruptions unmortified therefore exhorted to lay aside intirely those evils all malice all hypocrisie c. And so though they hear the word often yet be in a spirituall Atrophy eat much and grow nothing by it find no increase of grace and spirituall strength Would we know the main cause of our fruitless hearing of the word here it is Men bring not meek and guiless spirits to it not minds emptied and purified to receive it but stuff'd with Malice and Hypocrisie and Pride and other such evils and where should the Word enter when all is so taken up And if it did enter how should it prosper amongst so many enemies Or at all abide amongst them either they will turn it out again or choak and kill the the power of it We think Religion and our own Lusts and secret heart-Idols should agree together because we would have it so but this is not possible either therefore labour to entertain the word of Truth in the ●ove of it and lodge the mystery of Faith in a pure conscience as the Apostle St. Paul speaks joyn those together with David Psal. 119 113. I hate vain thoughts but thy Law do I love And as here our Apostle Lay aside all malice and hypocrisie and envy and evil speakings and so receive the Word or else look for no benefit by it here nor for sal●ation by it hereafter but cast out all impurity and give your whole heart to it so desire it that you may grow and then as you desire you shall g●ow by it Every real Believer hath receiv'd a life from Heaven far more excelling our natural life than that excels the life of the Beasts And this life hath its own peculiar desires and delights that are the proper actings and the certain characters and evidence of it amongst others this is one and a main one answerable to the like desire in natural life namely a desire of food and because 't is here still imperfect therefore the natural end of this is not only nourishment but growth as 't is here express'd The sincere Milk of the word The Life of grace is the proper life of a reasonable soul and without it the soul is dead as the body is without the soul so that without untruth this may be rendered reasonable milk as some read it but certainly that reasonable milk is the Word of God The milk of the Word It was before call'd the immortal seed and here 't is the milk of those that are born again and thus it is very agreeable nourishment to that spiritual life according to their saying iisdemalimur ex quibus constamus as the milk that Infants draw from the brest is most connatural food to them being of that same substance that nourish'd them in the womb But when they are brought forth that food followes them as it were for their supply in that way that is provided in nature for it by certain veins it ascends into the breasts and is there fitted for them and they by nature directed to find it there Thus as a Christian begins to live by the power of the word he is by the nature of that spiritual life directed to that same word as its nourishment To follow the resemblance further in the qualities of milk after the Monkish way that runs it self out of breath in an Allegory I conceive is neither solid nor profitable and to speak freely the curious searching of the similitude in other qualities of milk seems to wrong the quality here given it by the Apostle in which it is so well resembl'd by milk namely the simple pureness and sincerity of the word besides that the pressing of comparisons of this kind too far proves often so constrain'd ere they have done with it that by too much drawing they bring forth blood in stead of milk Pure and unmix'd as milk drawn immediately from the brest the pure word of God without the mixture not only of errour but of all other composition of vain unprofitable subtilties or affected humane eloquence such as become not the Majesty and gravity of Gods word If any man speak sayes our Apostle let him speak as the Oracles of God light conceits and Flowers of Rhetorick wrong the word more than they can please the hearers the weeds among the Corn make it
put upon him and by giving him up to be crucified and then cast into the grave and a stone to be roll'd upon this Stone which they had so rejected that it might appear no more and so thought themselves sure But even from thence did he arise and became the head of the corner The disciples themselves spake you know very doubtfully of their former hopes We believ'd this had been he that would have delivered Israel but he corrected their mistake first by his word shewing them the true method of that great work Ought not Christ to suffer first these things And so enter into glory and then really by making himself known to them risen from the dead When he was from these rejected and lay lowest then was he nearest his exaltation as Ioseph in the prison was nearest his preferment And thus is it with the Church of Christ when 't is brought to the lowest desperatest condition then is deliverance at hand it prospers and gains in the event by all the practices of Men against it And as this corner stone was fitted to be so by the very rejection even so is it with the whole bulid●ng it rises the higher the more Men seek to demolish it 3. Their unhappiness that believe not is express'd in the other word He is to them a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence because they will not be saved by him they shall stumble and fall and be broken to pieces on him as it is in Esay and in the Evangelists But how is this is he that came to save become a destroyer of Men he whose name is salvation proves he destruction to any Not he in himself his primary and proper use is the former to be a foundation for souls to build and rest upon but they that in stead of building upon him will stumble and fall on him what wonder being so firm a stone though they be broken by their fall thus we see the mischief of unbelief that as other sins disable the Law it disables the very Gospel to save us and turns life it self into death to us And this is the misery not of a few but of many in Israel many that hear of Christ by the preaching of the Gospel shall lament that ever they heard that sound and shall wish to have liv'd and dyed without it finding so great an accession to their misery by the neglect of so great salvation They are said to stumble at the word because the things that are therein testified concerning Christ they labour not to understand and prize aright but either altogether slight them and account them foolishness or misconceive them and prevert them The Jews stumbled at the meaness of Christ's birth and life and the ignominy of his death not judging of him according to the Scriptures and we in another way think we have some kind of belief that he is the Savior of the world yet not making the Scripture the rule of our thoughts concerning him many of us undo our selves and stumble and break our necks upon this Rock mistaking Christ and the way of believing looking on him as a Saviour at large and judging that enough not endeavouring to make him ours and to embrace him upon the termes of that New-Covenant whereof he is Mediator Whereunto also they were appointed This the Apostle addes for the further satisfaction of Believers in this point how 't is that so many reject Christ and stumble at him Telling them plainly that the secret purpose of God is accomplish'd in this having determin'd to glorify his justice on impenitent sinners as he shews his rich mercy in them that believe Here it were easier to lead you into a deep than to lead you forth again I will rather stand on the shoar and silently admire it than enter into it This is certain that the thoughts of God are all no less just in themselves than deep and unsoundable by us His justice appears clear in that Mans destruction is alwayes the fruit of his own sin But to give causes of Gods decrees without himself is neither agreeable with the primitive being of the nature of God nor with the doctrine of the Scriptures this is sure that God is not bound to give us further account of these things and we are bound not to ask it Let these two words as S. Austin sayes answer all What art thou O man And O the depth Our only sure way to know that our names are not in that black line and to be perswaded that he hath chosen us to be saved by his Son is this to find that we have chosen him and are built on him by faith which is the fruit of his love that first chuseth us And that we may read in our esteem of him He is precious or your honour The difference is small you account him your glory and your gain he is not only precious to you but preciousness it self He is the thing that you make acount of your Jewel that if you keep though you be robb'd of all besides you know your selves rich enough To you that Believe Faith is absolutely necessary to make this due Estimat of Christ. 1. The most excellent things while their worth is undiscern'd and unkown affect us not Now faith is the proper seeing faculty of the soul in relation to Christ that inward light must be infus'd from above to make Christ visible to us without it though he is beautiful yet we are blind and therefore cannot love him for that beauty but by faith we are inabled to see him that is fairer than the Children of Men yea to see in him the glory of the only begotten Son of God and then it is not possible but to account him precious to bestow the entire affection of our hearts upon him And if any say to the Soul what is thy beloved more than another it willingly layes hold on the question and is glad of an opportunity to extoll him 2. Faith as it is that which discernes Christ so it alone appropriates him makes him our own And these are the two reasons of esteeming and affecting any thing it s own worth and our interest in it and faith begets this esteem of Christ by both 1. It discovers to us his excellencies that we could not see before 2. It makes him ours gives us possession of whole Christ all that he hath and is As it is faith that commends Christ so much and describes his comeliness in that song and withal that word is the voyce of faith that expresses propriety My Wellbeloved is mine and I am his and these together make him most precious to the soul having once possession of him then it looks upon all his sufferings as endur'd particularly for it and the benefit of them all as belonging to it self sure it will say can it chuse but account him precious that suffer'd shame that he might not be ashamed and suffered death that he might not die that
how they requite so great so unspeakable love Honour the King This was the particular that the Apostle press'd and insisted on before and here repeats as a special duty of the Second Table and a vindication of Religion wrongfully blamed in this point but of this before This is out of question in the generall only in the measure and rule of it is the difference and sure they cannot possibly be satisfied that are so drunk with power as to admit of none at all no measure nor rate for it no banks nor channel for those rivers the hearts and wills of Kings to run in but if they like to run over all they may This is such a wilde conceit as destroyes both all law of reason in humane societies and all religious obligement to the Laws of God For the qualification and measure I shall mention no other but that in the Text that it be always regulated by this that here goes before it the fear of God that we never think of any such obedience and honour due to Kings as crosseth that fear that is due to God Let Kings and Subjects and all know that they are absoutely bound to this 't is spoke to Kings Psa. 2. serve the Lord in fear and Psa. 9.6 to all men fear before him all the earth for he is great and greatly to be praised He is to be feared above all Gods What is Man in respect of him Shall a worm whose breath is in his nostrils stand in competition with the everliving God Shall an Earthen potsheard strive with his maker Let the potsheard● strive with the potsheards of the earth Let them work one against another and try which is hardest and so they shall often break each other but woe to him that striveth with his maker There 's nothing there but certain perishing As we conlude in the question with Rome of the honour due to Saints and Angels honour let them have good reason but not Divine Honour not Gods peculiar so in this give to Caesar the things that are Caesars but withal still give to God the things that are Gods But 't is a miserable estate of a Kingdom when debates arises and increases in this and their happiness is when Kings and People concurre to honour God For those that honour him he will honour And whosoever despises him shall be despised Verse 18. Servants be Subject to your Masters with all fear not only to the good and gentle But also to the froward THy word sayes the Psalmist is a light to my feet and a L●nterne to my paths not only a light to please his eyes by the excellent truths and comforts that are in it but withall a light to direct his feet in the precepts and rules of life that it gives to inform and delight his mind to order his course That Phylosopher was deservedly commended that drew knowledge most this way and therefore was said to have brought Phylosophy from the clouds to dwell amongst Men calling it from empty Speculations to a practicall stram Thus we are taught in Spiritual knowledge by the word of God The Son the etenal word when he came to dwel with Men and so brought life and wisdom and all blessings from the Heavens down unto them he taught them both by his doctrine and perfect example how to walk and his Apostles do conformably aim at this in their holy writings joyning with the mysteries of faith those rules of life that show men the straight way to happiness And as it is spoken of the largness of Solomons wisdom that He spoke of all Trees from the Cedar in Lebanon to the Hysope that growes out of the wall So in this we may see the perfection of the Holy Scriptures that they give those directions that are needful to all ranks and sorts of Men they speak not only of the duties of Kings how they ought to behave themselves on their thrones and the duty of their subjects to them in that dignity and how Ministers and others ought to carry in the House of God but they come in to private houses and give aeconomick rules for them teaching Parents and Children and Masters yea and Servants how to acquit themselves one to another Thus here Servants be subject to your Masters As this is a just plea for all the people of God that they have right to the use of this book being so usefull for all sorts and that they ought not to be barr'd it so it is a just plea against a great part of those that barre themselves the use of it through sloathfulness and earthly-mindedness seeing it is so contemper'd that there be many things yea all the main things in it profitable for all Fitted to the use of the lowest estate and lowest capacities of Men yea it takes as we see particular notice of their condition stoops down to take the meanest Servant by the hand to lead them the way to Heaven and not only that part of it which is the general way of Christians but even those steps of it that lye within the walk of their particular calling as here teaching not only the duties of a Christian but of a Christian Servant Obs. 1. The Scriptures are a deep that few can wade far into and none can wade through as those Ezek. 47. But yet all may come to the brook and refresh themselves with drinking of the streams of its living Water and go in a litle way according to their strength and stature now this I say may be spoken to our shame and I wish it might shame you to amendment that so many of you either use not the Scriptues at all or in using do not use them turn over the leaves and it may be run through the lines and consider not what they advise you Masters learn your part and Servants too hearken what they say to you for they pass not you by they vouchsafe to speak to you too But you vouchsafe not to hear them and observe their voyce How can you think that the reading of this Book concerns you not When you may hear it address such particular directions unto you Wisdom goes not only to the gates of Pallaces but to the common gates of the Cities and to the publick highwayes and calls to the simplest that she may make them wise Besides that you dishonour God you prejudge your selves for does not that neglect of God and his Words justly procure the disorder and disobedience of your Servants towards you as a fit punishment from his righteous hand although they are unrighteous and are procuring further judgment to themselves in so doing and not only thus is your neglect of the Word a cause of your trouble by the justice of God but in regard of the Nature of the Word that if you would respect it and make use of it in your Houses it would teach your Servants to respect and obey you as here you see it speaks for you and therefore you wrong