Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n good_a life_n see_v 9,943 5 3.4753 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A05999 A commentarie vpon the first and second chapters of Saint Paul to the Colossians Wherein, the text is cleerly opened, observations thence perspiciously deducted ... Together with diuers places of Scripture briefely explained. By Mr. Paul Bayne. B.D. Baynes, Paul, d. 1617.; Stubbs, Justinian, 1604 or 5-1681. 1634 (1634) STC 1636; ESTC S101082 229,900 390

There are 14 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Title He hath to the Lordship and inheritance of all the Creatures It had beene enough if he be granted the onely begotten Sonne of the eternall Father to proove Him heyre justly but He that together with the Father created all the Creatures as Christ did Ioh. 1.3 Heb. 1.3 the case is cleere Hee must needs be Lord of all but if these were too weake it might be strengthened with a third even the redeeming of the Creatures subjected to vanity through sinne yea a fourth Heb. 1.3 His bearing up of all with His mighty power Let us therefore give glory to Him Vse even as in our nature and say thou art heyre of all the creatures and thou art worthy This for the coherence Now for the matter of this first reason viz. His creating all things is first set downe then each part the order inverted hath his amplification set downe in these words by Him all things were created expounded in the words following And first what those all things are which are set downe by a double distribution the one of the subject or place the other of the property in heaven and earth all visible or invisible 2. By a particular enumeration of those spiritual creatures which of al other might seeme to be exempted from the common law of creation which point also soone after Valentinus and Basilides did contend for viz. That these were not created but begotten of God Now they are described from the ministeries in which God doth imploy them for the administring of this world to the good of his Church 2. He repeateth the other that by Christ all things were created opening the manner of his working and adding the end for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signifie that Christ was not a secondary instrument by whom the Father made all things unworthy of Himselfe but a formall worker of all the creatures which is confirmed also that He is made the finis reductionis the end to which all the creature is reduced to Him to His glory whereas if He had beene to His Father as a hatchet is in the hand of a Carpenter the end of the creature should not have beene to have served His glory 1 Then we see Observ that Christ our King is the Creator of all things Ioh. 1.3 All things were made by the Word and without it nothing was made Heb. 1.1 It is most cleere for what ever the Father doth He also doth worke for the selfe same will is in all the Persons that what one worketh the other must worke also Which consideration of CHRIST Vse 1 doth serve first to strengthen our faith and to let us see with what reason he calleth us to trust in Him You beleeve on the Father beleeve also in Me we doe beleeve many things which we see not yea which we find much in disposition making desperate in us but here is a proppe of faith we know whom we have beleeved even the beloved Sonne who though there bee no print appearing of them is able to create them He created these things of nothing who though we be indisposed to receive things we beleeve yet this is no let to Him who out of darkenesse and a confused Chaos brought light and this goodly harmony of all things Therefore looke to CHRIST the Author and finisher of thy faith stand thy ground feare not the Creator of heaven and earth is He that hath spoken lay it at His doore and there rest thee thou shalt find all Amen as He hath promised so He is able to performe shall not He who hath made all the Hosts of the invisible Angels so bright in knowledge so burning in love so uncessant in action shall not he be able to effect in thee that small measure of Sanctification which Himselfe hath promised and thy heart desired be confident in Him that is made of God thy Sanctifier This Vse 2 that CHRIST is Creator of us doth teach us our duties even to offer our selves up unto Him if He never had done any thing to redeeme us yet we owe our selves unto Him for that He is our Creator how much more when that three fold cord commeth His Redemption by His bloud and saving us by sending His spirit into our hearts those that give us our lives as our Parents we say we owe them our lives those that save out lives as when we are ready to be executed we hold our selves their bounden servants for ever Christ the Father of eternity hath given thee thy life by creation hath saved thee by redemption It letteth us see the decency of the order enacted in that great Councell of the Trinity Vse 3 that the second Person should redeeme us for what could be more fit then that He by whom we were made by Him I say we should be restored That there is no creature whereof Christ is not the Creator Obs 2 both high and low are the worke of His hand It is in correspondence to that He is the first begotten of all the Creature Lord of it and reason good for He was the Creator of all of it and this must be understood with Saint Iohns limitation by Him were made all things that were made for defects of sin and penall evils as death c. which are not matter poysonfull as serpents but the destruction of things that have being these are not made by God but come from the suggestion of the Divell the will of man falling sinfully from God the fountaine of life and well being It doth not debase Gods glorious power to create small things as we see He caused Ionas his gourd to come up but often setteth it forth when all the strength of the creature cannot quicken a fly And we see that in the lice the finger of God was acknowledged by them whom greater things did not convince Yea it is needfull for if any thing could have being without it were God with Him We must sanctifie His name in all things Vse 1 not with cruelty abusing nor with disdaine rejecting any of the creatures for they are all the workes of His hands and as Salomon speaketh in another case so we may truely say he that despiseth or abuseth any creature abuseth his Maker Say our selves have made any thing if any marre it and unlawfully otherwise then our mind standeth useth it doe we not hold it an injury so will God hold Himselfe abused in such misusing His workemanship We must learne to consider of the least creatures Vse 2 and looke into the natures of them if a workeman doe make a fly finely in silke we will view it admire commend it and what new thing doth art invent the sight whereof we will not rather pay for then be without yet for Gods creatures we passe them over as contemptible that have things in them admirable a Spider an Ant a little kinde of Mouse the Holy Ghost setteth these as it were into the Pulpit to reade a Lecture to the wisest of
heavenly newes that our King hath subdued all our spirituall enemies yea triumphed over for this argueth full conquest when no wise man will ante victoriam cantare triumphum We must hence strengthen our faith Vse 2 for this triumph was all our triumphs the like being to be done in every member through the power of this begun in the Head in behalfe of all the members Is not the victory of a King the victory of all his subjects Likewise can we be in danger of them whom the King hath surprised so that they are altogether within his power So it is betweene us and our spirituall King the LORD give us faith This letteth us see what a potent Vse 3 all sufficient SAVIOUR we have If death and the power of hell could not prevaile against Him under death and in the grave in His lowest humiliation how much lesse shall any creature take from Him now in glory those things which He hath in keeping for us Finally that He saith in that His Crosse We see hence that in CHRIST crucified all victory is obtained against these infernall enemies this must be read in that Crosse not in Himselfe For the antecedent in all these is GOD the Father working these things in His Sonne Iesus Christ crucified In this unlike those great Potentates they never celebrated triumphs while they were receiving the assault of the enemie but stayed till they were returned into their owne Countries to their Imperiall Cities as Claudius who when he had conquered this Countrey of Britaine he went home to Rome there to rule in triumph But our LORD while He receiveth all the hot assault of these powers of darknesse triumpheth Nobile genus vincendi Patientia to let them doe all their worst and by His suffering it to overcome them is a most triumphant kinde of conquest The very fight it selfe is triumph It is reported of the Lion and the Vnicorne that there being deadly hostility betweene them when the Lion spyeth the Vnicorne he taketh a tree the Vnicorne following him eagerly runneth his horne into the tree in which case the Lion spoileth him at his pleasure So betwixt our Lion of the tribe of Iudah God-man and these proud Vnicornes those spirituall sons of Pride there being great hostility these Principalities hating GOD and oppugning His glory in the salvation of mankind it pleased Him to dwell under the vaile of our nature even with such a body and soule as we have sinne excepted that while the Divell did run with all his strength and lodge his horne as it were in this man his power might be broken for ever every stroake he gave returned on his owne head being the death of this man hee killed himselfe the head of him in which you know lyeth the life of a Serpent was bruised for ever And as angry Bees foolishly stinging once make themselves drones ever after So these wily Serpents but foolish here if ever foolish stinging our SAVIOUR CHRIST have made themselves stinglesse to all that are CHRIST's for ever their wisdome had beene not to have stirred up any sinful men to have attached this sacred Person they should have fled from Him to the most remote quarters of Hell rather than have made Him suffer the least thing from them Had they done thus their power in the world had still remained For as the sparkles of fire lighting on water are extinct so sinne and death falling on the GOD of Holinesse and life were extinguished in Him The use is first to arme us Vse 1 that wee take not offence at the scandall of the world at this that our GOD and Saviour dyed was a man hanging upon a Crosse Looke by the eye of faith what victory was gotten by this Crosse what was the powerfull worke of this death and then it shall no more hinder us in beleeving when we know that GOD created light out of darknesse Nay that our GOD did thus by His death as a second Adam abolish spirituall death and bring immortality and life to mankind is more wonderfull than the Creation of the world Wee see that when Satan seemeth the most to prevaile on CHRIST Vse 2 or His members that then hee is most of all foiled and subdued Now his power was comming now hee made Him feele the sting of the Crosse he killed Him c. all this was against himselfe Thus it is in all that are CHRIST's when hee thinketh to have the greatest hand over them all turneth to their good when by death they are stricken death it selfe dyeth and his power is almost quite abolished Wherefore let us not faint in our straits but stand still looking to the salvation of GOD Thus that type of him Pharaoh when he sore tasked the Israelites they most encreased when hee had them so hemmed in betwixt mountaines and seas that there seemed no evasion then was their deliverance at hand and his confusion VERSE 16. Let no man therefore condemne you in meat and drinke or in respect of an holy day or of the new Moones or of the Sabbath dayes YOu have heard at the sixth Verse of this Chapter that there began the exhortatory part of this Epistle and the Exhortations were generall concerning all sorts or speciall The generall you heard were either principall as that in the sixth and seventh Verses or secondary pertaining to the Principall the lesse principall assistant to that great duty of walking in CHRIST were prohibitions of things to be avoided In this Chapter are rules of spirituall practice in the next the Prohibitions are given first in generall Verse 8. Goe not after Philosophy and vaine deceit after the tradition of men and elements of the world the which generall prohibition hath beene propounded and by reasons hitherto enforced Now he commeth to some particular prohibitions which doe open unto us what things he meant by vaine deceit which leaneth on mans tradition and is carnall The dehortations are two-fold 1 From a servile respecting the censures of men so walking in CHRIST that they meddle not neither with Iewish nor Philosophicall superstitions to the twentieth Verse 2 He dehorteth them from the practice of every carnall and elementary fashion of worshipping GOD from the twentieth Verse to the end of the Chapter To returne this dehortation in the sixteenth Verse may be divided into the prohibition and the reason The Prohibition Let no man condemne you in these things The Reason they are shadowes of things which now in Christ and His Church are exhibited for this hath a secret force enforcing what by the Apostle is urged That which is a Shadow vanished that is not so to bee regarded as to feare lest you bee censured in the neglect of it But these are such Therefore passe not though you be condemned for omitting these But the former part of the sixteenth Verse may be diversely construed Let no man condemne you First it may sound to this sense Let no person in heart Iewishly affected take on him
A Commentarie VPON THE FIRST AND SECOND CHAPTERS OF SAINT PAUL TO THE COLOSSIANS WHEREIN THE TEXT IS CLEERELY opened Observations thence perspicuously deducted Vses and Applications succinctly and briefely inferred sundry holy and spirituall Meditations out of his more ample Discourse extracted TOGETHER WITH DIVERS PLACES of Scripture briefely explained By Mr. PAUL BAYNE B. D. LONDON Printed by Richard Badger for NICHOLAS BOURNE and are to be sold at his Shop at the Royall Exchange 1634. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE RELIGIOVS AND VERTVOVS LADY THE LADY MARY Countesse Dowager of Westmorland HONOURED MADAM SAint PAUL'S glory and exceeding great cause of rejoycing was this that as a wise Master-builder hee had laid the foundation whereupon the whole building of Christianity is established Though not to lay the ground-work or Principles of Religion yet to be fellow-workers with GOD and His holy Apostles is now the glory and rejoycing of the Ministers of the Word in these latertimes Amongst the rest a sincere faithfull and judicious Divine in these Workes of his never yet before extant is presented to your Honours view and approbation His abilities were such as became a Successour of a worthy and religious Predecessour in his ministeriall function in the Vniversitie of Cambridge by him performed unto GOD's glory the good of others and his owne comfort The first he unfainedly desired and propounded as the utmost scope of all his endeavors that GOD might be glorified by him both in life and death the second as subordinate to the other hee procured not ayming at his owne advantage so much as their salvation that heard him not seeking theirs but them The last was an effect of the two first this must needs be a consequent where the others are precedent for GOD forgets not our labour of love to Himselfe or others Sensible experience hereof had this holy man who found much comfort by his Ministry in himselfe and by the fruits of it in others There be many that spend much time in studying are never weary in wel-doing are instant in season and out of season but with how small successe for it is in vaine to rise early and sit up late except GOD give a blessing Paul planteth and Apollos watereth but GOD giveth the encrease if GOD put not His hand to the worke there will be but a Babel of confusion He knew it very well who prayed continually for the divine assistance to make his ministeriall worke effectuall Hee prayed and his prayer was heard hee wrestled with GOD as Iacob did and overcame Him Hee fulfilled his desires and granted his requests and made him a spirituall Father of many children by him begotten unto GOD. Should I say more I will adde this only what in him was praise-worthy let it be applauded what was in him for Instruction and a godly life let us imitate Let us learne of a dead man to live Dead doe I call him Though the body die by reason of sinne yet the spirit liveth unto GOD through IESUS CHRIST our LORD Let us therefore learne of him to live spiritually that with him we may live eternally I have shewed in some sort what hee was and what it concerneth us to be And this the rather presuming of your Honours favourable acceptance not so much of him that Dedicates these following Expositions as of him by whose incitement hee was encouraged thereto his worthy friend Your Ladyships humble servant that for his sake and the Authors You would vouchsafe to cast over this Booke the wing of Your protection This is his desire who shall ever remaine Devoted to your Honour in all humilitie IUSTINIAN STUBBS TO THE READER THE Mother of Nazianzene as himselfe relates it was so beneficiall to the poor that a sea of wealth was not sufficient for her What was her industrious diligence in relieving of outward necessities was this religious Pastors in supplying the wants of such as are spiritually poore thinking no time to be well imployed which was not a testimoniall of his pious life in word in conversation 1 Tim. 4 13. in charitie in spirit in faith in purity or of his wholesome doctrine in reproving correcting 2 Tim. 3.16 instructing in righteousnesse Thus thundring in doctrine and lightening in conversation hee left no stone unmoved that might further the building of the new Ierusalem For living in these last dayes the very dregs of time when iniquitie aboundeth and GOD is provoked every day so that fin cannot be more sinful nor wickednesse more wicked by his * Praecep a ducunt exempla trahunt Sen. exemplary deportment he fastned the naile which was driven by judicious Instruction in Precept and Practise A MAN OF GOD a Beacon on an hill a burning and a shining Lampe His method and matter were plaine and perspicuous yet so as if occasion served hee had meate for strong men as well as milke for babes he became all unto all to gaine some Blessed Saint quae sparsa per omnes In te multa fluunt what couldst thou more have done than in leaving nothing undone to receive at thy Masters hands an Euge bone serve Well done good and faithfull servant His well-doing and well-being is an invitation unto us to doe and to be the like which whosoever desires let him seriously survey these ensuing Expositions of Scripture composed with Laconicall brevity yet including in them the immense treasures of divine Speculation I suppose there is none will maligne them that understand them If there be any others as it was once said unto Philip King of Macedon passing unjust sentence betweene sleeping and waking I appeale ô King from thy selfe to thy selfe So let them reade with judgement and deliberation and then whatsoever fault was imputed to the Author will become their owne In a word whosoever thou art that carpest at these following Treatises whatsoever in them thou deemest either frivolous or superfluous emendes illa vel ede tua I. S. THE DOCTRINES OF THE FIRST CHAPTER OF THE EPISTLE OF Saint PAUL to the Colossians Verse 2. 1 EVery true member of the Church is a Saint 2 GOD gathereth and supporteth His people in all places 3 In distributing holy things wee must put a difference betwixt men betwixt sound and counterfeit 4 Christians are knit together by the straitest bond 5 Wee are to wish our selves and others favour from God and peace of Conscience as the chiefe blessings 6 The fountaine of all true Peace is the favour of God testified to us in Christ 7 All good things are to be sought from God the Father and the Sonne Verse 3. 1 DVtie bindeth us to pray for others and to give thankes for others as for our selves Verse 4. 1 SPirituall graces bestowed upon any must move us to thankfulnesse and to make request for them 2 Faith layeth hold onely upon Christ lesus for life everlasting 3 Our love must specially be shewed to the Saints Verse 5. 1 THe recompence which God hath in store for
them that have treasure and great charge about them letting penniles travellers alone So doth Satan he is busie to rob those whom GOD hath trusted with His graces VERSE 10. That ye might walke worthy of the Lord and please Him in all things being fruitfull in all good workes and increasing in the knowledge of GOD. NOw followeth the obedience it selfe set out by the practice of it that he prayeth for 1. In generall 2. More particular In generall it is to walke worthy of the Lord what this is may be understood by comparing it with like places Ephes 4.1 Worthy of the vocation whereunto yee are called Phil. 1.27 As it becommeth the Gospell 1 Thes 2.12 Worthy of God who hath called you to His Kingdome and glory To walke worthy of the Lord then is to live and behave our selves as becommeth those to whom God hath vouchsafed so great mercy that passing by thousands and ten thousands for deserts all as good and in outward respects many of them better than they Hee hath of His meere grace and free love in CHRIST chosen and called them out of the World to be partakers of Eternall life and glory with Him and for this cause hath caused His Gospell to be preached unto them and by His spirit hath made it effectuall in them we must therefore seriously consider 1 the dignity of our calling 2 the excellency of the Gospell whereby we are called 3 the kingdome of Glory whereto wee are called 4 and our most Holy and glorious Lord God by whom we are called and accordingly with due regard of all these things carry our selves in this present world let others then live as they list walke in sinne and wallow in filthinesse such a course may sort with their condition but for us we are by the grace of God of another dignity of an higher and more holy calling and such as waite for a Kingdome prepared for us even an Eternall Kingdome in the heavens This walking worthy of the Lord he expresseth by the end that it respecteth and aimeth at namely a pleasing of Him in all things or a full and entire pleasing of Him If then we will walke worthy of the Lord we must study to please Him and to give Him contentment in all things not accounting of pleasing any man yea or al men with displeasing him 1 Cor. 4.3 And good cause for life and death depend on Him He hath power to save and destroy yea He hath done such great things for our soules already and assured us of so great glory hereafter that we are the most unthankefull and impious Creatures that ever breathed our selves being judges if wee study not to please Him in all things Wherefore let others addict and give themselves over dedicate devote and consecrate themselves to serve and please to bow and becke to kneele and crowch and in all points to observe this or that great man on whom they depend by whom they live from whom they expect their advancement and rising in the world let us study and strive how we may please the Lord our GOD. He is to us in stead of all yea all inall Here Observe That this pleasing of GOD must bee in all things Obs or it must bee whole and universall for hee that seeketh not to please Him in all things seeketh not to please Him in any thing and hee that laboureth not to give Him an universall contentment laboureth not to give Him any at all according to that of Saint Iames Sam. 2.10 Whosoever shall Keepe the whole Law and yet offend in one point is guilty of all for the same God hath commanded all as well that Hee leaveth undone as that Hee doeth and therefore if out of conscience toward God hee hath care of doing any he would have conscience of doing all Which serveth notably to convince those who reforming and conforming themselves to the will of God as they would have it thought in many things Vse yet retaine some speciall beloved sinnes whereby they plainely shew that their reformation in other things is but counterfeit as being for some by-respects of their profit or estimation or such like Having thus set forth this pleasing of God in generall he expresseth it after in two particulars Bringing forth fruite Increasing in the knowledge of God For the bringing forth of fruite being an expressing of our duty to please God specially in an outward manner before God and Men may bee called not unfitly one particular of pleasing God Observe Hence Obs We must be fruitfull in good workes as Trees and plants are fruitfull in their kindes for from thence is this speech taken for being planted by Gods owne hand in His own Orchard or Garden yea in His owne house Psa 92.14 being also kept and dressed by Him as our Husbandman Ioh. 15.3 Esa 27.3 Ioh. 15.3 being watched over night and day and watered every moment finally being branches of CHRIST the true vine from whom by the vertue of His spirit we receive sappe and juice good reason wee should be fruitfull and if not we shall bee surely cut downe and cast into the fire Mat. 3.10 Ioh. 15.6 Luk. 13.7 For who among us would endure an unfruitfull Tree in his Garden who would not say with indignation Cut it downe why cumbreth it the ground If that were rooted up I might have another planted in the place of it that might bring me forth good fruite When the wicked see us grow livelesse powerlesse sapplesse they say what matter is in them and in their profession It is a shame that they should say I had rather live with any deale with any have a promise from any than from a Professor Their condition is incurable Reason when the Carpenter hath cut and hewen and sees it will not fit his turne ther 's no remedy but it must be cast into the fire My spirit shall not alwayes strive with man Gen. 6.3 Esay 5. GOD calls a counsell What shall I doe with my Vinyard A hedge Lord will do it good send them prosperity and security that they have had A winepresse Lord will doe them good that they have had afflictions will not worke upon them When no plaister will cure the Legge it must bee cut off when the Gospell will doe thee no good nothing can do thee good See the ground and cause of all our evils Vse wee impute them to the malice power or improvidence of men No no thy barren heart is the cause of all 1 Cor. 11. For this cause many are weake and many sicke and many sleepe as if hee should say you blame the ayre you say such a distemper was the cause no no it was your unprofitable comming to the Sacrament that hath brought this plague upon you Our unprofitablenesse is the cause why the Lord is still hacking at the Tree of England How many great Families are perished and yet by no ill husbandry or great improvidence no no they
Christ working through that death in the behalfe of all His the death of the creature so farre forth as by the just judgement of God it hath a power through Sathans working to draw us from God to it selfe 3 A death of our corruption Galath 6.15 By the Cxosse of Christ the world is crucified to me and I to it that is by Christ crucified Briefly as Adam becomming mortall and dying to this mortall life wee all so soone as wee are borne members of Him are mortall and tend to death by force of that mortality in the roote of us So Christ dying spiritually to this world and the sin of all us His members that thus they might be abolished we so soone as by faith we are made His members or are borne of Him we begin to dye spiritually till in death we are fully mortified by vertue of that radicall death in Christ our Saviour who dying according to his flesh did so worke by His omnipotent spirit that as the guilt was at once remooved so the life of it was mortified that it lost the raigne and was successively to be abolished in the being of it in all those who by faith should come to be engrafted into him or all those who should spiritually descend from Him 4 Lastly He brought into our nature supernaturall life that so He in our nature might propagate it to all who were His. The use hereof is to stirre us up above all things to seeke with Saint Paul Vse 1 that we may know what is the power of His death the communion of His sufferings while I feele my selfe made like to Him in dying to this world and sin for by this we know that we are untied to Him suffering and dead to sin and this world while we feele our selves by virtue thereof in like case as I know my communion with Adam that I dyed in him while I see my selfe mortall hastening every day to death as he is dead The Lord Iesus make the scales fall off our eyes that we may see the vertue of His most powerfull death toward all that are His. This also letteth us see what we must doe when this world and the things of it are forcible upon us Vse 2 when our hearts feele the life of sin strongly making to them come to Christ dying speake to Him Thou Lord hast crucified this world thou hast overcome the strength of it thou didst dye not regarding the allurements of it why doe I feele it have so mighty a hand over me even bewitching me as it were at the sight of it So when I feele my sin stirring lively in the lawes of it then to fly hither Lord thou dying hast beene the death of the sin of thy people why doe I who am in thee find it stirre as if it never had received wound The more we get to see our selves in Christ dying for the abolishing of all our sins the more we shall feele them wasting in us Let us give glory to this glorious death which maketh us all to dye Vse 3 As in the naturall body kill the head and all the members dye after so here c. This sheweth us why it is that sin liveth in so many men in the world Vse 4 even from this that they are not engrafted into Christ and so doe not partake of the influence of that spirituall life which from Christ the head floweth into all His members Buryed with Him in baptisme you have put off your sins being set into Him dying and buryed ingrafted with Him buryed in or by your baptisme Observe hence Doct. God doth unite us with Christ even by our baptisme the Lord doth by baptisme signifie to us and confirme thus much yea worke it as by an instrument namely the putting His Christ crucified upon us and our ingrafting into Him dying and rising Rom. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For first by baptisme is sealed our communion w th Christ dying and rising secondly our communion in the effects which are mortification and vivification but yet wee must not think though God useth outward baptisme of His minister that this ministeriall action bringeth forth grace as the Papists doe who hold that God doth so use the ministeriall baptisme that He lifteth up that action as an instrumentall cause to worke grace so that it neither commeth solely from God nor yet immediately For this must be held that the power and act of producing grace is only and immediately from God There are two sorts of instruments some worke somthing with the Principall worker others doe not operari aliquid but ad aliquid they worke to something but not any thing having force to cause that whereto they worke such are Gods meanes which He useth and coordeyneth with him selfe in working of all such things which are not wrought but onely by power omnipotent thus he healed the blind with clay and spittle thus He overthrew the walls of Iericho with the blowing of Rams hornes But one may say this is absurd Object to use meanes which shall doe nothing doth any man doe thus Men use meanes which worke something in that they doe with them Answ because their force doth not reach alone to the effect they intend without the helpe of the meanes concurring with them but Gods force being alsufficient it is not absurd for Him to take to Him selfe such instruments in giving grace which are of no force to produce it especially when hereby he exerciseth our obedience faith c. He that planteth and he that watereth is nothing 1 Cor. 3.7 in regard of working in the soule that they tend to the Gospell is sayd to be the power of GOD to salvation Rom. 1.16 because through GOD it is powerfull who accompanyeth it immediately and enty rely working faith by it Yet Papists will not say that the Preachers syllables are elevated by GOD to rayse up the dead in sinnes and trespasses This then is to be firmely held that GOD useth baptisme of engrafting us with Christ and mortifying and quickning us in Him Vse yet the baptisme of water doth not conteyne any force nor is not lifted up to any such agency whereby grace is properly produced But it may be asked Quest how we are set into Christ with baptisme when none must be baptised but those if they be adulti who have faith in appearance and so are already in Him Things are sayd to be done when they are manifested and done in a further degree then before they were Answ thus the believer baptised is by baptisme manifested to be so before the Church yea often to Himselfe the more plentifull grace of God comming into Him while he useth it faithfully and his faith being more strengthened the union is more confirmed The use is to stirre us up that we would looke backe to our baptisme Vse which sealeth unto us so great matters if we have sealed bonds we will have them sometime read to us that we may know what
this their restoring to life The first is pardon of sin The second is cancelling the obligation against them The third is the setting them free from those jaylors and executioners in whose keeping they were The two first are in this thirteenth verse the latter in the end of the thirteenth verse and in the other two following The first of the antecedents in the end of the thirteenth verse The second in the fourteenth verse The third in the fifteenth verse To returne to the thirteenth verse And first in genenerall from this his Commoration in this benefit wee note Doct. That our quickning in CHRIST is such a benefit which we must not quickly have done with and lightly passe over The Apostle cannot move from this till hee have dwelt a while upon it and amplified and enforced on them the consideration of it So it is we lend it little thought but the more is our fault we should when wee thinke on God's benefits in Christ make a stand and dwell upon them that so we might be more affected 2 Marke What Ministers must doe Doct. viz. they must amplifie to their people the benefits bestowed on them how often doth Moses this in Deutr. For 1 It is for the honour of God that His benefits should be set forth 2 It edifieth others and gaineth glory to God while they are to know the things bestowed on them and they are by this meanes wrought unto thanksgiving Againe wee are like children wee know not the worth of those great things wherewith GOD hath enriched us As a young childe that hath great patrimonies and priviledges doth not to any purpose conceive the worth of them yea we are as forgetfull as the eaten bread is quickly forgotten And beside a benefit while enjoyed groweth no dainties with us in all these regards we must use this practise of the Apostle If men have outward commodities and abilities and gifts of any kinde they know them too well even till they be proud of them but in heavenly things it is quite otherwise Now for their condition it is described from the state of death You when you were dead 2. The kinde of death viz. in sin 1. Actuall in trespasses 2. Originall in uncircumcision of heart which is set downe by a Synecdoche or Metonymie of the signe for the thing signified Outward Circumcision put for outward and inward which is more emphatical when they were so dead that inwardly and outwardly they did lye in evill the meaning is when you were utterly dead in soule mortall in body subject to eternall damnation by reason of your actuall transgressions and original corruption You then He quickened that is GOD the Father out of the Verse before with His CHRIST First then observe That we are by nature dead to God the same is Eph. 2.1 We are not like a man in a sleepe nor like the Samaritan greatly wounded but we are starke dead in regard of the life of GOD. Rom. 5. he saith Wee are of no strength not of feeble strength and the naturall man is often so called My Sonne was dead and is alive let the dead bury their dead A man is every way by nature dead his body is mortall in dying from his birth eternall death of soule and body hangeth over him His soule is quite dead for God in regard of His presence of sanctifying grace going from a man he dyeth in soule As the soule going from the body the naturall life is extinct But it may be said Object why man hath some reliques of knowledge Againe some of the Heathen have excelled in vertuous actions without grace Every knowledge is not the life of God strictly so called Answ but that knowledge which affecteth the heart to follow God to trust in Him love Him They that know thee will trust in thee otherwise the divels doe know God in their kinde 2 The knowledge of man is able to make him unexculable onely not able to make him alive according to GOD for these Heathens vertues they were but pictures without the soule and life of vertue in them splendida peccata good trees they were not and therefore their fruit could not be good all is not gold that glisters This then confuteth all doctrines of free-will Vse 1 or of any power in man which holpen a little can helpe it selfe Dead men have nothing in them to help themselves toward this world so it is with us toward the other Yea we see hence that it is not suggestions to the minde nor exhortations that will doe it we doe but tell a dead man a tale and all in vaine till God create a new light in the minde and take away the heart of stone and give us tender new hearts let us confesse our utter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 impotencie and inability and give glory to God Hence must be enforced to the natural man what is his estate dead in his soule Vse 2 hee heareth not the thunder of GOD's Law nor His sweet promises he seeth no heavenly thing neither GOD nor any spirituall matter hee tasteth no relish in any meat of the soule he speaketh not a word powdred with grace hee stirreth not hand nor foot to that which is good Oh the world is full of these ghosts twice dead as Saint Iude speaketh yea the relikes of this spirituall death hangeth about us all Marke from this that we who are alive through grace Vse 3 must not associate our selves with those that are meere naturall men for we see that no living thing can abide that which is dead the beasts will start at a dead carrion our dearest friends we put from us when dead but alas the LORD's children now can goe hand in hand with such who have not a sparke of grace in them Oh this death is not terrible we are al so much in it that we see not the filthinesse of it As a blacke hue among the Black-moores is not reproachfull So dead ones with us whose graces are ready to dye agree well enough In sinnes Observe Doct. That sinne both originall and actuall is the death of the soule Mors animae peccatum Our sin in which we are borne and live is the death of our soules and the demerit of further death Death it is to death it goeth Now what is death is it not the absence of life the soule being gone with the entrance of corruption And what is sinne Is it not the absence of saving knowledge righteousnesse and holinesse with the corruption of the minde will affections so that the spirituall stinch of it streameth out at the eye lust at the eare itching after vanity at the mouth rottennes is the best I mean unfruitfull speech sometime bitternesse Looke as holinesse is the beginning of life everlasting which goeth on till it end in glory so is sin the death of the soule which doth if the grace of CHRIST heale it not never stay till it come to everlasting damnation As for sinfull actions they
are nothing but the stinch which commeth from the dead corps I meane the body of sin dwelling within us For as heavie savours come from a putrified body so doe these motions from a corrupt soule And as a childe if he doe swarve from morality and civill vertue following whores and abominable courses be a royoter a theefe when thou seest an absence of civill vertue thou sayest he is even a lost childe what then shall wee thinke of our selves being without all heavenly vertue of faith hope joy in the Spirit godlinesse temperance c. The use is Vse that we would consider of sinne and our estate through it that we who have not thought of it may yet set our hearts to the way of life that we may be thankfull who have escaped from it that we may take heed of it and labour to be healed more and more of it Should some learned Physitian tell you such or such a deadly thing were growing on your body how would you thank him and make use of it Oh it is well with thee if God make thee wise that thou hearest this day how thou art dead in spirit and for us we are glad when we escape some great bodily sicknesse and if there dwell reliques of sicke matter wee keepe rules desanitate tuenda how much more should we be wise for our soules 3 That he saith they were dead in trespasses Observe What is the life of a naturall man even a death in trespasse Doct. tota infidelium vita peccatum like tree like fruit now the very conscience of them is polluted Tit. 1.15 without faith it is impossible to GOD. True it is that outwardly they doe many things that are laudable but still they walke in the flesh the Divell hath conjured them so into that circle that they cannot stirre forth of it Looke as in the flesh of a beast there is some part of greatuse bought up at great price some that is cast to the pudding pits yet all is flesh so in the life of the naturall man some workes are of good use and in commendation with man some are abominabl but all are of the flesh As a livelesse image hath the resemblance of a man but is nothing lesse So the vertuous actions of naturall men have that appearance of good but want the soule and life of it in which it consisteth This is to be marked against the Papists Vse as it teacheth us not to rest in this that we are neither theefe nor whore for be our life never so civill it is death in sinne till grace quicken There is a double madnesse as Hippocrates observeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the one very light and toying the other more sober and solemne in which men sit still musing deepely upon some fancies Such a difference we have in spirituall phrensies some are very sober over other some as we see the lives of some naturall men gravely ordered and morally in comparison of others but yet all is deluded phrensie before GOD. 2 Marke hence Doct. 2 That our course in actuall sinne doth sinke us deeper and deeper in death when you were dead in sinne intimating thus much that the custome of their trespasses did hold them under death Even as the more the body putrifies it goeth further into death So here the more the soule doth exercise it selfe in evill the deeper it sinketh into the death of it It is fitly likened to the stone of the sepulchre this custome of actuall sinning for it doth seale us up and keepe us downe more strongly under it Vpon this ground the Prophet asketh How shall the Leopard change his spots no more can those that are accustomed to evill learne to doe well Which must make us take heed how wee goe on in a sinfull course Vse for it maketh us rot in this spirituall death and maketh it more difficult for us to returne Many that procrastinate repentance they thinke not on this You hath He quickened with CHRIST that is both perfectly in CHRIST with whom your life is hid and initially in your selves being joyned with CHRIST Vos cum Christo convivificavit conjunctos Christo Observe hence Doct. How farre we are from being prepared to receive the grace shewed us by GOD when we are quickened to beleeve Even as well disposed as Lazarus was for his resurrection to this present life of whom it was said that he now stanke in the grave No there was as much disposition in that Tohu and Bohu that inanity and deformity which was before the world to the being yea the ordinate being of all the Creature as there is in our soules to the worke of grace We are as farre from this heavenly forme of supernaturall life as the deformed Chaos of the Creature was from this beautifull figure before the LORD did bring it forth There is nothing in Nature can so dispose a man to grace as that it should necessarily follow for onely the principal agent which bringeth in the forme it selfe is able to worke the immediate disposition upon which the forme ensueth As nothing but fire can bring combustible matter to be so sparke as that whereupon it presently burneth for such a disposition is the first point of bringing in he forme it selfe In this therefore many of the Papists are wide yea Vse erre from sound reason it selfe let us therefore by confessing our owne utter untowardnesse and repugnancie to GOD's worke glorifie His Name 2 That hee doth mention their estate before to illustrate GOD's mercy Observe Doctr. What is the way to bring men to thankfull acknowledgement of GOD's grace to teach them to see what they were when GOD shewed it Thus Moses thorow the Booke of Deuteronomie often calleth on them to think what they were in Aegypt yea from their comming forth of Aegypt to that day wherein he spake being now not many dayes from his death So Ezek. 16.30 Saint Paul every-where The Papists doe most wickedly derogate from GOD's glory Vse 1 while they teach something in us which is a partiall agent with God so good preparations and dispositions to this and that But Moses otherwise Not for the goodnesse of thy heart not that yee were more in number though He cast off others for their sinnes He tooke not thee for thy deservings We may hence strengthen our selves Vse 2 not to doubt in receiving God's particular promises though we finde our selves unworthy nothing so fitted as we should be Not unto us O Lord but unto thy Name c. For my Name-sake not for your sake O yee House of Israel As at the first so after GOD doth dispense His favours that we have still cause to confesse our unworthinesse to His Name to CHRIST our Mediatour to His Truth all is to be attributed and from them all is to be expected Hath He quickened together with Him Observe then That all believers have a new life in and through Christ Doct. To understand it wee must note that CHRIST in
of our inheritance is light Now how can a man bee altogether darkenesse and yet have light at the same instant these would make contradictions true at once Could Ioseph have beene a Prisoner clad in his base apparrell and yet have beene the second potentate in Pharaohs Kingdome No he was first brought out of prison then the King caused his old garments to be layd aside that change even rich ones should bee given him so doth GOD with us Which doth further assure the consciences of such as live in their naturall estate Vse they have no part while thus they abide in the heavenly inheritance From this that these when now they were truely converted are sayd to bee brought out of the power of darkenesse note What is our estate by nature Obs wee are under the power of the Divell the Prince of darkenesse and are in all kind of darkenesse ye were once darkenesse saith Saint Paul to the Ephesians Eph. 5. darkenesse of ignorance none understandeth none seeketh after God darknesse of lusts and ungodlinesse Tit. we by nature served lusts even as others darkenesse of condition GODs anger abideth on every one that doth not beleeve O most dreadfull Cloud yea His curse and all kinde of misery doth threaten them Temporall Princes if men rebell treasonably against them shut men up in darke dungeons where they are denyed outward comforts and live waiting their fearefull execution God is a spirit we have all rebelled against Him in the Loynes of our first Parents we lie before him guilty from the wombe God hath His spirituall darkenesse Hee giveth men into the hands of Sathan His jaylor Hee taketh away His spirituall light from them letting the Divell hide them in chaines of ignorance lusts fearefull expectation of judgement I but we feele no such thing Object Answer It is because we are all darkenesse and never saw nor heard some of us other that maketh us thinke there is no such matter those that are in hell wot there is no other heaven as wee say in the proverbe Our first parents were lesse miserable then we in this regard for they knew that the glorious light was gone from them and that their soules were in all kinde of darkenesse because they had left that lightsome and blessed condition but wee that never knew other wee thinke there is no other If men at forty yeares of judgement should be shut up in a darke dungeon they could perfectly know what a comfortable world what goodly heavens what a fruitfull earth they were deprived of Say they should get a Child in this dungeon he could not tell further then hee were told and so conceive by heare-say that there were such a matter Suppose a child that never saw other should heare nothing hee would verily thinke there were no other light hee could not imagine other estate or liberty then that which he had prooved from his birth upward So it is with us because wee are borne and bred up in Spirituall darkenesse wee thinke there is no other light To shew how none but God can helpe us Vse 1 to make us lament our miserable condition in which all of us lie by nature This also letteth us see the truth of the Doctrine Vse 2 that none but God can make us fit for our inheritance for who can pull us from the Prince of darkenesse but God alone the strong man will keepe his owne till a stronger come We must learne to lament and take to heart this miserable estate Vse 3 if we lay in some darkesome prison loaden with irons as many as we could beare committed to the custodie of some Cerberus-like keeper how would wee lament our hard fortune but to lie in such a condition wherein is no light of knowledge of GOD loaden with chaines of darkenesse hellish lusts of wrath covetousnesse pride filthinesse in the custody of the Divell himselfe this none bewaileth It must stirre us up to blesse GOD Vse 4 who are freed from this estate blessed be GOD who hath delivered us O were wee close prisoners in some noy some obscure place if one should come and set us free would we not be glad and thankefull why doe we not blesse God for this spirituall inlargement from the most woefull prison the hardest keeper most dolefull chaines and fetters that ever were felt by the sons of men Lastly What is matter of much rejoycing and praise Obs even this that GOD hath put us under the government of His CHRIST this is a benefit of GOD every way It is no small thing to live under the regiment of a gracious Prince in earth yet the good wee reape by them is bodily But what a blessing then is it to live a Subject in the Kingdome of IESUS CHRIST who saveth from all evills and giveth all good things temporall and eternall if the King should take a Traytor out of the Tower release him of his danger it were a great favour and Princelike clemency but to preferre him to a good place under Prince Charles and to make him farre greater hopes then his present preferment this were unspeakeable bounty Thus it is with us our gracious GOD hath not onely set us free from the darke holds wee were in but hath preferred us to an happie condition for the present and to most rich hopes for hereafter under His beloved Sonne The men of GOD foreseeing this it is strange to see how they provoked all the creatures even things senselesse to exultation The Lord raigneth Psa 97.1 Psal 98.7 let the earth rejoyce let the Searoare let the floods clappe their hands for the Lord is come to judge the earth that is to reigne over us The immunity from all feare of euills the abundance of all good things in the Kingdome cannot bee uttered CHRIST is the Prince of true peace Hee giveth His Subjects deliverance from the feare of all enemies of sinne death hell here is salvation Hee is the Iudge Lawgiver the King that must save us Esay 24.23 All enemies are subdued in this Kingdome here is justice against oppressors both spirituall and corporall here is store of all good things spirituall graces and corporall blessings so farre forth as is good for our salvation To provoke us in this consideration to bee more thankefull Vse 1 earthly Princes how glad are wee when GOD doth put us under them wee welcome them with all solemnities of joy wee shoote off ordnance make bondfires ring bells cast our caps up cannot stand upon any ground such is our exultation yea we blesse GOD for them doe we not keepe holy dayes in thankefull remembrance to God for their Coronations protections and we doe well they are our bucklers our peace and defence is from them they cloath us with scarlet and through them we enjoy many a pleasant thing they are the breath of our nostrels and we know that even the government of a tyrant is better then an Anarchy But if for mans government
we be thus thankefull what praise should wee offer to our God for bringing us under the Kingdome of His deare Sonne If we had some grievous Tyrant ruling over us and God should take him away and set a Prince of singular Clemency over us should not the blessing of all the kingdome come upon him for so singular a change But when he taketh the Divells iron yoaks off our necks and bringeth us under the Kingdome of that most meeke King who will not bruise a broken reed nor quench the smoaking flaxe here none in comparison is thankefull This giveth us to consider of our happy estate Vse 2 who are brought to live under Him reade Psal 72. To live in such a Kingdome were a great felicity but no more to be compared with this then the shadow with the substance What a blessing is it that we have His spirit to be a law in us good lawes in a Kingdome are no small benefit What a blessing is it that we have true peace from accusation of sinne from feare of death from disturbance which the remnants of sin doe cause before they be better mortified Say I am spiritually opposed and molested yea have great corporall enemies what a mercy is this that looking to CHRIST our King and crying for helpe we have succour they are weakened defeated scattered we are strengthened and comforted I see that I am besieged with enemies too mighty for me yea with Traytors in my owne bosome what a favour is this that we should be protected our King being such a wall and as a mighty flood about us that they cannot come neere us I want things looking to CHRIST I have supply I feare time to come looking to Him I heare it spoken This is our King Psa 48.14 Hee shall leade us to death VERSE 14. In whom we have redemption through His bloud the forgivenesse of sins NOw followeth the description to shew the excellency of this former blessing from the excellent benefit wee have by him and the worthinesse of his Person In whom in which deare Sonne and this phrase in whom noteth both the Author of the benefit next adjoyned and likewise the order or meane by which it commeth to be applyed in us viz wee being by faith in Him in whom then is through which Sonne we being set into Him by faith wee have redemption which word is taken Actively or Passively Actively for the act of CHRIST His working it Passively for the receiving of it into us or the applying of it in us that are believers so it is here as if it were said we are redeemed The force of the Word is ransomed brought forth of some miserable penall condition a price or ransome payd for us which was His bloud See Ephes 1.7 14. 1 Tim. 2.6 Who gave Himselfe a ransome for all He construeth this redemption to be Pardon of sinne freedome from all that penall condition to which wee were subject by reason of sinne For to pardon sinne is to release the punishment to which the guilt of sin doth bind us What is the singular love of our King unto us Obs 1 even such that Hee hath bought us with His bloud wee are ransomed by Him and not with silver or gold but with His pretious bloud 1 Pet. 1 18 19. If that a King should empty all his coffers and alienate all his Crowne Land to rescue his Subjects he should shew himselfe a naturall Prince but what is this to that ransome which our King hath tendered This doth let us see what cause we have of thankefulnesse for CHRIST not onely in regard of his love Vse 1 and naturall affection to us but for this great benefit which we have by Him Were we slaves in the Turkish gallies taken prisoners in the warre were we kept hard in debters hall how would we give thankes to God for such a one as should purchase our liberty with some summe of money How much more to be released from that woefull captivity in which the Divell doeth hold us through sinne and the curse of God whereof he is the executioner This letteth us see our duties towards CHRIST Vse 2 not to be young masters our owne men walking after our owne hearts but to live to Him who hath bought us dearely the Apostle Saint Peter on the same ground inferreth this exhortation For as much then as CHRIST hath suffered for us us in the flesh 1 Pet. 4.1 2. arme your selves likewise with the same minde for hee that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin that He no longer should live the rest of His time in the flesh to the lusts of men but to the will of God If men doe but small matters for us we are theirs to be commanded their servants theirs while we live to the utmost of our power but God may come from heaven take thy nature to the fellowship of His Person shed the pretious bloud of His man-hood and when He hath done all have no thankefull duty acknowledged Lastly we see hence our woefull estates by nature Vse 3 wee are bondslaves further then this our King doth set us free True it is we are like the Iewes when they were told of being set free from this thraldome we say they were never any mans servants never other then free So wee thinke we are free enough ô no beloved we are all by nature sold under ignorance under sinne under condemnation neither shall we ever come forth till this Sonne of God the truth set us free Remission of sins Observe hence Obs What is the greatest blessing which CHRIST our King doth procure us pardon of sinne great indeed binding us to be thankefull for our King We see how Kings at their Coronations when they enter upon their people they doe every way endeavour to winne their hearts testifie their princelike bounty and clemency hence come the customes of giving pardons to sundry even of capitall offences of releasing subsidies and such like dues otherwise of giving and enlarging and confirming charters to sundry places thus our Saviour that King of glory doth give a full pardon to His Subjects a generall pardon for it is sayd indefinitely none excepted that in Him we have forgivenesse of sinnes which Saint Iohn doth conster in these words the bloud of CHRIST clenseth us from all sins 1 Ioh. 1.9 originall actuall past future the most royall Charter that ever was given to the sonnes of men This is the grace promised I will be mercifull to their iniquities and remember their sinnes no more It is the justification and absolving of us sinners by God for that satisfaction or redemption which Christ tendered we are justified saith Saint Paul freely by His grace that is we are set free from our sins through Christ His redemption Rom. 3.21 Christ was made sinne that is a sacrifice or surety for sinners bearing all our sin that we might be made Gods righteousnesse righteous before God in him
and sheweth us the favour of a most mercifull Father and in this is perfect reconciliation 2 For the second this phrase is a Synechdoche bloud is put for a bloudy death upon the Crosse and bloudy death on the Crosse doth together note the curse of the Law felt in His soule who indured it Gal. 3.13 Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law when he was made a curse for us Now though Christs intercession hath His place in appeasing God and other actions yet His death is chiefely named because the force that other things have to pacify God is derived from this sacrifice which Christ the Sacrificer Himselfe offereth Againe He so often nameth bloud not to exclude inward sufferings but because this was more easily knowne being visible 2. The cursed manner in which it was shed that is how it was shed so that His soule did feele the wrath of God against sinne the curse of the Law for in these two stands the vertue and excellency of Christs Passion This Doctrine is a looking glasse to us wherein we may see the heavy displeasure of God against sin Vse 1 heavy it is which could not otherwise be reconciled sinne is good cheape men thinke yet we see it was of that haynous nature that the pardon of it could not be purchased nor obteyned but by the shedding of the dearest bloud in the heart of the Sonne of God It letteth us see CHRIST His love to us Vse 2 and to our peace It gives us to understand in what pretious account we are to have this benefit Vse 3 if we should buy a thing with a masse of money how charily would we keepe it but this and the other are bought not with silver and gold but with the pretious bloud of CHRIST Marke lastly Observ the thing in which the Fathers were reconciled to GOD it was CHRIST His bloud for what spirits were at Christs sufferings in heaven which did need reconciling to God by bloud but the sinne of the just who were dead in the faith of CHRIST to come Now as we see they by the faith on this bloud had salvation Acts 15.11 How can they be said to be reconciled to GOD by Christs sufferings Quest who were in heaven with God before He suffered This is said Answ not in regard that now the benefit was applyed in them but because now the thing was done by force wher of they had reconciliation that was now actually exhibited whereby they in former ages were taken to mercy the sins under the old Testament are said to be forgiven in Christs death Heb. 9.15 because then that was done for which they were pardoned though the pardon was given forth before 2. Because these things were now actually passed twixt God offended and God man our surety and Mediator This letteth us see how Christ hath beene in all times the onely atonement twixt God and us Vse Lastly marke hence Obs that the Fathers were in heaven before Christs ascension Psal 73. Thou guidest me by thy counsell and takest me to glory The Saints dying goe into everlasting Tabernacles now what is an everlasting mansion never to be changed but heaven VERSE 21. And you which were in times past strangers and enemies because your mindes were set in evill workes hath Hee now also reconciled NOw He commeth to set downe this benefit with application to them unto whom he wrote 1 Making way to it by remembring their former misery 2 Hee mentioneth the benefit applied in them with the manner of working it 3 Openeth the end of it 4 By way of caution adjoyneth the condition of perseverance vers 22. First then in generall from the Apostle his example note thus much That we must not onely teach in generall Obs but apply in particular the things of the Gospell* ⁎ * So Saint Paul doth every where the nigher they are brought the more they affect To tell a whole Towne there are priviledges bestowed on it doth not so much move as to tell them of this or that houshold that such and such things are bestowed upon them And therefore that Sacrament which commeth nearest Take eate this is my body given for thee it is most helpefull to particular affiance Beside such is the infirmity of many of Gods Children that if like a Nurse you doe not feede them putting the meate of their soule by particular application into their mouth you may famish them at least keepe them low in this heavenly grace Againe there is such an indiligent carelesnesse that we let them hang in the ayre unlesse they be brought the nearer to us that which is sayd to every body is sayd to no body let it therefore be exemplary for our imitation 2 Marke how the Apostle doth call to their remembrance what they had formerly beene taught teaching us Obs that we must not forget our miserable condition by nature worldly advancement maketh meane ones forgotten the Priest as we speake forgetteth he was Clerke but our spirituall dignity must therefore be with bearing in mind our naturall misery 1 Co. 6.11 Such were some of you but now ye are washed c. 1 For this is a ground of meekenesse it is like the Swannes blacke foote which when we behold will humble us 2 It stirreth up holy groanes O'miserable man that I am Rom. 7.24 3 It is a good sallad and maketh Christ with His benefits taste better 4 It is a good spurre to fruitfulnesse for the time to come Rom. 6.19 As you have given your members servants unto uncleannesse and to iniquity so now give your members servants unto righteousnesse in holinesse 5 Againe it is the ground of a holy blush wherewith all must walke before God Rom. 6.21 What fruit had yee in these things whereof ye are now ashamed We must therefore heare on this side when we are told of our naturall estates Vse 1 you must not tell of your former lewd led lives in a bravery but beare them in mind and speake them when it is for edification even to glorify Gods mercy to further meekenesse and holy shame-facednesse in us Now for the particular hee sets downe their misery two wayes 1 In regard of their externall constitution you who sometimes were strangers Supply it out of the Ephes 2.12 from the Common wealth of Israel ⁂ that is you who sometime were not so much as members with the Church by outward profession and society Vse 2 much lesse of it as Saint Iohn saith they were amongst us but not of us therefore they went out from us 2 In regard of their more inward condition partly standing in the quality and disposition of their mind which is here set downe enemies in minde partly in conversation in evill workes in which we have set downe What is a most miserable condition viz. Obs not to be a member of Gods visible Church to be a stranger to the societies where Gods word is preached
discipline practised where those duties flourish to which the communion of Saints doth tye us They that are estranged from Gods Church can have no society with God He is walking amongst the golden Candlesticks amongst His Saints onely where two or three are met together in His Name He is present among them As they have no acquaintance with God so they are under the power of Sathan where it is that Saint Paul calleth excommunication the giving up to Sathan Hee that hath not the Church for his Mother cannot have God for His Father In a word heaven and earth the Eden and Paradise of God is His Church So that miserable is that state neverthelesse this was ours sometime in our predecessors We were all of us alients from Israel but God hath kept us for happy times Let us therfore be thankfull and bring forth fruites least he take away our Candlesticke Vse 1 and deface the face of our Churches causing us to want our holy assemblies Let us not leave our fellowship Vse 2 and estrange our selves from Gods people from the assemblies as Brownists and other Novelists doe To be discommoned a Towne for a Citizen to be banished a City is a great reproach but to be an exile from Gods City and discommoned from the communion of Saints this is lamentable indeede being alients from this Common wealth of the Church they have nothing to doe with the covenants of grace and of the Gospell but strangers from all meanes of salvation This letteth us see that all true comfortable affinity Vse 3 kindred and society is in Christ onely and in the Word and Ordinances count all strangers that are not allyed to us in Him count them forreyners that will not communicate with us in the Word and Ordinances of GOD strangers as men of another Nation though never so neere allyed in Nature and let our neerest society fellowship and acquaintance be with Saints and holy Christians in the word and ordinances as our neerest kindred our spirituall brethren in CHRIST Therefore Abraham after he was called of GOD and sanctified was commanded to come out from his kindred and fathers house to count them Aliens and strangers to seeke new kindred a new Nation of his owne nature and bloud the generation of the righteous Why should we like prodigalls withdraw our selves from our fathers house and bring upon our selves by such singular separations this great misery to be estranged from them who are Gods true Israell Againe he saith they were enemies in mind and workes affection and action note hence What is our estate by nature Observ we are enemylike affected to God and His people the wisedome of the flesh is enmity against God Rom. 8. it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be In his Iudgement he counteth the things of God foolishnesse in his affections he doth not savour them he counteth of His Commandements as a yoake intollerable and maketh a tush at sincere obedience so for the Saints the righteous is an abomination to the wicked Gal. 4.29 Were not the Iewes a mocking in the mouth of the heathen did they not reproach them for their circumcision To let us see our selves Vse 1 we are altogether by nature thus heathens beasts the most of men in part we have a law in our flesh rebelling against the law of our mindes not enduring the spirituall obedience of Gods law What is all our love of this world know you not that the amity of the world is enmity with GOD If a woman cared not for her husband but were bent to the imbraces of other men were she not enemylike affected to him so we to God what is enmity if this be not not to care for him and his wayes to incline and looke another way for the Saints they are our enemies as we thinke and they are hatefull of all other to us our spirituall phrensie like not them of all others whose presence doth binde us in some sort We must labour to be changed Vse 2 seeking to God to give us another mind who can endure to heare these termes thou art an enemy a hater of God yet who laboureth to be free of the thing praying to God to purge forth the secret hatred which maketh him hee cannot assent to and affect that which is good Could an honest woman find a heart strange to her husband would shee not be ashamed of it labour to the contrary doest thou finde a heart averse not affected toward thy God ô wilt thou not cry who shall deliver me from this body of death Seeke to GOD to put enmity against the seede of the Serpent and to circumcise thy heart making thee love Him Deu. 30.6 Who ever hardened his heart against GOD and prospered Your mindes were set in evill workes By repeating the words from the part of the sentence before it teacheth thus much Obs What it is that maketh discovery of this enemy-like affection our naughty actions when we do that which crosseth God's will that evill worke is the triall of the inward affection He that loveth me keepeth my Commandements he that keepeth them not and saith he knoweth me is a lyar and the truth is not in him As the tongue is the interpreter of the minde so is the action to the affection A traytor we see may be a traytor in heart and not in attempt but when his treason breaketh forth in some disloyall action then it is manifest that he bare a trayterous heart So it is with this inward corruption when now ripe it practiseth the rebellion of it in the workes of unrighteousnesse Which meeteth with such as will say they love God Vse he were unworthy to live that is an enemie to God but if we looke at their course of life they leave the wayes of God and will have leave to walke in their owne wayes This is to give God good words and speake Him faire but indeed to deny Him But we have no such intention in any thing we doe Object If we through ignorance sinfully contracted Answ doe not know that we sinne against God when we doe this mitigateth not our offence If one should make himselfe drunke and after practice against the life of the King and State would this excuse him from being a traytor if he say I had no such meaning in that I did I meant the Kings person no hurt Lastly marke hence That men by nature are altogether occupied in evill works None doth good no not one the thought of man is evill onely and continually It is strange how the naturall man is devoted to his owne wayes which are all evill He museth mischiefe on his bed hee sleepeth not if hee have not done his mind For his mind is as meat and drinke to him and hee is fasting not able to take rest when hee hath not effected it He committeth sinne and doth his owne will with greedinesse he hateth to be reformed in these wayes
savoring of the flesh 6 Whatsoever is meerely grounded on tradition and what is carnall and sensuall in GODS service is contrary to Christ Verse 9. 1 THis must make us rest in CHRIST onely as all sufficient that we know Him GOD blessed for ever 2 All the fulnesse of GOD is communicated with CHRIST as man the whole entyre Nature of GOD. 3 Not created gifts or miraculous effects of the divine nature are united with Christ man but the deity it selfe the fulnesse of it 3 The same singular Nature is in all the three persons 5 The manner of GODS dwelling in CHRIST man is personally so as that GOD the Sonne is thereby become personally man Verse 10. 1 CHrist man doth send out all the streames of grace and good things to all His members in that the fountaine dwelleth in Him 2 Being in CHRIST we receive all kinde of graces and benefits that wee lacke nothing 3 The dignity of CHRIST who is all to us is this that He is the chiefe above all the creatures Verse 11. 1 AN excellent meane to hold us fast to Christ is to remember what great evil of sin He hath subdued for us 2 Christ hath given us a spirituall Circumcision 3 No outward action of the hand of man reacheth to the clensing of the soule 4 Sin and grace is to the soule as apparell is to the body 5 Spirituall circumcision standeth in putting off all our corruptions 6 The soule of the naturall man is clad with sinne 7 Wee must forgoe not some part of our corruption but the whole body of sinne 8 Our masse of corruption containeth many sinnes 9 IESUS CHRIST it is who worketh in us this spirituall circumcision Verse 12. 1 VVHat Circumcision was to the old people that Baptisme is to us 2 From our union with CHRIST dead and buried we come to have the body of sinne crucified 3 GOD doth unite us with CHRIST even by our Baptisme 4 To consider of our resurrection which we have through CHRIST is a forcible motive to make us cleave to Him 5 Faith on Christ maketh us rise to new life 6 The omnipotent action of God which raised Christ from the dead is it that begetteth faith in us Verse 13. 1 OVr quickning in CHRIST is such a benefit which we must not quickly have done with and lightly passe over 2 Ministers must amplifie to their people the benefits bestowed on them 3 Sinne both originall and actuall is the death of the soule 4 The life of a naturall man is even a death in trespasse 5 Our course in actuall sin doth sinke us deeper and deeper in death 6 We are farre from being prepared to receive the grace shewed us by God when we are quickened to beleeve 7 The way to bring men to acknowledgement of GOD's grace with thankfulnesse is to make them see what they were when God first shewed it 8 All beleevers have a new life in and through Christ 9 In order of nature first we have pardon of sinne before we have the life of grace begun in us 10 God the Father Son and Spirit doe properly forgive sinne 11 God's pardon is of meere grace to us 12 We must remember what God hath done for us while we shew to others the things bestowed on them 13 The grace of God in forgiving our sinnes is exceeding large Verse 14. 1 NOt onely our sin which is our debt is answered but whatsoever may shew any thing against us is done away in Christ 2 By Christ the ceremoniall Law is taken away 3 The Iewish ceremonies as they were purely legall were as bills testifying the debt of the people before God 4 Christ by suffering on the crosse hath abolished these things Verse 15. 1 GOd doth set us free from the power of Satan before we are made alive in Christ 2 God in Christ hath crucified and disarmed Satan 3 Christ in His death made a scorne of all the power of darknesse and exposed them to open shame Verse 16. 1 VVE must not make account of mens sinister judgements as any way giving place unto them 2 To put no difference in meats for conscience sake or religious respect is no sinne 3 Such as doate upon Mosaicall rites are ready to condemne such as are not done right in them Verse 17. 1 THe legall ceremonies were shadowes of that is done in Christ and His Church Verse 18. 1 FAlse teachers are led with a spirit of arrogancie which maketh them usurpe judgement over others 2 The naturall man doth judge and condemne what doth not agree with him 3 Our softnesse and pusillanimity doth make us subject too much to take to heart mens sinister judgements 4 Wicked deceivers will seeme to stand for vertue and challenge those that are truly godly as wanting it 5 Adoration of Angels and Saints masketh under the vizor of holinesse 6 All religious worship of Saints or Angels is unchristian 7 The property of a seducer is to speake that he knoweth not 8. The cause of vouching and diving into hidden things is Pride Verse 19. 1 LOoking to the creatures for helpe and grace doth make us fall from Christ 2 We have not many but one Head 3 In Christ mysticall there is nothing but the Head giving growth and the body receiving growth 4 For the whole multitude of beleevers there is sufficiency in Christ 5 Before we can take spirituall growth in Christ we must be knit to Him 6 Every true beleever groweth up in Christ not stands at a stay 7 It is God who maketh us as begin so grow in grace Verse 20. 1 CHRIST by His death hath freed us from the Ceremonies of the Law 2 True Christians must not live in that Christ dyed to take away 3 Gods children live out of the world while in it Verse 21.22 1 MEn are exact in outward observancies who know not the power of godlinesse 2 Hard to forgoe old rites to which we are accustomed 3 Bodily observancies profit nothing 4 We are not to give credence to any thing not taught in God's Word Verse 23. 1 VIce and error may have a shew of truth and vertue 2 Will-worship hath a plausible shew of wisdom 3 Lowlinesse of minde argueth wisdome 4 False teachers will make a shew of humility 5 To keepe the body in subjection argueth wisdome 6 False teachers make shew of mortification 7 Exercises much regarded with men are of no esteeme with God 8 Bodily externall things are not of worth with God The end of the Doctrines A COMMENTARY VPON THE SECOND Chapter of Saint PAUL to the Colossians COLOS. Chap. 2. VER 1. VERSE 1. For I would yee knew what great fighting I have for your sakes and for them of Laodicea and for as many as have not seene my Person in the flesh WE have had from the three and twentieth Verse of the former Chapter from the end of it a digression the summe whereof consisteth in declaring Paul's calling Secondly his executing this calling Vers 28 29.
when we beleeve first translated out of the power of Satan before we have our new life infused from Christ Even as a traytour cannot be safe from the sentence of death untill he be first taken out of the hand of a cruell Executioner So here with us Hence it is that Heb. 2.15 Christ is said first to abolish him who hath power of death and then to deliver those who through feare of death were still subject to bondage But it may be asked Quest how these were subdued by Christ when we finde them still encounter us Because they have no right in us Answ nor power to hurt us and are totally in due time to be troden under our feet therefore they are said subdued not that they have not leave a while to exercise us This then must make us rejoyce in God our Saviour Vse who hath vanquished such enemies in our behalfe When the great Armado in eighty eight was overthrowne what a joy was it to all true English hearts But this is the joy of all joyes to the Israel of God to thinke how Christ hath troden on the Serpents head and captivated all their power who sometime lead us captive In particular when he saith Doct. Who hath spoiled Observe hence That God hath in Iesus Christ crucified and disarmed Satan that he hath no weapon against us It is the custome of conquerours to disarme their vanquished enemies and make a prey of what ever they have so hath Christ Iesus done with Satan For first whereas they had sin and our owne confessions against us CHRIST tooke away our sins laying them on Himselfe and satisfying for them Secondly whereas they having power of death did hold us under CHRIST bare the death in His owne Person that so this weapon might not hurt us Thirdly whereas we by reason of sin and death were in their power He stripped them off us likewise making the mighty deliver these captives for sin and death being taken away by which they held us in their power they had nothing to shew why wee should be detained now this was the spoiling of him of his free-hold as hee imagined This must teach us to stirre up our selves in serving GOD confidently for why Vse Wee are delivered from our enemies who are spoiled that we might serve the LORD without feare Great are these spirituall powers in their nature but to those that are in Christ they are disarmed so that they cannot hurt us they are naked divels and we being in Christ are in a strong for t Wherefore as for armed men being in a strong hold it were too much shame to be afraid of naked enemies that should offer with nothing in their hands to assaile them So here True it is as children not knowing what is what are afraid of bull-beggars which cannot hurt them So are we here but the LORD maketh us grow up in His strength We see how to comfort our selves when we feele sinne darted against us or seeme to feele feare of death Vse 2 or discerne that the Divell doth halfe hold us still as we thinke what must we doe but looke to Christ tell Him LORD thou hast taken sin and death out of the Divels hand and tooke me from him likewise Lord make my eye of faith cleere that I may see this thy victory for me thy victory I know is full though in my feeling it seeme otherwise Looke with the eye of faith to Christ give glory to Him that He hath done it and thou shalt quickly see His victory applyed in thee And though the Divell hold hard feare not all is vaine he must yeeld the bucklers when all is done to thy Lord Christ his prey must be delivered up he hath no right in it nor power to hold CHRIST did discharge him of the one and brake the other in his death He hath made a shew of them openly Observe hence Doct. How Christ in His death made a scorne of all the powers of darknesse they are exposed to open shame It is said of the wicked Dan. 12. they shall be an everlasting reproach and it is a part of their deserved punishment So here it was just that these wicked powers should be exposed to all reproach But what was this open shew of them Quest The taking them captives Ans 1 the pinioning them with His Almighty power the presenting them before GOD Angels and every beleeving eye as naked things who are spoiled and cast out of their usurped possessions the filling them with confusion Yea not onely doth He thus make them stoope to His command but made them become hang-men doing execution at the command of His servants in His Name as Paul saith of Hymeneus and Alexander I have delivered them up to Satan 1 Tim. 20 Now as a serpent that leaveth the sting in one cannot sting againe so it was with this old serpent his sting was so stricken into Christ that he could not now any more sting us who are His Nay more the putting him under the feet of such demie creatures as we are and making him serve for our good whom he usurped over as cruell Pharaoh sometime Even as Conquerours taking their enemies captive doe make them serve for base slaves in the basest ministeries lead them along pinnioned one to another So doth our Conquerour IESUS CHRIST This must the more make us magnifie God Vse and animate our selves under the shadow of His wings who is all our salvation Note againe that our SAVIOUR hath openly triumphed on His Crosse which doth let us see the perfect victory of Christ over all our enemies in His death this was the consummation of His Conquest that the Victor did ride in His Chariot of triumph the vanquished captives of divers Nations led beside him When the Emperour came home he went up to the top of the Capitoll and there in publike view triumphed as he saith of Augustus Ille triumphata Capitolia ad alta Corintho victor aget currum This is the fulnesse of victory But here a Question ariseth Quest How doth this triumph on His Crosse stand with His humiliation For the first degree of His exaltation is made His resurrection He is said to triumph in regard He suffering Answ wrought that whence His after triumph ensued Secondly Christ who in His man-hood lay conquered and humbled under death the same Person in regard of His God-head was conquering and triumphing for though to faine the same nature in contrary taking is a contradiction as Schoole-men doe who will have the humane nature formally in the greatest felicity and greatest sufferings at one instant yet to affirme the same Person in divers regards humbled extreamely and yet triumphing is no contradiction because it is not understood secundum idem and in respect of the same but a diverse nature Which must be all our rejoycing Vse 1 with what acclamation doe subjects meet and welcome their Princes returning with victory Such should be our entertaining this
fasteth Quest and refrayneth some things and the other doe the same There is great difference in the antecedents Answ and manner of doing it and effect A Papist and naturall man conceiveth of lustings as rebelling to reason and hindering morall vertue and the free contemplation of mind not as sins but a thing indifferent capable of vertue or vice as obeyed or otherwise thus the Papists also after a manner But Gods children resist them as sinfull inclinations and whoorish lustings which hinder them in loving their God yea are enmity to him and fight against their soules They differ also in the ends which moove the one and the other to refraine Naturall men they doe it to vaunt themselves of more perfection then others have attayned to purchase themselves a naturall liberty of mind in such considerations as by Nature it reacheth Sometime for politique respects because hee is not counted fit for government who is subject to sensuall passion The Papist he doth it as a part of perfection as a thing in it selfe pleasing God as a point of merit with God But a good Christian hee doth refraine for the kingdome of heaven how not to deserve it by such course but that by this course done in faith he may subdue his lusts and kill them for it is their death not to be obeyed and that hee may have more freedome in Gods service For the manner of doing it the one doth it out of Nature sometime for as Christ saith of Eunuchs some are by nature so the same may be said of abstinence Some by Nature are averse from that liberty in dyet which others affect But all besides true Christians doe it out of their owne strength whereas a true believer he doth it by the spirit of GOD bewayling his weakenesse seeking to Christ for his strength to crucify these things to him and him to them 2 A Christian doth not absteyne for the thing simply prophaning that but from lust simply that he resisteth the thing so farre forth as his lust taketh occasion by that which is in it selfe good Now unbelievers looke not to inward lusts so much nor cry not downe them as they vilifie the things themselves desired Hence is a third difference the faithfull doe not make a set exercise upon stinted times onely to refraine or totally at once renounce the touching them but daily as they feele themselves tempted they resist eating with thankesgiving when they feele themselves not indangered by them Lastly they so refraine that they know their refraining it selfe doth not commend them to GOD for if not eating and drinking were in it selfe more holy than eating and drinking Iohn Baptist should have been more holy than CHRIST but as through the working of GOD's Spirit it is to them being weake a meane of their more firme cleaving to GOD. Now all other extoll the thing it selfe and rest in it as a matter of great perfection In the effect following they may be distinguished for the one have by their exercise greater confirmation of an externall morall habit the other true sanctification viz. death of sinne and life of grace promoted in them To teach us that we bee not beguiled Vse 1 nor yet have these externall exercises in admiration which such as know not the power of godlinesse abound in often yea we must be wise to distinguish things that differ for the Divell in his will play the Ape and imitate what GOD doth worke soundly in the hearts of His chosen This must provoke us to fight in right order against sensuall lusts Vse 2 Shall naturall men and others led in error be thus abstinent and in their fashion subdue their sensuall appetites and shall wee who have CHRIST with us our sanctifier lye downe as conquered of them Plato superstitious Popish wretches will condemne many Christians who feed their hearts in whatsoever they desire And so much for these words Now if you take the end of it sounding to the first sense Obs 1. That exercises much regarded with men Doct. are of no esteeme with GOD Circumcision nor uncircumcision are nothing much lesse meat eating or not eating commend not to GOD but a new creature many things great and glorious in the eyes of man are abominable before GOD which if the Papists considered they would not extol the rules of their Monkish orders the life of Anachorets nor yet cry downe with such base termes those that use their liberty in CHRIST as CHRIST and Abraham the Father of the faithfull have given them example 2 From the reason why they are in no price with GOD because they are occupied about the body the filling of it Doct. Observe therefore in generall that Bodily externall things are not of worth with GOD He is a Spirit worship in spirit and truth is His delight for a Synecdoche must here be marked one kinde put for the generall seeing there is the same disproportion in them to God the same in one that is in another even as in Nature like joyeth that which is like it So here GOD being a Spirit doth delight in that which is spirituall like Himselfe And as to a creature which liveth a pure sensible life reasonable delights are as nothing to it tell a horse a story never so pleasant it affects him not So to a pure spirituall nature sensible matters give no contentment In which the Papists had need to consider who follow GOD too too much with sensible things and thinke they take Him because they affect us FINIS LECTVRES PREACHED VPON THESE TEXTS OF SCRIPTVRE By Mr. PAUL BAYNE Esay Chap. 5. v. 12. Psal 50. v. 21 22 23. 1 Pet. Chap. 1. v. 17. Psal 119. v. 1. to v. 32. Luke Chap. 13. v. 24. 1 Pet. Chap. 4. v. 18. 2 Cor. Chap. 7. v. 1. Luke Chap. 2. v. 14. Philip. Chap. 2. v. 12 13. Hebr. Chap. 3. v. 13. 1 Tim. Chap. 2. v. 2. 2 Tim. Chap. 1. v. 9. 2 Tim. Chap. 1. v. 12 13 15 16.