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A89915 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of writers, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seuen yeeres weeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1617 (1617) STC 4217; ESTC S107140 703,811 512

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Two sorts of Christians some are feeble in the Knowledge and Grace of God There are strong Christians and weake infants and men of riper age It is profitable more exactly to consider of both and in the weake Christian I consider 1. Who are weake 2. What helpes to make them strong in the might of God For the better vnderstanding of the first I propound three things 1. What the Infant or weake Christian wanteth by which hee discouers his weakenesse 2. What he hath notwithstanding his wants 3. The happinesse of his estate though he be weake They are but Babes and infants in Grace 1. Who are Infants in grace That know not the loue of Christ with particular distinct and full assurance ſ Ephes 3 19.20.17 2. That are not able to practise the more strong and purging duties of mortification t Math 9.15 c. 3. That serue any passion and vnruly affection u 1 Cor 3.1.2.3 4. That are vnsetled in the way of life x Iohn 14.5 and tost with the winde of contrarie doctrine y Ephes 14. 5. That sticke at acknowledgement and dare not stand out to the profession of the truth z Ephes 4.13 6. That cannot digest some truths of God as being strong meate and in their account hard sayings 7. That are inexpert and vnskilfull in the word of righteousnesse a Heb 5.12.13 especially if they be ignorant in the principles * Iohn 6.60 16.22 other signes may bee gathered from the contrarie estate of the strong Christian afterwards What the weake Christian hath 2 Yet the weakest Christian whatsoeuer hee wants hath these things 1. Hee discernes the season of Grace and the day of his peace and redemption which the wise-men of the world doe not b Math. 16.3 2. Though in his owne account hee can doe but little for the truth yet hee will bee sure to doe nothing against the truth if hee may know it c 2 Cor 13.8 3. Hee is not in the flesh hee is more then a naturall man hee is borne againe d 1 Cor 15.50 Iohn 3.5 Rom 8.8 4. Hee hath an earnest appetite and constant desire after the sincere milke of the Word e 1 Pet. 2.2 5. Hee beleeues whiles hee struggles with vnbeliefe 6. The strong man armed which is the Diuell is so cast out by Christ that hee preuailes not as hee was wont 7. He can deny his reason pleasures profits and beloued sinnes and take vp his Crosse in some measure f Luke 14.26.27.33 Lastly such a dore may bee opened to them that haue little strength as no man can shut and such courage they may haue that they will sticke to the word and keepe it as their best treasure whatsoeuer they lose and by no meanes be induced to deny Christ and his Name g Reuel 2.8.9 His happines though he be weake 3. His case is happy though weake for hee hath such a High Priest and Sauiour as knowes how to haue compassion on the ignorant h Heb. 5.2 and is touched with a feeling of his infirmities i Heb. 2.18 and hath wrought the reconciliation of all his brethren and was tempted himselfe and therefore will succour the weake when hee is tempted k Heb. 2.18 and will see to it that more shall not bee laide vpon him then hee is able to beare l 1 Cor 10. it being his charge and office to prouide that the bruised Reede be not broken or the smoaking Flaxe quenched till iudgement be brought foorth vnto victory And at all times the weakest Christian may goe boldly to the throne of Grace and obtaine mercy to helpe in time of neede m Heb. 4. vlt. Helpes for the weake Christian The helpes for strengthening of the weake are of two sorts some without vs some to be vsed by vs. Without vs there are many things that may strengthen and incourage and animate the weake 1. There is proposed a glorious inheritance to them that ouercome 2. We haue the example of all the Saints 3. We haue a strong and sure foundation n 2 Tim. 2.19 4. We haue a strong God and his power is engaged to exercise it selfe in our weakenesse and to keepe vs vnto saluation without falling till hee present vs faultlesse before the presence of his glory o Iud 24. 1 Pet 1 5. 2 Cor 12.9 5. Wee haue a strong word of God able to builde vs vp and make vs wise and saue our soules p Acts 20.32 2 T●m 3.16 Iames 1.21 as being Gods Arme and mightie instrument of his power q 1 Cor. 1.18 Rom. 1.10 6. The spirit of God is a Spirit as of Grace so of Power r 2 Tim 1.7 and helpeth the weake as in Prayer ſ Rom. 8.26 so in euery Dutie and grace 7. Wee haue a strong Sauiour Christ doth strengthen and incourage the Christian three waies first by his owne example becomming a patterne to vs to follow secondly by application for vnto all that lay hold on him by Faith hee is a Priest after the power of endlesse life t Heb 7.16 the Wisedome of God and the Power of God u 1 Cor 1.24 thirdly by operation for hee hath borne our infirmities by his one offering hee hath and doth consecrate and make perfect our persons and workes in Gods sight x Heb 2.10 he doth vnite vs to the Father y Ioh. 17.21.23 hee giues vs his Fathers glory both in that he giues vs such Graces as will bring to glory and in that hee giues vs credit where himselfe and the Father are in credit Thus of the helpes without vs. If any aske in the second place what wee must doe that wee may bee strengthened I answere 1. Wee must pray for Knowledge and Faith to discerne and beleeue Gods power and promise Ephes 1.8 c. And in the fourth of that Epistle there are fiue things more to be done that wee may attaine to a ripe age in Christ first wee must subiect our selues to bee taught and wrought vpon by such Teachers as are set ouer vs by Christ 2. Wee must resolue and settle our selues in the doctrine of the foundation and the Principles of truth that wee bee not tossed to and fro with euery winde 3. Wee must so be satisfied with the voyce of Christ in our Teachers that we cast aside all respects of the voice of strangers not opening our ●●res willingly to the sleights of cunning men that will lie in waite to deceiue vs. 4. We must take heede of personall discords with any that feare God following the truth in loue 5. Wee must mutually striue to yeeld and seeke helpe to and of one another that euery ioynt in this mysticall body according to the measure of the part may supply and make vp the increase of the body by vertue of vnion with the Head and communion with the Members
couering of their faults auoiding of occasions of scandall a louing composing of our selues in matters of wrong and a daily and cheerefull association with them Thus farre of the gratious branches of Christian Loue. Now the manner how wee should loue Gods children is to bee considered Math 19 19. 22 39. Foure things in the manner of our loue 1 Pet 2.22 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 first in generall we should loue then as our selues and therefore in all our dealings to doe as wee would bee done by wee are to loue man in measure viz as our selues but God aboue measure But to consider of the manner of our loue more specially the particulars may bee referred to the foure heades mentioned 1 Pet. 2.22 First wee must loue brotherly that is not as we loue our beasts or as wee loue strangers or as wee loue our enemies but as wee would loue our dearest naturall brother with all tendernesse and naturalnesse of our affection Secondly wee must loue without faining without hypocrisie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 12.9 1 Iohn 3.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and this is explicated to bee not in word and tongue but in deedes and in the truth not onely truely for it cannot bee a true loue vnlesse it arise from a holy agreement in the truth Thirdly it must bee with a pure heart and then we loue with a pure heart first when our affection is grounded vpon knowledge and iudgement Phil. 1.9 secondly when it is expressed in a Spirit of meekenesse Thirdly when it is free from wrath or aptnesse to be offended from enuie from pride 1 Corinth 4 21. and swelling and boasting from selfe loue when men seeke not their owne things 1 Cor. 13.4.5 and from euill suspitions Fourthly when it is exercised in holy things 1 Cor. 13.6 so as no affection can make vs reioyce in the wickednesse of them we loue Fiftly when it is manifested in long-suffering and all-suffering when we beleeue 1 Corinth 13.7 all things and hope all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lastly wee must loue feruently and this hath in it Speedinesse a Prou. 3.28 Diligence b 1 Thes 1 13. called Labour in loue c Heb. 6.10 Cheerefulnesse d 2 Cor. 9.17 Earnestnesse and heate of affection and this is to follow after Loue e Galat 5.13 1 Thessal 3.12 and to the end it is without interruption f Ephes 5.2.3 Motiues Math. 24. Now because these are the last daies wherein the most haue no Christian Loue at all and many haue lost the affection they had so as their Loue is growne colde and the most euen of the children of GOD in all places are exceedingly wanting to their owne comfort and spirituall content in the neglect of the duties of Loue one to another but especially in the duties of a holy fellowship and mutuall societie in the GOSPELL and the rules of Clemencie and that men might bee kindled with some sparkes of desire to redeeme the time and gaine the comforts they haue lost and seeke the blessings of GOD in a holy Societie I haue thought good in the second place to propound out of the Scriptures Motiues as they lie heere and there scattered in the holy Writings to incite and perswade all sorts of men especially Professours to a more conscionable respect of this mutuall loue From example The first Motiue may be taken from Example and that both of God and CHRIST God made his infinite Loue apparant to vs in that hee sent his onely begotten Sonne into the world that wee might beleeue in him and hee might bee a reconciliation for our sinnes 1 Ioh. 4.9.10.11 and therefore ought wee to loue one another yea so to loue one another Shall the most high GOD fasten his loue vpon vs that are so many thousand degrees below him and shall not wee loue them that are our equalls both in Creation and Regeneration Shall the Lord be contented to respect with an appearing loue and shall we thinke it enough to carry good affections to our brethren without manifestation of the outward signes and pledges of it Was there nothing so deare vnto GOD as his Sonne and did hee giue vs his Sonne also to assure vs of his loue and shall the loue of the Saints be euer by vs any more accounted a burthensome and costly loue Hath God sent his Sonne out of heauen into the world and shall we stie our selues vp and not daily runne into the company of the members of CHRIST Was CHRIST sent that wee might haue the life of Grace in holy and heauenly and mysticall vnion and shall not wee as fellow-members in all the duties of a Christian societie stirre vp nourish and increase that life so giuen Note As Sinceritie is the life of Religion so Society is the life of Sinceritie Was Christ giuen a reconciliation for our sinnes and shall not wee striue to ouercome one another in the religious temper of our affections and the free and willing couering or forgiuing of trespasses and wrongs Our Head our Sauiour our Lord our Prophet our Priest our King that wee might perceiue his loue laid downe his life for vs 1 Ioh. 3.16 and should not wee imitate so incomparable an example though it were to lay downe our liues one for another From Commandement The second Motiue is from Commandement it is not a thing arbitrarie for vs to loue our brethren as is before expressed Curtesie peaceablenes liberalitie society and clemency are not things we may shew or not shew at our pleasures but they are necessarie such as if they be wanting a sin is committed nay grieuous sins euen against the commandement of Christ Ioh. 13. Iohn 13.34 As I said to the Iewes whither I go can ye not come so to you also I say now a new commandement giue I you that ye loue one another euen as I loued you Hee shewes here that whereas they might be grieued that they should loose Christs bodily presence he had appointed them a course for their solace and that was instead of Christ as fellow-members in Christs absence in the world to striue by all meanes to delight themselues in louing society one with another And this Commandement he calls a new Commandement not in respect of the matter of the duty for that was alwaies required but in respect of the forme of obseruing it for the old generall rule was That thou shouldest loue thy neighbour as thy selfe but now that forme as I haue loued you hath in it somthing that is more expresse and for the incomparable sufficiencie of the president is matchlesse and more full of incitations to fire affection Againe the person that giues it and the time is to be considered I now giue this commandement Men are vsed that haue any sparks of good nature in them to remember and carefully to obserue the last words of their dying friends especially
as well as they For we haue the spirit of God in vs and the people of God round about vs. Heere also Ministers may take notice of their duties their spirits should cleaue to their people and their daily thoughts and cares should runne vpon them they should still obserue them and watch ouer them in the Lord. Ob. 2. But might some one say Is it charitie in the Apostle being thus absent to entertaine surmizes and hard thoughts of vs as if wee were falling away c. Now to this he answers that though he wrote this to exhort them and to warne them yet he did greatly reioyce to know so much as hee did of their order of life and stedfastnesse of faith Many are so diseased that they thinke if a man reprooue them or admonish them that then hee hates them altogether and likes nothing in them but the Apostle to preuent that acknowledgeth the praise of their life and faith A holy minde can reioyce in the good things of those he warneth or reprooueth Your order Order hath originall in God he is the God of order a 1 Cor. 14.33 as all disorder and confusion is of the Diuell Order is that wonderfully commends whatsoeuer it is in There is a kinde of seede of order sowen in the creatures This order in man is their eutaxie or well disposing of themselues The Apostle might commend their order generally both in relation to the common-wealth and to the Church and in their families as also in their particular conuersation That there might be order in Common-wealths Of order in the common-vvealth God hath set man in authoritie for by him Kings raigne and haue their power b Prou. 8. Rom. 13. and hath communicated a part of the honour of his owne diuine lawes to their ciuill lawes viz. That they should binde mens consciences so farre as they are not disagreeing from his word Besides hee hath recorded threatnings against the disobedient and acknowledgeth Magistrates to beare his image to be as it were Gods by representation and hee guides them by his spirit for the time many times qualifying them with gifts and guiding their mouthes in iudgement for a diuine sentence is in the mouth of a King yea hee himselfe drew a plat-forme of rules for Common-weales to giue them a taste of gouernment Now that men may attaine to this Eutaxie and good order in Common-weales they must reade the law of God and let that bee a generall guide to them and they must propound sanctitie as well as felicitie as the end of their gouernment and in calling to office they must be carefull not to set the feet where the head should be but to chuse men that feare God and hate couetousnesse and are men of courage The feare of God and courage is wonderfully wanting in all sorts of Magistrates And as for courage in respect of the people what are they the better if they haue a good man that will doe no good then if they had euill men that would doe no euill Yet in truth Magistrates whether good or euill men doe much euill by suffering euill to be vnpunished But to returne to the point Magistrates that would preserue order must giue good example themselues and mend the disorders of their one households and bring such a sympathie and loue of the people as they should both preserue their authoritie and yet remember that they rule their brethren And in their gouernment they cannot obserue order vnlesse they punish vice as well as command or prouide for vertue and wealth Besides they must take away the persons or places that are occasions of disorder and they must charge and remunerate as well as punish Finally the people out of the obligation of conscience must striue to liue in order with reuerence and feare yeelding ready obedience and furtherance to those that are placed in authority ouer them Order in the Church There is order also in the Church and thus there is order in doctrine for milke must be propounded before strong meat or with sufficient reference to the parties to be taught There is order also to be obserued in the time places and manner of celebration of Gods worship There is order also to be respected in the vse of things ecclesiastically indifferent There is order in the subordination of persons in the ministery some to rule some to teach some to exhort some to distribute There is order also to be obserued in the discipline of the Church proceeding by degrees with offenders so long as they are cureable Order in the family Neither may our families be without order order I say not only in the duties that concerne the maintenance of the familie but also in the exercises that concerne religion and the seruice of God in the familie In families there must be a care also of reformation especially that openly prophane persons only for temporall aduantage bee not retained or admitted there In the familie also there must bee a daily exercise of patience humilitie knowledge and all other Christian graces that concerne mutuall edification What should I say There is a mutuall relation in all the members of the familie one to another and the discharge of their seuerall duties one to another is charged with a daily care of order But I thinke the Apostle commends the order of holy life vnto which euery Christian is bound It is certaine we can neuer soundly proceed in godlinesse without a care of a settled frame and order of liuing Wee may not liue at a venture in religion T is not enough to doe good now or then by flashes There is an order in holy conuersation We must walke by rule d Gal. 6.16 There is an holy disposing of our waies required e Psal 50. vlt. It is required of vs that we should ponder the pathes of our feet f Pro. 4.26 Wee must order our affaires with discretion g Psal 112.5 This is called the way of prudence or vnderstanding There is a guiding of our feet vnto the wayes of peace i Luke 1.79 T is a wonderfull curse to be left to our securitie to walke in darke and vncertaine wayes and contrariwise the vision of the saluation of God is promised to such as dispose of their wayes aright k Psal 51. vlt. And to bee carefull of an orderly course of life is to keepe our soules l Pro. 19.16 and peace shall be vnto such But alas men haue corrupted their wayes and their vnderstandings are darkned and they are strangers from the life of God neither will men cease from their rebellious wayes The ciuillest men walke after the way of their owne hearts yea the most men hate those that are right in their wayes and are like Dan that would bite the heeles of such as endeuour to walke in sincerity Some hypocrites there are that will know the way of the Lord and aske of him the ordinance of iustice as
Rules to bee looked vnto after our calling Wouldest thou be sure not to fall away Then looke to these things 1. Be sure thou continue in the carefull vse of the meanes as the word praier conference and Sacraments else know that when once thou giuest way to a customarie hardnesse of heart in the vse of the meanes or neglect of them thou art neere either some great sinne or temptation or some great iudgment and apostacie and therefore concerning the meanes principally looke to two things 1. preserue appetite 2. practise that thou hearest without omission or delay 2. If thou discerne any spirituall weaknesse or decay or feele any combat with the flesh or the tentations of Satan be sure thou complaine betimes and resist at the first for then the grace of God will be sufficient and the weapons of our warfare mightie through God praier will easily master sinne at the first through the victorie in Iesus Christ 3. Resolue with thy selfe not to let goe thy assurance or cast away the confidence of thy hope whatsoeuer befall thee or at least Heb. 10.36 not till thou maiest see wonderfull euident reason It is a maruellous great fault to call the loue of God into question vpon euery occasion whereas men cannot glorifie God more then to liue by faith and to be vnmoueable in it God takes little delight in a soule that will withdraw it selfe vpon euery occasion by vnbeleefe Are they not strangely foolish that will weare their helmets when there is no stirre and as soone as they see an aduersarie or any blowes towards then to cast away their helmet and doe it so vsually Such are we and worse that stand bragging of our faith and hope in prosperitie and ease and when affliction and temptation comes then most childishly we cast away both faith hope and till reason and sense are satisfied we will not be perswaded 4. Set perfection before thine eyes to striue after it and to this end acquaint thy selfe with the rules of holy life Phil. 3. and consider the examples of such as haue walked therein and the wofull euents that befall the contrary minded especially thinke much of the great recompence of reward euen the price of our high calling in Iesus Christ 5. Take heed of the occasions of falling such as are spirituall pride knowne hypocrisie desire to be rich discord with the godly and vaine ianglings without discretion neglect of our particular callings and vngodly company Hitherto of pe●seuerance in life Now in the next verse hee intreateth of perseuerance in faith Vers 7. Rooted built vp in him stablished in the faith as you haue been taught IN these words is both a precept and a rule a precept to be rooted built stablished a rule as ye haue beene taught The substance of the precept is but to counsell them to increase more and more that they might be stedfast in the assurance of Gods fauour in Iesus Christ Of this stedfastnesse I haue at large intreated in the 5. verse Onely wee may here againe be instructed and informed 1. Of the necessitie and excellencie of stedfastnesse The Apostle would not thus often peale vpon it but that hee knew it to be of singular worth in the life of man and of great necessitie vnto our consolation besides it implies that people are for the most part slow-hearted herein and hardly drawne to the vnfained and diligent labour after the establishing of their faith and assurance 2. That all this stedfastnesse of assurance is not the worke of a day a great tree is not growne or rooted but successiuely a great house is not built all at once we must be euery day adding something to Gods worke that the building of grace may be in due time finished none are so established but they may grow in faith none haue such great roots but they may take root yet more many men striue hard to make their trees shew in branches and leaues I meane in outward profession in the world but alas what should this great bulke and so many branches and leaues doe vnlesse there were more roots within Yea many deare children of God mistake wonderfully they euery day carry together heapes of precepts for life but alas poore soules so great a building will not stand vnlesse they lay their foundation sure I meane that they get their faith in Christ the only sure foundation more confirmed and established As ye haue beene taught Note here the Apostles candor he doth not arrogate the glory of their establishment to himselfe but sendeth them to their Minister and teacheth them to depend vpon him to wait vpon the blessing of God vpon his labour and to acknowledge the good they haue to haue receiued by his ministerie Here diuers things may be noted 1. That the people should labour for a reuerend estimation of the doctrine they receiue from their faithfull teachers 2. That as faith commeth by hearing so doth the establishment of faith also 3. That it is wonderfull dangerous to neglect either the charge of our teachers when they vrge vs to assurance or the rules by which they guide vs out of the word of God for the attainment of it if wee would goe about it when our teachers call vpon vs the Lord would be with his ordinance to blesse it to vs wee should be afraid to delay when we are taught how to confirme our soules in faith and grace 4. The faithfull Ministers doe greatly labour to establish their hearers in the assurance of Gods fauour and the duties of holy life Abounding therein with thankesgiuing In these words the Apostle shuts vp all wherein his intent is to stirre them vp to thankfulnesse that as they did thriue in the meanes or matter of faith and holy life so they should glorifie God by all possible thankfulnesse for it as he would haue them abound in faith and holinesse so also in thankfulnesse to God This may wonderfully smite our hearts for if we obserue our wretched euill dispositions wee may finde that wee are wonderfully bent to the very habit of vnthankfulnesse and therefore it is iust with God many times that we doe no more thriue in victorie ouer our corruptions or in the power of diuers graces or in the progresse of duties because wee doe not more tenderly and constantly acknowledge the goodnesse of God we haue had experience of Oh that it were written vpon our hearts and grauen deepe in our memories that nothing becomes vs more then to abound in thankfulnesse no fairer sight then to see the Altar of the Lord couered with the calues of our lips neuer can the estate of a childe of God be such but hee hath exceeding great cause of thankfulnesse for his happinesse in Christ VERS 8. Beware lest there be any man that spoile you through philosophie and vaine deceit through the traditions of men according to the rudiments of the world and not after Christ The order of the rest
acknowledge God and his truth and glory against reason profit or pleasure to make a man walke with God setting the Lord alwaies before him to bring the will of man to a holy subiection to Gods will in crosses temptations wants c but especially to create in man that sinceritie of worshipping God in spirit and truth without hypocrisie And as for righteousnesse in that part of it that concernes either mens owne soules or the soules of others how is all the vnregenerate mankinde dead It is the worke of a godly man only to serue the brethren by loue onely the members of Christ can in their calling denie profit and pleasure and make the particular calling serue the generall but especially in the combat against concupiscence onely the godly doe make conscience of it And howsoeuer in the matter of holy duties there are strange imperfections in the very godly yet their desire prayer purpose and indeuour is to approue themselues to God herein and they do attaine to it in some comfortable beginnings and they go on with a holy increase both of strength and desire Whereas it is euident by diuers Scriptures that wicked men are dead men in the former respects as would appeare if we should examine particularly for they seeke not God * Psal 14.1 They respect not the word of God aright x Ier. 6.10 nor can they loue the brethren y Joh. 15.19 Though they be smitten yet they will not sorrow after God z Ier. 5.2 And for the most part they are lukewarme without true zeale a Reuel 3. Their mindes are couered with a vaile b Esay 25.8 They are without hope c Ephes 2.12 Neither haue all these men faith d 2 Thess 3.2 And for the want of holy duties it vsually seems euill vnto them to serue the Lord. They are strangers from the life of God e Ephes 4.17 They call not vpon the name of God f Psal 14.4 with a pure heart neither take they heede of Gods sabbaths But it were too long to runne to particulars in matters of dutie seeing the scripture euery where paints out the ill liues of all wicked men In whom Doctr. The vertue by which Christians are raised is from Christ Quest But what is therein Christ which distinctly causeth this resurrection in the Christian or plucketh vp his heart to the care of holy graces or duties Answ 1. The vertue of Christ 2. The spirit of Christ 3. The example of Christ 4. The intercession of Christ 5. The louing inuitations and allurements of Christ And 6. The resurrection of Christ And lastly the second comming of Christ is like a loadstone to plucke vp the desires and affections of Christians vnto the studie of heauenly things Thus of the doctrine of the Christians resurrection Vse For terror 1. Hence may presumptuous secure wilfull sinners gather secret terror and anguish where is thy spirituall buriall in this life where is the first resurrection It is most certaine if this worke this strange worke be not wrought in thee thou art in the power of the second death without God without Christ without hope And here thou maiest see the vanitie of all thy shifts for dost thou say thou seest no such wretchednesse in thy sinnefull course why this doctrine tels thou art dead whiles thou liuest and how canst thou discerne thine owne wretchednesse dost thou thinke that this will serue thy turne that thou intendest to mend hereafter consider what is here implied the worke of true amendment is a true but spirituall resurrection T is then like that resurrection that shall be of our bodies and thou knowest when God shall raise our bodies at the last day when the trump shall blow it will be a silly pretence to say Oh let me alone now I will rise hereafter So is it with thee the trumpet of grace now bloweth Christ is now comming in the spirit the dead in sinne must now be raised Christs voice still reacheth vnto thee now if thou confirme thy selfe in that spirituall graue of sinne dost thou thinke thou hast reason to beleeue that Christ will tarry thy leisure and to put off till ●hou appoint the time For comfort to afflicted consciences 2. Here is singular comfort for such of Gods children as are afflicted in spirit especially about the greatnesse of the power of sinne and the difficulties of well-doing they should here consider not onely that it is Christs worke to make them holy but that he is pleased to resemble it to the resurrection of the bodie and can it be a harder thing to put downe thy sinne or to quicken thee in all well-doing then to raise thy body out of the dust of the earth Neither ought their terrors to amaze them for it is Christs manner to bring vs downe to the graue that he may raise vs vp the feare of hell now afflicteth thee that thou maist not be hurt hereafter Besides sinne doth so cleaue to vs that it will almost kill vs before we kill it Obiect But I doe not see either the graces or duties mentioned to be wrought in this resurrection Answ 1. There may be grace though thou see it not 2. If one sauing grace be in a mans heart it is a signe the rest be there though not so easily discerned 3. The spirituall age of a Christian must be distinguished thou must not think that the graces of Gods spirit or the power of holy duties will appeare so freshly or so strongly in thee whiles thou art but an infant in grace as they will doe when thou commest to be of riper yeares Lastly thy indeuour in Christ and desire is accepted and taken for the deede what graces thou vnfeinedly desirest and constantly vsest the meanes to attaine thou hast so the sinne thou striuest against thou hast not Thus of these effects as they are in themselues now as they are in their signe which is here called baptisme By baptisme Baptisme is a holy memoriall of Christ baptised in the seas of Gods wrath for vs. It is a badge of distinction from vnbeleeuers The ends of baptisme It is a certaine initiating rite by which we enter into the visible Church It is a seale of the righteousnes of faith It is a signe to teach vs by representation both our deliuerance and sanctification Quest But what hath baptisme to doe here with our mortification Three vvaies baptisme respecteth mortification and viuification and viuification or spirituall buriall and resurrection Answ Baptisme stands in a threefold relation or respect vnto them 1. In signification baptisme doth represent them vnto vs setting out our dying to sinne and rising to newnesse of life 2. By seale for baptisme is a seale of Gods couenant assuring vs that in Christ we shall be buried to our sinnes and raised vp with him 3. It is a band it ties vs to the desires and indeuours after the beginning and finishing of these
There are many other benefits signified and assured vnto vs by baptisme The benefits signified in baptisme then these here mentioned for baptisme doth signifie seale vnto vs 1. Our deliuerance from the seas of Gods wrath g Mat. 3.8 1 Pet. 3.21 2. The resurrection of our bodies h 1 Cor. 15. 3. Our communion with the whole Trinitie i Matth. 28. 4. Our adoption k Gal. 3.27 5. Our communion with the Saints l 1 Cor. 12.13 6. Remission of all sinnes m Act. 2.38.39 Baptisme is auaileable for these respects when we amend our liues and confesse our sinnes n Math. 3.38 and gladly receiue the word o Cant. 2.41 and lay hold vpon the promises of grace p Mar. 16.16 especially when the conscience maketh request vnto God q 1 Pet. 3.21 for the application and fruition of the things signified by baptisme Hitherto of the effects The causes follow 1. Faith 2. The operation of God 3. Christs resurrection Through the faith of the operation of God The faith that is mighty through God to make baptisme effectuall and to raise vs vp after the buriall of sinne is neither historicall nor temporary nor of miracles but that which is in scriptures called the faith of Gods elect and by Diuines iustifying faith Nor is it enough to bring hither the perswasion of Gods mercy in Christ which is the first and chiefe act of iustifying faith but we must beleeue the power of God in the particular successe of the meanes for effecting both of mortification and viuification which as I suppose is here meant What faith doth in baptisme where he calleth it the faith of the operation of God Quest But shew vs how faith hath to doe in baptisme or in sanctification Answ In baptisme faith is needfull not onely the faith of explication but also the faith of application for we are bound not onely to beleeue that those things there shadowed out are so as they import but that also they are fulfilled not onely to the faithfull in generall but to my owne soule in particular And for sanctification faith must needs be of great vse for without faith The vse of faith about sanctification nothing we do can please God r Heb. 11.6 And by faith Christ liues in vs Å¿ Gal. 5.20 It quencheth the fiery darts of the deuill t Ephes 6.16 It lightneth our darknes u Ioh. 12.46 It purifieth the heart * Act. 15.9 It ouercomes the world x 1 Ioh. 5.4 It breeds ioy and consolation y Rom. 5.2 And loue to Gods children z Gal. 6. It maketh the Scripture auaileable to saluation a 2 Tim. 3.15 And lastly our prayers to be such as God cannot denie b Mat. 21.22 Hovv vve may come to beleeue the effects of baptisme Quest How may we attaine to it to beleeue that baptisme doth signifie and assure these things to vs Answ 1. Labour to expresse that which on thy part is required that is set vp the confession of thy sinnes and amendment of thy life 2. Then goe vnto God and let thy conscience make request for the answer of the spirit of adoption by which the Lord may assure thee that in the mediation of Iesus Christ thy baptisme is giuen to thee as a particular seale of Gods couenant and grace Quest But how may I doe to be assured that my sinnes shall be subdued and that I shall be raised vp in holy graces and duties Answ 1. Acquaint thy selfe with Gods promises of this kinde and grow skilfull in them 2. Cry strongly to God for the testimonie of Iesus in thy heart that by his spirit hee would settle thee in this perswasion 3. Waite vpon the word and prayer till God doe effect it 4. Strengthen thy selfe both by the experience of others as also with due obseruation of successe in the subduing of any sinne or the exercise of any graces or duties Vses The vses may be diuers First for information we may here see how vaine the common faith of the common Protestant is shew me thy faith by thy fruits how canst thou beleeue aright and yet thy sinnes not mortified and thy heart and life vnsanctified Againe we see we haue not comfort of our baptisme till the power of holinesse in some measure appeare in our liues Secondly for instruction we should all examine our selues whether we haue faith or no and whiles we haue meanes of assurance make vse of all aduantages to settle our hearts in the faith and to this end we should deliuer vp our soules to be nursed vp in the words of faith and wholesome doctrine Lastly we might here be greatly comforted if we had true faith we see God can denie nothing vnto faith it should be to vs in the sacraments in mortification Three rules if vve vvould reason from Gods povver to the effect and in graces and duties according to our faith Of the operation of God The doctrine of Gods power and working is of singular vse in the Church great is the interest of Gods seruants in his power and therefore great cause they haue to rest vpon it The elect onely can reason from Gods power to the effect he is able to doe it therefore he will do it but then these three things must be noted 1. They must be beleeuers that looke for this priuiledge 2. They must bring a particular faith to draw out this power of God into operation 3. It will not be set a worke about euery thing but such things for which there is promise or meete examples in the scriptures * In vvhat things vvee may beare our selues vpon Gods povver Now it is a matter of singular weight to know in what things we may haue warrant to beare our selues vpon the power of God The power of God is engaged for operation in foure things for the benefit of the faithfull First in their afflictions Secondly in their temptations Thirdly in the difficulties of holy life Fourthly in his ordinances In afflictions God hath bound himselfe to shew his power 1. In giuing strength to endure them c Phil. 4.13 Esay 41.10 2. In moderating the afflictions to their strength d Esay 27.7 3. In guiding them to the right ends e Job 36.22 Esay 27.11 Zach. 13.9 4. In deliuerance out of them f Psal 71.20 Esay 43. If we looke vpon the enemies of the godly in particular God shewes his power 1. In restraining or disappointing them g Iob 12.16 Esay 54.16 17. 2. In rewarding and ouerthrowing them h Exo. 15.6 7 Esay 42.13 41.15 So likewise in temptations the power of God though it be secret yet it is wonderfull in dissoluing the works of the deuill and in vpholding his seruants and destroying the strong holds and fortifications of Satan i 1 Cor. 10.12 2 Cor. 12.9 Esay 27.1 Thirdly in the difficulties of holy life the
in this work beares the Image of Christ and in him Christ riseth before our eyes not onely because the Lord Iesus doth in this gracious worke giue vs a daily and fresh remembrance of his resurrection by renewing such fruits of it but also because he imprinteth a secret kinde of heauenly mindednesse the Christian in some weake measure liuing as Christ did in the interim betweene his resurrection and ascension waiting alwayes for his exaltation into heauen Now the consideration of this worke is heere vsed by the Apostle to perswade vnto the meditation of heauenly things and that fitly for if wee bee risen as Christ was then we must bee minded as hee was now wee know that after hee was risen againe hee was not encumbred with this world nor did he conuerse with the men of this world but liued with the Lord as it were immediately in a heauenly manner waiting for Heauen so should a Christian doe he should euery day bee striuing to get vp his heart by faith and prayer and meditation and voluntary abnegation by all meanes begging and seeking the vertue of Christs resurrection that being enabled to forsake the world and the vnnecessary society with worldly men he might haue his heart and conuersation in heauen euery day waiting when the time of his changing should come Quest How may a man know whether he be risen with Christ Ans Hovv a man may knovv vvhether he be risen vvith Christ Who are not risen vvith Christ This question may bee resolued both negatiuely and affirmatiuely For first they are not risen with Christ that are in bondage to traditions as the coherence with the latter end of the former chapter shewes nor they that are drowned and made sencelesse with the cares of this life or the pleasures of voluptuous liuing i Luk. 21.34 nor they that confirming themselues in a dead presumptuous common hope plead the abounding of Gods grace to auouch their continuance in sinne k Rom. 6.1.4.5 1 Pet. 1.3 For the Apostle in the Epistle to the Romans vseth a reason taken from our conformity to the resurrection of Christ to confute this vicious and prophane plea of carelesse men Further they that worship the Beast the great Antichrist of Rome and receiue his marke vpon their foreheads or their hands are reckoned among the dead men that haue not their part in this first resurrection l Reu. 20.4.5.6 Also the Prophet Esay seemes to say that such men as will not see Gods high hand of Iudgement nor will learne to doe vprightly in the land of vprightnesse nor can bee allured to godlinesse though mercy be shewed them are to bee accounted among the dead men that shall not liue m Esa 26.9.10.14 Lastly they are not risen with Christ that doe not beleeue in Christ n Joh. 11.25 Now for the affirmatiue They may haue comfort in the first resurrection that haue felt a diuine power in the voyce of Christ quickning their hearts with effectuall desire and endeauour to rise out of the graues of sinne o Ioh. 5.25 and to stand vp from the world of the dead p Eph. 5.14 2. That are constantly affected with an holy estimation of the knowledge of Christ crucified and risen againe an effectuall knowledge I meane valuing the meanes and signes of it aboue all earthly things q Phil. 3.9.10 3. That finde their hearts changed from the cares and delights of this life to a constant desire of the second comming of Christ to translate them to the presence of glory in heauen 4. That shew a daily care to walke in newnesse of life yeelding their members as weapons of righteousnesse striuing to crucifie the olde man and destroy the body of sinne as they that are aliue vnto God r Rom. 6.4 5.6.13 2. Againe in that the Apostle saith if yee bee risen againe with Christ seeke those things that are aboue wee may note that it is as hard a thing to get vp the heart of men to the study of heauenly things as to lift vp a massie corps out of the graue and to inspire it with the desire of life As easie to reuiue a dead man as persvvade a carnall man there is neede of the spirit and power of Iesus to doe it And therefore wee should not wonder to see naturall men so heartlesse nor should we attribute it to any inefficacy in the meanes if carnall men bee not perswaded for a man may long perswade a dead man to rise before he will get vp and it should touch vs with all thankfulnesse to acknowledge Gods mercy if he haue giuen vs a minde to heauenly things to desire them and delight in them Thirdly in that he saith if yee bee risen speaking not onely conditionally but doubtfully it imports that one should bee exceeding carefull to search and trie whether they haue their part as yet in this first resurrection and withall implyes that many a man may seeme to himselfe and others to bee deliuered from the kingdome of darknesse and yet lie buried still in the graues of sinne Seeke th●se things which are aboue Heere the Apostle enters vpon the proposition of the first maine exhortation or rule of new life Now before I bring in the Apostle vrging this duty imagine with thy selfe how farre the Christian thus now to bee instructed for order of life hath already proceeded by faith for before a man can bee truely capable of direction of life there bee diuers things requisite in the preparations of faith The preparations of faith before a man can be capable of directions of life And these things are necessarily to be presupposed 1. That faith hath plucked him out of the world of sinners or dead men so that hee is already withdrawen from the society of the wicked 2. It hath shewed him Gods fauour and ioyned him to Christ 3. It hath shewed him in some measure such things in the Kingdome of Christ as his naturall eare neuer heard nor his naturall eye neuer saw nor his naturall heart neuer conceiued ſ 1 Cor. 2.9 4. It hath ioyned him to the liuing Saints so as he now with great desire delight conuerseth with them 5. It hath made him to suffer in the flesh for his sins and withall hath refreshed his spirit and cured him of his distrustfull and solitary sorrowes 6. It hath garnished his soule with new budding graces and opened for him a fountaine and spring of grace within him euen in his bowels t Ioh. 7.38.39 7. It hath raised in him a true and constant desire of new obedience of life with a secret resolution not to depart from any thing the Lord shall command all the dayes of his life Now presupposing the Christian to bee thus farre proceeded the Apostle comes in and to beginne his institutions of manners hee first chargeth him with this rule Doct. Seeke those that are aboue teaching vs that the first maine thing to be
it should continually draw vp our thoughts to thinke of heauen whither so louing and so glorious a Sauiour is gone before Yea it should doe vs good to looke vp towards these visible heauens remembring that one day we shall be carried to that blessed place of rest and holy ioyes that is aboue them euen to the heauen of heauens to raigne with Christ for euermore And thus of the proposition VERS 2. Set your affections on things which are aboue and not on things which are on the earth THe exhortation in the former verse propounded is in this verse illustrated and expounded first by repetition seconly by the contrary The repetition is in these words Set your affections on things which are aboue The contrarie from which he doth dehort is in these words and not on things which are on earth Repetitions in Scripture are not without their vse The vse of repetitions in Scripture For thereby the holy Ghost vsually imports our slownesse and dulnesse of capacity in conceiuing and backwardnesse in practise and besides thereby enforceth both the necessity and the excellency of the matter so repeated And surely all three may be applyed to this repetition For the contemplation and desire after heauenly things is a most gracious ornament to a religious life and without some measure of holy affections it is vnpossible to get rid of the power of sinne or to practise with any successe or acceptation the duty of a renued life and if in any thing we are backward or wanting or decaying or languishing it is in this rule here giuen by the Apostle Set your affections The originall word varieth in signification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sometimes it is rendred to studie and it is out of question our dutie to study and contemplate of heauenly things Sometimes it signifieth to trie by tasting and it is sure that if carnall people had but once tasted of the sweetnesse of godlinesse and religious duties they would not so securely neglect the prouision for eternity but especially they would see that they haue spoken euill of what they knew not Sometimes it is translated to bee wise about a thing and certainely a Christian should bee wise in the matters of his religion and profession and shew it by forecast and diligence to compasse what may bee gotten of this true treasure and by serpentine discretion in the manner and circumstances of welldoing and by staydnesse in a Christian course voyd of passion rash zeale and fickle inconstancie growing more and more skilfull and cunning in the soundnesse of knowledge how with more power and spirituall aduantage to practise euery dutie or exercise euery grace Sometimes it signifieth to sauour of a thing and it is true that all the carriage and dealings of Christians should sauour of the things aboue but I take it as it is heere rendred Set your affections and so it manifestly teacheth vs that wee Vses 1 must get not mindes or thoughts onely but sound affections to heauenly things which may both serue for reproofe and comfort for reproofe I say both of the loathsome lukewarmensse of the most k Reu. 3.19 and of the dangerous Vses 2 losse of first loue in the better sort l Reuel 2. For comfort for it is certaine if thou canst finde thy heart vpright in affections and constant desire after heauenly things Three benefits of tender affections thou mayst bee assured of three things 1. That God will accept thy will for the deed He will beare with many wants and weaknesses where hee sees a man or woman come to his seruice with hearts desirous to doe their best and tenderly affected 2. That thou art not in danger of falling away for Apostasie neuer discouers it selfe to hurt vs or endanger vs till it hath stollen away our hearts and the care of affections in holy duties 3. That to that thou hast Matth. 13. more is and shall bee giuen as thy affections grow and continue so doth true knowledge grace and godlinesse grow also And thus of the repetition And not on the things that are on earth from the coherence and generall consideration of these words three things may be obserued Obs 1 1. That a man cannot both at once seeke and affect earth and heauen for they are heere disioyned and opposed Matth. 6. a man cannot serue God and mammon the loue of the world is the enmitie of God but this is thus to bee vnderstood Lam. 4.4 if the world be sought in the first place and with cheefe affection and care Obs 2 2. Nay more this dehortation implies that it is hard for a man to deale with the world but a mans affection will too much runne after it it is hard to bee much employed about profits and recreations but a man shall loue them too much Note Not that it is simply vnlawfull to vse the world but that wee should be very iealous of our selues to watch our owne hearts that our affections be not set on the world Obs 3 3. To be crucified vnto the world able to neglect and contemne the glory and pleasure of it is a notable signe that one is risen with Christ Thus in generall Three sorts of things on earth The things on earth The things on earth heere meant by the Apostle are either traditions mentioned in the former Chapter or worldly things in themselues lawfull or the workes of the flesh simply in themselues vnlawfull Traditions are for three reasons called things on earth Traditions and mans inuentions which the Apostle hath before taxed may well bee called things on earth 1. Because they spring from the earth and earthly minded men they were neuer inspired from God nor deuised by heauenly minded men 2. Because they hinder them that are deuoted to them from looking vp or attaining any insight in things that are aboue 3. Because these by effect make men more earthly and sensuall but of these in the former chapter The workes of the flesh and the corruptions of life to bee auoyded and not affected are the third sort of things on earth but of that also afterwards in the second part of the generall duties especially in the fifth verse So that the second sort of things on earth remaineth to bee more largely considered those are profits honours pleasures friends health and long life There be eight reasons to perswade not to affect earthly things Eight generall reasons to disswade from affecting things on earth The first may bee taken from the condition of man on earth For wee are heere but pilgrims and strangers m Heb. 11.13 and therefore being but in a strange place to what purpose should wee trouble our selues with more then what will serue our present need and the rather knowing that when wee come into our owne countrey these things will serue vs for no vse Besides our present lot lyeth not in those things but the Kingdome of God and righteousnesse is
the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ remembring you earnestly and constantly in our daily Prayers being exceedingly fired and inflamed since we heard by continuall and true report of your precious Faith by which you haue with firmenesse and stedfastnesse of assurance laide hold vpon IESVS CHRIST for life and righteousnesse and the rather because wee likewise heard of your holy affection to such as haue separated themselues from the prophanenesse of the world to the seruice of God especially considering that you haue not the glorious Faith of Christ in respect of persons but loue all the Saints as well as any And as a People not destitute of any sauing Grace Verse 5. For the hopes sake which is laid vp for you in heauen whereof ye haue heard before by the word of truth which is the Gospell wee reioyce to heare of that liuely hope by which you haue laid hold on the Promise of eternall glory which God the Father hath prepared and laide vp in Heauen And the more are we confirmed in this resolution constantly to praise GOD for these excellent Graces because they are not sodaine Fancies or presumptuous Conceits raised out of the Forge of your owne braine or conceiued for some corrupt or carnall ends but were indeede begotten in you by the mighty working of the most sweet Doctrine of Reconciliation proued in it selfe and by effect to be a Word of Truth euen that word of the LORD long foretolde now truely reuealed and accomplished also begetting the true forme of pietie in you with constancie and true vprightnesse both of heart and life Verse 6. Which is come vnto you euen ●s it is vnto all the world and ●s fruitful as it is also among you from the day that yee heard and truely knew the grace of God This is the word of Reconciliation which is come vnto you as by incredible power and swiftnesse it is now to the greatest part of the world euen to people of all sorts and Nations causing them to shew the soundnesse of their Conuersion by the daily fruits of amendment of life and this increaseth continually in all places as it doth and hath done with you since the very first day that you truely heard and effectually beleeued this rich Doctrine of the grace of GOD. Verse 7. As yee also learned of Epaphras our deare fellow seruant which is for you a faithfull Minister of Christ And this very Doctrine which you haue heard of Epaphras is the selfe same diuine truth that is gone all abroad the world of Epaphras I say whom wee all reuerence as our deare fellow-Seruant being assured that he is for your best good a faithfull and most humble Minister of Iesus Christ Verse 8. Who hath also declared vnto vs your loue which yee haue by the Spirit Verse 9. For this cause wee also since the day wee heard of it cease not to pray for you and to desire that yee might be fulfilled with knowledge of his will in all wisedome and spirituall vnderstanding Verse 10. That yee might walke worthy of the Lord please him in all things being fruitfull in all good workes and increasing in the knowledge of God Hee hath with great contentment boasted of you in reporting to vs your spirituall and heauenly affection to God and godlinesse and one towards another and for the same cause since the first time we heard of your praises in the Gospell wee haue beene importunate without ceasing praying for you and beseeching God to increase in you and make compleate your knowledge of his reuealed will not only for contemplation but for practise also with a gracious experience of the working of the Spirit That yee might carry your selues in a holy eminency of godly conuersation striuing to proportion your Obedience in a greater degree then ordinary as might become the great measure of Gods Mercies of all sorts towards you expressing a liuely kinde of pleasingnesse both in carriage towards God and man being refreshed with the sweetnes of acceptation in your seruices and that you might extend your carefulnesse to beare fruit not in one kinde or some few but in all kindes and sorts of good workes daily increasing in a holy acquaintance with the sacred nature of God which is both the effect and cause of all comfortable progresse in holy life Verse 11. Strengthened with all might through his glorious power vnto all patience and long-suffering with ioyfulnes That so growing vp to a ripe age in CHRIST in the sanctification both of soule and body and spirit in all the Graces and Duties of CHRIST and Christian life through the assistance of the glorious power of GOD in the vse of all meanes and helpes appointed of God yee might accomplish your most holy profession with singular comfort and contentment being able cheerefully and with all patience and Long-suffering to beare the Crosses Tentations Infirmities Persecutions and whatsoeuer Wrongs or Indignities might befall you waiting for the Promise of GOD being neuer weary of well-doing And as wee haue thought good thus to let you vnderstand our loue towards you and our reioycing for the prosperity of your soules Verse 12. Giuing thankes vnto the Father which hath made vs me●te to bee partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light so wee thought good to write vnto you both to put you in minde of the most holy doctrine of CHRIST as also to exhort and beseech you to be constant in the Faith and hope you haue receiued without listening to the entising speeches of false Teachers which as wicked Seducers would beguile your soules of that high prise of your most holy Calling What thankes can we euer sufficiently giue vnto GOD the Father of CHRIST and Christians that of his meere Grace and free Loue hath by a holy Calling made vs in his account meete to haue a Lot in that heauenly Canaan in that sweet and eternall fellowship with the spirits of the iust not onely reuealed vnto vs in this light of the Gospell but to be inioyed by vs in the light of Heauen And hath also already deliuered vs from that wofull estate Vers 13. Who hath deliuered vs from the power of darkenesse and hath translated vs into the Kingdome of his deare Sonne in which the darkenesse of Gentilisme and Sinne and Ignorance and Aduersitie and Death and Damnation had power ouer vs hath translated vs into the Kingdome of Iesus Christ the Son of his loue inrolling our names among the liuing and accounting vs as Subiects of this Kingdome of Grace and Heyres euen Coheyres with Christ of the glory to be reuealed And howsoeuer our Sanctification be as yet vnperfect Verse 14. In whom wee haue redemption through his bloud that is the forgiuenes of sinnes yet are we not onely bought with a price but effectually and truely redeemed and in some sort fully too for in our Iustification we are perfectly reconciled and all our sins absolutely forgiuen
84. How Gouernours in families may walke pleasingly and how inferiours in the familie may please their superiours and the like of Ministers and the people and Magistrates and their Subiects fol. 84. 85. Seauen things to be obserued if wee would walke in all pleasing towards our owne consciences fol. 85. What workes are not good workes and what rules must bee obserued to make our workes good and what workes in particular are goodworkes and seuen ends of goodworkes fol. 86. 87. What are the lets of increase of Knowledge and how wee may know when wee increase in knowledge and what we must doe that we may increase fol. 88. How God is made knowne and who are charged not to know God and how it comes to passe that man knowes not his God and what wee must doe that we may know God fol. 88. 89. Signes of a weake Christian or an infant in Grace fol. 89. What is in the weake Christian notwithstanding his wants fol. 90. Comforts for a weake Christian and helps for his strengthening fol. 90. 91. Signes of a strong Christian fol. 91. The extent of the power of God and what God cannot doe fol. 92. Of the glory of God and how many waies it is reuealed fol. 92. 93. About falling from Grace and Perseuerance fol. 93. Motiues to Patience and what wee must doe that wee may bee patient and seauen things wherein we should shew patience fol. 94. 95. Of Long-suffering and how to preuent anger and desire of reuenge fol. 95. What wee must doe that we might get constant Ioyfulnesse of heart fol. 96. How the Father may be said to redeeme vs. fol. 97. Markes of a Childe of God fol. 98. How Christ died for all men fol. 98. 99. Fi●e sorts of men in the Church not made fit for 〈◊〉 fol. 99. The diuision of Canaan by Lot shadowes out many things in the kingdome of he●●●n fol. 200. Our inheritance is in light in six respects fol. 201 A threefold light ibid. A sixe-fold darkenesse in euery vnregen●rate man fol. 102. Nine things in euery one that is deliuered from darkenesse fol. 103. The excellencie of Christs Kingdome and the priuiledges of his Subiects fol. 105. Foure waies of Redemption fol. 108. The comforts of the Doctrine of remission of sinnes ibid. The terrour of the Doctrine of remission of sinnes fol. 109. What a man should do to get his sinnes forgiuen him ibid. Christ more excellent then all Monarches in diuers respects fol. 110. Difference betweene image and Similitude Gods image is in man three waies the difference betweene the Image of God in man and in Christ Christ is the Image of GOD three waies hee is the Image of God as God and as man three waies fol. 110. 111. How many wayes Christ is said to be first begotten fol. 113. Foure words confute foure errors about the Creation fol. 115. Diuers opinions about the meaning of the words Thrones Dominions c. ibid. All things are for Christ in diuers respects fol. 117. The eternitie of Christ described and explained fol. 118. How all things consist in Christ ibid. Many obiections about the preseruation of the righteous answered out of the 37. Psalme fol. 102. But if we would be thus preserued wee must looke to nine things noted out of that Psalme fol. 121. The benefits that flow from Christ as Head of the Church fol. 121. Of the Church fol. 122. 123. How Christ is the beginning fol. 124. A three-fold primogeniture in Christ fol. 124. Christ was first begotten among the dead in three respects fol. 125. Christ is first in diuers respects ibid. What it is to yeeld Christ the preheminence fol. 126. All fulnesse is in Christ in fiue respects fol. 127. Tenne fruits of the bloud of Christ fol. 132. How many waies men sinne against Christs bloud ibid. Whether Angells be reconciled to Christ or no. fol. 133. Wicked men are strangers in fiue respects fol. 136. Wicked men are enemies both actiuely and passiuely and how fol. 137. The reasons why most men minde not their misery fol. 138. Sixe distinct things in our reconciliation by Christ fol. 139. Why the Church is called all things ibid. Christs body better then ours in fiue respects fol. 139. Not like ours in two things and like ours in three respects fol. 140. How many waies Christ doth present vs to God fol. 141. How Christians may be said to be holy vnblameable and without fault in Gods sight in this life fol. 142. Internall holinesse must haue seauen things in it ibid. What externall holinesse must haue in it fol. 143. Signes of an vpright heart 143. and Meanes and Motiues By what meanes men are induced to fall away fol. 144. How the faithfull may fall away ibid. Seauen things from which the Elect can neuer fall fol. 145. Concerning perseuerance 1. Motiues 2. Meanes 3. Helpes ibid. How many helpes a Christian hath from the very spirit of God that is in him and from the Word fol. 146. The priuiledges of an established and grounded heart and what wee must do that we might be grounded and stablished fol. 147. What a free spirit is fol. 147. Why many after so long profession are so vnsteled fol. 147. 148. Concerning Hope 1. what Hope is not true Hope 2. what persons haue no Hope 3. what are the effects and properties of true Hope fol. 149. How the Gospell is preached to euery creature fol. 151. Why godly men are so cheerefull in affliction fol. 153. How Paul was said to fulfill the rest of the afflictions of Christ fol. 154. How our afflictions are the afflictions of Christ fol. 155. Twelue Arguments against the Crosse fol. 157. How we may know we are of Gods houshold fol. 158. What good men get by their Ministers fol. 157. How many waies the Gospell is hidden 161. and how reuealed fol. 165. What a ciuill honest man wants fol. 165. 166. What we must do to preserue affection to the word fol. 167. The Gospell is a glorious Mysterie fol. 168. Nine Vses of the Doctrine of the calling of the Gentiles ibid. How Christ is conceiued in the soule of the faithfull fol. 170. 171. 172. How we may know that Christ is in our hearts fol. 170. 171. 172. The Benefits that come by the inhabitation of Christ fol. 170. 171. 172. What entertainment we ought to giue him fol. 170. 171. 172. Who haue not Christ in them The honour dutie and reproofe of Ministers fol. 173. Reasons to perswade vs to suffer admonition fol. 174. How we are perfect in this life fol. 176. AN EXPOSITION VPON THE WHOLE Epistle to the COLOSSIANS COLOS. 1.1.2 Verse 1. Paul an Apostle of IESVS CHRIST by the will of God and Timotheus a Brother 2. To them which are at Colosse Saints and faithfull Brethren in CHRIST Grace be with you and peace from God our Father and the Lord IESVS CHRIT TWO things are worthy our consideration in this Epistle the Author and the Matter A Description of the
first if thou beginne to loue Gods children it is a comfortable signe thou art not without loue to God and faith in Christ secondly it is a comfort against slanders reproches and molestations from wicked men thou hast as much credit with them as God if they loued God they would loue thee It is a great comfort when a mans enemies be enemies to Religion Note sinceritie and holinesse of life Thus farre of loue in generall In particular I propound foure things to be further considered first the nature of this grace secondly the reasons to perswade vs to the conscionable exercise of it thirdly the helps to further vs and lastly what defects are in the loue the world commonly boasteth of For the first that the Nature of this sacred grace may bee the better conceiued two things would be weighed first what things ought to be found in our loue What things ought to be in our loue Seauen things ought to be shevved in our loue Rom. 12.15 secondly in what manner loue is to be expressed And for the former of these two true Christian loue hath in it these seuen graces or duties first Vprightnesse in our owne things both in respect of Right and Truth secondly Peaceablenes in the quiet order of our conuersation thirdly Curtesie in needefull and louing complements fourthly Tendernes in the things that befall others so as wee can reioyce for them as for our selues fiftly Liberalitie sixtly Society seuenthly Clemencie Concerning these three last duties or branches of Loue it will bee expedient to adde something for further explication of them Liberalitie Liberalitie is required and it standeth of two maine branches first Hospitalitie and then the workes of mercy Hospitalitie is required in these places Rom. 12.13 Wicked hospitalitie 1. Tim. 3.2 1. Pet. 4.9 Heb. 13.2 But this dutie stands not in the entertainment of drunkards and vicious persons or in keeping open house for gaming and such lewd sports and disorders or in feasting of carnall men for this is so farre from being the praise of great men as it is a most shamefull abuse and one of the crying sinnes of a Land able to pull downe the curse of God vpon such houses True hospitalitie and such house-keeping but Hospitalitie stands in the kinde entertainment of strangers that are in want Heb. 13.2 and in welcomming of the poore that are in distresses and lastly in the friendly and Christian and mutuall exercise of Loue in inuiting of Gods children to our houses or tables Workes of mercy Workes of mercy are the second branch and those are required of vs as the needfull duties of our Loue and these workes are either in temporall things and so are Almes-deedes or in spirituall things Loue must shew it selfe in Almes-deedes Rom. 12.13 Leuit. 25.26 Luke 6.35 that is in distributing to the necessities of the Saints in relieuing those that are impouerished and fallen into decay by giuing or lending though they should not be paide againe vpon the hope of a reward in heauen 1 Cor. 8.3.8 and this to be done both to our power and without compulsion for that will shew the naturalnesse of our Loue. Thus being ready to distribute and communicate 1 Tim. 6.18.19 men may lay vp in store for themselues a good foundation against the time to come and that that is well giuen will be a greater helpe in time of need then that that is spared and kept Spirituall mercie There are workes of mercy also in spirituall compassion ouer the soules of men and thus the poore may be mercifull to the rich to wit in labouring to winne them to religion and sinceritie in praying admonition incouragements and such like needfull duties and these are the best workes of mercy that we can doe for others whom we loue or pittie Societie Thus of Liberality another thing required vnto the exercise of Christian Loue is Societie It is not enough to wish well to the Saints or salute them kindely or relieue them according to their occasions but we must conuerse louingly and daily with them make them our delight company with them and in all the mutuall duties of fellowship in the Gospell to sol●ce them and our selues with them This is that that Peter requires 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 2 17. Rom 12 11. when hee chargeth that we should loue brotherly fellowship we should not liue like Stoikes without all society nor like prophane men in wicked society but wee should both intertaine a brotherly fellowship that is society with th● brethren and loue it too This was their praise in the primitiue times Acts 2.42 that they continued in the Apostles doctrine and in fellowship and breaking of bread and prayers making conscience aswell of Christian society as of hearing praying and receiuing the Sacraments The holy Apostle Saint Paul blesseth God for the Philippians that they did not onely make conscience of receiuing the Gospell Philip 1 5. Phil. 2.1 but also of fellowship in the Gospell and that from the very first beginning of their entrance into Religion This was the comfort of their loue and fellowshippe of the Spirit The last dutie of loue is Clemencie and this stands in the right framing of ourselues in respect of others and vnto the practise of clemencie diuers things are required of vs. First to couer the faults of others Loue couereth the multitude of sinnes Secondly to auoyde the occasions of stirring the infirmities of others 1 Pet 4 8. And heere we are bound to forbeare our libertie in indifferent things rather than we should offend our brother If thy brother be grieued for thy meate Genes 13.18 Rom. 14.15 now walkest thou not charitably It is to be obserued that he saith thy brother for it matters not for the cauells and reproaches of idolatrous and superstitious persons that neuer regarded the sincerity of the Gospell Thirdly 1 Cor. 13 7. to take things in the best part Loue belieueth all things it hopeth all things Fourthly Ephes 4.16 in our anger both to be short Let not the Sunne go downe vpon your wrath and also to be more grieued for their sinne with whom wee are angrie Ephes 4.16 then kindled against their persons as it is said of our Sauiour Marke 3.1 Hee looked round about vpon them angerly mourning for the hardnesse of their hearts Fiftly to appease the anger of others and that either by soft answeres Pro 15 1. 1 Cor 6.7 Gen 13.18 6. Mat 17.25.26 Rom 12 21. Ephes 4 31. or by parting with our owne right or by ouercomming euill with goodnesse Lastly clemency stands in the forgiuing of trespasses done against vs Be tender hearted forgiuing one another euen as God for Christ his sake forgaue you So that vnto Christian loue is requisite a peaceable curteous and tender carriage hospitalitie and a liberall distributing to their wants both in temporall and spirituall things a
among the Saints Godly society doth frame vs and square vs and many waies fit vs for our place in this building Thirdly louing affection to the members of Christ and mutuall society doth much profit vs in respect of our growth in the body and that till we become perfect men and attaine to the age of the fulnesse of C●●●st Verse 13.16 Fourthly this holy loue is a great fence to the iudgement against false and deceitfull doctrine he is not easily carried with euery winde of doctrine nor vnsetled with the vaine deceits of men that can follow the truth and the meanes thereof in a setled and well grounded loue to Gods children But on the other side how easily are such men deluded and throwne off from their purposes and comforts that did neuer ioyne themselues to Gods children The second place is 1. Peter 4.7.8 where the Apostle exhorteth to sobrietie in the vse of the profits and delights of the world in meates and drinkes riches recreations and apparell and withall to spend their time here in spirituall duties especially Prayer watching thereunto both to obserue all occasions and opportunities to pray as also noting the mercies of God wee finde in prayer with our owne corruptions in the manner and the glorious successe of praier in preuailing with God But aboue all things hee wills them to haue feruent loue and yeeldeth two reasons or motiues first the end of all things is at hand and therefore it is best louing and making much of those that after the dissolution shall be great heires of heauen and earth secondly Loue couereth the multitude of sinnes it hideth the blemishes of our natures and fitteth vs for the comforts of Society Notwithstanding the infirmities accompany euen the Saints while they are in this vale of miserie The third place is 2 Pet. 1.7 c. where he largely perswadeth men to get holy graces into their hearts and to expresse holy duties in their liues among these as chiefe he instanceth in brotherly kindnes and loue to this end he bringeth diuers reasons first it will set our knowledge aworke which else would be idle and vnfruitfull Verse 8. and where should we vnloade our selues of the fruits of knowledge which men get in Gods house better then in the houses of the people of God secondly he that hath not these things is blinde or if he haue sight and wit enough for this world yet he is purre-blinde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so as hee can see nothing that is farre off as eternall things are but onely things neere such as are carnall things the want of loue to Gods people is a palpable signe of a pur-blind carnall man thirdly the want of loue and the other graces there named is a signe of a spirituall Lethargie euen that a man is fallen into a forgetfulnesse of the purging of his old sinnes that is Verse 9. it is a signe that a man lieth vnder the guilt and filth of all his former sinnes and neuer feeles the weight of them or considers the danger of them Fourthly Loue with the fruits of it doe make our calling and election sure Fiftly louing society and brotherly kindnes is a great meanes of perseuerance Verse 10. if ye doe these things yee shall neuer fall Lastly by this meanes an entrance shall bee ministred vnto vs abundantly into the euerlasting kingdome of our Lord Iesus Christ both because it mightily furthereth faith and hope As also Verse 10. Verse 11. because by these meanes eternall life is begun on earth in respect of communion both with God the Saints Thus farre of the Motiues Helps follow These helpes are such as serue The Helpes both for the begetting nourishing of a holy loue to and with Gods people There are eight things that are great furtherances of holy life First the conscionable hearing of the word of God for in Gods house doth the Lord fire the heart and holy affections and teach the right ordering of them How came those Colossians by their loue to the Saints no otherwise but by hearing the word of truth which discouered vnto them who were Gods children and did daily fence them against the scornes and reproches which the world laded them withall Secondly we must get faith and hope as the coherence shewes for till wee be soundly humbled to seeke Gods fauour and find our hearts possessed with the care for and hope of a better life we cannot receiue Gods children aright into our hearts But no man was euer truely touched in conscience and had vnfained desires of remission of his sinnes Neither did euer a man seriously seeke after the things of a better life but he did loue Gods children aboue all the people of the earth and it is true of the measure that as we grow in faith and hope so we should grow in loue and in the comforts of Gods fauour 1 Pet. 1.22 Thirdly would we loue brotherly without faining and feruently then we must get our soules purified through the spirit in obeying the truth i. we must make conscience of the duties of mortification as of so many purges to clense our thoughts and affections of dwelling and raigning lusts and euills for secret sins intertained and delighted in within the affections and thoughts do exceedingly poyson affection both to God and man this is that the Apostle meaneth where he saith 1 Tim. 1.5 Loue must come out of a pure heart 2 Tim. 1.7 Fourthly we must stirre vp the spirit of loue The spirit of God is a spirit of loue and we must stirre it vp by nourishing the motions of the same putting courses or waies of expressing loue into our mindes and by prayer meditation or any other meanes that may inflame our hearts to a holy affection 2 Tim. 1.13 Fiftly it profiteth much hereunto to get and keepe in our minds a patterne of faith and loue euen a draught of the things that concerne faith in God and loue to the Saints that we might alwaies haue a frame of all holy duties that concerne this holy affection this was their care in the Primitiue times as appeareth 2 Tim. 1.13 Sixtly to be sound in these 3. things Faith Loue and Patience requires most an end Experience and a daily acquainting our selues with the things of the Kingdome of Christ When we are driuen by often crosses to seeke comfort in Gods children and by much obseruation do finde the worth of the comforts that arise from holy Society with them Many are the incredible weakenesses that discouer themselues in the hearts of yonger and weaker Christians but it is a shame for the elder men if they be not sound in loue Tit. 2.2 Tit. 2.2 Heb. 10.24 Note Seuenthly we must by all holy meane● strengthen and encourage and set our selues vpon perseuerance in the profession of our hope for if once wee giue ouer profession it will be easie to see loue vanish a wauering profession
no ripenesse in knowledge because when they vse the meanes their heads are full of cares or lusts c. or they waite not vpon the opportunities and aduantages of the meanes they seeke not earely Obiect 9 Obiect But at the least it is an enemy to Thrift and a hinderance to mens outward estates Solut. Sol. That is false too and hee giues two Reasons for it Vers 18.19.20 For first the most durable riches that is better then all gold or pleasure is righteousnesse and this is gotten by the knowledge of the word Secondly that that most an end impouerisheth men is the hand of God or of men and sinne vsually and disorder is the originall cause of all losses or pouertie Now Wisedome causeth a man to walke in the wayes of righteousnesse and so to inherit substance and as God sees it meete for them to fill their treasures Obiect 10 Obiect But a man can neuer obserue the rules of holinesse required in the word Solut. and vrged vpon men by preaching Sol. The word doth not only shew men what they should doe but it giues power to doe it It causeth men to walke in the way of righteousnesse Vers 21. Lastly to put all out of doubt Knowledge Why It is the very glory of Christ and dwelt with God in the very beginning of the world yea it was begotten from euerlasting when there was no depths nor the mountaines setled nor the earth framed c. from Vers 22. to 32. The exhortation is in the end of the Chapter that as men would assure themselues to be Gods Children or to be blessed in their wayes they should heare instruction in this point and bee wise and daily watch at the gates of Knowledge so should they get the life of grace and obtaine the fauour of God when others that despise knowledge and the meanes of it shall be so wounded in soule that they shall certainely die eternally Vers 32.33.34.35 Thus of Contemplatiue Knowledge Wherin wisedome or discretion consists 1 Wisedomes order in seauen rules Wisedome or Actiue Knowledge followes the consideration hereof is exceeding difficult for it lyeth in the prescribing of the discretion in practise Wisedome in practise stands principally in two things first in Order of practise secondly in the Specialties of good behauiour Wisedomes Order lieth in the prescribing of Rules concerning the priority and precedencie of things in practise she tels what must be first done and chiefly and thus she giues seauen Rules 1 That Heauen be sought for before the earth and remission of sinnes in Christ before any other thing q Math. 6.32 2 That men choose present affliction rather then future rather suffer now with hope of reward in another world then take pleasure now to endure the paines to come r 2 Tim 2.3 to 8. 3 That God be serued before man whether it be other men or thy selfe thus it is wisedome to let God haue the first place in the morning before thou serue thy selfe in thy calling thus it is wisedome to obey God rather then man when the Commandement of God and the commandement of man lieth before thee and are contrary one to another Å¿ Acts 5. thus also the duties of the first Table are to be done before the duties of the second Table in equall comparison t Mat 22.38.39 4 That death be prouided for before life first learne to dye and then it is easie to learne to liue u Deut 32.29 5 That opportunitie be preferred before time Worke in haruest walke while ye haue the light delay not whilst thou hast the meanes seeke God whilst hee may be found 6 That the first place in dignitie ouer any be accounted the greatest place of seruice vnto all x Math 9.34 7 That in duties to men wee first regard to practise the duties of the fift Commandement y Ephes 6.3 Secondly concerning behauiour Wisedome bindes the Heart the Tongue Wisedomes specialties in the behauiour 1 Of the heart in fiue things the Conuersation First in binding the heart to good behauiour she chargeth fiue things 1 That in the dearenesse of affections and clearenesse of knowledge in the puritie of our thoughts God be loued aboue all z Marke 12.33 2 That wee draw weapon vpon euery imagination or what else exalts it selfe against Contemplation and the obedience of Christ neuer ceasing till those inward sinnes be led away captiue * 2 Cor 10.4 3 That wee grow in Meekenesse as wee grow in knowledge a Iames 3.13 and that we be wise to sobrietie desiring the knowledge onely that can profit vs b Rom 12.13 4 That wee rest not till wee be dearely resolued in Religion Gods Loue and our owne Saluation c Pro 24.15 5 That the feare of God throughout all our whole life bee our chiefe treasure d Esay 33.6 2 Of the tongue in seauen things Secondly in binding the Tongue to the good behauiour she chargeth 1 That our words be few when we speake either to God or men e Eccles 5.1 Iames 1.19 Eccles 10. vlt. 2 That wee doe not so much as whisper against the Lords Annointed f Deut 28.58 Command 3. 3 That we presume not to come neere the sacred Name of God to take it vp in vaine g Pro 17.15 4 That we censure not the iust nor iustifie and defend the wicked g Pro 17.15 It is not safe for the Prince to smite with the tongue the meanest seruant of God h Pro 17.26 5. That wee answere not a matter before wee heare it i Pro 18.13 6. That we iudge nothing before the time k 1 Cor 4.5 and speake euill of no man but be soft shewing all meekenesse to all men l Tit 3.2.3 7 That wee seeke a due season for good words m Pro. 15.23 Thirdly in binding the conuersation to the good behauiour she chargeth 3 Of the conuersation in eight things 1 That men walke exactly accurately precisely it is translated circumspectly n Ephes 5.15 2 That with all delight men set their hearts to keepe Gods Commandements and doe them o Deut 4.5.6 and by good conuersation men shew their workes p Iames 3.13 3 That men meddle with their owne businesse q 1 Thes 4.11 4 That profit and pleasure giue place to godlinesse r Psal 4.6 1 Tim. 6.6 5 That men trust not faire pretences but haue some sure triall before wee commit our selues to any Å¿ Iohn 2.24 6 That wee feare and depart from euill before the crosse come t Prou 16.6 Esay 27.11 it is euery bodies course to talke of repenting when misery is vpon them but a wise man will redeeme his owne sorrowes and feare GOD whiles the curse hangs in the threatning though it come not yet into execution 7 There is a speciall wisedome in knowing how to giue place to the time so farre as may
The most men see no necessity of the restoring of their soules they cannot bee perswaded of the necessity of Regeneration and conuersion by the Word and when they come to the meanes they seeke not to God to lead them u Psal 23.3 5 Men are double-hearted and diuide one part to the flesh and the world and another to God the more open part of their liues some pretend to direct with some respect of holinesse but the secret and inward part is full of all rottennesse and yet men will not see that God and Sinne God and Riches God and the Flesh cannot be serued both of one man at one time 6 They are incorrigible will neyther be heal'd by the word nor bee forced by the workes of God They will not vnderstand though all the foundations of the earth be moued x Psal 82 5. What we must doe that wee might be holy Thirdly that we might attaine vnto this holinesse of Conuersation 1 Wee must grow out of liking with our owne waies and our present carnall course and forsake that way and returne from it x Prou 9.6 Ezech 18. 2 We must get out of the way of sinners for he that walketh with the vngodly will be like them y Psal 1.1 3 Wee must mightily labour for knowledge and bee much in contemplation and to this ende exercise our selues in Gods word day and night and dwell in Gods house Coherence with Verse before and Psal 1.2 Prou. 8.20 and 2.11.12 Psalm 84 4.5 Esay 2.3 yea wee should by conference aske the way one of another z Ier 51.4 4 Wee must get into Christ for hee is the way and till wee labour our ingrafting into Christ and settle our selues to seeke a Sauiour euen vnto vs by faith all our workes are in vaine 5 That our conuersations might be more holy and vnrebukeable wee should first labour to get holinesse into our hearts for if grace be within duties will be without if corruption be mortified in the Soule which is the fountaine it will haue no great sinne in the life which is the streame which flowes from the heart first we should guide our hearts into the way a Prou. 23.19 for thereout commeth life b Prou. 4.23 6 Wee must submit our selues to Gods corrections learne obedience by the things we suffer c Heb. 5.8 obey the checkes of our conscience and be contented to eate the bread of affliction d Esa 30.20 beare the words of rebuke and admonition e 1 Thes 5.13 for hee that refuseth correction will certainely goe out of the way of life f Prou. 10.17 Lastly we should commit our way to God and by constant and daily prayer beseech him that hee would shew vs the way and lead vs forth g Psal 25.4 and then that he would stay our steps in his paths that our feet doe not slide h Psal 17.5 and to this end that he would remoue out of our way all impediments and euery lying way i Psal 119.29 and that he would daily quicken vs in the way against the sluggishnesse of our owne Natures k Psal 119.37 and bend our hearts to his holy feare but especially euery morning wee should beseech God so to assist vs and guide and strengthen vs to doe the duties of the day and that hee would see to and defend the thing of the day in his day l 1 Kin 8.58.59 by the vertue of Christs intercession and his words which are neere vnto God day and night The gaine of godlinesse Fourthly thus doing and endeauouring our selues to know and doe Gods will 1 The Lord would know vs by name and take notice of our wayes euen with the knowledge of approbation m Psal 1. vlt. 2 Our liues would be full of ioy and chearfulnesse n Psal 138.5 yea they that haue tasted of the ioyes of a Crowne shall leaue the Throne and Pallace to seeke the sweet delights of the faithfull and to sing their songs 3 God would walke in the middest of vs o Leu 26.11 4 Yea hee would keepe his Couenant and Mercy with vs p 1 King 8.23 5 We should be protected against all hurtfull troubles being eyther preserued from them or in them if we walke in the day we shall not stumble q Ioh 11.8.9 yea though we went through fire and water yet Gods holy presence and strong arme would be with vs r Esay 43.3 Psal 23.3 yea we might dwell with euerlasting burnings that is within the knowledge of Gods terrible presence and sight of his great iudgments when the hypocrites of the world would be afraid ſ Esay 33.14.16 6 Or if there were sorrowes and griefes vpon vs in this world yet heauen shall come and we shall rest in the beds of eternall ease whatsoeuer betides vs we shall not lye downe in sorrow t Esay 57 2 50 vlt. 7 Thus to liue is to rule with God and to be faithfull with his Saints u Hos 11.12 8 Thus shall we scape the vigor of the Law x Gal 5 18. and the flames of Hell y Rom 8.1 Lastly if we cōtinue faithfull to the death there is laid vp for vs a crown of life z Reuel 2.10 Thus of walking or holy conuersation in the generall now in particular that we might walke in an holy eminency three things as is before noted are heere vrged First that wee should walke worthy of the Lord. That is so to know and consider the singular mercies of God in Christ as to endeauour to expresse our thankefulnesse in the obedience of our liues in such a measure as might become the mercies of God Before I open the words further I consider in the generall two things 1 That the obedience of the faithfull is raysed by the contemplation of the mercies of God which should teach vs 2 Generall obseruations as wee desire more to abound in good fruites so to be more in the assurance and often meditation of Gods loue to vs more knowledge of this kinde would worke more obedience and a confused knowledge of Gods mercy is vsually accompanied with an vnconstant obedience Besides this reprooues the dangerous and sinfull abuse of Gods mercies in the common people that vse to plead their safetie notwithstanding their sinnes by the alledging of the mercy of God to sinners whereas it is most certaine that the right knowledge of Gods mercy would make men afraid to sinne There is mercy with thee that thou maist be feared saith the Psalmist a Psal 130.4 and it is the infallible signe of a true conuert that hee doth feare God and his goodnesse b Hos 3.5 euery man can feare God and his Iustice especially in some kindes of iudgements but a childe of God doth neuer more tenderly feare God then when hee hath greatest taste of Gods mercies 2 The Papists would finde merit of workes
z Ephes 4.11 to 17. Besides if we would increase in strength wee must let Patience haue his perfect worke making conscience to mortifie corrupt passions as worldly griefe anger fretting a Iames 1.4 c. And lastly wee must bee carefull to keepe what God hath giuen vs that no man take away our crowne Neglect of grace receiued is a great hinderance of strength and increase Thus of the weake Christian A strong Christian discouers himselfe by diuers things First Of the strong Christian and how he may be knowne hee is spirituall that is such a one as not onely hath a taste and desire after spirituall things but is also ruled by the Word and Spirit of God that hee restraines the euils of the flesh both in heart and life so as hee giues not occasion eyther of scandall to the weake or of scorne to them that are without b 1 Cor 3.1 Secondly hee is able to be baptised with the baptisme that Christ was baptised with and to drinke of the cup that Christ dranke of he is not onely willing to beare ordinary wrongs and crosses but is prepared for the worst the world or Sathan may doe to him c Mat 20.22.23 3. Hee can beare the infirmities of the weake and in conuersing deny himselfe and please his Brother in that that is good to edification d Rom 15.1.2 4. Hee is full of goodnesse and knowledge and is able to admonish e Rom 15.14 and comfort others with the comforts hee hath found himselfe f 2 Cor 1.4 5. Hee sinnes not in word g Iames 3.1 that is hee is able to gouerne his tongue with Wisedome Meekenesse Grace and Truth The ordinary faults of speech are not found in his Tongue 6. He is not carefull for his life to take thought for what he shall eate or what he shall drinke nor doth he disquiet his heart about his body what he shall put on for these outward things hee can easily trust his heauenly Father h Math 6.25.30 7. He can loue his enemies endure wrongs without resistance or reuenge or if hee vse the helpe of the Magistrate hee can seeke it without malice or crueltie hee can blesse them that curse him and pray for them that despight him and doe good to them that hate him i Math 5 38. to the end Lastly in Faith hee is strong like Abraham Rom. 4.16 to the end Hee can beleeue things to come as well as if they were present Vers 17. hee can beleeue aboue hope and vnder hope Vers 18. hee looketh not to the meanes but to the promise Vers 19. hee vanquisheth doubts Vers 20. hee is as thankefull for promises as others would bee for performances Vers 20.21 for these things were not onely true of Abraham but may be true in vs also Vers 23.24 who may haue as great helpe from Christ as euer he had Vers 25. Thus of the strong Christian In all might Note how the Apostle presseth to perfection before Why all might in all knowledge all pleasing all good workes now in all might And wee had neede to be strengthened with all might because not one part of the soule onely is to be looked to but the whole soule spirit and life throughout nor haue wee one Grace to tend but all sorts of Graces from God nor doth there abide vs one trouble but calamities indignities and temptations of all sorts Wee haue not one aduersary to encounter but many and of many sorts inward outward visible inuisible publike priuate at home and abroad Neyther doe wee stand vpon our guard at one time but must looke to our selues in all these respects at all times It must be all might that we should labour after in foure respects All might in foure respects First it must bee a Might that extends to the strengthening of all the faculties of the soule powers of the body and duties of the life our Mindes must bee strengthened in the approuing of truth and goodnesse and in reprobating of euill and falshood l 1 Cor 14.20 our Memories must bee strengthened in retayning and recording the secrets and hid things of God which are committed to it the Will must be strengthened in the Election of good and reiection of euill and our Affections neede strength also thus wee were to be strengthened in Patience m Iam 1.4 Ioy n 1 Thes 5.16 Loue o 1 John 4.18 Mercy p Col 3.12 Hope and Confidence q 1 Pet 1.13 Desires r Psal 27.4 in Reuerence Å¿ Heb. 12.28 in Hatred of sinne t Psal 139.21.22 Contempt of the World u Phil 3.8 Esay 30.22 So doe wee neede strength to euery dutie of holy life Secondly it must be a Might that is gotten from the vse of all the meanes wee must be strengthened in the power of euery ordinance of God and supported with the vse of euery helpe to make vs strong Thirdly it must be a Might shewed in the vse of all the Armour of God Wee must strengthen our selues with euery piece of Armour whether it bee Armour of Defence as the Girdle of Truth the Brest-plate of Righteousnes the Shooes of the Gospell of Peace the Shield of Faith the Helmet of Hope or Armor of Offence as the Sword of the Spirit Gods Word and the Darts of Prayers x Ephes 6.12 Fourthly it should be a Might extended to all possible degrees and power of euery Grace and dutie thus in mercy wee should communicate in all good things y Gal 6.6 our seruice should be an heartie Seruice z Ephes 6.6 wee must loue the Lord with all our hearts with all our soules with all our might * Deut. 6.5 According to the power of his glory In the handling of these words I consider them first apart secondly as they are ioyned together and thirdly the Doctrines out of them Here are two things laid to pawne for the strengthening of the weake Christian Gods Power and Gods Glory The extent of Gods power Power is one of the Attributes they call in Schooles relata the Power of God is infinite both in respect of Essence for it is as large as the Essence yea it is the Essence it selfe and in respect of Obiects hee hath not done so much but farre beyond our capacities hee could doe infinitely more and so is it infinite in respect of continuance Yet to speake of it according to our capacities What God cannot doe it is restrayned 1. By his Will hee cannot doe what his Will is against 2. By his glory hee can doe nothing against his owne Glory 3. By his Nature hee cannot lye c. because it is against his Nature 4. In some respects by the nature of the Creature so as whatsoeuer destroyes the essentiall definition of the Creature God cannot doe as God cannot make a man vnreasonable and yet hee remaine a man hee cannot make a
despise not this riches of the bountifulnesse of God when in the Gospell it is offered vnto vs though wee may goe on with the hardnesse of our not repenting hearts yet if by speedy repentance wee preuent not our ruine we shall heape vp wrath against the day of wrath euen the day of the declaration of the iust vengeance of God vpon such obstinate and secure sinners h Rom 2.4.5.6 3. Let not worldly rich men glory in their riches i Jer 9.24 but rather vse their outward riches as helpes to further them vnto this true treasure else their riches shall not shelter them in the day of Gods wrath against the woes denounced against them k Iob 36.18.19 Luke 6.12 Lastly would any man know some sure way how to thriue with great successe in these spirituall riches let him then amongst other things especially remember to pray hard for the Lord is rich to all them that call vpon him l Rom 10.12 Thirdly CHRIST is in the faithfull m 2 Cor. 13.5 hee liues in them n Gal. 2.20 hee dwels in them o Ephes 3.18 but that this doctrine may be more fully vnderstood I propound fiue things 1. How Christ is conueied into the soule of the faithfull 2. By what effects he discouereth himselfe to be there 3. What they get by his comming 4. What intertainement they ought to giue him 5. Who haue not Christ in them How Christ is conueied into the faithfull For the first there is this order First God secretly giues Christ to the beleeuer and the beleeuer to Christ p Rom 8.32 Esa 9.6 Iohn 17.6 then Christ begins to manifest himselfe riding in the Chariot of the word q 2 Cor 2.14 The word that before was a dead letter receiueth life by the presence of Christ and that both in the Law and the Gospell The law being made aliue attacheth the particular sinner and playeth vpon him the part of a Sergeant accuser Iaylor or Iudge And the sinner putting in baile the Law brings him to Christ and will not let him goe to another r Gal 3.24 then the Gospell gets aliue and crucifies Christ before his eyes Å¿ Gal 3.1 and propounds varietie of sweet promises The sinner being beaten and wounded almost to death before hee would yeelde to the arrest of the Law seeing now whither he is brought laments with vnspeakeable groanes his owne sinnes and the horrible torments hee sees the Sonne of God put to for his sake and at the same time the spirit of the Sonne working saith a wide doore is opened Christ enters in with vnvaluable ioyes wrought in the heart of the sinner How we may know that Christ is in our hearts Now if you aske by what effects Christ discouers himselfe to bee there I answere there is a light when Christ comes in that giues the Knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ t 2 Cor 4.6 And being rauished they behold as in a mirrour the glory of God and are transformed into the same Image the spirit of God making them suddainely new Creatures u 2 Cor 3 18 2. The conuert now findes a sauour of the things of the spirit and his heart is bowed to be subiect to the law of God x Rom 8.5 7. 3. Hee is baptized with the fire of zeale and holy affections and desires y Math 3.11 4. There appeares a battell and combat in the soule and much lusting on either side the spirit resisting with teares and strong cries 5. In this combat Christ vndertaking the battell sends out by his ordinances his arrests and apprehends one by one euery imagination that rebelliouslie puts it selfe forward in the opposition and exalts it selfe and will not leaue till it be brought in subiection so as the obedience of Christ may haue the vpper hand z 2 Cor 10.5 6. The spirit of the Sonne discouers himselfe as a spirit of supplications by which the tender infant beginnes to learne with holy desires and secret incouragements to speake in Gods language and by prayer to make knowne his griefes and wants in the best manner vttering his affiance in God as a Father x Gal 4.6.7 7. The loue of God and of Christ and of Gods Word and Gods people is shed abroad in his heart and it now constraineth him to holy dueties a Rom 5.9 2 Cor 5.14 8. The body growes dead in respect of sinne and the spirit is life for righteousnesse sake b Rom 8.10 resolution more and more increasing both for reformation of sinne and new obedience 9. Hee findes himselfe proclaimed free the prison doore set open his fetters knocked off his wounds made by the law healing apace his depts paid himselfe in a new world inioying a true Iubile c 2 Cor. 3.17 Esa 61.1.2 10. He liues thenceforward by the faith of the Sonne of God for Saluation for Iustification and for preseruation d Gal 2.20 2 Cor 13.14 11. The heauenly dewes of spirituall ioyes often water and refresh his heart in the vse of the meanes with delightfull peace and tranquility in his heart and conscience e Hos 14.6 Rom 14.17 Lastly in a holy couenanting with God his daily purposes and desires are to cleaue vnto God deuoting and consecrating himselfe and his vowed sacrifices vnto God in the mediation of Christ Thirdly the benefites hee hath by the inhabitation of CHRIST The benefits come by Christ dwelling in vs. are such as these 1. GOD is in Christ reconciling him not imputing his sinnes f 2 Cor. 5.19 2. Christ is made vnto him Wisedome Sanctification Righteousnesse and Redemption g 1 Cor 1.30 3. All the promises of Christ are to him Yea and Amen hauing the earnest giuen in the spirit and the same sealed by the same spirit h 2 Cor. 1.20.22 4. Hee is not destitute of any heauenly gifts i 1 Cor 1.6.7 but hath the seeds and beginnings of all sauing graces 5. The grace of Christ shall be sufficient k 2 Cor. 12.9 against all temptations by the power of Christ that dwels in him and as his outward afflictions doe abound so shall the consolations of Christ abound also l 2 Cor 1.5 6. Paul is his and Apollo is his yea all things are his as he is Christs m 1 Cor 3.22.23 he hath his interest in all the means of saluation 7. God hath giuen him Christ how shall hee not with him giue him all other things also n Rom 8.34.35 Finally eternall life is the gift of God in and with Iesus Christ o Rom 6.23 For the fourth if you aske what you must doe when you finde Christ in your hearts I answere if you liue in the spirit walke in the spirit p Gal 5.24 let olde things passe and all things be new for if you be in Christ Iesus you must be new Creatures
and censures of Gods seruants a 2 Thess 3.14.15.16 As the knitting together of Gods people is wonderfull comfortable and a gracious effect of the Gospell so to disturbe the loue and vnity of the Church and people of God is most execrable and abominable It is a greeuous sinne to disquiet and disioyne Gods seruants Now if we obserue in our owne times who they are that are that are disturbers of the Church and vnitie amongst true Christians Foure sorts of disturbers of the Church wee shall finde foure sorts of men may bee iustly taxed with this greeuous fault 1. Papists and halfe-Papists these in all places labour to hinder the progresse of the Gospell and the vnitie of the Church 2. Ambitious temporizers Diotrephes had his hand deepe in this sinne Too many there are that scarce know any readier way to couer their damned Simoniacall practises and to aduance their owne aspiring ends then to blaze and enlarge and with bitter exaspirations to proclaime that heauie rent and dissent of opinion that hath diuided the sonnes of the same mother 3. Men of flagitious and wicked life for wicked men disturbe Gods Church both by their sinnes vexing the righteous and by their rayling opposing the truth and cause God by his iudgement to afflict his owne Israel 4. Sectaries and humorous persons that out of their hellish pride despise all the assemblies of Gods people because they fauour not the fantasticall proiects These many of them diuide from vs both in Church and habitation Thus of the affection it selfe But I must more specially yet consider of the manner in the word knit together 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Knit together The originall word when it is taken properly it signifies to set in a frame of building but vsually it is taken in the new Testament in a b●rrowed sense sometimes it is to demonstrate a thing by euident testimonie b Act. 9.22 sometimes to assure c Act. 16.10 sometimes to instruct d 1 Cor. 2.16 but most frequently to knit together as the members are knit in a bodie e Ephes 4.16 and so it may well be taken heere and so wee are considered as ioyned together in the mysticall bodie of Christ And wee may hence obserue 1. That our vnion one with another must be sanctified in one head if we be not ioyned to Christ we doe in vaine pleade our loue to men 2. Our affections must carrie vs to a thirst and constant desire to procure the good of the bodie the bodie of Christ must bee dearer to vs then our particular good 3. That wee must respect all that feare God and not contemne the meanest Christian We are knit to the whole bodie and not to some one member onely Thus of the second reason viz. from the effect of the Gospell And vnto all riches of the full assurance of vnderstanding The third and last reason is taken from the adiuncts of the Gospell which doe more and more appeare by the power of it in the paines of Gods faithfull seruants and thefe are three 1. certaintie 2. sublimitie 3. perfection The first is in these words The Gospell is certaine two wayes 1. In it selfe 2. The Gospell is certaine two waies in the infallibility stedfastnesse of the perswasion of the Elect. In it selfe the Apostle had good reason to say so for it was no new deuice lately broached but long before from the beginning propounded to Gods seruants and confirmed in all ages by the Prophets c. But in this place it is considered in the certainty of the perswasion of the godly by faith laying hold vpon it and beleeuing it This he expresseth in the word full assurance or plerophorie A twofold fulnesse The fulnesse of a Christian is either generall or speciall the generall is that fulnesse which euerie member hath in Christ their head and by influence from him The speciall is that fulnesse wherin some members excell Thus some are full of the spirit f Ephes 5.18 of loue g 1 Thess 3.12 of ioy h Rom. 15.13 2 Cor. 7.4 some in obedience and good workes i Acts 9.36 Phil. 1.11 Reuel 3.1 2 Cor. 10.6 some in faith and knowledge So Rom. 15.14 So heere Quest But is full assurance essentiall vnto true faith Answ Some seeme to say so but I see no reason so to thinke And experience shewes vs many worthie in the praises of the Gospell and yet haue not gotten full assurance Full assurance is in the greatest faith but faith may be true in the least measure though it be not so confirmed it is essentiall to a strong faith not to a litle faith Quest May this plerophorie or full assurance be had in this life Answ Full assurance may be had It may without all doubt as these Scriptures euidently proue 1 Thessal 1.5 Heb. 6.11 and 10.22 Rom. 4.21 Quest But are we bound to labour for this full assurance Answ We are It must bee sought Heb. 10. he saith let vs draw neere in the full assurance of faith k Heb. 10.22 and in the sixth chapter they are exhorted to shew their diligence vnto the full assurance of hope to the end l Heb. 6.12 We make no question but we ought to make sure our houses and lands c. and shall life and happinesse lie vnassured There are 7. things wherein this assurance hath been imployed 1. Seuen things of which we should be assured There is a full assurance of the things done by Christ mentioned Luk. 1.1 2. There is a full assurance required in the knowledge of our libertie in things indifferentm. 3. There is a full assurance requisite vnto the perswasion of the truth of their ministeries to whom we subiect our soules as the originall word imports 2 Tim. 4.5.17 4. We must be fully assured of the doctrine of the Religion that we professe 5. There is a full assurance of the hope of a better life n Heb. 6.12 6. There is a full assurance sometimes in speciall and particular persons as that to Abraham about his sonne Rom. 4.21 Lastly there is a full assurance of faith in Gods fauour vpon the warrant of Gods word and spirit This is chiefly to be laboured for Now there are seuen properties or signes of a plerophorie or full assurance of faith 1. It will receiue the word in affliction with much ioy o 1 Thess 1.6 2. Seuen signes of full assurance It will not bee carried about with every winde of doctrine p Ephes 4.14 3. It is industrious and laborious in the duties of loue to Gods children q Heb. 6.11.12 4. It is vnrebukeable and full of innocencie and integritie of life it cannot possibly stand with any presumptuous sinne r Heb. 10.22.23 5. It will giue glorie to God against all sense and reason ſ Rom. 4.20 6. It mortifies and extinguisheth all headstrong affections t Esay 11.7.9
if they would bee carefull to please God but alas they were neuer washed from their olde sinnes and they quickly returne with the dogge to their vomit and corrupt their waies being of purpose set on by the Diuell to make a clamorous profession that so their fall might more dishonour the glorie of an exact and circumspect conuersation Alas what should I say There is wonderfull want of order in the very liues of Gods children Scarce the tithe of professours of sinceritie of the Gospell that haue gathered a catalogue of holy duties and obserued out of the word that frame and order of settled holy conuersation Ten helpes of order in conuersation There are 10 helpes of order in holy life 1. knowledge 2. vprightnesse that is an vnfained resolution to shew respect to all Gods Commandements 3. constant diligence 4. watchfulnesse 5. contemplation or meditation 6. prayer 7. reading the word daily 8. frequent hearing of the Gospell preached in the power of it 9. a tender conscience 10. societie and fellowship with gracious Christians in the Gospell There are many impediments of an orderly conuersation Nine lets of order 1. Men are not reconciled to God and so not being in Christ they receiue not influence of grace from Christ to enable them to walke in an holy course 2. In others t is negligent mortification the staine of former sinnes being not washed away there remaines in them an ill disposition to sinne 3. Many are ensnared with euill opinions either in doctrine and so errour of life is the scourge of errour in opinion or else about practise as that such strictnesse is not required or it is impossible or none doe liue so 4. Many know not what order to appoynt vnto themselues 5. Many are confirmed in a heart accustomed to euill and they loue some one sinne wherein they especially breake order 6. Sathan striues aboue all things to keepe men in a dead sleepe that they might not awake to liue righteously or expresse the power of godlinesse 7. Many are so set in the way of the vngodly that their very euill society chains them downe to a necessitie of dissolutenes 8. Many are put out of all order by their daily distempers and disorders in their families Lastly some faile and fall through very discouragement receiued either from opposition or contempt or scandall Now if any be desirous to know in generall what he should do to bring his life into order I shall profitably aduise fiue things First Rules for bringing our liues into order that hee doe resolutely withdraw himselfe from the sinnes of the times and keepe himselfe vnspotted of the world in respect of them Now the sinnes of the times are apparant pride of life contempt of the Gospell coldnesse in faith and religion swearing profanation of the holy Sabbath domesticall irreligiousnesse contention vsury whoredome drunkennesse and drinkings oppression and speaking euill of the good way Secondly that hee obserue the more vsuall corruptions of the calling of life hee liues in and with all heedfulnesse shun them whether he be Magistrate Minister or priuate person Thirdly that he especially striue against and subdue the euils that by nature hee is most prone vnto Fourthly he shall doe wonderfully profitably Vse of catalogues if hee would get a catalogue of duties out of the whole law that directly concerne himselfe in particular which is very easie especially by the helpe of some that are experienced to be distinctly gathered labouring to shew all good faithfulnesse in duties of pietie as well as righteousnesse and to striue for inward pietie as well as outward resoluing to continue as well as once to begin Hence it is if wee marke it that the holy Ghost in diuers Scriptures drawes for the people of those times diuers catalogues either of grace which specially tended to their praise or of duties that most fitted their state or of sinnes that they must most carefully auoyd as being most commonly committed yea it could not but be of excellent vse if we did taske our selues to the more strict obseruation of some of those catalogues either of grace or sinnes or duties as wee might perceiue they most fitted vs. But if euer we would goe about the order of our liues More rules wee must in generall 1. labour to weaken the loue of earthly things 2. We must resolue to keepe our hearts with all diligence I meane we must with all care and conscience striue against inward sinnes 3. We must put on a minde to liue by faith whatsoeuer befall vs. 4. If we fall we would speedily recouer our selues by confession and prayer and not accustome our selues to sinnes either of omission or commission Vpon the consideration of all this what should we doe Vses but euen pray the Lord that he would make his way plaine m Psal 5.8 before our face and direct the workes of our hands n Psal 90. vlt. and hold vp our goings in his pathes o Psal 17.5 ● that our steps doe not slide And to this end we should euery one be p●●cing and amending his waies making his paths straight being ashamed and confounded for all the disorder of our liues past But if thou goe about this bee not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a man that hath two hearts for then thou wilt be vnstable in all thy wayes either goe about it with all thy heart or else let it alone What shall I say but this let vs all learne the way of God more perfectly Thus of order The second thing hee commends is their faith which hee praiseth for the stadfastnesse of it The stedfastnesse of their faith Concerning stedfastnesse of faith I propound fiue things to be considered of 1. That it may bee had and ought to be sought 2. What the nature and properties of it are 3. What is the cause why the faith of many is not stedfast 4. What we must doe to attaine it And lastly concerning vnstedfast faith The stedfastnesse of faith may be had For the first that it may be had is manifest for God that giueth the earnest of his spirit and sealeth and annoynteth vs in Christ doth stablish vs in him p 2 Cor. 1.21.22 There is a sure foundation of God q 2 Tim. 2.19 Matt. 7.24 vpon which we may found our affiance And God willing more abundantly to shew vnto the heires of promise the immutabilitie of his counsell interposed himselfe by an oath to confirme his promise that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie we might haue strong consolation which flie for refuge to lay hold vpon the hope set before vs which hope wee haue as an anchour of the soule both sure and stedfast r Heb. 6.17.18 And we are commanded to resist stedfast in the faith ſ 1 Pet. 5.9 And wauering is secretly threatned and disgraced by the Apostle Iames after he had charged that wee should pray in faith
the doctrine hee receiued together with Iesus Christ great is the generall neglect of many sorts of people heerein 3. Or thus Let the doctrine you haue receiued from Christ Iesus be your onely rule both for life and manners So liue and walke as you haue receiued The Apostle commandeth to separate from euerie brother that walketh inordinately and not after the traditions which they had receiued of the Apostle b 2 Thess 3.6 By tradition he meaneth the holy word of God deliuered by liuely voice vnto the Churches while yet it was not written euen the same which now is written The elect Lady and her children are commended for walking in the truth as they had receiued commandement of the Father c 2 Ioh. 4. Yea so must wee sticke vnto the word receiued as if any man teach otherwise he should be accounted accursed d Gal. 1.9 1 Cor. 15.1.2 For the Apostles receiued it not of men but by the reuelation of Iesus Christ e Gal. 1.12 And as they haue receiued of the Lord so haue they deliuered vnto vs f 1 Cor. 11.23 Therefore wee must conclude with the Apostle These things which wee haue learned and receiued and heard out of the holy word those things we must doe g Phil. 4.9 4. The sence may bee thus as yee were affected when yee first receiued Christ so walke on and continue at first men receiue Christ with singlenesse of heart with great estimation of the truth with wonderfull ioy with feruent loue to Gods children with a longing desire after spirituall things with endeauour to beare fruit and without the mixtures of mens traditions and inuentions Now then they are exhorted to take heede that they lose not what they haue wrought h 2 Io● 9. but preserue those holy affections and desires still striuing against the witchcrafts of Sathan and the world that they be not beguiled from the simplicity that is in Christ Iesus The doctrines hence to be noted are 1. That Christians doe receiue Christ and that not onely publikely into their countries and Churches which yet is a great priuiledge for Christ bringeth with him many blessings and stayes many iudgements brings a publike light to men that sit in darknesse and shadow of death and raiseth immortalitie as it were to light and life againe but priuately and particularly into their hearts and soules The priuiledges of such as receiue Christ This is the happiest receiuing of Christ Oh the glory of a Christian in receiuing Christ i Phil. 3.9 for he that receiueth Christ into his hart receiueth excellent illumination vnspeakably ioy k 1 Pet. 8. sure attonement l Rom. 5.11 3.25 hid Manna m Reu. 2.17 eternall graces n 1 Cor. 1.6 4.7 yea the very spirit of Christ o Rom. 8.9 to make him know the things giuen of God to set the soule at liberty p 2 Cor. 3.17 to mortifie the deeds of the flesh q Rom. 8 13. to be a spirit of prayer r Zach. 12.12 to giue answer concerning our adoption ſ Rom. 8.15 to furnish the soule with gifts t Gal. 5.22 to seale vs vp to the day of redemption u Eph. 1.14 to be an eternall comforter * Ioh. 14. to be life for righteousnesse sake x Rom. 8.10 to helpe our infirmities y Rom. 8.26 and to raise vp our dead bodies at the last day z Rom. 8.11 Lastly he that receiueth Christ receiueth with him the promise of an eternall inheritance into which hee is presently acknowledged an heire yea a Co-heire with Christ Iesus 2. The second doctrine It is not enough to receiue Christ but wee must walke in him to walke in Christ is not only so to liue as we be sure that Christ liueth in vs c Gal 2.20 or to walke after the appoyntment of his will expressed in his word but it is cheefely to continue a daily care of holy perseuerance in the graces and duties of holy life holding fast our communion with Christ this the Apostle thinks wonderfull needfull to bee often vrged and pressed by all meanes vpon vs a Heb. 9.15 b Rom 8.17 so shamefully doe many fall away and so cursedly is the sinceritie that is in Christ Iesus pursued by the Diuel and the flesh and the world and so necessary is the endeauour to preserue the glory of perseuerance in all well doing to the end Oh this perseuerance it is a wonderfull thing and where is the man that doth not lose something of what hee had Oh that wee could bee soundly awakened to the care of it or that wee had mindes that would bee willing to doe any thing wee could to further it but alas there is not a heart in vs there are diuers excellent directions in the word to confirme vs heerein if we were not ouercome with sluggishnesse There are diuers things which if they were looked to at our first setting out we were sure to hold out and continue walking in Christ As Rules for perseuerance to bee obserued in our first conuersion If men did at first put their hearts to these questions of abnegation so as they would bee throughly aduised if thou haddest asked thine owne heart these questions Canst thou take vp thy crosse and follow Christ Canst thou suffer aduersity with the righteous Canst thou professe Christ admidst the different opinions of multitudes of men Canst thou bee content to denie profit and reason and thy desires and pleasures and credit and all for Christs sake if not thou wilt certainely fall away and therefore better neuer beginne 2 At mens first setting out they must take heede they bee not sleightly in their reformation and mortification but doe it throughly not sparing to afflict their Soules with sensible and sound godly sorrow for else they will afterward repent of their repentance whereas if it were done with sound aduice and serious humiliation this would be an vnmooueable foundation of rest and encouragement to faith and well-doing It is a great question whether such will hold out that come in without sorrow for sinnes 3. Men must at first looke to their kinde of faith we see many are grossely deceiued temporary faith maketh such a shew that vnlesse it be throughly tried it will deceiue many and there is a maruellous lothnesse in our nature to abide the triall though wee know it be plainly here required d 2 Cor. 13.5 whereas if wee did get a continuing faith at first wee might haue the more assurance of holding out 4. It would much further perseuerance if wee did at first endeuour that knowledge and affection might be inseparable twinnes not to bee much proud of knowledge without affection nor to trust much to zeale without knowledge either of these may be alone in men that will fall away shamefully 5. When men goe about reformation they should doe it throughly and be sure their hearts
of our friends we burie them in hope they shal rise againe And secondly we mourne because we must part with them but both these must be denied here It is the propertie of the wicked to part with their sinnes with sorrow because they must leaue them or else with hope that at length they may returne to them againe Note this rule But let all such as feare God be otherwise minded especially let vs learne from this comparison of buriall to aduantage our selues in what we may in mortification Similitudes if the master be buried we know all his seruants will attend the funerall so is it with vs in the mortification of sinnes if we light vpon the master sins and drag them to the graue we shall be sure of all the attendants they will follow to the funerall The Iewes manner was to burie with odours so should we our odours and sweet smelling prayers offered vp in the mediation of Christ And howsoeuer this worke may seeme difficult yet God many times strangely relieues our infirmities After Iezabel was cast downe and dead they had not been long within but sending out to burie her they found nothing but the skull and her feet and the palmes of her hands so many times would it be with vs if we cast downe the Iezabels our sinnes when we come to finish our mortification we may by the strange helpe of God finde the bodie of the master gone we know not how so as we shall not be troubled vnlesse it be with some skull or feete or palme of sinne But certainely though this kinde of buriall be somewhat difficult yet it is the true buriall place of Kings the most noble funerall that can be Thus of the first effect The second is in the next words How many vvaies Christ raiseth men vp In whom ye are raised vp together Christ is said to raise men vp diuers waies 1. When he awaketh men out of their naturall Lithargie or spirituall sleepinesse and securitie in matters of religion thus Ephes 5.14 2. When hee brings forth the minde of man out of the dungeons of ignorance and shewes them the light Esay 60.1 2. 3. When he cures men of discouragements and discomforts vnder their crosses Psal 41.10.6 4. When he recouers the Church from securitie or relapses either ordinarie or extraordinarie Cant. 2.10.11 c. and 5.3.5 Prou. 24.15 16. 5. When he incourageth men to holy duties A fourefold resurrection Cant. 7.12 but principally there is a fourefold resurrection The first is out of desperate crosses Esay 26.19 The second is the lifting of men vp to some speciall callings in the Church Matth. 11. The third is the resurrection of our bodies at the last day And the last is the resurrection of the soule vnto holy graces and duties this is called the first resurrection and is meant here in this place and Rom. 6.4 but most vsually we say there is a twofold resurrection the one from the corruption of the flesh the other from the corruption of sinne this latter is here meant and this belongeth to viuification Now this first resurrection must be considered either in it selfe or in the vnion or relation of it In it selfe and so there is a double resurrection First the resurrection of graces The resurrection of graces secondly the resurrection of duties For the first there are certaine graces which are not in the heart of man by nature which by the mighty power of Christ are wrought in the hearts of such as are truly conuerted A resurrection of 13 graces in a childe of God and are actually the members of Christ As first a holy inquirie after God Hos 3.5 Ier. 50.4 Secondly a holy wisdome in spirituall things Iam. 3.17 Thirdly a liuely faith in the fauour of God in Christ Fourthly a holy delight and meditation in the word of God Psal 119.10 11.128 and 27.4 Fiftly a liuely hope of an eternall inheritance 1 Pet 1.3 Sixtly a holy loue of Gods children 1 Ioh. 3.14 such as is required Ro. 12.9 10 11. Seuenthly godly sorrow for sinne 2 Cor. 7.10 Eightly vnspeakable and glorious ioy euen in affliction Rom. 5.2 1 Pet. 1.7 8. Ninthly a holy contentempt of the world and sinne and sinnefull persons Psal 15.4 1 Ioh. 2.19 Tenthly a holy reuerence and feare of God and his goodnes Hos 3.5 Eleuenthly a holy zeale and feruencie of affections especially in the seruice and worship of God Twelfthly a holy loue euen of enemies And lastly a holy desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ Now for the effecting of these the spirit of Christ is called in respect of his wonderfull working the spirit of God and of glory g 1 Pet. 4.14 the spirit of power of loue and of a sound minde h 2 Tim. 1.7 The spirit of praier or deprecations i Zach. 12.12 And the spirit of reuelation k Ephes 1.18 The resurrection of duties in a childe of God of diuers sorts in vvhich he differs from the vvicked Thus of resurrection of graces Now concerning resurrection of duties We must know that there are diuers duties which the naturall man will neuer be brought vnto in which lieth the very power of godlinesse and the experience of all sound and sauing consolation Now these duties may be three waies considered 1. As they respect holy life in generall 2. As they respect piety to God 3. As they respect righteousnesse to men For the first there are foure things wherein the liues of Gods children differ from all others 1. In the manner 2. In the matter 3. In the meanes 4. In the ends of holy life For the manner three things are eminent 1. That they are deuoted and consecrated to holines l Reuel 12.1 2. That they delight and loue to be Gods seruants m Esay 56. 3. That they haue their conuersation in simplicitie and godly purenesse n 2 Cor. 1.12 11.3 For the matter they haue respect to all Gods commandements * Psal 119.31 and do indeuour after inward holinesse o Matth. 5.6 as well as outward besides they liue by faith p Rom. 1.16 in some measure which is a way of holinesse altogether vnknowne in the practise of wicked men And for the meanes of holinesse the godly haue a recourse to a threefold fountaine of sanctitie with such a sinceritie and constancie as no wicked man can attaine it viz the word q Psal 1.2 Luc. 8.15 prayer r Gal. 4.6 and the Sabboth Å¿ Esay 56. And for the end of their obedience their praise is of God and not of men hauing a maine respect alwaies to exercise themselues so as they may haue a conscience voide of offence towards God or towards men u Act. 24.16 t Rom. 2.26 Thus of holinesse of life in generall Now in respect of piety to God it is a very resurrection through the power of Christ to bring a man to
laboured after in the reducing of our liues into a holy order u Matt. 6.33 Eight sorts of things that are aboue is to striue by all meanes to get vp our hearts to a constant seeking and minding of heauenly things according to that serious charge of our Sauiour Christ first seeke the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof That this rule may bee more cleerely vnderstood and more carefully practised it will bee profitable to consider distinctly what things are aboue and how they are to be sought And so the things that are aboue may bee distinguished into eight sorts First God is aboue for hee dwels in the high and holy places * Esa 57.15 and he must be sought x Hos 3.5 and if you aske what we must seeke in God I answer wee must seeke the true knowledge of his nature y Psal 14.1.2 Wee must seeke his fauour and the pacification of his iust anger for our sinnes z Zeph. 2.3 Wee must seeke his face d Hos 5. vlt. and presence a Psal 24.6 Psal 27.8 We must seeke his honour and glory b Ioh 5.44 And wee must seeke his saluation c Psal 105.4 70.4 And if you aske how wee must seeke God I answer wee must seeke God with acknowledgement of our faults with weeping and repenpentance for our sinnes e Ier. 50.4 Isay 21.12 with the desire of our hearts f Esay 26.7 with prayer and supplication g Matt. 7.7 with feare of his mercies h Hos 3.1 with meeknesse i Zeph. 2.2.3 and in the way of holy life Secondly k Psal 24.4.5 Christ is aboue for so he sayth to the Iewes yee are from beneath I am from aboue l 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yee are of this world I am not of this world m Ioh. 8.23 and he is the Lord whom euery Christian ought to seeke n Mal. 3.1 now Christ is two wayes sought principally First in the sincere and constant vse of all his ordinances both publike and priuate that by them we might finde his presence of grace on earth And thus the Church sought him in the Canticles o Cant. 3.1 c. Secondly in the desires prayers and preparations for our owne dissolution and his appearing p Phil. 1.21 Reu. 21.20 2 Tim. 4.8 2 Pet. 3.12 Thirdly the new Ierusalem is aboue for so the Apostle to the Galathians expressely saith q Gal. 4 26. Euen that heauenly society of glorious spirits in illustrious splendor And these are to be sought two wayes 1. By the constant desire of their presence and to bee gathered to them 2. By the imitation of their graces and vertues which they shewed when thy were on earth Fourthly Heauen is aboue For it is the price of our calling that is aboue r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 3.14 and the glory of that eternall and immortall honour is to bee sought ſ Rom. 2.7 and that fiue wayes 1. By prayer for preparation and that daily for so our Sauiour hath taught vs in the second petition of his prayer t Matth. 6.10 2. By seeking the assurance of faith and hope and the pledges and earnest of it u Heb. 11.1 Eph. 1.14 3. By meditation and contemplation striuing to expresse our desires and sighes after it * 2 Cor. 5.2 4. By carrying our selues as strangers and pilgrimes in this world weaning our hearts and retiring our liues from the world confessing and professing our trauailes towards a better countrie that is aboue x Hebr. 11.13.14.16 5. By continuing in well-doing y Rom. 2.7 striuing to liue a Citizen-like life heere z 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 3.20 in all things prouident to send our workes and prayers to Heauen before vs as our prouision and treasure a Matth. 6.14 Fiftly holy graces are aboue for S. Iames saith Euery good giuing and euerie perfect gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the father of lights b Iam. 1.17 And it is apparent that they are a part of the Kingdome of Heauen and they tend to Heauen and therefore the Prophet Esay cals grace by the name of glory c Esay 4.5 and they come downe from Heauen which will also appeare in the particulars Wisdome is from aboue d Iam. 3.17 so is zeale for it is the zeale of Gods house e Psal 69.9 so is lowlinesse so is faith so is peace and ioy and all the rest And that these are to bee sought many Scriptures euidently proue f 1 Cor. 14.1 Zeph. 2.3 2 Cor. 13.5 Rom. 14.17.18 and if you aske how they are to be sought it is shortly answered by prayer and the vse of the meanes which the Lord hath appoynted as holy vessels and instruments and as it were wombes to conceiue conuey and deriue grace vnto vs. Sixtly the meanes of saluation themselues are things aboue for they are called the Kingdome of Heauen g Matth. 3.2 and the Kingdome of Heauen is sayd to bee taken away when the meanes is taken away h Mat. 21.43 and these we must seeke i Esay 41.17.18 though it cost vs much trauaile if there be a famine k Amos 8. or much cost if the Lord giue vs to finde such pearles of instruction or comfort in the field of any Church or congregation l Mat. 13.45 Seuenthly holy duties are many of them from aboue for the Wise man saith the way of life is on high to the prudent to auoyde from hell beneath m Pro. 15.24 and that because both the will that enioynes them and the power to doe them and the successe or effects of them are all from God aboue And therfore the Author to the Hebrews when he would discourse of doing of Gods will quoting the place in the Psalmes seemes to intimate that the true speech of such duties is to speake from aboue n 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 10.8.9 and these good things are to bee sought o Prou. 11.27 wee must seeke the old and good way p Ier. 6.17 we must seeke Iudgement and Righteousnesse q Esay 1.17 Eightly many of the priuiledges of Christians are from aboue as the righteousnesse of Gods Kingdome r Matt. 6.33 forgiuenesse of sinnes ſ 1 Ioh. 1.7 deliuerance from this present euill world t Gal. 1.4 both in respect of the contagions and punishments of the same all spirituall blessings in heauenly things u Ephes 1.3 the reuelation of hid mysteries * 1 Cor. 2.9 Col. 1.26 the spirit of the sonne x Gal. 4.6.7 the influence of Christs death and resurrection y Phil. 3.9.10 the word with all the treasure of it z Psal 119.94 and the honour which is aboue a Ioh. 5.44 and all these are to bee sought Thus of the particular things that are aboue and we must seeke Vse The
what were it to lose not some of our credits or our goods but euen our liues seeing wee are sure to finde them againe with more then a hundred fold aduantage Mat. 16.24 vlt. at the time when Christ shall come in the glory of his Father to giue vnto all men according to their deeds Besides wee must know that there is no talking of sitting at Christs hand in glory till we haue asked our selues this question whether wee can drinke of the cup he dranke of and be baptized with the baptisme he is baptized with a Mark 10 ●7 c. And then if we can suffer with him we shall raigne with him b 2 Tim. 2.12 and shall be glad and reioice with exceeding ioy when his glory shall appeare And in the meane while the spirit of glory and of God resteth on you c 1 Pet. 4.13.14 Thirdly seeing Christ will receiue Christians into such glory it should teach vs to receiue one another d Rom. 15.7 into both our hearts and houses Why shouldst thou be ashamed or thinke it much with all loue and bountie and bowels of affection to entertaine and welcome the heires of such eternall glory Oh if thou couldst but now see but for a moment how Christ doth vse the soules of the righteous in heauen or will vse both body and soule at the last day thou wouldst for euer honour them whom Christ doth so glorifie and make them now thy only companions whom thou shouldest see to be appointed to liue in such felicitie for euer Fourthly the thought of this glory should win vs to a care to be such as may be capable of it Qu. What must we doe that we may haue comfort that wee are the men shall partake of this glory and speede well in the day of Iesus Christ What vvee must doe that vvee may be assured of the glory of heauen A. First Euery one that would haue this hope must purge himselfe as Christ is pure e 1 Ioh. 3.3 we must be much in the duties of mortification For no vncleaue person can enter into the kingdome of glory And vncleane wee are all till we be washed in the bloud of Christ by iustification and bathed in teares of true repentance by mortification It hath beene obserued before that if we would not haue the Lord to iudge vs we must iudge our selues f 1 Cor. 11.34 And if we would not haue Christ to take vnto him words against our soules we must take vnto vs words g Hos 14.3 against our sinnes to confesse and bewaile them in secret Secondly we must labour for the assurance of faith T is faith that is the euidence of the things not seene h Heb. 11.1 T is faith that shall be found to honour and praise in the reuelation of Iesus Christ i 1 Pet. 1 7. It is faith to which the promise of eternall life is made k Ioh. 3.18 Thirdly wee should labour to get vnto our selues the benefit of a powerfull preaching ministerie for thereby our hearts may be wonderfully stirred vp to see the glory of sincerity on earth and it will open a wide doore to behold as in a mirror the glory to come with an open face changing vs into the same image from glory to glory by the spirit of God I say not that this is of absolute necessity as the former are but it is of wonderfull expediency Fourthly we must be circumspect and watchful in speciall manner attending to our owne hearts that wee be not at any time oppressed with the cares of this life or voluptuous liuing l Luk. 21.34.36 if euer wee would be able to stand in the day of iudgement and escape the fearefull things that are to come especially we must looke to our selues in these things least that day come vpon vs at vnawares Fifthly Doe we looke for the mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ into eternall life then we must as the Apostle Iude sheweth edifie our selues in our most holy faith praying in the holy Ghost and keepe our selues in the loue of God m Iud. 20.21 we must be afraid of whatsoeuer may estrange the Lord from vs or any way darken the sense of his loue For we may be assured if we haue his fauour and walke before him in the sense of it we shall haue glory when wee die Likewise praying in the holy Ghost with constancie and frequency doth maruellously enrich a Christian both with the first fruits of glory euen glorious ioy on earth with the assurance of fulnesse of glory in heauen Sixthly the Apostle Iohn seemes to say if loue be perfect in vs wee shall haue boldnesse in the day of iudgement n 1 Ioh. 4.17 As if he would import that to be inwardly affectionately acquainted with Christians on earth is a notable meanes to procure vs gracious entertainment with Christ in heauen especially if we perfect our loue and grow to some Christian ripenesse in the practise of the duties of loue in a profitable fellowship in the Gospell It is good discretion to grow as great as we can with Christians that so wee may winne the fauour of Christ Lastly the Apostle Paul shewes in the second to the Romanes that they that seeke glory and honour and immortalitie and euerlasting life must be patient in well doing For they shall be rewarded according to their workes And to euery man that doth good shall be honour and glory and power to the Iew first and also to the Graecian o Rom. 2.6.7.10 For all that haue any tydings of saluation in the Gospell or looke for that blessed hope and appearing of that glory of the mightie God must liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world p Tit. 2.11.12.13 Without holinesse no man shall see God q Heb. 12.14 And therefore we should be abundant in the worke of the Lord forasmuch as we know that our labour shall not be in vaine in the Lord r 1 Cor. 15. vlt. And thus farre of the glorious appearance both of Christ and Christians And thus also of the first rule of life namely the meditation of heauenly things VERS 5. Mortifie therefore your members which are on earth fornication vncleanesse the inordinate affection euill concupiscence and couetousnesse which is idolatrie THese words with those that follow to the tenth verse The diuision of this part of the Chapter containe the second principall rule of holy life and that is the mortification of euill These euills to be mortified are of two sorts for either they are vices that concerne our selues most or else they are iniuries that concerne the hurt of other also Of the mortification of vices he intreats v. 5.6.7 of the mortification of iniuries he entreats v. 8.9 In the first part viz. the exhortation to the mortifying of vices I consider first the matter about which he deales and the reasons The matter is in verse
his exceeding great reward c Gen. 15.1 The third preseruatiue is the daily practise of pietie If we would seeke the kingdome of God first both in the first part of our life and in the first part of euery day of our life as well in our houses as in Gods house these religious duties constantly performed would be a great and continuall helpe against worldly cares they would cleanse our hearts of them and daily prepare our hearts against them But how can it be otherwise with a man then it is They must needs liue and die the drudges of the world seeing they haue no more care of holy duties at home or abroad they liue like swine without all care of any thing but rooting in the earth The fourth preseruatiue is the due preparation for Christs second comming For when our Sauiour Christ had dehorted men from the cares of this life he adioynes this exhortation Let your loines be girded about and your lights burning and ye your selues like vnto them that wait for their master when he will returne from the wedding that when he commeth and knocketh they may open vnto him immediately blessed are those seruants whom the Lord when he commeth shall finde waking c. One great reason why couetous men doe so securely continue in the immoderate cares for this world is because they doe so little thinke of death and iudgement Whereas on the other side Christians doe with some ease withdraw their hearts from the world when they haue inured themselues to die daily by the constant remembrance of their latter end and by holding fast the euidence of faith and hope waiting when Christ will call for them The fift preseruatiue is to shun the meanes and occasions of couetousnesse And to this end it is good not to conuerse much with couetous persons or to get our selues libertie to conceiue the hope of any long prosperitie and rest in the world and generally we should labour to obserue our owne hearts and other mens liues and what we finde to be a meanes to kindle or inflame couetous desires that wee should auoid and betimes set against it or mortifie it And thus farre of couetousnesse And thus also of the catalogue of sinnes from which he doth disswade The reasons follow VERS 6. For the which things sake the wrath of God commeth on the children of disobedience VERS 7. Wherein ye also walked once when ye liued in them THese words containe two reasons to enforce the exhortation in the former verse The one is taken from the euill effects of the former sinnes vers 6. The other is taken from their owne experience while they liued in the estate of corruption vers 7. In laying downe the reason from the effect two things are to be noted First what sinne brings viz. the wrath of God Secondly vpon whom viz. vpon the children of disobedience Before I come to intreat of the wrath of God apart I consider of it as it stands in coherence with the former reason For in these words we are assured that man liuing and continuing in filthines and couetousnes shall not escape Gods wrath for they incurre both his hatred and his plagues both which are signified by the word wrath Gods wrath vpon vncleane persons And if any aske what plagues filthy persons and couetous persons shall feele I answer briefly and distinctly that neither of them shall scape Gods wrath as the Scriptures plentifully shew The filthy person brings vpon himselfe Gods curse temporall corporall spirituall and eternall Temporall for whoredome and any kinde of vncleannesse brings vpon men many temporall plagues in their estate the fire of Gods iudgements consuming many times their whole increase as hath beene shewed before Corporall for God many times meets with the sinnes of the body by iudgements vpon the body so that many filthy persons after they haue consumed their flesh and their body by loathsome diseases which follow this sinne in the end say with the foolish young man Oh how haue I hated instruction and despised correction d Pro. 5.11.12 Now I am brought almost into all euill in the middest of the assembly Spirituall for vncleannesse breeds in many a reprobate sense e Rom. 1.24.29 c. and finall impenitencie Many also for their filthinesse are pursued with secret and fearfull terrors of conscience and sometimes phrensie and desperate perturbations Eternall for the adulterer destroyes his owne soule and is shut out of the kingdome of heauen as hath beene also before declared Neither let the couetous person thinke hee shall speed any better for God hates him wonderfully And therefore the Prophet Ezechiel saith that the Lord smites his fists f Ezech. 22.13 at the couetous which is a borrowed phrase to expresse most bitter and sharpe threatnings Now lest the people should obiect that those were but great words the Lord would not doe so they would deale well enough with the Lord he preuenteth it and saith Can thy heart endure Vers 14. or can thine hands be strong in the dayes that I shall haue to doe with thee I the Lord haue spoken it and will doe it Let couetous persons without further enquirie assure themselues that couetousnesse is a maine cause of all the euils are vpon them or theirs and besides they may be assertained that all the seruice they doe to God is abhorred and meere lost labour It were to no purpose if they would bring him incense from Sheba and sweet calamus from a farre countrey their burnt offerings would not bee pleasant nor their sacrifices sweet vnto him g Ier. 6.13.20 Ob. But couetous persons are of most men so well furnished that there is not that meanes to bring them to any great hurt Sol. The Prophet shewes that God can lay a stumbling blocke before them and father and sonne together may fall vpon it and neighbour and friend may perish together h Ier. 6.21 The Lord hath meanes enough when men little thinke of it to bring downe rebellious sinners Ob. But wee see couetous persons and wealthy worldlings scape the best and longest of many others Sol. The Prophet Amos saith Amos 8.5 6.7 the Lord hath sworne by the excellencie of Iacob will neuer forget any of their workes Though the Lord may deferre yet certainly hee will neuer forget and therefore they are not a iot the better for scaping so long But howsoeuer they might escape outward iudgements yet they may be infallibly sure they haue sinned against their owne soules k Hab. 2.10 and that they shall know in the day of their death their riches shall not then profit them when the Lord taketh away their soule l Iob 27.8 he that is a great oppressor shall not prolong his dayes m Pro. 18.16 for he that getteth riches and not by right shall leaue them in the midst of his dayes and at his end shall be a foole n Ier. 17.11 How horrible then shall
Ioels counsell that if they would haue the Lord repent him of the euill and returne and leaue a blessing behinde him they must sanctifie a fast and call a solemne assembly l Ioel 2.13.14 c. Secondly by the seuere execution of iustice by Magistrates vpon notorious offenders and thus Phinehas staied the plague m Num. 25.1 Thirdly by the generall repentance of the people and thus Gods anger towards Nineuie was pacified n Jonah 3. Fourthly and especially by the intercession of Christ intreating for a Citie or Nation So was Ierusalem deliuered out of captiuitie as the Prophet Zacharie declares Zach. 1.12 Zach. 1.12 How priuate wrath is pacified Concerning the pacifying of Gods anger to particular persons I will first consider what will not pacifie it and then what will pacifie it For the first no multitude of gifts can deliuer thee o Ioh. 36.18 and the most mighty helpes cannot cause the Lord to with-draw his anger p Iob 36.18 it will not auaile thee to come before the Lord with burnt offerings and with calues of a yeere old The Lord will not be pleased with thousands of rammes or with ten thousand riuers of oyle Nor will the sonne of thy body make an attonement for the sinnes of thy soule q Mich. 6.6.7 To crie Lord Lord at home r Matth. 7. or the Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord ſ Ier. 7. abroad will not a whit abate of his fierce anger and as little will it auaile to build Churches mend high wayes erect Tombes for dead Prophets or the like workes of labour or cost Now for the affirmatiue if we speake properly nothing will quench Gods anger but the bloud of Christ For hee is the propitiation for our sinne t Ioh. 2.1 R●m 5.9 Yet in some respects and as meanes the Lord doth appoint vnto vs that wee might be capable of reconciliation these things are auailable First the duties of mortification as confession of sinne and iudging of our selues and examining of our hearts and liues If we acknowledge our sinnes hee is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes u 1 Ioh. 1.9 and if we iudge our selues the Lord will giue ouer iudging vs * 1 Cor. 11.34 If disobedient Israel will returne and know his iniquities the Lord will not let his wrath fall vpon him x Jer. 3.12.13 Godly sorrow also is very auailable to quench wrath If Ierusalem will wash her heart she shall be saued y Jer. 4.14 the Lord will heare the voice of our weeping z Ps●l 6.8 Praier also is of great vse and force for the Lord is a God that heareth praier a Psal 65.2 And the Prophet Zephany sheweth that if the people can learne a language once to call vpon the name of the Lord b Zeph. 3 9. in the sinceritie of their hearts hee will not poure vpon them that fierce wrath which shall certainly fall vpon all the families that call not vpon his name Secondly faith in the bloud of Christ procureth reconcillation and forgiuenesse of the sinnes that are past through the patience of God c Rom. 3.25 especially the worke of faith whereby a Christian perceiuing Gods anger and encouraged with the support of Gods couenant and promise in Christ doth in all tendernesse of heart importune Gods free mercy and wrestle and striue with importunitie casting himselfe vpon Christ for shelter and seriously setting himselfe against euery iniquitie euen because there is hope Hovv vve may knovv that God is pacified Finally wee may discerne that God is pacified diuers wayes First by induction from the practise of the former rules for if we doe what God requires we may conclude and inferre we shall receiue what God promiseth Secondly it may be perceiued by Gods presence in the meanes if we finde our hearts vnloosed and the passages of the meanes againe opened that is a comfortable testimonie that the Lord is returned Thirdly it may bee perceiued by the witnesse of the spirit of adoption speaking peace d Psal 85 8. to our consciences and with vnutterable ioyes quieting and satisfying our hearts Vses The vse followeth And first the doctrine of Gods wrath may greatly humble and astonish impenitent sinners Is the anger of the Lord kindled against thee how long then wilt thou be without innocencie e Hos 8.5 Be not a mocker lest thy bonds increase f Esay 28.22 Art thou an vncleane person a railer a drunkard an vsurer a swearer a lier a prophaner of Gods Sabboths a voluptuous epicure a carnall worldling or the like Be not deceiued nor let any deceiue thee with vaine words crying peace peace dawbing with vntempered morter for assuredly the wrath of God for these things commeth vpon the children of disobedience and who knowes the power of his wrath g Psal 90.11 Secondly seeing Gods wrath is so exceeding terrible and fierce blessed are all they that are deliuered from it in Iesus Christ We should be stirred vp to constant thankfulnesse because the Lord hath forgiuen vs the punishment of our sinnes 1 Thess 5.8.9 Heb. 3.11.12 so as now there is no condemnation to vs being in Christ Iesus Lastly seeing the Lords anger is so dreadfull wee should all learne to walke before him in all vprightnesse and feare and trembling fencing our selues with the breast-plate of faith and the helmet of hope being in all things sober and watchfull taking heed to our selues that wee be not hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne And thus of the wrath of God The children of disobedience The second maine thing in this verse to be considered of is the persons vpon whom it fals viz. the children of disobedience And by children of disobedience he meaneth generally wicked and vnregenerate men Now wicked men are of two sorts Some are cleerely out of the Church and haue beene branded in seuerall ages with seuerall tearmes of distinction as now the Infidels and before all the vncircumcised Gentiles Before the floud they were called sonnes of men Now others are in the Church and are children of God by creation generall vocation and externall profession but indeed are wicked and prophane Esaus The former sort were disobedient men D sobedient men and the latter are disobedient children Disobedient children And these disobedient children in the Church are of two sorts for some will not be tied to liue in their fathers house but that they may the more securely sinne and wallow in all filthy abominations they shunne Gods house for the most part and liue without any conscionable subiection to any ministerie Such was the prodigall sonne and such are our common swearers drunkards and vncleane persons nay they goe further for they speake euill of their fathers house and slander their owne mothers sons Now the other sort liue in their fathers house they come to heare and receiue the Sacraments they are there at bed
roughheartednesse the 2. is an Euangelicall harmelesnesse or simplicity l 2 Cor. 11.3 The consideration may much humble the best of vs if wee consider how passion doth ouer-master vs and how successe doth swell vs and how stiffe our hearts are after an vnconceiuable manner against the power of the meanes and how vnquiet weare for want of confidence in God Oh where is this conuersation with feare to bee found And for the simplicity that is in Christ Iesus how is it mixed in some and wanted in others and lost in many who are beguiled of the Serpent Yet inasmuch as this grace is indispensibly required that it should be put on let vs stirre vp our hearts as to seeke righteousnesse so to seeke meeknesse with it And to this end wee should auoide what doth encounter it As namely wee should take heede of lust and malice and couetousnesse and contention For these things will wonderfully disturbe the heart and fill it maruellously with perturbations and also wee should meditate of the incouragements to this grace For meekenesse would much auaile vs in the profit and power of the word m Iam. 1.21.22 Jsay 29.19 Math. 11.29 and God hath promised to water this grace with secret ioyes and easefull refreshingsn. Besides God doth in speciall manner vndertake their protection as the places in the margent will shew o Psal 76.1 to 9. 147.5.6 149.4 For meeknes in the hid man of the heart is a thing much set by p 1 Pet. 3.4 he will guide them in iudgement and teach them his way q Psal 25.9 What long-suffering hath in it Long suffering By Long-suffering is meant as I take it First an vnwearied firmenesse of heart holding out vnder all crosses tentations oppositions c. The minde not being easily broken put out confounded discouraged distempered or vnquieted with any kind of passion And so indeede it is nothing else but the perseuerance of patience Secondly there is a long-suffering which is a spirituall perseuerance of hope vnder the promise with an expectation of the performance of it r Heb. 6.12.15 There is a long-suffering in our carriage toward others in regard of their reformation and so we should suffer long in hope of the conuersion of the wicked Å¿ 2 Tim. 4.25 and in expecting the reformation of infirmities in Gods children whom wee loue and admonish t 1 Thes 5.14 And this is the praise of Christian loue that it doth suffer long u 1 Cor. 13. Motiues The long-suffering is an excellent grace and a worthy ornament meet to be put on aswell as any of the rest and would wonderfully grace the liues of Christians And the rather should wee loue it and long after it because it is so eminent a praise in God himselfe * Rom. 9.22 Luk. 18.7 and in Christ x 1 King 1.17 yea as any haue excelled in the Church so haue they beene approued in the triall of this grace as were the Apostles But it is enough to commend it it is an excellent fruite of the sanctifying spirit y Gal. 5.22 Onely we must know there is great difference between enduring long and long-suffering for true Christian long-suffering is accompanied not onely with patience but with diligence z Heb. 6.12 Col. 1.11 1 Tim. 4.5 and ioyfulnesse and watching in all things but especially with the renuing of faith in Gods promise and prouidence VERS 13. Forbearing one another and forgiuing one another if any man haue a quarrell to another euen as Christ forgaue you euen so doe yee THere are two vertues in conuersing that concerne aduersitie 1. Long-suffering vnder crosses and clemencie vnder iniuries Of Long-suffering before 1. Of Clemencie in this verse where two things may be noted 1. the duty required 2. the reason rendred for the vrging of the dutie The duty is propounded in the two principall parts of it viz. to forbeare and to forgiue and amplified by the supposition of a case If any man haue a quarrell to another The reason is from the example of Christ forgiuing vs. Forbearing The originall word is rendred sometimes to maintaine a Act. 18.14 sometimes to suffer to endure b 1 Cor. 4.12 2 Thes 1.4 2 Tim. 4.4 Heb. 13.22 sometimes not onely to endure but forbeare also c 2 Cor. 11.1 sometimes to support d Ephes 4.1 What it is to forbeare In the two last senses it may be well taken here Now if wee would distinctly know what it is to forbeare one another as it here imports a maine part of Christian clemencie we must vnderstand that it is not an omission of holy duties to others nor a refusing to satisfie others in their griefes or offences nor a shunning of their company nor yet a swallowing downe of all sorts of iniuries committed with an high hand without acknowledgement or satisfaction But out of clemencie to forbeare others hath in it such things as these 1. A freedome from the thirst of reuenge 2. A bearing with the infirmities of others which may be performed two waies First by couering them and not blazing them abroad if they be secret And secondly by silence in not reprouing them when they faile meerely in frailty Thirdly it hath in it not onely a bearing with them but a bearing of them f Gal. 6.2 and that I thinke may be two waies also First in not stirring or prouoking their infirmities Secondly by pleasing our neighbours humour in that which is good to edification g Rom. 15.1.2 Fourthly there is a forbearance in matters of wrong to vs and thus to forbeare is not to prosecute euery wrong either by answers or by suits And this forbearance is to be practised when we are able to reuenge else it is no thankes to vs to forbeare when we want either power or oportunitie to doe it 2. T is forbearance not to meete wrong with wrong Or thus there is a threefold forbearance First in iudgement when in doubtfull cases wee suspend our opinions or censures Secondly in words which consist either in not answering or in giuing soft answers Thirdly in deedes when we render not euill for euill Againe forbearance is varied from the consideration of time for in some things we must forbeare euer neuer taking notice of the infirmities or wrongs as in some weakenesse that are by meere ouersight or ignorance and in some things we must for beare for a time that is till there bee a fit opportunitie to admonish or correct c. The consideration thereof serues greatly for the reproofe of that wretched distemper in many that professe the same faith and hope Vses prouoking one another and consuming one another and by frowardnesse disquieting the rest and content of others Is it not heere an expresse charge that wee should forbeare one another Haue we not heere the example of Christ who did so Motiues who might haue had a thousand fold more iust reason
to their rebukes Pro. 13.1 secondly to their restraints in diet apparell recreations c. thirdly to their corrections Fifthly with piety praying for them for if they must doe it for all men much more for them and if for all in authoritie then for Parents 1 Tim. 2.1 Sixtly with all meeknesse of loue shewed three waies 1. By obeying without inquiring discoursing murmuring or contending 2. By bearing their infirmities either of bodie age or minde obey though aged diseased crabbed c. 3. Obeying without respect of profit some children are obsequiou● so long as any thing is to be had from their parents but when they haue all they must haue then their forwardnesse to please is neglected this is a base and mercenarie obedience Seuenthly with all thankfulnes and gratitude a great part of which is to recompence their Parents kindnes by releeuing their wants if they fall into wants 1 Tim. 5.4 Your Parents Viz Both your Parents not your Father onely but your Mother also Leuit. 19.3 Prou. 15.20 In all things Quest But must they be obeyed in sinne Answ No you must so obey your earthly Father as you disobey not your heauenly Father therefore in the Lord is added Eph. 6.1 But else we must obey in all things that are not apparant to be sinfull though against our ease profit credit c. Or more plainely thus All things are of three sorts First some things are simply good this must be done though the Parents forbid because God commands Secondly some things are simply euill these things must not bee done though Parents command because God forbids Thirdly some things are indifferent in these children must obey though their Parents require things neuer so vnmeete for things may be vnmeete that are not vnlawfull Thus of the doctrine of their obedience Against this doctrine children obiect many things Childrens obiections ansvvered Obiect I am now in better estate in higher place of better gifts or such like then my Parents Answ This is no reason to withhold obedience and reuerence for Ioseph was a Prince in Aegypt and Iacob in great want Salomon sits in his throne of Maiestie and yet when his Mother comes to him he yeelded all reuerence the throne did not make her cease to be a Mother yea our Sauiour Christ infinitely excelled his Parents and yet he was subiect vnto them Luk. 1.51 Obiect But our Sauiour saith call not men father on earth Mat. 23.9 Answ The words are not to be vnderstood simply but comparatiuely and that either to God or to the Pharisies call no man Father as thou callest God Father but so giue titles to men as all honour and sacred estimation of Gods fatherly care be preserued and call no man Father as the Pharisies ambitiously desire to be called giue not trust and child-like honour to men of what profession soeuer that you should onely trust in them and by performing honour or obedience or recompence to them grow carelesse of the duties you owe to your owne parents as the Pharisies taught Mat. 15.5 Obiect But my Parents require base things and such as cast a kinde of discredit vpon me in the world Answ Consider not the things required but Gods ordination besides God the Father required of Christ to beare the Crosse spitting in the face c. yet he willingly obeyed Obiect But my Parents are disordered persons and foolish c. Answ Pray for them but despise them not besides God knowes what is good for thee and therefore hath caused thee to come out of the loines of such Parents and required subiection of thee Obiect They are not my naturall Parents but my step-father or step-mother Answ Yet they must be obeyed so Ruth obeyed Naomi and Moses Iethro Exod. 18.19 Obiect They are not Parents at all but my kindred onely as my Vncle Aunt c. with whom I am left in trust Answ Thou must be ruled by them so was Hester by Mordecai Vse This condemnes the doctrine and practise of Papists that defend the vowes of solitarie and single life of children without consent of Parents and it meets with the doctrine of the Pharisies that would dispense with childrens releeuing of their parents so they would bestow it vpon them Mat. 15. 2. This may serue for reproofe of stubborne and vngracious children that forsake their Parents instruction Prou. 1.8 but especially such monsters as despise their Parents when they are old or mocke them or curse them or chase them or robbe them c. the cursed estate of such children is set downe in these Scriptures Prou. 15.20 and 19.26 and 23.22 and 20.20 and 28.24 and 30.11.17 Thus of the duty the reason followes There are many reasons why they should obey Reasons vvhy children should obey their parents 1. Children haue their substance from them euen their life and their education their Parents then tooke care of them when they had no ragge to couer their nakednesse nor morsell to put into their mouthes and what can children render equiualent hereunto 2. Christ himselfe was obedient to his Parents Luk. 2.51 3. This is the puritie and vprightnesse of children and hereby they must be tried and tried whether their worke be pure Pro. 20.11 4. The consideration of Gods iudgements vpon wicked children should much moue such as were Cham Esau Absolon Abimelech c. 5. If thou obey not thy Parents thou maist liue to bee required by thy children 6. In the sixth of Ephes 1.2.3.4 There are many reasons why children should obey First it is the Lord that is their obedience is both commanded by God and it is for God and besides it is no further vrged then as may stand with faith and piety to the Lord. Secondly this is right it is childrens iustice Thirdly this commandement that requires this is the first commandement with promise for this had a promise in the very first promulgation of it in the Tables written by the finger of God whereas all the rest had their promises annexed afterwards by the ministrie of Moses Obiect But the second Commandement had promise in the first promulgation of the Law Answ Some answer the words of the second Commandement are a proposition not a promise but this answer satisfieth not Some say the promises mentioned in that commandement belong to the whole Law and not to that Commandement alone but I thinke the plainest answere is the fift Commandement is the first Commandement with promise viz. in the second Table A fourth reason is children must obey for so it shall go well with them they shall get good and contentment and Gods grace and blessing by so doing Fifthly they shall liue long on earth to enioy the blessing of God Obiect Wicked children liue long Answ Their life is a death and it is not well with them Esay 65.20 Obiect Gods children doe not liue long Answ For the most part they doe 2. I say if God performe not this promise absolutely in the letter yet he performes
10.7 Vse Is first for reproofe of such wretched men as pray not at all Of such as fall avvay from the affection and practise of praier Iob 21.14 Secondly for reproofe of such as make apostacie from the affections and practise of praier and this is a fault in carnall men that fall from temporary faith or in Gods children that by the deceitfulnesse of sinne and Sathan giue ouer their affections and carefull diligence in praier For the first sort wee must know that when such men lose their ioy and delight in the word they lose also their care in praier but they must know they doe it not without singular danger for now that hearing and praier are laid aside seuen deuils worse than that one cast out by acknowledgement may enter in yea that they may fall from these affections into a reprobate sense yea which is worst they are in danger of the sinne against the holy Ghost and the more if they grow to hate praier and despight Gods grace in his children and therfore they should be aduised with all speed to repent with sound sorrow and beseech God to forgiue them if it be possible the thoughts of their hearts And as for such of Gods children as are decaied and fallen away from the power and practise of praier they should be wakened and remember themselues both by considering the hurt they bring vpon themselues and the remedies for their recouerie The hurts befallen them by this apostacie are such as these 1. The hurts that follovv the apostacie from the povver and practise of praier The losse of the comforts of the sweet presence of God 2. They put on a kinde of image of the old Adam againe they looke as if they were no better than carnall people they returne in many things to the filthinesse they had forsaken they forme themselues to the courses of carnall wisdome and too much like the world and the sinfull profits and pleasures of it 3. Faith and loue are more and more enfeebled lesse sense of Gods presence and lesse loue to Gods children 4. They bring vpon themselues a tedious dislike of the meanes of saluation besides the danger of many temporall iudgements For remedie of this great inconuenience they must doe three things 1. They must purge by godly sorrow and fasting 2. They must labour to reduce themselues vnto an holy order of liuing both by a daily course of examination by the Law and also by the consecration of themselues to the constant and orderly practise of all Christian duties 3. They must by daily importunitie beseech God to giue them againe the words and affections of praier and all this they should doe the more speedily because if by long dwelling in apostacie they prouoke God though by repentance they recouer themselues againe yet the ioyes of Gods spirit or the great measure of them may be lost so as they ●hall neuer recouer the ioy of their saluation all their dayes Obiections about praier ansvvered 3. This doctrine may serue for encouragement to many of Gods poore seruants against all the doubts and feares of their owne hearts these neede only better information for their discouragements arise from mistakings as may appeare by their obiections Ob. I haue much hardnesse of heart before I goe to praier Sol. 1. So had Dauid in the entrance into many of his Psalmes yet hee recouereth and exulteth exceedingly before the end 2. Hardnesse of heart that is felt and mourned for is no hindrance to the successe of praier 3. Therefore thou hast more need to pray for praier is as a fire that melts the leaden hearts of men Ob. I want words when I come to pray Sol. 1. Goe to Christ and beseech him to teach thee to pray and pray God to giue thee words that hath commanded thee to take vnto thee words e Luk. 11. Hos 14.3 2. Be more in the examination of thy heart and life by the Law 3. The Spirit helpes our infirmities when for words wee know not how to pray as we ought f Rom. 8.26 4. The foundation of God remaineth sure and is sealed if thou but name the name of the Lord g 2 Tim. 2.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with vprightnesse desiring and resoluing to depart from iniquitie he may haue an infallible seale of saluation that but nameth the name of God in praier as the word is in the originall Ob. But I doubt of audience Sol. 1. Consider Gods nature commandement promise his nature he is a God that heareth praiers h Psal 95.2 his commandement for hee as peremptorily giues his commandements to pray as he doth any of the tenne Commandements and therefore will certainly accept of what he so earnestly commands his promises also are to bee collected and considered as they lie scattered in seuerall Scriptures He will be neere vnto all that call vpon him in truth And his eares are open to the praiers of the righteous c. Only be thou carefull that thou lie not in any presumptuous sinne and that thou turne not away thine eare from hearing the Law and that thou allow not thine owne heart in wrath or doubting for these and such like are great lets of audience Ob. I haue praied long and often and yet I am not heard Sol. 1. God sometimes doth of purpose deferre to grant that so he might compell them to continue to pray 2. Consider the things thou praiest for whether they be such things as God will euer grant for if we aske amisse or onely for fleshly things or to spend vpon our lusts God will neuer heare i Iam. 4.1.2.3 3. God heares diuers wayes for sometimes he granteth not what is asked but giueth what is answerable to it or better so he heard Christ Heb. 5.7 Thus of continuance in praier Watching in the same Of vvatching in praier Doct. Watching is needfull vnto praier k Matth. 26. Luk. 21.36 1 Pet. 4.8 For explication whereof we must know that watching is taken 2. wayes either literally or metaphorically literally and so is either a iudgement or a dutie watching as a iudgement is when God brings vpon wicked men the terrors of the night or for chastisement of his seruants holds their eyes waking As a dutie watching is a voluntary restraining of our eyes from sleepe and spending of the whole or part of the night in holy imployments Thus the Church kept the night of the Passeouer holy Exod. 12.42 Thus Christ watched Matth. 14.23.25 Thus Paul 2 Cor. 11.23 Thus Dauid Psal 139.18 And this watching vsed by Gods children was either ordinary or extraordinary Ordinary watching is nothing but a sober vse of sleepe in which we ought to be moderate as well as in eating and drinking Extraordinarily Gods children haue beene vsed to watch either vpon occasion of great iudgements l Lam. 2.19 Isay 26.9 Psal 102.7 Mark 14.38 or for preparation to some great businesse Thus Christ would spend whole
wisdome in the prudent in euill times to be silent Amos 5.13 T is not good prouoking euill men nor safe to pull a Beare or a madde dogge by the eares 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 T is the true ambition of a Christian to meddle with his owne businesses 1 Thess 4.11 For conclusion as wee haue seene what it is to walke wisely in the affirmatiue so we must be informed what this wisdome hath not in it It hath not in it a relinquishing of pietie or holinesse in the whole or any part to keepe peace with wicked men Heb. 12.14 It hath not in it a forsaking of fidelitie in the discharge of our duties Amos must not leaue the Court though Amaziah tell him it is his wisest way Michaiah must not flatter Ahab because the 400. Prophets did Lastly to walke wisely is not to walke craftily and deceitfully for such wisdome of Serpents is required as may stand with the innocencie of Doues Redeeme the time To redeeme signifies either to recouer what is lost or to buy what is wanting It is vsually a metaphor borrowed from Merchants buying and selling of commodities Time signifies either space of time or the opportunitie of time both may be here retained Six things obserued concerning the redeeming of time In generall as time is taken for space of time there are diuers things may be obserued 1. That time is a commoditie 2. That a Christian is a Merchant by calling 3. That as any are more wise the more they know the worth of time Eph. 5.15.16 4. That a Christian findes the want of time 5. That if he were prouident time for holy duties might be bought 6. Not to trade for time is a great fault and yet an vsuall fault and comes to passe because men haue no stocke of grace to imploy or they haue neuer serued a prentiship to learne how to vse time or else they haue had such extraordinary losses they cannot set vp againe they haue so often made shipwracke of time by misse-spending it that they cannot now well set themselues in a course to vse it well Againe if time be taken for opportunitie we may obserue Foure considerations of the opportunitie of time 1. That there is a season an opportunitie a due time God hath his haruest for iudgement Matth. 13.30 his season for temporall blessings as for the deaw of heauen and the fruits of the earth Act. 14.17 so he hath for the manifesting of his will by preaching Tit. 1.3 for iustification Rom. 3.26 for the testification of our iustification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 2.6 for mercy and deliuerance and the helpe of Sion Psal 102.13 and for saluation spirituall and eternall 2 Cor. 6.2 Finally there is a season both for man to doe good Psal 1.3 and to receiue good Isa 55.8 2. That this opportunitie is not obuious not ordinary nor easie and euery where to be had Euery day in the yeere is not the Faire day nor euery day in the weeke the Market day 3. When opportunitie is offered we must not neglect it or lose it Ministers must preach while the doore is open the people must walke while they haue the light so we must all pray in euery opportunitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 12.11 Seruing the opportunitie Eph. 6.18 Luk. 21.36 4. We must aduantage our selues by spirituall opportunities though it be with our losse and paines We should not thinke much to be at some losse for Gods wares as well as mens and we must be content to trauell as well to the market of our soules as of our bodies In particular concerning redeeming of time consider 1. what time is lost 2. how time is to be redeemed 3. how it must be vsed when it is redeemed 4. the vses For the first all time is lost that is spent idly What time is lost or in the superfluous feeding of nature either by food or sleepe or in ill company or in the seruice of sinne and the lusts of the flesh or in the seruice of the world or superfluous cares about profits or ioyes about pleasures yea the time is lost that is spent in Gods worship where it is done idolatrously superstitiously ignorantly carelesly hypocritically c. For the second wee must distinguish of times and the persons that haue time to sell and the kindes of redeeming There is time past this cannot be brought backe againe by any price but yet wee may contract with time present for some allowance towards the losse of time past There is also time to come And here is first a time of glory to come Hovv time may bee bought againe and a great bargaine to be made and for the buying of this heauen must suffer violence and we should throng and crowde into the market to procure it by praier hearing faith almesdeeds c. For though it be onely Christs merits that deserues it yet these things we must doe for the assurance of it Besides there is a time of sorrowes to come as sure as we haue had our dayes of sinne we shall haue dayes of sorrow and torment This time is to be bought out with repentance watching fasting praying strong cries by all meanes endeuouring to make our peace and flie from the anger to come But time present is the commoditie we are with all carefulnesse to redeeme The deuill and the world haue time our callings haue time and God is a great Lord of time Time out of the deuils hands and the worlds must be redeemed by violent ablation time from our callings we must redeeme by permutation only making an exchange and allowing time for godlinesse In the first and chiefe place time of God we must buy both the space of time to repent in and the opportunitie of time both for the giuing and the efficacie of the meanes and for this we must both offer and tender the sacrifice of Christ to pacifie for time lost and procure acceptation and also wee must offer vp our selues soules and bodies vpon the seruice of opportunities humbling our soules to walke with our God 3. When wee haue bought time wee must be carefull to vse it well Hovv time must be vsed vvhen it is bought and herein a principall respect is to be had vnto the soule for all this merchandise is for the vse of the soule especially and for religious ends And thus we must spend some time in mortification 1 Pet. 4.1.2 and some part in searching the Scriptures lest that be said of vs which was said of the Iewes that whereas concerning the time they might haue beene teachers they did need againe to be taught the very principles they were so inexpert in the word of righteousnes Heb. 5.12 Much time should be spent in the workes of pietie abounding in the worke of the Lord as wee abound in time Some time should be spent in workes of mercy both spirituall instructing comforting exhorting admonishing