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A65753 A vvay to the tree of life discovered in sundry directions for the profitable reading of the Scriptvres : wherein is described occasionally the nature of a spirituall man, and, in A digression, the morality and perpetuity of the Fourth Commandment in every circumstance thereof, is discovered and cleared / by Iohn White ... White, John, 1575-1648. 1647 (1647) Wing W1785; ESTC R40696 215,387 374

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It is objected that the Rest commanded in the fourth Commandement was a figure of Christs rest in the grave and therefore is now banished with the rest of those shadowes We answer this typicall relation to Christ Answer was accidentall to the Sabbath not essentiall That was accidentall to the Sabbath it was a Sabbath before it was a Type for it was a Sabbath before Christ was looked upon as a sacrifice for sin that is before man had fallen and consequently before there was any need of our Saviours resting in the grave Seeing therefore it was a Sabbath before it was a type it may remaine a Sabbath though the type be taken away They will it may be grant that there must be a rest from labour upon the Sabbath day Objection 2 but the strictness of that rest such as the Jews observed The strictnesse of the rest enjoyned the Jewes is taken away is ceremonious and abolished The rest say they to be observed of us Christians is only for publike worship and no longer so that the remainder of the day after publike duties are ended is free and then men are at liberty to make use of the time remaining for recreations or for any secular affaires as occasion shall required In answer hereunto we have shewed already that although publike worship be principally yet it is not solely provided for in this Law which as we have proved out of Esay 58.13 reacheth to our private carriage also And the Law calls the whole day the Sabbath or rest of the Lord that is both commanded by him and consecrated to him For the whole week being distributed into seven parts sixe are allowed for labour and the seventh is consecrated unto God which therefore must be a naturall day as the other sixe are To replie that we are not bound by that Law is to begge the question But why should not Christians be bound to rest the whole day as well as the Jews The Jews not bound to rest but for holy duties Surely if the Sabbath were a type of Christs rest in the grave yet there could be no type in a whole day as there was in Jonas his three daies So the rest of the whole day having no type in it is not abolished for that cause What then was it a part of the burthen of those ceremonious observances from which Christ hath freed us To give the fuller answer hereunto let us examine what rest was enjoyned the Jewes that we may discover wherein the burthensomenesse of that rest consisted First I conceive no man will think that the Jewish rest was a totall cessation from all action like that in the Aegyptian darknesse Exod. 10.23 as if men after the publike exercise were to sit still and to do nothing Was it then a ceasing from labours to follow sports that the Sabbath might be like the feast of the Calfe Exod. 32.6 or was it rest from worldly labours to fit men give them the more leisure to attend holy duties Such a rest indeed the Law requires For which we have as much need of rest as they and the Sabbath to be kept holy Now if this were all that God required of the Jews to rest that they might be exercised in hearing reading praying c. Is this the liberty Christ hath purchased unto us that we may be lesse godly then they lesse frequent in prayer and other holy duties then they For if we are bound at least to equall if not to go beyond them in our exercise in those holy duties we have as much need of rest from ordinary employments as they had This will be made more evident unto us if we lay before us these five particulars First 1. As having a more weighty ground for observing this holy rest our ground of consecrating the Sabbath is as great and weighty and more cleer and evident to us then it was to the Jews seeing Gods mercies towards man are more cleerly represented us in mans redemption then they could be to them in the worlds creation and conservation Secondly 2. And are as much bound to advance Gods majesty as they 3. And more helps then they 4. And as much need to prevent distractions as they 5. And our duties are as many or more then theirs the majesty and greatnesse of God to whom we consecrate this day is as fully manifested to us as to them Thirdly our helps and means for the raising up of our spirits to an holy rejoycing in God are greater and more effectuall then they were unto them Fourthly we need as much as they all helps to prevent the distraction of our minds and to the quickning of our spirits Lastly our exercise in spirituall and holy duties is in all respects as much or more then theirs So that if all be laid together the observing of a whole day of rest for our exercise in holy duties is as usefull and as needfull to us Christians as it was heretofore to the Iews To cleer this point yet more fully 1 Private prayer and reading let us lay before us the right manner and order of performing the duties in which the Sabbath day is to be sanctified First therefore all men must needs grant that the private exercises of prayer reading Gods word and meditation which are constantly to be used on other daies are not to be neglected but ought rather to be enlarged on the Sabbath day 2. Recordation of Gods mercies generall and Particular Again as the Sabbath ought to be a day of gladnesse and rejoycing in God Psalm 118.24 for all his mercies to man in generall so it is a time of recounting his extraordinary favours to our own souls in particular which will be of speciall use to quicken and fill our hearts with the love of God by tasting the sweetnesse of his goodnesse and to carry us on with more cheerfulnesse and life of spirit in the performance of all the duties of that day both private and publike Thirdly 3. Preparation to publique duties for the publike duties themselves they can never be rightly performed without precedent preparation David will wash his hands in innocency and so compasse Gods Altar Psal 26.6 and Solomon tels us we must take heed to our feet when we enter into Gods house Eccles 5.1 and bethink our selves of the majesty and greatnesse of that God before whom we present our selves and of our own vilenesse that are but dust and ashes Gen. 18.27 nay which is worse unclean and filthy persons Isa 64.6 unworthy to stand before a God that hath pure eyes and the Apostle tells us of superfluity of naughtinesse that must be laid aside when we come to hear that we may receive the word with meeknesse Jam. 1.21 into an honest and good heart Luk. 8.15 Meditations by which we must prepare our hearts in our private exercises of reading Gods word and prayer much more in these which are more solemn and publike Again
the Sabbath was altogether needlesse and superfluous Thirdly they insist strongly upon this that if God had given Adam such a law at that time then had the Patriarchs been bound to the observation of that law Now say they if the Patriarchs had been bound to the observation of that law they had certainly kept it but that neither all or any of them observed any such is manifest by the history of their lives written by Moses wherein there is no mention of any such thing For the first of these three arguments which is Answer to the first that it was impossible for Adam in Paradise to keep a Sabbath they reason thus The Sabbath say they was appointed for the publike worship of God 1. That supposeth publick worship to be the whole duty of the Sabbath as all men must needs acknowledge But Adam and his wife could not make a publike assembly nor consequently worship God publikely nor by the same observe a Sabbath according to the Law To this we answer in the First place Though publike worship be the principall yet it is not the sole duty of the Sabbath Honoring God forbearing to do ones own waies or to find his own pleasure or to speake ones own words are duties of such an holy day of Rest as God delights in Isa 58.13 as well as publike worship And the Fourth Commandement which sets apart an whole day unto the Lord entirely and commands therein a totall cessation from all our employments in our ordinary calling makes it evident The sequestring of our selves from our ordinary secular affaires for religious duties is the full scope of that fourth Commandement which if a single person shut out by sicknesse or any other casuall accident from publike Assemblies perform he keeps an acceptable Sabbath unto God though he cannot joyne with the Congregation in the duties of publike worship Againe why may not two persons where there are no more 2. Two where no more are may be esteemed a publike assembly be esteemed to be a publike Assembly It is cleare that our Saviour esteems the meeting of two or three for prayer a gathering together Mat. 18.20 And then it 's plaine that Adam and Eve meeting together in Paradise and employing the whole day in prayer and other holy and religious exercises may in a true and proper sense be said to worship publikely so that in this argument brought against possibility of keeping a Sabbath by Adam and Eve in Paradise 3. It is no good argument Adam could not then keep the Sabbath therefore he had no Law for it the propositions are both faulty Besides this is no good argument Adam and Eve could not at that present keep a Sabbath therefore they had no Law given them by God to command it The fifth Commandement prescribing the duties of Parents to their Children is questionlesse a Law of nature shall we say that this Law was not at the least written in Adams heart from the beginning because he had then no child We think it wisdome to make laws for warres in time of Peace although there can be no execution of them for the present The Next Argument against the Institution of the Sabbath in Paradise Answer to the second is that then Adam needed no Sabbath neither for his body nor for his mind For his body they say he needed no Sabbath because that he being exercised in no painfull or toylsome labour but exercised only in such work as might be accounted rather a recreation then a labour needed no rest at all or refreshing of his body thereby 1. Ease by rest though it be a consequent is not the scope of the Sabbath To this we answer that the ease of man and beast from labour although it be a consequent of the rest of the Sabbath yet was it never the scope of it seeing the moderation of labour belongs properly to the same commandement which enjoynes labour that is unto the Eight as the Apostle also interprets it Eph. 4.28 The Fourth Commandement forbids labour indeed but not so much for mercy as for Piety nor so much for easing of the toyle of the body as for the preventing of the distraction of the mind by labour seeing we know the body cannot labour but the mind must needs be more or lesse employed withall which therefore at that time cannot so freely be wholly exercised in Spirituall duties as it ought So that Adam might have use of a Sabbath in Paradise although he needed it not for the ease of his body 2. Adam might make use of the Sabbath in respect of his minde Yea but say they Adam much lesse needed a Sabbath in respect of his mind then he did in respect of his bodie because his mind in that state of Innocency being continually filled with heavenly thoughts he could not choose but keep a perpetuall Sabbath To this Objection we have answered in part already that the Sabbath requires of us not only the filling of the mind with heavenly Meditations but besides a totall sequestration of the whole man to the exercise of all holy duties forbidding us to finde our own pleasure or our own waies Isa 58.13 that is take up any employment either of body or minde about any of those affaires which may properly becalled our own such as are all our secular affaires Now although Adam in Paradise had not in that ease and pleasure of his in keeping the Garden his minde so wholly taken up with that businesse as ours are now in our more toylsome works yet it must needs be and was his duty too to attend and to have his minde exercised in the thoughts of those things that he tooke in hand which on the Sabbath ought to be wholly laid aside In one word Adam was and ought on other dayes to be wholly heavenly minded in the use of earthly things but on the Sabbath day he was to be wholly heavenly minded in the use of heavenly things All then that can be made good in this parcular is only this that Adam in some respects lesse needed a Sabbath then we doe whence cannot possibly be inferred that he therefore needed none at all nay upon the same ground it will follow that because he being riper in knowledge stronger in faith and more quickned and fervent in affection lesse needed the Sacraments or other like helps as we doe it was not fit for him to have any Sacrament at all As well as of the Sacraments c. Rather we may conclude that because Adam infinitely excelled us in all these abilities therefore though he lesse needed yet he was more fit to keep a Sabbath then we are having more leisure and being more heavenly minded then we are All this while we speake of the Sabbath as if it were given to man only for his own good whereas the principall scope of it is the honouring of God which was Adam duty as well as ours So that in respect of
methodically in the interpretation of the Commandement we must first enquire what the scope is at which it aimes The appointing of a day of rest cannot be the scope of the fourth Commandement For all Laws being rules directed to some end proposed cannot so well be interpreted any way as by the end unto which they are directed Now the appointing of a day of rest cannot possibly be the last scope of this Commandement seeing we know rest from labour is enjoyned to give us freedome for holy duties and the exercising of our selves therein But of rest for holy duties which consequently must be the principall thing intended in the fourth Commandement But then it will be questioned to what kind of holy duties this day is consecrated For there are many that imagine that God hath set it apart only for duties of publike worship Publick and private But this opinion seemes not to agree with the letter of the Law which in expresse tearms gives the whole day unto the Lord for his own immediate service in religious worship Now we know publike worship takes not up the whole day It must needs be granted therefore the Lord appointed that day of holy rest for the performance of something more unto God then publike worship and so much is expresly affirmed Isa 58.13 where we are forbidden to find our own pleasure or speak our own words upon that day which as all men must acknowledge must needs extend to the ordering of our carriage in private as well as in publike so that the setting apart of a whole day of rest unto God for his publike and private worship seemes to be the full scope of this fourth Commandement Next to the scope of this Law 3 Parts of the fourth Commandement the 1. Summe 2. Explication 3. Reason we are to consider advisedly the frame and composure of it and therein we are first to take notice of the principall parts of the Law which we shall find to be three First we have laid down unto us the summe of the Law Exod. 20.8 Secondly we have the explication of that sum ver 9. Thirdly we have the reason of all v. 11. Each of these two first parts containe three heads of duties pointed out in the summe and opened and unfolded in the explication and confirmed in the reason of the Law The first duty is Preparation intimated in the word Remember The second the Sequestration from ordinary employments implied in the word Sabbath The third is Sanctification of that rest expressed in the phrase to keepe it holy All these are explained in their order Our Preparation must be by the dispatch of all our Secular affaires in six daies Our rest must be a cessation by all persons from our usuall labours and imployments in secular affaires The Sanctification of our rest must be by employing our selves in holy duties The confirmation of all follows in the reason of the Law of Preparation and rest from Gods own Act of Creating the world in sixe daies and ceasing from his work on the seventh and the Sanctifying of that rest from Gods Commandement and ordaining the seventh day to be a day of rest unto us for ever Now wherein the strength of that Confirmation lies will be the maine point in question of which hereafter To come now to the Explication of the words and phrases in this Commandement The first word in the summe of this Law Remember is diversly interpreted some conceive that it implies the importance of the duty commanded as that word is used many times to intimate some matter of speciall observation as Deut. 9.7 Others there are that think it points at the Antiquity of that Law given many ages before and therefore to be called afresh to minde as the Psalmist saith he will remember the works of the Lord his wonders of old Psal 177.11 and 143.5 and withall some conceive that he taxeth the peoples forgetfulnesse of that Law and neglect of the observation of it in the time of their bondage in Aegypt Some or all of these senses may be implied in this word Remember but beyond all these we may probably conceive that it may import Remember implies Think upon and by dispatching of thy busines provide for the Sabbath Think upon and accordingly before-hand provide for the observation of this holy rest by dispatching of all the works of thy calling that nothing may be undone which providence and diligence might prevent that might hinder thy rest on the seventh day As for those which conceive that in this Law labour upon the sixe daies is commanded as well as rest upon the seventh they are much mistaken The precept for labour is delivered in the eight Commandement as the Apostle interprets that Law Eph. 4.28 In this place is commanded the dispatch of our secular affaires before the Sabbath whether it be done in six daies or fewer it is not materiall as to this Law The next tearme to be explained Sabbath is a day of rest which only and not seventh is expressed in sum and conclusion of the Commandement is the name of the Sabbath or day of rest and easing from labour as that word properly signifies which is repeated againe in the conclusion of the Commandement And it is not to be passed by without observation that whereas the old Sabbath from the beginning till Christ came was the seventh day or last of the weeke and both in the explanation and reason of the Commandement is appointed to be one of the seven yet God mentions not the name of seven either in the Summe or in the Conclusion of the Commandement We have therefore reason to conceive that seeing God in this Law was to prescribe something of the Law of Nature The day of rest being of the law of nature the set day of positive institution which is the appointing of a day of holy Rest to be consecrated unto God for his worship which the very light of nature teacheth and in the explanation and reason of the Law to adde something which is of positive Institution namely the proportion of the time and the set day wherein this rest was to be observed he first settles that which is of the Law of nature and afterwards establisheth that which is Positive God purposely makes choise of such fit expressions especially in his Law in which he is most exact as may best acquaint us with his minde Wherefore seeing this is a fit Method to be observed by him and seeing the composure of this Law agrees with it we have reason to conclude that the Lord himselfe intended it in this place The last phrase in the sum of this Commandement remains which is To keep it holy To keep holy is to employ the day in holy duties of Gods immediate worship Now to keep a day holy is to employ it in holy actions directed to the immediate service and worship of God in the use of such
A VVAy to the Tree of 〈◊〉 Discovered in Sundry DIRECTIONS for the Profitable Reading OF THE SCRIPTVRES Wherein is described occasionally The nature of a Spirituall Man And in a Digression The Morality and Perpetuity of the Fourth Commandment in every circumstance thereof is discovered and cleared BY IOHN WHITE Master of Arts and Preacher of Gods Word in Dorchester in the County of Dorset Search the Scriptures for in them you think you have Eternall life Iohn 5.39 LONDON Printed by M. F. for R. Royston at the signe of the Angel in Ivy-lane 1647. TO The right Worshipfull the Mayor Recorder Bailives Burgesses and the rest of the Inhabitants in the Burrough of Dorchester in the County of Dorset Grace be unto you and peace from God our Father and from our Lord Jesus Christ NO man I conceive will wonder Right Worshipfull and Dearely Beloved in the Lord that I present you with this small Treatise being an accompt of some of my labours which I have taken amongst you I know not of whom they are likely to finde nor desire they may have better acceptance then of those of whose love manifested unto me in so many honours and favours by which you have so many waies engaged me now neere these two and fourty yeares wherein I have continued amongst you I have had so aboundant and full experience Besides in presenting you with this poore Treatise I give you of your own as I may truely say with the Prophet David 1 Chron. 29.14 although not altogether in his sense For am not I yours as S. Paul tels the Corinthians that himselfe and Apollo and Cephas were theirs 1 Cor. 3.22 And by consequent the issues of all my weake abilities you may as justly challenge to be your own as the Master might claime the issues of the bondslaves borne in his house to be his and as in true estimation it is such so I desire you to accept it as an acknowledgement although in no proportion a satisfaction of that great Debt which I owe unto you And to speake truth it will be of speciall use to you to accompt this labour of mine such as it is as your own that you may so entertaine and embrace it so use husband and employ it to your best advantage as we use to doe those things that are our own For the chiefe reason wherefore the manifold helps which God is pleased to afford us by the labours of other men usually profit us so little is because men looke not on them as matters wherein themselves have a peculiar interest and so neglect them as we too usually doe those things which are of common and generall concernement As for the matter handled in this short Treatise I desire you to take notice that of all the Truths that I have delivered unto you in so large a time of my Ministery continued amongst you I have chosen this above all other subjects to recommend unto you in a more especiall manner and to leave with you as a memoriall of my tender affection towards you for these two weighty reasons First because this duty of studying the Scriptures whereunto this Treatise is intended as an help is of all others of most generall concernement and of most necessary and common use Secondly because it hath pleased the Lord to cast us into dangerous times wherein some men endeavour what they can to bring the Scriptures into contempt crying down that sacred booke as containing nothing else but a dead letter and being a beggerly element fit for none but the lowest forme of Christians Others that are unstable and unlearned as the Apostle tearmes them 2 Pet. 3.16 wrest them at their pleasure to their own destruction and the endangering of their brethrens soules Let me therefore in the bowels of Christ beseech you Brethren as you ever hope to get any power of grace into your hearts to have your spiritual life quickened your comforts assured and your wayes directed to take heed to this Sure and Infallible word of Truth as to a Light shining in a darke place as the Apostle speakes 2 Pet. 1.19 as containing in it your Food your Physick your Evidences your Comforts your Armes both for offence and defence and in a word which is the very life of your Soules the Light of your Vnderstanding the Director of your Wills and the Moderator of your Affections Study this Word which our Saviour tearmes Searching of the Scriptures Iohn 5.39 which is done not by Reading them over cursorily but by examining them diligently comparing Scripture with Scripture that we may know the full minde of God revealed therein who many times layes not down the whole truth together in one place but leaves us to take in some other clauses out of other places to make up the full of that truth which hee would reveale unto us For want of this care of laying Scripture to Scripture many taking up the truth of God by parts ground thereupon dangerous errours wronging God in making him to speake what he never meant and overthrowing their own Faith to the hazard of their owne Soules Of one thing we must be very carefull that we bring with us our minds free and not prepossest with any Opinion which we have either framed in our owne phantasy or received from others A mind forestalled by an erroneous conceipt is no fit Judge of any Truth or of any Testimony cōcerning Truth but as coloured glasse transmits the light and represents it to the eye infected with the same colour with which it selfe is dyed Or as the taste distempered by some ill humour relisheth all things which it receives according to that humour with which it selfe is infected so happens it with a minde prepossest with any phantasie it apprehends and judgeth of all things according to that opinion which it selfe hath entertained Lastly the Scriptures being in themselves exceeding broad to use the Psalmists expression Psal 119.96 that is of large comprehension and withall very mysterious containing in them wonders as they are tearmed ver 18. there needs together with our reading much Meditation upon what we have read as the same Prophet tells us that he did meditate upon Gods Law all the day Psal 119.97 much conference especially with Ministers and other experienced Christians much use of learned mens writings which give great light to the understanding of darke places in Scripture which wee shall often meet withall But above all fervent and continuall Prayers wherein acknowledging our owne blindnesse and inability of our selves to search into the deep Mysteries revealed in the Word with Agur Prov. 30.2 3. we beg earnestly the assistance of Gods Spirit to open our eyes Psal 119.18 to make us to understand the way of his precepts ver 27. to give us understanding that wee may know his testimonies ver 125. being assured that as there is no other meanes to reveale unto us the mind of God but his Spirit 1 Cor. 2.11 so God will not deny that
but his own Spirit 1 Cor. 2.11 It is true concerning a mans mind seeing it is moved according to reason in order to the end which he proposeth to himself therefore one that knows another mans end may with some probability guesse at his thoughts and purposes tending to that end which Solomon implies in affirming that though counsell be hidden deep in the heart of man yet a man of understanding may draw it out Prov. 20.5 And so a man knowing that Gods main end in all his ways is his own honour may conclude that Gods law must be such as may direct men in those ways in which they may most glorifie God But what those particular directions must be it is impossible for men to guesse till God himself reveal them It is true that the very light of nature which God hath planted in every man will discover unto him some of the chief heads of the duties that he requires of him as to love the Lord with all our hearts and to fear and serve him Deut. 10.12 And to serve one another through love Gal. 5.13 But in what particular services we are to expresse our piety to God or love to men what man can prescribe or imagine For that the ways by which both these main duties may be performed are various and divers it is evident now to which of these different ways God would direct one it was impossible to guesse till God himself had made it manifest in his own word To give instance of this truth in some particulars Especially laws positive must needs bee given by God alone it was impossible for any man to conceive what ceremonies or outward acts God would accept and be best pleased withall in the duties of his worship No man could divine that the tree of life should be a Sacrament to Adam in Paradise or Circumcision to the Jews or Baptisme and the Lords Supper to Christians For ought any man could conceive to the contrary the Priesthood might have been setled upon the Tribe of Simeon as well as Levi. The rest of the Sabbath might have been fixed on the second or sixth day as well as on the seventh and on the first if God had so appointed it And for the duties of the second Table it was not of absolute necessity that God should establish such a kinde of subordination and subjection of one man to another as he hath done or give every man a propriety in his goods to possesse them as severall to himself or limit one man to one wife and ordain marriage for the onely way of propagation of mankinde seeing that although all these are fit and convenient yet God if hee had pleased might have given other rules for the governing and establishing peace amongst men and it was as lawfull for him to give the creatures what laws he pleased as to give them what natures he pleased So that seeing the law for the right ordering of the creatures depends meerly upon Gods will which cannot be known unlesse himself reveal it it must needs be granted which was first proposed that none could give the law to Gods Church but God himself Next if it had been possible 2ly Nor is it convenient that any other then God should give this law 1 For preserving Gods authority it was no way fit either for the advancing of Gods honour or for the furthering of mans good that any other should give that law then God himself Not fit for Gods honour in two respects First Gods authority could be no way so well preserved as by giving his own law to his people seeing all men acknowledge that giving of laws is an honour annexed to the highest power although the execution of them be committed to Magistrates of a lower degree It may be probably guessed that even heathen Law-givers by pretending either consulting with their gods in giving their laws or allowance of them by them acknowledged law-making to be a divine prerogative which yet is more fully manifested by this that we acknowledge no law to bee just that is not either founded on or consonant to Gods law either written in mans heart or delivered in his word So that it was fit that God should give the law to his own people to preserve his own authority amongst them Again it is requisite for Gods honour in another respect 2 And that we might have a perfect mirrour of him Which none could give but himself that none but God himself should give his own law to his people because none is able to give so perfect a mirrour of God as himself As for men we know none of them hath seen God at any time John 1.17 and it is so little a portion that they know of him Job 26.14 that it is impossible they should set him out as he deserves Now it is for Gods honour that hee should be expressed as fully as may be which neither is nor can be performed so exactly by any man as it may be by his law which represents unto us the image of his minde and will and gives us a more distinct knowledge of him then his works can doe Nay his word serves as a Commentary to his works as laying before us the rule according to which God orders all his ways so that by the help thereof we understand the righteousnesse and holinesse of all his acts as David did Psa 73.17 which he could not finde out before It is true indeed that the very works themselves praise God and shew him in his tender mercies Psal 145.5.8 in his mighty power Job 36.22 37.23 Godhead Rō 1.20 yea commonly in his righteousness in rewarding and punishing Psa 58.11 But they neither expresse him so distinctly nor consequently affect the heart so deeply as they doe when they are illustrated by the word as Job confesseth chap. 42.6 that he never saw God so clearly nor abhorred himself so much as when God described unto him his works in that conference Job 38. c. Wherefore seeing the image of God is most exactly expressed unto us in the word it is most fit that the word that represents him to us should be given by God himself who knowing himself best can give us the most perfect draught of his own face Besides these respects unto Gods honour in regard of mans good it was not convenient that the Scriptures which contain Gods law to his Church should be given by any other then God himself For first 3ly For mās good 1. To subdue his heart to obedience mans heart would hardly be brought to stoop to any power but Gods alone whose voice onely prevails upon the conscience and subdues the very thoughts and imaginations of the spirit which the voice of no man can doe Besides 2. To make his services accepted nothing can make our services performed to God or man to be duties of obedience but the undertaking of them upon Gods command which we do when we know the
that two different constructions may be made of the same place of Scripture importing both of them a sense Orthodox and indifferently agreeing with the circumstances precedents and consequents of the Text. We may take which we please or both if need be In such a case a man is at liberty to embrace which he thinks best so he condemn not the other or to make use of them both for instruction and meditation as conceiving that the Holy Ghost who could in those as well as in other places have spoken more distinctly hath left those places of doubtfull construction to supply us with more variety of matter for our use and edification We meet sometimes with Parables and similitudes Similitudes must be extended no farther then the Holy Ghost intends them Nor any principles of truth built upon them which we must be carefull to extend no farther then the Holy Ghost intends them and that may be easily discerned by the occasion and by the scope of the Text. Now these similitudes being used for illustration by the holy Spirit we may easily make use of them so far but it is not so safe to build any principle of truth upon them which is not confirmed by other clear places of Scripture Where we find heavenly things expressed by earthly as when God is said to come down Resemblances of spirituall things by earthly must be understood spiritually to depart to sit to stand to have parts of an humane body when the state of glory is called a kingdome wherein men are said to have houses thrones c. we must understand the resemblances spiritually not according to the nature of those things by which they are resembled So Gods hand notes his power his eye his providence c. which also we must not proportion according to the scantness of a man but extend according to the infinitenesse of a God CAP. XIII Directions for raising observations out of the Scriptures for our owne instruction and edification ALl wise men in their writings as they do in other actions First propose unto themselves a scope or end at which they aime especially Secondly in relation thereunto they make choice of matters and subjects fit for that end which they propose unto themselves Thirdly those matters which they intend to handle they digest and dispose in such a method and Lastly they express and set them out in such phrases and forms of speech as may best fit the matter which they have in hand Seeing therefore God in these holy writings which we call the Scriptures speaks to men after the manner of men as he must do For raising observations out of Scripture 1. Search after the scope 2. Take notice of the matter 3. Observe the order 4. The phrases or expressions if he will be understood by them we must necessarily in the First place search after the end and scope at which he aims principally in these books Secondly we must take notice of the matters or subjects which he handles therein Thirdly we must carefully observe the order and method and Lastly the words and phrases of speech which the Lord makes choice of in expressing and setting down those things which he delivers in this sacred Volume Now the generall scope which God aims at in these holy writings which we call his word is that which he also proposeth unto himself in all his works The generall scope of Scripture is to make God known namely to make himself known unto men that they may honour him as God advancing him alone in their hearts and believing in and serving him alone may by that means further their own salvation That this is the end of the Scriptures is clearly testified by our Saviour himself Joh. 5.39 who upon this ground exhorts us to search the Scriptures because in them saith he ye think that is you make account you have eternall life and they are they which testifie of me And that which is spoken of the history of Christ Joh. 20.31 that it was written that we might beleeve him to be the Son of God and beleeving on him might have eternall life may be truly verified of God himself and of the scope of his word in generall For these purposes For which end Gods spirit handles subjects fit for it Recording his works and for the furthering of these ends God makes choice of and handles in the Scriptures such subjects as may make him best known unto us Such as are all his wares works as well of Creation as of Providence in the administration supporting and disposing all that he hath made Especially in the government of his Church 1. His lawes 2. The application of them by the Prophets especially in the government of his Church Secondly his Laws and Precepts which he hath given to his people for the right ordering of their waies Thirdly we have in the Prophesies the Application of these Laws and of the Sanctions annexed thereunto unto the manners and conditions of the people to whom they are delivered together with the histories both of the godly prospering in the waies of Gods service and of the wicked perishing in their rebellions Psal 92.15 Hos 14.9 1 Cor. 10.6 All discovering his glorious attributes In all which the Lord hath wonderfully discovered unto us his power goodness wisdome faithfulnesse justice and mercy The consideration whereof must needs or ought at least to work our hearts to a firm adherence to him To win us to adhere to him in faith love and feare in faith love and fear and quicken us to all duties of obedience in which he requires to be served unto which we are wonderfully encouraged by such examples as are layed down before us in the Word which manifest the righteousness and holiness of God rewarding every man according to his deeds so that all the waies of the Lord are right and the just shall walk in them but the transgressours shall fall therein Hos 14.9 SECT I. Of the subject matters handled in the Scripture and first of Gods works THe Scriptures in recording setting out before us the history of Gods works In the work of creation is manifested Gods begin first with the creation of the world with all things therein by his mighty word wherein is discovered unto us Eternity first Gods eternity who was before all things Psal 90.2 yea before time it self in which they were created and therefore must needs be from everlasting Secondly Self-being we may take notice of his self being who being before all things and giving being to all things must necessarily be of himself and could not otherwise have imparted that being to the Creatures which he had not in and of himself Thirdly we discover his free and overflowing bounty Bounty whom nothing could possibly move to create the world but his own goodnesse and who in creating it hath furnished and stored it with such infinite variety of all
us to doe or in his dispensations towards us what he would have us to be ought to be the ground of our submission both to doe what he commands and to be what he ordaines concerning us in the course of his Providence Upon this ground it is that as well those glorious works For want whereof all works though never so specious are abominable done according to the rules of morall honesty by the heathen who neither knew God nor his Law As also the like actions done upon the same grounds by many amongst us that carry the name of Christians cannot possibly be accepted by God because though those things done be the same that he commands in his Law yet the will and command of God is not the ground upon which they are done but rather a respect to civill honesty and often a desire to honour our selves by conforming thereunto so that to speak truth we doe therein not so much the will of God as our own will Seventhly the method and order in which God delivers his Law unto us must not be neglected For instance in the preface of the Law Rule 7 Take notice of the method of the Law God before he gives any one Commandement laies before us the interest that he hath in us that he hath purchased us to himselfe and therefore we are his and consequently to be ordered and disposed by him according to his own will This method teaches us a leston without which no service of ours is accepted that all our services must be tendred unto God as duties as we are taught to doe by our Saviour himselfe Luk. 17.10 which as it reserves unto God the honour of his free grace when he rewards our services for which he owes us nothing seeing they are all but debts and duties so withall it takes away all our boasting even in our best services Againe when God begins his Law with that Commandement to have the Lord for our God it teacheth us to lay that for the foundation of all duties of obedience that we have avouched the Lord to be our God This method Joshua observes in renewing the Covenant betwixt God and his people immediately before his death Iosh 24.15 putting them first to choose what God they will serve which when they had done then he presseth them with the duties of his service verse 22.23 And indeed this is the most effectuall of all motives both to draw us on to all duties of obedience and to hold us fast to continue therein that they are services to that God whom we have chosen and set up to our selves for our God Neither can there be an higher aggravation of any sinne against God and his Law then this that we have thereby in a sort cast off Gods yoke and denied the Lord to be our God This foundation being once laid that we have advanced and set up the Lord to be our God the Lords next care was in the second Commandement to prescribe the meanes by which we may hold communion and fellowship with him which he appoints to be only in such ordinances as himselfe hath established and no other way expecting blessings from him and rendring our services to him in them alone In the third Commandement God requires us to make publike profession of this Covenant that we have made with God but still in sincerity and uprightnesse of heart alwaies mentioning his name whether by way of attestation in an oath or upon any other occasion with such reverence and feare as becomes the Majesty of so great and holy a God The fourth Commandement appoints the time not only of meeting together in publike for Gods worship but besides that of sequestring our selves from al worldly employments that we may enjoy an holy communion with God in those things that are spirituall and heavenly The same method that the Lord useth in setting down the Commandements of the first Table he observeth in ranking the Laws of the second First he establisheth authority which is the bond and foundation of civill society in the fifth Commandement Secondly he provides for the safety of mens persons forbidding murther or any wrong or hurt tending thereunto in the sixth Thirdly in the seventh Commandement under the name of adultery besides the prohibiting of all uncleannesse in the propagation of posterity the Lord forbids the inordinate use of any creature as meats and drinks c. Fourthly the eight Commandement provides for the support of community by honest labour and discreet and charitable distribution after the necessities of our selves and ours are supplied of the profits of our labours for the reliefe of our neighbours wants Fifthly in the ninth Cōmandement God establisheth truth among men without which commerce in civill society cannot stand Lastly in the tenth he settles propriety in such things as God by his dispensation hath shared and allotted out unto every man apart so that no man may so much as in his thoughts reach out after any thing that an other man possesseth by a just title but may content himselfe with his own portion Eightly whereas the Laws of men bind us only by the power of the authority that commands or though to that indeed for conscience sake of that Law of God Rule 8 by which authority is established the Laws of God bind the conscience immediately by themselves The Laws of God and they only bind the conscience and not only by the power of the commander So that those Laws which are given by God being once made known unto us we are bound to acknowledge them to be just holy as the Psalmist doth Ps 119.39.128 140. as manifesting the will of God which is the rule of righteousness and holines upon that ground to embrace them and submit unto thē to esteem our selves unrighteous and wicked if we swerve from them But as for the laws of men though we are bound to submit unto them because they have upon them the stampe of that authority which God hath established and set over us yet neither are we bound to judge the Laws themselves to be righteous and holy nor consequently to esteeme our selves unholy and wicked if we yeeld not obedience unto them unlesse withall we despise that authority that commāds them or be an occasion of disturbing the publike peace for the conservation whereof the authority and power of the Magistrate was ordained Lastly the obedience which the Lord requires of us unto this Law of his which we call Morall Rule 9 Our subjection to the law must be 1. Voluntary 2. Upon knowledge must necessarily have these foure conditions In the first place our subjection therunto must be every way free and voluntary such as the Prophet David professes his was Psal 119.30 173. In the second place that it may be so this free choice of ours must bee firmely grounded upon the cleare and distinct knowledge of the justice and equity Psal 119.128 of the purity and holinesse Psal