Selected quad for the lemma: city_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
city_n act_n apostle_n appear_v 98 3 5.3954 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A22481 A commentarie vpon the epistle of Saint Paule to Philemon VVherein, the Apostle handling a meane and low subiect, intreating for a fraudulent and fugitiue seruant, mounteth aloft vnto God, and deliuereth sundry high misteries of true religion, and the practise of duties Ĺ“conomicall. Politicall. Ecclesiasticall. As of persecution for righteousnesse sake. ... And of the force and fruit of the ministery. Mouing all the ministers of the Gospell, to a diligent labouring in the spirituall haruest ... Written by William Attersoll, minister of the word of God, at Isfield in Suffex. Attersoll, William, d. 1640. 1612 (1612) STC 890; ESTC S106848 821,054 582

There are 12 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

case of those that are without the preaching of the word they liue in blindnesse darknesse they walke in places of continuall danger and yet cannot see their way they liue without the ordinarie meanes of life and saluation and so without hope to come to repentance without which there can be no saluation This is the estate of Iewes of Turkes and Infidels that are depriued of the comfortable vse of the word and they that liue in corners where the sound thereof is not heard These want the bread of life and therfore must needs starue perish They haue not the words c Iohn 6 68. Rom. 1 16. of eternal life which are the power of God to saluation therfore are neer to destruction For it is the maner of gods dealing d August de bono perseuer to deny vnto men the meanes whereby they should beleeue when hee hath no purpose that they should beleeue he withdrawes from them the instrument whereby they should be conuerted when he doth not purpose and intend their conuersion It was a fearfull cursse when God said to his Apostles e Math. 10 5. Acts 16 6 7. Go not into the way of the Gentiles and into the Citty of the Samaritans enter ye not Likewise when they had gone through Phrygia and the Region of Galatia they were forbidden by the Holy-Ghost to preach the worde in Asia then came they to Mysia and sought to go into Bithynia but the spirit suffered them not So when God vouchsafeth not this mercie vnto vs to wit the Ministry of his word it is a fearefull signe of his heauy indignation and as much in effect as if the Lord should say I will not haue them conuerted I haue no purpose to bring them to saluation This is it which is spoken concerning Israell by the Prophet f 2 Chr. 15 3. Now for a long season Israell hath beene without the true God and without a Priest to teach and without Law And to the same purpose Amos speaketh g Amos 8 11 12 13. Behold the daies come saith the Lord God that I will send a famine in the Land not a famine for Bread nor a thirst for water but of hearing the word of the Lorde and they shall wander from Sea to Sea and from the North euen vnto the East shall they runue too and fro to seeke the word of the Lord and shall not finde it in that day shall the young Virgins and the young men perrish for thirst O that we could consider of these things and lay before our eyes what daunger it is to want the preaching of the word that thereby we might be moued to pitty the desolations of so many of our poore Brethren and to feare the taking of it away for our vnthankfulnesse from our selues and to magnifie the vnspeakeable mercy of God toward vs while we do enioy it Great are the plagues and horrible are the ruines of the Church in many places Oh that we had harts to mourn for it and to pray to the Lord of the haruest to thrust forth Labourers into his haruest Secondly it teacheth the fearfull condition of such as contemne this ordinance of God and thinke it too base for them to seeke saluation by it It is very strange that so plaine a point as this should be so proudly gainsayed and resisted These carnall men will not giue the Lord of heauen leaue to apoint how and by what meanes he will saue vs. Shall flesh and blood presume thus farre and aduance it selfe against his Creator If we will be saued wee must seeke saluation as it is left vs to seeke and not after our owne fansie When God hath saide Giue attendance to my word wilt thou answere I will not attend and yet haue saluation as well as if thou diddest attend Take heede thou do not deceiue thy selfe and thine owne soule and in the end finde thy selfe frustrate of thy saluation How men will shift off these duties I knowe not because I know not their hearts but this I know and this I would haue them know and vnderstand that as there is a God that will bee worshipped after his owne will and not according to our naturall wit so this must bee our wisedome to submit our conceites and immaginations to his heauenlie pleasure It is the first point in Christian Religion to be learned to account thy selfe a Foole that thou mayest bee wise in Christ and to throwe downe all thy Naturall parts at his feete that thou mayest seeke true and Heauenlie Wisedome of him Thou must account thy selfe starke blinde and able to perceiue nothing aright in the matters of God and in the meanes of thy saluation to the end thou mayest recouer sight and see thy way wherein in thou oughtest to walke Hence it is that the Prophet sayth h Psal 119 18 27 34. Open mine eyes that I may see the wonders of thy Lawe Make mee to vnderstand the way of thy Precepts and I will meditate in thy wonderous workes Giue mee vnderstanding and I will keepe thy Law yea I will keepe it with my whole hart Where hee acknowledgeth his eyes to be closed his eares to be stopped his minde to be darkened his heart to be hardned by nature before Grace and Mercie come and make the way plaine before him wherby our eyes shall be opened out eares boared our mindes enlightned our hearts softened and our selues prepared to hearken to the voyce of God speaking vnto vs. Obiection But is not God able to saue vs without the Ministers preaching and the peoples hearing Are not all thinges possible to him Is hee bound and tyed to his owne meanes Is not he free to worke as it pleaseth him Answere I answer he is not tyed he is free hee is able to saue without preaching yea without reading without the Sacraments without Prayer Wilt thou from hence conclude against reading of the Scriptures against receiuing of the Sacraments against ioyning in Prayer The question is not of the power of God but of his will not what he is able to do but what he hath promised vs to do not what he is tyed to but what he hath bound vs to seek He is able to preserue our life without Bread without foode but he that presumeth vpon this power and abuseth his prouidence and neglecteth to seek his nourishment at his hands must look to perish So we deny not but God is able to saue vs without preaching but he hath not made vs any promise to obtain life any otherwise then as we seeke the Law at the mouths of his Ministers that bring glad tydings of good things He was able to preserue his three seruants in the hot fierie furnace and did preserue them yet hee that will voluntarily and violently cast himselfe into the fire shall feele the smart of his own folly and the danger of tempting God Let vs not therfore thinke our selues wiser then God least our
the knowledge of the Gospell the name of God and his Doctrine is blasphemed and euill spoken of Likewise speaking of beleeuing Wiues that haue vnbeleeuing Husbands he putteth them in minde of subiection to the end that by their holy conuersion they may winne their husbandes to embrace true Religion To this purpose the Apostle Paul teacheth seruants to be obedient to them that are their Maisters according to the flesh and chargeth them z Col. 3 22 23 that whatsoeuer they do they do it heartily as to the Lord and not to men Seeing therefore that God is the authour of order not of confusion seeing Christ came not to abolish but to establish the Lawe and lastly seeing the Gospell teacheth subiection and doth not release or acquite any of their duty it followeth that the gospel doth not bring in parity and equality among al the Mother of al mischiefe but discerneth and distinguisheth of the Callings of men it doth not giue liberty to peruert all order it maketh not Seruants to be Maisters and Maisters to be seruants but directeth euery one to keepe his place and to abide in his vocation Vse 1. Seeing this is the honor commendation of the gospel let vs see what Vses arise from the knoledge of this point First of al we conclude from hence necessarily that it hath alwaies bin a lying deuise and diuellish slander to Christian religion to be the author and fauorer of carnal liberty and to Christian professors to be enemies to states and commonwealths to magistrats lawes ciuil ordinances This hath alwaies bin the accusation of slāderous tongs to brand the Gospell as the breeder and bringer in of all vprores and conspiracies yet there is no Doctrine vnder the Heauen that lesse deserueth to bee defamed For the Gospell was a friend to Princes when Princes were enemies to the Gospell it teacheth to be subiect vnto them to pray to God for them to obey all their godly constitutions and therefore it is the Father of lies and enemy of al truth that hath sought to disgrace discredit the holy truth of God and such as in truth do embrace it Hee seeth and perceiueth that if the Gospel stand his kingdome must fal if the Gospel florish his kingdome must decay Hence it is that the church people of God haue in al ages and times of the world bin accused of rebellions treasons seditions insurrections many other greeuous impieties Heerof the scripture experience affoord plentiful examples In the book of Ezra the enemies accuse the guiltles Iewes z Ezra 4 15. 1 King 18 17. Ester 3 6. to be a rebellious people that they haue of old bin alwaies giuen to sedition Ahab burdeneth Elias that it was he his fathers house that trobled Israel Haman suggesteth vnto the king against the Iewes that their lawes were diuers from al people that they did not obserue the kings lawes and therfore it was not for the kings profit to suffer them The Apostles are accused to be authors of sedition troublers of cities raisers of tumults causers of rebellion breakers of lawes and teachers of ordinances not lawful to receiue they said of them b Acts 16 19 20. and 24 5. These men that are Iewes trouble our City they preach ordinances which are not lawful for vs to receiue neither to obserue seeing we are Romans Where we see they couer their couetousnesse with a shadowe pretence of standing against innouation but they discouer the hollownesse hypocrisie of their harts when they ioyn trobling of the state and preaching of the gospell together Whereby it appeareth that their troubling of the city was nothing els but because they preached the word which the deuill his instruments could not beare and abide Paule is accused by Tertullus to be a pestilent fellow and a moouer of sedition among all the Iewes thoroughout the world and that he taught al men euery where against the law of Moses And no maruel for thus they dealt with the son of God when he taught the truth without mixture of error and without respect of person he was accounted accused not onely to be a Sorcerer a Samaritan a Drunkard a glutton a deceiuer a deuil c Luke 23 2. but an enemy to Caesar and a troubler of the publick peace Now al these things being considered let vs remember what the Lord Iesus sayth to vs d Iohn 15 20. The seruant is not greater then his maister if they haue persecuted me they will also persecute you The heathē after Christs time cried out against the christians that they were the authors and causes of al publick plagues calamities that fel vpon kingdoms countries If Nilus flowed not ouer the fields if the heauen stayed if the earth quaked if famine encreased if the pestilence continued by and by the poor Christians as the sheep of Christ were cast vnto the lyons They charged them to make priuy conspiracies e Euseb lib. 5. cap. 11. Tertulli in Apologel Cyprian contra Demetrian to deuise secret counsels against the commonwealth to murther children to feed themselues with mans flesh and to practise all Iniquity they were so blinded that they could not perceiue that their Idolatries brought Gods iudgments Thus we see how the church hath lien open to all false surmises and suggestions of sedition But what can be immagined more vniust or vetrue If there be any peace in this world in any lande it is for the Gospels sake and it commeth through the bountifulnesse of God for his peoples sake that call vppon him Neuerthelesse as the Gentiles dealt with the Iewes and Christians from time to time so doe the wicked in these dayes with the godly they lay to their charge that they keep no lawes that they disobey Princes that they are seditious and tumultuous and enemies to the State If we see or heare the Saints of God thus handled and euilly intreated we must know that this is an olde deuise of the deuill practised against the Prophets against Christ against the Apostles and against all true Christians euen from the beginning And let this serue to comfort vs when wee finde such slaunderous imputations and accusations layde to our charge considering that thus they haue reuiled and railed vppon the Seruants of GOD that haue beene before vs in all times and that wee haue Christ Iesus the witnesse of our innocency who if not in this life yet in the life to come will reueale the thinges that are hidden in darknesse and bring to light the things that are couered In the mean season we must remember f Math. 5 11. that they are pronounced blessed that are reuiled and persecuted for righteousnesse sake and wee must labour to conuince them not so much by words as by deeds g Demosth de corona answearing the falshood of their slanders by the vprightnesse of our liues which shal be able to speak
preaching Christ crucified and risen againe from the dead h Acts 17 5 8 9. Insomuch that the Iewes which beleeued not moued with enuy tooke vnto them certaine vitious and Vagabond Fellowes and hauing assembled the multitude they made a tumult in the Cittie It is said that Iason receiued him and other of the Brethren into his house and offered to baile them and to be bound for them putting in good assurance that they should appeare and be forth-comming And if we require an example in the same kind and condition with this that is mentioned in this Epistle Our Sauiour expresseth the like in the Parable of him that went downe from Ierusalem to Iericho and fell among theeues who wounded him with their weapon and robbed him of his Raiment and left him in his trouble euen halfe dead i Luke 10 34 35. A certaine Samaritan as he iournied came neere vnto him and when he saw him he had compassion on him and went to him and bound vp his wounds and poured in Oyle and Wine and put him on his owne Beast and brought him to an Inne and made prouision for him and on the morrow when he departed he tooke out two pence and gaue them to the Host and said vnto him Take care of him and whatsoeuer thou spendest more when I come againe I will recompense thee This Samaritan did shew himselfe a right Neighbour both in shewing his present charity toward him and in offering himselfe to become a surety for him All these approued and allowed examples of the faithfull do sufficiently and euidently teach vs that it is in it selfe lawfull to vndertake payment for another and to become Suretie for him Reason 1. And if we require better groundes to satisfie vs in this truth let vs enter into the strength of reason to assure vs without any wauering heerein First waigh with me the example of Christ an excellent patterne and president of the practise of this an example farre beyond all exception an example that ouershadoweth and dazeleth k Heb. 12 1 2. and darkneth all that cloud of witnesses produced by the Apostle in the Epistle to the Hebrewes he became surety for his Church vnto his father to pay the debt of our sinnes and to satisfie his iustice If then any doubt or make a question of the former examples wherein we saw how Ruben offered himselfe to become as a pledge to his father Iudah to Ioseph Iason to the Gouernour and the Samaritan to his Hoast behold a most absolute and perfect example of Christ Iesus who bound himselfe for vs his body for our bodies and his soule for our soules that our sinfull bodies might be made cleane by his body and our soules washed through his most precious bloud For the Prophet prophesieth l Isay 53 10. that he should make his soule an offering for sinne And Christ himselfe saith m Mat. 26 38. Iohn 12 27. My soule is very heauy euen vnto the death c. Thus did his loue exceed and abound toward vs that our loue might exceed and abound one toward another To this purpose the Apostle sheweth n Heb. 7 22. that Iesus is made a surety of a better Testament He stood in our places he tooke vpon him our sinnes he bare in his body the punishments due to vs he felt the wrath of God kindled against vs. Reason 2. Secondly it is a fruit of loue euen this way to releeue and helpe such as are like to suffer damage and detriment by want of outward thinges Now humane society and Christian piety requireth that one should sustaine and succour another in their necessity as we see in the former examples of Reuben Iudah Iason and the Samaritan before mentioned and remembred The life of man can hardly stand without lending and borrowing without letting and hiring without buying and selling without bargaining and trusting one of another It is a worke of mercy o Leuit. 19 18 to become surety and therefore as lawfull no doubt as to giue or lend The law of God commandeth vs to helpe our Neighboures as we are able and as they haue neede and they are to be releeued by such meanes as are in our power by giuing by forgiuing by communicating to them such things as we haue and they haue not For if we loue them and haue true Charity in vs we must not be wanting to them but be ready to profit them and do them good so farre as wee do not hurt our selues It is no vnwise sentence of a wise man p Eccle. 29 18 The wicked will not become surety and he that is of an vnthankfull mind forsaketh him that deliuered him declaring thereby that as he is a foole that is surety for euery man so is he vngodly that in no wise will be surety for any man Wee are commanded to q Exod. 23 5. helpe vp our enemies Oxe that is fallen or his Asse that is sunke downe vnder his burden how much more ought we to shew pitty and compassion to our brother himselfe vexed with the creditor terrified with the prison oppressed with his debt and dismaid and discouraged with the paiment at hand that is to be made So then whether we do consider that Christ Iesus is made our surety or that suretiship is a fruit of Christian loue one toward another in both respects we see that in it selfe it is not to be disalowed or condemned Vse 1. The vses of this Doctrine are diligently to be considered of vs. And first of all if it be lawfull and warranted to become surety one for another as we haue before plainely prooued it conuinceth and confuteth those that hold it to be euill and vnlawfull to giue their word or offer their band or tender their promise or engage themselues any way for their brethren Loue is a debt that we owe to all men r Rom. 13 8. as the Apostle testifieth Rom. 13. 8. and therefore we ought not to faile in the perfourmance thereof It is imagined and supposed by some that all or the greatest part of the controuersies betweene man and man and suites of Law betweene party and party arise from hence that things are taken vp vpon trust that there is borrowing and lending among vs and that there is crediting one of another and so would haue these quite taken away and the Names of them vtterlie abolished out of all Incorporations and Common-wealths It is reported that among the Turkes are few suites and actions commenced one against another because there is with them no bargaine or sale no buying or selling but for ready Money and for present pay But this is a plaine fallation to put that for a cause which indeede is not the cause For the corrupt conscience of men the couetous desire of Money the greedy gaping after gaine the malicious humour of reuenge the bitter roote of strife and the extreame want of loue are the true causes of
Isaac Moses Hezekiah Iehoshaphat others Secondly albeit God do not bestow vpon vs alwaies those lawfull things which we desire and demand yet he heareth our prayers and answereth our cries when he giueth some thing proportionable to that we ask As if we craue earthly blessings he giueth vs heauenly and if we craue temporall things he yeeldeth eternal life and if instead of deliuerance of vs out of trouble he giueth vs strength and ability to beare trouble and patience to endure vnder the crosse without murmuring Thus is Christ said to be c Heb. 5 7. heard in that which he feared albeit he suffered death He prayed that the Cuppe might passe from him yet he was to drinke of it his Father had decreed it he had vndertaken it and we were to be d 2 Cor. 12 8 9 redeemed by it Notwithstanding he was heard when God gaue him strength to beare it and sent an Angel to comfort him in his Agony according to that he speaketh Iohn 11 41 42. Father I thank thee because thou hast heard me I know that thou hearest me alwayes So when Paule felt a pricke in the Flesh the Messenger of Sathan to buffet him for this thing hee besought the Lord thrice that it might Depart from him and he saide vnto him My Grace is sufficient for thee for my power is made perfect through weaknesse God did not heare him and yet hee did heare him He requesteth one thing and God graunteth him another He craueth freedome from tentation but he is promised a supply of grace to be made able to ouercome tentations Thus it fareth with euerie one of vs we must consider what we aske and how God heareth vs. Wee must not thinke he forgetteth vs when he doth not feed our fansies and answere our expectations he knoweth what is best for vs and he will giue vs that which he seeth to be best for vs. Vse 2 Secondly as this Doctrine sendeth vs to schoole to learne what true prayer is so it serueth to reprooue three sorts of men First such as are growne to this height of prophanesse that they thinke it to bee in vaine to pray vnto God The faithfull finde by a blessed experience of Gods fauor that nothing is more profitable vnto them They woulde rather leaue any earthly Commoditie and loose their liues then cease to call vppon the Name of God Wee see this in the example of Daniell Chapter 6. 7 8. when a Decree was confirmed sealed and published according to the Law of the Medes and Persians e Dan. 6 7 8. which altereth not That whosoeuer shall aske a petition of any God or Man for thirtie daies saue of the King he should be cast into the Denne of Lyons It might seeme no great matter to forbeare and abstaine from prayer for so short a time yet when Daniell vnderstood that the writing was passed and published hee went into his house and his window being open in his Chamber toward Ierusalem hee kneeled vppon his Knees three times in a day and prayed and praised his God as hee did afore-time It is therefore a Testimony of a very prophane and proud heart not onely not to pray but to contemne and abhorre it as an vnclean thing or as a superfluous and needlesse thing Thus doeth Iob bring in the vngodlie speaking who differ but one steppe from Atheistes the dearest and best beloued sonnes of the Deuill Chapt. 21. f Iob 21 14 15. They say also vnto GOD Depart from vs for wee desire not the knowledge of thy wayes Who is the Almightie that wee should serue him And what profite should wee haue if wee shoulde pray vnto him Ah vile Wretches whether will your blasphemous mouthes reach Will you thus bee at defiance with the most high and Omnipotent GOD and set your selues against Heauen Whereas wee are so oftentimes allured and prouoked to prayer and haue most gracious and precious promises added that God will heare vs Shall we bidde him battell as if we were stronger then hee and say If wee crie vnto him Day and Night what do we gaine or what aduantage shall growe vnto vs Do not they prosper alike that neuer haue God in their mindes and they that frequent diligently and daily the house of Prayer Who are more subiect to troubles then such as trouble themselues with the word of God and studie to keepe his commandements Wherefore whether we pray or not pray al is one all is alike there is no difference we loose our labor wee receiue no profit Thus do many speake thus do g Eccles. 9 2. Mal. 13 14. mo thinke the world is full of such vermine and venome Against which most wicked imaginations wee must oppose the commandement of God willing vs to pray the promise of mercy the examples of the faithfull which haue bin heard when they prayed Secondly this Doctrine reprooueth such as goe to Saints and Angelles from the Creator to the Creature which is a great dishonour done to God and a reproach to Christ Were not hee a foolish and sottish suppliant that when the Kings sonne offereth to speake for him to his father would refuse to vse his mediation and goe to one of his seruants to entreat for him Is it not meete that such a one should be saide nay and depart without his purpose Euen so inasmuch as the father sendeth vs vnto his sonne and the sonne calleth vs to himselfe what madnesse is it to runne as well from the one as from the other to go from the sonne to the Saints from him that can hear to them that cannot helpe Nay as the Father is depriued of his Honour and the sonne robbed of his Office so the Saints themselues are disgraced If a man should set any of the Subiectes downe in the Chaire of estate and then bowe downe before him and giue him any of the Royalties of the King were not this high Treason against the Prince and extreame wrong to the Subiect Thus the case standeth betweene vs God and the Saintes If wee shall aduance the Saintes to so high a degree as to pray vnto them which is proper vnto God and as it were the Princes Regality if they did see our impiety they would blush at it and be ashamed of it The Apostle Peter would not suffer Cornelius h Acts 10 25. when he met him to fall downe at his feet and worship him Paule and Barnabas rent their cloths i Act 14 13 14 when they saw Iupiters Priest bring Bulles with Garlands vnto the gates of the Citty to the end they might offer sacrifice vnto them Did they reiect this seruice done vnto them when they liued vpon the earth and shal we think they doe now affect it or would now accept of it Away therefore with the mediation of the Angels who know not our hearts nor hear our prayers Away with the mediation of the Saints who beeing now in heauen are accepted of God not
the Minister if they do him no harme if they offer him no wrong if they abstaine from iniurie toward him It was farre otherwise with the Galathians who loued Paule so dearly and entirely that they accounted nothing to bee too precious for him q Gal. 4 14 15 The triall of me which was in my flesh ye despised not neither abhorred but ye receiued me as an Angell of God yea as Christ Iesus what was then your felicity For I beare you record that if it had beene possible ye would haue plucked out your owne eyes and haue giuen them vnto me But in these daies wherein we liue it were well or not much amisse for the faithfull Ministers of the Gospell if such as should support them would not subuert them if such as should help them would not hinder them if such as should raise them vp were not ready to cast them downe and if such as should refresh them were not rather giuen to reuile them and disgrace them Heere then is condemned all hard and bitter dealing toward them whereby their calling which is an honourable office is made an irksome burthen vnto them to bear against such as taunt and scorne them that iest and mocke at the worke of their ministry which is the wisedome of God and the power of God against those that delight to vex the seruants of God to mingle their bread with grauell their drinke with gall and their life with reproach This made the Prophets and Apostles cry out continually to see themselues abused their Ministery contemned the word of God himselfe refused all Religion prophaned When Eliah saw that the children of Israell had forsaken the Couenant of God cast downe his Altars and slaine his Prophets he desired God to kill him r 1 King 19 4 It is now enough O Lord take my soule for I am no better then my fathers The prophet Å¿ Esay 65 2. 53 1. 49 4. Esay saith I haue spred out my hands all the day to a rebellious people which walked in away that was not good euen after their owne imaginations Lord who hath beleeued our report and to whom is the arme of the Lord reuealed I haue laboured in vaine I haue spent my strength in vaine and for nothing but my iudgement is with the Lord and my worke with my God The Lord sayth to Ezekiell t Ezek. 33 31 32. The Children of thy people talke of thee by the walles and in the doores of houses they sit before thee and heare thy words but they will not doo them for vvith their mouths they make iests and thou art vnto them as a iesting song of one that hath a pleasant voice and can sing well for they heare thy words but they do them not and when this commeth to passe for loe it will come then shall they know that a prophet hath beene among them So when Paule came to Athens u Acts 17 18. and saw the City full of Idols he preached vnto them the knowledge of God and the resurrection of the dead but they said What will this babler say And others worse then those that scorne and scoffe at the word of life which they should heare with feare and reuerence are falne into this horrible depth of sinne that thorough malice to the word it selfe do come vnto them to heare them not to learne but to trap and intangle them not to edifie themselues but to misreport and accuse them not to receiue profit but to finde occasion to persecute them as the Iewes did with Christ and his Apostles who came not to heare them but to tempt them not to beleeue them but to belye them Many such Iewes and Iudasses wee meete withall in our dayes who are so farre from reioycing the hearts of their Ministers that they may doo the worke of their calling wil ingly not grudgingly cheerefully not heauily u Heb. 13 17. with ioy not with greefel that they thinke it a great duty done vnto them if they doo not disgrace them or molest them It is a great sinne not to helpe them not to countenance them not to stand with them in good causes but to suffer euery base companion and beastly liuer to insult vpon them as their footstool but it is more greeuous to scorne them and deride them to make them their Table-talke and their Tauern-talke to declaime against them from the Tribunall of their Ale-bench but it is most fearefull of all to come to them to catch them and intrap them to hunt after words and Syllables and to wrest them against the minde and meaning of the speaker Let vs beware of these sinnes let vs not be in the number of such as are set downe in the seat of scorners and false accusers If they shall not escape that do no good if they shall not be excused that do not reioyce them surely they shall bee guilty of a sorer and seuerer punnishment that malice them that mocke them that misinforme others of them and euery way misvse them and contemne them Vse 4. Lastly seeing we are all bound to reioyce in the proceeding of the faithfull it followeth from hence necessarily that wee are not to enuie and repine at the growth of the Church or of any member of the Church This is a great fault and folly in many when they see any parts of the Church flourish and behold greater encrease in others then in themselues by and by they grudge and repine at it and haue their owne eye euil because the Lords eie is good These are like to those Labourers that were hyred into the Vine-yard who when they saw such as were hyred about the eleauenth houre to receiue their penny and to be made equall with them who had borne the brunt and burthen of the day x 1 Mat. 28 20 11. and had endured the heat and sweate of the worke they enuied at the Seruants and murmured against the Mayster of the house We must enuy no mans good wee must repine at no mans Saluation The calling and conuersion of the Gentiles y Acts 11 3. 15 1. was such a stumbling-blocke in the way and n Mote nay a Beame in the eyes of the Iewes that they had rather renounce the Gospell and depart from Christ then to receyue them into a fellowshippe of the same Faith and make them partakers of the Kingdome of Heauen So did the Scribes and Pharisees z Math. 9 11. Luke 7 39. take it greeuously that the grace of God and Remission of sinnes and the Mysteries of Saluation should be preached and published to Publicans and Sinners There is no guift or benefit bestowed vpon any but it is giuen for the good and comfort of the whole Church so that wee should reioyce therein not repine thereat forasmuch as we haue our portion and profite in it Neuerthelesse what is more common and vsuall then to make the blessinges of God vppon others a great
q 1 Cor 7 12 13 16. For what knowest thou O Wife whether thou shalt saue thy Husband Or what knowest thou O Man whether thou shalt saue thy Wife So the Apostle Peter setting downe the wiues duty toward her husband saith r 1 Pet. 3 1 Let their wiues be subiect to their Husbandes that euen they which obey not the word may without the word be wonne by the conuersation of their wiues Where we see that some are won to the Faith without the preaching of the worde Answere I answere it is true that God blesseth and sanctifieth many meanes beside the preaching of the word to the good of his Children as Meditation Conference priuate instruction Prayer feare of Hell and such like Notwithstanding many that are conuerted to God are deceiued in the meanes and instrument of their conuersion For albeit such as are afflicted are brought to know themselues and to acknowledge the damnable estate wherein they stood yet it is not the affliction it selfe that wrought their conuersion The trouble that they sustained and endured whether it were in body or in mind or in both was sent by the goodnesse of God vpon them to bring them to a loue of the word who before loathed it and made no account or reckning of it This is it which the Apostle teacheth Å¿ Rom. 3 20. That by the Lawe commeth the knowledge of sinne So affliction may lay before vs the knowledge of our sins but it cannot take them away it may shew vs our wound but it cannot help vs and heale vs it may cast vs downe but it cannot raise vs vp it may bee a Schoole-maister to bring vs to Christ but it cannot make vs partakers of Christ It is like a sharpe Needle which doth not nor cannot sow the cloth but it is necessarie to prepare the way for the thred or it is like an eating or a fretting corrasiue which cannot cure but yet it is profitable to make the way for the healing medicine So the afflictions that God layeth vpon vs may bring vs to the sight and knowledge of our sinnes and to the consideration of the miseries which we deserue and to the feeling of the flashes of hell fire but they cannot worke Faith in vs nor assure vs of pardon nor apply to vs the promise of God touching the remission of sinnes It maketh a good beginning but it cannot bring the worke to perfection The like may bee saide of priuate admonition and a godly conuersation which the Apostles teach may be meanes of saluation to others it is not spoken to lessen or weaken the authority or efficacy of publicke preaching as if it were not the ordinary meanes to conceiue nourish and encrease faith in vs neither is it simply to be vnderstood that they are able to conuert the soule but onely that they are good occasions fit inducements and profitable helpes to drawe vs and allure vs to a liking and louing and longing after faith For when a man that is not a Christian but an Infidell beholdeth the holy pure chast conuersation of his Wife after her calling to the knowledge of the truth and hir subiection and obedience toward himselfe he may be mooued to embrace the Christian Religion whereof he seeth such worthy fruites We haue a notable example heerof in u Ioh. 4 39. 42 the woman of Samaria who perswading the men of the Citty to go out and heare Christ they saide vnto her after they hadde heard his preaching Now we beleeue not because of thy saying for we haue herd him our selues and know that this is indeede that Christ the Sauior of the world The exhortation of this woman preuailed with them to heare Christ and by their hearing they were conuerted she was the cause of their hearing their hearing was the cause of their beleeuing shee was the Instrument that brought them to Christ and hee wrought Faith in them when they vvere brought vnto him Obiection 2. Secondly it is saide that reading is preaching and therefore it is a sufficient meanes of saluation To this purpose they quote Actes 21. Moses of olde time hath in euery City them that preach him seeing he is read in the Synagogue euery Saboth day Loe say they he is preached when he is read therfore the bare reading must needs be preaching yea some adde it is better then preaching because when they heare the Scriptures read they knowe it is the word of God but when they heare preaching it is mens exposition and interpretation and they know not whether it bee true or false sound or vnsound right or wrong Answere I answere this obiection falleth of it selfe and it is ouerthrowne by that whereby it is sought to be strengthned For if reading be preaching then reading cannot be better then preaching inasmuch as nothing can be better or worse then it selfe It is not denied but the word Preaching may in a general sence include not only the reading of the word x Marke 1 45. 5 20. 7. 36 but any other way of declaring and publishing the power truth glory and workes of God Rom. 2 20 21. Psal 19 1 2. but then it is not vsed as wee take the word in the state of the question For wee meane by preaching the expounding of the Scripture according to the proportion of faith applying thereof according to the capacity of the hearers And thus they are set downe in the place alledged before as two distinct things one accompanying and following the other according to the ordinance of God and practise of the seruants of God Hence it is that the Apostle giueth this as a duty and direction belonging to Timothy y 1 Tim. 4 13. Till I come giue attendance to reading to exhortation and to Doctrine So it is sayde in the booke of Nehemiah z Nehe. 8 7 8. The Leuites caused the people to vnderstand the Law and the people stood in their place and they read in the Booke of the Law of God distinctly and gaue the sence and caused them to vnderstand the reading Likewise when Christ came to Nazareth where he had beene brought vp and went into the Synagogue on the Saboth day he stood vp He opened the Booke a Luke 4 17. and read the Scripture then he closed the Booke he sate downe the eyes of all of them were fastned on him and he began to preach vnto them Thus also wee see that when the Apostle Paule wrote his Epistle to the Romaines hee excused himselfe that hee could not come to preach vnto them b Rom. 1 11 15 14. For he longed to see them that he might bestow some spirituall guift among them and acknowledged himselfe a debter to the Grecians and to the Barbarians to the Wisemen and vnto the vnwise so that as much as lay in him hee was ready to preach the Gospell to them also that were at Rome Whereby we see that preaching and hearing are
hee may prouide thinges honest in the sight of God that he may reioyce in the labour of his owne handes and be thankfull to the father and giuer of all good thinges It is a rule taught by nature approued by experience strengthened by custome f Aristot polit lib. 2. Cap. 2. and established by the founders of Citties and Kingdomes that whatsoeuer is cared for of all is cared for of none as it ought to be but is neglected of all This appeareth in euery Towne and incorporation in euery house and congregation If a matter be committed to many seruants to be dispatched it is commonly either altogether left vndone or done negligently and worse then if it had beene assigned to one I haue heard it deliuered as a prouerbe that he which hath one man is sure of a man he that hath two men hath but halfe a man and he that keepeth three hath none at all One looketh vpon another and leaueth the worke for his fellowes thinking with himselfe that albeit he neglect the dooing of it yet there are two others to finish it and so among them all the businesse of the Maister lieth vndone We see this in mending of high waies which because it is to be done by a common hand and by a generall agreement of many together is generally posted ouer from one to another and commonly left off from yeare to yeare Marke this moreouer in the prouision for the poore who ought to be charitably rel●…ued by the lawes of God and man yet because the burden lieth vpon the shoulders of all all men are ready to shake it off from them and pinch curtesie who shall begin But when euery one knoweth his owne it encreaseth care and doubleth diligence in him he reioyceth with his family in the blessings of God and learneth to be a good Steward in the vse of them disposing of them to the glory of the giuer and to the comfort of the receiuer This it which Salomon teacheth Chap. 5. of the Prouerbs g Prou. 5 15 18. 19. Let thy fountaine be blessed and reioyce with the wife of thy youth let her be as the louing Hind and pleasant Roe let her breastes satisfie thee at all times and delight in her continually So then the distinction of dominion and possession when euery one knoweth his owne and what is not his owne maketh men carefull to looke vnto them Wherefore seeing God is the author of propriety the hater of confusion and the commander and appointer of euery man his seuerall taske and labour it followeth that the community of the Saintes doth not destroy the propriety of substance but euery man keepeth the title and tenour of his owne goodes which no other can chalenge to himselfe Vse 1. As we haue seene the reasons that confirme this Doctrine so let vs see the vses that instruct vs in many profitable points tending to edification First of all this confuteth and conuinceth the detestable and damnable sect of the Anabaptistes who deny to men any property in any thing but would haue all thinges common True it is among faithfull friends all thinges are common as we haue already prooued and confessed so that as we haue one father so we haue one fraternity and are of one family Hence it is that Tertullian in his Apology teacheth h Tertul. in Apologet. that among Christians all things were common except mens wiues What then Were these first Christians Anabaptistes Or are these Anabaptistes like these first Christians No in no wise They alledge indeed the example and practise of the primitiue church but it doth not no way fauour their opinion nor countenance any such Communion as these Heretikes would bring in amongs vs. Obiection 1. But they obiect that all that beleeued were in one place and had all thinges common yea they accounted nothing to be their owne Answere I answeare that these words are not to be vnderstood as though they had forsaken their owne houses and liued together in publike and in common in the same house as it were in the celles and Cloisters of Monkes but as it followeth in the next wordes i Acts. 2 46. They continued daily with one accord in the Temple and breaking bread from house to house did eate their meate together with gladnesse and singlenesse of heart If this be true let the Anabaptistes a new sect of Monks answere at whose houses this was done Was this meeting and eating of their meat in the houses of the Infidels or of the beleeuers I thinke no man is so sottish to say it was in the houses of the vnbeleeuers who would not receiue them to house nor giue them any entertainment among them seeing they hated them and their profession to the death Wherefore it must of necessity follow that these assemblies were in the houses of such as were faithfull If then the faithfull Christians had their houses in which they met together then they did not at all sell nor forsake their houses and dwellings nor coop vp themselues as is it were in Monasteries or Hermitages from the society of men Obiection 2. Secondly whereas they obiect Chap. 4. k Acts. 4 34 35. As many as were possessors of Landes sold them and brought the price of the thinges that were solde and laid it downe at the Apostles feet Answere It is not so to be vnderstood as if they had cast away all care of their houshold affaires and possessed nothing in priuate afterward For this was done by some of the richer and wealthier sort who were not compelled to sell neither can it be gathered that they sold all Nay it appeareth throughout this booke of the Actes that many after this fact possessed houses of their owne The Euangelist Luke noteth that when Peter the Apostle was brought out of prison by the Ministry of the Angel that was sent to deliuer him l Acts. 12 12. As he considered the thing he came to the house of Mary the mother of Iohn where many were gathered together and prayed Frō whence I pray you had this woman this house If all Christians sold their inheritances and proper houses So then the communion of goods that was among the first Christians was nothing but a sale of part of their possessions to succor the poore Saints least being constrained through Famine and left destitute of the helpe of the Bretheren they should turne backe againe to the Iewish Religion and therefore it is said that distribution was made of those things that were sold not equally or confusedly m Actes 4 35. But according as euery one had neede so that he that had the greater charge had the greater allowance and he that had the lesse Family had the lesse maintenance Tiue it is it is said n Acts 4 32. 2 44. The multitude of them that beleeued were of one heart and of one Soule neyther any of them atcounted any thing of that
that after the Thessalonians had heard the Gospell of Christ published vnto them so many of them as were ordained vnto eternall life beleeued and submitted themselues to be duided and reformed by it This dutie hath c Foure degrees of submitting our selues to the Gospell manie branches First it is required of vs to heare the worde of God with patience This is the first step and degree that leadeth vnto life and it proceedeth from the meere grace and fauour of God whensoeuer it is wrought in our hearts For how many are there that when they heare stop their eares That when they see shut their eyes That when they vnderstand doe harden their hearts When Stephen made a defence for himselfe before the chiefe Priests that sat in the Counsel d Acts 7 57. They gaue a shout with a loud voyce and stopped their eares and ran violently vpon him all at once and cast him out of the Citty and stoned him with stones When one Alexander a Iew beckned with the hand prepared himselfe to speak and would haue excused the Apostles e Acts 19 33 There arose a great shout almost for the space of two houres of all men crying Great is Diana of the Ephesians Likewise when Paule made a perticuler rehearsal of the manner of his conuersion to the faith before the Iewes they heard him quietly and with silence vntill he said He was sent to the Gentiles but then thorough impatience f Acts 22 23. they cried out they cast off their cloathes and threw dust into the ayre and lift vp their voices saying Away with such a fellow from the earth for it is not meet that he should liue We see by these examples that it is a token of Gods goodnesse when he giueth vs circumcised eares to listen and attend to the word preached vnto vs with patience and perseuerance vnto the end albeit we heare our sins reproued our secret thoughts opened vnto vs. It is our dutie to shew our selues swift to heare but slow to speake and slow to wrath We must be slow to speake against that which hath bin deliuered and we must be slow to anger and indignation against those that haue deliuered the truth vnto vs. Secondly it is required that we receiue the word that we haue heard assent vnto it as to the word of truth and acknowledge it to bee good and true euen that part of the word that containeth his iudgements his threatnings his cursses his punnishments This is to be craued of God as being a special worke of grace in those that belong to his kingdom For many there are that heare and haue their eares open to attend these are not dull hearers that marke nothing but ate ready to listen and giue care and yet they will not giue their assent to that which they haue heard The Apostle teacheth g 1 Cor. 2 14. That the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned When Paule preached at Athens in the hearing of the Stoikes and Epicures touching the resurrection from the dead they saide h Acts 17 18 What will this Babler say A great part of our ordinary hearers may be placed in this rank who are content to heare and then sit in iudgement vppon that which they haue heard and neuer giue credit vnto it but measure the truth of God by their carnall conceits and naturall reasons Thirdly it is farther required of vs to embrace the truth in our hearts carefully to apply it to our owne soules It belongeth vnto vs not onely to heare it with the eare and to assent to it with the mind but to lay it vp deeply rooted in vs and to make it our owne by a speciall application This is the right vse of the word this is peculiar to the elect and this is a work of grace in our hearts The Hystoricall faith giueth a generall consent to the truth of God but neuer goeth farther to apprehend it as we see in Simon the Sorcerer who is said to haue beleeued that is in a generall maner to haue consented to the Gospell and yet Peter telleth him i Acts 8 21. That his heart was vpright and that he remained in the gall of bitternesse Let vs not therefore approbriate the word of grace that is able to build farther vnto our owne selues otherwise we shall haue no more comfort then the Reprobates haue who come so farre as to confesse the word to be true and that God by his Sonne will saue the Vessels of mercy Lastly it is required in this speciall manner to entertaine the worde to wit as the word of God Many receiue the word and imbrace it willingly readily chearfully and ioyfully but not as the word of God I wil not stand to speake of the Church of Rome which holdeth that the word written hath not authority in it selfe vnlesse the Church approue it and therefore albeit it embraceth the word of God yet it embraceth it not as the word of God For how many are there among our selues that receiue not the word of God with that reuerence and obedience that they ought as appeareth by the euil practises of their liues These men do not receiue the word of God as the word of God who if they did in truth sincerity acknowledge this truth to be of God to haue him for the author thereof they would lead their liues in another maner then they do they would be afraid to rush forward to run headlong as it were with violence into the breach transgression thereof They would consider that God will not beare and endure the contempt of his word but reuenge the dishonor done to his name with great plagues and most grieuous iudgments These are the duties that are to be performed of vs and the foure degrees that testifie our submitting of our selues to the truth of the Gospel preached deliuered vnto vs by the Ministers of Christ Vse 4 Lastly seeing they by whose ministry we are gained to God and preserued in the state of saluation being gained ought to be most deare to vs we owing vnto them our owne selues This must teach the Ministers of God a necessary duty and lesson to be marked of them to wit to endeuor by their daily diligence and continuall preaching of the Gospel to make the people indebted vnto them For how do the people come so much in their debt but that they receiue heauenly Doctrine by their Ministry as from the mouth of God Such as haue need of admonition must be exhorted such as are weak in the faith must be strengthned such as need comfort ought to be comforted such as are ignorant must be instructed such as are willing to be taught must be beseeched and intreated and euery one must be handled according to his nature and condition according to the rule
when he saith I hope through your Prayers c. it argueth that the Churches of the Gentiles did pray vncessantly vnto God for the deliuerance of Paul out of Prison as we see in the Actes of the Apostles when Herod had killed Iames and put Peter in Prison d Actes 12 5. earnest Prayer was made of the Church to God for him So that we see he had the Prayers of the faithfull and that he did acknowledge the benefit necessity of them that they should preuaile with God Lastly when he addeth I shall be giuen vnto you We must vnderstand that the word which the Holie Ghost vseth in this place signifieth to bee freely and frankly giuen noting thereby that when he should be deliuered and finde the effect of their Prayers it should be through the free grace and mercy of God and not merited by the Saints So then according to this order of the words and interpretation of the Text the reading of this Verse is to this effect Hauing now ended my suit mooued vnto thee touching Onesimus I am in the next place to sollicite thee for my selfe namely that as thou art inclined in loue to all the Saints of God so that thou prepare thy selfe to entertaine me at thy house with all the fruits of hospitality For although I be in bonds and kept fast in hold yet my hope is that by reason of the continuall and effectuall Prayers of the Saints I shall ere long through the free mercies of God be giuen vnto you and to the other Churches for their further edification in Christ Iesus our Lord. General obseruations pointed out in this verse Thus much touching the meaning Now follow certaine generall obseruations which I will onely point out and not stand vpon at large First of all obserue the different manner of the Apostles dealing heere and in the former words When he entreateth for another he is large and earnest but when he commendeth to him his owne cause and priuate businesse he dealeth in a word he dispatcheth it breefely he toucheth it by the way as if it were a thing impertinent or from the matter This sheweth that he had more respect and a greater regard to obtaine his suit for Onesimus and to further his saluation then to speed in his owne suit which pertained to the supporting and supplying the necessities of this present life This teacheth vs to be more earnest in another mans cause then in our owne but especiallie all Pastours that haue the charge of Soules committed vnto them to bee more earnest for the sauing of Soules then to procure their owne ease and that they seeke the benefit of others rather then the profit of themselues according to the rule of the Apostle 1. Pet. 2. e 1 Pet. 5 2. Feede the Flocke of God that dependeth vpon you caring for it not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready mind This affection if it be found in vs shall minister exceeding comfort to our hearts when we remember that we haue imployed our guifts and labours to gaine a people to God and haue not sought theirs but them On the other side woe vnto idle Shepheards that feede not the Flocke but feede themselues Such as are to worke in the Lords Vineyard must be Labourers not Loyterers they must be able to feed not to fleese they must blow the Trumpet and not hold their peace Secondly the Apostle doth not assure himselfe or the Churches of God that he shall be deliuered but he hopeth to be set free as if he should say I haue conceiued an hope not vaine and foolish without ground of reason but I trust in Gods mercy to be set in safety that I may serue the Church and profit you in the Gospell a long time Now whether the Apostle being deliuered out of Prison euer came among the Colossians and tooke vp his lodging in the House of Philemon it is vncertaine and not to be found in the holy Scriptures The like hope he conceiueth in other places of his Epistles as when he writeth to the Phillippians Chapt. 1. f Phil. 1 24 25 To abide in the flesh is more needefull for you and this am I sure off that I shall abide and with you all continue for your furtherance and ioy of your Faith And in the Chapter following g Phil. 2 23 24 I hope to send Timothy as soone as I know how it will goe with me and I trust in the Lord that I also my selfe shall come shortly The like wee see in the Epistle to the Hebrewes if that were Paules Chapt. 13. h Hebr. 13 23. Know that our Brother Timotheus is deliuered with whom if he come shortly I will see you Obserue in this place that his hope is not absolute but condicionall not simply purposed but limited I hope in the Lorde This is expressed by him in the first Chapter of the Epistle to the Romaines i Rom. 1 10. I make mention of you alwaies in my Prayers beseeching that by some meanes one time or other I might haue a prosperous iourney by the will of God to come vnto you Wee must therefore know that all our steppes are directed of God they are not in our owne power to be ordered at our owne pleasure We must also beware of all vaine confidence and presumption in our selues and in vnder-taking our businesse and affaires of this life seeing the successe is vnknowne and our life is vncertain Whatsoeuer we take in hand we must depend vpon the prouidence of God and rely vpon his will Hence it is that the Apostle Iames reprooueth them that say k Iames. 4 13 14 15. Goe to now ye that say to day or to morrow we will goe into such a Cittie and continue there a yeare and buy and sell and get gaine and yet ye cannot tell what shall be to morrow For what is your life It is euen a vapour that appeareth but a little time and afterward vanisheth away For that ye ought to say If the Lord will both we shall liue and we shall doe this and that God is the cheefe Ruler and Moderatour of all persons and actions nothing is guided and gouerned by Fortune nor falleth out by Chance he sitteth as it were at the Sterne and ordereth al things to his owne glory and the good of his Church Thirdly he putteth them in hope and comfort that he should be deliuered and come vnto them as a matter that would be welcome and profitable vnto them Which teacheth that the company fellowship and presence of the faithfull Seruants of God is much to bee desired and looked after and much to be reioyced in Thereby they receiue mutuall comfort one in another and bestow mutuall graces one vpon another and likewise by hauing the fellowship one of another they whet and sharpen one another We are ready to grow dull as an edge-toole that is quickly blunted and turned Now the communion
not wish to liue without it What is more desired then life Yet he preferreth the louing kindnesse of God before it So in another place l Psa 130 3 4. If thou ô Lord straitly markest iniquities ô Lord who shall stand But mercy is with thee that thou maist be feared Likewise the Church in the Lamentations of Ieremy confesseth as much chapt 3. It is the m Lam. 3 22. Lordes mercies that we are not consumed because his compassions faile not In all which places we see that the godly sue for pardon and cry out for mercy If they desire any blessing they aske it of fauour If they craue to haue any iudgement remooued they craue it of mercy and they esteeme his grace aboue their owne liues or any earthly thing that they can desire Wee must acknowledge that it is of his meere mercy that we liue and mooue and haue our beeing It is our duty to praise his name daily for his great mercies toward vs which are infinite for measure and continuance If hee accept vs it skilleth not greatly though men reiect vs and condemne vs. If his wrath be kindled against vs and his louing countenance be turned from vs what is it that can delight vs who is it that can comfort vs We see by many sundry examples in our Brethren that haue beene cast downe through the multitude and greeuousnesse of their sinnes and an apprehension of the heauie wrath of God and a with-drawing of his fauour for a season from them albeit they haue had Riches Friends Lands Prosperity and outward peace yet none of these could Minister comfort vnto them so long as Gods countenance was hidden from them as the Sunne couered in a Cloud But when once he appeared in mercy and goodnesse to them againe their bones and bowels haue bin refreshed according to the wordes of the Prophet in the Psalme n Psal 4 6 7. If thou Lord lift vp thy countenance vpon mee thou shalt giue mee more ioy of hart then they haue had when their Wheate thier Wine did abound Labour therefore by all meanes to feele his fauour vse all meanes to obtaine it employ thy selfe diligently to keepe it and to continue it towarde thee that in thy life it may be with thee and in death it may not depart from thee 23 There salute thee Epaphras my fellow-prisoner in Christ Iesus 24 Marchus Aristarchus Demas and Luke my fellow-helpers The order of the words Hitherto we haue handled the cheefe matter touching this Epistle containing his sute for Onesimus and his commandement to prepare him lodging Now followeth the Conclusion and shutting vp of the Epistle consisting in certaine salutations which are of two sorts either from others or from himselfe The salutation from others is in these two Verses the salutation from himselfe is in the Verse following In these Verses he saluteth Philemon in the name of fiue persons which were famous and well known in the Church and of great authority and credit aboue many others This salutation as it was very honourable vnto him so also it carried with it great waight and moment to effect his principall purpose with more easinesse For seeing hee ioyneth with him His Fellow-prisoner and Fellow-helpers in this sute that he might the better obtaine his request so that they all put vp as it were with one voice and consent the same petition Philemon could not but consider that it was a verie vnseemely and vnworthy thing to reiect so many suppliants in so reasonable a cause So then the sum of these wordes is this Epaphras Marcus Aristarchus Demas and Luke do salute thee The first man is described by an adioyned propertie my Fellow-Prisoner which is declared by the cause For Iesus Christ. The rest that are heere named haue one common adioynt as a title of honor ascribed vnto them when he calleth them his Fellow-helpers The meaning of the words Thus much touching the Order and Method Now let vs see the meaning and Interpretation of the wordes By Saluting in this place we are to vnderstand to vse all kinde and courteous speaking and to wish all peace and prosperity of soule and bodie which are fruits of that Brotherly Loue that ought to bee among all the Saints Thus did the faithfull pray one for another In this salutation he nameth fiue persons In the first place he rangeth Epaphras a Cittizen of the same Citty with Philemon and his Countreyman as appeareth in the Epistle to the Colossians chap. 4. Epaphras o Col. 4 12. the Seruant of Christ which is one of you Saluteth you and alwayes striueth for you in prayers that yee may stand perfect and full in all she will of God This man had beene the Teacher of the Church at Colosse and had conuerted them to the faith of Christ as we read in the same Epistle Cha. 1. p Colos 1 7. As ye also learned of Epaphras our deere fellow seruant which is for you a faithfull Minister of Christ. It seemeth he was an Euangelist who succeeded in the labours of the Apostles but now being at Rome hee was put in prison and heere saluteth Philemon as a Fellow-prisoner of Paule not for anie wickednesse and crime that he had committed but for the Testimonie of Christ and for preaching the Gospell and therefore is called not Caesars prisoner but Christs Prisoner Whereby it appeareth that this Epaphras was falsely accused by the enemies of the Gospell and therefore brought vnto Rome and put in hold Secondly he nameth Marcus who is mentioned also in other places of the Scripture who was Cozen to Barnabas and the sonne of that Marie who was wont to giue entertainement to the Disciples at Ierusalem yea such was her godlinesse that shee made her house as an Inne to lodge the poore Saints and as a publicke Temple for the people of God to meet together to pray vnto him and to praise his name This appeareth Col. 4 10. Marcus saluteth thee Barnabas Cousin touching whom ye receiued Commandements if hee come vnto you receiue him So when Peter was deliuered out of prison it is saide q Acts. 12 12. Hee came to the house of Marie the Mother of Iohn whose sur-name was Marke where manie vvere gathered together in Prayer Thirdly he saluteth Philemon in the name of Aristarchus of whome also mention is made in the Epistle to the Colossians and there likewise he is called Paules prisoner r Colos 4 10. Aristarchus my Prison-fellow saluteth you As they embraced one Faith and beleeued in one Christ so they suffered for one cause and were Companions in affliction Fourthly he nameth Demas who at this time was a constant Confesser of the truth and a zealous follower of the Gospell but afterward hee started backe from the Doctrine of Christ forsooke the fellowship of Paul embraced this present world as the Apostle complaineth of him afterward as we see 2 Tim. 4 10. Demas hath forsaken
to preach to the lost Sheepe of the house of Israell and afterwarde appointed seauentie Disciples to second their Labors he willed them to salute the places whether they came x Math. 10. 11 12. with Luke 10 5. Into whatsoeuer Citty or Towne ye shall come enquire who is worthy in it and there abide till ye go thence and when ye come into an house salute the same and first say Peace be to this house That which Christ commandeth his Disciples himself practiseth toward his Disciples for when he appeared to his Disciples after his resurrection y Iohn 20 21. he saide Peace be vnto you The Apostle writing to the Romaines spendeth the greatest part of the sixteenth Chapter in Salutations Commendations sent too and fro among the Saints Thus hee concludeth another of his Epistles z 2 Cor. 13 11 12. Finally Brethren fare ye well be perfect bee of good comfort be of one minde liue in peace and the God of Loue and Peace shall bee with you greet one another with an holy kisse all the Saints salute you All these examples teach vs this as an vndoubted truth that the vse of kinde and curteous speeches are beseeming the seruants of God and becommeth their profession Reason 1. We shall not neede to seeke farre to finde out the true causes and reasons of this Doctrine First our well wishing one to another is a fruit of our loue and a meanes to maintaine and continue loue among vs. To this purpose the Apostle Peter doth command not onely that they should salute one another but such as they loued and such as loued them Chap. 5. a 1 Pet 5 14. Greet ye one another with the kisse of loue If we would maintaine loue we must wisely and carefully entertaine such helpes as may further vs in the perfourmance of that duty whereof this that now we speake off is one so that we are to expresse our inward loue by outward tokens to the end it may bee seene and appeare vnto others Reason 2 Secondly our salutations are remembrances of our care and good affections toward these whom we greet well It is a signe that wee are not forgetfull of them but doe greatly regard and respect them This doth the Apostle Paule signifie Colos 4 12. Epaphras the seruant of Christ which is one of you b Col. 4 12. saluteth you and alwaies striueth for you in praiers that ye may stand perfect and full in all the will of God Where we see he ioyneth these two thinges together as depending one vpon the other his saluting of them and his praying for them Reason 3. Lastly to desire the good of others from the heart is both a fruit of the spirit and a good signe and testimony to our owne selues that we are chosen of God to eternall life To this purpose the Apostle numbring vp many notable fruits of the spirit maketh mention c Gal 5 22. of Loue Peace Gentlenesse Goodnesse meeknesse Long Suffering And in another place he exhorteth them d Col. 3 12. as the elect of God holy and beloued to put on the bowels of mercies Kindnesse Humblenesse of minde Meeknesse Long-Suffering Forbearing one another and forgiuing one another So then if we shall consider that courteous speeches are tokens of loue remembrances of our affection fruits of the spirit and testimonies of our election we may conclude that it is the duty of one Church to wish well to another and of one Christian to speake kindly to another We haue heard the Doctrine confirmed but before we come to the vses that arise from hence it shall not be amisse briefly to answeare an Obiection or two that may stand in our way which may seeme to restraine and forbid that which heere is commanded and allowed Obiection 1. We read in the booke of the Kings that when Ellisha sent his seruant Gehazi to the Shunamites house e 2. King 4 29. Luke 10 4. he bad him if he met any not to salute him and if any man saluted him he should answere him nothing And when Christ sent out his disciples to preach he gaue them the same charge and willed them to Salute no man by the way Where the duty which is heere approued may seeme there to be reprooued Answere I answeare the drift and scope of those places is to be considered and not the bare wordes to be vrged The intent of the Prophet speaking to his seruant and of Christ to his Disciples is to enioyne those persons to omit for that time the practise of duties of common curtesie and ciuility so farre forth as they might stay or any way delay the perfourmance of waightier affaires enioyned vnto them We must therefore vnderstand the meaning of them comparatiuely as if it had beene said Rather then you should any way hinder the quicke dispatch and speedy practise of that businesse which is laid vpon you speake to no man in the way So then the meaning of the places is not simply and absolutely to forbid men to salute others but so farre to require the omitting of it as it should be a let and an impediment vnto them in doing their duties Obiection 2. Secondly we read in the Apostle Iohn in his second Epistle f 2 Iohn 10. If there come any and bring not this Doctrine receiue him not to house neither bid him God speed for he that biddeth him God speede is partaker of his euill Heere againe seemeth to be another prohibition contrary to the precept and Iniunction in this place Answere I answere this place doth not forbid salutations courtesie of man to man but familiarity and acquaintance with Hereticks euen such ioyning and closing with them as may seeme to giue the least applause and approbation to their bad proceedings and wicked opinions Thus much of the loosing of these knottes and aunswering the Obiections that seeme to contradict the Doctrine taught out of this place Now let vs handle the Vses Vse 1 First we learne that courtesie with ciuill gentle friendly soft speeches are to be entertained of the seruants of God This is it which Salomon teacheth in sundry places of the Prouerbes g Prou. 15 1. 25 15. A soft answer putteth away wrath but grieuous words stirre vp anger And Cha. 25. A Prince is pacified by staying of anger and a soft tongue breaketh the bones This is the commaundement that the Apostle giueth h Ephes 4 32 Bee ye courteous one to another and tender-hearted This is the commendation of Gideon against the rage of the Ephraemites that were greeuously incensed and sharpely set against him hee answered them mildly and gently i Iudges 8 3. and thereby their spirits abated towardes him The like we see in Abigail when Dauids wrath was kindled against her husband and houshold she pacified him by her louing and lowly aunswere k 1 Sam. 25 32 so that he blessed
deliuered the Poore that cryed the fatherlesse and him that had none to helpe him the blessing of him that was ready to perish came vpon me and I caused the Widdowes hart to reioyce Where we see how he rendereth an account of his life past being of his Aduersaries charged with great wickednesse and much dissimulation So the Prophet describing the blessednesse of that Man that feareth the Lorde and delighteth greatlie in his Commaundements saith y Psal 112 9. He hath distributed and giuen to the Poore his righteousnesse remaineth for euer his Horne shall be exalted with glorie He sheweth heereby that the godlie doe not spare niggardlie but distribute liberallie according as the necessitie of the poore Saints requireth and as his owne power and abilitie suffereth him Heereunto commeth the precept of Christ z Luke 12 33 Sell that yee haue and giue Almes make you Bagges which waxe not old a Treasure that can neuer faile in Heauen where no Theefe commeth neither Moath corrupteth Let vs consider that God hath made the poore as well as the Rich and that the poore man is our owne Flesh Especiallie let vs alwaies remember that the godly poore are our Bretheren in Christ a Math. 25 34. and that in the last iudgement the Lorde Iesus will account it and reward it as done vnto himselfe whatsoeuer hath beene bestowed vpon his needy and distressed Brethren If we be carefull to practise these duties of Christian Charity and Community it shall auaile to seale vp Gods fauour toward vs in the remission of our sins and much aduantage vs to obtaine many blessinges seeing many supplications shall be made and offered vp for vs and so we shall tast the fruite that wee haue planted and haruest the Corne that wee haue sowed For b Gal. 6 7. Whatsoeuer a Man soweth that he shall reape as the Apostle testifieth to the Galathians and therefore if wee be diligent to helpe the poore and needie we shall receiue a full recompence with much increase into our owne bosomes That impute to me I will recompence thee c. See heere the most earnest affection of Paule for this poore Seruant He offereth himselfe to become Suretie and Pay-maister for Onesimus to answere for his debt and to stand as a debter himselfe in his place in respect of his Creditor and to pay whatsoeuer would be or could bee required at his handes Obiection But before we come to the point of instruction here offered to our consideration it shall not be amisse to answer a question that may here be demanded how he promiseth the paiment of mony to another who vnlesse he were himself helped and sustained of the Churches had not whereupon to liue We know how it went oftentimes with the Apostles by the confession of Peter and of Iohn who said to the Cripple that lay at the gate of the temple c Actes 3. 6. Siluer gold haue we none And the Apostle Paule was also constrained to labour with his owne handes How then is he on a suddaine become so wealthy as to offer his seruice to another and to vndertake to discharge the debt of another Answere I answere the meaning of the Apostle is that he would haue him forgiue his Seruant and to require the debt neither of him nor of his Seruant as appeareth euidentlie by the whole course of the preuenting of this Obiection Hee would not therefore haue him to contend with his poore penitent Seruant nor seeke any trouble against him vnlesse he would account him a debter in his stead And furthermore he addeth forth-with that Philemon was indeede wholy his to whom he owed all that he had so that if he would require the debt he should consider that the paiment was already made From this offer that Paule maketh which is to satisfie another mans debt Wee d Doctrin 2. It is lawfull for one man to become surety for another learne that it is a lawfull thing for one man to become Suretie for another and to engage himselfe for his sure and faithfull Friend of whom he is well perswaded Howsoeuer suretiship be to some very hurtfull and to all dangerous yet it is to none in it selfe and of it owne nature vnlawfull or sinnefull This truth is confirmed vnto vs by diuers examples of such as haue gone before vs in the practise of this dutie When Iacob refused to send his youngest and beloued Sonne Beniamin whom he begat in his old age into Egipt with his other Sonnes to fetch Corne saying Ye haue robbed me of my Children Ioseph is not and Simeon is not and ye will take Beniamin all these things are against me e Gene. 42 36 37. Then Ruben answered his Father saying Slay my two Sons if I bring him not to thee againe deliuer him to mine hand and I will bring him to thee againe Where we see he offereth his Sonnes in hostage and was ready to deliuer them as pledges and to binde to his Father Man for Man Sonne for Sonne bodie for bodie and life for life which is a greater matter then to be bound mony for mony and goods for goods The like we see more euidently in the Chapter following when Iacob did hang backe and seemed resolued not to let Beniamin depart with them Iudah is earnest with his Father saying f Gene. 43 8 9 10. Send the Boy with me that we may rise and go and that we may liue and not dye both we and thou and our Children I will bee suretie for him of mine hand shalt thou require him If I bring him not to thee and set him before thee then let me beare the blame for euer In which words we see that when Iudah considered the cause of their long delay and the extreamitie of the great dearth and the daunger of their present estate that except they had made this tarrying doubtlesse they might haue departed from their Father and returned to their Father againe the second time he vndertaketh the matter and becommeth surety for the Child This is it which he freelie and francklie confesseth before Ioseph when they had beene brought backe to him the Cup being found in Beniamins sacke g Gen. 44 32. Doubtlesse thy Seruant became surety for the Childe to my Father and saide If I bring him not vnto thee againe then will I beare the blame vnto my Father for euer now therefore I pray thee let me thy Seruant abide for the Childe as a Seruant to my Lord and let the Childe go vp with his Brethren Whereby also it appeareth that he considering with himselfe that hee could not without impeachment of his credit without breach of his promise and without heauinesse to his Father returne to him except the Child were with him he offereth himselfe as a pawne and pledge and prisoner to Ioseph as before he had done to his Father This also we see euidentlie in the Actes of the Apostles when Paule was troubled fot