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A15525 A commentarie vpon the most diuine Epistle of S. Paul to the Romanes Containing for matter, the degeneration of our nature by Adams Fall; and the restauration thereof, by the grace of Christ. Together with the perfection of faith, and the imbecillity of workes, in the cause of iustification of elect sinners before God. For forme and maner of handling, it hath the coherence and method, the summe and scope, the interpretations & doctrines the reasons and vses, of most texts. All which, are set downe very familiarly and compendiously, in forme of a dialogue, betweene Tlmotheus [sic] and Silas, by Thomas Wilson, one of the six preachers in the cathedrall church of Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1614 (1614) STC 25791; ESTC S120148 882,533 1,268

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the flesh that is their sinfull nature is the pipe after which they dance and the guide which they follow Tim. But tell me what are we to learne by that word henceforth in the 6. verse Sylas That the Gospell doth look forward to the time to come it respecteth not what beleeuers haue beene before their repentance and turning to God but requireth that henceforth that is from the time of their conuersion forward they should carefully serue God by doing his wil fo rs king the seruice of their sinfull lusts see the like place in Acts 17. 30. and Ephe. 4 17. 1 Pet. 4 2. Which affoords a great comfort vnto those which morne for sinne and a speciall admonition vnto such as be yet secure it will bee sufficient to either of these it henceforth they look vnto it mourning and loathing that which is past beeing carefull hereafter no more so to sin Tim. What be the reasons which may disswade all men from the seruice uf sin Sylas Very many and sorcible First because the seruice of sin is a spirituall bondage the end of which seruice is shame and euerlasting death Secondly if we serue sin wee cannot serue Christ for no man can serue two such contrary maisters Thirdly it is contrary to our vowe in baptisme where wee promise that wee will forsake sin and serue God Lastly wee are by mortification dead and freed from sin and therefore we are not to serue it Tim. How do ye make playne this last reason Sylas By a comparison of naturall death and the effects thereof which our Apostle doeth touch in the seauenth verse when hee sayth they which are dead are freed from sin the meaning whereof is this as they which are naturally dead cease from their sins which they were wont to doe whiles they liued so beleeuing Christians which are spiritualy dead by mortification must resolu to cease from their former sins Tim. But wee cannot bee so free from sinne as men that are dead for they sin not at all whereas there is no man liuing that sinnes not Sylas True it is so yet the godly Christian is free from sin in a twofolde respect First because the guilt and punishment of sinnes is forgiuen him by Christ. Secondly because he doth no more follow the impulsion or motion of sinne but as a bondman deliuered and ransomed from some cruell Lord doth not now any thing at the commandement of that Lord whose yoake he hath shaken off So it is with true beleeuers being once deliuered from the dominion and rule of sinne they are no more vnder the gouernment and becke of sin and though they bee not free from the corruption of sin which cleaueth to their nature as skin to their flesh or as the flesh to their bones yet they are free from the command and compulsion of sin not any more to bee ruled and ledde by it but by the spirite of Christ. Tim. By what tokens may it bee knowne to our selues and others when we be thus freed from sinne Silas By these tokens First a person freed from sin hath not any purpose to sinne but is determined in all things to please God so farre as grace shall enable him and frailty suffer him I am determined to keep thy righteous iudgements Psal. 119. Secondly he feares sinne as the greatest euill as it is saide of Esra that hee feared God greatly Esra 7 10. Thirdly hee is verie watchfull ouer himselfe resisting the verie motions in euil Fourthly he shunneth euery occasion of sinne Fiftly he prayeth heartily and continually against the power of sinne Sixtly if he sinne at any time it is with godlye greefe which causeth fresh repentance neuer to bee repented of 2 Cor. 7. Seauenthly he laboureth to pul others out of the bondage of sinne and to keepe from sinning such as are set free there-from especially such as bee vnder his charge Eightly he is ioyfull and heartily thankfull for his owne libertie in Christ and for the freedome of others Rom. 7 24. Lastly he loues Christ which hath freed him and tenders the glory of Christ his deliuerer aboue his owne saluation Rom. 9 2. DIAL V. Verses 8 9 10 11. Wherefore if we bee dead vvith Christ wee beleeue that we also shall liue with him Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dyeth no more death hath no more dominion ouer him For in that he dyed hee dyed once to sinne but in that he liueth he liued vnto God Likewise thinke yee also that ye are dead to sinne but are aliue to God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Tim. WHat is the drift and purpose of this Text Silas To admonish all Christians that they may in no wise liue licentiously in sin sithence they receiue this mercy from God to haue communion both with the death and life of his Sonne both for mortification of sinne and for newnesse of life and this to bee the drift appeareth by the twelfe verse Let not sinne therefore raigne c. Tim. What is the sum substance of this Text Sylas It sets forth the doctrine of sanctification by comparing Christ and his members together in these 4. things wherein they are one like the other First as Christ dyed once for sin so all his members are once to dye to sinne Secondly as Christ being dead did liue againe so all his members are quickned by him to liue a new life Thirdly as the life which Christ now liueth is perpetuall and can neuer bee againe extinguished by sin or death so all his members shall perseuer to the end in newnesse of life Lastly as the end of Christs death was to take away sinne and as the glory of his father was the end of his life so it is in his members their mortification shall quite abolish sin at the last and the vprightnes of their life tends to the glorifying of God who takes himselfe much honoured when his bee holie as hee is holie Tim. Tell vs now the meaning of the wordes what is it to be dead with Christ and also what it is to liue with him Sil. To be dead with Christ it is to haue communion or fellowship with his death for the mortification of our sinnes by the vertue and power of his Spirit which his death merited for vs and to liue with Christ is to haue communion with his life or to be partakers with his life whereof there be two degrees The first degree is the life of grace in this world whereby beleeuers are enabled to thinke and do in some measure thinges pleasing vnto God The second degree is the life of glorie which they shall haue and liue in heauen in all perfection louing God his Angels and Saintes with all their heart soule and strength Tim. What are we to learne from hence that such as die together with Christ shall also liue with him Silas Two thinges First an instruction that dying to sin and newnesse of life are inseparable For he that hath the
speeches to such as stand about vs namely our Children c. as Iacob Dauid Christ others haue done Fourthly to giue vp our spirites to God as Steuen Acts 7. in a good hope and assurance of a bessed resurrection after the example of Iob Iob 19 23. I know my Redeemer liueth Tim. What learne we from hence that wee are the Lords whether we liue or dye Silas First that wee haue matter of much comfort in whatsoeuer kinde of death we dye for wee haue a Lord that will in death looke to vs our teares are put vp in his bottle Psal. 56 8. Our death is precious to him Psal. 116. 15. Let all men neglect nay dishonour vs in our death cast vs out drag vs through streetes hang our bodies on 〈◊〉 giue our flesh to be meate to the Fowles of the ayre as they complaine in the Psalme 79 2. As the two witnesses Reuel 11 8. And as the Admirall of France was dealt withall in Paris Marlorate at Roane in Normandy Yet Christ is their Lord and will be their Patron and auenger Secondly let such as liue to the Lord by obedience to his will and zeale of his glory free their hearts from feare of Purgatory faigned fire yea and of truely tormenting hell fire sithence they being purged by the bloud of their Lord are deliuered thereby from all torments and restored to life eternall Lastly see the wonderfull dignity of a true Christian by faith ioyned to Christ he hath a good and a great Lord. If they be happy which might alwayes bee about Salomon to heare his wisedome how blessed are they rather which belong to a Lord greater then Salomon whoe are in such sort the Lords as they be lords euen freemen friends and brethren to Christ fellow-heires Priests Kings to their God through Christ Reueh 1 6. Tim. From the ninth verse which as you said doth set downe the acquisition or how Christ got his vniuersall dominion oner all the faithfull what things doe ye collect thence for our instruction Silas I collect these doctrines First that Christ dyed truly and indeede hauing his soule for a time violently separated from his body whereof as the Sacrifices and Sacraments of the old Testament namely the Paschall Lambe was a Type 1 Cor. 5 7. So the Lords Supper a Sacrament of the new is a liuely representation in distributing the bread apart from the Wine and in the breaking of the bread there is a signification of his painfull passion Secondly it was not so necessary that he should die to satisfy diuine Iustice according to Gods eternall appointment and most iust threatning Thou shalt dye the death Gen. 2 17. and to fulfil the prophesies types of his death and Legall sacrifices but it was as needfull he should raise himselfe from the dead because his death had not otherwise profited vs either by merit or efficacy For by this meanes he both declareth himselfe to be absolued from our sinnes which he bare that hee might iustisy vs Rom. 4 25. and to be conqueror of death and graue yea and to become fit to exercise that dominion and victory which his death had purchased For being dead he could not be victorious so long as himselfe seemed to be conquered neyther could he rule ouer the liuing except he had beene made aliue and he liueth for euer that he may for euer gouerne his people which are heere distributed into two sorts or rankes 1. the dead that is such as had departed this life from Adam vnto Christ and 2. by liuing such are vnderstood as then did liue or should liue from thenceforward to the end of the world Now albeit Christ being risen haue absolute power which he practiseth generally ouer all men good bad euen ouer the diuels as it is written All power in heauen and earth is giuen mee Math. 11 27. and 28 18. which agreeth with Phil. 2 9 10. yet Paul extends his dominion in this place no further then to beleeuers ouer whome Christ doth rule for their saluation in a peculiar manner by his word and Spirite as ouer his owne peculiar people whose comfort and instruction the Apostle in this Text purposely intendeth Heere is then the thirde Doctrine of this verse that Christ dyed and rose not in vaine but to this end and to this very cause to get a soueraignty ouer all the Electe which either had liued or did then or should afterward liue in the world all which by good right are subiect to him as to their Lord to be ruled and kept vnto saluation in heauen Which as it teacheth the Church of both Testaments to be but one vnder one Lord of both and that it comprehends vniuersally the Saintes before the law vnder the law vnder grace all which make one bodie and one family whence the Church is intituled Catholike so withall we learne that the benefits of this Lord as remission of sinnes righteousnesse adoption saluation c. reach no lesse to such as wer before Christ thē to them who since Christ do liue Ro. 3 25. Hebr. 9 15. And moreouer that they which be alreadie dead in his Faith shall certainly be raised to heauenly glory for so much as Christ is not Lord of the dead as they bee dead but as they are appointed to be aliue for he is the Lord of all the liuing Math. 22 32. Furthermore that there is great comfort vnto all the true seruants of God inasmuch as both in life and death they haue a mighty and louing lord to care for them to preserue and safegard them till hee haue crowned them And finally by this consideration they ought to keepe themselues from mutual discords and dissentions liuing together in a peaceable and brotherly fashion which as it is agreeable to the minde and will of their Lord so it will tend much to his honour and to the credite of our Christian profession and that especially if remembring that they are vnder his authority and rule they take not leaue to liue as they list but to his will and honour who hath brought them out of the power of darknes to whō for sin by the righteous iudgment of God they were enthralled and captiuated Acts 26 16. Let them studye to serue him whose they are after Pauls example Acts 24 23. and follow his counsell 2 Cor. 5 5. Hee died and rose again that henceforth we should liue not to our selues but after his will that dyed for vs. DIAL V. Verses 10 11 12. But why doest thou iudge thy Brother Or why doest thou despise thy Brother For we shall all appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ. For it is written I liue saith the Lord c. Tim. VVHat is the drift of this text Silas To perswade the Romanes and in them all other Christians to concord about indifferent things by three new Arguments First from their condition in that they are equals being all Brethren and equals may not mutually iudge each
of those singular thinges without fruite for the whole Scripture is profitable howsoeuer wee may not become followers of them therein yet there is of euery Scripture a profitable vse perpetuall to all times Tim. What other things may bee noted from this ground of the Apostles application Sil. Sundry things first the sauing vse of the Scriptures is proper to the faithfull for whose good alone they were written a speciallmercy Scondly that diuine trueth must bee prooued by diuine Scripture and not by humaine writers which are of no authority in matters of saluation Thirdly examples serue very well to declare doctrines and commaundements because to thinges hard and doubtfull they bring great light and cleerenesse for that in them the minde and sences both are ioyned together Fourthly we learne that it is a great comfort to the faithfull to bee made equall to Abraham in iustification To Iusticiaries mercenarie hypocrites infidels and prophane vnbeleeuing worldlings it hath no comfort Tim. What is the fourth thing contayned in this text Sil. To lay forth the two principall thinges whereunto faith leaneth to witte the death and resurrection of our Lord. For Christ dead and raysed againe is the thing which a true faith chiefly looketh vnto because there it is that faith findeth matter of support stay to itselfe Therfore the Apostle doth ioyne his death and resurrection togither because neither his death without his life nor his life without his death could any whit auaile vs to Saluation Hence are they in Scripture so often ioyned togither Pagans can beleeue that Christ being a man died but that he is risen they do not Tim. Who deliuered Iesus to death Sil. Iudas for his gayne the Iewes for enuy Christ deliuered himselfe for his Fathers will to obey it God the Father deliuered his Sonne for the redemption of sinners out of his loue as it is written So God loued the world Iohn 3. 18. This last deliuering is meant here Iudas Christ God did one and the same thing but not for one and the same end therefore Iudas a sinner and God iust Tim. What was learned hence Sil. That the whole efficacie of Christs death doth depend vppon Gods free will and decree that is that his death had beene of no force to satisfie Gods wrath had he not dyed according to the determination of his father and this is that which is written Iohn 6. 27. Him hath God the Father sealed Tim. To what death was Christ deliuered Sil. To the most shamefull and cruell death of the Crosse his bare death is not onely here meant but all the miseries of his life yet his death onely is named because it was the perfection of all and that wherein his obedience most appeared the top of his obedience Epilogue of his passion Tim. What necessity was there of his death seeing hee was free from sin in himselfe Sil. Although himselfe had no sinne yet our sinnes were all imputed to him as to our surety and pledge who was to answere for vs. But further this was the end for which hee dyed that ouercomming death in his resurrection he might fully satisfie for our sinnes For death by GODS iust decree was pronounced the wages of sinne Genesis 2. we had surely suffered it eternally if our Mediatour had not both borne and conquered it Tim. What sins doth he speake of Sil. Not our light and common infirmities but our most grieuous and haynous sinnes by the which wee deserue euen to fall from the grace of God if he should deale with vs in rigour not his but our sinnes were the cause of his death which suffied for all hath acquitted vs from them all one and other Tim. What learne we from hence Sil. Very many things first that we are bound to loue Christ who so loued vs. Secondly we must loue our enemes as Christ Iesus dyed for his enemies Thirdly sinne is a most loathsome thing being the cause of Christes accursed d at h Fourthly that there is iust cause of beeing humbled by this consideration that wee were the meanes of Iesus death wee killed the Lord of life Fiftly there is matter of great comfort to heare that our greatest sinnes are done away by his dying for vs for his bloud was of infinite value being the bloud of God Acts 20. Sixtly that all men must be fearefull to offend God who shewed himselfe so mercifull and so iust in the death of his sonne iust to his Son standing in our roome but mercifull to beleeuing sinners whome he absolueth by his Sonnes death let this mercy leade men to reuerence God continually Tim. Did Iesus remayne in death Sil. No surely for then he should be thought to dy for his owne sinnes also to be but a meere man and therefore he rose againe euen to declare that hee was God and absolued from our sinnes and wee in him for in that death could not hold 〈◊〉 in his denne and house that made it manifest that our sinnes which hee tooke vppon him were all discharged that we might be iust through him This is the meaning of that which is here written Hee rose againe for our iustification Christ is sayd to be raised of God who deliuered him and of himselfe for God doth all things by his Son Tim. Is there any other fruit of his resurrection Silas Yea for thereby Christs members are raised vp to newnesse of life Rom. 6 4. Also it is a pledge of our resurrection to life eternall at the last day 1 Corm 15. Lastly in his resurrection he began his exaltation vnto glory and hath giuen sufficient testimony and declaration of our absolution from sinnes out of which sithens he was deliuered as his raising againe did proue for he had stayed in death if but one sinne had beene vnsatisfied for heereby we haue assurance of our iustification in him CHAP. V. DIALOGVE I. Verse 1. Therefore being iustified by faith wee are at peace with God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Timotheus WHat is the connexion or dependance betweene this Chapter and the former Also tell me the argument of this Chapter and of what parts it consisteth Silas Paul hauing taught in the last verse of the former Chapter that mans iustification before God was founded vpon the death and resurrection of our Lord Iesus being by faith apprehended now he continueth the same argument and sheweth what a riuer of benefits do flow out of this Fountaine of free Iustification both to present comfort and life eternall in the heauens Vpon the rehearsall and demonstration of which benefits as the two principall parts this Chapter standeth For first he reckoneth vp the seuerall and singular fruites of the passion and resurrection of our Lord beginning with iustification the foundation of reconciliation peace whence the rest do yssue to ver 5. after followeth the demonstratiue confirmatiō of the same to verse 19. Vnto which is anexed an answer touching a question wherefore the
doth this text contayne Sil. It containes a conclusion drawne from the circumstance of time wherein Christ shewed his loue by dying for vs while yet wee were sinners and enemies the summe whereof is thus much If Christ out of his loue dyed for vs being wicked nowe beeing through faith in his death and bloudshed iustified hee will much more saue vs from eternall punishment Tim. How is this conclusion amplified and enlarged in the 10 verse Sil. By comparing vs with our selues and Christ with himselfe according to diuers estates after this sort Before we beleeued we were sinners vng odly and enemies nowe wee are made friends and iustified Christ once dyed and by his death wroght much for vs now he liueth an eternal life and raigneth with his Father and can doe more for vs for if Christ by his death could doe so much as when wee were enemies to make vs friends and to iustifie vs being vn godly now that we are friends and he is aliue raigning in heauen hee is much more able to bring vs to felicity and glory Tim. Now we haue heard the scope sumnie and order of this text let vs heare the words expounded and tell vs what is heere meant by his bloud and by iustified Sil. By his bloud is meant the whole death and sufferings of our lord whether they were felt in soule or body and by being iustified is to bee acquitted from our sinnes and to bee accounted perfectly iust with God by Christs death and obedience imputed Tim. Doth Christ his obedience to death Iustifie vs alone without any other thing Silas Wheresoeuer iustification is spoken of there Christ and his bloud or death if faith bee not named are to be vnderstood with respect to faith which apprehends and applies it and on the contrary where faith is named and not Christ it hath reference to Christ. This doth appeare to be so first by those plaine places where it is said we are iustified by faith in Christ. Secondly by comparing Gen. 12 3. and Gal. 3 8. together also in this present Text in the particle Now which implieth that before while they were vngodly and vnbeleeuers they were not iustified Tim. What then do ye thinke the meaning of these wordes to bee Silas Thus much wee are iustified that is wee are freed from the guilt of our sinnes and accepted for righteous with God by his bloud that is through faith whereby we beleeue the bloud of Christ to bee shed to death for vs and those other thinges which he suffered to be suffered for our sinnes Tim. What is meant heere by wrath Silas Not onely all iudgements heere inflicted vpon the vnrepentant world but an eternall paine or punishment in the world to come proceeding from a iust and wrathfull God offended with mans sinne Tim. What learne we by this Sil. Not to make light account of sinne whereby the wrath of God is kindled euen to the euerlasting destruction of his creature but to feare it more then Hell for Gods wrath and displeasure is the greatest euill Tim. What is meant by being saued Silas Two things first our deliuery from the gulfe of perdition Secondly the keeping or preseruing of the faithfull vnto heauenly blisse Tim. But we are saued when we first beleeue and haue our sinnes forgiuen vs and are regenerated by the spirite of Christ as Christ said to Zacheus at his conuersion This day saluation is come to thine house Luke 19. Silas True that is the beginning but Paul speaketh heere of the toppe and perfection of our saluation which is the glorifying of vs in Heauen Tim. What learne we from this Silas That both the entrance and end the first beginning and last consummation of our saluation is from Christ by faith therefore they rob Christ of his glory which attribute any part of their saluatiō to any other as all sects doe saue true Christians Tim. What things were considered in the tenth verse Sil. A three-fold estate of Gods Children the first is of corruption they were enemies The second is of Grace they are iustified and reconciled The third is of Glory they shall be saued There is a fourth not named heere to wit the estate of innocency by creation Euery true Child of God must passe through all these Tim. What else is to be considered heere Sil. A two-sold estate of Christ one of humiliation he was dead the secōd of exaltation he now liueth In the former estate Christ merited for vs as our High-Priest in the latter he effecteth and applieth vnto vs all his merites as a King daily working and bringing vs towards the saluation once merited Tim. What doe ye gather from this Sil. This comforte that true beleeuers which haue their sinnes forgiuen them by Christ they haue good hope that they shall certainly bee saued the reason is plaine for if Christ by the merit of his death being beleeued in could set the elect being enemies in the estate of saluation now that he liueth surely hee is able by his power to set them being friends and reconciled in the possession of saluation Secondly from hence are reproued such as say that true beleeuers may fall from grace and perish also such as teach that they ought continually to doubt of their saluation as the Papists do teach Lastly it reproueth Gods Children which doe yeeld to doubtings of their owne saluation For this is an iniury vnto Christ as if he were not strong enough to saue them whom he was sufficient to reconcile This is a most excellent place for the infallible not probable and coniecturall as Romanists speake certainty of glory and perseuerance in grace Lastly wee are taught by example of our heauenly Father to make atonement with our enemies DIAL IX Verse 11. And not so onely but we reioyce concerning God by Iesus Christ our Lord by whom we haue receiued the attonement Tim. WHat doth this Text offer vnto vs Silas An amplification of that which was said before in the thirde verse of this Chapter to which it must be 〈◊〉 after this sort He had said verse second We reioyce vnder the hope of glory Then verse third he added a correction Not so but we reioyce also in tribulations now in the eleuenth verse he ioyneth a third member of glorying or reioycing not onely so but we reioyce concerning God through Iesus Christ our Lord. The sum whereof is thus much seeing we haue God reconciled vnto vs by Christ euen vnto our certaine and assured saluation in heauen wee reioyce not in our hope of glorie to come nor in afflictions present but especially in the knowledge Faith of this great grace and fauour of God the father vnto vs through his Sonne Tim. What be the parts of this Text Silas First a dutie to reioyce Secondly the cause heereof because God is reconciled and become our Father in Christ. Thirdly the meanes how we attaine this reconcilement in that we receiue it to wit by our faith in
we must rise out of sin to liue a godly life And the power whereby wee can do this is deriued from the death and resurrection of our Lord as the grifte liueth by the life of the stocke to which it is ioyned Tim. What doth this similitude of planting teach vs Sil. Sundry things First that naturally we are strangers from Christ beeing in the stocke of rotten Adam whence we must be taken that we may be one with him Secondly that whiles we remain in Adam out of Christ we can no more do any good then a grift can bring forth fruite being alone and seuered from the stocke Thirdly to the end we may liue spiritually to God wee must first be vnited to Christ as the plant or grift is vnited to the Tree into which it is planted Fourthly whatsoeuer power is in vs to do good or to leaue sinne it is al from Christ not from our selues As the graft set in a stock taketh now no life from it selfe but from the stocke into which it is grafted By this is quite ouerthrown the concurrence of nature and grace Tim. What are we to learne from hence that the Resurrection of Christ is heere annexed and ioyned vnto his death and mentioned after it Sil. These two things First wee learne that as Christ had no way opened vnto his resurrection but by death so till we depart from sinne we cannot be raised vp and renewed to a righteous life Secondly as Christes death and resurrection be ioyned together so our death to sin is euer accompanied with a newe and vnblameable life which can no more bee seuered from mortification then the resurrection of Christ can be seuered from his death and therfore our Apostle hath truly affirmed before that such as bee dead to sin cannot liue in it verse 2. for nowe they lead their liues according to God Tim. I haue heard you speake of the likenesse between a grift and the elect and what we are to learne by it shew me nowe in this likenesse what dissimilitude and vnlikenesse there is Silas It is a sure truth that no similitude doth holde in all things it is sufficient to holde in that for which it is applied as in this present similitude which is brought to shew that as a slip passeth from one tree to another and hath life from that stock into which it islast planted so the elect passing from Adam to Christ are partakers of his spirit but as in euery other similitude there is a dissimilitude so in this likenes there is an vnlikenes and it doth consist in two things first the slippe or grift is taken from a good tree and fastned to a wilde Secondly it retaineth still his olde nature though it be planted into a new stocke now it is not so in this spirituall planting of men into Christ. For wee are plucked from an vnfruitfull tree and wild Oliue euen from the corrupt nature of Adam and are grafted into Christ as a most noble stocke a tree of righteousnesse whose very leaues are wholesome also we put off our old nature which we had afore and leaue the affections which spring of our birth-corruption are partakers of the spirit of Christ whose nature and properties we put on Rom. 12 14. Tim. When may we be said to leaue off our olde nature and affections of sinne and by what meanes are wee best furthered to it Silas When wee begin perfectly to know our selues that whatsoeuer commeth of our nature is in vs without Christ is naught and vicious and are moued to bee displeased with it and to abhorre it with an earnest and constant endeuour to leaue and forsake whatsoeuer is from our corrupt nature whereunto wee are much furthered and holpen by the faithful and fruitefull meditation of Christs painefull death when wee doe consider the shame and bitternesse thereof to bee occasioned by our owne sinnes it will cause a mans heart to rise against them as a mans heart ariseth against his enemy prouoking vs speedily to shake and cast thē off which cast our beloued and blessed Sauiour into such a bloudy agony and hell of sorrowes for who can beleeue that Christ was made a curse for his sinnes and yet still liue in the loue and seruice of sinne Tim. When may it be said of vs that we haue put on the nature and properties of Christ into whom we are newly planted Silas When we doe feele wrought in vs by his spirit such feelings and affections as he had putting on like mercy loue faith meekenesse patience long-suffering ioy goodnesse temperance and kindnesse as the man Christ had being meeke and lowly as he was c. DIAL IIII. Verse 6 7. Knowing that this our olde man is crucified with him that the body of sinne might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serue sinne for he that is dead is freed from sinne Tim. WHat is the substance of this Text Silas It rehearseth the principal argument to proue that beleeuers are dead to sinne taken from their Communion with Christ and his death with him Secondly it mentioneth the kind of death by which he merited for them the spirit of Sanctification by the death of the Crosse Crucified Thirdly it layeth foorth the ende of our Sanctification which is the destruction of sinne that the body of sinne might be destroyed Fourthly the duty of sanctified persons that hencefoorth they serue not sinne Lastly a reason thereof because they that are dead are freed from sinne verse 7. Tim. What is meant heere by the olde man Silas The vniuersall corruption of our nature as wee are conceiued and borne in sinne whereby we are prone vnto all euill and vndisposed vnto any good the which corruption is therefore called olde because it hath been in mans nature euer from our first parents Adam Secondly because it is in euery Child of God before that new quallity of holinesse for which they change their olde deformity at their new birth And for other two respects the name of Man is attributed vnto our sinnefull corruption First to shew how neerely the euill and poyson of sinne cleaueth to vs being as it were a mans selfe Secondly to note how men are addicted vnto it before they be sanctified they do not thinke themselues to be men without it so striuing for the maintenance of their dearling sinnes as they would doe for the safety of soule or body one were as good plucke out a mans hart as seeke to pull him from his beloued sinnes as good kill the man himselfe as his sinne Tim. In what sence is our olde man saide to be crucified Silas To haue our olde man crucified is to haue the strength of our sinne enfeebled weakened and broken by little and little as Christs body was weakened vpon the Crosse till he dyed Tim. What may this word Crucifie put vs in minde of Silas Of the kinde of death which Christ suffered namely the cursed death of the Crosse by which death he
thinke ye of these wordes as Pharaoh liueth as thy soule liueth or verily verily Gen. 42. 15. 1 Sam. 17 55. Iohn 3 5 Silas They be earnest asseuerations affirming weightie things somewhat grauely and vehemently but are no Oathes Tim. Why doth Paul say I speake truth and lye not Silas This is spoken after the manner of the Hebrues who say one thing twice for plainnesse Also one may speak truth and yet lye the thing may be a truth which one speakes and yet he thinke it a lye This Paul disclaimes professing sincerity of mind as well as truth in his words he is no Equiuocator Tim. What other things do ye learne from hence Silas That though ones conscience bee a thousande witnesses euen a good conscience as well as an euil yet Christ and the Spirit are greater then the Conscience seeth more and further 1 Iohn 3 20. Again from hence we learne that a Christian may take a priuate oath lawfully though it be not before a Iudge or Magistrate Example heereof wee haue of Abrahams seruant Genef 24 3. of Rahab and the Spies Iosh. 2 12. and of Paul in this place it appeareth also by the nature and end of an Oath Heb. 6 16. but it is to bee done in graue and important cases and not in light and trifling thinges but when it behooues and concerneth Gods glorie and the saluation or some great good of our neighbor that some doubtfull thing should be confirmed with an oath Thus was the case heere it was necessary the Iewes shoulde know and beleeue that Paul had true and great sorrow for them least vpon suspition of his 〈◊〉 toward them they shoulde haue despised the Doctrine of saluation brought to them by his writing to their owne destruction and Gods dishonor therefore hee gaue an oath as a pledge of his truth Tim. What vse of this point Sil. It reproues such as take rash Oaths as prophane persons do Also such as refuse lawfull oathes priuate or publicke as the Anabaptists do Tim. May not one refuse to sweare rather then to lay ones hand on a Booke Silas No for that is nothing to the forme and substance of an Oath which is one among all Gods people but a circumstance and ceremony which is diuers in diuers Countries The Iewes laide theyr hand vnder the Thigh Genes 24 3. Also they lift vp their handes to heauen Tim. How is the greatnesse of his sorrow set forth Silas First by the measure of it it was great Secondly by the length of it it was continual Thirdly by the subiect of it it was in the heart Tim. What is meant by heauinesse Silas It is a griefe arising either from feare of some euill at hand or the seeling of some present euil vpon our selues or others as ioy is a sweete motion of the heart from hope of som future or sence of some present good And whereas he saith that his heauinesse was great he meaneth that his griefe was not small or ordinary slight or meane but very vehement and greeuous such as did sore vexe him Tim. What manner of sorrow is that he speaketh of Silas It signifies such a greefe and paine as woemen in trauell feele which of all bodily sorrows is most sharp and bitter such was the torment that Paul had in his minde for the Iewes Tim. But why doth he call this sorrow continuall Silas To shew that howsoeuer the paines of a woman end at the birth of a childe or shortly after yet hee in his sorrow could finde neither remedie meane nor end Tim. What Instructions may we gather from these wordes thus opened Silas First they teach vs that Gods children bee not stockes blockish and sencelesse Secondly that we ought to bee touched with a feeling one of anothers misery Thirdly that aboue all other miseries we are bound exceedingly to grieue for the vnbeleefe and destruction of others because that is the greatest euill and therefore it should most affect vs. Fourthly it is best knowne what loue we beare vnto others by our griefe for their harms For thus Paul seekes to confirme his great loue towards the Iewes by witnessing his great greefe which he conceiued for them Tim. What vse is to be made of this last instruction Silas It conuicteth such to be void of Christian charity as are not affected at the hurts and harmes of others especially at their spirituall dangers and miseries no griese no loue Tim. What was the 〈◊〉 of his heauinesse Silas His heart which is the sense both of life and affections which may put vs in mind that the sorrow which Paul had for the Iewes was most bitter and dangerous The reason heereof is because there is no sorrow like vnto that which presseth the heart for it doth by little and little quench the vitall spirits and oftentimes bringeth death with it if it be immoderate many haue suddenly dyed of hearts sorrow being extreame Tim. But what might be the cause of this extreame sorrow of the Apostle Silas The damnation of the Iewes for their vnbeleefe sake because they reiected the Gospell refused Christ as appeareth in that he wisheth himselfe to be separated from Christ for them it argues that they were separated from him else there had beene no cause of such a wish Tim. What is it to be separated from Christ Sil. To be remoued and put from the fauour of God from the saluation purchased by Christ from al hope of it and in a word to perish and bee condemned for euer For without Christ there can bee no grace of God no saluation no hope of being saued nothing but condemnation Tim. But did Paul well in praying for his owne damnation or whether was it his prayer that he might perish Silas The truth is Paul makes no such prayer and if he had he had sinned greatly in praying vnlawfully and vainely The reasons be first because his prayer had crossed the constant purpose of God and his owne certaine perswasion spoken of in the former Chapter Secondly Paul was not bound to preferre the saluation of the Iews before Christ and his grace Tim. If he did not make a prayer heere to bee cut off from Christ what then thinke you of it Silas The sence of the Apostles words is thus much that he could haue wished to be cut off from Christ and so to haue deliuered the Iewes from damnation by the losse of his owne saluation had it beene possible For the speech is conditionall if it might haue beene hee could haue wished to be damned for them that he being but one had rather perished then such a multitude Like vnto that speech of Dauid wishing that hee might haue dyed for his sonne Absolon which as it bewrayeth Dauids affection for his sonne so this sufficiently discouers Pauls exceeding great affection for the Iewes how great it was But as Dauid knew that his life could not redeem the death of his sonne being already dead so it fared with
pleasing of others or themselues hauing no further drift but as prophane worldlings and blinde Papists Thirdly such as do not that they do to but against the lord to dishonor him and not for his honour as wicked Epicures and Atheists Moreouer from hence all are very earnestly to be exhorted that whatsoeuer they take in hand they do looke to the pleasing and honouring of God in it For seeing God in his actions toward vs doth chiefly respect his owne glory Rom. 3 2. also 9 24. Eph. 1 6 11 4. therefore in all our duties towardes him this should principally be seene vnto that he may bee magnified by our godly life For there are three things required of them which will be acceptable to the Lord One that it haue the word to warrant it or not against it Secondly that it proceed from the root of faith being done with a perswasion that both action person please God through Christ. Thirdly to these must be added an affection and sound desire to haue God honoured loued and praised by our meanes without this our best doings are defiled Therefore as good seruants haue care of the credite of their Lord and naturall children do study how to encrease the reputation of their parents such ought to bee the disposition of all Christians who are bound to striue hereunto euen to haue the testimony of their conscience to witnesse that in all vprightnes they desire seek this more then their owne wealth credit life yea or saluation that their louing father and gracious Lord may reap praise and honor by their obedience to his wil. This will giue more peace and true comfort to the soule then all the world will do Tim. Is there any other Doctrine behinde Silas Yea that it behooueth all Christians especially Ministers by Pauls example to walke very wisehe towards them which differ and be at variance among thēselues For sometimes he nameth the strong before the weake as verse 2. and heere verse 6. the weake are put before the strong Also hee makes them both equall in this that they intended Gods honour in omission as wel as in facte passing by the infirmities of both that hee might not seeme partiall and haue more hope to winne them to concord The reason heereof is If among Christians which do contend in matters of Religion any respect of person or inequality be vsed more being yeelded to the one then to the other vnkindnesse will be taken iealousie kindled peace hindred and the edge of all good exhortations blunted therefore an euen hand must bee carried without leaning to any side This rule holdeth when differences grow through weaknesse this wil require much wisedome and prayer but with those which erre of malice and are obstinate impugners of the truth after lawfull instruction Paul dealeth more roughly roundly See Gal. 5 3 4. and Chap. 4. also Phil. 3 2. 2 Epistle of Iohn verse 10. Tit. 3 10. Rom. 16 17. Heere marke that the Apostles are peremptory without fauour or indulgence towards such as maintaine euill opinions in Religion with an euill minde to depraue the trueth and to corrupt their Brethren Tim. What is the fourth and last Doctrine from this sixte verse Silas That Gods creatures and blessings ought to bee receiued with giuing of thankes to the Lord. See 1 Tim. 4 3 4. Col. 4. 2. and 3 17. 1 Thess. 5 18. To which adde the example of Christ Iohn 6 11. and of Paul Acts 27 35. The reasons of this duty besides former precepts examples are first thankes giuing which is a part of Gods seruice Psal. 51. It makes to his honour and glorifying of his name Againe without it we haue not a pure and conscionable vse of the creatures and benefites of God also vnthankefulnesse is odious to God it hindreth the act of faith and so turneth our eating and drinking into sin Rom. 14. last verse Tim. What vse of this instruction Silas This reprooueth such as foreslow this duty and deride such as do it or do it onely of custome for fashion not as of duty and conscience to the word Likewise such as turne it ouer to children in their owne presence being themselues more able for gifts and most bounde for Gods bounty and benefits to them the excellent God looks deserues to be serued with most excellent graces Lastly it prouokes both our selus to frequent wil lingly and often this duty there being nothing wherewith GOD is so pleased and honoured as with heartie Thankesgiuing and to teach our Children and to see them do it on their own behalfe but not to make them our mouthes so long as we haue an heart and tongue to praise our God Although Christes Disciples were men grown yet he put not them to say grace in his presence hee alwayes gaue thankes in his owne person leauing a patterne for all Housholders to looke vpon to doe the like for his moral actions are our instructions DIAL IIII. Verses 7 8 9. For none of vs liueth to himselfe neither doth any die to himselfe For whether we liue we liue vnto the Lord or whether we die we die vnto the Lord whether we liue therfore or dye we are the Lords For Christ c. Tim. VVHat is it that Paule doeth in these Verses How doe they sute and sort vvith the former Silas Paul resumeth and enlargeth the argument put down in verse 4. that all being seruants to one common Lorde who with like good will embraceth and ruleth ouer all his seruants with equall dominion purchased by so great price as his own death therefore they ought to dissent no longer or mutually to condemne iudge one another especially seeing the glory of the Lorde is sought for by his seruants The scope and drift is to teach and confirme all beleeuers to whom and to what they must liue and dy not to themselues and to their owne priuate purposes and praise but to Christ their Lord that hee in our life and death may be glorified He confirmes and comfortes the godly that liue in all ages that they should be verie full of comfort and ioy seeing they haue a lord who taketh more care of them in life and death then they could do of themselues being both able and willing to preserue them during their life and being dead to restore them to a neuerdying life For his power is omnipotent ouercomming death in himselfe beeing vniuersall Iudge of all and for his will he is so affected to all faithfull ones as to his owne redeemed dearely purchased to bee his peculiar The order of these words is this First a proposition that no man liueth or dyeth to himselfe verse 7. Secondly a reason because our life and death is to another euen to the Lord Christ verse 8. Thirdly a cause of this in the same verse because we are the Lords in life death therefore must liue and dye to him onely Fourthly an answere to a secret Obiection
if one should aske How came Christ by this right and power in vs and ouer vs it is answered verse 9. By his death and resurrection the end whereof was to giue him Lordship ouer his church In his death was paide the ransome in his resurrection he possessed his dominion For being dead so long hee could not be Lord and Conqueror but by rising againe he obtained it and that he might for euer exercise this dominion hee must both rise from death and reuiue or continue aliue to continue an eternal Lord as it is written I was dead and am aliue and Behold I liue for euer euer Reuel 1 18. Rom. 6 9. Christ being dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion ouer him The sum of all is that not onely in indifferent things but in all our Christian actions we must like good seruants seeke the honour of Christ our generall and rightfull Lord and therefore must lay aside our diuisions and discords which are neither after his pleasure nor to his praise and glory Tim. Interpret the words and tell vs what it is to liue to our selues and to dye to our selues Silas To liue to himselfe hath a two-fold signification first ciuill which is double First to depend on no man but to liue of himselfe without helpe from others to bee beholden to no man as Abraham would not take a shoo-lachet from the foure Kings which warred with him Gen. 14 23. Elisha would not at any hand take a guist from Naaman the Syrian 2. Kings 5 15 16. Also in a ciuill sence it may import to care for none but for our selues onely to minde our owne benefit with neglect and contempt of all others As in couetous misers many vnmarried batchellors and all worldlings doe hauing a care of themselues and theirs alone as if they were borne for none other The other sence wherein the Apostle vseth these words is theologicall and Gospell-like namely to liue after our owne minde lust and pleasure doing our owne will and seeking our owne praise like to that Rom. 8 5. 1. Cor. 10 2. also 2. Cor. 5 15. Our life when it is referred not to Christ but to our owne commodities and honour then we liue to our selues Also when there bee none to grieue mourne and lament our death which is the case of many widdowes single persons sole liuers poore people with whose death nōe is affected this is ciuily to die to himself but euangelically one dyeth to himselfe when he findeth himselfe desolate and there is none to care for him being dead as if he were forelorne and cast off of Christ this is the meaning heere Tim. What may now be our lesson from hence Silas First all wicked and vnregenerate men liue and dye to themselues to their owne pleasure and praise When Paul saith none of vs hee meaneth that others doe so the reason heereof is first they haue no other ground and beginnings of their actions but their owne will or lust nor other end of them but their owne glory or the pleasing of themselues and other men Tim. Tell vs the vse of this point Silas It serues to reproue not onely heathenish people but among Christians the couetous vsurers Cornemongers oppressors extortioners c. which minde their owne profite onely without respect of pleasing God or their neighbour Also idle Ministers which seeke their owne things and not Christs Phil. 3. and Magistrates which referre their authority to their priuate vse soreslowing the weale publike Also it is a checke and a sore one to our young gallants swash-bucklers Tauerne-haunters gamesters c. which wholy intend their pleasure ease and carnall delight they doe what they ought not and as godlesse men doe liuing to themselues let these looke to dye to themselues For as they neglected God in their lise so it is right that he neglect them in their death and leaue them without comfort on their death bed who in the dayes of their health and strength forgot and forsooke him Tim. What other lesson from verse 7 Silas All beleeuers are taught their duty not to liue to themselues after their owne lusts and for their own praise and purposes for how can they liue to themselues which haue in baptisme and profession denyed themselnes euen all carnal affections which are as deare to men naturall as themselues better neuer to haue vowed this then not to keepe our vow Eccle. 5 7. Tim. What is the vse heereof Silas It serues to warne the faithful to stoppe their eares as a Serpent doth against the voice of sinfull pleasures profites selfe-loue and vaine glory charme they neuer so wisely And to suffer thēselues to be led by the inspiration and the gouernment of the holy Spirite by which they are sanctified then ye shal dye not to your selues but find God in your sicknes ready to make your bed and to take care 〈◊〉 you dying sithence liuing yee did thinke and studie how to please and glorifie him How can he leaue you in your death which did cleaue to him in your life How can he not refresh you at the last dying houre receiue you at the last dreadful day whose chiefe intent and endeauour was to renounce your owne desires and wayes for his will and glory sake Tim. Proceede to the eight verse and shew what it is To liue to the Lord and to dye to the Lord Silas Each of these containe these foure seuerall distinct things To liue to the Lord is first to acknowledge our selues not to be our owne or vnder our own power at our owne hands as Iourneymen and Freemen but to be Christs as his proper and peculiar No flocke is so much the Shepheards or inheritance so much the Owners or Seruants their Lords as we Christs Secondly it signifies to render vp our selues to him to doe not our owne but his will As seruants doe his will which hath ransommed them and freed them with whom they haue made a Couenant and from whom they haue taken wages and protection 1 Sam. 22 7. so we are bound to attend and obey the will of Christ to whom we are bound by solemne couenant and from whom wee haue had alreadie many good things and doe looke for more and greater whose wil also is most holy Thirdly as seruants make their Lorde their refuge so to flye to Christ in all our distresses and dangers so Iacob so Dauid so Ezekiah so Peter fled to Christ Saue Lord or 〈◊〉 perish Mat. 14. Lastly to seeke his glory to the vtmost end of our life Now To die to him is to confesse him to be the onely Lorde of death hauing it in his owne hand and power Secondly to submit with patience to the decree of death after Christs example Math. 26. Thirdly to study how to glorifie him in our death by hope patience contentment repentance and feruent prayer to God for our selues ours and his whole Church and by our counsels comfortable
other this argueth superiority Secondly from the office of Christ who is the vniuersall iudge of all confirmed by a Text out of Esay 45 v. 23. Therefore wee haue no neede to censure others but to looke to our owne account verse 12. Thirdlie from the euent which followes the vnseasonable abuse of our liberty which is the scandall of the weake verse 13. The last reason concernes the strong the two former both weake and strong Tim. In what forme of speech are these Reasons propounded Silas By way of interrogation Why doest thou c. Which hath the verie force not onely of a strong deniall Thou oughtest not but also of a reprehension as who should say Haue you no more-grace wisedome charity then to despise and iudge one another Whence we learne that Ministers of the word are to take care not onely of the matter but of the very shape and fashion of their speech that they vse a most piercing and moouing forme of words as circumstances may require for there is much force to make a thing gracious and powerfull in the verie forme of words which be vsed Tim. Now for the matter what be the actions here reproued and vpon what Reasons Silas Two one is to despise or set at nought this was the fault of such as had more knowledge of their Christian liberty they esteemed vilely and lightly of the weaker sort and disdained such as had lesse vnderstanding The other action is iudging which pertaineth to the weake in faith and thereby is neyther meant the publike sentence which the Magistrate giues from the seate of iustice against euill doers nor yet that priuate sentence which Christians passe either against actions simply bad or good or against persons already iudged of God in the worde or with condition of their continuance in euill if they bee not such as the Scripture hath fore-iudged but the rash vncharitable iudgement touching the finall estate of Christians for middle actions as to pronounce peremptorily absolutely of any that they must perish or bee past grace or cannot bee saued because they are not of our minde in euery thing That this is the meaning of the word Iudge there be two circumstances in the Text which fully preoue it First by that which went immediately before of liuing and dying to the Lord and beeing the Lords in life and death which shewes that these Romanes tooke vpon thē to determine what should be the end and death of each others and what should 〈◊〉 come of them as if they were Lords one of anothers life and death also by mentioning the last iudgement and ascribing the same vnto Christ it appeares that they did vsurpe his office in giuing heauy doome of each others destruction As at this day the Lutherans do against such Churches that differ from them in things indifferent as about breaking the bread in the Cōmunion and some of our hot brethren at home haue had their finger too deepe in this faulte of iudging their brethren too rigorously Tim. What is our instruction from hence Silas That it is not lawfull for Christians to passe their doome touching the euerlasting estate of any man of whō it is not apparant that hee hath committed that irremissible sinne 1. For wee know not what a day may bring forth Also we see many wicked men suddenly mightily called and changed Thirdly we reade of one standing in the market called at the eleuenth houre to work in the vineyard Also of the thiefe conuerted at the instant of his death Fourthly we are euen Brethren one of vs no better then another and therefore wee should not vsurpe this superiority as one to iudge and condemn another This is a gainst Brotherly charity and Christian loue which hopes well of all men so farre as there is any cause or reason to induce vs. Finally it is against the honour and dignity of the son of God whom the father hath aduanced to this honor to be the Iudge of vs all Tim. What Vse of this Doctrine Silas It cals to repentance such as haue been too free and forward in iudging others peremptorily and ought henceforth to stay vs from such wickednesse Secondly it reprooues such as would take away from Christians all liberty of iudging vnder this pretence that wee may not for meane things iudge our Brethren finally for that which is vtterly vnlawfull in some case is and may bee lawfull in some other cases when circumstances vary the matter it selfe is varied Silas Concerning the Reason drawne from the iudgement of Christ shew vs after what sort the Apostle dooth handle this point or how many things he doth consider about it Silas The things considered about it are verie many and waighty which follow heere in order First the vniuersality of this iudgement all we shall stand weake and strong learned and vnlearned none are to be exempted from his iudgement the iudge is vnpartiall he will dispence with none Secondly we shall stand or we must giue account verse 12. This iudgement is vnauoydable First Gods decree hath purposed it his word prophesied of it his Iustice requireth it 2 Thess. 1 6 7. Thirdlie the manner how we shall appeare Be presented or made to stand forth euery one naked himself and his cause both before the Iudge each one in his owne person Fourthly the person of the Iudge to wit Christ not as he is God onely but as he is man and Mediator who though at this presont hee bee Iudge of all and raigne ouer all Math. 28 29. yet it is amidst his enemies they are not abolished the Church is not fully deliuered which shal perfectly bee done at this last and generall iudgement Fiftly the manner of his comming to iudgement it shall be glorious and full of Maiesty for he shal haue a Iudgement seate euen a throne very high in the clouds Mat. 25 31. and a white Throne Reuel 20 11. to note the innocencie and vprightnesse of the Iudge one to bee corrupted with no bribes or blinded with ignorance or respect of persons Sixtly the things which he shall do when he is come to iudgement which are these First he shall make enquiry of all men both their persons and actions then he shall lay them open and manifest them what they haue beene and what they haue done After that he shal giue a righteous sentence vpon euery one according vnto his workes which are as euidences and witnesses of Faith or vnbeleefe Vpon which shall follow speedy mighty execution the wioked beeing cast downe into hell shame and torment the righteous carried vp to heauen there in blisse and glory to abide with Christ for euer for this order of the iudgement see Math. 25 from verse 31. to the end of the Chapter Tim. Is there yet any further thing considerable about this last and generall iudgement Silas Yea the authority and right that he hath to this Office of a Iudge and to the worke
the constitution of body in equall tenour during the handling of this Epistle the Reader therefore may not looke for equal exactnesse of stile and stuffe in euery part of this Booke 5. I had a care to accommodate my selfe as for manner so for matter to my Auditory in that regard haue pressed some points further then some other and passed by or lightly passed ouer more pertinent to the text to driue home some others more fitting to the times and persons where and with whom I do liue Howbeit this thou shalt finde vniuer sally thorow the whole Booke that both the naturall sence of words and phrases and the Analysis or artificiall disposition of the Text with Summe Scope and Coherence of euery Sentence is constantly and faithfully I trust deliuered But for as much as there was an Ocean of hard and dark some both things to be entreated and Texts to be interpreted wherein I mette with great diuersity of Opinions among Expositors so as it was difficult if not imposible for such an one as I am to hit the marke in euery passage of this Epistle therefore in my best humblenesse and reuerence I submit my Spirit vnto the Prophets being not onely desirous but beseeching the Learned Teachers and guides of our English Church in loue to shew me my faylings whereof I feare they shal find not a few not slight ones Concluding with the Poet Si quid nouisti rectius istis Candidus imperti si non his vtere mecum What righter things thou knowst impart Or what I bring thee take in good part Thine in the Lord Tho. Wilson THE EPISTLE OF the Apostle PAVLE to the Romanes Explained and Opened Familiarly in Forme of a Dialogue betweene TIMOTHEVS and SILAS Wherein ye haue for the most part 7. thinges performed on euerie Text. 1. The Scope 2. Summe 3. Method 4. Interpretation with their 5. Doctrines 6. Reasons 7. And Vses of euerie Text. DIAL I. Timotheus WHat was the chiefe Argument and Occasion of Writing this Epistle Silas A Difference and dissention betweene the Iewes Gentiles which was abused by the malice of Satan and was likely to haue much hindered the course of the Gospell yea to haue stifled and choakt it in the verie Cradle and beginnings For the Iewes which did beleeue did thinke thorough the suggestion of some false Apostles Acts 15. that the Legall Ceremonies were to be still obserued as necessary to Saluation that vnlesse men were circumcised and kept the Law they could not be iustified and saued by Christ. Whereas the beleeuing Gentiles did knowe by the Doctrine of the Gospell their exemption from Moyses Law being taught that in the death and passion of our Lord all Legall rites were fully determined and that Faith alone in Christ was sufficient to Iustification before God Heereuppon arose no small discorde betweene Iewes and Gentiles which were mixed together the Iewes bearing themselues insolently because of their priuiledges despised the Gentiles as enemies of Moyses Law and the Gentiles insulting ouer the Iewes as reiected of God for the contempt of Christ. To compound this dissention Paul the Apostle framed this Epistle First shewing that neyther Gentiles by their naturall Woorkes or Iewes by their Legall deeds could be Iustified for somuch as the one violated and brake the Law of nature and the other the Lawe of Moyses therefore both the one and the other were to be Iustified thorough Christ alone apprehended by a true and liuely Faith After this generall Doctrine reaching vnto the ninth Chapter there he doth in more perticular sort represse both the insolency of the Iews by prouing that the promises were giuen and became effectuall onely to the true Israel euen to such as were of the faith of Abraham to all the Elect of God which beleeue in Christ and not to the carnall seede which came of Abraham onely according to the flesh Then in the 11. Chapter conuerting him to the Gentiles he perswadeth them vnto humility that they should modestly behaue themselues toward the Iewes forsomuch as diuers of them were dayly called to the Faith and towardes the second comming of Christ God would graffe in againe the whole Nation and make them the Members of the Christian Church When the fulnesse or bodie of the Gentiles should enter into the same then the blindnesse of the Iewes should cease it being neyther totall nor final but only in part and for a time In the 14. Chapter againe Paul setteth vppon Iewes and Gentiles exhorting them both with many and waighty reasons vnto Brotherly loue and peace not to be diuided one from another or to iudge and contemne one another about Dayes and Meats and such things as were of a middle nature The rest of the Epistle is spent in exhortations to Morrall Good-workes both speciall in respect of a Calling and generall belonging to all Christians Chap. 12. and part of the 13. where politicall duties be vrged both of the Maiestrate and of the Subiect Finally after diuers salutations and familiar matters he doth verie grauely conclude the Epistle with admonition to take heede of false Teachers with giuing of Thankes and praises of God Tim. What is the scope of this Epistle Silas To teach the way of obtaining true Righteousnesse which is not by works but by a liuely faith in Christ Iesus Tim. Are there any more matters handled in this Epistle Silas Yea sundry and most waighty as namelie about Originall Corruption Sanctification Spirituall Combate the vse of the Law of the remnants of sinne the benefites of afflictions the Constancie of Beleeuers Election Reprobation Reiection Prouocation of the Iewes Morrall Ecclesiasticall and Politicall duties Christian Liberty familiar matters Tim. What Reasons may mooue vs to loue and Studie this Epistle Sil. 1. The worthinesse and variety of the Matter 2. the Method and order of writing being verie exacte 3. the Dignity of the Instrument or Pen-man being an Apostle that had seene visions and Reuclations 4. the Maiesty and Wisedom of the Author being the God of Wisedome and Maiesty Tim. Into what Parts may this Epistle be diuided Into two parts 1. the Title and Inscription The Epistle c. 2. the Treatise Paul an Apostle c. The Treatise hath a preface ad Verse 16. wherein Paul Saluteth the Romaines wishing them good thinges and describeth the person of Christ also testifieth his pur pose of visiting them after the Preface is a Doctrionall institution vnto Chap. 12. and another exhortatorie vnto the end of the Epistle Tim. What Significations be there of this worde Epistle Sil. It hath two the one vnproper and borrowed the other proper and naturall by the vnproper signification signifieth any thing that representeth the minde of another Thus the Scriptures bee Gods Epistles also the Corinthians are called Pauls Epistles because their conuersion by his preaching as an Epistle of recommendation did commend him for a true Minister of Christ 2. Cor. 3 2. Secondly in a proper signification it
presence and helpe for their better profiting in the Gospell Rom. 15 22. His imployment in other Churches deferred his comming to Rome though he much long desired it Whence let vs learne that God according to his vncontrouleable wisedome doth order and direct the course of the Ministery to whō he pleaseth sometime causing the raine of Doctrine to fall vpon one Citty or Country and sometime on another as hee seeth it meet for the commodity of his Children and for his owne name and honour Also obserue that God vseth to crosse the purposes of his Seruants and Saints being in snew good and holy bringing to passe his owne decrees at a further time and after a farre other manner and way then men had determined When God would preferre Ioseph it was disliked of his Father and Brethren yet God brought it to passe by another meanes then they dreamed Paul purposed to come to Rome to establish them but he must doe it at such a time in such a fashion as God would for after many troubles suffered at Ierusalem he was sent bound to Rome and God turned Paul to preach to the Macedonians whereas he had meant to teach in Asia yet Paul sinned not heerein that his will was not agreeable to Gods secret will for it is sinne to a man to transgresse his reuealed will Hence it is that a Christian with a good mind may will that which God willeth not as a good Child with a good affection may wish his fathers life whom the Lord will haue to dye againe a man may wish with an euill mind that which God willeth well as a wicked Child may euilly desire his fathers death which God iustly purposeth Finally note that Sathan casteth innumerable hinderances in the way of Gods Ministers to stop the edification of the Church which should prouoke all the Seruants of Christ with greater feruency to pray for the free passage and good successe of the Gospell that the word of God mauger Sathan and his instruments may runne and be glorified and if their prayers be not heard yet to wait vpon God with patience and to continue constant considering that Paul did not at the first obtaine what he earnestly and often craued touching his repaire to Rome but at length if they perseuer God will grant that which shall be expedient for his Church Tim. What is furthermore to be learned from hence that man cannot doe what so euer he purposeth Silas That all things in the world are iustly wisely and powerfully ordained and ordered by Gods prouidence more especially God disposeth of all mens purposes as it is written Man purposeth God disposeth and the wayes of man are not in himselfe Ieremy 10 23. This teacheth all men patience prayer and thankfulnesse to commend all their purposes to Gods prouidence and to blesse him in all euents Secondly it reprooueth such as attribute all things to Nature or Fortune as A thists and prophane worldlings doe Thirdly it comforteth Gods Children to know that their heauenly father looketh to all things so as nothing falleth out in the world but by his decree and will Tim. What doe ye call the fruit heere spoken off Sil. First the conuersion of some who yet are in vnbeleese and sinne Secondly the confirmation of such as be conuerted Thirdly the encreasing and bringing to perfection such as be conuerted and confirmed This is the three-fold fruit of the Ministery Iohn 15 16. Tim. What doe ye learne heereby that he tearmeth strengthening such as be conuerted a fruit Sil. Sundry very profitable Lessons First that the Gospell is fruitfull wheresoeuer it is preached eyther for conuersion or for confirmation or for growth and profiting Secondly that the people conuerted by it are as an acceptable fruit to God and to their Teachers as delightfull to them as good fruit is to the Husbandman or as the good state and disposition of the flocke is to a good Shepheard Thirdly Ministers are to be glad and to account it as precious fruit when any be conuerted by them to Christ. This is a remaining fruit and most excellent Iohn 15 5 8 16. Tim. What was taught from these words as amongst other Gentiles Sil. First in that Paul prouoketh the Romanes to the obedience of the Gospell by the example of other Gentiles we learne that great is the force of good examples to mooue to good as of euill examples to mooue to euill The first reason heereof is because we are like Apes apt to imitate others and secondly examples affect our sences as well as our minds Furthermore we learne that where the Gospell is truely preached it is neuer preached without fruit to life because wheresoeuer the Gospell is preached there God hath a people which must serue to a double vse first to encourage Ministers to teach second ly to encourage the people to liue vnder teaching Pastors Tim. What Learne we hence that Paul reckoned himselfe A Debter to the wise and vnwise For there were Men of both sorts among the Graecians and Barbarians which heere signifieth al people saue the Iewes Silas That the Doctrine of the gospel is not too light nor too hard for the simplest wherein appeareth the facility and excellency of the Gospell propounding life to all sorts Secondly that the wisest of the world may be glad to becom Schollers of the gospel which is worthy the serching of the most learned For it is no disgrace with Mary to sit at Christs feet no nor for Paul himselfe Thirdly that euerie Minister by vertue of his Calling is a debter to his people oweth them diligent feeding Fourthly that a man who hath any Calling or guift it maketh him a Debter to others according to his measure of Grace and compasse of his Calling when opportunity serueth him to be readic to do others good as an honest Debter is readie to satisfie his Creditors when he gets wherewith There is first a Debt of money borrowed which is a ciuill Debt Rom. 13 3. Secondly of Nature to those of our owne houshold 1 Tim. 5 8. Thirdly of Charity to all men masmuch as they be men euen to our enimies Esay 58 7. Luke 6 27. Fourthly Debt of a Vocation or Calling which the Apostle heere hath respect vnto according to that which is written 1 Cor. 9 17. These three last hath allusion to the first the Apostle speaking by Similitu de as his manner is to shew that as Worldly so Christian Debters ought to bee willing to discharge the Debt both to their Brethren and vnto God especially that great Creditor of whom men do receyue all that they haue Tim. What doth this 15. Verse containe Silas A profession of the Apostles readinesse to declare and preach Iesus Christ to such Christians as dwelt at Rome so it might seeme good vnto God to haue it so For he was prepated for his part according to his Office Tim. What learne ye heereby Silas First that it came not
iudiciary law is called iudgement or iustice because by the immutable order of iustice it is requisite that rewards and paines be repaied to men as recompence of their workes It is tearmed the iudgement of God because it doth not belong to God as a contingent effect of his free will which he may doe or not do as he will but as a naturall attribute is in God and by him vnchangeably expressed and executed 2. Thes. 1 6 7. Whereas the Gentiles are saide to know this iudgement the meaning is that they well vnderstood the law and iudgement of God to allot death to them which did such crimes and that vnto such crimes death did so firmely and necessarily cleaue by Gods iudgment as whether God did inflict or for some time spared yet the doers of such things were worthy of death that is some kind of punishment tending to destruction euen of Hels destruction the Gentiles were not altogether ignorant as by Virgil and other Poets may be collected This iustice of God the Heathens knew by light of Nature Secondly by witnesse of their owne Conscience and by experience in the daily examples of diuine reuenge Hence Draco appointed death to the breakers of his lawes and Gentiles iudged Adulterers vnto death Gen. 38 24. Also the Barbarians Acts 28 4 bewray murtherers worthy to dye in their iudgement Tim. What death are they worthy of which doe such things against the Law of God imprinted first in mans minde then written in Tables of Stone Silas Both naturall death violent death and death eternall this eternal death standeth in a separation from God and in a sense of paine-full torments in body and soule it is to be suffered in Hell a Prison a Lake a place of darkenesse a depth in the company of the Diuell wicked Angels and Reprobate men and for euer without end infinitely without measure Tim. How is this paine and smart of this death shaddowed out in Scripture Silas By the similitude of fire and Brimstone the effects of this paine be weeping howling and gnashing of teeth this paine shall endure as long as God endureth euen euerlastingly Tim. What vse is to be made of this description Sil. First it should humble vs much to think that we deserue such an vnhappy condition Secondly it should make vs flye from sinne that hath pulled it vpon vs. Thirdly it should stirre vp a loue to 〈◊〉 Christ that hath himselfe suffered the paines of this death to free vs from it Fourthly it should moue in vs great pittie towards such as do lye in sin and be in the Highway vnto this death Lastly it should breed great carefulnesse to keepe others from sinning Tim. What sinnes are chiefely to be auoyded of vs Christians Sil. Sinnes against our knowledge because they giue greatest wounds to our conscience and so most trouble the peace of our owne hearts Secondly they draw after them the greatest downefall in this world which is the sinne against the Holy-ghost Thirdly they procure greatest wrath and punishment after this life Lastly they haue in them slat contempt and Rebellion against God Tim. May not Gods Children sinne after their knowledge Sil. They may and do as appeareth by Dauids praier Psal. 19 13. and practise Psal. 51. Also by the example of Adam Manasses Solomon and Peter but in these sinnes the godly differ much from the wicked for the godly fall into these sinnes seldom with a strife of heart against them in the doing and great griefe of heart afterwards as also encrease of care and watchfulnesse against new temptation but none of these things bee in the wicked but the quite contrary for they run headlongly and wilfully into euill and are without remorse and returning to God Tim. What is it to fauour those that do euill Sil. To consent vnto their wicked deeds with approbation this may be done many waies as by praising by counselling and perswasions by hiring and rewarding by defending by dispensing by pardoning or procuring pardons by concealing and hiding and by pleading for them also by silence and not reproouing or not punishing all these worthy of death Tim. How may their fault bee set out which fauour euill doers Sil. By the example of Arch-rebels which wil maintaine all that rise vp against their Prince This is an high pitch and degree of sinne and in a very dangerous case they stand who be risen to this height of iniquity especially in this light of the Gospell CHAP. II. DIALOGVE I. Verse 1. ¶ Thou therefore art inexcusable O Man whatsoeuer thou art that iudgest for in that same wherein thou iudgest another thou condemnest thy selfe for thou that iudgest doest euen the selfe same things Tim. WHat is the purpose of this Text Silas The general purpose is to shew the guiltinesse of the Gentiles but especially to discouer reprooue a close kinde of sinners who tooke themselues to be righteous without fault because they reproued others and could not themselues be blamed of the world these sinners the Apostle telleth them that it is little helpe to them that the world cannot iudge them seeing they are iudged of their own Conscience and of God The text hath a reproofe in the first words Secondly a reason in the rest Tim. This indeed is the commonly receined opinion that the Apostle hauing in the latter end of the former Chapter reproued and conuicted open and bold offenders doth now in the beginning of this Chapter blame another kinde of trespassers amongst the Gentiles which were more polliticke and sinned with more cuning neither doing openly nor allowing such grosse crimes as were mentioned before but taxing and condemning them both morally by precepts as did Cato Socrates c. and ciutlly by their lawes as Solon Lycurgus Draco c. Yet in secret and priuately did the same things Some also there be which thinke that Paul hauing reprehended such as abused their contemplatine knowledge and contrary there vnto bad run into foule Idolatry against the first Table now taxeth such as abuse their practicke knowledge trespassing against their neighbours contrary to the knowne rules of common equity but what doe you thinke of the connexion of this Chapter with the former Sil. The first Particle of this Text Therefore doth well cleare it to me that this whole sentence is inferred and dependeth vpon the former words in the last verse of the precedent Chapter so as he doth not take vp a reprehension of a new sort of sinners but goeth on still to conuict the same transgrcssors but with a new 〈◊〉 Hitherto he hath reasoned from the effect of euill workes done by the Gentiles against God and men to wit the wrath and punishment of God reuealed and executed vpon them whereof it followeth strongly that the Heathen by their works deseruing damnation could not thereby challenge Iustification Heere he argueth and concludeth the same thing from a Testimony or iudgement of euery mans owne Conscience not from that particular morall iudgement
imputation of righteousnes to the beleeuer without workes Tim. Who was Dauid Sil. The Pen-man of the Holy-ghost one of the holie Prophets Tim. What followes heereof Silas That his testimony is to be receiued as the testimony of God because the Prophets wrote as they were moued by the holy Ghost Tim. What meanes he by describing Silas Not a perfect definition but a short and plaine setting before vs of the matter Tim. What is meant by the Blessednesse of the man Sil. The man which is blessed or which may be esteemed and held blessed Tim. What do ye call blessednesse Sil. The happy condition and estate of such as bee in Gods fauour through Christ. Tim. What is meant by imputing Silas To impute is to put a thing into ones account or reckoning it is a word borrowed from Merchants who are saide to impute that whereof they exact a reckoning and account Tim. What is meant here by righteousnes Sil. The exact and perfect conformity and agreement to the will of the Creator which since Adam was found in Christ onely Tim. Why doth he say without workes seeing Dauid speaketh not of workes in that part of the Psalme Sil. It must of necessity bee vnderstood for if this bee the blessednes to haue the righteousnesse and good works of another that is of Christ accounted to vs then a man is righteous and blessed without his owne works Tim. Tea but he meaneth ceremoniall and naturall workes done before our conuersion workes done before faith Sil. Nay not so but he meaneth all workes wherein sin may be committed and therefore more principally works of the moral law because more properly sinne is in them againe Dauid speaketh this euen of himselfe being nowe conuerted and renewed vnto faith Tim. What were we taught out of the testimony it selfe Sil. Sundry things first that there is but one way for all men to become blessed and this is by free pardon Secondly from hence is matter of great comfort for the pore and needy in that the wealthy of the world haue no other true happinesse then that which is common to the poorest beleeuer Thirdly here is matter of great humbling for the mighty and rich in that the poore are equall to them in the chiefest things Fourthly here is matter of great vnity and loue amongst all sorts in that there is but one common saluation or meanes of forgiuenesse of sinnes to the begger and to the king Tim. What is that way of blessednes which is common to all the Saints tell vs-this more plainly and distinctly Sil. Free forgiuenesse of sinnes through faith in Iesus Christ which is expressed heere by three phrases or fashions of speech First remission of sinnes which is a discharge of a debt Secondly couering of transgression it beeing a speech taken from such as hide vnseemely things from the eies of others least they bee offended so our sins by forgiuenes are hid from the eies of Gods iustice Thirdly of not imputing that is not reckoning it to vs or calling vs to any account for it A speech borrowed from Merchants or Creditors who doe put that debt out of the reckoning which they meane to forgiue so are wee saide to haue sinne not imputed as when a creditor of grace and fauour accepteth a debt to be paid accounting it discharged when the party indebted is not able to pay it Tim. What vnderstandeth hee by forgiuenes of sinne more then is expressed Sil. The imputation of Christ his righteousnes which cannot bee seuered from remission of sinnes so heere is a Synechdoche of the part Tim. What was further here noted Sil. That forgiuenes is of all sinnes great and small many and few one and other Secondly that seeing we cannot be free from sinne but by forgiuenesse we should therfore auoyde sinne the more carefully being wary that wee do not that from which we cānot be quitted but by a pardon and least we abuse that mercy which doeth so graciously couer our faults Tim. What other things more were noted out of this text Sil. Sundry first touching blessednesse Secondly touching Gods mercy in forgiuenes of sin Thirdly touching our duty about leauing of sin Tim. What was noted and obserued concerning blessednes Sil. Many things first the causes of blessednes the chiefe working cause is Gods grace or the fauor of God the meritorious and materiall cause is Christ his obedience to death the ende or finall cause is Gods glory the instrument Gods word offering our faith apprehending the Sacraments sealing hence it is written Blessed are they that beleeue blessed are they that heare the word and keep it Secondly the effects of blessedness the effects towardes our selues are forgiuenes of sinnes regeneration peace of conscience ioy in the holy Ghost graces of the new man as knowledge wisedome faith hope loue and patience The effects towards others bee the workes of loue and mercy and all fruits of our labour in our calling hence it is saide Blessed is the man whose sinnes are couered Psal. 32. Blessed are the mercifull and the 〈◊〉 and the poore in spirit Math. 5. Thirdly the degrees of blessednes which bee three first in this life an entrance into a blessed estate by beeing engrafted into Christ through faith to bee 〈◊〉 of him and his benefits of forgiuenes of sinnes and sanctification Secondly the proceeding in it at death when the soule is receiued into glory the body beeing laide into the earth Thirdly the perfection of it in heauen when the whole man shall be glorified hence it is said Blessed are they which dye in the Lord Reuel 14. 13. Blessed are they who are called to the Lambes martage Reue. 19. Tim. What was obserued touching forgiuenes of sinnes Sil. That the Prophet speaking in the plurall number giueth vs to vnderstand that not one or a few nor smal but many and great sinnes are forgiuen the faithfull the reasons hereof are first because otherwise they coulde not bee blessed if one sinne were vnpardoned for they coulde haue no true peace Secondly Christs merits and Gods mercies exceedeth all and be much greater then al the sins of the 〈◊〉 were they all in any one man Tim. What vse of this Sil. Sound consolation to beleeuers in the time of 〈◊〉 for sinne Secondly an instruction for vs to forgiue our brethren whatsoeuer offence against vs when they come and say it repents mee euen as God for Christs sake forgaue vs Ephe. 4. 32. Obserue that our sinnes only hinder our blessednes which shall bee perfect when our sinnes be wholy taken away meane time it is but begun Tim. What were wee to learne as touching our duty about sinne Sil. That before the committing of sinne wee doe take good heed 〈◊〉 that we may not offend so merciful a God as hath forgiuen vs so great a debt Rom. 12. 1. Secondly because sinne being once committed we cannot bee well eased till wee be forgiuen further we learne that after the committing thereof we despaire not
faith Vnbeleefe if it bee a meere absence of faith then it breedeth that wauering where of Iames speaketh Iam. 1. 7. if it be but a defect of beleese then it engendreth doubting such as is here spoken off Tim. But had Abraham no doubting at all touching the thing which he beleeued Sil. Yes on euery side doubting offered it selfe but when hee looked to the will and power of God hee was certaine of the promises and subdued doubts arising for it is impossible that any man should so beleeue as to bee freed from all doubting because euery mans faith hath infirmities in it Tim. Whence happeneth this infirmity of faith vnto godly men Sil. It commeth two wayes first by want of knowing well such thinges as are to bee beleeued example in the Iewes Rom 14. 21. Secondly by not constantly and firmely cleauing to such things as they know well as Peter when he walked on the water knew Christ wold haue him come to him but did not closely hold to Christs words Tim. What should this worke Sil. Earnest prayer vnto God to encrease and stablish our faith Tim. Now tell vs of the measure of Abrahams faith what it was Sil. It was not a little and weake faith but a strong and great faith such a faith as fully assured him of the thing promised to him This word full assurance is fetched from shippes which against winde and waues are yet with full and strong saile carried vnto the hauen so Abraham by the strength of his faith ouercame al waues of doubts beating against his minde Tim. What may be obserued from hence Sil. That in euery true faith there is an assurance and perswasion of that which it beleeuth but not a full assurance for this is proper to a strong faith Secondly that weake Christians should not be discouraged because they be not fully assured so as they striue towards it for the mea sure of true faith is differing and God lookes not to the quantity but to the trueth of faith Tim. What is the end whereunto faith tendeth Sil. It is the glory of God because our faith giueth vnto God a witnesse of his great power truth and goodnes euer contrary to our reason and sence DIAL XII Verse 22 23 24 25. And therefore it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse Now it is not written for him onely that it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse but also for vs to whome it shall bee imputed for righteousnes which beleeue in him that raysed vp Iesus from the dead who was deliuered to death for our sins and is risen againe for our iustification Tim. VVHat is the end and scope of this scripture Sil. Together with the conclusion of this Chapter it doeth conclude the treatise of Abrahams iustification In this conclusion wee may obserue these things first the cōclusion it selfe verse 22. and therefore Secondly an application of Abrahams example to the beleeuing Romaynes and to all beleeuers verse 24. as teaching a doctrine common to the whole Church Thirdly a proofe of the fitnes of this application from the end and drift of this Scripture verse 23. now it is not written Lastly a declaration of iustifying faith by the twoe speciall things on which it principally leaneth the death and resurrection of our Lord. Tim. For the conclusion tell vs what is the meaning of it Sil. Thus much that it is no maruell if the faith of Abraham were imputed to him for righteousnesse seeing by it hee did so strongly and liuely apprehend the mercies and promises which the strong and faithfull God gaue him Tim. We may not then thinke by the Apostles words therefore that he meant to make faith a meritorious cause of Abra hams righteousnes Sil. No surely his purpose is to declare not what his faith merited but that it was a true liuely and sound faith seeing it did so firmely lay hold on the trueth and the power of God promising to Abraham eternall blessednesse in the person of the Messiah Tim. May not a weake Beleeuer by this be moued to thinke that he is not reckoned iust seeing hee cannot so strongly beleeue as Abraham did Sil. No such matter For this Text applyeth Abrahams example not vnto strong beleeuers but vnto beleeuers For whosoeuer beleeueth truly though weakely yet that weake faith being true shall iustifie them For Faith iustifieth not as a quality or in respect of the quantity and measure but by the vertue of the obiect Tim. But is not righteousnesse imputed to the elect before they do beleeue Silas No such thing it was not imputed to Abraham till he had faith Likewise it is reckoned to his children on this condition so as they beleeue or at that time when they shall beleeue Faith and imputation of righteousnesse go together in order of time though not in order of Nature for so faith as a cause goeth before Tim. Tell vs now what the application is Silas Abraham beleeued and was reckoned righteous likewise all Abrahams Children are iustified by beleeuing the promise For no otherwise are the Children to be iust then was the Father who by an inheritable right conueyeth to them the Iustice imputed to himselfe Tim. What is the ground and reason of this application Silas The scope and end of the Scripture which aymed not at Abraham only when it is written he beleeued and it was imputed to him for righteousnesse but had respect heerein to all that should beleeue as Abraham did This may appeare by the fifteenth Chapter of this Epistle verse 4. that the things which are written of some one do concerne all Also Paul saith so much in effect in this place That that which was written of one Abraham did belong to all the faithfull Tim. But how will this hold in other things which are written both of Abraham others which no man may draw vnto himselfe for imitation as Abrahams sacrificing of his son and lying with his handmaide and many such like things and if it hold not in these things how then doth Paul with any strength of reason gather in this poynt of Iustifying by Faith that it belongeth to vs which was written of Abraham Silar The answere is this Some things which are written of Abraham and other of the Saints are personall or singular which either were their infirmities or such things as they did by a singular calling as Elias his praying for fireto fall 〈◊〉 heauen and some other thinges are written of them which they did by vertue of an vniuersall vocation which are common to them with all others These we may distinguish after this manner Such things as they did besides or contrary to the lawe of God these are singular and personall and herein wee must not imitate them but such thinges as were agreeable to the law or the generall commandements of God they belong to the generall estate of all Gods people and in them wee are to followe them as for the other we are not to read or think
was the child of God and he fell most grieuously and did long lye in his sinne but hee recouered his fall and was saued For first hee is of the Holy Ghost intituled the beloued of God 2 Sam. 12. 24. 25. which was neuer affirmed of any reprobate Secondly hee was one of the penmen of the Scripture euen an holy Prophet and of al the holy Prophets Christ saith they sitte downe in the kingdome of God Luke 13. 28. Thirdly he was a tipe of Christ and so was neuer any reprobate Fourthly Gods promise was made especially touching the person of Solomon that howsoeuer his sinnes should be corrected with the rod of men yet his mercies hee would neuer take from him nor remoue his louing kindnesse 2 Sam. 7. 14. 15. Fiftly he was by repentance restored to God and to his Church as appeareth both by the title of his booke called Ecclesiastes which is as much to say as a person vnited againe to the Church vpon his repentance done and published in the Church And the argument of that Booke which is a large condemning of those vanities and follies wherewith he had beene ouertaken do fully witnesse his repentance but none that repenteth can perish Luke 13 2. Therefore whatsoeuer else he lost by his fall yet the grace of reconciliation with God hee lost not Sil. But the Apostle saith of such as taste the good word of God and the power of the world to come that they may fall away Heb. 6 5. Silas True such as taste only that is lightly slenderly bee touched may but the true beleeuer which eateth and digesteth and receiueth the worde cannot fall away Tim. Yet the Apostle Heb. 10 26. saith of such as haue receyued the knowledge of the truth that they may vtterly forsake God and renounce him Sil. The Apostle speaketh of such as receiue the knowledge of the truth by their iudgement and not by their affection into the braine and not into the heart Tim. But Christ in the 13. of Mathew saith of such as doe receiue the word with ioy which is an affection of the heart that in time of temptation they fall away Silas The ioy there spoken of is not the fruite of the spirit in a truely sanctified heart reioycing in the sence of Gods peculiar loue vnder the hope of his glory but a tickling of the minde delighted with knowledge of new and strange things which may be in an Hypocrite and be lost but the other cannot be lost for of it sayth Christ in Iohn 16 22. it cannot be taken from vs. Tim. Yet the Apostle Heb. 10 29. writeth of such as bee sanctified by the blood of Christ that they may goe from God and perish Silas He speaketh of such a sanctification as standeth in profession and not in power and practise Secondly he speaketh of a generall sanctification which maketh a light and slender change not of a speciall sanctification which effectually and more throughly changeth transformeth a man into the Image of God Tim. But the true Beleeuers which are truly sanctified may sinne grieuously against Conscience and thereby wholly loose Grace Silas All grieuous sinnes against Conscience do not vtterly destroy and put out grace but much weaken slake the grace of God These grieuous sins of Conscience be of two sorts Some proceede of humaine infirmity such as of Dauid Peter Salomon Others arise of diabolicall malice such as of Iudas Cain Esau these doe destroy grace But Gods children after their calling cannot fall into such for all their sins come either of ignorance or weakenesse but not of malice and prophane contempt of God and these alone do lay wast the conscience Tim. What think ye of that Doctrine which teacheth that one effectually called may wholy through some grosse sin loose grace and fall from Christ yet afterwards againe bee ioyned to him Silas This is vtterly vntrue for as Christ being aliue from the dead dieth no more but liueth eternally vnto God so likewise the life of grace in his members is perpetuall and can no more returne to the death of sinne then Iesus can returne to the graue Rom. 6 8 9. for the life of grace must be the life of glory therefore eternal and vnchangeable Moreouer if a Christian may so fall from Christ as he shall neede to be engrafted and ioyned to him the second time then also this new ingrafting must be sealed by a new baptisine which is absurd and impious For as men are but once borne into this worlde so they are but once borne anew and are but once to haue the Sacrament of newe birth and if there be any such extinction of Grace how is the seed of new birth immortall and his loue vnchaungeable and his 〈◊〉 abides for euer Tim. How 〈◊〉 it the prodigall child who is the picture of one that after grace of reconcilement falleth from his obedience to God is said Luke 15. to bee lost and dead being before a child Sil. To this I answere that it is a parable and sure arguments cannot bee raysed from parables Secondly it is said of that child that hee was lost and dead and it is true he was so in his fathers opinion and in his owne seeming so Gods children in their owne sence and in the opinion of the Church their mother they are lost but truely and indeed they are not so Tim. You holde then confidently that a man regenerate which once truely beleeueth in Christ can neuer be quite pluckt from grace Sil. I doe confidently affirme and that for very good and vndeceiueable reasons and grounds which I will rehearse in order The first is from the authority of Scripture Psal. 1. 6. The wicked and his wayes shall perish but the Godly and his wayes shall be knowne and crowned Psal. 37. 24. The righteous falleth and riseth againe because the Lorde held vnder his hand Psal. 125. 1. He that trusts in the Lord shall be like Mount Sion that cannot be remoued Math. 24. 24. It is not possible that the elect should be deceiued The second reason dependeth vpon Gods election vppon which the stablenes and firme stedfastnes of the faithfull is grounded as vpon a most sure rock mountain of brasse as it may appeare by 2 Tim. 2. 19. where the Apostle hauing spoken of some Apostatates who were falne from God he doeth comfort the weake minds of beleeuers with this resolution that their standing is firme because of Gods election which for the assurance and certainty of it is there likened to a soundation or seale two thinges of greatest strength and validity The third reason or ground dependeth vpon the free and vnchangeable couenant which God hath striken with his elect the tenour whereof is in Ieremy 31 38 40. From whence I doe obserue that the couenant of grace and saluation is euery way sure and constant both on Gods part who altereth not his good wil towards his and also on our part who shal haue no wil
of worldly things which we may call humaine or ciuill hope it is of things vncertaine which may fall out or not fall out because they haue vncertaine causes and this hope hath no assurance but is ioyned with continuall doubting but Christian hope it hath alwayes assurance and certainty ioyned with it because it is of spirituall blessings and protections also of heauenly glory which commeth of a most firm cause namely the vnchangeable good will and loue of God as also his most free and firme promise in Christ. Tim. Whereunto doth this serue Sil. To reproue both the Papist and ignorant prophane Protestants which seuer assurance from Christian hope wherein they doe iniury to God himselfe and shewe that they are not such who haue his loue shed abroade in their harts DIAL VI. Verse 6. For Christ when we were yet of no strength at his time died for the vngodly Tim. VVHat is the drift and end of this text Sil. To confirme that which hee had said of the loue of God towards vs by an effect and fruite of his loue which is the death of his Sonne Christ Iesus Here beginneth the demonstration which is the second part of this Chapter as before Tim. How is this set foorth Sil. It is set foorth by a double circumstāce of time first in that the Sonne of God was giuen to death for vs at that time when we were yet weake vngodly sinners and enemies Secondly in that he dyed for vs at the time appoynted of his Father called his time Tim. What be the parts of this sixt verse Sil. Foure first what ones God loued weake and vngodly ones Secondly by what guift hee expressed his loue his Sonne Christ. Thirdly at what time the guift was bestowed at his time Fourthly to what thing he was giuen to death Tim. Now come to the interpretation of the words and first tell vs what is meant by weake in this place Sil. The word here vsed is applyed sometime to the body then it signifieth either weaknesse which commeth by some disease or sicknesse after which men bee feeble or else it noteth the want of al might as in that text of 1 Cor. 15 43. The body is sowne in weakenesse or it is affirmed of the minde and then it is either put for small strength as Rom. 15 1. or for no strength as here in this text that this is here meant may appeare by this that they which are called weak the same are called vngodly sinners enemies such are voyd of all spirituall and sauing power to beleeue or repent Tim. What doe these termes teach vs Sil. That they for whome Christ was giuen to death were such as had no force of their own to help themselues but needed all manner of helpe vnto saluation Secondly that such as Christ died for doe not onely neede all helpe but being vngodly refuse helps being offered and beeing sinners encrease their euils more and more and which is most of all they grow in hatred of the remedy being open enemies to God heere is a singular gradation to amplify Gods loue to lost mankind Tim. What is the vse to be made of this truth Sil. It sheweth the wretched estate which men liue in without faith in Christ. Secondly it condemneth the madnesse of such as affime that the elect beeing in this estate were yet Iustified and the sonnes and heires of God this their madnesse may appeare in this that the selfe same persons at one time shal be actually and indeed both enemies and friends to God sinners and righteous vngodly and sonnes to need all helpe and yet to haue all helpe this is to confound heauen and hell grace and corruption Sathan and God death and life togither Thirdly it confuteth the Pelagian and Papist who ascribe some strength to nature to prepare at least to dispose it selfe to grace This the Pelagian sets forth by a similitude of waxe fitte for any impression of white paper or a naked table ready to take any forme so is our nature say they apt to learne if it be but taught vs also the Papists they expresse it by the similitude of a man sore wounded or much enfeebled or laden or borne downe with bolts and fetters which with a little helpe of another mans hand will raise vppe himselfe and make shift to stand vppon his feete So say they nature is but wounded enfeebled or ouerburthened and with litle helpe of grace can reare it selfe to heauenwards These their corrupt opinions appeare to be false by Ephes. 2. 1. where it is written that wee are dead in trespasses and sins and therefore as touching God and godlinesse wee are by nature dead corps and in this our text we are said to bee of no strength Fourthly it prouoketh Gods children to great humility and thankfulnes towards God to consider what they were before their conuersion for the more miserable our former estate the more amyable present grace also it must moue them to compassionate others which yet be in this woeful estate seeing themselues once were such And lastly it must stirre vp a feruent loue to God who in this most pittifull case loued vs and gaue such a guist and remedy to vs and for vs. Tim. What was that gift whereby God doth expresse his loue vnto vs being so sinfull and wretched Sil. No lesse then Christ his owne and onely begotten Sonne which is the greatest and best guift that the most great and good God could bestow vppon mankinde the reason is because it is more worth then all the world for it is himselfe in the person of his Sonne therfore the greatest Also through this gift all other gifts are made good and profitable to vs which else would bee so many curses Therefore the best cause that moued him to bestow such a gift vpon vs was the good pleasure of his will which here and elsewhere is called his loue Iohn 3 16. 1 Ioh. 4. Tim. What did we learne by this that God would witnes his loue by such a fruit of it and gift Sil. That our loue must be like the loue of God that is an effectuall and fruitfull loue not in purpose onely and goodwill but in effect as wee are able to expresse it Secondly that as God declareth his great loue and that to his enemies so after his example wee should out of loue do good to our enemies whereby we are knowne to be Gods Children Luke 6. For euen Infidels and the most wicked persons they will loue such as loue them Math. 5. Tim. What doth this meane which is added According to the time or at his time Silas It meaneth thus much euen that fit and conuenient time appointed of his Father called fulnesse of time Gal. 4 4. and his houre John 5 25. for God hath his times appointed for all his workes Eccl. 3 1. Tim. What followes of this Silas That Christ could come neither sooner nor later then hee did Secondly it commendeth the more Gods loue
vnto vs to send him at a time when a floode of wickednesse had ouerflowed all Thirdly that there is a fit time for euerie work of God which should teach men to waite vpon God Eccles. 3 1. Tim. Where unto gaue he Christ for vs Sil. Vnto death which was a dissolution of his bodie and soule ioyned with the curse of God Galath 3 13. Of this death there was great neede For Gods Iustice had decreed it his word foretolde it the sacrifices prefigured it the foulenesse of mans sin deseruing it Christ willingly suffered it man was sufficiently redeemed by it and God greatly glorified by it Tim. What vse heereof Silas It sheweth vs the greatnesse of mans sinne and of Christs loue of Satans malice and of Gods Iustice of Popish blindnesse and corruption which teach some sinnes so light and veniall as asprinkling of holy-water and ashes will purge them DIAL VII Verse 7 8. Doubtlesse one will scarce die for a Righteous man but yet for a good man one dare dye but God setteth out his loue toward vs seeing that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for vs. Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To set foorth and extoll the loue of God towardes vs by a comparison of the lesse with the greater The sum of this comparison is this There is scarse any mans loue so great as that he will die for a iust person though hee bee also good and profitable vnto him how great then was that loue that moued God to giue his Son to death for vs which were sinners and his enemies From whence the Apostle doth gather that if Gods loue bee such as our sinnes before we did beleeue and whiles we were enemies could not hinder him from giuing his son to die much lesse shall those sins which wee do afterwards be able to hurt our saluation therefore the hope which the godly haue in God cannot make them ashamed Tim. What he the parts of the comparison contained in this Text Silas Two First a proposition verse 7. Secondly an application verse 8. Tim. What is heere meant by righteous Sil. Not a iust matter or cause but a iust man as is to be seene both by the 6. and 8. verses where hee vseth words noting persons Tim. What difference is there betweene a iust man and a goodman Silas Some vnderstand a good man to be Christ for whom Martyrs dyed Others by a good man vnderstand one who is profitable to vs this is most probable Others put righteous and good both for one thing Tim. Why doth the Apostle say It may bee one dare dye for a goodman Si. Either for that if any did die for others it were more for their owne sake then for another mans sake or else for that he neuer found nor knew any such example As if he should say it may be but for my part I knowe of none that euer did so Tim. What instruction now doe ye gather from these first words Sil. That a mans life is a deare and precious thing for seeing so few are found that will giue their life for righteous men this sheweth that men holde their liues in very greataccount Tim. What doth this put vs in mind of Sil. Surely of thus much that the charity of the best men is faint and faulty because the Apostle knew none whose loue had carried them so farre as to die for their brethren whereas we ought to do so 1 Iohn 3 16. Tim. Can ye tell vs of none that haue aduentured their lines for others sake Sil. Yea the Apostle Paul as he witnefleth of himselfe 2 Corinth 12 13. also Aquila and Priscilla Rom 16 4. and the Martyres This was great charity but yet not to bee compared with the charity of Christ which he shewed towards vs. Tim. One would thinke that it did rather exceed his loue for it is a greater matter for a meere man to dye then for him that is more then a man hrist could take vp his life againe and so could not other men resume theirs Sil. The charity of Christ yet far exceedeth that other for first Christ is of more dignity by farre then any man therefore his life by far more worth then ours Secondly the loue towards sinners is far more then that loue which is towards good men for that is free from all selfe respect and therefore is the more pure lone Tim. What instructions gather ye from hence Sil. That the loue of Christ to his Church far surmounteth all the loue of al men towards men Tim. What vse is to be made of this 〈◊〉 singular loue Sil. First it serueth for confirmation that hee will not cast out and condemne such as he hath thus loued as verse 10. Secondly it serueth for imitation for it Christ so loued vs wee ought also to loue one another Iohn 15 12. 1 Iohn 3 16. This is the marke we must aime at and wherin we come short we ought to be sorry and amend Tim. But when the Apostle sayth Christ dyed for vs while wee were yet sinners hath his death brought this to passe that we are now no more sinners Sil. After wee beleeue that Christ dyed for vs and are regenerate by his Spirit we haue sinne still but we are not any longer to be called sinners because that now our sins by forgiuenesse are blotted out and that which remaineth still in our nature it raigneth not and the denomination of a person or thing is euer from that which is more excellent and worthy But here the Apostle meaneth by sinners such as be vnder the guilt and dominion of sinne as al men are before faith Tim. What could God see in vs then to moue him to loue vs Sil. First he saw in vs his own creation which he loued with a generall loue as he doth all the works of his hands Secondly he saw in vs much misery through sinne and this made him loue vs with a pittifull loue Thirdly her loued his elect being yet sinners in that he purposed in himselfe to call and iustifie them in due time And nowe lastly hauing grafted his elect in his Sonne by faith and instified them he loueth them actually hauing set his owne image in them Tim. You hold then that there are seuer all degrees and kinds of Gods loue euen towards his 〈◊〉 Sil. There be so for hee cannot loue his elect with that degree and kinde of loue when they are sinners as he doth after they are now in his Sonne iustified and sanctified for now sinne which bred hatred and enmity is defaced and cast out by remission and holinesse which God loueth is imprinted in them and brought in by renouation DIAL VIII Verses 9 10. Much more then being now iustified by his bloud we shall be saued from wrath through him For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saued by his life Tim. VVHat
of that innocencie wherein man was created Tim. How proue ye guilt or fault and deseruing of punishment thereby Silas There is guilt or fault because wee are made sinners by it verse 17. and there is deseruing of punishment because this cannot be seuered from the former Also it is expressely saide that by it death went ouer all Tim. How do ye proue that there is corruption of Nature Silas Because it is written That weee go astray from our Mothers wombe Psal. 58 3. Againe that the frame of mans heart is onely euill continually Gen. 8 21. and that we are borne in sinne Psal. 51 5. and man borne of a woman cannot be cleane Iob 25 4. Tim. What doe ye call the corruption of our Nature and what be the fruites of it Silas It is a naughty vicious quality in our Nature whereby it is enclined to all euill naturally and vndisposed vnto any good yea enemie to God and disposed against all good as Titus 3 3. Hating God Col. 1. Minds set vpon euill workes The fruites of this our corrupt Nature are all sinnes whatsoeuer euen all those sinnes reckoned vp Ro. 1. 29 30 c. Gal. 5 19. Tit. 3 3. Col. 3 5. or in any other place euen all maner of sinnes not blasphemy against the Holy-Ghost excepted Tim. By what degrees doth this corruption proceede and go forward Silas First it begetteth lust which is an euill motion or desire sweruing from Gods will this is the spawn of all sinne The second is obedience to this lust Rom. 6 12. which we call consent when the will yeelds vnto the euill motions with purpose and resolution to do it this is called of Iames the conception of sinne Iam. 1 15 Then thirdly there followes an euill action in word or deede this is called of the same Apostle the bringing forth of lust it bringeth forth sinne that is some outward grosse acte in speech or action Lastly the going ouer this sinnefull acte by custome and continuance in it this is called the perfection or finishing of sinne vpon all this there succeedeth death as the terme last period or full point of this proceeding and course in sinning wherein it resteth Tim. But how proue ye that Original sin hath priuation or absence of Originall righteousnesse Silas This is the consequence vpon all the former for we could not be guilty deserue punishment and be corrupt if we had our first perfection Secondly except we had lost that we should not need to seeke and fetch that from another euen from Christ as ver 17. Thirdly when the Scripture saith God made man righteous but they found out many inuentions Eccl. 7 31. This prooueth that the perfect righteousnes giuen vnto vs in our creation is not only lost but thorow our owne fault lost Tim. Why is this sinne called Originall Silas First because it is from the beginning Secondly because it is first in vs before grace Thirdly it is the first head beginning of all sins Lastly it is in vs from our beginning euen from our very conception Tim. What vse of all this Sil. First it confuteth the errors of such which say it is nothing but priuation of righteousnes Also such as say it is nothing but the inclination of our nature to euill Secondly it sheweth the most heauy case in which we are all by birth we being all ouer-couered with corruption and sinfull putrifaction rotten and ful of sores and not so full of euill as voide of all goodnesse and so hatefull to God whose pure eyes cannot but hate vs abhorre vs and therefore we are called the children of wrath Eph. 2 3. See Ezck. 16. No leaper no lazar no Iob to be compared to vs if we saw our selues wee should loath our selues Thirdly the knowledge heereof must humble our stomacks and courages Fourthly it must stir vp great care of being washed and clensed from this spot all the water in the sea is too little to wash this one staine all care in the world is not great enough to get it scoured out Psa. 51 2 6. either repentance for this sinne or for no sinne Fiftly it must stir vp a desire and a thirst after the pure and holy conception of Christ which is the couer to hide the Salue to cure this originall sore Sixtly it may make vs compassionate and mercifull one to another especially to our children being all alike infected and they by vs and therefore in our chiding and corrections were should bee moderate Seauenthly it must keepe vs from extolling nature and the goodnesse of nature for all natures euen the best is poysoned there being nothing good in vs till grace come and plant goodnesse in vs for can one gather figges of thistles or grapes of thornes Math. 7. Tim. What is meant here by death Sil. Properly a depriuation of life vnproperly all such things as are forerunners and furthereis thereof all miseries sicknesses paynes the 〈◊〉 of death Tim. What life did Adam liue before sin Sil. A twofold life first of grace being led by the holy Spirit which moued him wholy to celestiall and diuine things this is called spirituall life The second is of nature wherby he was moued to follow those good things which tend to preserue nature and the estate of his body of both these kinde of liues Adam was depriued and so dyed a spirituall and naturall death for beeing before ioyned to God in his fauour mooued by his spirit hee now hauing sinned was turned from God lost his sauour and spirit and so could not aspire to any diuine thing but had his heart wholy set vpon euill and touching his naturall life he was threatned that to dust he should go Tim. Did not his sin deserue eternall death Sil. It did so but eternal death is nothing saue the continuance of spirituall death Tim. Yet naturall death was not inflicted vpon him after his sin for he liued still in the world and that a great while Sil. He did so howbeit he may be said to be naturally dead so soon as he had sinned First because by the guilt of his sinne hee was presently subiect vnto it Secondly God streight way gaue sentence of death vppon him and therefore hee may bee saide straight way to haue dyed as condemned persons are called dead men though they bee respited Thirdly the messengers and souldiers of death presently tooke hold on him and arrested him as hunger thirst cold heat diseases dayly wasting of his natural moysture to the quenching of life but God did spare him that the sentence was not presently executed to commend his patience and to giue Adam thereby occasion of saluation for the promise beeing giuen and hee called to repentance faitb by that meanes attained a better life through Christ then he lost through sin Tim. What did this shew Sil. That God doth not delight in the death of sinners but rather that they should returne and liue Secondly it teacheth vs patience towards such as
are offenders of vs being ready to receiue them to fauour whensoeuer they truely repent Tim. Howe vnderstand ye this that all men are vnder death Sil. After this sort first euery man so soone as hee is borne is euery houre apt to die Secondly euery man at his birth is spiritually dead quite destitute of Gods grace and holy spirit Ephe. 2 1. till his regeneration Thirdly euery person deserueth this death to become eternall euen euerlasting separation from GOD and his presence and felicity Tim. What equity or iustice is there in this Sil. The equity is iust for that one mans sinne was euery mans sinne for Adam was the roote of our kinde and therefore this fault is not personall resting in himselfe but reaching to all his posterity which were then in his loynes as Leuy was in Abrahams loynes Heb. 7 10. For such iuice as is in the tree commeth to all the branches also such as is the water in the fountaine such it is in the riuer and some such diseases as be in the parents descendeth to the children also amongst vs men the father beeing a Traytor the whole bloud is tainted Lastly the righteousnesse of Christ the head is conuayed ouer to the members so it is here againe God who is most iust so decreed and would haue it that the grace which Adam had hee should keepe or loose for himselfe and all mankinde who were to stand and fall wih him thus it appeares to be very equall Tim. What instructions learn ye hence Sil. First it reproues the vulgar conceit that God will not punish but for actuall sinnes Secondly it reprooues some Papists which exempt the Virgin Mary from this generall condition of sinne and death Thirdly it doeth admonish vs of our most wofull condition which wee are in without Christ. Fourthly it puts vs in minde of mutuall compassion seeing our case is equall one no better then another all alike 〈◊〉 and wretched Fistly it teacheth the necessity of a Sauiour not onely to know there must be one and who he is and what he hath done but to gette him to become ours by beleeuing the promises of him Tim. What are we to be put in minde of by the connexion and ioyning together of sin and death Sil. First that euery one is bound to make account of dying euery moment hauing sinne the matter and means of death still about him Secondly that the dāme of such a brood that is sinne which causeth no lesse then death is most carefully to be auoyded and abhorred euen to be fled from as one would flie from death Moreouer think that if an others sinne could doe this as to make thee culpable of death what will that sinne do which thou doest in thine owne person for Adams sinne is thine in account not in act yet so as this proueth Adams sinne to bee euery mans owne proper sinne as if he had himselfe acted and done it because else he should not dye for it for men in iustice are not to suffer death for any sinne saue that which is their owne by act or imputation Christ had had wrong done to him to be brought to death if sinne had no way belonged vnto him for death is not inflected but with reference to sin DIAL XI Verses 13 14. For vnto the time of the law was sin in the worlde but sinne is not imputed where there is no lawe But death raigned from Adam to Moyses euen ouer them that sinned not after the like manner of the transgression of Adam Tim. WHat is the drift of this scripture Sil. He proceedeth in his purpose to proue all men euen to the yong In fants newly borne to bee through Adam sinnetull by bringing in a secret obiection and answering it Tim. What is the obiection and how is it answered Sil. The obiection is this there could be no sin nor sinners before Moses seeing there was no law where there is no lawe there is no sinne This obiection the Apostle doeth answere two wayes first by a distinction betweene being and reputing sinne was in the world before Moses law yet not so reputed and esteemed so vile and soule seeing yet no law was giuen them Secondly hee prooues there was sin by the effects of sinne which is death whereunto euen before Moses law both olde and young were subiect which is a sufficient proofe that then all men sinned death being the stipend of sinne Tim. Now expound the wordes and tell vs what is meant here by this vntill the time of the law Sil. That is to say all that time that passed betweene Adam and Moses so expounded verse 14. Death raigned from Adam to Moyses Tim. What is meant hereby that sinne was in the world till then Sil. That is to say men which liued in this world had sin in them as well before the law as afterwards Tim. But howe could that bee seeing that yet there was no law and sin is the transgression of some law and indeede what law could be giuen to some of them as to Infants which had no vse of reason Sil. Therefore the Apostle in affirming that notwithstanding this there was sinne in the world hee meaneth there was a sinne euen afore the Law by which sin al men were borne sinners being both guilty of wrath and corrupted euen from the wombe This is the sinne of Adam in whose sinning all men were comprehended he being head and roote of our kinde as was sayd verse 12. Tim. Belike then this is now the scope of the Apostle to proue That as al men are guilty by their owne sinnes vvhich they do in their owne persons and haue in their owne Nature so there is a sinne of Adam by guilt whereof al men are obnoxious and culpable of death Sil. True this is in verie deede that which is intended and wherein Adam is like Christ the one being fountaine of sinne vnto death the other of righteousnesse to life Tim. What meane ye heereby in that it is saide Where no Law is there sin is not imputed Silas That afore the Law was giuen sin was not so thoroughly knowne and reputed but when the law was published it was better knowne and became more greeuous Tim. But may not these words carrie another sence which may wel stand with the Apostles minde and drift Silas They may so as thus that such as liued in the world after Adam though they wanted Moyses Law yet they wanted not a Law altogither Tim. How makes he that appeare Silas Heereby because that sinne was imputed and men became thereby guilty of wrath Tim. What Law might that be Silas The Lawe of nature giuen them in their Creation Tim. What examples can yee giue that sin was imputed to men before the giuing of the Law by Moyses Sil. Sundry and very manifest First the punishment of Caines murther Gen. 4 11. Secondly the reprehension of Abimelech Gen. 20 6. Thirdly the ouerthrow of the world by a flood Gen. 7 20.
Fourthly the destruction of Sodom 19 24. Fiftly the drowning of the Egyptians Exod. 14 27 28. al which hapned for sinne Tim. What other examples can ye giue to proue this that sin was imputed Silas The death of infants as well as of men of yeares which plainly proueth all men to haue bin sinners and guilty before the Law of Moyses Tim. What learne ye by this that sinne and death doe vnseparably follow one the other Silas That death came in not by creation but by corruption Secondly that if men accompt death terrible they should not thinke sleightly of sin the breeder of it Tim. What meaneth this which is saide heere That death raigned from Adam to Moyses Silas Heereby hee signifieth the force and power of death to bee exceeding great bearing all men downe before it as a mighty King dooth subdue such as rise against him Tim. How long doth the raign of death continue and last Silas Not from Adam till Moyses onely but till the end of the world Tim. Ouer whom doth death exercise his power and kingdome Sil. Ouer all both olde and young none exempted Infants nor men Tim. Yet the Apostle saith of some that they shall not dye but be changed Cor. 15 52. Sil. True yet that change shall bee instead of death to them Secondly this is the condition of all men that through sinne they are subiect to death God may priuiledge whom he will as Enoch and Elias Tim. Whence got death this power Sil. Through mans sinne according to Gods decree Tim. What learne ye heereby Sil. That there is a necessity for al men once to come vnto death Tim. But the faithful haue their sinnes forgiuen them how is it then that they dye Sil. Yet sinne is still in them whence commeth death to them not as a part of the curse for sinne but as an entrance into heauenly blisse whither they cannot come but by death so as they are freed from the hurt which death brings but not from the necessity of dying Tim. What should this teach Sil. That all men are so to make account of death as they doe prepare continually for it and arme themselues continually against the fear of it by keeping faith and a good conscience Tim. You saide that death raigned ouer Infants tell vs by what words are infants described Sil. That they sinned not after that maner that Adam sinned Tim. What meaneth this Sil. That they are free from voluntary and actual sins as in respect of their owne persons Tim. What sin then haue Infants to procure death Sil. Their byrth-sinne or originall corruption which they draw from their Parents by propagation Tim. What is to be gathered hence for our instruction That parents haue cause to mourne for sinne in their young children as well as for their owne Secondly that in the death of their children they consider not so much the losse as the cause which is sinne which would keepe them from impatiencie serue to humble them Thirdly that there is diuers kindes of sinne to wit voluntary inuoluntary originall actuall Moreouer that all sinne is equall thus farre as to deserue death though in other respects vnequall Tim. What will follow of this Silas That God is no respecter of persons young or olde all are one with him Tim. Yet sinnes are not euery way equall Sil. No For there is difference in the degree both of the offence and of the punishment some more heynous then others some to be more grieuously punished then others Tim. What should this worke Silas It should be a bridle to wicked ones to refraine from sinne as much as they can thereby at least to lessen their paine Also a Curbe euen to the godly whose sins howsoeuer pardoned so as they shall not dye eternally for them yet sorer temporall punishments are inflicted as their sinnes be greater As is to be seene in Dauids example who had many smartfull blowes for his very shamefull falles DIALOGVE XII Verse 14 15. Which was the figure of him that was to come But yet the gift is not so as is the offence For if by the offence of one many be dead much more the grace of God and the gift by grace which is by one man Iesus Christ hath abounded vnto many Tim. VVWhat doth this Text containe Silas Two things First the similitude or like nes between Adam and Christ which was the tipe or figure Secondly the dissimilitude or vnlikenes betwixt them but yet the gift is not so Tim. What is meant by him that was to come Silas First Adams posterity as some iudge and then the meaning is all they should be sinners as he was Secondly Iesus Christ who in respect of Adam sinning was to come this is the truth Tim. In what meaning is Adam said to be a tipe or figure of Christ Silas Some take it thus that as Christ is an example to such as willingly obey God so Adam was an example to so many as sinne and disobey willingly this sauours of Pelagianisme as if sinne came by imitation and not by propagation Tim. How then do ye take Adam to be a figure of Christ Silas In respect of that force and efficacy which was in Adam to propagate and conuey euen into all his progeny destruction by sinne Heerein hee was a figure or a Tipe of the second Adam the man Christ Iesus in respect of the like force in him to deriue into his members eternall life by his righteousnesse imputed to their faith Tim. Report vnto vs more plainly and in few words this analogie and proportion which is betweene Adam and Christ Iesus Silas As Adam by his sinne was the cause of death to all men though they did not eate of the forbidden tree so Iesus Christ was made righteousnesse to beleeuers though them-selues had wrought no righteousnesse Heerein was Adam a figure of Christ. Tim. But it may appeare that this is rather a difference and vnlikenesse then a likenesse Sil. True it is so if you take it particularly but not if it be taken generally that is that as Adam meriteth death for his so Christ meriteth life for his that is to take it generally but particularly there is great oddes for grace righteousnesse and life came by Christ Sinne death and damnation by Adam Also Adam by generation of the flesh poureth euill things into men Christ by faith poureth good things into his members Tim. What vse can ye make of this Silas It serueth to confute both Iew and Papist the one for thinking that one Christ cannot bee the redeemer of the whole world whereas it is of them confessed that the whole world was corrupt by one Adam the other for denying that we are iust before God by the obedience of another to wit of Christ yet all men bee made vniust by the disobedience of another to wit of Adam and why not that as well as this De similibus simile iudicium parium par est ratio Tim. What do ye
Righteous Tim. WHat doth this Scripture containe Silas First a rehearsall of the comparison betweene Adam and Christ begun in the twelfth verse Secondly a laying forth the ground of this whole comparison Tim. Declare the comparison as it is rehearsed in the 18. Verse Silas As by the offence of one Adam guiltinesse came ouer all men to make them subiect to death so on the contrary part the righteousnesse of Christ imputed to beleeuers through Gods free fauour iustifieth them that they may become partakers of eternal life Or thus as by Adam guiltinesse came on all men to death eternall so by Christ righteousnesse is giuen to all beleeuers vnto life eternall Tim. What is the ground of all this comparison Silas That Adam and Christ by the decree of God are not as two particular persons but as two rootes or stocks or heads of all mankinde that as out of the one springeth sin and death by Nature so out of the other springeth righteousnesse and life by Grace Tim. Whereunto tends all this Silas To make vs to vnderstand that we are iustified not by our owne workes but by Faith in Iesus Christ. For hauing in our selues by meanes of Adams offence guiltinesse death how can our workes iustifie vs and if they do not then Christs his obedience apprehended by faith must be our Iustice before God Tim. Now let vs expound the words and gather instructions What doth he meane heere by the offence of one Silas The sinne of Adam which was but one sinne as himselfe was but one person Tim. What learne yee by this That guiltinesse came on all men to condemnation Sil. That there is not one that came of Adam by naturall generation which escaped the condition of sinne and death Christ onely is exempted who was conceyued by the Holy ghost and not by the seede of man Tim. What do ye obserue heerein Sil. This namely how dreadfull a thing the offence of Gods Iustice is when but one sinne done in a moment could wrap a world of men in euerlasting death and paine Tim. What learne ye heereby That the Iustifying or righteousnes of Christ is set against the offence of one Silas That as the offence is without vs which makes vs all guilty so is the righteousnesse which iustifies vs not in vs but in Christ. Secondly that iustifying is an absoluing or acquitting vs from guilt and condemnation Tim. What meanes he by all men Silas All the Children of God which beleeue whereof there is an vniuersality as there is an vniuersality of the Reprobate Tim. Why doth he ioyne life vnto Iustification Iustification of life Sil. Not onely by the custome of speech peculiar to the Hebrewes but to teach that life is knit to righteousnesse and heereof it is also that faith and life are so often ioyned together because it is by Faith that wee take hold on righteousnesse which bringeth with it life as a proper and necessary effect Tim. What learne yee generally out of the whole 19. verse Sylas That Adam and Christ are not to be considered of as other particular persons bee but as two heades or rootes of all mankind which depend on them Tim. What seuerall and speciall things do ye now learne out of the 19. verse Sylas That Adams offence was disobedience to Gods word Secondly this disobedience ought to be familiarly known and what hurt we get by it therefore by an excellency called that disobedience as exceeding al others both for the quality and effects Thirdly this disobedience is communicated to all men to the making of them sinners which is done by an action called imputation and so it is euery mans owne sin no lesse then Adams Fourthly that distrust or doubting is the roote of all sinne and so to bee greatly taken heed of Adams fall began at doubting that carried him to disobedience Fiftly that wherein we disobey Gods will therein we bewray old Adam whose children wee shewe our selues to bee by our disobedience against Gods blessed commandement Tim. What do ye call disobedyence Sylas It is a vice which causeth vs not to beleeue God promising or threatning nor to obey him forbidding nor commanding either because the commandements be troblesome or because we cannot see the reason of them Tim. Now tell vs what was that whereby righteousnes and life entred into the world Sil. The obedience of Christ Iesus Tim. What is obedience Sil. It is a power by which a godly man is ready to do and to obey the will of God though the reason of it bee not vnderstood nor it appeare to be any way profitable Tim. Wherein did Christ shew his obedience to God Sil. Throughout his whole life doing alwayes in all things what his Father appoynted without any regard of men but especially in his death wherin he submitted himselfe wholy to the will and pleasure of his Father Tim. Is the actiue obedience of Christ in fulfilling the morall law by doing it necessary vnto the iustification of a sinner before God or his passiue obedience in sufferiug death doth it alone iustifie vs for the Scripture ascribeth our purging remission of sins and saluation to his bloud and death in many places it may seem that Christ kept the Law not for vs but for himselfe to make him a meete high Priest Sil. Iustification hath two parts First the forgiuenesse of sinnes secondly the making of vs iust For as we owed vnto God a satisfaction by death for the breach of the Law so we were bound to performe subiection to God with all power of body and soule and all the might of those powers euen from the time of our being Therefore as we needed the passion of our Lord to discharge the first debt of paine and punishment so the other debt of homage and conformity to the will of God was answered in the obedience of his life that so we might not onely escape death but finde an entrance into life eternall which without perfect obedience to the commandement might not bee granted according to the tennor of the Law Doe this and liue Leuit. 18 5. By which words it is plaine that by meere passiue obedience wee could not haue possession of life which is promised to doing all that is required in the Law for euen Christ himselfe by his doing the Law may claime and challenge eternall life and it cannot be denied him in rigor of iustice because hee fulfilled the condition of workes enioyned by the Law and how should we think to haue life without the Law done which not beeing possible by our selues therefore Christs obedience in his life must be imputed to make vs capable of life For seeing euery iote and tittle of the Law must bee done Mat. 5 18. therefore the sum and substance much more Now the summe of the lawe is to loue God with all our harts c. and this cannot be done by vs which are sinners then there must be a translation of the lawe from
vs in our persons vnto the person of our mediatour who must do euery iot for vs therefore he saith it behooued him to fulfill all righteousnesse Math. 3. and that hee is the end of the law for righteousnes Rom. 10 and hath made vs iust by his obedience as in our text and became subiect to the law to redeeme vs which were obnoxious to the law Gal. 4 4. 5. And indeed seeing Christ himselfe was giuen vs and that he was borne for vs wrought miracles suffered death arose ascended c. how must not his life also be ours Againe is it not written that Christ was made our sanctification as well as our righteousnesse and our righteousnesse as well as our redemption 1 Cor. 1 30. Moreouer he that continueth not to doe all things contained in the law is accursed Deut. 27. last verse Where of it followes that if any wil auoyd the curse of the law he stands bound constantly from his conception till his death to keepe the law which forsomuch as none can do by himselfe therefore all the contents of the law must be accomplished by our surety or else no escaping the curse Besides if the actuall obedience of Adam made vs sinners howe should we be iust without the actuall obedience of Christ and it seemes that Christ should be but halfe a Sauiour only suffering and not doing things pleasant to his Father for vs. What meaneth that that Christ sanctified himselfe for vs Iohn 17. and who knowes not that it is written of Christ that hee came to doe his Fathers will Heb. 10. Whereas Scripture attributeth our saluation to his bloud that is a Synecdoche a part put for the whole likewise where iustification is placed in forgiuenesse of sins Rom. 4 5 6. and the bloud of Christ shedde beeing his chiefest obedience as it comprehends the rest that went afore so it excludeth onely legall sacrifices as not meritorious Tim. Is not this a speciall marke of a good Christian to follow the example of Christ his obedience in our doings and sufferings Sylas It is so hereby men are knowne to be Christians if after Christs example they doe indeuour to doe the will of God and not by their profession only which may be in an hypocrite Tim. Why doth hee say many shall bee made iust and not in the present time many are made iust Sylas Because this obedience is giuen to the elect at what time they shall liue in the world and beleeue DIAL XVI Verses 20 21. Moreouer the law entred thereuppon that the offence should abound neuerthelesse where sinne abounded there grace abounded much more That as sinne hath raygned to death so might grace also raygne by righteousnes vnto eternall lyfe through Iesus Christ our Lord. Tim. WHat doe these words contayne Sylas The Conclusion of the whole treatise of Iustification by faith Tim. What is the matter of the conclusion Sylas In the conclusion he doth meet withall and make answere to a secret obiection made in the behalfe of the law The obiection is this that if the obedience of Christ be our full righteousnes before God without the works of the lawe then to what end doth the law serue To which the Apostle doth first propound his answere barely verse 20. and nakedly that the law was giuen first to encrease our guiltinesse Secondly that the grace of Christ thereby becomes more glorious the which the Apostle doth enlarge by a comparison of contraries verse 21. sinne and death set against righteousnesse and life as contrarie one to the other the sum of which comparison is thus much that as sin preuailes to make all guilty of death so the righteousnesse of Christ beeing freely giuen to the beleeuers doth preuaile much more to make them partakers of eternall life Tim. Now expound the words what is meant by the Law Silas The morall Law contained in the ten commandements Tim. In what meaning is it said it entred thereuppon Sil. The Apostle meaneth that it came in and entred vpon Adams offence which had made vs guilty of death that wee might become more guilty Some expound and say it entred beside the promise of grace as the more principall doctrine Tim. Was this the purpose of God in giuing the Law to encrease our guiltinesse Silas No not so the Apostle doth not note the intention of God with what purpose he gaue it but the euent that did follow the giuing of the Law that thereby our offence did more abound Tim. In what respects is offence and sinne said to abound by the Law Silas In these respects First because a Law beeing giuen sinne was made more grieuous now by the breach of it Secondly sinne is more stirred vp and irritated by the Law our nature desiring the things that are forbidden it Thirdly the Law doth affoord vs a clearer sight and knowledge of our sinnes which were more manifested vnto vs by the Law as may bee made plaine vnto vs by these comparisons first of a Glasse which makes vs see the spots of our face what they be and how foule they bee Secondly of a Candell which doth discouer vnto vs the thinges in a Roome which lye out of order and could not be espied in the darke So by the law we come to vnderstand what our sinnes be and how greeuous they are Tim. Tell vs now what is meant by Grace Silas The fauour of God in the free forgiuenesse of all sinnes by the merite of Christ his obedience Tim. In what sense is it said that grace abounded Silas In respect of vs and of our knowledge for by the forgiuenesse of our many and great sinnes the mercy and fauour of God in Christ did appeare most manifestly vnto vs and is more fully and famously knowne Tim. By what similitude may this be declared vnto vs Silas Of a skilfull Surgeon or Physition who by curing and healing great and desperate wounds and diseases doth not get more skill but doe more manifest their skill which they had Secondly of a most kind Prince or father who by pardoning some great faults of their Children or subiects do so much the more make known their clemency and kindnes by how much their offence was more heynous in like manner the more and fouler the sinnes be which be forgiuen vs of God the more plentifully doth he declare his grace From whence we learne first that wonderfull is the wisedome and goodnesse of God that can turne such a thing as sinne is to the praise of his grace as Dauids fall Psal. 51 1. and Peters deniall Luke 22 32. Secondly it affoordeth a great comfort to great sinners so as they feele their sinnes beleeue in Christ for whatsoeuer their sinnes be there is mercy with God more then to counteruaile them grace in Christ is more able to saue then Adams sinne to condemne Thirdly God suffereth men to abound in sinne with a meaning not to destroy them therefore but to poure and shew forth his goodnesse more richly
The power of God which was then chiefely declared to his glory when Christ was raised from the dead and in vs it is shewed manifestly when casting away sinne we liue vncorruptly and holily Tim. What is signified by newnesse of life Silas The blamelesse life of Christians or purenesse of liuing Tim. By the word Walking what doth he teach Sil. That of a pure and blamelesse life there be certain degrees as in walking there is a going forwards to a certaine place so there must be a profiting in Christianity more and more Tim. Thus farre of the parts now tell vs the true and proper cause of our Sanctification Silas Our communion with Christ Iesus dead buried and raised againe or our fellowship with the death buriall and resurrection of Christ which is meant by those phrases of being baptised into the death of Christ and of being buried with him heereby signifying vnto vs thus much both that Christ when hee dyed and was buried was in our stead as our surety and also still communicateth the merite and vertue of his death and resurrection to such as are one with him for the destruction of sinne as well as for remission Tim. Shew vs this more plainly what your meaning is Sil. They which are the members of Christ by faith there is a power and vertue deriued and conueyed into them from his death and buriall for the beating downe and consuming the strength of sinne and from his resurrection to the quickning and raising vp their minds and wils to the study and loue of godlinesse Tim. Tel vs now distinctly and particulerly how doeth the death of Christ auayle to the mortifying and killing of sin Sil. Thus Christ Iesus consists of two Natures hee is God and Man as man hee dyed Now the power of his Godhead did in his death vphold his manhood from sinking and gaue merit to his death and the same Diuine power workes in his members for mortifying sin thorough his death Tim. How doth his buriall profit to the buriall of sinne or to progresse of mortification in vs Silas Christes bodie buried was by his diuine power kept from corruption in the graue and that verie power of Christ buried workes the continuall wasting of sinne that it may dye by little and little in his people Tim. Shew vs now how our raising to a newe life is effected by Christ his resurrection Sylas That diuine power that raised the dead bodye of Christ out of the graue worketh in the elect the resurrection of their soules from the death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse Tim. What doth follow of all this Silas First that Christ is a Sauiour not by merit onely but also by vertue and efficacie Secondly euery christian that desireth to partake in the merit of Christs death for Iustification must labour to haue fellowshippe with him in his death for mortification and to feele the Vertue of his resurrection vnto newnesse of life Thirdly such as haue fellowship with his death for the leauing of sinne with a hatred of it and with his resurrection for the leading of a godly and a iust life out of a loue vnto God and to his Law do thereby declare that they are one with Christ himselfe grafted in them Tim. How is our Sanctification made knowne to a Mans selfe and vnto others Silas By two pledges and testimonies the one inward the other outward the inward is the change of our affections when the heart loatheth the sinnes it was wont to loue and striueth against them and loueth such Vertues and duties as once it did abhorre endeauouring to do them with a desire to please and glorifie God The outward pledge is baptisme which is no empty bare but a powerfull pledge and instrument thereof Therefore it is said We are baptized into his death that is to say it is an effectuall pledge of our fellowship with Christ in his death aswell to Sanctification as to Iustification Tim. Declare how Baptisme is a pledge of our sanctification in all parts of it Silas The holy Ghost by the water of Baptisme being sprinkled vpon the childe as by an instrument not onely sealeth but worketh Sanctification by linking knitting the elect nearer vnto Christ from whome they draw vertue and power not onely for the mortifying the burying of their sinnes but for the pleasing of God in a new course of life Or thus the death of sinne is effectually represented by the water cast on vs at our baptisme and buriall of sinne by our being vnder the Water and by our comming out of the water is signifyed our arising out of our sinnes to a better life thorough the power of the holy Ghost applying Christ his death and buriall for the beating downe of our corrupt Nature and his resurrection or our quickning to godlinesse of liuing Tim. Then the power of Baptisme dependeth not vpon the Element of water or on the Minister or actions performed in the ministration Silas No surely but vpon the ordinance of Christ appointing it to be a pledge of remission of sinnes and repentance and vppon the Spirite and diuine power of Christ working by his ordinance a straighter Coniunction betweene himselfe and the elect beleeuers Tim. Whereof should this put vs in minde Silas That such parties as are baptized are much beholden to God for such a testimony and instrument of his grace and in this regarde stand bound to depart from sinne and to liue godlily especially hauing made a solemne Vowe and couenant in their Baptisme that they will not serue sinne in the lust thereof but God in keeping his word and doing his will therein reuealed to the vtmost of that Grace which they haue receiued DIAL III. Verse 5. For if we be planted with him to the similitude of his death so shall we bee to the similitude of his resurrection Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To make it manifest that the power grace of dying to sinne and walking in a new life is deriued and borrowed from Christ Iesus Tim. How is this declared and made plaine Silas By a similitude or comparison of planting For as it fareth with a grift translated from an old stocke into a new so is it with elect beleeuers As the grift liueth groweth and fructifieth by the iuyce drawne from the new stocke into which it is planted so the elect beeing taken out of the olde rotten stocke of Adam and planted into that Noble stocke Christ Iesus they participate of his heauenly Spirite by whose vertue applying the death and resurrection of Christ to them they receyue power to die to sinne and to liue to God Tim. What is meant by the similitude of his death and resurrection Silas Thus much that what was done in Christ by nature must be likewise done in vs by Analogie or proportion as thus Christ dyed naturally so wee must feele in our selues a dying of our sinnefull desires as hee rose againe out of the graue so
first cannot but haue the latter Secondly a consolation that the life of Christ is annexed to his death for they are sure to haue part with him in his life both of grace and glory that haue part with him in his death So the Apostle saith We beleeue it that is we are certainely perswaded of it that the life of Christ belongs to vs if we be dead to sinne it is no matter of opinion or coniecture but of faith Tim. What things learne we out of the ninth verse Sil. First that Christ was dead to take away sin touching guilt and dominion Secondly that he was raised from death to life again Thirdly that his life is no more subiect to death for it cannot againe be quenched with sinne and death whereupon doth follow these two most comfortable things First those sinnes of ours vvhich were imputed to him he hath wholy abolished and freeed himselfe from them For if any one of our sins were not taken away by him either he must not rise from the dead or being risen he must returne againe to dye for where sinne remaines vnremooued there of necessitie death hath power because it is the stipend of sinne Secondly that as Christ hath freed himself from our sins death so he wil free his mebers wholy from them both For he tooke our nature vpon him to that end to chase sinne and death out of it as it is written He came to destroy the works of the deuil 1 Iohn 3. Also in his death resurrection he bare our persons and for vs and in our behalfe ouercame sinne and death as if wee our selues had done it Tim. Vnto what vses will the knowledge of these thinges serue vs Sil. This knowledge must serue vs to these vses First to prouoke our thankefulnesse vnto Christ who hath wrought our liberty from sin and death the two maine enemies of our saluation Secondly to encrease our hatred of and our strife against sinne in a ioyfull hope of full and perfect freedome from it by Christ. Tim. What other thing is there to be learned out of this 9. Verse Sylas That Iesus Christ was once not onely dead but vnder the dominion and power of death not as one constrayned as it he could not haue kept him selfe from the power of death but willingly because he would obey his Fathers decree who had appoynted that death for our sin shouldseaze vpon him hold him as prisoner in the house of death for a time this is the lowest degree of Christs humiliation contayning the true meaning of that article of his descension into hell hell signifying the graue according to the phrase of scripture and descending into the graue was the putting of his body vnder the dominion of death for a certain space The vse of this is to teach vs humility that the same mind be in vs which was in Christ who at hee abased himselfe to such a vile condition for our good so ought wee in humblenesse of minde to serue and profit others though they bee our inferiours and though wee should put our selues to doe very meane or hard things for their sakes Tim. What is contayned in the tenth verse Sylas The end of Christs death which was to abolish and wholy take away sin both touching the punishment and the power of it therefore it is saide hee dyed once to sin that is to take away sin from his members by that one death which he once suffered Also it containes the end of his life which he now liueth in heauen to wit the glory of his Father therefore it is written that he liues to God that is to the praise of God and in his glorious presence or most gloriously Tim. What are we to learne from this that Christ is said to dye once to sin Sil. First that our sinne was the cause of his death Secondly that sin in the elect shall be destroyed and taken away by the merit vertue of his death the time wil come to wit after this life that the children of God shall bee as free from sinne as Christ himselfe is Thirdly that for the destruction of sinne it was sufficient for Christ once to dye and therefore the sacrifice or offering of Christ in the popish Masse to take away sinne is absurd and abhominable it is absurd because it implies a taking away of sinne without death and a sacrifice for sinne without bloud or else an iteration of his death or often shedding of his bloud all which is most absurd it is abhominable because it is directly against the Scripture which speaketh of Christ as of one once dead and once offered Secondly because it doth derogate from the allsufficiency and perfection of Christs onely sacrifice in his death for if his sacrifice bee sufficient for this purpose to take away sinne their sacrifice of the Masse is superfluous if this be needfull then Christs is weake Tim. What other thing learne we from hence that Christ dyed but once Silas That it is sufficient for vs once to be mortified and once to dye to sinne from whence wee may gather that they are in an error which thinke that the grace of mortification and repentance may be wholly lost for then Gods Children must twice dye to sinne howbeit though the grace of sanctification is but once giuen yet Christians must labour to cherish preserue that grace with purpose neuer to returne againe to the seruice of sinne as Christ neuer returnes vnto the Graue Tim. Why is it said that Christ raised from the dead lines to God seeing he alwayes liued vnto God euen afore his death Sil. Christ after his resurrection from the dead doth otherwise liue vnto God then he did before his death For though it be true that alwayes euen before his death as well as after he was led by the spirite of God and did all things to the praise of God yet before his death hee so liued to God as hee had in him as in one who was a true man the infirmities of our nature wearinesse hunger thirst cold c. and vpon him as vpon our surety all our sinnes charged and imputed but after his resurrection hee so liueth to God as his manhood is wholly freed from all infirmity of nature and imputation of sin being most perfectly glorified Tim. What is contained in the 11. verse Sil. It is the conclusion of the comparison betweene Christ and his members the effect and summe whereof is this that what thing was done in Christ the same thing ought to be done in his members For as Christ once dying doth euer liue to God so his members are once to dye to sinne and perpetually to liue to God Tim. What is meant heere by our liuing vnto God Silas When not sinne but the Spirit and the word of God bee the grounds of all our thoughts wordes and deeds Tim. How is this spirituall life whereby we liue to God to be preserued and maintained Silas First by
not vnder the Law but vnder grace God forbid Know ye not that to whomsoeuer ye giue your selues as seruants to obey his seruants ye are whom ye obey whether it be of sinne vnto death or of obedience vnto righteousnesse Tim. VVHat doth this Text contayne Silas An answere of the Apostle Paul vnto a cauilling obiection made against his former doctrine Tim. First of all tell vs what he meaneth by Sinne when he saith What then shall we sinne v. 15. Sil. By Sinne is meant heere not one act of sin but a continuall course of sinning and it is as much as if it had beene said Shall wee liue or leade our liues in sinne as before verse 2. or shall we serue sinne verse 6. or shall we obey sinne This then is the meaning of the obiection Shall wee giue ouer our selues licenciously to sinne because wee are not vnder the Law but vnder Grace Which obiection did arise from the ill vnderstanding of the Apostles words For his words were so taken of some as if hee had meant by not beeing vnder the Law our freedome from the gouernment and doctrine of the law and so the bridle being cast loose in our necks we might haue liued as we list which was very farre from the Apostles meaning Tim. What may we learne from this Obiection Silas Our first instruction from this Obiection is to learne how ready and prone sinnefull men bee to snatch vp all manner of occasions which may nourish liberty in sinne peruerting holy doctrine to this end therefore al men must watch ouer their owne hearts being naturally bent to these crooked shifts auoyding the company of sinnefull men which affect such naturall licenciousnesse Secondly that the il vnderstanding of things wel taught breeds errors and cauillings and therefore we must take heed of mistaking good doctrine Thirdly that there is no doctrine so sound but one or other will carpe at it wrest it therefore Teachers must arme themselues with patience Fourthly that Ministers of the word must haue skill not onely to teach the truth but how to meet with and conuince such gaine-sayers Tim. Now tell vs what answere the Apostle makes vnto the former cauillations and how the Obiection is wiped away Sylas It is first to be noted that the Apostle doeth not directly answere their cauilling argument which is Sophisticall being a fallacy from the ambiguity of the speech of not beeing vnder the law which the obiectours tooke as beeing meant of a freedome from the obedience of the law wheras the Apostle vnderstood it of the rigorous exaction of the law forbidding euill thinges and giuing no strength to forbeare them but rather prouoking our lusts more after such euils as it forbids Our Apostle therefore contents himselfe to answere the consequent of the argument namely that which was vntruly concluded and gathered from his owne doctrine to witte that we might freely sin this consequent he answereth two wayes His first answere is by words of detestation God forbid in 15 verse hereby teaching vs that all wicked and false things inferred from the worde must bee abhorred of vs. In the second part of his answere he proues the quite contrary to the obiection namely that such as bee not vnder lawe but vnder grace ought not to serue sin but Christ their Lord. Tim. How doth he proue this by what argument Sylas By these two reasons the first is taken from the condition of Seruants in the beginning of the 16. verse This reason standeth thus It is meete that euery one obey him whose seruant he is but all true beleeuers are the seruants of God and not of sin therefore are they bound not to obey sin but God in doing his will Which the Apostle doeth confirme and backe by the testimony of euery mans conscience know ye not that a seruant must obey him that is his Lord and that Christ is your Lord and not sin ye all know this by the light of nature the one and the other ye know by the light of the word Tim. What thinges are wee to learne out of this first reason Sylas First that it is wisedome in the Ministers of the word to build their doctrine vppon knowne and receiued principles of which euery one is conuicted that they are true Secondly wee must iudge of our seruice either to sinne or to God not by our profession but by our practise and obedience if we do fulfill and obey the lusts of sinne then are we the seruants of sin whatsoeuer wee professe or say to the contrary Thirdly that it standes with great reason that a Christians life should be a continuall obedience to Christ because he is our Lord and hath admitted vs to be his seruants who by nature through Adams fall were wholly captiues to Sathan and sin but Christ by his death hath freed vs from this captiuity and addicted vs to himselfe to this end that we should not now serue sin our former Lord but Christ our new maister who hath deliuered vs from sin and Sathan as seruants which paste from one maister to another doe euer please and serue the latter maister Tim. What is the second reason whereby he proues that wee ought to obey Christ and not sin Sylas The second reason of this text is taken from the effects which follow the seruice of Christ and of sin which be death and life whether it bee of sin to death or of obedience vnto righteousnesse This second reason hath two branches and may be thus framed such as obey and serue sin must haue death for their reward therefore wee ought not to serue sin least we dye for it Againe such as obey Christ by doing righteous things shall haue eternall life for their reward therefore wee ought to obey Christ and renounce the seruice of sinfull lusts that wee may liue for euer Tim. What instructions do ye gather from hence Sylas First of all that sin and righteousnes be two contrary Lords as fire and water as God and Mammon loue the one and hate the other Secondly that all men must doe seruice to one of these two Lordes no man can serue both at once because they commaund contrary thinges Thirdly wee learne here the nature of sin that it is repugnant to the obedience of the lawe or vnto righteousnes therefore a filthy vnrighteous and bitter thing Fourthly that the seruice of sin is to bee auoyded as a damnable or deadly thing bringing to destruction in hell and deseruing it Lastly that a righteous life that yeelds obedience vnto God shall end in eternall life though it cannot merite it Tim. But our Apostle hauing said whether of sin to death why did he not likewise say or of righteousnesse to life but saith thus of obedience to righteousnesse What are we to learne by this kinde of phrase and stile Sil. These three things First that this is the righteousnesse of workes to liue obediently vnto the will of God reuealed in his word
engender both shame and death therefore the seruice of it is of all Christians to be carefully auoyded Silas What bee the generall instructions from this 21. verse Tim. First where sin goes before vnrepented of there of necessity by the ordinance and iustice of God shame and death will follow after these be the fruites which sinners must reape euen as they sow Secondly we are to learn from hence that howsoeuer men are not ashamed whiles they are in the act of sin yet afterward though they haue repented as these Romaines had the memory of their sin doth breed shame and trouble of minde Lastly the children of God because they haue much flesh and corruption remayning in them had need to be awed and held to their duties by fearefull threatnings where of there is vse euen for the most godliest to helpe to subdue their sturdy nature Tim. Nowe expound the wordes of the 21. verse and tell vs what is meant by fruite Silas Commodity gaine or profit this speech of the Apostle hath a mocke in it for hee well knewe that there came no fruit of such things but by this meanes he thought to presse and vrge their conscience more forcibly when they should perceiue that they had spēt their time in things whereof there came no credit or profit but both shame losse euen eternally this must cause euery one examiue himselfe in euery act whether he serue sin or righteousnes Tim. What are the things whereof the Romaines had cause to be ashamed Silas Two things generally first vnpurenesse of life and conuersation see Chapter 1. 24. 25. c. Secondly vnpurenesse of their religion they beeing both worshippers of Idols and prophane in their manners Rom. 1. 20. 21. 22. c. These things were accompanied with shame that is to say with griese and perturbation in minde and conscience in the fight of God vppon remembrance of these their offences against him for the shadow doth not more necessarily attend the body thē shame doth sin which maketh conscience blush within aswel as red checks without Tim. How many wayes is shame taken in scripture Sylas Two wayes first properly that affection so called which appeares in the countenance by blushing this is natural shame which commeth either for griese of some dishonesty already done or for feare of some dishonesty that may be done This kinde of shame is common both to good and bad and bringeth forth in them both certain common effects as to cause them to change their minds to bee loth to come in presence to doubt least they doe not please others to discourage them in their duties and somewhat to disquiet them finally touching this affection of naturall shame this counsell is to bee giuen that it bee so cherished in all in young folkes especially to be made a bridle to keepe from filthy things as care be taken least it grow vehement and excessiue Secondly shame is vnproperly taken for trouble or griese of conscience being cast down abased before God the former may be called shame of face and this latter shame of conscience when no shame-faced man is so dashed out of countenance before men for offending against common honesty and ciuility as the soule and conscience is ashamed for some sin wittingly committed against Gods law this shame considered in it selfe and as it is in the wicked is a part of the torment of hell but as it is in the godly it is blessed as a meanes to keep them from running into hell being a fruit and consequence of their repentāce as in these Romanes who nowafter their conuersion had shame for things done afore Tim. What things doth this shame of conscience work in the children of God and in the wicked of the world Sil. First it causeth the godly to come into the presence of God with reuerence and fear but it maketh the wicked to shun his presence as Adam who after he had sinned hid himselfe in the thicket of trees and Cain who hid himselfe after hee had murdered his brother Secondly it maketh the godly to blame and accuse the sins which they haue done with detestation and forsaking them as it is written of Ephraim Hee was ashamed but it hardeneth the wicked in their euils Thirdly it prouoketh the godlic more vnto dutie but from the wicked it taketh al heart of doing any good dutie Fourthly it helpes the godly vnto true peace at the last whereas it is but a torment vnto the wicked and beginning of their hell Lastly the godly are ashamed of God that he should knowe their sinnes but the wicked are more trobled that the world doth take knowledge of their sinnes This is it that vexeth them Tim. What aduice is to be giuen concerning this shame of Conscience Sil. A double aduice vnto Gods Children First that it should serue to stay them from committing sin seeing shame and griefe will follow it Secondly when they feele this godly shame and griefe after any sin vnheedefully done let them thanke God for such a mercie Also vnto the wicked this aduice is to be giuen that it moue them to hasten their repentance as they desire to auoide confusion of Conscience for euer in hell whereof their shame of sinne heere is both a part and an enterance if it be not looked vnto Tim. Seeing all euill is the fruite of sinne wherefore doeth the Apostle mention shame onely Silas The reason is because shame doth alwayes follow sinne so doth not other euils Secondly shame followes vs in euery place but wee doe not in euery place meete with affictions and other euils Lastly if as often as we sinne God should strike vs with some euill wee should neuer abide it therefore it is best for our profit to haue such a gentle monitour as shame is to pluck our conscience by the eare and to iogge vs on the Elbowe that wee may be stayed from doing euill when wee are tempted or from going on if we haue yeelded Tim. What is the next Reasons to hold vs from sin Tim. It is taken from the end of sinne which is death by which is meant the second death which is called eternall death in which we may consider two things first a separation of the whole man from heauenly glorie Secondly a destruction of the whole man in hellish paine Tim. What is meant heere by End Silas This word signifies eyther the cause for which a thing is done or it is put for the last terme of any thing so it is vsed heere For men do not sinne for this cause that they may dye eternally yet eternally death is the tearme of the seruice of sinne which doth determine in fearefull and endlesse destruction The reason whereof is this First because in sinne eternal Iustice is offended Secondly wicked men if they might liue alwayes they would sin eternally and therefore are worthy at the last to be punished with death eternall Tim. Now tell vs the Instruction that we are to learn
reward As souldiours endure much in hope of victory and spoile and merchants vppon expectation of a commodity in the end also husbandmen labour hald for a good haruest so should Gods children doe to attaine eternall life at last yea somuch the more and rather because of such an excellent and eternall glory in the end DIAL XIIII Verse 23. For the wages of sin is death but the guift of God is eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord. Tim. WHat doeth this text contayne what is the scope and summe of it Sylas It proues that death followes sinne because it is the wages which is due vnto it and it also proues that life doeth follow good workes yet not so as death comes after sing for this follows by way of iustice but the other by free fauour Tim. What is meant here by sin by wages and by death Silas By sin is meant the corruption of nature beeing the matter and mother of all sinnes and it selfe a sin and by wages is meant properly victuals paid by the 〈◊〉 omaine Emperours to their souldiours as their wages in recompence of their seruice and by death is meant both natural violent and spirituall but especially eternall death all which in diuine iustice be as due to sinne as wages to soldiours Tim. Why is this death called the stipend or wages of sin Silas Because it is rendered as due and paid worthiiy to the merit of such as fight for their lusts euen as souldiours which warred for their Emperours deserued their stipend in that behalfe Tim. What consider ye in eternall death Silas Two things the substance and circumstance the substance of eternall death hath two parts First separation from Gods presence blisse and glory which is called in Scripture the casting out of his kingdome Secondly destruction of body and soule each to haue seuerall torments The circumstances be sixe first the place a pit a dungeon a prison a lake Secondly companions be the Diuels and his Angels and the whole route of the Reprobate Thirdly darkenesse blacker and thicker then that of Egypt there shall bee a continuall night Fourthly eternity euen as long as God endureth for the worme neuer dyeth nor the fire neuer goeth out Fifthly sinfull concurrences as hatred of God blasphemy despaire c. Lastly weeping and gnashing of teeth This wages though it be due to all sinne yet it is not rendred to all sin and sinners because this payment was exacted of Christ in behalfe of all elect beleeuers who are discharged from it in their owne persons Tim. What are the instructions that doe arise from hence Silas Three The first whereof doth concerne the vnrepentant who still serue sinne to warne them that betimes they shake off such a Lord as sinne is which renders such deadly and damnable wages For the performance whereof let them consider these foure thinges First that in respect of their sinnes past it may moue in them a great griefe to thinke that they haue earned and worthily deserued such a stipend Secondly a searching out and particular confession of such sins as haue raigned in them and made them worthy of so deep a punishment Thirdly great care and endeuour to refraine from occasions of such wickednesse in time to come and lastly to aske earnestly of God forgiuenesse through Christ and the grace of true repentance The second instruction doth concerne such as haue repented and left the seruice of sinne they are first to be thankfull to Christ who hath freed them from such a wretched wages due to their sinnes himselfe taking the whole punishment vpon him Secondly it prouokes them to humblenesse to remember what misery they haue escaped Thirdly it doth admonish them neuer to returne againe vnto the seruice of sinne but to study rather how to please such a redeemer which hath for giuen them such a debt after the example of the woman Luke 7 47. who loued much because much was forgiuen her Now the third and last generall instruction is that which concernes all men both good and bad who may learne from hence what a dangerous thing sinne is to which such wofull wages of due doth belong Secondly what a terrible thing Gods iustice is which doth repay such bitter recompence to such as offend against it Thirdly what cause there is for all Christians to tremble at the least motion of sinne in themselues and to auoide al occasions of sinning with all their power Finally this proueth all sinnes in their owne nature to be mortall and none to be veniall for he speaks of sins generally that death is their wages Tim. Tell vs now how he doth proue that eternall life doth belong to good workes Sil. Because the guift of God is eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord. The which words doe affoorde vs this reason God doth freely giue eternall life to such as liue well and Christ Iesus merited it for them therefore they must at the last be brought to it Tim. But why doth not the Apostle say that eternall life is the wages of righteousnesse as he said before that eternall death is the wages of sinne Sil. If we had perfect righteousnes eternall life should be rendred vnto vs as wages because God hath said Do this and liue but wee haue it not for our owne righteousnesse is vnperfect and therefore in rigor of iustice deserues rather death then life Tim. But ere we goe any further satisfie me I pray you how these words ought to be read Sil. They haue these two seuerall readings first Eternall life is the gift of God and then they teach vs this lesson that eternall life doth follow our good workes and holy life as death followes sinne yet not as a due debt but as a free gift The second reading is thus The grace of God is eternall life and then it hath this meaning that true holinesse which God of his grace and free gift giueth vs is eternall life that is to say leadeth and bringeth vnto eternall life as a way bringeth a man to the place where he would be and as one must passe through the running place to the goale so by holinesse must all true Christians passe vnto life eternall this latter is the fitter and better reading more agreeing vnto the phrase and scope Tim. What doe ye call eternall life Silas The full fruition of celestiall ioyes without any possibility of loosing them so long as God himselfe liues And therefore are they called eternall because there is no end of them and they haue the name of life put vpon them to teach of what great value and price they bee of all earthly things life beeing most pleasant and precious Tim. What instructions are we to learne from hence Silas First we learne that our saluation is Gods free gift both as touching the beginning and end of it and comes not by our merites eyther in whole or in part Secondly Christians must encourage themselues to leade a
godly life notwithstanding all hinderances in their way from themselues from the world and Sathan because a holy life being continued in will at the length bring to a life eternall Thirdly seeing godlinesse of life doth by the ordinance of God necessarily leade vnto eternall life and they which do liue godlily may know that they doe so heereof it followeth that all the godly haue certainty and good assurance of their owne saluation if one may know that he liueth holily thereby he may know that he shall liue happily Tim. Wherefore are these wordes added Through Iesus Christ our Lord Silas To teach vs that all merite is to be sought out of our selues and to be found only in the person of Christ Iesus who by that which hee himselfe hath suffered and done hath fully deserued life eternall for all beleeuers which liue vprightly to whom therefore all praise honour and glory is due Amen For further clearing of this Scripture and hauing a little emptie Paper to fill vp I haue thought it not amis to set downe what our Diuines haue cited out of Antiquity for the sence of this latter clause that to the vnlerned it may appeare what consent is between vs and the Fathers in the Doctrine of grace When we finde life eternall to be called Grace saith Augustine wee haue S. Paul a magnificall defender of Grace Againe he calleth ' Death the Wages of sinne because it is due it is worthily payd it is rendred as a merit But least Iustice should lifte vp it selfe he sayeth not Eternall life is the Wages of it but tearmeth it the Grace of God and he addeth by Iesus our Lord least life should bee sought any other way but by our Mediatour Chrysost. Life eternall is not a retribution of labours but the free guift of God not deserued by vertue but giuen freely Ambros. Such as follow Faith shall haue life euerlasting Theodoretus he saith Grace not reward not by works saith Photinus but by Grace CHAP. VII DIAL I. Verse 1 2 3. Know yee not Brethren for I speake vnto them that know the Law that the Law hath dominion ouer a man as long as he liueth For the womā which is in subiection to a man is bound by the Law to a man while he liueth but if the man be dead she is deliuered from the Law of the Man so then if while the man liueth she taketh another Man she shall be called an Adulteresse But if the man be dead shee is free from the Law so that she is not an Adulteresse though she take another man Timotheus WHat parts may this seauenth Chapter be diuided into and what take you to be the purpose of the Apostle therein Silas The purpose of Paul is to confirme illustrate that Paradox or strange Doctrine propounded in the former Chapter of beeing not vnder the Law but vnder grace which haply some of the Iewes might haue taken as if the Apostle had bin an enemy to the knowledge and obedience of the Law therefore now he sheweth how our freedome from the Law is to be vnderstood and vpon what groundes and reasons it is founded This is shewed and declared by the similitude of ciuill marriage wherein the woman during natural life is obliged to the Husband 1. to be his or to him onely 2. not to depart from him 3. nor to marry with another but the husband being dead she is free being 1. his no more 2. and may without guilt of Adultery marry to another 3. to bring forth fruite to another to the second man So all the elect before new byrth are in bondage to sin to which they bring forth Children that is euill workes by the force of the Lawe but after regeneration the vigour and coaction of the Law ceaseth in part at least and they 1. are free being dead to the Law and 2. married vnto Christ. 3. do now bring forth good workes as children to God Paul exemplieth in the woman rather then in the man because her Obligation and bond is straighter toward the man then of him toward her for by the Lawe the man was suffered to giue a Bill of Diuorce to the woman so was it not on the contrary also because his meaning was to compare vs to the wife The Chapter consisteth of three parts The first setteth out our liberty from the Law and proueth it by 3. reasons in verse 1 2 3 4 5 6. Secondly he aunswereth certaine obiections made against the Law which he excuseth and commendeth by the manifest and necessarie effects also by the properties and Nature of the Law all this in his owne person Thirdly the spirituall combate betweene grace consenting to the Law and flesh or corruption resisting the Lawe is described in his owne example both touching the fight and battell and the yssue or end of it Tim. What be the parts of this similitude Silas They be two First a proposition in three Verses Secondly an application in the fourth verse The proposition is thus that the Law bindeth a man so long as he liueth the which is amplified two wayes First by the testimony of the Romanes themselues of whom hee saith they knew the truth of it Tim. What are wee to learne from the first proofe of the proposition Silas First the wisedome of the Apostle in preuenting the offence of the conuerted Iewes to whom hee wrote not onely by a louing Title in calling them Brethred but by attributing the knowledge of the Law to them and by taking vpon him the defence of the Lawe Secondly Gods people ought not to bee ignoraunt of Gods Law for it doth both helpe the teachers to speak to a people endued with knowledge and the people to know those things whereof their teachers speake Tim. What is the vse of this Silas It reproueth such as lacke knowledge and labour not for it as being iniurious both to themselues to their teachers Secondly it must stirre vp all men to endeauour to encrease in knowledge as they doe desire their owne profiting or the ease and comforte of their teachers Lastly it warneth Ministers by Paules example in their teaching to preuent offences and to speake wisely Tim. What is the other way by which hee doth explaine the proposition Silas By the example of marriage whereby the wife is linkt vnto her husband and is not free till death so as if she marry another while he liues she commits adultery but he being dead she is free to marry to whom shee will that shee may bring foorth to her new husband Euen so our first husband to wit sinnefull corruption by the Lawe irritating and prouoking it brought foorth euill workes as Children to death but our corruption being mortified by the death of Christ wee are dead to the Law and it is dead to vs as the vigor of sin hauing now no force to engender or encrease sin in vs so as we are free to passe ouer and
till it bee quite abollished and extinct vtterly at their natural death Tim. What doth this teach Sylas That the death and mortification of sin as well as the sorgiuenesse of sinne is the fruite and effect of Christes death Tim. Whereunto should this serue vs Sylas To a twofold purpose first to stirre vp in Christians a great care to sub due and kill their sins least Christs death be made voyde vnto them for it neuer profits any vnto forgiuenesse whome it doth not profit vnto mortification Secondly such as feele sin die and loose strength may bee perswaded thereby that they haue a sauing part in the death of Christ it beeing made effectuall to them for mortification of their lusts Tim. What is the end of our liberty and freedom from sin the law Sil. That it may bee free and lawfull for Christians to passe ouer to a second marriage to bee ioyned to another husband that is to Christ being dead and raysed againe and for very good reason it is that the Apostle after the death of Christ doth make mention of the resurrection of Christ. First because vppon his resurrection dependeth the force efficacy and fruite of his death which had no whit benefited the Church if he had not been raised from the dead Secondly because Christ being now raised again to life and raigning in glory he is able to do towards his Church and euery member of it all husbandly duties of protection supporting instructing blessing enriching her with graces and gifts of al sorts Lastly to teach that as Christ dyed and rose againe so it is not enough for vs to crucifie sin but wee are to rise to a new life as well bound to liue godlily and righteously as to cease from euil Tim. What are wee to learne from this that you haue sayd Sil. First such as haue not sinne mortified in them are strangers to Christ for wee cannot at once bee vnder the law as the seruants to sin and yet bee ioyned to Christ as a wife to an husband Secondly the great dignity of euery true Christian which hath his sinnes taken away touching the guilt by forgiuenes and touching power and tiranny by mortification such a one is the spouse of Christ and is one with him and with all his graces and liues by his Spirit which enableth him to do good workes acceptable to God as sweet fruites are acceptable to men or as childeren which are the fruite of the wombe bee gratefull to their parents A most happy estate to be fruitful in good workes through the Spirit of Christ to whome we are ioyned in spiritual marriage Sylas Is not this the effect of our being ioyned in marriage with Iesus Christ that wee may abounde in the fruites of the Spirit Sil. It is so as the chiefe effect of naturall marriage is the begetting of Children whome the Hebrewes call the fruit of the wombe Psal. 127. and 128. So the maine fruit of our spirituall mariage is the bringing forth such fruites as are commanded in the law This doeth first of all encourage vs to labour in euery good worke because God will accept it as a pleasant fruit Secondly it reprooueth such as are either vtterly and wholly or partly vnfruitefull in the workes of righteousnesse for as the barrennesse of the wombe was a reproach amongst the Iewes so barrennesse in good workes is much more reprochfull to a Christian who is elected redeemed called ioyned espoused to Christ sanctified also to this end to glorify God by fruits of new obedience DIAL III. 5.6 For when we were in the flesh the affections of sin which were by the law had force in our members to bring forth fruites to death But now ye are delmered from the law he being dead in whome ye were holden that we should serue in newnes of spirit and not in the oldnes of the letter Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Scripture Silas To confirme the exhortation of bringing forth fruites to God by the comparison of contraries wherein our old and first mariage with sin is compared with our latter new mariage to Christ. The summe where of is this If in our first mariage sin was effectuall in vs by the law to bring foorth euill woorkes as fruites to death now that we are freed from sin and the law and be married to Christ let his spirit be effectual in vs to bring forth good workes as fruits to God if before we brought forth euil fruites vnto destruction much more now let vs bring forth fruite pleasing to God and wholesome to our selues Tim. What then be the parts of this text Silas Two the first hath the condition of our first mariage with sinne in the 5. verse The second part hath the condition of our second mariage with Christ in the sixth verse Tim. Nowe expound the word and tell vs what is meant here by the flesh and by being in the flesh Silas By the flesh is meant our sinfull corruption such as we bring with vs into the world through carnall generation and by beeing in the flesh is meant to remaine or abide securely in the estate of corruption our sin and our nature being vnited together as husband and wife And this is here to bee noted that it is one thing to haue flesh in vs and another thing to be in the flesh For the regenerate haue flesh that is some sinfull corruption in them because their sanctification is vnperfect but they are not in the flesh because their sinfull nature is mortified and reformed before their new birth they are in the flesh being euery way obnoxious vnto sin after new birth the flesh is in them because sin stil dwels in them Tim. What are we to learne from this kind of speech Silas That all the elect before their conuersion are so necrely linkt to sinne as they and sinne are but one euen as the woman coupled in marriage vnto the man they are no more twaine but one And note heere that in this comparison sinne answereth the Husband we our selues the wife married first vnto sinne and then to Christ. Tim. What is meant heere by affections and why are they called the affections of sinne The word signifies passions which with great force affect the soule and generally all euil motions But more particularly by affections is meant not onely the lustes which be in the inferiour part of our soule as in our wil but they comprehend our reason and minde as it is corrupt by sinne and so our euill thoughts counsels purposes deuises immagination discourses are all contained vnder this word affections And they are called the affections of sinne because they 1. come from sinne 2. they are themselues sinfull and 3. eggers vnto sinnefull workes begetting in vs those workes of the flesh mentioned Gal. 5 19 20. Tim. How are these sinnefull affections saide to bee by the Law seeing euery man by Nature hath them engrafted in him before
stead of not stirring raging it doeth moue and trouble our mindes to see and to feele it For sin is neuer truely dead in any natural man but counterfotly and in seeming onely while the knowledge of the law is absent there is a true death of sin by the Holy Ghost as Chap 6. 2 3. and a dissembled death while the law is hid from vs. Tim. What doth the Apostle meane in the beginning of the 10. verse when he said he dyed Sylas That is while before hee seemed to himselfe to bee aliue nor hee sawe himselfe to bee vnder the wrath of God and eternall condemnation through the breach of the law hence came death not frō the law as he sheweth by his owne example Tim. What instruction haue we from hence Silas This that the law serueth to kil men by shewing and making them feele that they are dead and most wretched by reason of their sinnes Some are thus killed to destruction as Cayne Esau and Iudas and such as wholly despaire Others are killed vnto saluation as Paul and such as by their despaire are driuen to Christ when they are brought to see nothing in themselues saue matter of eternall misery and bee out of hope euer to bee saued by any goodnesse or strength in themselues this causeth them to looke about for succour from elsewhere DIAL VII Verses 10 11. The same commandement which was ordayned to life was found to be vnto me vnto death 11. For sin tooke occasion by the commaundement and deceiued mee and thereby slew me Tim. VVHat is the drift of this text Sil. To prooue that the lawe is not properly the cause of death but sinne verse 10. and withall to shew how it is that sinne did slay and kill Paul namely by deceiuing him verse 11. he cleareth nowe the lawe from being cause os destruction as before from being cause of sin Tim. How is it proued that the law is not the cause of death and of Gods wrath Silas Because on Gods part it was ordained vnto this end that it might giue life but sinnefull lustes stirred vp in Paul by occasion of the law deceiued him and by that deceiuing slue him spiritually so sin is the proper cause and by it selfe of death law is the occasion only that by the deceit of sin abusing it Tim. In what meaning doth the Apostle say that the commandement is ordayned to life Silas It teacheth what end and vse there is of the lawe in respect of it owne nature that is if so it be obserued it doeth giue life eternall For so it forbiddeth euill things and commandeth good things as it propoundeth the promise of life to the perfect doers of it as it is written He that doth these things shall liue in them Leuit. 18 5. Indeed the Apostle sayth Gal. 3 21. That the lawe cannot giue life and Rom. 8 3. that it is impossible for the law to giue life But the fault hereof is not in the nature of the law which of it selfe is a worde and oracle of life like to the fountaine whence it flowed but in our weaknesse which cannot fulfill the perfect righteousnesse of the law whence it is that it cannot giue life as the Sunne cannot giue light to him that hath no eyes to see it nor Christ cannot giue righteousnes to him that hath no faith to receiue it Tim. How doeth the Apostle meane that the commaundement was found to be to him to death Silas Thus much that at length he felt it to be so for the law when he rightly vnderstood it made him perceiue that hauing in it owne nature a good vse euen to giue life that accidentally and besides the nature of the law it proued to him the cause of death insomuch as by breaking it he felt himselfe guilty of death and damnation For the proper cause of death and damnation it is sin or our natural corruption deceiuing vs which abusing the ministry of the law by being stirred vp by it the more brings forth of it owne nature properly and by it selfe death and damnation Thus sin as the true cause doeth produce death and the law occasionally doth produce it Tim. Open this somewhat more playnly and fully vnto vs how death comes of sin by the occasion of the law and how sinne deceiued Paul the Apostle being in his Pharisaisme Sylas Thus when wee begin to knowe the law rightly we see and feele our sinnes which before wee did not and that thereby wee are woorthily adiudged to damnation in hell fire This cannot bee carnestly thought on but that it will bring vs to some taste of destruction in which respect though wee doe liue in our bodies yet we are said to bee slaine by sin and to be dead For as a malefactor condemned who by feare feeling of his death approaching looking for it euery minute with terrour may be said to tast of death and to die before he be dead so it was with Paul being vnregenerate and so it is with all the elect when the law hath effectually conuicted them of death through sin they haue a sence of death eternall which breedeth great heauines and disquietnes in their minds Tim. What instruction is to be gathered from hence Silas That there is none of yeares which are partakers of the life of Christ and of his righteousnesse vntill by the preaching of the lawe they haue such a sence in regard of their sinnes that they feele themselues dead this is the course that God taketh with all his children to kill them before hee make them aliue to humble them in feeling of their own dead-sick and damnable estate before he heale them and saue them The reason hereof is because till men be brought to a through-sight sence of their own dsmnation they will neuer secke after Christ nor desire him without which they can neuer finde him nor haue him God hauing so ordained it that by seeking we shall find him Secondly the health and saluation by Christ becomes more sweete and precious to men that first haue felt themselues lost and damned without him as health is more pleasant after sicknesse liberty after bond plenty after scarsity faire weather after foule peace after warre therefore to haue his grace highly esteemed God vseth to bring them very low that shall enioy it Tim. What is the vse of this Doctrine Sil. First to stir vp secure sinners to labour much to be brought to the feeling of their owne deserued damnation that they may become capable of the grace of Christ vnto saluation Secondly to comfort those which bee humbled to Hell gates in the sence of their sinnes seeing by this meanes God is a preparing of them for his Sonne to become meete to bee his members by faith Lastly to admonish such faithfull Christians as haue by the Law beene brought to seele the death due to their sinnes to be thankfull in word and deed for such a deliuereance This is
both the duty and testimony of a truely deliuered sinner which hath indeed by the death of Christ escaped death Tim. But tell me what course sinners are to take that they may get the sound feeling of their owne woefull damnation due to their sinnes Silas It is no easie thing to get it nor euery sinners case to come by it yet I will commend vnto the sinner desirous to be humbled foure looking-glasses wherein if he vse often and intentiuely to behold himselfe hee may haply through Gods mercy attaine his desire to his euerlastaing good The first is Adams fall wherein hee shall see not onely himselfe depriued of all goodnes and exposed to all sin and misery but the whole race of mankind and al creatures in heauen and earth folded in gods fearefull malediction and vengeance The second is the curse of the Law in which he shall see God as a most terrible Iudge most seuerely denouncing vnto his Creature the worke of his hands all the miseries of this life bodily and spirituall which are innumerable separation in the end of life of the body from the soule which is terrible and after this life ended euerlasting destruction both of body and soule which is most horrible and all this euen for the least transgression of his Law Deut. 27 26. The third is the estate of a damned man in Hell where he shall see a liuely picture of misery it selfe to with a man for sinne chained vp in a prison where there is a continuall night and most lamentable roaring and outcries hauing for his companions the Diuell and his Angels and the Reprobate his tender flesh extreamely pained in euery ioynt and sinew his soulc lying in vnexpressable horror filled with hatred of God blasphemy and despaire fretting and vexing not so much in the sence of present punishment which yet is easelesse and endlesse as in remembrance of his exceeding losse beeing cast out of Gods kingdome without hope of recouery And here remember I pray that this woefull estate euery one hath deserued a thousand waies The fourth and last is the most bitter death and passion of our Lord Iesus wherein let him see and consider himselfe as principal debter and Christ but as his surety suffering for his sinne euen at the hands of his owne vassals the Iewes Gentiles most greeuous tants scornes and reproaches most smartfull buffeting whipping crowning and piercing with thornes speares and nayles in his head hands and feete his most tender parts and at the hands of his angry reuenging Father receiuing such inuisible strokes in his soule as drew from his body abundance of bloudy sweat in the garden and from his mouth a most dolefull complaint and crie vpon the Crosse My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Heere vpon if a man will consider this deepely that if Gods wrath did lye so heauy vpon Christ for sinne imputed who also had his diuine power to vphold his man-hood in suffering it how heauy will it lye when it lighteth vpon a meere man and that for his own sin This meditation may preuaile much to bring downe the stoutest and proudest heart and stomacke that is in the sight and feeling of his owne misery which by desart of sinne is due to him in iustice or if this doe it not the case is very hard for it is a signe of a full hard heart not to be touched with griefe for such greeuous things as the onely Sonne of God for our cause endured Tim. Now that you haue told vs how the Law doth kill vs by engendering in vs a sence of Gods wrath and eternall death let me heare you declare vnto me by what meanes sinne did kill Paul Silas Sinne deceiued him and so slew him deceitfull sinne killed him Tim. What is the instruction from hence Silas That sinne is a deceitfull thing may appeare by these three wayes First by the testimony of Scripture as Heb. 3 12 13. Take heed least any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne also in Ephe. 4 22. the lusts of sinne are called deceiueable lusts now whatsoeuer God saith is deceitfull must needs be so for hee cannot lye Secondly by the example first of Paul confessing that sinne deceiued him he being very wise learned and heedfull Secondly of Peter who was deceiued by his sinfull presumption Thirdly of Salomon and Dauid by incontinency Fourthly of Iudas who was deceiued by couetousnesse Lastly of Herod by pride Thirdly by reason because it is the brood of the Diuell that olde Serpent full of subtilty who deceiued the whole world by his guile and craft the Child being like his father such damme such broode Second reason sinne is in quality contrary to holinesse therefore as holinesse hath sincerity and truth so sinne hath deceit and guile annexed to it Lastly seeing it makes our hearts deceitfull therefore it selfe must needs be full of deceite For that which maketh a thing to be such it selfe is more such Quod facit tale id est magis tale Aristot. Tim. What hurt and daunger is there in being deceyned Silas From this deceite of sinne springs hardnesse of heart and spirituall deadnesse Heb. 3 13. And after this there followes eternall death without the mercies of God and great repentance Sil. Are all men deceiued alike Silas No the wicked are deceiued wholly willingly and vnto their destruction The elect in some things are deceiued by sin euen after calling but neuer wholly and finally Tim. After what sort and wayes doth sinne deceiue vs Silas First by making men thinke that they are aliue and happy when they are dead and miserable thorough sinne Secondly by causing them to neglect their inward thoughts and lusts resting in outward obedience onely as if that were enough and could iustifie them Thirdly by insinuating it selfe into their harts becomming more pleasant and delightfull to them by the prohibitions of the Law forbidding and condemning it By these three waies especially was Paul deceiued with sin Fourthly by blinding our iudgement by putting out the eyes of our minde that we should not be able to see it to be a sin in our selues which we see to be a sin in others not to be a fault in particular which men do know to be a fault in the generall As the couetous proud malicious will condemn couetousnes pride hatred in general yet perceiue not that their owne actions sauour of these vices Fiftly sin perswades mē that the things which the law forbids are good commodious for them as some kind oflyes and some litle breaking of the Saboth and vsury such like sin dooth often put on the name and countenaunce of vertue as pride of cleanlinesse niggardnesse of thrift great swearing and reuenge of manhood courage c. Seauenthly it turneth away our thoughts from thinking earnestly vpon the punishment due to sin Eightly when we do any good it maketh vs ascribe it to
sinfull by the commandement Tim. WHat is the drift of this Text Silas To cleare the Lawe from a new slaunder which might by cauillers be cast vppon it The flaunder was that Paul in his Doctrine did make the Law a verie pestilent thing the very cause of death to himself whom it had slaine verse 8. The which slander he doth wipe away and discharge himselfe of it thus First by denying it God forbid Secondly by turning the blame of death vpon sinne For Sinne. As if hee should say it is not the Lawe which is made death but it is sinne which begets death Thirdly he proues by reason that the Lawe cannot be the cause of death for that it is spirituall that is ordering or framing a man to spirituall obedience to liue conformably vnto God which if any could doe they should not dye but become spirituall and liue for euer therefore in it selfe it must needs be an holie and a good thing Tim. What learne we out of the Obiection Silas First that a malicious Cauiller wil neuer make an end of obiecting against the trueth an vnsanctified wit is euer vnsatiable Such as enquire and obiect soberly out of a desire to learne will soone receiue satisfaction but wanton wits and contradicting spirites delight in crossing the truth Therefore their error being plainly shewed them they are to be left least wee cast Pearles before Swine Secondly that the Doctrine of the Gospell doth lye open vnto many slanders of wicked men who because they will not beleeue sound Doctrine and obey it therefore they are iustly giuen ouer to the spirit of calumniation against such men must bee armed Thirdly it behoueth the Ministers of Christ not onely to lay downe their Doctrine soundly and plainly but wisely to foresee what accusations may bee brought in against it and how to remoue them for as they may assure themselues that Satan will sifte all the corners of his wit to deuise slanders against the truth so it behooueth them to bee prudent to forecast and preuent it Tim. What are wee to learne out of the first part of Paules answer denying the slander Silas That no man especially a Minister must suffer a slander especially in the matter of Doctrine falsely to be fastened vpon him because the discredite of a Teacher in matter of Doctrine is the endaungering of the soules of the hearer For who will giue credit vnto vs if it should be blowne abroad and beleeued that we had taught poysonfull and vnsound things Tim. What is the vse of this point Silas First it reproueth such as put them vp passe by such slanders lightly as the betrayers of the saluation of their flocke Secondly it reproueth those that put them out and be Authors of them as being the procurers as much as lyes in them of other mens destruction Thirdly it admonisheth all to beware how they father any false Doctrine vpon the Ministers of Christ seeing the hurt reacheth to them and others Tim What is the second part of Paules answere Sil. That sinne wrought deatl in him thorough that which is good to wit the lawe the meaning whereof is twofold First that his sinne the more the law forbid it the more it did rise vp against the lawe and so wrapt himselfe more deeply in death and damnation as an vntained Horse the more hee is curbed the more he rageth Secondly the law shewed him his sin and made him feele it and that by the desert of it hee was vnder Gods wrath adiudged to hell fire vpon the apprehension and taste wherof his heart was smitten with deadly heauines It fareth with him as with a man condemned to dye and respited two or three dayes he feeles death euery houre though he be aliue So Paul being vnder eternall death through sin and made by the lawe to see and feele somuch hee was by this meanes as a flaine and dead man as one that hath the axe ouer his neck and euery moment looks for the mortal blow Tim. At what time was it that sinne through the lawe had wrought this death in him seeing it is playne by Scripture that while he was a Pharisy hee was farre from thinking himselfe in any such woefull and deadly estate because it is witnessed of him that hee liued vnblameably Phil. 3. 6. keeping a good conscience Acts 23 1. profitting in the religion of the Iewes aboue his fellowes Gal. 1 14. In somuch that he rather took him selfe to be iust by the keeping of the law thē feared death by the breaking of it therefore shew me at what time it was that the lawe wrought in him this feeling of death by reason of his transgressions aginst it Sylas This hapned vnto him vppon all presumptions euen a little afore his conuersion after that Christ had met him in the way as hee went to Damascus and had begun to humble him by terrible actions words and sights committing him ouer for further direction vnto Ananias By whose ministry he was broght and made to see two things amongst many others First that the good woorkes which he did before his conuersion they did not proceed from faith and charity and therefore in the sight of God they were no better then sins Secondly he was instructed to know the meaning of that commandement which forbiddeth lust to wit that all sodaine motions and desires of the minde deserue damnation in strictnesse of iustice now being made to perceiue this that his best righteousnesse was but iniquity with God and that his heart had beene full of euill affections and motions in the sight of God howsoeuer his life had beene without blame in the sight of men these things I say being beleeued and eainestly thought of with application to himselfe of the threatnings of the law against his inward and secret corruptions and hipocrisie brought him to see and feele himselfe to be in the case of a fellon condemned to dye euen a most miserable and dead man without the grace of God in Iesus Christ this was the beginning of his conuersion Tim. Tell vs now what instructions wee are to gather from all this Silas Two first that it is a mans owne sin which produceth and begetteth his death the law onely sheweth a man his sinne conuict him of it and maketh him feele himselfe guilty of death prouoking him by his own fault to doe that which shall more deserue condemnation For as an earthly King hearing of some subiects apt to mutiny and rebellion giues his commaundement to them to forbeare assembling to weare no weapons vppon paine of death hereby they are made the more rumultuous are apprehended conuicted as guilty of the breach of the Kings edict and therefore executed whereof their rebellious mind is the proper cause the kings commandement onely an accidentall cause so it is with the law it is but the accidentall cause of our destruction which properly commeth from our sins Secondly we are taught that whosoeuer God meaneth to bring
discouraged therein forasmuch as such a Champion as this blessed seruant of Christ hath beene danted and quailed by sin and Satan Lastly heere is a marke whereby wee may iudge of a regenerate person namely this that hee is drawne captiue to the law of sin and is carried away by the lust of sin yet not without contradiction whereas the wicked which are voide of grace of their owne accord do run on to euils as a horse vnto the battaile as Rom. 3 15. Their feete are swift to shedbloud And againe They drinke iniquity like Water and draw sinne with Cariropes Esay 5 18. DIAL XVIII Verse 24 25. O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death I thanke God through Iesus Christ my Lord. Then I my selfe in my minde serue the Law of God but in my flesh the Law of sinne Tim. VVHat doth this Text containe Silas A conclusion both of the whole chapter and of the spiritual conflict with sin which hath bin set forth in the person of Paul Tim. What is the Sum of this conclusion Silas Hee confesseth himselfe miserable because hee was obnoxious to sinne and death desiring full deliuerance from them giuing God thankes for the grace and merit of Christ Iesus Tim. What be the parts of this conclusion Silas Three First an exclamation or complaint of his miserie in these words O wretched man c. Secondly a consolation in respect of his victory by Christ I thanke God through Iesus Christ. Lastly an acclamation So then in my minde I serue c. Tim. What is meant heere by wretched man Silas Not one that is accursed as being out of Gods fauour but one tyred and wearied with the continuall and miserable conflictcs and striuing with sinne It is a wretched and wofull thing to bee toiled and troubled with filthy motions but euerie such man is not in damned case Tim. What instructions are we to learne from this Silas First that it is a wretched thing to carry about one but the remainder of sinne and to be troubled with the continuall assaults and force of it The reasons hereof be First because sinne euen in the godly doth defile their conscience within and their actions without Mat. 15 18. Iames 1. 21. Secondly it offends their most good and louing Father being contrary to his Law Ro. 7 7. Thirdly it doth grieue and make sad the holy Spirite of God Ephes. 4 30. Lastly it procures many temporall chastisements and deserues eternall punishment See Dauids example 2 Sam. 12 10. Rom. 6 23. Tim. What profit are we to make of this instruction Silas First it reproues them that make slight slender reckoning of their sinnes Secondly it admonisheth the godly to be humbled because howsoeuer they bee blessed with forgiuenesse of sinne yet their blessednesse is not perfect but mixt with some misery Tim. What other instruction from hence Silas It is the marke and token of a regenerate man to feele the misery he is cast into by the force of sinne to mourne for it and complaine of it The reason hereof is because none but such as haue the Spirit of Christ can thinke themselues miserable in this behalfe that thorough sin they are drawne from the obedience of Gods Law for they that be vnre generate thinke themselues wretched for bodily euils as if they bee blinde or dease or maymed or imprisoned or extreame poore they neuer take themselues wretched in that they are full of spirituall euils and thereby hindred in the seruice of God Tim. What vse of this poynt Sil. First it affoords a great comfort vnto such as can vnsaignedly sigh because of their sinnes which still sticke in their nature and striue against grace Secondly here is a testimony against such as beare their sins without griefe that they are not Gods children If there be a strugling in the wombe Rebecka feeleth it but the barren which bring not forth feele no such wrestling Tim. What other instructions from hence Sil. From hence wicked and impenitent sinners may consider how extreame their wretchednesse is that haue sin raigning in them when as the godly count it their misery but to haue sin dwelling in them Tim. Proceed and tell vs now what is meant by the body of this death Silas Some expound it thus for a mortall body subiect to death and then the meaning is that Paul doth desire to be freed from this conflict with sin by his corporall death Tim. If we follow this meaning what lessons then will arise for our instructions Silas That the battell of sinne will not be at an end while the godly liue in this worlde in which regards the sighes and repentance the exercise and striuings of a Christian man are continuall and haue no other tearme but death And thus God will haue it bee for many good purposes to exercise patience stirre vp prayer watchfulnesse to humble vs by sight of our weaknesse and comfort vs by experience of his power Tim. What other meaning is giuen of these words Sil. Some by body doe vnderstand our corrupt and vncleane nature euen the whole masse of sinne as it is yet vnmortified which is called a bodie of death to signifie that it is a deadly thing deseruing both temporall and cternall death this is the best interpretation Tim. What instruction from hence Sylas In that sinne is likened to a body it teacheth that it is no idle weake thing but as it were a thing subsisting full of force and power and therefore not to be neglected Secondly as a body hath many members so sin hath innumerable lusts See Rom. 1. 29. 30. Gal. 5 19 20. Tim. What instruction from hence that it is called the body of death Silas That the bondage of sinne euen such as it is to the godly is a verie grieuous and heauie thing often thrusting them into the iawes and wrapping them in the bondes of death both worldly and euerlasting which makes them cry out wretched man and blessed are they which for this can cry thus Tim. What is meant by being deliuered Sylas To be wholly and perfectly freed from the corruption of sin Tim. Did Paul doubt or knew he not who should deliuer him Silas No such thing these be the words not of doubting but of desire Tim. What is the instruction from hence Sil. That it is the note of a regenerate person constantly to desire perfect liberty from his sins Tim. What are we to learn from hence that he doth not say who hath deliuered mee but who shall deliuer mee Silas That the grace of sanctification is neuer perfect while wee abide in this life the godly are so deliuered as there is still cause to say who shall deliuer mee Tim. What are we to learne from hence in that hee sayeth thanks be to God through Iesus Christ our Lord Sil. That as Paul faints not in the combate but comforts himselfe with a certaine hope of victory in like manner all
things of the spirit doth bring forth life and peace therefore we are bound to follow the affections of the spirit endeuoring diligently and vprightly to perform and doe such good workes as we shall be moued vnto by the holy Spirit working in vs. Tim. Let vs now heare you expound the words and tell vs what is here meant by flesh Silas That same vicious and naughty quality of sinne powred into our nature from our conception by carnall generation whereby both in our reason and will wee are wholly inclined to all sinfull things and not at all disposed to any good but rather cleane bent against euery good thing Gen. 6 5 Colo. 1 21. Tim. What is here signified by wisedome Silas The concupiscence lust and desires of the flesh or mans sinnefull nature as Gala 5 24. They which are Christes haue crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts The word Phronêma may indifferently be interpreted wisedome sence affections desires or lust so that the meaning of the first word should be this That which corrupt nature lusteth after and desireth if it bee obeyed leadeth to death Tim. Why would the Apostle call the desire and lust of sinning by such a word as signifies wisedome Silas For two causes first for that vnto carnal wicked men it seemeth wisedome to desire and do wicked things for wicked men apply all their witte subtilty policy and craft howe to contriue and effect wicked and sinfull purposes being wise to doe euill and being done glorying in it as if it had beene wisely done Secondly to teach vs that that which is in man being vnregenerate most noble and most highly esteemed of to wit his wisedome vnderstanding and counsell it is a corrupt and deadly thing leading and guiding men in such pathes and wayes as will at last bring them to euerlisting destruction so farre off it is that naturall wisedome should bee able to perceiue the things of God and to direct men to do things pleasing vnto God seeing it is darknes and enmity vnto him Tim. What is the instruction you gather from hence Silas First it admonisheth euill men not to reioyce in their wisedome which is such an euill and deadly thing being seuered from Christ. Secondly it warneth the godly to examine euen their wittiest thoughts and deuises to bee humbled for them if they come from the flesh Let the best and quickest wits most suspect and looke most carefully to themselues Tim. What is heere meant by death Silas A deadly thing as before Rom. 7 24. Where sinne is called the body of death The reason why sinne or the lust thereof is counted a deadly thing is first because it comes from such persons as are dead in trespasses and sinnes Ephe 2 1. Secondly because the lust of sin brings foorth death eternall and deserues it as a proper and meritorious cause of it Rom. 6 23. Tim. How comes it that the sinnes which men doe heere in a short time merit punishment which is without any limit or end Silas First because God hath so decreed it it is his owne ordinance and appointment that the soule that sinneth shall dye Ezek 18 20. Secondly an infinite and eternall Iustice is offended by sinners Thirdly because sinne in wicked men growes vnto perfection and they which follow sinfull lusts would do it for euer if they might liue for euer Tim. What is the instruction that ariseth from these words in death Sil. First that the godly from hence are to bee warned to auoide and abhorre euery sinfull lust and desire because it deserues death eternall wherewith howsoeuer God will not punish the faithfull because there is no condemnation to them being in Christ yet it standeth them much vppon greatly to take heed of louing and doing that which may make them guilty of such horrible paine in Hell fire A wise man would not deserue the losse of his temporall life though he were sure to be pardoned What madnes then were it to deserue the losse of eternall life vpon hope of pardon Secondly the wicked from hence are also to be warned that as they abhorre death and would not dye and perish euerlastingly both in body and soule so let them beware that they goe not on to fulfill their fleshly and sinfull desires of pride couetousnesse enuy c. For he that is truth it selfe hath spoken it that the wisedome of the flesh is death and all vncleane persons shall be cast into the burning lake Reuel 21 27. Tim. Come we now to the next words and tell vs what is meant heere by the Spirite and by the wisedome of the Spirite Silas By Spirite is heere meant holinesse and newnesse of life which is heere called the Spirite because the Spirite wisedeme of the flesh Silas The affections and lusts of our corrupt nature which are of two sorts The first sort be in the vnderstanding part of the soule called the mind as counsell discourse of reason purposes drifts thoughts desires motions together with all actions taken in hand by carnall wisedom yea the very principles and beginnings of this carnall wisedome as they be in men vnregenerate they are wholly infected with naturall blindnesse and vnbeleefe being vtterly displeasing to God The second sort be seated in the will and doe flow from thence as anger wrath enuy couetousnesse pride emulation c. with all the actions that proceede from such lusts Tim. Wherefore are these affections and lusts called by the name of wisedome Silas Because carnall men are wise to doe euill esteeming it not the least wisedome to plotte and performe sinfull deeds See before Tim. What is heere meant by enmity Silas Enmity doth signifie an aduersary an enemy or one that fighteth against another The Apostle doth rather chuse to say Enmity then enemy because enmity is a word of greater force and vehemency seruing more to encrease and aggrauate the naughtinesse and hurt of sinne For it sheweth that the lust of the flesh doth greatly striue against God as an extreame enemy of his See the like speech Phil. 1 21. For Christ is to me both in life and in death aduantage or gaine that is very gainefull Tim. Doth not this enmity argue that once there was friendship betweene God the Creator and men his Creatures Silas It doth so for there was a friendship betweene them at the first creation of man when God printed in mans soule the image of himselfe consisting in perfect knowledge righteousnesse and true holinesse then did God loue man and man did loue God againe This friendship was broken off by the malice of Sathan inspiring the hearts of our first parents with vnbeliefe pride and sinne from whence arise this fearefull enmity God extreamely hating man for sinne and man through sinfull affections extreamely hating God For sinne made a separation and diuorced the Creator from the Creature which were sweetly linked together in an holy and happy Communion Tim. How may it be made cleare vnto vs that all naturall
the Spirit Silas The godly are debters to the spirit three manner of wayes in respect of his benefits towards them past present and to come the benefits past are these sixe First the benefit of their creation for in that all men at the first creation were made in the image of God this must be ascribed to the worke of the Spirit Gen. 1. 26. This place proues that our creation is the worke of the whole Trinity therefore of the Spirit Secondly their regeneration in that of the children of wrath they are become the childeren of God by faith Ioh. 1 12. 13. 3. 5. 6. Thirdly iustification in that they are set free from sin eternall death and accepted as fully righteous by the imputation of Christs righteousnesse to them Fourthly calling whereby they haue beene drawne vnto the faith in Christ. Fifthly sanctification whereby sinne is mortified that they may liue in newnes of life 1 Cor. 6. 11. Sixtly all the graces and fruits of the spirit Gal. 5. 22. Secondly the benefite present is the spirituall consolation in all afflictions together with the gouernment and regiment of the spirit Ioh. 16 7. Rom. 8. 9. Thirdly the benefits which wee hereafter looke for from the spirit is first dayly encrease of knowledge and all other guifts of the spirit Secondly corrob oration in grace vnto death 1 Pet. 5 10. Thirdly quickning of their soules at their death with eternall life Rom. 8 10. Fourthly quickning of their dead bodies at the resurrection Rom. 6. 11. Fiftly the glorification both of body and soule eternally in heauen These many and great benefites of the spirite doe therefore oblige and binde the faithfull most straightly vnto this debt not to-liue after the flesh but after the spirit which doth so many and great things for vs. Tim. What is it not to liue after the flesh Sil. Not to liue after the flesh signifies not to liue after the motions of our corrupt nature but to study to mortifie them Tim. What do we ow nothing to the flesh Silas Yes to our flesh as it is our substance wee owe loue and cherishing but to the flesh as it doeth signifie here sin and corruption wee owe nothing but crucifying and mortifying of it for it striues against the spirite it rebels against the law of our minde it leades vs captiue to sin it causes vs to doe the euill wee would not doe and to leaue vndone the good wee would doe it is an enemy or rather enmity against God it cannot please God Tim. What is it to liue after the spirit Silas To striue take thought and endeuour to doe according to those motions which are stirred vp by the spirit to witte such thoughtes and motions as agree with the worde of the lawe and Gospell and such motions wee are bound to follow for it is our debt whereas a carnall man wil repell such motions as accord with the word but a spirituall man will entertaine them Tim. Shew vs nowe what wee are to learne from this sentence Sil. This one thing that a godly and a righteous life is a debt which is due from vs to God the reason hereof is threefold First wee are Gods creatures therefore wee are bound to serue him by the lawe and right of creation Secondly wee are redeemed and bought with the price of Christs bloud therefore we doe owe to him all obedience and seruice by right of purchase 1 Cor. 6 20. Thirdly all the former benefites giuen vs by the Spirit doe oblige and binde vs to a godly life by the right of common honesty which bindes vs vnto our benefactor Tim. What vse and profit are wee to make of this poynt of doctrine Silas First if liuing godly all our life long be a debt then it cannot be that our workes should merit with God for that which is a debt cannot be a merit no man merites not thanks to pay what he oweth Secondly this ouerthrowes the works of supererogation which if they beo works of the Spirit then we ow them of duty and if they be not such works then ought they not to be done Thirdly hence wee learne that the doing of good workes or the leading of a godly life is a thing necessary though not as a meritorious cause of saluation yet as a duty which we are bound to pay as a debt to the spirit our benefactor Lastly all that liue after the spirit will bee obedient to the worde of God the more obedient wee are to the word of God the more we liue after the spirit for the spirit the word are coupled togither by firme connexion The worde is vnderstood and obeyed by sanctification of the spirit and the holy Spirite perswadeth to that onely which is consonant to the word DIAL XII Verse 13. For if ye liue after the flesh ye shall dye but if ye mortifie the deeds of the body by the Spirit ye shall liue Tim. WHat doth this scripture contayne Sil. Newe reasons to enforce the sormer exhortation of liuing after the Spirit and not after the flesh that is of leading a holy life the reasons bee three The first is from the vnprofitablenesse or danger if we doe liue after the flesh then wee shall dye Secondly from the profit which will follow if we doe liue after the Spirit then wee shall liue The third is from the facility and easinesse because through the grace of the holy Spirite it will be an easie thing to leade a godly life Tim. Now expound the words and tell vs what it is to liue after the flesh Silas To follow and obey the corrupt motions of our blinde reason and peruerse will The danger heereof is death now all men naturally abhorre death as a most fearefull thing Therefore as we would abhorre such a miserable and horrible effect as death wee must bee carefull that we liue not after the flesh but that we obey the Spirite Tim. What death is that which is threatned to those that liue after the flesh Sil. Not onely the naturall death which is common vnto all frō which euen the godliest are not exempted but must dye at the last Againe this death is so farre from terrifying some of the godly that it giueth them much ioy and comfort and is a thing most desired of them and therefore these words are not to be vnderstood of a corporall death alone which is the dissolution of nature but it may partly be vnderstood of a naturall death when it is inflicted vpon the godly as a iudgement of some lust of the flesh which they haue too much followed As it hapened to Moyses Aaron Iosias Ely Numb 27 12 13. Deut. 32 49 50 51. 2. Kings 23 29. 1. Sam. 33 34 4 11 18. Also the Prophet mentioned 1. Kings 13 24. Yea sometimes the obeying some lust of the flesh doth cost Gods children deare from the hand of ciuill iustice as happened to some that perished in the wildernesse 1. Cor.
10 5. and to sundry others daily amongst our selues who come vnto publike and shamefull death for some worke of the flesh which they haue done and yet no doubt are the faithful Children of God as it did befall the Theefe vpon the Crosse. But that death which is heere chiefely to be meant is eternall death which is the casting out of the whole man both body and soule from Gods presence to suffer Hell torments for euer and euer Tim. But seeing they which are cast into Hell shall there liue for euer how is this called death Sylas First as the blessednesse of heauen is called life in scripture because of all things life is most pleasant so the miseries of hell are called death because death of althings is very miserable most shunned Secondly though the wicked do liue in hell yet because they are separated from God who is life and because they so liue as that they are euer dying therefore it is worthily called death Tim. The words being thus opened nowe let vs see what instructions will arise from hence Silas The instructions are two the former concernes the wicked the latter the godly for the former the wicked are heere admonished that if they are obedient vnto the flesh liue wickedly doing what sin commāds they must dye and perish for euer if they continue so 1 Cor. 6. 9 10. Gal. 5. 20 21. Reue. 21. 8. the reason hereof is because the wisedome of the flesh is death Rom. 8 6. also because the wages of sin is death Rom. 6. 23. Tim. What is the vse of this instruction Silas It affoords an admonition to all such as doe liue in the seruice of any fleshly lust to forsake it betimes and earnestly as they doe couet not to be destroyed perpetually if this moue not yet let them forsake their euill course least they shorten their naturall life and purchase to themselues a reproachfull death by being giuen ouer to some crime that shall deserue it Tim. What instruction may bee giuen from hence to the godly Silas This that howsoeuer they are free from condemnation by faith in Christ yet the meditation of eternall death is profitable for them the reason here of is because the godliest men haue still some flesh and sinne abiding in them yea the most haue more sin than grace Heereof it followes that they are neuer free from blemishes and spirituall slothfulnes security presumption and prophanenes against which the consideration of hell paines is a good remedy because the more Gods fierce iustice and wrath be thought vpon and feared the more carefull men become to auoid the former and all other sinnes The Papists doe vs wrong in charging vs to wish men not to leaue sin for feare of Hell fire Tim. What profit is to be made of this latter instruction Silas First it reproueth the godles who do not thinke it needfull often to thinke of Hell fire or bee afraide so to doe least it trouble them better now to be feared with it then heereafter to feele it Secondly it admonisheth all Gods Children much and very earnestly to consider the estate of the damned if they desire to liue holily after the example of Paul 2. Cor. 5 9 10. 2. Tim. 4 1 2. It is Chrysostomes counsell that at banquets and feastes and publike meetings men should talke of hellish paines that they may be awed and auoide them Tim. Proceed now to the words which containe the second reason and tell vs what is meant heere by the deeds of the body and what is it to mortifie them Silas By deeds of the body we are to vnderstand the same whichelse where are called the lusts of the flesh the workes of darknesse euen all sinfull motions and deeds which spring from the minde and are executed by the body and mortifie signifies to suppresse and keep them downe by the power of the Spirite that they doe not flourish and raigne in vs as a King to command and gouerne vs. Tim. What is meant heere by Spirite Silas The power and strength of the Holy-Ghost abating and taking downe the strength of sinne causing it by little and little to dye in vs. Tim. How many wayes doth the grace of the Spirite worke towards the mortifying of sinne Silas Foure wayes First it doth detect and discouer sinfull thoughts and actions Secondly it stirres vp a griefe for them and hatred of them Thirdly it kindles feruent prayer to get strength against them Fourthly it brings to mind sentences of the word which are as a sword to cut downe sinne Lastly it makes watchful against sinne to auoide all occasions of it and to vse all sanctified meanes against it Tim. What is heere meant by life Sil. An happy long and prosperous life here which is often granted to the godly as a fruite of their godlines but especially eternall life in heauen which consistes in the participation with Christ of his blisse glory and dominion Reu. 3 21 22. Tim. Let vs heare what instructions doth arise from the latter part of this Verse Silas First in the godly which are regenerate there will alwayes be found some deedes of the flesh because their regeneration is vnperfect Tim. What vse of this instruct on Silas It confutes such as challenge to themselues a faigned perfection Tim. What is the second instruction Silas That the life of euery godly person must bee a continuall mortification and repentance They must alwayes be offering violence to their sinfull lusts resisting them by the word praying against them auoyding all occasions of them and vsing all other good meanes for the beating of them downe if euer they will liue holy Tim. What vse of this second instruction Silas It sharpely reprooues the negligence of such Christians as suffer their wicked lusts as weeds in a garden or ill humors in a body for lacke of mortifying resistance Tim. What is the third instruction Silas That sinfull lusts are not to bee mortified otherwise then by the grace of the Spirit without which it is impossible to subdue them by which it will be found verie easie to tame them The reason is because the force of the Spirit is stronger then the power of sin Tim. What vse of this instruction Silas It confutes such as affirme that vices may bee maistred by strength of free wil or by Philosophical vertues Secondly it humbles the godly to consider that they can ouercome no sinne of themselues without the aide of the Spirite Thirdly it admonisheth all men to seeke for strength against sin at the hands of Gods Spirit Lastly the Spirit vseth our endeauours as a means of iustification Hee that made vs without our selues doth not saue vs without our selues Tim. What is the last Instruction Silas To liue after the Spirit is the way to liue happily heere and for euer the reason is Gods ordinance and promise Tim. What is the vse heereof Silas To encorage all men to leade a godly life without the which they
constancie were called in question as Augustine and Ambrose thinke but passiuely for that loue wherewith the faithfull are beloued of Christ as if the sence of that could be shaken out of their hearts That this is the meaning may appear by the end of the 37. and 39. verses which expound it of Gods loue to vs. Also it appeares by that which goes before our Text for Paul had spoken of Christs loue to vs witnessed by his dying for vs rising againe sitting at the right hand of God and making request for vs all which proueth his great loue toward the elect Tim. How may it bee further knowne that the sence of Christs loue is heere to be vnderstood Silas By Pauls scope which is to comfort beleeuers who would haue no comfort of Christs loue except they felt it as Rom. 5 5. Againe it is the sence and perswasion of Christs loue that Satan by crosses seekes to wrest from vs. Tim. What learne we from hence Silas A good Lesson which is this the godlie must make reckoning to haue the perswasion of Gods loue assaulted and sore shaken The reason is because it is a notable aduantage to Satan and hurt to Gods children to doubt of Gods loue to them For then Satan may bring in impatiency despaire dulhesse in Gods seruice disobedience loosenesse of manners and all iniquity which we are kept from by the sence of Gods loue quickning our loue and causing to hope in him wel constantly Tim. What is the vse of this point Sil. It warneth the beleeuers to arme themselues against this assault labouring by all meanes to setle their hearts more and more in the assuraunce of Gods loue holding fast that truth that Gods loue is most constant and nothing in the world can be of such force as to hinder it much lesse to plucke it away so as sin and security be taken heed of This was Pauls perswasion for his part verse 28. and pray vnto God that yee also may bee thus perswaded and striue mightily for it Tim. Now shew vs particularly what things they bee which be contrary to our perswasion of Gods loue Sil. They be either crosses and calamities whereof he rehearseth seauen or enemies whereof he mentioneth nine in number Tim. Shew vs the meaning of these calamities in particular Sil. First by tribulation is meant euery thing which presseth or wringeth to wit any vexation Secondly by anguish is meant streightnesse of place properly but by a Metaphor preplexity of minde when one knowes not what to doe an example heereof we haue in Ichosaphat 2. 〈◊〉 20 12. Thirdly by persecution is meant some extreame violence offered by Tyrants and wicked men to our goods name person or life Fourthly by famine is meant hunger through wante of victuals to sustaine our life Fiftly nakednesse signifies want of apparell and cloathing to couer and defend our bodyes from cold Sixtly by perill is meant dangerous distresses which put a man in perill and ieorpardy such as Paul reckoneth 2. Cor. 11 25 26. and Heb. 11 36 37. Lastly by sword is meant slaughter cruell tormenting death or punishment by barbarous sauage bloud-shed as happened to Abell the Prophets and Christ and holy Martyrs Tim. What obserue you in this particular rehearsing of calamities Silas First what heauy and hard things the godly are subiect vnto for their profession sake others haue felt these things and we must prepare for them Secondly the Apostle by reckoning vp the most bitter things would teach vs that seeing these things cannot put out the sence of Gods loue neither any else in the world can doe it For what can goe beyonde these for smarte or shame Tim. But how is it proued by the Apostle that the faithfull are subiect vnto the sworde and bloudy slaughters for the Gospels sake Silas By a text out of the psalme 44 verse 22. For thy sake we are killed all the day long we are counted as Sheepe for the slaughter All the day may signifie all times of this life or without intermission or all the time of the world Tim. What things doe yee note from this testimony of the Psalme Silas First that Christians are subiect euen to death and slaughter as well as other calamities Secondly that in this respect wee are like vnto Sheepe not which are fedde for wooll or store but such as are appointed for the kitching Thirdly they are put in mind to be meeke and patient in suffering of death euen as sheepe are vnder the Butchers hand Fourthly that death doth continually hang ouer their heads euen all day long either for that they are ready euery day to dye if neede require or because their continuall dangers are so many deaths as it were Lastly that the cause of the death of Gods Martyrs is not any crime of their owne but their sincere faith and profession of Christ for thy sake as Math. 10. for my names sake and Mat. 5. Tim. But what is the comfort of the faithfull against all these terrible things Silas Euen this that in all these things they are more then Conquerors The meaning heereof is that true beleeuers in their miseries they doe not onely not fainte and are ouercome but themselues get a glorious victory ouer their crosses and persecutions both by their patient wearying and vanquishing the persecutors themselues brought to heauen Tim. But how may this be that the slaine and conquered should yet be Conquerers Silas Indeed this is a paradoxe and strange to carnall reason yet it is most true in this spiritual warfare howsoeuer it be otherwise in the bodily warrefare For the Saints when they suffer and are killed they are not onely patient but reioyce and glory which is the parte of victours Rom. 5 3. Secondly because by their constancy they doe euen daunt the minds of their persecutors who rather seeme to bee ouercome then the Martyrs which suffer Example heereof in the Pharisies Acts 4. and in Iulian the Apostata whose cruelty was conquered by the patience of the Martyrs Lastly of some of the Romaine persecutors in the ten first persecutions whose barbarous sauagenesse was euen tired with the stedfastnesse of the Saints in suffering Thirdly the Diuels practise is by crosses to wrest from Gods children their confidence in Gods loue which is rather increased by this meanes Rom. 5 5 6. Tim. But whence haue they strength to be so stedfast to hold out and to conquer Silas Not from themselues who are farre vnequall for so great a battaile but from the helpe and aide of God confirming and establishing them The cause that mooueth God to affoord this strength is his great loue which he beares them in Christ Through him that hath loued vs. Tim. What is our lesson from hence Silas That the victory which beleeuers doe get ouer all their troubles depends not vpon their owne power or merites at all but meerely solely and wholy in the loue that God beares them in Christ see 1.
Cor. 15. 57. Ttm. What vse of this Silas It warnes the Saints in their greatest patience constancy to be humbled seeing they haue nothing but what they receiue from Gods loue Secondly it must stirre them vp to great thankfulnesse to God so graciously and mightily confirming them Thirdly it admonisheth weake Christians in the time of any calamity to flye to the throne of grace for succour distrusting themselues as Iehosaphat did Lastly it teacheth that the faithfull can neuer fall from Gods loue Of this before 2. Dialogue on verse 2. Chap. 5. DIAL XXXII Verses 38 39. For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Tim. VVHat doeth this text containe orwhereto tendeth it Silas The same which did the former euen to prooue that no enemies or euils how many sundry or mighty soeuer can breake off Gods loue to the faithfull that hee should cease to loue them and cast off the care of their saluation which beleeue in his Son Iesus Tim. What be the parts of this text Silas Two first an enumeration or rehearsall of the seuerall enemies which may terrifie and threaten our separation from Gods loue Secondly a most sweet consolation that Gods loue to beleeuers is constant doe all enemies against them what they can doe This comfort is set foorth by the certainty thereof in these wordes for I am perswaded c. Thirdly by the cause of it verse 39. because it is grounded on the merits of Christ the Redeemer and not on themselues or any creature Which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Tim. Resken vp those enemies which wrestle against beleeuers and shew vs the meaning of euery one of them in particular Silas They bee nine in number as 1. life 2. death 3. Angelles 4. principalities 5. powers 6. things present 7. things to come 8. height 9. depth Saint Paul in Ephe. 6. 12. reduceth them all to two heads First flesh and bloud Secondly spirituall wickednesses the meaning of them is this By life and death is meant all things which endanger vs about life and death or prosperity and aduersity which be companions of life and death By Diuels is meant wicked Spirits which seeke by all meanes to lead vs from God and endeauour to separate vs from his loue yea good Angels are meant too by supposition hyperbolical like to that saying Gal. 1 8. Also by principalities powers is meant such Angels as are set ouer Empires and Kingdomes also ouer Cities and particular Countries as Dan. 11. or tyrants of the world with their whole power according to that threatned Mat. 10 17 18. Moreouer by things present and to come wee are to vnderstand all things which do presently or heereafter may happen to vs in this worlde and the worlde to come or all both good and euil things which now or heerafter shal come to vs. By height is meant things high and marucllous or whatsoeuer strange and vnaccustomed thinges happen from Heauen by high and by deepe is meant whatsoeuer thinges burst foorth of the lower partes and Regions of the earth and lastly by Creatures is meant euery thing created in the vniuersality of this whole world Tim. What learne we by this magnificent rehearsal Silas That Christians and Christianity bee assaulted with meruailous and sundry enemies Of this see before what hath bin said Tim. What is the vse of th s Silas That euery Christian hath neede of a strong Faith and much patience and continuall watchfulnesse so much the more by how much the more the malice number of enemies are greater Tim. What are we to learne of this that hee sayth of these particulars that they cannot separate vs from the loue of God Silas That the loue which God beareth his elect is immoueable and most firme the reasons hereof are First because nothing in the world is able to hinder break it off Secondly he himselfe will neuer alter it because hee is vnchangeable Tim. What vse heereof Silas It conuicteth both the Papists and Lutherans of error who teach that such as are in the state of grace Gods loue may loose it and fall from it Se condly it affordeth much consolation and ioy in time of deep temptations to al such as are infallibly assured that they stand in the loue of God whatsoeuer they lose yet they keep still Gods loue whereof before enough Tim. But may any Christian be after this sort assured Silas Yes Paul the Apostle was so as himselfe confesseth in this place I am perswaded c. Tim. Yea but he speaketh this of his owne person what is that to vs there is great diffrence between Paul other christians Silas Paul speaketh many things of himself which are not peculiar to himselfe but in common do belong to al Christians as Gal. 2 20. 6 14. Phil. 1 21. and often elswhere Secondly in the last words of this text he wraps vp all other beleeuing Christians with himselfe saying Who shall separate vs. Thirdly euery true beleeuer may be certainly assured of his own saluation vpon the same grounds that Paul was of his which grounds are eyther Theologicall and necessary others are but Logicall and profitable only The Theological and necessary grounds bee first the foreknowledge and immutable purpose of Gods election Rom. 8 30. manifested in calling Iustification Sanctification The second is the inward perswasion of the holy Spirit witnessing to their spirites that they are Gods children Rom. 8. 16. Thirdly the most faithfull promise of God that such as do beleeue in him shall haue euerlasting life Iohn 3 18. Fourthly Christ his deliuering himselfe to death and his nowe making request in heauen for them Rom. 8 32 33. Lastly the effects of Gods sanctifying Spirit in their hearts to wit vnfained faith and diligent loue 1 Thess. 1 3 4. The Logicall and probable grounds be all the outward protections and blessings of God which being very many great though they haue no force in themselues to perswade vs to the loue of God yet being ioyned vnto the former they helpe well to strengthen our assurance and to make the matter more euident For Gods Children haue them as testimonies of their Fathers loue and fruits of redemption Tim. Now shew vs what vse is to be made of this Silas First it conuicteth the Papists of errour in that they teach that we haue but a probable and coniectural assurance of our election to wit by hope as they speak to hope well of it vnlesse it be some certaine men who knew by reuelation Gods loue as Abraham Isaac Iacob Dauid Paul c. or of the predestinate in generall but for any particular man to assure himselfe that God loues him and that he is iustified and shall be saued they esteem it presumption
sundry similitudes as of a stone of an Iron sinnew of a brazen forehead of an heart of Adamant Ezek. 11 19. Esay 48 4. Zach. 7 12. Heere in Zacharie as also in that place of Esay there is a plaine description of an hard heart Sec Verses 11 12 of Zachary Tim. How many kindes of an hard heart be there Silas Two one Naturall which all men bring from the wombe called a stonie heart by Ezekiel in chap. 11. verse 19. for all men from their birth are enclined to the disobedience of God being sinners and enemies vngodly and the Children of Gods wrath Secondly there is an habituall hardnesse which is gotten by long custome of sinne which for a time takes away both the feare and feeling of sinne This is common both to elect and reprobate but with great difference For hardnesse of heart in the elect before their conuersion is totall and temporary it wholly possesseth them but it continueth onely vntill their calling after that their hardnesse is partiall mixt with tenderncsse and softnesse of heart as in Dauid and Peter but in the reprobate it is totall and perpetuall so as they remaine wholly obdurate and obstinate till their death as did Cain Esau Pharaoh Iudas and these refused Iewes heere spoken of And this last hardnesse is that which is heere meant in our text which is both of the whole heart and final or for euer For this onely is peculiar to such as be not elected as the nearest iust cause of their destruction which is inflicted vpon them not so much for sinne as for beeing hardened in sinne for their impenitency in sin to the end of their life notwithstanding al means vsed to soften and cause them to relent and turne to God from their sinne Tim. But it should seeme that fewe or no men are whollie hardened because Pharaoh yeelded and desired Moses to pray for him Esau wept Achab put on Sacke-cloath Also of Iudas it is written that hee repented and that Foelix trembled and Balaam wished that hee might dye the death of the righteous Silas These were but sudden motions in the wicked which lasted not like vnto flashings or lightnings Secondly they proceeded not from a soft and brokenhart but from slauish feare and dread or present smart of diuine iudgement Thirdly that beeing once ouer they returne to their former wickednesse and contempte of Gods will as Pharach did and Felix and the reste of them c. Tim. What is the Doctrine out of these words Silas That finall stubbornenesse in sin when a sinner obstinately continueth till his death in one or more knowne sins is a certaine marke of distinction betweene an elect childe of God which shall bee saued and him which shall be for euer condemned as appeareth Rom. 9 17 18. Math. 13 15. Iohn 17 11. 1 Iohn 5 18. The Reasons heere of be because it is neither sinne nor the number nor the long continuance in them that makes the actuall difference For in all these things many of the elect and reprobates are like therefore that which doth it must needes be this vniuersall and finall hardnesse of heart vnto which reprobates are giuen ouer and so are not the elect For whome God elects into their hearts he puts his Spirit which changeth their stony hearts into fleshy being made pliable by his will but the rest as our Text is they are hardned and left in their naturall corruption to persist in it to death and this is the second reason of the doctrine that the elect haue their natural stubbornnesse corrected by the Spirit of sanctification which altereth and reneweth them vnto the obedience of the word 1 Pet. 1 2. 2 Thess. 2 13. Tim. What profit are we to make of the knowledge of this Doctrine Silas It may serue to keepe vs from rash iudgement that wee neuer giue finall sentence vppon any man to brand him for a reprobate for who can tell if a wicked man will so continue vnto the end of his life some haue beene called at the ninth houre of the day some chaunged at the eleauenth and one to wit the Theefe on the crosse conuerted at the twelfe and last houre Secondly heere is a warning to all Christians aboue all thinges in the world to striue against hardnesse of heart and to labour for soft and obedient hearts for as this latter hart to wit when it is mooued and bowed by God to follow his worde is the greatest blessing being the peculiar note of the Childe of God and a speciall fruit of the Couenant so the other to wit a stiffe and vnyeelding heart is the greatest curse beeing the marke of cast-awayes and reiected persons vnto which euery man is so much the nearer the nearer he is vnto hardnes of heart and so much the further off the more softe and contrite his heart is This admonition will be found so much the more needfull if we duely consider with our selues these two things First that we liue in times of exceeding great case plenty and prosperity by which meanes the heartes of men are most vsually hardened and made forgetsull of God as it is written Deut. 32. 15. of the Israelites when they were full and well fed they forgot the strong God that made them and prooued like the vngratefull Horse that spurneth and kickes at his maister that fedde him Secondly that this iudgement of hardnes of heart hath generally ouerspread most men which nowe professe the Gospell all places being full of wilfull sinners which haue hearts as hard as the flint or the smithes anuell or the adamant such as no meanes faire nor soule either benefits or afflictions thretnings or promises can either breake or somuch as bend them The very word it selfe which should be the meanes of softning them through their owne mallice prooues a greater meanes to harden them Therefore in this generall hardnesse of hearte there is the more cause for all men to take heede to themselues to preuent it in themselues by all good courses as namely besides the constant vse of the publike workes of religion prayer sacraments the word read and preached these foure things following are to be done of all which desire to escape an hardned heart First in time of any affliction to worke their hearts earnestly to feele Gods displeasure in it and their owne sinnes which procured it alwayes begging that euery affliction may be effectually blessed to the humbling of their hearts In time of their prosperity dayly to confesse their knowne sinnes particularly vnto God with great griefe for the offence of God in them all and euery one of them Then to meditate often and earnestly of Gods iudgements against sinne in this worlde and in hell also to meditate of the passion and death of Christ crucified of their owne mortality and death of the day of iudgement Lastly to inure themselues to mourne as well for their small as great sinnes and to auoyde diligently
the dregges of his wrath and feele his bitter seuerity to bee very carefull not to drinke in sinne with greedinesse going on in euill with contempt of God and his word DIAL XIX Verses 23 24. And they also if they abide not still in vnbeliefe shall be grafted in for God is able to graft thē in againe For if thou wast cut out of the Oliue tree which was wilde by nature c. Tim. HOw doth Paul proceede Silas Now he addeth a new argument to beate downe the pride of the beleeuing Romanes and to teach them humility It is taken from the hope of the Iewes reparation whose restoring to Christ howe desperate and forlorn their case may seeme to be he prooueth to bee possible in verse 23. also to bee probable and verie likely verse 24. Tim. Vpon what condition is it possible and by what reason is it confirmed to be so Silas By a reason taken from the power of God who by his almightines is able to engraft them into the Church on this condition that they did not remaine in their vnbeliefe As the Gentiles if they fall from the faith may bee cut off so the Iewes might be planted in and recouer their dignity of being Gods people if they did not still continue vnbeleeuers and contemners of the grace of Christ. Where of it doth not follow that to doe so is in their owne liberty but it must come from God who worketh both the will and deed Tim. What are we to learne from these condition all wordes if they abide not in vnbeliefe Sil. First the sinne of vnbeliefe in the obstinate refusing of Christ and his grace offered so kindely and freely was the true cause why the Iewes were cast out from being Gods people which shews what an horrible sin vnbeliefe is of which a certaine Diuine hath truely written that it is the grand-witch which worketh all euill and mischiefe both to the body and soule of men in this life and in the world to come For it shutteth the hands of Gods bounty that hee cannot giue good thinges as it is written in the Gospell that Christ could not do any great work because of their vnbeliefe Math 13 58 also it openeth the hand of his iustice and draweth down euen eternall vengeance as well as temporall as it is saide afore verse 20 Because of vnbeliefe they are broken off and Reuela 21 8. which must cause men to hate this sinne as they abhorre a Witch or a Serpent and to striue against the same as against death hell and destruction Secondly wee learne that though the Iewes being very grieuous offenders as also very sore and very long plagued yet their conuersion is not to bee despaired of so they returne repent and beleeue they may be saued thogh through vnbeliefe they crucified the Lord of life And withall wee are taught generally that wee ought not to cast away hope either of our owne or of the saluation of other howsoeuer great transgressors and of a great time and standing in sinne so wee doe not abide still in our iniquity The reasons hereof be first because Gods mercies and Christes merites doe farre exceede mens trespasses for they be absolutely infinite so bee not our sinnes Secondly God hath promised grace and saluation to such as returne to him without exception either of the kinde of sinne or of the number or of the time but at what time soeuer as the Prophet Eze. speaketh chap. 18. also O house of Israel returne and thou shalt liue Eze. 18 20. Repent that your sinnes may bee done away Acts 3 19. Lastly if the Iewes were the greatest offendors that euer were for they killed that iust one desired a murtherer to be giuen them are not left without hope so they returne what good hope may other conceiue whose sins are not comparable to the Iewes if they will repent of that is past and hencefore liue godlily Tim. What vse is to be made of this knowledge Silas It confutes the Nouatians and other like heritikes who denied repentance vnto such as after baptisme did fall into any 〈◊〉 crime though it were of feare or other infirmities Secondly it serueth to teach and instruct vs touching the largenesse of Gods kindenesse and loue that it is exceeding rich and deepe euen as a bottomelesse sea beeing indeed without eyther bottome or bankes And thirdly it giueth comfort against finall despaire to such as are out of heart with conceite and horror of their sinnes because they may be many and manifold being also most vgly or for that they haue long liued in them whereas these Iewes after abiding in their infidelity now a thousand yeares and a halfe yet are raised vp to a comfortable hope Lastly heere is an admonition to such as haue eyther committed 〈◊〉 great notorious sinne and doe liue in ignorance 〈◊〉 security hypocrisie prophanenes worldlinesse c. that they make haste to repent and to get out of their sinne as a man would with speed leap out of a quagmire or out of a deep dungeon or hot furnace for it is not the fil thinesse of their sinne that shall be able to condemne them so they doe not abide in it Sin damneth a man when it is abiden in and liued in without remorse or hatred against it or eschuing occasions and purpose of amendment but such as turne vnto the Lord with all their heart shall not dye in their sinnes the mouth of the Lord hath saide it Tim. But it seemeth vnpossible that euer the vnbeleeuing Iews should be grafted in and restored to Christ his Church for how can they leaue their infidelity no more then an Ethiopian can change his skinne or a Leopard his spots or how can they giue to themselues faith no more then an euill tree can againe make it selfe good or a bough broken off graft it selfe into the tree no more can vnbeleeuers conuert themselues become faithfull ones Silas It is true yet that which is vnpossible both to our selues and others it is possible with God God that by his owne power could make the world of nothing by his word which could diuide the sea and make it stand by his power as a wall and stay the course of the Sunne and open the earth and ouerwhelmne the world with water and cause the deafe to heare the lame to go the blinde to see the dumbe to speake the dead to liue which could cast out Diuels and dispossesse vncleane spirites by his commandement why shold not he be mighty enough to make an vnbeleeuing Iew to become a beleeuing Christian did he not make Paul of a bloudy persecutor and a raging wolfe to become a sheepe yea a a shepheard and teacher of the flocke and why then can he not change a blinde obstinate Iew being an enemy to Christ into a faithfull member of Christ for God is able to graft them Tim. Yea but there be many 〈◊〉 which might bee done of God
of speech one selfe-same word vsed in seuerall sences First in il part for condemning others vncharitably then in good part for examining our selues and pondering our owne actions so to order them as no offence come thereby wee may not iudge others but we may ought to iudge our selues these be not contrary 1 Cor. 11 31. Tim. What is our Docrine from these words thus expounded Silas That after our conscience is by good reason conuicted of any sinne we must striue to leaue it and vse it no more so Paul speakes heere Let vs no more though ye haue beene bold to iudge and condemne one another for these indifferent matters yet now that ye haue heard so good and manifest reasons against it from the dignity of your Lord and his office of Iudgeship hencefoorth do it not The reasons heereof are first when wee liue in sinne after knowledge it is the greater sinne Iohn 9 41. Iames 4 17. Secondly it draweth greater wrath and punishment both temporall and eternall Prou. 1 29. Luke 12 47. He that knowes his Maisters will and doth it not shal be beaten with many stripes God bare with the Israelites in their ignorance but when they had sinned stubbornly after sundry warnings by his straunge workes hee sent strange plagues amongst them 1 Cor. 10 5 6 7. The examples of Gods iudgements against the Old world Sodomites 〈◊〉 the sonnes of Ely against Corazin and Bethsaida all of them warned by Noah or 〈◊〉 by Moses by Ely and by Christ doe confirme this truth that it is daungerous to continue in sinne after warning Thirdly sinnes against knowledge are the high-way to the sinne against the holy-Ghost for though euerie sinne after knowledge bee not that vnpardonable sinne which hath knowledge ioyned with malicious hatred of the knowne trueth of saluation by Christ yet it is a step and degree thereunto Tim. What is the vse of this instruction Silas To exhort euery one to beware chiefely of such sinnes whereof he hath beene admonished and clearely conuicted For if our loue to our bodies bee such that wee carefully auoide such things as we know are wont to hurt them how much more ought we to shew foorth this care for our soules For if ciuill Iustices Maisters Parents will more seuerely strike where their warnings be despised let not vs thinke that God will forget such as neglect his admonitions but will wound them deeply first or last that goe on in knowne sinnes as himselfe threatneth Leuit 26 21 24. I will walke stubbornly against them that walke stubbornly against me Oh that this in time might bee considered of such as haue beene often and many wayes aduertised of their faults yet are so farre giuen ouer as they vse no endeauour for the forsaking of them do not enter into any care or course of amendment Tim. What is heere meant by a stumbling blocke and occasion of falling Silas They be speeches borrowed from earthly things and translated to spirituall as from high-wayes wherein stones and blockes do lye to make men stumble and fall or from snares and nettes of Powlers and hunters they signifie euery thing that hindereth in the course of godlines either quite turning vs away from religion which is meant heere by falling or causing vs to goe on lesse chearefully which is called heere stumbling blocke and when the Apostle saith put not the meaning is that we giue no manner of offence neyther small nor great to our Brother either to make him flye whollye from Christ or to trouble him neuer so little For this place speakes not of a passine offence which is taken where none is giuen as the Pharisies and Scribes which were offended with the doctrine and myracles of Christ Mat. 15 12. and as worldlinges now are grieued with Magistrates Ministers and others for doing their duties for their zeale against vices which beeing good things ought not to scandalize any and do offend none but ill mindes But of an actiue scandal which is an offence giuen when some euill is not secretly either spoken or done but openly contrary to Gods Lawe or when our liberty in things indifferent is vnseasonably vsed by the which others are made the worse lesse godly and honest For as a stone or block so an offence must appeare An horrible crime whilst it is vnknowne it is an offence to God hurts the committer but no offence to others to hurt them till it be manifested Tim. What is our Doctrine from this place Silas That all Christians must carefully looke to this that they neuer be a iust occasion of sinning to any man either by words or deedes to hurt the saluation of any or by building them vp vnto sinne by our euill examples in our sayings or dooings For first this is against the commandement of God 1 Cor. 8 9 10. and 10 32. Secondly it puls downe heauy iudgements on our selues Math. 18 8. Better a Milstone were hanged about our necke c. The world is full of examples of such as haue beene grieuously plagued of God for being authors and occasions of sinne to others as Gen. 3. the History of Adam and Eues fall the Serpent punished more then Eue and Eue more then Adam Iezabel more plagued then the Iudges and false witnesses which accused and killed Naboth Ieroboam for making the Israelites to sin more punished then the Israelites themselues Thirdly it is against the example of the blessed Apostle 1. Cor. 8 13. Fourthly by offence giuen wee breake the rule of charity which shunneth the greeuances hurt of euery man and studieth how to foster help and strengthen euen the weakest As in a naturall body the stronger mēber succoureth the feebler or as a Phisition or Chirurgion tenderly handleth a diseased or pained party so loue is maruailous chary not to trouble or doe the least harme to the soule of any Christian brother Rom. 14 15. Fiftly by offence giuing wee sinne against our neighbour while wee beate nay wound his weake conscience which is great cruelty procuring him by our example to allow or doe some thing whereof in his conscience hee was not resolued or which he knew he ought not to do had not we made him to stumble 1. Cor. 8 12. Nay by our offence we destroy our brother so much as lyeth in vs and become very butchers murtherers of our brothers soule eyther wholy driuing him away from the faith or discouraging him and what a matter is this for so slender a thing as meates and drinkes daies or such like indifferent things to bee the death and slaughter not of the body but of the precious soules of men Rom. 14 15. Lastly this reacheth not to our brother alone and to his destruction but euen so high as Christ the head and Lord against whome wee sinne in wounding or hurting any member or seruant of his 1. Cor. 8 12. There is that straight coniunction betweene Christ and the faithfull that the
Shame what it is to the godly and vngodly what it works in both ibid. Shame why mentioned rather then any other fruit of sinne ibid. Sinne the nature kindes filthinesse and danger of it ch 6. v. 23. Sinne to liue in it what Ch 6. v. 1. Sinne to abound what ch 5 v. 20. Sin how first husband ch 7 v. 4. Sinne how mortified and dead not in a moment cha 7. v. 4 5 6. Sins our cause of Christs death and what it shoulde admonish vs of ch 4. v. last ch 5 8. Sinnes none veniall in their owne nature ch 6. v 23. Sins how venial ib. Supper of the Lord howe to prepare to it ch 2. v. 25. T. Tribulatiou see affliction Trust in God see faith Truth of God is for our comfort and imitation Ch. 3 v. 3 4 5 6 7. Truth of God not impeached by mens vnbeliefe Ib. Truth of God how renow ned by our liues ibid. V. W. Vanity how creatures subiect to it and why Chap 8 verse 20 Vnbeleefe a Mother and maine sinne reasons against it and why wee ought to beleeue God Ch 11 v. 20. Will of God ch 12 v. 2. Word of God see Scripture Workes good which bee and why to be done What required to a good worke ch 2 v. 6 ch 14. v 5 6. Works neither 〈◊〉 nor merit and why see Law Works to what ends they are to be done seeing they iustifie not ch 2 v 6. Z. Zeale what erroneus and wise ch 10 v 2. Zeale without knowledg ibid. Zeale ioyned with knowledge and of what thinges ibid. Zeale of the Iewes faultie sundry waies Ibid. Zeale of Papists blind and furious Ibid. Zeale rare in Protestants Ibid. Zealous why we ought to be and why we should take heede of blinde zeale Ibid. Also Ch 12 v 11. Errata Muse not courteous Reader that thou doost meete with these faultes for there would haue beene farre more if the great diligence of the Printer had not preuented it the blinde Coppy and wine owne ouer-sight were so bad Correct therefore with thy pen these heere noted ere thou beginne to reade and beare with the rest PAge 3. l. 25. read Reuocation p. 4. l. 12. r. it p. 8. l. 11 r. exordium p. 9 l. 34 r. his afore free and for after grace and in the mar r. the Gospel after of p. 21. l. 3. strike out which of it selfe and place it before could in l. 32. P. 22. l 16. r. gift p. 23. l. 19. r. few l. 22. r. meane ones p. 25. str the 9. and 10. lines wholy p 27. l 35. r. whom p 32. l. 28. r be p 43. l. 17. r. too high p 54. l. 6. r. 1 Iohn p 57. l 19. r with P 61 l 14. r by for on in p. 63. the lines 12 13 14 15. 16. must be ioyned to l. 6. p. 72 str out whole lines 7 8 9 10 p. 73. r. all matters after attribute P. 84 l. 18. r. these foure p. 89. l. 13. r. Antimisthia p 〈◊〉 l. 1. r. as in killing Abcl. p. 107. l 4. r. doth not p ibid. l 16. r. iudgement for Law l. 32. r. coactiue p 112. l. 19. r. of the 1 chap. p. 133. from the two last lines vnto the 14. l of p. 135. all belongs vnto the 6. Dial. p. 186. l. 31. r. righteous p. 189. l. 3. r. Ro. 12 2. p. 272. str lines 26 27. p. 277. l 26. r hencc p 284. l 8. 〈◊〉 hence p. 362. mar r. imputetur p. 366. l. 34. str actions p. 385. in mar r. habent p. 390. l. 17. r. frced p. 397. l. 1. str on t hauing a little paper left p. 409. l. 29. r. sick p. 428. l. 18. r. now p. 442. l. 7. r. and workes it is a good signe p. 〈◊〉 l. 1. r. word and 446. morg r. deplorat 451. l. 14. r. good p. 488. l. last r. truth p. 489. str 5 last lines p. 502. l. 15. r. after vnable by his-own vnthriftinesse p. 527. l. 15 〈◊〉 r. followeth and his merites p. 563. l. 19 20. r. to our spirit and with our spirit p. 596. l. 6. r. explication p. 606. l. 25. r. our error p. 6 〈◊〉 1. l. 34. r. 〈◊〉 p. p. 614. in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 628. l. 14. r. or some thing which hath Analogic and proportion with faith p. 650. for thirdly r. secondly l. 35. angels for diuels p. 652. l. 31. read probable onely p. 673. l. 1. r. Silas p. 679. mar r. vniuersum genus p. 693. l. 19. r. be iust p. 719. l. 30. r. having p. 〈◊〉 l. 3. r. 〈◊〉 p. 759. l. 11. r. ver 3 4. of this chap. p. 802. r. christ for faith p. 833. r. preaching p. 〈◊〉 l. 21. r. hath not done p. 848. r. are things pa. 860. l. 32 r. it is not true p. 862. l. 23. r. sub testo p. 865. r an agreement p. 882. l. 18. reade Antopistos p. 867. mar r. prophetarum p. 897. l. 13. r. anomia p. 976. r. one beleeuer page 979 l. 11. so the promise p. 991. l. 28. r. or for of p. 997. l. 31. for gods iudgement 〈◊〉 these are things p. 902. l. 1. r. as christ p. 925. l. 6. r toward the end p. 1016. l. 32. r. allow them p. 1023. l. 15. r. three p. 1041. l. 10. for but r. nor l. 12. r. canon p. 1042. mar str Orineus p. 1048. in mar r. one for euen and write after doc Fulke p. 1069. l. 5. r. correction pag. 1085. l. 27. r. vnprofitable 1090. l. 10. 〈◊〉 good lawes 1101. l. 13. r. acknowledge p. 1106. 〈◊〉 4. r. retchles p. 1113. l. 21. r. for 〈◊〉 l hy p. 1121. l. 1. r. also defended Peters abiuring after marriage p. 1126. l. 31. r. vices for duties Acts 9 1 2 3. Ro. 3 24 25 26. Paul was separate 1. to eternal life 2. to the knowledge of both to beleeue as a Christian. 3. to preach it as an A ostle Prou. 3. Psal. 119. 10. 11 c. Nouelty a note of error Antiquity of verity By Prophets here be ment such as preached to the people as Nathan thogh they did write no prophesie Scriptures Vse Foelix Holy Ends Vses of the Scripture This putteth a difference betweene the Gospell and Law Son of God Iesus Christ. Lord. Seed of Dauid Gal. 4 4. Iohn 1 14. Christ had his humainity from Dauid not his 〈◊〉 Ioh. 5 26. and 2 19. Eph 4 10 11 Acts 26 8. Rom. 4 17. Son of God Apostleship Ephel 3 8. 1. Cor. 15 8. It is a certain token of a faithfull Minister when he can account the profit of the hearers to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and vantage Paul his presence and preaching was fruitfull to other Gentiles and he wished and hoped it to be toward the Romaines Diuinity heer in excelleth Phylosophye which is not made for al men and the Law of Moyses giuen into one Nation only Acts 2 45 4 34. Habak 2 4. Papists must blame the Prophets and Apostles and