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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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yeelding to any sin but give apparent tokens of dislike Object Why May wee not by yeelding a little to them draw them to us Answ No but the way to win them is a pure conversation with fear 1 Pet. 3.12 much less may wee flatter them in any evil Mica●ah would not flatter with the King though four hundred false Prophets did Fourthly Acknowledge thy self a childe of Wisdome which is justified of all her children Suffer not Gods glory to bee trodden down by thy silence Wisely break off fooleries by savoury Riddles or Questions as Sampson and in a wise and peaceable manner change the matter holding it a settled ground of Religion not to relinquish piety to keep peace with wicked men Heb. 12.14 Follow peace and holiness No corruption of man must drive us from our station Fifthly So soon as wee may depart from them Prov. 14.7 Depart from the foolish man when thou perceivest not in him the lips of knowledge And b●ware of falling into the like company again Joseph wisely declined the company of his Mistress when shee daily spake unto him Gen. 39.10 and Dav●● would not return with Saul when hee perceived his wilfulness against him 1 Sam. 26.25 CHAP. XXXII Rules to carry our selves wisely towards evil men evi●●y affected to us IF men bee not onely evil in themselves but also to us then it is either in evil purposes or in evil practices against us If they purpose evil the● our Saviours Rule is Beware of men Matth. Rules how to carry our selves to our enemies 10.17 for they will deliver y●● up to the Councils By men our Saviour means those whom in the former w●rds hee calleth Wolves that desire to make a ●●ey and spoyl of the sheep of Christ and in his Caveat adviseth 1 Wisely to prevent the plots and trains of ungodly men discreetly to prevent our own trouble so near as wee can 1 Wisely prevent their plots How wisely did Jacob prevent the fury of his brother Esau And as they watch to traduce us so must wee watch to cut off occasions of entrapping Luke 6.7 The Scribes and Pharisees watched whether Christ would heal on the Sabbath day or no to finde accusation against him our Saviour for all this omitted not to do good but its doing it by his question unto them cut off so far as hee could the matter of their malice by clearing the lawfulness of it So must wee And yet prepare stoutly to bear whatsoever the Lord measureth out by them 2 Decline their fury 2 Our Saviour would have us wisely decline their fury not without cause provoking them It is no wisdome to provoke an evil man It is no good discretion to stir up a Lion to take a Bear by the tooth or a Dog by the ears For they desire nothing more than matter to stir up their corruption by So Hezekiah commanded his servants not to answer Rabshecah one word 3 Joyn with Serpentine wisdome innocency of Doves 3 Joyn with Serpentine wisdome innocency of Doves Matth. 10.16 Nothing more vexeth and vanquisheth an Adversary than innocency no better brest plate than righteousness But if a man had the innocency of Christ himself the Adversary will watch advantages and play upon a mans simplicity therefore joyn Serpentine wisdome as Paul did Act. 23.6 hee testified his innocency and that with all good conscience hee served God till that day But what tell you Ananias of Doves innocency hee commands to strike him on the mouth the more innocent the less indured hee fared the worse for that and therefore hee joyns in season Serpentine wisdome For perceiving his greatest enemies to bee Pharisees and Sadduces hee professeth himself a Pharisee and the son of a Pharisee and that hee was brought in danger for the hope of the Resurrection which the Sadduces denied and so casting a bone between them and letting them by the ears hee escaped between them 4 Out of their evil ●raw some good 4 Out of their malice wee should draw our own good so w●rily to carry our selves towards them as that wee may finde that of the Heathen true An enemy often hurteth less and profiteth more than many friends Wee must both in their absence and presence especially take heed wee do not disadvantage our selves It was some disadvantage to Paul when in the Council although hee was provoked and unjustly smitten hee called the High Priest Whited wall hee was glad to excuse it by his ignorance Wee may not bee too bold or too forward to speak in a good matter 5 Having received wrong f om them do three things 5 If evil men have done us harm and wrongfully molested and persecuted us our Rule is 1 In respe●t of them to pitty pardon and pray for them If wee do them good wee shall either overcome their evil with goodness or heap coals on their heads 2 In respect of our selves possess our souls with patience and shew meekness and moderation and say as David in Shimes his railing It may bee the Lord will do mee good for his cursing of mee this day 3 In respect of our duty still to shew an undaunted constancy and resolution for the truth and all good wayes 1 Pet. 3.14 15. If yee suffer for righteousness blessed are yee but fear not neither bee troubled but sanctifie the Lord in your hearts and bee ready alwayes to give an answer to every man that asketh a reason of your hope Thus far of the Rules of Christian Wisdome of which I may say with Moses Deut. 4.5 6. These are the Rules and Ordinances keep them and do them for this is your wisdome CHAP. XXXIII Containing motives for Circumspect walking BUt because this accurate and Circumspect walking is grown out of request and men generally are too well contented to walk at adventure and as men that shoot at tovers secure themselves in a loose and neglected course and go on carelesly as if there were no danger in wandring from God and declining from the good way Motives to the former Rules wee will use some Motives to provoke every Christian that tenders either Gods glory or his own salvation to undertake this Christian course 1 In regard of God 1 Whose Commandement is That all our wayes bee ordered aright Prov. 4.26 and that the Saints walk worthy of the Lord and please him in all things Col. 1.10 2 Whose Word must bee our Rule to which wee must continually frame our whole course and every part thereof For first The moral Law is a perpetual Rule binding at all times without any intermission 2 The Precepts of it are to make the Word our continual Counsellor to binde it to us not to let it depart but to meditate in it night and day And what is it less than Blasphemy to charge the Saints with folly singularity and a Saintish purity in that wherein they were most acceptable to God As David set the Lord before him continually and when hee
as 1 To serve God is to reign and to be a King over the world fleshly lusts c. and to suit with Saints and Angels 2 God hereby becomes our protector maintainer and revenge● a David often prayeth Lord save thy servant teach thy servant revenge the cause of thy servant c. 3 Servants of unrighteousness meet with the wages of unrighteousness 4 All our comfort in crosses and afflictions stands in our service of God and a good Conscience or else we have none 5 To fear and keep his Commandements is the whole duty of a man and that which makes him f●lly happy Notes of a good servant of God 1 Labour to know the will of the Lord which hee hath revealed in his Word as David prayed Psal 119.125 For in the Scripture hee hath laid but our work for us and let us expect our calling to every business there let us be ready to hear not lightly absent nor present for custom but conscience 2 Let us serve him in affection and be glad to doe any thing to please him and grieve when we fail either in doing that wee should not or in not doing that we ought or not in that manner that may please the Lord. 3 Be ever imployed in his work How know I a mans servant but by his labouring in his Masters business Yee are his servant to whom yee obey Rom. 6.16 and Joh. 15. Yee are my Disciples if yee doe whatsoever I command you If I see a man spend his time in the service of sin of lusts of games pleasure the world c. I know whose servant he is certainly he is not in the service of God hee is not in Gods work 4 Intend thy Lords profit and glory A good servant knows his time and strength is his Masters and hee must bee profitable to him and seek his credit It will be with every servant of Christ as with Onesimus Phileus 11. being converted howsoever before grace he were so unprofitable and pilfering as he was unfit for any honest mans house and much more the house of God yet now he profits the Lord and credits him and takes not his meat and drink and wages for nothing 5 A good servant sets forward his Masters work in others hee will provoke his fellow-servants and not smite and hinder them as the evil servant did he will defend his Lord he will venture his life for him he will stand also for his fellow-servants while they are in their Masters business he will be a law to himself if there were no Law no Discipline he will not idle out his time his eye is upon the eye of his Master his mind upon his account his endeavour to please him in all things Vers 11. Then the Devil left him and behold the Angels came and ministred unto him HAving by the assistance of God now finished the two former general parts of this whole History which stood in the 1 Preparation and 2 The combate it self we proceed to the third and last which is the issue and event of all which affordeth us the sweet fruit and comfort of all our Saviours former sufferings from Satan and of our labours and endeavours in opening the same In this issue two parts are to bee considered 1 Christs victory 2 His triumph His victory and conquest in that the Devil left him His triumph in that the Angels came and ministred unto him In both which shine out notably the marks of his Divine power which even in all his lowest abasements did discover it self to such eyes as could see it and gave shew of a person far above all that his outward presence seemed to promise as for example His conception was by the Holy Ghost His birth as mean and base as might be but graced with a Star and the testimony of Angels and his Circumcision with Simeons His Baptism performed by John in Jordan but graced by his Fathers testimony and the Spirits descent in a visible shape of a Dove His civil obedience causeth him to pay tribute but hee sends for it to a Fish His person was called Beelzebub but Beelzebub confesseth him to be the Son of God At his Passion what greater infamy than to be hanged between two Theeves What greater glory than to convert and save one of them At his apprehension they that took him fell backward to the ground Joh. 18.6 In death he trod upon Deaths neck and being shut up in the Grave he opened it So here he is carried and recarried in the hands of the Devil but as one weary of his burden hee is forced to leave him on the plain field and to give up the bucklers because a stronger than hee is come This is the great mystery of God manifest in the flesh 1 Timothy 3.16 In the victory of Christ consider three things 1 The time when the Devil left him Then 2 The manner hee departed from him 3 How long hee left him and that is in Luke for a season Then This particle may have reference to three things 1 When the temptations were ended saith Luke namely all those which his Father had appointed him to indure at this time in the Wilderness For as the Son of God knew how much to suffer so Satan would not give over till hee had spent all his powder and had exercised all his malice in these most hellish Temptations wherein hee used all his skill strength and malice if he might possibly in this seed of the woman overthrow all the Sons of men and in the Head kill all the members Whence wee may Doct. Observe The obedience of the Son of God who stood out resolutely and departed not the field at all nor expected any rest till all the Temptations for this time were ended Christ could have confounded Satan in the beginning of the temptations and so have freed himself from further molestation but he continues and abides all the trial to the end And why Reason 1 His love to his Father made him submit himself to the lowest abasement even to the death of the Cross and refuse no difficult service for which his Father sent him into the World of which this was a principal The speech of David was most proper to this Son of David Behold here am I let the Lord do with mee even as hee will In his greatest agony hee said Not my will but thy will be done For he that loveth God his Commandements are not grievous to him 2 His love to his Church made him stand out the uttermost peril in this dangerous combate Eph. 5.25 Christ loved his Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and exposed himself for it and made himself liable to all wrongs and dangers for it as a loving Husband steps between his Wife and danger 3 Hee persisted in the Combate to teach us to hold out after his example in temptation and to expect freedome from temptation when wee have indured all but not before It is absurd to expect the
it was the top of an exceeding high mountain 2 How Christ came thither the Devil took him into c. 3 Why he chose that place 2 a vision represented here 1 What it was All the kingdomes of the world and the glory of them 2 How he represented them Hee shewed him 3 How long the sight lasted in a moment saith Luke 2 Dart it self in it 1 A profer All these will I give thee 2 A reason for they are mine and to whom I will I give them in Luke 3 The condition in it 1 the matter worship mee 2 the manner fall down if it be but externally 2 Repulse in it 1 The denial But Jesus answered 2 The manner Avoid Satan sharp in the Title Satan Commandement Avoid 3 the reason from a testimony of Scripture in it 1 Allegation It is written 2 precept in it 1 Person to whom Thou every man the whole man in Soul Body 2 matter shalt worship serve i. divine worship 3 object the Lord thy God and him only 3 The issue 1 Christs victory 1 The time when the Devil left him Then 1 When Christ had stoutly resisted 2 When all the temptations were ended in Luke 3 When Christ had said Avoid Satan 2 The manner Hee departed from him 3 How long for a season saith Luke 2 His triumph 1 A note of attention set as a star before it And behold 2 What we must behold 1 the coming of the Angels unto Christ here 1 When they come 2 To whom they come 3 Manner of their comming 2 Their ministery unto him where 1 How they ministred unto him by Adoring him as Conquerour comforting his soul vexed with temptation body pined with fasting 2 why they did so Not for necessity on Christs part But their own duty as to Their Lord. The head of the Church AN EXPOSITION OF Christ's Temptations MATTH 4. Vers 1 Then was Jesus led aside of the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted of the Devil 2 And when hee had fasted fourty daies and fourty nights hee was afterwards hungry 3 Then came the Temper to him and said If thou be the Son of God command that these stones be made bread 4 But he answering said It is written Man shall not live by bread only but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God 5 Then the Devil took him up into the holy City and set him on a pinacle of the Temple 6 And said unto him If thou be the Son of God cast thy self down for it is written That he will give his Angels charge over thee and with their hands they shall lift thee up lest at any time thou shouldst dash thy foot against a stone 7 Jesus said unto him It is written again Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God 8 Again the Devil took him up unto an exceeding high Mountain and shewed him all the Kingdomes of the world and the glory of them 9 And said unto him All these will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and worship mee 10 Then said Jesus unto him Avoid Satan for it written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve 11 Then the Devil left him and behold the Angels came and ministred unto him OUR Lord Jesus Christ having passed the former part of his preparation to his Ministry and Office by his most holy Baptism of which wee have spoken at large in the former words now he proceedeth to the second which standeth in Temptation For as in the former he publikely revealed himself to bee that Messiah so long expected in whom salvation is purchased to all beleevers of Jews and Gentiles so herein hee sheweth himself most evidently to bee that promised seed of the woman who was to break the serpents head and him who was set a part and sent from his Father to destroy and dissolve the works of the Devil And therefore this holy doctrin bringing us such glad tidings of Satans confusion and our own rescue out of his hands must bee most welcome to us whereof if we would taste the sweetnesse and benefit we must stir up our best attentions affections petitions to hear with readiness receive with gladnesse and practise with fruitfulnesse such holy instructions as this Treatise will abundantly afford unto us Wherein must bee handled three things 1 The preparation to Christs combate vers 1 2. 2 The combate it self with the several assaults from vers 3. to vers 11. 3 The issue and event vers 11. The preparation hath three parts 1 Christs entring the lists by going into the wilderness 2 His expecting of the enemy by his abode and converse there 3 The entrance of his adversary The first part is inlarged by sundry circumstances as 1 The time when this combate was Then 2 The person opposed Jesus 3 His guide hee was led by the Spirit 4 The place into the wilderness 5 The end why hee came thither to be tempted of the Devil In the second part three points are afforded out of the three Evangelists 1 How hee was furnished Hee was full of the Holy Ghost Luke 4.1 2 What company hee had Hee was with the wilde Beasts Mark 1.13 3 What was his imployment 1 Hee was tempted Luk. 4.2 2 Hee fasted forty daies and forty nights and afterwards was hungry which was both the effect of his fast and the occasion of the first temptation The third general part namely the entrance of our Saviours adversary stands in three circumstances 1 The time then 2 The name of the adversary she Tempter before called a Devil 3 The manner of his entrance he came The first circumstance in the preparation is the circumstance of time noted in the word Then which is not a word of supplement but of reference unto the former History of Christs Baptism which this immediately succeedeth as Mark 1.12 Immediately the Spirit driveth him note the present tense into the wildernesse so as Christ went directly from Jordan into the wilderness Then 1 When Christ undertook his high-office 2 When hee was baptised 3 When the Spirit had descended upon him 4 When hee had received testimony from Heaven that hee was the Son of God and Doctor of his Church Doct. The more God graceth his children the more Satan letteth himself to disgrace and molest them Hence note That the more God doth grace any man or advance him in gifts or place the more doth Satan set himself to disgrace and molest him Wee read not that the Devil did ever set upon Christ while hee lived as a private man though perhaps hee did but now his Father setting him apart to work mans redemption baptizing him powring his Spirit upon him and giving testimony with him that hee is the Son of his love now hee is assailed with most violent temptations No sooner is hee set apart to his office therein to glorify God and gratify man but hee is set upon by Satan a deadly enemy to both Moses was
this Miracle and the Gospel it self 4 That hereby he might bid battel offer opportunity and provoke his adversary to the combate for this was the end both of his fasting and going into the Wilderness and of his hunger Wherein also this fast of Christ may not be imitated for we are not to offer any opportunities or advantages to Satan who is ready enough to seek and take enough as we may not tempt God so we may not tempt the tempter but pray that we may not be lead into temptation by him and watch lest we fall into temptation Mark 14.38 yea we must cut off and prevent his advantages and shun all occasions wherein hee might assault us as knowing our own weakness The third thing in Christs fast is the continuance of time III. Christ fasted no longer nor shorter time than forty days for five reasons Moses in mon●e ante legem Elias in itinere sub lege Christus in deserto sub gratia forty days and forty nights Quest Why did he fast so long why no more nor no less Ans For these reasons 1 To bee answerable to the types As Moses fasted forty days at the institution of the Law and Elias at the restitution of it so would Christ here at the manifestation of the Gospel 2 He exceeded not his number lest he should seem too inhuman and cruel against himself for he did no more than Moses and Elias had done men subject to infirmity In our time he is no man that cannot strain one trick above others but Christ being in the shape of a Servant takes not upon him above his fellow-servants 3 He would not fast less because he would not seem less than the Prophets nor unlike them 4 He would not fast more because he would not have his Deity now acknowledged by the Devil 5 He would not give occasion to Hereticks to doubt of the truth of his body and human nature If he had fasted longer than Moses and Elias he might have been thought no true man but only in shew incarnate Quest Why is it added that he fasted forty nights Ans For these reasons Forty nights added for two reasons 1 To shew that it was not such a fast as the Jews used to keep who fasted many days together but ate at nights as Daniel fasted for three weeks of days chap. 3. vers 10. Nor like the Turkish fasts who so soon as they see a starre eat any thing on their fasting days but that which is strangled or Hogges flesh Nor yet like the Papists fast who though they say they fast forty days both to imitate Christ and to give God the tithe of the year yet can feed well and fare deliciously every night 2 To shew that Christ had a care to spend his nights well as well as his days not spending them out in sleep but in watching and prayer as well as in fasting for by the same power his body was preserved without sleep as it was without meat Farre unlike the Papists who in their fasting-fasting-days spend the night in gluttony luxury and all uncleaneness Doct. Fasting a most necessary duty This example of Christ teacheth us of what great necessity this exercise of fasting is both for the entrance and comfortable continuance of the duties of our calling both general and special This Nehemiah knew well when hearing of the calamity of Jerusalem and his brethren the Jews hee fasted certain daies and prayed before the God of heaven chap. 1. v. 4. And Ezra proclaimed a fast to seek the right way homeward and safe from their enemies chap. 8. v. 21. see also Act. 13.3 Reasons 1 Fasting in an holy and religious manner helpeth forward graces that are necessary for our calling as 1 the grace of conversion and therefore is made an adjunct of it Joel 2.12 Turn you with all your heart with fasting and weeping 2 The grace of prayer for as Prayer sanctifieth fasting so fasting strengtheneth prayer Otherwise to place Gods worship in fasting is to make the belly the God 3 It helps forward the knowledge of the mysteries of God and godlinesse Dan. 9.3 conferred with 20.21 as Daniel was praying and fasting Gabriel was sent to instruct him and revealed to him the mystery of the seventy weeks 4 It addes strength and courage in the Christian combate between the flesh and the spirit it is as a third that comes in to take the spirits part and so helpeth to the victory by subduing the flesh 2 The necessity and profit of this exercise appeareth in respect of our selves for 1 If wee want publike or private benefits fasting joyned with prayer is the means wherein God will have them sought and obtained The Benjamites after two sore overthrows by this means got the victory Jud. 20.28 Annah by the same obtained her Samuel and David fasted for his childes life 2 If wee bee in danger of publike or personal judgements by the same means they are to bee diverted religious fasting is a chief part of the defensive armour of the Church as wee may see in the examples of Hester saving her people from Hamans devise and of the Ninivites turning away the destruction threatned by Jonah by fasting and humbling themselves 3 If wee bee to attempt publike or private duties hereby wee must fit our selves and obtain success and blessing So did Nehemiah and Ezra as wee saw before and when Paul and Barnabas were separated to the work of the ministery they fasted and prayed Act. 13.3 Yea Christ himself spent a whole night in fasting and prayer before he chose his Disciples Luk. 6.12 13. 3 Daily experience shews the necessity of religious fasting for 1 How many men observe in themselves that for want of this duty they grow dull in their profession and heavy in holy practices yea empty of grace so as they may think the Spirit is departed from them yet when they have renewed this exercise they finde themselves more ripe and ready more quick and able to good duties as if they had new soules given them 2 Do wee not see that the more conscionably a man carrieth himself the more busily Satan doth bestir himself against him and had hee not need so much the more fence himself with coat-armour and flye to God for strength and protection If a good Magistrate or Minister bee to bee brought into any place how doth Satan storm and bend his forces against him because hee thinks that then his Kingdome must down Therefore if a man mean to be serviceable to God in any place it is meet hee should first sanctify it by fasting and prayer as Christ did Vse 1. This serves to rebuke the great want of this so needful a duty What Magistrate or Minister against whom Satan most shooteth entreth thus into his calling as Christ by fasting and prayer but by gifts favour or otherwise get livings and offices but to God they go not and this is the cause that so little good is done
evening solemnly on our knees making confessions of sins and requests to God together with thanksgiving Psalm 55.17 Evening and morning and at noon will I pray and make a noise Daniel three times a day prayed and praised God in his house as hee was wont chap. 6. v. 10. The excellent use of which is the opening of the door of Gods treasury to the family by which it is inriched with the best blessings of God Besides the Lord shall hereby have some honour that is due to his mercy upon the family 5 In edifying the family with Psalms and melody to the Lord as it is Col. 3.16 In these daily duties doth the sanctification of a family consist Whereunto wee may bee perswaded by these motives 1 In that they are the practises of men fearing God such as Joshua and his house Cornelius and his houshold 2 In that by these exercises the family shall not only be sanctified but also blessed as Obed Edom and his house for the presence of the Ark. 3 What madness is it to reject and banish Gods word and worship out of doors and yet think God is there Nay where found grace comes there is the Spirit of Prayer and Supplication in every family apart Zach. 12.14 and where the worship of God is not set up in families there is nothing but a conspiracy of Atheists and a wicked brood bringing Gods judgements on themselves and the business passing through their hands Use 3. Jerusalem is called holy being once sanctified to the Lords use which teacheth us that wee should reverently both conceive and speak of all such things as are set apart to the Lords use 1 Some persons are consecrate to the Lord as the Tribe of Levi of whom the commandement was Thou shalt not forsake the Levite all thy daies And the Prophets Touch not mine annointed and do my Prophets no harm So in the New-Testament The Minister that rules well is worthy of double honour Yea if the widows which were set apart to inferiour offices about the poor must be honoured 1 Tim. 5.3 much more the Minister that standeth in Gods place and stead Heb. 13.17 Obey them that have the oversight of you Thus Cornelius reverenced Peter and the Eunuch Philip. Nay not onely the Minister but every beleever is separate to God and sanctified to carry the Covenant and hath the annointing of the Spirit which the Lord acknowledgeth on them and speaketh reverently and lovingly of them calling them his holy ones yea the apple of his eye They see not this who can persecute and revile them for hypocrites and count them as the Apostles whose doctrin they profess the scum of the world 2 Some places are for their use to bee accounted holy because God is there present in his worship as the places of our meetings not that any inherent holiness is annexed to the place or cleaveth to it out of the action of Gods worship but while God is present in his Worship wee must account it holy ground and the house of God When God appeared in Bethel to Jacob hee said How fearful is this place surely it is no other than the house of God Wee must therefore put off our shooes with Moses that is our base and vile our sinful and sensual affections yea our lawful if earthly thoughts when wee come to this holy place Look wee bring no thoughts with us unbeseeming the place where God is separated from other common places to holy uses Look that in this place wee use no gesture or behaviour unbeseeming a man that hath business with God being present To sit talking or sleeping or laughing or gazing sutes not with this place And further if God please to account the very places holy for the use and presence of God in this use what shall wee think of them that conceive so basely of them as they would love a Parish better in which is no Church Others prophane them with base practices and unconscionably suffer them to fall or decay and will bee at no charge to make or keep them handsome sweet and beautiful Styes were fit for such swine As their affection is so is their devotion 3 The holy Ordinances of God must not bee touched but with holy respect and reverence of which it is said It is not safe to play with holy things 1 The word must bee received read heard spoken as the holy word of God To make jests of Scripture is a wicked practice God looks graciously on him that trembles at his word Isa 66.2 as good Josiah whose heart melted hearing the words of the Law So the names and attributes of God are never to bee used in frivolous admirations but every knee must bow unto him Phil. 2.10 Neither ought wee to laugh at Gods judgements on others 2 An Oath is one of the holy Ordinances of God and to swear in common talk vainly is not to shew reverence to this holy Ordinance Swear not at all that is uncalled Mat. 5.34 35. neither being called but in truth justice and judgement for an Oath is appointed to decide controversies which other means cannot How few consider whether the matter bee worth an Oath or whether they bee called to it or whether it might not have been better passed by Yea or Nay or by a bare asseveration A wicked man is described by being a Swearer Eccl. 9.3 but a godly man not only not swears from which a man by education or civility may abstain but also fears an oath in what company soever hee is or what occasion soever hee hath 3 A Lot is another special Ordinance of God to decide a controversy from heaven by God himself when all means on earth fail Therefore Lots must not be used without great reverence and prayer because the disposition of them commeth immediately from the Lord Pro. 16.33 and not but in great matters not for recreation for it is said to cause contentious to cease among the mighty Prov. 18.18 neither do wee read that it was ever used but in very great things as the dividing of the land of Canaan the election of High Priests and Kings and the surrogation of Matthias into the place of Judas Hence it follows if dice and cards bee Lots as I think they bee that all play by them is unlawful 4 Some times are sanctified above other as the Sabbath day all which must bee passed holily with much reverence and respect both remembring it before it come yea rejoycing in the approach of it and when it is come to sanctify it 1 In our hearts for external observation of the Sabbath without inward holiness and affection to the duties of Gods service is hypocrisy 2 We must not meddle with any part of the duties of our ordinary calling for that is no holy thing 3 Much less travel to Markets or Fairs but every man must stay in his own place Exod. 16.29 Neb. 13.15 to 19. 4 Least of all must wee set any part of it apart
reverently acknowledged for something wherein God hath preferred them before us as for years gifts graces authority or such as are set over us as Parents and Fathers of bodies and souls of Church and Country And this is required by the fifth Commandement and Rom. 13.1 7. neither doth the Gospel and Christianity take away but teach civility And performed by the godly both in speech as Daniel said O King and Paul to Festus O noble Festus and also in outward behaviour and gesture as Jacob bowed seven times to Esau and Joseph taking his Sons from the knees of his Father Jacob having blessed them did reverence to his Father down to the ground Gen. 48.12 David inclined his face to the earth and bowed himself to Saul who pursued his life 1 Sam. 24.9 The like of Ruth to Boaz chap. 2. and of Abigail to David 1 Sam. 25.23 she fell on her face and bowed her self to the ground and fell at his feet 2 Of courtesie which is a fruit of humility when a man to his equals and inferiours sheweth reverence and respect as Abraham to Lot Gen. 13.8 9. and to the Hittites his inferiours cap. 23.12 he bowed himself before the people of the Land Farr unlike the surliness and stiffness of proud and conceited persons who being voyd of all good nature nurture and religion know not to bow to any neither their betters in the way of duty nor equalls in way of courtesie Divine worship is two-fold 1 Inward the sum of the first Commandement standing in fear love and the like 2 Outward bowing or reverence the sum of the second Commandement The former bindes the soul and the will and affections and the whole inner man the later the outward man to give God his worship and service and to give no part of that to any other For the word only only mentioned in the latter branch must bee extended and referred to the former too The latter of these is here meant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the word properly signifieth to kiss or adore by some outward gesture to manifest a veneration 1 Because this was it which Satan required of Christ namely to fall down or bow unto him but Christ aptly refuseth it 2 This worship proceeds from an inward fear and apprehension of a Divine excellency and power not communicable to any Creature which Satan well know for even by this bowing he would have Christ to acknowledge in him a power to dispose of all earthly things which is proper to God And him only shalt thou serve By service is not meant the inward service of the heart for the words in Deut. 6.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord and serve him will not bear it the first thereof betokening the inward service the second the outward following the former as the effect the cause Neither would our Saviour invert the order in setting the stream before the fountain Therefore this word serve serveth to expound the former as an addition signifying nothing else but the outward service of God so that Christ here shews that it is not enough to give God outward reverence but that wee must as servants perform duties according to his will so the word signifies being taken from servants 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who perform service to bodily Masters in bodily actions 3 The person to be worshipped and served is God only Him only whom we call the Lord our God according to the speech of Samuel 1 Sam. 7.3 Direct your hearts unto the Lord and serve him only for his glory will hee give to no other Quest Must we give outward worship to none but God Must we not bow our knee and uncover our heads to our King and Rulers Must we not rise up to the hoare-head Levit. 19.32 Must we not serve one another in love How then must we outwardly worship and serve God only Ans We must not deny any civil worship to any man to whom God hath made it due but external religious worship must not be given to any Creature man or Angel Quest How may we know the one from the other Ans They differ greatly 1 In the kind one is servil the other social the former due to an absolute Lord and Commander the latter due from one fellow-servant to another This distinction is grounded in Revel 19.10 where the Angel refused the worship done him by John upon this ground because he was a fellow-servant and one of the brethren for John being overcome with the greatness of the Angels glory and splendor out of humane infirmity ascribed to him more than civil honour and mixed some religious worship with it which only was due to God 2 Another difference is in the intention of the mind in worshipping Religious bowing is when a man inwardly apprehends a Divine power proper to God and incommunicable to the creature or when god-head or divine properties are conceived in the thing bowed unto As for example in falling down to an Image uncovering the head praying c. the mind now conceives a Divine power in the image of knowing ones thoughts hearing helping and the like at least that God hath tied his presence and grace to such a place where such an Image is set up But the civil bowing to the King or superiour or to the Chair of estate is a meer token of civil subjection without any conceit of deity in the mind only because we see in them excellent gifts of God or in place above in the Church Common-wealth or family For the same gesture may be civil and spiritual according to the intention of the mind of the worshipper 3 The end distinguisheth them the one is to exercise godliness the other to express civility the one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one done as a man is a member of Gods Kingdom the other as he is in the rank of an earthly Kingdom As for example Kissing of the Popes feet is a worship done to a man and so seems civil but being tendred to him as to the Vicar of Christ as one that can pardon sins and cannot erre this religious end makes it a religious worship and therefore none of his being not offered to any other Prince or Emperour upon the earth 4 Some difference may be taken from the common estimation of the thing worshipped as if it be generally esteemed or reputed Divine and deity ascribed to that which in it self hath it not The Host as they call it is generally held to be Christs very self now for a man suppose a Protestant that knows it to remain very bread and that no such deity or change is in it to bow down before it to uncover his head or use gestures of adoration to it is an external religious gesture and is unlawful although his intention bee not to worship it but because in common estimation he ascribes a kind of God-head to the creature as others doe And whereas adoration is a sign
in the deep nor at the mountain not so destitute but we find some supports But were the case with us as it was here with our Lord if we were in the world as in a wilderness our food nothing but stones our company wild beasts ready to devour us no friend near us but the Devil tossing and tumbling us with his temptations wee should assuredly see the Lord extraordinarily providing for us and working out for us unexpected comfort our extremity would be Gods opportunity God sent not Moses to deliver Israel from under Pharaoh till their burdens were at the heaviest and their oppressions intollerable God might have sent his Angel to preserve the three Children from being cast into the fire but he did not till they were in the flames this was Gods time wherein he was more glorified his children more gloriously delivered and his enemies more mightily confounded than if the Angels had come before Even so when this Land was like that fiery Furnace made seven times hotter than ever before to consume the bodies of Gods Saints in Queen Maries days in the midst of those flames God sent that happy Queen now a blessed Saint to quench those fires and deliver our whole Church from that tyrannical and Papal oppression Thus the Lord himself waits and stays for the fittest time of our deliverance and so must we Never shall the faithful soul fail of a day of refreshing And ministred unto him We have spoken of the Angels coming Now the last thing considerable in this History is their ministery unto Christ wherein are two things 1 How they minister to him 2 Why they minister I. 1 They ministred in adoring the Son of God the only conquerour of the Devil and honouring him as the victorious destroyer of the Prince and Commander of all hellish powers For the Angels rejoyced in Christs victory in the Devils overthrow and the salvation of the Church of God The goodness of their nature carries them wholly to the glory of God in all their actions and motions and the good of the Church as at the birth of Christ they sung Glory to God on high on earth peace and good will to men And there is no doubt but now upon this victory they did much more honour him and congratulate his glorious triumph 2 They ministred to him in comforting him being in his soul extreamly afflicted and molested with Satans temptations for how could the Son of God but utterly abhorr and with fiery zeal detest such blasphemous temptations as that hee should not only distrust his Fathers providence but even fall down and worship the Devil himself with which temptations a sinful man yet in his corrupt nature would be exceedingly distracted and disturbed It is no doubt therefore but as in his Agony before his Passion the Angels came to comfort him so likewise in this conflict and perturbation so soon as they might they came in to the same purpose 3 They ministred to him in releeving his body which was now broken with hunger and watchings having already fasted forty days and forty nights and brought him food to allay his hunger spreading as it were a table for him in the wilderness For if they neglected not the servant of God Elias in the wilderness being ready to starve for food but provided him a meal in strength whereof he went forty days and forty nights 1 King 19.5 much less would they neglect the Son of God who was now in the same necessity 4 They ministred to him standing about him and giving attendance waiting as it were at his table and ready to be employed in any further service hee had to command them Psal 103.20 Yee Angels ready to execute his will Whence in Ezek. 1.11 the Angels are described with wings stretched upward noting their propensity and readiness to the Commandements of Christ II. Why the Angels do thus minister to Christ Ans Not for any necessity of his for 1 He was able to have sustained himself and held out for ever against the Devil 2 He was able to have confounded the Devil 3 He was able to have created food in the wilderness without them which they could not do for although they could fetch food elsewhere provided yet could they not create any but 1 It was their duty to attend him as their Lord called the Lord of the holy Angels 2 Christ would now use their ministery and did not help himself by Miracle as he might if he had pleased But we read not that he used his power for himself or his Disciples Himself being hungry and weary at Jacobs Well he created not food but sent his Disciples into the City to buy bread And when his Disciples were faint and hungry they were fain to pluck ears of Corn and eat it But yet he used not his miraculous power For Miracles were wrought for the edification of others and commonly done in the presence of many whose faith was to be strengthned as the Disciples was in part already 3 This was so for our instruction and consolation that we also in our wants standing in the Lords battels may expect the presence and comfort of the Angels Doct. The priviledge of Christ whereby hee is exalted above all creatures hence appeareth in that the Angels minister unto him Heb. 1.6 the Apostle proves Christs divinity and eminency above all things out of that testimony of the Psalm And let all the Angels of God worship him For he must needs be greater than all who must bee honoured of all Job 1.51 Christ himself proves himself the Son of God because notwithstanding he is the Son of man which plainly notes him to be 1 A true man and 2 A weak man yet they should see the Heavens opened and the Angels ascending and descending upon him as was figured in Jacobs Ladder Gen. 28.12 For Christ is the Ladder and only way by which we ascend into Heaven It reached from earth to heaven signifying his two Natures God of his Father in Heaven man of Jacobs loyns in earth Angels ascending and descending are the ministring spirits attending him for in that phrase is meant their sending out their emission and commission to their office descending to their work and ascending to give account of it Now according to this Prophecie of Christ two of his Disciples saw the heavens open upon him in his transfiguration Matth. 17.1 2. In his resurrection those keepers of the Sepulcher saw the Angel of the Lord that descended from heaven and had rolled away the stone from the door and sate upon it so as they were afraid and as dead men Matth. 28.4 The women also saw the Angel and talked with him that had attended him in his Resurrection vers 5. And in his Ascension all his Disciples saw the Heavens opened unto him and two Angels standing by them who attended him Acts 1. Reasons 1 The more honourable the attendants and ministers the greater is the Personage so attended But our Lord hath
by bad means to be suspected sundry instances page 201 Accusers mouths how to be stopped four rules page 19 Against false accusation seven rules page 17 Adversaries must bee overcome rather with patience than power page 72 Adoption called into question by Satan for present adversity five reasons page 58 Allegories must not be stuck too fast unto page 170 Christs Allegation of Scripture with some addition and change of words five reasons page 217 Angels called Gods Angels three reasons page 151 Angels tender keepers of the godly three reasons page 153 Concerning Angels three observations page 154 Angels come not in unto Christ before the Devil is gone from him four reasons page 258 Angels cannot bee in two places at once why ibid Angels have bodily shapes by way of 1. description 2 dispensation page 259 Angels minister unto Christ and how page 262 Christ was more Angry in the last temptation than in the two former four reasons page 214 Apochryphal books not authentical three reasons page 86 In the Ark were three things kept page 105 Assemblies in the Church of England holy meetings four reasons page 107 Avoid signifieth three things page 213 B BAd causes are thrust on by bad means four reasons page 2●0 Behold signifieth five things in Scripture page 257 Blame thy self sinning more than the devil page 139 Blessing more desirable than means page 90 Blind and bloody battels for the holy land more for the Popes profit than Gods glory page 115 Boasters resemble the Devil page 303 To get Bread out of stones three waies page 70 Gods way to get bread contrary to the devils in three things page 71 C TO live out of a lawful calling wicked three reasons page 94 Calling to bee well carried two rules page 97 Special Calling requires the practice of four vertues page 98 Christ was locally carried to the Pinacl● four reasons page 123 In Christ Satan would have cast down all mankind page 133 Satan would have us cast down our selves why page 139 Causes of God must affect us above our own five reasons page 214 Changes here good for us five reasons page 254 To be chearful in trials four motives page 10 Chair of Rome a frivolous pretence page 114 Christ subject to temptations notwithstanding his perfection of 1 nature 2 grace 3 power page 5 Christ chose to be tempted in the wildernesse four reasons page 13 Christs going into the wilderness no ground for Popish Eremites four reas page 15 Chri●t would be tempted four reas page 11 Christ by being tempted succoureth us four waies ibid. Christ after among wilde beasts than wicked men page 29 Christ not so rough with Satan as with some wicked men no or with his own disciples four reasons page 73 Christ revealeth himself onely to such at will make right use of his knowledge four reas page 75 Christ as able to defend us as himself from wilde beasts and Devils page 29 Christs priviledge above all Creatures in the ministery of Angels three reasons page 263 Christs combate exemplary as victorious page 15● Christians must he reasonable even to most unreasonable adversaries three reasons page 71 Church no competent Judge of Controversies page 158 Church hath no authority over Scripture four reasons page 159 Church of England not to bee separated from for some corruptions four conclusions page 108 Comforts for weak Christians in temptation four grounds page 5 Circuit of Satan is the compasse of the earth page 13 Comforts from Christ being tempted four grounds page 24 Comfort of the creatures a greater blessing than the creatures themselves page 90 Comfort in that Satan cannot overcome him who is not willing to be overcome page 139 Comforts from the custody of Angels page 154 Comforts of God bid for a time but at length shine out upon his children four reasons page 260 Bad Company worse than solitarinesse page 15 Comforts when temptations come thick on us three page 180 Compacts with Satan 1 open 2 secret page 204 Means to avoid Satans Compacts five page 206 Conference of Scriptures beateth out the true sense of them see instances at large page 165 Councils no competent Judges of controversies four reas page 160 In the inner Court of the Temple were four things of note page 104 D DAy of sicknesse and death most unfit to resist Satans temptations three reas page 42 Death enters the Soul by the windows of the Senses four real page 187 Devil is not driven away by holy water reliques nor the naming of Jesus page 7 Difference between the love of God as God and of God as a Father page ●9 Directions for the fortifying of faith three page 56 Distinction of 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 1 silly 2 ignorant 3 novel page 223 Doctors and Fathers no competent Judges of Scripture five reas page 160 Doing of what God commaundeth not alwaies a sign of true grace three reasons page 247 God draweth neer his Saluts in trouble three waies page 61 E EFfects of the spirits assured governance in troubles three page 12 Eminent persons must be so much the more watchful page 186 Ends and means must be tyed together page 179 Equivocation a Jesultical trick discovered page 150 Three Estates Satan especially would cast men from 1 of innocency 2 regeneration 3 office in Church or Common-wealth page 133 Evill men cleave one to another because all of them hate Christ page 103 Excellency cannot exempt a man from Satans temptations three reasons page 6 How to avoid Satans extremities three rules page 129 F FAmily-worship of God stands in five things page 111 Fasting the kinds 1 civil 2 religious 3 miraculous page 31 Fasting of Christ differeth from Popish in eight things page 32 Christ fasted his fast for four causes ibid Fast of Christ no longer or shorter than forty daies five reasons page 33 Forty nights of Christs fast expressed two reasons ibid Fasting a necessary Christian duty three reasons page 34 Motives to fasting six page 35 Faith his ablions about the means of safety if present three 30. if absent three ibid Overthrow of faith the aim of all Satans temptations five reas page 54 Faith must be so much the stronglier fortified as Satan more furiously assaileth it page 56 Faith his excellency in four things ibid The least Faith can pray for more page 57 Properties of Faith in want of means three page 64 Faith how it demeaneth it self towards the word of Gods providence three Rules page 94 Faithfulness in Promises enforced by five reasons page 198 G COmmon Gamesters live by no word of God page 97 Generality of obedience in four things page 250 Gifts of God differ from the devils in four things page 205 Glory of God must bee preferred above all the world six reas page 210 Motives to promote the glory of God five page 225 To glorify God in good measure means four page 213 God glorifieth himself in our tryals four waies page 254 Glory of the world falsly claimed by Satan for
respects as birth riches learning crowns and kingdoms these in mens Courts are good advocates but before Gods Tribunal may not plead and cannot help No condition of life no degree no outward quality no calling no not the outward calling of a Christian if thou hast no more shall stand by thee stript stark naked shalt thou be figge-leaves can hide thy shame no longer only the Wedding Garment can now cover thee from the consuming wrath of God A garment not laid with gold silver pearls but straked with bloud yea dyed red in the bloud of the Lamb. The High Priest upon pain of death might never enter into the Sanctuary but he must first be sprinkled with the bloud of Bullocks figuring the bloud of Christ Never dare thou to appear in the Sanctuary of Gods holiness without this garment of thy elder brother in which alone thou gettest the blessing as Jacob gat the blessing in Esaus garments from this alone the Lord savoureth a savour of rest Gen. 27.26 Lastly from this consideration that God is no respecter of persons the Apostle admonisheth superiours to moderation and equal dealing with their inferiours Ephes 6.9 and inferiours to silence and contentation under the tough dealing of their superiours Col. 3.25 Vers 35. But in every Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted of him BY a fearer of God and worker of righteousnesse is signified an upright and truly religious man in whom these two things must necessarily concut as the cause and effect the fountain and stream the root and fruit of pure and undefiled religion for under the fear of God are contained all the duties of the first Table concerning God and his Worship such as are Knowledge Love Faith Hope and such like whence Salomon often calleth it the beginning of wisdome that is of true worship or piety And under working of righteousnesse is comprehended the observation of the duties of the second Table whereby the former being most of them inward are outwardly manifested and justified so as under both is comprised the whole duty of man Eccles 12.13 Fear God and keep his Commandements for this is the whole man All those ten words wherein the Lord hath included an admirable perfection of wisdome and holiness are here contracted into two 1 The fear of God 2 The keeping of his Commandements and therefore when the Holy Ghost in the Scriptures would grace this or that holy man with full commendation as it were with his whole stile be commonly joyneth these two together unto which nothing more can bee added Job was a just man fearing God and abstaining from evil Job 1.8 Zachary and Elizabeth were just before God and walked in all the Ordinances of God without reproof Luke 1.6 Here two points are to be considered 1 Who is a religious man hee that feareth God and worketh righteousnesse 2 What is his priviledge he is accepted of God Religion is a binder and thence hath his name for it both bindeth man unto God as the former of the points will shew as also God unto man as the latter declareth The former band knitting man unto God is the fear of God Fear of God which is a peculiar gift of the Spirit of God whereby the Regenerate fear God for himself not so much that they bee not offended and punished by him as that they do not offend him An excellent grace both in regard of the excellent Object and of the excellent Use of it through the whole life 1 The right object of our fear is God himself who is 1 Omnipotent of power to do whatsoever he wil who is able to cast body and soul into Hell fear him Matth. 10.28 2 Omnipresent hee is all an eye beholding our Thoughts Words and Deeds of which hee is both a witness and a Judge 3 Full of Majesty which even in a mortal Man strikes us with reverence 4 Full of Grace and Bounty wee stand in need of his Favour and Bounty every Moment who can turn us out of all at his pleasure In all which respects wee ought to make him our dread Isa 8.13 But above all in that he hath been so good and gracious a Father unto us through his Christ we ought to fear to offend him and so turn his love into displeasure against us II. Now the Vse of this Grace is manifold As 1 To beat down pride and high-mindedness against which it is a notable medicine Rom. 11.20 Bee not high-minded but fear Prov. 3.7 Bee not wise in thine own eies but fear God this grace maketh a man come low before the Lord as Jacob fearing Esau Gen. 33.3 Came and bowed seven times before him 2 To cause a man to renounce and restrain himself from sin and therefore the fear of God and departing from evil are often joyned together Joseph could not commit the sin with his Mistresse because hee feared God the Midwives feared God and killed not the Hebrews Children Nehem. 5.15 Nehemiah did not exact upon and oppress the people as the former Governours that were before him because hee feared God and whereas the wicked mans servile fear keepeth him often from open sins but not from secret from gross sins but not from smaller and this of Pain not of Conscience this grace maketh a man hate Pride Arrogancy and every evill way Prov. 8.1 3. never so small and never so secret 3 To destroy false and fleshly fears which foil every good duty and lay open to many sins and judgements Quod supra homines est time homines te non terrebunt August it is a property of a wicked man to fear where no fear is and not fearing God hee feareth every thing but God the face of man the arm of man the Tongue of man whence many a man dare scarce profess Religion or if they do dare shew no power of it for fear of reproach and nick-names and so come to bee ranked in the formost band of those which march to Hell called the fearful Rev. 21.8 and that which they fear shall come upon them Prov. 10.24 even disgrace of God of Men and Angels Jeroboam feared lest the people should return to their own Master if they should persist in the true Worship of the true God and so for the establishing of his Posterity hee established Idolatry but in the very next generation his whole race was extinct The Jews were afraid lest the Romans should come and take their nation and therefore Christ must dye but the Romans not long after came with a powder and took their Nation and so dis-peopled and dispersed them as they could never bee gathered into a nation till this day Pilatus multis diveratus Calamitatibus sibi-ipsi manum intulit Euse lib. 2. cap. 7. Entrop lib. 7. hist eccl c. 7. Pilate feared not God but Caesar but hee was not long after cast out of Caesars favour and slew himself Now this grace of God fenceth a man from such fleshly fears
them to God his Father so as being now redeemed and bought with a price they are no longer their own but the Lords that bought them 1 Cor. 6.20 3 Because when he hath thus dearly purchased his Church he contracteth himself in spiritual Marriage with her and so becometh her Lord Hos 2.18 I will marry thee for ever unto my self yea I will marry thee unto me in righteousnesse in judgement in mercy and in compassion Ephes 5.23 As the husband is the wives head so is Christ of the Church So as if a man bee a Lord of that which is given him of that which he hath redeemed and ransomed of her whom he had married into his bosome in all these regards by as good right is Jesus Christ the Lord of his Church and every member of it Object But how can Christ be a Lord and a servant too Isa 42.1 Behold my servant I will lea●e upon him and hee took upon him the form of a servant Phil. 2.7 Ans Christ considered as Mediator is after a special manner both his Fathers servant and yet the Lord of his Church In all the work of mans Redemption he served and obeyed his Father being sent of his Father for this end he was subject to the death he prayed unto him gave him thanks learned obedience by the things he suffered not as God equal to his Father but as our Mediator and Surety and yet by all these things he became our Lord and the King of his Church And herein the Apostles travel as in their main scope to prove that Jesus Christ whom the Jews put to death hath shewed himself the Lord of glory and the true Messias Acts 2.34 Let all the house of Israel know assuredly that God hath made that Jesus which they crucified Lord and Christ. Object But how can Christ be the Lord of all seeing many yea the most will not obey him Ans Doth a King cease to be the Lord of all his Country because some which were his subjects are gone out in rebellion against him besides howsoever it standeth with his glory and grace to suffer with patience the vessels of wrath yet at length he shews his power against them in bringing forth his whole displeasure upon them Vse Hence in that Christ is in general Lord of all we learn that all Creatures are his and therefore we must never use any of them without leave from him or without return of praise and thanks unto him none of them are sanctified to our use without the Word and Prayer And if wee have leave from him we ought in sobriety to use them 1 Cor. 10.26 Eat whatsoever is sold in the shambles making no question for conscience sake Hence followeth it also that he having an absolute power over all hee may doe with his own what he will who shall hinder a Potter to frame one vessel to honour another to dishonour which I speak because many cannot endure to hear of a decree of reprobation who must frame their judgement to his will who cannot but be just and good and leave off to reason with God Hence also he may make one rich another poor at his pleasure The rich and poor meet this Lord maketh them both Secondly in that Christ is in special Lord of his Church sundry things are to be noted as first That none can have Christ to be a Jesus that is a Saviour who have him not for their Soveraign and Lord whosoever thou art that challengest him for thy Saviour see thou acknowledge him thy Lord. Quest How may a man have Christ to be his Lord A man hath Christ his Lord by four things Ans By the practice of four duties 1 By preserving in the heart a fear and reverence towards his person Malac. 1.6 If I be a Lord where is my fear Lordship requires subjection Psal 45.11 He is thy Lord and reverence thou or bow unto him Now this fear must proceed from love for if any man love not the Lord Jesus let him be accursed and wheresoever this love is it must needs bee attended with a fear to displease him 2 By professing him to bee thy Lord as servants by their livery or cognisance speak and proclaim to all men to whom they belong so if Christ bee thy Lord thou must not bee ashamed of him but bee ever speaking of him commending his goodness thou must glory of such a service accounting it thy greatest honour that thou art become his servant thou must defend his name where ever thou hearest it called into question thou must suffer with him and take part with him in affliction 1 Pet 4.13 an unfaithful servant is hee that can bee dumb in his Masters dishonour but especially if his Master be assaulted and in danger then to forsake him when hee hath most need of him 3 By acknowledging thy self to bee countable unto him for all thy waies and for all thy receites Make account to be countable of all to this Lord of all The servant not being at his own hand must go about no business but his Masters whatsoever matter of trust hee receiveth from his Master it is not his own hee is faithfully to discharge himself of it by a true and just account Thus therefore must thou reason the case with thine own heart what am I now in my Masters work had I commandement from him did his word or warrant set mee about the business which is now in my hands Again what gifts have I received of body minde wealth authority credit I am to be countable for all all the Talents I have are his If I gain nothing I am unprofitable If I gain I must be profitable unto him By absolute obedience unto his will revealed To this Lord only must be given absolute obedience Thus himself being to give his Law beginneth thus I am the Lord thy God thou shalt do thus and thus other Lords and Kings must bee obeyed in him yea disobeyed for him if they command contrary unto him onely hee must ever by Kings themselves bee obeyed absolutely in all the parts of his will revealed Which may bee considered in three heads 1 It is his will that wee beleeve in him Joh. 6.40 The will of Christ reduced to three ●eads This is the will of him that sent mee that every one that seeth the Son and beleeveth in him not onely beleeving his word to bee true but leaning upon him only for thy salvation If a Master should promise a servant that if hee will but beleeve him and seek to please him hee will provide for him for ever it would adde cheerfulness to such a servant and hee would think none of his Masters commandements burdensome but yet wee having larger and surer promises are slow of heart and hand to beleeve or yield obedience 2 It is his will that wee shew forth this faith of our hearts in the fruits of sanctification 1 Thess 4.3 This is the will of God even
seeing God doth not extraordinarily save men where the ordinary means are afforded or offered the neglect of this means is to despite great salvation and to make themselves unworthy of life eternal And from the evidence of truth I avouch against every soul that turneth his ear from hearing the word preached that hee despiseth the pardon of the King of Heaven hee refuseth life and salvation offered hee chooseth death and forsaketh his own mercy Joh. 10.27 hee is no sheep of Christ for then would hee hear his voice Joh. 8.47 and if hee were born of God hee would hear the words of God Secondly The object of this Ordinance or what wee must Preach Christ the matter of our preaching and that is Christ The scope of the whole Scripture is Christ and it is wholly resolved into him The Law that is a School-master to Christ for by convincing of sin and making the sinner exceeding sinful it leadeth him forth of himself to seek salvation in Christ The Gospel preacheth nothing but Christ and him crucified for sin 1 Cor. 2. Wee preach Christ the power of God and the wisdome of God Hence is called the Gospel of Jesus Christ Mark 1.1 and the word of Christ Col. 3. not onely because it is from him being God a● an ●●h●●ent cause and preached by him as the chief Teacher of his Church but also for the material cause which is Christ The Apostle Paul calleth it the word of Truth n●t onely for the truth of it but because it publisheth that eternal Truth Jesus Christ as also the word of the cross not onely because the cross ordinarily attendeth the faithful preaching and profession of it but because the matter of it is Christ crucified 1 Cor. 2. Quest What is it to preach Christ Answ It standeth in two things To preach Christ wherein it stande h 1 In plain manner to preach the docttrin of Christ concerning his Person his Natures his Offices and the execution of them from his incarnation to his ascension 2 In powerful manner so to apply this Doctrin to every hearer that every one may feel a change to follow both in his heart and life For to teach onely the History of Christ his Doctrin his Miracles his Life his Death is not the full teaching of Christ for thus the unbeleeving Jews know Christ and the Infidel Turks can easily come to this knowledge of him But to reach Christ as the truth is in Christ is to apply every particular to the heart of a sinner that hee may bee framed to conversion and repentance which is the most difficult labour of the Ministery and most to bee striven in Many Teachers who can choose hard Texts and make learned discourses and shew much dexterity of wit reading and humane literature have not thus learned Christ themselves not can after such a lively manner teach him to others And pitty it is to see that whereas so great an Apostle as Paul who wanted not Arts Tongues and humane Learning desired to know nothing but Christ and him crucified among the Corinths themselves it should bee the study of many men to shew the knowledge of any thing rather than of Christ and how they may paint out themselves rather than Christ in their Preaching Is not the end of preaching to make Disciples of Christ Mat. 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was it instituted to please the ear or to prick and pence the heart Let the Minister therefore strive to ransack the hearts of men with whom hee is to deal that discovering their secret things they may fall down and say God is in him indeed Let him think hee hath spoken the word of Christ when hee hath both taught him and led his hearers unto him And this will not bee done but by the plainnesse of words and evidence of the Spirit It is thought a reproach to preach a plain Sermon whereas indeed that is the best Sermon which teacheth Christ most plainly 1 By true interpretation of Scripture 2 By wholesome savory and proper Doctrin gathered thence 3 By sound application of that Doctrin for the information of mens judgements and reformation of their lives where Christ crucified is thus held out there need no wooden Images nor Pictures nor the real sacrifice of the abominable Mass to put men in mind of him 2 Hearers may hence learn to judge of themselves whether they have heard aright or no. And then have you heard well when you not onely know that which you did not before but when you beleeve more love more hope more and are more changed than before When you find our Sermons as the glass wherein you see and discern the true estate of your souls when you are cast into the form of this Doctrin when your Lusts stoop and yeeld to this Scepter of Christ without this no knowledge is saving but all our preaching and your hearing tendeth to damnation if yee know these things blessed are yee if yee do them Joh. 13.17 The Apostles commanded in special to teach the doctrin of the last judgement Reasons The third point is what is the particular Doctrin which the Apostles and wee in them are so straitly enjoyned to preach and that is the Article of Christs comming again to judge the quick and the dead And surely it is not without reason that our Saviour should wish them to insist in this doctrin above others 1 Because this being the last work of Christ remaining to be done after his ascension it could not be so easily beleeved as those things which were ●●re●●y done and accomplished being still in fresh memory and so much the less deniable by how much they were still fixed even in the sences of all those who were eye-witnesses of the same And therefore hee would have his Apostles careful to help the weakness of mens faith in the expectation of his return to judgement by much and often beating upon it as a point that needeth more instance and perswasion than such as being past and so sensibly confirmed by many hundreds and thousands as they were are far more easily apprehended and beleeved 2 The Scriptures teach that the remembrance of this judgement to come is a notable means to quicken the godly in their duty to work in them a reverent fear and shake out security which breedeth hardness of heart therefore did the Apostle Paul considering the terrors of the Lord 2 Cor. 5.11 provoke both himself and others unto their Duty and no marvail seeing the children of God have even at the consideration of more particular judgements been stricken with the fear of the Almighty The Prophet Habakkuk when hee heard but of judgements to come saith That his belly trembled his lips shook and rottennesse entered into his bones Habak 3.16 And David being a noble King hath these words my flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I am afraid of thy judgements Psal 119.120 A special example whereof wee have in that famous
marvail if the members look thus black when the Sun looketh upon them seeing their Head Christ himself was rejected because they saw and judged him to bee plagued and smitten of God Isa 53.4 But wee must look beyond all these as the Lord himself doth who in his judgement goeth beyond the out-side and pronounceth sentence according to the grace which himself worketh within Let us imitate our Lord Jesus who notwithstanding all the infirmities yea and deformities of his Church pronounceth of her that shee is all fair and no spot is in her not because there are none but because all are covered and none are reckoned and imputed unto her yea let us remember that the pure and holy Spirit of God is contented notwithstanding much blackness to take up his lodging in those hearts where hee findeth reigning sin dispossessed Now how far are they from the mind and judgement of this blessed Father Son and Spirit who have nimble eyes to spy out every infirmity of Gods Children to blaze them nay rather than they will not accuse and slander them can of themselves coin raise up and impute unto them that whereof they are most innocent Assuredly these are of neer kindred to the Devil who is the accuser of the brethren The glory of God in his children turned into shame And surely were Christ on earth again even this most innocent Lamb of God should not want accusers wherein are so many of Cains constitution who hate their brethren because their works are good and so many Sons of men who seek to turn the glory of God in his Children into shame Alas religion is at a low ebbe already and not so reckoned of as it should bee by the forwardest and yet so malitious is the Devil in his instruments as unless this smoaking flax also bee quenched wee can see nor hear of any hope or treaty of peace the beauty of Gods people goeth disgraced under titles of niceness preciseness purity holy brotherhood and the like To go ordinarily to Sermons is to bee a Sermon-munger not to swear is the next way for a man not to bee trusted and except a man bee as black and deformed as either the Devil is or can make him by Drinking Swearing Gaming Sabbath-breaking and casting off all care of Civil Honesty as well as godliness hee may sit alone well enough hee hath a great many Neighbours that care but a little for his company What can make it more evidently appear that numbers there are in this age who never knew and without Gods infinite mercy in their timely conversion are never like to know what the blessednesse of remission of sin meaneth neither in others nor yet in themselves Vse 2. Let no man bee discouraged in the pure waies of God but walk on without weariness or faintness A strong motive to hold on in well-doing seeing that whatsoever the blinde world may deem to the contrary thou who art a beleever in the name of Christ hast blessedness between thy hands for thy sins are remitted thou must go in peace And this happinesse by the grace wherein thou standest is surer than that of nature which Adam had in his innocency that was lost because it was in his own keeping this is seated in the unchangeable favour of God by whose mighty power thou shalt bee preserved to the full fruition of it Get faith in thy heart and thou shalt dea●ly behold thy happiness if all the World should set it self to make thee miserable Get faith into thy soul and thou shalt think him only happy whom God so esteemeth although it be the misery of the world to place happiness only in misery Get assurance of faith to clasp the sure promise and word of God and thou shalt possess in misery felicity in sorrow joy in trouble peace in nothing all things and in death it self life eternal An Alphabetical Table to lead the Reader more easily unto the things contained in this Exposition A. A Basement of Christ is the Christians advancement 335 A bundle of Popish blasphemies 405 Account must bee given to God of all things done by us and received of us 381 Administration of Judgement laid upon the Son for sundry reasons 375 Afflictions though lingring no sign of Gods hatred 356 Agreement of the life of the Saints upon earth with the life of the Saints in Heaven 350 All diligence must be given to make our pardon of sin sure unto our selves 414 Anointing of three sorts of persons what it signified 308 Antiquity of the Gospel and of our religion 298 Apostles peculiar witnesses of Christ and why 362 A proof by induction that all the Prophets bear witnesse unto Christ 388 Attendants and companions of faith four 396 A strong motive to hold on in wel-doing 417 B BAptisme often put for doctrin 303 Beleevers are fellow servants under one Lord. 302 Beleevers may know they have faith by four marks 395 Beleevers may and must know the pardon of their own sins 409 Benefits flowing from remission of sin four 407 Better to goe to Heaven alone than to Hell with company 411 C. CAre of Christians must bee to suffer as Christians 331 Care must be had of our receits and expences because we must bee countable for them 383 Chief duty of every Christian whilst hee is in this world 406 Children of God delayed often but not denied in their suits 355 Christ acknowledged our Lord by four practises 301 Christ already come proved 307 Christ his life not monastical 315 Christ preached to the Israelites two ways 297 Christ first preached to the children of Israel for three reasons ibid. Christ Lord of all two ways 299 Christ both a Lord and a Servant how 300 Christ is not a Jesus but to whom he is a Lord. ibid. Christ no sooner received gifts and calling but did good with them for our example 311 Christ seasonably preached after Johns Baptisme that is Johns doctrin of repentance 305 Christ proved the only Messiah because he was Jesus of Nazareth 306 Christ his Deity proved by his glorious resurrection 339 Christ by dying offereth and by rising applyeth his one only sacrifice 341 Christ went about doing good two way 311 Christ sent of his Father and came 〈◊〉 before he was sent 3●7 Christ his righteousnesse notably witnessed 328 Christ his two natures lively set out ibid. Christ reputed an arch-traytor in his life and death 332 Christ submitted to the l●west estate of death reas five 337 Christ the Lamb slain from the beginning how 341 Christ hath powerfully trodden Satan under his feet and under our feet how 323 Christ rose early in the morning and what we learn thence 354 Christ in respect of himself needeth not any witnesses and yet hee useth them 362 Christ must bee the matter of all our preaching 373 Christians must partake of Christs annointing 309 Christians must become Kings Priests and Prophets 310 Christians must imitate Christ in doing good 316 Chosen witnesses of
4.7 her oyle was increased till she had enough for her creditors and her self CHAP. XX. Rules of Wisdome for our own necessary actions in respect of their first Order Secondly Subject THe fourth sort of rules for actions Rules for necessary actions 1 Ground Thou w●●● sent in●o this World f r necessary business respecteth such as concern our selves and these are either necessary or indifferent actions Wee w●re sent in●o this world to do some necessary business which wee must intend and not wa●e our time in impertinent things The master that sent his servants into the Vineyard sent them in to work Do we think that God sent man into the World to sport and play for his recreation sake or idleness yea or to eat and drink and onely to get what to maintain himself by No but for something beyond all these else his end were not beyond the brute-beasts Or can wee think that God hath given men gifts of reason understanding judgement and means of nature and grace for the culture of all these onely to enjoy outward things to feed their pleasure and appetite which they might fully injoy without all their gifts No but the master gave his servants talents to traffick withall to make their Lord and themselves gainers Wee must therefore acknowledge some thing to bee absolutely necessary unto which all other things are necessary but respecttively and carry our selves unto every thing accordingly If wee would know what that is which is absolutely necessary our Saviour tells us Luke 10.42 One thing is necessary namely to know how a man may come into Gods favour and bee saved and all earthly things are respectively necessarie so far as they conduce to this To know the vertue of Christs death and resurrection is absolutely necessary all things are to bee counted but dross and dung unto this Phil. 3.10 But in all necessary actions 2 For the order the most necessary things m st bee done fi●st the rule of Wisdome requires that the most necessary action be done first and most Eccles 9.10 Whatsoever thy hand shall finde to do do it with all thy might Nothing in the world is so necessary as to repent us of sin past and the reason for it is the present time to day Nothing so necessary as amendment of life for time to come therefore do it now Delaies in all things are dangerous in this often deadly And this most necessary business must bee done most Well said Augustine Deficit in necessariis qui redundat in superfluis August h●e must needs fail in necessaries who over-flowes in superfluities How then can men answer the wasting of their lives and time in pleasures recreation eating drinking buying selling and seldome finde in their hands the business which ten is unto eternal life A good rule therefore it is often to examine our selves thus What am I doing And whether in all inferiour things do I aim a● the chief in earing I must not forget the bread of life In recreation and pleasure I must ch●●fly affect the pleasures of Gods house In buying and se●ling I must specially help forward my purchase of eternal life In my earthly calling I must express the calling of Christianity 3 For the subject The most necessary actions of evil men are evil This is the way to do the one necessary thing most of all 3 Most necessary actions in evil men are evil the best actions of the unregenerate are sins And therefore it is most necessary to bee a good man The truth hereof appears because a man may do what God commands and omit and forbear a work prohibited and yet sin in both For example Aristides practised justice most strictly yet herein hee sinned because it was no work of faith Alexander conquering Darius violated not the chastity of Darius his wife and daughters but forbare this prohibited and sinful action yet therein hee sinned because hee forbare not of good conscience But wee must know that this sin lyeth not in the substance or matter of the work which is materially good but in the vice of the doer and manner or end of doing Neither are these sins in themselves but onely by accident CHAP. XXI Rules for necessary actions in respect of the meanes and the order of the two Tables 4 For the means The best action may not be thrust on by evil means Rom. 3.8 NO action is so necessary as it must bee thrust on by evil means Wee must not do the least evil for the greatest good which was Lots sin to procure good by evil neither yeeld to a less evil to prevent a greater in evils of sin In civil things it is a most necessary thing to preserve life but not with a lie usury sabbath-breaking or going to Witche● Life is not so necessary as without separation to cleave to that which is good In spiritual things to preach the word is so necessary 1 Cor. 9.26 as Paul cries Wo unto himself if hee do not because the flock of God depends upon him But if I may not preach unless I wound my conscience by compounding with hereticks and blending truth with errour I must never preach but leave the care of the Church to God who without my lie will provide for the good of it Thus Elijah fled and left his Ministry because hee could not exercise it unless hee would have received Baals ceremonies and flattered with the Baalites And if hee had not thus forsaken his place hee had forsaken the Church Great Athanasius chused rather to leave his Church than to yeeld any thing to the Arrians Act. 20.29 Saint Paul knew that after hee went from Ephesus grievous Wolves would come in not sparing the flock And yet because hee could not stay to preach unless hee would have restored some pharisaical observations and unless for peace sake hee would have yeeld●d to the rites and image of Diana he left the place because he must not do the greatest good by any evil meanes Never let any think to thrive by means which God hath accursed and upon which himself cannot pray for a blessing For the order of the two Tables All necessary actions must bee done according to the order of the Tables ever esteeming the duties of the first Table more necessary than they of the second This is Christs own rule Matth. 22.38 This is the first and great Commandement Duties of the first table must bee done first and the second is like to this both in respect of the necessary binding and of the end for even these are a worship of God if they bee performed in faith and for his commandement sake Wherefore else did the Lord deliver two Tables whereas hee might have put all into one but that hee would prefer and claim the first place to duties that immediately concern his worship From whence Divines gather that rule of Antinomy and truth that when the two Tables are opposed and both
call for necessary duties which both cannot bee done at the same time the second Table must give place to the first as Act. 5.25 It is meet to obey God rather than man Magistrates must bee obeyed but the first Table derogates from the second when both cannot bee observed So in the New Testament Parents and friends are to bee loved but if they bee not hated for Christ when both cannot bee loved together one cannot bee Christs Disciple But here bee three Caveats Three caveats 1 That a special commandement is more necessary and dispenseth with all the Ten And it is a principle that all commandements of both tables run with one exception If God command not otherwise Thou shall not kill nor steal unless God command Abraham to kill his son and the Israelites to rob the A●gyptians Thou shalt make no graven image unless God command Moses to make a Brazen Serpent Thus observations of immediate commandements give all Sovereignty to God who is to bee simply obeyed and acknowledged above his Law 2 Moral duties must take place of all ceremonies The rule of Divines is that charity dispenseth with ceremony according to that Matth. 12.7 I will have mercy and not sacrifice because mercy is moral and sacrifice ceremonial So Abimelech gave David the Shew-bread which was not lawful but in the case of necessary mercy And it was superstition in the Jewes that they would rather suffer their City to bee taken Matth. 12.11 than fight upon the Sabbath day in their own defence God allows an Oxe to bee pulled out of a ditch Exod 12.16 and led to water and allows a necessary provision for the body unto which even Sabbath duties must give place 3 Necessity wee say hath no law but that is to bee understood in mans laws when some sudden case falleth out so as the inferiour cannot have recourse to the Law-maker that then hee may interpret the law himself and break the letter of it to follow the reason and intent of it as in case of the murder of a thief But in the Law of God one onely case doth dispense with it and that is when necessity so altereth a fact as it taketh away from it all reason of sinning As for example it is not lawful to marry ones sister but in the beginning of the world extreme necessity altered this fact and gave dispensation So it is not lawful to take away that which is anothers but extreme necessity makes it lawful because it is not anothers any longer seeing the Law of nature it self maketh some things common in such extream necessity On the Sabbath wee must hold our selves strictly to Gods worship but if an house bee on fire wee may leave it without sin Note the equity of that Law Deut. 23.24 25. CHAP. XXII Rules of Wisdome for necessary actions in respect of the scope and binding of them ALL necessary actions as they must begin with Gods will 1 Scope God must be the end of all our actions so they must end with his glory The end and scope of all our actions must bee God 1 Because hee made all things for himself 2 He is the Alpha and Omega the beginning from whom all is and the end for whom and unto whom all must bee referred 3 If in all indifferent things Gods glory must bee aimed at mu●h more in necessary But so it is in indifferent things as eating drinking c. 1 Cor. 10.31 and Rom. 14.6 Hee that eateth eateth to the Lord or ought so to do 4 The very Heathens had a glimmering hereof professing that they were not born for themselves but partly their friends partly their Country and partly God But the Scripture speaks more plainly that wee owe all our selves to God Something indeed wee owe to our neighbour but that is in 2 Binding necessity duti s must be d ne whatever follow and for God In the necessary duties of Religion or our calling wee must hold our selves bound to do them whatsoever follow Two things commonly hinder us herein which wee must arm our selves against The first is fear of mens Judgements faces offence and censures but wee must tread this underfoot if wee have a comman●●m●●t and calling to do any thing as Paul did 1 Cor. 4.3 I pass little to bee judged of any man Neither feared hee any persecution or trouble so hee might finish his course with joy Jeremy must make his brow of brass to speak the word of the Lord Chap. 1. vers 17. A Christian must prepare to pass through good report and bad report and to count neither liberty nor life dear unto him Daniel would open his window Daniel 6.10 and pray as hee was wont even when his life was sought after Secondly events of a●tions do often and much trouble us For remedy whereof ob●●ve two rules 1 That of the Wise man Eccles 11.4 Hee that observes the wind shall not s●w It is a fo●lish Husbandman who for sight of a cloud forbears either his seed time or harvest So for sowing works of mercy hee that sticks in doubts and saith I may bee poor or old long diseased full of children or persecuted for the Gospel and must provide for one neglects his seed-time by looking at winds and clouds So many a carnal Gospeller saith If I should go so often to Church as some and bee so forward in Religion I should lose much profit and incur much rebukes and reproaches Therefore secondly wee must learn to leave events and successes to God for it is not in man to direct his steps God disposeth as hee pleaseth The Saints of God are often frustrate of their godly p●rposes as David in purposing and preparing to build an house for the Lord. But first they lose nothing if they do their du●y Secondly Gods over-ruling hand will dispose all to the best therefore there let them rest CHAP. XXIII Rules for actions indifferent first In general A Great part of mans life is spent in the doing of natural and indifferent actions which in themselves are neither good nor evil but as they are used And being so common and ordinary many sins creep into them because wee take our selves free and loose to do as wee list in them which conceit grows out of ignorance of Gods wisdome who by his word hath tied u● as straight in the use of them as in things most necessarily injoyned For there is no action in which wee must depart from God Obje●t They are therefore indifferent because they are neither commanded nor forbidden and therefore as they bee free so bee wee also in them Answ Alth●ugh there bee no word commanding or forbidding yet there is a w●rd directing and ordering in them as wee shall see in some general rules concerning them all General Rules concerning all indifferents 1 The most in different must be by God 1 W●rca●● 2 Leave and in special rules applied to some particulars The general rules concerning them