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A02178 The workes of the reuerend and faithfull seruant af Iesus Christ M. Richard Greenham, minister and preacher of the Word of God collected into one volume: reuised, corrected, and published, for the further building of all such as loue the truth, and desire to know the power of godlinesse. By H.H.; Works Greenham, Richard.; Holland, Henry, 1555 or 6-1603.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1612 (1612) STC 12318; ESTC S120843 1,539,296 988

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trie their loue two wayes What is the first 1. First if they be as carefull to doe all duties to their children as they would haue had their parents in times past to haue performed all good duties vnto them What is the second 2. Secondly if they bee as carefull to doe duties to their children as they would haue their children hereafter to be dutifull vnto them What be the duties of Seruants to their Maisters Seruants ought in feare and trembling to submit themselues to the instructions commandements and corrections of their Maisters and to doe no eye-seruice to them What if Parents and Maisters doe not their duties to their Children and Seruants Yet they must obey them for conscience to Gods ordinance What if they command vniust things Then they must obey God rather then men and submitte themselues to their correction Why are these words added That thy dayes c They are added to allure vs more carefully to keepe and willinglie to obey this Commandement And shall not disobedience bee punished Yea it shall be rewarded with a short and miserable life How may they trie their loue by these duties They may trie it three manner of wayes What is the first 1. First if they bee as desirous to doe all these duties to their Maisters as they would haue their Maisters to doe the dutie of Maisters vnto them What is the second Secondly if they bee as carefull to doe all these duties to their maisters as they would haue their seruants to be dutifull vnto them when they shall be maisters What is the third Thirdly if they be as willing to doe all duties to their maisters as they would be glad to receiue long life or any other blessing at the hand of God What duties doe Maisters owe to their seruants Maisters ought to teach and correct their seruants and to pray for them How may they trie their loue by these duties They may trie their loues two wayes What is the first 1. First if they be as desirous to doe all these duties to their seruants as they would haue their Maisters deale with them if they were seruants What is the second thing 2. Secondly if they be as carefull to doe all these duties to their seruants as they would be to haue their seruants to doe all duties vnto them Rehearse the sixt Commandement Thou shalt doe no murther How many things are here forbidden Foure especially 1. First is forbidden by weapon or poyson to kill our brother 2. Secondly by wound or blowe or anie other meanes to shorten the life or empaire the health of any man 3. Thirdly by word countenance or gesture to mocke grieue or contemne any man 4. Fourthly wee are forbidden all anger hatred or enuie whereby we may be brought to reuenge our selues vpon our brother What good is here commanded 1. First wee are commaunded to haue peace with all men as much as is possible and in vs lyeth 2. Secondly wee are commaunded in thought word and deede to seeke the preseruation of the health of our brother Rehearse the seuenth Commaundement Thou shalt not commit adulterie How many things are here forbidden Three things are forbidden Which is the first First all outward actions are forbidden whereby the bodie is defiled as Adulterie Fornication vncleannesse How many wayes is vncleannesse committed Two wayes First either against Our owne bodies which is vnnaturall or The bodies of beasts which is monstrous Secondly by marrying one 1. Of a false religion or 2. Of no religion at all 3. Within the degrees forbidden 4. Without the consent of parents 5. It is committed by vsing the marriage bed intemperately What is the second thing forbidden Secondly all instruments and occasions are forbidden whereby this sinne is raised vp or strengthened in vs and they bee all contained in this word Wantonnesse How is this wantonnesse seene In two things First when either 1. The whole bodie is abused in idlenes or vaine sports or 2. Any part of the bodie as the eye the eare the tongue the nose the hand or foote are abused Secondly when we doe intemperately abuse meate drinke sleepe or apparell or vse any inconuenient companie time or place What is the third thing forbidden Thirdly all inward setled lusts are forbidden wherunto the heart doth giue consent What good is cammaunded 1. First I am commaunded to keepe my selfe pure and chaste both in body and soule 2. Secondly to vse those meanes carefully which may keepe vs chaste Which ●ee the meanes of Chastitie Continuall sobrietie in meate drinke sleepe and apparell Continuall painfulnes in our calling Fasting and watching so often as neede requireth What if by these meanes wee cannot be kept chaste 3. Then thirdly wee are commanded to marrie and in marriage to vse those meanes carefully whereby the marriage bed may be kept pure and vndefiled Rehearse the eight Commandement Thou shalt not steale How many euils are herein forbidden 1. First all those outward acts are forbidden whereby stealth is committed How many wayes is stealth committed outwardly in acte Two waies either By our selues and this is three waies 1. First all secret filching and open robberie ●e it neuer so small a thing for neuer so great a neede 2. Secondly all extortion or violent wrong all oppression and vnmercifull dealing 3. Thirdly all deceit in buying and selling or exchanging in restoring things borrowed found giuen to keepe and such like By others either By commanding or counselling others to steale By keeping counsell By consenting any way to them when they steale Which are the second euills forbidden 2. Secondly all outward occasions of stealth forbidden Which be they All idlenes wastfull spending of goods liuing in an vnlawfull calling all false weights measures coynes and such like What is thirdly forbidden 3. Thirdly all inward stealth of the heart is forbidden What is that The setled will or desire of our neighbours goods although wee cannot get them or for feare ●hame or some other respect we doe not take them What is h● recommaunded 1. First to restore goods euill gotten or wrongfully kept 2. Secondly to labour faithfully in a lawfull calling to be sparing of that wee get and to helpe others as their neede requireth Rehearse the ninth Commandement Thou shalt not beare false witnes c. What is forbidden herein Wee are forbidden not onely to beare false witnesse our selues but also to be partakers with false-witnes bearers How many wayes doe m●n ●eare false witnesse Two waies 1. outwardly and against others and that is in iudgement or out of iudgement or 2. inwardly themselues When they denie that to bee in them which is indeed or When they take vpon them that which belongeth not vnto them whether it be good or euill In Iudgement when they giue or receiue false information pronounce or write anie false sentence Out of Iudgement 1. When anie raise vp spread abroad or listen after false
serue Gods prouidence Rehearse the second Commaundement Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image nor the likenesse c. What euill is expressely forbidden in this Commaundement I am forbidden to make any Image either to represent God or to worship him by What euill is generally forbidden I must auoide all inuentions and deuices of men in the outward worship of God which be contrarie or besides the written word of God Which be the speciall euills forbidden Chiefly all corruption in the substance of doctrine prayer Sacraments and discipline of the Church What occasions of euill be forbidden There be some which wee must necessarily auoyd vnlesse wee will fall into superstition and idolatrie and they be these 1. First to ioyne the false parts of worship with the true worship of God 2. Secondly to be present in bodie at idolatrous and superstitious seruice 3. Thirdly the reseruation of some speciall monument of superstition and idolatrie Which bee the lesser occasions forbidden and yet so wee haue the speciall groundes of Gods worship we must and may tolerate them when we cannot helpe them 1. First all vaine idle and superstitious Ceremonies 2. Secondly all keeping companie with false worshippers Is not the euill in heart also forbidden Yea so farre forth as I lust in my heart to haue any of them preuaile or be established What good is generally commaunded All the outward meanes of Gods worship which be agreeable to his written word What is specially commaunded I must vse such doctrine prayers Sacraments and discipline of the Church as bee agreeable to Gods word in the substance What occasions of good be here commaunded 1. First to haue and vse good bookes of the doctrine and history of the Church written according to Gods word 2. Secondly erecting and maintaining schooles of learning as nurseries of the ministerie 3. Thirdly sufficient prouision to be made for the Ministers of Gods word 4. Fourthly building and maintaining Churches and all things belonging thereunto 5. Fi●ly I must v●●●ll good ceremonies and orders agreeable to the word of God 6. Sixtly 〈◊〉 fami●●● company with the true worshippers of God What good in heart is commaunded I am commaunded to vse the meanes of Gods worship not onely outwardly but also in spirit and truth What is me●●● by these words For I the Lord thy God am a iealous God c That God will punish false worship in the false worshippers and in their posteritie vnto the ●●●rth generation What is meant by these word● And will shew mercie vnto thousands c Th● God will blesse his true worship in the true worshippers and their posteritie vnto the thousand des●ent W●●t is ●●●●●●●f these The vse is to make false worshippe more vile and his true worship more pretious in our eyes 〈…〉 third Commaundement Thou ●●●● not taketh● Name of the Lord thy God in vaine c. What 〈…〉 forbidden 1. First 〈…〉 ●●●ning or ●ursing enchanting or coniuring 2. Secondly all 〈…〉 by false Gods or naming them with reuerence 3. Thirdly 〈…〉 swearing or speaking of GOD without reuerence 4. Fourthly to c●use Gods Name to bee dishonoured by false Doctrine or vngodlie life 〈◊〉 in my ●●●●●r in others W●at good is herein commaunded 1. First in matters concerning Gods glorie I must sweare by GOD onely in Iustice. Iudgement Truth 2. Secondly I must endeuour from my heart to growe vp in true knowledge and a godly life that so Gods Name may bee praised in my selfe and by mine example in others What is meant by these words For the Lord will not holde him guiltlesse c That God will certainely punish the dishonoring of his Name in any sort What is the vse of this The vse of this is to make vs more fearefull to dishonour him and more carefull to glorifie his Name Rek●●●●● the fourth Commandement Remember the Sabbath day to keepe it holie c. What is here generally commaunded I am commanded to make it my whole delight to sanctifie the holie Sabbath of the Lord from morning to night What is 〈…〉 commaunded 1 First to vse ●ll the publike meanes of Gods worship in the congregation of Gods people 2. Secondlie to reioyce to vse all such priuate exercises as may make the publike meanes ●●●●●table to my selfe and to others W 〈…〉 bee those priuate exercises 1. First the examining of my sinnes and wants priuate prayer reading of the Scriptures singing of Psalmes conference with others and applying all things to my selfe with a care to profite others 2. Secondly relieuing the needle visiting the sicke and them that be in prison comforting them that bee in any miserie reconciling them that be at variance admonishing the vnruly and such like What is especially commanded The spirituall beholding of the Creatures of God thereby to prouoke my selfe and others to praise him What else is A diligent searching of my heart with a like care to finde it out and to reape some profite of the forenamed meanes so that I may be the better for and through them What is then particularly forbidden 2. All such labours and pleasures in thought worde and deede are forbidden as may hinder mee and others for vsing of or profiting by the same meanes 2. Secondly the leauing 〈…〉 of those publike meanes or priuate exercises What is here generally forbidden The vsing either of those publike or priuate meanes in ceremonie without some good fruite in my selfe or care of fruite in others Rehearse the fift Commaundement Honour thy Father and thy Mother that thy dayes may be long in the Land c. Whom doe you vnderstand by father and mother By father and mother I doe not vnderstand onely my naturall parents but also those whom God hath set ouer me for my good as Magistrates Ministers Masters such like What duties doe children owe vnto their naturall parents Children ought reuerently and obediently to receiue the instructions commaundements and corrections of their parents to succour them and to pray for them What are they forbidden to doe To refuse or murmure at the instructions commandements and corrections of their parents or to neglect any dutie belonging to them How may they trie their loue by these duties They may trie whether their loue be right three wayes 1. First if they bee as desirous to doe all these duties to their parents as they would haue their parents to doe all duties vnto them What is the second 2. Secondly if they be as desirous to doe all duties to their parents as they would haue their children hereafter to honour them What is the third 3. Thirdly if they bee as willing to doe all these duties to their parents as they would receiue long life or any other blessing at the hands of God What duties doe parents owe to their children Parents ought to teach correct pray and prouide for their children How may they trie their loue by these duties They may
much in effect Wilt thou learne sincerely to worship me according to that substance manner and end which I haue prescribed and wilt thou truly trie thy loue to mee by exercising the duties of loue to thy brethren then forget not to keepe holie the Sabbath wherein I shall teach thee both how thou shalt walke vprightly in the worship due vnto mee and also liue obediently in duties concerning man Againe the nature of the word remember importeth thus much that this law was not only grauen in the hearts of our forefathers as were all the other but also in expresse words inioyned vnto Adam and Eue in Paradise and manifestly practised of the Israelites in the wildernes Exod. 16. and that therefore in this common promulgating of the Law they should especially remember this which is not newly giuen as are the rest but rather renued as being giuen out before True it is that before this solemne publishing of the Law in mount Sinai this and all other Commandements were written in the hearts of our fore-Fathers as we may see in the booke of Genes For the first we reade how the Lord said vnto Abraham Gen. 17. I am GOD all-sufficient walke before mee and be vpright Concerning the second Gen. 31. 19. Rachel is saide to steale her Fathers Idols Genes 35. 2. Iacob reformed his household and cleanseth it from Idolatrie For the third we may see how religious they were in swearing Concerning the fift what authority exercised Iacob towards his children what duties they yeelde to him both in life and death How they hated murther it is manifest in that historie Both Iosephs continencie and the punishment threatned to Abimelech declare how hainous a thing adultery was vnto them Concerning theft Laban his quarrelling with Iacob and Ioseph his accusing of the brethrē doe shew that it was a thing vnlawfull Lastly Abimelech the king reprehendeth both Abraham Genes 20. and Isaak Genes 26. for bearing false witnesse in denying their wiues Thus we see what efficacie is couched in this preface in that it sheweth both by the precept and practise giuen and yeelded of our first fathers how this commandement alone was giuen in expresse words as also that this one precept is the schoole of all the other Commandements But to what end to keepe it as ceremoniall No to sanctifie it as morall for the end of the Sabbath consisteth in these two things first in the morall secōdly in the figuratiue ceremoniall or shadowish obseruation of it as wee take the word shadow here for a figure because a ceremonie is more then a shadow That I call morall which doth informe mens manners either concerning their religion to God or their duties vnto man that I meane figuratiue which is added for a time in some respect to some persons for an helpe to that which is morall as Deut 5. 15. Remember that thou wast a seruant in the land of Aegipt Howbeit that this first morall ende is here vnderstood the first words declare where it is saide Sanctifie the Sabbath day For where mention is made of the ceremonie it is saide keepe and not sanctifie the Sabbath Now what is it to sanctifie the Sabbath day but to put it apart from all other dayes for a peculiar vse of Gods worship for otherwise wee must know that all other dayes are sanctified so that to sanctifie it is to do that thing on the Sabbath for which it was commanded but of this we shall speake more largely by the grace of God in the last reason In the meane time let vs briefly obserue this that as our first parents did sanctifie the Sabbath in viewing the creatures of God for to praise him so wee sanctifie it in vsing the means which hee hath appointed for his worship So that first wee vsing the exercises of religion whereby we may be sanctified and then ioyning with them the spirituall vse of the creatures whereby wee may be furthered in our sanctification should after vse the exercises of loue whereby we may shew that wee are sanctified Our first Fathers needed not ordinarily the ministrie of the Word but had the great bookes of Gods workes We haue need of the Word both publike and priuate and therefore must learne it that hauing learned it wee might the better exercise the duties of loue So then that which was first to Adam is now the last to vs to wit the beholding of God in his creatures and the praising of him for the same In the Psalme 92. which was appointed to be sung of the Church on the Sabbath is set downe as the chiefest vse thereof the singing of Gods mercie the shewing of his righteous iudgements in rewarding the godlie though afflicted in punishing the vngodlie though here they be aduaunced as also in learning to know God in his worship and in his workes Againe Psal 95. we shall not see any ceremoniall vse of the Sabbath but that it should be vsed in praying to God in praising of God and hearing of his Word This is confirmed Exod. 31. 13. Speake vnto the children of Israel and say Notwithstanding keepe my Sabbaths for it is a signe betweene mee you in your generation that yee may know that I the Lord doe sanctifie you As also Deuteron 5. 12. Keepe the Sabbath day to sanctifie it as the Lord thy God hath commaunded thee And Ezechiel 20. vers 12. I gaue them my Sabbaths to bee a signe betweene mee and them that they might know that I am the Lord that sanctifie them In which places as the reason is adioyned of keeping the Sabbath So wee must vnderstand that where it is called a signe it is meant a document and not a figure for euery figure is a signe but euery signe is not a figure as we may see in the sacraments which are not figures or shadowes of things to come So that in that the Lorde saith My Sabbath is a signe betweene mee and you it is as much in effect as if he should say my Sabbath is a common instruction betweene you and me of mee as the Creator Redeemer and Sanctifier of you as created redeemed and sanctified so that the Sabbath is a document pledge of Gods will whereby we should know what hee is vnto vs and wherein wee should learne what we should do to him In which respect this commandement is no more ceremoniall then the first where the Lord propoundeth what he is to vs and secretly includeth what wee should be to him No maruell then though this be the principall ende which was not begun to the Iewes but first inioyned to Adam and Eue. Wherefore we may thus reason both safely and soundly Whatsoeuer is the first ende is the chiefest ende but to sanctifie the Sabbath is the first end because it was ordained so to Adam in time of his innocencie at what time it could not bee a figure because by the iudgement of
conuey themselues vnto warmer climates vntill the spring time and man alone either vnsensibly doth not foresee or vnaduisedly will not auoide the perillous times to come To conclude Matth. 16. 2. 3. our Sauiour Christ reprehendeth the follie of Pharisies saying When it is euening ye say Faire weather for the skie is red 3. And in the morning ye say To day shall be a tempest for the skie is red and lowring O hypocrites yee can discerne the face of the skie and can ye not discerne the signes of the times True it is that this spirituall vse and holy meditation of the creatures of God should be our whole life howbeit because our distractions in our lawfull and ordinarie callings will not permit this so fully in respect of our finite nature we must remember on the Sabbath day to vse a recouery and by Christian diligence to make recompence for our former negligence herein And in so heauenly a varietie which both by precept and practise we haue receiued of our forefathers for this purpose we shall much profit and set forward this exercise if in wisedome of the spirit we endeuour to frame our meditations especially about those things whereof by reason of our callings in respect of our countries in consideration of the season of the yeere we haue most speciall occasion offered Now if by reason of some dulnes or deadnes by the corruption of nature and secret punishment often incident to the dearest children of God we cannot so reuerently cheerefully and comfortably doe these duties required by our selues alone we may humbly vse the remedie which by the communion of Saints the Lord in this case hath prouided that so frequenting the holy companie of the godly learned and zealous vnto whom the Lord hath giuen greater libertie both of graces and of spirit we may be humbled in regard of our owne wants and take the supplie by them in them that if we cannot either for ignorance or blockishnes reade the things heard compare the places by publike ministerie receiued pray for the fruite of them if we be not able to refresh our selues with considering the workes of God then we must attend vpon the reading conferring and praying thanksgiuing singing and meditations of others that so at the least we may either haue our iudgements cleered or our affections better stirred vp Neither must we blush or be abashed to acknowledge our wants vnto our brethren but with all humilitie earnestly deale with them and enquire of them how they can compare and reconcile the places deliuered how they can amplifie it by meditation how they feele their affections renued how they can frame a prayer of it how they can gather of the creatures and workes of God some fruitfull matter of thanksgiuing that by their godly participation we may haue either our ignorance helped or our infirmities relieued For vndoubtedly this is the cause why so many doe rather in ignorance and deadnes beare the Sabbath as a burthen euen in that they are ashamed by asking the helpe of others to bewray their ignorance or display that corruption of nature which indeed they see and seele in themselues Against which worldly and carnall shame we must fight if euer we will triumph ouer that endlesse shame of the wicked and prouoke our selues by that wholesome and mutuall societie which becommeth the children of God either for the increase of spirituall gifts or for a charitable supporting of the infirmities one of another And these briefly be the exercises of faith and repentance whereby we may either stirre vp our selues or be stirred of others Now it remaineth to intreate of the duties of loue because the Lord his Sabbath is not a day of knowledge alone but of loue not onely of hearing the word by preaching but also of doing the word by practising and these duties either respect the persons of our brethren or they concerne such things as are about our brethren The things concerning their persōs are either in regard of their soules or of their bodies the exercises respecting the things that are about them are either appertaining to their goods or to their credite The duties vnto the soules of our brethren are to teach the ignorant to bring sinners to repentance to bind vp the wounds of them that are afflicted in spirit to comfort the weak to strengthen the hands that fall downe and the knees that are readie to faint to stirre vp them which be dul to admonish the vnruly to confirme the faith of them that beleeue to encourage them in weldoing which haue begun well and to rebuke the wilfull offenders And though these should be the exercises of euery day yet especially they belong to the Sabbath wherein we make a supplie of the wants which we haue on the weeke daies The duties of loue required to the bodies of our brethren are the visiting of the sicke the relieuing of the imprisoned the helping of the poore and miserable the feeding of the hungrie the cloathing of the naked the comforting of the distressed the bestowing of our goods on them that are needie In the primitiue Church as they did euery Sabbath receiue the Sacrament so they laide something downe to the vse of the poore which they did both to giue some thankefull testimonie how the Lord the weeke before had blessed them as also to shew some godly token of their pittie to their afflicted brethen Concerning the exercises of loue towards the credit of our brethren if we shall heare of any secret reports tending to the discredite of others wee must not onely carefully suppresse it but wisely endeuour to recouer their former credite This requireth heauenly wisedome both to admonish the author of euill reports as also to signifie vnto the man euill spoken of what hazard and shipwrake of his good name is pretended yet still concealing the person and vrging the report that if the partie be guiltie he may the sooner step out of his sinne the Lord hauing discharged such a warning peece against him or being guiltlesse that he rather seeke to proue by the rumor than to pursue the author But alas the sinne of our age hath not onely brought in the ignorance and banished the practise of this Christian dutie but also which more is in stead of healing we would the credite of others and it is hard to discerne whether there are more willing to report euill or not vnwilling to heare euill reports of others Who seeth not the common profession of our Sabbath to be a table talking and vaine babling of the infirmities of others tossing to and fro the credit of our brethren as a tennis ball and this not onely vsed among brainsicke and vnstable women whose tongues labour of some greater infirmitie but also of men who vndiscreetly either set abroch or draw out to the full measure and past measure the discredit of their neighbours so that they are so farre from saluing such sores
an easie thing because it is a thing whereto of necessitie wee must yeeld but also of our inferiours whom we may seeme to contemne For all men will graunt that a child ought willingly to be admonished of his father or a seruant ought obediently to be reprehēded of his master but few will in practise giue this that a father should listen to the aduertisement of his sonne or that the maister should receiue an admonition of his seruant Howbeit Iob saith he durst not contemne the iudgement of his feruant or of his maide when they did contend with him because in a dutie of pietie he looketh to them not as seruants but as brethren he looked not to the speaker onely which in respect of his calling was his inferiour but vnto the things spoken in the ordinance of God vnto whom Iob himselfe was an inferiour and before whom Iob knew there was no respect of persons Howbeit to correct the preposterous boldnes of some we rather adde this much that inferiours must rather aduise than admonish aduertise rather than reprehend their superiours that so still they may offer their pure zeale of the glorie of God in vnfained humilitie least through their corrupt zeale they doe not onely not profit their superiours but most iustly exasperate them against them For as Magistrates Ministers and maisters by God his ordinance are to admonish rebuke and reprehend so subiects inferiours and seruants by the same rule are to aduise obey and aduertise Thus zeale goeth from respect of the person to the truth of the cause Another propertie of zeale is to be constant not to be hot by fits cold in the end and onely so long as the world fauoureth it must not be earnest in the beginning and secure in the ending but keepe a continuall tenour and temperature Iobs wife seemed to goe farre so long as she could wash her paths with butter Saul and Pharaoh had some good motions by fits vpon some occasion could play fast and loose being of a strange complexion that they could be hot cold in a moment This propertie of zeale teacheth vs how to be affected in the prosperitie and afflictions of the Church namely that the publike prosperitie of Sion should comfort vs cause vs to reioyce when our priuate crosses might make vs sad As Paul being imprisoned was not so grieued at his owne bonds as he reioyced at the libertie of the Gospell of Christ. Againe that the affliction of the Saints should moue vs to a godly griefe euen when in respect of our selues we might greatly reioyce As Daniel could not finde cōfort in his priuate prosperitie though he were in great authoritie and exempted from the common calamitie because he knew the Church of God to be in miserie But to goe forward pure zeale is not blinded with naturall affection but it discerneth and condemneth sinne though it be neuer so neerely resident in our kindred Many offend against this rule who neuer will rebuke sin in their friends euen vntill God reuenge it from heauen where they are farre from true friendship for whereas they might by admonishing them of their faults in time preuent the iudgements of God they do through a false loue and manifest hatred pull the iudgements of God vpon them whom they loue most deerely He loueth most naturally that hath learned to loue spiritually and he loueth most sincerely that cannot abide sinne in the partie loued without some holesome admonition But doe not many now adaies zealously mislike sinne in strangers who will not mislike the selfe-same sin if it come to kindred if it be in our wife in our children o● in our parents as though the diuersitie of subiects could make the selfe-same thing sinne in some and not in other some This blinde zeale God hath punished and doth punish in his children Isaac did carnally loue his sonne Esau for meate and for a peece of venison Dauid was too much affected to Absolom for his beautie and to Adoniah for his comely stature so as his zeale was hindred in discerning sinne aright in them Now Iacob was not so deere to Isaac and Salomon was more hardly set to schoole and to take paines But behold God louing Iacob and refusing Esau howsoeuer Isaac loued Esau better than Iacob made Easu most troublesome and Iacob more comfortable vnto him Absolom and Adoniah brought vp like cooknies became corosiues to Dauids heart Salomon more restrained of God le●le set by of Dauid was his ioy his crowne his successour in his kingdome This ●●sease is so hereditarie to many parēts louing their children in the flesh rather than the spirit that the holy Ghost is fame to call vpon them more vehem●●tly to teach to instruct and to correct as knowing how easily nature would coole zeale in this kinde of dutie Indeed many will set by their wiues children and kinsfolke if they be thriftie like to become good husbands wittie and politike or if they be such as for their gifts can bring some reuenue to their stocke or affoord some profit vnto thē how deepe sinners soeuer they be against God that maketh no matter it little grieueth them whereby they bewray their great corruption that they neither are zealous in truth or Gods glorie nor louers aright of their children because they can be sharpe enough in reprehension if they faile but a little in thriftines yet are cold enough in admonition if they faile neuer so much in godlinesse Well let these fleshly zealous men lay to their heart the blind affection of Hel● who being the deare child of God was seuerely punished of the Lord for that he was not zealously affected to punish sinne against God in his deere children but blessed are they that can forget their owne cause and euen with ieopardie of nature can defend the quarrell of God henceforth labouring to know no man after the flesh but to endeuour spiritually by faith to see and know Christ Iesus so as no outward league doe bleare and dazell our eyes as that we should not espie sinne in the neerest kindred to correct it or that we should not discerne vertue in the greatest aliens to reuerence it Casting off then this vaile of fleshly loue we must labour to loue most where the image of God appeareth most there shew our affections in lesse measure where sinne may be as a marke whereby God restraineth our loue euen to them where nature may soonest deceiue vs. Now whereas many haue great courage to rebuke such as either cannot gainsay them or gainsaying them cannot preuaile against them here commeth another propertie of zeale to be spoken of and that is that it feareth not the face of the mightie neither is it dis●aied at the lookes of the proud and the loftie Such a courage was in Iob who besides that he made the yong men ashamed of their libertie and afraid of his grauitie made euen the Princes also to
word of God were we pricked by it then haue we profited Haue wee not bin pricked thereby then as yet are we not a sacrifice for the Lord. For as was said before Christ comforteth them that are troubled hee helpeth them that doubt he easeth them which are in distresse hee setteth their feete in the way of peace and gladnesse that haue long been in darknes and sorrow Haue ye not been sorrowfull and will ye learne a salue for this sore be sorrowfull that ye were not sorrowfull be pricked in your hearts because you were not pricked Haue wee heard the word let vs examine our selues if our knowledge be the better if our affections be the holier As hauing heard the exposition of the law of God doe we feare God doe we know how to loue God doe we pray to God doe we worship God in our soules and in our bodies more carefully and in greater conscience than we haue done heretofore Are we not now as prophane and carelesse still in giuing the right worship to the true God as before wee were too superstitious in seruing Angels Saints and other false gods neither sorrowing for our Idolatrie nor caring for true religion Haue wee not blasphemed and prophaned the name of God in vnreuerent hearing his word in vnprofitable talking of his workes and abusing his owne maiestie with swearing and cursing as much as euer wee did before we heard his word Haue wee kept holy the Sabbath or haue we not prophaned it by open neglect of the word by playing sporting drinking and other vanities Doe wee not still send forth our seruants to dispatch our busines on that day as if it were the market day when they may doe such things most lawfully Are not parents householders and gouernours as slacke in prouoking obedience and children seruants and subiects as slow in yeelding obedience as euer they were parents in the meane time not seeing that children therefore rebell against them because they rebell against God nor householders perceiue that seruants doe not their duties to them because they doe not their dutie to God Are we lesse wrathfull and more mercifull Are we lesse riotous and filthie defilers of our flesh and are wee more sober chast and holie Are we lesse giuen to oppression to hard dealing one with another and more iust righteous and carefull to maintaine the good estate of our brethren Are wee not backbiters slanderers or sowers of discord causers of contention among our neighbours being farre off from maintaining loue vnitie and the good name of our brethren The cause why wee cannot see further into these things is because wee flatter our selues and because we compare our selues with our selues and with others but not with the rule of Gods word Let vs then learne to accuse our selues and to iudge our owne consciences For if God see vs condemne our selues hee will not condemne vs if we accuse our selues God will not suffer Satan to accuse vs if wee iudge our selues God will acquite vs from the fearefull iudgement to come if wee bee displeased for our sinnes God will be pleased with vs in Christ his righteousnesse On the contrarie whilest we lie in our sinnes we lie in our owne blood if wee iudge not our selues God will both iudge vs and bee reuenged of our sinne he will set our house on fire he will send enemies hee will send earthquakes he will send famines to consume our goods he wil make friends foes he wil send sicknes and sorenesse vpon our bodies a troubled spirit into our soules he will send vs an ill name thus will he bring plague vpon plague vntill we repent and come to a feeling of our sins And why doth God all this because we will not come to iudge our selues For this cause saith the Apostle 1. Cor. 11. 30. that is because wee iudge not our selues many are weake and sicke among you and many sleepe 31. For if wee would iudge our selues wee should not be iudged 32. But when we are iudged we are chastened of the Lord that wee should not be condemned with the world Likewise the Prophet Psal. 89. and 30 31. 32. 33. But if his children for sake my law and walke not in my iudgements if they breake my statutes and keepe not my commandements then will I visit their transgression with the sword and their iniquitie with strokes yet my louing kindnesse will I not take from him neither will I falsifie my truth For as a father withdraweth from his childe sometimes his loue and whippeth him with the rod of correction so the Lord dealeth often with his children and scourgeth their naked conscience God doth iudge his heere but his enemies will hee iudge in the world to come if we bee not punished here the punishment will be as thunderbolts in the day of iudgement Hast thou been afflicted and not profited Will not a little crosse serue thee a greater shal come to thee Will not a few troubles turne thee to God then many shall come vpon thee If a man be not troubled for sinne here it is the way to hell if hee bee troubled here it is the way to heauen And as they which haue not bin troubled hauing had a little ioy shall haue eternall paine so they which here haue had a little paine shall after haue euerlasting ioy They that are corrected and haue profited by it are afflicted of the Lord in mercie but they that bee vexed and amend not receiue a token of Gods further wrath Wherefore we must not looke to feele comfort in the remission of sinnes vnlesse wee also haue sorrow for committing our sinnes For neuer any of Gods children were comforted throughly but they were first humbled for their sinnes To the working of which humiliation wee must remember Gods iudgements shewed on others Hath God destroyed the whole world for sinne and can hee not or will hee not destroy thee for sinne Hath hee ouerthrowne whole nations and will hee suffer thee to lie still in thy sinnes See how full hell is alreadie and yet daily wee runne headlong thither Consider also how great thy sinne was that could not be cleansed but by the blood of Iesus Christ Oh how foule was that sinne that nothing else could wash it but Christ his heart blood Oh how great was our guiltinesse that was raunsomed by such a price How great was the sore that needeth such a salue how deepe was the wound that needed such a medicine O louing kindnes and vnspeakable loue towards vs Shall Christ ●ee slaine for our sinnes and wee not labour to slay sinne in our selues Shall Christ dye for our sinnes and sinne as yet is not dead in vs Shall Christ bee crucified for vs and will wee not crucifie sinne in our selues Shall Christ haue his heart pricked with a speare and shall not wee haue our hearts pricked with sorrow This is the true vse and meditation of Christ his passion
in the word make him that hath taught him partaker of all his goods The reason is very good if the schoolemaster taketh paines in teaching the schollers owe to him other necessaries Such is the subtiltie of Satan which rageth and stormeth at the Gospell of Iesus Christ the reaching whereof he seeth is the decaying of his kingdome when as by no other meanes he can ouerthrow the same yet doth he mightily heaue at it by drawing the peoples harts from nourishing and maintaining the Preachers thereof that they being oppressed with penurie might be constrained to forsake their ministerie So that it is no marueile though the Apostle giueth so straight a charge thereof seeing so great danger might ensue If they sowe vnto you spirituall things is it a great thing if they reape of you carnall things If the Ministers giue vnto the people gold is it much for them to giue chaffe againe yet there is a greater difference betweene that that the Minister distributeth among the people that which he receiueth of them than is betweene gold and chaffe For he giueth vnto them by the preaching of the word the kingdome of heauen what treasure may be compared vnto it and will not they giue him of their worldly commodities to maintaine his liuing Truly it were a token of too too much infidelitie and a manifest argument that we are not Christians but very Heathen if we should refuse to nourish the Minister that laboureth for our profit It is manifest in the law that the Priests which waited on the Altar liued of the Altar Euen so hath the Lord appointed that they which preach the Gospell should liue of the Gospell Naturall reason teacheth vs this and yet is it written in the Scripture also that no man goeth on warfare at any time of his owne cost for the souldier receiueth his stipend Neither doth any manplant a vineyard and eateth not of the fruite thereof for to that end doth he plant it because he would enioy the fruite And againe No man keepeth a flocke and eateth not of the milke thereof But if the case standeth so in earthly matters that euery man enioyeth the fruite of his labour and is maintained by the same how much more ought the Ministers and Pastors liue of their flocke to whom they are so profitable and for whose sake they take such paines If therefore you will haue such an one placed ouer you that shall refuse no paines in studying night and day in preaching the word in season and out of season in exhorting and trying all meanes to doe you good and that shall loue you so tenderly that his owne life shall not be deare vnto him for your sake you must know it is your dutie to prouide all things necessarie for him for you must not make him your slaue but you must so minister vnto him that he may giue himselfe wholy vnto the faithfull doing of his dutie that he may not be drawne away with other cares from the same If the Lord hath commanded not to mousell the mouth of the oxe that treadeth out the corxe much lesse to withhold the Minister from things necessarie to preserue his life The labourer is worthie of his wages How wonderfully forward were the Galathians in fulfilling of this dutie when as they would not haue refused to pull out their eyes if it had beene possible and haue giuen them to the Apostle Which words although they be of supererogation yet doe they expresse such loue and readines in administring of their worldly commodities that they would haue pluckt out their owne eyes and giuen them vnto him also if by that meanes they might haue pleasured him Truly there is good cause why they should thus loue and prouide for their Minister which laboureth faithfully for if the childe cannot recompence the paines kindnes of his parents in bringing him into this world and prouiding things necessarie for his education neither the scholler the paines of his maister which hath garnished his breast with wisedome and knowledge much lesse can the childe of God recompence his spirituall father who hath begotten him vnto the Lord. Refuse not them to bestow part of thy worldly commodities vpon him that hath brought thee such heauenly treasure without the which thy estate were more miserable than the condition of brute beasts But because it may seeme very much to the worldly minded man who respecteth nothing but temporall things to thinke that he must be so liberall toward his Minister as to prouide him all things that he hath neede of although the children of God which are alreadie called and haue tasted how sweete the Lord hath beene to them by the Ministers meanes whom the Lord hath vsed as an instrument to bring them home will not thinke it much to do their dutie that very liberally in prouiding for their Pastor you shall vnderstand in what sort you ought to prouide for him First you must see that he hath sufficient for to finde himselfe and his familie necessarie foode and apparell for their bodies Secondly you must giue him wherewith to keepe hospitalitie that hee may be able honestly and decently to entertaine strangers which come vnto him to aske his counsell in matters of conscience concerning their faith and saluation Thirdly you must prouide him bookes for his studie and all such as may enrich his knowledge whereby he may the better hee able to answere and helpe all their doubts which come to him Thus must you prouide for him that he may not be troubled with any cares that may with draw him or hinder him in doing of his dutie And whereas the Apostle saith make him partaker of all your goods it is nothing lesse meant than that your goods should be at his pleasure or that you should make him abound in superfluitie wherewith he should be filled vntill he burst as they say there is no such thing but to prouide for him for those causes aforesaid Heere may they aske a question whether they ought to pay tithe vnto such Ministers as bewicked liuers because we haue spoken onely of the dutie which they owe vnto the true Ministers and faithfull labourers in the Lords busines You shall therefore vnderstand though he be a wicked liuer if he teach true doctrin hold nothing back from him but let him haue his dutie that if it shall please the Lord to conuert him from his wickednes hee may loue you the more dearely and haue the more care ouer you but if hee teach false doctrine not the word of God purely but his owne braines yet because you haue a conscience of disturbing the common weale and seeke rather peace than trouble let him haue his dutie that your diligēce in doing your duty may moue him to a more care of his or else if the Lord doth not giue him that grace yet thereby shall you leaue a testimonie in his conscience to his condemnation Moreouer where any such
will take order they shall not fall out And to this end we must labour to haue a good iudgement at the first to esteeme all sinnes as beames in our selues 5 To recouer brethren from their faults belongeth to priuate and publike to Minister and Magistrate Dauid Psal. 101 saith it was his mornings worke to cast out the workers of wickednesse what case are they in then whose morning and euening work it is to keep them in This is now the first sin of the Magistrate to leaue beames as motes vnpunished as I●roboam would let them commit idolatrie so he might haue his kingdome Secondly it is their fault to punish motes and to let beames passe as Saul put the holy Priest to death for Dauids cause but Abner for whoredome was not punished because he was a beame of his kingdome Thirdly they offend in punishing beames as motes and motes as beames as Dauid in diuiding the in heritance betweene Mephibosheth and Ziba For the Minister he must reproue in the light before all men and if they be slow-bellies he must reproue them sharply Priuate men must also admonish There is not only a healing of eyes in the Chirurgians shops but euery man msut haue a care of his brothers eye If we looke for a commandement Leuit. 19. 17. Thou shalt reproue him plainely is as vehement a speech as God could vse Now they say if a manreprehend he is an hypocrite but assuredly he that performeth not this dutie when and where he may let him know his silence is a seruile hypocrisie 6 The holy men of elder ages haue been in the dutie of reprehension and admonition most careful Esay for this cause was counted a man in his time so contentious as that nothing in the land could please him I●remie saith he was borne a man of contention Eze●hiel was called a finde-sault Christ himselfe both commanded Matth. 18. and practised this dutie he is often curning the eyes of the Pharisees Sadduces high Priests Matth. 23. Herode Luk. 4. his owne countrimen his owne disciples most sharpely calling Peter Sathan and saying to Iames and Iohn ye know not what yee aske and his owne mother he reproues roundly Ioh 2. The holy Ghost is a reprouer also Ioh. 16 and this he pr●ctiseth euen at his first comming Acts. 2. 22. Ye haue sl●ine the Lord of life Paul reprooued Peter and Peter Iames. All their Epistles command this dutie 1. Thes. 4. 15. Ephes. 5. 11. They which will not perform this dutie to reprehend the wicked fall often to ●euile good men When there was but one Miohaiah to performe this duty there were 400. Prophets which stood by to preach peace to the people As often we reade in the booke of Kings There came one of the Prophets there came not many to performe this dutie and so it is to this day and this maketh this dutie as bitter as wormewood for that it is so little put in practise 7 That we may suffer rebuke these three things must we doe First as Psalme 141. we must esteeme it as a balme and make profession that we doe so Secondly men must feare themselues more now euery man presupposeth himselfe innocent when as we should be fearefull to haue offended when we haue not offended 1. Sam. 22. I am thy fathers death s●●●h Dauid when he was not indeed Iob was afraid of his children when he knew not they had sinned Thirdly though the accusation be false we must performe thankefulnes Iosh. 22. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16 But contrarie waies if one espie a mote in our eyes we straightway looke into his and then ours is whole 8 If yet we desire more reasons to perswade vs to the practise of this most Christian dutie let vs remember we are to admonish because they are our brethren If two strangers walke together and a mote fall into one of their eyes the other will blow it out or wipe it out this nature teacheth vs. Paul goeth a note higher If there be a thorne in the foote the head stoopeth but if any thing be in the tender eye it laboureth to ease it much more But we reproue commonly when we fall out with our brethren and therefore in veritie we be enemies and not brethren for this is a good argument wi●h ●s he is thine enemie therefore reproue him And this is an Aegyptians tricke to reiect a iust reproofe and to say who made thee a ruler who made you a Preacher Augustine faith if thou dost not helpe his eye God will plague thine eye and his too And againe though thou saiest not euge yet because thou saiest not apage there is saith he a mutuall approbation as well as a mute commendation 9 Three things ought to moue vs to this dutie First least men thinke it an indifferent thing to offend and so we nourish him in his sinne and thereby his eye will gather more filth and scales and in time goe cleane out Secondly if thou pitie not him that offendeth yet pitie him that standeth by least he be offended or any way indangered by thy silence or by the sin past or both as we see in Barnabas by Peter Gal. 2. 13. Thirdly pitie thy selfe and deliuer thy selfe from the guilt of this sinne for if thou be pr●sent be est not grieued for the offence it is in account laide vpon thy score Neither let that hinder vs that we shal not preuaile for Nichodemus also performed this dutie when he had no hope to be heard Ioh 7. 50. Again by rebuking thou shalt deliuer thy selfe from cotempt for by thy silence the wicked will giue thee the same reward they giue vnto God Psalm 50. 21. They will conclude that thou art in the s●me league of imp●●tie with them Finally so doing thou shalt free thy selfe from the punishment of sinne Ely for not reprouing his sonnes perished with them in the same calamitie but L●t escaped in the destruction of Sodome Saint Peter rendreth this reason because he was v●xed with the vncleanly conuersation of the wicked continually preaching righteousnesse and reclayming them from their sinnes 10 This dutie of reprehension is onely to be done to a brother of whom there be two sorts the naturall and the beleeuing brother for the faithfull haue one spirituall Father and one Holie mother euen the heauenly Ierusalem the mother of vs all As there be beames so great that we cā●ot moue them at all so th●re be some men whom we must not touch with any reproofe We must not reprehend thē whom the Church acknowledgeth not for childrē for they be not our brethrē Such a● deserue to ●e reiected by the Church I am not bound to performe this dutie vnto them for holy things must not be giuen to dogges Againe the scorner must be smitten and cast forth as Ismael was he is not worthie a christian reprehension nor a barker or biter of the religious godly as prophane Esau for these
though babish things both in life and doctrine become vs being babes yet hauing past our child-hood the Lord looks for more manly ripenesse both in knowledge in holines of life though our perfect age be not consummated before the resurrection As little children whether in teachablenes to good or reformablenes from sinne are either wo●●e by a faire word or ●llured by a trifling benefit or awed by a checke or feared by a frowning looke or stiiled by seeing another beaten before them or else quieted by the rod so if we be children either the promises of God must affect vs or the mercies of God must allure vs or his threatnings in his word must awe vs or his angrie countenance must feare vs or his correcting of others must humble vs or else the corrections of God vpon our selues must pull vs downe But as those children are of most liberall ingenuous nature who are rather allured with faire words than driuen to dutie with the rod so they are most gracious which are most broken with the conscience of their vnkindnesse more prouoked by the promises of God then by all the curses thunderings and threatnings of the law but they that are affected with neither degenerate as yet from the affections of children Hypocrisie 1 HEe obserued some who outwardly liued an honest ciuill life yet lying hypocritically in some sinne were constrained in death or before to vtter it to their shame Which kinde of iudgements are most necessarie that God might shewe himselfe to be God and his threatnings to be true that the wicked might lesse reioyce in their exceeding impietie and that Gods children might be raised from their securitie Iudgement 1 IN our most earnest matters wee must be zealous ouer our owne heart and then especiallie examine and call to account our affections because that in such a case there is either some speciall worke of God or else it is some notable worke of the flesh or of Sathan And whereas it is a pedagogie of the soule that in all things we had neede to aske the gouernement of God by his word and spirit for that a man knoweth what hee is but not what he shall be in this or that action When wee cannot gage the depth of our heart wee must impute it to want of prayer and the not trauailing with our heart how to doe the things in wisedome 2 Though all exercises of pure religion purely vsed doe both strengthen iudgement and whet vp affections yet reading hearing and conferring do most strengthen iudgement and in part whet on affections But praying singing and meditation doe mos● chiefly whet vp affection but in part strengthen iudgement and vnderstanding 3 Being desired to giue his iudgement of a weighty matter hee answered Syr neither am I able to speake nor you to heare for that wee haue not prayed indeede I may talke and you answere as naturall men but wee are not now prepared to conferre as t●e children of God 4 Hee fatherlie exhorted men to labour for increase of iudgment first by reason then by example by reason thus without soundnes of iudgement it is a more difficult trauailing for the childe of God with his owne heart to any fruit Againe not being stayed in iudgement one shall be troubled to commit and afraide to doe many things which indeede he might lawfully and comfortably doe if he had knowledge Thirdly wee shall not without good knowledge satisfie our godlie desire in perswading or dislwading an●e for that we cannot doe so assuredly substantially and effectually as wee ought and would doe By example he exhorted men to consider of the Prophet Dauid in his Ps●lme ●19 hee prayeth for knowledge hauing no one thing oftner then this Teach mee O Lorde thy statutes c. Sound ioy 1 THe more one tasteth of heauenly things the lesse is his ioy in earthly things the more one feeleth earthlie things pleasant the lesse ioy can hee haue in heauenlie Coloss 3. 1. Phil 3. 20. 2 Wee must in reading the iudgements of God obserue this rule If any man will trie conclusions against Gods conclusions hee shall prooue nothing in the ende but himselfe to be a foole And if hee faile in his triall by how much the more he might be admonished by so much the more hee shall be without excuse There are many that feare Psal. 14. 5. where no feare is but there are more which reioyce where no cause of ioy is 3 Some ioy euery man must haue either carnall or spirituall and therfore when Cain had lost his title and interest in heauen hee made himselfe a seate on earth and when hee had lost the harmony of a good consciēce his nephew Tubal was faine to inuent Organs that hee might haue some musicke and solace in outward things And 2. Kings 11. when the people could not haue their owne fond delights Salomon causeth Apes Peacockes and such like to bee brought from Ophir for them Men will haue ioy ●t they cannot haue the more solemne melodie by Arte they will haue the common instruments of the Countrey But the reason is because the soule is mouldring and the heart is p●rching drie But let these sandie mouldring earthly hearts consider that there is no secure nor true ioy which either time may loose or death dismay or the iudgements of God make afraide It is no sound ioy that either will leaue vs or wee shall be glad to leaue it as an vnprofitable possession 4 Manie had rather part from all fauour of God then loose the grace of some wittie speech which they haue deuised but cursed bee that merriment which respecteth not either dutie to God or loue to our neighbour Knowledge THere are manie who haue a generall knowledge of the Truth but when it comes to particular practise they are hindred with profites pleasures and selfeloue 2 They whose knowledge is in swelling words and painted eloquence of humane wisedome being but a doctrine of the letter in their death they are as if they knew nothing of Christ crucified and whereof comes it that there is so much preaching and so little learning but because men preach and delight to heare plausible nouelties to please the eare rather then the simple power of the Word to pierce the heart they take the bone and refuse the marrow they are content with the shell but want the kernell and not onely the law killeth but also the Gospell that is the letter of the Gospell beeing ministred without the spirite Aske the wounded conscience what comfort it is to heare that Christ dyed for our sinnes Nay aske if this gall not as much as the lawe it selfe so long as it is rather conceiued by reason than receiued by faith 3 He said how after hee knew God hee desired by prayer two things principallie the one that hee might loue the Saints the other that hee might willingly and
Sathan went about to leade him 9 Hee had often in his publike ministerie and priuate conference a sudden failing in memorie so as by no meanes hee could recouer himselfe in those things hee purposed to speake in which case he vsed this remedie presently to groane in his hart and to humble his soule vnderneath the holy hand of God not busilie to stand troubling and tossing his memorie because he knew and had often prooued that this was the best way to turne away this euill 10 To reade and not to meditate is vnfruitfull to meditate and not to reade is dangerous for errours to reade and meditate without prayer is hurtfull 11 The cause why our meditations and prayers are no stronger in the night is because we ioyne not with meditation the examination of our hearts vpon our beds which if we did in some truth it would keepe vs from drowsinesse and want of reuerence in our prayers as well as worldly men are kept waking by thinking on worldly matters Here we are taught by Dauids example when we want the more solemne and best meanes to make a supplie by often and sincere vsing of such priuate meanes as we can Ministerie Ministers 1 WE must neuer be so moued at the reproches of enemies as at the not profiting of friends that is such as be or ought to be the ioy crowne and glorie of our ministerie for whom wee haue prayed and with whom we haue trauailed for their saluation For as these men alone giue all the credite to our ministerie in well-doing so they doe farre more discredite it by euill doing then all others at whose hands we looke for no such things And for this cause wee may not be so moued to see the common sort of people offend because what maruaile is it if they faile in duties when others which are continually taught doe so often slip and fall 2 Ministers should most frequent those places where God hath made their Ministerie most fruitfull they should heerein be like the couetous man that where they haue once found the sweetnes of gaining of soules thither they should be most desirous to resort 3 Hee feared much the preposterous zeale and hastie running of young men into the Ministerie because as iudgement so also stayednesse and moderation vse experience grauitie in ordering affections and the hauing some masterie ouer corruption was needefull in him that should teach others And hee obserued the extreame in our age to be contrarie to that in the first age wherein men being but slenderly brought vp it was very long ere they were vsed in the Church but now education being bettered they are too soone imployed Too hastie a triall must not be made of mens giftes to their hurt that vse them and that haue the vse of them 4 If we aske whether a man may not lawfully desire to be in the Ministerie or no I answere that in the Ministerie are two things a worke and a worship a dutie and a dignitie The worke and dutie to the glory of God and the good of his Church a man may desire The worship or dignity to serue our couetous mind is not to be desired It is good before we come to the complete function of the Ministery there should be some training vp by degrees in the schooles of the Prophets Acts 20. Wee reade of the training vp of certaine Disciples at Corinth and at Antioch Paul was first a Disciple then an Apostle Ioshua vnder Moses Samuel vnder Ely Elisha vnder Elias Salomon vnder Nathan Baruch vnder Ieremie Timothie vnder Paul were trained vp And surely it is a diuine policie first to be of the childrē of the Prophets then a Prophet thē a Pastor First Christ calleth some to be domesticall Disciples Luk 6. After he sendeth them forth Luk 10. And then they preach most fully whē after his Ascension they had receiued the holy Ghost Now if this order were in the Prophets times why should it not be much more in ours In the common-weale there is a training vp of the Gentrie before they be installed into Magistracie In the Court no man at the first is admitted to the highest titles and functions but according to their gifts practise In naturall things wee will not commit our bodies to euery Physitian professor but make enquiry after him who hath had the longest experience Then it is good first with Ioshua Samuel Elisha Salomon Baruch and Timothie to be humbled then with Moses Ely Elias Nathan Paul to be honored For what age requireth this more then our headie olde age of the world Wherein young men are some what forward and young men haue younger iudgemēts younger affections vnseasoned speeches and vnseasoned speeches bring retractions and retractions bring their discredit Mirth 1 WHen a Gentlewoman asked him if he were not sometime merrie Yes saith he we are often merrie and sometimes we are afraid of our mirth Mercies 1 THe way to see the length depth breadth and heigth of Gods mercies is first with shame and sorrow to see the length c. of our owne sinnes Memorie 1 THe best arte of Memorie is to be humbled at Gods threatnings and comforted at his promises for sure it is that exceeding griefes or exceeding ioyes leaue great impressions in vs. 2 The best arte of Logicke is to reason E conuerso out of that saying of Paul There is no temptation hath ouertaken you but it hath ouertaken others And to say thus There hath no temptation ouertaken others but the same may ouertake vs. This will teach vs to speake charitably and profitably of other mens infirmities Markes of the children of God 1 THere be some notable markes to know whether our iourney be to heauen or to hell first if a man be so close that he will not open his way whither he purposeth to goe yet you shall sp●e out his intent by obseruing which way his carriage is sent if our carriage goe after the flesh to the flesh we shall come if after the spirit to the spirit we shall come Secondly if a man conceale his voyage yet you shall discerne him by his inquirie this way or that way if he aske which is the way to Canaan and where the way lieth in the wildernesse it is an argument he is going to the promised land Thirdly albeit he would keepe his iourney neuer so priuie yet he is bewrayed if when in hearing a man speake against his countrey and dispraise his Prince and people his blood beginneth to rise he findeth himselfe grieued and standeth in defence of his countrey So if when men disgrace Gods word speake euil of his Ministers or reproch his Saints we finde our selues moued and not able to containe our selues from reprehension that is a token we are trauailing towards heauen Occasions of euill 1 GOdly men are not in danger of grosse wicked women wherefore we must haue a greater carefulnes of our selues when we are in companie
diuels yet God is vnchaungeable and maketh them white as snow and as he loueth vs not simply for any wel doing so he doth not cast off his loue simplie for any euil doing We must often listen to that sweete Eccho which is betweene the Lord and our consciences Sinner saith the Lord I am thy saluation Father saith the sinner thou shalt be my saluation That we may be assured hereof it pleaseth the Lord euen to admit vs into his Tabernacle of cōference and will not only let vs tread in the courts but also giueth vs a stool● to sit in his owne presence before the Arke yea and not onely giueth vs a roome in his Church but also diuideth vs our portion of heauenly consolation by his Spirit truth whereby not only our soules and bodies be holden together but also we grow from glorie to glorie from pleasure to pleasure vntill wee be made perfit in his Syon 34 The heart is God his owne part and that which must goe to the Lord Now as nothing should runne to common vses which was sacrificed to the Priests vnder the Law so the heart which is the Lords title must not be freely giuen to any possession but onely in for and from him 35 As of all mercies of God this is not the least that the Lorde will not let vs thriue in sinne but vouch safeth to crosse vs and meete vs in our way as hee did with Ba●●●m going into an euill way So this of all iudgements is the sorest when the Lord taking away his carefull hand from vs shall suffer vs to prosper and growe cunning in sinne so as wee can rode thorow and cut downe whole woods drie vp whole fountaines and drinke vp manie riuers and ouerthrowe euery mountaine that stands in our way And therefore God his children are quickly espied to be bungerlike workers of sinne that the Lorde may shame them in this life but the wicked knit so close a web that they goe away with art and peace vntill the Lord shame them in the day of shame 36 As many being much diseased in bodie are the more thereby distempered in their mindes So manie troubled in minde bring a disorder of nature euen vpon their bodies And none more then contētious persons who not looking to the hand of God but to the weaknes of man doe fret too much which is only to be remedied with considering of the vilenes of our sinne of the wisedome of our God Iob did not fume against the Chaldeans but humbled himselfe before God Dauid fretted not against Shim●i but cast himselfe into a searching of his conscience And wee shall finde by proofe that they that are much humbled for their owne sinnes are most meeke to others as also that they who are most contentious with others are not much humbled with their owne sinnes 37 It is one thing to haue our hearts hardening and another to haue them hardened Our hearts are hardened when there is litle hope of repentance or at least hard comming to repentance our hearts are hardening when we are but in the way to the other and this commeth either by wholly refusing of good things or by some carelesse vsing of them or else by doing of euill and suffering our selues to be hardened through the deceitfulnes of sinne This deceiueablenesse of sinne is either an inarching vpon vs after some good fruite or Christian profession when hauing beene any long time well occupied wee haue not through want of feare and priuie pride the former iealouzie ouer our thoughts but wee are ready to giue some larger libertie to our first motions motions breeding consent consent producing the action the action iterated bringing a custome and custome casting vs into hardnes of heart or else it sl● lie stealeth vpon vs by leauing our exercises of religion by little little when we can leaue off for once without any necessitie one thing and ●not●●r time another vntill at the length our desire die and our good purposes lye buryed ●re we ●e aware 38 Wee may learne to suspect our wisedome in matters concerning a better life euen by the wise men of the world in things concerning this life The Physition whose Arte hath bene fruitfull to manie will not content himselfe being fallen into some sicknes with his owne knowledge but will ioyne in conference with the more learned in that facultie for his recouerie The skilfull Lawyer hauing cōmendablie handled the causes and controuersies of many Clients will not in his purchase or proper case trust to his owne practise but prouideth better for the matter by taking the aduice of many men of experience in that profession and yet in the matter of saluation in the great sicknesse of the soule and purchase of eternall life wee thinke our selues wise enough and that sinne can soone be plaistered and Heauen gotten with ease as though saluation were not worth the labouring for 39 Manie are readie to doe duties and they will also require duties and though they haue not duties answered to them yet they must goe forward in duties Manie will doe no iniurie and they will suffer no iniurie yet they must learne to beare iniuries and bee readier to receiue the second then to reuenge the first It is also true that many see their owne infirmities and will not see other mens and yet they espie not so manie things as they may espie Manie thinke they doe many good things and they doe so yet they doe not many things which they may doe And one may doe many things good in their owne natures and yet corrupt them in the manner of doing and by some blemish in the affection corrupt the beautie of the whole action Manie leaue many sinnes and doe manie good things thinking that all others should le●ue many sinnes too and that euery one should goe foote by foote by them and yet God giueth not the like measure to euery one Many rebuke a thing rebukable and when the offenders see it not they growe impatient and yet in wisedome wee should waite for the turning of the sinner Manie will forgiue when they see a man relenting neither is it any great matter yet this is a Christian dutie in deed by faith in God to hope and waite for the conuersion of a sinner in the meane time supporting all infirmities The naturall affection of parents with their children doth by hope vse great longanimitie and why should not we then vse the same and more in Christianitie For Gods children are to put vpon them the affection of fathers of mothers and of brethren and sisters to heare out and sustaine the infirmitie of our brethren Many do duties forbeare want of duties looke to the least infirmitie in themselues not prie into the defects of others and yet cannot away to bee adn onished but if a man can sustaine the rebuke of his friend and the reproch of his enemie not looking so
himselfe whether hee be in the Faith or no 2. Cor 13. 5. Why else 2. Secondly because euery one must be able to proue and examine mens doctrines and doings by the Scriptures that they be not in their saluation by them deceiued 3. Thirdly because euery one must be able as his calling requireth to teach admonish exhort and comfort one another 4. Fourthly because euery one must be able to make an account of the faith and hope that is in him What if men cannot reade Then they must vse the helpe of others that can reade Is it enough to reade the Scriptures priuately or with others No for God hath also commaunded to heare them read publikely in the Church And is it enough to heare them read publikely in the Church No for hee also hath ordained preaching to be vsed Why must preaching be ioyned with ●eading Because it is the most principall and proper meanes to beget Faith in vs. Why must Faith be mixed with the Word read and preached Because otherwise the word profiteth vs nothing How many things are requisite to bee in euery one that will come to heare the Word read and preached Amongst others foure are necessarie What is the first 1. First a reuerend feare of the Maiestie of God 2. Secondly an assured faith in Christ. 3. Thirdly an earnest endeuour to frame our liues thereafter 4. Fourthly they must pray for the holie Ghost to bee giuen them to enlighten their mindes and to write all these things in their hearts Which be the principall parts of Gods word The Law and the Gospell What call you the Law It is that part of the Word that commaundeth all good and forbiddeth all euill What if wee could keepe the Law Then wee should be blessed What if wee breake the Law Then we are subiect to the curse of God and so to death and damnation What call you the Gospell It is that part of the word which containeth the free promises of God made vnto vs in Iesus Christ without any respect of our deseruings What doth that worke in vs It worketh in vs a true and liuely faith in Iesus Christ whereby wee lay holde of the free remission of our sinnes in him and the true repentance of them What must wee learne by the whole word of God Two things 1. First to make a right and sound entrance to our saluation 2. Secondlie how to encrease and continue in the same vnto the ende What is required for our right and sound entrance to our saluation Three things are required 1. First to know and to be perswaded of the greatnes of our sinnes and the miserie due to the same 2. Secondly to know and be perswaded how we may be deliuered from them 3. Thirdly to know and bee perswaded what thankes wee owe to God for our deliuerance How shall wee come to the right sight of our sinnes and a sound perswasion of the greatnesse of them By the spirit of God leading vs into the true vnderstanding of the Law and a due examination of our selues thereby Where is the Law set downe It is written in many places of the Scriptures but the summe thereof is contained in the ten Commandements Rehearse them I am the Lord thy God thou shalt haue none other gods but me How are they deuided Into two principall heads or tables as they be called What doth the first table teach vs It teacheth vs our dutie towards God and is contained in the foure first Commaundements What doth the second teach vs Our dutie towards our neighbour and is contained in the sixe last Commandements Why are the duties towards God set downe before the duties towards our neighbour 1 Because the loue of God is the ground of the loue of our neighbour What followeth hereof 2 That none can rightly loue his neighbour except he first loue God Why are the duties towards our neighbour ioyned to our duties towards God 3 Because the loue of our neighbour is the proofe of our loue towards God What ensueth hereof 4 That none can loue God aright except he also loue his neighbour Why are the Commandements set downe in ten parts and not in generall 5 Because God is not pleased with doing our duties in generall or in some part but he will be wholy serued in all and euery one of his Commandements Why are they set downe singularly or to euery one 6 Because euery one must doe his owne dutie though none goe before him What followeth of this That euery one must beare his owne burthen and none shall haue excuse by the example of others Are there not some rules which serue for the better vnderstanding of euery one of the Commandements Yea there be foure which haue speciall vses 1 First in euery commandement where euill is forbidden there the contrarie good is commanded 2 Secondly many moe euils are forbidden and many moe good things are commanded in euery commandement than in words are expressed 3 Thirdly because God is a spirit therefore his commaundements are spirituall and require spirituall obedience 4 Fourthly in euery commaundement where euill is forbidden there the occasions of the euill are forbidden and where good is commanded there also the occasions of good are commanded Rehearse the first Commandement Thou shalt haue none other gods but me What euill is here generally forbidden Euen that which the words doe import What good is commaunded To haue God to be my onely God and to be alwaies in his presence What is it to haue God to be our onely God To giue him all things which be proper and peculiar to his Maiesty Which be those that properly concerne God and therefore be the speciall things commanded They be very many Rehearse the summe of them wher● b● the rest may be vnderstood I am bound to beleeue in God to loue God to feare and obey him to pray vnto him and praise him After what sort m●st you performe these duties of faith loue feare obedience prayer and thankesgiuing With my whole mind and vnderstanding with my whole heart and my whole strength Which bee the peculiar sinnes herein forbidden To faile in giuing to God any of these or the like forenamed good things in any part or in any respect What else is particularly forbidden To giue any of the forenamed good things to any creature or any other thing whatsoeuer whereby my heart may be withdrawne from God in any part or in any respect Which be the occasions of the breach of this Commandement 1. First the vaine desire of the pleasures riches and glorie of this world 2. Secondly a negligent and carelesse vse of the meanes to serue God his prouidence Are not the contrarie good things to these commaunded Yea. Which are they 1. First a heart contented with any estate and vsing things of this world as though we vsed them not 2. Secondly a reuerend and diligent vse of the meanes to
refresh our selues with spirituall pleasures in the pure worship of God and thankefull beholding of his workes We see how these reasons make rather flatly with vs than against vs. And thus much for their proofes out of the prescript words of the lawe now let vs consider what they alleage out of the Prophets Their reasons out of the Prophets be taken either out of Esay or out of Ezechiel Out of Esay they vse these places Esai 56. 1. 2. and 58. 13. 14. and 66. 13. The wordes of the Prophet chap. 56. vers 1. 2 are these Thus saith the Lord keepe iudgement and doe iustice for my saluation is at hand to come and my righteousnesse is to be reuealed Blessed is the man that doth this and the sonne of man which laieth hold on it he that keepeth the Sabbath and polluteth it not and keepeth his hand from doing any euill See say they here is the Sabbath commended as a resting from sinne I denie it not but our controuersie is about the ground of the Sabbath For why doth the Lord so call on his people by the Prophets for keeping the Sabbath and crieth so much against the breach of the same but because it was the especiall meanes of God his worship and their saluation which being contemned they contemned God his worship and their owne welfare And because in this horrible contempt of the holie schoole of the Lord where they should haue learned both their religion towards God and duties to their brethren they gaue a manifest token of carelesnesse in them both they are worthily threatned by the Prophet And concerning the pure interpretation of this place by keeping the Sabbath is meant the obseruation of the first table by keeping their hands from doing any euill is vnderstood the obedience of the second table so that the thing in this place chiefly vrged is this that they should keepe the Sabbath which might nourish them in the worship of God and in duties to their brethren But say they the Sabbath is here ioyned with ceremonies as may appeare in the verses following therefore it is a ceremonie This is no sound argument For in the law is set downe the morall law which teacheth the common duties of all Gods people wherein be also the ceremonies which describe the duties peculiar to the Iewes whereupon we must not conclude that therefore the morall law is ceremoniall Againe these ceremonies containe not only certaine truths of spirituall things which should be accomplished in Christ but also of other meanes which should succeed in their places True it is that if they had onely contained truths of spirituall things in Christ it had beene somewhat that they affirme but seeing they haue also in them such meanes which though not in the same manner yet more effectually are afterward to be vsed the reason is not good Wherefore we reason against them thus that albeit we haue not the manner of their sacrifices yet we haue our sacrifices and meanes of Gods worship succeeding them For though we haue not as they had Priests to offer for vs and such slaine sacrifices as the Priests did offer for them yet we haue the Ministers of the word of God which cut vp mens consciences by whom the secrets of mens hearts are made manifest 1. Cor. 14. 25. By the preaching of the Gospell and word of God which being mightie in operation and sharper than a two edged sword entreth thorough euen to the diuiding asunder of the soule and spirit and of the ioynts and the marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the hearts Heb. 4. vers 12. And whereby Christ is as it were freshly crucified vnto vs and that by so much the more profitably than if we were present at the thing it selfe as beside the describing of the manner thereof the fruite of it is more effectually preached And certainely we may affirme that then the dumbe sacrifices of the blinde Papists came in when this glorious sacrifice of preaching ceased And where the word is administred in any power and sinceritie there doubtlesse the preaching of the law striketh vs and the preaching of the Gospell bringeth vs to Christ. Herein is the difference betweene the Iewes and vs that they in all their Sacraments and sacrifices represented Christ that was to come and shewed that their sinnes in him should be taken away being yet to come we manifestly in our sacrifices witnesse that he is alreadie come and that our sinnes in his death are fully pardoned Besides to those forenamed sacrifices we haue the sacrifices of prayer and thanksgiuing whereof the Prophet speaketh Psalme 141. 2. Let my prayer be directed in thy sight as incense and the lifting vp of mine hands as an euening sacrifice As also Psalme 119. part 14. vers 108. O Lord I beseech thee accept the free offerings of my mouth and teach me thy iudgements Of these sacrifices is mention Malac. 1. Hose 14. 2. Mat. 24. Ioh. Heb. 13. 15. Now in that it followeth Esai 56. 7. that the Lord will bring them to his house of prayer I grant in that they had but one house of prayer which represented to them the Church to be one it was ceremoniall yet I also confesse that in the same was this common truth that it should be a meane to worship God Wherefore in this place the Lord commaundeth and commendeth holie assemblies euen to vs to whom they be as needfull as to the Iewes For though it be not now necessarie nor required that wee should goe vp to Ierusalem to worship after the manner of the Iewes yet besides our priuate houses wherein we may worship the Lord we haue neede of one publike and common place to meete in whereunto the Lord in his Gospel hath made this promise that where two or three shall be gathered in his name he will be in the middest of them This also is commended vnto vs by the example of the holy Apostles who mette together and besides their seuerall houses it is said Acts. 2. 46. They continued with one accord in the Temple so that they had one place where the Word the Sacraments Prayer c were vsed And though we now haue not the same offerings places and sacrifices which the Iewes had yet we haue these things more effectually than they and though we haue not their Sabbath yet we haue a Sabbath The words Esay 58. 13. be these If thou turne away thy foote from the Sabbath from doing thy will on mine holy day and call the Sabbath a delight to consecrate is as glorious to the Lord and shalt honour him not doing thine owne waies nor seeking thine owne will nor speaking a vaine word 14. Then shalt thou delight in the Lord and I will cause thee to mount vpon the high places of the earth c. This is spoken to the present estate of the Iewes as then they were and not properly to
not so doe for the great ignorance carnall securitie of people For the administration of Baptisme although there be no expresse places of the scriptures shewing the practise of it on this day yet there are many good reasons agreeable to the word which will proue the same First we know Circumcision was vsed on that day therefore Baptisme which is come into the place of Circumcision is to be vsed on the Sabbath day Againe Baptisme is a publike action of faith wherby a member is to be receiued into the Church and therefore the prayers of the whole congregation ought to be made for it all must be hereby put in minde of the benefits which they haue reaped by Baptisme and so make a double profit of their presence hereat Now seeing old and young men women masters and seruants fathers and children cannot so generally conueniently meet on the weeke daies by reason of their callings as they can on the Lords day their busines set apart it seemeth by good reason that the Sabbath is the fittest day for this Sacrament Againe if the Lord in his infinite wisedome and goodnes commanded Circumcision to be vsed on the eight day both for the auoyding of superstition if any tied the grace of God to the outward signe as also for a sufficient time wherin the children might gather some strength to the cutting off of their flesh why were it not a thing requisite that Baptisme should be deferred to the Lords day both for the remouing of their superstitious opinion who think the childrē dying vnbaptized to be but damned and also for the better enabling of the child to be dipped in the water according to the ancient maner and pure nature of Baptisme Wherefore for these causes Baptisme cannot be denied to be a publike dutie of the Sabbath Cōcerning priuate exercises on the Sabbath they are either going before the publike or following after or comming betweene The duties going before are either in examining our selues or stirring vp of our selues The examination of our selues consisteth partly in surueying our estate past and partly in considering of our present condition in surueying our estate past we are to call to minde either what sinnes the weeke before we haue committed to the more humbling of our selues in prayer or we must remēber what graces of God in our soules what benefits of God on our selues or in our friends we haue receiued to the better prouoking of our selues to thanksgiuing in considering of our present condition we are to examine how we stand affected whatmeasure of faith repentance and godlines is in vs if there be any special want or occasion of publike prayer we must craue the prayer of the Pastor and congregation if any peculiar cause of a solemne thanksgiuing be offered we must giue the Preacher and people word of it as also if there be occasion of some want we are to pray for the Minister that his mouth may be opened to make some happy and holy supply by the word of it How requisite this examination is our ciuill practises may declare We see worldly thriuing men if not euery day yet at the least once in the weeke they search their bookes cast their accounts conferre with their gaine their expences make euen reckonings whereby they may see whether they haue gained or whether they haue lost whether they are before hand or come short and shall not we much more if not once a day which were expedient yet once in the weeke at the least call our selues to a reckoning examining what hath gone from vs what hath come towards vs how we haue gone forward in godly proceedings or how we haue gone backward that if we haue holy increases we may giue thankes and glorie to God if we come short we must humble our selues and endeuour the weeke following to trauaile with our selues the more earnestly to recouer our former losse This examination had we are further to stirre vp our selues before we come to the publike exercises This consisteth in reading meditating and praying whereby we may prouoke a spirituall appetite the more hungerly desirously and louingly to resort to the congregation How necessarie this is the long and wofull experience of non-proficients in the schoole of Christ doth lamentably shew For what is the cause why in the prayers of the Church we so little profit What causeth the word to be of so small power with vs whereof commeth it that the Sacraments are of such slender account with vs Is it not because we draw neere to the Lord with vncatechised hearts and vncircumcised eares without prepared affections and vnschooled senses so that we come vnto and depart from the house of God with no more profit than we get at stage-plaies where delighting our eyes and eares for a while with the view of the pageants afterward we vainely depart If we at any time are to entertaine some speciall friend or stately guestes it is ciuilitie to auoide all things noysome and to procure all things handsome in our houses and shall we not thinke it Christianitie at such times as the Lord hath made speciall promise to visit vs and to become our friendly guest to purge the loathsome affections of the heart dispose our soules in some holy order for his entertainement Are we so diligent to present our selues on the Sabbath in our best attire because then we shall come before the whole congregation and shall we be negligent to attire our soules seeing we are to appeare before God and his Angels Doe we outwardly professe this day to be a more solemne time than any other day of the weeke and shall we in inward practise denie the same Wherefore in this holy preparing of our selues we are to imitate the wisedome of worldly men who hauing a suite to the Prince or some noble personage which hath not that happie successe and issue which was hoped for by and by beginne to call themselues to account to consider with themselues in what circumstance they failed whereby lesse circumspectly and lesse aduisedly they attempted their enterprise accusing themselues of folly and vnconsiderate dealing in their cause whereby a● wofull experience teacheth them their request fell to the ground Vnto these men herein we must not be vnlike when in dealing with the Lord we profit not so much by hearing reading praying or any other publike exercise as we should neither must we sticke to reason with our selues and to contemne our selues as faultie either in omitting something to be done or committing something to be vndone before we addresse our selues to our publike duties Now that this examining and stirring vp of our selues may the better be done it is requisite contrarie to the long and loathsome practise of the most part of men that we rise earely on the Sabbath day We see young men will rise earely to resort to matiages to feastings to goe a maying to ringing
who mourne rather in themselues possessing their soules in patience thā murmur against others as labouring in a secret disdaine of them and of this sort of mourners the Lord Iesus hath pronounced this iudgement Blessed are the meeke for they shall inherit the earth Neither must we be of too abiect a spirit as they that will patiently suffer all things because they would be troubled with nothing for that were rather a stoicall and vnchristian sottishnes than an heroicall and Christian meekenes but willingly submitting our necks to the yoke by the Lord his appoyntment imposed vpon vs we are rather patiently to waite for the time of our deliuerance and by labouring to keepe a good conscience we are to hunger and thirst after righteousnes where with vpon the credite of the Lord his owne word we shall in his good time be satisfied Now that wee may continue sanctification with mortification as wee ioyne together Christ his passion and resurrection let vs adde somewhat of those quickening graces of the spirit wherin some effects of Blessednesse doe appeare most euidētly the first is peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost Rom. 5. 2. wherby we finde both truce with God and are at league with his creatures so as both for our comfort in the promises of God we haue accesse to him to reioyce vnder the hope of his glorie and for our confidence in the promises of God we can lie downe and sleepe in many perils because God hath either meanes to deliuer vs out of them or else is readie to sustaine vs in them Psal. 3. 6. and 4. 8. Of this thus speaketh the Prophet Blessed is the people that can reioyce in thee they shall walke in the light of thy countenance O Lord Psal 89. 13. Now least we should deceiue our selues with some false peace and illuding ioy we put vnto this peace of minde sinceritie which the holy Ghost hath linked together Psal. 32. 2. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not iniquitie and in whose spirit there is no guile And Psal. 119. Blessed are those that are vpright in the way and walke in the way of the Lord. Beware least this vprightnes of minde be boysterous and voide of loue without which all is as nothing but a swelling pride so with this we make knowne our faith by fruites and our feeling by sweete effects For loue the enemie of securitie is carefull to please God and fearefull to displease him and blessed is the man that feareth alwaies Prou. 28. 14. Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord and walketh in his waies Psalm 128 1. Lastly this feare is ioyned with a care to please God in the obedience of his word Luk. 11. Blessed are they that heare the word of God and keepe it Those effects which concerne not onely our selues but others are of two sorts and comprehended Matth. 5. The first a Christian care to worke in others a taste of that sweete reconciliation which is from God to man or from man to man whereof it is said Matth. 5 9. Blessed are the peace-makers for they shall be called the children of God Many may vndertake this dutie but vpon some sinister affection and therfore we require a fellow-feeling of the euils of others mourning both for their inward defects outward necessities of whom Christ hath said Blessed are the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercie Of the other the Psalmist speaketh Psal. 40. 2. Blessed is he that iudgeth wisely of the poore c. And when wisedome ioyned with compassion pitie mixed with policie doth worke such a moderation in our affections as that wee may vse such a mercifull seueritie where it is needefull and a seuere lenitie where the matter so requireth it this causeth vs to auoide on the one side taking of offence for Blessed are they saith the Lord Iesus that are not offended at me and on the other side it teacheth vs to reach out our hand to the needie for it is a blessed thing to giue rather than to receiue Act. 20. 35. The outward effects are prosperitie as a signe of God his loue and aduersitie as a thing sanctified vnto vs in the crosse of Christ Psal. 128. Many temporal blessings are propounded not vniuersally but as restrained to them that feare the Lord because indeed they haue the surest interest in them right vnto them The like felicitie falleth out Psal. 144. but to such as haue God for their Lord. And much more is a certain gain and handsell of happines ariseth euen out of the bitternes of affliction to them that feare God in that thereby the Lord strippeth them from some sin wherewith they might haue rotted or whetteth them vp to some actions of godlinesse wherein their zeale began to freeze for cold or to trie their faith which else would haue beene drosse or for the good of others that might make their profit thereby The Prophet his testimonie of this is Psal. 99. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastisest O Lord and teachest him in thy law Herevnto may be ioyned that beatitude of the Lord of all blessings Matth. 5. 10. Blessed are they that suffer persecution for righteousnes sake for theirs is the kingdome of heauen To draw at the last to the consummation of all this we make the full heape of all happines after this life to be filled with the Lord of life and with the sweetnes of his presence who is happie aboue all that can be thought and counted happie This is foreshewed Matth. 25. Come ye blessed of my father possesse the kingdome prepared for you And Reuel 14. Blessed are they that die in the Lord c. For thus shall we be ioyned to God the Father the Sonne and the holie Ghost then shall all teares be wiped from our eyes then shal our infirmities be taken from vs then shall we dwell with the Angels with all the hostes of heauen in most happines and blessednes it self We see now by this chaine not forged by our own braine but framed out of Gods his word that he is indeed blessed whom God chuseth whom Christ redeemeth whom the Spirit renueth whom faith staieth whom the Word Prayer Sacraments and discipline build vp in the Lord in whom faith breedeth peace peace sinceritie sinceritie loue loue a feare of displeasing and a care of pleasing God in whom this care striueth to a mortification in pouertie of minde this pouertie comming from a mourning heart possessed in a meeke spirit which hungreth after righteousnes all these things being ioyned with that sanctification which lamenteth the sinne of others and relieueth the wants of others knowing to vse prosperitie and aduersitie as pledges of God his fauour and vndoubtingly looking for the kingdome of heauen in the life to come If any of these linkes be missing the chaine is broken if any of these members be wanting the bodie of blessednesse is vnperfit FINIS
get knowledge and feeling Wherefore all men must looke to this men and women old and young masters and seruants What will they challenge themselues to be Christians and glorie in the title alone and not esteeme of the dutie They will leaue that part peraduenture to book learned men and to Preachers Well they must know that againe whereof they are wilfully ignorant that there is a mutual coherence betweene these two things the title and the dutie What ye glorie that yeare Prophets and yet ye prophecie not ye boast that ye are Kings and ye ouercome not ye bee glad to be counted Priests and ye sacrifice not Euen Papists though they taught ignorance to be the mother of deuotion can say more for their superstition and Heretikes can say more for their diuellish opinions than Protestants for the defence of Christ his glorious Gospell Look but to the Papists and Familie of loue how painfull and cunning they are to goe to runne to ride to make one like of their heresies see how they will looke for you at markets how they will entertaine you what meekenes what mildenes they will vse to salute you This ought to shame vs this ought to make vs labour more for knowledge that when temptations inuade vs when Satan accuseth vs when heresie shal assault vs we may stand stedfast and vnremoueable we may edifie one another and in persecution not be dismaied but resist constantly vnto blood Now as Peter hath shewed that which Ioel prophecied to be fulfilled so these verses following shewe the iudgements of God which should fall vpon the Church for the neglect or contempt of these graces offered There is some question here about the time Some vnderstand it of Christ his comming in the flesh-some of his comming to iudgement others more truly thinke it to be that whole time which is betweene his comming in the flesh and his comming to iudgement and so it appeareth the most probable opinion both by the things going before and by that which followeth after For in the words going before it is saide In the last dayes I will powre out my spirit now the giuing of the spirit was fulfilled in that whole time spoken of Againe that which followeth after concerning calling vpon the name of the Lord is also meant of that time Now it both that which goeth before and that which followeth after be vnderstood of that time then it is probable that that which is in the midst is likewise so vnderstood And although Christ his first comming was a most glorious time as we may see by the testimonie of the Apostle yet his last comming shall be a farre more glorious day as wee may see Titus 2 2. Thess. 4. where his comming is described to bee with Angels and with a shoute Yet because this glorie doth appeare in the whole course of redemption it shall be good to vnderstand this as the places going before and comming after that is of the whole time in all which hee ceaseth not to offer these graces and to execute these iudgements As for the wordes themselues some thinke them to be vnderstood literally some allegorically and spiritually But they admit both First that they haue vse in their naturall signification it appeareth because the Lord neuer leaueth his Church without some instructions in the Sunne the Moone the Heauens and the Earth For besides naturall eclipses in Sunne and Moone and other exaltations yet there haue been workes extraordinarie in them both which haue been as prognostications of Gods wrath for sinne Further wee may safely gather that there was neuer any strange Eclipse Comet apparition in the heauens shaking of the earth strange and vnnatural births but after this change of nature some euent came strangely sooner or later which shewed that men had broken their obedience with God and were become monstrously disobedient which the Lord maketh knowne to vs by changing the course of nature Therefore wee say that before great Earthquakes plagues warres Comets famine or such like goeth great contempt of religion monstrous prophanenes so they be the prognostications of some notable sinnes either in religion or in life or in both Thus wee neither exclude the literall sense and yet wee doe not admit that fansie or rather frensie of the Familie of loue because we graunt that after strange disobedience and contempt followe strange punishments and reuenge so that the Prophet sheweth the workes of God for sinne either by the things following or by the signes going before It is a question why at this time wherein hee would shewe himselfe so gratious the Lord should send such tokens of his wrath Here wee see a contrarie order of teaching to flesh and blood because God will then haue his mercie manifested when he will shew his iustice And because men hearing of the Gospell imagine of a felicitie in this world therefore Peter to awaken them out of this dreame le ts them to vnderstand that vnlesse these gifts be reuerently receiued God will be most angrie because they either refuse or abuse the mercies of God so offered The vse of this is partly in respect of the elect and people regenerate and partly in respect of the wicked and vnregenerate in respect of the elect either before or after their regeneration before their regeneration to bring them to seeke Iesus Christ. For though it is certaine that God in time will call them whom he hath predestinated and chosen yet because his Gospell is not so pretious vnto them as it should be therefore the Lord sendeth them crosses sometimes pouertie sometime sicknes sometime reproch sometime a troubled minde sometime priuate miserie and sometime a publike calamitie to inuolue them among others because they haue no more trust in the promises of God before they be humbled And because men wil not easily or vsually be humbled by the bare word the Lord sealeth it by sending of troubles that when wee can feele no comfort either in heauen or in earth but perdition and matter of damnation in our selues wee should then be the fitter to receiue comfort in Christ. Againe for as much as God his children haue one speciall fault or other as priuie pride vainglorie selfe-loue or such like priuie corruptions that the word of God cannot be suffered to draw vs out of these sinnes for this cause the Lord sendeth affliction by his correction he draweth vs out of our ciuill righteousnes maketh vs make conscience of inward and hidden corruptions and putteth them in minde by miserie that the same corruption is ●●rking in them which hath broken forth in others and that naturally it did dwell in them though repressed by the finger of God it did not violently flame out Againe where others lie in sinne and know it not because the very light of nature is choked in them God his spirit can take little hold to worke any thing vpon them that the Lord might bring them to see sinne vnknowne and to
is an house of hearing the word of receiuing the Sacraments of executing discipline as well as of prayer but yet this one name comprehendeth all Now before we shew the reason of it how commeth it to passe that few care for the word fewer for the Sacraments and fewest for discipline yet all shew themselues friends to prayer yea and Heretikes which in the other things will depart from vs will acknowledge this thing This is God his goodnes that none doe forsake this That by prayer is meant all parts of God his worship it is manifest Matth. 24. 13. where our Sauiour Christ saith But he that endureth vnto the end he shall be saued Now the meanes to auoide these iudgements come after The Gospell of the kingdome must be preached to all nations Iohn 3. Christ by the preaching of the Gospel must be lift vp that who so hearkeneth to the word should be saued These are ioyned both together Rom. 10. where it is s●id Whosoeuer calleth on the name of the Lord he shall be saued and a little after But how shall they call on him on whom they haue not beleeued and how shall they beleeue vnlesse they doe heare So that as faith saueth so faith commeth by the word of God And Eccles 4. 17. and 5 1 When then entrest into the house of God looke vnto thy feete c. In which place the holy Ghost first teacheth men to heare then to pray because as they came into the Temple to pray so also to heare Likewise Psal. 95. first the Prophet saith O come let vs worship and kneele donne exhorting to prayer and after To day if ye will heare his voyce harden not your hearis making mention of the word because these must be ioyned together That the Ministers of God are ioyned to come to the one and to the other the Scriptures shew as Deut. 33. where the Leuites dutie is first to teach Iacob then to offer incense that is to pray as Psalme 141. and 2. Sam. 12. where the people acknowledging their sinnes request Samuel to pray for them who answered them that he would not onely pray vnto God for them but that he would also preach God his word vnto them threaten God his iudgements and proclame God his mercies to them if they would repent Act. 6 whē the Apostles found themselues troubled with the ordinarie ministerie of tables they ordained new meanes and they would giue themselues to the word and prayer 1. Timoth. 1. and 2. Paul teacheth Timothie first how he should preach to the people then how he should pray for them and so the Lord would haue the people as well to come to heare the word preached as to pray We shall see this the better if we consider what the Lord requireth of vs in praying First a man cannot be heard vnlesse hee doe the will of God Matth. 7. Not euery one that saith vnto me Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of he●uen but he that doth the will of my father that is in heauen Matth. 15. 8 9. This people draweth neere vnto mee with their mouth c. But in vaine doe they worship me teaching for doctrine mens precepts Psal. 145. 18. The Lord is neere to all that call vpon him yea to all that call vpon him in truth And it is saide in the Prouerbs that the sacrifices of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord and his prayer is his sinne Psal. 34. 15. 16. The eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares are opon vnto their crie But the face of the Lord is against them that doe euill c. But notable is that place Psal. 66 18. If I regard wickednes in mine heart the Lord will not heare me Now if we cannot call on God without faith because Iam. 2. 6. saith we must aske in faith and wauer not for he that wauereth is like a waue c. and as Christ saith whatsoeuer wee aske beleeuing wee shall obtaine seeing he taught his Disciples so to pray Lord increase our faith and Iam. 5. 15. the prayer of faith shall saue because it is grounded on God his promises and infallible truth and seeing with faith the Lord would haue vs ioyne repentance because 2. Timot. 2. 19. euery one that calleth on the name of the Lord must depart from iniquitie we must labour in all our prayers to come with faith and assurance that in Christ we shall bee heard waiting on the Lord in newnes of life If such faith feare and holinesse is required of vs in prayer seeing both faith and repentance are begun continued and increased by the word it is meete that the ministerie of the word should be ioyned with prayer Therfore where it is said Whosoeuer calleth on the name of the Lord it is as much as whosoeuer worshippeth and serueth God although great calamities come yet if hee be a true worshipper beleeuing God his promises repenting of his sinnes and giueth himselfe to serue the Lord aright he shall be preserued from all plagues and either he shall be taken away in mercie if the Lord seeth him to be weake or else if he liue hee shall haue strength to passe thorow them and by them take his voyage to heauen euen as the wicked by them make a way to the hels We stand on this point the rather because most men nowadaies are of this mind that if they come to the Church to pray a little all is wel they haue bin very religious not thinking it in the meane time so necessarie a thing to come to the word preached which may breede in them faith and repentance And therefore in that all will graunt prayer some few forlorne persons excepted we say there is no true prayer where is no faith and no faith without the word and therefore without the word neither faith nor prayer nor repentance Now if wee will aske on the contrarie why the Lord rather nameth prayer than hearing of the word I answere that naturally men had rather heare than pray and then wee are fit truly to pray when wee haue reuerently heard because the hearing of the word inferring prayer when we haue heard we are most readie to pray We shall see that ignorant and superstitious persons much commend prayer but not preaching but come to them that haue knowledge and they on the contrarie are more readie to heare than to pray and they will longer continue in hearing than in praying The holy Ghost then not respecting Turkes Papists or such like but professed Christians which will bragge of their worship to Godward teacheth vs that all is nothing without prayer knowing that neither foundation nor continuance of repentance can be without prayer the word and Sacraments are vnfruitfull without prayer without which wee are vnworthie of any thing because wee will not vouchsafe once to aske it of the Lord. I appeale to the consciences of God his children who that I might passe by other lothsome
murmuring and grudging nature whensoeuer our flesh by any occasion is prouoked thereunto FINIS OF ZEALE THE THIRD SERMON Reuel 3. 19. Be zealous therefore and amend AS Zeale can neuer be sufficiently commended so much lesse may it effectually be perswaded to many howbeit that wee may shadow out some Anatomie thereof let vs first see how God commendeth it then how hee rewardeth it that so wee may the more freely with greater authoritie speake of the thing it selfe What is the vse of the first foure Commaundements but that wee should with zeale worship the Lord The first precept chargeth all men charwith the matter of God his worship shewing what it is The second geth vs with the manner prescribing how wee must vse it The third imposeth on vs the right end of his worship and teacheth why we must doe it The fourth commaundement pointeth the time and instructeth vs when wee must solemnely professe and exercise this worship of God Concerning the large promise offered to pure zeale what is greater than that the Lord should binde himselfe to aduance them into the chaire of honour before all the world who will honour him Againe that he will defame them most surely with some notable marke of infamie that dishonour him yea and he will vomit them vp as a loathsome burthen to testifie his vtter misliking of them First now let vs consider how true zeale beginneth in our selues and taketh his proceedings to others For neuer can that man be zealous to others which neuer knew to be zealous to himselfe And as zealous men in their ascendent begin at themselues and goe to others so in their retrograde they come from others end in themselues If we consider the zeale of Abraham Moses Iosua Samuel Daniel Iehosaphat Ezekiah we shall neuer see expressely in the word that at any time they were more zealous to others than to themselues We see on the contrarie how it hath beene a fearefull note of hypocrites and such as haue fallen from the liuing God that they haue waded very deepely into other mens possessions gored very bloodily into the consciences of others who neuer once purged their owne vncleane sinkes at home no● drew one drop of blood out of their owne hearts How zealous as wosull and late experience still crieth in our eares were some great reformers of the Church who were readie to burst their bowels with crying against disorders abroad and yet neuer reformed their owne consciences at home no● found themselues any whit grieued for their owne sinnes These men being so zealous to others but onely through some secret loue of the world when they had that they sought for made knowne their hollow and rotten zeale in that without any griefe of conscience they could rush into a profound worldlinesse and without all godly sorrow could a●ter they had satisfied their greedie and fieshly zeale n●t onely more hardly ●eare vp their owne consciences but also be so chaunged that they sowe vp thei● lippes and ●pare their words from speaking in the like manner againe to others and so are neither zealous to themselues nor others True zeale casteth the first stone at our selues and plucketh the beame out of our owne eyes that we may the better draw the more out of anothers eye And this is the condemnation of the world that euery man can pr●e and make a priu●e search into the wants of others but they account the same wants no wants in themselues The father saith thus the child d●th so the child saith in this dutie doth his father faile the husband knoweth what the wife should doe the wife seeth the duties of her husband we thinke in this particular another should behaue himselfe but yet the father repenteth not of the sinnes which he did being a child the child repenteth not of his sinnes being a father we call not in our consciences for those things which we dare challenge and one out for in others Here offereth it selfe the second propertie of zeale that it is sincere and in the truth it vrgeth our selues more than others it maketh vs the most seuere censurers of our owne soules it is strictest to our ●elues offereth libertie to others and this simplicitie appeareth either in inward corruption or in the liberrie of outward things the first whereof doth so humble vs in the wants present and in those cor●uptions which hang behind vs that we are zealous of those secret ●uils which are not onely vnespied of others but euen vnknowne also to our selues Although the whole world cannot charge vs with want of dutie yet considering our priuie corruptions wee daily declaime against our selues and say with the Apostle though our consciences do not oppresse vs yet herein we are not iustified Yea such ought to be ou● familiaritie and acquaintance with secret infirmities in ourselues so grieuous ought they to be in our eyes in our eares to our faces that where we shall see heare and behold the sinnes of others they may be more tollerable and so learne by the sense of our owne sores to deale more mildly and m●ekely with the sores of others Neither doe I meane that we should make other mens sinnes no sinnes and that wee should haue no kinde of censure vnto others but that there should be that holy mixture in vs of the zeale of Gods glorie and sight of humaine corruption that for the one we may not spare to rebuke any sinne and for the other wee may moderate our rebukes with mildnes and meeknes Abraham was so strict to himselfe that he would not take of the King of Sodom so much as a threed or a latchet and yet he would not deny Aner Echol and Mamre their libertie Iob would not permit to himselfe nor denie to his children their libertie of feasting so that it is rather a Pharisaicall pride than a Christian zeale to be too tetricall in vrging of others so farre that whosoeuer in euery point is not pure and precise as we we cast them off as dogs and prophane persons and such as are vnworthie of any account or countenance This then must be our pedagogie in this point that as for the glory of God which is deere vnto vs we are not to leaue the least sinne vnespied or the least meanes vnattempted to aduance the glory of God So for the grieuousnes of sinne for the easines to fall into sin for the vilenes of corruption which we haue obserued in our selues for the knowledge of the wrath of God for sinne in vs we are loth for loue to see our brother either so vilely infected so perillously endangered to goe without our louing admonition both to draw him out of his sinne and to rescue him from the wrath of God due to his sinne Further this attribute of true zeale maketh vs as willing to be admonished as carefull to admonish and that not onely of our superiours which is
and therfore indeed they are vnfit to receiue any profit by such reproches Therefore after the most sharpe seuere censure of the Church they must becon mitted to the hand of the Magistrate to be punished in the purse and in the body And yet surely such are their whorish faces that there is small hope of their amendement for it doth often come to passe that they which will not profit by the Church cannot receiue profit by the Magistrate Therefore after all this they must be left vnto the Lord to worke if it be his will by some extraordinarie meanes vpon their hearts which are exceedingly hardened Othersome there be who being put to open shame are sorrowfull indeede but this is because they haue sustained open shame rather than because they haue sinned against the Lord. These are in some degree better than the former yet they goe not so farre as they ought to do for the deuill hauing bewitched them doth perswade them it is no such matter as men would make them belee ●e it is and that as a wonder lasteth but nine dayes so this shall be of no long continuance Thus they are letted so that the shame cannot enter into their hearts there to worke godly sorrow which may bring forth vnfained repentance This is daily seene in whores and theeues and such like male factors who although they make large promises of amendment yet the punishment being passed they fall into the like filthines againe Some thinke that they doe dissemble and deale deceitfully but I thinke that they thinke as they speake and speake with sorrow and griefe For will a theefe purpose to steale againe when he is readie to be hanged Will a childe purpose to play the wanton when he is a beating No doubtles but in the one there is a childishnes to speake without aduise in the other is a seruilnes to be moued with nothing but present feare I graunt indeede there is hypocrisie in them yet the grosse hypocrisie whereby men labour to deceiue others is not in them but the close most dangerous hypocrisie whereby the diuell hath beguiled their owne hearts through his subtiltie This witcherie of the diuell I say is the cause why many promising amendement doe not performe the same Thus we see how men doe misse of that profit which ought to be reaped of open shame we therfore are to take a better course and to labour that as our faces doe blu●h before men so our soules may be confounded before the Lord that being throughly humbled vnder his hand by godly sorrow it may please him in mercie to raise vs vp Now if we doubt in this case whether our sorrow be sound or no let vs trie it by these two rules First whether wee can with contented mindes take the punishment as a correction from the Lord and yet mourne and be grieued for the sinne but in such a manner as giuing place to Gods iustice in punishing we labour for mercy in the forgiuenes of sinnes Secondly whether when we could keepe the sinne close we can yet with Dauid freely confesse and say Against thee O Lord haue I sinned This if wee can doe it is a sure argument that our sorrow is godly and that we haue well profited by that reproch which our sin did bring vpon vs. As the sinne is sometime so euident that it cannot be couered so indeede the sinne may be committed and yet either not knowne nor suspected at all or else by probable susp●tions When the sinne is in this case the Lord may cause a man that hath so sinned to bee accused or euill spoken of for that sinne Here the partie offending must first learne to deale wisely and in such manner as the sinne may be kept close still if it may be done without another sinne But if an oth of the Lord be required then ought we to giue God the glorie though it bee with our own shame and confesse the fault Secondly for the profits which may be made by such reports wee must learne with thankefull hearts to receiue this mercifull chastisement of the Lord and acknowledge it to his praise for hee might haue punished vs for those sinnes which were manifest yet he hath passed ouer them he might haue made these knowne but he spared our name and our credit Therefore for a second fruite this mercie of the Lord must leade vs to repentance and to an earnest sorrow for all our sinnes for it were too too grosse that wee should continue in sinne because we cannot bee conuicted of sinne for if the Lord did not mislike thy sinne why should hee raise such a report of thee Why should he saue thy good name if he were not minded to shew thee mercie And if hee would not haue thee with all thy heart to repent thee of thy sinne why doth hee whip thy naked conscience for sinne Therefore if by this louing kindnesse wee bee not led vnto repentance verily it will be a sinne that shall not escape vnpunished Thus we haue heard how an euill name doth arise of sinne committed and what profit must bee taken hereof Now let vs further consider how a man must profit by an euill name not when he ha● by some sinne deserued it but when he hath only failed in this that he hath giuen occasion to be suspected of euill This occasion is of two sorts First when good duties are either altogether omitted or done with a grudging minde or else as it were of constraint This report must teach thee that although thou be not so euil as men would make thee yet thou art not so good as thou shouldest be Therefore by this thou must learne as to bee more carefull of doing good so to doe it with greater and better courage for the Lord Ioueth a cheerefull giuer The second occasion is inward which although no man can finde out yet the Lord for thy good doth cause men to speake euill of thee for it This inward occasion is when thy heart hath either giuen some full consent to doe euill or at the least hath much wandred in thinking of it Here the Lord doth take thee betime and suffereth men to report of thee that thou hast done that which indeed thou hast not done yet in thy heart thou hast taken pleasure in it Then the way to profit by this is to confesse the goodnesse of the Lord who will not haue thee to fall into such sinne as might deserue discredit For such is the nature of man that if any euill thought doe long tarie in the minde it will hardly be restrained before it come to the outward act Againe by this report raised on vs we must take occasion to call backe our selues if we haue consented to euill and with griefe to be sorrowfull for it or if we haue not as yet consented we must labour to represse the heate of our affections and quench them
they are corrected for it And yet deale with these and such like men for the euil education of their children and they will answere doe not wee as much as is of vs required Wee send our children to the Church to be instructed of the pastor and to the schoole to be taught of the master if they learne it will be the better for them if not they haue the more to answere for another day what can wee doe more But remember O man consider O woman whosoeuer thus speakest that for thy sinnes sake and thy want of prayer there may be a plague vpon the pastors paines and a curse vpon the teachers trauaile If parents would haue their children blessed at Church and at schoole let them beware they giue their children no corrupt examples at home by any carelesnes prophanenes or vngodlines otherwise parents will doe them more harme at home than both pastors and schoolemasters can doe them good abroade For the corrupt example of the one fighteth with the good instruction of the other which is so much the more dangerous because that corrupt walking is armed with nature and therefore more forceably inclineth the affections of children to that side And further experience teacheth vs that children like or mislike more by countenance gesture and behauiour than by any rule doctrine precept or instruction whatsoeuer Some there be also that will not haue their children taught vntill they bee ten or twelue yeeres olde because as they say before that age they haue but an apish imitation To whom I answere that although indeede they cannot then deeply discerne nor profoundly conceiue things yet how many things before those yeeres both will they receiue and remember And I demand if children being apish in imitating euill whilest they be yong which they will haue the habit of when they be old why may they not much more better doe apishly good when they are young which they may doe carefully when they are old Besides let them so goe vntaught and they will grow so headstrong that they will sooner be broken than bended And sure it is that one stripe or two wordes will doe more good to a child in the beginning than an hundred stripes afterward And here let parents bee admonished of their vndiscreete correction who doe their children more harme in shewing a merrie countenance after their discipline vsed than they doe good by their chastising although in their anger they be corrected Neither doe I purpose to take away naturall affections and a Christian kinde of compassion in all our censures for it is my great complaint of the brutish vnmercifulnes of many parents herein but I would wish Christians to correct their vndiscreete affections herein by heauenly wisedome Neither am I so Stoicall as to denie a more milde and affable kinde of speech to bee both lawfully and conueniently vsed to children but yet I wish it to be voide of all vnseemely leuitie and without all shewe of foolish vaine and vnnecessarie behauiour To bee briefe how needfull household gouernement is towards our children it may appeare by the slender thriuing and smal profiting of religion and vertue either in the Church or Common-wealth For complaine men and preach they neuer so much abroade vnlesse they wil begin to reforme their owne houses and giue religion a roome at home especially in their owne hearts they shal trauaile much and profit little And surely if men were careful to reforme themselues first and then their own families they should see Gods manifold blessings in our land vpon Church and Common-wealth For of particular persons come families of families townes of townes prouinces of prouinces whole realmes so that conueighing Gods holy trueth in this sort from one to another in time and that shortly it would so spread into all parts of this kingdome Well I say let there be neuer so good lawes in cities neuer so pure orders in Church if there be no practise at home if fathers of families vse not doctrine and discipline in their houses and ioyne their hands to Magistrate and Minister they may but most vniustly as many haue done complaine that their children are corrupted abroade whereas indeede they were before and still are corrupted at home Alas if parents to whom the comfort of their children well brought vp is a precious crowne will not informe and reforme their children in the feare of God whom it doth chiefly concerne how should hope sustaine these men that others will performe this dutie to them for whom the charge doth farre lesse appertaine Lastly let parents remember that therefore oftentimes they haue disordered and disobedient children to themselues because they haue been disobedient children to the Lord and disordered to their parents when they were yong wherefore because they haue not repented the Lord punisheth their sinnes committed against others with the like sinne in others against themselues Wilt thou know then O father how thou maist haue that blessing to be the blessed father of a blessed seede wilt thou know O mother how to auoide that curse to be the cursed mother of a cursed seede then bring thy children within the couenant endeuour to make thy sonne by nature the sonne of God by grace and thy daughter by nature the daughter of God by grace and remember that God which on his part protested to our father Abraham that he was all sufficient for the accomplishment of his promise in giuing him a blessed seede required also of our father Abraham for his part that he should walke before him and be vpright Wilt thou then haue the one part of this couenant that is that God should blesse thee in thy seed then remember thou also the other part that thou walke before the Lord and be vpright Wilt thou haue thy children as the blessed seede of Abraham teach them with Abraham the commandements of God pray for them with Abraham that they may liue in the sight of the Lord be readie to offer them with Abraham that they may bee an holy sacrifice to the Lord It is thou O man O woman that maiest do thy child the greatest good and the greatest harme if thou praiest for him and repentest for thy selfe the Lord will blesse thy care the pastors paines and the teachers trauaile But if thou despisest these duties the Lord will denie thee those blessings and the curse of God will bee vpon thy childe at home in thy house abroade in the Church and in the schoole And seeing that the Lord hath promised that hee will bee thy God and blesse thy seede if thou bee faithfull thou maiest both hope that thou art of the faithfull if thou haue a blessed seede and feare that thou hast not as yet the blessing of the couenant when thy seede is cursed But some will say had not Iacob wicked children and Dauid godlesse sonnes And doth not daily experience teach vs that wicked men haue godly children Yes for besides
saluation vntothe children of God thus God by little and little conueigheth his graces into vs. But now whether for remission of our sinnes whether for omission of certaine duties whether for our barrennesse in spirituall graces whether for our humbling or triall of our faith or neglecting of the inward meanes or for the setting foorth of the glorie of God it hath pleased him a little to frowne vpon vs and to withdrawe his smiling countenance from vs He which found vs when we sought not him euen hee doth now leaue vs to the intent that we might now learne to seeke after him God hee gaue vs those things which were profitable for vs before we knocked to the intent that receiuing them at his hand we might hereafter learne to knocke for them for we must know that our cloathes must not alwaies be put vpon our backes the teares must not be alwaies put into our mouthes wee must not alwaies be fed with milke and be young children wherefore seeing that there is an infancie and a nonage and a time of discretion as it is in Hebr. 5 and seeing the Lord hath a long time fed vs with milke as babes we must not now murmure if he feed vs with stronger meate as men Fathers will nurture their children and giue them corrections whē they abuse their louing kindnesse and will make their children to seeke vnto them and craue of them those things which they want And shall the fathers of our fleshe doe thus shall they nurture their children and by discipline correct their sinnes and offences and shall not wee suffer the father of our spirits to deale thus with vs Seeing that we haue offēded the Lord not glorified him as we should seeing we haue been barren in goodnesse haue not brought foorth fruites of repentance worthie the Gospell is it not now good for vs that the Lord should deale somewhat sharply with vs is it not meete that now the Lord should take his blessing from vs when we abuse them is it not meete that the Lord should with hold his goodnesse when wee are not thankfull for it and when the beholding of it doth doevs much harme If God shall now deale somewhat more strictly with vs it is to the intent that wee might the better learne to doe our duties for surely now wee are not in our nonage but euen come to yeeres of discretion wee must not therefore looke still to bee dealt withall as yong children but we must fast and we must pray and vse those good meanes which God hath appointed We must knocke and we shall finde wee must bee important with the widow and we shall obtaine we must seeke earnestly and then I dare bee bold to say that the graces of God which now seeme in some sort to be withdrawne from vs shall be restored vnto vs in as great measure as euer they were before Wherefore seeing the Lord heretofore hath bestowed his graces and blessings vpon vs in more amplesort than euer wee could haue looked for and that now hee seemeth as it were to be absent from vs let vs bewaile and mourne for his absence and then he will returne otherwise let vs neuer looke for his presence againe wherefore let euery man beware that he make precious account of the word of God and let euery one consider and examine himselfe whether he hath in him a readinesse to seeke this treasure or no yea let euery one prouoke himselfe to this for the kingdome of heauen from the time of Iohn Baptist vnto Christ suffered violence and must suffer violence vntill the end of the world And none euer did or shall enter into it to haue fruitiō thereof but those who with all feruencie violence and zeale haue sought after it Wherefore if we haue not cleerenesse in knowledge purenesse in affections if we finde not in vs ioy in the holy Ghost zeale and boldnesse in good things loue meekenesse patience and such like fruites of the spirit wee are to know that this is for want of fasting praying knocking seeking and due estimation of the Word and Sacraments Wherefore if wee finde in our selues the want of these things wee must haue recourse to the vse of the meanes It followeth And for ioy thereof departeth c. It is a thing incident to treasures when they are found to worke ioy and great is their ioy which haue found pleasures but greater is the ioy of him that findeth the treasure of saluation then his ioy is that findeth earthly treasures Shew vs saith the Prophet Psal. the 4. the light of thy countenance thy fauour and thy grace and thou shalt make our hearts more cheerefull and ioyfull than rich men are when their Corne Oyle and Wine increaseth Great is the ioy that ariseth of abundance of riches but greater is the ioy which ariseth of the loue and fauourable countenance of God The man of God saith in Psalme 1●9 the ninth part and the 72. verse of the Psalme The law of thy mouth O Lord is better than thousands of gold or siluer That man which loueth gold hee taketh great pleasure and delight therein but yet saith the Prophet Thy word is sweeter and better esteemed and liked of by me than thousands of gold and siluer And in the sixteenth part of the same Psalme verse the ● I loue thy commandements saith he aboue gold yea aboue most fine gold And in the 21. part of the same Psalme and 2. verse of that part he saith I reioyce at thy word as one that findeth a great spoyle Pleasures breede ioy profits breede ioy honour and glorie breede ioy by a good haruest with increase of Wine and Oyle commeth pleasure by riches as gold and siluer ariseth profit by victorie conquest and spoyle of the enemie honour and glorie is gotten Now all these things being laide ioyntly together must needes bring a great ioy to a man but the man of God preferreth the ioy which proceedeth from the Word before all these and that not without good cause for greater is the ioy of the kingdome of heauen and of eternall saluation in heauen than the ioy which ariseth of all these things And what is the ioy of Wine and Oyle to this that mens hearts are refreshed with the refreshed Wine and Oyle of the countenance of God is it not more than to possesse much gold and siluer What greater ioy can be than to be perswaded of the loue of God in Christ Iesus the eye hath not seene neither hath the eare heard neither can the heart of man conceiue of this vnspeakable ioy of the kingdome of heauē To liue and remaine for euer with God the Father the Sonne and the holy Spirit in eternall glorie is not this better than thousands of gold siluer To subdue Satan sin the world the Diuell and the torments of hel is not this a great victorie and a great ioy yea is it not greater than the triumph ouer our
vnto prayer 2. Secondly after that he hath studied the word of God he must come out of his study to teach and instruct his flocke to deliuer forth vnto them wholesome doctrine for the nourishment of their soules 3. Thirdly he must liue a godly life shewing himselfe an example and patterne of godlinesse for his people to imitate that the mouthes which are ready to slaunder the Gospell may be stopped and hee must watch ouer his flocke that they be not deceiued with false doctrine 4. Last of all he must not refuse to giue his life for them Concerning the first that Ministers must giue themselues diligently to reading as it is manifest in the fourth chapter of the first Epistle to Timothie where he exhorteth Timotheus with these words Till I come giue attendance to reading to exhortation and to doctrine If that reading the word of God were not very needefull yea and the first poynt of the Ministers of God this faithfull seruant of God Saint Paul would neuer haue willed Timotheus to vse such diligence therein who neuer moued anie to do those things which were not profitable and himselfe for the example of others vsed the same therefore it is certaine that Saint Paul vsing great diligence therein found such commoditie as moued him to exhort Timotheus and in him all other Ministers thereunto But if Saint Paul who was more than a Minister euen an Apostle called thereunto extraordinarily by the mouth of Iesus Christ himselfe from heauen if he I say which was placed in so high an office and called with so worthie a calling gaue himselfe diligently to reading and studying the word of God how much more ought the Ministers which haue not so excellent a calling as he had The Prophet Malachie sheweth a reason hereof The Priests lippes should preserue knowledge and the people should seeke the law at his mouth for he is the messenger of the Lord of hostes if the people must learne the will of God at the Ministers mouth it is requisite that he himselfe studie and reade the w●rd of God diligently where his holy will is reuealed that he may be able to declare the same vnto the people to the which end the Lord hath placed them ouer his people So that he must be as it were the storehouse of the Lord and the children of God must come to learne and he must minister necessarie doctrine vnto them as occasion shall be offered that all seuerall heresies may be rooted out of the peoples hearts and so be brought vnto God to serue him in true holinesse according to perfect religion hereby we may know that whosoeuer doth not thus is not the seruant of the Lord. The reading and meditating in Gods word is so necessarie that the Lord commaunded Iosua being a ciuill Magistrate That the booke of his law should neuer depart out of his mouth but that he should meditate therein day and night Noting thereby how hard and vnpossible a thing it is for Magistrates to gouerne the Common-wealth aright and orderly without continuall studie of Gods word which is the perfit and absolute rule whereby as well Magistrates as all other sorts of people must measure their affaires and order of life for this cause also must not the ciuill Magistrate be ignorant of the law of God that their ciuill law might be established according to the law morall and therefore they ought continually to reade and meditate therein but if this be the dutie of ciuill Magistrates to be alwaies conuersant in the word of God how much more is it the dutie of spirituall Pastors whose office consisteth in the ministerie thereof The Prophet Dauid in the first Psalme when he would describe who are they that are blessed includeth them in this number They that delight in the law of the Lord meditate therein day and night so that euery priuate man if he will be blessed must continually meditate in the word of God and haue his whole delight and pleasure therein The Minister therefore of necessitie must teach the people he must learne first for it is not possible for him to teach another that which he himselfe hath not learned which is a strong argument to prooue the first part concerning his studie and reading of the word which as we haue prooued to be the first point in his office so will we God willing make manifest in this point of his duty that he ought also to teach the same and must not keepe continually in his studie filling himselfe with knowledge till he become as full as a tunne that will not sound when one knocketh vpon it but he must come out of his closet and preach the word of God and deliuer forth holsome doctrine and so declare by feeding of the flocke of Christ that they loue their maister Christ whose seruants they professe themselues to be Let these deepe learned Clerkes which bragge and vaunt of such deepe knowledge and abundance of learning come forth and shew the same that we may beare record that it is so for if they be the seruants of the Lord they must not haue knowledge buried in themselues but in their lippes that Gods children may be taught thereby to attaine vnto saluation for the Lord hath ordained the preaching of his word to be the onely meanes whereby he calleth together his elect and to that ende hath he giuen gifts to men that by their labour the body of Iesus Christ might be perfited He gaue them not a talent to hide in the ground but to occupie increase the same let them be assured therefore when our King shall come to call vs to account they shal as hardly be handled for not occupying increasing it to his glory as they should if they cōtemptuously throw the same away The Minister therefore of Gods word must not onely be learned but must teach also for how can he be a minister of doctrine but in this respect that he teacheth executing that office of his ministry And this teaching is none other thing but to preach the word of God sincerely and purely with a care of the glory of God and a desire of the saluation of our brethren secōdly a reuerent administration of the sacraments according to the order institution of our Sauiour Iesus Christ. Whosoeuer therefore shall not thus labour is not the minister of the Lord but a robber and spoiler of the people of God which thrust themselues into the ministrie to fill their belly only with the sweate of other mens browes Now as it is necessary that the Minister ouer and besides reading and studying the word must also ●each the same So hee must take heede that he obseru● the right order of teaching and must not deu●●e doctrine of his owne head But if hee will be a good builder his foundation must be Iesus Christ for another foundation can no man lay and vpon the same he must not
build timber hay or stubble whereby is meant all curious and vnprofitable questions and vaine ostentation but he must build gold siluer and precious stone by which precious substance is noted the most excellent and pure doctrine of the Gospell And hereby shall you knowe his argument if hee beate downe the st●●fenecked and obstinate sinners by threatning the rigor of the law and the terrible iudgements of God against the violaters thereof and on the contrarie by healing the bruised and wounded consciences with sinne with the sweete promises of the Gospell If any man therefore shall labour to lay any other foundation and vse any other order of doctrine than this he is an Antichrist that is to say against Christ and no Christian. He must teach them all the counsell of God and keepe nothing backe but whatsoeuer concerneth the saluation of his flocke that must he teach them yea so absolute must his doctrine be that there must be no point of the will of God pertaining to the saluation of his children but the Minister must be both able and diligent to declare Therefore it is requsite and needfull that a rare gift of God be added who onely openeth their vnderstanding that they might vnderstand the scriptures wherein the most holie will of God is reuealed and nothing that is needfull for our saluation omitted so that whosoeuer knoweth not the scriptures must needs erre and be deceiued but the Minister who must declare all the counsell of God vnto his children must be very perfect therein Moreouer he must improue rebuke exhort and stirre vp first himselfe to a great care of doing his duty faithfully then must he also by all meanes spurre forward the godly gently louingly exhorting to hold fast the profession of their hope in the assurance of faith making their election more surely knowne vnto themselues by their godly life and the rather to bring them forward herein with willingnes and great readinesse he ought to set before them the wonderfull mercie of the Lord God shewed towards them in that he hath out of all the world elected them to be heires of his kingdome where they shall ●aigne for euer in such vnspeakable ioyes as neither eye hath see●e eare hath heard neither hath at any time entred into the heart of man He must not be ashamed to rebuke reproue such as will not be obedient to the Gospell but remaine still wallowing in their sinne if that wholesome admonitions will not serue hee must not spare to thunder out the iust iudgements of God against them vntill he hath beaten them down to hell with the terrors therof and after true repentance to raise them vp euen to the heauens and daily strengthen them more and more so that to the impenitent hee must pronounce damnation because he is still vnder the law and vnder the curse of the law and that hee shall be sure to be tormented euerlastingly if he doe not repent but the penitent that labour with a burdened conscience for sinne and are wounded with griefe for the same he shall comfort with blessed promises of the Gospell declaring vnto him that hee is not vnder the law but vnder grace and so build him into a liuely faith in Iesus Christ. This must the Minister doe both openly and priuately for it is not sufficient that hee preach the word of God openly in the pulpet but hee must goe to euery mans house and there diligently instruct both him and his house in the feare of God and not as the manner of some is to goe to folks houses to tell them a tale and flatter them with faire words and glozing speeches to the end they might fill their bellie sat another mans table or get some other benefite which hee hunteth after These be hirelings and time-seruers which thrust themselues into the Ministerie for lucres sake and because they would liue idlie and take no paines for their liuing but contrary to the commaundement of God to liue of other mens labours these are not true Ministers but such as the Prophet Malachy speaketh of in the first chapter of his Prophecie The true Pastor must not haue any such purpose but as it is his dutie to labour to winne the soules of his people vnto Iesus Christ so must he vse all meanes both publikely priuately which may further his ministerie and make it profitable We might proue out of diuers places of the word of God this his dutie both by the example of our Sauiour Christ the perfect patterne for al mē to follow who did not onely preach openly in the Synagogue but priuately in mens houses The Apostles did so likewise and S. Paul witnesseth the same in the 20 chapter of the Acts with these words I kept backe nothing that was profitable but haue shewed you and taught you openly and throughout euery house This is the dutie of a good Pastor The reason hereof is very good because that which is spoken generally to all is regarded of very few or none so wonderfully hath Satan stopped mens eares and blinded their vnderstanding that either they will not hearken at all or else hearing will neuer applie the same to their consciences and therefore to preuent this the Minister shall not sticke to instruct them priuately when as they shall haue no such occasion to apply that to other mē that is spoken particularly to themselues By this meanes if the Lord hath appointed so they may be brought home or else haue the testimonie of his word in their consciences euen to make them vnexcusable at the latter day Furthermore this must he not seldome now then once in a moneth or euery quarter ●●● he cannot so discharge his conscience before the Lord who hath appointed him to feede his flocke continually but this cannot liue and continue without foode no more can the soule liue vnlesse it be cōtinually fed and nourished with the milke of Gods word He must therefore feede them continually as we reade that carefull shepheard S. Paul did when he tooke his leaue to depart from Ephesus after he had committed the keeping of Gods flocke vnto the Elders of the Church and giuen them warning of false teachers which would be busie with them after his departure and therefore exhorted them to watch Remember saith he that by the space of three yeeres I ceased not to warne euery one both night and day with teares This diligence must be in Ministers to be euermore teaching that if the Lord doe not blesse at one time yet he may at another they know not the time wherein the Lord will call any of his flocke he must therefore vse the meanes diligently at all times both in season and out of season as S. Paul writeth to Timothy I charge thee therefore before God and before the Lord Iesus Christ which shall iudge the quicke and the dead at that his appearing and in his
defend them from the diuell that rauening wolfe by the wholesome word of God and not to watch for his owne gaine And hereby shall he be knowne if in time of daunger he stand by his flocke and will not forsake them nay rather than that they should perish he will giue his life for their sake for if this affection be not in them the case is very manifest that they are not good shepheards but hirelings For the true vnderstanding of this point we will consider when the Ministers may flie for if we should denie that they might not flie at any time we should not say truth for our Sauiour Christ hath bidden that when we are persecuted in one citie we should flie into another It is manifest also that our Sauiour Christ himselfe fled as when the Iewes tooke vp stones to cast at him he hid himselfe and went out of the temple and he passed through the middest of them all and so went his way And in the tenth chapter of Iohn we reade that when they went about to take him he escaped out of their hands and went his way beyond Iordan yet afterward when the time appointed wherein he should suffer was come he fled not Saint Paul also and Barnabas as it appeareth in the fourteenth of the Acts being at Iconium when there was an assault made both of the Gentiles and of the Iewes with their rulers to doe them violence and to stone them they being aware of it fled vnto Lystra and Derbe cities of Lycaonia Yet as I declared before out of the one and twentie of the Acts at another time Paul went willingly vp to Ierusalem to lay downe his life for the glory of God So that if we should deny that we might not flie at any time we should deny the words of Christ who biddeth vs flie in time of persecution and againe if we should plainely say that they might flie we should put no difference betweene the true Minister and the hireling This therefore must we note if so be that the people ouer whom he is placed shall be in daunger to be seduced by false teachers from that most true and holesome doctrine of Iesus Christ hauing receiued as yet but a tast as it were thereof and are not grounded he must not in any case flie and giue place no though it cost him his life for it were a daungerous case to flie then because that his constancie in sealing his doctrine with his bloud may wonderfully confirme the faith of his flocke and draw them forward by his example rather to die for the profession of Iesus Christ than to deny him whereas on the contrary if he should flie they could not but fall from the truth being not grounded therein when as they see their pastor to hide himselfe But when this affection loue is in the Minister to consider that he is betrothed to Iesus Christ to defend his spouse and Church from his aduersaries and to bring them as it were by the hand vnto the bridegoome of which he hath so singular a care that he will neuer forsake thē although by earnest studie he should euen shorten his life and all his Physitions in the world should tell him plainely that it wil end his daies if he doth not giue ouer the same yet I say when he hath such a loue and affection to his people whose soules hee laboureth to feede and nourish with the word of God that hee will resigne his life into the hands of God and giue ouer himselfe vnto his prouidence and rather to end his daies with labouring and studying for his flockes sake than by withdrawing and sauing his owne life to suffer them to want then no doubt the Lord by his holy spirit shall teach him when he may without danger to his flocke euen with all their consents depart and saue his life from the hands of his aduersaries As we see by the examples of Iesus Christ and his Apostles who sometimes fled and saued their liues and otherwhile abode by it and suffered all things patiently So will hee teach his true and faithfull Ministers when it is good to flie and when not We haue knowne many godly Ministers which haue spent their time in studying and teaching their flockes and haue rather desired their saluation than their owne liues All these things obserued the Minister shall yeeld a ioyfull account vnto the Lord and stirre vp his people to be thankfull vnto the Lord which hath shewed them such mercie as to place ouer them so louing and careful a Minister which so hungreth and thirsteth after their saluation that he esteemeth his owne life lesse than it The second part concerning the dutie of the people to their Minister NOw we haue declared the dutie of Ministers it followeth that we shew next the dutie of the people vnto their Ministers which is the second part of our diuision truly this declaration of the Ministers dutie doth very manifestly shew the other for if the Minister be bound to applie his studie and to exercise himselfe diligently in reading and when he hath studied to come foorth and teach the people all things necessarie for their saluation and moreouer must set himselfe a liuely patterne of godly conuersatiō for them to follow letting no meanes vnassaied whereby he may beget their soules vnto God neither in life nor doctrine but must so carefully watch ouer their soules that rather than they should perish he must giue his life for them what shall the people then do vnto him for his intire loue and affection The holy Ghost telleth vs in these words Obey them and submit your selues So that obedience is the dutie of the people to their Minister The reason hereof is very good seeing the case so standeth that the Minister must labour to bring thē home to Iesus Christ by the Gospel which is the power of God vnto saluation if the people notwithstanding his paines will remaine obstinate to what end will his labour come all will be in vaine the people shall not profit by it and himselfe shall be grieued and molested with sorrow to see their disobedience The people therefore must bee obedient vnto their Ministers which labour for their profit which is a great grace of God who worketh all this in all creatures when hee hath giuen the people obedient hearts to bee gouerned by his word for which end he hath appointed the Ministers thereof And as it is a grieuous and the most dangerous thing to be obedient to such superiours as shall leade vs out of the way into destruction whom our Sauiour Christ calleth blinde guides which together with the people fall into the pit so it is on the contrarie the greatest vertue to become obedient to the true Pastors and Ministers of the word of God It hath been euermore the charge that the Apostles laide vpon the children of God of which thing S. Paul in his Epistle to the
those Elders which are appointed to watch and looke to the manners and behauior of the children of God if they execute this charge faithfully be had in double honour but aboue all let the faithfull Ministers such as labour in the word be honoured for why the other are ouerseers of your outward behauior but these haue an other manner of office they watch ouer your soules which tendeth to the saluation both of body and soule Moreouer it is requisite that they also feare the Minister or else can they in no ease reuerence and honour him for where feare is not all honour is absent and so consequently all dutie extinguished And this feare must not be a fained and counterfeited feare but when he shall come before the Minister to aske him any question he must consider that he commeth to talke with the messenger of the Lord whom he ought to heare as well as if the Lord himselfe were present For this is most certaine where a faithful Minister is that doth sincerely and purely preach the word it is all one as if the Lord himselfe dwelt personally among vs and his owne selfe hath verified the same saying He that heareth you heareth me And therefore it behooueth vs to giue a proofe of our feare loue and obedience towards the Lord by receiuing his word with such feare and reuerence as beseemeth his subiects although the same proceede out of a mortall mans mouth It is a common thing among vs the Embassadour of a Prince is receiued with great honour reuerence yea his message is to be receiued as vndoubtedly as if the King were present himself yea they that shall despise his authoritie shall be as hainously accounted of as if they resisted and rebelled against the Kings owne person And shall the Embassadours of the liuing God who is King of all Kings be receiued lesse worthily than the other whose authoritie is both greater and the message waightier Truly whosoeuer shall take scorne to yeeld this dutie of feare and reuerence vnto the Minister let him be assured that he scorneth not him but the Lord that sent him But some will obiect what shall we make a God of our Minister and is he so to be feared as you say I answere thee that I meane nothing lesse nay I hold him accursed that shal chalenge such dignity vnto himselfe But this feare must ye yeeld not to the person but to his office which is by the word of God to remit your sinnes and to giue you assurance that they are washed away by the blood of Christ if you be truly penitēt for them and that you are made heires of the kingdome of heauen whereof you need not to doubt On the contrarie if you be not penitent by his office hee hath authoritie to binde sinnes here on earth iustly to euerlasting condemnation which the vnpenitent may be as sure to suffer as they see the light of the day feare him therefore I say not as he is a man but as the Minister of God With what a reuerend feare did the Galathians receiue Paul his owne selfe doth report that they receiued him as an Angell of God yea more than so they receiued him as Iesus Christ himselfe And that was not for the excellencie of his person which hee testifieth was simple base vile and to all the world contemptible yea and subiect to all infirmities but they receiued him with such feare and reuerence for that excellent message which hee brought vnto them for those glad tidings which hee published among them and for that hee was a Minister of the Gospell of Iesus Christ which is the power of God to saue all the beleeuers Thus reuerently must all Gods children feare their Minister euen for the worthines of his office and ministery for if they should not feare him they could not in any case obey the word when hee doth sharply reproue them for their sinnes but euen as a light wife so long as her husband pleaseth her so long and no longer will she be obedient vnto him for if he shew a sharp countenance of very loue to driue her from some lewd cōditions then will she begin to scorne to fret and chafe and in stead of obeying him she will deadly hate him and despise him so is it with the people if they stand not in feare of the authority which God hath giuen him they will obey him no longer than he preacheth pleasant things for when he shall touch their consciences with threatning the iudgemēts of God against their sin then can they not abide him but harden their hearts not against him but against the Lord which hath sent him and so fall away to their vtter destruction the children of God must therefore feare their Minister and be obedient to the word of truth which hee bringeth vnto them When the people are come thus farre that they will willingly obey the Minister and that with feare and reuerence submit themselues to bee guided by the pure word of God they must shew further their dutifulnes towards him and must also bee readie to doe for him whatsoeuer lieth in their power which thing S. Paul earnestly desireth of the Thessalonians Wee beseech you brethren that yee acknowledge them which labour among you and are ouer you in the Lord and admonish you that you haue them in singular loue for their workes sake Where the holy Ghost sheweth a reason why they should acknowledge their Ministers which carefully faithfully doe execute their office which is for their workes sake his exhortation is in effect thus much Brethren this one thing doe I heartily craue at your hands that you be not so obliuious as to forget those which labour among you in the Lord and are by his appointment euen of great mercie towards you placed ouer you to the end they may admonish you of your sinnes and to stirre you vp by the word of God to a more zeale of the glorie of God and to walke more circumspectly before him I beseech you I say be not forgetfull of them but haue them in a singular loue yea let nothing be dearer vnto you than such for this worke sake which they haue taken in hand for I tell you truly there is no labour vnder the Sunne so profitable vnto you as this which bringeth not store of corruptible siluer and gold not large kingdomes and empires of this world which shall perish and come to an end but this profit commeth of their labour euen the saluation of your soules such a treasure as all the world no not a thousand worlds are comparable vnto it for this cause loue them Besides this it is their dutie also to prouide for him all things necessarie for that he may haue to supplie his want at their hands as we may by diuers places of the Scripture proue In the 6. to the Galathians the Apostle giueth this commandement Let him that is taught
by their doings the Lord hath pronoūced by the mouth of his Prophet Malachy that he will bring a curse vpon them and will curse their blessings he will corrupt their seede and cast dung in their faces Thus will the Lord deale with such vnfaithful seruants that nothing shall prosper but euen their very seede shall be corrupt and he shall be called to a straight account and he shall beare the burden not only of his owne sinnes but of all the sinnes of the people and euery soule that hath perished thorough his negligence shall be laid to his charge and so shall he become a notable Diuell in hell there to be tormented with euerlasting and vntolerable paine Finally if the people doe not their dutie vnto the Minister they shall make him full of griefe and sorrow maruellously troubled in spirit nothing ioyfull in his calling but alwaies mourning and moreouer the Lord will harden the peoples heart that the word shall not be profitable vnto them but euen as S. Paul testifieth a ●auor of death vnto death and in the end they shall be rewarded in hell fire which shall neuer be quenched nor the worme shall neuer die but there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Thus haue we learned first how necessary a thing it is to haue Ministers in the Church of God because without them the people should be as sheepe without a shepheard ready to be deuoured of their aduersary the diuell secondly that the Lord hath appointed them to this vse by them to call together the number of them that shall be saued by the preaching of the word wherewith he hath giuen them power to open heauen to all beleeuers and to giue as good assurance of their saluation by the word as if Iesus Christ himselfe were present to certifie the same and on the contrary to shut out all the vnpenitent from the kingdome of heauen and to binde them ouer to euerlasting woe which they shall be so sure of as they see the light that shineth in the day And therfore it behoueth all such as desire to be saued to learne the way to saluation of them and to harken vnto them for because the Lord hath appointed no other meanes in the world for to attaine to the knowledge thereof and hath said plainely that whosoeuer will not beleeue the truth at their hands shall not beleeue though one should come from heauen to tell them who shall be saued and another from hell to tell them who are damned We haue also heard that when the Lord determineth to beget soules he appointeth spirituall fathers fit and able for that purpose by reason that he giueth them gifts for the accomplishing of that busines and herewithall we haue learned what is the duty of these spirituall fathers or Ministers which we finde to consist in foure principall points 1. He must reade and study the word of God diligently that he may be able to teach and instruct his people 2. When he hath studied he must come forth and deliuer wholesome doctrine that their soules may be refreshed for therefore must he study to haue knowledge for them and sing to himselfe and his muses not filling himselfe so full of knowledge till he become as a tunne that will giue no sound but he must keepe knowledge not only in his heart but also in his lips for the Minister must be the mouth of the Lord from whence Gods people must know the will and counsell of God also he must obserue the true order of teaching that is to build vpon the true foundation Iesus Christ for he that buildeth vpon any other foundation is an Antichrist and not the Minister of God but the messenger of Sathan Moreouer he must by all meanes pricke forward the godly to increase in godlines beate downe the obstinate and hardharted with the terrible iudgements of God and after to raise vp th● penitent with the sweete promises of the Gospell the which he must doe not onely openly in the pulpit among the congregation but priuately also in euery house because that generall doctrine doth not driue the people to such a consideration of their estate as when they are particularly admonished of their sinnes exhorted to repēt for them Thus must the Minister labour to make his doctrine profitable and that continually supposing it not sufficient to be done now and then but he must do it in season and out of season omitting no opportunitie wherein the Lord may call home some into the Church of Christ and that God may the rather vouchsafe to blesse his ministry he must pray continually for himselfe and his people both openly and priuately be very circumspect in administring the Sacraments 3. He must liue a godly life aad set himselfe as example for his flocke to follow and so much the rather ought he to looke more neerely to all his waies because the aduersaries if any thing be otherwise than well with the Ministers will straightway with open mouth blaspheme the Gospell which is most pure and vnreproueable whereas if they haue nothing whereof to accuse the Minister neither can they blame the word which they onely heaue at to ouerthrow it if it were possible taking occasion by the Minister to blame the word For an other cause also must he liue vnreproueable and that is because hee must watch ouer the soules of other which charge he cannot performe except he be able to watch ouer his own Thirdly in this respect that his election may be surely known vnto himselfe least in preaching of the election vnto other he be a reprobate himselfe So that when he threatneth the iudgements of God against other hee shall condemne himselfe and when he raiseth vp the penitent with the promises he himselfe shall fall into the hole of his owne condemnation and no man shall be able to comfort him 4. Last of all he must ●●●●e his flocke so deerely that he must giue his life for them But because it were contrarie to the wordes of our Sauiour Christ to say he might not flye at any time and on the other side if wee say he may flye wee should put no difference betweene the true Ministers and the hirelings wee haue heard that the Lord will teach his faithfull Ministers by his holy spirit when it is good to flye and when not Thus much haue we learned concerning the dutie of Ministers In the second part we haue heard the dutie of the people towards their Ministers which we haue learned to consist first in obedience because it were altogether in vaine and an vnprofitable labour for the Minister to teach the people if they should not bee obedient vnto his doctrine and also because it is impossible for any to bee saued that will not bee obedient vnto the word of God besides which the Lord hath appointed no meanes for man to attaine vnto the knowledge of saluation and therefore hath he giuen it vnto his
Ministers to be preached sincerely and purely vnto his people And heere we learne by the way that the people must beware that they bee not seduced with false doctrine and mans inuention therefore they must proue the doctrine to accord with the word of God and then be obedient vnto it Secondly besides obedience wee haue learned that they must also reuerence him because they cannot obey his doctrine except they haue a reuerent opinion of him as we see by the woman of Samaria and the people that S. Peter conuerted Thirdly it is requisite that they feare him for where feare is not there honor and reuerence must needes bee absent And thus haue we heard that they ought to feare him not in respect of his person but for his office sake not as he is a man but in that he is the messenger and Minister of God Fourthly they must loue him and that vnfainedly with all their heart being ready to help him in all distresses Fiftly they must prouide for him that he may haue to maintaine himselfe and his familie to entertaine strangers and buy him bookes that he may not with any worldly care bee drawne from doing of his dutie Sixtly they must pray for him continually and for themselues also that hee may be able to teach and they to receiue the word profitably 3 These duties being wel performed bringeth this commoditie The Ministers labour shall be profitable his account acceptable and his soule saued The people shall make their minister ioyfull and louing vnto them willing to labour for their profit and in the end they shall raigne together in the kingdome of heauen Also if the Minister doth his dutie faithfully though the people doe not their yet hee shall saue his soule Likewise if the people doe their dutie and not the Minister the Lord will so prouide that they shall enioy eternall felicitie 4 Last of all if these duties be not performed we haue learned how great dangers they are in that neglect the same if the Minister his labour shall be cursed he shall be called to a streight account and shall answere for euerie soule that hath perished and so become a diuell in hel for euer If the people doe not their dutie they shall grieue their Pastor make him vnprofitable and in the end be tormented in vtter darknes for euer The Lord of all power deale mercifully with vs for his deare Sonne Iesus Christs sake and graunt such grace both vnto the Ministers of his word that they may carefully doe their duties with that feare of his name that reuerēce of his Maiestie that zeale of his glorie and that desire of the saluation of his people that they ought and that the people may so obediently and willingly receiue thy word and Ministers thereof as shall bee most for thy glorie and the profit of their soules that after this life ended wee may dwell together in thy kingdome of glorie with thy Sonne our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ to whom with thee and the holy Ghost three persons and one true and most wise God be al honour and glorie for euer Amen OF THE CONFESSION OF SINNES THE FIFTEENTH SERMON Prouerbs 28. vers 13. He that hideth his sins shall not prosper but he that confesseth and forsaketh them shall haue mercie THere are two parts of this verse Hiding of sinnes with punishments and Confessing with mercie It is not my manner to restraine a precept generall but according to circumstances to speake of generall things generally Here both the sinne of hiding sinnes is taught to bee auoided and the vertue of confessing sinnes to be practised A matter not obserued for error hath been much spoken against but truth not so throughly taught which is the cause of the small proceeding of the Gospell Example in Consubstantiation and Transubstantiation in the Sacrament where the true manner of Christs presence is not knowne because it hath not been taught as it should Example in superstitious holidaies the breaknecke of the Lords Sabbaths mē now not sparing to worke on the Lords day also because they haue not been taught to sanctifie it Example of Lent fast wherein the abuse of fasting hauing been checked and the manner of right fasting so little opened it is come to passe that men knowe not how truly to fast Example of the butcherly discipline once entred the truth of discipline not being spoken of it maketh men thinke that now to speake of it is to make euery one a Pope in his owne parish So likewise of Eare confession the grosse abuses whereof hauing been reprooued but the right vse of confession passed ouer vntaught men care not to confesse either to God or men and if they doe either it is rather vpon the commandements of men than vpon the consideration of iudgement and mercies Whereby also all conference and examination is taken from the Minister to whom examinatiō is not to be denied though al things be not to be disclosed And againe acknowledging of sinnes and priuate and publike reconciliation haue vtterly ceased My brethren teach the truth teach the truth for by want hereof it is come to passe that first the peace of mens consciences is not prouided for secondly our winnings are not so great as our losings thirdly God is not glorified The peace of conscience is not looked vnto for when thou knowest what thou shouldest not doe thy conscience straight accuseth thee for doing the euill thou shouldest not but because thou art not taught the good thou shouldest doe thou canst not pursue after it with comfort Our losses haue been greater thā our winnings because the good of men hath not been prouided for by building thē vp For though they heare sinnes spoken against yet seeing godlines and religion to decay the Lords day not being celebrated with reuerence men not prepared for the receiuing of the holy Sacrament neuer fasting neuer confessing c. yet the weake are not staied or drawne on but fal away the aduersaries mouth is not stopped but set wide open because truth is not enough spoken of and practised God is not glorified for they who are wonne are not so truly wonne but become hypocrites and many are not wonne at all because the truth is not fully deliuered for hearing some things spoken against they are led to contrarie heresies by reason they were not grounded in the truth which teacheth it selfe and errors also as good sheweth euil and it selfe also We must then teach loue and practise good things as we must reprooue hate and not doe that which is euill Which manner of teaching because it hath not been in vse we cannot now get credit to peoples mindes being inured with other kinde of teaching Confession is either priuate or publike Priuate first vnto the Lord secondly vnto men first for our owne sinnes secondly for the sinnes of others Publike first vnto God with men and before men secondly vnto God and vnto men That which cannot be done
is one thing to be noted more notable that is he was not grieued for himself alone but euē for others which made no conscience of Gods word was he grieuously vexed and tormented as portio 7. 5. Feare is come vpon me for the wicked which forsake thy law And portio 17. 8. Mine eyes gush out with riuers of water because they keepe not thy law And in portio 18. 3. My zeale hath euen consumed mee because mine enemies haue forgotten thy words He was not onely grieued for his owne incredulitie but for the incredulitie of others he lamented not onely his owne wants but also the wants of others his glorie was then chiefest when the word was glorified his griefe when the word sustained wrong did most abound Like zeale was in Paul who cared not for his owne bonds so the word of God might be free neither did hee care how much he did suffer for the Gospels sake which he preached so others might thereby ●e confirmed Now if we shall lay this with due examination of our owne hearts to our seuerall liues we shall see many grieued for their owne sinnes which are not grieued for the sinnes of others But if we could be grieued both for our selues and for others it were an infallible token that we sought not our selues but Gods word Many likewise are comforted when they finde Gods glory set forth in themselues who cannot so praise God when they see it in others Many indeed as Io● witnesseth can declare ●loquently against the sinnes of others yet we see few weepe and lame it for them as he did But aboue all notable is that place of the Spirit of God to stirre vs ●●● to this practise which is Ezech. 9. where a man is mentioned with a writers in●khorne by his side which is sent of the Lord to goe through the middest of Ierusalem and to saue from the destroying and reuenging Angell which was to come all them that mourned and cried for the abominations which were done in the citie In which place by marking the children of God vnto saluation is shewed the manner of thē to w●● to mourne and c●ie out against the wickednes of the people which they see committed against Gods glorie Paul 1. Cor. 5. sheweth the Corinthians that they had reiected despised the incestuous person but he also telleth them that they had not mourned for him the effect where of is set downe 2. Cor. 7. where the Apostle reioyceth that he had wrought in them a godly sorrow not to be repented of We must therefore learne to lament the sinnes of them with whom we liue and specially of them ouer whom we haue charge least in not so doing we be made guiltie of the sinnes of others Let vs then away with that carnall emulation in the graces of another and let vs learne to giue God the praise of his gifts in others as though they were bestowed on our selues But alas our corruption is great here in and is well set downe in Luke in the elder brother who repined at the receiuing of his younger brother into his fathers fauour Now to draw to the fourth and last reason which concerneth the meanes vsed of the Prophe● they were these conference prayer praise or thanksgiuing and a vowing of his obedience to the Lord whereof I will speake in order and of the first first I am saith he port 8 7. a companion of all them that feare thee and keepe thy precepts And port 10. 7. L●● such ●● feare thee turne vnto me and they that know thy testimonies that I may both impart my feelings and comforts vnto others and that they may strengthen me with their gifts such was his humilitie that notwithstanding his high calling he desired euen to profit by others In naturall things experience doth teach vs that young men cannot satisfie themselues with a priuate vse of their exercise but if any one haue inuented a pleasant conceit he cannot be quiet vntill he haue ioyned himselfe with others therein such is their loue to their carnall deuices Which thing if it be so vsuall in earthly things how much more is it requisite in heauenly things Many will studie for a trade and methode by themselues whereof none shall be partakers but they will still be the fathers of it but it was not so in Dauid but whatsoeuer he had he would teach it others and whatsoeuer good thing he heard he would learne it He had not this spirit to say Tush I haue enough I know many things I neede not to conferre Paul thanketh the Romanes and protesteth himselfe a debtor vnto them for their communicating of spiritual things vnto him Wherfore let vs exhortione another wher one another admonish one another and watch one ouer another for good and suffer our selues to bee exhorted to perseuerance to be whetted for our duties and to be admonished of our infirmities and let vs be grieued that wee haue made so little exchange of our talents to bring so small increase to the Lord. The second meane is prayer wherfore he said so often portiō 5. 2. Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes c. portion 9 2. Teach me good iudgement and knowledge Where sometime he delireth to haue his iudgement inlightened and sometimes his affections cleered Well was hee one that was wiser than Gad and Nathan and yet had this affection to growe in the knowledge of wisedome and shall not wee be ashamed if wee pray not He felt this ioy delight of the word by measure in him he felt sometimes a cleane heart sometimes an hard heart sometimes vnspeakable ioy of mind sometimes exceeding dulnes of mind sometime hee seemed to haue enioyed the comforts of Angels sometimes no comfort at all So let vs thinke our selues to be as betweene light and darknes clowdes and brightnes sometimes hauing patiēce and sometimes murmuring sometime purposing to do good sometime fainting in bringing them to passe Concerning thanksgiuing which was another of his exercises it is said port 21. 4. Seuen times a day doe I praise thee because of thy righteous iudgements Where hee sheweth that hee vsed this kinde of worship often which thing with vs is farre contrarie because wee pray more than we giue thankes The reason is wee are giuen in greater measure to feele our wants which prouoketh vs to prayer than to see Gods benefits receiued which might moue vs to thanksgiuing The next meanes by order the fourth which the man of God vseth is here by name set downe meditation But some will say How commeth it to passe that among so many and sundrie meanes no mention is made of hearing and reading the word of God Wee answere that this is a Psalme of experience and not of knowledge And hee that seeketh for knowledge here will want methode but wee must trauaile with the Prophet to finde the truth so applied to our hearts
is it to giue vs his truth to enrich vs with his Gospell and to blesse vs with such abundance of temporall things Oh that this were knowne of vs oh that euery man would say Oh Lord what am I that thou shouldest shewe mee such mercie to giue mee the enioying of thy word and Gospell more than any other and giuing it to mee makest me to vnderstand it aboue many oh what am I that thou shouldest offer to mee this goodnesse I was borne and conceaued in sinne I haue multiplied and enlarged my corruptions both before since my calling my vnthankfulnes is great my vnworthines therefore greater and yet thou hast not ceased to preferre me in mercies before many If we consider the fearefull iudgements of God in consuming all hypocrites who will not say that many haue beene called and few chosen When we shall see I say in the day of the Lord his seuere iudgements to tread downe these hypocrites and cause them to goe from his presence to hell oh how wil we esteeme that we are in Christ and say Oh how loue I thy law For I see thy iudgements are equall and thou dealest not with me in iustice but in mercie not in anger but in loue not in wrath but in pittie therfore they couenant is sweete because I haue deserued thy iudgements and thou hast spared me Vers. 120. My flesh trembleth for feare of thee and I am afraide of thy iudgements HEre may seeme at the first to be some contrarietie betweene feare and loue sith loue causeth not but casteth out feare For he had saide in the verse going before that hee loued the testimonies of the Lord and here he saith that his flesh trembled for feare Wherefore at the first sight here is some shew of contrariety but indeed there is none For he saith My flesh trembleth c. whereby he sheweth that as he loued the law of God in his inward man and with his part regenerate so it is the outward and olde man and the part vnrenued which is full of corruption that did feare So that as hee had Gods spirit to renue his minde hee had this witnesse in him that he did loue the promises of God but because his flesh rebelleth against the Spirit and hee found many corruptions of nature remaining in him and threatning him that after hee was like to fall againe if the Lord yea but a little should leaue him he saith I am afraid least for my vnthankfulnes and vnworthie refusing of thy mercie thou shouldest leaue me to my selfe and so shouldest make a way to thy iudgements Thus there is an harmonie in the Prophet for because as the flesh hath a trembling feare so the spirit reioyceth Thus as wee haue often heard Gods children finde to their comfort in themselues faith in Gods promises and a delight in his word sometime they are grieued for the absence of this sweetnes of faith in the same For as the presence of Gods spirit bringeth ioy so the absence thereof feare as faith breedeth a loue of Gods promises so infidelitie maketh vs afraid of his iudgements Although Noah had great cause to loue the promises of God for his wonderfull deliuerance so he had great cause to feare himselfe that he might haue fallen afterward Lot also hauing good cause to beleeue and embrace the couenant of God for his safegard had iust occasion also to haue suspected himselfe that he was subiect to falling It is said Prou. 28. 14. Blessed is the man that feareth alwaies but hee that hardeneth his heart shall fall into euill For where feare is not there is securitie securitie breedeth hardnesse of heart and hardnes of heart bringeth Gods wrath Wherfore the Apostle writing to the Philippians shewing that God worketh in vs both the will and the deede of doing good least hereby they should draw to themselues security addeth that they must fill the course of their saluation in feare and trembling For if wee doe only well by Gods grace working in vs wee are much to feare the absence of it Wherefore wee see how the man of God did iustly feare his part vnregenerate This feare of Gods children differeth much from the feare of the wicked for it bringeth vs to the Lord and driueth vs not from the Lord it helpeth and hindreth not our prayers it hurteth not but furthereth our duties For it maketh vs to feare least wee should lose Gods grace it causeth vs to waite more and more to haue it and hauing it moueth vs by prayer to continue it When Noah had Gods fauour he feared and being warned of God as Heb 11. 7. of the things which were as yet not seene moued with reuerence prepared the Arke c So Habacuk hearing of the iudgement of God which should fall vpon the faithfull by the Chaldeans saith H●b 3. 16. My bellie trembled my lips shooke at the voyce rottennes entred into my bones and I trembled in my selfe Paul said he preached with feare and trembling Thus wee see how the good Saints of God did feare because they knewe that if the Lord should enter into iudgement with vs no flesh should be saued and that there was nothing in them but of mercie and therefore they acknowledge their weaknes vnworthinesse and wretchednesse Wee see also that Gods children haue diuers affects according to their diuers estates and though sometimes they are quickened through faith other times they are most ready to sinne if they doe not sinne No maruell then though the children of God feare when they see that God restraineth their will the greater their feelings are yet are they mixed with a reuerent feare of Gods maiestie and sight of their own corruptiōs least they should not abide his glorie and least they should not continue in their good things We see moreouer that this feare humbled Noah that the Prophets Apostles spake in feare which the Lord gaue vnto them either to prepare them to some grace which they should receiue or else more zealously to keepe some grace which already they haue receiued And where it might be obiected that loue casteth out feare wee must vnderstand of that seruile and excessiue feare which driueth vs away from God And seeing though wee feele Gods loue by faith wee will feare then much more had we neede so to doe when by infidelitie wee feele not this loue So wee must haue both feare to prepare vs to grace and wee must haue loue to continue vs in this grace And surely onely they with whom this thing hath been familiar doe knowe how loue and feare doe dwell together For as blessed experienc● hath taught some that by this feare they haue attained to speciall graces and continued in them by the same so also by wofull experience some haue found that for want ●f this they either haue not t●sted of the grace of God or else not continued in the same PORTION 15. AYN. Vers. 1●1 I haue executed iudgement and iustice
and in an holy courage to be delighted in weldoing For the godly whose onely stayes in trouble are faith and a good conscience are brought by their affliction to a sight of their sin to a desire to haue them pardoned to a feeling of God his mercy in hearing their prayers to an hatred of their sinnes Thus if we can support our faith in Gods promises wee shall reioyce in trouble When heretikes suffer for their illusions and being taught of man they quickly shrinke but when Sathan deludeth them with strange fantasies they are ready to suffer much Doe we know that heretikes wil suffer for their illusions and shall not wee much rather suffer for the truth And yet we see the Lord maketh a distinction betweene their sufferings our martyrdomes For Christians through faith can sing Psalmes in the midst of the flame heretikes by their roring shewe they haue no such ioy It stands therefore vpon vs euen now to be iealous of our prosperitie to bestow the time which we haue in weldoing and striue against sinne For we shall breake the first wall by this and so come with ioy to the other And as the word is a comfort in trouble so is it a bridle from sinne in prosperitie For as it doth not let vs fall in trouble so also it bridleth vs from sin in prosperitie For to this end we read and heare the word that in prosperity it should subdue sin and in aduersitie it should minister comfort But what is the iudgement of God vpon them that know not the word If they bee in health they seeke for nothing but for pleasures for profit and for gaine and thinke whatsoeuer they do to be lawfull yea admonish a man of his couetousnes by the word yet will hee not repent vntill eyther theeues or fire or some other iudgement of God vtterly consume him but hee will obiect why should I not get riches why should I not maintaine my gaine Admonish a theefe at his libertie of his theft and it prevaileth no more then if ye should tel him a storie vntill wofull experience ●each him the truth of it by the prison or by the halter There is no hope to any profit to perswade the adulterer vntill some plague of God haue wrought vpon him So we see when fire is on our houses when we must goe to prison or yeeld to any other calamitie men wring their hands teare their haire and rent their clothes crying for woe to themselues and saying they cannot liue they wil not be seene in the world they are ashamed to looke their friends in the face and why because they haue no feeling of the ioyes of the life to come they haue no stay on Gods prouidence they feele no comfort in his promises but they curse they moyle and pine away with sorrow If we see then the great mercie of God in staying vs from sinne in time of prosperitie and in aduersitie telling vs that he doth not punish vs in wrath but in loue and as a father doth teach vs the contempt of this world the desire of the world to come faith in his promises patience and repentance let vs reuerently esteeme the word Verse 144. The righteousnes of thy testimonies is euerlasting graunt mee vnderstanding and I shall liue IN repeating the same againe which hee had saide before the man of God here vseth two words the righteousnes of thy testimonies whereas before he vseth this one word thy righteousnes so that he meaneth here nothing els but the righteousnes of God reuealed to vs in his word For they bee called testimonies both in respect that they bee records of Gods loue towards vs as also they are testimonials of our obedience towards God So the words may beare this sense true it is Lord that that part of thy word where in thou hast comforted vs with thy promises is euerlasting and that part of thy word wherein thou hast set downe our duties is also euerlasting And I shall liue That is what doe men desire but life that I may liue therefore in godly pleasure Lord teach me to vnderstand thy testimonies See the man of God doth rest his life in this vnderstanding of the word They then that are ignorant are dead in sin Ephes 2. They sit in the shadow of death Luk 1. they are bound in the chaines of ●●●●● as Paul witnesseth of the widowes that liue delicately For as we cal him a man of death on whom not the Iudge but the law or not the lawe but the fact hath already giuen iudgement so they are subiect to the spirituall death on whom not God but his word or not the word but the sinne hath pronounced guiltie What is then life surely this was life the estate wherein Adam liued before hee fell his other life afterward which now is common to vs is a death and wee in him are all dead For when there was no sinne there was no shame when there was no shame there was no trouble when no trouble no death Wherfore sinne bringeth in shame trouble and death and hath left vs dead spiritually by cutting vs off from God For as a ciuill life is when wee are obedient to the ciuill lawes so we liue in God when wee liue according to his lawe And as he is dead ciuilly that by transgressing the lawes of the realme hath cut off himselfe from the common people so we are spiritually dead when sinne hath cut vs off from God The Prophet Abacuk saith chap. 2. 4. Hee that lifteth vp himselfe his minde is not right in him Where the Prophet sheweth that though a man for a time swel not hauing an vpright heart yet afterward he sodainely vanisheth away as a bubble of water for as a bladder with the wind is soone drawne out so the vngodly with conceit of his reason seemeth to bee puft vp but all is but inconstancie The iust man saith the Prophet shall liue by faith not by workes as some would dreame for all the shift of them that will be righteous in themselues will bee as a bubble of water but the iust man beleeuing the forgiuenes of sinne looking for euerlasting life staying himselfe on the promises and prouidence of God hath true soundnesse in him Hee shall liue saith the Prophet noting perpetuitie of time So the man of God his meaning is I shall liue i. perpetually and for euer Wee see then the great mercie of God that commeth by the knowledge of the Worde in that wee finde how hee deliuereth vs from wrath and taketh vs into his fauour he rescueth vs from sinne and clotheth vs with righteousnes he taketh from vs death and restoreth to vs life But marke who speaketh these words doth this man of God attaine to such an heroicall spirit as to crie graunt me vnderstanding and shall wee thinke ourselues sufficiently rich well sighted and that wee are so well clothed that wee neede no such prayer We are like the Laodiceans
but when wee knowe that wee haue to deale with God before whom no wickednesse will stand this will humble vs. 3 The people of Israel would not heare Moses though hee did sharply rebuke them wherein we learne to pray that our affections be mas●red betime for many are so heady in their affections that they will giue no eare to admonitions and as it is said of the belly to haue no eares so it is of such headstrong affectiōs Some giue so much place to their grief that they will not receiue comfort of the promises no● be rebuked by the threatnings of God in his word This griefe is carnal and dangerous and therefore euery man is to search his heart to see how such corruption is setled in him let him in time st●iue against it suffering himselfe to be rebuked by the word and so grace assisting him he shal ouercome it 4 Many see Gods workes with Moses but cannot profit by them because the Lord hath not giuen them the affections of Moses According to our affections so wee profit both by workes and word of God let vs therefore euer pray vnto God to fill our hearts with good affections CHAP. V. Of Affliction WHen we are in affliction we are not so wise of our selues as to see the cause of it or if we see the cause we cannot see the mercy of God that his hand which is vpon vs is not a destroying hand but a deliuering hand 2 Afflictions worke much in men but most when they come with the word of God to giue vs a more liuely sight of sinne and to manifest the rich mercies of God in Iesus Christ to deliuer vs from sinne Iehosaphat was more humbled by the speech of Iehu the Seer than he was being compassed with an host of enemies round about 3 When affliction commeth to Gods children not so much the sinnes themselues as the not auoiding of the meanes which procured their sinnes and not the vsing of the meanes which might haue preserued them from sinne will torment their consciences for as a man falling into some sicknesse if it come whilest he is walking in his calling is then lesse grieued than if through surfetting hee had procured and ha●ched the disease in himselfe euen so it commeth to pa●●●m in the other By vsing the meanes of godlines in simplicitie of heart we shall be either freed from sinne wherein we haue lyen or else be confirmed in some good things begun in vs. 4 Although the godly sha●l escape hell in the world to come yet they shall be punished in this world and though the wicked be not punished in this world yet shall they not escape hell in the world to come 5 When Sathan doth desca●t vpon our afflictions we must be comforted being Gods children because we suffer no more than Gods childrē before haue suffered and the Lord himselfe doth suffer with vs. 6 It is the Lord which sendeth crosses to his children to saue them that they freeze not with the wicked world in their dregs 7 When Moses was rebuked of the Lord for the not circumcising his sonne his faith was weake and his wife in performing that dutie was almost without faith yet the Lord saith and that if any affliction lie vpon vs it is for want of faith and if it depart without effect in vs then a sorer punishment is like to light vpon vs because we haue not profited by the crosse of Christ but if we effectually profit by it and still it lie vpon vs let vs then patiently abide for it is to trie our faith 8 If we would so prouide for our selues that no afflictions make vs quaile let vs in the time of prosperitie and quietnes cut off all headie affections as griefe sorrow and such like and then shall they not in our trouble preuaile against vs. 9 When our afflictions doe not driue vs to God nor cause vs more humbly to heare and seeke his word but rather to stoppe our ●a●es and to runne from it and to seeke vnlawfull meanes let vs then mourne secretly and heartily vnto God for the direction of Gods spirit for that case is dangerous 10 It is the Lordes mercie that wee are not destroyed Lamenta Chap. 3. But when we are freed from punishments and others are afflicted it is either to shewe his further mercie or his further iudgement if wee waxe better and bee more thankefull then it is of mercie but if wee waxe proude and thinke our selues better then others then is it assuredly to confound vs And heereby wee may gather comfort or griefe when wee escape punishments If hee pu●ish not in this worlde eyther GOD is vniust or else there is a hell to punish them euerl●stingly But his children if they profite not by one he sends another to condemne them in this worlde that they may escape in the worlde to come 11 We must denie our selues and our owne reason that we may continue with Christ we must take vp our crosse and follow him and if wee will be glorified with him wee must also suffer with him and if we will rise againe with him we must first die with him and if we will partake of his benefits we must also drinke of his cup. But many would willingly haue in Christ forgiuenes of sinne yet would they not beare his crosse 12 We must faithfully remember Gods corrections and though our trouble be past yet still with feare to remember the hand of the Lord not to attribute our cross●s to Fortune complexions or humours nor health to Physicke but only to God glorifying him continually and making our daily profite by all his louing chastisements vpon vs. 13 The deliuerance of the people of Israell is often repeated in the Scripture And it is not without great cause for it serues notably for the comfort of the godly and the terrour of the wicked for if we would thinke that hee were not able to helpe vs we see that he diuided the mighty Seas If we should think our selues vnworthy of helpe he then did mi●htily deliuer the vnworthie So that if wee being in any danger can be perswaded that the Lord is able to helpe vs and that he will helpe them that are vnworthie it wil be a notab●e stay vnto vs that we fall not away vnder the crosse by the vehemencie of temptations 14 Curses are turned into blessings through Christ as by sinne blessings are turned into curses The benefices of God being in themselues good yet by our corruption wee make our table a snare vnto our selues and so in other of his mercies 15 Iob serued God in trueth and yet punished and so Lazarus but this was not so much for their own sin as for the trial of their faith and that after them the Church might receiue great cōfort by their examples For as it hurts not the gold to be put into the fire
depriueth himselfe of this meditation weakeneth his faith For it is to our comfort and humbling To our comfort that albeit we be in danger and no man with vs yet God and his Angels be with vs. To humble vs that in euill doing they both see vs and can hurt vs as also the euill angels which still houer ouer vs. And therefore we must knowe that as the good Angels haue appeared to good men for speciall defence so the foule spirits doe appeare also to some men for speciall sinnes And when euill spirits so appeare we may not with the Papists and the Iewes beleeue they be soules departed but the euill spirits in the ayre about vs Epes 6. 11. 12. 13. CHAP. VIII Of Baptisme BAptisme is a pledge of our washing in Christs blood Act. 2. 30. of our iustification Gal. 3. 27. of our ingrafting into Christs body Ephe. 4. 16. of our dying to sinne Rom. 6. 3. of our resurrection 1. Cor. 15. 26. of our vnitie of spirit with our brethren Ephe. 44. of not seeking our owne 1. Cor. 10. 1. 2. 24. 2 Of Baptisme in Papistry this we may say for as much as they euer kept the foundation the substance of the institution of Christ that Sacrament was effectuall for more preuaileth the institution of Christ vnto good than the corruption of man vnto euill 3 The example of Zipphorah cannot be followed amongst vs that women should baptize though Papists abuse that example to proue it for the ministration of the Sacrament is ioyned to the ministerie of the word which office none can take except he be called as Aaron was and it is a most waightie and most honourable office to haue the word and seales of our reconciliation committed vnto vs. 4 It is obiected that it is a dangerous matter to want Baptisme it causeth death I answere The child saith the story was not punished but Moses through whom that contempt came for when as it is said Gen. 17. that the man not circumcised shall be cut off the reason is this because he despiseth the couenant of the Lord. Now a child cānot so do therefore the negligent father is punished and if the child come to yeeres continue in his fathers steps he is in the same state of rebellion contempt against God and so it is in our Baptisme Againe this popish opinion of the necessitie of Baptisme is confuted by the Lords institution of Circumcision the eight day for if this necessitie had been in Circumcision which they affirme to be in Baptisme all that dyed before the eight day were condemned The Lords meaning was in appointing this conuenient time to prouide that the child might haue more strength to beare the wound and this regard of time is fit to be obserued also with vs that this holy worke might be done on the Sabbath day in the congregation because it is a publike action by diuine institution 5 Concerning promises in Baptisme and the office of the witnesses which be called Godfathers and Godmothers looke in what things the Scripture giueth general rules the Church may vse the particulars so all be done decently and to edification the law giueth this generall instruction to a man in authoritie to defend the good and to offend the euill he may to this end take some godly man to him for an assistant The law commanding generally to distribute to the poore a man is not able to helpe all particularly therefore he endeuoureth the relieuing of some speciall persons The law commanding generally to helpe one another with godly instructions and no greater need to any than to a father in helping him for the education of children surely this dutie of loue to be an assistant in Baptisme may not be denied Againe to professe ourselues enemies to Arrianisme we vse Glorie be to the Father and to the Son c. all one with that so often in the Psalmes Praise yee the Lord So may we in like manner to auoid Anabaptisme haue witnesses to testifie to the Church that we are Christianly baptized And as we are to renounce all friuolous ceremonies so to keepe the peace of the Church we may not refuse such orders as tend to edification to loue and comelinesse in the Church 6 It is good to teach children while they be young that whereas they haue been baptized and blessed in the name of the Trinitie they should be taught forthwith some questions concerning their creation redemption and sanctification CHAP. IX Of Couetousnesse and the desire of Riches THere are manie which can be content to make Iacobs vowe that is if they haue meate drinke and cloathing they will serue God but they goe vpwards still in their worldlike accounts and downwards in heauenly things they rise from tens to scores from scores to hundreths they will not goe downeward with Abraham they will haue thousands of sheep els they be but poore they will haue Nab●oths vineyard with Ahab and dwell alone els they be sicke Thou hast set vp the heauens high saith the Prophet else surely rich men would haue all the vse of them leese them too So nothing can satisfie mans desire which is infinit but God who infinite And if he haue all the riches in the world he will desire more A very vnnaturall desire is this as the dropsie in desiring drinke when the desire proceeds from fulnes for a man should desire that which he wanteth The minde of a man is not filled with corporall things no more then a chest can be filled with wisdom or spirituall things But presuppose that riches could fill a man if wee had all wealth all riches all apparell wee put not our wealth in our mindes our clothes do vs no good but whē they are vpon vs. The possessing of riches doth not so fully possesse the heart but that it can desire a thousand things more 2 Riches are in question whether they be good or no When the Scripture speaks of riches they ioyne alwayes somewhat to them to take away our hearts from them as the deceitfulnes of riches the vncertainty of riches the riches of this world and therfore like the world now here now gone they either haue their own end or our end They make no man good but they are euen like a penie purse which is worth as much as the money that is in it but the money taken out it is nothing worth euen so is the man that hath his good in his riches When they are takē from him he is worth nothing he hath no good in him God hath them not and yet he wanteth no good thing It is the common complaint that the worst men doe most abound with them Dauid was faine to goe to Nabal for them Esau had foure hundred men when Iacob lay downe at his feet with a few Sometimes indeed they doe good but that is not sufficient to ground a Maxime they
to fall vpon them 7 Where a people hartily desire by prayer the ministerie of Gods word the Lord will send them faithfull ones and will multiplie his graces in them but because people are so full of carnall securitie the Lord sends them such as either for abilitie cannot or for affection will not deliuer the word of God vnto them 8 The Ministers of God are more discouraged by the disobedience of their owne people than by the maliciousnesse of their enemies be they neuer so mighty But let Gods ministers know that they must euer haue some to refuse thē but let euery child of God take heed that he offend not his godly Minister and if he hath offended let him with submission seeke to please him for as Paul saith If I be sory who can make me glad but those by whom I haue been made forte And let the Minister of the Lord remember that the fruits of his labours amongst the people be as it were the life and crowne of his ministerie so Paul teacheth also in his owne example I doe liue if Christ doe liue in you 9 The Israelites murmured against the Lord though they seemed to repine but against Moses and Aaron Christ saith He that heareth you heareth me c. So lōg as the Ministers of God trust not in themselues nor doe any thing of themselues but that wherunto they are called and ordained if they be resisted the Lord in them is resisted and if we refuse such wee refuse the Lord 2. Sam. 12. But when they be not ordained of God nor bring not the word of God with them then the curse cause lesse shall not fall But if we be assured of their calling or perswaded of their doctrine or if doubting and searching by the Scriptures we finde it true then if we obey not the Lord is highly dishonoured 10 It is necessarie that the Minister of God doe very sharply rebuke the people for their sinnes and that he lay before them Gods grieuous iudgements against sinners for so the Apostle commandeth Rebuke them sharply that they may be sound in the faith And again it is needfull for the people that they haue their cōsciences touched and their hearts made knowne vnto them that so they may come out of their sinnes and preuent the heauie iudgement of God 11 The Israelites were sometime at their wits end and therefore could not pray so that they had a singular blessing to haue Moses to pray for them So had Lot when Abraham prayed for him So had the Israelites when Samuel Phineas and Elias were ready to pray for them This must teach vs to set much by Gods seruāts among vs which pray for vs and not to haue them in small account Eccl. saith The godly in prosperitie is not regarded but in aduersitie they are sought vnto And indeed they are our chiefest helpe as is said of Elias that he was the chariots horses of Israel this is not onely profitable for whole countries but for euery particular man that when he cānot pray but hath as it were his heart tongue fast looked vp yet then Gods seruants doe pray for them that after they may pray themselues Wherefore let vs euer be readie to pray for others though they be wicked and haue done no dutie to vs yet it is Gods grace that we stand that we might reach a hād to them and though they haue reiected vs and deale euill with vs yet let vs doe our dutie vnto them as Moses did for this people though they were ready to stone him and so did Samuel pray for the people which had reiected him so that nothing must cause vs to leaue our duties to them but euer labour to haue our harts vpright with God whereof this is a good note if we can pray for others though they haue wronged vs. And that we may do this we must set the glory of God before our eyes which will teach vs not only to loue do good vnto them which loue vs for so do the harlots but euen to help them that hate vs. Therefore when the Lord will haue a punishment brought vpon vs then will hee take the godly frō vs as he tooke Lot from Sodom And therefore in such cases we haue to feare dangers 12 With what prouision the mightie of the world build their castles and with what consultations the Kings of the Nations proclaime warres with the same prouision with the same consultation and with no lesse should we take the calling of the Ministerie vpon vs which is a masonrie and a warfare both at one time as master Beza well noteth Ephes. 6. 2. continually like the builders vnder Nehemiah holding the trowell in one hand and the sword in the other The ground-worke hereof flesh and blood hath taught vs and set it downe for a corner stone in all serious consultations that whatsoeuer is must be set downe once for all euen for all the life long neuer to be called backe againe That same had need be well breathed vpon and be long in setting downe And this is not onely heathen wisedome but Salomons wisdome a man filled with vnderstanding euen one of his Aphorisms Prou. 25. Prepare thy worke without and make readie all things in the fielde But behold a greater then Salomon Luc. 14. before whom all heathens wisedome all mans wisedome is foolishnes yea brutishnes euen Christ Iesus the only wise God who not in generalitie but in this particular case of the ministerie streightly chargeth and commaundeth vs that not the best of vs all be so hardie as to lift vp an Axe or to stretch a line ouer his building before we haue been at Ephrata and in the woods to see that our prouision be great enough before wee haue set downe and as it were kept straight Audite with our selues and cast all our Reckonings ouer againe and bee sure wee haue sufficient to lay the last stone as wee lay the first If we doe not thus charges will arise more then wee thinke and we shall not be able to holde out to the ende And if wee be not why then all that behold vs all the world all the Angels in heauen CHRIST himselfe shall laugh vs to scorne Christ himselfe shall haue vs in derision this fellow must needes be building c. Oh it goeth sore when CHRIST whose Face was wrinckled with weeping and the shadow of death was on his Eyes for our sinnes when that Christ who in the dayes of his flesh offered supplications with strong crying and teares Heb. 5 When that Christ who in the bitternes of his soule lifted vp his voyce ouer Ierusalem and cried Oh if thou ha●st but knowne at the least in this day what belonged vnto thy peace and so was saine to lift vp the rest of the Sentence with teares as it was and as not being able to speake on for weeping the teares comming downe so fast
note that both prosperitie and aduersitie drawe vs neere to God if wee haue once receiued the Spirit of God but without that in their owne nature they are forcible to drawe vs away from God as may bee seene in the Israelites who for all their trobles in Aegypt could not bee brought to the Lord let vs learne then to glorifie God in our owne present estate and to vse that well and then shall wee bee prepared to ●eare well whatsoeuer commeth Iacob at his death giueth his Sonnes that which hee himselfe had neuer the possession of which declared his faith grounded on the word for he● faith God said thus Thus must we beleeue when wee haue the word though it seeme ridiculous but wee must not beleeue without the word CHAP. LVI Of Prophecie and Preaching THe office of a Prophet is not onely to foretell things although many did so the grosse vnderstanding whereof hath put downe our prophecies but also to teach to pray and plainly to interpret with a fit application to the people by the reuelation of the Spirit 1. Corinth 24 Genes 18. and 19 Number 11. Deu● 18. 1. Sam. 12. This reuelation commeth sometimes by meanes sometimes extraordinarily but alwayes spirituallay for this difference is betweene prophecying and teaching that a man may teach that he hath learned in the Schooles but the other hath a further reuelation of the Spirit to applie the word to times and persons fitly that euery one may haue his portion Reuelation is ordinarie or extraordinarie ordinarie when hee spiritually speaketh of the word as the word of God with power deuiding it aright as the Apostle Pau● saith If any be spirituall let him vnderstand what I say Extraordinarie when by some reuelation of Gods Spirit hee can note and specifie the time or manner or place of Gods threatnings here againe I say as the Apostle saith If any be spirituall let him consider what I say and the Lord giue them vnderstanding yet this is not to bring in the reuelations of the Familie of loue or any other Heretikes which dreame of such things as are not in and according to the word 2 To receiue a Prophet in the name of a Prophet is effectually to profit by their doctrine for all things are written for our learning so are all gifts which God bestoweth vpon others 3 As they that receiue a Prophet in the name of a Prophet shall receiue a Prophets reward so he that is receiued in the name of a Prophet must performe the dutie of a Prophet 4 It is one thing to speake daily by meditation and to beate vpon the consciences as a Pastour and another thing to set downe a thing with iudgement and deepe studie as a Doctour must doe 5 There are three kindes of false Prophets The first teacheth false doctrine The second teacheth true doctrine but applieth it falsely The third teacheth and applie well but liue ill 6 It is good to preach according to the state of a mans owne conscience vnlesse wisedome require a consideration to be had of the time person and place 7 Pastors were not able to deuoure their great paines to the people vnlesse they should consider what paines Christ deuoured for them and that their paines may bee the more profitable as the Pastor or Preacher should pray for the people so in like sort the people should pray for the Preacher 8 We care not though the Lord accuse or condemne neuer so much so he doth it in another court and touch vs not So long as Ieremy prophecied against Edom against Moab against Ammon or against mount S●ir so long presently after the threatnings the people would goe to the Church they were willing enough to heare the burthens of the Lord so long as it concerned not Iudah and Ierusalem but when he came to the burthen of Iudah and Ierusalem then they say the Lord hath not sent thee thou art taught to speak euil c. Wherefore wee must bring our selues to this to bee as glad to heare and with as great patience the action of the Lord commenced against vs as against any other And we may note it as a fault and marke of false Prophets to prophecie against other countries and to be full of generall tearmes but to come to particulars that they were loth to speake and others were loth to heare Being at Samaria they speake against Ierusalem and being at Ierusalem they speake against Samaria being at Bethel they prophecie against Gilgall and when they are at Gilgall they speake against Bethel at Dan against Sheba at Sheba against Dan. This is a sinne of false Prophets the true Prophets doe not so 9 The honour of a Prophet is not from the breast of his Mother it is not so materiall who was his father as who was his teacher In whom chiefly is to bee considered what the Prophet speaketh how The Prophets did somtimes threatē sometimes promise sometimes comfort sometimes reprooue but this they did rather as teachers than Prophets as whose proper function specially was in speaking of future things we doe not so much imbrace good things as wonder at strange things The Prophets spake that by inspiration which they knew by reuelation God disposing both their words and writings so that all that they spake and wrote they did but as instruments from God so great a difference is there betwixt our speeches and theirs Though we conceiue exquisitely how long are wee before we can speake And when we haue meditated wel doe not our tongues falter in our mouthes Though our tongues vtter most the puritie of knowledge when wee vtter the wisedome of God yet when herein we adde much indeuour how sore we grieue our hearers sometimes by obscuritie sometimes by vnsauorie and sometimes by vnseemly speeches In things of arte or reason be they Prophets bee they Apostles be they Euangelists or be they Pastors they may be deceiued Was not Moses counselled by his father in law Iethro Was not Peter conuicted of error by Paul Was not some of the Prophets conuicted by Ieremiah and Ezechiel But how then are the bookes of the Prophets so generally allowed Answere is that the Prophets were exempted from all possibilitie of errour in those things which they receiued by diuine reuelation indeede they must be voide of errour because God teaching them immediatly euery word and writing is voide of errour But how shall wee know that these their bookes were of such diuine reuelation and deliuered from God himselfe We must know that the certaine knowledge hereof to the prophets was one and to the hearers was another The Prophets by vision most certainly knew that the things they deliuered were from God The knowledge and certaintie of these things were confirmed to the hearers by miracle and oracle by miracle the persons of the Prophets were authorized for without doing of miracles they were accounted of as the
sonnes of the Prophets not as Prophets by oracle their bookes were tried by offering them to the view of other of the Prophets and of the Priests who asking counsell of God for the w●r●ant of them were answered by oracle from God 10 Another scruple is yet to be answered whether the Prophets did speake these things being in themselues or as rapt out of themselues True it is the Heathen Prophets did speake things to others onely the Prophets of God did otherwise as they that were themselues rauished and affected with the things giuen out to others The promises of God by them deliuered were as honey in their owne mouthes so sweetly were they mooued with them the threatnings denounced abroad left a sharpe sting in their owne bowels and made themselues to tremble the word of obedience taught to others bound them as straightly as if others had been the teachers of that word and they to be taught by it Seeing then this is the certaintie and dignitie of the writings of the Prophets is it not strange that the Prophets at whose doores and thresholds stood Princes and Gouernours in times past to aske counsell should now of euery meane person be either wholie contemned or re●chlesly receiued whē they are read or interpreted Though the greater thing is to do yet the first thing is to learne For as hearing without doing addeth to our confusion so doing without knowledge is neither acceptable to God nor profitable for vs. Let vs not therefore heare only or heare vanitie let vs not heare the Preachers as we heare Minstrels least that when we should be old men in knowledge and children in malice wee become old men in malice and remaine as children in vnderstanding 11 It is a greater thing in a Pastour to deale wisely and comfortably with an afflicted conscience and soundly and discreetly to meete with an Heretike than to preach publikely and learnedly 12 He said to some dwelling in a place where the word was preached Oh consider it is the easiest thing to heare it is the painfullest thing to preach the Gospell The sitting of one houre receiueth a fruite vnto immortalitie for howsoeuer men thinke the Ministers of God to speake euen whatsoeuer commeth into their mouthes it is not so they speake that which many yeeres they haue studied for earnestly they haue prayed for which by experience they haue bought and by a painfull life dearely payed for If a Prince should giue out by portion a mint of money for the fetching who would spare to goe The Lord offereth the mint of his mercie to bee deuided to them that will but heare and beleeue it and no man almost regardeth it 13 We must not so presse the Law that we suppresse the Gospell in mens consciences 14 All applications of doctrine must be referred to one of these heads 1 To teach and establish true opinions 2 Or to consute false opinions 3 Or to correct euill manners 4 Or to frame good manners 5 Or to comfort withall The first foure are set downe in this text the whole Scripture is giuen by inspiration of God and is profitable First to teach Secondly to conuince Thirdly to correct Fourthly to instract inrighousnes c. 2. Tim. 3. 16. The fift and last in this text Whatsoeuer things are written afore time are written for our learning that we through Patience and comfort of the Scriptures might haue hope Rom. 15. vers 4. These thigns are profitable saith the Apostle to Timothie And these things are written for our learning saith the same Apostle to the Church of the Romanes therefore by these things we must onely profit and onely learne by these for as application is a concluding of one thing out of another so these are the fiue heads from which all application must flow and he that thus speaketh attaineth to the purpose of S. Paul as elsewhere ●e noteth He that prophecieth speaketh vnto men to edifying to exhortation and to comfort 1. Cor. 14 3. That is to say applieth the vse of his doctrine to edification exhortation and comfort 15 The meanes to increase our faith is the word preached prayer the Sacraments and the discipline of the Church The word crucifieth thee a new in thine heart Prayer giueth thee a feeling of thy faith The Sacraments confirme both thy faith and feeling and discipline continueth vs in obedience both of the word and prayer and the Sacraments and consequently is a meanes to continue in vs al those comforts which by the other meanes are to be found in Christ. 16 The word of God is as a Glasse it blusheth not to tell our faults yet great infirmities haue beene in them that should carrie this glasse Moses foreseeing his cold entertainment in the faith saith Exod 4. Mitte quem missurus As Ionah when he should haue carried the Glasse of Gods word and of the peoples sinnes sayled from Niniuie flat East to Tharsis flat West Nathan 2. Sam. 12. Though Dauid was a man easie to be spoken to made off notwithstanding a good while vntill the king had made the premises himselfe he would make no conclusion To come to our times some there be that doe not onely sow pillowes but draw Curtaines and spread Couerlets ouer mens sinnes Others there are that for gaine will runne apace and yet with Balaam will neither blesse nor curse Some there are that doe conceiue and are readie to bring forth yet they cannot be deliuered Others there are who very softly and easily doe their dutie as Elie did to his children 1. Sam. 2. Others there be that speake with some courage but keepe a loofe and in a generalitie Lastly some there are who can and will particularize duties but when they spare some either rich or noble these can be very hot vehement against those that be absent CHAP. LVII Of Gods prouidence EVery one that leadeth a godly life and trusteth in God his Prouidence shall finde that in extreame dangers he will put such things into their mindes that they shall be cheered and comforted when others shall be disquieted and deiected This we may see in the parents of Moses because they beleeued and led a godly life Heb. 11. This is the blessing but the wicked shall want this good issue for the Lord will punish their wickednes in such a case as appeareth in the time of the glorious Martyrs who liued well before and in their deaths were crowned but Apostataes had their former hypocrisies punished and in such danger they shall not know what to doe but the godly trusting in Gods prouidence if they haue a way to escape shall haue their life for a prey but if they want this way yet they will offer themselues a sacrifice to the Lord. 2 When Moses and the rest of the children of Israel had receiued some good handsell of the goodnes of God in his prouidence ouer them they gathered thereupon that the Lord
meanes 15 Gods iudgements are most suddaine and when men are in greatest delight Euen in the Sun-shine Sodome was destroied and in the banquet time Iob● children were slaine therefore wee are to learne to bee most warie and watchfull and then most to suspect our selues when the world thinketh least of euill and is most secure CHAP. LXV Of Parents Education of children Gouernours of youth and Care of posteritie WHen children haue infirmities their parents are to see and consider whether they haue not receiued such sinnes from them If they haue they are rather to pray for their children than too much to correct them least they persecute their own sinnes in the persons of their children 2 When Moses was to goe at the commandement of the Lord into Aegypt he first returned with his wife to his Father in law Iothro to haue his leaue of him thereby shewing his dutie and obediēce vnto him that so he might giue no occasion of offence and might auoid all appearance of euill so must all the children of God be carefull in the like case and not to excuse themselues by good meanings 3 The Lord is carefull that his workes should bee recorded and that not for his owne cause for he knoweth them wel not for the age present for that many remember it but for posteritie to whom he would haue it to come that in them thereby hee might bee glorified Therefore the Lord made choyse of Iosua to whom he would haue Moses to rehearse the victories which he had giuen the Israelites ouer Amaleck his people that he might not be proud thereof nor glorie in his owne strength but that hee might giue the glorie wholy and onely to the Lord that gaue it Secondly that thereby he might be prepared to helpe the people and to gouerne them after Moses departure And this must teach vs to pray that the Lord would euer prepare such as may be profitable to posteritie And therefore in the 78 Psalme God commaundeth that the workes of the Lord should bee taught to posteritie and so saith Paul to Timothie deliuer this to men which may be fit to deliuer it to others c. From whence wee may learne that when the Lord will haue a blessing continued to any people he wil also prepare instruments to conuey his blessings to posteritie But when the Lord will not continue his mercie then will hee depriue them of the meanes Seeing then in our time men are carefull onely for themselues and few care for them that shall come after and that so few regard to Catechise their families these things I say are signes that the Lord will not continue those mercies to our posteritie which we doe now enioy 4 Youth especially is to take heede of pleasure for though fire be good yet in fl●xe or tinder it is not good so though pleasure be good yet pleasure in youth is not good We neede not plough for weedes they will grow fast enough in the fallow But some will take their pleasure in their youth especially and they purpose to become good and to liue grauely hereafter in their age This is to make a couenant with the diuell as the diuell said to Christ I will come out but the time is not yet come so we will leaue pleasure when the time comes and in the meane time he keepeth vs in a purpose Young men make their sinnes of a double die Crimzen sinnes they become a disease of the bones and custome is turned into a necessitie whereupon diuers say I would faine but I cannot leaue them of these if one recouer fortie rotte away 5 If Sathan can make our youth an vnprofitable age in all the ages following little good is to be looked for For if yee once nip the blossome where is the hope of the Autumne Where may we looke for fruite Well if we will needes vse our pleasure then must we set downe some measure The diuels rules neuer haue exceptions but Gods Saints must learne restraint we must neuer make our hearts the stewards of our affections that our thoughts wander not in them and least in desiring things too much we exceed when we haue them There must be the least lusting of these outward things because there is least vse of them If a man cannot want them he will abuse them when he hath them It is true that Ierom saith The beginning is honest but the greatnesse is deformed And that also sinne is very reasonable in the beginning very shamefaced Thamar went first to play the whore with a vaile before her face but now with an open face first honest recreation and then a pleasure of vanitie recreation before labour to play before we study we vse pleasure but to no good end 6 There is a generall rule wantonnesse is the beginning of sinne We see in Esau to what great prophanenesse his wanton pleasure in hunting grew So in the Scriptures there can be found none other beginning of Salomons fal but this that 1. Kin. 3. whē he had spent seuen yeeres in building the house of God he spēt thirteene after in building an house for himselfe This was scarce a good proportion to bestow thirteene yeers on his own house and seuen yeeres on God his house and the Apes and Peacocks that he brought into the land set the people in such vanitie that they vanished away in their wanton thoughts Idlenesse and trifling be the callings of Gentlemen now adaies as also needelesse expenses 1. Tim. 5. 7 If euer we would haue the Church of God to continue among vs we must bring it into our households and nourish it in our families 8 A certaine woman saying without pittie at the birth of a poore childe here is the mouth but where is the meate had this saying replied on her at what time she brought forth a child which died here is meate but where is the mouth 9 Wee are not to iustifie our selues before God onely by faith but wee must also iustifie our selues by good workes before men so that we must not onely labour for our selues but endeuour to stirre vp others also and looke one on another as the Cherubins did and tell things one to another as Iohn tolde his brother We must be carefull for one another and that not onely for the time present but for the time to come This we are bound to doe and our common dealings ought to bind vs thereunto We prouide for our children should we not prouide for the Church which is spiritually tied vnto vs Surely if we consider the plentie and peace which we enioy we shall see that it is not for our deserts for we abound in sinne and none iniquitie is wanting in vs but it is the bloud of the Martyrs who haue purchased this so dearely For these daies did they sowe with teares and we haue reaped them with ioy Now if we will not haue our
to loue best 516 how to loue superiours equall and inferiours 120 Loue of the creatures hinder 20. carnall loue 637 Lust remedies against it 635 M MAdnes the cause of it 20 Magistrates how they may winne the peoples fauour 260 they must be men of wisedom 38 haue a care of Gods glory pray for the people 778 their sinne most dangerous 79● si●s of the people cause euill Magistrates 53 Markes of Gods children 25 See children of God M●riners that s●ile on the Sabbath 164 Matrimonie notes to know whether it be of God 20 consent of parents 21 choise in it 742 the spousage before knowne by the light of nature 122 the end of it 806 Meanes 27 of saluatiō 42 all good meanes must ●e vsed 615 ●70 we ought to attend thereō 736 neglect therof a tempting of God 674 by what meanes wee draw to God 690 to keepe vs from sin 7●8 the vertue power of the meanes in God 844 meanes of least shew bring greatest graces 290 Mediatour who it is 80 how dangerous to appeare before God without him 694 Mediocritie 29 Meditation 615 159 574 564 in labour 4 how we be hindred therein 10 commodities of it 22. rules for it 23. of Christ his death 19● of death in or on the word 450. to redeeme the time for it 471 Meditation must be continued 459 we will alwaies meditate thinke on the things we loue 459 Melancholy Satan and it disquiet afflicted soules 257 Memorie helpes for it 23 ●5 447 Mercie 209 of God 9 522. the rich mercy of God to the faithfull in opening their eyes when many millions are left in darkenesse and miserie 503 it is either in giuing or forgiuing 697 to the poore 69● how it worketh in the wicked 247 to whom the mercies of God are dear● 782 Merit 509 Messengers of God how they binde and loose 877 must be prepared for trouble 747 their euill life how dangerous 752 messengers of Satan within vs. 306 Minde 52 cast downe 95 distempered 482 Ministers 24. the necessitie of thē ●39 ●40 the vse whereunto they are appointed 341. their dutie first to reade and studie 342. secondly to teach the word ●43 how where what he must teach 344 when 345. to pray for himselfe and the people 345. thirdly hee ought to liue a godly life ●46 fourthly hee ought to teach priuately as well as publikely 347 how a Minister may ●●●e 347. Miniets the porters of heauen 288. meanes to bring vs to Christ. 288 Ministers and Auditors are not alwaies alike 448 Ministerie 24 646 the haste of young men to it 24 the dignitie of it 747 the necessitie of it 340. whether a man may desire it 52. negligent in it 752 790 sufficiencie for it 546 couetous in it 735 Miracles giuen in mercy and in iudgement 736 Mirth 25 the way to godly mirth 724 Morall and Ceremoniall 132. See Law To know things morall and ceremoniall 138 Mortification goe together with remission of sinne 105 Mother 76 three good mothers breeds three euill daughters 830 Motions secret vnto sinnes 108 the spirit restraines euill motions 89 the godly are not free from euill motions 681 we must watch ouer them 703 the first motion to sinne must be crucified in vs. 467 why so few good motions come to vs 522 sudden motions to good 476 Motes what sinnes are called motes and what beames 632 Multitude to follow is dangerous 704 Murmuring the policie of Satan therein 26 how common in our daies 249. remedies against it ●51 758. how readie we are in our daies to murmure 815 N NAme good name how pretious 259 260. See good name Nature good and euil 29 natural men measure others by thēselues 715 they count all spirituall things as paradoxes 457 Necessitie two kindes thereof 166 Neighbour who is our neighbour 79 O OBedience what it is 50 to the word 826. it must be free 44 triall of it 544 strict obedience to be laboured for 292. popish obseruations and workes of supererogation in the point of obediēce confuted 393 Occasion of euil must be auoided 25 263 Offences 721 47 74 90 702. small sinnes great offences 727 Oppression 780 Order necessarie in all things 833 Othes 75 476 P PApists 3 673 disquieted in minde 96 rest in the worke wrought 689. neuer felt the power of Christ his grace 787 popish obiections against the Gospell 802 popish superstition 455 Papists goe beyond carnall Protestants in outward things 805 455 How papists follow Peter 483. papists may not be spared for their ciuill honestie 455 Popish Doctors of reason 520 Parēts immoderate loue 2● follie 258 for what cause the Lord afflicteth parents in their children 277 their consent in mariage 743 consideration in correcting their children 798 Pastors the ●inne of the flocke their sinne 259. their office 772. See ministers Patience 6●9 759 56● triall of it 25 properties of it 254 vnder the crosse 761 768 the vse of Gods patience 694 Pe●ce three-fold 7 of minde 97 of conscience 209 false peace ibid. of the wicked 6●0 of the Church 542 People their dutie to their Magistrates 76 to their Ministers 349 Perfection God lookes not for it at our hands 390 Periurie how men fall into it 333 Persecution 670 popish persecution how great 791 Perseuerance 496 694 721 116 in the vse of the meanes 15 764 a sure triall both of knowledge and faith 510 P●ruert who they be that peruert others 730 Physition properties of him 794 Pittie who are to be pittied 25 Plague 79● boldnes and fearefulnes in it 2 extremities 104 plague threatned 790 for the contempt of the word 513 A perfume for christiās against the plague 444 Pleasure 653 734 how we may take pleasure 726 vse of it with restraint 7 9 of sinne 323 Pollution the polluted person polluteth all things 189 Policie of the world euill 838 Polygamie 586 Posteritie care thereof 798. Iehosaphat punished in his posteritie 462 Posts on the Sabbath 165 Pouertie the cause and vse of outward want 26 Poore 261 zealous in defence of them 258 poore in godlines 784 collections for them on the Sabbath 161 Praise 27 733 749 Preaching with prayer before after 272 the power therof 283 708 sincere bring men to Christ 139 needfull by sea 164 distinguished from catechizing 664 the onely meanes to worke faith 690 346 173 Preachers how they winne fauour 8●1 how they should carrie themselues 358 247 a true marke of a faithfull Preacher 375 See Minister Prayer 2 38 when to pray 26 to offer vp our prayers to God albeit in perplexitie of spirit wee know not how to pray 484 publike for the sicke 34 want of it cause want of faith 177 what it is 90 a remedy in temptation 873 how it is hard and what doth season it 507 619 how profitable 776 motiues thereunto 777 the more grace a man hath the more need he hath to pray 46 47 it is the best sacrifice 8● priuate prayer necessarie 501 rules for prayer 562 563
in death Three things to bee noted in this text The power of Gods word in the cōuersion of sinners Three waies Note The first entry to godlines beginning of repētance is a godly sorrow for sinne Psal. 4. 5. Esay 40. 6. 7. 8. Esay 66 and 57. 14. 15. Matth. 9. 13. The power of the plaine simple preaching of the Gospell The power of the word Heb. 4. 12. The word must pierce vs. Iohn 16. 8. 2. Sam. 1. 2. A false perswasion of the pardon of sins in many Signes of godly sorrow To be often touched with out amendment dangerous How foolishly many wold put off their sorrowes A true examination of our selues In our examination hee teacheth vs to follow the order of the commandements Note 1. Cor. 11. 30. 31. Simile Sorrow for sin the way to heauen Luk 16. True humiliation before sound cōfort Rom. 6. 12. Zach. 12. 10. 11. Gal. 5. 24. 2● Not to cōtent our selues with sorrow for sin but to proceede to repentance 2. Cor. 7. 9 10 Note Repentance what it is Rom 6. 3 4. Phil. 3. 9. 10. 11. What is meant by the gift of the holy Ghost Act. 2. Sorrow for sin must be continued Note The scope of the text The loue of the Saints to the word 1 The diuers acceptatiō of these words kingdome of heauen 2 1 2 First it is taken for the meanes The keyes of the kingdom of heauen committed to all Ministers of the Gospell Looke to the translation Luke 17. 21. The Ministery of the word is the meanes to bring vs to the knowledge of Christ and so to his kingdome Graces bestowed on thē which vse the meanes well Obseru 1. He that will goe to heauē must make an entrance into it on earth How to know where a treasure is Wherfore so few loue the Gospell and meanes of saluation Sacraments Meanes of least shewe may bring vs greatest graces Obseruation Few loue the word How to speak of a parable Sense of the place Doubts in our first conu●rsion The mindé may be deceiued the heart cannot so be being truly possest of the word How the word is found before it be sought God turnes away his coūtenance from his children for a time God hath a different respect of yong and old Wherfore we wa●t good things Ioy of saluatiō how great Gods proceedings with his children To labour for the ioy of our saluation Psal. 51. Two sorts of ioyes in receiuing the word The ioy of the minde of the heart note the difference Seate of faith An apt ●imilie A good triall of some ioy The fight of a Christian. Similitude of building Similitude of warfare Euery Christian a builder and a warrier Striue to enter in at ●●e ●●raite gate Premeditations before men be resolued to follow Christ. Christianitie a warfare To renounce reason first Anger To fight with reason and affections a hard battell To fight with penurie and want Satans practises in temptations Wherefore many are ouertakē with temptations Ephes. ● Philip. 4. 14. Rom. 8. The wicked by faith purged made Gods childrē The summe of the two former Sermons Sense What must besold before w●●ā possesse Gods kingdome Consider three things 1 2 3 Iames 5. The change of on sinne for another Secondly all sinne must be forsaken Herod Ananias Iudas 3 Sale of sia for euer Not sufficiēt to leaue sin but mē must mourne for it vntill they come to soūd griefe How many de●eiue thēselues when they know their sinnes are pardonable not labouring any further for an assurance that they are pardoned To harbour some secret sins in our breast To be religious rather than so to seeme to be Of infirmities Inward corruptions To maister naturall corruptions Video meliora proboque de ●●riora sequor Note The messenger of Sathā within vs. Pride How to carri-ourselues in a temptation C●rnall securitie feare dangerous Note A greater studie and care for the increasing of this inestimable treasure The necessitie of Ministers Pastors Docters and Elders in the Church of God 1. Thess. 5. 12. 13. This is not meant of ciuill Magistrates but of the gouernours of the Church Matth 9. 36. Mark 6. 34. The people of God without a shepheard for all the great learning of the Doctors Matth. 9. 38. Who be onely true Ministers The miserie of the people without a Pastor Matth. 23. 37. Luk. 13. 34. Ephe 4. 4. 5. 6. The ministerie of the word the most necessarie thing in the world 1. Pet. 1. 23. 1. Pet. 5. 8. Great danger of not hauing a godly Pastor The vse wher vnto God hath appointed ministers Rom. 10. 6. 7. 8. Rom. 10. 17. Preaching the onely meanes to worke faith in vs. Luk. 16 31. Matth. 16. 19. The Lord in his mercy wil haue his children certaine of saluatiō in this life to their vnspeak able comfort Exod. 20. 18. 19. If the Preaching of the word worke not faith in vs we could not beleeue though God spake to vs himselfe nor if one should come from the dead Iohn 10. 24 25. 26. 27. 28. Note Rom. ● ●● Though their holines be neuer so great in the outward appearance they shall not stand in the end Certaine condemnation of the wicked The assured comfort of Gods childrē in Christ. Iohn 20. 23. The dutie of Ministers Ephes. 47. 8. Attendance in reading 1. Tim. 4. 13. 1. He must reade studie the worde of God diligently Malach. 2. 7. Iosh. 1. 8. To meditate in the word day and night Psal. 1. 2. To meditate in the word daily 2. He must teach the word The strait account of the Minister The order of his teaching is to build vpon the true foundation Iesus Christ. How to know on● that preaches with the power of the word He that ●uildeth not vpon that foundation is an Antichrist Acts 20. 27. Hee must teach all the counsell of God Luk. 24 45. 2. Tim 4. 2. Matth. 22. 29. Hee must p●icke forward the godly to increase in godlinesse beate downe the obstinate with the iudgements of God comfort the penitent with the promises of the Gospell To apply comfort to the penitent sinner The minister ought to go t● the houses of his charge Gen. 3. 19. Priuate meanes as well as publike must be vsed by the Minister Luk. 10. 38. 39 19. 9. Acts. 20. 20. That which is spoken to all is regarded of none or of few To admonish priuatly is to take all excuses away He must teach continually both in season and out of season Acts. 20. 31. Paul warned them with teares both night day 2. Timoth 4. 1. 2. Note He must pray both for himselfe and his people as wel priuately as openly 1. Cor. 3. 6. His office is to blesse the people in the Lords name Deut. 10. 8. Num. 6. 23. Psal. 118. 26. Iohn 17. Rom. 1. 9. 2. Tim. 1. 3. He must be circumspect in administring the Sacraments The minister ought to take account of their faith The sacrament pertai●●●●
commonly despised We may not loue that best which the world esteems best A good rule Depth of mystery in plainnes of words Heart seat of diuinitie Triall of heart Note Note Affections Note Popish doctors of reasō A wit not hūbled hinders vs in godlinesse Loue. Canticles Griefes Motions Mercie 〈…〉 nts 〈…〉 they 〈…〉 〈…〉 c●p 7 7. 〈…〉 true sense A two fold iudgement the one in righteousnes another in mercie We are to follow the holy Prophets c. in their holy affections Note Note The name of the Lord. The word the onely glasse to see and know the Lord. Iohn 14. 23. Psalm 119. A mirrour of godlinesse Freewill Albeit wee haue the light of the word yet the Lord must opē our eyes before we can see Affection Anger Watchfulnes Simile To meet with tēptations before sinne be perfected Simile Godly feare The dominion of sinne Rom. 6. 12. Not to bee tempted Heretikes 〈…〉 ●0 Note Simile The blindnes of sinnes Simile Note the louing mercie of the Lord couering our manifold infirmities Simile The Christiā warfare The end of all deliuerances Thankfulnes Two principall props in trouble Esay 5. Godlinesse Afflictions Gods countenance Godly sorrow Loue to Gods word Simile God iust in his prouidence Note Diues and Lazarus Matth. 5. Incredulitie in Gods children Beleeuing the word That the 119. Psalme concernes all the regenerate Iobs sinnes Note A true propertie of zeale Galath 6. 1. Zeale for the contempt of the Word Of Zeale Diuers kinds of zeale 1 2 3 The first propertie of true zeale The first rule of true zeale Toleration of many things for the peace of the church The second rule of true zeale Two obseruations The second obseruation Simile Conscience of thoughts The third rule of zeale The fourth rule of zeale Triall of our obedience To heare with the frailties of Gods children Duties of loue euen to Gods children The fift rule of zeale Sufficiencie for the ministery The sixt rule ●● zeale Difference betweene fretting anger and pining zeale Admonition Our vnbeleefe and wherefore we see it not Triall of our zeale Our vnbeleefe is shewed vs in the often repetitions of the commendatious of the word No idle repetitions in this Psalme M. Bradford and holy Martyrs much lamenting euer f●r their vnbeleefe The word of God a tried friend in troubles Simile Dauid against Goliah Triall of our loue to the word Triall of our loue to the word How Christians differ much from heretikes Heretikes cannot abide the word Good notes for prayer 1. Importunate in praier with God Luk. 1● 1. 2 Wherfore God delayes to graunt our requests 2. Wisedome of he spirit in prayer Our times for prayer Sabbath Luk. 10. 41. 42 Callings Diligence in hearing and prayer Note Sabbath two Sermons the mornings 〈…〉 e●es Note Preparation and meditation Preparation The min●s●e● Balaams witchcrafe Num 23. 22. 23. Meditation The morning meditation 1 2 3 Note 1. Cor. 7. Ierem. 7. 13. Iob. 8. 2. Matth. 21. 18. The third point cheerefulnes in prayer Spirite of cheerfulnes a singular grace Note The fourth propertie in prayer is Faith Faith and patience A iudgement of mercy and of seueritie Note Note Note Secret sinnes Note Witchcraft Zeale Anger Hypocrisie Note Note Rom. ● 3. 4. 5. Luk. 7. 47. Dulnes Esay 25. ● Feare Consulting with witches Is Gods feare be wanting there is no temptation so great but we fa●● in●o it Triall of our feare of God False feare Simile Witchcraft A true note of Gods child The true ioy of the faithfull howfor it ex●●●des all carnall ioy Triall of our ioy Simile Sabbath Dulnesse in prayer and other holy exercises Feare and ioy tempered together Loue to good things and hatred of euill things may not slak● in vs. Prayer Admonitiō Relapse Polygamie Heresie or prof●●●nesse like to follow our securitie The true faith worketh by loue Iohn 17. Furies Application Waiting an effect of faith Asoūd faith breedeth a good conscience Incredulitie hastie A patient faith Impatience True faith not without good workes To iustifie diuersly taken How we are iustified by workes Simile Simile Simile Repetitiōs in prayer how reprooued Simile Promises are generall Prayer must bee ioyned with faith knowledge Ripenes of iudgement and quicknes of affections whence Thankesgiuing the end of Gods blessings Many thinke they loue God his word religion whē indeed they doe not Simile How to holde fast true Wisedome The cause of forgetfulnes is carelesnes Two things to be auoided first vanitie of minde secōdly worldlinesse if wee will entertain and possesse wisedome What to be auoided Simile To auoyd the societie of the wicked Citò longè tardè Psalm 119. and 1●0 1 The practises of the wicked against the godly 2 3 What euill examples doe No hope of Lucre or preferment must linke vs in any league with wicked men Reasons of the former precept The delight of the wicked A true marke of the wicked How we must endeuour to s●irre vp ot●ers ●o ●●ad ne● ●●● be 〈…〉 we haue not performed any such autie Psal. 119. It is not sufficiēt to flie the counsells an● companies of the wicked Wee must haste● to the societie of the godly 〈…〉 〈◊〉 ●●al ● 1. 2. 〈◊〉 16. ● Gen. 16. 8. Vaine and vnprofitable changes of places of callings c. Two marks of a righteous man 1 2 Notes of a good conscience 1 2 3 Simile Simile Simile Good cautiōs to keepe vs from sinne How the wicked walke in sinne know it not Profit by reading preaching conferring of the word We must store vp the word in our heart by prayer meditations We must not rest in the vse of one good meanes 1 Two causes of watching ouer our hearts 2 The second cause of watching ouer our hearts In what respects the worldlings leaue sinne The triall of our hearts whether in sinceritie wee loue the Gospell for the Truths sake or because we get some gaine glorie by it Cause of all sinne in our owne selues Satā is made a chirurgion to cure the corruption● of the Saints How the pure heart stadeth fast in temptations Our hearts tried two waies The first by afflictions The second triall of the hart by our ioy and griefe in good and euill Desire of saluation How to discouer a couetous heart Care for the prosperitie of the Church a speciall note of Gods children Psal. 122. True triall of our ioy and sorrow Paul afflicted yet great ly comforted whē he heard of the peace of the church and prosperitie of the gospell Triall of the heart in prosperitie To loue and speake the trueth in the least matters How God chasteneth his children for lying To speake the trueth in iudgement Scorne True knowledge where and how to finde it Triall of our hearts whether we principally respect Gods fauour in all our actions Contempt of the word what causes breed it 1 We say the rich and the mightie est●eme it not 1. Cor. 1. 2 We say it is too hard