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A04220 An exposition of the second epistle of the apostle Paul to Timothy, the first chapter Wherein 1 The text is logically into it's parts resolved ... 4 The seuerall doctrines thence arising deduced. ... All which is accompanied with familiar and delightfull similitudes ... Lastly as the matter requireth: there is vsed, definitions, distributions, subdiuisions, trialls, motiues, and directions, all which be of great vse in their proper order. By Iohn Barlovv ... Barlow, John, b. 1580 or 81. 1625 (1625) STC 1434; ESTC S100861 328,113 454

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those that liue it are counted as signes and wonders in Israel Isa 58. 18. But what marvell sith Christ was not Isa 52. vlt. And 53. 7. knowne by it his image despised his person in carnall eyes deformed They then that cannot discerne the Sunne how should they perceiue a Starre a Candle Moreover Is our life from Christ Let vs then that are Vse 4. partakers of it returne him prayse for so great a blessing divide not this treasure ascribe nothing to thy owne selfe or others it s the root that beareth vs not we the root life is a Rom. 11. great blessing this life the blessing of blessings then let vs never be weary in magnifying the Lord for such a favour nay seeing it comes from Christ let vs returne it againe vnto him seeking his glory as he hath done our good If we beget children doe we not expect they should spend their liues for the profit of vs their Parents As the Sea therefore sends forth many rivers but they returne all againe into her bosome so seeing our life comes from Christ let it flow backe to the prayse of his Maiestie and th● rather wee may be induced hereto because this is the onely way to haue life and to escape death for all eternitie And here may all of vs learne instruction seeing our life Vse 5. is from Christ Iesus are we weake and feeble in our minds Runne we to to him and pray we Lord quicken me Be our children dead in sinne Bring them before Christ desire him to raise them to life imitate the poore that liued when he liued amongst them in the vse of the meanes still haue an eye to this Physitian otherwise our Patients will not be cured this is that Sunne that with his warme beames enliueth all the creatures if he be absent we are all but dead men rotten branches And to shut vp this poynt wee are to learne here to be Vse 6. carefull that we offend not this Lord of life and incurre his displeasure for if we doe we shall dye the second the eternall death Simple Polititians be they that consider not how all the keyes to convey life and death hang on his finger Will we not tremble to heare treason For its death And shall we then crucifie againe the Author of our salvation and rend his flesh in our teeth and tongues like the vaile of the Temple from the top to the bottome take heed of this for he that lighteth our Candle can easily put it out And this shall suffice to haue spoken of the Pen-man of this Epistle for the present now in the next Verse is the person mentioned to whom Paul in particular directed his Writings VERS 2. To Timotheus my beloved sonne grace mercie peace from God the Father and Christ Iesus our Lord. IN these words are two things contained a description The Logicall resolution and a salutation in the forme of a prayer the person to whom Paul sent this Epistle is described 1. By his name Timotheus 2. By a word of relation sonne 3. By an adiunct beloved In the salutation being laid downe prayer-wise obserue what he wisheth and from whom the matter what is 1. Grace 2. Mercie 3. Peace the persons from whom be 1. God 2. Iesus Christ and both are amplified by a word of relation God the Father Christ our Lord. To Timothie This word imports as much as the honor The Theologicall exposition of God or precious to God his Father was a Grecian and his Mother a Iewesse who beleeued in God Acts 16. 2. What he was in name he was in nature he honoured God was precious to God My beloved sonne Sonne is a word of relation and doth alwayes presuppose a father who gaue him his being and it is diversly taken 1. For persons Psal 79. 11. 2. for lambes branches bullets arrowes sparkes or almost any other thing the which proceedeth from a cause Genes 49. 22. Psal 79. 11. and 80. 16. and 89. 23. and 1●4 4. and 147. 8. Iob. 5. 7. Now the reasons why Paul cals him sonne may be these 1. Because he had either begot him or at the least confirmed him by the Gospell 2. Because he loued him as a sonne and he Paul like a Father 3. In that he was yong and Paul old 4. And in regard he was so like minded to the Apostle from the first reason I take it came the name of God-father because they had begotten them to God And he addeth Beloved to distinguish him from others for he was beloved of God of the good people and of Paul also in a speciall manner Grace mercie and peace To omit to speake of all the acceptations of grace let vs know that it is tooke chiefly two wayes 1. For Gods free favour 2. For the gifts flowing from the same the first though I exclude not the latter is here meant Mercie To omit how many wayes it is accepted by Mercie here is meant a loving inclination of God to his people being in misery or for an effect of his grace or the effects of that loving inclination mercie seemes to proceede from grace and all other blessings whatsoever for by the grace of God each one may truely say I am that I am Peace It also in Scripture hath a large extent but ordinarily is received for outward rest and quiet and inward tranquilitie of the mind this latter is to be received though the other not absolutely to be reiected And what if wee should vnderstand grace as it is in God Mercie as manifested to miserable man And peace as the effect which proceeds from both Yet how ever it be this is most safe to hold that Paul wished Timotheus all good spirituall corporall temporall eternall without him and within him From God the Father In these words the Apostle manifesteth to vs from whom and in what order grace mercie and peace is derived to vs. By God is meant the first person in the Trinitie and he is called the Father because as from the fountaine all things proceed from him for by an vnvtterable yet naturall generation he begate the Sonne from all eternitie He is also a Father by Creation Adoption Preservation Againe the word Father is attributed to the whole Deitie in generall and the distinct persons in particular Isa 9. 6. Ier. 23. 6. And Iesus Christ our Lord We haue once heard for all what Iesus and Christ signifies yet here is another title annexed to our Messias Lord in the Hebrew tongue is a supporter stay or base In Greeke it signifies one that hath authoritie over a thing or person being a word of relation It is a truth that I haue writ diverse times vnto Churches The Metaphrase in generall and publike and private persons in particular wished them all blessings that might make either for their comfort and peace here on earth or the perfection of glory in the kingdome of heaven But now I haue Penned this
portion which passeth all vnderstanding and afterward thou shalt dwell with Angels with Christ with God the Father where is fulnesse of ioy and pleasures for euermore thou shalt never die never whither no rust shall eate thee nor moth consume thee thou shalt see no sorrow thou shalt heare no complaint neither be afraid of the least evill successe Thou shalt iudge the quicke and the dead acquit the innocent condemne the guiltie and doe little lesse than a pettie God in one word thou shalt doe more and haue more than can be told by man or by Angell all that be good before God shall commend thee preserue thee or rather thou them for ever and ever And now in the last place let vs make application Then is not that life base that is led without it A miserable Vse 1. service is that which is begun continued and finished without a good conscience being accompanied with lying swearing dissembling and deceiving is it not they that thus liue are worse then beasts and no creature the devill excepted more wretched Be thou then assured that such a life is odious to God hatefull to his Saints and an vndoubted fore-runner of the second death He that layeth the foundation of his service with ignorance infidelitie and disobedience in the fiery tryall shall be blowne vp when the match of Gods vindicatiue iustice shall lay hold on this blacke powder how shall that man be able to stand Wee may muzzle the mouth of our conscience not suffer it to speake and deale with it as an vniust Land-lord with his poore tenant when he in some iust cause is to giue evidence against him put it to silence by an over ruling commaund but when Christ shall come to iudgement and take part with conscience then shall it speake freely boldly truely as ever did faithfull witnesse at the barre having the chiefe Iudge for his friend How will a Iudas looke at that day who was so pittifully deiected before the Pharisees whom he tooke for his friends and expected comfort from them How will the Drunkard stagger and reele not with wine but with the fume of a bad conscience What face can the hypocrite hold vp that hath dissembled all his life long where shall the vniust the fornicator adulterer lyer with all the wicked and vngodly appeare I am sure of this that though such and a thousand moe haue blind erroneous and cauterized consciences burned with an hot yron for the present yet at that generall assize being lanced with the sharpe edged knife of Gods revenging hand they shall all bleed freshly and to death eternall This kind of men may looke bigge set the best side out eat drinke and be merrie but I shall never beleeue that their hearts laugh with their faces O matchlesse miscreants of all mischiefe sonnes of blood and slaues of perdition you may sooner separate your soules from your bodies then conscience from your soules or damnation from either Goe then your wayes laugh and be fat play and dance sing to the Tabret and Harpe put death iudgement and hell farre from you tread vnder foot the blood of the new couenant crucifie againe the Lord of life make a mocke of sinne and shipwracke your owne consciences yet know that God one day will call you to account and dash out your braines with the heele of his vengeance In the next place seeing this is so let vs in the feare of Vse 2. God get knowledge and mixe our service to God and man with sinceritie walke according to the rule doe nothing without a precept haue a true patterne for all our proceedings and runne to the Law and to the Testimonie of the Gospell obey the one and beleeue the other so shall we haue good and pure consciences one whereof though the world may fume and chafe is worth more than ten thousands of gold and silver What can be of greater price what should we preferre aboue it O conscience whereunto shall I compare thee who or what is like vnto thee Is not knowledge good obedience better and art not thou of these two simples compounded There is no evill in thee thou art all good and very good There are foure things Pro. 30. ●9 30. comelie statelie in their going a Lyon the strongest among beasts and tunneth not away from any a Grey hound an hee Goa●e and a King against whom there is norising vp but he that hath a complete good conscience surmounts them all But conscience least I should ecclipse and obscure thy same when I would speake and spread it I will therefore giue thee thy charge a large commission Conscience that thou mayest execute thine office throughly Conscience his Charge speake thou in the language of Canaan be thou mighty in the Scriptures and that thou mayst not build Babel and pull downe Bethel let euery man haue thy sentence in his mothers tongue Goe to and fro through the world passe by no Citie Burrow Village Hall House nor Cottage but let them heare thy voyce sounding in their wals speake truely plainely boldly crie aloud spare no mans person of whatsoever cloth his coate be cut Be thou a good linguist make it knowne thou art a skilfull Artist and declare an exact Method in thy proceeding And Conscience first goe thou to all Christian Princes Kings and Emperours speake gently to them and intreate them to cry to God for wisedome that they may wisely goe in out before the great people committed to their charge will them yong and old to tread in the steps of Hezekiah Iosiah pull downe the high places burne the groues with fire over turne Baals Altars and cause all his Priests to fall by the sword Bid them send Levites through their Lands spread the truth of God for their subiects haue immortall soules in their mortall bodies tell them that is the way to get a good Conscience and how thou art of more worth than a golden Scepter Put them in mind how a bad one was the cause Saul his kingdome and I●roboam became the subiect of Gods vengeance Let this Poesie be stamped about the borders of their Crownes that the more religious the more royall Conscience step on to the honorable Lords and because they affect breuitie not prolixitie say to them in a few sentences that Nobilitie without pietie and a good conscience is like a painted Sepulchre or blazing comet good for nought except to gaze vpon that they feare God or else they haue no curbe to bridle them that they honour the King keepe their houses well but the Church better that they exceed others as much in goodnesse as they doe in greatnesse and that without a second birth none can enter into the kingdome of heaven Bid them blaze their Armes continue their ancient Scutchions but take this for their Motto that The more holy the more honorable Conscience See that thou meet with the intelligent Counsellors and graue Iudges of the State and Nations
Reasons alleadged we omit what might be further collected from this verse and proceed to the next VERS 10. But is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour Iesus Christ who hath abolished death and hath brought life and immortality vnto light through the Gospell THis verse dependeth on the former For our The Logicall resolution Apostle hauing affirmed that we were called and saued in Gods purpose before the world was in these words declareth the manifestation of Gods mercy and the benefits we receiue through the same The particulars in this portion of Scripture be these 1. That the grace and purpose of God and mans saluation is manifested 2. The time in the word Now. 3. With whom or by whom it appeared and that is Christ who is described by two effects one that he destroyed death another that he brought life and the instrumentall cause whereby is said to be the Gospell Now. This word includes all times before and after the The Theologicall exposition comming of Christ Made manifest There be diuers degrees of the appearing of Grace but onely in our apprehension 1. Grace appeareth in Gods decree 2. In the darke promises at the beginning of the world 3. When the efficacy of the merit of Christ appeared in the world 4. By the application of the Spirit 5. When Christ came in the flesh 6. And lastly when hee shall returne againe in Glory Who hath abolished That is Remoued obliterated destroyed swallowed vp 1 Cor. 15. 54. c. Death By Death is meant the sting of death for all must once dye and the torments of hell hereafter called the second death Reuela 21. 8. As also the death of corruption which is in vs may also be vnderstood with all other kinds that be inflicted as curses And brought life First the life of grace here and of glory hereafter And immortalitie This argueth a further benefit that Christ hath procured for as Adam brought death and eternall death so Christ bringeth life and life that shall endure for euer Some read the word incorruption and the bodies of the Saints shall after the day of iudgement see no corruption Vnto light First openly manifestly and as cleare as the Sunne at midday vnto such as haue their eyes opened Through the Gospell First by the promises and doctrine of the new Testament written preached As the Lord from before the begining of the world of The Metaphrase his gracious and free purpose gaue through Christ Saluation to his chosen people so hath he now since the beginning of the Law and promises exhibited clearely and conspicuously vnto euery one of vnderstanding manifested the same by the bright appearing of Christ our Lord who hath blotted and rooted out death temporall in respect of the sting and torment and eternall paine in the kingdome of darkenes and hath also brought vnto light the assurance of the life of grace here and the perfection of endlesse glory hereafter and that by the writing and Preaching of the Doctrine and promises of the Gospell From the relation and dependance of this verse with the The deductiō of doctrines former we gather that Gods purpose in his appointed time shall come to passe Doct. 1. Grace was giuen in Gods resolution before the world and now manifested in former and present times Let man devise what he can Gods counsell shall stand The Lord of h●●sts Prou. 19. 24. Isai 14. 24. 46. 10. hath sworne saying Surely like as I haue purposed so shall it come to passe and as I haue consulted so shall it abide He declareth the last things from the beginning and from old the Psal 33. 11. things that were not done Yea the co●●sell of the Lord shall stand for euer and the thoughts of his heart from generation to generation And though Christ was long yet he came in the fulnesse of time Gal. 4. 4. For he is not subiect to forgetfulnes The Butler being Reas 1. but a man may forget Ioseph and Ioseph his fathers house yet howeuer that be the Lord alwaies is mindfull of his purpose David was in a passion when he cryed Hath God forgotten to be mercifull The Lord hath the Idea of all things in himselfe and euery thought is before his eyes so that he is not forgetfull of his purpose Psal 139. 16. He is true of his promise for it makes for his glory Shall Reas 2. the Lord purpose and not performe Sure this should argue instability and mutability in the Lord the which cannot be For the Lords purposes are founded vpon his counsell his counsell is most wise therefore hee neuer altereth or changeth his former purposes Neither doth God like man purpose any thing that he Reas 3. is not able to performe Nature may be interrupted and not produce her effects but the Maker of it cannot be hindered at all for his power is infinite and if he but will any thing it is done yea speake but a word Speech is one of the least motions yet when God said Let there be light Gen. 1. it was so This may serue for to terrifie the wicked and confute Vse 1. their Atheisme who cry out Where 's the promise of his comming haue not all things beene alike from the beginning Yet Act 17. 31. shall not the Lord appeare in his appointed tim He hath set a day wherein he will iudge the world The yong man Eccles. 11. 9. may reioyce in his youth and doe what seemeth him best in his owne eyes y●t let him know that the Lord will bring him to iudgement The Epicure goe in purple and fine linnen and fare delicately euery day but his sweet morsells shall be grauell in his mouth when his account is cast vp And be thou assured that as the Lord hath purposed mercy to his children so hath he iudgement without 2 Thes 1. mercy to all wicked and vngodly persons and in the time he hath purposed it shall be performed For he is Iob. 9. 4. wise in heart and mighty in power who euer waxed fierce against him and hath prospered God spared the old world long but the floud swallowed them vp at the length Iezabell had a long time of turning and Ierusalem of repenting but was not the wrath of God powred downe at the resolued time to the vttermost And so shall it be at the last with such as cry and thinke the Lord is like vs he will neither Psal 50. 21. Zeph. 1. 12. do● good or evill And in the second place this must teach the faithfull patience Vse 2. Ioh. 2. and to waite the Lords leysure We may not appoint the Lord a time when to finish his worke It was Maryes fault that would be directing her sonne that was God and man when to worke his miracles and be handling of him and we read that the best of Gods children haue failed in not patiently waiting for the accomplishment of
we doubt of it or of Christs sufficiency A second we may draw from his person for hee is God Reas 2. and man Therefore our onely and absolute Sauiour He must be man that saved vs. 1. That the iustice of God might be satisfied in that nature whereby he was offended for in Heb. 2. 17. no wise he tooke vpon him the nature of Angells 2. That we might be his brethren and 3. He haue a fellow feeling of our infirmities the better to succour vs and comfort vs Heb. 4. 15. when we are tempted And he must be God two natures in one person 1. That his merits might be sufficient to satisfie the infinite wrath of the father for the worthines of the merit comes from the dignity of the person 2. That hee might ouercome him that had the power of death that is the Deuill Christ was stronger then he And 3. That he Rom. 14. 4. vlt. might be able to raise himselfe from death so that he might be able to raise himself from death so that he is our only Saviour for none was euer like him before him or euer shall be after him this is our Kinsman And he may be called our Sauiour from his properties Reason 3. for he is holy harmelesse vndefiled separate from sinners Heb. 7. 26. and made higher then the heauens He is infinite in knowledge power and presence neither can hee euer sleepe or slumber Finally he may be called a Saviour 1. In respect of his Reason 4. doctrine 2. Example 3. His mediation And 4. by his merit Heb. 7. 25. and that is principally So that he is a Saviour every manner of way For all the promises are yea and Amen in Christ Iesus 2 Cor. 1. 20. And here we might shew the misery of the Iewes Turkes and Heathens who put no confidence in him neither haue Vse 1. heard of him As also the Papists that put their confidence and place their hope in Mary and their owne merits This should teach vs to be acquainted with him and to Vse 2. repose al our confidence and trust in him for our saluation And that so much the rather seeing eternall life consisteth Ioh 17. 3. in the knowledge of him and the obedience of his doctrine For this is a sure way Who hath abolished death The note is this that Death by Christ is destroyed Doct. 6. Oh death where is thy sting O graue where is thy victorie But thankes be vnto God who hath giuen vs victorie through our Lord Iesus Christ 1 Cor 15. 55. c. Reasons For he onely it is who hath borne our infirmities and the burthen of our sinnes paid our debt dissolued the workes of the Deuill quickened vs by his spirit tooke away the law of ordinances broke downe the partition wall cancelled our bond and satisfied the iustice of the father for the first and second death The which if any should deny these reasons may serue to confirme it 1. For the law requireth both after the fall therefore Christ must satisfie for both or he had not discharged the full debt and payment 2. They that are not partakers of his sufferings shall dye the first and second death who calls this into question 3. What had we suffered if he had not died the separation of soule and body and of both from the fauour of God for euer and euer had we not And 4. Haue we not a double life from Christ then a two-fold death was abolished by the rule of contraries But it may be obiected that his sufferings were finite Obiect 1. Sol. 1. True in respect of time but there is another infinitie in regard of degree or quantitie the which Christ endured 2. The course of originall sinne is stopped in all his members 2. that they do not sinne for euer therefore it was not necessary that Christ should suffer for eternitie But some may further obiect how is this manifested in Obiect 2. scripture and when did he suffer for it Were not the bodies of those beasts whose bloud was Sol. I. brought into the holy place by the high Priest for sinne to be burnt without the campe and did not Christ suffer Heb. 13. 11. 12 without the gate What can be vnderstood by this but the second death For is it not a priuation of all ioy and the infliction of the torments of hell for a season 2. And was not Christ in his agonie in great perplexitie when he cried My soule is heauie to heath My God let this cup passe from me And why hast thou forsaken me In what sence Christ may be said to suffer the second death Yet this is warily to be vnderstood For we may not in any wise so much as thinke that God the father did euer wholly withdraw his loue from Christ Iesus or separate his affection from him the second death so accepted is to vndergoe the full iustice and implacable anger of God for all eternitie the which may not here in that sence be admitted For the father did neuer with draw his loue from his sonne indeed Though for the present hee looked on him as hee was our suretie and a sinner by imputation with the strict eye of a seuere iudge and creditor who would not remit one farthing of his due debt but exact a ful perfect satisfactiō At which time Christ felt the most bitter pangs in his passion and that torment the which was equiualent to the second death This should worke in vs both loue and thankfulnes to Vse 1. Christ who hath wrought so great a worke for vs. How should we praise him for so great a fauour If a Physician remoue a disease or preuent death in vs will we not pay him and commend him And is it not thanks-worthy to haue corruption remoued death destroyed and that temporall and eternall David would glorifie God in that hee had deliuered his soule from the nethermost part of hell And 1 Sam 25. 32. 33. did he not blesse God and blesse Abigail and blesse her counsell in that she was a meanes to preserue Nabal and his familie from death and shall we not doe so much who are our selues preserued from death eternall I wish that wee did but well consider this thing then we would be more affected with Christ more thankfull to him for the remouall of so great an euill Againe this may comfort euery christian heart in its greatest Vse 2. troubles Doth corruption fight within thee and striue to put out the sparke of grace Be of good comfort for it shall neuer preuaile When that serpent death shooteth out his venemous sting why consider its tooke from him And that which thou seemest to see is but like the Enchanters serpent counterfeit Let the deuill tempt thee why haue recourse to Christ who hath destroyed his plot redeemed thee out of his hands and tooke his power from him And
demand Could not God haue saued man Quest from death and pardoned sinne without a satisfaction I answer No. For 1. It s against his nature Iustice in God Ans is not a quality as in man but his verie essence therefore it must be satisfied or no flesh could be saued 2. His word was passed forth At what time thou eatest thou shalt dye the death Yet the Lord sheweth the liberty of his iustice in sauing some by Christ and condemning others without him So that we see sinne must be punished Gods infinite iustice satisfied either in vs or by another But it will be obiected that man being finite cannot satisfie for infinite iustice It s true that man is finite in respect of place or a geometricall quantity but infinite in regard of duration of time or Arithimetical enumeration so that though no created nature at an instant in one act of it selfe is able to vndergoe the infinite wrath of the reuenging God yet in regard of continuance or times succession his torment may be said to be * Viz a parte post infinite What he cannot doe at once hee must be doing euer How can God be iust in this his proceeding 1. Because man hath offended an infinite God Now the Quest Ans dignitie of the person offended aggrauates the offence as we see a word against the king is death to a subiect pardonable 2. The sinner hath had a world of sinning here therfore must haue a world of suffering hereafter 3. The sinner sinnes continually neuer comes to a period therefore the punishment as the shadow doth the body when the Sunne shines followes the sinner continually And 4. The sinner would haue sinned in a greater degree had it beene in his owne power or if he had not beene by a necessity restrained Therefore its iust with the Lord to punish him with eternall torments And brought life We haue handled the like doctrine in Doct. 7. the first verse that ariseth out of this place viz. that All spirituall life is procured by Christ Therefore we passe to this Doct. 8. Phil. 3. 1. 2. Pet. 1. 12. that Repetition of the same thing is warrantable profitable Paul doth so here and all the rest who preached and writ as we may see elsewhere Compare Mat. 5. 1. with Luk. 6. 20. and you shall see that Christ preached one sermon twice In Mathew he is said to sit in Luke to stand the one saith it was in a Valey the other in the Mountaine Yet some seeke to reconcile them Because we vnderstand not all we heare at the first deliuery Reas 1. 2. 3. 4. What if we doe yet we may not beleeue it But grant we beleeue may we not forget it I am sure we doe not practice it though we vnderstand it beleeue it and also remember it Therefore to repeat the same things may be profitable And a man may be in a different disposition so that hee 5. panions to thee thou hast iust cause to feare thy present condition and to labour for these things For when the spirit sauingly applyeth to the Christian the vertue of Christs death these forenamed effects or properties will be in some measure felt in that person And wouldst thou also know whether life be by Christ Trials if we haue life by Christ Iesus procured for thee then examine thy selfe by these rules 1. What knowledge hast thou of Christ what vnderstanding of the Gospell For its eternall life to know Christ and his doctriue Hagar had her eyes opened before shee could see the well so must thou the eye of thy minde before thou tast of the water of life 2. What power hast thou to do good How often doth the pulse of prayer beate in thy closet and in the secret roome of thy heart What strength hast thou to runne the pathes of Gods commands Canst thou like the creeple rise vp leape and be glad in the praises of God 5. What care hast thou to preserue the life of grace in thee and to come to eternall glorie Men that loue their liues will make choyce of their food Physician and aire And he that loues the life of grace will eate vp the good word of God depend on a skilfull Preacher and plant himselfe where the pure ayre of holinesse is sensible found and felt breathing mouing 4. And in conclusion how dost thou imploy thy life what be the ends of all thy motions Dost thou spend thy strength that God may haue glory by thee and his children receiue good from thee then thou hast done well For as all fire that comes from aboue will tend vpward againe the heate that comes from the heart will disperse it selfe to euerie member so that life which is receiued from Christ will alwaies incline and moue that hee may haue praise and benefit by it Are these things also within thee and proceed from thee then hast thou participated of the first resurrection and shalt neuer tast of the second death And if thou want them striue for them or else Christs life will profit thee nothing See thou defer no time omit no oppertunitie neither neglect any meanes but seeke this life while it may be found purchase this field though it cost thee all thy treasure Thou hast now a price in thy hand want not an heart For the tyde and season to saile to this land to buy this commoditie serues but once not euer And to moue thee thus to doe let these things be well weighed seriously thought on 1. Consider the excellencie of this life the least degree of Motiues to get spirituall life it is of more worth than all other life what euer therefore it s called the life of God Eph. 4. 18. How many kindes of life be there and amongst them how many degrees yet the neerer it approcheth to the fountaine of life God the more excellent it is The subiect hath a life aswell as the King the sicke as the whole but what is it in comparison of this but a kind of death now the better a thing is is it not the more to be desired 2 Without this life we can doe no action acceptable to God or profitable to our selues and what a misery is this alwaies to be doing yet all in vaine A naturall life can doe but naturall actions therefore such as be in the flesh cannot please God Rom. 8. 7. 3. This life will make vs acceptable and well pleasing to God and man yea the Angels shall reioyce and the father say with delight This my sonne was dead but is now aliue Luk. 15. 24. We ioy to see the trees budde the corne peepe the graftes flourish and shall we haue no care to obtaine that life wherein all beautie consisteth 4 Finally he that hath not the beginning of this life here cannot possesse eternall life hereafter for they onely shall escape the second death that partake of the first resurrection to life The
couetous when he hath gotten goods the Prodigall hauing satiate his soule with the huskes of pleasures the ambitious when he hath climbed to the highest pitch of honour thinke they liue the onely Iouiall life and yet all dwell and breathe in the chambers of death and as the Apostle speakes are dead while they be aliue no better than walking ghosts in the formes of liuing men Let such buy and build plow and sow marry and beget many children yet the vntimelie birth is better than they The basest life exceedes as much the best meere being as Adam the red earth whereon his body was made but this life excels all others Gods only excepted more than men do beasts or Angels Deuils Why then let the worth of it moue thee the withering of this is worse than the death of the Gourd of Ionah And will not this consideration that all thy actions are but as so many beautifull sinnes and distastfull vnto the Lord set thee a worke to obtaine it Then call to mind how it maketh all things beautifull and well pleasing to the eye Will not our flesh tremble to see a body without a soule the teeth closed the eyes open the lips shrunke and the bloud set blacke and swart in the face and members is not such an obiect odious to man Euen so yea worse are we being dead in sinne to God and good persons Yet if all that 's said will not moue thee to this then know No life here no escape of death hereafter And immortalitie We collect hence that Life spirituallis eternall Doct. 10. It is not like the Lillies that flourish to day and wither to morrow Methushelah liued long yet died at the age of 969. but he that once hath the life of grace shall see no corruption Mortality shall put on immortalitie and though the body perish yet this life is in the soule being a more excellent subiect for as he that puts off his apparell doth not leaue his naturall life in it so he that layes downe the body loseth not the life of grace and immortalitie with it For as the naturall life is in the body not in the apparell so the spirituall life is in the soule not in the dead corpse after the separation Mat 19. 29. Mark 10. 17. Ioh. 5. 24. 1 Cor 15. 53. For Christ hath purchased eternall redemption Heb. 9. 12. Reas 1. Christ was a holy person yea God aswell as man and he obeyed freely these two made the satisfaction of Christ sufficient And there is a proportion betweene Adams sinne and Christs sufferings 1. Finite sinne offending Adam Christ Adam Christ Adam Christ 1. Finite suffering satisfying 2. Finite sinne offended the infinite God 2. Finite suffering satisfied the infinite God 3. Finite sinne infinitely offended the infinite God 3. Finite suffering infinitely satisfied the infinite God So that life must be infinite because the satisfaction was infinite in value and worth and equall to the offence in remouing eternall death God hath promised eternall life and hee is faithfull and Reas 2. cannot denie himselfe 1 Ioh 2. 25. Christ from whom this life is deriued liueth for euer and Reas 3. maketh intercession Heb 7. 25. Reu 1. 18. Else it were better with the wicked than the faithfull of all Reas 4. men they were most miserable 1 Cor. 15. 19. And the word is called eternall 1 Pet. 1. vlt. And we read of an eternall house an eternall weight an eternall kingdome an eternall crowne and an eternall inheritance This 1. Confutes those heretikes that hold the soule is Vse 1. mortall 2. the Papists also who say that a man may haue true spirituall life and lose it But we see that Christ hath brought life and immortality or immortall life and if this life should end then it were mortall This makes also for the comfort of such whose friends Vse 2. are departed in the Lord why be of good cheare they are not dead but liue for God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing This vse is of great vse were it well vsed This likewise might and ought to encourage all to goe Vse 3. on with cheerefulnes and Christian resolution and not be afraid of death seeing after it followeth eternall life death like a dore le ts the soule passe a better roome of habitation And here we haue a strong motiue to moue vs to labour Vse 4. for this life Is it immortall incorruptible why then striue for it What man would not liue long why liue this life once and liue for euer and that thou maist thou must 1. Be vnited to Christ for euery branch that abideth not in Helpes to life spirituall him is cast out and withereth All spirituall life floweth from this coniunction For as the graft hath life from the vnion with the stocke so haue we from Christ Ioh. 15. 2. Heare the Gospell preached for the word of is God spirit and life and he that beares this voyce though he were dead yet shall be liue What though we cannot quicken our selues yet we may vse the meanes And the Angell may trouble the water and Christ come and heale vs when we are at the wels mouth and vnable to helpe ourselues 3. Pray often Dauid neere about 19. times in the hundred and nineteenth Psalme prayeth Lord quicken me Lord giue me the spirit of life c. Did he thus sure then it was good for him to be practised of all such as would be quickned and enliued Finally and aboue all things resist no good motion that thou hast in the vse of Gods ordinances or at any time else for this is to driue the author of all life from vs. Entertaine them therefore and kindle those sparks by obeying of them so shall thy soule liue and not dye Through the Gospell Here is manifested the instrumentall cause by which death is abolished and life brought vnto vs whence let this be noted that Though all grace come by Christ yet it is deriued vnto man by Doct. 11. meanes of the Gospell For that declareth how it may be attained and no other Reas 1. writing God giues his spirit with the Gospell not by the Law Reas 2. Gal 3. 2. and hence it is called the ministration of the spirit 2 Cor. 3. 8. This must worke in vs a loue to the Gospell and a care Vse 1. to continue it amongst vs. Had we but one herbe in our grounds that would cure all diseases would we not hedge about it water it and by all meanes seeke to preserue it it from perishing Why the Gospell is this herbe that tree whose leaues onely cure all the nations We must make much of them that bring this Physicke Vse 2. for the wounded spirit how should such men be respected Pray we that the word may runne and be scattered to the Vse 3. foure ends of the world otherwise death will reigne life
few doe this and the fewer that doe this the worse the more the better Another poynt we collect is this that Doct. 7. Paul was sent to preach principally to the Gentiles Act. 22. 21 Gal. 2. 8. From which it will necessarily follow that Peter was not B. at Rome for then he should haue to deale in Pauls Diocesse And Peter was appointed to the Iewes therefore dedicates his Epistle to the dispersed Iewes Besides an Apostle could not be strictly tyed to any one Diocesse as they write Peter was to Rome And if he was there shame was it for him not to assist Paul but to forsake him This we but touch by the way for many worthy Clerkes haue scanned this at large Besides we know when Noah prayed for these people it was many a hundred yeeres agone yet now it came to passe according to his desire whence we note that Doct. 8. Prayers made in faith are not alwayes granted at the first Ionah was not cast on the shore so soone as he showted neither Paul at the first request had an answer return'd him David waited long Ieremiah fainted in expecting and Christ himselfe stayed some time before the Angells came to comfort him We sometime meet the poore with a penny in our hand and at another time we suffer them to cry run and weary themselues before we heare them so dealeth the Lord with his children Reas 1. Because that as God hath appointed all things to be done so hath he set downe the very precise time wherein they shall be effected and not before This is the principallest Reason of the poynt Gal. 4. 4. Reas 2. And the Lord doth so sometimes that we may cry the more earnestly and feruently vnto him Let the Infant fast it will know the dug the better and seeke it the faster stop the Lure and the Hawke will mend her pitch and fly the higher and if the Lord deny the faithfull their requests for a season their prayers will pierce the deeper be heard the better Dauid in one Psalme vseth one petition thrise and marke how he did grow in feruency First saith he Turne vs Psal 80. 3. ver 7. againe O Lord c. the second time he addeth saying O Lord of hostes c. and the third time he proceedeth further and ver 19. praieth Turne vs againe O Lord God of hosts cause thy face to shine and we shall be saved Thus by iteration he gathereth the more heate fervency like a stone by often tumbling Mervaile not then if the vnfaithful be not heard at all shal Vse 1. the Lord deny his children long and will he giue bread instantly vnto Bastards shall the good man of the house sleepe at the discharge of the greatest Cannon and will he awake and cry Who is at the window at the report of the narrow-mouthed peice or pistoll No neuer respect it If Noahs prayer be put off 2000. of yeares Let the drunkard Fornicator Blasphemer and such as regard iniquitie in layd downe the obiect of Pauls faith which is God secondly his knowledge of him and that is not a bare vnderstanding of him but a knowledge of experience or practise and thirdly an act that accompanied this experimentall knowledge which was his beleeuing or faith This is the first ground why Paul suffered afflictions without being ashamed And I am perswaded That is I am confident and certaine and fully assured That he to wit God Is able to keepe Gods power is twofold 1. Absolute 2. Actiue that is a power ioyned with his will and is here meant for else Pauls reason had not beene good for his will must accompany his ability in the preserving of what was committed to him That which I haue committed to him Some interpret the thing he committed to God to be his person others his grace faith salvation the difference is nice or none at all the Originall word signifieth both that which is committed to vs of God and that we commit to him The Pp ' on the Rhem. expound it of good deedes sufferings but absurd for that how euer a truth yet not from this place Against that day Either the day of trouble or of the last iudgement I rather vnderstand it of the great day of the Lord. For Paul was put to death and it s vsuall with faithfull men in great tryalls and tribulations to cast their eye on the day of iudgement It may seeme strange but it is a truth that I am afflicted The Metaphrase for preaching the Gospell vnto the Gentiles yet for all that I goe on resolutely in the execution of my function and am not ashamed Neither is it without reason for I haue had experience of him in whom I put my confidence and besides that I doe verily beleeue that the Lord is not onely able but also willing to preserue my soule in safety against the great and last day of iudgement For the which cause I suffer these things Out of the ground Doctrines deduced Doct. 1. of Pauls sufferings we may gather this conclusion that The goodnes of an action doth not alwaies free the deer from affliction Abel was slaine because his workes were good Ioseph 1 Ioh. 3 12. Gen. ●7 20. Amos 5 10. Ioh. 7. 7. 20. sold for the discouery of his Brethrens sinnes Amos hated for speaking vprightly David in danger for weldoing Christ did many good workes none evill yet they went about to kill him and they so went about that at last they kill'd him indeed Ignorance may be the cause and that of the person or of Reas 1. the thing 1. of the person For many of the Saints I shut vp in prison but I did it ignorantly The Princes of this world put to 1 Tim. 1. 13. ● Cor. 2. 8. Act. 3. 17. death the Lord of life but had they knowne him they would not haue crucified him I know that through ignorance ye did is as also your governours And Father for giue them for they know not what they doe And 2. of the action What new and strange Act. 17. 19. Mark 2. 24. doctrine is this He doth and teacheth things vnlawfull They thinke they doe God good seruice they erred in that they haue not knowne my wayes O that ye had knowne these things A second Reason may be drawne from the rage and malice Reas 2. of the wicked Ahab hated Micaiah therefore he must to prison if God prevent not Christ was sold of envy Away with such a fellow for he is not worthy to liue And Had he not beene an evill doer we would not haue deliuered him into your hands Not Iesus but Barrabbas All this smells of malice and sents of envy For which of them was ignorant that the one was a theefe and who could accuse the other of sinne And pride in the prophane causeth goodmen suffer for Reas 3. weldoing Master in thus saying thou rebukest vs also The Pharisees were
11. with Gods Saints For there the deuil endeauoureth to dwell as the Pope at Reas 1. Rome at this day he raiseth stormes of affliction the leprosie of sin cleaueth close to their walls through his setting on Againe those places cōmonly haue many sorts of false religions Reas 2. all will cōspire against the truth in that become friends as we see in Herod Pilate in crucifying of our Lord Iesus so we read of Ephraim against Manasseh Manasseh against Ephraim yet both against Iudah Isai 9. 21. Let none thinke that the greatnes of the place can exempt Vse 1. him from pouerty or persecution Be not too forward to pitch thy Tents at Bethel except Vse 2. thou haue a full and lawfull calling Lot may liue better in little Zoar then in the great city of Sodom Christ in the small village then at Ierusalem Moses at Madian then in Aegypt Where On●siphorus relieued Paul so worthy a man and an Apostle this will follow that The best man and worthiest Christian may stand in want be Doct. 12. releiued by a meaner person that both for soule and body For the one may be in prosperitie when the other is in aduersity Reas 1. in peace when the other is in war corporal spirituall God bringeth it to passe for to encrease affection to knit Reas 2. them the nearer together in the bands of loue and amitie Doe not lightly regard thy inferiour brother for the weaker Vse 1. may doe pleasure to the stronger Timotheus may do Paul a kindnes in carrying him his bookes and parchments And the meaner man weaker Christian by this may be Vse 2. of comfort for little doth he know how the Lord will imploy him Iephthah was despised being basely borne yet in future time the people prayed him to be their Iudge and he was so and he fought and prevailed for Israel The third point we note where Onesiphorus ministred to him many things is this that A good man thinkes nothing too deare for the preachers of the Doct. 13. Gospell We are commanded to make such partakers of all our goods Rom. 15. 27. 1 Cor. 9. 4. c. For they giue spirituall things for carnall Reas 1. Reas 2. Reas 3. They watch for mens soules They suffer much paine in study reproches of the wicked and bitter pangs for others good In a word they are the Ambassadours of the great King Reas 4. Vse 1. This checketh many who would be reputed forward professors and with Simon Magus some great bodies yet thinke all too much that goeth that way These could be content that like Paul Ministers would turne tentmakers But be thou otherwise minded if he be a man sent from Vse 2. God preach the word and is faithfull holy all thou hast is too little for him Let such a man enioy a sufficient honourable and constant stipend I say if his doctrine be sound his conuersation proportionable make yee much of such But would ye know what letteth 1. Coueteousnes This holdeth all and cryeth giue giue b●t will neuer part with any thing We haue a thousand yong men in our dayes Christ met but with one in his we read ●f that would goe away sorrowfull if they should sell but an hundreth part of what they haue to giue the poore especially were he a preacher 2. Infidelity letteth For men want faith to credit God therfore they be so strait-handed Did men beleeue that they should be rewarded an hundred fold would they not be more liberall And of all men the Vsurer he hath no faith for he will take mans band before Gods for Ten where he might haue the Lords for Ten-times Ten in the Hundred and will not 3. Idlenes is another let these vsually doe nothing so they haue nothing that liue in this lethargie 4. And the last let is vnthriftines An vnthrift and prodigall alwaies be in want for they haue one way whereout more runs in a day then will returne in a yeare The two first Coueteousnes and Infidility get all but will part with nothing the two letter vnthriftines Idlenes either are vsually in want or if they haue it it runs apace but a wrong way and takes its rest but neuer on the right subiect So that let Ministers neuer expect maintenance from any of these especially if he cry out as he must against these bosom and beloued sins Christ was neuer worse vsed or Paul either then when they preached against Coueteousnes and Prodigality And lazie vnthriftie persons make sure work for amending for the one is vsuall turning himselfe on his bed like a doore on its hinges and the other in the tauerne or tipling house into a barrell or a beast when they should heare the preacher and be reformed And to end with the end this we note for a conclustion tha● In the greatest straits the Lord remembreth them that suffer Doct. 14. for his cause and Gospel Read the Acts of the Apostles Paul was releeued at Rome often at Ephesus yea the rude Barbarians did vse him kindly Act. 28. 2. For God hath the most glory by them Reas 1. 2. 3. 4. The rest of the Church most benefit by them The truth the greatest prayse by them And sin Sathan all his depthes the greatest ouer ●●row by them and shall not the Lord then remember them Let vs imitate our heauenly Father euer respecting those Vse 1. most that suffer for our good and alwayes to the vttermost of our power to make much of such Priscilla and Aquila must be greeted much respected why for they to saue Pauls life laid downe their owne neckes Surely if God deale mercifully with those that suffer for him shall we want compassion towards them that suffer for vs And is it so as we haue heard Then be resolute in the Vse 2. Lords cause take vp thy burden gird thy sword vpon thy thigh put on al the armour of a Christian souldier march on in thy ranck and order What if Sathan tempt thee the Serpent brood do bite thee the fiery triall befall thee or the King of feare pale fac'd death looke grin vpon thee Yet the word is gone out the oath is 〈◊〉 to it and the Spirit hath sealed that they that suffer for the ●ruth of God of Papist or Pope men or Deuills in Rome or is ●ll shall neuer be forgotten for saken Take a view through all 〈◊〉 holy letters cast thine eye on all the former ages looke where thou wilt or canst and thou shalt alwayes find it so that in the greatest misery God hath remembred mercy in the greatest weakenes giuen power in the most pinching pouerty sent plenty and in death conveied life Wherefore neuer feare want misery penury mortality for the Lord shal be with thee whether soeuer thou goest and in what estate soeuer thou beest But me thinkes I heare some say What needeth all this 〈◊〉 not at peace may we not sit vnder out vines sleepe safely in our beds walke the pleasant fields eate drinke and take our pleasure Mistake me not For I am not weary with these fauours I wish the Sun of that morning may neuer rise or that euill time approach wherin it might be said the Arke is gone and the glory of God from this our Israel Yet is not Sathan compassing the world hath not the Serpent much viperous spaw●● will not his great instrument that blacke crawling vgly adder the Papist be casting foorth his venome shooting out his sting and lye lurking in the sweetest herbes to bruise the heele of the seed of the woman But to let this passe death will come iudgment will come and damnation will come this thou knowest And is it then in vaine to comfort thee against those three fierce gyants that thou shalt conquer and ouercome them all that not an haire of thine head shall perish but thou shalt be landed safe at the kay of Canaan the kingdome of God I cannot tell I doe but guesse yet except thy faith exceed mine me thinkes I am not herein at all deceiued neither a whit vnprofitably exercised But I say no more Let the day declare it FINIS Laus Deo Amen
Kytes do on stirking carion but neuer tasted of Angels food They may eate huskes with hogges thinke and say they liue the onely iouiall royall life but they shall neuer make me beleeue that their hearts answere to their boasting for death is in the pott this red broth wrings them in the bellie and as Ioab said in another case will be bitternesse in the latter end But we will dismisse them to wallow like swine in the mire and mudde swallow each filthy vomit seeing they can relish no better food Let men by this doctrine try the truth of their profession Vse 2. whether they be sound Christians or meere rotten worldlings Art thou a Preacher and hast thou ioy of hart in studying preaching in feeding the flocke whereof the holy Ghost hath made thee the ouerseer is it thy meat and drinke to prune Gods tender plants strengthen the weake and comfort the feeble-minded canst thou reioyce more in winning a soule than if thou hadst lawfully obtained the office of a Bishop why then thou art a Christian indeed an Interpreter one of a thousand for these bee the branches where this ioy growes and the onely pathes where it is to be found And you that flocke to the house of God like Pigeons looke the Preacher in the face as if you would eat the word from his mouth and make publike profession doe you heare with delight pray with comfort and praise God with reioycing are you rauished in spirit on the Lords day and account it your Iubile your heauen then doubt not of your spirituall estate For these are the sparkes of far greater ioy and the vndoubted fore-runners of euerlasting pleasures But if the wayes of God dampe thy mirth cary a cold report to thine heart and like old Barzillai thou art wearie of men singing and women singing feeles no more tast in the bread of life than hee that hath an ague doth in the white of an egge thou art but a counterfeit one that hath a forme but wants the true fruits of the power of Godlinesse and therefore a stranger in the kingdome of heauen But it will be said the wicked aswell as the Godly haue A doubt resolued their ioy in the vse of the Lords ordinances where then is the difference How may it be discerned Why thus 1. The true Christian hath sorrow before solace mourning preceedes his mirth for as at the creation darknes was before light the Chaos the comelie creatures and as the ground is first broken then scattered with good seed so is it at our regeneration new creation We first see our ignorance blindnes confusion haue our harts pricked our spirits wounded by the Law and then followes beautie comfort and amendment But it is not so with the wicked for they haue light before darknesse ioy without heauines and bring forth comfort ere they haue conceiued sorrow or felt any panges or throes that accompanie the new birth The Christian comes to his ioy as an Ambassadour to a forreigne Prince or souldiers to the spoyle with preceeding crackes of canons fireworkes and garments tumbling in blood this is the road way to sound comfort 2. A good Christian fetcheth the water of ioy primarilie from the pure fountaine of iustification not the troubled spring of sanctification the old man treads the old way hauing no knowledge or experience of a better hee lookes for heauen but by his good deeds First he will deserue it and then sue for possession but the new-man is assured that God indents with no man vpon such termes onely he relies on his all-sufficient suretie Did Zaccheus purchase Christ by his almes by his fourefold restitution or by faith rather onely beleeue is the new way and the conduit that conueyes comfort into the Cisterne of the Soule 3. Moreouer the ioy of a true Christian is of another nature spirituall the worldlings is carnall or at the best but a bastardly kind of spirituall comfort for hee wants the spirit he hath no radicall grace planted in his soule that can beare and nourish true and solide reioycing Doe men gather Grapes of thornes Figs of thistles then may carnall meere naturall men haue spirituall ioy sound and vnfeigned comfort it were as easie to finde an haruest in an hedge as this fore named fruit in the heart of the vnregenerate person 4. Finallie the ioy of the sound professor is constant eternall for the cause is constant and abideth for euer but the formall hypocrites candle shall be put out his ioy shall perish For the foundation thereof is sandy the obiect mutable and abides but a season Suppose by the addition of fewell it should crackle till death yet then at the furthest the flame therof shall be put forth neuer more rekindled So that you see what a reall and broad difference is betwixt them And is there ioy to be found in the course of a christian Vse 3. what then shall be had in the kingdome of heauen did David dance before the Arke how will hee leape before the Lambe could Peter sing in prison and shall hee not chante it being set at libertie with Gods sonnes if the gleanings be so good what will the whole haruest be shall a tast so refresh the soule then doubtles a full meale must needs reuiue rauish the spirit Thinke on this you that are in this wildernesse so shall it comfort your hearts exceedingly For if to sow breed single ioy the reaping will trebble it This must perswade men to take vp the yoke of Christ Vse 4. for its easie light tast and see how good the wayes of God be Men are worse skard than hurt when they draw then hand from the worke of the Lord for great ioy is to be found in well-doing If this afford not comfort what can but the most thinke not so therefore they are strangers from the ioys of a Christian Beginne I beseech thee to auoyd sinne cast off the communion of the wicked read heare pray and be doing of good and experience shall tell thee that no ioy is like the ioy of a Christian It s hid in part from the best totally from the worst but if men would make triall they would say of it as the Queene of Shebah did of Salomons wisdome that the report is true but the halfe of it was not told them For it much exceedes the 1 King 10. same which they heard on 't Finally we obserue from these words that The strongest Christian may receiue increase of comfort from Doct. 7. his weake brethren Paul not inferiour to any of Gods seruants hoped to haue his ioy augmented by the comming of Timothie As a poore man by wisdome may deliuer a Citie so may hee that is weake comfort his stronger brethren Did not Ionathan reioyce Dauid the greatest worthy in the world and the 2 Sam. 1. vlt. poore widow of Sarephtah refresh the man of God Yea Christ himselfe was comforted by an Angell and betwixt him
neuer heard of all the daies of their life Is there not a woe denounced against them that speake good of euill and is hee Isa 5. 20. not culpable of Iudgement to honour those the Lord neuer did I would haue men to iudge charitably rather then to speake too confidently yet God is wise for such praise without iust desert stirres vp men to rippe vp that whereby their names rot and so that is effected they neuer intended And may not this giue vs some glimpse what to deeme Vse 3. of them whose faith to this day was neuer heard of may not such feare their present condition and we mourne to consider their wofull estate wa st thou neuer a noted person reputed singular or entertained of the Saint surely thy faith is dead and thou art dead the Lord quicken thee Let this in the last place bee a comfort to those whose Vse 4. sound goeth through the world and whose names are famous too amongst the faithfull For it argueth some good thing to be in thee when good and bad haue some words about thee Crowes doe not flocke and houer and cry but it s about some thing nor Eagles soare and gather themselues together except there be a carkase yet take this also with thee be sure thou art such in truth as good men report of thee and contrary to what the world daily dischargeth against thee For otherwise thou maist haue a name to bee a liue and art dead and defamed but of desert And by the way take this as a note of faith vnfeigned viz. a care to Note become better when either the good commend thee or the bad condemne thee It may here be demanded how Paul came to know that these three had one and the same faith It s not to be doubted of but by the effects that flowed from these persons though he had an extraordinary gift of discerning too From the which this will arise that Faith v●feigned is to be iudged by the effects We cannot see Doct. 8. it in its selfe or in its cause But we omit this and collect another doctrine which is that Faith workes like effects in diuerse subiects Doct. 9. The Grandmother the mother and the mothers sonne had the same faith and the like fruits proceeded from them else Paul would neither haue called it vnfeigned or said that it dwelt in them or giuen them all three one and the same testimony All three had faith and vnfeigned faith For the likenes of actions were in them and proceeded from them by the which it was called vnfeigned and equally appropriated to each particular person And it is an vndoubted position that faith produceth the like effects in all Gods children in truth it must bee vnderstood not in degree For as faith increaseth the effectes are bettred Many Lanternes with seuerall Candles will all giue light but in proportion to their diuerse degrees and quantities Euery peece hath his report but according to the bignes and each instrument will sound but variously as they be in proportion and that for these reasons Because faith differs not in kind but in degree and like Reas 1. causes produce like effects Euery Bell hath its sound Each stone its weight and seuerall planets their diuerse influences yet not in the same measure though they may varie in kind Againe faith is diffused into subiect though seuerall yet Reas 2. they are the same in nature and consist of like principles Fire put into straw will either smoke or burne let the bundle be a thousand life in the bodie will haue motion though not in the same degree and measure and reason in euery man acteth but not so exquisitely The constitution may not be alike therefore a difference may be in operation naturall and also from the same ground in acts spirituall A darke horne in the Lanthorne dimmes the light somewhat Faith is begot and increased by the same originals the Reas 3. spirit and the word be both the principall and conseruing causes of it If one woman conceiue and bring forth a child and another nurse it varietie of foode might somewhat alter the nature and disposition of it but that spirit which begets faith doth also preserue it therefore it cannot be but that the like effects should proceed from it Here by the way we may see that those mothers if a forced necessity compell not who bring forth and bear● children yet haue no care to nurse them are to be blamed for so doing in that they differ from Gods manner of proceeding And in the last place if faith had not like effects in all Gods children Reas 4. then could they not attaine to one and the same ends as iustification sanctification saluation c. And so should it be in vaine the Lord failing and man too of their chiefe scope and purpose Hath not God made euery eie to see and hand to worke and shall we then iudge that faith shall not act but be idle away with that From this point we may learne how to iudge of the faith in our times which so many boast of they cry haue Vse 1. not we faith Doe not wee beleeue aswell as the best but where be the fruits of faith vnfeigned hast thou an humble and purging heart dost thou call vpon God at al times tary his leasure and rely vpon his promise art thou bold and resolute for good causes canst thou resist Sathan cleaue to God and shunne the appearances of euill will neither pouerty ouerpresse thee by despaire or prosperitie by presumption Why it s well and we beleeue that Faith is to be found in thee but if not thou hast it not rooted in thee For the tree is knowne by the fruit Will not the flower smell the candle giue light and the fire heate and shall true faith be without her effects boast not too much lest thou deceiue thy selfe taking the shadow for the body and that which is not for that which should be And this doctrine is of great comfort for them that often call the truth of faith into question But hast thou the true Vse 2. signes of it then thou hast it What if it worke not so mightily as in others will it follow that thou art without it suppose thou wert carried to the toppe of some high tower and casting thine eye vpon seuerall chimneyes of the which number thine is one and all smoking wouldst thou not conclude that fire in is thine house aswell as in thy neighbours there is the like effects therfore the same cause of certaine When men in heart and life are like the Godly let them be assured they haue the same faith It may differ in some degree yet the quantity greater or lesser alters not the kind of it Leauen is leauen though neuer so litle and if the meale bee seasoned it is to be found in the lumpe This must teach vs to take heed how we rashly
who thinke the ground of all sufferings come from mens indiscretion It s better to suffer for well doing then for evill donig yet it will follow hence that good men great men may suffer for weldoing Surely if Christ had liued in our dayes some would haue taxed him for indiscretion questioning with him why hee would denounce so many woes to the Scribes and Pharisees men of great place and learning calling them painted Sepulchres whited Tombes Hypocrites c Iohn would haue beene reputed a rash fellow for telling Herod of his incest and Micaiah that the King and his fathers house troubled Israel Wisedome we would say should haue past by these things But the foolishnes of God is wiser then the wisedome of man Yet we say still that Circumspection is good and that some through indiscretion pierce their soules through with needlesse sorrowes This must teach men of great place and rare parts patience Vse 2. for even the best Princes haue had their portion of persecution Let our Soueraigne put his pen against the Pope call Rome that great Whore discouer her skirts and lay her naked hee must expect neither pardon nor Purgatory from his Holines but Excommunication and if it were in his greatnes hands condemnation What should we more say the Dragon and his Angels fought and Michael and his Angels fought and this quarrell shall not be ended vntill the number of the elect be accomplished and then peace shall come These things Paul sayth not this thing but these things whence obserue that Good men suffer many things 〈◊〉 10. vlt. Psal 22. 12. c. Doct. 3. In the world shall ye haue many persecutions many are the troubles of the righteous one depth calleth another and thou breakest me with one sorrow after another And how commeth this to passe First from the diuers ill disposi●●ns of wicked men For Reas 1. some like Rabshakeh delight in ray●●ing's others like Do●g in informing a third sort like Pilate would please the people a fourth with Iudas haue their minds on Coveting and at a word some are such as neuer can be appeased mercilesse Now we must know that as euery Creature of diuers constitutions desire the contrary things that might content them so various mindes in evill persons produce seuerall euill effects And as euery kind of weed hath a stinking smell though distinct one from another so all vngodly men haue variety of persecutions against the Saints of God All weeds stinke but not alike so all wicked persons persecute but not in the same kind and degree Besides the children of God bring forth variety of good Reas 2. fruite doe many good actions now wicked men hate all good though not in a like degree so that for variety of actions they prepare various corrections A skilfull Physician prepareth pills potions and prescribeth receipts according to the kinds and nature of the diseases and the men of Beliall Atheist and Papist are wise in their generation therefore they haue a seuerall salue for sundry soares They had whips in 88. fire brimstone and gunpowder within a few yeares after Anno Domini 1605. Let the Pope then and his poll-shorne Brethren boast Vse 1. and brag of their long peace and plenty make such sure signes of the trueth of their Church and the Lords fauour yet they build on a wrong foundation and their hopes 1 Pet 4. 17. shall one day make them ashamed Babylon must sit as a Queene be no widow see no mourning yet in a day as Rev. 18. 8. it were in a trice shall famine sorrow and death befall her for strong is the Lord God which will condemne her Againe art thou afflicted and sufferest but a few things Vse 2. then murmur not neither repine at all for sure the Lord is good vnto thee in chayning vp Sathan and in putting an hooke into the nose of his instruments that they torment thee no further Truly God is good to this our English Israel for though we suffer yet the Lord moderateth his corrections he restra●●eth the rage of our Aduersaries and hath confounded them that sought all our confusion Many complaine perhaps not without some cause of our daies but I wish a worse age may not follow And tell me What sufferest thou Doest thou liue in Mesheck amongst them that hate peace so did David Is thy righteous soule vexed in seeing and hearing of vncleannesse so was Lots Haue thy friends proued vnfaithfull so did the Apostles My good friend thou hast escaped the whip the stone the fire the Racke the Crosse that many of thy forefathers haue suffered tasted Thou wast neuer constreyned through famine to feed on the fruite of thy owne wombe to say this I must eate and then dye And hast thou wanted food for thy soule then blame not God for thou maist haue it either at home or with thy Neighbour and that in such a manner too as many a poore good soule neuer enioyed But I am not ashamed In these words is layd downe Pauls carriage of himselfe in sufferings and he addeth this as an Argument from his example to encourage Timothy in his course and not for any sinister end of vaine boasting But we omit that for the present and gather this other instruction that A Resolute Christian is not nor should not be ashamed of the Doct. 4. Gospel Rom. 1. 16. Heb. 12. 1. 2. For there be many great and excellent mysteries contained Reas 1. in it Why then should any man be ashamed to preach or professe it Sinne should breed shame not the meanes that can and no other remoue it We haue a warrantable calling to it and shall wee then Reas 2. cast it off and be gone No we are to abide in that calling whereunto we are called Nehemiah will not flee if the Lord haue sent him Againe we haue all good by it and all things that wee Reas 3. enioy without it are but curses This salt must sweeten all our naughtie waters and remoue all heauy plagues both temporall and eternall And why should we be ashamed of it For God preached Reason 4. it Christ the Holi-ghost and the Angels haue preached it It s a priviledge to suffer for it God is not ashamed of vs and shall we be ashamed of his cause Why then let vs goe on in wisedome and Christian resolution Vse 1. Helps to endure shame and neuer be ashamed of our profession And take those breife helpes 1. Consider what vow and promise thou madest at thy Baptisme and be ashamed to breake Couenant with thy God 2 Call to minde that the professors of Antichrist are bold and resolute for their false Gospell and are marked in their hand and forehead if they much more we 3. What greater honour to man then to be chosen to be the Lords Champion in so great an action Finally let a forced necessity vrge thee to resolution for they that will not
suffer now shall be denyed of Christ hereafter at his appearing Such as are found halting must be turned out of the way And as the words stand in way of argument we may gather that The sufferings of others should moue vs to suffer also Doct. 5. What a cloud of witnesses haue we Christ example is propounded to this purpose and many more in the booke of God that we with patience might endure the crosse and despise the shame Heb. 12. 1. 2. For its a good thing to follow a multitude in the way of Reas 1. righteousnes as it is evill to tread in the lewd steppes of vngodly persons Againe if their example moue nothing then they shall Reas 2. rise vp in iudgement against vs For are not they recorded to this purpose Let vs in time of trouble then cast our eyes on those that Vse 1. haue gone before vs for like a liuely picture they will giue vigour to our faint spirits when we are ready to faile Examples are of great force in all things and shall so many worthy patternes prevaile nothing No I ade so dull but will follow a free and forward leader And here we are instructed to giue good examples to others Vse 2. Let vs learne some incouragement by our practise to future posterities that they may be pricked forward to tread in our footesteps For vndoubtedly the best way of teaching others as we see is not by precept onely but by example also For I know whom I haue beleeued We haue heard of two causes why Paul suffered the one in that he preached the Gospell the other that he preached it vnto the Gentiles and now followeth a double reason why he was not ashamed of so doing but resolutely did goe on in the fulfilling of his Ministery Whence this poynt will truly arise that As the wicked haue pretended causes to afflict the faithfull so Doct. 6. haue they good grounds not to be ashamed of their sufferings Heb. 11. 24. 35. 2 Cor. 4. 16. Acts 5. 29. Aske Moses why he would not be called the sonne of Pharaohs daughter enjoy the pleasures of sinne for a season but chuse rather to suffer affliction his reason is at hand he hath respect to the recompence of reward Why would not Heb. 11. the Saints in their greatest tortures by vnlawfull meanes be comforted they looked for a better resurrection Wherefore did not the faithfull faint in their suffering they did account that the momentany afflictions of this life were not w●rthy 2 Cor. 4. 17. of that eternall weight of glory that should be revealed What reason had Christ that he would not come downe from the Crosse and saue himselfe that saued others Hee must doe the will of him that sent him finish his worke and performe his promise And he knew that his death and resurrection would be a greater miracle then to haue deliuered himselfe another way For the Children of God goe by a sure rule they ground Reas 1. their proceedings and sufferings vpon Gods precepts and promises when as the prophane haue false rules fained causes And if it were not thus they could haue no comfort in Reas 2. their suffering for blessed are those that suffer persecution for righteousnes sake Therefore they ground the cause of their affliction vpon Reason Vse 1. Wonder not then ye men of this world why the Saints in all ages haue resisted unto bloud and not counted their liues deare vnto themselues but haue carried them in their hands For they know that though man frowne the Lord will fauour though Antichrist bind with a curse Christ will lose with a blessing though Sathan tempt and terrifie the Spirit will strengthen and comfort if the flesh be weakened the spirit shall be renewed if death goe before that life shall follow after and if the world loose them heaven shall find them For so it s said that if their earthly house of 2 Cor. 5. 1. this Tabernacle be destroyed they haue a building giuen of God an house not made with hands but eternall in the heauens of the possession whereof they be assured after their dissolutions A wonderment riseth from the ignorance of the cause or the rarenes of the event and these be the proper grounds why many men admire and are astonied at others sufferings for the Gospell But surely the seruants of God haue had great reason for their courses whatsoeuer blinded men doe deeme of them For I know c. The next Instruction wee obserue from these words is this that It is an experimentall knowledge of God that will cause a Doct. 7. man to bee resolute in good courses and to suffer afflictions See this in David and in the wife of Manoah for notable are these two places for this purpose 1 Sam. 17. 34. 35. c. Iudg. 13. 23. Rom. 1. 16. 17. Because it is a great meanes to strengthen our weake faith Reas 1. Now as our faith encreaseth so is our resolution and patience bettered Christ would call his Disciples Men of little faith when they were troubled and dejected in small matters so that weakenes of faith must be remoued to beget resolution and that is done by the experience we haue had of the Lords proceedings Againe the former performance of Gods promise doth Reas 2. not take away the efficacie force of it for future time but rather confirmes it For when God loues once hee loues euer so to whom he performes his promise once hee will performe it for euer The often setting and rising of the Sun doth assure vs the more both of the one and of the other for we haue had long experience of the stability of it in its course and motion In the first place here we may see why men are faint impatient Vse 1. vnder the Crosse and vnsetled irresolute to any good word or worke they haue no experience of God and his proceedings For experience will cause tribulation to bring foorth patience as many little acts doe make a great habit Rom. 5 3. And in the next place this poynt serueth for our direction Vse 2. and teacheth vs what to doe that wee may patiently beare the Crosse and manfully fight the battels of the Lord namely to get experience of Gods manner of proceedings And for our direction the better to gaine this obserue Rules to procute experimental knowledge these Rules following I. Obserue Gods dealing with vs. 1. In temporall 2. In spirituall things 1. Hath he not fed thee clothed thee lodged thee since he gaue thee a being and is his hand shortened and not stretched out still When the Disciples of Christ were troubled in minde about these matters What sayth he haue ye not remembrance how I fed you with a little bread and a few fishes When I sent you forth without money in your purse meate in your scrippes and all other prouision wanted you any thing they
answered No Lord. When a poore man hath beene alwayes in his want relieued by his rich friend will it not make him the more boldly to rely on him for helpe in time to come 2. Consider how he hath giuen thee knowledge when thou wast ignorant infused faith into thine heart being before an infidell and preserued his graces in thee from perishing For the calling to minde the dayes of old is a notable helpe for this thing Is it possible that he who hath begun to doe well will now waxe weary in so doing What man planteth a tree and will not labour to preserue the same from withering And shall the Lord suffer his pleasant plants after he hath so often pruned watered and dunged them to dye and perish for want of dressing II. Call to minde the many dangers from the which he hath deliuered thee Why mightest not thou haue beene buried in thy Mothers wombe beene drowned in the waters or deuoured on the land the theefe might haue slaine thee some crumbe choaked thee or a thousand diseases beene thy death And shall not the fresh remembrance of these things worke powerfully in thee When our Apostle had beene deliuered out of the mouth of the Lyon he gathered strength thence that the Lord would deliuer him from euery evill worke and preserue him vnto his heavenly Kingdome 2 Tim. 4. 17. 18. III. Take a view how in times past he hath dealt with his children run to and fro through the stories and acts of holy Writ and as he hath done to his servants of olde so will he doe to thee assuredly I wish that this were well thought on for its a notable remedie Psal 37. 25. IV. Conferre with grounded Christians Demand of them how the Lord hath dealt with them in some particulars for they can teach thee by experience their comforts will comfort thee also A timerous patient will be encouraged to swallow the bitterest pill when another standeth by that hath beene cured of the like disease that he now is annoyed with telleth him the experiment V. Take a view of the vanitie of all other things Our Ioh. 6. fathers ate Manna in the wildernesse and are dead For in so doing thou shalt get experience of Gods constancy the Creature is changeable sometimes killing another whiles curing But the Lord is one and the same for euer VI. Finally and aboue all Consider how the Lord dealeth with thee in the vse of all his ordinances Marke what power the Word hath in working in thy soule how it weakeneth corruption strengtheneth the new man Obserue how the Lord hath heard thy prayer in time past and now how he enableth thee to call vpon him being in the like condition Dauid from this ground cryeth out The Psal 6. 9. Lord hath heard my petition for grace the Lord will receiu● my prayer and therefore as one refreshed biddeth the workers of iniquitie be gone Canst thou pray at this present as in times past when he heard the voyce of thy weeping then doubt not but he will deale fauourably with thee For when the Lord intendeth to conferre a fauour vpon his children he will alwayes giue them hearts for to vse the meanes whereby he doth ordinarily convey the same vnto them and wherevnto he hath annexed his promise If Hannah prevaile for a sonne or Abraham either they shall first be enabled a long season to powre out their soules by prayer vnto the Lord. And so it is in all other things whatsoeuer I wish that every one had but the experience of this engrauen in their mindes for it would be profitable for them every manner of way And true it is that this experimentall knowledge of God is the very food and spirit and life of a Christian from which all faith patience and resolution in the times of trouble spring and flow as from their proper fountaine and roote Then striue for it in the vse of the forenamed meanes and when thou hast obtained it wonderfull and vnspeakeable are the effects that it will produce and thou shalt taste of Againe in these words wee see Paul placeth knowledge before beliefe whence we may collect this doctrine that The knowledge of God precedeth faith in him Doct. 8. How can they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard And for this cause Knowledge in Scripture is many times put for faith Rom. 10. 14. Ioh. 17. 3. Io. 4. 10. Reas 1. Because the act of faith in beleeuing followeth the act of the vnderstanding rightly guided Knowledge is like the needle which maketh the way faith the threed that tyeth and vniteth things together And as whatsoeuer by ordinary working is in the inward senses was first in the outward so whatsoever comes to the will the proper seate of faith must first be in the vnderstanding And if this were not so then might an ignorant man be Reas 2. saued and haue faith the which the whole current of Scripture runs against As My people are cut off for want of knowledge and God shall come in flaming fire to render vengeance on them that know him not Hos 4. 6. 2 Thes 1. 8. and many more to that purpose This confuteth Bellarmine and his adherents who say Vse 1. A man may better beleeue things whereof he is ignorant then those which he knoweth If he had spoken it of the things recorded in their leaden Legend I should easily haue consented with him for I thinke that when men haue heard them they more doubt of them then when they were ignorant of them To name some of th●ir ridiculous fables we read of one that was sicke his stomacke would vomit vp whatsoeuer he receiued so that he being willing to receiue the Sacrament yet doubting he should not retaine it if he receiued it by ordinary course it was put the consecrated Hoste I meane to his side the which opened and after the receipt thereof closed as before And there is mention made of a woman whose Bees were sicke of the Murraine who tooke also an Hoste put it into the hiue and marke this they within a few dayes were not onely cured of the danger of the disease but there was a miraculous encrease of them in number and they had built a Chappell and steeple and bells and an Altar and layd the Hoste thereon and the Bees sung their Canonicall houres about it iust as the Monkes vse to doe in their Cloysters I could relate the like of the Lady of Loretto for ther 's bookes of her too in Folio It s reported that shee sometime vnderstand the house too being discontented displaced her selfe and passing by a wood all the trees in reuerence bended and stooped with their heads to the very earth vnto her wonder it was they had not rent themselues vp by the rootes and proffered her their standings Also the Booke sayth that one being prisoner in Turkey and there having his bowells ript out by the ayde of a prayer that he made
cryed Lord establish me Psal 51. 12. 119. 116. 4. When men are carried about with euery winde of doctrine For what one man maketh firme another in teaching Ephes 4. 14. the contrary dissolveth weakeneth He that runs to euery Physician to know the state of his body shall proue a weake and infirme Patient 5. Vnmortified lusts if they be let loose and cherished 2 Tim. 3. 7. in the heart the soule like him that standeth on a slippery place will be reeling sliding 6. Finally when men will cast their eyes on their owne infirmities and not looke to him that accepteth the minde and honest intent of the heart for the deed they shall still Rom. 7. vlt. be wauering doubting And now to come to another Collection which is that The best way to saue and secure the soule is to commit it into Doct. 10. the hands of God For that which was the best to Paul and others will be the safest way for vs also Psal 32. 7. 71. 1. Iudg. 12. 3. Dan. 5. 17. Esth 4. 16. For we are weake and our enemies be many powerfull Reas 1. subtill and malicious Sathan could fetch a prey out of Paradise one from amongst the Apostles God hath all the properties of a good keeper 1. he is wise Reas 2. Iob. 9. 4. Psal 121. 3. 4. 2. powerfull 3. watchfull 4. faithfull He hath giuen lawes to be faithfull and then shall not hee This discouereth the indiscretion of many For some put their confidence in Chariots and Horses others in the arme of flesh Millions as the Papists in the Creatures but passe by the Creator But can those stay the swelling flouds from drowning the earth from deuouring the plague and pestilence from destroying and Sathan with all his huge hoast from tempting and condemning These men stand Iob. 26. 7. on the Ice leane on a broken staffe and as the Lord is said to doe the earth hang the security and safetie of their soules vpon nothing But ye that would be wise and preserued from all dangers Vse 2. cast your care vpon God● make him your secret place and haue your eye alwaies towards him For it s he and there is not another that can keepe you safe and secure at all times in all dangers And in regard whatsoeuer we weene its no easie matter practise these two Rules following to further thee Helps to commit the to god 1. Learne to commit lesse matters of this life to him and to trust him with smaller things for he that cannot doe the lesser it 's impossible for him to doe the greater Hee that will not trust God with his earthly substance can neuer credit him with his soule and salvation This Rule is worthy the consideration and practise 2. Striue to keepe thy soule holy and vnspotted from all sinne We will blush to commit into the custody of our friend any thing that is polluted and vncleane and can we haue the hearts to commend into the hands of God who is Holines it selfe a corrupted impure and a soule defiled with sinne What if we could doe it will he receiue it thinke we No verily And there be certaine times when we are to commit our Speciall times when to commit the soule to God Psal 4. vlt. soules especially into the hands of God And that ordinary or extraordinary The ordinary is the Morning and Euening David in the euening would commend his soule into the Lords hand for he knew that his sleepe might be his death and his bed his graue but in so doing he should sleepe soundly and securely It were an excellent thing if we could giue God our last thoughts before we close vp our eyes then would we when we awake finde our mindes fixed on him And what if death should come Yet our soules would be with him and preserved in safetie And in the Morning we must ordinarily doe this Prou. 27. 1. for who knoweth what a day may bring foorth The wise King compares a day to a woman with child who often laboureth at an vnlooked for houre And haue wee not seene our Mother the day bring to light strange and vnexpected birthes The extraordinary times of committing our selues to God are in troubles or at death This did that good Prophet in time of persecution Into thy hand I comm●nd my spirit for thou hast redeemed me O Lord God of truth Psal 31. 5. Iudg. 12. 3. And when Stephen was stoned to death hee Act 7. 59. cryed Lord Iesus receiue my spirit and Christ when his houre was come Father into thy hands I commend my Soule Luk. 23. 46. Let vs then trust the Lord with smaller matters keepe our soules vnspotted Morning and Euening commend them constantly vnto him so in afflication persecution and death we shall haue ability and boldnes to doe the same Vse makes perfect a good habit is hardly got So not easily lost For he that hath vsed to commit his soule to God in the times of peace shall with ease doe it in time of danger Yea let such a man but dreame of death or drowning in his broken sleepe his mind will reflect it selfe on the Lord and he run vnto him for perservation Grounded Christians know the truth of this by experience And in Conclusion know that the oftener we commit our soules vnto God and draw the neerer him in this duty why let death come how and when and where it can or shall come we shall feare it the lesser or any euill but embrace it entertaine it shutting vp the eyes of our bodies with the which our minds now see God as through a paire of spectacles and more clearely and comfortably behold him with the naked eye of our spirits Now whereas Paul maketh mention of the Lords ability we note thence that God is a God of Power Doct. 11. He is called the strong and mighty God all-sufficient that can doe whatsoeuer h●e will Gen. 17. 1. Exod. 34. 6. 1 Cor. 6. 18 Apoc. 1. 8. Math. 19. 26. The Reasons follow For he is the first Ens or being and altogether perfect and Reas 1. independant he hath his beginning of himselfe and doth not participate of any borrowed power or exhibited ability Therefore no impotency or imperfection can be found in him hee being of himselfe and the sole cause of all created power Againe he is one most simple and pure act immutable Reas 2. eternall and euery way blessed Therefore hee cannot be hindered or resisted Neither is he subiect to any passion for he is not compounded of any simples Passion proceeds from matter and presupposeth an imperfection Before we come to apply this poynt we will speake somewhat of his power for our better vnderstanding and information The power of God is that whereby he is able to doe all things The Power of God defined possible I say possible for there be that contradict his essence and the nature
pricks or keene kniues they they pierce and strike it through the heart if God shew not greater mercy with deadly wounds temporall eternall Why then weepe for your selues and doe good for your selues and for your children Yet for all our preaching and pressing of parents to piety some houses are like little hells and diuers gouernours worse then Achitophel who though he hanged himselfe had a care first to set his house in order Furthermore this doctrine should instruct vs to pray for good gouernours godly parents For woe to that society Vse 4. where the Ruler of it is ignorant profane or a child in vnderstanding Such good men are little regarded respected men esteeme of them at too small a valuation Corke is light yet it keepeth the net from sinking to the bottome of the sea so good gouernours are too little esteemed of Notwithstanding were they remoued fire and brimstone should fall downe from heauen and heapes be tumbled into the nethermost hell When good Iosiah was taken away the people as men sensible of their owne misery mourned so that it became a proverb like Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddo for his death did presage future and fearefull evilles to follow When Lot was gone to Zoar what befell the inhabitants and if Paul had not beene in the ship who had come safe to shore Wherefore make much of such pray often and earnestly for such mourne and spare not for the departure of such and let all the men of God in their preaching ayme especially at the conuersion of such For one good King godly gouernour holy father is worth ten thousand of the inferiour people for all the world will be tapt to imitate the Rulers and great men being good will doe the more good by their speech example and authoritie Why did King Dauid a little before his death giue his sonne Salomon a charge to serue the Lord God of Israel in such a particular and speciall manner Why for hee was to succeed him in the kingdome to build the Temple therefore he was so vrgent to presse him to piety Let vs in the like case do the same In a word if they that gouerne houses Colledges or Kingdomes be godly pray for them praise God for them but if not mourne and entreat the Lord to amend them And the higher place thy sonne is to haue in the Church or commonwealth striue thou the more to teach him the knowledge and seruice of God And may a good governour bring a blessing to he Vse 5. whole house then depart not out of such a family from vnder such a mans protection for if thou doest thou maist draw iudgements vpon thine owne pate Some cannot endure such Masters as well curbe them of vnlawfull pleasures presse them to the performance of holy duties but will like the prodigall vp and be gone These out-runne the shower of Gods grace and thinke they doe well when alas as much as they can they drowne themselues in perdition and endlesse destruction They had rather eate and drinke and deuoure beefe and garlike in Aegypt then the water of life and Manna from heauen vnder the conduct of Moses Are thou one of this minde then alter thy manners for feare a worse thing follow Finally this must teach those that liue in bad houses to Vse 6. be vp and gone Is the gouernour a Papist or Athiest a swearer or filthy person carry not with him except a forced necessity compell thee For as the Lepers said in another case if thou abide in such a● place some mischi of evill light vpon thee 2 King 7. 9. Thou wilt say vnto me how shall I know a godly Quest family Well enough and that by these markes Answ 1. Is there in it more good bookes and Bibles then payres of cards and tables 2. Is there more praying then playing searching of Scriptures then shufling of cards turning ouer of the holy papers then tossing of tables singing of Psalmes then obscene songs and sonnets desire and endeauour to grow in grace more then to gather goods 3. Is there constant prayer morning and euening sanctifying of the creatures before they be receiued casting out of the bad receiuing in the good And last of all Is the Sabbath strictly obserued of all strangers that rest there as of the daily inhabitants then conclude that the feare of God is in that place and if thou maist lodge and cate thy bread there That house that hath neither Bible or good booke reading praying or singing of Psalmes instruction catechising nor care to keepe holy the Lords day is that place where Sathans throne is and the Deuill dwelleth And not to belye them such filthy and infectious habitations be the families of Papists yea all that I haue beene acquainted with of which sort the Norherne parts are but too fully replenished Rome hath two much roome there amongst them Abraham did teach his family Ieremiah imprecates the Lord to poure downe his fury vpon the families that cal not on his name David did the like See Ier. 10. vlt. But passing this poynt we come to handle another which is that True affection is of a spreading nature Act. 26. 29. Rom. 2. 3. Paul loued Oresiphorus well and from the head we see it enlarged it selfe to the whole house all the members Hence it is that in the Scriptures it 's compared to water for loue is said to be shed in the heart or to oile that being Rom. 5. 5. Psal 133. 1. c. powred on the head runneth downe all the garments Certainely he that in truth loueth the parents cannot but affect the children For at the first it was so created As the vnderstanding Reas 1. was to see all truth in all things so was the affection framed to effect all things the which reason approued Those two were to be proportionable like the patterne and the thing made by it Now at our Regeneration Loue in some degree is restored to that perfection it had at the Creation therefore spreadeth Because that Loue is nimble subtile actiue therefore likened Reas 2. to fire that would conuert all contrary elements and subiects into its selfe It s hotter then the coales of Iuniper it compasseth the creatures as a garment it will dilate it selfe farre and neere For of all simple elements fire is the most actiue and spreadeth as we may see by a candle the furthest and so will true and feruent affection Againe Loue shouldreth out enuy the which a pinching Reason 3. and cold frost freezeth and holdeth things together from spreading Enuy would draw all good from others to it selfe but loue doth breake those bonds and sets the heart at liberty And is not Loue true loue one of the most sacred attributes Reason 4. in God yea God is called Loue. And did not the Lord before sin brake the condition extend his affection to all creatures Why then a sparke of that true fire in the
creature cannot but haue a large extent a spreading operation This may informe vs what to judge of many in these Vse 1. dayes surely they haue little or none of this oyle or fire abroad and kindled in their hearts for if they had we should fee it's spreading We may truly say with Christ that Loue is waxen cold Many boast much of it but where shall we finde a faithfull louing man for all seeke their owne and not the good of their brethren We haue a prouerbe Loue me and loue my dog I wish some did not more loue their dogs then the Lords children And by this doctrine in the impartiall examination of Vse 2. our selues we may try the trueth of our Loue. Canst thou that art a Magistrate say with Moses Oh! that there were such an heart in my people to serue God being a preacher canst thou breake out with Paul I would to God that all that heare me this day were such as I am the children of the Lord Hath the Lord made thee a father and canst thou pray with Abraham and Noah Oh that Ismael might liue and Iapheth dwell in the tents of Shem that is that my disobedient seed might know the Lord God of their father serue him and be saued you that are Gouernours of families is it in your hearts and hands for you and your people to follow God doe you labour like Cornelius that all your family might feare the Lord And you that are single persons doe you helpe one another to get grace and to grow vp in godlines then this fire of true affection is from Gods owne altar descended on you this loue is shed abroad in your hearts the oyle of amity hath annointed your garments and you are of that number which with ioy vnspeakeable shall one day behold the face of God But if this desired spreading be absent your hearts are stuffed with hatred cold envy hath benummed your subtile and actiue affections and therefore take heed of this that you be not found haters of God and louers of pleasure aboue him or his If you be heare your doome Depart from me into euerlasting fire for I know you not you did neuer visit me in my members cloath me feede me or build vp my decaied body by prayer instruction example nor in affection therefore you haue no loue in you neither shall ye receiue any fauour at my hands for the head and members make but one obiect Thou wilt say vnto me How farre will loue spread it Quest Answ selfe Why from God the Father to all his children Christ the head to all his members from the beginning of Gods booke to the last letter in breife from one end of the world from one part of the large heauens vnto the other true loue would haue al sexes persons countries and kingdomes so farre forth as it may stand with the will of God the Father to be sanctified and for euer blessed for there is no bounds in loue Affection vnlesse God chaine it the which he may and doth for mans vnworthines is without limits spreading it selfe from the externall conuexe of the highest throne round about and thence descendeth to the earth's lowest center yea Loue embraceth the Lord who is infinite incomprehensible so farre forth as sound reason doth rightly guide it direct it It is a garment that doth cloth all creatures and to the vttermost of its power wrap within its louely armes the eternall Creatour He that findeth this in himselfe findeth a good thing and but that very character which is imprinted in the heart of euery true beleeuer and faithfull person I might deduct another doctrine out of the matter of this petition which is that The mercy of God is principally to be desired for our friends Doct. 5. For what Paul prayed for for his friends we should request also for ours Rom. 1. 7. 1 Cor. 1. 3. Gal. 1. 3. For if we receiue mercy from God we shall want no Reas 1. manner of thing For to whom the Lord shewes mercy to that man he will giue all gifts spirituall and corporall whateuer so farre as they be good for him Againe had we all other fauours the world can affoard Reas 2. yet without the mercy of God they would but proue curses to vs in the end for without mercy we are no members of Christ so no sonnes and consequently no heires of heauen This checkes the preposterous course of many in these Vse 1. times The Papist he entreates God that his friend may haue his Purgatory here or in another world but omits the mercy of God in the beginning The common Christian or earth-worme wisheth his kinred and companions strong bodies large possessions heapes of siluer and long life but no mention of Gods mercy all this while that is least thought on seldome prayed for He that obserueth but the custome of many in their best wishes shall heare them ordinarily crosse this Canon and method of our Apostle Let this then be a derection to thee what chiefly and Vse 2. first of all to beg of God for thy friends Aske not that thy sonnes may sit at the right hand of Christ in his earthly kingdome for it is not of this world Cry not for Quailes in the wildernesse for they may choake thee and thine nor for riches for the theefe may breake through thy wall carry them away seeke not long life or like Saul the honour of the people But cry to the Lord for grace and mercy this this is that one thing necessary for thy selfe for all thy friends And though few doe thinke so yet it is so for if the Lord doe not deny thee this then hee will deny thee nothing and hee that hath this shall haue all things This will wash away thy sinnes cloath thee with the righteousnesse of Christ enrich thee with the sauing graces of the Spirit procure thee food and rayment sanctifie all things to thee affliction and sinne it selfe giue thee comfort in trouble hope in death and carry thee to the throne of God where in his presence thou and thy friends shall haue fulnesse of ioy for euermore Then when thou prayest say The Lord giue mercy to me and my friends to them and their families For hee oft refreshed me In these words wee will briefly point out the Doctrines and handle some of them From the person refreshed Paul we gather that Want may befall Gods dearest children Doct. 6. Iacob sometime went ouer Iordan with his staffe Ioseph was once no rich man the widow of Sarepta was in a great Gen 32. 10. 1 King 17. 6. Luk. 16. 20. strait Lazarus was poore and it is said the women did minister to Christ Luke 8. 3. of their substance The Lord doth it for many Reasons First to correct his for the abuse of his creatures for Reas 1. when wee haue like the Prodigall mis-spent abused or surfetted on them the Lord in
he sought him out found him And here it may seeme to appeare that these people were at Rome when they forsooke Paul and also probably that they met with him with his chaine and would not take knowledge of him but turned themselues from him and that by the opposing of these seuerall persons actions directly one against another Now in this Verse we haue a description of Onesiphorus The Logicall resolution 1. It s said that he was at Rome that was the subiect place where for a time he abode 2. He is described by an effect For he sought 3. By the manner how very diligently And 4. By the successe of his seeking he found whom he sought Againe here be two things layd downe in these words concerning Paul the one that he was at Rome the other that he was prisoner and in distresse there But when he was at Rome This word But is diuersly vsed The Theologicall exposition in Scripture Sometime exclusiuely I haue lost none that thou gauest me But the sonne of perdition 2. Inclusiuely Now is layd vp for me a crowne of righteouses and not for me only But for al them that loue his appearing 3. Discretiuely He gaue them all none excepted change of rayment But vnto Beniamin three hundred pieces of siluer 4. Oppositiuely Not Iesus But Barrabbas And in the last sense it seemes to be taken here They of Asia sought me not or He was not ashamed But c. opposing it to shame and then the arguments are diu●rs I haue thought it might be read For making it the third argument of a Syllogisme or Reason to proue that Onesiphorus was not ashamed of Pauls chaine He sought me out very diligently To seeke in Scripture is sometimes taken in the worst sense also for prayer c. Here it signifies searching and going from place to place very studiously and inquisitiuely And found me That is came where I was and did meete with me The Difference betwixt Inuenire and Reperire is this When we goe on a thing we doe inuenire when a thing comes on vs we doe reperire The one seemes to be an act per se the other per accidens Let no man once doubt that Onesiphorus was ashamed The Metaphrase of me being poore in bonds for he being at Rome where I was prisoner in chaines very diligently and studiously inquired for me and trudged from place to place vntill he had met me found me out And would hee ever haue done this if he had beene ashamed of me or scorned me No verily be thou assured of that my sonne For hee being at Rome c or when he was at Rome When Doctrines deduced he was there and heard or knew of Pauls troubles he then sought him and refreshed him whence note that When the faithfull are afflicted then they are to be refreshed Doct. 1. Say not vnto thy neighbour Goe and come againe to morrow will giue thee if thou now haue it Prou. 3. 28. I am 2. 15. c. For that 's the fittest time Now a morsell of bread or cup Reas 1. of cold water to a dry and hungry stomacke will be right welcome comfortable A word now spoken to the weary and wounded soule is in its sittest season and how gladly will it be receiued Againe we know not what a day or hower may bring Reason 2. forth our brother may be dead or swallowed vp of ouermuch heauines in the meane time And will not that be pitifull fearefull Now sleepe hence forward the houre is come c. could not but pierce the sluggish hearts of Peter and Iohn Besides we may haue our goods taken from vs or in Reason 3. future time want all oportunity to doe good when we be willing the which though the world neuer dreame of such a thing is an heauy curse Would it not greeue the husband to much haue good seed and yet want ground and time to sowe it In so doing we make God our debtor and the sooner Reas 4. the better is it not And here the best may be taxed for omitting of the Vse 1. present occasion or poore mans necessity We are prone to commit sin instantly and to put off good and charitable duties from time to time and to doe them lingringly But beloued this should not be so we gather fruit when it is the ripest cut downe corne when it is hardest let bloud when it groweth ranckest and shall we not refresh our brethren being poorest Let vs be otherwise minded Is thy brother hungry now Vse 2. feed him thirstly now giue him drinke burdened with sinne now comfort him sicke or in bonds now visit him And doe but obserue the Lords proceeding and thou shalt see that alwayes in the greatest straites then he hath declared his arme of mercy In the middest of the sorrowes sayth the Prophet of my heart the Lord comforted my soule In my daies marke the best haue their dayes of affliction he heard me Then goe thou and doe likewise Canst thou tell how it may fall out with thee in future time Death will come and it s a righteous thing with the Lord to depriue those of meanes of comfort then when as they would not comfort others in great sorrow at that houre Wee may runne from the poore and his homely bed and cottage but God and his swift curse will one day overtake vs. Wherefore I in the name and mercy of God beseech you to minde this thing Say not Pharisaically see to it thy selfe Little doest thou know how the very presence of thy friend in time to come may comfort thee And I wish that the experience of the want of it may sometime teach thee the worth of it I may truly say that if men knew the sting of death burden of sin or extremitie of hunger by experience they would runne to and fro to comfort and refresh the afflicted but men haue not felt the one therefore they neglect the other A morsell of bread or cup of small beere nay a word spoken in due season may not saue the body but a soule from death Then seriously assiduously minde this one thing Thou wilt reply we shall endanger our selues in so doing Obiect 1. Sol. 1. Onesiphorus might haue said so being at Rome but would that haue serued his turne 2. Thou therefore must do it and leaue the euent to God Epaphroditus was neare vnto death and regarded not his life in this case for the service of his brethren Phil. 2. 30. But they are visited with strange and noysome diseases Obiect 2. Sol. Why such haue most need of all others the greater miserie the more need of mercy I am a Minister and my people haue the plague may I Quest 1. visit such It s generally held no thou maist not being a publike Answ person for thy death may be the death in mans iudgement of many a soule And a generall
The yong man must Remember his Creator in the daies of youth least the houres come wherein hee shall haue no pleasure in them Iezabel had a time so had Ierusalem Agrippa and many others but when they foreslowed the oportunitie they found not in future time any mercy When God calleth and we will not come we shall cry but we shall not be heard Wofull experience hath taught this truth to many thousands for there is an appointed time for all things vnder the sunne 2. Seeke for what thou wouldst haue at the Lords hands let him be the principall Asa was sicke in his feete Ezekiah at the heart the one seeking to the Phisician first died the other going to God had his life many yeares prolonged Goe not with Saul to a witch at Endor with Iudas to the Pharisees with Ephraim and Iudah to Ashur and Hos 5. 13. king Iareb with the Papist to the Pope or Angell But goe to the Lord for these are miserable comforters and the best of them if the God of all the world the first mouer of all things and chiefe Phisician be absent cannot heale thee or cure thee of thy wound But seek vnto God and he will heare thee helpe thee 3. Goe to him but not like the proud Pharisee with I thanke God I am not so nor so neither with the boasting Papist in the robes of thing owne righteousnes but come vnto him in the name of Christ Iesus the sonne of his loue send him or set him before thee For whatsoeuer thou shalt seeke in his name that is in his worthines it shall be giuen thee For without Christ he is a consuming fire 4. Let the word and that neuer-erring spirit be thy guide If these two lead thee to the Father in the new and euerliuing way of Christ the Sauiour of all that are saued thou shalt find according to thy hearts desire Practise this Rule 5. Haue respect to the manner of thy seeking let it be vpon the feete of faith and affection with the wings of pure zeale and feruency and then thou shalt find assuredly 6. And finally let the end of thy seeking be for the glory of thy God the good and comfort of thy brethren and reformation of all thy wayes the curing and curbing of thy strong corruptions the encrease of all grace and for food friends favour and rayment so farre and no farther as the Lord seeth them to be needfull for thee Obserue these directions and then stay the Lords leysure and be sure of it that as Onesiphorus found Paul so shalt thou the thing thou hast sought after be it what it can in earth or heauen Now whereas Onesiphorus sought Paul at Rome and was permitted to refresh him we may note that Rome heathen was not sobad then as Rome Christian is now Doct. 5. Act. 28. 30. For Paul might be suffered to liue to haue his keeper Reas 1. to leade him in a chaine to dwell in a house all that would were permitted to come vnto him and without let he might preach the kingdome of God the Gospell of Christ But now if a Paul were there he would not be thought worthy to liue no not for an houre Againe wicked men grow worse and worse Reas 2. Vse Let this for euer be as a sure brand for that Beast who is drunkk with the bloud of the Saints that it is he and no other who exalteth himselfe aboue all that is called God and the very Antichrist whom the Lord will consume with the sword of his mouth They boast of piety and pitty when as Cain was no more cruell to Abel then they be to the faithfull Well Let them thinke that they doe God good seruice in putting vs to death yet they are deceiued it that In this we are not that for so doing they shall tast of the very dregs of Gods hottest vengeance spue and fall and dye the second death For Pope and Papists are men according to the Divells owne heart VERS 18. The Lord grant vnto him that he may find mercy with the Lord at that day and in how many things he hath ministred vnto me at Ephesus thou knowest very well WE are now come through the good prouidence The Logicall resolution of God to the last verse of this Chapter In the which two things are comprehended 1. A prayer 2. An Appellation In the Prayer we may obserue 4. things 1. To whom Paul prayed the Lord. 2. For whom he prayed him That is Onesiphorus 3. For what he prayed mercy 4. At what time he would haue his friend to receiue the thing he prayed for at that day In the Appellation we haue these particulars 1. That Onesiphorus relieued Paul 2. The place where it was at Ephesus 3. Wherewith that is many things And 4. The probation of this in the last words These or this thou knowest very well He drawes an argument from Timotheus knowledge to confirme his Testimony The Lord. In Hebrew Adonai is Lord being a word of The Theologicall exposition the plurall number yet often vsed in the forme singular it is deriued of Aeden a base or pillar which sustaineth a thing and our English word Lord hath much like signification being contracted of the old Saxon word Laford which commeth of Laef to support sustaine or cherish so that Lord is a Sustainer refresher supporter cherisher For if God withdraw his power all things come to nothing In the Greeke it properly signifieth one that hath authoritie or on whose authoritie something dependeth or consisteth and so indeed doe all things depend on God and hee is cheife gouernour and owner of all things created Mercy The word in the Hebrew put for mercy doth import a sacred affection of piety fauour benignitie and bountifull good pleasure or will of God towards a man without respect of desert or merit It is also applied to man and then it is meant a pious louing and benigne affection whereby he is moued and inclined to doe good to shew pittie compassion c. or that grace of God the which he hath receiued from the father through Christ which is inherent in him or conferred externally vpon him and then its glory Isai 40. 6. 1 Pet. 1. 24. And it is frequent for the Greeks to vse that word which our Apostle doth here for it the which Christ himselfe alloweth did practise See Hos 6. 6. Math. 9. 13. And the Hebrewes of Chesed which is Mercy call a godly man chasid that is gracious mercifull Psal 4. 4. some read a gracious Saint With the Lord. The like phrase we read Gen. 19. 24. The Lord rained fire and brimstone from the Lord. Paul vseth the like manner of speaking for as iudgement came from the Lord vpon Sodom so he prayes for mercy to befall Onesiphorus from the Lord Yet I haue thought that Lord in the first place is to be vnderstood of the Father and in the second is meant the Sonne
of an husband or a wife either for the How to choose a good husband rules will hold in that respect also two things must be regarded first the person secondly the portion The person is to be respected afore the portion for diuers reasons 1. For he is of more worth 2. He being bad may soone mis-spend it 3. What comfort can that woman haue in goods her husband wanting grace and 4. Otherwise she may be said not to marrie the man but the money We must crosse the worlds custome and first say what is he then what hath he Now in the person two things are to be considered the one grace the other nature Grace must be regarded in the election and much set by For what is beauty or birth or wealth without this but very vanity And in grace wee may consider either the truth of it or the degree of it If we in the iudgement of charitie finde some beginnings and some sprouts of this tree wee may not reiect such a plant for it will grow and in time come to greater perfection but if we finde none at all this is not to marry in the Lord. 1 Cor. 7. 39. Some may demand may not one marry with one that Quest hath not so farre as she can iudge any sauing grace at all being tractable and hopefull Diuerse answer diuersly but I say the safest way is to Ans make a good things as sure as we can And it s a safe course when we haue choyce to choose the best Nay take heed that he whom thou art well perswaded of doe not deceiue thee and proue bad enough The next thing to be respected in the person is the nature or his disposition the which will be more meeke and gentle austere and froward A little grace in a crooked crabbed nature will not easily be perceiued in a good tractable nature it will and shew excellent Wherefore if the disposition constitution and complexion content thee aswell as grace there will bee the greatest strongest and durablest bond of affection It is a fault in some that are carelesse in this respect and cry giue me grace and let him be crooked or deformed or froward that will neuer trouble me Thou art deceiued my friend a little Sugar in sweete wine makes it excellent but a great quantitie in tart will not change the tast so when grace and nature doe both answere thy desires then will thy loue and content be the greater Wee haue in our selues a double man and if thou canst please both vse it rather Next the goodnes of the cloth regard the colour and when thou hast found grace haue an eye to nature The second generall thing is the portion maintenance must be had or loue will waxe cold And the Lord prouided for Adam before hee put him into this condition And portions may be in hand or in hope In hand either good domesticall or terrestriall grounds mines pondes c. The portion in hope is either the promise of Parents friends or the fruits of ones hands hauing an honest calling The latter is good but the first is better By all this wee may be directed how to know a good husband and a very good or a bad and a very bad husband If a man haue much grace an ingenuous and tractable nature accompanied with lands and possessions this is a very good husband If true grace a tractable disposition and a small promised future portion This man is not though not equall to the first to be altogether reiected Indeed naturally we desire lands For wanting much faith wee liue by sence and earth is least subiect to be remoued from vs. And on the contrarie when men are not sanctified of a froward disposition and neither haue goods in hand or in hope these must needs proue if the Lord worke not aboue mans reach euill husbands ●angerous to match withall Wherefore in thy choyce be wise as the Serpent and lay hands on no man rashlie But how shall a gracious man be knowne 1. If he take Foure signes of a gracious man delight in the societie of the Godly 2. If gracious words proceed out of his mouth 3. If he bee well reported of 4. If hee make choyce of thee for grace not goods and this may appeare if he refuse another that hath a greater portion than thy selfe When I call to remembrance the vnfeigned faith These Doct. 7. words be the first in the verse yet we haue made choyce to handle them last Out of which we note that Vnfeigned faith cannot be had but it will be heard of Paul could not remember but what he had either heard or seene For rememberance is of things past and so properly to be vnderstood here Faith will get fame and cannot be hid Fire will giue light the wind makes a noyse and so will faith vnfained be perceiued Rom. 1. 8. Coll. 1. 4. Why should this be so For it will by its effects declare it selfe to the world If Reas 1. roots be found in the earth some sprigges will be sprouting Hot riuers will smoke and a liuing heart set the pulse a working So will faith in the soule sprout smoke and worke apparently It is ordinarily conceiued in sorrow and borne with Reas 2. great gronings Before it be begot and brought forth there will be some stirre and striuings And can the trauell of a woman be hid or a Prince bee borne without rumor Great report Meanes must also be vsed to mainetaine it as hearing Reas 3. reading singing praying conferring and will not the world and good men too take notice of these things these are like so many flashes which argue fire for certaine And the Deuill too will put to his hand to declare it for then like Herod he will goe about by all meanes to murther Reas 4. it He would eate vp this seede wither this branch if neither yet hee will sow some cockle to choke it or send some pur-blinde crow to pecke about it Truely the sunne may assoone runne his full course in the equinoctiall about the whold Globe vnseene as faith passe her Pilgrimage till death and not be heard of Doe not those then incurre reproofe that would be reputed Vse 1. faithfull yet their bruit must not goe abroad they would willingly goe to heauen but like Balaam it shall be betweene two wals or in corners What hope is their that men will fight when they tremble to bee termed Souldiers resist to blood and cannot suffer to be seene in the combate doe these thinke to steale their passage and not pay their fare to heauen to be wiser than their forerunner and Grand-Captaine the Lord Iesus take heed lest now walking folded in the ragges of darkenesse thou be not one day wrapped in the robes of blacknesse This may meete with those also that will commend for Vse 2. a handfull of Barley at the day of death such whose faith was
to the Lady for wee will not wrong them and Christ together he was enabled having put them vp againe to travell into Italy where this house is and there having receiued the Sacrament then dyed Many more such as this the Bookes mention And doe ye not now easily beleeue that these things are harder to be credited being related then if in grosse or implicitely they had beene vttered I may say of these as a man replied once hearing a strange tale that he gaue small credit to and the Relater demanding said Why sir doe you not beleeue this the person replied truely it s too much for one to credit it himselfe but if the persons present will take my part we will beleeue it amongst vs. And I thinke the Miracles in the three Bookes of the Lady of Loretto and their Legend are too many and too great for any one Protestant in the world after they haue knowledge of them to beleeue them Therefore we will leaue the ignorant Papists who never read or heard them to giue credit to them I speake not these things mistake me not to moue laughter but to make them if possible ashamed of their doctrine and that we thereby seeing their most palpable blindnesse and error might be the rather induced to prayse God for our light and the truth we pertake of But to omit them and their false Doctrine Let vs come Vse 2. nearer home and learne what to iudge of such as haue no knowledge of God at all Why surely they haue no faith in him neither for the Lord hath put these together like man and wife and therefore they may not be put asunder Christ propounds this Question When the sonne of man sayth he shall come shall he finde faith on the earth From the vse of this Doctrine we may make answere Surely very little For if knowledge be but amongst few as that is a truth then is faith rarely to be found This must moue vs all to get knowledge of God if wee Vse 3. would haue faith in him yea the best must grow herein for the better we know him the more confidently shall wee beleeue in him For it s so in all other things When I know the firmenes of the Land I will the better rest my foote on it the strength of my staffe the rather leane my whole body vpon it and the faithfulnesse of a friend put and repose my confidence in him And we must know God 1. In his power how that he is able to doe whatsoever he How God is to be knowne will this confirmed Abrahams faith and moved him to offer his sonne to whom it was said In Isaac shall thy seede be called For he considered that God was able even to raise him vp from the dead Heb. 11. 18. 19. 2. We must know him in his truth and iustice This made the Apostle to be of great courage in his perilous voyage and Sarah to expect a sonne after she was past the naturall course of conceiuing because shee iudged him faithfull which had promised Heb. 11. 11. Act. 27. 25. And here we Iustice either Revenging or Rewarding 2 Thes 1. 6. 7. are to vnderstand that the iustice of God is either revenging or rewarding It s a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you ther 's Revenging iustice and to you that are troubled rest with vs that is Rewarding Rom. 2. 6. 7. 8. iustice The one accompanieth the truth of his promises the other the truth of his threatnings And if we were more acquainted with this it would strengthen our faith in the performance of all his promises to vs and the many threats giuen out against the wicked 3. We are to know God in his stabilitie How that time changeth not his nature neither altereth his purpose He had no beginning therfore cannot either be yong or grow old He consisteth not of either matter or forme but is one most simple and pure act so that he is not incident to any shadow of turning What the Lord hath said it shall Iam. 1. 17. stand for euer for God is not like man that he should repent or change his purpose Did we know this it would wonderfully support our weake faith and stay our staggering mindes Did we vnderstand that the affection of our friend we most affect were constant it would make vs the more confidently to rely on him But feare of mutation weakens perswasion 4. We are to vnderstand that God is soveraigne Lord that there is none higher then he For if we should trust in an inferiour we might be deceiued But know this that he is aboue all and then thy faith cannot faile thee in beleeuing in him To put confidence in an inferiour Lord were dangerous in policie but in Divinitie desperate 5. We must know God in Christ For without him he is a severe Iudge a consuming fire But if we know him in Christ Iesus he is our Father and all his attributes that otherwise would be terrible will be most comfortable Thinke on this Finally We are also to know God in the distinction of Persons One Deitie yet three subsistences Father Sonne and Holy Ghost and we should haue some apprehension of their seuerall operations For otherwise we cannot beleeue as we should and ought for his full glory and our certaine salvation And thus briefely I haue poynted out some things in God and of God that must be knowne if we would obtaine Faith to the eternall conservation of our soules Rules to come to the knowledge of God God is knowne either 1. In his Word 1. The Law Psal 19. 2. The Gospell Rom. 1. 17. Or 2. In his Workes 1. Of Creation Rō 1. 20. 2. Of Providence Act. 14. 17. And this Doctrine with that hath beene delivered may Vse 4. serue to informe Ministers how to deale with their people Parents with their children and Masters with their servants If they would haue them faithfull to God to themselues they must make them acquainted with God and whom he hath sent Iesus Christ for to know this is ●t●●all life Ioh. 17. 8. 1. When men heare much but practise little or nothing 〈◊〉 of the soules setling 2 Pet. 3. 17. The neglect of this causeth men to be plucked away and to fall from their former stedfastnes For euery act of godlinesse is like the blow and stroke of a Mallet that stablisheth rivetteth and setleth the soule on a firme foundation like a pile or poste in the earth by often beating 2. Too much confidence in sanctification and too little in iustification We must fixe and fasten our faith in the obedience of Christ and make his life and death the sure foundation of our establishment For such shall neither stagger or be moved Rom. 8. 1. 3. Omission of private and often prayer the contrary to this like a strong Cord doth binde vs fast vnto the tree of Christ David therefore