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A45335 A practical and polemical commentary, or, exposition upon the third and fourth chapters of the latter epistle of Saint Paul to Timothy wherein the text is explained, some controversies discussed, sundry cases of conscience are cleared, many common places are succinctly handled, and divers usefull and seasonable observations raised / by Thomas Hall ... Hall, Thomas, 1610-1665. 1658 (1658) Wing H436; ESTC R14473 672,720 512

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conviction 'T is infinite patience that the earth doth not open her mouth and swallow them up alive and if the rocks rent the fonndations of the earth were moved and the Sun hid its self when Christ was crucified and blasphemed by many that knew him not Oh how doth the whole Creation groan under the burden of such as crucify the Lord afresh and wittingly and maliciously put him to an open shame 4. It doth exceedingly debase a man and makes him viler then the vilest creature that we tread under our feet for they in their kind praise God and shew forth the Wisdome Power and Goodnesse of their Creator But the Blasphemer dishonours him in all his Attributes 5. 'T is a most unprofitable sin other sins have some seeming pleasure and profit to allure but what pleasure or profit can it be to rage against the Just and Great God 6. Such are guilty of a most pestilent scandal they grieve the godly harden the wicked offend the weak who are quickly turned out of the way and become an ill example to their children who like soft wax are ready to be framed to any thing like Spunges which suck up any water that comes near them Now Woe unto them by whom Scandalls especially Blasphemous Scandalls come Matth. 18.6 7. 7. 'T is a sin which makes men most like to the damned in Hell As the Saints in Heaven being filled with joy shall Vocally sing the Praises of their Redeemer so the damned in hell being filled with the wrath of God shall Vocally blaspheme him Hell is full of blasphemy 'T is the very work of the damned to lye under the intolerable wrath of God continually blaspheming him He that accustomes himself to such language here let him take heed that he be not put for ever to sing it there and if the wicked that in this world do but taste of the cup of Gods wrath yet blaspheme him for their torments Revel 16.9 how will they be filled with blasphemies when they shall be filled with the wrath of God for ever Lastly as 't is the greatest sin so it makes men obnoxious to the saddest judgements of God and severest punishments of the Magistrate when a man shall directly and purposely speak reproachfully of God denying him in his Attributes or attributing that to him which is inconsistent with his Nature this is called direct and immediate blasphemy and if it be acted not out of Infirmity of nature the person not being distempered with sicknesse melancholy or madnesse but out of Malice Deliberation and Obstinacy then the party is to dye without mercy Lev. 24.13 14 15 16. this was no judicial Law peculiar only to the Jews but it being of the Law of Nature is an Universall Law for all Nations He who ever he be that shall directly and obstinately blaspheme the Name of the Lord shall surely dye Hence wicked Iesabel that she might stone Naboth to death proclaimes him a blasphemer 1 Kings 21.11.14 this stoning endured till Christs time as appears by their stoning of Steven Acts 7. now if every direct and obstinate blasphemers should be stoned to death in England what showres of stones would there be in all parts of the Land and if Nebuchadnezzar a Heathen by the Light of Nature could make a Decree That who ever blasphemed the God of Heaven or spake any thing amisse concerning him should be cut in pieces and his house be made a Dung-hill Dan. 3 29. how much more ought Christian Magistrates to make severe Lawes for the punishing of such high offenders lest as their light and charge is greater so they suffer double punishment We see how carefull Magistrates are to punish Thieves and Murderers of men and shall Spirituall Theeves who rob God of his Honour deny his Being and since they cannot kill him yet will smite him with their Tongue be suffered to go unpunished We see how tender great men are of their own Names Honours Priviledges and Lives if any oppose them he must dye for it and shall he that abuseth and blasphemeth the King of Kings not dye the death Surely as this is the greatest sin so it should be punisht with some eminent and remarkable punishment This Hellish sin defiles the land and cannot b● purged away but by the death of the Blasphemers Impunity breeds Blasphemy and all manner of sin Eccles. 8.11 Paul must excommunicate such 1 Tim. 1.1.20 and the Magistrate must cut them off Levit. 24.6.16 Dan. 3.29 and when men cannot or will not punish them God takes the sword into his own hand He cut off blasphemous Sennacher●b with one hundred fourscore and and five thousand men 2 Kings 19.35 Blasphemous Arrius voyded his bowells and so died The Syrians blaspheming the God of Israel and calling him the God of the Mountains and not of the vallies many thousands of them fell by the sword 1 Kings 20.29 30. and if the Lord be thus terrible in the Camp of the Assyrians for blasphemy where will blasphemous Christians appear who sin against greater Light and greater Love Caution Yet every unadvised speech or act against God doth not presently denominate a man a Blasphemer There be may blasphemy in what is spoken and yet the person speaking not to be a blasphemer Iob and Ieremy spake many things unadvisedly when under a tentation yet blasphemed not Blasphemy properly taken is ever joyned with an intent to cast reproach upon God As every one is not a lyar that telleth what is not true but he that telleth an untruth knowing it to be an untruth with an intent to deceive and wrong others so he that thinks or speaks a thing unbecoming God with an intent to reproach or slander God and his wayes This is Blasphemy directly against God 6. Disobedient to Parents 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Parentibus non obedientes Next unto God our Parents are to be loved and obeyed he that dares blaspheme the one will never fear to abuse the other he that dares revile his Heavenly Father will not stick to rebell against an earthly one Hence Haters of God and disobedient to Parents are yoakt together in the same Predicament Rom. 1.30 This is a branch of pride 't is that which makes men so refractory and rebellious that no perswasions of their superiours can work upon them nor any intreaties winne them to obedience The words are indefinite and equivalent to an Universall In the last dayes men shall be disobedient to Parents in the Plurall number viz. To Parents Naturall Politicall Spirituall Domesticall 1. In the last dayes men shall be disobedient to their naturall Parents of both sexes Father and Mother Thefe especially are here implyed in the word Parents though I shall not exclude the latter since the Character in its fullest Latitude suits so fully with our times 1. Was there ever more contempt of Naturall Parents is not the complaint generall that the youth of our age is
them These are those that poysen not bodies but soules as the harlot so these hunt for the precious soul. Prov. 6.26 they hatch the Cockatrice egges he that eates of their egges dyes and that which is crusht breakes forth into a Viper Isay 59.5 These are those that make rents and divisions in the Church whose Peace should be very deare unto us for though Unity be not the very being yet it tends much to the well-being of a Church These hinder the progresse of the Gospel when people should be praying weeping and humbling themselves together these set them to disputing wrangling and malicing one another 'T is Unity that spreads the Gospel and makes mountains to become a plain even the seven hills amongst the rest Were there that sweet Synceretismus or rather Synchristianismus that harmony of hearts and wayes as ought to be amongst the people of God how terrible would the Church be to her enemies 'T is these that breed tumults in the Church commotions in the Common-wealth that imbitter mens spirits one against another waste mens estates bring men to a morsell of bread and at last bring themselves to some untimely end Oh consider the sad Ends of many Hereticks and let their falls make you to feare Arrius voyded his bowells Iulian died blaspheming Simon Magus an Arch-Heretick who by his sorcery and feined miracles deluded many people who took him for a God Acts 8.10 attempting on a time to fly in the ayer in the sight of many people his divelish art failing him he fell to the ground and brake his leg which was his death Servetus was burnt for his blasphemies at Geneva Gibraldus the Heretick was swept away by the Plague Blandrate Physician to the King of P●land a great Patron to Socinus and his followers was strangled in his bed by his Brothers son Alciat a Socinian died despairing Pale●logus an Arrian was burnt Francis David a proud Socinian died mad and was distracted with the sight of the Devill Lismanninus an Arrian drowned himself in a well Olympius that denied the Trinity was burnt to death with three Lightnings Be●old that Anabaptist King with his companions was tortured and put to death Humber was burnt Muntzer and Pheifer beheaded So let all thine enemies perish O Lord. Consider Gods hand on Nayler a Quaker and Sundercomb a Leveller and Mistris Hutchinson in New-England who was banisht for her Heresies and destroyed both she and her family by the Indians Parnel a Quaker famisht himself in Colchester Jayle trying to fast 40. dayes as Christ did Poole a Quaker in Dorcester drowned himselfe Quest. If any desire to know the Reasons why God suffers Seducers to abound he may find good store in Doctor Boltons Arraignment of error Pag. 5. to 55. in Mr. Brimslyes Spi. Vertigo p. 37. c. and Mr. Sherlock against the Quakers In fine cap. 6. p. 205. c. Vse 1. Since false Prophets are such Pestilent persons the Magistrate must not Tolerate them Who will Tolerate such as have Plague-sores running on them to go up and down infecting others or that have poyson to go up and down selling it instead of food Seducing Hereticks are worse those kill but the body these with their damnable Heresies destroy the soul. 2 Pet 2.1 and if such as steal away but their bodies must die Exod. 21.16 what shall be done to those that ruine the better part These are called Foxes Vipers Wolves Thieves troublers of the Church and therefore to be cut off not tolerated Galathians 5.12 Christ blames the Church of Thyatire for giveing a toleration to Iesabel Revelations 2.20 and commends the Church of Ephesus for not bearing with such as are evil Revelat●ons 2.2 and Iosiah is commended for compelling men to the worship of God 2 Chronicles 34.33 The Magistrate is the Minister of God and must be a terror to them that doe evil Romans 13. especially if they be compounded blasphemous seducing Hereticks they must be put to death Leviticus 24.14 Exodus 22.20 Deuteronomy 13.6.8 9. and 17.2.5 2 Chronicles 5.16 Ezra 7.26 Iosiah slayes the false Prophets 1 Kings 23.20 El●jah commands the Priests of Baal to be slain 1 Kings 18.40 Object Lest any should think to evade these Proofs as Legall the prophet Zachary 13.3 prophesing of Gospel times tells us that if any shall be so bold as to teach lies that his father and mother shall cause him to be put to death alluding to that Deuteronomy 13. The equity of which Law still remains under the Gospel Better and with lesse danger is a Thief an Adulterer a murderer a Witch and Sorcerer tolerated then such an Heretick and Seducer As our large Annotations have it 'T is observed by a learned Divine That as in things of practice so of perswasion that are impious either in themselves or in their naturall unconstrained consequences the Plea of conscience is an Aggravation of the crime if mens consciences are ●eared and themselves given up to a reprobate mind to do those things which are not convenient there is no doubt but they ought to suffer such things as to such practices are assigned and appointed Thus he And if any shall object that these are tolerated but in corners The answer is easie if it be truth they teach why should it not have Churches if errour why should it have Chambers See more against Toler Mr. Ant. Burges on Iohn 7.21 Serm. 115. Mr. Gee on Prayer cap. 4. Sect. 7. p. 358. Mr. Iohn Clerk Ser. on Leaven p. 24.36 See 9. wayes by which the Magistrate may stop the flood of Heresies Mr. Obad. Sedgwicks Serm. on Revelation 12.15 p. 37. Preacht 1646. Iames 27. Mr. Edwards against Toleration Calvin contra Serv. inter Opuscul p. 694. Beza de Haert puniend Epistol contra Deditium Prins Treatise in defence of the Magistrates coercive power Mr. Rudderfords Treatise against Liberty of Conscience Doctor Taylor on Titus 3.1.10 p. 347 715. 2. Ministers must come forth to the helpe of the Lord against these daring Goliahs Even a Dogge will barke when hee seeth his Master wronged And a Craesus sonne that hath been dumbe all his life yet will speak when they offer violence to his father We are the Lords Watchmen and when we see the Wolf or the Theif approching we must give warning seducers are subtle and people can not easily discover their plots we must do it for them One great cause of so many abounding errors amongst us springs from Ministers 'T was whilest the watchmen slept that the enemy sowed his Tares Matthew 13.25 1. Some are ignorant dumb dogs and cannot bark 2. Others are scandalous and dare not for fear of being questioned themselves 3. Others see which way the times go and like dead fish they go down the stream they dare not displease they love to sleep in a whole skin and say as the great ones say But let us be the Lords witnesses against a perverse people this
they would stirre up the Magistrate since they have more especial influence on him and are more nearly related to him that he may no longer bear the sword in vain but as God hath made him the Drunkards terror the swearers terror and the profane mans terror so he may be the blaspheamers terror and the Quakers terrour making them Quake in a better kind c. That some of these are Witches accumulative compounded seducing blasphemous witches in the highest degree there is none that hath read their books or known their Practices but is or may be fully satisfied That such should be put to death is clear Exod. 22.18 Levit. 24.16 Dan. 3.29 Deut. 13.6 to 10. Some judicial precepts are Iuris communis of common equity such as are agreeable to the instinct and law of nature common to all men and these for substance bind all persons both Jews and Gentiles as being Moral and so agreeing with the Moral Law These judicial precepts which were Iuris particularis of particular equity such as pertained especially to the Jews common-wealth and were sitted for them and their time are now abolished E. g. that a man should marry with none but his own stock That the brother should raise up seed to his Brother and that a Thief should restore four-fold this was peculiar to their Common-wealth and not to ours For 1. They were a wealthy people had abundance and could better bear a losse then we can To steal an Oxe from him that hath a thousand is nothing in comparison of stealing an Oxe from him that hath but two or four 2. Violence is oft added to Theft and the publick peace of the Nation is oft broken thereby Now more regard is to be had of the publick peace then of a private mans life Melius est ut pereat unus quàm unitas The Question then will be whether it be lawfull to put a man to death for Theft Answ. We must distinguish of Theft 1. There is a single simple Theft and this admits of discreet pitty especially when 't is committed by reason of extream poverty and necessity 2. There is compounded Theft when Violence Assaults Frights in the night time especially by breaking of a mans dwelling house whereby the life of him and his are endangered and in such cases where the offence is multiplyed and increased there the Magistrate may increase the punishment and inflict death upon the party as appeares 2 Sam. 12.1 2 3 4 c. Exod. 22.2 Prov. 6.31 So then those judicial and civil Precepts which are agreeable to the Moral Law and do confirm and uphold it they bind for ever E. g. 'T is a judicial Law that adulterers and adulteresses should dye the death now this being agreeable to common equity and to the Law of Nature as appeares Gen. 38.24 where Iudah before this judicial Law was publish by Moses appoints Tamar his daughter-in-Law to be burnt for this sin and Nebuchadnezzar burnt Ahab and Zedekiah for it Ier. 29.21 22 23. So this judicial Law of putting Witches to death by the Magistrate is agreeable to common equity it helps to preserve all the Moral Prceepts which are broken by the Idolatry Murder and Malice of Wiches It preserves the Peace of the land and therefore is perpetual and must be executed in our dayes on such as practice witchcraft be they high or low white or black As witchcraft is the same for substance now as it was in the dayes of Moses viz. a Covenant with the Devil whereby men can do strange things above the Order of Nature so the punishment ought to be the same and Witches should now be more severely punisht because they sin against greater Light and Love against greater means and mercies Yea though they never hurt any person yet if it can be clearly proved that any person hath made a League with the Devil and is in confederacy with him this renouncing the Lord and contracting with his deadly enemy is a High Treason against God and deserves present and certain death It 's dangerous for Magistrates to suffer such to live whom God hath appointed unto death 1 Kings 20.42 True God is very tender of the life of man and therefore the Magistrate must be very cautious and make diligent inquiry to find out this great Mystery he must not judge by bare reports or doubtful signs but he must lay all the Testimonies Signs Circumstances and strong presumptions of witchcraft together and then judge of the Cause What a heap of words the Lord useth by way of Caution before a man be put to death Deut. 13.14 15. if a man were reported to be a seducer of others to Idolatry he must not presently be stoned though he were a son of Belial But they must enquire and make search and aske diligently and behold if it be truth and the thing be certain that such an abomination is wrought then they must surely die Levit. 20. ult this made Iosiah to destroy the witches of his time 2 King 23.14 yea Saul though a wicked man yet put witches to death 2 Sam. 28.3.9 though his heart was not sincere in what he did for he sought to them in his trouble and if the Magistrate will not cut off such yet God will Balaam the sorcerer fell by the sword Iosh. 13.22 Simon Magus fell and perisht miserably Yea Saul lost his life for seeking to such 1 Chron. 10.13 14. and so did Ahaziah 2 Kings 1.2 3 4. Levit. 20.6 2. Idolaters and enticers to Idolatry must die Exod. 22.20 Deut. 13.6.9 But witches are the grossest Idolaters they sacrifice to the Devil they pray to him trust in him and serve him who is Gods profest enemy 2. They entice others to forsake God Witches beget witches they usually seduce wives sons daughters friends c. and therefore they ought to die 3. Those that doe more especially bring Gods plagues on a Land and Nation ought more especially to be punisht But witches and wizards do more especially bring Gods Plagues on a Nation This brought the curse on the Canaanites and drove them out of their Land Deuteronomy 18.12 14 15. This was that crying sin which made the Lord to forsake his people Isay 2.6 Therefore thou hast forsaken thy people because they are South-sayers like the Philistims Manasses witch-craft and wickednesse brought plagues on the Jewes many years after So 2 Kings 17.17 18. I have insisted the more on this sin because witch-craft grows so rife in the Land Had it been practised in the midnight of Popery it had been no wonder to see such works of darkness in dayes of darkness Revelati●ns 18.23 but now in the glorious Sunshine of the Gospel and day of special grace to practice such abominable works of darknesse makes mens sinnes out of measure sinneful We look for Peace but God may say to us as Iehu did to Ioram what hast thou to doe with Peace since the whoredomes of thy Mother Iesabel and
mention not Vain-gloriously but Thankfully against both men and devils and beastly Barbarians I have contended for the Gospel constantly and couragiously My life is a race and I have run my course even to the very goal in despight of all opposition I have maintained and defended the truth of Christs Gospel inviolably according to my Christian profession and office Apostolical and now from henceforth I comfort my self with the expectation of that crown of immortality which upon the gracious promises of a righteous God is laid up for me and not for me onely but for all the faithful who love Christ and long for his coming Observations 1. 'T is lawful sometimes to speak of those gifts and graces which God hath given us that we may comfort and quicken others by our example But of this see the Observations on chapter 3.10 2. The sweetest songs of the Saints have been towards their last ends The sun shines sweetliest when it is setting the wine of the Spirit is strongest in the Saints when they are drawing to an end His motions are quickest when natural motions are slowest as we see in Moses his Swan-like Song Deut. 31. and 32. and 33. and David how sweetly doth he sing a little before he dies of Gods mercies to himselfe of the covenant of free Grace which God had made with him and his judgements on the sons of Belial 2 Samuel 23.1 to 8. Ioshua dying how sweetly doth he exhort the people to obedience by setting before them the mercies of God Ioshua 24. All Christs sayings are excellent but none so sweet and comfortable as those which he delivered a little before his death His last Sermon and Prayer how sweet are they Iohn 13.14 15 16 17. Iacob dying how sweetly doth he bless his sons Gen. 49. Steven dying prayes for their life who put him to death so did the Martyrs Doctor Prestons last Sermons were on the Attributes Doctor Sibbs his last Sermons on that comfortable Text Iohn 14.1 and Master Robert Boltons on the Joyes of Heaven Wicked men when they die they set in a Cloud and like the going out of a candle they leave a stench behind them as their bodies so their names rot and stink when they are dead and gone As wicked men grow worse and worse and their last dayes are their worst so good men grow better and better and their last dayes are their best having hut a little time to live in the world they are willing to leave it with a good savour Observation 3. 3. The sweet resent which a good Conscience hath of a well spent life is matter of singular comfort and rejoycing in death The Apostle was now near to death and what doth he rejoyce in why 't is in this that by the assistance of Christ he had fought a good sight and finisht his course and therefore he had hope as the righteous have even in death Proverbs 14.32 Elijah that had been zealous for the Lord of Hosts can with comfort desire the Lord to to take his soul 1 Kings 19.4.10 Hezekiah that great reformer when he heard that he must die yet comforteth himselfe with this that he had walked before God in sincerity and singleness of heart Isay 38.3 this upheld Iob in the middest of all his trials Iob 27.5 6. This comforted the Apostles when they were in deep distress 2 Corinthians 1.12 This is our rejoycing the Testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our conversation in the world Not that the conscience of our sincere walking is the Deserver but the Assurer of our salvation Well-doing may Evidence to us our Election though it cannot Merit it 2 Peter 1.10 Men of good consciences sit at a continnal Feast Proverbs 15.15 a good heart or a quiet merry heart as some Translations render it Is not may be or shall be hereafter but is already a reall Feast and hereafter shall be consummate 'T is not a dead Ignorant secure benummed erroneous seared Conscience but it is an inlightned inlivened renewed pure conscience which is purged from the guilt of sinne by the blood of Christ and delivered from the Tyranny of sinne by the Spirit of Christ This this onely is a good Conscience This puritie of Conscience breedeth Peace and Peace breedeth Joy and Spirituall Mirth this reconcileth those Translations which render it a quiet or merry heart which is true in respect of the effects and fruits of a good conscience Now this good conscience is called a Feast 1. Because at a Feast there is variety of dainties and dishes abundance of cates and delicates 't is not a Feast without variety and plenty and more then ordinary fare So at this Feast there is great variety 1. Here is Ioy this is most sutable and seasonable at a Feast not a carnal sensual external inferiour joy but a spiritual supernatural Holy Heavenly solid serious well-grounded durable Joy which none can take from us Iohn 16.22 They rejoyce in the Lord alwayes Psalm 33.1 Philip. 4.4 yea even in Tribulation Romans 5.3 Iames 1.2 and that with a superlative transcendent Joy hence called Ioy unspeakable and glorious 1 Peter 1.8 and compared to Joy in Harvest when the husbandman after long toyl reapeth the fruits of his labours Isay 9.3 yea it surpasseth that joy Psalm 4.7 it mortifieth our delights to these low things makes us to rejoyce in them as though we rejoyced not 1 Cor. 7.31 Lo this is the first dish which is served in at this Royal Feast Matthew 13.44 Acts 16.34 and therefore it is called by a special propriety the joy of Gods people Psal. 206.5 2. At this Feast here is Peace not a Fading unsetled transitory Peace such as wicked men have but 't is a well grounded and a well bottomed Peace 't is built on the Word and it's foundation is laid in Humiliation it had a storm before it came to this calme 2. 'T is not an ordinary but a transcendent Peace such as passes all human understanding Phil. 4.7 mans wit cannot sufficiently conceive it nor value it according to its worth To have Peace with men and Angels is a mercy but when the soul lieth groaning under the sight and sense of sinne then for the Spirit to speak Peace to us to assure us that God in Christ is reconciled to us this is a mercy of mercies David had this Peace and therefore he fears not though ten thousand should compass him about Psalm 3.6 Peter that was in great danger of his life yet having a good cause and a good conscience he sleeps in Peace Acts 12.6 3. 'T is an everlasting peace Christ hath bequeathed it to his for ever Iohn 14.27 Peace I leave with you my Peace I give you The Lord hath bound himself by Covenant to continue it it is more firme then the pillars of the Earth or the Poles of Heaven Isay 54.9 The mountains shall depart and the hills be removed but my
stead of confessing it he useth all means to hide it and so runs himselfe into five sinnes more 1. He useth unlawful means to father it on Vriah 2. He draweth him into that foul sin of Drunkenness 3. After he had made him Drunke he contriveth how to kill him 4. After he was dead he Fathers his death on God 5. He continued a considerable time in this sinne without Repentance All this David did when he changed his condition and came to be a King Hence we read of Davids first wayes which were his best when he was afflicted and low 2 Chronicles 17.3 Solomons great prosperity proved a snare to him 1 Kings 11.3 Ionah sleeps when in the Ship but Prayes in the Sea we have more cause to fear then to desire prosperity When the Moone is in the full it is nearest an Eclipse When Iesurun waxeth fat he kicks at God Deuteronomy 32.13 to 17. When men are fed to the full then they goe by Troups to Harlots Ieremiah 5.7 When once men are become Lords they care not for God Ieremiah 2.31.32 When Hazael is a King he is not the man he was his condition was changed and he changed with it 2 Kings 8.13 Honores mutant Mores How humble was Saul before he was a King and how insolent and cruel after he came to a Crowne Cataline whilest poore had many seeming vertues but when rich he put off all Modesty and Honesty Many like Ionathan march well till they come to this Honey They are good servants but ill Masters Like Ieroboam before he was a King we do not read of his wickednesse but after he makes the golden Calves 1 Kings 12.18 20. Innopem copia fecit Many had ben rich if they had not been rich they had been rich in Grace if they had not been rich in Goods The temptations accompanying prosperity are more dangerous as being most sutable to our corrupt nature and most subtile to deceive Mark 4.19 1. Then we are most prone to Pride Vzziah when strong then his heart is lifted us 2 Chron. 26.16 yea good Hezekiah had a taint of this 2 Chron. 32.25 So hard it is to have Honour without Tumour 2. Then we are most apt to forget God Hos. 13.6 and ready to say with those prosperous wicked men Depart from us Iob 21.13 14. when men have no changes they fear not God Psal. 55.19 but their Table becomes a snare to them Psal. 69.20 and their prosperity their ruine Prov. 1.32 most are like to Aesops Hen the more she was fed the worse she laid Hence the Lord gives so many cautions to his people that they should take heed of forgetting him in their prosperity Deut. 4.1 to 15. and 8.11 3. Then we are apt to trust in the Creature and so expose our selves to knocks and falls Psal. 30.6 7. and 20. 4. Then we are more prone to cruelty Psal. 73.6 7. Babylon that sits at ease like a Queen murders the Saints of God Revel 18.7 5. Then we are most prone to riot and security Luke 12.19 Prov. 30.9 God may speak to men in their prosperity and they will not hear Ier. 22.21 The Sun-shine of prosperity makes men put off all when the storms of adversity make us wrap our garments about us Hannibal and his army became effeminate by the spoyles of Capua which could not be conquered by their distresses in passing over the almost unpassable Alpes Superfluities in the body breed more dangerous diseases then defects A wicked poor man cannot do that mischief that a wicked rich man may Both extreams are very dangerous Hence Agur prayes Give me neither Poverty nor Riches Prov. 30.8 Great Riches are great Temptations as well as extream poverty As to be very rich and very good is rare so to be very poor and very good is rate When the Devill tempted our aSviour his first temptation was but the hungry Temptation Matth. 4. to turn stones into bread But the Devils last temptation was the sorest when he offered him all the Kingdomes of the world to worship him By the Order of the Devils temptations we may see which is the greatest for the Devill keeps his greatest Temptations till the last Fret not then at the prosperity of wicked men they are to be Pitied rather then Envied The sword of Gods wrath hangs over their heads ready every moment to drop upon them Their prosperity is Transient but their sorrows are permanent Fear not their power and pomp for they shall soon come dowm Psal. 37.1 2 c. and 49.16 their joy is but for a moment Iob 20.5 8. and 21.13 like the crackling of Thorns which make a great blaze but are soon extinct Psal. 58.3 4 5 6. Hence their pomp is compared to a Dream which quickly vanisheth Psal. 37.20.35 36. and 73.20 Isay 29.7 8. and 38.13 Like Ionah's gourd they suddenly rise and as suddenly wither Like Counters now they stand for pounds and anon for pence Neither let any man conclude of Gods favour because he enjoyeth temporal blessings and outward prosperity for all these be blessings and such as God hath promised with condition to the obedient Deut. 28. yet they are but blessings of the left hand and the wicked whom God hates oft-times have them in greatest abundance They prosper many times usque ad invidiam Psal. 73. they that do wickedly oft-times are exalted Mal. 3.15 The great Turk that fat Hog and great Dog of the world yet what rich possessions hath he and if the Lord do thus for his Dogs and be so bountiful to such as hate him oh what will he not do for his children who serve and obey him These outward things are oft given in judgement as God gave Israel a King in his wrath and Saul gave Michol to David for a snare so riches oft fit and fat men for the slaughter Those beasts which the Butcher intends to kill he puts them into fat pastures Iob 21.30 Let us then improve our prosperity to Gods praise let our Health Wealth Peace c. improve our Vertues and our Vices let us not fight against God with his own weapons but the more he exalts us the higher let us exalt his Name 'T was Jehosaphats great honour that when he had riches in abundance his heart was lifted up in the wayes of the Lord. 2 Chron. 17.6 He was made thereby more zealous and couragious in Gods cause and went forward with an high and Heroick spirit We should serve him with gladness and singleness of heart in the abundance of all things Deut. 28.47 This is the end why the Lord hath made so many promises of Temporall good things even to make us good Deut. 28.1 to 15. Prov. 3.16 17. and 22.4 Isay 1.19 and 30.23 Ier. 32.39 Hos. 2.21 22. The things are good in themselves and enable us to do good to others but 't is our corruption that turns them into poyson by abusing of
Saviour what in us lieth to all the world this is to do the work of an Evangelist viz. soundly and sincerely to publish the Gospel True Ministers must preach the Law but then it must be preparatory to the Gospel to convince them of their sin and misery and so fit them for mercy and after their conversion as a Rule for direction c. This work is so that Christ tells us it was the primary end of his coming into the world viz. to preach the glad tidings of the Gospel Isai. 61.2 3. Luke 4.18 'T is true the four Apostles which wrote the Gospel are properly or rather appropriately called Evangelists but in a large sense he 's an Evangelist that teacheth the Gospel Observation 8. Timothy was no Diocesan Bishop He was an Evangelist and so not fixt as Bishops were to any particular Congregation City of Diocess but he was to go up and down pro re natâ as occasion required and to preach the Gospel as other Evangelists did Objection In the Post-script 't is said that Timothy was Bishop of Ephesus Answer These Post-scripts are no part of Canonical Scripture but were added by the Scribes who wrot out the Epistles 2. It contradicts the Text which expresly calls him an Evangelist which was a distinct Officer from a Pastor or Bishop Ephes. 4.11 3. It may help to take up the Cavel of Sectaries who would have us live as Timothy and others did without Tythes or fit Maintenance when the case is not the same For 1. They were not tyed to any particular charge as we are 2. The Magistrate was an Heathen and an Enemy 3. They had all things common and they sold all and brought the money to the Apostles 4. The Apostles had their learning by inspiration and they could work miracles and so could not want maintenance Observation 9. Make full proof of thy Ministry Observe Ministers must fully and faithfully discharge all the duties of their callings They must so behave themselves in their office that they may be charged justly with nothing Thus Barnabas and Saul fulfilled their Ministry Acts 12. ult and 14.26 so did Paul 2 Cor. 4.1 2. Archippus Colos. 4.17 must not do his duty to halves but he must perform it in every respect as it ought to be done and accomplish all the parts of his Ministry strengthning the weak comforting the afflicted raising the lapsed reproving the wicked convincing the erronious and confirming the strong adorning our pure doctrine with a pure conversation This is to fulfil our Ministry Verse 6. OBSERVATIONS 1. When God takes away faithful and laborious Ministers those that survive them must stand up in their stead supply their loss and be so much the more active careful and vigilant in the discharge of their office When Paul dyes then Timothy must double his diligence If Eliah be taken away Elisha must pray for a double portion of his spirit to carry on the work Eleazer succeeds Aaron Haggai and Zachary supply th● loss of Daniel and Christ ariseth in Iohn Baptists stead Observation 2. 2. The godly by a spiritual instinct and sagacity foresee their ends so did Iacob Gen. 48.21 and Ioshua 23.14 and Christ Iohn 17.2 and Peter 2.14 They alwayes watch and wait for their Masters coming Their acts diseases and disquietments which they meet withall from the world are as so many petty deaths unto them A man that dwells in an old crazy house where the walls fall down the foundation sinks the pillars bend and the whole building craks concludes such a house cannot long stand As for the wicked they are insensible and secure and though gray hairs which are signes of old age and death approaching be here and there upon them yet they know it not Hos. 7.9 Observation 3. 3. Death is not dreadful to good men The Apostle speaks of it here not by way of Lamentation but of Exultation and in an holy triumph tells us that he had fought a good fight and finisht his course and now the time of his departure was at hand when he should receive a crown of glory Death to him was but a departing from one room to another from a lower room to an higher from earth to Heaven from troubles to rest from mortality to immortality They are long since dead to the world and so can part with it more easily Paul died daily he was sending more and more of his heart out of the world so that by that time he came to dye he was fully weaned from the world and desirous to be gone Phil. 1.23 When Moses had finisht his course God bids him go up and dye that 's all Deut. 32.49 50. Death which to wicked men is the King of terrours and makes them fear and tremble Iob 18.14 That to a good man is the King of comforts and like the Valley of Achor a door of hope In an holy security at death and destruction they can laugh Iob 5.21 22. The wicked look on death as a dreadful dismal thing but Gods people looking on it through the Spectacles of the Gospel s●e it to be a conquered enemy having its sting taken out Hos. 13.15 so that what Agag said vainly and vauntingly Christian may speak truly and seriously The bitterness of death is past 1 Sam. 15.32 As Christ said of Lazarus this sickness is not to death but unto life so may we now say this death is not unto death but unto life So that now the Saints can embrace it go forth to meet it and bid it welcome They know 't is but winking and they are presently in Heaven This made the Martyrs go as cheerfully to their Stakes as others do to a Feast or Marriage when Basils enemies threatned to kill him if he would not turn he boldy answered Oh that I might dye for the truth Hilarion chides himself for his backwardness why dost thou fear Oh my Soul to dye thou hast served thy God these seventy years and art thou now afraid to dye Egredere anima egredere Even Seneca makes it the property of a wise man to desire death We must not judge of death or of any other thing as Sin Riches Afflictions c. as the world judgeth of them but as Scripture speaks Now the Spirit of God in Scripture cloaths death with very lovely and pleasing expressions 1. It calls it a going to our Fathers Gen. 15.15 A going to the Spirits of just men made perfect Heb. 12. 23. A going to God to Christ and to the blessed Angels Phil. 1.23 2. It is called an Exaltation or lifting up Iohn 3.14 3. A sowing which will rise in glory 1 Cor. 15.43 4. An undressing and uncloathing of our selves a putting off our rags that we may put on immortal Robes 2 Cor. 5.2 2 Peter 1.14 5. A going to sleep when men are wearied with labour they desire their beds The grave is a bed of rest Isay 57.2 Iob 3.13 Dan. 12.2 Rev. 14.13
and death is but a long sleep till the Resurrection Iohn 11.11 Acts 13.36 Let Atheists and Epicurean worldlings who have their portion onely in this life fear death because it puts an end to all their pleasures and hopes Iob 11. ult Hence Lewis the Eleventh King of France a bloody persecutor commanded his servants in the time of his sickness that they should never once name that bitter word death in his eares But Christ hath died to free his people from this slavish fear of death Heb. 2.15 by his death he hath sweetned our death unto us and changed the nature of it and hath made that which was sometimes a curse now to be a blessing of a foe he hath made it a friend of a poyson a medicine and of a punishment an advancement He lay in the grave to sweeten and season our graves for us so that now our flesh may rest in hope Psal. 16.9 Proverbs 14.32 Observation 4. 4. The soul of man is immortal Death is not an Annihilation but a Migration of the soul from the body for a time As soon as ever the soul departeth from the body it is presently in blisse Revelations 14.13 they are not onely blest at the day of judgement but also in the intermission The soul doth not sleep or perish but the souls of the Saints go to a better place and to better company viz. to Christ and to the spirits of just men made perfect Iosiah was gathred to his father in peace 1. to the spirits of his fathers who enjoyed peace for in respect of his Body he was slain in battle The soul never dieth but subsisteth still even when it goeth out of the body it returneth to God that gave it Eccles. 12.7 Hence Paul desires to be dissolved why so that he might be with Christ Philippians 1.23 and desires to be loosed from the body that he might be present with the Lord 2 Cor. 5.8 Christ telleth the thief on the Crosse this day shalt thou be with me in Paradice Luke 23.43 Steven when stoned cries Lord Iesus receive my spirit Acts 7.59 Christ hath prepared immortal mansions for it Iohn 14.2 and what should mortal souls do in ●mmortal dwellings and why is the Devil so serviceable why doth he make Covenants and Compacts with wicked men for their souls yea and why doth he offer the world in exchange for a soul if it be but a mortal perishing thing To what end are all those promises of Eternal life which are made to those that deny themselves if in this life onely they had hope Then all the Threatnings of Eternal death and all those sorrowes which the Scripture affirmeth shall light on the wicked would be false for here they have mirth ease and pleasure and if they had no punishment hereafter where were the Truth of Gods threatnings and where his Justice The Scripture is clear that the pleasures of good men and the pains of bad men are eternall then it must needs follow that the souls of men which are the Subjects of these pains and pleasures cannot be mortal But here our Mortalists Object 1. Objection If the soul of man be ex Traduce as some affirme then it is mortall for Omne generabile est corruptibile Answer The soul cometh not ex Traduce by Propagation from our Parents as the souls of Beasts which come è potentia materiae but the soul is created and infused by God and not propagated as appeareth Gen. 2 7. Eccles. 12.7 Zach. 12.1 See Doctor Reynolds on the Passions cap. 32. p. 392. Piscator his Annot. on Gen. 2.7 Baronius de Origine animae Exercit. 2. art 3. 2. Objection The dead are said to sleep and to perish Psalm 6.5 and 104.29 Isay 38.18 and 57.1 Job 14.7.10 Answer This is spoken in respect of their bodies not of their souls The dead do not praise thee saith David viz. not in the land of the living on earth but in Heaven they sing Hallelujahs Rev. 5.9 A tree when it is cut down may sprout again saith Iob but man dieth and giveth up the Ghost and where is he This will not help the sleepy Sadduces of our times for tho Physically and by the course of Nature man cannot revive again yet Hyperphysically and by a supernatural Almighty power he shall arise So that Where is is to be restrained to where is he in the world look for him in City or Countrey at home or abroad he 's not to be found Man gives up the Ghost and where is he with all his riches honours plots and purposes 3. Objection Eccles. 3.19.20 21. As the beast dieth so dieth man they have all one breath Answer 1. Solomon here as oft elsewhere in this Booke doth bring in the Atheist deriding the immortality of the soul he speaketh the opinion of other men and not his own Solomons own judgement you may see Eccles. 12.7 2. Take it in the Letter and then Solomon speaketh not of the soul of man but of animal and vital breath which is common to both he speaketh of mans mere natural condition else in respect of mans future condition his body shall rise again and come to judgement So that here is no comparison between the soul of man and that of beasts but between the death of the one and of the other q. d. both are liable to death pains and diseases 4. Objection Matth. 8.22 and 10.28 Ephes. 2.1 The soul is said to die Answer The soul is not said to die in respect of Existence and being but relatively in respect of Gods grace and favour 'T is a separation of the soul from God who is the fountain of life and is a living death and a ceasing not to be but to be happy 5. Objection 1 Tim. 1.17 and 6.16 God onely is said to have immortality How then are mens souls immortal Answer The answer is easie Immortality is twofold 1. Essential Absolute Natural and Independant and so God onely is immortal à parte antè from all Eternity he 's the onely Author and continuer of it 2. Derivative and by Donation communicated to man and so our souls are immortal and our bodies though subject to corruption yet by Divine Ordination shall be immortal after the Resurrection Wo then to those Atheistical Mortalists and Libertines which have sinned away conscience and have led loose lives and now are fallen to loose opinions Open but this gap and farewell Lawes Civility Religion and all that is good Grant but this and farewell all noble actions and all spiritual comforts then Christ died the Apostles laboured and the Martyrs suffered in vain If this Doctrine were true then all our Faith our Hope our Praying Preaching Fasting self-denial mortification sowing in tears and spiritual combats would be in vain and we should be in a worse condition then the beasts that perish If this were true then why did Abraham forsake all Ioseph forbeare his Mistress Moses refuse the pleasures of Pharaohs
Court and the Martyrs wander up and down in Sheep-kins and Goat-skins being destitute afflicted tormented Heb. 11. Grant but this and then Cain need not fear to kill his brother Saul to persecute the Church Herod to kill the Saints Who will study to keep Gods Commandements or make any conscience of his wayes As for ourselves let us abhor that desperate Opinion which openeth the flood-gates to all villanies and abominations The broachers and obstinate defenders of such Tenents should die without mercy Zach. 13.3 And if the murderers of mens bodies must die for it then such murderers should die some remarkable death for as there are no mercies like soul mercies so there are no murders like these 2. The Immortality of our souls should make us have a special care of them we should see to them diligently Deuteronomy 4.9 Nature teacheth us to look to our bodies but grace to our souls The soul is the man and if that be lost all is lost but if you have a care of your souls God will have a care of your bodies If the Mid-wives fear the Lord he will provide them houses Exodus 1.21 If Solomon seek soul mercies God will cast in Temporal blessings into the bargain 1 Kings 3.12 There are many sicknesses now abroad the way to remove them is to cleave to the Lord and serve him with all our souls then he hath promised to bless our Land and to take all sickness from amongst us Exodus 23.25 Solomon telleth us that the soul is a precious thing Proverbs 6.26 and a wiser then Solomon hath told us that One soul is more worth then all the ●orld Matthew 16.26 Ten thousand worlds could not ransome one soul. Nothing but the precious blood of Christ who was God and Man could do it 1 Pet. 1.19 We see how careful men be for their bodies to feed them when hungry cloath them when naked Physick them when sick and arm them against dangers but the soul the immortal soul lieth starved naked sick and unarmed most with Martha carke and care for the body but few with Mary see to the better part We see how highly men prize their Natural Lives Skinn for skinn and all that they have they will give for them Iob 2.4 Offer a man all the World for his life and he can readily answer what will this profit me when I am dead but offer the same man a little gain honor pleasure for his soul and he 'l part with that for it Esau sold his soul for a mess of pottage Iudas his for 30. pieces of silver the Prodigal his for husks and the worldling for meer vanity drowns his soul in perdition 1 Tim. 6.9 Let us from time to come set a higher price on our souls let us so pray so hear so live as those that believe that our soules are immortal 'T is true we must have a moderate care of our bodies 1 Timothy 5.23 but the welfare of our soules must be chiefly regarded Matth. 6.33 Iohn 6.27 'T was an high commendation of Gajus when the Apostle wisheth he might be in health and prosper even as his Soul prospred 3 Iohn 1.2 I see more in Mr. Calamies Sermon at R. Bolto●s Funeral and Mr. Ambrose his Prima 2 P. p. 61. c. See 20. Reas. for the Souls Immortality in Mr. Baxters Saints Rest. P. 2. c. 10. S. 1. p. 298. Norton Orthodox Evangel c. 15. D. Arrowsmith Tactica S. l. 3. c. 3. S. 12. Prideaux Fascicul p. 315. Calvin de Psychopannychia inter Opuscula contra Libertinos cap. 22. Observation 5. 5. The death of the Martyrs is a most pleasing Sacrifice to God The obedient life and death of all Gods Saints is very pleasing to him Psal. 116.15 but the death of Martyrs who do actually seal to his truth with their dearest blood is a most deligthful sacrifice to him How vilely soever the world esteems of their sufferings yet they are precious in Gods eye and their blood shall pay for it who have made themselves drunk with the blood of his Saints Isay 63.13 Rev. 17.6 When ever therefore the Lord shall call for our lives especially by way of Martyrdom we should cheerfully offer them up in sacrifice to God rejoicing that we have a life or any thing of worth to loose for him We should be holily prodigal of our lives in Gods cause so were the Martyrs and so was Paul he did not value his life when he came to part with it in this kind Acts 20.24 Neither should we mourn inordinately moderately we may as they did for Steven Acts 8.2 for such as dye in the cause of Christ nor yet hinder our Relations in such resolutions but say The will of the Lord be done rejoicing that we have any children or friends that are worthy of so great an honour Observation 6. 6. The death of the Martyrs doth confirm the truth The Church is Gods garden and t is watered and enriched by the blood of Martyrs By sealing the truth with their blood and not loving their lives unto the death the weak are strengthened and the strong confirmed and though they be dead yet their Testimony speaks Heb. 12.4 they conquer even when they seem to be conquered and Chri●● is magnified by their death as well as by their life Phil. 1.20 Caut. Not that the sufferings or constancy of the Martyrs is the foundation of our Faith but God hath ordained it as a means to strengthen it VERSE 7 8. I have fought a good fight I have finisht my course I have kept the Faith V. 7. Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of Righteousness which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall give me at that day and not to me onely but unto them also that love his appearing THE Apostle being come to the end of his race he looks about him he looks downward backward upward 1. He looks downward into the grave v. 6. whither he was going and there he sees comfort his death was a pleasing sacrifice to God and a friend to conveigh him to his fathers house 2. He looks backward and views his well-spent life with joy and comfort and in an Holy gloriation breaks forth I have fought the good fight c. A Soul that hath made its peace with God may with comfort and confidence look death in the face and say with good old Simeon Lord now let thy servant depart in peace 3. He looks upward and there he sees Heaven prepared for him v. 8. So that in these two verses we have Pauls work and Pauls wages we see what he did for God and what he expected from God Objct. But doth not this savour of vain-glory and Spiritual Pride Answer Not at all for the Apostle speaks not this Proudly or Thrasonically as if he had merited any thing at the hand of God for he testifieth against this in all his writings especially in Rom. 4. and Phil. 3. and tells us
saddest and sorest tentation of all the rest since the Messiah the Saviour of the world was to come of Isaak if he were killed the safety and salvation of the world seemed to perish with him 5. Whom thou lovest To offer up an Ismael or a son which we hate is not so much but to offer up such a son as was worthy to be beloved for his Piety and Obedience was a great trial 6. He himself must take him he must seek no other Executioner but with his own hands must he sacrifice him 7. When must he take him Now. Take now thy son he must take him presently without deliberation or delay God allowes him not an hour or a day to confer with any or to comfort his distracted heart 8. He must go to Mount Moriah three days journy so long his soul must be kept in suspence 9. When he comes there he must slay him he must cut his throat rip up his bowels and burn his Quarters to ashes on the Altar so they did by burnt offerings Levit. 1.6 8 9. 10. This must not be done secretly but he must be sacri●iced on a Mount in the fight of all the world Thus strong believers must look for strong Temptations God loves to try us in our most dear and delightful things which our hearts most affect that it may appear which hath most of our hearts God or they If any would see more let him peruse those elaborate large Annot. on Gen. 22.2 3. Mr. Herles Ser. on Gen. 22.2 3 c. D. George Downam's Ser. on the same Text and Doctor Maxey Venning's Milk and Honey 2. Part. p. 88. Sect. 257. Sibelius 1. Tom. p. 1. c. 6. Consider the shortnesse and uncertainty of our dayes is a notable spur to speedy Repentance for as presumption of Long life doth harden men so Realizing of death and looking on it as present doth quicken and awaken men now our life in Scripture is compared to a span that is soon measured Psal. 39.5 to a Tale that is soon told Psal. 90.9 to a Vapour that quickly vanisheth Iames 4.14 like a flower that soon fades Isay 40.6 7 8. Iob 14 2. Psal. 102.11 and 103.15 Iames 1.10 1 Pet. 1.24 Like a Post or a Weavers shuttle that fly speedily Iob 7.6 and 9.25 We are obnoxious to above 300. diseases and to excessive Passions of joy sorrow fear envie c. which have killed many besides thousands of Casualties a Tile from a house may kill thee Iudg. 9.53 a Beast may slay thee a Haire a Fly a Raisin stone may choke thee as it hath done others There 's death in our Pots Cups Beds Boards c. Death borders on our Birth and our Cradle stands in our grave we lament the losse of our Parents how soon shall our friends bewaile ours and as our life is short so 't is Vncertain no man knowes when where or how he shall dye I am old saith Isaak and know not the day of my death Gen. 27.3 God in his wisdom hath hid from us our last day that we might watch every day 7. The seasons of Grace are short time it selfe is short but opportunity is much shorter Every day in the year is not a fair day and every day in the week is not a Market day Grace is not every dayes offer and therefore we should walk in the light whilest we have the light Iohn 12.35 36. as the day is ordained for men to work in so is the day of Grace wherein we must store our selves against the winter of afflictiou 'T is our harvest time wherein we must double our diligence Prov. 10.5 In this we may learn wisdome from the men of the world The Smith strikes whilest his iron is hot The Husband-man makes hay whilest the Sunne shines The Marriner observes his Wind and Tide the Lawyer his Termes the Chapman his Faires and Markets and the Gardiner his Seasons Yea shall the Stork the Crane and the Swallow know the time of their coming and shall not we know the day of our Visitation Ier. 8.7 Doth the Bee lose no faire day and doth the Ant in Summer provide for Winter Prov. 6.8 and shall not we in the Summer of youth provide for the Winter of old age 8. Shall the Devill observe his seasons to do mischiefe Matth. 13.25 and Thieves Hereticks and Harlots take their opportunities to act their Villanies Iob 24.15 Prov. 7.9 Gen. 39.11 Mark 6.21 and shall not we observe our seasons to do good 9. In these Seasons of Grace the Lord is very ready and willing to be found of us witnesse those Pathetical expressions Psal. 81.13 14. Ier. 4.14 and 13. ult Ezek. 18.31 he knocks at the dores of our hearts by his spirit by his word by mercies and menaces if by any means he may prevaile with us Rev. 3.20 Hence he 's said to wait that he may be gracious to stretch forth his hands all the day long to gather us as a Hen doth her chickens and and promiseth that we shall not lose our labours but that they who seek him early and with their whole hearts shall find him Deut. 4.29 2 Chron. 15.15 Prov. 8.17 Ier. 29.13 10. Neglecting the day of our Visitation increaseth wrath and provokes the Lord to cut off young persons in the flower of their dayes If a man should every day be adding sticks to the fire and Oyle to the flame it must needs make the fire very terrible at last Now the longer the fire burns the harder 't is to quench it the further the Lord fetcheth his arm the heavier will the blow come Such Treasure up wrath against the day of wrath Iob 36.13 Psal. 7.11 12. Rom. 2.5 11. God takes special notice of peoples delayes and sets down every Minute that they abide in their sin and abuse his Patience hence he cryes Proverbs 1.22 How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity and Psal. 4.2 O ye sons of men How long will ye love vanity and denounceth a woe against Ierusalem for her dallying and delaying Ier. 13. ult Woe unto thee O Jerusalem wilt thou not be made clean when shall it once be After how many woings and warnings after how many Invitations and Exhortations wilt thou still continue Impenitent and unreformed how long wilt thou deferre thy Returning to me when wilt thou be cleansed from thy old abomination thou talkest of turning and makest some offer but when wilt thou turn in earnest what not after so many yeares purifying Sermons not after so many melting mercies not after so many purgeing judgements not after so many dayes of Humiliation Oh when will it once be They were wilfully impenitent God doth not say Canst thou not but wilt thou not be made clean many say they cannot leave their drunkennesse swearing c. yet for gain or for fear in some companies they can forbear So that the will is worse then the
and resolute we dis-hearten them in their attempts and dismay that great Belzebub the Prince of these Flies Let therefore this salt season all our services Christ calls for such Worshipps Matth. 22.37 38 39. Christianity is a work of activity we must ask seek knock strive wrastle run and work out our salvation with the greatest accuratness care and diligence Philip. 2.12 We must not rest content with the beginnings of grace but we must work it up and increase with the increasings of God Colos. 2.19 We must be filled with the Spirit and with the fire of zeal we must have fiery-heads and fiery-hearts fiery words and fiery works that what in us lyeth we may set the whole world on fire with the love of Christ. If we be to hear the Word we should be swift to hear and gladly embrace the opportunity flying as the clouds and flocking as the Doves to their windows When we come to the Sacrament we must earnestly desire it as Christ did Luke 22.15 With a desire have I desired to eat this Passover with you i. I have earnestly and heartily desired it Hezekiah kept the Passover with joy 2 Chron. 30. If we be called to Covenant with God we must do it with joy and with all our hearts as Asa and the people did 2 Chron. 15.12 15. If we be to Pray it must be fervent operative energetical praying Iames 5.16 We must strive in our prayers Rom. 15.30 and stir up our selves that we may lay hold on God Cant. 3.4 Isai. 27.5 and 647. That 's the way to have peace with him When we see a man angry those that are friends lay hold on him to prevent a danger so when we see God angry with his People we should compass God about like an Army one lay hold on him and another lay hold on him till he be pacified with his people But then we must be holy men else if a Rebel or Traitor should come to the Princes Chamber and lay hold on him it would be accounted Treason before we come to reason with God we must wash our selves and then come and welcome Isai. 1.16 17 18. We must get a spiritual induration and holy impudency let God do what he will with us let him oppose delay deny us yet we will not let him go till he bless us As Pharaoh had a cursed Induration and a plerophory of hardness so that no plagues could work on him so we should get a blessed induration and fulness of assurance resolving though God should crush and kill us yet that we will trust in him Iob 13.15 And when we find our spirits flat then cry because thou canst not cry and be in an agony because thou canst not be agonized Formality in duty is the bane of duty and Religion There 's little difference between a careless performance of duties and a total omission of them since men loose both wayes Let us then rouse up our selves remembring that the more zealous any are here the more glorious they shall be hereafter Let us all in our several callings be active for God Let Magistrates and Rulers rule for him as Nehemiah did Let them not bear the sword in vain nor tolerate such things as are intolerable There 's no Precept or President in the whole Book of God for any Toleration of one Error much less of all but promises that God will give us one heart and one way If Magistrates suffer Gods Name to be despised he 'l make them to be despised 1 Sam. 2.30 Ahab lost his life for not punishing blasphemous Benhadad with death 1 Kings 20.42 I Plead not for Cruelty but Iustice as Magistrates must be clement and merciful when occasion requires so they must be just sharp against incorrigible incurable offenders If Abishai out of love to David would have slain Shim●i who reviled him saying Why should this dead dog curse my Lord the King let me goe to take off his head 2 Sam. 16.9 and shall the Magistrate be silent when the King of Kings is blasphemed and reviled to his face if men will still bear with such yet God will not Objection If we punish them we shall loose a partie Answer Such a partie as I now speak against are better lost then found They cannot long prosper with them who ever hath them But by punishing such we shall make God our friend who hath promised to defend those that defend his Truth We have a notable instance in the City of Geneva which from the beginning of the Reformation to this day have punished Sectaries and Hereticks and yet God hath kept them safe and sound Many create to themselves needless fears 2. Governours of Families should be zealous against sin in all their Relations hate it in father mother wife children Asa punisheth his own mother for her idolatry 2 Chronicles 15.16 The Lord taketh notice what every man doth in his Family he observes who prayes who reads who supresseth sin in his Family who acts for him and who for themselves Mal. 3.16 Our zeal is the best thing we have and therefore to be given to God who is the best of beings But yet there is nothing that the world so much opposeth as zeal the Devil and his Agents can bear with any man save the zealous man The Hypocrite Formalist Civilian Temporizer c. All pass through the world with praise 'T is onely these Zelots that oppose the sins of the time which are counted the troublers of the places where they come though they be never so peaceable To discourage men from this course the world hath raised many Cavils 1. Objection I am but one and what good will my zeal doe Answer One zealous man may yea and hath done much good to a whole Land One Phinees by executing Justice turned away Gods wrath from all Israel Numbers 25.6 7 11. One faithful Hushai by his Counsel spoyled Achitophels policy 1 Samuel 17.14 One poor man saved a Citie Eccles. 9.15 and the Prayers of One righteous man availeth much Iames 5.16 When Gods judgements were falling on Ierusalem he sought but for a man that he might spare it Ieremiah 5.2 A carnal man dares not stir without company especially the company of great ones they enquire whether any of the Rulers and learned Pharisees have gone that way Iohn 7.47 Jades will not go unless some lead them the way and Cowards stand still to see who will go first but a gracious soul is content to fit alone Lam. 3.28 and go alone in the way to Heaven 1 Kings 19.10 He stayes not for company but if the cause be good rather then it shall fall he will endeavour to uphold it himself Hester will venture all for Gods people and if she must perish she will perish in this cause Let nothing discourage you if God have called thee to a good work and none will joyne with thee in it yet remember he that called thee alone will bless
many years after he is dead and gone He tells what Iosiah will do before he is born and it came to pass 1 Kings 13.2 and 2.22 17. What is to be done a thousand years hence is as present to him as a thousand years that are past which are but as yesterday Psal. 90.4 His knowledge is like himself infinite he perfectly knows all things past present and to come nothing is hid from him Heb. 4.13 He calls the things that are not as if they were Rom. 4.17 and knows us before we had a being Ier. 1.5 This is Gods prerogative royal whereby he is distinguished from all false Gods Isai. 41.23 1. He knows all things to come in himself as able and willing to have them done if good or else to suffer the doing of them being evil and to order them to his own ends 2. He sees them in their causes by which they shall be done 3. He knows them in themselves altogether not successively as we do by reasoning and searching out the causes but by one eternal act of understanding Acts 15.18 This will further appear 1. If we consider how he made all things and therefore he must needs know all things As an Artist that made an Instrument knows all the secrets of it God that hath made the eye must needs see and the heart must needs know what is in it Psal. 94.11 He knows all by way of ca●sality 2. He rules and governs all things and therefore must needs know all things 3. He 's the righteous Judge of all the world yea he 's both Judge and Witness Mal. 3.5 which he could not be if he did not know the thoughts words and works of men 1. This reproves these Atheistical Antinomians which say God sees not the sins of his people when he sees them more perfectly then our selves see them and sets even our secret sins before him Psal. 90.8 He saw David's adultery and Solomons idolatry and punisht them for it He saw the sins and his Churches and reproves them for them Rev. 2 and 3. 2. This must teach us to walk sincerely with our God who sees even our secret vices as well as our duties He sets a print on our heels and spies out all our paths Iob 13.17 He knows our thoughts before we think them our words before we speak them and our works before we do them Psalm 139.2 to 16. He knows more by us then we know by our selves we know but in part but God knows us thoroughly and if our consciences do accuse us of some things yet he is greater then our consciences and knoweth all things 1 Iohn 3.20 3. It may serve to convince us of the truth of the Scriptures and that they are the very Word of God in that all its Predictions have been fulfilled See B. Vshers Body of Divin p. 9. and M. Baxter's Saints Rest. p. 2. c. 6. Sect. 1. p. 250. 4. It serves for singular comfort to the Godly and that many wayes 1. In point of weakness it may be thou canst not pray nor do as thou desirest yea but the Lord knows onr desires before hand and hath promised to answer them Neh. 2.4 Psal. 10.17 he knows the intents and bents of our hearts and will deal with us accordingly 1 Cor. 4.5 2. It may comfort us in all our troubles that our God knows them before they come upon us When we know not how to deliver our selves yet he doth 2 Pet. 2.9 And therefore to comfort his Churches he tells them more then once that he knows their sufferings Rev. 2.2 3 9 13. and the plots of their malicious enemies Ier. 18.32 Exod. 3.9 2 Chron. 16.9 He knows thy strength and thy parts and will not suffer thee to be tempted above what thou art able to bear 1 Cor. 20.13.3 It may comfort us in case of reproach cruel witnesses may rise up against thee and lay to thy charge things which thou knowest not I but the Lord knows thy innocency and will one day clear it before all the world this comforted Iob 16.19 4. It may comfort us against Apostasy many good souls fear they shall never persevere I but the Lord knows who are his 2 Tim. 2.19 and he 'l not lose one of his Iohn 10.27 28 29. and 17.12 5. It may comfort us against inordinate cares he 's an Heavenly Father that knows our wants and out of the riches of his goodness will supply them Math. 6.30 32. 6. It may comfort us against the ingratitude of the world here oft-times the more we do for men the less they do for us the more we love the less are we beloved But our comfort is that our God who seeth in secret he will one day reward us openly Matth. 6.6 Observat. 2. The more perfidious the world is and the more false Teachers abound the more careful must Christs Ministers be to oppose them by preaching sound Doctrine The badness of the Times approaching must make us to redeem the present season The Sun will not alwayes shine tempests will arise aud the night will come when no man can work Besides the affections of people are mutable they that at first seem to love the Gospel after a time will loath it they that to day are ready to adore us as Gods to morrow are ready to stone us as Devils Acts 14.12 13 18 19. Those that reverence Moses to day to morrow are murmuring against him Exod. 14. ult and 15.14 So unconstant are the affections of this ungrateful world to Gods faithful messengers especially when they apply sound Doctrine to their soars Observation 3. Saving Doctrine is sound Doctrine 'T is pure and sound in it self and 't is sound effectively it cures and heales the soul which is sick of sin and brings it to salvation hence it 's said to save the soul James 1.21 and it 's called healthful and wholesom words 1 Tim. 1.20 and 6.3 and 2.1.13 Titus 1.9 and 2.1 Observation 4. Vnsound persons cannot endure sound Doctrine 'T is salt which searcheth mens sores and puts them to pain 'T is light which these soar eyes cannot endure nor these Thieves abide They do evil and therefore they hate the light Iohn 3.20 They are sick of a Noli me tangere and had rather perish in their sins then part with them They imprison the Truth in unrighteousness Rom. 1.18 There is in them not onely a f●rmido but a detestatio lucis they do not onely fear but hate the light They cannot endure to have the Law preacht their consciences searcht nor their sins discovered The light to them is as the shadow of death as Iob 24.17 speaks in another case This made Ahab to hate plain-dealing Micajah 1 Kings 22.8 and Asa to imprison the Prophet 2 Chron. 16.7 20. and Herod I●hn the Baptist. So Ier. 11.21 Amos 7.12 Micah 2.6 Light is an unwelcom guest to evil consciences Wholesom instructions will not down with them they must have
the body that I may be presently with Christ in Heaven Or as the word will bear I desire to depart this life and to dislodge as those that quit their Innes to further their travel homeward or such as goe to Sea and set sail for another Countrey who weigh Anchor and are gone So saith the Apostle I am here as an exile and like as a stranger I desire to be freed from this banishment and to set sail for Heaven Thus the Word is often used for a departing Luke 8.38 and going home Luke 9.31 and 12.36 Matthew 14.23 Observations Observation 1. 1. But watch thou The Apostasie and loosenesse of the times we live in must make us the more watchful Their falls must be our fears their Levity must quicken us to Constancy and their negligence must quicken our diligence in keeping the Watch of the Lord. Like Salmons we must swimme against the streame of corrupt times and keep our selves pure not onely from the grosse Blottes but even from the Spottes of the Age wee live in Good men in evill dayes are compelled to be Singular in many things as Lot in Sodome and Iohn in the Land of Vz but they never affect singularity affectation of singularity argues pride Observation 2. Good men desire the Churches good after their departure Paul is dying yet he commands Timothy to improve his talents for the Churches good when himself was dead Moses before he dies prayes the Lord to set up a fit Ruler in steed Numbers 27.16 17. Elisha wept for the mischief that Haza●l would doe to Gods people when he was gone So did Isai 22.4 5. when he saw a day of trouble coming on the Church though himself lived not to see it yet he wept bitterly David set his son upon his Throne before he died and gave him a strict charge to maintain the truth Peter 2.1 15. endeavoured to keep the truths he had taught in remembrance after his death Christ prayes for the welfare of the Church after his departure Iohn 17. Wicked men care not what becomes of the world when they are dead and gone let heaven and earth come together and all be in confusion they care not But good men have publick spirits Observation 3. As all persons so Ministers especially must watch The Devil hath a special spight at them he commands his agents as the King of Aram did his followers to fight neither with small nor great but against the King of Israel so he bends all his strength against the Ministers of Israel What Luther said of Magistrates is most true of faithful Ministers They are the common Buts which the Devil and his Factors shoot at We are watch-men by office and so are bound to the duty by a double tye 1. As Christians Mark 13. ult What I say unto one I say unto all watch Christs Disciples must not be secure Luke 21.34 The better the man the more watchful must he be The Pyrat sets on the laden Ship and the Thief upon the wealthiest Traveller But we must watch as Pastors too we must stand upon our watch-tower to descry dangers and discover Wolves that would destroy the Flock 2. We must watch at all times 1. In prosperity as Pigeons when they fare best fear most Then we are most apt to forget God Hence Iob 3.25 in his highest prosperity foresaw a storm and prepared for it Christ would have his to watch and pray alwayes Luke 21.36.2 Watch in adversity the Devil is busie then in laying snares as the Fowler doth for Birds in frosty weather When we be in tentations then watch and pray that you be not overcome by them Matth. 26.41 3. In all places in publick and private at home and abroad the world is full of snares Art solitary yet watch for then Christ was tempted Matth. 4.1 Goest thou to Markets fairs and publick meetings thou art encompast with dangers Ibi latet imò patet anguis in herba 4. Watch in all things so runs the Text. Watch unto prayer take the fittest opportunity for that duty Ephes. 6.18 1 Pet. 4.7.2 Watch in prayer against destractions sleep c. Colos. 4.2 So watch unto hearing take all opportunities to hear Iames 1.19 Wait on wisedoms posts Pro. 8.34.2 Watch in hearing take heed how ye hear Luke 8.18 5. Watch against all sins We carry about us a proness to all sin Even the best men have the root of the basest sins in their bosoms as we see in Lot Noah David Solomon How fouly did they fall when they did but a little neglect the watch of the Lord especially we must watch 1. Against the sins of our natures and constitutions Psal. 18.23 2. Against the sins of our particular callings There are several sins which accompany several callings Ministers are prone to idleness and flattery Magistrates to covetousness and bribery Trades-man to consenage and forgery c. Watch against the sins of the Nation which thou livest in The sins of our age are Atheism Formality Hypocrisie Pride and Impenitency 6. Watch over all thy senses stop thine ears make a covenant with thine eyes Iob 31.1 Set a watch before thy mouth The whole soul is out of order and therefore we must set a Guard upon all its faculties especially upon the understanding which is the primum mobile and sets all the rest on work Warring and watching go together Our war is perpetual and so must our watch be Iob. 14.14 We are beset round with many dangerous enemies which calls for sobriety and watchfulness 1 Pet. 5.8 1. The Devil is a dreadful enemy if we consider his power malices subtilety and sedulity If one of these make an enemy terrible how terrible must that enemy be in whom all these four meet if an enemy be malicious if yet he want power or if he have power and malice yet if he want pollicy or if he have malice power and policy yet if he be lazy and careless there is the less danger But where malice is accompanied with power and that seconded with craft and all heightned with diligence it concerns men to watch against such an adversary The World also hath many dangerous tentations and above all we our selves are the sorest enemies to our selves Saul Goliah and Absalom now of the three Absalom was the worst because a child and so a bosom enemy This inbred enemy which lies in our own bosoms is that which doth us all the mischief God who hath made our hearts and knows them better then we our selves hath told us Ierem. 17.9 That the heart of man is deceitful 2. Deceitful above all things 3. Wicked 4. Desperately wicked 5. Yea so desperately wicked that none can thoroughly know how wicked it is A sad clymax and gradation By which we see that the heart is the most deceitful and the most deceiveable both actively and passively of any thing in the world This should make us keep a very strict watch
plainly that what ever he was it was by grace 1 Cor. 15.10 By the grace of God I am that I am and through Christ that strengthened him he could do all things Phil. 4.13 and that 't was mercy and not merit that ever he was faithful 1 Cor. 7.25 But being a man of a good conscience and knowing whom he had believed in an Holy confidence exultation and triumph he breaks forth into this heavenly gloriation and publisheth this his Cygnean song I have fought a good fight c. For though in the case of Justification we must renounce our own righteousness yet out of that case we may rejoice in the good we have done 2. He speaks this partly to comfort Timothy and to incourage him to walk in his steps keeping Faith and a good conscience that as he died now in the peace thereof so he walking in the way which he had prescribed might attain to that end 3. To incourage himself against the reproach of his reproaching violent death he eyes that heavenly reward and that crown of life prepared for such as have fought the good ●ight as he had done who was now to dye not as a Malefactor but a Martyr not for any evil that he had done but for his fidelity to Christ whose faithful servant he proves himself to be by a threefold Metaphor in the Text. 1. The first is taken from a valiant Champion I have fought a good fight or I have strove a good strife and wrastled a good wrastling The life of the Apostle was a continual conflict he was never out of action but was still combating either with his own flesh and corruption 1 Cor. 9.25 Rom. 7. or with Satan 2 Cor. 12.7 or else with the instruments of Satan with Jewes and Gentiles with Pharisees and Sadducees with false brethren and seducers and such like beasts as Elymas the Sorcerer Hymenaeus and Philetus Alexander the Smith the Epicures at Athens and the beastly men at Ephesus 2 Cor. 15.32 If after the manner of men I have fought with the beasts at Ephesus what advantageth it me if the dead rise not Some take this Text literally that Paul did really fight with wild beasts it being one kind of punishment commonly inflicted on the primitive Christians when any thing went amiss presently they cast the Christians to the Lions imputing the cause of their calamities to them But the most genuine and proper sense of the words seems to be this viz. that Paul had contested with such men at Ephesus as wee Barbarous in opinion and beastly in practice such as Demetrius and his followers Acts 19.9 Such wicked men the Scripture frequently stiles beasts Psal. 68.30 Dan. 7.3 4. 2 Tim. 4.17 Grotius and Dr. Hammond his disciple do illustrate this from 2 Cor. 1.8 9. where Paul received the sentence of death in Asia of which Ephesus was the Metropolis q. d. If as 't is the manner of men to be put to fight with beasts in their Amphitheaters so I have been put to fight with bestial men at Ephesus and have with them been exposed to so manifest and great peril what am I the better or to what purpose have I done it if there be no Resurrection This sense agrees best with the scope of the Text especially seeing Luke describing that which happened to Paul at Ephesus Acts 19. makes no mention of his being cast to wild beasts to be torn by them and of his miraculous deliverance from them so great a matter would not have been omitted by the Evangelist who carefully sets down far lesser sufferings of the Apostle So then the Apostle glories how much he had done and suffered for Christ what death and dangers he run for him he reckons eight distinct perils in one verse 2 Cor. 11.26 Besides other hazards that he run 1 Cor. 4.9 to 14. and 2.23 to 28. He bare in his body the marks of the Lord Iesus Gal. 6.17 Yet in all these fights and conflicts he conquered still for he fought not as one that beat the air but the enemy if he had to do with Hereticks he reproved them sharply if with his own flesh he did not lightly chastise it but by force of armes he brought it into subjection 1 Cor. 9.26 27. Object But doth not the Scripture condemn fighting in a Minister 2 Tim. 3.3 and 2.24 Tit. 1.7 Answer This doubt is easily resolved by distinguishing Fighting is twofold 1. Corporal and that also is twofold 1. Lawful as when a man fights in defence of the truth and of his Relations 2. Unlawful as rash drunken quarrelling and fighting and this is that the Apostle condemns in a Minister he must be a man of patient and peaceable temper not given to fighting and quarrelling else a Minister may as occasion requires correct his children and servants and se defendendo strike an assaulter 2. There is a spiritual fight against sin and Satan and of this the Apostle here speaks Paul was a warriour his weapons were spiritual 2 Cor. 10.4 his adversaries spiritual or for spiritual respects and his victories were spiritual Rom. 7.24 25. God had placed him in the head of his Army he kept his station in despight of all opposition and through Christ that strengthned him came off a conquerour And in this sense every Minister must be a striker else God will strike him he must be a man of strife and contention not a beast must come in his way but he must give him a bang He must not play with them but fight with them he must not flatter or humour them in their sins but throw salt on them and reprove them We have seen the Apostles activity he fought We now come to the Adjunct of this fight 't is a Good sight He calls it That good fight Emphatically as being good for Matter Manner End and issue hence the Article is doubled Other fights as corporal ones for Masteries at the Olympick games such agones wrastlings and combatings are poor low sensual things not worth the mentioning but the fight that I have fought is that good fight against sin and Satan no battles like these no agonist or champion like this spiritual one who fights the good fight of faith 1 Tim. 6.12 q. d. I have fought that excellent glorious pleasant and profitable fight Glorious in Gods eye profitable to the Church Phil. 1.12 13. and pleasing and profitable to my self what ever the world judge of it and though my end may seem reproachful in their eye yet 't is glorious in mine and 't is my joy that I have broke through all impediments I have not fled from my colours nor been faithless in Gods Covenant but like a faithful Souldier of Christ I have fought against the temptations of Satan the persecutions of the world the corruption in mine own bosom and the oppositions of false Teachers 2. The second Metaphor is taken from a strenuous runner I have finisht
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 neminem blasphemare Blasphemia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qui laedit alterius famam Maledici Beza and Diodate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i e. in ipsum Deum maledici nam in hoc sensu eminentiore sumendam esse hîc hanc ●ocem indicat ordo Grotius Per blasphemos intelligimus qui falsa aut impia de Deo loquuntur sentiunt Aquinas Divina Attributa in De● sunt Accidentia qualitates secundum Socinianos V. Hornebeck contra Socinian l. 2. c 4. Blasphemias fecerunt magnas Mont. Vulg. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blasphemantes eos V. Schooles Guard Rule 56. See my Sal Terrae cap. 8. Via veritatis i. e. vera orthodoxa fide● religio Laurent See a Pithy descript on of Blasphem● against the H. G. in Wilsons Diction Edit ult on the word Blasphemy D. Maresius and D. Arnoldus two learned German Professors have taken notice of the Blasphemies of our Biddle See London Ministers Testimony against Heresies p. 6. See 32. abominable Errors and Heresies lately sprung up in Mr. Bartlets Balsom p. 63. London Ministers Testimony and 176. in Mr. Edwards's Cangreen Part. 1. p. 15. c. Qui non vetat p●ccare cum possit jubet Qui non corrigit resecand●s c●mmittit Ecce quales sunt qui Christum colunt Salvian Hi sunt Christiani ad contumeliam Christi Virtus blaesphemiae contraria est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gloria i. e. Instrumentum piae gloriationis in Deo sive organum quo Deum glorificamus Met. Sub. Polanus See my Scholes Guard Rule 23 Octoginta sex annos illi jam servivi nihil me laesit unquam quâ igitur conscientiâ maledicerem blasphemarem regem meum qui salutem mihi dedit Euseb. Hist. lib. 4. cap. 15. Blasphemiae vitium omnium peccatorum ex suo genere est gravissimum Aquinas 12 ae Q. 13. art 3. Quo major persona hoc injuria major Nakab i. e. perforavit confi●it Lev. 24.11 Naats contempsit irritavit blasphemavit Psal. 107.11 Magis effendunt qui blasphemant Christum regnantem in coelis quàm qui crucifixerunt ambulantem in terris Aug. Sicut blasphemi filii Diaboli ea cantica discunt in mundo quae canant in inferno ita filii Dei divinis laudibus assueti eos Psalmos addiscunt in terris quos cantabunt in coelis Peraldus Erit in damnatis Vocalis blasphemia sicut in Sanctis Vocalis Dei laus Aquinas 22. Q. 13. art 4. See Mr. Clerks Mirrour cap. 11. Edit 3. Cum mala formaliter expressè et aperiè Deo tribuimus fit blasphemia Tollet Ex personis hominum dicta ac facta pensentur Reg. Saxeus scelestus lapidandus est saxis ab omni populo ut omnes testarentur quam oderint Blasphemiam Drexelius John 19.7 We have a Law and by our Law he ought to dye because he made himself the Son of God Blasphemator Creatorem cum interficerè non possit linguâ ferit Theoderet The Prophet Zachery 13 3. speaking of Gospel-time sayes that even false Teachers and much more blasphemers shall be put to death Anathema belongs to other sinners but Anathema Maranatha is the portion of such High Attainers See more Beards Theater of Gods Judgements l. 1. c. 29. p. 130. and 477. Edit ult Aliud est blasphemiam dicere aliud blasphemum esse Blasphema fuit vox Jobi 34.5 at quia id dixit animi perturbato non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deliberativè non fuit blasphema Fayu● Qui Deo maleditunt quomodo parentès venerarentur novit arrogantia quae ex blaspemia est etiam adversus naturam efferri non ergò solùm Deum quem non vident sed parentes quos cernunt ii despiciunt● Espencaeus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 immorigeri inobedientes insuasibiles contumaces refractarii ab ● privat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 persuadec Videtur Parentum nomen in genere amplectiomnes qui nobis praesunt Baldwin Omnia sunt generaliter accipienda nisi ubi aliud specialiter urgent circumstantiae Mercer V. Franzium de animalibus P 2. c. 8. p. 266. That is a singular piece for describing the Nature of most creatures Parentes suos non amare impietas est non agnoscere insania Est hoc animi perversissimi indicium quia Lex naturae jubet ut benefactoribus bona referatur gratia inter quos primum locum obtinent Parentes quibus ' vita hujus initium debemus quorum labore educati sumus Gualter V. Theater of Gods Judgements l. 2. c. 1. In quo quis peccat in eo punitur See Gods Judgements on such Theater of Gods Judgement l 2. c. 2. p. 158. Per Parentes intelligit specialiter veros doctores qui alios per Evangelium genacrunt Prim●sius See my Pulpit Guard 4. Edit p. 77.78 See D. Haris on Matth. 5.11 Serm. 24. and Mr. Pemble on 1 Cor. 15.19 in Folio p. 478. Malo in malo non est obediendum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est ingrati animi crimen Qui gratiam rependere benefactoribus non noverunt Heming Ingratus est qui non reddit ingratissimus omnium qui oblitus est Seneca Most carry themselves as men to men recompensing Love with Love again but as Devills toward God recompensing his Love with hatred Clerk To do good to those that do ill to us is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 't is a quid divinum Matth. 5.44 45. Rom. 12.20 21. all love friends onely true Christians can love their enemies Absque dubio maximi criminis reus creditur qui malum pro bono reddidit cui etiam malum pro malo reddere non liceret Hoc nos qui Christiani dicimur facimus Irritamus in no● misericordem Deum peccatis nostris propitian●●m sordibus laedimus Salvian de Gubern Dei l. 6. Clerks Mirrot car 59 60. Ingratum qui dixerit omne nefas dixerit Iudaei rebelles ingrati hîc non assimulantur equo generoso aut cani sugaci grato sed stolido bovi asino quid enim stolidius bove quid stupidius asino his tamen stolidiores stupidiores sunt omnes ingrati Hieron Officia etiam ferae sentiunt nec ullum tam immansuetum animal quod non cura mitiget in amorem sui vertat Granatensis in verbo Gratitudo Vbi plura Omnis ingratus est injustus Qui non est gratus datis non est dignus dandis See more in Clerks Mirrour cap 73. Edit 3 Ingratitudo est ventus urens siccans pietatis fontem rorem misericordiae fluenta gratia Bern. Ingratitudo velut fermentum omnia peccata permeat ingratitudo materialis est in quolibel peccato Aquinas 22. q. 107. art 4. Iustitia postulat ut quid cuique debetur reddamus Zanchy Vnusquisque debetur ex debito honestatis ut loquuntur Scholastici aliquid ei reddere qui sibi gratiam fecit Gratitudo est non solum maxima sed mater