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A17384 A commentary: or, sermons vpon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter vvherein method, sense, doctrine, and vse, is, with great variety of matter, profitably handled; and sundry heads of diuinity largely discussed. By Nicholas Byfield, late preacher of God's Word at Isle-worth in Middlesex. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653. 1623 (1623) STC 4211; ESTC S107078 497,216 958

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thus two things are implied for our information The one concerns Ministers the other concerns the hearers First Ministers may hence take notice of it that there can neuer bee hope they should perswade with all their hearers for sacrifices were heer and there once taken out of the whole herd And besides the hearers may hence see that they are neuer so effectually wrought vpon till they can giue themselues ouer to their Teachers and to GOD to obey in all things though they perswade them to leaue the world and binde them to the cords of restraint in many liberties they took to themselues before yea though they let their hearts blood by pearcing their soules with sorrow for their sins euen to the death of their sinnes 2. Cor. 8.5 and 7.15 Secondly at the day of Iudgement also Ministers shall offer vp their hearers to God so many of them as are found chaste virgins vnto Christ to whom they had espoused them before in this life 2. Cor. 11.3 And thus Ministers before they dy must make ready their accounts for the soules of their people Heb. 13.7 And thus of the sacrifices of Ministers Ministers haue another sacrifice too viz. the particular texts or portions of Scripture which they chuse out and diuide to the people as consecrated for their vse For diuers think that that phrase of cutting the Word of God aright is borrowed from the Priests manner of diuiding the sacrifices and especially from the Priests manner of cutting the little birds The little birds is his text chosen out of the rest and separated for a sacrifice which hee must so diuide as that the wings bee not cut asunder from the body that is he must so diuide his text that no part be separat from a meet respect of the whole Leu. 1.17 and 5.8 2. Tim. 1.15 Secondly the Martyrs likewise haue their sacrifices and that is a drink-offring to the Lord euen their owne bloud this part is readie to bee powred out as a drink offring to the Lord for the Church Phi. 2.17 2 Tim. 4.6 and though we cannot bee all Martyrs yet we should all deny our owne liues in the vowes of our hearts to perform our couenant with God if euer wee be called to die for Christs sake and the Gospel Thirdly the sacrifice of rich men is almes and wel-doing and those sacrifices they are bound vnto to offer them continually Heb. 13.16 Philip. 4.18 Prou. 3.9 Almes is as it were the first fruites of all our increase But then wee must remember that our almes bee of goods well gotten For else God hates robbery for burnt offering Isaiah 61.8 And in giuing wee must denie our selues and not seeke our owne praises or plenary merit in it for it is a sacrifice clean giuen away from vs and consecrated only to God and the vse of his spirituall house the Church And thus of the sacrifice proper to some Christians There are other sacrifices in the Gospel now that are common to all Christians And these are diuers For fi●st Christ is to bee offered vp daily to God as the propitiation for our sins God hath set him forth of purpose in the Gospel that so many as beleeue may daily run vnto him and in their prayers offer him vp to God as the reconciliation for al their sins and this is the continuall sacrifice of all Christians Without this there is the abomination of desolation in the temple of our hearts This is the end of all the ceremonious sacrifices the substance of those shadowes Those sacrifices serued but as rudiments to instruct men how to lay hold vpon Christ and to carry him into the presence of God and laying hands vpon his head to plead their interest in his death who was offered vp as a whole burnt sacrifice for their sinnes Wee are Christs and Christ is giuen vnto vs as our ransome wee must euery day then lay hold vpon him and see him bleed to death for our sinnes and bee consumed in the fire of Gods wrath for our sinnes Secondly a broken and contrite heart is a sacrifice God will not despise yea such hearts are the sacrifices God especially cals for from men Hee euer loued them better then all the outward sacrifices in the Law Psal. 51.17 It is the heart God cals for and yet not euery heart but a heart wounded with the knife of mortification that is cut and bleedeth in it selfe with godly sorrow for sinne and is broken and contrite with the daily confession of sinne This is required of all Christians and this very thing makes a great deale of difference between Christian and Christian Thirdly praier and thanksgiuing to God are Christian and holy Sacrifices as many scriptures shew Psal. 141.2 Heb. 13.15 Hos. 14.4 Psal. 51.21 Fourthly we must offer our selues our soules and bodies as a liuing sacrifice to God Rom. 12.2 2. Cor. 8.5 and that First in respect of obedience deuoting our selues vnto God liuing to him and wholy resolued to be at his appointment Psal. 40.6 Loe I come to doe thy will this is in stead of all burnt offerings Secondly in respect of willingnes to suffer affliction of what kind soeuer as resoluing that through many afflictions as through so many flames wee must ascend vp to heauen as the smoak of the incense or sacrifice on the Altar Acts 14.21 Hence are trials called fiery trials 1. Pet. 4.12 Thus of the kindes of sacrifices which remaine vnto Christians The lawes about those sacrifices follow For there bee many things to to be obserued by Christians in their sacrifices if they would euer haue them acceptable to God which the shadowes in the old law did euidently signify as First the sacrifice must bee without blemish Malach. 1.7 which the same Prophet expounds Malach. 3.11 Our offrings must be pure offerings wee must tender them in the sincerity of our hearts Our sacrifices are without fault when wee iudge our selues for the faultinesse of them and desire they might haue no fault Secondly it must bee presented before the Lord and consecrated to him which signified that we must walk in Gods presence and doe all in the sight of God deuoting all to his glory Genes 17.1 Mic. 6.8 Thirdly our sacrifices must bee daily some kindes of them There were sacrifices euery day in the Temple and it was an extreme desolation when the sacrifices ceased so it must bee our euery daies worke to imploy our selues in some of those spirituall sacrifices Heb. 13.15 Fourthly There must bee an Altar to consecrate the gifts Math. 23.19 This Altar is Christ who is the onely Altar of Christians Heb. 13.10 Reuel 8.3 No seruice can be acceptable to God but as the Apostle heere saith by Iesus Christ We must doe all in the name of Christ Col. 3.17 Fiftly there must bee fire to burne the sacrifice This fire is holy zeale and the power and feruencie of the spirit in doing good duties The fire on the Altar first
as intreat of the resurrection last Iudgement and the glory of heauen proue it Now for the other sort that confesse the life of the Soule after the last Iudgement but deny that the Soule liues after death till then there are diuers Scriptures against their opinion As First the former Scriptures The Soule cannot be killed at all Math. 10. And God was presently the God of Abraham as then liuing and for eternal life it is not said He shal haue but He hath eternall life that beleeueth Secondly Christ said to the theefe This day thou shalt be with me in Paradise not at the last day Thirdly Rom. 8.38 Death cannot separate vs from God in Christ as it would if the Soule were dead or a-sleepe and did not enioy God Fourthly the dead that die in the Lord are forthwith blessed Reuel 14.14 Fiftly the soules of Abraham and Lazarus were in ioy and aliue after death so was the soule of Diues in hell Sixtly Iohn saw vnder the Altar the soules of them that were slaine for the testimony of Iesus and they cried with a loud voice O Lord how long c. Reuel 6. Seuenthly the soules of the wicked die not but are kept in prison and are now in prison too 1. Pet. 3.19 Before I leaue this point of the immortalitie of the soule it is profitable briefly to answere certaine obiections which may bee brought out of some words in the Scriptures as Ob. 1. The Soule that sinneth shall die Ezeth 18. Therfore it seems the soule is mortall or at least for sin it must die and the rather because it was threatned in Paradise That day that thou eatest therof thou shalt die the death Sol. The Scriptures euidently shewe that since the fall and sinne yet the Soule doth not die as the places before alleaged proue But the answere is that this death threatned or inflicted is not the destruction of the being of the Soule but the depriuing of it of the grace and fauour and presence of God Ob. 2. Eccles. 3. It is said that there is one end of the man and of the beast As dieth the one so dieth the other Sol. These are not the words of Salomon but of the Epicure who is here as in other places of that booke brought in declaring his minde of things For Salomon himselfe concludeth euidently that the Soule returneth vnto God that gaue it as in the last Chapter The other obiections are the obiections of the dreamers that is of such as imagine that the Soule lieth a-sleepe till the day of Iudgement and perceiues nothing and is without operation which is to say it is dead seeing life is nothing else but the continuall motion and action of the Soule Ob. 1. It is said that man when he dies that he sleepeth as Christ said that Lazarus He sleepeth and Stephen slept in the Lord Iohn 11. Act ●7 Sol. Other Scriptures adde another word viz. in the graue or in the dust Iob 7.21 and Psalme 78. sleeping in their graues but it is euident that the Soule cannot sleepe in the graue but the body onely And Stephen deliuered his Spirit to Christ. Ob. 2. Paul saith that if the body rise not we are of all men most miserable That it seemes canno● be true if the Soule enioy blessednesse without the body Sol. The immortalitie of the Soule and the resurrection of the body are conioyned For the Soule without the body can be for euer because it is the forme of the body though God for the time do by his power and grace prouide for the Soule in glory yet it is not at full happinesse till it be ioyned to the body againe For without the body it hath no vse of vegetation or sences but onely of reason But for the Argument of the Apostle it holds good of that part of man which is in question which is the body of man For the bodies of Godly men are more miserable then other men kept vnder and exposed to many restraints and paines eyther by mortification or persecution which the bodies of wicked men are not exposed vnto Ob. 3. It is said of the spirit of Princes that it returneth to his Earth and in the day of death his thoughts perish So the Soule thinkes of nothing after death till the day of iudgement Sol. The place is corruptly alleaged two waies One in the Words the other in the Sence for the text doth not say That his Spirit returneth to his earth but thus his Spirit returneth viz. out of his body to God and he not it returneth to the earth viz. in respect of his body for the other these words his thoughts perish must not be vnderstood of his vnderstanding after death but of his proiects while hee liued For men are exhorted not to trust in Princes For they may die and then all their promises and proiects will bee of no vse and come to nothing Obiect 4. It is said that the dead cannot praise God Psal. 88. and 1 13. and 30. Sol. That the soules of the godly in heauen doe praise God is manifest Reuel 5.11 13.14 and 19.1 Now the Scriptures cannot bee contrary one to another and therefore the places in the Psalmes must not bee taken simply but onely in some respect The dead doe praise God but not as the li●ing did in their liues their praises cannot prouoke other men to beleeue in God or serue him as in this life they might Thus of the immortality of the soule The next thing to bee inquired after is about the originall of the soule and about this point in seueral ages diuers men haue breathed diuers and strange conceits erring because they knew not or regarded not the Scriptures First some conceiued so highly of the soule as to think it was no creature but vncreated and eternall without beginning but this must needes bee false 1. Because then the soule should bee God and infinite too For God onely is vncreated 2. Because then the soule had vnderstanding and thoughts and willed from eternity whereas till it was in our bodies it did not work and to imagine it should bee as a dead lump all that while is monstrously absurd Secondly others haue conceiued that when men die their soules goe into the bodies of other men that be borne and so our soules heeretofore were the soules of some men that bee dead This was the opinion of diuers of the Philosophers and it is apparant that diuers of the Iewes were infected with it for about Christ they said some that hee was Elias some that he was Ieremias and some one of the Prophets and some Iohn Baptist. Now they saw that his body was not theirs and therefore they thought that his soule was the soule of some of them Now this opinion cannot bee true 1. Because no Scripture giues any notice of it For in that place the conceit of the Iewes is told with dislike 2. Because the soules that were deliuered out of the miseries
men that they might know the things of God and therefore when a man cannot know the things of God it is a signe that he wants God's Spirit 1. Cor. 2.12 14. Fourthly because when God would of purpose plague a man with a speciall or horrible curse vpon his soul this is it to giue him vp to a sottish spirit Iohn 12.40 with Esay 6.10 Fiftly it may appeare by the effects of this sottishnesse when wee respect the sinnes it breedes or the punishment it brings vpon the ignorant persons for sinne It is certaine that ignorance is the mother of vice and corruption an ignorant person may quickly make himselfe guilty of a world of sins yea there is no sinne so grossely absurd or abominable but this kinde of men may commit it and without sense or care too The Prophet Isaiah opens the dotage of Idolaters and shewes the roote of it to bee their blockish ignorance Esay 44.18 20. As ignorant persons may be made wilfull Idolaters and that easily so may they be whoremongers Prou. 7.22 drunkards c. yea they would at sometimes kill Christ himselfe if he come in their way Luke 23.34 We see into what sinnes ignorant persons fall into such as whoredome Sodomitry buggery stealing murther drunkennesse swearing and yet see not their danger but like bruite beasts are senslesse and for the offences in respect of punishment they are fearefull whether wee respect this life or another world In this life their ignorance depriues them of the sight of all those things that haue true glory or comfort in them To liue in ignorance is worse for the wicked then it is for the body to liue in a dungeon besides all their best workes are lost all they doe is abominable Hosh. 6.7 Psalme 14.1 2. and it is in vaine to pleade their good mindes and meanings For without knowledge the minde is not good Prouerbs 19.2 and if they were neuer so zealous yet they lose their labour Rom. 10.2 and further this sottishnesse brings many a curse vpon men yea when it is generall it brings fearefull publique Plagues Esay 1.3 c. and 5.13 Hosh. 4.1 2. and which is worst of all after all the miseries of this life they must go down to hell they are vtterly vndone for euer this is the place of all them that know not God Iob 18. vlt. and Hosh. 4.6 Vses The vse may be First for to shew the lamentable estate of multitudes of Christians that frequent our assemblies and yet are still extreme ●ots in regard of spirituall things They sauor nothing but the things of the flesh and rellish nothing but what flowes from fleshly wisedome Aske the Labourer of his worke or the Artificer of matters of trade or the Husband-man of the fruits of the ground or the Gentleman of his pleasures or the newes of the World or the Scholler of humane learning and you shall haue an answere many times to admiration But aske of Heauen and heauenly things except a fewe generall sayings they can say nothing but froth or error they are as blockish as if they had neuer heard of the Gospell How many Masters are there in Israel and yet know not the things that concerne sound regeneration and a true sanctified life Dauid calls himselfe a beast in respect of the remainders of ignorance in some things being excellently qualified with true knowledge Oh how brutish then must these persons account themselues to bee What heart can stand before the serious thoughts of the damnation of multitudes that now sit with vs in the House of God euen for this very sin of ignorance Hosh. 4.6 And the more lamentable is it to obserue the vnspeakeable auersenesse that is in man that of all sorts though they be warned yet some will on stil and dy without wisdom Iob 4.20 and which is yet more in places where men haue the meanes plentifully yet what number doth the God of this world keepe in blindnesse so as they liue and die very sots euen in those places where they haue had line vpon line and precept vpon precept and yet the people no more instructed then the childe new weaned from the brest Esay 28.9 Yea the more fearefull is the estate of diuers that they doe not onely want knowledge but they reiect it and blaspheme it as if it were not onely vnnecessary but hatefull they loue darkenesse more then light and therefore their damnation sleepeth not Ioh. 3.19 Iob. 21.14 But on the other side so many as haue their harts touched from God let them bee warned to auoid ignorance as they would auoid the death of their soules let it bee hatefull to them to bee babies in vnderstanding 1. Cor. 14.20 Eph. 5.16 and learn of Salomon aboue all things to get vnderstanding Prou. 4.7 and to that end to pray with Dauid That God would giue him vnderstanding that he might liue Psal. 119.144 and when men haue the light they should walk in the light and when God giues the instructions they should take heed that they be not as the horse or mule to learn nothing but what they are forced vnto but rather with all diligence and readinesse to wait daily at the gates of wisdom Psal. 32.8 9. But if men bee still senselesse and wilfull then I say to them as the Apostle said if the hatefulnesse of their ignorance will not appeare Let him that is ignorant be ignorant still 1. Cor. 14.38 Doct. 4. It may bee likewise noted that in the language of God vnregenerate men are fooles or rather mad-men men without mindes Rom. 1.3 Tit. 3.3 And that this point may be more cleare I would consider of the signes of a spirituall mad-man or foole and that this point also may bee cleared you must remember there are two sorts of men are said litterally to bee without mindes the one is naturall fooles and their disease is called moria the other is furious mad-men and their disease is called mania both suffer alienation of minde they want their mindes or the right vse of them and so there are two sorts of men which spiritually want mindes some are resembled by fooles and some by mad-men A spirituall foole may bee known especially by two signes First by his mindlesnesse hee hath no thoughts nor words about the Kingdome of heauen hee is altogether carelesse and sencelesse hee sits still without any regard of it as some children that are mopish and heed nothing or some that are sicke of a kinde of a melancholy that will neither speake nor eate these lose time and will not buy it Eph. 5.16 Secondly by his sottishnesse this sort differs from the former for these will talk and bee doing and many times very busie but it is without any spirituall sense or discerning their words and workes are all idle and sottish and crosse to the Word of God and these are discouered by diuers signes diuersly as First the Wisdome of God seemes foolishnesse to them let heauenly things
suffring But committed himself to him that iudgeth righteously From these words diuers things may bee obserued Doct. 1. First that in case of wrongs from other men it is not alwaies needfull or conuenient to complain to the Magistrate for redresse Christ heer commits his cause to God but complaineth not nay though hee were wronged almost continually and with grieuous wrongs yet we read not that euer he complained against them that did him wrong Heer two things are to be enquired after First in what cases it is not fit to complaine to men Secondly in what cases it may bee lawfull and fitte In these cases following it is not fit to complain to the Magistrate First where redresse of the wrongs may be had by priuate and peacefull courses 1. Cor. 6. Secondly where the lawes of men doo not prouide punishment some wrongs are offenses and yet not punishable by mens lawes Thirdly where the offense is committed of meere frailty or ignorance Fourthly where the offense is grounded vpon meer surmises which in the iudgement of charity ought not to be conceiued .1 Cor. 13. Fiftly where the iniury is lesse and the party trespassing doth acknowledge the wrong in this case the rule of Christ holds If thy brother say It repenteth me thou must forgiue him Luke 17.4 Sixtly where by the suite Religion wil receiue greater dammage by the scandall then the party suffers by the wrong as in the case of the Corinthians where a brother went to law with a brother before Iudges that were Infidels Seuenthly where the Magistrates haue declared themselues to bee enemies to iustice and iust men as heer in the case of Christ it was bootlesse to complain because all the Rulers were his professed enemies Contrariwise in these and such like cases following men may lawfully seek iustice from men in authority First where the offense is grieuous and against the Lawes of God and men Secondly where the offender persists in euill-doing without repentance Thirdly where the offense is against God and Religion as well as against the party wronged Fourthly where such wrongs are vsually punishable Fiftly where the party complaining is bound to complain by his office either by charge or oath prouided that the party complaining first loue his enemies and secondly prosecute with continuall respect to God's glory and thirdly vse the benefit of the Law with charity and mercy without cruelty or extremity Thus of the first doctrine Doct. 2. The malice of wicked men against the godly is so great that when they begin to oppose them though it be but in their name they will neuer cease opposition if they haue power till they haue their liues too Thus I gather from hence that our Sauiour beeing reuiled doth not onely commit his cause to God but commits himself to God as expecting the increase of their oppositions till they haue put him to death This is the reason why God indites euery man that hates his brother of murder 1. Iohn 3.15 And Dauid so often complaines of his enemies that slandred him that they also sought his life yea his soule as if they were desirous not onely to kill his body but damne his soule also Doct. 3. Wee may heer also note that God is to be conceiued of according to the occasion seeing we cannot comprehend God wholly as he is wee ought to raise vp such conceptions in our hearts of the glory of God as may with honour answer the occasion that presently concernes vs as heer in the case of wrongs God is conceiued as a righteous Iudge In the case of death hee is called The God of the spirits of all flesh In the case of prayer he is called a God that delighteth to hear prayer in the case of infirmities a God that takes away iniquity and passeth by transgression and in cases of great difficulty he is conceiued of as Almighty and so forth Doct. 4. It is euident from hence that God is a Iudge and this point is both terrible to the wicked and comfortable to the godly It is terrible to the wicked many waies First because he is Iudge of all the world all must be iudged by him Gen. 18.25 Heb. 12.23 1. Sam. 2.10 Hee is not a Iudge of some one circuit as Iudges amongst men are Secondly because he is a Iudge that needs no euidence bee brought-in for hee knowes all causes and is witnes himself Ier. 29.23 and so Iudges among men are not Thirdly because hee iudgeth for all offenses he tries the hearts and the reines as well as the words and works of men Psalm 7.9 11. Earthly Iudges try malefactors but in one or some few cases Fourthly because hee hath Armies of Executioners he can call to the heauens or speak to the earth and haue hostes of seruants to doo his will and execute his iudgements Daniel 7.9 10. Psalm 50.4 22. so as none can deliuer out of his hands Fiftly because hee is Iudge himself Psa. 50.6 and 75.8 He doth not do iustice by Deputies but will hear all cases himself Sixtly because his iudgement is the last and highest iudgement and therefore there lieth no appeale from it Seuenthly because he can bring men to iudgement without any warning hee standeth before the doore and often seizeth vpon the offender without seruing any Writ or giuing him any summons Iames 5.9 And therefore wicked men do very foolishly that ruffle heer in the world and lift vp their horns so high and speak with such a stiffe neck and walk on in their sinnes and iniuries so securely Psalm 75.5 6 7 8. Again if God bee Iudge it is comfortable to penitent sinners First because repentance will alter the iudgement if it be after the fact and before the Sentence euen in such offenses as deserue euerlasting death as appeareth in the case of Dauid and the Niniuites and is notified to the world Acts 17.31 Whereas earthly Iudges must proceed in their iudgement whether the parties bee penitent or no. Again it is the more comfortable that God is Iudge because all parties wronged or grieued may haue accesse to God and put vp their supplications at any time he is ready to be found and willing to heare which is seldome true of earthly Iudges Thirdly because godly men know their sentence already God hath acquitted them by his Word and by his Son and by his Spirit and therefore they need not feare his last iudgement Doct. 5. God will iudge righteously God's iudgement is a most righteous iudgement Psal. 9.8 Rom. 2.5 2. Tim. 4.8 He is the righteous Iudge by an excellency because there is no Iudge but misseth it some way onely God's iudgment is alwaies righteous and it must needes bee so for many reasons First because hee iudgeth the high as well as the low Iob 21.22 Secondly because his iudgement extendeth to euery offender in the world Iude 15. Earthly Iudges may punish some malefactors but they leaue thousands of men that
heare read or think of these sufferings of Christ they may rather see cause for euer to abhorre the doctrine of merit seeing heerby we proclaim our selues to bee worthy of the very merits of Christ that can be so little affected with the thought of his suffrings Thus of the matter of Christ's sufferings The effects follow and the effects in respect of vs are named to be three First the death of sin secondly the life of grace thirdly the healing of our natures That we being dead to sin Men may be said to die diuers waies First in respect of nature when the Frame of nature is dissolued by the parting of the soule from the body Secondly in respect of God when God is departed from men with his grace and righteousnes and fauour thus wicked men are spiritually dead Eph. 2.1 and 4.17 1. Tim. 5.6 Thirdly in respect of the world when a man is ouerwhelmed with crosses especially such as are ioyned with disgrace in his reputation hee is said to be dead and his life to be hid vnder those afflictions being despised and forgotten as a dead man out of minde Col. 3.3 Esay 26.19 Fourthly in respect of sinne and so men either are dead for sinne as malefactors or dead in sinne as all wicked men or dead to sinne as the godly heer To take the soule from the body is the death of all men To take GOD from the soule is the death of all wicked men To take sinne from the soule is the death of all godly men To bee dead to sinne then is to be mortified in respect of sinne Sinne is said to be dead either in appearance or in deed In appearance onely it is dead in such as haue their sinnes onely restrained for a time either by God's owne strong hand or else by themselues kept downe for certain hypocriticall ends or else for want of occasion or temptation to stir the sin thus sinne was dead in Paul when hee was vnregenerate and reuiued when the Law came Rom. 7.9 Sinne is dead in deed in godly men but with a difference for though in this life they bee wholly rid of many sinnes yet some corruptions are not wholly remoued yet are they dead to them in the inchoation of it their sins lie a-dying but in the life to-come they shall be wholly and fully deliuered from all sin Thus of the sense There be many doctrines may bee hence obserued as Doct. 1. First it is euidently heer implied that all men by nature and out of Christ are aliue to sin or liue to sin and in sinning they may bee said to liue or be aliue or liue to it in diuerse respects 1. Because all the parts of their life are full of sinne sinne infecteth their persons and their works 2. Because they are in bondage to sin so as all their life they are at the command of sin they are seruants of sin Rom. 6. 3. Because they account sinne to bee the life of their liues they could not esteem life but for the hope of liberty and power of sinning It were a death to them to liue restrained of sinne as appeares when either by punishment or for other ends they are found to cease sinning 4. Because they doo not destroy sinne in letting it liue they are guilty of the life of sinne in them because they will not vse the meanes to subdue and mortifie sin that dwels in them but let it alone vnresisted 5. Because they haue most life or are most liuely when they haue most liberty to sin 6. Because they continue in sin they spend not an houre but it is in sinne yea they so sinne now that they desire to spend euerlasting life in sinne Vse And so from hence by way of vse men may discern whether they liue in sinne or not for hee that is a seruant to his corruptions and esteemeth them as the happinesse of his life and resists them not and hath a desire to sinne euer is without doubt aliue in sinne and dead to righteousnes And so contrariwise where these things cannot be found there the person is not aliue to sin Doct. 2. Hence is implied also that to liue in sin is but miserable liuing and therefore those whom God loueth he changeth from that condition and maketh them die to sin Now this may be shewed out of other Scriptures briefly for 1. Sinne infects a man and all he goes about it stains his very conscience and like the leprosie will pollute his clothes his flesh his house and whatsoeuer he toucheth almost Titus 1.15 It maketh all things impure 2. To harbour sinne is to harbour the diuell too who alwaies takes possession of the soule that is giuen ouer to sinne so as the heart of the sinner is the Fortresse of the diuell Eph. 2.2 2. Tim. 2.26 2. Cor. 10.5 Eph. 4.26 3. While a man liues in sinne he is in danger to be crossed and cursed of God in euery thing he doth he shall haue no portion from God nor inheritance from the Almighty Iob 31. ver 2. Good things will be restrained from him Esay 59.2 And he may finde himself cursed in euery thing he sets his hand to Deut. 28.16 17 18 c. His very blessings may bee cursed Mal. 2.2 His very table may be a snare For certainly God will bee reuenged of the sinnefull man that is aliue in sin Nah. 1.2 3 6. 4. His soule is dead within him while hee is aliue Eph. 2.2 1. Tim. 5.6 And how can it bee otherwise when God which is his life is departed from him and with God all spirituall blessings are gone from his soule too 5. The end of this life is to die miserably Rom. 8.10 and 6.23 Gal. 6. and to perish foreuer with the diuell and his angels Reu. 21.8 Mat. 25.45 And in a speciall manner it is a miserable liuing to be liuely and iouiall as they call it in sin such men are worse than the generall sort of sinners for these wretched men that are so liuely in sin haue a most miserable heart in them a heart like an Adamant like a very stone within them are senselesse and brutish like the very beasts that perish Psal. 49. vlt. Besides in many of these God scourgeth sinne with sinne and giueth them vp to such a reprobate minde that their wickednes oftentimes exceeds the wickednes of the wicked Ier. 5. Rom. 1.26 28. And further many times strange punishments light vpon those workers of iniquity Iob 31.3 To which may bee added that oftentimes such wretched creatures conclude in most wofull and hellish terrors so as they howle for vexation of heart while God's seruants sing for ioy of hart Esay 65.13 14. Reu. 6.15 16. But in generall of all that liue in sinne it is manifestly heer implied that they haue no part in Christ Christ in respect of them and as they are in their present condition died in vain Vse The consideration whereof should awaken men from that
A COMMENTARY OR SERMONS VPON THE SECOND CHAPTER OF THE FIRST Epistle of Saint Peter WHEREIN METHOD Sense Doctrine and Vse is with great variety of matter profitably handled and sundry heads of Diuinity largely discussed By NICHOLAS BYFIELD late Preacher of God's Word at Isle-worth in Middlesex LONDON Printed by Humfrey Lownes for George Latham and are to be sould at his shop in Paul's Church-yard at the Signe of the brazen Serpent 1623. TO THE HONOVRABLE KNIGHT SIR HORATIO VERE Generall of the English forces in the Low-countries and to his most worthy Lady the Lady MARY VERE all happiness that a poor widow may in their behalfe pray for at the Throne of Grace My much-honoured Lord and Lady AS that speciall duty which I my self owe to you both so that purpose which my deare husband had while hee liued of dedicating to you this Commentary of his vpon S. Peters Epistle bindeth mee who am left his sole Executrix to see his Will euery way performed to set out this first of his workes published since his death vnder your Honourable Names It pleased you to take into your Family a childe of his body be further pleased I pray you to take into your Patronage this childe of his soule which as an Orphane yea as a Posthumus in all humility is presented vnto you You manifested more than ordinary kindnes to my husband while he liued wee and ours haue oft tasted of the sweetnes of your bounty so that I should deserue to be accounted most ingratefull if I should bury so many fauours in obliuion or neglect to prouoke others to loue and good works by proposall of your example Accept I beseech you this poore acknowledgement of thanks which is most due first to that primary Fountain of all goodnes Almighty God for keeping your Lordship safe in your late imployment in the Palatinate and for freeing your Ladiship from those fears wherunto you could not but be subiect by reason of his long absence and for giuing you both a mutuall and comfortable fruition one of another And next to your selues for all those kindnesses which while my husband liued you did to him and his and since his death you continue to do to such as he hath left behinde him Now the good God continue his blessed protection ouer you both and take all that belong vnto you vnder the wings of his fatherly Prouidence And so I rest with the renewall of my sute that you would cast your eyes vpon this Worke of him who much honoured you in his life-time and is after his decease offred to you by Your humble Oratrix ELIZABETH BYFIELD To the Christian Reader MAny and great are the means which the Lord hath beene pleased since this latter Spring of the Gospell begunne aboue an hundred yeeres agoe to afford vnto his Church for opening of the mysteries of the Gospell Neuer since the Apostles times were the Scriptures more truly interpreted more fully expounded more distinctly diuided or more powerfully pressed then in our Times The number of those who haue taken good paine in this kinde is not small Wee may well put into the Catalogue of them the Authour of this Commentary vpon the second Chapter of the first Epistle of S. Peter Master Nicholas Byfield by name who continued for the space of twenty yeeres to take more then ordinary paines in the work of the Lord. Hee had a singular gift in diuing into the depth of those points which he vndertooke to handle As the many other Treatises which in his life time he published doe verifie as much so in particular this Commentarie here commended vnto thee In it thou shalt find besides the Grammatical exposition Logical resolution and Theological obseruations many diuine points copiously handled by way of Common-place which hath made the booke to arise vnto that bignesse that it hath In this manner of handling the holy Scriptures hee hath not gone alone Many of the main Pillars of the reformed Churches haue beaten out a path before him as Martin Bucer Peter Martyr Musculus Zanchius Lauater Perkins and sundry others The large volume of Peter Martyrs Common-places was gathered out of his Commentaries on the holy Scriptures The Church of God hath reaped much good by such copious and distinct handling of heads of Diuinity Their labours therefore who take paines therein are not to bee concealed from the Church If it had pleased the Lord to haue continued the life liberty and ability of this his Seruant longer vnto his Church he had questionlesse gon on further in this course which hee so well began and so might wee haue had by his paines as compleat a Commentarie on the two Epistles of Saint Peter as we haue vpon the Epistle of Saint Paul to the Colossians published by this Author In his life-time he entred vpon the third Chapter and went thorow a good part thereof all which is fairely copied out and prepared for the presse But there is so much matter in that which remaineth as it will make a competent Treatise by it selfe This I make knowne not that thou shouldst let this Book alone till the other be published for when it is published it cannot bee bound vp with this in one volume by reason of the bignes of both of them As care hath been had to print this Commentary on the second Chapter euery way answerable to the former on the first Chapter so like care shall be had of printing that which remains answerable to them both that so you may haue all the labors of this faithfull and painfull Minister of Gods Word on this part of Scripture in three euen volumes which is in a manner as good as if they were all in one volume They may for their matter be well distinguished into seueral volumes for though one continued Scripture be handled in them all yet the points in euery of them are different In this respect there is an Alphabeticall Index in the latter end that by the help of it you may the more readily finde out such points as you most desire to reade If the Author bee of force to commend a Work the more this Work may receiue no small commendation from the Author of it for hee was a man of a profound iudgement strong memory sharp wit quick inuention and vnwearied industry He was in his Ministery very powerful and that vnto all turns as we speak When he had to doo with tender and troubled consciences he was a Barnabas a sonne of comfort but when hee had to doo with impudent and obstinate sinners hee could make his face hard and strong and shew himself like to Boanerges the sonnes of thunder Graue sober and temperate he was in his carriage and yet with his intire familiar friend he could be modestly pleasant God gaue him a great measure of patience and hee had in his very body that which tried his patience for it appears that he carried a torturing stone in his bladder fifteen
yeers together and vpward I haue heard it credibly reported that fifteen yeers before his death he was by a skilfull Chirurgion searched and that vpon that search there was a stone found to bee in his bladder whereupon hee vsed such meanes as were prescribed to him for his ease and found such help thereby as he thought that either the Chirurgion which searcht him was deceiued or that the meanes which hee vsed had dissolued the stone But time which manifesteth all things shewed that neither his Chirurgion was deceiued nor yet his stone dissolued for it continued to growe bigger and bigger till at length it came to bee of an incredible greatnes After his death hee was opened and the stone taken out and being weighed found to be 33 ounces and more in waight and in measure about the edge fifteen inches and a halfe about the length aboue 13 inches about the breadth almost thirteen inches it was of a solid substance to look vpon like to a flint There are many eie-witnesses besides my self who can iustifie the truth heerof A wonderfull work of God it was that he should bee able to carry such a stone in his bladder and withall to doo the things which he did He was a close Student witnes the many Treatises which time after time he published in print He was also a diligent Preacher for constantly hee preached twice on the Lords Daies and in Summer when many of the Gentry and City came to his Parish at Isle-worth and dwelt there he spent an houre on Wednesday and another on Friday week after week in expounding the Scripture in his Church very seldome was he hindred by the forementioned stone in his bladder This course he kept till about fiue weeks before his death when the paine came so violently vpon him as it wasted his vitall vigor yet did it no way weaken his faith but as the outward perished so was the inward man renewed in him He earnestly praid that the extremity of the pain might not make him vtter or doo any thing vnbeseeming his vocation and profession but withall he aduised his friends to consider that he was but as other men and thereupon to iudge charitably of his carriage in that case Many heauenly meditations issued from him in that time of his visitation vnto the last period thereof Quietly meekly and patiently he endured till that surest Chirurgion of all Death had eased him of all his pain In his soule he euer liueth and in his name he will continue to liue so long as the Church enioyeth his Works more lasting than Marble Monuments Now O blessed Sauiour and Head of thy Church as thou transplantest some of thy Plants out of thy Nurcery the Church militant plant others wee beseech thee in their rooms that thy Church may neuer be vnfurnished of able painfull faithfull and powerfull Ministers WILLIAM GOVGE AN EXPOSITION of the Second Chapter of the first Epistle generall of PETER 1. Pet. 2.1.2.3 1. Wherfore laying aside all maliciousnes and all guile and dissimulation and enuy and euill speakings 2. As new borne Babes desire the sincere milke of the word that ye may growe thereby 3. If so be ye haue tasted that the Lord is bountifull FRom the thirteenth verse of the 1. Chapt. to the eightth verse of the third chapter is contained matter of exhortation and the exhortation is either generall or speciall The generall exhortatiō concernes all men Chap. 1.13 to Chap. 2 13 The speciall exhortation concernes onely some men as subiects seruants wiues husbands from chap. 2.13 to chap. 3.8 The generall exhortation stands of two parts first the one concernes the matter of holiness secondly and the other the meanes of holiness Of the matter of holiness in the later part of the former chapter In these wordes and those that follow to the thirteenth verse is contained an exhortation to the right vse of the meanes by which wee might growe vp in all holiness and acceptation with God In the exhortation two things must be distinguished first the substance of the exhortation secondly the conclusion of it The substance is contained from verse the first to the eleuenth the conclusion in the eleuenth and twelfth verse For the first there are two things in which if wee be rightly ordered it cannot bee but wee must grow wonderfully in grace and holiness first The one is the word secondly The other is Christ. To a right order of ourselues in respect of the word he exhorts verses 1.2.3 To a right order of our selues in respect of Christ hee exhortes verse 4. to 11. The part of the exhortation that concernes the word hath three things First what wee must auoid we must lay aside Malice Guile Hipocrisie c. secondly what we must doe wee must desire the word as the child doth the brest thirdly Why so where diuers reasons are imported First wee are babes Secondly we are but as new born babes Thirdly the word is sincere milke Fourthly it will make vs growe fiftly haue wee not already tasted of the sweetnes of it verse the third That part of the the exhortation that concerns Christ hath likewise three things in it which I will heer but touch First what we must do verse 4. Secondly how wee must doe it verse 5. Thirdly why so viz. for two reasons First the one taken from the testimonie of Scripture which is alledged verse the sixt and expounded verse 7.8 Secondly the other taken from the con●iderati-of our prerogatiues we inioy in Christ which are set down first positiuely verse 9. Secondly and comparatiuely verse 10. And this is the breef order of the whole first part of this chapter The first thing then in the exhortation is about the word and therein the first thing is about the things which must be auoided if we would profit by the word of which in the first verse THere are fiue things we should lay aside and be sure wee be free from when wee come into gods presence to heare his word or to bee exercised in it viz. Malice Guile Hypocrisie Enuy and euill speaking Two things distinctly must bee considered in verse first the sinnes to be auoided viz. those fiue before named Secondly the manner of auoiding them imported in the metaphoricall tearme laying aside In generall diuerse things may be noted First that it is exceeding profitable to gather speciall catalogues of our sins which we should auoid to single out such sinnes as we would specially striue against and doo more specially hurt vs and hinder good things from vs I mean not of all sinnes so much as of special certain choice euils that yet remain in greatest force in vs. We may obserue a great wisdome of the holy Ghost in many places of Scripture drawing such catalogues according to the state of the people to whom they are giuen and so it were of excellent vse if we did gather catalogues of the duties which specially concern vs or of
cause why Christ was no better rellished by them and why they found such an ill taste in the word of Christ it ●as the wickednes that was in them Sinne had marred their tastes sweet meates haue but an ill rellish with those who haue corrupt and diseased stomacks and the cause is apparant the ill humors in their stomacks and nothing in the meates they eate But of their disobedience before and therefore this shall suffice in this place and thus of the cause in themselues The cause in God followes Whereunto they were appointed There is much difference of the reading of the originall words in the translations Some read thus They stumble at the Word beleeue not in him in whome they are placed or set and expound it thus In whom they liue moue and haue their being some read in stead of disobedient They beleeued not But for these words read them as heer But then their meaning is that the Iewes beleeued not though they were thereunto appointed that is though they had the promise of saluation and were a people separate thereunto and so it is an aggrauation of their vnbeliefe This sence and reading is not to bee despised But I take it as I finde it in the translation and so the sence is that these men whether Iewes or Gentiles that are heere spoken of were appointed to this misery by the decree of God and so they are words that expresse the substance of that part of Gods decree which Diuines call Reprobation And so it is to bee obserued from hence that wicked men are appointed from euerlasting to the enduring of the miserie which are inflicted vpō them in this life or in Hell This is a doctrine which is extremely distasted by flesh and blood and proues many times more offensiue to the common people and is alwaies to bee reckned as strong meat and therefore that I may fairely get off this point I offer two things to your considerations First the proofes that plainely auouch so much as is heere obserued Secondly I will set downe certaine infallible obseruations which tend to quiet mens mindes and perswade them against the seeming difficulty or absurdity of this truth For the first the Apostle Iude saith that the wicked men he treateth of were of old ordained to this condemnation Iude 4. and the Apostle Peter saith that the vngodly were reserued vnto the day of Iudgement to be punished 2. Pet. 2.9 and verse 12. he saith that they are naturall brute beasts made to bee taken and destroied and it is manifestly implied 1. Thes. 5.8 that God hath ordained wicked men to wrath so Rom. 9.22 For the second though this doctrine seeme wonderfull hard yet to assure vs there is no hard dealing at all in God there bee many things may confirme vs and ease our mindes though for the present wee cannot vnderstand how this should be and perhaps are much troubled about this point and therefore seriously consider First for thy selfe that if thou haue truely repented and doe beleeue in Iesus Christ and hast in thee the signes of a child of God for thy part thou art free from this danger and out of all question art in safe estate and therefore oughtest not to greeue but reioyce with singular praise to God Secondly seeing God hath comforted vs with many doctrines and trusted vs with many cleere points of knowledge can wee not bee contented that God should speak darkly to vs in one point Especially when wee are told before-hand that there is an Abyssus a depth yea many depths in this doctrine Shall we bee wayward because one truth will not sinke yet into our heads Wee are told that this is a point vnsearcheable Rom. 11.32 33. and the rather because weake Christians are not tied to eate strong meat they may safely let this doctrine alone Thirdly that no man can know his owne reprobation nor ought to beleeue so of himselfe but is called vpon to vse the meanes by which he may bee saued Fourthly wee haue this oath of God for it That he desires not the death of the sinner but would haue all men to repent and bee saued Fiftly that whereas Diuines make two parts of the decree of reprobation Praeterition and Praedamnation All Diuines are agreed for the latter that God did neuer determine to damne any man for his owne pleasure but the cause of his perdition was his owne sinne And heere is reason for it For God may to shew his soueraignty annihilate his creature but to appoint a reasonable creature to an estate of endles paine without respect of his desert cannot agree to the vnspotted Iustice of God And for the other part of passing ouer and forsaking a great part of men for the glory of his Iustice the exactest Diuines doe not attribute that to the meer will of God but hold that God did first look vpon those men as sinners at least in the generall corruption brought in by the Fall For all men haue sinned in Adam and are guilty of high treason against God Sixtly that sinne is no effect of reprobation but onely a consequent Gods decree doth not force any man to sinne c. Seuenthly that what soeuer God hath decreed yet all grant that God is no way any Author of sin he doth not cause sin in any but onely permits it and endureth it and whereas the most that can bee obiected is that God hardneth whom hee will Rom. 9. it is agreed vpon in the answer of all sound Diuines that God doth not infuse any wickednes from without in mens hearts but whereas their hearts are in themselues by custome in sinne hardned as a iust Iudge hee giues them ouer to Satan and his power who is as it were the Iayler but doth neuer restraine them from good and the meanes of it Eightthly now may men say that ●●nne came vpon men by reason of the rigour of Gods Law For it was impossible to bee kept For this there is a cleere answer When God gaue his Law at first man was able to keep it and it came by his owne default that hee was not able to keepe it afterwards A man that sends his seruant to the market and giues him charge to doe such and such busines for him if that seruant make himselfe drunken and so bee vnfit to doe his masters busines hee is worthy to bee punished because hee was fit to doe it when hee was first sent about it Ninthly it is plain in this verse that those men of whom he heer speaks are indited of grieuous sin against Christ and the Gospell Tenthly that things may be iust though the reasons of them doo not appear vnto vs if it bee true of some cases of iustice among men much more in this case of God's iustice Lastly it should much satisfie vs that in the day of Iesus Christ those mysteries of Religion shall be broken open and all then shall bee made cleer vnto vs as cleer as
to answer or obey reiect the counsell of God harden their hearts and are therefore extremely miserable for First they iudge themselues vnworthy of euerlasting life Acts 13.46 Secondly they are in danger to bee left and forsaken of God and haue the meanes taken from them Iohn 12.39 Thirdly God will prouoke them many times to ielousie by calling a people to himselfe whom they account foolish Rom. 10.19 especially when they haue rebelled against the means Ezech. 3.6 7. Fourthly God will laugh at the calamity of such men Prou. 1.26 Fiftly and they may bee taken away with sudden destruction Prou. 1.17 Sixtly if they call to God it may be hee will not answer heereafter Prou. 1.28 29 30. Seuenthly if they liue in prosperity that shall destroy them Prou. 1.31 Eightly the dust of the feet of Gods seruants shall witnesse against them in the day of Christ and then they shall bee fearefully punished Now there are another sort of wicked men that are called externally and in some respect internally too and yet are not right such as haue temporary grace doe obey their calling after a sort and for a time for they assent vnto a part of the Word of God which they receiue with ioy and this is called a taste of the good word of God they may also bee perswaded to leaue diuers sinnes as Herod was and may bee indued with diuers graces of the spirit which they had not before Heb. 6.4 5. Now this calling yet is not that effectuall inward calling which is in Gods Elect. For they receiue not the promise of grace in Christ to them in particular to rely vpon it nor are they perswaded to for sake all sinne nor haue they any one sauing grace which is in the godly Now these men are miserable because they are not truly called and the more first because they were neere the Kingdome of God and yet want it secondly because they will bee the hardlier drawne to see their miseries Harlots and Publicanes may enter into the Kingdome of heauen before them Hitherto of our calling and so of the positiue descriptiō of the happines of a Christian the cōparatiue followes in the last words of this verse the whole 10. v. where the Apostle intends to shew thē their happines now in Christ in cōparison of that miserable estate they liued in before so that hee compares the estate of a Christian in grace with the estate of a Christian in nature and this he doth first in metaphoricall termes in the end of this verse and then in plaine words verse 10. In this verse hee compares their misery to darknes and their happines to maruellous light Out of darknes From the generall consideration of all the words two things may bee obserued First that it is profitable euen for godly men to bee put in minde of the misery they were in by nature For the consideration heereof may 1. Keepe them humble to remember how vile they haue beene 2. Quicken them to the reformation of the sinne that yet hangs vpon them Col. 3.5 6 7 8. 3. Work compassion in them towards others that lye yet in their sins and teach them to deale meekely with them Tit. 3.2 3. 4. Make them more watchfull to look on a nature which hath beene so vile 5. Quicken them to redeem the time they haue spent in the seruice of sinne 1. Pet. 4.3 6. It should set the greater price vpon our happines in Christ and so is the consideration vsed heere Secondly that a mind that is truly cured of sinne can easily beare the remembrance of it as it is past A man that hath beene wounded in his arme will endure you to gripe him when hee is well healed A signe he is not well healed when hee cannot bee touched so is it with sinners Thus in Generall The first thing then to be considered of is the misery of men by nature expressed in the word darknes Darknesse The darknes that is in the world is not all of a sort For there is first darknes vpon the earth which is nothing but the absence of the light of the Sunne Secondly there is darknes vpon the outward estates of men in the world and that is the darknes of affliction Now afflictions are called darknes in diuers respects As first in respect of the cause when they fall vpon men by the anger of God The want of the light of Gods countenance is miserable darknes the absence of the Sunne cannot make a worse darknes Secondly in respect of the effects because afflictions darken the outward glory of mans estate and withall breed sorrow and anguish and the clouds and storms of discomfort and grief and for the time depriue the heart of lightsomnesse and ioy Of both these respects may the words of the Prophet Esay be vnderstood Esay 5.30 and 8.22 And so God creates darknes as a punishment vpon all occasions for sinne Esay 45.7 Afflictions may bee compared to darknes in respect of another effect and that is the amazement bred in the heart by which the afflicted is vnable to see a way out of distresse and vnresolued either how to take it or what means to vse for deliuerance Thus it is a curse vpon wicked men that their waies are made dark Psal. 35.6 Thirdly afflictions are called darknes when they are secret and hidden and fal vpon men at vnawares when they are not dreamed of Iob 20.26 And thus of darknes vpon mens estates Thirdly there is a darknes falls vpon the bodies and so it is either blindnes wanting the light of the Sun or else it is death and the graue Death and the graue is called darknes Iob 17.13 and 10.21 22. Psal. 88.13 Fourthly there is a darknes vpon the soules of men and that is spirituall blindnes when the soule liues without the knowledge of God and Iesus Christ especially As it respecteth the will of God in generall it is the darknes of ignorance and errour and as it respecteth the promise of grace in Iesus Christ it is the darknes of vnbelief Eph. 4. Lastly there is a darknes shall light vpon both soules and bodies of wicked men in hell and that is called vtter darknes Mat. 8.12 and 22.15 So that darknes as it comprehends in it the misery of wicked men is either temporall darknes vpon the estates or bodies of men or spiritual darknes vpon the soules of men or else eternall darknes in hell This darknes also may be considered in the degrees of it For besides the ordinary darknesse there is first obscure darknes called also the power of darknes and such was the darknesse of Gentilisme and such is that darknes threatned to such as curse father and mother Pro. 21.20 so was the darknes Ier. 2.1 2. and that our Sauiour Christ speaketh of Luke 22.53 Such also was that night brought vpon the Diuiners Mic. 3.6 7. Secondly there is vtter darknes or eternall darknes in hell which is the highest
declared himself that hee will not shew mercy or pity towards diuers sorts of offenders Thirdly that the things men vsually obiect will not be auailable to deliuer them from Gods wrath Fourthly what sorts of men in particular God will not be mercifull vnto For the first that men are apt to plead God's mercy when it belongs not to them is apparant through the whole course of Scriptures to haue euer been in the disposition of most wicked men they blesse themselues in their hearts when their iniquity is found worthy to be hated Psal. 36.2 They liue at ease and put far away the euill day from them Amos 6.1 3. They cry Peace peace when sudden destruction is made to come vpon them 1. Thes. 5.3 For the second that God will not bee mercifull to many a man that liues in the visible Church is manifested by many Scriptures as Deut. 29.19 Ier. 16.5 Ezech. 5.11 and 7.4 9. and 8.18 Hosh. 1.6 and 2.4 and in many other places For the third their excuses and pretenses are all vain for 1. If they stand vpon their greatnes in the world it is certain that riches will not auaile in the day of wrath Iob 36.18 19 c. 2. Nor will it help them to be born of godly Ancestors for rather than God will bee tied to the wicked seed of Abraham hee will raise vp children of the stones to Abraham Mat. 3. 3. Nor can multitude priuiledge them For though hand ioin in hand yet sin shall not go vnpunished and God turns nations of men into hell Psalm 9.17 4. Nor will their outward seruing of God serue their turn It is bootlesse to cry The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord if men redresse not their waies Ier. 7.4 8 9 10. 5. Nor wil it help them that some Ministers speak comfortably to them and by their preaching they may expect mercy for GOD will iudge those Prophets that strengthen the hands of the wicked The stubborn people were neuer a whit the safer when the Prophet told them they should haue peace and no euil should come vnto them but the Lord protesteth that the whirl-wind of his fury should fall grieuously vpon the head of the wicked for all that Ier. 23.15 19 20. that at length they should consider it perfectly and the Lord threatneth that he will rent the wall of security which the Prophets haue built with vntempered morter that he will rent it euen with the fierce winde of his furie and there shall be an ouerflowing showre in his anger to consume it Ezech. 13.10 to 15. 6. Neither may the patience of God proue that he meanes to shew expected mercy for though a sinner prolong his daies an hundred times yet it shall not be well with the wicked nor ought he to settle his heart the more freely on his sinne because sometimes it is not speedily executed for God will finde a time to set his sinnes in order before him and then he may teare him in peeces and none can deliuer him Eccles. 8.11 12 13. Psal. 50.19 7. Neither will it ease them that there are so many promises of mercy in Scripture For they are limited and besides in diuers places where mercy is promised the Lord explains himselfe by shewing that he will not cheere the wicked Ex. 34.7 as was alleaged before so Nahum 1.3 and v. 7. compared with the 6. 8. Neither will their Baptisme helpe them for neither Circumcision nor vn-circumcision auaileth any thing but a new Creature Gal. 6. Ob. If any say But though they be not now vnder mercy yet hereafter they may bee vpon Repentance Ans. I answere that in this they say truely but yet not safely For many men that haue promised themselues the late Repentance and mercy haue died in their sins before they could euer repent And thy times are in Gods hands thou knowest not when nor how thou shalt die and therefore the surest way is Now to turne to God with all thy heart as they were counselled more at large Ioel 2.12 13. Now for the fourth it may awake some sort of offenders the more effectually that besides the generall threatnings against wicked men they in particular are assured that they are not vnder mercy As first such as shew no mercy to men Iam. 2.13 and such as transgresse of malicious wickednesse Psal. 59.6 and such as are people of no vnderstanding Esay 7.11 and such as walk after the imaginations of their owne wicked hearts and will not harken vnto God Ierem. 16.5 10 12. and such as blesse themselues in their heart when they heare the curses of the Lawes Deut. 29.19 and such as steale murther commit adultery and sweare falsely Ier. 7.9 and many other particulars Catalogues might be instanced in all the seuerall Scriptures the Prophet Malachy puts in such as deale corruptly in tything and offring Malach. 1.8 9. To conclude the counsell of the Prophet Ieremy is excellent in this case who most effectually speakes thus Heare yee giue eare bee not proud for the Lord hath spoken Giue glory to the Lord your God before hee cause darknes and before your feet stumble vpon the dark mountaines and while yee look for light hee turne it into the shadow of death and make it grosse darknes But if you will not heare my soule shal weep in secret for your pride and mine eye runne downe with teares Ierem. 13.15 16. Vse 2. Secondly the consideration of this doctrine may iustify the practice of godly Ministers that denounce the iudgements of God vpon their hearers that liue in sinne without repentance It is their duty to shewe them that they are not vnder mercy they are required to cry aloud and to shew Gods people their sinnes Esay 58.1 And the Prophets that cried peace peace are extremely threatened of God so as for not warning the people the blood of their soules is required of the Prophets Ezech. 33. verse 2. to 10. Vse 3. The third vse may bee therefore for the singular humiliation of wicked men that liue in the assemblies of Christians Though they haue obtained a place in Gods Church yet they haue not obtained mercy but liue vnder the fearefull displeasure of God and this is the more terrible if they consider three things First that this is the case of multitudes of men in the Church but a remnant are vnder mercy which will appeare more distinctly if you draw out of our assemblies such as in Scripture are expresly said not to bee vnder mercy as 1. Take all such as yet liue in their naturall Atheisme that mind not God nor Religion that onely care for earthly things and shew it by a constant either neglect or contempt of the publike assemblies of Christians amongst vs These cannot obtaine mercie because they refuse to heare Gods voyce and to seeke to the ordinary meanes of mercie Isaiah 50.1 2. Heb. 3.7 2. Draw out then secret offenders such as sinne in the dark and say Who seeth vs
is not the life of man That is apparant in scripture when a difference is put betwene the soule and life as what soule shall be blessed in life So 2 Sam. 11.11 By thy life and the life of thy soule The soule then is a substance of it self put within vs by God distinct from the body this may bee euidently proued First God after hee had made the body is said to breath into it the breath of liues to note that his soule was a substance distinct of it selfe Secondly because it can subsist without the body as is apparant in the soule of Abraham Lazarus and Diues Luke 16. And of the soule of the thiefe on the crosse it is said This day thou shalt bee with mee in Paradise Thirdly God is said to haue formed the Spirit in the midst of man so it is a substance of it selfe Note hee saith in him not of him Fourthly those words of Dauid Christ proue it Into thy hands I commit my spirit the body being committed to the earth there remained a substance deliuered to God Fiftly that place of Ecclesiastes Chapter 12. is most plaine The body returnes to dust and the Spirit to God that gaue it Therefore there is in man a Spirit which returnes to GOD. Sixtly Paul desires to be dissolued and to bee with Christ so there was a substance which should enioy the presence of Christ Phil. 1.23 The second thing to bee proued is that the soule is incorporeal It is ioyned to the body but it is no body it informeth the matter of man which is his body but it is without matter it self It is immateriall It is wholy a spiritual substance It is not a bodily substance no not a most subtil or pure body but altogether incorporeall This is a high doctrine and shewes the soule to bee an admirable kind of substance Now that the soule is void of matter and is no bodily substance may bee plainely proued though not easily explicated First it is expresly said to be a Spirit now Spirits are not flesh and bones or any like bodily substance Psa. 31.6 Eccle. 12.7 and Zach. 12.1 It is reckned one of the wonders of Gods creation that hee made in man a spirit Secondly the soule is after the Image of God and hath imprinted vpon it the similitude of the goodnes wisdome and holines of God Now it were not like God if it were a body nor were it capeable of such habits which can bee stamped vpon meere naturall or bodily things Thirdly the soule performeth those actions which depend not vpon the body and are done without bodily instruments for it vnderstandeth and willeth Fourthly if the soule were a body then it must be corpus animatum or inanimatum but to say it is without life is sense-lesse because it enlyues and animates the body and to say it is animatum enlyued it self it must then bee so by some other body All which the same questions will bee asked and so run into an infinite The third thing is that the soule is inuisible this shewes the transcendencie of the nature of it and experience in all men proues this for who euer saw a soule Ob. The soule of Diues in hell saw the soule of Abraham and Lazarus and Iohn saw the soules of those that suffred for the testimony of Iesus Reu. 20.4 Sol. These soules were seen by the eies of vnderstanding not by the bodily eies The fourth thing to bee prooued is that the soule is immortall it cannot die when it is once kindled it will neuer go out or be extinct as the Sadduces wickedly imagined and some Atheists still think the contrary This is a point necessary to bee knowne as for the truth it self so for the vse of it in our liues for to doubt of immortality makes vs miserable and to beleeue the soules are mortall makes men Epicures Let vs eat and drink for to morrow wee shall die But to bee fully assured of an estate after life makes a man carefull to auoid sinne lest his soule liue for euer miserably and to serue God that hee may liue for euer happily Now things may be said to be immortall two waies either absolutely and in their owne nature and so God onely is immortall or else they are so by the wil and pleasure of God and not by their owne nature and so the soules of men and so the Angels are immortall There haue been two sorts of men that haue denied the immortality of the soule The one were the Sadduces among the Iewes who held that in death the soule of man is vtterly extinct as the soule of a beast The other were certain Arabians of whom Eusebius and S. Augustine make mention who said that the soule died with the body and so remained dead till the day of Iudgement and then they reuiued with the resurrection of the body Now against the first fort may bee produced many reasons as also euident Scriptures The reasons are such as these 1. The prouidence and iustice of God prooueth the immortality of the soule For heer in this life good men haue not all their happinesse and euill men liue in prosperity so there must be another life where iustice must be done 2. Religion confirms this for to what end were Religion and seruing of God if the soule died like the soule of the beast seeing in this life the most godly are outwardly in great misery many times For if Paul say If the dead rise not then of all men are wee most miserable it will hold much more strange if the soule liue not at all after death 3. The wisdome of God proues it for else man were not in better case than the beast yea in some cases worse For man from his infancy to his death is liable to many diseases subiect to cares and griefs which the beast is free from yea this addes to man's miserie that hee knowes hee must die which the beast doth not Now shall man that was counted like God bee thought to haue no better end than the beast that did exalt himself so much in the glory of his beginning 4. The conscience of malefactors prooues this who fear a iudgement after this life and an estate of misery 5. The nature of the soule proues it for it is simple and void of all contrariety and accidents and causes of corruption or putrefaction and is besides the Image of GOD. Now no mortall thing can bee the image of that which is immortall These reasons make it exceeding probable But I am of their mindes that think it may be beleeued by faith but not be proued by reason The Scripture therefore only makes this point cleer such as these First our Sauiour proues it out of the Word of God saying I am the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob c. Secondly it is most plain Mat. 10.28 Thirdly eternall life is euery where promised to them that beleeue Fourthly such places
wrath or griefe or lust or the like may come infection to the childe but not from their soules Thirdly rather the Argument may be retorted vpon them that in asmuch as the soules of all children are not like in qualities to the soules of their parents that therefore they receiue not their soules from their parents Obiect 5. Genesis 9. Leuit. 17. The soule is said to bee in the blood Now it is euident that the blood is from the parents Solut. The soule is in the blood but how By the effect of it which is life otherwise the soule is neither deuoured in the bloud nor depends vpon it in it selfe Obiect 6. It is said Genes 2. That God rested from all his works Now if hee did daily create newe soules then hee rested not from all his works but continues creation still Solut. The meaning of Moses cannot bee that God rested simply from all creation For then it must needes follow too that the soule of Christ was not created but propagated which cannot bee true But his meaning is that he rested from creation of things in specie hee made no more newe sorts of things That hinders not creation in indiuiduo which is a work of God preseruing those sorts hee had made at the first by creating successiuely a new supply as in this case of the soules of men That God did not rest absolutely is plaine by the words of our Sauiour Christ My Father worketh hitherto and I work Iohn 5. Fiftly hitherto of the Originall of the Soule The vnion of the soule with the body followes which is a consideration of no lesse difficulty then the former no lesse needfull to be knowne no lesse certaine That it is vnited to the body so as to make it one man is apparanti by the words of God in the creation Hee breathed into him the breath of liues and so Adam became a liuing soule Hee became then a man or a liuing creature distinct from other creatures vpon his coniunction of the soule with the body And by this vnion with the body doth the Spirit of man differ from the Angels who are Spirits separate and such as exist without relation to a body wheras the soul of man in the creation of it and the disposition of it also tends vnto this coniunction with the body and doth not fully exercise it selfe liuing without the body and that is the reason why man is not absolutely perfect after death in his soule till the day of Iudgement For though the soule doe enioy an estate free fron sinne or paine or misery yet two of the faculties of the soul are without exercise till it bee vnited againe to the body viz. the faculties of vegetation and sense which cannot bee exercised but in the body The manner how the soule is vnited to the body is full of difficulty to expresse The question is whether the soule work vpon the body from without and so is by that means ioyned to it or whether it be placed in the body and work there and from thence This later is the truth for the soul doth not work from without which I shew by a comparison The light the eye are ioyned together in seeing but how The light from without extends it self to the eye and so is ioyned to it so is not the soule ioyned to the body but is seated within the body which appears so partly by experience for wee may all perceiue that our thoughts reason will affections c. doo discouer themselues within vs and it is manifest that God infused the soule not vpon the body but into the body seating it within vs. The soule then is within the body and so ioyned to it but how Diuines haue sought out diuerse similitudes to expresse their mindes And first to shew how it is not ioyned First not as water and the vessell that holds it are ioyned by contact or touching one another for the soule is not a bodily substance and therefore cannot be ioyned by touching nor doo the water and vessel make one thing as the soule and body doo one man nor do they work together as the soule and body doo for the water doth all the work therof in watering or clensing without the vessell Secondly not by mixture as water and wine are mingled together for things mingled cease to be what they were for there is no longer water nor wine now they are mingled nor is the soule materiall to suffer such a mingling Thirdly not as the heat of the fire is vnited to the water when the water is heated for though the heat bee ioyned to the water as the former yet it is but an accidentall form and they are one by accident not per se. Thirdly not as the voice is in the aire for though the voice be dispersed abroad the air and doo likewise carry something to the vnderstanding besides the sound yet doth not this reach to express the vnion of the soule with the body For the voice is not the form of the air nor is it conceiued in the air without the breaking of the air and besides it presently vanisheth whereas the soule is a substance and doth not easily depart out of the body Fiftly nor as the Mariner is in the shippe with the Gouerner for the dispatch of his iourney for though the body be as a tabernacle wherein the soule dwels yet that similitude doth not express this vnion because the soule body make one thing whereas the ship and the Mariner do not make one thing but are two distinct sorts of things yea the soule and body are so one that by sympathy what one suffers the other feeles whereas the wounding of the Mariner is not the tearing of the ship or contrariwise There are two similitudes doo more neerly reach this Secret The first is of Christ. For as God man make one Christ so the soule body make one man But I will not meddle with the breaking open of that dreadfull mystery The other is of the light of the Sun in the air for there are many things in this comparison do fitly resemble this diuine light which is our soules as they are ioyned to our bodies 1. This light doth fitly resemble the soule because it is a thing that cannot bee corrupted or diuided 2. This light doth so pearce into and penetrate the air that they are both made one and are not separated so doth the soule the body 3. The light and the air though ioyned together are not confounded or mingled together for the light remaineth light and the air the air so is it in this vnion between the soule and the body 4. The light is so in the air that the air beeing smitten yet the light is not touched nor diuided nor carried about as the air is so doth the soule remain vnpearced though the body bee wounded and fall yea and die too 5. As the light is onely from the Sun so is the soule
man in earth doth so much as in true desire forsake all sinne There bee some corruptions hee knowes that hee would vpon no conditions part with To desire and endeuour to bee rid of all sinnes is an infallible mark of a childe of God Doct. 6. Mortification makes a man dead onely to sinnes it doth not make him of a dead and lumpish disposition in doing good duties Heb 9.14 nor doth it require that it should destroy his nature or naturall temper or the parts of his body but his sinne onely nor doth it kill his contentment in the creatures of God and the vse of lawfull things nor doth it destroy his liberty in lawfull delights and recreations it kils his sinne onely Might liue vnto righteousnes These words containe the second effect of Christs death and passion viz. the raising of vs vnto a righteous life His death makes vs liue and liue righteously Diuers doctrines may bee hence obserued Doct. 1. First that men truly mortified shall liue happily These dead men will liue there is no danger in great sorrow and the other works of mortification It kils sinne but the soule liues by that meanes Hee is sure to liue that is dead to his sins Rō 8.13 Esay 26.19 1. Pet. 4.6 Eze. 18. Ho. 14.2 The reasons are First because God hath promised comfort to such as mourne for sinne Math. 5.4 Pro. 14.10 Secondly Christ hath a speciall charge giuen him to looke to those mourners that they miscarry not Esay 61.1 2 3. Thirdly they are freed from eternall death they cannot be condemned 1. Cor. 11.31 32. Iob 33.27 28. Fourthly because the fruit of the lips is peace to these they are euer after interessed in the comforts of the Word Esay 57.15 18. Fiftly the nature of godly sorrow is onely to tend to repentance It is worldly sorrow that tends to death 2. Cor. 7.10 Sixtly they that are conformed to the similitude of Christs death by mortification shal be conformed to Christs life by the resurrection from the dead The vse may be first for confutation of such as think that mortification is a way full of danger and makes many men come to great extremities wheras they may heere see there is no danger in it Hellish terrours and despaire and some kind of diseases may make strange effects in some men but neuer was any hurt by godly sorrow for sinne if wee will beleeue the Scriptures and therefore it should incourage men to fall to work soundly about searching their waies and confessing their sinnes and iudging themselues in secret for their sinnes Iames 4. chapter 7.2 Cor. chap. 7.10 11. But heere men must looke to some fewe rules First that they see the warrant of the course in the Word and know the places that require these duties that they lay vp such promises made to the duties of mortification as may vphold their hearts in the practice of them Thirdly that they refuse not consolation but when they haue found true humiliation for their sinnes and comfort from God in his ordinances that they turne their sorrow into ioy and their praiers into thanksgiuing and spend their daies alwaies reioycing in the Lord. Doct. 2. It is not enough to die to sinne vnlesse wee also liue to righteousnes It is not enough to forsake our sinnes but wee must spend our daies in good works wee are so charged to cease to doe euill as withall wee are charged to learne to doe well Esay 1.16 we must bring forth fruits worthy amendment of life as well as confesse our sinnes Math. 3.8 A man will cut downe his fig-tree for want of good fruite though it beare no ill fruit Luke 13.6 It will not please any husband-man that his Land beare no thornes nor briers nor weedes if it beare him not good graine It is not enough for a seruant that hee doe his Master no hurt but hee must see to it that hee doe his Masters worke For first obedience and good fruits are required at our hands in the Law of God besides the prohibition of sinne Secondly Christ died to this end that wee might liue righteously as well as die to sinne Thirdly because all the gifts of the Spirit bestowed on vs in our regeneration are giuen to profit withall not to lay them vp in a napkin 1. Cor. 12. Fourthly because wee shall bee iudged at the last day according to our works Rom. 2.6 Vse And therefore this shewes the dangerous folly of such carnall people as think if they come to Church and liue ciuilly and doe no body no wrong they are out of al question in a right course And besides it should awake carelesse and sluggish Christians to looke to their gifts and remember what accounts they will giue to God for their vnprofitablenesse and vnfruitfulnesse 2. Pet. 1.8 Doct. 3. It is from hence euident that the onely liuing is to liue righteously Hee is worthy to bee said to liue that liues to righteousnes a religious life is the best life And these are the reasons First because it is the most honorable life For to liue to righteousnes makes a man highly in the fauour of God Psal. 11.7 Prou. 15.9 and it shewes that a man is borne of God 1. Ioh. 2.29 and besides it helps a man to the best and most blessed memoriall Prou. 10.7 and the fruits of righteousnes are the best meanes of glorifying God Phil. 1.11 And therefore Salomon said well that The righteous is more excellent than his neighbour Prouerbs 12.26 And Dauid saith They are the onely excellent Ones Psal. 16. whereas euery wicked man is lothsome and a sinnefull life is a shamefull life Prou. 13.5 and 14.34 Secondly because it is the most profitable life and the most gainfull for blessings are vpon the head of the righteous Pro. 10.6 The wicked worketh a deceitfull work but to him that soweth righteousnes shall be a sure reward Pro. 11.18 And righteousnes is both the best riches and the most durable Pro. 8.18 19 20. And it hath the promise of this life as well as the life to come 1. Tim. 6. Iob 8.6 And the profit of righteousnes will help a man when he is to die when the treasures of the wicked will profit nothing Pro. 10.2 Yea a good man lacketh not an inheritance for his childrens children and the wealth of the sinner is many times laid vp for the iust Thirdly because it is the safest and quietest life He that walketh vprightly walketh surely Prouer. 10.19 and the fruit of righteousnes is peace Iam. 3.18 For God's promise is that No euill shall happen to the iust whereas the wicked shall be filled with mischief Pro. 12.21 And God's blessing makes them rich and hee mingles no sorrow with it Pro. 10.21 and 15.6 And righteousnes is reckoned as an impenetrable armour 2. Cor. 6.7 And God doth mark euery one that doth righteousnes and solaceth his heart Esay 64.5 And the very doing of good is sweetnes to the soule
9.1 and 67.2 5. Where is that walking with God required in Scripture Who doeth alwaies set the Lord before him Where are those soliloquies betweene the soule and God Are not many content to goe weekly and monthly without speaking to God And thus of the defects concerning the first table In the second table diuers things may be noted as were defectiue in the parts of righteousnes as First there is a generall defect of mercy men doe exceedingly faile in that liberality to the distressed and poore seruants The bowels of mercy are euery-where shut vp either altogether or in the neglect of many degrees and duties of mercy Secondly in many Christians there is a fearefull want of meeknes they being guilty of daily sinnes of passions and worldly vexations and that many times with a kinde of wilfulnes against knowledge and conscience Thirdly The cares of life and worldlines doe striue and blemish the conuersation of many and discouer a strange defect of that contempt of the world should bee in them Fourthly domesticall disorders doe euen cry to heauen against many husbāds for want of loue and of most wiues for want of obedience and of seruants for want of diligence and faithfulnes in their places And thus men faile in the parts of righteousnes In the manner of weldoing many things are wanting first both in the generall weldoing of good duties secondly and in speciall affection to God thirdly and in the manner of Gods seruice In Generall First zeale of good workes is exceeding defectiue in the most Tit. 3.14 Men shewe not that willingnes and feruency of affection should bee shewed in all parts of righteousnes men doe not lift vp their hearts in Gods waies Gods commandements are vsually grieuous and tedious Secondly there ought to bee a holy feare in the practice of their good duties 1. Pet. 3.2 which is vsually wanting men do so much trust vpon themselues and doe duties with such boldnes neglect of their waies whereas they should feare alwaies Pro. 28.14 Oh that meeknes of wisdome required Iames 3.9 where is it to bee found Thirdly men are not circumspect to make conscience euen of the least duties as they ought and to obserue to doo them euen to watch for the opportunity of well-doing and to look to the means of the performance of euery duty and to abstaine from the very appearance of euill and to bee discreet in looking to the circumstances of time place persons c. Eph. 5.15 Deut. 5.32 Fourthly there is great want of moderation in Christians for either they are iust ouer-much in conceiuing too highly of themselues for what they doo or else they are wicked ouer-much in thinking too vilely of their works Eccles. 7. Fiftly men are strangely negligent in the growth of grace and knowledge men stand still and doo not prosper and striue to increase in euery good gift as they ought 2. Peter 3.18 Many graces are not strengthned and many works are not finished Secondly in mens affections to God how are men defectiue Where is hee that loues the Lord with all his hart and all his might and all his soule Deut. 30.6 and 6.3 Thirdly in God's worship these things are in many wanting 1. Reuerence and that holy feare which should bee shewed when wee appeare before the Lord Heb. 12.28 2. Men vsually forget to doo all worship in the Name of Christ Col. 3.17 3. The care of praising of God that is of looking to God's acceptation in all seruice is much forgotten Heb. 12.28 4. The desire of vnity and consent in iudgement among our selues when wee worship God is miserably neglected and reiected by diuers wilfull Christians Zeph. 3.9 Phil. 2.2 3. 5. Men miserably neglect thankfulnesse to GOD for the good they receiue daily from his mercies Col. 3.17 6. Many faile publiquely and shamefully in want of care to come time enough to God's seruice Zach. 8.21 Esay 60.8 In these things Christians should bee admonished to minde their waies and their works and to striue to walk as becommeth the Gospell and the death of Christ that they may hold fast the light of the truth and shew out better the glory of a Christian life And thus of liuing to righteousnes Now follows the third form of speech By whose stripes we are healed The healing of our sicknesses is reckoned as another fruit of the Passion of Christ or else it is the same with the former exprest in other words These words then are borrow'd from the Prophet Esay chap. 53.5 who doth chiefly vnderstand the spirituall healing of our soules of our sinnes as the coherence shewes in the Prophet but yet the Euangelist saith Mat. 8.17 and vnderstands of the healing of our bodies also And therefore I consider of the death of Christ both in respect of soule and body And first as this healing is referred to the soule diuers doctrines may be obserued Doct. 1. The soules of all men are diseased by nature euen the very soules of the Elect are so till they be healed by Christ. The soule is diseased diuers waies especially by sorrows and sins it is the disease by sin is heer meant Quest. It would bee inquired how the soule comes to be sick of these diseases and why sinne is called sicknes in the soule Ans. This spiritual sicknes comes into the soule by propagation Adam hath inflicted all his posterity and euery man hath increased the diseases of his nature by his owne wilfull transgressions Now sinne is called sicknes because it doth work that vpon the soule which sicknes doth vpon the body for sinne hath weakned the strength of the soule in all the faculties of it which all men may discern and obserue in themselues by nature Besides it causeth spottednes and deformity in the soule as sicknes doth in the body and therefore sinne was likened to the leprosie in the Law Further it often causeth pain and torment in the soule as wounds diseases do in the body for there is no peace to the wicked especially when God fighteth against them with his terrors Besides it will cause the death of the soule as sicknes will of the body if it be not helped and so men are said to be dead in sins Vse The vse may bee to shew the fearfull negligence of worlds of people that are exceeding carefull to help their bodies to health but neuer think of the poor soule that lieth lamentably full of diseases And withall it shewes that all wicked men are men of ill natures because their dispositions are all diseased though there be degrees of ill nature or of this euill in mens natures as there is difference of sicknesses in mens bodies And godly men should be compassionat when they see the grieuous diseases in the natures and liues of other men remembring that they also were by nature subiect to the same diseases as well as they Doct. 2. The diseases in the soules of men by nature are very
7.1 Doct. 4. The fourth doctrine is that wee are cured by Christs stripes His sufferings heale our sorrowes His wounds make vs whole His sicknes offers vs health and his stripes heale vs partly by satisfying for our sinnes and so remouing the cause of our diseases both spirituall and corporall and partly by an vnspeakeable vertue of his Passion which being applied to our soules makes our sins dye And this point may serue for vse many waies Vses First for information and so it may shew vs the wonder of Gods working that can doe great things by meanes in respect of vs altogether vnlikely Wee hold it a thing almost beyond beliefe that the applying of medicines to the sword that wounded a man shall make the wounds heale in a man But this heere is a mystery that onely the Christian Religion can tell of of which there neuer was president in nature that The wounding of one Man should heal another or that the stripes of the Captaine should cure all his diseased souldiers and yet thus it is euen thus is the Lord pleased to glorify the power of his working Secondly we may hence bee informed of the precious vse of euery part of Christs sufferings not his dying onely doth vs good but euery thing hee did endure His stripes cure our wounds his shame wrought our honour His temptations draue the diuels from vs not any thing was done to him by his aduersaries but GOD made it work for our good Shall wee then dare to take offence at the crosse of Christ Haue we not reason to glory in it aboue all things Thirdly doe we not heere see how hatefull sinne is in Gods sight and how foule our diseases are when nothing can cure vs but Christs blood and that must bee fetched out of him with the best stripes which the hands of the wicked inflicted vpon him Oh the hardnes of our hearts that can see Christ thus vsed for our sinnes and yet are not perswaded that sinne is hatefull to God! Oh how should wee bee sorry for our Sauiour and mourne to think of it as wee would for our onely sonnes Would it not grieue vs at the heart if we should see the young Prince the Kings sonne basely whipped by our aduersaries only for our affaires Oh what hearts haue we that as bad as they are would be melted to see this done to a Kings sonne and yet are not troubled to knowe it was done to Gods Sonne Fourthly we may see what wicked mallice will doe if it bee not restrayned to disgrace our Sauiour to get a sentence against him to binde him hand and foot yea to kill him will not serue their turnes vnlesse they may most basely scourge him before hee dies That malicious men now doe not alwaies so is not because their malice doth not tend to it but because either God or man restraines them It is a most diuelish humour and therefore to bee auoyded and detested of all those that loue the Lord Iesus Vse 2. Secondly how many waies should this instruct vs what care the Lord Iesus requires of vs what should not this make vs willing to doe Oh how should wee loue him with all our hearts aboue all the world that could endure to bee thus abased euen vnto stripes for our sakes when hee could haue preuented it if hee had pleased what a shame should it bee to vs to bee impatient or to think much of our crosses who though wee had suffered many things yet not so grieuous as those things befell our Sauiour Yea further it should encourage vs to suffer any thing for Christ and the rather because wee haue not resisted to stripes or blood nor cannot now suffer the thousandth part for him of that he hath suffered for vs. Thus of the healing of our soules These words also may bee expounded of the healing of our bodies as we shewed before and so the like doctrines may bee obserued as Doct. 1. That the bodies of all men by nature neede healing For sinne hath brought vpon man the sentence of deformities and infirmities and diseases and wee see God doth inflict diseases vpon many and that of diuers sorts and many men that for the present are free from the paines of diseases yet haue their enemies in their bodies in diuers parts of them laid as it were in garison which may and will break out vpon them at a time they know not or if they were not there the Lord from without can send diseases vpon them The world is euery where full of occasions of sicknes or if there were not outward meanes to worke them yet God can strike men from heauen Vse The vse should bee to warne such as are in health to walke humbly For they know not how soone sicknes may seaze vpon them Secondly such as haue their friends taken away by sicknes or are yet afflicted should submit to Gods will For this is the case of all men euen the greatest yea and Gods elect are liable to such a condition by nature Doct. 2. The diseases of the body are grieuous therfore Christ takes notice of that kind of distress to prouide for the healing of our bodies We see by experience that of many sorts of crosses it is most grieuous to beare the paines that arise from the wounds or sicknes of the body and it is the more grieuous partly because no men are priuiledged from diseases but either haue them or are in danger of them as was said before and partly because God hath armed such a multitude of sorts of diseases to which the body of man is liable Vse Therefore the vse should bee to take warning from these pains of the body to preuent eternall paines in hell by reconciling our selues to that God that can so fearefully afflict both body and soule and as wee feele the outward man to decay the more to labour for the health of the inward man especially by those harbingers of death to prouide for the time when our change shall come Doct. 3 Christ is a Physician for the body of man as well as for the soule In Christ our bodies may be healed Christ prouided healing for mans body as well as for his soule and mens bodies he heales either in this life or in the generall Resurrection First in this life some hee hath healed by miracle as hee did multitudes in the daies of his flesh while hee was heere in this world which he did in execution of his office as hauing charge of mens bodies and some hee healed by meanes giuing his blessing vnto the medicines prouided in nature and applied by the skilfull to the diseased yea hee vndertakes the healing of all Gods Elect in their bodies as this place imports which hee doth promise and will performe if it bee good for them Many times to heale the body would hurt the soule or keepe the leper from heauen and then Christ will not heal them else he vndertakes and is bound
not alwaies enlarged in the like manner towards the people as is imported 2. Cor. 6.11 Thus of the fourth doctrine Doct. 5. We may further hence note concerning the time of this visitation that not onely there is a season but withall that it is but a short time in comparison therefore heer called The day of visitation Now a day is one of the least measures of time and this ariseth not onely from the breuity of mans life and the infinite mutations that befall the outward conditions of men and the extreme malice the diuell and the world beare to the Gospell but also from the will of God who will offer his grace in so special a manner but for a short season neither is the Lord bound to giue account to vs of his so doing since we haue more reason to admire his mercy that will offer vs his grace at all than to murmure because it is not offred alwayes yet this shortnes of the season doth the more magnifie God's power that can so quickly conquer and set vp the Kingdome of Christ and gather his Elect. And some cause may bee taken from the rebellion of wicked men who when they despise holy things and vse them vile the Lord to shew the accounts hee makes of those treasures remooues them from them Thus the Iewes lost their glory Acts 13. When a people growe obstinate and will not bee wrought vpon that God that commands vs not to giue holy things to dogs doth himselfe also many times remoue his Word for the vnprofitablenesse and vnworthinesse of the people Vse The vse should be so much the more strongly to inforce the care of speedy profiting by the means while it is yet called To day as the Apostle vrgeth it at large in the third and fourth chapters to the Hebrews And withall it should teach vs to bewail the stupidity and carelesnes of the multitude that in these times of peace and spirituall plenty haue no care to make any prouision for their soules ouer whom we may lament as Christ did ouer Ierusalem Luke 19.42 c. And the shortnes of the time should teach Ministers to labour more diligently they that are the stewards of the manifold graces of God should be instant in season and out of season and with all authority beseech rebuke and correct knowing that their time is short and vncertain Doct. 6. We may here note that the day when God visits a man with his grace is a glorious day The Apostle speaks of it as of the most happie time of the life of man and so was it euer accounted by the godly Esay 24.22.23 And it must needs appear to be a day of singular happines if we consider what that day brings forth instantly vnto the man or woman visited of God for First in that day God reueales in some measure his loue to the visited which is the more admirable a benefit because Gods loue is a free loue and it is euerlasting and is also immense Secondly in that day hee giues that particular person vnto Christ and giues Christ vnto him with all his merits Iob. 10. and 17. Thirdly in that hee iustifies him both forgiuing him all his sinnes and clothing him with the righteousnes of Christ. Fourthly in that day hee adopts him to bee his owne child that was before the child of wrath Romans 8.16 Fiftly in that day hee giues him a new nature and creates and fashions in him the Image of Iesus Christ and so reueals Christ in him Colossians 3.10 Galatians 2.20 Sixtly in that day he giues him the holy Ghost neuer to depart out of his heart Gal. 4.7 Seuenthly in that day hee makes him free so as hee is inrolled amongst the liuing and acknowledged particularly of God amongst the Saints He is written in the writing of the house of Israel and is free from all the miserie bondage he was in before or was in danger of and hee is henceforwards free of the house and presence of God Hee may feede at his Table and eate the food of life Hee hath accesse with boldnes at all times into the presence of God with any suites He is also free to the Communion of Saints and is restored to the free and lawfull vse of the creatures in generall Psal. 87.5 Esay 4.4 Rom. 8.1 Gal. 1.6 Esay 25.8 Mark 11.24 Eph. 2.20 21. Mat. 5.5 Eightly he sets a guard of Angels about him to attend him all the daies of his life Hebrewes 1.14 Psal. 34. Ninthly in that day he is receiued into Gods protection in respect of afflictions which protection containes in it foure things First the with-holding of many crosses which doe fall vpon others God spares him as a man would spare his onely sonne Mala. 3.17 Secondly the bounding of the cross so as God appoints the measure which is euer with the respect of the strength of the partie Esay 27.7 8. Thirdly the sanctification of the crosse so as all shall work for the best Rom. 8.28 Fourthly deliuerance out of trouble in due time Psal. 34.17 Tenthly hee assures and estates vpon him the euidence of an inheritance that is immortall vndefiled that withers not reserued for him in heauen 1. Pet. 1.3 The vse should be chiefly to moue godly men to the exact study of those things and to all possible thankfulnes for Gods visitation and they should with much ioy remember the verie time if it may bee when God did so visit them and if the men of this world keep commemoration yearely of the daies of their birth or marriage how much more cause hath a Christian to preserue in himselfe and to speake of it to the praise of God the verie day and season when God did first reueal his grace vnto him Let none mistake me I meane it not of all Christians for manie Christians did neuer obserue or knowe distinctly the verie first daie of their conuersion being not called either by ordinarie meanes or not in such a sensible manner as some others were or stood for a time in temporary grace yet vnto all the counsell is profitable that taking a day in the sense as it is heer they should often think of with gladnes the season of their conuersion or at least magnifie God for the thing it self that they are conuerted And besides all such as enioy the means of grace and yet haue not felt this visitation of God should be much allured to the care of attending vpon the means and be made desirous to receiue the grace of God and that effectually it should much moue them that God hath now sent them the meanes and keeps his publique visitation and that GOD stands not vpon desert nor doth he make exception of them but offers his grace vnto all and desireth not the death of any sinner yea beseecheth them to be reconciled and to that end hath committed the Word of reconciliation to his seruants with expresse commandement that they should be instant and with
all patience instruct men and call vpon them and perswade them to saue their soules Doct. 7. Wee may yet further from hence obserue that before calling the very Elect of GOD may bee as bad as any other as heer till God visited those elect Gentiles they were railers as well as others so were the former sinnes mentioned 1. Cor. 6.9 found in the very Elect as the eleuenth verse sheweth This appears by the example of Manasses Marie Magdalene Paul and the thief on the Crosse see further Tit. 3.3 And the reasons may bee easily assigned for first the very Elect before calling haue the same corruption of nature that other men haue and so all haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God so as there is not one of them doth good no not one Secondly they haue the same occasions to sinne from the Deuill and the world Thirdly and were their natures somewhat better then other mens yet they would haue beene leauened as they were a part of the lump of infected mankinde This may both inform vs teach vs in diuers things It may inform vs in three things viz. about our election and our iustification and about the Gospell as the means of our vocatiō For election this point proues it must bee free seeing there was no goodness in the very elect more then in the reprobate in the estate of nature And for Iustification the Apostle Paul vseth the consideration of this doctrine in the third Chapter to the Romans to prooue it cannot be by workes And for the Gospell wee may here see the mighty power of it it may well bee called the Arme of the Lord and his power to saluation that can thus mightily and suddenly change men And it should teach vs also diuers things as it concernes either our selues or other men or God 1. For our selues it should teach vs to walke both more humbly all our daies seeing wee haue beene vile as well as others and also more watchfully seeing wee carry about vs a nature that hath beene so rebellious against God and besides wee should resist the beginnings of sinne in vs as hauing knowne by experience whither sinne will lead vs if wee giue way to it and dally with it 2 For others not yet called it should teach vs both compassion of their miserie it hauing beene our owne case and a care to shewe all meekness to all men in wayting for their conuersion and patience in bearing their wrongs 3 For God how can wee euer sufficiently loue him that hath shewed such loue to vs euen when wee were his enemies Yea wicked men that are smitten with terrors for the hainousnesse of their sinnes should hence confirme themselues against despaire seeing they may hence learne that as great offendors as they haue beene conuerted and saued 2. Tim. 1.15 There is one thing that from hence men must take heede that they doe not learne that is that they abuse not these examples to confirme themselues in sinne for there is matter to daunt them and fright them from this presumption For first not all that haue liued licentiously but some few onely haue beene saued the rest perished in their owne wickednesse Secondly of those that were saued none were saued without amendment of life and regeneration and therfore so long as thou liuest in thy sinne so long their example fits thee not Doct. 8. The last Doctrine that may from hence be made is in particular concerning the sinne of speaking euill of the godly and the point is That Gods gracious visitation doth cure that disease exactly Hee will neuer raile any more that is truly gathered vnto God in his day of visitation It is possible Christians may speake euill one of another in particular and it is lamentable when they doe so but that is vpon supposall of particular faults in those of whom they speake euill But that a man should speake euill of godly men in generall because they are godly with desire he might finde them euill doers is a vice not found in such as are truly called And therefore let such as are guilty of that sinne of speaking euill of good Christians because they follow goodnesse know That their day of visitation is not yet come Verse 13. Submit your selues to euery ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether to the King as superior FRom the 13 Verse of the first Chapter to the 9 Verse of the third Chapter is contained matter of exhortation and the exhortation is either generall or speciall The generall exhortation concernes all Christians and hath beene set downe from the 13 Verse of the first Chapter to the end of the 11 Verse of this second Chapter Now those words and those that follow to the 9 Verse of the next Chapter containe speciall exhortations which concerne some Christians onely namely subiects seruants wiues and husbands Of the duty of subiects he entreats from Verse 13 to Verse 18 Of the duty of seruants from Verse 18 to the end of this Chapter of the duty of wiues in the seuen first Verses of the third Chapter and of the duty of husbands in the eightth Verse of that Chapter So that the Apostle hauing taught all Christians before how to behaue themselues in their generall calling hee now vndertakes to teach some sorts of Christians in particular how to order themselues in their particular callings and so hee teacheth them in some things that concern the Politickes and in some things that concerne the Oeconomickes Vnto order in a Common wealth belongs the duty of Subiects and vnto houshold gouernment belongs the duty of Seruants Wiues and Husbands From the coherence and the generall consideration of the whole exhortation diuers things may be noted before I breake open the particulars of the Text. 1 The Word of God must be the warrant of all the actions of our life it not onely giues order about the businesses of Religion but it prescribes matter of obedience in all our conuersation it tells vs what to doe in our houses and in the Common wealth as well as what to doe at Church which shewes vs the perfection of the Scripture Theologie is the Mistresse of all Sciences it perfects the sound knowledge of the Ethicks Politickes or Oeconomickes and it should teach therefore in our callings whether generall or particular to seeke warrant from the Word which warrant we may finde either expressed particularly or else implied in generall directions and withall we should take heed that wee make not more sinnes in any estate of life then are made in Scripture and so not affright or disquiet our selues with vaine fears that way 2 The Apostle would haue Christians in a speciall manner careful that they offend not the lawes of the Princes of this world this appeares in that hee enioynes them the duties of Subiects first and in that they doe teach them the duty of submission both in this and other Scriptures with great force and