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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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servants in heaven but in Gods Kingdome they are as free as their Masters and therefore should not thinke much of a little hardnesse or harshnesse in this life Thus of the originall of servants Secondly we may hence note that servants are bound by God himselfe in his Word unto their subjection The Word of God doth belong to the calling of Servants as well as to any other calling God hath included them within the doctrine of Scripture as well as any other men partly to shew that they have right to the Scripture as well as others and partly to shew that the power of binding servants is from God And God hath taken it upon him by his Word to teach Servants as well as other men and that for two reasons The one is because Servants belong to the Kingdome of Christ and his Church as well as other Christians and therefore must be taught as well as they Secondly the other is because usually Masters are negligent in teaching them and therefore God provides that by his Word they shall bee taught Men have some care in teaching their children but little of their servants and therefore God to shew that he is no respecter of persons gives order to his Ministers to see them instructed The Use may be divers Uses First Masters must learne from hence their dutie For when they see that God takes care to teach their servants they should not be so proud or carelesse as to neglect their instruction Yea it shewes also that if they would have them taught or reproved or incouraged they must doe it with Gods Word and with their owne yea it also shewes the folly and wickednesse of divers Masters that cannot abide their servants should heare Sermons or much reade the Scriptures when they doe not only wickedly in restraining their servants from the meanes of their Salvation or comfort but do foolishly also hinder them of that meanes which should especially make them good servants Secondly Servants may hereby be instructed or informed and taught Informed that though neither Master nor Minister will teach them yet they are not excused because they are bound to learn from Gods Word their duties And taught from hence they must be to do their duties to their Masters not for fear or reward but for conscience sake because God hath bound them to his subjection Thirdly Ministers should learne and from hence be awakened to take notice of their charge both to catechize in speciall and to teach servants in generall as well as others their hearers If it be a part of the Commission of great Apostles to instruct servants as well as other Christians then what accounts can they give to God if it be found that they have had no care of instructing the servants of their parishes and charges Doct. 3. Thirdly the indefinite propounding of the word Servants shewes that all sorts of servants are equally bound to subjection hired servants are as strictly bound as bond-servants The servants of Princes are not free from the duty of servants more than other servants and ●o likewise poore mens servants must be subject and obedient to their Masters with as much reverence and fear as servants to great men Old servants are tied to as much duty as such as come new to serve Religious servants are bound to as much subjection and obedience as Pagans or rather their bond is the stronger because Religion should rather make them better servants And so there is no difference of sexes men servants are bound as well as women servants neither doth birth office gifts or meanes priviledge any servant from the strictnesse of the bond of subjection Be subject The duty then required of servants is subjection servants must be subject It is not enough to weare their masters Cloth and to hire themselves to their masters they must make conscience of it to performe constant and humble subjection to their masters And so they must be subject to their masters three wayes First to their commandements and so they must obey them and yeeld themselves to them to be ruled and directed by them in all things Eph. 6.5 Colos. 3.22 Secondly to their rebukes and corrections For if children need rebukes and corrections then doe servants also Pro. 13.1 and 15.5 Servants will not alwayes be corrected by words and therefore need blowes Pro. 29.19 Gen. 16.6 yea they must patiently suffer correction though it be inflicted unjustly as appeares in the verses following this Text. Thirdly to their restraints Servants must be subject to the appointment of their masters even in the things wherein they restraine them as for instance in their diet It is a sinfull humour in them not to be content with such diet as their masters appoint them though it be worse than the diet of their masters or the diet of the children of the family So likewise in their company they must avoid all company that may be any way offensive to their masters and so likewise in their apparell in such cases where servants are to be apparelled by their masters as also in respect of their going out of the house in the day time when they have not leave but much more abominable it is to be out of their masters houses in the night without their leave And as their subjection must be performed in all these cases so the indefinite manner of propounding it shewes both that they must be subject in all things and in all the wayes of shewing subjection for the manner of it they must be subject in all things so as to beare with their masters for it is a sinfull rebellion to crosse or disobey or leave undone any thing that is required of them to doe And besides it showes that they must be subject in their very hearts and in their words and in their countenance and gesture as well as in the work to be done by them Use. The use may concerne both servants and the parents of such servants and the masters that rule them Servants should hence from their hearts learne to yeeld themselves over to their masters with all good conscience to performe the subjection required yea such servants as heare this doctrine may try their hearts whether they be indeed good servants or no for a good servant that makes conscience of his duty when he heares the doctrine doth from his heart consent to it and will strive to fashion himselfe according to it Now the servants that desire to be such as is required may attaine to it if they observe these rules First they must carefully study the doctrine of servants duties Servants oftentimes faile through meere ignorance because they doe not lay before their mindes what God requires of them Secondly they must often judge themselves for their faults wherein they have displeased their masters or neglected their duties therefore many servants mend not because either they will not see their faults or doe not humble themselves in secret for them Thirdly they
in particular concerning the sinne of speaking evill of the godly and the point is That Gods gracious visitation doth cure that disease exactly Hee will never raile any more that is truly gathered unto God in his day of visitation It is possible Christians may speake evill one of another in particular and it is lamentable when they doe so but that is upon supposall of particular faults in those of whom they speake evill But that a man should speake evill of godly men in generall because they are godly with desire hee might finde them evill doers is a vice not found in such as are truly called And therefore let such as are guilty of that sin of speaking evill of good Christians because they follow goodnesse know That their day of visitation is not yet come Verse 13. Submit your selves to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether to the King as superior FRom the thirteenth Verse of the first Chapter to the ninth Verse of the third Chapter is contained matter of exhortation and the exhortation is either generall or speciall The generall exhortation concernes all Christians and hath beene set downe from the thirteenth Verse of the first Chapter to the end of the eleventh Verse of this second Chapter Now those words and those that follow to the ninth Verse of the next Chapter containe speciall exhortations which concerne some Christians onely namely subjects servants wives and husbands Of the duty of subjects hee entreats from Verse 13. to Verse 18. Of the duty of servants from Verse 18. to the end of this Chapter of the duty of wives in the seven first Verses of the third Chapter and of the duty of husbands in the eighth Verse of that Chapter So that the Apostle having taught all Christians before how to behave themselves in their generall calling hee now undertakes to teach some sorts of Christians in particular how to order themselves in their particular callings and so hee teacheth them in some things that concerne the Politickes and in some things that concerne the Oeconomickes Unto order in a Common wealth belongs the duty of Subjects and unto houshold government belongs the duty of Servants Wives and Husbands From the coherence and the generall consideration of the whole exhortation divers things may bee noted before I breake open the particulars of the Text. 1 The Word of God must bee the warrant of all the actions of our life it not onely gives order about the businesses of Religion but it prescribes matter of obedience in all our conversation it tells us what to doe in our houses and in the Common wealth as well as what to doe at Church which shewes us the perfection of the Scripture Theologie is the Mistresse of all Sciences it perfects the sound knowledge of the Ethicks Politickes or Oeconomickes and it should teach therefore in our callings whether generall or particular to seeke warrant from the Word which warrant wee may finde either expressed particularly or else implyed in generall directions and withall wee should take heed that wee make not more sinnes in any estate of life than are made in Scripture and so not affright or disquiet our selves with vaine fears that way 2 The Apostle would have Christians in a speciall manner carefull that they offend not the lawes of the Princes of this world this appeares in that hee enjoines them the duties of subjects first and in that they doe teach them the duty of submission both in this and other Scriptures with great force and violence as it were of arguments which shewes that they were wonderfull desirous to charge and instruct the Christians so that if it were possible they might not offend that way and the reasons are divers and many why Christians should bee above all men carefull to keepe the lawes of Princes first because by breaking the lawes of men they sinne against God Secondly because evill minded men have in all ages watched godly Christians to see whether they could finde any fault by them in the matters of the kingdome Thirdly because if earthly Princes be provoked it may cause a generall trouble of the Churches the offendors many times suffer not alone but many others upon displeasure raised by them Fourthly because if earthly Princes bee good the carefull obedience of their Subjects may incourage them to be great helpes to Religion even to be Nursing-fathers and Nursing-mothers to the Churches 1 Tim. 2.2 Fiftly because perversnesse and contempt and carelesse neglect of the lawes of Princes many times proves scandalous and Wee must not offend them that are without 1 Cor. 10.2 Col. 4.5 Many that were somewhat enclined to embrace the sincerity of the Gospell have beene cast backe and professe that therefore they abhorre such people because they observe their disobedience against humane government either through indiscretion or nice scruples or perverse wilfulnesse The use may be to reprove the carelesnesse of many Christians this way and that for divers offences as first for sluggishnesse in not studying the Lawes of the Countries where they live Some Christians have a secret jealousie against the Lawes of men and doe in heart thinke meanly of them and unlesse the equity of the Law stare them in the face they doe without any further consideration securely cast aside the care of it and rush into the breach of it Secondly divers Christians doe much sin against the holy desire and direction of the Apostles in the intemperancy of their words when in ordinary discourse they speake with much scorne of the observation of the Lawes of men which they understand not A Christian that will not study to be quiet in respect of the Lawes of men is a singular plague to the Church where he lives Doct. 3. We may hence note that it is necessary for Ministers often to teach their hearers their duty to Magistrates to shew the power that Princes have to make Lawes to governe them by And this is fit to be noted because of the strange weakenesse and perversnesse of some Christians that are much offended with their Teachers if they fall upon doctrine of this nature with any application to the times they mistrust them or censure them to be temporizers and to speake out of flattery or wilfulnesse or the like corruption of conscience I speake not now of such Ministers as pleade the rights of Princes onely for their owne ends or in such a manner as they discover an apparent hatred of godlinesse it selfe for these are worthy to bee blamed but even of such Ministers as prove the rights of Christian Princes with compassion and love and meeknesse without provoking or reviling tearmes even these I say are mistrusted and censured though we heare and see in other Scriptures that they are bound to prove and defend the authority of the Magistrate in any thing wherein it is unjustly questioned Doct. 4. It is necessary wee should first bee taught our duty to God and those
what we learne at Church is for the most part to bee practised at home Many have little occasion of practice abroad Sixtly because the comfort and contentment of mans life lieth much in this How are the lives of many men made uncomfortable by disordered servants wicked children idle froward vicious wives God gave the woman at the first as a speciall help to man to shew that at home the chief help of his life was to be had Use. The Use should be therefore to teach Christians in their severall places in the family to make conscience of their dealing both to know it and to doe it as ever they would have God to come to them and dwell with them Psal. 10.1 2. and as they desire to be no hypocrites in Religion for such as make no conscience of doing their duties in the family whether themselves wives servants or children are not sound Christians they are but hypocrites They are not compleat Christians that are not good at home aswell as abroad they walke not in a perfect way Psal. 101.2 And besides till domesticall disorders be redressed the family will never be established Pro. 14.3 Secondly it is to be noted that Inferiours in the family are either onely or first or with most words charged about their duties as here servants and not masters and servants and wives with many words and there may bee divers reasons assigned of it 1. To preserve order God hath subjected the Inferiours to the Superiours and the Superiour in a family is Gods Image the Lord is therefore carefull to preserve his authoritie The Superiours receive lawes from God but not from their Inferiours The Inferiours are to learne their dutie without prescribing lawes to their Superiours 2. Because the disorders of Inferiours are for the most part most dangerous to the troubling of the family because the businesses of the family are done by their hands the Superiour providing for the common good by common instruments If the Master of the family bee never so godly-wise yet oftentimes the family may be destroyed by wicked servants and vicious wives Pro. 14.1 3. Because faults in the Inferiours are most scandalous against Religion especially where the family is unequally yoked as if the Head of the family be an unbeleever and the Members beleevers disorder in the beleevers is most extremely scandalous 4. Because if the Head of the family be disord●ed the orderly behaviour of the Inferiours may bring him into order and win him both to Religion and good order at home A conversation with fear in wives may win their husbands as chap. 3.1 2. of this Epistle 5. Because God would hereby shew that the Inferiours must alwayes doe their duties before they looke after the duties of Superiours they must be first served 6. By this course the Apostles did labour to intice the Gentiles to Religion by letting them see how carefull they were to breed goodnesse and love in their wives servants and children and the Apostles did wisely in so doing because it is a greater gain to Religion to gaine one master than many servants because such a master may doe more good The Use should be therefore to interest the obligation upon the consciences of wives servants and children and even the more they see that God saith unto them the more they should be carefull of their duties and ever the more desirous they see the Lord to bee to have them live without offence the more abominable they should account it to dare to offend still and if they have not masters or husbands they should strive to be good themselves before they complaine of the fault of their Superiours and should thinke with themselves If I were a better wife or servant I should finde my husband or servant better to mee Thus in the generall The first thing then the Apostle gives in charge concerns servants from verse 18. to the end of this chapter where observe First the proposition enjoyning servants to bee subject to their masters verse 18. Secondly the exposition shewing both how they should be subject viz. with all feare and to what masters viz. not only to the good but to the froward verse 18. Thirdly the confirmation of it by three reasons viz. from the consideration 1. Of the acceptation of such subjection with God verse 19.20 2. Of their calling verse 21. 3. Of the example of Christ which is urged 1. For the use of servants verses 22.23 2. For the use of all Christians by digression verses 24.25 First then of the proposition where we are to consider first the persons charged Servants secondly the duty imposed be subject thirdly the persons to whom they owe it to your Masters Servants Two things are to be inquired into about servants First the originall of their est●●e and secondly the bond that ties them to this subjection There are servants of God servants of sinne servants of men It is the servants of men that are here meant Servants of men are not all of one sort neither For first such as apply themselves to satisfie the unreasonable humors of men are said to be servants of men and condemned 1. Cor. 7.23 Secondly such as make themselves beholding to other men through their pride are forc't many times to become their servants Thus the borrower is a servant to the lender Pro. 22.7 Thirdly such as imploy their estates or bodies for the honour or preservation of their superiours are said to bee servants thus subjects serve Princes 1. Sam. 8.17 Fourthly such as imploy their labours and spend themselves for the common good are said to be servants thus Ministers are the peoples servants 2. Cor. 4.5 1. Cor. 9.19 But none of these are here meant These servants are domesticall servants such as are under the yoke of particular Masters in a family Those servants in the Apostles time were of two sorts some were bond servants such as were bought and sold in the markets over whom the Masters had absolute and perpetuall power some were hired servants that did serve by covenant and contract as servants do now for the most part with us Concerning these it may be inquired how it comes to passe that men that by creation have the same nature with other men should in their condition be abased to so low and meane estate as to serve them that are in nature alike to them This seemes to be a grievous inequalitie and therefore first to be searched into for the originall and causes of it It is out of doubt that before the Fall if man had staied in his Innocency there had beene no servitude because all men had been made after the Image of God both for holinesse and glory and so had been on earth as the Saints shall be in Heaven The first cause then of subjection and servitude was the confusion and sin of our first parents brought upon the world the earth being cursed for mans sake A necessity of toylesome ●●bour lay upon men
Apostle and other Apostles think it fit with such effectuall termes when they write to the Churches to give such speciall charge to Husbands and Wives it shewes That God doth greatly desire that they should in a speciall maner be carefull to leade an orderly and comfortable life together Whatsoever in domesticall matters is sometimes omitted in the Text yet seldome in any place that treats of family-duties is the duty of Husbands and Wives left out Here it is vehemently urged and so in the Epistle to the Ephesians which should worke in all that feare God a ca●e and conscience of these duties and of carrying themselves in the best manner they can one towards another Now the substance of an orderly life betweene man and wife is to love one another with all constancy tendernesse and fidelity to shew one heart in all things helping one another to doe the duties of the family especially in the service of God and in carrying the crosses may light upon them in their callings encouraging and comforting one another honouring one another before others and ●earing one with another in respect of infirmities and each of them striving to doe exactly the duty that belongs to each Now that men and women may be carefull hereof many motives may be alledged and ought to be thought upon 1. Because this society betweene one man and one woman in marriage was instituted of God himselfe and was the first society that he brought into the world and had the honour to be ordained in the blessedest place in this visible world even Paradise and was made betweene two persons that were like God himselfe and therefore God doth expect that men and women should walke very carefully in this estate Gen. 2. 2. Because man and wife had so heere an originall and dependance one upon another The woman was made of the rib of a man which Adam perceiving by a spirit of prophecy said she was bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh that is another selfe or himselfe in another shape or sexe and therefore whosoever disagreed they should agree it being most unnaturall for a man to hate or disagree with himselfe Gen. 2. Ephes. 5. and ever the more miraculous the forming of the woman was the more extraordinary should the affection betweene man and wife be 3. Because they are but two of them they would hardly please many that cannot please one 4. Because they are appointed necessarily to be companions in life withou● parting or dissolution and therefore since they live alwaies together they should resolve to dispose of themselves so as their lives might be comfortable 5. Because from man and wife is the originall of all mankind of Church and Common-wealth and all other societies now those Husbands and Wives that live disorderly dishonour the whole kind What would they have the streames to be when the fountaines are so troubled and impure 6. Because marriage is honourable in Gods account and ought to be so amongst men therefore it being a great dignity to which they are called it is as shamefull a fault to live disorderly in that estate as in the estate of a Magistrate or Minister or the like Heb. 13. 7. Note that the fift Commandement that concernes family-duties and the order should be in our dwellings stands betweene the Commandement of the first Table and the rest of the Commandements of the second Table to signifie that from the carefull performance of domesticall duties men are fitter to serve God in the first Table or converse with men in the world in the second Table yea all we get from God in the first Table or from men in the second we bring it home to our houses or to the place of well imploying it Note the last words of verse 7. of this Chapter 8. Because man and wife resemble Christ and the Church by way of type or image and will men or women dare say that Christ and the Church carry themselves so unlovingly or disorderly one to another as they doe one to another Doe you not think it had beene a hatefull thing for any man that was to be a type of Christ to have exprest the type by false or wicked waies Even so is it for man and wife to carry themselves one to another so as Christ and the Church doe one to another Ephes. 5. 9. The end of marriage is Gods glory now if God may not have glory by the loving and orderly carriage of man and wife one to another he will winne himselfe glory to his Justice in revenging the quarrell of the Covenant which they have broken 10. Because usually the carriage of man and wife is the originall cause of good or evill order in the family partly because thereby they are the more inabled or disabled for their carriage towards others in the family and besides their courses are exemplary and withall they thereby lay the ground of their owne honour or dishonour in the hearts of children and servants 11. Because Gods commandement injoyning them their duties one to another binds the conscience as hard as any of the other Commandements so as God is as well provoked by these disorders betweene man and wife as by swearing or cursing or Idolatry or murther or whordome or drunkennesse or the like yea they that live in the customary breach of these duties are unjust and dishonest as well as if they broke any other Commandements 12. The Apostles were the more earnest in pressing husbands and wives to a loving and orderly behaviour one towards another because of the scandall or honour came to Religion by it It did greatly adorne and become the Gospel if they lived amiably together it made men like of their Religion the better and contrariwise it was a foule scandall and caused Religion to bee lesse esteemed or else hated when they lived so ungodly and unquietly together 13. Because if they live lovingly together they are like to have a quiet conscience and a cleane heart whereas if they jangle and live in discontentment it is a thousand to one the conscience will be very froward and their hearts filled with foule lusts after others Pro. 5. And that the conscience should be froward how can it be otherwise when they live in the direct breach of Gods commandement which as was shewed before binds as strongly in this as in any other duty 14. Because this commandement is the first commandement with promise To the faithfull discharge of these domesticall duties is promised a long and happie life in the land God hath planted men in 15. Because men and women may greatly further their salvation by living according to Gods will in this estate as is intimated 1 Tim. 2.15 16. Lastly let husbands and wives remember their accounts at the last day Will it not be a wofuli miserie for a rebellious and froward wife to be throwne to hell and see her quiet and religious husband goe to heaven and so on the
doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes See Rom. 1. ult Heb. 10.26 2 Pet. 2.21 Husbands and wives should in a speciall maner remember this for there is a great deale of need that they should take notice of this point Oh it is a grievous thing for a Christian to be wilfully corrupt to doe or leave things undone against his knowledge Doct. 7. One thing here is comfortable that God requires no more of his servants but to doe according to the knowledge they have Ignorances by the benefit of the new Covenant in Christ he will passe by so as they be carefull to get knowledge according to the meanes they have of knowledge This is a great comfort Doct. 8. In knowledge men should excell women therefore is knowledge here specially mentioned in giving the charge to men They are the head● of their wives and therefore in them should be the especiall seat of spirituall senses and understanding and their wives are charged if they doubt of any thing to aske their husbands at home It is a great dishonour to many men in this age in many places that women excell them in knowledge both for the measure of it and power of it and care to use the meanes to get it Thus of the generall Doctrines These words as they in particular order the duties of husbands shew divers things they are to look to in their carriage in dwelling with their wives To dwell with them according to knowledge imports 1. Matter of edification and so three wayes for first they must set up religion and the worship of God in their dwellings Iosh. 24.15 They must keepe off the curse of God from them and their wives and children by daily praying to God Ier. 10. ult They must diligently in their kinde instruct their family in the plaine things of Gods law talking and discoursing of the Word of God upon all occasions Deut. 6.7 Gen. 18.19 They must see that Gods Sabbaths bee kept and sanctified in their dwellings and therefore must not only restraine labour but bring their houshold to the exercises of religion and privately help them by examination or repetition Commandement 4. Exod. 20.4 yea and by sanctifying them to Gods worship Iob 1.5 which is done by exhorting them to holinesse and preparation and by humbling himselfe in prayer before God for himselfe and them and hee must sanctifie the creatures they use by prayer 1 Tim. 4.5 Secondly in speciall towards their wives they must use their knowledge in instructing them or resolving their doubts as there shall be occasion 1 Cor. 14.35 Thirdly they must teach their wives reformation and right order of behaviour by their example giving full proofe of their piety discretion providence painefulnesse and meeknesse not daring to commit the faults themselves they reprove in their wives and to live so as not to be liable to any just exception There is a question is often asked about the first branch of this answer and that is whether a woman may performe the duties of religion in the family in case of the absence or insufficiency of the husband Now for answer thereunto it is hard to give any peremptory rule because in this thing we have no Commandement from the Lord but yet seeing some of the duties of religion may be done by the wife as instructing of children and servants for the law of grace should be in her lips Pro. 31. and both Parents are charged with instructing the children Eph. 6. therefore I thinke by Anallogie it will follow that the wife may doe other duties as pray and repeat Sermons But yet it is most likely that this power extends not further than her children and her maids which was the power Hester used ch 4.16 or if it goe further it must be in some speciall cases and with observation of divers circumstances in which their safest way is to get direction and resolution from their learned Pastors 2. Matter of toleration and that in respect of the infirmities of his wife if her infirmities be bodily it must be the praise of his knowledge not to loath her for that because God layeth them on her and shee cannot helpe them And for her faults they are either meere frailties arising from ignorance or insufficiency she cannot help and those he must passe by altogether when he discerneth that she is not willing to offend in them Pro. 19.10 or else they are faults she committeth of knowledge and so they are either curable or incurable Curable are such faults of negligence or waiwardnesse that prove grievo●s to him or others for these his rule is he must not be bitter to her Col. 3.19 but shew himselfe to be gentle and easie to be intreated Iames 3.17 He must use all good meanes of counsell and forewarning of her and intreating and such reproofes as may be seasonable and secret as much as may be He must avoid raging and furious passion and reproaches If her faults be incurable that is such as he cannot mend by such courses then I suppose he may flie to the generall remedy of all Christians in the case of trespasses and that is to take one or two with him and admonish her and then if she mend not he may fly to his Pastor and such as have charge of soules with him and get them to admonish her But if none of these courses will serve I thinke the Pastor or others imployed in the businesse may give notice as they have occasion to other Christians of her incurablenesse and they may thereupon forsake her company and reject her as a Pagan or Publican but for the husband he must cohabite still and with patience beare the crosse God hath laid upon him waiting if at any time God will give her repentance or otherwise restraine her wickednesse 3. Matter of circumspection To dwell according to knowledge is to dwell with circumspection and that he must shew in matter of his owne right He must take heed that by no indulgence or remissenesse he lose his owne right He must keepe his authority and rule as head and not suffer things to be done or disposed ordinarily against his will And for the good ordering of necessary directions if his wife will not obey he must then provide to have things done as well as he can by his children or servants This I speake of things essentially expedient to the peace or well-being of the family he must not be his wives underling contrary to the order of nature and ordinance of God Gen. 3.16 1 Cor. 11.3 7 8 9. Eph. 5.23 1 Tim. 2.12 13 14. Secondly he must shew it in the care of his estate restraining her wastefulnesse if she be given to disorder or retchlesnesse in that kind Pro. 14.1 Thirdly in case of sin against God he mu●t take heed that he nourish not sin in her by connivence or neglect of counsell or reproofe Iob 2.9 10. Fourthly in case of difference betweene her and her servants so
doctrine may serve for three uses First It may confute that cavill of carnall men that Religion will make men dumpish and melancholy whereas the cleane contrary we see here is true 2. It greatly reproves the uncheerfulnesse of many professors who doe thereby greatly darken the glory of Religion and cause the way of God to be evill spoken of besides the hurt they doe themselves through unthankfulnesse and unbeleefe exposing themselves to the tentations either of sinne or apostasie together with a continuall unfitnesse to all duties of piety and this ariseth out of aptnesse either to passion of anger or worldly griefe 3. It may teach us to seek the ioyes of God and having found them to be carefull by all meanes to preserve them But what shall I doe to preserve the ioyes of God in my heart First keep thy self free from the allowance of the least sin violate not the peace of thy conscience Secondly digest the promises concerning infirmities after calling Thirdly take heed of omission or carelesse use of Gods ordinances Lastly care not for the world but retire thy selfe else from thence will flow unavoidable unrest Before I passe from these words yet two things more may be briefly touched First in that he ●aith yee rejoyce he seemeth to import that true ioy is onely in converted Christians For as for the ioyes that the men of this world have they are not true For besides there is much vanitie and madnesse in them there is also much danger in them for they breed security and men shall be called to account for them yea men may lose their soules for them Secondly where he saith wherein hee meanes in which benefits of regeneration glorification preservation c. whence may be briefly noted that the chiefest ioyes of Christians are in spirituall things it ill beseemes Christians to set their hearts on earthly things But is it not lawfull to delight our selves in earthly pleasures It is with these rules First thou must be sure thou hast repented of thy sins before thou allow thy selfe liberty for pleasures 2. Thou must not make a vocation of recreation 3. Thou must spend onely thy owne time upon them not the Lords 4. Thou must avoid scandalous delights and such games as are of evill report 5. Thou must watch over thine owne heart that thy recreations steale not away thine heart from the delight of better things but be used rather as an helpe unto them Lastly note from hence that they onely are fit to give testimony of the ioyes of a converted estate that have had experience of it themselves trust not the iudgements of carnall persons for the dignity utility and durablenesse of the graces of godlinesse And thus of the first reason Though now for a season you are in heavinesse There are divers sorts of heavinesse 1. There is the heavinesse of the desperate such was that in Cain and Iudas 2. and the heavinesse of the disappointed such was the heavinesse of Haman Ahab and Ammon when they could not compasse their ambitious covetous and voluptuous ends 3. And there is the heavinesse of the melancholy and of the scandalized 4. There is the heavinesse of the penitent for sinnes 5. and of the afflicted for crosses 6. There is a heavinesse in Gods children after calling for spirituall respects as for corruption of nature for absence of Christ for want of the meanes for the dishonour of God in publike abominations for the miseries of the Church for Gods threatnings and anger for the desire of death for hardnesse of heart and for speciall sins after calling Quest. But may not Gods children be heavy for crosses Answ. They may and I think that may be meant here but then these rules must be noted First that their heavinesse be rather for some sinne in themselves which might cause the crosse then for the crosse it selfe Secondly that their heavinesse be moderate Quest. But when is sorrow for afflictions moderate Answ. First when it exceeds not the measure of sorrow for sin 2. Secondly when it withdrawes not the heart from God and holy duties through passionate and incredulous perturbations but it is to be noted in the generall that the Apostle is very loth to grant them liberty for heavinesse but it is with many limitations as 1. it must be but a little season 2. they must be sure need doth require it 3. it may not be allowed for many crosses that will not be allowed for lesser or fewer tentations For a season The troubles and griefs of Gods children are but for a season for a moment God hides his face but a little while and the reason is because afflictions are used of God but as plaisters or medicines or as a ●urnace Now in as much as the godly will quickly judge themselves and make their peace therefo●e the Lord will soone draw off the crosse the plaister shall lie no longer than till the sore be whole and the goldsmith will let his metall lye in the fire no longer than till the drosse be● melted off or it be fit to be wrought upon Now if crosses should continue long in our reckoning say it were the whole life of a man what is mans life even a vapour that appeareth a little time Besides what can thy longest crosses be in comparison of the paines of the damned from which thou art delivered or of the joyes and glory of heaven which thou shalt possesse Yea what is that thou dost suffer in comparison of what thou deservest but yet I say it is but a season as wee account seasons even a small part of the life of the godly For either the Lord removes the crosse or takes away the sting of it or sweetens it with his mercies The Use may be to teach us to check the unquietnesse and failings of our hearts and to be ever ashamed of our selves that we should make so much of our crosses and so little of Gods mercies we should learne seeing they are but for a season to hold fast the confidence of our hope and live by faith and if the Lord be angry to hide our selves for a little season till his indignation be past If need require Here three things may be observed First that Christians man● times make crosses to themselves and draw heavinesse upon their hearts through feares and suspitions and unquietnesse where there is no need this is a great fault and usually is a great scourge For by such distempers they many times lessen the comforts of God and their credit with Gods children Secondly crosses and griefes are sometimes needfull needfull I say to hide our pride to weane us from the world to put us in minde of death to make us desire heaven to drive us to seeke more grace and holinesse to prevent sinne to come to humble us for sinnes
a while and heard her speak with such affection and admiration they are turned and will now goe seek Christ as well as shee Cant. 5.9 to the end and 6.1 3. Thirdly such as have felt this love of Christ should be carefull to keep it now there are seven things to be observed if wee would preserve the love of Christ in our hearts 1. First we must establish our assurance of both our loves to Christ and his love to us we must labour our owne edification in the faith if wee would keep our selves in the love of God Iud. 20. 2. Secondly if we would preserve this love we must keepe uprightnesse For if we relapse to the love of sin the love of Christ will decay in us 3. Thirdly we must keep our selves out of the company of such as might intice us from the love of Christ namely out of the company of Idolaters and all profane persons 4. Fourthly we must take heed of worldlinesse for the love of God and the love of the world will not stand together The cares of this life will be a snare and bait to draw us away 5. Fiftly we must take heed of security after feelings For if the Church be so sleepie after communion with Christ that when he comes again she will be slumbring and not rise when he calls Christ will be gone and not answer no though afterwards she call Cant. 5.2 6 7. 6. Sixtly we must walke in the steps of the flock and feed our kids neere the tents of the shepheards we must converse with holy Christians and keepe our selves under the powerfull instructions of profitable Ministers Cant. 1.7 c. 7. Seventhly wee must be much in the preparation for the second comming of Christ. To be much in thinking of or praying for the comming of Christ will preserve us from declination in our affection to Christ Iud. 20 21. The doctrine implyed in these words is that when we shall come to heaven and shall see Christ face to face we shall love him and admire him wonderfully For the Apostle takes it for granted that it is no hard thing to love Christ if we once saw him And thus of the first signe The second signe is the joy of the holy Ghost expressed in these words In whom though you see him not yet beleeving ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and glorious There are six kind of joyes 1. Some are unnaturall such is the joy of those mentioned Iob 3.22 that are glad at heart to find the grave 2. Some are naturall such are the joyes Solomon commends Eccles. 8.15 Prov. 15.13 3. Some are sensuall such are the joyes Epicures conceive in the pleasures and sports of this life Eccles. 11.9 Iob 21.12 4. Some are fantasticall when men rejoyce upon meere conceits and fancies without any ground For as in some diseases there are abundance of sorrowes without cause so are there also joyes without reason in divers 5. Some are diabolicall and there are three sorts of devilish joyes 1. The first is to joy in sinne 2. The second is to joy in the misery of Gods people Ezech. 25.6 3. The third is the joy we call illusion when Sathan to feed the security of men doth tickle their hearts with a great deale of joy and ravishing of the heart 6. Lastly some joyes are spirituall joyes and these are either 1. Temporary or 2. Eternall Temporary joyes are those which wicked men may feele in the hearing the word Mat. 13. Eternall joyes are such as onely the Elect feele I call these Eternall not because they are felt without interruption for ever but because they are so now in the hearts of Gods children that they shall never either totally or finally be lost but shall be felt againe Now there are two sorts of this joy in Gods elect The one is a duty the other is a signe the one man brings to Gods service the other God gives as a token of his acceptance of mans service The joyes given of God are here meant these are here called unspeakable and glorious But how may we discern these joyes of the holy Ghost from all the other sorts especially the temporary joyes and illusions of Sathan The true joy in the holy Ghost may be known by these marks 1. It is given of God in the due use of some ordinance of God the soule being retired into Gods presence especially these joyes are felt in prayer this joy is drawne out of the wells of salvation 2. It usually follows humiliation for sin Esay 6.2 3. Ioh. 16.20 22. 3. It may be felt in adversity as well as prosperity Hab. 3.17 18. Rom. 5.3 Phil. 2.17 4. It is accompanyed with righteousnesse It can never be felt of any in whom the love of any sin raignes Rom. 14.17 5. It ratifies the written promises and doth assure nothing but what the word assures Eph. 1.14 6. It is kindled upon the sense of Gods favour it followes here bele●ving 7. It is unspeakable and glorious above all carnall or earthly joyes it doth ravish the heart as if a man were already in heaven 8. Lastly it may be knowne by the effects For 1. It will make a man more humble and apt to acknowledge his owne vilenesse and unworthinesse 2. It will make a man lesse censorious of others and with more compassion to tender the wants and sorrowes of others 3. It will marre the taste of carnall joyes it causeth us to find lesse rellish in the taste of earthly delights 4. It breeds a great love of God and godliness and quickens to diligence in well-doing Whereas the joyes that are illusions or temporary joyes will make men more proud and carelesse and contemptuous and more negligent in the use of the meanes and the care to doe good But are these joyes felt of every Christian Distinguish of Christians and of feeling and of joyes 1 Some are Hypocrites and so have not any power of godliness at all but onely a shew 2 Some have temporary grace onely these have joy but not such as will abide the tryall For 1 These joyes are not accompanyed with humiliation for sinne or not for all sinne 2 They arise not from any grounds of particular assurance 3 They are not felt in the time of temptation 3 Some Christians are alwayes diseased with some spirituall malady and that many times till death as with passion or with strange effects of melancholy these may possibly dye without any evident comfort Some fall after calling into some grosse sinne for a time and these may so lose the joy of their salvation as they may never recover it till their very end Againe distinguish about feeling 1 Some have those joyes but observe them not eyther through ignorance of the doctrine of the joy of the holy Ghost or through neglect 2 Some haue this joy and observe it and are affected established with it for the time but presently eyther forget it or
ordered and guided The testimony of God is either immediate or mediate God hath given an immediate testimony either by vision or by voice By vision either in in sleep or in a certaine extasie when men were awake thus did he reveale his will often in the Old Testament sometimes in the New a● to Paul By voice God testified either to particular persons as when he gave answers to the Priest as some think wearing his Ephod or else by publike voice as when from heaven he said Mat. 3. This is my welbeloved Son heare him The testimony God hath given by meanes is threefold 1. By his Sonne 2. By his servants the Prophets and Apostles by word of mouth 3. By the Scriptures and of this here Now concerning the proofe of doctrine in Scripture we must observe 1. That the testimony of God onely is authenticall 2. That a divine testimony now adaies is no where to be had but in the Scripture 3. The testimony of Scripture is sufficient for all things needfull to salvation 2 Tim. 3. 4. That we both Ministers and people should have recourse to the Scriptures for warrant for what we teach beleeve or doe For if Christ and the Apostles men priviledged from error doe yet for honors sake alledge the testimony of Scripture then much more ought we to have recourse to what is written seeing we can have no assurance that we erre not but as wee are warranted by the Word Thus of the first point Now for the second point Inasmuch as the proofes are taken out of the Old Testament it shewes the wonderfull harmony and agreement between the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament and that the Old Testament is to be acknowledged of equall authority with the New Hence it i● that the quotations of authorities out of the Old Testament are so frequent for there are above 260. places of the Old Testament cited in the New so as there is almost no point of doctrine needfull to salvation but the harmony of the Old Testament and the New is exprest yea hence it is that there are very few bookes of the Old Testament but they are cited in the New amongst the historicall bookes I except Iudges Ruth Ezra Nehemiah and Hester amongst the Prophets I except Obadiah and Nahum amongst the dogmaticall books I except Ecclesiastes and Canticles else proofes are taken out of all the rest and very frequent out of many of them as the Psalmes are cited 53 times Genesis 42 times Esay 46 times and so I might note of the rest Lastly from the manner of propounding this authority or testimony out of the Word we may note two things 1. The great mercy of God afforded to us in these times that have so many helps for knowledge wee see here in those daies they quoted neither Chapter●or ●or v●rse and many times not the booke and therefore we should praise God that have the Scriptures digested so easily and our doctrine confirmed with such expresse quotations 2. This shews what labour knowledg the godly then had they were so conversant in the Scriptures that they could discern of a quotation though the place were not cited And thus of the fountain from whence this proofe i● fetched The matter alledged followeth Be ye holy for I am holy The drift is to shew that it hath beene anciently taught unto the people of God that if they profeste themselves to be his children they must imitate his holinesse and shew themselves like unto God their heavenly Father This sentence is chiefly found in the book of Leviticus and is there often used as Lev. 11.44 19.2 20.26 21.8 From hence divers things may be observed 1. That exact holinesse hath beene anciently required This is a doctrine hath ever ●ounded in the Church that we must be holy yea so holy as wee might in some mea●ure be like unto God and expresse his image Exod. 19.6 D●ut 26 19. 2. That holinesse of life is indispensibly required of every child of God for so this speech is used Lev. 19.2 3. That true holinesse stretcheth it selfe to the care of lesser offences as these places shew Lev. 11.44 20.26 therefore God will accept our service in lesser duties 4. That we cannot have true holinesse without some competent knowledge of the nature of God Verse 17. And if you call him Father which without respect of person judgeth according to every mans worke passe the time of your dwelling here in feare HItherto of the first reason The second reason to inforce the exhortation in the 13. verse is here taken from the consideration of Gods judgement The time must certainly come that we must appeare before the Tribunall of God receive reward or punishment according to our works and therefore it stands us upon with all care and feare to carry our selves so reservedly and holily as in that day we may have comfort and reward In the words two things may be noted 1. The proposition of the reason 2. The inference or the conclusion of it or here is the doctrine and the use of it The proposition of the doctrine is He whom we call Father or call upon as a Father shall without respect of persons judge every man according to his works The inference or use is therefore wee should passe the time of our dwelling here in feare In the proposition concerning the last judgment observe 1. who shall be the Judge viz. God the Father whom we call upon 2. How will he judge viz. without respect of persons 3. Whom hee will judge viz. every man 4. For what they shall be judged viz. according to their works In the setting downe of the first point both matter and manner are to be observed The matter is that the same God and Father who is called upon by us is the judge of the world The manner o● expressing it is conditionally if you call him Father The words in the originall be both waies read Some reade if you call him Father and the meaning is not of prayer but of profession if you professe God to be your Father Some reade it if you call on the Father that is if in prayer you goe unto God the Father with your requests so the Kings Translators reade it and so I think it is most agreeable to the intent of the Apostle in this place If you call on the Father Many things may be noted from these words with their coherence 1. That the heart of man is not able to beare the contemp●ation of the last judgement nor can we with comfort any way be fitted for it ●ill we know and by practice and experience doe find that God is our Father The Use is 1. for information The reason why many are so troubled with the thought of the judgement to come is the defect of assurance of Gods love as a Father these fears shew weaknesse of faith and if they raign constantly shew there is no assurance at all 2
hearts are washed by the Word Eph. 5.25 Psal. 119.9 the law in their hearts Psal. 37. 119.80 4. Keep still in Gods presence walke before him thou darest not then come in thy uncleannesse 5. Avoid the beginnings of pollution dally not with sinne 6. Informe thy selfe throughly of the vanity of all the things unto which thou art likely to be tempted 7. Come not neere uncleane persons 2 Cor. 6.18 8. Get the assurance of faith Act. 15.9 Heb. 10.22 Promises to such as labour for a cleane heart Mat. 5.7 ●say 1.16 20. 2 Pet. 1.3 Prov. 22.11 Psal. 24.4 125.5 Rom. 8.34 38. Hitherto of the subject of sanctification The manner of exercising or expressing this purification followes In obeying the truth Foure things must be considered 1. What is truth 2. What it is to obey the truth 3. How their hearts are said to be purified in obeying the truth 4. The observations and uses which may be here gathered 1. Truth is taken diversly in Scripture 1. Sometimes it signifieth the verity of our words as opposed to lying 2. Sometimes faithfulnesse in performing of promises and so mercy and truth are given both to God and men 3. Sometimes for uprightnesse as opposed to hypocrisie and so it is to doe a thing with all our hearts 1 Sam. 12.24 4. Sometimes for the substance of a ceremonie I●h 1.17 5. Sometimes for Christ Ioh. 14.6 6. Sometimes for the word of God and so here The word of God is called the truth Ioh. 17. ●1 Ps. 119.142 1. because it agrees with the eternal pattern of Gods will 2. because there is no error nor falshood in it 3. because it shews us a true way for the infallible attaining of blessednesse 4. because it effects truth and uprightnesse in us 2. Now to obey the truth is to conforme and subject our selves in practise and workes unto the will of God revealed in his word 3. The heart of man is said to be purified in obeying the truth inasmuch as there is an inward obedience to the truth required in the hearts of men as 1. the obedience of the Gospell in beleeving this is called the obedience of faith When a man from his heart doth assent to and relye upon the promise of God in Christ thus to beleeve is to obey 2. In the practise of all outward duties there is required the inward purity of the heart and the exercise of the grace of Gods Spirit without which all mens workes are impure Besides by the outward obedience of the truth men shew that their soules are purified There are foure things may be observed from hence 1. That the word of God must be the rule of all our actions as wee were begotten by the word of truth Iam. 1.18 so we must live by it Gal. 1. 16. Psal. 119. This is that light to our feete and lanthorne to our pathes The Use is for instruction Therefore first we should study this truth and buy it Prov. 23.23 2. Wee should pray to God to direct us in this truth Psal. 25.5 43.3 and never to take it out of our mouthes and lives Psal. 119.43 Yea hereby we may shew our selves to be truly sanctified if wee sticke to the word of God as our onely guide as these places shew Esay 26.2 Psal. 26.3 119.30 2 Cor. 13.8 and let us therefore come to the truth to know whether our workes are wrought in God or no Ioh. 3.21 And therefore woe unto them that are destitute of the truth both in respect of the meanes without and in respect of knowledge within these sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death Finally here we see our liberty wee are bound to obey nothing but the truth 2. That there can be no true sanctification without obedience God stands precisely upon obedience and practise It is not knowing the truth or praising the truth or hearing the truth or speaking the truth or thinking the truth or purposing the truth will serve the turne 1 Sam. 15.22 Ioh. ● ● 1 Ioh. 1.6 8. This should serve mightily to urge us to practise to be doers of the word Mat. 7. Iam. 1.22 c. to follow the truth and to expresse the power of it Without this obedience we can never prove our selves to be truly sanctified and ther●fore let us that have the meanes take heed wee examine our selves how we grow in the practise of it How miserable then is the state of such as onely give God good words Mat. 7. and such as resist the truth 2 Tim. 3.8 and such as blaspheme the way of truth 2 Pet. 2.2 and such as fall away from the truth 2 Tim. 2.18 Heb. 10.26 Oh who hath bewitched men that they should not obey unto the truth Gal. 3.1 ● That wee must exercise the inward purity of the heart in all the parts of outward obedience In all good duties we must looke to the obedience of the heart The heart must adde divers things to the manner of our obedience From the heart must flow judgement attention care and affections of all sorts This is true of all duties both to God and man The Use is therefore to teach us to set our hearts to worke when wee goe about well-doing and to looke to the inside as well as the outside 4. The indefinite propounding shewes that our obedience must bee without limitation for we must obey 1. A● all times Psal. 106.1 Gal. 5.7 2. To all truths both of Law and Gospell of piety and righteousnesse inward and outward c. 3. In all places absent as well as present in all companies as well as one at home as well as abroad before inferiors as well as superiors 4. All persons must obey learned unlearned rich poore high low c. This serves notably for the ransacking of hypocrites and unmasking them for here we may note divers things wherein they may be evidently taken tardy For either 1. They obey not at all they practise not but only give good words 2. Or they obey but in shew It is not true obedience that will leave the tryall o● Gods truth 3. Or they obey not out of conscience of the word of God but onely for fashion sake or other carnall ends not for the truths sake 4. Or their obedience is not from the heart for either it is constrained and not ready and voluntary or they doe not imploy the heart in the good worke they doe The affections of godlinesse they want 5. Or they obey not the Gospell in seeking ass●rance of Gods favour though they practise some things of the Law 6. Or they obey but for a fit Hos. 6.5 Demas returnes to the world 7. Or they obey but in some things Herod will not obey the seventh Commandement They will not crosse their profits lusts credit c. 8. Or they will obey but in some places and companies Quest. Now if any godly person should bee dismayed and aske How might I know
courses and avoid him But the close hypocrite thou canst not discerne or not certainly and if thou follow thine owne conjectures thou maist sometimes condemne a deare child of God and approve a detestable hypocrite But how may the open hypocrite be discerned By divers signes First by an ordinary and usuall affectation of the praise of men in doing good duties When a man constantly sets himselfe out to the shew it is an apparant marke of a false heart Marke that I say an usuall affectation Secondly if a man make a shew of the meanes of godlinesse or liking the means of godlinesse or of the persons that are godly and yet it be manifest that he hates to be reformed lives in knowne grosse faults and being rebuked by the word or servants of God will not reforme but carieth a grudge at the parties that laboured his reformation This is an evident marke of an hypocrite Now to judge these is no offence Thirdly it is a signe of an hypocrite when a man will be godly and restrained and zealous in some companies and in other company take liberty for grosse prophanenesse Lastly he that will be rid of hypocrisie must looke to himselfe to keepe himselfe free from the causes of it and take heed that he be not bewitched in those things that have bred hypocrisie in other men What is it can make a man an hypocrite First sometimes feare will doe it as in time of trouble or persecution men to avoide dangers will play the hypocrites Luke 12.1 2 3 4 5. Secondly sometimes desire to get credit and to be well thought on especially when it is mixt with envy at the respects of others drives some men headlong into hypocriticall courses Mat. 6. Thirdly sometimes men are emboldned unto hypocrisie by a secret perswasion that Christ will defer his comming and they shall not of a long time be brought to account Mat. 24.48 50. Fourthly men fall into hypocrisie for gaine to hide their wicked and deceitfull courses So the Pharises Mat. 23.14 so 1 Tim. 4.2 7. Fiftly forgetfulnesse of God is a great cause of hypocrisie and the raigne of it in many hearts Iob 8.13 Sixtly Lust and some vile wickednesse drives many men and women into hypocrisie 2 Tim. 3. These things we must take heed of and preserve our selves from them if ever we would not be wretched hypocrites before God Thirdly here is also consolation to all the godly whom God hath kept upright and free from this damned vice I meane from the raigne of it for there is no man but hath some dregs of hypocrisie in him But how may a man know that he is not a hypocrite By many signes Secondly when a man makes God his secret place strives and desires secresie to worship God Mat. 6. Thirdly when a man loves no sin but would faine be rid of every sinne and so hath respect to all Gods commandements Fourthly when a man confesseth his hypocrisie and mournes for it and strives against it Fiftly when a man accuseth himselfe for it to others whose respects hee most desires Sixtly when a man keepes his heart close to the substance of godlinesse and labours to be built up without distraction in the maine things needfull for his salvation and is not caried to spend his time most about unnecessary or impertinent cares or studies 1 Tim. 4.2 7 8. Seventhly when a man is as carefull to serve God in prosperity as well as adversity Iob 27.9 Eightly when a man delights in the Almighty and loves all the meanes by which he findeth any communion with God Iob 29.9 Ninthly when a man from the hatred of hypocrisie is stirred up against hypocrites cannot abide them nor will converse with them Iob 17. ver 8. Lastly Iob comforts himselfe that hee was no hypocrite by three arguments 1. He would trust in God though he did slay him 2. He would reprove his wayes in Gods sight 3. He sought Gods presence and set himselfe alwayes before him none of which an hypocrite could doe Iob 13.15 16. Thus much of Hypocrisie Envy The fourth sin to be avoided is Envy Envy is nothing else but a vexation or inward displeasure conceived at the good of another viz. either anothers credit gif●s preserment profit successe or the like This sinne though in the world it be litile thought of yet in it selfe i● a most fearefull vice and should be so accounted of by Christians for many reasons First if we consider the subject persons in whom it usually is It is found most in naturall men Tit. 3.3 yea in silly men Job 5.2 This was the sinne of Cain Gen. 4. yea of the devill himselfe The maine sinne of the devill was the envy of mans happinesse It raigned in the devillish Gentiles Rom. 1.29 Secondly if we consider the cause of it it is for the most part the daughter of pride Gal. 5.26 sometimes of covetousnesse Prov. 28.22 and often of some egregious vile transgression such as in Rom. 1.29 but ever it is the filthy fruit of the flesh Gal. 5.25 Thirdly if we consider the vile effects of it which are many for 1. It hath done many mischifes for which it is infamous It sold Ioseph into Aegypt Gen. ●7 and which should ever make it abhorred of us it kild the Son of God Mat. 27.8 2. It deformes our natures it makes a man suspitious malicious contentious it makes us to provoke back-bite and practise evill against our neighbours It is ill for our sight for the envious man hath alwayes an evill eye and a cast downe countenance with Cain also many times 3. It begins even death and hell while a man is alive It kills the silly one Job 5.2 It destroyeth the contentment of his life and burnes him with a kinde of fire unquenchable It feeds upon the envious man like the moth or worme by degrees and it hasteneth mischiefe in the envious man because it makes the person envyed more glorious and besides it is a vice that driveth a man from among men in respect of comfortable society for it was long since advised Eat not the bread of him that hath an evill eye Prov. 23.6 and no man by his good will if he can be free will converse with such as he perc●ives to be envious F●urthly this place manifestly imports that it is a notable hinderance to the profi● of the word and so no doubt it is to prayer and all piety as evidently it is a let of charity unlesse it be that men in hypocrisie to disgrace others will for envy doe some good as they preacht Christ for envy in the Apostles time Phil. 1.15 Vses The use should be threefold First for instruction to teach us to follow the advice here given in putting away Envy and cleansing our hearts of it and to this end think much of the reasons against it and withall remember by confession and godly sorrow to cleanse thy heart carefully
feare but he that is guilty of many treasons hath great reason to be extreamly confounded in himselfe and this is thy case Secondly thy disobedience is the more grievous because thou hast received abundance of blessings from God who hath by them wooed thee to repentance and this will heap much upon thee Rom. 2.4 Esay 1.3 Thirdly thou must consider all the meanes thou hast had of amendment God hath planted thee in his garden the Church hee hath commanded his vine-dres●ers to bestow the paines and apply the meanes of growth to thee If now thou be not fruitfull this will be pleaded against thee which art still a barren fig●tree Luke 13.6 Fourthly it increaseth thy disobedience that thou hast been guilty of divers h●inous and soule evils as if thou have been a drunkard a filthy person a blasphemer of the Name of God a man of blood or the like Fiftly the continuance in sin thou hast long abused the patience of GOD and this heaps coales of further indignation against thee Rom. 2.4 5. and the rather because thy heart hath been to sin for ever for there is in the heart of unregenerate men a desire to sin for ever and it is a griefe to them to think that at any time they should not be able to live in sin still Sixtly thou hast offended against thine own vowes and covenants and the promises thou hast made to God both in baptisme and the communion and in other passages of thy life Seventhly it increaseth thy offence that thou hast dealt wickedly in the land of uprightnesse Esay 26.11 There thou hast offended where thou hast had the example of the godly to shew thee a better course It is ill to sinne any where though in Babel but it is worse to transgresse in Sion or Jerusalem even in the glorious Churches of Jesus Christ. Eighthly thy incorrigiblenesse adds to the heap of sin though the Lord hath afflicted thee yet thou hast not learned obedience by the things thou hast suffered but thou hast made thy heart like an adamant so as thou wouldst not return Ier. 5.2 3. Ninthly it is yet more that thou hast beene so farre from reforming thine own life that thou hast scorned and reproached the good conversation of the godly thou hast spoken evill of the good way of God Thus and many other wayes may the sinner charge his owne heart and thereby prepare himselfe to returne to the Lord while there is yet hope For if thou wouldest returne with all thy heart and take unto thee words and confesse thy sins and pray for forgivenesse and mourne before the Lord and turne away from thy owne wickednesse the Lord would shew mercy and the obedience of Christ would heale thy disobedience and God would love thee freely and the bloud of Christ would cleanse thee from all thy sins Hos. 14. Esay 55.7 1 Ioh. 1.7 and while it is yet to day the Lord sendeth to thee and beseecheth thee to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5.19 21. Consider that God hath been with thee all this while having sent many others to hell for their sins and there is hope of forgivenesse the Lord hath received great offenders to mercy as the Israelites that often fel away from him Iudges 10. and Mary Magdalene and Peter and David and the thiefe upon the Crosse Consider that God hath offered thee thy pardon in the Sacrament Feare the Lord therefore and his goodnesse and returne with all thy heart and iniquity shall not be thy ruine Hitherto of their sin their punishment followes and so first upon their rulers and leaders in these words The stone which the Builders refused is become the Head of the corner Which words are taken out of Psal. 118.22 where they are used by the Prophet David and here quoted by the Apostle Peter The words have a double sense for they did concerne both David and Christ. As they concerned David this was the meaning that though the Nobles and Courtiers did despise and reject and oppose David yet s●ch was Gods providence that the man whom they rejected God made King of Israel and the chief stay and support of that State Now for this sense of the words divers things may be noted First that God hath raised up great men in the Common-wealth for this end that they might seeke the publique good and imploy their labours for the building up and prosperity of the State Which should both teach great men to think of their duties and the accounts they must make to God a● also it should teach the people to pray the more heartily for them and to obey them in all lawfull things Secondly wee may hence gather the imperfection of all humane things For in that earthly Kingdomes need building up still it shews that they attain to no perfection but at the best are still in progresse Thirdly that many times great men wilfully oppose the right and set themselves against the righteous and resist the will of God Which should teach us not to place our confidence in the great men of this world nor to be alwaies led by their example in opinions Fourthly that God will find out the wickednesse of great men and bring them to confusion God accepts not persons hee hateth sin in great men as well as in mean men and will crosse and confound their godlesse ungodly counsels Fiftly that God takes to himselfe the power to dispose of earthly Kingdomes and to give Kings and Rulers at his owne pleasure It was the Lords doing and it was marvellous that David should become the Head of the corner Psal. 118.23 The Lord pleads it as a part of his soveraigtny and prerogative to set up Kings By me Kings raigne Pro. 8. Which should teach Princes and Judges and Nobles to doe homage to God and acknowledge him for their Soveraign therefore serve him with fear Ps. 2. And it should teach the people to give honour and tribute and custome and obedience for conscience sake to their Rulers seeing the power that is is of God Rom. 13. Now as these words were understood in the case of David so was David herein a type of Christ and so the words are to be understood in the case of Christ also as our Saviour himselfe applies them Mat. 21. and as it is evident to be the meaning of the Apostle here And it is the drift of the Apostle to strengthen weak Christians against the scandall that might arise from the opposition of the Kingdome of Christ. For it might trouble amaze them to consider how Christ was opposed by the Scribes Pharises who were the great learned men of the time and such as were eminent in the Church and in the account of the most men were the chief persons that took care for Religion and the state of the Church and did excell all other sorts c. Now that this scandall might be removed he shews in these words First that nothing did therein fall out but what
can resolve to suffer the extreamest things rather than forsake our innocency This makes men acknowledge the vertue of Christ in us Thirdly by the power of practice in our conversation and so to shew them forth is First to practise them to the life to make a cleere impression of them in our workes The word here rendred to shew forth signifieth to preach and so it may note that wee should practise those vertues so cleerly that our lives might be as so many Sermons upon the life of Christ. Secondly to practise them so as others may observe them and so it imports that upon all occasions in our conversations which are before other men we should be sure not to be wanting in those vertues when we are provoked to the contrary vices Quest. But may wee do things for the shew Is not that Hypocrisie and vaine glory forbidden unto Christians Answ. There are some vertues we can never offend that waies by shewing them as we can never shew too much wisedome we may be vain-glorious in too much shew of our knowledge we may offend in bringing our zeale too much to the shew but we can never shew too much true patience or meeknesse or moderation of mind Phil. 4.5 we may offend in making shew of divers duties of piety in the first table as almes prayer fasting Matt. 6. but those vertues here mentioned may on all occasions bee lawfully held out to the best shew But that I may expresse my selfe more distinctly outward shewes are then condemned as sinfull viz. First when sinfull things are shewed as carnall passions and railing in stead of true zeale Secondly when secret duties are done openly and for shew as when private prayer and fasting is so performed as that others may manifestly observe them Matt. 6. Thirdly when outward shewes are purposely affected affectation and hunting after applause is condemned Fourthly when care in lesser things is shewed and the care of greater things is manifestly neglected this hath grievous irritation in it and is Pharisaicall Matth. 23. Fifthly when the things shewed are done deceitfully such was the practise of Ananias and Sapphira Act. 5. Sixthly when men multiply the use of the meanes of holinesse but neglect the practice of it Esa. 1. Mich. 6. Seventhly when wee shew our gifts of purpose to the contempt and disgrace of others Rom. 12.16 Iam. 3.10 1 Cor. 8.3 The use briefly may be First for humiliation and so first unto ungodly men in the Church that professe the service of Christ and claime the priviledges of Christians and yet in stead of shewing forth the vertue of Christ shew forth the wickednesse of the divell by their lewd conversation causing the name of God to bee blasphemed by Papists and Atheists and all sorts of Heretickes and Sectaries by their whoredomes swearing malice drunkennesse and the lusts of their father the divell and those of all sorts These are they that carry Christ about in scorne to be derided of the enemies of the truth for when with their words they professe Christ by their workes they deny him themselves and cause him to be denied by others Were there not a remnant that beare the Image of Christ in sincerity who would ever imbrace a religion that were professed by men of s●ch wicked conversation Secondly it should exceedingly humble scandalous pro●essers that would have the world thinke better of them than of the former sort an● yet become grievous to men by their vile offences Thirdly unfruitfull Christians which lie in a continuall barrennesse whose ground is alwayes fallow have but little consolation from hence for though they are better than the former in that they are not openly wicked yet they fall short of their duty here because they do not more effectually shew forth the graces of Christ. And that there may bee a healing of this error they must amend first their ignorance and pray to God to teach them to profit secondly their slothfulnesse rowzing up themselves to more zeale of good workes and care to answer the opportunities of well doing Use 2. Secondly for instruction All that love the Lord Jesus should hence be perswaded to increase in all care of well-doing and study how to shew forth the light of their workes before men and the rather because First they have received such singular mercy from the Lord. Secondly they shallhereby glorifie their heavenly father and make religion to be well spoken of Phil. 2.15,16 2 Thess. 3.21 and put to silence the ignorance of the foolish we should be as tender of the honour of our profession as of our owne honour Thirdly they shall hereby wonderfully establish their owne hearts in the assurance of their calling and election 1 Ioh. 1.5,6 2 Pet. 1.5 to 10. and much increase their owne contentment and joy in the Lord 1 Cor. 15.58 Fourthly they shall have a full and plentifull reward in the day of the Lord Rom. 2.7,8,9,10,11 Fifthly the hearts of their teachers shall be hereby filled with joy when they see they have not laboured in vaine Phil. 2.16.2 Cor. 3.1,2,3 Of him that c. In the third place it may be here considered of why those vertues shewed forth by Christians are yet called the vertues of Christ. For answer whereunto we may be enformed that they are the vertues of Christ in divers respects First because they are such vertues as are had onely by such as bee in Christ by effectuall calling for all the wicked are strangers from the life of God Secondly because they are received from the Spirit of Christ of his fulnesse we have all received these graces Ioh. 1.14 Eph. 1.21 Thirdly because they are shewed forth for his glory All our gifts and services are devoted to the glory of Christ as they are in him so they are for him Lastly I thinke they may bee called the vertues of Christ because they resemble his vertues as the picture of a man is called by the name of the man himselfe And the consideration hereof should the more incite us to the care of these vertues seeing wee are here to follow no worse a patterne than the example of the Lord Jesus himselfe and withall we should be the more humble when we have had and done all we can seeing we have nothing but what wee have received And since all should bee for his glory we have reason to say at the best Wee are unprofitable servants And withall it should comfort us against the sense of our infirmities to consider how weake soever wee have beene yet our gifts are acknowledged for the vertues of Christ himselfe and by the benefit of Christs intercession are accepted of God as if they had been found in the person of Christ himselfe Thus of the third point He that hath called you The fourth thing to be noted is this Periphrasis here given of Christ. Instead of saying the vertues of Christ hee saith the vertues of him that called you which he doth of
not onely lyars but such as love lies Rev. 22.8 And a good man is said to have this property that he will not receive an ill report against his neighbour Psal. 15. And by receiving evill reports a man becomes accessary to the slander guilty of it for as it is true that the receiver of evil-gotten goods is accessary to the theft so is it in the case of slander somewhat worse for there may be theeves though there be no receivers but there can be no slanderers without some to receive the slander Neither is there any great difference betweene the tale-bearer and the tale-hearer for the tale-bearer hath the divell in his tongue and the tale-hearer hath the divell in his eare Quest. But what should wee doe to avoid tale-bearers or if wee do heare reproaches or slanders of other men Answ. As the North wind drives away the raine so must thy angry countenance do the slaundering tongue thou must not any way shew any liking of his discourse but the contrary yea and further thou must as farre as thou art able make an apologie for the godly man that is evill spoken of And the tongue of a godly wise man should be in this sense healthfull because it should be ready to heale that wound which the tale-bearer hath made in the name of his neighbour Prov. 12.18 and 25.23 Thus of the second reason The third and fourth reasons are contained in these last words viz. That they may by your good workes which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation The reasons are because God may visit them and if he do they will glorifie God upon the remembrance of your good workes But here I purpose to handle the words as they lie in the order of reading them and so I have foure things to consider of First of good workes secondly of the beholding of good workes thirdly of the glorifying of God fourthly of the day of visitation Good workes Divers observations are implied here First that Religion sets men to worke there is labour in godlinesse Hee must worke that will be truly godly or religious God entertaines no servants but he sets them to worke they are called to labour all the daies of their life Wee must worke out our salvation without working wee cannot be saved though our workes be not the cause of salvation This point proves that the Gospel is not a doctrine of liberty religion doth call men to working not to live as they lift but as he lists that died for them and requires their service And secondly this doctrine shewes who is a true Christian. For as the Scripture is wont to describe a profane man by saying that he is a worker of iniquity so doth it avouch that hee is a godly man that worketh truth and righteousnesse Psal. 5. Prov. 14.23 Ioh. 3.21 Psal. 106.2 To be a worker of iniquity imports three things First grosse knowne sin secondly a daily custome in the practice of it and thirdly an estimation of sinne as the means of our happie life The wicked man lives by sin as the labourer doth by his trade So here that man that will labour and that constantly about the workes of a holy life making it his every daies care to do Gods will and accounts it the happinesse of his life to doe good duties that man is a godly man It is not talking of Religion will serve the turne nor the shewes of it but hee must worke and endure the labour of godlinesse Iam. 1.25 Act. 10.36 And further this should teach Christians often to remember their holy calling and examine themselves what workes they have done as such servants as desire to give a good account to their Master and the rather because no servants can have fairer worke it is all good worke and servants were so ingaged to their masters nor did owe more service and because never was there a master that gave better wages than God doth to his servants And therefore let every Christian be daily carefull to looke to his worke that when his Master cometh he may find him so doing Thus of the first point Doct. 2. Secondly that workes do specially commend us to the good opinions of men it is our workes must justifie us before men by good workes wee must winne testimony to our sincere religion from men Faith justifies us before God and proveth us to be true Christians as works do before men prove us to be so And therefore wee should strive by well doing to win as much credit as we can to our Religion among men Iam. 3.13 Doct. 3. Thirdly that the foundest way of confuting our Adversaries is by our workes we must make reall apologies wee must put them to silence by well-doing Now in that he calls the good workes done by them their good workes I might note divers things 1 The necessity of good workes they must have workes of their owne the good workes done by others availe not them nor justifie them 2 The goodnesse of God that vouchsafeth to call those workes their works when yet they were wrought by him as having had their beginning from his grace and Spirit Esa. 26.12 3 It is true that they onely can doe good workes good workes are onely theirs a wicked man cannot do good workes because his person is hatefull to God and his nature altogether impotent and though he may doe some actions which for the matter of them are good yet he pollutes them with his sins of which hee hath not repented and cannot bring them forth compleate for matter manner and end Tit. 1. ult Mat. 6. But it is the goodnes of workes which I specially intend to intreat of in this place Good workes The goodnesse of mens workes may be diversly considered either according to the differences of workes good from such as are not so or according to the formes of good workes or according to the time of doing workes or according to the uses workes are put to For the first Some mens workes are neither good nor seeme to be so as are the apparent sinnes of men Some mens workes seeme good but are not as the almes and prayer and fasting of the Pharisees Some mens workes are good but seeme n●t so at least in the eyes of some men and so the religious duties of godly Christians seemed to be vain practices of Sectaries and innovators Act. 28. and so Pauls zeale and knowledge seemed madnesse to Festus Act. 26. Some workes seeme good and are so such are the open good workes of the godly in the judgement of godly men guided by charity For the second If workes be tried by their forme then those workes are good works which are done with correspondencie to the revealed will of God in his Word they must be commended in the Word and done according to the directions of the Word so that all workes done besides or above the Law of God are sinfull and naught and the doing of
things that concerne a religious life and then our duty to man and in particular to Magistrates This the Apostle intimates in that he first instructs them as Christians and then as Subjects and there is apparent reason first in respect of God secondly in respect of themselves and thirdly in respect of the Magistrate First in respect of God for we are first and chiefly bound to God our first covenant is made with God and we are more beholding to God than to all the world besides and therefore againe to respect his glory and obedience to him in the first and chiefe place Secondly in respect of our selves and our owne profit we must study God's Lawes as well as the Lawes of men yea with our first and chiefe cares and accordingly yeild obedience because though by keeping the Lawes of men wee may live quietly and safely and with much reputation yet all this will not protect us against the breach of Gods Law but the hand of God may pursue us while we live and we may be damned in hell when we die for want of a religious life Thirdly in respect of the Magistrate he shall have the better Subjects by it Good Christians are the best Subjects and the knowledge of Religion and Gods Word makes men obey not for feare or custome but for conscience sake and for feare of God's displeasure And besides it makes men humble and charitable humble not to thinke themselves too good to obey and charitable in not suspecting the meaning of Princes further than they must needs And it restraines the excessive pronesse of mens natures that are without Religion apt to speake evill of those that are in authority and chiefly because true Religion will make men pray heartily to God for their Governours and God himselfe doth spare or blesse them the rather for the prayers of the righteous The use should be to informe and teach all sorts of men to take heed of separating what God hath joyned together It is an extreme folly to give unto Caesar what is due to Caesar not to give unto God what is due to God and so it were to give unto God what is due to God if men could doe it not to give to Caesar what is due to Caesar. The respect of God's Lawes should make us more carefull to observe mans Lawes And contrariwise it is a fearfull case that many live in that thinke they have done enough if they live in obedience in respect of the authority that rules them in the places they live in they would bee much troubled if the Magistrate should bee offended with them but are never troubled though they provoke God to his face and they are maliciously foolish that would have the Laws of men obeyed when they are against the Lawes of God or would have men so rest in observing the just Lawes of men as not to be so forward and busie about the duties of Religion Further a question may bee here asked Why the duty of Magistrates is not here set downe as well as the duties of Subjects I answer that in those times of the Apostles the Magistrates were without so farre from being Christians that they did for the most part persecute that way and therefore they doe avoid medling or undertaking to teach them that would not learne but rather be incensed against such Teachers Besides if this and other Scriptures of the New Testament be marked we shall finde that the duty of Inferiours is both more often and more fully taught than the duty of Superiours for in that new and tender world great care was to bee had that under pretence of Religion civill obedience either in the family or Common-wealth were not neglected And it is a truth to be knowne at all times that God would not have Inferiours too skilfull in the duty of Superiours that they might first learne to shew duty before they called for duty from their Superiours That may be one reason why the duty of Masters is not here handled and in other places of the Epistles but briefly for many times the description of the duty of Superiours is used but as a glasse by the Inferiours to pry into the faults of those that rule them and so grow carelesse and wilfully stubborne under pretence of the faults of their Superiours But some one might say that by this means if the Magistrates did turne Christians they were left without rules of direction and so they should not know what to doe Answ. That inconvenience was long before prevented because the duty of Magistrates is fully taught in the Old Testament which unto a godly minde is of as great authority as the New Thus of the coherence and generall consideration of all the words The duty of Subjects followes to bee particularly considered of Submit Concerning Subjects here are five things to be considered of First the proposition of Doctrine in these words Submit your selves to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake Secondly the exposition of it in one case and that is the persons to whom they were to bee subject to all sorts of Governours to Kings or any other Governours Thirdly the confirmation by reason Ver. 14 15. Fourthly the answer of an Objection Ver. 16. Fiftly the conclusion Vers. 17. In the Proposition consider 1 The duty to be done Submit 2 The persons must doe it your selves 3 The things to which they must bee subject Ordinances where is a double extent viz to every ordinance though they be ordinances of men 4 The manner or motive For the Lords sake Submit The duty is to submit unto Magistrates Rom. 13.1 2. For Explication two things are to be considered Why we must submit and How we must submit For the first we must submit 1 Because God is the Author of Magistracy Gen. 9.6 Deut. 16.18 Pro. 8.15 Dan. 2.21 Ioh. 19.11 Rom. 13.1 4 6. Object The Divell is said to bee the Prince of this world and hee claimeth all the kingdomes of the earth Ioh. 12.31 Mat. 4.8 9. Sol. He is the Prince of this world by malicious usurpation not by any right 2 He is so in relation to wicked men he is their king but not of others 3 He speakes like himselfe that is like the father of lyes when hee claimes all the kingdomes of the earth for no part of the world is his because The earth is the Lords and all that therein is Object But God was angry with the Israelites for their asking of a King and therefore it seemes it was not his ordinance that there should be Kings Sol. He was not angry with them for desiring Governours for they had Governours before sent of God and the very King they had afterward God gave them him Hos. 13.8 but hee was angry for the cause of their request Their faith and hope was in a manner spent and they conceived more hope in a King than in God that had beene such a King to them so many yeares 2
must often meditate on the motives that may perswade them to subjection And so there are five things that might bow their hearts and breed in them a conscience of their duties First the Commandement of God it is Gods will they should beare themselves thus humbly and obediently toward their masters Secondly the promise annexed to Gods Commandement should move them God wil reward their work Eph. 6.8 Col. 3.24 And in particular inasmuch as their service is required in the fifth Commandement therefore if they be good servants God will blesse them with long life Thirdly the threatning if they bee not good servants but beare themselves naughtily and stubbornly they shall not only receive shame and punishment from men but God will plague them for the wrongs they doe to their masters even for all the grief wherewith they have vexed them and for all the losses they have brought to their masters Col. 3. ult Fourthly the examples of such as have born themselves full well in Scripture should much move them the piety of Abrahams servant Gen. 24. and the painfulnesse and faithfulnesse of Iacob Gen. 31.38 c. and the readinesse of the Centurions servant Mat. 8. yea it should much move them that Christ Jesus himselfe was in the forme of a servant Phil. 2. Fiftly the care of the Religion they professe should much move them if they be carelesse and proud and stubborne the Name of God and the doctrine of Religion may be blasphemed 1 Tim. 6.1 And if they be humble and carefull and faithfull they may adorne the doctrine of the Gospel as the Apostle shews Tit. 2.9 10. Use 2. Such parents as put their children forth to service must take heed that they spoile them not by giving eare to the complaints of their masters or by allowing them any way in stubborne and disobedient courses Thirdly if masters would have their servants to please them by their subjection they then must learn how to rule and govern them not only by teaching and charging them what to doe but also by over-seeing them whereby many faults may bee prevented and accordingly by seasonable reproving them and correcting of them betimes for the more wilfull offences so studying to carry themselves gently towards them as that they lose not their authority by too much love of their owne ease and quietnesse else it is just that their servants should prove a continuall vexation to them Pro. 30.22 and 29.19 To your Masters The parties to whom they owe subjection are their masters where three things may be observed First that though servants are under subjection yet it is not to all men or to other men but only to their masters which may warne men to take heed that they abuse not other mens servants or speake basely of them For though in respect of their masters they are servants yet in respect of them they are as free as themselves And in particular it should teach divers to meddle lesse with other mens servants by way of complaint to their masters It was Salomons rule Accuse not a servant to his master lest he curse thee and thou be found guilty Pro. 3.10 He gives two reasons of his advice The one is that his complaining may so vex the servants over whom he hath no jurisdiction that it may cause them in their impatience to vex him with their reproaches of him which an ingenuous minde should strive to avoide The other is that in such complaints most an end there is much mis-taking when men meddle with such things as belong to other mens families and then it is a soule shame to be found faulty To conclude this point we should remember that of the Apostle What hast thou to doe to judge another mans servant he standeth or falleth to his own master Rom. 14. Secondly that all masters have authority over their servants though the master be a poore man or an ignorant man or a cruell man or a froward man or a hard man yet the servant must be subject to him and beare himselfe as reverently and obedient as if hee were the richest or wisest or worthiest master in the world and the reason is because the subjection is due not to the masters riches or gifts or greatnesse but to the authority which God hath given him as a master and therefore servants must looke to this point and the rather because it will bee the greater triall of their snbjection and singlenesse of heart when neither feare nor reward nor any outward respect doth compell or constrain them but simply the conscience of Gods Commandement and the masters authority Thirdly wee may here inquire how masters come by this authority over servants by nature they have it not and therefore must have it by law The laws of men cannot make one man a servant and another a master therefore it is by the Law of God Since it is by the Law of God if we have recourse to the ten Commandements we shall finde that it is the fift Commandement which giveth masters this authority and honour the exhortations of the Apostle being but interpretations of that Law And that this point may bee cleared two things must be searched into first what sorts of men are called fathers and mothers there and secondly why they are so called in the Commandement seeing the most sorts of them in the usuall life of man have other titles For the first This tearme Father we shall finde in Scripture to be given first to such as begat us Heb. 12.9 Secondly to Ancestors Ioh. 6.18 Thirdly to Tutors so Students are called Children of the Prophets Fourthly to such as beget us in respect of grace as to our Ministers 1 Cor. 4.15 Gal. 4.19 Fiftly to Magistrates Gen. 41.43 1 King 24.12 Ezra 1.5 Sixtly to Elders in age 1 Tim. 5.1 Seventhly to the Inventors or Authors of any science art or trade Gen. 4.20 Lastly it is given to masters so Naamans servants called him Father 2 King 5.13 And from hence masters were wont to be called Patr●s familias as Magistrates were called Patres patriae For the second Magistrates Tutors Ministers Masters and all Superiours are called Fathers first because the father was the first degree of superiority the fountain seminary of all society Secondly God of purpose preserves this title in all superiority therby to sweeten subjection to inferiours and to make them think the severall dangers burdens labours subjections in each condition to bee not only tolerable but meet to be borns because they endure them under parents as it were so such superiority for that reason should not be resisted or envyed Thirdly that thereby superiors may be put in mind of their dutie to avoid insolency cruelty oppression and the too much respect of themselves God charging them by this title to remember that their inferiours are to them by Gods Ordinance as their children Thus of the proposition of the duties of servants The exposition followes and so first
repented It is a signe of true mortification when 1. A man hath seriously condemned himselfe before God for his sin 2. When he feeles the wonted violence of affections after sinne and the world to be deaded and his heart growne dull and out of taste in matters of sin and the world He is crucified that hath his lusts and affections crucified Gal. 5.24 3. That he is weary of life is selfe by reason of the remainders of sin in his flesh Rom. 7. 4. That hath felt as sensible sorrowes for his sinnes as he was wont to doe for his crosses sorrowes I say that are voluntary and for sinne as it is sinne Do●t 4. The Passion of Christ is the best medicine to kill sin in us he died that we might die to sin There is a vertue in the death of Christ to kill sin Rom. 6. Now the death of Christ may be said to kill sin First in respect of the guilt of sin Christ in his death paid all that was needfull for satisfaction and ●o destroyed the imputation of it and stilled the clamour of it It cannot cry against us in heaven because God is fully satisfied and the bond discharged and cancelled the plea of our sins died in the Passion of Christ. Secondly in respect of the hatefulnesse of it or the demonstration of the hatefulnesse of it The Passion of Christ gives all men occasion to see how unworthy sin is to live that made him die when it was only imputed to him and not done by him Thirdly in respect of the power of it in us actually There is a secret vertue in the wounds of Christ to wound sin and in the death of Christ to kill sinne and therefore the Scripture speakes not only of the merit but of the vertue of his death Rom. 6. Phil. 3. which vertue is secretly derived unto the penitent sinner by the ordinances of Christ his Word Prayer and Sacraments Uses The Use should be for triall men may know whether as yet they have any part in the death of Christ by inquiring whether they be dead in their sins First they have no interest in the merit of his death that have not experience of the vertue of his death in killing their corruptions Secondly for instruction When godly men find any corruption begin to be too strong for them they must flye to Christ for this medicine and then there is no sin so strong in them but by constant prayer to Christ for the vertue of his death will be subdued if they pray in faith Prayer gets the medicine and faith applies it to the disease Doct. 5. True mortification doth not encounter one sin only but sins in the plurall number and indefinitely It notes that in true repe●tance there is a respect had to amendment of all sins To amend only one or two faults is not true repentance for he that is truely dead is dead to sins there is no sin but the true Convert desires and endeavours to be rid of it so far as hee knowes it to be a sin Her●d did mend in some things but yet was not sound because in one sin he minded no repentance And this point doth give an infallible rule of triall of mens estates in Christ for no wicked man on earth doth so much as in true desire forsake all sin There be some corruptions he knowes that he would upon no conditions part with To desire and endeavour to be rid of all sins is an infallible mark of a child of God Doct. 6. Mortification makes a man dead only to sins it doth not make him of a dead and lumpish disposition in doing good duties Heb. 9.14 nor doth it require that it should destroy his nature or naturall temper or the parts of his body but his sin only nor doth it kill his contentment in the creatures of God and the use of lawfull things nor doth it destroy his liberty in lawfull delights and recreations it kils his sin only Might live unto righteousnesse These words containe the second effect of Christs death and passion viz. the raising of us unto a righteous life his death makes us live and live righteously Divers Doctrines may be hence observed Doct. 1. First that men truely mortified shall live happily These dead men will live there is no danger in great sorrow and the other workes of mortification It kils sin but the soule lives by that meanes He is sure to live that is dead to his sins Rom. 8.13 Esay 26.19 1 Pet. 4.6 Ezek. 18. Hos. 14.2 The reasons are first because God hath promised comfort to such as mourne for sin Mat. 5.4 Pro. 14.10 Secondly Christ hath a speciall charge given him to looke to those mourners that they miscarry not Esay 61.1 2 3. Thirdly they are freed from eternall death they cannot be condemned 1 Cor. 11.31 32. Iob 33.27 28. Fourthly because the fruit of the lips is peace to these they are ever after interessed in the comforts of the Word Esay 57. 15 18. Fiftly the nature of godly sorrow is only to tend to repentance it is worldly sorrow that tends to death 2 Cor. 7.10 Sixtly they that are conformed to the similitude of Christs death by mortification shall be conformed to Christs life by the resurrection from the dead Rom. 6.5 8 11. Uses The Use may be first for confutation of such as think that mortification is a way full of danger and makes many men come to great extremities whereas they may here see there is no danger in it Hellish terrours and despaire and some kinde of diseases may make strange effects in some men but never was any hurt by godly sorrow for sin if we will beleeve the Scriptures and therefore it should incourage men to fall to worke soundly about searching their wayes and confessing their sins and judging themselves in secret for their sinnes Iames 4.7 2 Cor. 7.10 11. But here men must looke to some few rules First that they see the warrant of the course in the Word and know the places that require these duties that they lay up such promises made to the duties of mortification as may uphold their hearts in the practice of them Thirdly that they refuse not consolation but when they have found true humiliation for their sins and comfort from God in his ordinances that they turne their sorrow into joy and their prayers into thanksgiving and spend their dayes alwayes rejoycing in the Lord. Doct. 2. It is not enough to die to sinne unlesse wee also live to righteousnesse it is not enough to forsake our sinnes but wee must spend our dayes in good workes we are so charged to cease to doe evill as withall we are charged to learne to doe well Esay 1.16 we must bring forth fruits worthy amendment of life as well as confesse our sinnes Matth. 3.8 A man will cut downe his fig-tree for want of good fruit though it beare no ill fruit Luke 13.6 It will not please any
sheepe Fourthly he that lives without God and Christ that can spend whole daies and nights without any communion with God yea that when he is present before God finds his heart continually carried with wandring distractions that constantly draw him away from all inward attendance upon God Ephes. 2.12 Esay 29.13 he erres in his heart Psal. 95.10 Fiftly he that hath no other companions of his life but swine and wilde beasts that is wicked men of all sorts especially when it is joyned with willing neglect and shunning of the society of the godly Psal. 5. 2 Cor. 6. Sixtly he that tastes nothing but earthly things and findes no savour in spirituall things it is a signe that he is out of the pasture and feeds in the wildernesse Rom. 8. 1 Iohn 2.18 Seventhly he that when he is told he is out of the way blesseth himselfe in his heart when it is plainely found that he openly wandereth Psal. 36.1 2. Deut. 29.19 Eighthly he that lives in any of the grosse sins expressely mentioned in the Catalogue in Scripture without repentance as swearing Com. 3. adultery covetousnesse drunkennesse railing extortion 1 Cor. 6.9 or the knowne sins of deceit Micah 6.10 Ninthly he that doth his workes of purpose to be seene of men resting only in the praises of men not seeking the praise of God Mat. 6. Rom. 2.26 Tenthly he that knowes not Gods wayes especially if he desire nor knowledge or entertaine wilfull objections against the meanes of knowledge Psal. 95.10 Eleventhly they that spend their zeale in meeting with other mens infirmities neglecting sound reformation in themselves It is the wisedome of the prudent to understand his owne wayes but to be a busie-body in other mens matters is erring and the folly only of fooles Pro. 14.8 Every busie-body is out of the way The Doctrines follow and so divers things may be observed out of these words Doct. 1. Even godly men before their calling were out of the way as lost sheep as well as others Ephes. 2.2 Tit. 3.3 Which should serve first to set out the riches of Gods free grace as the only first cause of the happinesse and salvation of the Elect. Secondly it should teach the godly divers duties both toward God other men and themselves As for God they should live to his prayse and spend their dayes in magnifying his great compassions in their deliverance that deserved so ill at his hands And withall it should teach them to put all their trust in God seeing they carry about them a nature that hath beene apt to wandring and therefore have cause to mistrust themselves And for other men that are out of the way they should pity them and carry themselves with all meeknesse and charity remembring what themselves have beene Tit. 3.1 2 3. And for themselves they should be the more humble and abased hating all pride and conceitednesse and contempt of others Doct. 2. A man may be a sheep and yet lost Not only Dogs Goats Swine Lyons c. may be out of the way but even sheep may wander and be clean lost Men of harmlesse natures and such as are profitable members of humane societies and such as are of a gentle disposition and free from grosse offenses yet may be utterly lost and cleane out of the way of happinesse and if they returne not by repentance may perish for ever And this is a point which should marvellously affect civil-honest men and move them at length to see the weake vanity of their confidence in their prayses for civillity of nature or life This is a doctrine very hardly entertayned by this sort of men and the rather because they think they want nothing unto the prayse of a good life never considering that they are not religious though they be civill and that they have a world of inward impurities though they are free from outward grosse uncleannesse of life and that they never felt the joyes of the holy Ghost to approove of them though they have beene tickled with the prayses of men and that they have not sought or desired the assurance of Gods favour or a better life but spend their time in a still dreame without providing for what is most necessary and that they never serve ●od not have had any sociable fellowship with him in any of his Ordinances in respect of the inward power of them Doct. 3. To breake out from the meanes of Religion and from the society of godly Christians is the very way to undo many a soule A sheep is 〈◊〉 when it is gotten from sheep and is out of the pasture and hath no discreet shepheard to take the care of it Thus of the first part that is mans misery by nature The meanes of recovery out of that misery followeth and that is noted in the word Returne Where first may be observed that wicked men may returne It is not impossible for men that have spent a 〈…〉 lives in sinne and vanity at the length to be saved And it is the first part of a mans work that would return to inform himselfe seriously of 〈◊〉 ●●●●ments that may proove that he may bee helped out of his misery The fi●●t thing a diseased man inquires after is whether his disease be curable or no. Now there are divers things that give hope of curing and salvation even to men that are as yet cleane out of the way as First the disposition of God towards sinners which appears first because he sweares he desires not the death of a sinner but rather that he should return and live Ezech. 18.21 Secondly he is patient and hath been with thee all this while and he is therefore patient that men might repent and be saved Rom. 2.4 2 Pet. 3.9 Thirdly he hath declared himselfe to be willing to forgive all sinnes but only the sinne against the holy Ghost One sinne only is unpardonable all other sinnes may be forgiven Secondly the sufficiency of the sacrifice of Christ He is the Lamb of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world Iohn 1. Rom. 3.25 Thirdly the worke of Gods grace already shewed unto them For first God hath placed them in the visible Church where repentance and salvation may be had Secondly he hath bestowed upon them many temporall blessings to allure them to seeke to him for mercy Thirdly he causeth the Gospell to be preached to all sorts of men without exception And so grace is offred to them and there is no other let but their refusall of grace offred Fourthly the example of all sorts of sinners that have returned As great sinners as they have beene received to mercy and they are set out as examples to encourage other men to seeke mercy as Manasses Mary Magdalen David Peter Paul and others Many among the Corinthians have beene notorious offenders but were justified and sanctified The explication of the doctrine of returning followes where these things are to be considered of First the motives to perswade men to returne
or contempt of others or hath the appearance of such evill in the judgement of others Esay 3. 1 Thes. 5. 8. When it becommeth not good workes or hindereth them 1 Tim. 2.9 as when men restraine mercie to the poore or oppresse their Tenants or defraud other men onely to mainetaine themselves or theirs in outward pompe and gallantnesse of apparell This is the horrible sin of the Gentry in many places of this kingdome 9. When it is condemned and reproved by godly Ministers that are both wise and learned for their testimony ought to be received 2 Thess. 1.10 and it is a vile sinne to vexe them and grieve them by our obstinacie yea though they were not able to make so full demonstration yet when they reprove such things out of a spirituall jealousie and feare they corrupt their hearers they ought to be heard Heb. 13.18 1 Cor. 11.2.3 10. When the time that might be profitably spent is consumed by the tedious curiositie of dressing Ephes. 5.16 as it is with those that have not time for God● worship in private or cannot come time enough to the Church or neglect their calling by being so long in dressing 11. When it dishonours the body of a man Col. 2. ult as when it is slovenly or sluttish or is taken up of meere singularitie and affectation of the praise of mortification and tends to restraine Christian libertie in others For no pretence may uncomely apparell be used for 1 Tim. 2.9 it is required that the apparell of women be comely for so the originall word signifies But especially uncomely apparell is then most vile when it is worne with a purpose to deceive as the Prophet complained of such as weare a ro●gh garment to deceive 12. The puritie of a Christian life should avoide all dressings or fashions which had their originall from infamous persons such as are the fashions of Whores or debauched creatures and such a beginning it is said commonly Yellow starch had What fellowship betweene light and darknesse righteousnesse and unrighteousnesse Christ and Belial If we would have God to love us we must separate and come out from amongst them and touch no uncleane thing 13. When such apparell is worne as is contrary to the wholesome lawes of men for we are bound to submit our selves to every ordinance of man for Gods sake 1 Pet. 2.13 14. Lastly when the partie that useth such apparell or dressing is condemned in himselfe and hath his owne conscience accusing or disliking it or is no● fully assured that he doth not sin Whatsoever is not of Faith in those things is sin Rom. 14. Verse 4. But let it be the hidden man of the heart c. HItherto of that adorning they should not be curious or costly in Now in this verse he shewes in the affirmative what apparell or dressing they s●ould be carefull of and that is the adorning of their soules and the apparelling of the inward man In the words three things may be noted 1. What must be apparelled viz. the hidden man of the heart 2. With what it must be adorned which he shewes both in generall and in particular in generall it must be with incorruptible things in particular it must be with a meeke and quiet spirit 3. The reason viz. because such apparell is very rich in Gods account The fir●● thing then is what must be apparelled viz. the man of the heart The man of the heart This is a kind of speaking not used in any place of Scriptu●e but this onely this Apostle onely useth this kinde of expressing himselfe Now concerning the man of the heart I would consider of sixe things 1. What he is 2. Whence he is or his originall 3. In what he excels the outward man 4. What condition he is in by nature 5. H●w he may be mended or made better 6. How we may know when the man of the heart is right ●or the first by the man of the heart hee meanes the same the Apostle Paul●oth ●oth by the inward man 2 Cor. 4.16 and the inward man is the soule or he●rt of man Thus ●e speakes of a Jew that is outward and a Jew that is in●ar● Rom. 2.28 29. Now the heart is and may well be called the man for divers reasons 1. In respect of definition For the definition of a man agrees to the heart of man though there were no body for God was the God of Abraham and Abraham was and was a living man many hundred yeeres after his body was in the grave Mat. 22. And hence it is that unto the soule or heart of man in Scriptures is attributed all things that the outward man can doe as life Psal. 22.27 language Eccles. 9.1 Psal. 14.1 36.1 praying to God Psal. 37.4 receiving messages from God as when the Prophet is bidden to speake to the heart of Jerusalem Esay 40. serving of God c. 2. In respect of dominion The heart is the man because it disposeth the way of man Pro. 16.9 and ruleth the outward man for out of the aboundance of the heart the mouth speaketh And therefore Solomon saith that from the heart comes life Pro. 4.23 3. In respect of acceptation The heart is that which God especially respects in man it is the heart he lookes upon 1 Sam. 17.7 He tries the heart and as Solomon saith He weighes the hearts of the children of men Pro. 21.2 and he will be served with our hearts Iosh. 24.14 and in all holy duties it is with us in Gods account according as he seeth the heart 1 Kings 8.39 so he requires the heart in repenting 1 Sam. 7.3 in praying 2 Tim. 2.22 Hos. 7.14 in hearing the Word Luke 8. and so in every good duty Thus of the first point For the second The man of the heart hath his originall from God himselfe He is the Father of Spirits Heb. 12.8 and it was his especiall glory to forme and fashion the heart in man as divers Scriptures shew Zech. 12.1 Psal. 33.15 and is therefore called the God of the heart Psal. 37. For the third The man of the heart excells the outward man exceedingly and that both in substance and in priviledges As for substance in the outward man we agree with beasts but in the inward man we agree with Angels in as much as the man of the heart consists of a spirituall and immateriall essence as well as the Angels And as in substance so in properties there is great difference for first the man of the heart is hidden it can be and doe all his worke and yet be invisible God himselfe hath variety of conversation with the man of the heart that no creature else knowes Secondly he is free and subject only to the God of his heart properly No man can come at or governe or command the heart of man Thirdly he is properly the seat of Gods image Wee are not properly like God in our bodies because God hath no body but in
unto reformation if they will carefully observe these rules following 1. They must study to be quiet 1 Thes. 4.12 They must not trust their owne conceits of things but with good conscience study how to prevent occasions of unquietnesse and how to carry themselves discreetly and with meeknesse It doth require much study to live quietly 2. They must be sure they meddle with their owne businesse as it is further added in the same place They must be sure to place their greatest care in learning how to discharge their owne duties to others and not allow themselves liberty to suspect or censure the waies of others with whom they converse Such wives as are so diligent to studie their husbands duties and to finde fault with them in their callings seldome or never live quietly with their husbands whereas the Apostle here would have such wives as have ill husbands to lay the ground of a quiet life in the care of sound discharge of their owne duties to their husbands 3. They must heartily repent for their faults of unquietnesse and frowardnesse past and not only humble their soules in secret before God for such sins but also shew their repentance to those with whom they converse by an humble acknowledgement of their vile nature and froward behaviour even in the particulars of it Repentance for knowne trespasses can never be sound if it be secret and not made knowne to the parties grieved 4. It will wonderfully help them if they pray constantly to the Lord Jesus that left such a patterne of meeknesse and to entreat him by influence of his grace to quiet and sweeten their natures Beseech the Lord Jesus even by his meeknesse to make us meek and able to expresse his vertue in a quiet conversation 5. They must not give place to wrath but if they perceive their hearts rising and inclined to passion and provoking and censorious words they must presently lay necessity of silence upon themselves till they be able to speake quietly and without frowardnesse This one rule constantly for a while observed would breed a great alteration in their dispositions quickly and in time weare out the force of the disease Unquietnesse is much enlarged by the words are uttered after the offence is taken And thus of a meek and quiet spirit only we may note from the indefinite requiring of meeknesse That Christians and in particular Christian wives must exercise meeknesse and quietnesse towards all persons and at all times and in all places In all places I say and so both at home and abroad towards all persons and so they must carry themselves quietly not only towards their husbands but towards their servants and their neighbours whether they be poore or rich and at all times they must not be young Saints and old Divells as the Proverb is that is of a soft and gentle behaviour at first and then grow froward afterwards Age and infirmities are not sufficient excuses for vicious anger and unquietnesse Besides in that the Apostle resembles meeknesse to apparell it imports That by nature we are borne without it our soules being as naked in respect of meeknesse as our bodies be in respect of cloathes and withall that it should be our every-daies care to put on meeknesse and fit our selves for quietnesse as wee would put on our cloathes And further as it is not enough to put on our cloathes but we must tie them and fit them handsomely so must we use discretion in the putting on of meeknesse and quietnesse fitting the vertue to the reasons and occasions of the day Thus of the second part of this verse The third and last is the reason why women should be so carefull of this kind of dressing and apparell and that is because it is a thing of great price in the sight of God Which in the sight of God is of great price Divers things may be hence observed 1. That God doth highly esteeme of the vertues and true grace and good behaviour of his servants and therefore in this place their vertues are said to be very rich in Gods sight and in the Scriptures he gives the terme of riches to their gifts 1 Cor. 1.5 and grace is called glory Esay 4.5 and God is described as if he were in love with his people when they carry themselves graciously Iohn 14.21 And this serves greatly to exalt the praise of Gods good nature and tender affection to man and the more because all good things in us are his owne gift Iames 1.17 and because our best gifts have many imperfections in them and our best workes are defiled with sinne Esay 64. and besides because he greatly esteemes them even the least beginnings of goodnesse in his servants as their desires to be good and their very preparations of their hearts to goodnesse Esay 55.1 2. Psal. 10.17 2 Christians are bound in all their behaviour to carry themselves so as that God may accept of them and esteeme what they doe and this is required of them in every state of life They are tyed to this not only in what they doe in Gods house but in what they doe in their owne house This all are charged Heb. 12.28 and so wives here and so servants Eph. 6. 5 6 7. The praise and acceptation of God should be ever before their eyes the reasons are because the formes and rules of all behaviour are given by God his Word is the light to our feet and the lanthorne to our paths Psal. 119. and is only able to make the man of God perfect in every good word and worke 2 Tim. 3. ult and besides if we doe well we are sure never to faile of the praise of God whereas if we seeke the praise of men wee may be deceived For either they may praise us for that which is abominable in the sight of God Luke 16.15 or they may dispraise us when wee doe well or at best their praise is mutable And further it is God that must reward our good conversation Eph. 6.8 and therefore reason that hee bee looked after in what wee doe Lastly this is a signe of difference betweene the godly and the wicked in doing good duties a godly man is knowne by this signe that his praise is of God and not of men Rom. 2.29 Mat. 6. The Use should be to teach us therefore in all our waies to labour to please God and above all things to seeke his acceptation Now if wee would have God pleased with what we doe we must looke to divers rules 1. Wee must bee sure that wee are not in the flesh for they that are in the flesh cannot please God Rom 8.8 Wee must be sure we are new creatures Gal. 6.15 2. Wee must set God alwaies before us and remember his holy presence Gen 17.2 Psal. 16.8 God cannot abide to be forgotten 3. Wee must come to the light that it may bee manifest that our workes are wrought in God Iohn 3.22 Wee must walke by
Parliament for the holding of their lands they think they have a sure tenure yet many Acts of Parliament may be repealed but the Acts of Gods councell are like himselfe immutable The godly they are predestinate to adoption Secondly they have not only Gods promise for their inheritance but Gods oath that by two immutable things the heires of promise might have aboundant consolation as the Apostle shewes Heb. 6.17 18. Thirdly to make all sure God hath put his spirit within them as the seale and earnest of their inheritance Eph. 1.13 14. The Use may be 1. For information and so first to shew the great goodnesse of God to man that not only requires and gives holinesse but adds also blessednesse to his servants In justification and sanctification he gives to men those good things they call bona virtutis the good things of vertue and inadoption he gives those good things they call bona conditionis the good things of condition even blessednesse and true happinesse whom God makes holy he will make happy also Secondly it manifestly shewes that we hold all our happinesse not by merit but by grace For adopted children cannot plead merit but must acknowledge all of gift as will more appeare when we come to speak of the cause of inheriting viz grace 2. For instruction and so The first impression this Doctrine should worke upon us should be a desire to be such as may obtaine the right of adoption of sons for flesh and bloud cannot inherit 1 Cor. 15.50 So long as wee are carnall and unregenerate men we neither are nor are to be called the heires of God The unrighteous that is such as live in grosse sins and doe the workes of the flesh are expressely and peremptorily excluded from the benefit of adoption 1 Cor. 6.9 ●0 Gal. 5.21 None but such as are effectually called and borne of God are capable of this grace Heb. 9.16 Iohn 1.13 And in particular we must have a true justifying faith Iohn 1.12 For as was shewed before we come to the right of Sons only as we are ingrafted into Christ upon whom all the inheritance is originally and fundamentally conferred and into Christ we cannot get but by faith And further we must looke to the sound mortification of the deeds of the flesh Rom. 8.13 and know that none can inherit but such as overcome the power of their corruptions and are not in bondage to any sin Rev. 21.7 And more specially God requires in all such as will be his sons that they be such as are not in bondage to the passions and perturbations of the heart for he hath promised that the meeke shall inherit Mat. 5.5 Thirdly we must forsake all needlesse society and familiarity with the wicked of the world if we will be Gods sons and daughters and resolutely refuse to be corrupted with the sins of the times as the Apostle she●es at large 2 Cor. 6.17 18. Fourthly we must be such as are described Esay 56.4 5 6. We must make conscience to keep Gods Sabbaths and chuse the thing will please God being more desirous to please God in all things than naturall children are to please their earthly parents and take hold of Gods Covenant as resting upon this preferment and the promises of it as our sufficient happinesse And that we may be the more established in the knowledge of our adoption it will be good for us to trie our selves by the signes of such as are Gods adopted children 1. Such as are Gods children by adoption have this marke they are made like unto God their father in holinesse in some truth of resemblance 1 Pet. 1. 15. and this they shew two wayes first by purifying themselves and sound humbling of their soules for their sins that deface the image of God in them as Saint Iohn saith Every one that hath this hope purifieth himselfe as he is pure 1 Iohn 3.2 3. Secondly by imploying himselfe constantly in doing righteousnesse for hereby the children of God are knowne from the children of the Divell 1 Iohn 3.10 2. In the last recited place you may discerne another signe of a sonne and heire to God and that is the love of the godly as his brethren and fellow heires He that loveth not the brethren is of the Divell not of God 1 Iohn 3.10 3. The gift of prayer is a signe of adoption and that we have received the spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 16. By the gift of prayer I meane not the skill to utter words to God in a good forme of words and variously but the gift to speake to God in prayer both with confidence in God as in a Father and with the affections of prayer which the phrase of crying Abba Father imports 4. A child of God discovers his adoption by the maner of doing good duties he doth serve God not with servile respect but with filiall affection he loves to be Gods servant as may be gathered Esay 56.6 5. To love them that hate us and blesse them that curse us and doe good to them that persecute us is a signe that we are children to God as our heavenly Father Luke 6.35 Mat. 5. The second impression that this glory of adoption should make upon our hearts should be to stir us up to carry our selves in this world as becomes the children and heires to such a Father as God is And so in generall it should wonderfully fire us to all possible care to be holy as he is holy and to expresse more to the life the Image of Gods grace and holinesse 1 Pet. 1.14 15. and that in all maner of conversation striving to carry our selves as the sons of God without rebuke in the midst of this froward and wicked world all sorts of the men of the world being so ready to reproach such as are Gods people that if they will speake evill it may be only for our good conversation in Christ Phil 2.15 16. And in particular we are charged in Scripture with certaine speciall and choice things that doe greatly adorne and grace the life of a child of God that is an heire of heaven if we be Gods heires and he be our Father 1. We should be Peace-makers for our Father is the God of peace and this will force men to call us the sons of God Mat. 5.10 2. We must not render reviling for reviling but rather blesse seeing we are heires of blessing as the Apostle urgeth it ver 9. 3. We should live without care as knowing that we have a heavenly Father that careth for us Mat. 6.32 And seeing we are heires of a better world we should not love this world nor set our hearts upon such meane thing● as this world can afford 1 Iohn 2.15 4. If we be Gods sons we should be willing to submit our selves to his correction If we yeeld that power to the father of our bodies how much more to the Father of our spirits Heb. 12.9 But especially take
say that is he may be insallibly assured of it And this is true in two respects first he may know that he is truely called and converted and elected of God secondly he may know his calling in respect of the warrant of all his particular actions as here he may know what is required of him in his carriage towards his enemies Now that every true Christian may be sure of his calling and election and may know his conversion is most apparent by these Scriptures 2 Cor. 13.5.1 Cor. 3.16 2 Tim. 1.12 Heb. 8.11 1 Iohn 2.3 3.14 4.16 5.13 19. And that every Christian is bound to seeke this assurance and knowledge is apparent by many reasons As first from Gods Commandement he requires it of us that we should with all diligence seeke to make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Secondly many reasons may be gathered from the effects and benefits such knowledge and assurance will bring to us Assurance is profitable for many things In generall it is our best riches on earth Col. 2.2 and in particular 1. It estates us in all the promises of God when we know we are truely called then we know our right to all the promises of Gods Word 2. It purifieth the heart and life of man Acts 15.9 for when we know we are the children of God we are thereby stirred up to the greater care to please God and walke in his waies 3. It greatly staies and supports the heart of man in the evill day when temptation or afflictions befall us yet the comfort of our assurance sustaines us and refresheth us greatly For helpe in the evill day the Apostle saith we should above all things put on the shield of faith which if it remove not the crosse yet it qu●ncheth the fiery temptations of Sathan with which we may be assaulted Eph. 6.16 and it greatly helps us against the feare and terrour of death Heb. 10.19 20 22. In a word it overcomes the world 1 Iohn 5.4 5. 4. The faith of a Christian is all his living he lives by faith in all the occasions of life as his faith helps him when all other meanes faile him and makes all other meanes more successfull when he useth them The just man lives by faith The people in captivity that were Gods children raised a living for themselves in a strange land by their faith Hab. 2.5 5. It puts life into all the duties of religion or righteousnesse it worketh by love it ●ets all our affections on worke towards God and his people and creatures Gal. 5.6 6. It opens a spring of grace in the heart of a Christian every good gift from above is excited and made to flow from within him by the benefit of his certaine knowledge and assurance of faith Iohn 7.38 Now if any aske how a Christian comes to know his calling I answer 1. By his sensible feeling of his sins to be a heavie burthen to him of which he is truely wearie so as he desireth more to be rid of them than of any burthensome crosse whatsoever Mat. 11.29 9.13 2. By his manner of receiving the voice of Christ and the preaching of the Gospel not in word but in power The voice of Christ hath a marvellous power over him above all things in the world which appeares by the effects of it for he seeles in hearing the word first such an estimation of it as he acknowledgeth nothing like it for power and wisedome 1 Cor. 1.23 24 Secondly he finds at some times especially such an assurance of the truth of his religion and the doctrine he heareth that he is fully established and freed from his naturall uncertainties about the true religion Thirdly the Word worketh in him spirituall senses and very life from the dead which he feeles in all parts of his conversation making conscience of his waies in all things bewailing his frailties and striving to be such as God would have him to be Fourthly it makes him to separate himselfe from the world avoiding all needlesse societie with the wicked and exciting in him constant desires to use the world as if he used it not Fiftly much spirituall joy before the Lord even then when in respect of outward things he is in much affliction The most of these effects are noted 1 Thes. 1.4 5. 3. By the image of the vertues of Christ in his heart by new gifts in some measure for when God calls a man he reveales his Son in him Gal. 1.15 16. There is begotten in him a likenesse of Christ his very disposition is changed into the similitude of the vertues of Christ God gives him a new heart with the image of Christ stamped upon it and he is like Christ in respect of lowlinesse of minde and meekenesse and contempt of the world and love of God and the godly mercy wisedome patience love of his very enemies and desire to live without offence and praying to God as to his Father Quest. But if Christians may know their calling what should be the reason that so many Christians are so unsettled and are not assured of their calling Answ. Distinguish of Christians some are Christians in name and outward profession but not in deed being not at all converted though they have the meanes of conversion and this is the estate of the most men and women in all places Now some are indeed converted but are weake Christians as it were infants that lie but in the cradle of religion Now for the first sort the answer is easie They know not their calling because they are not called yea they are so far from knowing it that they generally are offended at it that we should teach that any body can know his owne calling certainely Carnall Christians then know it not because they have it not and in particular the causes why these Christians attaine not assurance is because they rest upon common hope of mercy in God which house is but like the house of a Spider and will give up the ghost when the evill day commeth upon them And besides they live in knowne sins which they love and preferre before all things can be offered to them by the Gospel Now it is impossible to have true assurance and to lie at the same time in knowne grosse sins without repentance And further many Christians by their wilfull unteachablenesse and incurablenesse in sinning doe so provoke God that all meanes notwithstanding yet those things that concerne their peace are hidden from their eyes Luke 19.42 Now for the weake Christian the causes of his want of assurance are such as these sometimes ill opinions about assurance either that it may not be had contrary to the charge given 2 Pet. 1.10 or if it be had it will not be profitable contrary to the reasons given before Sometimes it is their ignorance they are so unexpert in the Scriptures that not discerning the frame of godlinesse in generall they can never tell when
number of his Elect fulfilled and therefore he dispatcheth away the generations one after another and so shortneth the daies of man for his Elect sake Now for the Uses Are our lives so short then it should teach us divers lessons 1. To pray God to make us able to thinke so and so to number our daies that we may not make any reckoning of any long continuance here Psal. 39. 3. 90.12 2. To make haste and dispatch our repentance and all the businesses that concerne our sound reconciliation and so to walke while we have the light and to use all good meanes while we enjoy them 3. To redeeme the time and save as much of it as we can for the uses of a better life Eph. 5. and to worke the harder to fulfill thy measure and dispatch that taske God hath set thee to doe 4. To lay fast hold upon eternall life 1 Tim. 6. and to make that sure 5. Every day to provide for our departure even all the dayes of our appointed time to wait when our changing shall come Iob 14.14 FINIS AN ALPHABETICALL TABLE OF THE MOST Principall things handled throughout the whole Booke ACtion What things marre a good Action 630 How we are said to doe well ibid. Adoption Wherein the greatnesse and glory of our Adoption appeares 645 their priviledges in this life 646 What kind of persons we must be to attain this Adoption with the markes of it 647 How they must carry themselves 648 Affection We must care that our Affection grow not either cold or corrupt 163 Foure things which abate Affection in the godly ibid. Afflictions The godlies Afflictions are but for a season 56 57 God tries man in Afflictions seven waies 62 63. comforts therein 63 Afflictions better than gold in divers respects 67 Angels Of their names and natures 96 The singular account that God makes of them 97 Their affection to man ibid. 98 Of the Cherubims looking upon the Ark Exod. 268. 98 Of their knowledge affirmatively and negatively 99 100 Antiquitie In what things Antiquitie is ill pleaded 621 What respect is to be had to old time 622 Apostacie twofold 1. inward 2. outward 237 Apparell Rules for it 105. Vide Attire 603 604 605 Application Rules of application of the word aright 288 Assurance Such as have the perswasion of the Assurance of salvation should looke to foure things 77 Astray What is meant by going astray 555 Their miserie that so doe ibid. An aggravation of their miserie 556 Causes of mens going Astray ibid. Signes of a lost sheepe 557 Attire Eleven reasons against vain Attire in women 603 604 Foureteene wayes by which Attiring of our selves becomes vicious 605 B BAbes Why most are Babes in religion 228 Speciall duties of new borne Babes 229 What Babes by nature should teach men in grace ibid. Backe-biters Vide Evill-speakers or Whisperers 215 216 Behold The diverse acceptation of the word 274 Beleeve Vide Faith Beleevers They onely have benefit by Christ 154 We may be said to beleeve five waies 156 What it is to be a true beleever 290 In how many things it is seen ibid. c. It s excellencie 625 Helpes to it ibid. Rules for a right trusting in God 626 It is by Christ that wee beleeve in God and that for divers reasons 157 Birth Borne The necessitie and ho●●ur of our new Birth 32 Why repentance is called a new birth 184 We had need often to be put in mind of our new Birth 185 Lets of it with excellent uses thereof ib. Bishop The word expounded 566 Christ excels all other Bishops in ten respects 561 All are happy that live under the charge of such a Bishop 567 The duties of such as be under his charge 568 Blesse Blessing How man blesseth God how God man how man blesseth man 29 30 Divers kinds of Blessings 688 When we blesse indeed and wherein it stands 688 689 Godly men inherit the Blessing many wayes 694 In this life three wayes ibid. c. What we must do to get Gods blessing 695 How godly men may grow in the comfort of Gods Blessing 696 Bloud The benefits flowing from Christs Bloud 21 This his Bloud diversly taken 145 Why shed ibid. Why this is most urged ibid. c. The uses of it 146 The preciousnesse of it ibid. What makes it so precious ibid. Bowels What Bowels of mercy doth import 183 When they are right 684 Motives to affect the having such Bowels 685 Brother Brotherhood How we should expresse our love to the Brotherhood 477 In what respects godly men are Brothers 178 478 680 Reasons perswading to love as Brethren 680 With what kind of love we are to love the Brethren 681 Rules for Brotherly love 682 Build Builders Meanes to build up a Christian 260 Causes why men are so little edified 261 How farre wicked men may be said to be Builders 295 296 The causes why many great and learned are oft times Destroyers rather than Builders 296 How Builders that is Churchmen refuse Christ 298. and how Christ refuseth them 299 C Calling It is a matter of great weight to shew a good warrant for our Calling 2 3 Seven sorts of men transgresse about their Calling 3 Those sorts of lusts which must be hatefull to us after our Calling 114 Eight reasons why we should avoid lusts after our Calling ibid. How many waies God calleth us 119 120 What our effectuall Calling is 120 Why our conversion is termed our Calling ibid. How a true Calling may be discerned ib. Seven things which we are called to 121 Three sorts of Calling 1 personall 2 naturall 3 supernaturall 334 335 Distinction of Callings 335 Foure things in the order of working in our Callings ibid. Eight signes of effectuall Calling 336 Five rules to shew us how to walk worthy of our Calling ibid. The danger of such as refuse their Calling in eight things 337 Of the C. of the Gentiles in generall 345 Why Christians should be affected with the consideration of their Calling 689 The Calling of a Christian is a hard Calling 690 The necessity of knowing our Calling ib. By what meanes 691 Ceremonies About taking and giving scandall in the use of Ceremonies 436 Chastity twofold 1 of body 2 of mind 594 Chastity must be as well in married persons as in single 595 Motives to Chastity 596 It is specially charged upon the woman ib. Preservatives of Chastity ibid. How a chaste wife may be discerned 597 Christ. The benefits flowing from his bloud 21 22 His generation and ours how unlike 31 In three things wee should learne of Christ to carry our selves towards God as our Father 31 Christ hid till his second comming in sixe respects 69 Seven signes of his love in the sparkle 71 Seven more in the flame ibid. The word Christ is a word collective 144 His bloud precious 146. c. He is said to be a Lamb in sixe respects 147 Christ manifested five wayes 152 Beleevers onely have benefit
the contrary ibid. c. In what cases we may not be of one mind with the Church of Rome 678 W WArre Warfare Vide Fight The Christian condition is military 42 He must keepe a fivefold garison 43 Foure kinds of Warre against the soule 384 The flesh warres against the soule five wayes ibid. Why God doth suffer this Ware 385 Our armour in this Warre what 386 How we may get victorie in this Warre 387 Weake Priviledges of Weake Christians 229 Encouragement for Weake Christians 237 Well-doing Well-doing is the best way to stop the 〈◊〉 of wicked man ●65 Excellent uses of it ibid. How we are said to doe well 639 631 Reasons why we ought alwayes to be Well-doing 631 Whisperers Vide Bac●biters 216 217 Wicked Wickednesse What Wicked men in particular are not under mercie 354 God doth oft suffer his children to live among Wicked men 391 In what case we may converse with wickedmen 392 Wife Sixteene motives for Husbands and Wives to live together quietly in marriage 576 Five speciall causes of disorder betweene Husband and Wife 577 Why the Apostle is so large in setting down the Wives duty 579 Eight reasons of the Wives subjection 581 In what 582 How and in what cases not ibid. Particular sins of the Wife in case of subjection 583 What meanes a Wife must use to win her Husband 595 596 Chastity in marriage is specially charged on the Wife 596 How chaste wife may be discerned 597 Wherein Wives should shew their feare to their Husbands 601 602 What is a Wives best ornament 627 Obedience and reverence are a Wives ornaments 628 Will. The Will of God is first Personall secondly Essentiall First Legall secondly Evangelicall 451 Gods Word is his Will in two respects 452 The Will is the rule of our actions 452 Whether a Christian can exactly doe Gods Will 453 Winne Divers kinds of Winning 590 What a Minister must doe to win soules 591 To be won what it 〈◊〉 ibid. Why all are not won at once 592 By what meanes we may win wicked men in our conversation 594 Wise Wisedome Why many Wise men are rather confounders than founders in grace and goodnesse 296 How the ignorant may herein notwithstanding be supported 297 Five waye 's we should shew forth the Wisdome of Christ 329 What this Wisedome must not have in is ibid. Woman In what things a Woman is more fraile than man 643 Word How powerfull 55 Vide Scripture How many wayes sin hinders the growth of the Word 200 How to be desired 221 How our affections to it may be discerned 222 Other signes of it ibid. c. Impediments thereof both externall and internall 223 224 Meanes to get desire to it 225 How to preserve our desires to it 226 Foure motives of getting it 227 How farre wicked men may desire the Word 230 The sweetnesse of the Word 240 Rules for applying the Word aright 288 When and how a man is said to be offended at the Word 310 The Word must be the warrant for all our actions 422 Its praise 189 The only outward meanes to beget the seed of grace in us 190 Eight things needfull in us to heare the Word of God as the Word of God ibid. How the Word is said to live 191 Sixe wayes to shew the life of the Word in our conversation ibid. c. Gods Word should be our maine care 199 The power of the Word Preached 200 Workes How men shall be judged according to their Workes 129 130 How infants 130 How poore men 131 Manifold distinctions of Gods works 148 How wonderfull Gods Workes are 274 The uses of it 275 To be a Worker of iniquity signifies three things 397 Wherein Workes are good 398 Rules to be observed in doing good Works 399 400 The divers kinds of good Works 400 401 How any man that is not absolutely good can be said to doe good Workes 401 402 What Workes are good for 402 How a man may lose his Workes 403 What Works may and ought to bee shewed 404 We should by good workes silence the wicked 454 World Contempt of the World shewed in foure things 331 Worship Actions about Gods Worship of two sorts 432 433 Many defects in Gods Worship 548 Wrongs Reasons against righting Wrongs by our owne private revenge 498 We may not in some cases resist but endure Wrongs ibid. To suffer Wrongs is profitable ibid. Places of Scripture herein expounded occasionally GEnesis 10. ver 9. p. 428 Exodus 26. ver 8. p. 98 Leviticus 14. à ver 4. ad 32. p. 165 ad 173. Cap. 16. ver 12 13 17 p. 26 Numbers 19. à ver 1 2. ad 7. p. 23. Psalme 19. ver 10. p. 240 Psalme 119. ver 103. ibid. Psalme 145. ver 8 9. p. 32 Proverbs 15. ver 30. p. 447 448 Proverbs 22. ver 1. p. 447 Esay 53. ver 7. ibid. Jeremiah 11. ver 19. ibid. Matthew 16. ver 18. p. 250 John 1. ver 29. 36. 147 Acts 5. ver 10 28 29. p. 435 Acts 17. ver 30. p. 127 Romans 2. ver 10. p. 449 Romans 12. ver 3. p. 104 2 Cor. 2. ver 14 15. p. 241 Ephesians 4. ver 17 18. p. 458 1 Thess. 5. ver 15. p. 686 Hebrewes 4. ver 12. p. 55 Hebrewes 12. ver 9. p. 374 2 Epist. Johan ver 8. p. 593 FINIS Verse 1. PETER an Apostle of Iesus Chr to the strangers scattred throughout Pontus Galatia Capadocia Asia Bithinia Verse 2. Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience and sprinckling of the blood of Iesus Christ Grace unto you and peace be multiplied Verse 3. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which according to his aboundant me●cy hath begotten us a●aine unto a lively hope by the resurrecti●n of Jesus Christ from the dead Verse 4. To an inhe●●●ance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you Verse 5. Who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time Verse 6. Wherein yee greatly rejoice though now for a season if neede be you are in heavinesse through manifold tentations Verse 7. That the tryall of your faith being much more precious then of gold that perisheth though it be tryed by the fire might be sound unto praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. Verse 8 Whom having not seene yee love in whom though now yee see him not yet beleeving yee rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory Verse 9. Receiving the end of your faith even the salvation of your soules Verse 10. Of which salvation the Prophets have inquired and searched diligently who prophesied of the grace that should come unto you Verse 11. Searching what or what manner of time the spirit of Christ which was in them did signifie when it testified before hand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow Ver 12. Vnto whom