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A03342 CVIII lectures vpon the fourth of Iohn Preached at Ashby-Delazouch in Leicester-shire. By that late faithfull and worthy minister of Iesus Christ. Arthur Hildersam.; Lectures upon the fourth of John Hildersam, Arthur, 1563-1632.; Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 13462; ESTC S119430 700,546 622

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were to be gathered out of the whole world This answer shall be cleared and confirmed vnto you in three Points 1. That the World in this place cannot possibly be taken for all mankinde 2. That by the World may well be meant the Elect onely that are scattered throughout the World 3. The Reason why the Holy Ghost intending onely to teach that Christ is the Sauiour of all the Elect vseth this Phrase to expresse it by and cals him the Sauiour of the World 1. That the world in this Place cannot be taken for all mankinde is euident because then this sentence should be contrary to many other plaine places which teach vs that Christ is not the Sauiour of all mankinde For it is expressely said in Scripture 1. That many in the world shall not be saued by him Matth. 7. 22 23. Many will say vnto mee in that day Lord Lord haue wee not by thy Name prophesied c. And then will I professe to them I neuer knew you 2. Yea that the greatest part of men in the world shall not be saued by him wide is the gate and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction and many there be that goe in thereat because straight is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth vnto life and few there be that finde it Matth. 7. 13 14. 3. That he shall be an occasion of damnation to many in the world Rom. 9. 32. 3. They haue stumbled at the stumbling stone as it is written B●…held I lay in Zion a stumbling stone and a rocke to make men fall 4. God doth not so much as offer Christ nor make him knowne to all men in the world For as it was vnder the Law he hath not dealt so with any nation and as for his iudgements they haue not knowne them Psal. 147. 20. so may it truely be said that in euery age since there hath beene many thousand soules that neuer so much as heard of the name of Christ. As he did by immediate Reueration forbid his Apostles to goe vnto some people Act. 16. 6 7. So still by his prouidence he with-holds the meanes of grace frommany He doth in this case with the heauenly raine of his Word as he oft doth with the naturall raine I caused it saith he to raine vpon one city and caused it not to raine vpon another city one piece was rained vpon and the piece whereupon it rained not withered Amos 4. 7. 5. Christ desired not that all men in the world nor that the most men in the world should haue benefit by his death Ioh. 17. 9. I pray for them I pray not for the world but for them that thou hast giuen me for they are thine Thus haue I made it euident that when Christ is here called the Sauiour of the world it cannot be meant that he is the Sauiour of al men in the world 2. Now for the second point that by the world here may well be meant the Elect only that are scattered throughout the world is as plaine First because the like generall speeches are so taken in other places Looke vnto me and be ye saued all the ends of the earth vnto me euery knee shall bow and euery tongue shall sweare Esay 45. 22 23. and All Kings shall fall downe before him all nations shall serue him Ps. 72. 11. Secondly because in many places of Scripture the benefit of Christs death is restrained and limitted to a peculiar and choise company Esay 53. 6. He hath laid on him the iniquity of vs all Mat. 1. 21. He is called Iesus because he shall saue his people from their sins Ioh. 10. 15. I lay downe my life for my sheepe Ephes. 5. 23. He is the sauiour of his body Thirdly because in other places of Scripture by the world is meant the whole company of Gods Elect only Ioh. 6. 33. The bread of God is he which commeth downe from heauen and giueth life to the world 2. Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ and reconciled the world to himselfe not imputing their sins vnto them Will any say that he hath giuen life vnto or reconciled vnto God all persons in the world 3. To come to the Reasons why the Holy Ghost intending to say no more but this that Christ is the Sauiour of all the Elect expresseth it not in those tearmes which one would thinke were more plaine but saith he is the Sauiour of the world 1. Iohn 4. 14. The Father hath sent his Sonne to bee the Sauiour of the world Iohn 3. 16. God so loued the world Ioh. 1. 29. and 6. 51. I giue my flesh for the life of the world not for our sinnes onely but for the sinnes of the whole world 1. Iohn 2. 2. God will haue all men to be saued and he gaue himselfe a ransome for all 1. Tim. 2. 4. 6. He tasted death for euery man Heb. 2. 9. The Reasons hereof are these 1. To expresse that the number of the Elect the number of those that shall be saued by Christ should be exceeding great according to that promise Gen. 13. 16. I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth And 15. 5. Innumerable as the starres in the firmament For so when we would expresse that a thing is commonly knowne we are wont to say All the world knowes it And so the Scripture it selfe speaketh Ioh. 12. 19. The world goeth after him Rom. 1. 8. Published throughout the whole world So Mat. 3. 5 6. It is said that all Iudea and all the region round about Iordan went out to Iohn and were baptized of him 2. To shew the better that Christ and his Merits should belong not to the Iewes onely but to the Gentiles to some of all parts and corners of the world some of all sorts and conditions of men This was necessary to be taught and expressed in most significant tearmes specially in those times wherein Christ and the Apostles liued both because the Iewes for a long time had beene the onely people of God and all of other Nations might iudge themselues excluded as all the Gentiles are called strangers and brought in complaining Esay 56. 3. The Lord hath surely separated me from his people as also because Christ while he was on earth seemed to haue beene sent onely to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel Matth. 15. 24. Now the Lord could not in more significant tearmes haue expressed this That the Lord had his Elect not among the Iewes onely but also among the Gentiles in all sorts and conditions of men than by saying Christ is the Sauiour of the World And this is certainely the Apostles meaning both in 1. Iohn 2. 2. not for our sinnes only that are Iewes and haue beene his ancient people and to whom he was first and chiefly sent but also for the sins of the whole world of his elect Gentiles dispersed throughout the whole world And in 1. Tim. 2. 4. who will haue all men
Sonne will reueale him Matth. 11. 27. And the meanes whereby Christ reuealeth and makes his Father knowne vnto vs is the Word Iohn 17. 6. I haue declared thy name to the men that thou gauest mee out of the world verse 8. For I haue giuen vnto them the Word which thou gauest mee 2. For the second branch Whatsoeuer is not done of faith that is vpon a perswasion wee please God in it is sinne Rom. 4. 23. Now faith is grounded vpon the Word And how can a man be perswaded he pleaseth God in that seruice hee doth to him vnlesse he haue his Word for it For if we follow our owne good intent while we thinke we please God we may most highly offend him the Iewes when they killed the Apostles thought they did God good seruice Ioh. 16. 2. and so did Paul when he was exceedingly mad against the faithfull and compelled them to blaspheme Acts 26. 11. and he saith that this was then the height of his zeale he persecuted the Church Phil. 3. 6. The First Vse of this Doctrine is to teach vs 1. To esteeme this a singular prerogatiue that the Lord hath not suffered vs to walke in our own wayes Acts 14. 16. But to be thankefull that we haue the Word and to make our vse of it This was the chiefe preferment of the Iew aboue the Samaritan and all others Romanes 3. 1 2. If any want this the god that they serue is not the true god but an Idoll and fancie of their owne 2. Chron. 15. 3. They worship they know not what whereas wee haue a comfortable assurance that the worship wee doe pleaseth God 2. If therefore thou desire to serue and please God let this bee thy first care to liue vnder a good Ministry and to get knowledge Israel was without the true God while it was without a teaching Priest and without the Law 2. Chron. 15. 3. all the deuotion that ignorant people vse is but the Sacrifice of fooles till they be ready to heare and willing to be instructed that way Eccles. 5. 1. Therefore also the Lord complaineth Hos. 4. 6. that there is an ignorant Priest that cannot instruct them the people perish for want of knowledge 3. Count it thy wisedome to cleaue so precisely to the Word as in the maters of Gods seruice not to doe any thing which thou canst not finde warranted by the Word Psal. 119. 31. I haue cleaued to thy testimonies O Lord confound me not 4. Conceiue no otherwise of God then he hath reuealed himselfe in his Word Now if we apply this to our selues wee shall finde that the most of our people are in no better case then the Samaritans were who worshipped they knew not what 1. Indeed we haue the whole Word of God and so had not they But is our case euer the better for that No surely it is so much the worse they wanted it we haue it and contemne it We count it no prerogatiue to haue it wee make no benefit of it wee reade it not wee seeke not the knowledge of it we care not what Ministrie wee liue vnder we count it no benefit to liue vnder an able Ministrie Heb. 2. verse 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great saluation 2. Though they doe ioyne with Gods people in his true worship yet doe they it not vpon this ground that they know by the Word God will be thus serued But the rule they follow is either first the commandem●…nt of men as it is said of the Pharisees Matth. 15. 9. or secondly the custome of the place where they liue as we read the Samaritans of old did 2. Kings 17. 40. or thirdly their owne good meaning contrary to that commandement seeke not after your owne heart Numb 15. verse 39. The second Vse is to iustifie our Religion against the Papists For it is euident wee may truely say to them as our Sauiour doth heere Yee worship that which yee know not wee worship that which wee know 1. It is not possible they should haue any assurance that they please God in that seruice they doe vnto him how confident soeuer they seeme to be because they doe not worship God according to his Word 2. While they thinke they worship God they worship the diuell Of them certainely that is spoken Apoc. 9. 20. And the remnant of men which were not killed by these plagues repented not of the workes of their hands that they 〈◊〉 not worship diuells and Idols of gold and siluer and of brasse and of st●…ne and of wood which neither can see nor beare nor goe For if the Israelites in Aarons and Ieroboams time were truely said to worship diuells when they worshipped the true God vnder the similitude of a molten Image then is their worshipping of Images no better then Idolatry and worshipping of diuells notwithstanding that they say that they neither worship the Image it selfe nor any false god in or by it The worshipping of the Virgin Mary as well as the worshipping of Venu●… or any of the heathen gods the kneeling before the picture of God the Father or Christ crucified as well as the kneeling before Baal is a worshipping of diuells Lecture the fiue and thirtieth December 12. 1609. IN this Verse as we haue heard three things offer themselues to our 〈◊〉 1. The fault he findeth with the Samaritans worship Yee worship that wh●…h y●…e know not 2. The commendation he giues to the Iewes worship wee worship that wee know 3. The reason whereby he iustifieth this commendation hee giues to the Iewes For saluation is of the Iewes It followeth now that we proceed to the two last points contained in these words Wee worship that we know for saluation is of the Iewes In which words for the helpe of our memory and vnderstanding three things are to be obserued 1. That Christ prof sieth of himselfe that he worshipped God 2. That he worshipped God as the Iewes did 3. That he affirmeth saluation is of the Iewes Then the first Doctrine that we haue here to learne is this That our Sauiour himselfe though he were the Sonne of God did vse when he was here on earth to serue and worship God 1. He was wont diligently to frequent the place of publike prayer Luke 4. 16. Hee went into th●… Synagogue on the Sabbath day as his custome was 2. Hee was wont to vse prayer in his owne family Luke 9. 18. As hee was alone praying his Disciples were with him 3. He was wont alwayes at his meales to giue thankes and pray to God for his blessing vpon the creatures and that not onely when he was to worke a miracle Matth 14. 19. Hee 〈◊〉 vp to heauen and blessed the food that was prepared that is gaue thankes and prayed but ordinarily Luke 24. 30. As hee sate at table hee tooke the bread and gaue thankes 4. Besides all these kinds of prayer he was wont to pray in secret
his fatherly affection and loue in Christ more fully and cleerely to vs then hee had done to his Church vnder the Law Gal. 4. 3. 4 5. We when we were children were in bondage vnder the elements of the world But when the fulnesse of the time was come God sent forth his Sonne made of a woman made vnder the Law To redeeme them that were vnder the Law that wee might receiue the adoption of sonnes From hence then we haue this Doctrine to learne That No man can worship God aright till he know God to be his Father the better a man is perswaded and assured of Gods fatherly loue to him in Christ the better seruice he shall doe vnto him Therefore our Sauiour teaching vs to pray bids vs say Our Father Matth. 6. 9. As if he should say presume not to aske any petition of God till thou canst so conceiue and be perswaded of him And the Apostle tells vs it is the spirit of adoption that makes vs able to pray and makes this the voice of the spirit of prayer it cryes Abba O Father Rom. 8. 15. Yea he makes it an impossible thing for any man to pray aright without this assurance Rom. 10. 14 How shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued The reason of it is first because till we know God is our Father and Ioueth vs in Christ we cannot be assured that he will accept vs. When we know he is our Father in Christ it makes vs goe to him with boldnesse and confidence in Christ we haue boldnesse and accesse with confidence through faith in him Eph. 3. 12. I will arise and go to my father saith the Prodigall Luke 15. 18. and will say vnto him father I haue sinned against heauen and before thee Though he had sinned so outragiously yet the consideration of this that it was his father he was to go vnto gaue him boldnesse It giues vs assurance that not withstanding our infirmities he will accept vs I will spare him and deale gently and indulgently with him saith the Lord Mal. 3. 17. as a man spareth his son that serueth him When the Prodigall was yet a great way off his father saw him and had compassion and ran and fell on his necke and kissed him Luke 15. 20. And nothing graceth our prayers more with God then this confidence and boldnes Let vs come boldly to the throne of grace that we may obtaine mercy and finde grace to helpe in time of need saith the Apostle Heb. 4. 16. But without this faith and perswasion that God is our Father we can haue no assurance that any thing we doe in his seruice pleaseth him without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. And the best thing we doe in his seruice without this assurance that we please him in so doing is sinne Rom. 14. 23. Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Secondly because till a man be per●…waded of Gods loue and fatherly affection towards him in Christ he can neuer serue him of loue nor with a good heart but vpon some by-respects vpon a seruile feare or hope of merit Heb. 10. 22. We can neuer draw neere to God with a true heart till we haue assurance of faith and our hearts sprinkled from an euill conscience No man can truely loue God till he be perswaded by the spirit of Gods loue to him Wee loue God because he loued vs first 1. Iohn 4. 19. true loue comes from a pure heart and a good conscience and faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1. 5. And whatsoeuer seruice we doe to God vnlesse it proceed out of a good heart and from loue to God it cannot please him though a man should giue his body to be burned in Martyrdome yet if that proceed not from his loue to God it would profit him nothing 1. Corinthians 13. 3. For what man would accept of any seruice from him that hee knowes loues him not The Vse of the Doctrine is to exhort vs to get good assurance to our hearts that God is our Father that he beares a fatherly affection to vs aboue all sinnes striue against infidelity Examine your selues whither yee bee in the faith prooue your selues 2. Cor. 13. 5. Many want this assurance and seeke it not many seeme to haue it and haue it not I will giue you foure notes to trie it by 1. God is a Father to no man but in and through Christ Iohn 1. 12. So many as receiued him to them gaue hee power to become the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue in his name Galathians 4. 5. Hee hath redeemed vs that were vnder the Law that wee might receiue the adoption of sonnes so that vnlesse a man ground his assurance and confidence that God is his Father onely vpon Christ if hee ground it vpon this that God hath made him and preserued him c. his assurance is in vaine 2. He that is perswaded indeed that God is his Father will ●…adly and boldly resort to him in prayer Because yee are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father Gal. 4. 6. They that seldome pray or pray with no willingnesse and cheerefulnesse or pray with no confidence doubtlesse are not perswaded that God is their father 3. He that is perswaded that God is his Father will not murmure against nor be put out of heart by any of Gods corrections but be perswaded of his loue euen in affliction according to that of the Apostle Heb. 12. 7. 9. If yee endure chastening God dealeth with you as with sonnes for what sonne is hee whom the father chasteneth not And Rom. 15. 3. Being iustified by faith wee glory euen in tribulation They that in the time of their peace and prosperity onely are confident in Gods loue but haue no heart no comfort in affliction are not indeed perswaded that God is their Father 4. He that is indeed perswaded that the Lord beareth the affection of a Father vnto him will beare the affection of a childe vnto God will loue him and be carefull to please him fearefull to offend him Mal. 1. 6. If I bee your Father where is mine honour Heb. 10. 22. No drawing neere to God in assurance of faith till wee be sprinkled in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies also They that haue no care to please God nor feare to offend him doubtlesse are not perswaded that God is their Father Now come we to the principall Doctrine which our Sauiour teacheth vs in this place namely That the onely true worship of God the onely worship that pleaseth God now especially vnder the Gospell is that which is spirituall the worship that is proper to the Gospell the true Christian worship is spirituall For so saith our Sauiour here The houre commeth and now it is that the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth and againe They that worship
liue through him and Ver. 10. Herein is loue not that we loued him but that he loued vs and sent his Sonne to be a reconciliation for our sinnes The reasons whereby this may appeare to be the greatest gift that euer God gaue man are three 1. In respect of the Lords affection towards vs declared in this gift 2. Of the benefit we receiue by this gift and the fruits and consequents of it 3. The freenesse of this gift For the first though Christ were more worth then ten thousand worlds being in the forme of God and one that thought it no robbery to be equall with God Phil. 2. 6. Though he were infinitely dearer to his Father then any of our children can be to vs. Mat. 12. 18. His beloued in whom his soule delighted I was daily his delight saith he Prouerb 8. 30. Yet as if we were of more worth and dearer vnto him then his onely begotten Sonne he gaue him for vs and that he might expresse his loue to vs he neglected him as it were and withdrew his affection from him Rom. 8. 32. He spared not his owne Sonne He caused him to take vpon him the forme of a seruant and to be of no reputation Phil. 2. 7. to make vs Kings Apoc. 1. 6. 2 Cor. 8. 9. He being rich for our sakes became poore that we through his pouerty might be made rich So that in this it may seeme God hath respected and loued vs aboue his own Son 2. He caused him to be tempted by Sathan for forty dayes together and that in the wildernesse a place of great terrour Mark 1. 17. And surely this was a farre greater indignity and reproch to be done to him then it would be to the greatest Empresse in the world that she should be sollicited by the basest scullion or rogue in a kingdome to commit filthinesse with him yea he permitted him so farre to the power of Sathan that he in those forty dayes carried the precious body of the Sonne of God vp and downe at his pleasure one while to the top of an high mountaine Luke 4. 5. Another while to a pinacle of the Temple Luk. 4. 9. And why did he thus giue his owne Sonne ouer thus farre to the power of Sathan Surely to deliuer vs from the power of Sathan Hebrewes 2. 15. So that in this respect also it may seeme he hath respected and loued vs more then his owne Sonne 3. He powred shame and contempt vpon him greater then euer any creature endured In his life oft he endured great contempt but specially in his death he died the shamefull death of the crosse hanged betweene two thieues both before and after his execution so many reproches and contempts were done to him as no Chronicle can remember the like euer done to any malefactor The whole band of the soldiers being called together clothed him with purple platted a crowne of thornes and put it about his head and began to salute him Haile King of the Iewes and smit him on the head with a reed and did spit vpon him and bowing their knees worshipped him as the holy Euangelist recordeth Mar. 15. 16. 19 We haue known many notorious traitors and other malefactors executed as for example the gunpowder-traitors in whose death all good subiects had cause to reioyce but did you euer know any so reproched and insulted ouer in their death as Christ was In which respect the Prophet saith of him Esa. 53. 2. He had no forme nor beauty he was despised and reiected of men we hid as it were our faces from him he was despised and we esteemed him not and himselfe complained in the person of Dauid that was a type of him Psal. 22. 6. I am a worme and not a man a shame of men and the contempt of the people And why did God powre this contempt on his own Son Surely to deliuer vs from that shame and confusion that did iustly belong vnto vs To vs belongeth confusion of face O Lord to vs belongeth confusion of face saith the Prophet Dan. 9. 7 8. So that in this also it may seeme the Lord hath respected and loued vs aboue his owne Son 4. He made him to be sinne which knew no sinne 2 Cor. 5. 21. As if from the soale of his foot to the crowne of his head nothing had beene whole on him but wounds and swellings and sores full of corruption as the Prophet speakes in another case Esa. 1. 6. imputing to him and as it were clothing him with all the drunkennesses adulteries murders blasphemies of all the Elect througout the world And why did he thus make him sinne surely to make vs free from all sinne thas we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. So that in this also it may seeme the Lord hath respected and loued vs more then him 5. Lastly he made him a curse for vs Gal. 3. 13. so as for a time nothing could be seene on him but the curse of God no signe of his fauour at all He was in the garden in such sorrow and feare as that he was faine to desire poore weake men to watch with him Mat. 26. 36. and that he shed many teares cryed out and roared with strong cryes Heb. 5. 7. and sweat water and bloud Luke 23. 44. and vpon the Crosse the curse of God was so heauy vpon him that he cryed Mat. 27. 46. My God my God why hast thou forsaken me so that that which is said in another case of the Church Lam. 1. 12. that might our Sauiour haue said at that time Behold and see if there be any sorrow like vnto my sorrow which is done vnto me wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his fierce wrath And why was hee thus accursed Surely he was made a curse for vs that the blessing of Abraham might come vpon vs saith the Apostle Gal. 3. 13 14. he endured the sorrowes and terrours of hell that we might be brought to the ioyes of heauen So that in this also it may seeme the Lord hath respected and loued vs more then his owne Sonne Let no man thinke that I haue strayned my selfe to amplifie this matter more then needed no if I had The tongues of men and Angels I were not able suficiently to expresse vnto you the loue of God to man in bestowing this gift and therefore the Apostle saith the Angels wonder at and desire to pry into this mysterie 1. Pet 1. 12. Yea the Prophet saith that the Lord himselfe a wondring at his own loue in this gift shall call Christs name wonderfull Esa. 9 6. The Lord might haue forborne to create vs or when we were created he could haue preserued vs from falling and when we were fallen he could without this cost this gift and price haue redeemed vs but then he should not sufficiently enough haue declared his loue to mankind The second reason whereby this may appeare to be the greatest of all
and thoughts which Sathan puts into the minde which till they be cast downe we can neuer be brought to the obedience of Christ 2. Cor. 10. 4 5. And as this may be said of all sin so specially of this Sathan puts many erroneous conceits and imaginations into the minds of men whereby he deceiues them and makes them thinke it can be no matter of great danger to liue in this sinne Therefore the Apostle speaking of the danger of this sinne saith 1. Cor. 6. 9. be not deceiued neither Fornicators nor Adulterers nor Wantons c. and Ephes. 5. 5 6. When hee had said this Ye know that no whoremonger nor vncleane person hath any inheritance in the Kingdome of Christ and of God he addeth Let no man deceiue you with vaine words And thus Salomon describes the man that is drawne to it Pro. 7. 22. 23. Hee goeth after her straight-way as an oxe goeth to the slaughter or a foole to the correction of the stocks till a dart strike thorow his liuer As a bird hasteth to the snare and knoweth not that it is for his life If his vnderstanding were not blinded if he knew well what he did if he were not a foole and as void of the true vse of his reason as the bruit beast is he could not doe as he doth I will therefore endeauour by the weapons of our warr-fare such as I haue receiued from the Lords Armory the holy Scriptures to cast downe those thoughts and Imaginations whereby Sathan deceiues men in this case and hardens them in this sinne And these weapons if you will receiue them and learne to vse them you shall finde will be mighty through God to cast downe strong holds as the Apostle speakes 2. Cor. 10. 4. This is the soueraigne Preseruatiue to keepe vs from all Sathans Temptations By the words of thy lips saith Dauid Psal. 17. 4. I haue kept me from the paths of the destroyer Now the meanes whereby Sathan deceiues men and drawes so many into this sinne I finde to bee principally foure 1. The generality of this sinne 2. The hope of secrecy 3. The hope of impunity 4. The hope of repentance and so of pardon 1. The generality of this sinne deceiueth many How can this bee so great a sinne thinke they that is so common in all places and among all sorts and conditions of men How vsuall is this among such as are of chiefe credit yea are not many professors faulty in this yea are there not Preachers and good Preachers too that will doe as bad as this commeth vnto and worse too This errour hath of old deceiued many The example of some persons doth strangely comfort and harden men in sinne The Prophet saith Ezek. 16. 54. that the Iewes by their Iewdnesse and euill example were a comfort vnto them of Sodome and Samaria When a sinne is become common and growne into fashion it is presently counted no sinne or no great sinne at least See how this hardned them Ier. 44. 17. Wee will burne incense to the Queene of heauen And why we haue done it and not we onely but our Fathers our Kings and our Princes in the Cities of Iudea and in the streets of Ierusalem And surely these times are such and this sinne is growne so common as men shall haue much adoe to preserue themselues and their families from it As when the Plague is in a towne if but some one or two houses be infected a man may without danger goe to the towne and liue in it but if the infection grow generall all men are afraid of it so is it in this case This made the Prophet complaine so Esay 6. 5. Woe is me for I am vndone because I am a man of vncleane lips apt to offend in my speech and how can I chuse but be so For I dwell in the midst of a people of vncleane lips So that there is small hope I shall any more preuaile in speaking against this sinne now then Lot did when he sought to oppose himselfe to the multitude in the like case Gen. 19. 4. All the men of Sodome from the young to the old euen all from all quarters had compassed his house and he verse 7. sought to perswade with them but verse 9. see their answer He is come alone as a stranger and shall he iudge and rule Yet because Gods sheepe will heare his voice Ioh. 10. 27. I will giue you out of Gods Word some soueraigne preseruatiues against this temptation No mans example should be the rule of our conscience that were to preferre man before God And it is a poore excuse a poore comfort for any to say such a mans example drew me to this What helpe found Adam in this excuse when he said Gen. 3. 12. The woman gaue mee of the tree and I did cate Nay it is a token of Gods wrath vpon thee to lay such stumbling blocks before thee Matth. 18. 7. Woe be to the world because of offences And it is a certaine signe of reprobation in thee that thou stumblest and takest occasion to fall by such examples Those whom God hath ordained to destruction he will lay stumbling blocks before them that they may perish as he threatneth Ier. 6. 21. Behold I will lay stu●…bling blocks before this people and the fathers and the sonnes together shall fall vpon them the neighbour and his friend shall perish No sinne is the lesse odious nor the danger of it the lesse because it is common for as it is certaine the greatest part shall be damned Matth. 7. 1●… Broad is the way that leadeth to destruction and many there be which goe in thereat God hath made Tophet wide and large as the Prophet speaketh Esay 30. 33. So though with men many times it be a meanes of immunitie from punishment to a lewd man that hee hath many that ioyne with him in that sinne yet with God it is not Though hand ioyne in hand saith Salomon Pro. 11. 21. the wicked shall not be vnpunished Nay the more common a sinne is the more odious it is to God and the more dangerous for them that liue in it For nothing will hasten Gods vengeance so much as that It was the generality of sinne in the old world that brought destruction vpon it Ge●… 6. 12. And vpon Sodome likewise Gen. 19. 4. See a notable proofe of this Ier. 5. 7. How should I spare thee for this and verse 9. Shall I not visit for these things Shall not my soule bee auenged on such a nation as this And marke the reason why the Lord must needs be auenged vers 7 8. They committed adultery and assembled themselues by companies in Harlots houses euery man neyed after his neighbours wife And yet though the generality of sinne doe hasten and increase Gods vengeance vpon men in this life if it would be any mitigation to the torments they should endure in hell that they shall there haue so many
4. 13. By this the Prophet knew that the Lord had determined to destroy Amaziah 2. Chron. 25. 16. because he scornefully reiected his admonition and would not receiue it And this is giuen as an vndoubted signe of the vtter ruine of the kingdome of Iuda 2. Chron. 36. 15 16. that when God sent them his messengers to admonish and reprooue them they mocked his messengers and misused his Prophets vntill the wrath of the Lord rose against his people till there was no remedy Dauid committed two hainous sins but was Gods child and found mercy Why being admonished he tooke it well and profited by it 2. Sam. 12. 13. But let it be the least sin that can be committed if being admonished a man will not be reclaimed he is to be esteemed as a Heathen and a Publican Matth. 18. 17. The highest degree of sin is the sitting in the seate of the scorner Psal. 1. 1. and who is a scorner he that will not endure admonition but hates him that reprooues him Pro. 9. 8. THE FOVRE AND TWENTIETH LECTVRE ON AVGVST XXIX MDCIX IOH. IIII. XX. Our Fathers worshipped in this mountaine and yee say that in Ierusalem is the place where men ought to worship WE haue already heard that the Euangelist in this verse and the former doth set downe the effects of that speech whereby our Sauiour did discouer to this poore Woman her secret sin and reprooues her for it and this he setteth forth in three notable fruits and signes of a true conuersion which it brought forth in her 1. She acknowledgeth her sin 2. She esteemeth farre more reuerently of Christ then she did before 3. She seekes to him for instruction and resolution in a doubt that troubled her conscience The two first we haue spoken of in the former verse Now it remaines that we proceed to the third and last as it is set downe in this verse For this must needs be acknowledged another notable fruit of Gods Spirit and signe of her conuersion that perceiuing him to be a Prophet and one that through the diuine knowledge and holinesse that was in him was not onely priuy to all her secretest sins but ready also to charge her with them yet she shrinkes not from him nor leaues his company but desireth further communication with him and seekes instruction and resolution of him in a case of conscience that did most neerely concerne her Now before we can well receiue that instruction which the Holy Ghost intended to giue vs in this verse fiue questions must be answered for the opening and vnfolding of the meaning of the Text. 1. What the worship was that she here speakes of 2. What mountaine was that she here speakes of 3. Who were these Fathers that she saith did worship in that mountaine 4. What mooued her to make any doubt of this matter 5. Why seekes she to be instructed in this question rather then in any other For the first the word that is heere vsed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth properly Adoration euen a bodily and outward worship when by some reuerent gesture of the body we testifie the inward subiection and honour that in our hearts we beare vnto God Now because we can doe no part of worship and seruice vnto God well but there must be in it euen some bodily signification of reuerence vnto him therefore also the whole worship we doe vnto God is oft called adoration yet in this place it is not put for the whole worship of God but onely for the most publike and solemne worship which stood in sacrifices and ceremonies appointed by the Lord. For she knew well that there were many parts of Gods Worship which the Iewes did vse as well in any other place as in Ierusalem They vsed to pray in the Synagogue Matth. 6. 2. Yea and in their priuate houses also Dan. 6. 10. They vsed to read and preach the Word in their Synagogues Acts 15. 21. And they had Synagogues not in Ierusalem onely but in all parts of the world at Damascus Acts 9. 2. at Salamis Act. 13. 5. at Antioch Act. 13. 14. at Iconium Act. 14. 1. at Thessalonica Act. 17. 1. at Corinth Act. 18. 17. at Ephesus Acts 18. 19. 2. The mountaine that she speakes of here was Mount Gerizim as appeares not onely because both Iosephus and the author of the Macabees 2. Mac. 6. 2. doe affirme that the Samaritans Temple stood vpon that mountaine whose authority though it be meerely humane and therefore such as the conscience of man cannot rest vpon nor be conuinced by in the matter of faith or manners either because we know all men are subiect vnto errour Rom. 3. 4. yet in a matter of fact and story is of some vse as those ciuill stories and Chronicles were that we reade of in the holy Scriptures namely that booke of the warres of the Lord mentioned Num. 21. 14. and that booke of Iasher Iosh. 10. 13. and that booke of the acts of Salomon mentioned 1. King 11. 41. But specially because it is plaine by Iudg. 9. 7. that Mount Gerizim was the Mount that stood by this towne Sychem 3. By their Fathers shee meanes not onely the true Ancestours of the Samaritans which were Heathens and Infidells as yee shall reade 2. King 17. 24. But Iacob also and the Patriarches as ye shall finde in the 12. verse For the fourth question The reason of her doubt and scruple was this 1. For Mount Gerizim she had reason to thinke it was as holy a place as Ierusalem not onely 1. because her true Ancestours had worshipped there and in the Temple that stood there but 2. Specially because it was the place that the Patriarches and Iacob himselfe had worshipped in for it is said Gen. 33. 18. 20. that Iacob hard by Sichem built an Altar and called it The mighty God of Israel and it is very probable that the place vpon which he built that Altar was this Mount Gerizim which stood hard by Sychem for the Patriarches before the Temple was built were wont to make choise of mountaines to serue God on for the better stirring vp of their affections by the contemplation of Gods workes and that by Gods owne direction also 1. This is noted of Abraham Gen. 12. 8. and 22. 2. Of Iacob Gen. 31. 14. of the Israelites the posterity of Iacob Exod. 3. 12. and in a fond imitation thereof that seemes to bee that the idolatrous Iewes did offer incense and powre out their drinke offerings vpon the roofes of their houses Ier. 19. 13. 3. Besides vpon this mountaine the Lord had appointed that the Priests and Leuites should stand to blesse the people so soone as euer they were come to the Land of Canaan Deut. 11. 29. and 27. 12. On the other side she had reason to doubt that Ierusalem was the place where this solemne seruice should be done vnto God because hee whom shee found to be a Prophet of God and all of his
1. That serues to make men onely without excuse and cannot bring them vnto saluation Rom. 1. 20. But this is all-sufficient to make men wise vnto saluation 2. Tim. 3. 15. and therefore is called saluation heere and Iam. 1. 21. it is said to be able to saue the soule Secondly that light is as a dimme light that knowledge is darke and obscure and vncertaine notwithstanding this knowledge they haue of him by his creatures and the light of nature men haue many strange conceits of God and know not what to thinke of him Rom. 1. 21. Though they knew God yet they became vaine in their imaginations and their foolish hearts were full of darkenesse But the Word reuealeth God vnto vs so cleerely and so certainely that the simplest may know him Psal. 19. 7. The testimony of the Lord is sure and giueth wisedome to the simple Thirdly the knowledge of God that is gotten by the creatures hath no power to change and reforme the heart Rom. 1. 21. When they knew God they glorified him not as God neither were thankefull but the knowledge of God that is gotten by the Word hath power to conuert the soule Psalm 19. 7. Fourthly the knowledge of God that is gotten by other meanes brings no comfort nor ioy to the soule but worketh in it rather a slauish feare of him Eccl. 1. 14. I haue seene all the workes that are done vnder the sunne and behold all is vanity and vexation of spirit and verse 18. in much wisdome there is much griefe and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow but the knowledge of God wee attaine to by the Word reioyceth the heart so as the better we know him the more comfort we haue in him Psal. 19. 8. 10. So that you see now the first branch of the Doctrine confirmed vnto you that no man can know God aright know him to his comfort know him to his saluation but by his Word The second branch of the Doctrine shall bee made as plaine vnto you that no man can worship God aright but by the direction of his Word No seruice can please God but that that is done by direction and in obedience to his Word When the Lord had forbidden his people to serue him as the Cananites had done he adds Deut. 12. 32. Whatsoeuer I command you take heed you doe it thou shalt adde nothing thereto nor take ought there-from that is doe neither more nor lesse in my seruice then I haue appointed Say that we doe that in his seruice which he hath not forbidden yet if he hath not commanded it we highly offend him as is plaine in the case of Nadab and Abihn They offered strange fire before the Lord which hee commanded them not and there went out fire from the Lord and deuoured them Leuit. 10. 1 2. When the Tabernacle was to bee built Moses though a wise and holy man was not to bee trusted with any thing but straitly charged Heb. 8. 5. See said hee that thou make all things according to the patterne shewed to thee in the Mount This charge was foure times repeated Exod. 25. 9. 40. and 26. 30. and 27. 28. And it is said when all was done Exod. 39. 43. Moses beheld that they had done all in euery point as the Lord commanded and hee blessed them So when mention is made that Salomon set the courses of the Priests and singers and of the Porters for the House of God least we should thinke he did it of his owne head his warrant is set downe and it s expresly said For so was the commandement of Dauid the man of God 2. Chron. 8. 14. And yet more plainely 2. Chron 29. 25. When Hezekiah appointed the Leuites to vse in the Church of God Cymbals and Viols and Harps least we should thinke he tooke vpon him to appoint any thing in Gods seruice it s said Hee did it according to the commandement of Dauid and Gad the Kings seer and Nathan the Prophet For the commandement was by the hand of the Lord and by the hand of his Prophets See how precise God would haue vs to bee in sticking close to the direction of his Word in the matter of his worship Yea it is certaine when we doe him any seruice that he hath not appointed vs in his Word we serue not him but we serue an Idol This is plaine here in the example of the Samaritans they intended to worship the true God 2. Kings 17. 32. Ezra 4. 2. And yet it is said they did not worship the true God 2 King 17. 34. What did they worship then surely an Idoll of their owne braine They worshipped they knew not what Why so Because they made not the Word the rule of their worship but the custome of the countrey 2. King 17. 34. 40. Yea while men thinke they serue the Lord they serue the diuell if the worship they doe to God be not grounded vpon his Word This is plaine in three examples 1. It is certaine the Gentiles as they had some knowledge of the true God Rom. 1. 21. so in all their superstitions they intended to worship him For so Paul tells the Athenians hee preached no other God to them but the same whom they did worship Acts 17. 23. Yet it is said of them 1. Cor. 10. 20. They worshipped diuells and not God Why because they worshipped him ignorantly and not according to his Word Acts 17. 23. they serue the vnknowne god 2. Aaron and the Israelites intended to worship the true God in the similitude of the golden Calfe as is plaine Psal. 106. 20. They changed their glory into the similitude of an Oxe that eateth grasse And Nehem. 9 ●…8 This is the God said they that brought thee out of the land of Egypt and Exod. 32. 5. Aaron made an Altar before it and proclaimed To morrow shall bee an Holyday to IEHOVAH And yet the Lord for this chargeth them that they had offered a burnt offering to the diuell Leuit. 17. 7. Why Because they were turned out of the way that he had commanded them They swerued from the direction of his Word Exod. 32. 8. they haue turned quickly out of the way which I commanded 3. The tenne Tribes intended to worship the true God when they erected the two calues euen the same God that was worshipped at Ierusalem 1. Kings 22. 28. Behold O Israel thy gods that is the similitude of thy gods that brought thee out of the land of Egypt And yet the Holy Ghost saith they serued the diuell 2. Chron. 11. 15. He ordained him Priests for the high places and for the diuells and for the calues that hee made And why Because they worshipped him not according to his Word 2. Chron. 15. 3. Israel hath beene without the true God Why Because without a Priest to teach and without the Law The Reasons of the Doctrine are these 1. For the first branch No man knowes the Father but the Sonne and hee to whom the
tell vs all things She professeth that she knew Christ when he came would teach the Church farre more excellently fully and perfectly then Moses and the Prophets had done By all things she meaneth only all those things that concerne the worship of God and the saluation of man as if she should say when he commeth he will tell vs all these things all such things as we speake of So is the word taken also in that speech of Christ Ioh. 14. 26. The Holy Ghost whom the Father shall send in my name he shall teach you all things So that which Paul saith Act 20. 27. Of declaring to them all the counsell of God he interpreteth thus verse 20. I haue kept backe nothing that was profitable to you For many other things before Christs comming were more particularly and fully reuealed to the Church then they haue beene since You shall find more spoken in Leuit. 26. and Deut. 28. of the temporall rewards of goodnesse and of the temporall punishments of sinne then in all the New Testament In things and matters concerning this life the Prophets told more and gaue more particular and cleere direction then Christ hath done When Saul seeketh for his Fathers asses that were lost he commeth to Samuel and hee telleth him of them When Iehosaphat would know whether he should haue successe when he went with Ahab in battle against Ramoth Gilead he asketh counsell of the Lord and sendeth for the Prophets 1. Kings 22. 5. 7. When Dauid feared that Saul would come to besiedge Keilah and that the men of Keilah would deliuer him into his hands he asked counsell of God and receiued a direct and cleere answer 1. Sam. 23. 11. 12. When any was sicke and they desired to know whether he should dye or escape they were wont to send to the Prophet and he would tell them 1. Reg. 14. 1 2. Elisha could tell the King of Israel the words that his enemy the King of Aram spake in his Priuie Chamber 2. Reg. 6. 12. Now Christ telleth vs no such things The Lord vnder the Gospell doth not giue vs so cleere direction in these outward things But in heauenly and spirituall things that concerne Gods worship and our saluation Christ hath told vs more then Moses and the Prophets we haue a more cleere and perfect direction now then they had vnder the Law In which respect the light they had then is compared to the light of a candle that shineth in a darke place and that which we haue now vnto the day light 2. Pet. 1. 19. Of these spirituall and heauenly things this woman speaketh here 2. For the second point Though these be not the words of the Euangelist that wrote by diuine inspiration but the words of a weake sinnefull woman reported by the Euangelist yet may we ground a Doctrine vpon them whereupon our consciences may safely rest For 1. Our Sauiour by his answer approoues and confirmes her speech 2. This is a truth she learned from the Word of God she knew Moses had said thus of Christ Deut. 18. 15. 18 19. The Lord thy God will raise vp vnto thee a Prophet like vnto mee from among you euen of thy brethren vnto him yee shall hearken Whereby shee well vnderstood he should be a greater Prophet then Moses Then the Doctrine that we are to learne here is this That Christ since his comming hath fully and perfectly reuealed all things concerning the saluation of his Church This honour God reserued vnto his Son that he should teach his Church more fully then the Prophets did How or where hath Christ taught vs more then Moses and the Prophets seeing he taught but three yeares and a halfe or thereabouts and that but in Iury onely he did but begin to teach as it is said Acts 1. 1. Heb. 1. 3. Surely by the Doctrines and writings of the Apostles He by word of mouth and by his spirit taught the Apostles all things and by their Doctrine and writings hath perfectly instructed his Church that shall be to the end of the world This is plaine Iohn 15. 15. All things that I haue heard of my Father haue I made knowne vnto you and 17. 8. I haue giuen vnto them the word which thou gauest me After his Resurrection he conuersed with them by the space of forty dayes and instructed them in the things that pertaine to the kingdome of God Acts 1. 3. And after his Ascension he did yet more fully instruct them and by their doctrine and writings the whole Church This is that that he saith Ioh. 14. 25 26. Christ did not teach his Church all things by word of mouth when he liued vpon earth but by the Ministry and writings of the holy Apostles These things haue I spoken vnto you being present with you but the Holy Ghost which the Father will send hee will teach you all things and 16. 12. 13. I haue many things to speake vnto you but you cannot beare them now but when he is come that is the spirit of truth hee will lead you into all truth So that in the time of the Apostles he did fully instruct his Church and perfectly reueale the whole will of his Father so as nothing might after be added vnto it How can Christ or his Apostles be said to haue taught more then was taught before seeing that the Scriptures which the Church enioyed before did containe a perfect direction for Gods people both in faith and manners and neither Christ nor his Apostles taught any more then was contained in the Scriptures as is euident by that we reade Luk. 24. 27. 44 45. Acts 26. 22. Three things there are wherein the Scriptures as they are now perfected and consummate by the writings of the Euangelists and Apostles doe excell the Scriptures of the Old Testament 1. Though the Scriptures did before the Apostles time giue cleere direction to the people of God in those things that concerned their saluation As Dauid could say the enterance of thy words giueth light it giueth vnderstanding vnto the simple Psal. 119. 130. yet they doe it now much more plainely and cleerely then they did before that was but a light that shineth in a darke place as the light of the Moone or of the Starres or of a candle this as the day-light 2. Pet. 1. 19. yea the things contained in the Old Testament are made more plaine to vs then they were to the Prophets themselues of which saluation the Prophets haue enquired and searched diligently who prophesyed of the grace that should come vnto you Vnto whom it was reuealed that not vnto themselues but vnto vs they did minister the things which are now reported vnto you 1. Pet. 1. 10. 12. 2. They were perfect before the Apostles times and gaue sufficient direction in all things to the Church that then liued the law of the Lord is perfect saith Dauid Psal. 19. 7. yea so perfect it was euen in Moses time that it was
then said yee shall not adde vnto the word which I command you neither shall yee diminish ought from it Deut. 4. 2. but now they giue a perfect direction to the whole Church that shall be to the end of the world It is said that the whole houshold of God is built vpon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Ephes. 2. 20. Yea the Apostles are called the foundations of the new Ierusalem Apoc. 21. 14. 3. That had additions made to it in euery age to this neuer shall be any Therefore the Apostle Iohn who liued to see all the bookes of the New Testament written and the whole body of the Canonicall Scripture perfected and to giue his testimony to them all concludes his booke of the Reuelation which is the last of them all and of the same and no more diuine authority then all the rest and so sets his seale to the whole Canon I testifie vnto euery man that heareth the words of the prophecy of this booke If any man shall adde vnto these things God shall add vnto him the plagues that are written in this booke Reu. 22. 18. Therefore the Apostle obserues this difference betwixt the former times and the times of Christ Hebrewes 1. 1 2. At sundry times and in diuers manners God spake in old time to our fathers by the Prophets in these last daies hee hath-spoken to vs by his Sonne 1. We haue a more excellent and perfect teacher giuen vs then they had they had the Prophets we haue the Sonne of God himselfe 2. Then God reuealed his will at sundry times now all at once In which respect also thirdly it is to be marked that he calls that time wherein Christ and the Apostles liued the last dayes as Acts 2. 17. 1. Pet. 1. 20. And the ends of the world 1. Cor. 10. 11. Why are they called so so many 100. yeares so many ages before the worlds end Surely because there shall be no more alteration made in Religion the will of God shall be no further reuealed then it was then there shall be no more additions made to that which Christ hath taught vnto his Church The Reasons of this Doctrine are three 1. It is a part of Christs Mediatorship and one of the offices whereunto he was called and anointed of his Father to be the Prophet and teacher of his Church so Peter interprets and applies that place of Moses to be meant of Christ For Moses truely said vnto the Fathers a Prophet shall the Lord your God raise vp vnto you of your brethren like vnto me him shall yee heare in all things whatsoeuer hee shall say vnto you Acts 3. 22. yea he is called the onely Doctour and teacher of his Church Matth. 23. 8. 10. One is your Doctour to wit Christ. 2. There was no want of ability in him to reueale the whole will of his Father to the Church For Iohn 1. 18. Hee is in the bosome of his Father and knew all his secrets and Col. 2. 3. In him are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge 3. There was no want of faithfulnesse in him he was faithfull in his office as Moses Hebrewes 3. 2. yea more faithfull then Moses Heb. 3. 5 6. This Doctrine serues for the improouing and conuincing of three errors First Of the Papists that deny the perfection of the Scriptures and still adde traditions and vnwritten verities vnto them Christ hath taught vs all things and whatsoeuer he taught vs he taught it in his owne life time and in the daies of the Apostles And whatsoeuer he taught in his owne person is contained in the Scriptures Luke 24. 27. 45. Whatsoeuer the Apostles taught is contained in the Scriptures Acts 26. 22. The Scriptures before Christ and his Apostles had put the last hand vnto them and reuealed all the will of God were perfect and sufficient to keepe men from damnation Luke 16. 29. To make them wise to saluation 2. Tim. 3. 15. so as the Church then needed no traditions nor indeed might receiue any how can they then be vnperfect now The second error to be improoued by this Doctrine is of them that make too light account of sundry things that Christ taught by the Apostles iudging them temporary and abrogating them at their pleasure and esteeme the direction that God gaue to his Church vnder the Law in matters of his seruice more cleere and perfect then that which he hath giuen to his Church vnder the Gospell and that more is left to the power and discretion of the Church now then was then They grant that then nothing was to be done without Gods particular direction neither by the Church According to all that I shew thee after the patterne of the Tabernacle and the patterne of all the instruments thereof euen so shall yee make it Exod. 25. 9. neither by the Magistrate Dauid not as a King but as a man of God a Prophet commanded the courses of the Priests c. 2. Chron. 8. 14. And of the Musitians that were imployed in the Temple it is said that it was done according to the commandement of Dauid and of Gad the Kings Seer and Nathan the Prophet for so was the commandement of the Lord by his Prophets 2. Chron. 29. 25. but now they say there is more liberty giuen to the Church then was in those daies But this conceit is euidently ouerthrowne by this Doctrine We haue heard that Christ hath taught vs all things that concerne Gods worship indeed not expresly euery thing that belongs to the circumstances of Gods worship no more did he vnder the Law no expresse direction was giuen for the houre when the morning and euening sacrifice should be kept for setting vp the Synagogues or Pulpits for the forme of buriall and marriage but he hath giuen vs rules to direct vs in all these things and those more cleere and certaine and sufficient to resolue vs in all our doubts and to decide all controuersies that may arise about them then they had vnder the Law The third error is theirs that hold and put holinesse in sundry superstitious customes touching buriall fasting c. for which they haue no warrant but the tradition of their fathers as the Apostle speakes of many other vanities 1. Pet. 1. 18. The second Vse is for reproofe of them that are ignorant in these daies of the Gospell when all things are so cleerely and fully reuealed that the simplest person which with an honest heart shall vse the meanes of knowledge God hath giuen may attaine to a greater measure of knowledge of these daies it is prophecyed that the earth shall bee filled with the knowledge of God as the waters that couer the sea Esay 11. 9. If then God vnder the Law did so much abhorre ignorance in the Minister Hos. 4. 6. in the people Esay 27. 11. how much more in vs now if he required then that all should be instructed before they came to
better discerne if we looke into foure sorts which the Lord hath had most respect vnto this way and wherat the world hath taken great offence He hath oft had more respect 1. To men of meane condition for wealth wisedome and authority then to men of better degree and account 2. To young men then to the antient 3. To persons that haue beene infamous then to men that haue liued ciuilly and vnblameably 4. To women more then to men For the first For one man of degree and note in the world for birth wealth wisedome and authority the Lord hath beene wont to call many of the meaner and baser and simple sort This is plaine 1 Cor. 1. 26. And Mat. 11. 2●… Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast reuealed them vnto babes And Iam. 2. 5. Hearken my beloued Brethren hath not God chosen the poore of this world that they should be rich in faith and heires c. And how naturall men haue stumbled at this you shall perceiue by that speech of the Pharisees haue any of the Rulers or of the Pharisees belieued on him but this people which knoweth not the Law are cursed Ioh. 7. 48 49. and by that speech of our Sauiour who when He had told Iohn's Disciples the poore receiue the Gospell adds presently blessed is he that shall not be offended in me Matth. 11. 5 6. 2. The like may be said of the second sort The Lord hath oft giuen more grace more zeale and faithfulnesse more piety and conscience of their waies to many young men then he hath to them of riper yeares For zeale where shall we finde among all the Kings such a one as young Iosiah 2. Chron. 34. 3. Or for faithfulnesse among all the Prophets such a one as young Samuel 1. Sam. 3. 20. Yea for wisedome and true discretion among all Iob's friends such a one as young Elihu was Iob 42. 7. And this also the world hath euer repined and stumbled at See an example of this corruption Matth. 21. 15 16. When they heard the children cry Hosanna they disdained and said hearest thou c. so that Christ was faine to make an Apology for them 3. For the third sort that I propounded The Lord hath oft had more respect this way vnto some that haue been formerly infamous in the world for their lewd life and hath vouchsafed more grace and zeale to such then he hath done to sundry that to the iudgement of men haue liued a ciuill and vnblameable life Christ bids himselfe to Zacheus house which we neuer reade he did to any other Luke 19. 5. After his Resurrection he appeareth first to Mary Magdalen out of whom he had cast seuen diuels Marke 16. 9. He honoured Paul that had beene a notorious persecuter and blasphemer with more abundance of gifts and successe in his labours then any of the Apostles beside 2. Co. 11. 23. And 1. Cor. 15. 10. Now this hath also euer beene a matter of great scandall to the naturall man when the Pharisees saw what respect our Sauiour shewed vnto Publicans they murmured saying this man receiueth sinners and eateth with them Luke 15. 2. And of the elder brother who was a type of the wicked and hypocriticall Iewes it is said Luke 15. 28. that when he heard that his father had receiued with such ioy his Prodigall sonne he was angry and would not goe in 4. For the fourth sort God hath oft reuealed himselfe further and giuen more grace more tendernesse of conscience more zeale more loue to him and his truth yea which is stranger more knowledge more resolution and courage more constancie in good duties vnto many women then vnto men Examples are infinite in this case I must make choice but of a few Exod. 38. 8. See the zeale of many women in the first establishing of Gods Religion vnder the Law 1. They vsed to flocke together vnto the Tabernacle 2. They were wont to come betimes and giue attendance at the doore of the Tabernacle 3. They were content to bestow the best things they had euen their looking glasses vpon Gods Sanctuary And of Samsons mother we reade that though her husband Manoah were a holy and good man yet Christ appeares to her rather then to her husband Iudges 13. 9. gaue her more knowledge faith and resolution then her husband yea makes her his instrument to confirme and comfort him verse 22 23. It is recorded that there was much more zeale in that noble woman the Shunamite mentioned 2. Kings 4. 8 9. then was in her husband and yet he a good man too It was she that tooke that care for the Prophets entertainement it was she that would needs go to the Prophet vpon a day that was neither Sabbath nor holy day which her husband thought much of verse 23. And in the New Testament it is worthy to be obserued 1. That Christ after his Resurrection shewed himselfe first to sundry women and made them his messengers to the Apostles Luke 24. 10. 2. That zeale and diligence that woman shewed in hearing the Word and all other parts of Gods seruice more then men They were women that are noted to haue beene the speciall followers of our Sauiour to heare him preach Luk. 8. 2. It was a woman that shewed such zeale to heare him that neglecting all other businesse sate at his feet to heare him and to whom our Sauiour gaue that testimony that she had chosen the good part which should not be taken away from her Luk. 10. 39. 42. They were women that were wont in Philippi euery Sabbath day to meet and pray together Acts 16. 13. 3. The kindnesse they shewed in Ministring to Christs necessities which is not reported of any man Luke 8. 3. 4. The constancie and courage that they shewed in following him and shewing their loue to him euen to his Crosse when the Apostles themselues fled for feare Luke 23. 27. and in their care to embalme his body after he was dead Luk. 23. 55 56. 24. 1. 5. The faith which was stronger in them then in any men we read of Mat. 15. 28. Luk. 24. 8 9 11. Now this respect that the Lord hath beene pleased to haue vnto women in this kinde how offensiue it is to the naturall man you may perceiue here by the disposition of the Disciples themselues which were more then naturall men and by common experience also For if women shall flocke to the Tabernacle of God and shew any zeale and diligence in frequenting his house if any Shunamite shall shew her selfe kinde in entertaining Gods Prophets or Susanna in ministring to their necessities what naturall man is there almost that will not be ready to slander and misconstrue this Yea to account it a most ridiculous thing and argument of the weakenesse and foolishnesse of our Religion The Reasons of this Doctrine are three whereof The first concerneth the Lord. The Reason why he vseth to passe by the more
15. The Philippians sent reliefe oft to Paul when he was in prison Phil. 4. 10. 14. 16. The Reasons of this haue bin two 1. The comfort they haue receiued by them For if men esteeme of the message that is brought vnto them they cannot but esteeme of the messenger that bringeth it If they haue once found comfort in their doctrine they must needs esteeme of their persons esteeme them very highly in loue for their workes sake 1. Thess. 5. 13. The Elders specially that labour in word and doctrine are worthy of double honour 1. Tim. 5. 17. How beautifull are the feet of them how welcome are they that bring good tidings of peace yea he speakes of this as of an vnseparable consequence of the Gospell in some of those to whom God giues preachers of his owne sending Rom. 10. 15. 2. That they may thereby helpe the truth it selfe and further the Lords worke in their ministry we ought to receiue such that we might be fellohelpers to the truth 3. Iohn 8. so Paul saith of the house of Stephanas that by the kindnesse they shewed him they helped him in his Ministry 1. Cor. 16. 15 16. And Hezekiah by the kindnesse he shewed to the Leuites and by the prouision he made for them incouraged them in their ministry 2. Chron. 30. 22. and 31. 4. Gods faithfull seruants haue many discouragements in their ministry from the wicked and they had therefore need of this helpe from the kindnesse of the godly toward them The Vse of this Doctrine is First for the Ministers then for all Gods people For we that are Ministers are to be admonished that we so carry our selues in our ministry as we may deserue this loue and respect from the people of God Euery ignorant carelesse and vnconscionable Minister is apt to vrge this doctrine of the duty and respect the people owe to Gods Ministers but they neuer consider what manner of Ministers they haue bin to whom Gods people haue giuen this respect and for what reasons it is due vnto them If thou be faithfull and profitable in thy ministry they that vnfainedly feare God cannot chuse but vnfainedly reuerence and loue thee The Vse that Gods people are to make of this Doctrine is First for Exhortation that they would be content to receiue this truth as well as others and not to reiect it because we seeme herein to plead for our selues Be not vn willing to learne from vs euen those duties you owe to vs as well as others nor count it folly or pride or couetousnesse in vs when we teach you such things for 1. We are bound to teach you the whole counsell of God Acts 20. 27. 2. Remember whatsoeuer corruption may be in our hearts in deliuering of it yet no part of Gods truth hath any corruption in it all the words of my mouth are righteousnesse there is nothing froward or peruerse in them Pro. 8. 8. 3. A Minister may teach the people what respect they owe to him and yet be neither proud nor couetous Paul himselfe taught this doctrine and pleaded for speciall reuerence and respects at the Corinthians hands 1. Cor. 4. 15. and for loue Gal. 4. 17. and that they would pray for him Ephes. 6. 19. and euen pleadeth for maintenance also 1. Cor. 9. 1. 4. We respect not our selues so much as the peoples profit in teaching this Secondly for Reproofe for if euery one that hath receiued any true beginnings of grace doth beare this reuerence and loue to Gods Ministers then surely many that take themselues to be right good Christians haue no grace in them For 1. Many esteeme not at all nor shew any reuerence to any Minister because he is a Minister but though he be such a man as for birth education learning wisedome speech and conuersation they could reuerence for this very cause only they despise him because he is a Minister To these I will say no more but wish them well to consider what Christ saith Luke 10. 16. He that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me 2. Some will seeme to loue preachers but will part with nothing to maintaine them Like to that hypocrite that saith vnto his poore brother that is naked and destitute of daily food depart in peace bee thou warmed and filled God helpe thee get thee to a good fire get thee some meate but giues him nothing I am 2. 16. This is the cause of that generall complaint that is made in all places where the Ministers maintenance riseth from the beneuolence of the people that euen where the people are most forward it vseth to decay much in a very short time I would wish these to consider the charge God gaue his people take heede to thy selfe that thou forsake not the Leuite as long as thou liuest vpon the earth if thou doest thou shalt haue the worst of it thy selfe Deut. 12. 19. and the practise of Gods seruants who haue euer bin wont to keepe a proportion betweene the blessing God hath giuen them in outward things and their liberality in contributing to the maintenance of Gods seruice since the people began to bring the offerings into the house of the Lord we haue had enough to eate and haue left plenty for the Lord hath blessed his people and that which is left is this great store The peoples readines to pay their tithes offerings brought Gods blessing vpon them and the more God blessed them the more liberally and cheerefully they brought in their tithes and offering to the Priests and Leuites 2. Chron. 31. 10. 3. Some and that a great some too are wont to withhold that which by Gods law and mans is due vnto the Minister they thinke euer the Minister hath too much they enuie and cannot endure he should liue so plentifully they count him couetous if he seeke his owne though in the most peaceable manner that he can yea where is a man to be found almost that payeth his tithes willingly which yet the Minister hath as much right vnto by law as they themselues haue to any thing they possesse These I would haue to remember that all men of worth were wont to count it their honour to giue somewhat to the maintenance of Gods seruice Dauid the King and the chiefe fathers and the captaines ouer thousands and hundreds and the Captaines of the hoast and Samuel the Seer and Saul the sonne of Kish and Abner the sonne of Ner and Ioab the sonne of Zeruiah were wont to dededicate of their substance and of the spoiles that they won in battaile to maintaine the house of the Lord and his seruice there 1. Chron. 26. 26 27 ●…8 2. That God promiseth this as a blessing to his Church that in the plenty and aboundance he would giue to his people his Ministers should also be plentifully prouided for when he had spoken of the plenty of wheat and wine and oile and cattle
toward him when God had promised him a sonne by Sarah and a most blessed posterity he bursteth out into this speech Oh that Ismael might liue in thy sight as if he should say I loue Ismael so well that I care for no more Gen. 17. 18. yea afterward when for mocking and persecuting Isaac Sarah would needs haue him cast out the bond-woman and her son it is said Gen 21. 11. This thing was very grieuous in Abrahams sight not because of Hagar but because of his sonne Before when Sarah was offended with Hagar he yeelded to her Gen. 16. 6. Behold thy Maide is in thine hand doe with her as pleaseth thee But now she will haue him to cast out his sonne This thing was very grieuous in Abrahams sight because of his sonne The second example is in Dauid who though he had so much cause to haue hated Absolon a murderer of his owne brother a rebell against his owne father a filthy and shamelesse defiler of his owne fathers bed and that in the sight of all Israell yet see the affection that he bare vnto him the father loued when the childe hated 2. Sam. 18. 5. He gaue Ioah and Abishai and Ittai and all the Captaines straight charge thus Intreat the young man Absolon gently for my sake yea he gaue it so as all the people might heare him and when some came to him with newes touching the successe of the battaile the first question he asked him was this 2. Sam. 18. 22. Is the young man Absolon safe And when he heard he was slaine he could not containe but though he sought a secret place to cry his fill in yet he could not hold till he came thither but as he went burst out into this out-cry O my sonne Absolon my sonne my sonne Absolon would God I had dyed for thee O Absolon my sonne my sonne 2. Sam. 18. 33. Though Absolon could forget Dauid was his father yet Dauid could not forget that Absolon was his sonne The third example is of the Widow of Sarepta 1. Reg. 17. who though first she was a very poore woman verse 10. Eliah found her gathering stickes secondly though the time also was very hard euen a great dearth verse 7. thirdly though she could not maintaine her selfe nor her sonne without the Prophets miraculous helpe verse 22. yet see how this poore woman loued her childe what an affliction it was to her to part with him first she kept him in her bosome a good while after he was dead verse 19. secondly she grew so impatient and into such a passion that she fell out with the Prophet and imputed the death of her child to him Verse 18. What haue I to doe with thee O man of God art thou come vnto mee to call my sinne to remembrance and to slay my sonne So that you see though there be nothing in children to deserue this though there be neuer so much in children to deserue the contrary though the parents be so poore as they haue much adoe to maintaine their children yet will parents godly parents beare a tender and deare affection vnto them The time will not permit to giue you a reason of this and indeed if it would yet were it folly in me to goe about to giue a reason of this for who can giue a reason of those Sympathies and Antipathies that are in nature Let vs therefore come to the Vse of this Doctrine First you that are children and haue parents liuing learne from hence the duty you owe to your parents You can neuer match them in loue you can neuer recompense their kindnesse but yet striue to doe it 1. Tim. 5. 4. Let them learne first to shew godlinesse toward their owne house and to recompense their parents Take heede of giuing them iust cause of griefe Pro. 17. 25. A foolish son is a griefe to his father and an heauinesse vnto her that bare him This is noted for one of Esau's chiefe sinnes by matching wickedly he did that that was a griefe of minde to Isaac and Rebecca Gen. 26. 35. But specially take heede thou despise them not contemne them not the Prophet speaking Pro. 30. 11. of foure sorts of the vilest men placeth these in the first ranke Pro. 20. 20. He that curseth speaketh euill of his father or his mother his light shall be put out in obscure darkenesse Though the Magistrate punish them not so God will Men should remember the example of Cham and take heede how they delight to see or speake of the infirmities and faults of their parents Gen. 9. 22. 25. Secondly you that are parents and haue children learne your duties here First to shew naturall affection to them else art thou a beast rather than a man or woman It is made a note of a man whom God hath giuen vp to a reprobate mind to be without naturall affection Rom. 1. 30. And Iob noteth it for a property of a most wicked man that so he may enioy wealth and pleasure while he liueth he careth not what becommeth of his house and children after him Iob 21. 21. What pleasure hath hee in his house after him when the number of his owne moneths is cut off And the Apostle saith 1. Tim. 5. 8. He hath denyed the faith and is worse than an Infidell that prouides not for his owne house Let all Vnthrifts and Belly-gods thinke of these things Secondly sith it is so easie to exceede in naturall affection seeke to moderate it by knowledge and religion It is no singular thing to loue thy children the Harlot did so 1. Reg. 3. 26. but take heed of ouer-louing them of louing them more than God as they doe first that loue their children so as that they loue also their faults reioyce to heare them curse or doe vnhappily secondly that will not haue them crossed in any thing or corrected thirdly that for loue to their children will shrinke from Gods truth or otherwise offend God as Eli did 1. Sam. 12. 29. Be sure God will plague thee by thy children if thou dote vpon them and loue them too much Prou. 29. 15. A childe set at liberty maketh his mother ashamed and his father too Know the chiefe thing thou shouldest shew thy loue to thy childe in is in louing his soule Ephes. 6. 4. If thou loue thy children feare God that 's the onely sure way to doe them good the generation of the vpright shall be blessed Psal. 112. 2. take heede of those sinnes that will bring Gods curse vpon them oppression will doe it this is the heritage of the oppressours which they shall receiue from the Almighty if his children be multiplied it is for the sword and his of-spring shall not bee satisfied with bread Iob 27. 13 14. whoredome will doe it it is a fire that consumeth vnto destruction and would roote out all mine increase Iob 31. 12. contempt and hatred of Religion will doe it as is plaine by the reason God giueth
grounded vpon this doctrine The first of these considerations is That affliction is not a signe of Gods hatred but of his loue rather not onely his shaking and holding out of his rod is a signe of his fauour as that was we reade of Ester found fauour in his sight and the King held out vnto her the golden scepter Est 〈◊〉 2. but euen his whipping and scourging of vs with it Though it be a signe of his anger and of a little wrath as the Lord speaketh Esay 54 8 yet of his hatred it is not Pro. 3. 12. The Lord correcteth him whom he loueth euen as a father doth the childe in whom hee dlighteth Heb. 12. 6 7. Whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and scourgeth euery sonne whom he receiueth if ye endure chastening God offereth himselfe to you as to sonnes for what sonne is it whom the father chasteneth not Therefore Iob wondereth at Gods loue in this Iob 7. 17 18. What is man that thou doest magnifie him and that thou set●…est thy heart vpon him and doest visit him euery morning and try est him euery moment And that is the reason why the Lord though he passe by a thousand foule faults in the wicked is wont to whip his owne people if they doe but tread awry Amos 32. You onely haue I knowne of all the families of the earth therefore I will visit you for all you●… iniquities And on the other side it is spoken of as an argument of God●… wrath and indignation against desperate sinners that God will for beare●…o-correct them Esay 1. 5. Wherefore should yee bee smitten any more for y●… fall away more and more And Hosea 4. 14. I will not visit your Daughters when they are Harlots nor your Spouses when they are Whores Oh how great is the blindnesse of such as because though they haue often committed grosse sins yet they prosper still are ready to conclude God loues them and that they that haue greatest afflictions are the worst men most out of Gods fauour No no affliction is not a signe of Gods hatred but of his loue rather And who will not be patient and comfortable in affliction that beleeueth this The second consideration is this The Lord certainely intends our good in all our corrections yea to doe vs that good by them which we could not receiue by any other meanes Be thou assured of this that if thou vnfainedly feare God the Lord intendeth thy good in euery affliction of thine though thou cannot yet perceiue it Psalme 25. 10. All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth to all such as keepe his couenants and his testimonies Heb. 12. 10. He chasteneth vs for our profit that we might be partakers of his holinesse 1. Cor. 11. 32. When wee are iudged wee are chastened of the Lord that wee might not bee condemned with the world Affliction is a medicine which though it be bitter yet it is well approued by the experience of all Gods people that euer were to be most wholesome and soueraigne If any of vs should in our sicknesse haue a physitian come to vs whom we knew to be so wise and learned that he perfectly knew our estate and what would doe vs good and so louing and good a man also that he did vnfainedly desire to doe vs all the good he could if this man should prescribe to vs a potion and tell vs he had no other meanes to do vs good but that if we take it not we must needs die if we do take it it will certainly do vs good how strange soeuer the working of it seem to be for a while yet in the end it will certainly do vs good and recouer vs there was neuer any of his patients receiued it but it did them good would any of vs be so mad as to reiect such a potion giuen vs by such a Physitian would we not willingly drink it off euery drop though it were neuer so loathsome in colour how bittersoeuer it were in taste how much soeuer it were in quantity Now such a Physitian is the Lord and such a medicine is Affliction When we are iudged we are chastened of the Lord that we may not be condemned with the world 1 Cor. 11. 32. He chasteneth vs for our profit that we might be partakers of his holinesse Heb. 12. 10. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law that thou mayest giue him rest from the dayes of aduersity vntill the pit be digged for the wicked Psal. 94. 12 13. The third consideration that may make vs patient and comfortable in affliction is this That God will surely remoue it when it hath had that good worke in vs that he hath appointed it for The Lord our God is not like those hard hearted Chyrurgions that care not what paine they put their Patients to but he is very mercifull and tender-hearted he vseth not to apply corasiues nor to launce or seare but vpon great necessity Lam. 3. 33. He doth not punish willingly nor afflict the children of men 1 Pet. 1. 6. Now for a season if need require you are in heauinesse through manifold tentations Is thy affliction sharpe and painfull certainly the Lord seeth thou hast need of it or els he would handle thee more gently When a man hath a deepe wound and festered at the bottome full of corruption or hath some bullet or arrow head or point of a sword that must be taken out the Chyrurgion can neuer cure him well but he must needs put him to great paine launce him and cut him and make the wound bigger before he can heale it and euen so deales the Lord with his patients Iob 5. 17 18. Behold blessed is the man whom God correcteth as if he should say Happy man is he that euer came vnder the hands of this Chyrurgion Therfore refuse not thou the chastening of the Almighty for he makes the wound and binds it vp and his hands make whole The like must we think of the continuance of our afflictions Is thy affliction long certainly thy need requires it should be so it hath not had the good work in thee yet God sent it for The Lord is not like those couetous and wretched Chirurgions that for their owne aduantage will protract their cures but he is most faithfull and will not keep his patients a day longer vnder his hand than their necessity doth require This made Dauid say Psal. 119. 75. I know O Lord that thy iudgements are right and that thou of very faithfulnesse hast caused me to be troubled The fourth consideration is That we haue had much more experience of his goodnesse towards vs in giuing vs prosperity than we haue had of his anger in afflicting vs and there is no proportion betwixt the time of our afflictions and prosperities that which the Lord speaketh by his Prophet For a small moment haue I for saken thee but with great mercies will
respect to my Name that it should not be polluted before the Heathen 2. God hath still a great people in the Land that feare him vnfainedly It is true that in many places he hath not so many as he hath had their numbers decrease very sensibly in sundry places yet hath he still a great people in the Land And this is another chiefe cause why the Lord spares the Land Gods people are a blessing vnto it thou shalt be a blessing Gen. 12. 2. As bad as Potiphars house was Gen. 39. 5. The Lord blessed it for Iosephs sake and the blessing of the Lord was vpon all that he had in the house and in the field Yea as bad as Sodome was if there had been but ten righteous men in it they had saued it Gen. 18. 32. And certainely of our Land it may be said that neither the wisedome of our Counsellors nor the valour of our Souldiers but as Iob 22. 30. The innocent haue deliuered the Iland and it hath beene preserued by the purenesse of their hand 3. There be many of Gods faithfull seruants that pray vnto him feruently day and night and so stand in the gap to keepe out Gods iudgements from the Land It is true fasting and prayer is not so much in vse as of old it was yet still is it vsed by many and this hath great force to keepe away Gods iudgements Psal. 106. 23. The Lord minded to destroy them had not Moses his chosen stood in the breach to turne away his wrath and Exod. 32. 10. the Lord saith vnto Moses Let me alone that my wrath may wax hot against them 1. Euery man the more he sees iniquity to abound the more feruent should he be with God in prayer that so he may be one of those that stand in the gap to turne away his wrath The encrease of sin in the land should increase our feruency in prayer So did it in Moses Exod. 32. 11. and Num. 16. 4. And this the Lord lookes for at the hand of all his people Esay 59. 16. When he saw there was no man he wondered that none would offer himselfe Ezek. 22. 30. I sought for a man among them that should make vp the hedge and stand in the gap before me for the Land that I might not destroy it but I found none And this is the first thing we must doe in such euill times 2. Take so much the more heede to thy selfe that thou be not plucked away with the common errour 2. Pet. 3. 17. and that thy heart be not by little and little drawne to the liking of sin This is pure religion indeed to keepe our selues vnspotted from the world Iam. 1. 27. For it is a maruellous hard thing for a man not to receiue infection where sin is common Experience shewes how hard it is for a man that liues where swearing and drunkennesse or filthy talke or Sabbath breaking are in continuall vse to keepe his heart in the detestation of those sins Yea men shall be apt to thinke a sin to be no sin when he sees it to be in generall vse See the danger of this in two examples Ioseph had learned in Egypt to sweare by the life of Pharaoh Gen. 42. 15. And the Prophet complaines he was a man of vncleane lips because he dwelt among a people of vncleane lips Esay 6. 5. This must therefore cause vs to take the more heed to our soules Ephes. 5. 15 16. Take heed you walke circumspectly not as fooles but as wise redeeming the times because the dayes are euill Men must do in this case as they that liue in London when the plague is very rife they seeke preseruatiues and go not abroad without their Pomanders nor till they haue eaten and drunke some thing that may preserue them The worse the times are and the lesse comfort thou hast in them the neerer shouldst thou draw to God when the Prophet had spoken in the two former verses of the extreme badnesse of the times he liued in see what vse he makes of it therefore will I looke vnto the Lord I will wait vpon the God of my saluation My God will heare me Mich. 7. 7. the worse the places are thou liuest in the more diligently shouldest thou giue thy selfe to reading and hearing and prayer Obadia liuing in Ahabs house made vse of Gods Prophets in priuate 1. King 18. 4. And Daniel while he liued in the Court of Darius was giuen much to secret prayer Dan. 6. 10. They that liue now in such like places and giue themselues neuer the more to praying or reading declare plainely they haue no care of their soules 3. The third duty is that the worse the times are and places we be in the more carefull we should be to preserue others from the common infection Ministers must so much the more vehemently reproue sin by how much the more common it growes to be in the place where they liue Titus 1. 12. The Cretians are alwaies lyars euill beasts c. It is Vitium gentis Therefore vers 13. rebuke them sharply that they may be sound in the Faith Parents and Masters should do in such times as Ioshua did he resolued thus with himselfe but as for me and my house we will serue the Lord Iosh. 24. 15. So one Christian should the rather stirre vp another as they that feared God did Mal. 3. 16. The third and the last Vse of the Doctrine is for comfort and encouragement of the godly that are euery where hated for nothing so much as for this that they will not be content to do as their neighbours do they thinke it strange that yee run not with them into the same excesse of riot speaking euill of you 1. Pet. 4. 4. and good soules they are oft ready to faint and giue ouer an holy course euen for this as euen Elia himselfe was 1. King 19. 10. because they are alone I will therefore giue vnto such some encouragements out of Gods Word to confirme and comfort them against this temptation 1. Remember the Commandement of God so oft giuen to his people in his word to separate themselues from the world and be vnlike to them The Lord instructed me that I should not walke in the way of this people saying Say not yee a confederacy to all them to whom this people shall say A confederacy Esay 8. 11 12. Come out from among them and be ye separate saith the Lord and touch no vncleane thing and I will receiue you and will be a Father vnto you and yee shall be my sonnes and daughters saith the Lord Almighty 2. Cor. 6. 17 18. 2. Remember the necessity that lieth vpon thee that thou must do otherwise than they do or thou must perish Better it is to go to heauen alone and with the ill will of all thy neighbours than to go to Hell with company and with the loue of all men Indeed you should desire their loue and to haue
64. 6. All our righteousnesses saith the Church are like filthy clouts But doth God therefore reiect them No first he accepteth them and takes them in good part they are acceptable to God by Iesus Christ 1. Pet. 2. 5. secondly he delighteth and taketh great pleasure in them sweet is thy voice Cant. 2. 14. thirdly yea he will also reward them not onely in this life yet godlinesse hath promises euen of this life 1. Tim. 4. 8. but euen with the reward of the inheritance as the Apostle speaketh Col. 3. 24. When the dead shall be iudged he will giue reward not onely vnto his seruants the Prophets and to his Saints but to all that feare his Name both small and great Apoc. 11. 18. Thirdly and lastly he is so farre from reiecting his seruants for any their infirmities that of all other he hath most care of them that are most troubled with their infirmities he sheweth most tender respect vnto them In this respect it pleaseth the Lord to compare himselfe to a carefull and good shepheard that sheweth his care most of all towards those sheepe that are most weak and feeble in the slock Esay 40. 11. He shall feed his flocke like a shepheard he shall gather the lambs with his arme and carry them in his bosome and shall guide them that are with young And Ezek. 34. 16. I will seeke that which was lost and bring againe that that was driuen away and will binde vp that that was broken and will strengthen the weake In this respect it is said of Christ Mat. 12. 20. Abruised reede shall he not breake and smoaking flaxe shall he not quench See an experiment of this in those two Apostles which aboue all shewed most weaknesse of Faith Thomas and Peter and you shall finde Christ shewed more tender respect to them two than to all the rest For Peter Christ was most carefull that his resurrection should be reuealed vnto him Marke 16. 7. Yea 1. Cor. 15. 5. He was seene first of Cephas and then of the twelue yea to him specially he giues the commandement to feed his sheepe Ioh. 21. 15. And for Thomas see the care Christ had of him Iohn 20. 24 26. first he appeared againe to his Disciples when hee was among them and for his sake chiefly secondly he singles him out from the rest and giues him sensible helpes and meanes to confirme his Faith The Reasons of this Doctrine are principally two first the loue that the Lord beareth to our persons through Christ. Gen. 4. 4. God had respect to Abell and to his offering Through Christ God is become our father he beareth a fatherly affection to vs yea a farre more tender affection than any of vs that are parents can beare to our little ones yea a mother may forget to haue compassion vpon the sonne of her wombe yet will I not forget thee Esay 49. 15. And yet euen we that are euill stand thus affected to our little ones that we cannot loath them or neglect them for any out-breach or looking asquint or any other such like deformity yea many a thing which in another mans eye is a great blemish as the pocke-holes in the face or such like to vs seemeth none at all yea the weaker and more feeble any of our children are the more tender we are ouer them And this is much more so with the Lord toward his children Psal. 103. 13. As a father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion on them that feare him Mal. 3. 17. I will spare them as one spareth his owne sonne that serueth him The second Reason is the respect the Lord hath to the worke of his owne spirit that dwelleth in his children and to the vprightnesse of their heart Psal. 51. 6. Behold thou louest truth in the inward affections therefore hast thou taught mee wisedome in the secret of my heart Vprightnesse of heart is the chiefe worke of Gods spirit therefore Dauid begs this so earnestly of God that he would renew a right spirit within him Psal. 51. 10. and describes the man whose iniquities God hath forgiuen to bee such a one as in whose spirit there is no guile Psal. 32. 2. Where God discerneth this he will beare with many other wants Though Asa had many foule faults yet is he for this commended Asa his heart was perfect with the Lord all his daies 1. Reg. 15. 14. But on the other side it is said of Amazia that though he had not so many faults as Asa but did in many things much better than he yet the Lord reiected him and made not that account of him as he did of weake Asa he did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with a perfect heart 2. Chro. 25. 2. The Vse of this Doctrine Before I can deliuer it I must labour to preuent the abuse of it For whereas this is the childrens bread many dogs and whelpes will be snatching at it many a wicked and vngracious man will be ready to abuse this Doctrine to the blessing of himselfe in his vngodly waies and say The best haue their faults God is not so seuere as to marke euery thing that is said or done amisse he will beare with the infirmities of his children my heart is good c. But to such I say they haue nothing to doe with this doctrine but first as of the godly I haue said that none of all their foulest sins shall euer be imputed to them so to thee I say that all euen the least sinne that euer thou committedst shall be laid to thy charge know thou that for all these things God will bring thee to iudgement Eccles. 11. 9. of euery idle word that such men shall speake they shall giue account at the day of Iudgement Matth. 12. 36. Secondly As the duties the godly haue performed euen those that haue beene most full of blemishes shall be accepted and rewarded so the very best things that euer thou didst are abominable to God and shall increase thy condemnation the sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord Pro. 15. 8. Thirdly As the foulest sin that euer a godly man fell into was but his infirmity so the least offence that euer thou committedst is a reigning sin And because thou comfortest thy selfe so much in this that the godlyest haue their faults and thy sins are but thine infirmities I will shew thee sundry differences betweene the faults of the godly and thy sins betweene the infirmities of the one and the reigning sins of the other First Before the committing of it The regenerate man doth not commit any foule sinne with purpose and premeditation of heart but hee is ouertaken before he be aware and slippeth suddenly into it through the violence of tentation Thus Paul describeth the sinne of a regenerate man Gal. 6. 1. If any be fallen by occasion ouertaken with any fault So Dauid speakes of himselfe Psal. 39. 22.
cast off by vnfained repentance all our knowne sinnes before we come In this respect the wisdome of the Church is to be commended in beginning our publike worship with a holy and good confession of sins it were to be wished that men would make more conscience to ioyne with the congregation in it and to do it with feeling and vnderstanding hearts than the most do This is that that was signified by putting off the shoes and washing of the clothes Exo. 3. 5 and 19. 10. and is more plainly taught I am 1. 21. Lay apart all filthinesse and superfluitie of naughtinesse and receiue with meeknesse the ingrafted word In this respect it is worthy to be obserued that Ezek. 23. 38 39. the Lord notes this for a circumstance that greatly aggrauated their whoredomes and murders That they came the same day into Gods Sanctuary And what maruell is it then that so many receiue no profit but hurt rather by the Word being guilty of hainous sinnes they come to Gods house without the least motion of remorse for them or purpose to forsake them Yea many come on the Lords day to Gods house hauing spent the greatest part of the night before some in drunkennesse some in gaming and other disorders We must labour to bring our hearts to a religious feare of the Maiesty of God with whom we haue to deale and in whose presence we are to appeare in a speciall sort Set thy selfe as in Gods presence and that will keepe thy heart from wandring Acts 10. 33. We are all here present before God saith Cornelius to heare all things that are commanded thee of God That which Salomon vseth as a reason to restraine men from rashnes and irreuerence in prayer serues as fitly to restraine from rashnesse and irreuerence in hearing for reuerence is as well required when God speakes to vs as when we speake to God Eccl. 5. 1. Be not rash with thy mouth nor let thy heart be hasty to vtter a thing before God for God is in the heauens and thou art on the earth This feare of God rising from the apprehension of his glorious presence is a singular means to prepare the heart to heare well Thus God prepared Abraham Gen. 15. 12. A fearefull darknesse fell vpon him first and then the Lord deliuered to him the word of promise Serue the Lord with feare Psal. 2. 11. and 5. 7. I will come to thy house in the multitude of thy mercies and in thy feare will I worship toward thy holy Temple No maruell then though many profit so little both in their comming into Gods house and sitting in it The very triall of their countenance testifieth against them as Esa. 3. 9. that there is no feare nor reuerence of Gods presence in their hearts Thou must rid thy heart of all preiudice and hard conceit of him thou art to heare and labour to be well perswaded of thy Teacher This hath great force to further our profiting by that we heare This was that that made Herod himselfe not onely to heare Iohn gladly but also to practise many things he taught Mar. 6. 20. This made Paul so earnest in protesting his loue and declaring his affection to them he wrote to that he might winne them thereby to haue a good opinion of him because he knew how much this would auaile to their profiting by his Doctrine See how many words he vseth to perswade both the Romanes and Corinthians of this in the beginning of his Epistles vnto them Rom. 1. 8 15. 1 Cor. 1. 4 8. This made him so earnest with the faithfull in that exhortation And we beseech you brethren to know them which labour among you and are ouer you in the Lord and admonish you and esteeme them very highly in loue for their works sake 1 Thess. 5. 12 13. We must bring with vs an appetite euen an earnest desire to profit by that we shall heare As new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the Word 1 Pet. 2. 2. This will greatly further our profiting for the Lord vseth to fill the hungry with good things and to send the rich empty away Luke 1. 53. We must bring with vs an honest heart euen a sincere purpose and resolution to obey the Word in all things and to learne to know the will of God to no other end but that we may direct our liues according to it resoluing as Esay 2. 3. Come ye and let vs go vp to the mountaine of the Lord and he will teach vs his wayes and we will walke in his paths And as Psal. 119. 34. I will obserue thy Law with my whole heart Such shall be sure to profit If any man will do his will he shall know of the Doctrine whether it be of God Ioh. 7. 17. What man is he that feareth the Lord him shall he teach in the way that he shall choose Psal. 25. 12. We must vse to pray before we come We must Pro. 2. 3. call vnto God for knowledge and cry for vnderstanding Verse 5. Then shall we vnderstand the feare of the Lord and find the knowledge of God And the reason is added Uer. 6. For the Lord giueth wisdome out of his mouth commeth knowledge and vnderstanding As if he should say it comes not out of the mouth of the excellentest man that thou canst heare it comes from the Lord onely and therefore thou must seek to him for it THE HVNDRED AND SEVENTH LECTVRE ON OCTOBER XXIX MDCXI IOHN IIII. LI LII LIII And as he was now going downe his seruants met him and told him saying Thy sonne liueth Then enquired he of them the houre when he began to amend and they said vnto him Yesterday at the seuenth houre the Feuer left him So the father knew that it was at the same houre in the which Iesus said vnto him Thy sonne liueth and himselfe belieued and his whole house WE haue already heard that from the beginning of the 46 Uerse to the end of this Chapter the Euangelist doth set downe the History of the second miracle that Christ wrought in Galile in curing of the sonne of a certaine Ruler And that the History stands vpon foure parts First the occasion that was offered vnto Christ to do this miracle Uers. 46 47 Secondly the manner how Christ wrought this miracle Vers. 48 49. and the beginning of the 50. Thirdly the fruit and effect of this miracle from the latter end of the 50 Verse to the end of the 53. Fourthly the conclusion of the story in the 54 Uerse And in the fruit and effect of this miracle which is the third part of the story we haue heard there be three principall things to be obserued First the beginning of the faith and conuersion of this Ruler in the words of the 50 Verse And the man belieued the word that Iesus had spoken vnto him and went his way Secondly the means whereby this faith that was begun in him was
generally haue a reuerent opinion of such men This reason is giuen why the Pharisees durst say nothing against Iohn Mat. 21. 26. For all held Iohn as a Prophet Herod himselfe thought reuerently of him Mar. 6. 20. 2. To secure their owne hearts in their errours and sinnes The finding of this little goodnesse in themselues that they hate not all good men but can thinke and speake reuerently of them doth strangely quiet the conscience of hypocrites for a time as that little goodnesse he found in himselfe did that Pharisee Luke 18. 11. The Vses of this Doctrine are three 1. To discouer vnto vs the weake foundations of the Popish faith and religion which yet I would not be large in had I not two reasons to moue me to it 1. That though I see no cause to doubt that any of you should be inclined that way yet partly the great increase of Papists of late and partly their strange boldnesse and confidence in their religion and readinesse to maintaine and broach their opinions in euery company may cause you sometimes to stagger and thinke they haue some truth on their side if you be not the better grounded and confirmed against them 2. My text here giues me direct occasion to do it yea more direct then any other that I can thinke of in all the Scripture Consider therefore that as the Papists do resemble the Samaritans in many other things so in this point especially that is described in this text namely in aduancing the credit of good and holy men to the discrediting of the truth of God The Papists are right Samaritans and do resemble them in many things 1. The Samaritan in many points of Religion agreed with the people of God for he worshipped the true God Ezra 4. 2. 2. King 17. ●…8 He acknowledged the fiue Bookes of Moses he vsed Circumcision and the Sacrifices of the Law 2. Kings 17. 32. he looked for the Messiah that was to come Iohn 4. 25. So doth the Papist agree with vs in many points of Religion 2. The Samaritan corrupted these parts of the true Religion with grosse Superstition and Idolatry for he had many things besides the Lord that he gaue diuine honour vnto 1. Kings 17. 29. Euery nation made gods of their owne and put them in the houses of the high places which the Samaritans had made euery nation in the cities where they dwelt He worshipped the true God in Images These nations feared the Lord and serued their grauen images saith the text 2. King 17. 41. And in that respect though the Holy Ghost say of them 2. Kings 17. 33. They feared the Lord because they retained many parts of Gods true worship yet in the very next verse he saith They did not feare God they did not worship the true God because they serued him not according to his Word And our Sauiour denieth Ioh. 4. 22. that there c●…uld be any saluation had in their religion In this point also the Papist is like the Samaritan he hath many petty gods that he giueth diuine honour vnto he worshippeth the true God by Images and in that respect we may as truly say of him as it was said of the Samaritan he worshippeth not the true God at all because he worshippeth him not according to his Word how then can saluation be found in the religion of the Papist 3. The Samaritan was euer the chiefe practiser against the re-edifying of the Temple and of the holy city See some of their practises They weakned the hands of the people of Iudah and troubled them in building and hired Counsellours against them to frustrate their purpose all the dayes of Cyrus as we read Ezra 4. 4. 5. And Neh. 6. 12. 14. They made some of the Prophets and Prophetesses their instruments to hinder the worke So hath the Papist euer beene the author of all the means whereby the growth of religion hath been hindered amongst vs The strange slanders whereby many of the seruants of God haue beene discredited both with the Magistrate and with the people haue come from the Papist The domesticall dissentions and iarres we haue had among our selues haue come from the Papist also But in nothing hath he better resembled the Samaritan then in this case that is here described in this Text namely in pretending great loue and respect to the Saints departed and in aduancing their credit and authority to the discredit of the truth of God The Samaritan pretended great reuerence to Iacob they pretended for this Well from which they fetcht their water that Iacob gaue it them The Papist pretendeth for the power and authority of their Pope from whence in very deed all their religion is deriued and vpon which it is grounded that Peter gaue it him that Peter vsed it himselfe and left it to the Bishops of Rome that are his successours and for their whole religion they pretend that the ancient Fathers and Doctors of the Church deliuered it vnto them And therefore let vs bring neuer so good euidence out of the Word of God against them they are ready to put vs off as the Samaritan doth here Are you or the founders of your religion Luther and Caluin greater then Saint Peter Are you or they better or more likely to see the truth in religion then all the Fathers who gaue vs this religion and themselues professed it and all such as were taught by them We honour the Fathers say they you reiect and despise them The ancient Doctors of the Church are for vs and against you and your new religion Now for answer vnto them we say that the very same errours will be found in this plea of theirs as wee haue found in the argument of this Samaritan-woman for 1. As Iacob gaue no such Well to the Samaritanes so it is euident Peter gaue no such power and authority to the Bishops of Rome as they pretend Marke how we proue this 2. He had no such power and authority himselfe as the Pope exercises Peter exercised no such temporall and ciuill iurisdiction nay he might not do it The king of the Gentiles saith our Sauiour vnto him and the rest of the Apostles Luk. 22. 25 26. exercise lordship ouer them and they that exercise authority vpon them are called Benefactors But yee shall not be so Peter neuer tooke vpon him nor thought hee might take vpon him to depose Princes that should abuse their authority against the true Church and Religion or to absolue subiects from their Oathes of allegiance for he taught the contrary submit your selues to euery ordinance of man for the Lords sake saith he 1. Pet. 2. 13. He had no such ecclesiasticall supremacy ouer the whole Church as the Pope exerciseth for all the rest of the Apostles were equall to him Paul professeth so of himselfe in nothing am I behind the very chiefest Apostles saith he 2. Cor. 12. 11. The same commission the same gifts of the Holy Ghost the same keyes
of the kingdome of heauen and power to bind and loose was committed to them all as was to him to them all he said as my father hath sent mee so send I you And when he had said this he breathed vpon them and saith vnto them receiue yee the Holy Ghost Whosoeuer sins c. Ioh. 20. 21. 22. 23. He in respect of his Ministry is called a rocke vpon which Christ saith hee would build his Church Matth. 16. 18. so are all the Apostles the wall of the City the new Ierusalem had twelue foundations and in them the names of the twelue Apostles of the Lambe Reu. 21. 14. Yea Peter was so farre from exercising any such supremacy ouer the rest of the Apostles that writing to the ordinary Pastours and Elders of the Church hee makes himselfe equall to them and calleth himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Pet. 5. 1. and makes the title of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 proper to Christ himselfe 1. Pet. 5. 4. 2. Though Peter had had such authority as the Pope exerciseth and exercised it himselfe yet followeth it not that the Pope hath the like For they can neuer proue that Peter left the authority that he had to the Bishops of Rome or that they are his successors Marke the proofe of our second argument 1. They can neuer proue by the Scripture that Peter was euer at Rome Say they haue Ecclesiasticall history to proue it we say that for a point of religion so fundamentall it is necessary they should haue euident Scripture also 2. Their Ecclesiasticall history for Peters being and continuance at Rome viz. that he should come thither in the twenty seuenth yeare of Claudius and tarry there twenty fiue years is expresly contradicted by the Scriptures For 1. He was at Ierusalem three yeares after Pauls conuersion Gal. 1. 18. and foureteene yeares after that Gal. 2. 1. 2. When Paul sends salutations to the Church of Rome he makes no mention of Peter Rom. 16. 3. If Peter had beene at Rome when Paul was in trouble there Paul would neuer haue written as he did Col. 4. 11. These onely are my work-fellowes to the Kingdome of God which are found to my consolation 2. Tim. 4. 16. At my first answering no man assisted me If Peter had been then there would not he haue beene a comfort to him would not he haue assisted him in his troubles 4. Though it were euident that Peter had beene at Rome and continued there twenty fiue yeares yet could he not be Bishop of Rome For 1. The office of a Bishop or Pastour is an office distinct from the office of an Apostle and inferiour also vnto it Eph. 4. 11. 2. Peter was specially appointed to be the Apostle of the Circumcision Gal. 2. 7. And the Iewes in this time that they pretend Peter should be Bishop of Rome were banished from Rome Acts 18. 2. 2. The second errour in this plea is this that they say the Doctors of the Church are their fathers that they are for them and against vs as the Samaritans said Iacob was their father But for our selues we may say in this point 1. We despise not the Fathers but reuerence them highly for their learning and piety 2. We esteeme them good helpes for the vnderstanding of the Scriptures 3. We study them and alleadge them also in our writings 4. There is scarce any matter of moment in religion which we cannot anouch from some or more of them On the other side the Papists do not giue vnto the Fathers that honour they pretend to do For 1. In many points they renounce their authority 2. They preferre Aquinas before the most or all of them 3. They match with the ancient Fathers sundry bastard and counterfeit fathers 4. They haue foisted into their writings parts of tracts and whole treatises that were neuer theirs 5. They haue by thir Indices expurgatorij cunningly altered or razed and quite put out many of their sentences and bookes and that with strange impudency though they haue knowne well that we haue many printed and written copies to controll them by Of these Indices they haue made fiue already as neuer satisfied with the correcting of the Fathers Neither do they in these Indices correct alter or raze the prefaces marginall notes collections and obseruations made out of the Fathers onely as some pretend but the very texts of the Fathers also All this our learned men haue made euident to the world in sundry bookes 3. The third errour in this plea of the Papists is this that as the Samaritan here thought it was not possible that God should do for any more then he did for Iacob Christ could giue no better a water then Iacob did Christ was not so great as Iacob so they think none can see any thing in Religion now which the Fathers did not see yea they oppose the iudgement and authority of the Fathers against Christ himselfe and the manifest testimony of his Word Whereas though it were granted that there are many things in popery that were receiued from the Fathers and in ours which the Fathers receiued not yet may that which they hold be erroneous and euill and that which we hold sound and good for all that For 1. Nothing in religion is to be receiued vpon the authority of the Fathers vnlesse it haue warrant from the Scriptures They are not to be admitted as Law-giuers and Authors of opinions in religion but as Interpreters of the Scriptures they are not Iudges of the Scriptures but are to be examined and iudged by them This we proue 1. By plaine testimonie of the Scriptures There is no Law-giuer saith the Apostle Iam. 4. 12. And our Sauiour forbids vs Mat. 23. 9 10. to acknowledge any for a father or master with such absolute dependance vpon him but his heauenly Father and himselfe onely 2. Themselues acknowledge the perfection of the holy Scriptures 3. Themselues doe disclaime this absolute authority and hold that they ought not to be further receiued then they bring warrant for that they teach from the holy Scriptures 4. The Fathers themselues do differ one from another and from themselues also 5. They were subiect to errour Euery man is a lyar saith the Apostle Rom. 3. 4. that i he is subiect vnto errour he may be deceiued himselfe and he may also deceiue others And indeed the Fathers did mistake in many things and erred yea and that very grossely as the Papists themselues do confesse also 6. There is no certainty euen of the most legitimate bookes of the best Fathers for heretiques haue gelded and corrupted them and foisted into them their owne errours 2. Though they were holy and learned men yet it may well be that the Lord hath reuealed that to his seruants now which they saw not for the Lord hath oft done so Dauid had more vnderstanding then his teachers had Psal. 119. 99. and the Disciples of Christ saw many truths which many of the