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A22481 A commentarie vpon the epistle of Saint Paule to Philemon VVherein, the Apostle handling a meane and low subiect, intreating for a fraudulent and fugitiue seruant, mounteth aloft vnto God, and deliuereth sundry high misteries of true religion, and the practise of duties Ĺ“conomicall. Politicall. Ecclesiasticall. As of persecution for righteousnesse sake. ... And of the force and fruit of the ministery. Mouing all the ministers of the Gospell, to a diligent labouring in the spirituall haruest ... Written by William Attersoll, minister of the word of God, at Isfield in Suffex. Attersoll, William, d. 1640. 1612 (1612) STC 890; ESTC S106848 821,054 582

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Answer I answer It is a generall rule in all Arts and true in Diuinity That which is vnderstood is not wanting So then the holy Ghost the third person in Trinity is not omitted though not expressed for he must of necessity be vnderstood who proceedeth from them both namely from the Father and the Sonne Christ saith in his m Iohn 17. Prayer This is eternall life to know thee to be the onely true God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ yet the holy Ghost in this place is not excluded from both the persons but included and comprehended together with them for these three are one n Iohn 5. as the Apostle teacheth Thus much touching the order and meaning of the words Now let vs proceede to the obseruations out of the same and then come to the Doctrines Obseruations out of this ver The obseruations out of this verse containing the salutation are not many which we will point out First of all we see the matter of his Prayer what it is he asketh not the fauour of Men but of God he craueth not earthly and worldly peace but spirituall and heauenly True it is the fauour and good will of Men the outward peace and tranquilitie one with another are worthy and excellent guiftes but the free and fatherly fauour of God together with peace with GOD the Father beeing reconciled vnto vs in his deare Sonne are much to be preferred in our desires Heereby wee haue that peace o Phil. 4 7. of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding which teacheth vs to rest in God as in a most louing Father with all confidence and assurance Secondly as wee learne cheefelie to aske spirituall blessings so wee see what blessings among such as are spirituall are the principall and predominant to wit the fauour of God and peace of conscience He that is possessed of these two hath an hid Mine of Treasures with which all the Wealth and Riches of the World are not to bee compared vnto For these blessings are heauenly are spirituall are eternall whereas the substance of this World is Temporall is Transitorie is corruptible The Worlde it selfe must passe and vanish away and all these earthly things must decay and perish with it Thirdly the Apostle in some of his Epistles vseth three wordes p 1 Tim. 1 2. and 2 Tim 1 2. 2 Iohn 3. Grace Mercy and Peace heere hee contenteth himselfe with naming two Grace and Peace omitting and leauing out Mercy wherein there is no contrariety or diuersity for as much as Mercy is included vnder Peace For by Mercy is vnderstood our Iustification which consisteth partly in the forgiuenesse of our sinnes and partly in the imputation of Christs righteousnesse which do bring true peace with them Fourthly we see from whom hee asketh all these to wit first from God the Father to teach that he is the Authour of euery good giuing and perfect guift If then we stand in neede of them we must goe to him we must aske them of him we can receiue them of none but of him q Iam. 1 5 17 as the Apostle Iames teacheth Fiftly we see that to God the Father he ioyneth Iesus Christ for all blessings are bestowed vpon vs through Christ the Mediator of the New Testament God the Father is the Fountaine Christ is the Pipe or Cunduit by whom they are conueied vnto vs. He that hath not him hath not the Father Hee that is not in him remaineth in death Hence it is that the Euangelist saith r Iohn 3 36. He that beleeueth in the Sonne hath euerlasting life and hee that obeyeth not the Sonne shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him Sixtly obserue the Title giuen vnto him he is called the Lord of his Church it is a Kingdome whereof he is the Prince it is a Citty whereof he is the Gouernor it is an house whereof he is the Maister it is a body whereof he is the head So then all obedience is due to him and all men how great soeuer must acknowledge his Lordship ouer them Lastly in that he craueth grace and peace from Christ our Lord as well as from God the Father it confirmeth our Faith in a Fundamentall point of Christian Religion touching the Deity of Christ n Phil. 2 6. Who is GOD equall with the Father against the Arrians and other Heretiques that deny his Eternity For seeing hee giueth grace and peace as well as the Father we conclude him to be true God Co-eternall and Co-equall with the Father Grace c. This word in the Scripture hath two significations the ignorance whereof hath bred great errour and be one the occasion of stumbling in the Church of Rome First it signifieth Gods good will and fauour Secondlie some guift of God freely bestowed which is grace of his grace and so the o Rom. 5 15. Apostle doth distinguish the grace of God from the gift that is by grace In this place we must vnderstand not any particular gift of God infused into vs as faith hope loue and such like but the free fauour and loue of God whereby he accepteth of some in Christ for his owne Children for wee see heere it is discerned and distinguished from peace which is a guift of Grace and therefore cannot signifie the same thing This grace and good will of God is the Fountaine of all Gods blessings and the foundation of all mans happinesse All that we haue is of Grace it is the beginning of all good thinges in vs. Our p Rom. 11 5. 2 Tim. 1 9. Rom 3 24. Ezek. 36 27. Ephe. 2 10. Rom. 6 23. Election Redemption Vocation Iustification Sanctification Glorification is of grace onely we can ascribe nothing to our selues Now in this Diuine Salutation and Apostolicall Benediction mark that the Apostle beginneth with this grace Doct. 1. The free fauor of God is of vs chiefely to be desired From hence we learne that the fauour of God is to be sought for aboue all other thinges The free grace and vndeserued loue of God is the first and highest and onely cause of all blessings is aboue al things to be desired and intreated at the hands of God Consider the example of Dauid Psal 4. Many say q Psal 4 6. who will shew vs any good But Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon me As if he should say let worldly men seek what they will and let them place their happinesse in riches pleasures and vanities but my desire is after thy loue and fauour aboue all Hence it is that he calleth and accounteth God his portion r Psal 16 5. 18 2. his lot his inheritance his rocke his refuge his shield and Castle of defence to shew that all his ioy was in Gods fauour all his comfort in Gods loue and that he preferred his grace before all thinges in the world besides This affection is also expressed in the
Children of God c Psal 123 3. Haue mercy vpon vs ô Lord haue mercy vpon vs for we haue suffered to much contempt This is the direction that the Apostle Iames giueth d Iames 5 5. If any of you want wisedome let him aske of God which giueth to all men liberally and reprocheth no man and it shall be giuen him This is that which the Apostle both teacheth and craueth The Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ the loue of God and the Communion of the Holy Ghost be with you all The like we see vsed by the Apostle Iohn Reuel 1. 4. All which testimonies serue directly to teach vs that what blessings soeuer we want we must beg them of God and of him onely Reason 1. Let vs see the Reasons to confirme vs in this truth First God is the fountaine of all good thinges and the Well-spring of all graces whatsoeuer Hee is a most bountifull and liberall Giuer none can helpe vs but he alone If hee shut his handes who can open them If hee stoppe his eares who can heare If hee turne awaie his eye from vs who can see our wantes If hee close vp his heart who can shew mercie Hence it is that the Apostle saith e Rom 11 36. For of him and through him and for him are all thinges to him bee glory for euer Amen And Iames in the first Chapter of his Epistle Iam. 1. 17. f Iames 1 17. Euery good giuing and euery perfect guift is from aboue and commeth downe from the Father of lights with whom is no variablenesse neither shaddow of turning Reason 2. Secondly the three persons in Trinity doe worke ioyntly together euen from the first beginning of our creation to the last finishing of our saluation It is said all things were made by the Sonne g Iohn 1 3. and that without him nothing was made that was made the Spirit also did sustaine and vphold that confused Lumpe which was the matter of the vniuersall so that they are said and set downe to be Creators as well as the Father In the worke of our saluation the Father willeth it and electeth vs the Sonne meriteth and deserueth it the Holy Ghost applyeth and appropriateth it This is it which Christ himselfe h Iohn 5 17. 16 13. saith Ioh. 5. My Father worketh hitherto and I worke And Chap. 16. When he commeth which is the Spirit of truth he will lead you into all truth So we might say the like touching the guifts of Sanctification and Iustification the Father forgiueth and washeth away sinne by the blood of Christ through the sprinkling of the Spirit he mortifieth sinne by the power of the death of Christ through the working of the Holy Ghost he raiseth vnto newnesse of life by the power of Christes Resurrection applyed by the Spirit hee iustifieth vs by the righteousnesse of Christ imputed and appropriated vnto vs by the Spirit Seeing therefore that God is a most munificent and liberall giuer rich vnto all and niggardly to none and seeing these three persons beeing one God doe worke ioyntly together in all things touching the creation of the World and the saluation of man and the redemption of our Soules it followeth whensoeuer we want any guifts needefull for Soule or body for this life or the life to come we must aske the supply of them at the handes of God onely the Father the Sonne and holy Ghost Vse 1. Now let vs handle the Vses breefely that arise from hence First we see that it is necessary for all that would pray aright and would obtaine that which they desire to be well instructed in the Vnity of the Godhead and the Trinity of the persons and to know the distinct properties of the persons without the vnderstanding whereof wee worship not the true God but an Idoll Our Sauiour in his conference with the Woman of Samaria chargeth the i Iohn 4 12. Samaritans to worship they know not what so doe many in our dayes both Heretiques and ignorant persons they call vppon God confusedlie but they haue no particular knowledge of God at all We must conceiue no otherwise of God in our minde then he hath expressed in his word The scripture teacheth to knowledge to beleeue to worship one God and him onely If we conceiue or imagine or receiue a multiplicity of Gods wee turne the truth of God into a lie and we erect vnto our selues so many Idols Againe the same Scripture setteth before vs three persons in that Godhead the Father which is the first person in the Trinity of himselfe the Son which is the second person begotten of the Father the holy Ghost which is the third person proceeding from the Father and the Sonne The Father is God the Sonne is God the holy Ghost is God and yet these three persons are not three Gods but one onely God And heere we haue in this place a notable Testimony of the God-head of the Sonne where the Apostle desireth and prayeth for grace and peace to be giuen to Philemon and his Wife to Archippus and the Church not onely from God the Father but from the Lord Iesus Christ This had bin monstrous horrible Idolatry and blasphemy Lastly if Christ had not bin in Nature Maiesty and glory equal with the Father hee of whom and from whom we craue spirituall and eternall gifts k Iohn 1 16. And of whose fulnesse we receiue and grace for grace must be confessed and beleeued to be God but such is Christ Iesus and therefore let this be an article of our Faith written in our hearts acknowledged with our mouth and confessed in the Church for euer that Christ is true God Vse 2. Secondly all good things are to be craued of God whether it be the supplying of his graces or the remoouing of our troubles we are taught to goe immediatly to God by Christ whensoeuer he blesseth vs and to returne vnto himselfe the praise of his owne worke This duty being required it serueth to meete with many corruptions that are too common in the world It conuinceth such Heathnish minded men as are of dead harts and haue no spark of the life of Gods Spirite in them that receiue and swallow vp daily diuers blessinges yet neuer looke to GOD that blesseth them but wee are like vnto the Swine that goe groueling to the ground like the Horse and Mule that haue no vnderstanding at all and so vse all the profites and pleasures of this life without any acknowledgement and consideration from whence they come and of whom they haue receiued them l Ezek. 32 6. or like vnto the Israelites when they had forsaken God They sate downe to eate and drinke and rose vp to play or as c Gen. 25 34. Esau He did eate and drinke he rose vp and went his way he filled his paunch and such was his prophanenesse that hee was touched with nothing These men doe daily deuour infinite
their negligence as Eli did of the offences of his Children Hence it is that in the fourth Commaundement prescribing the time of Gods publike worship g Exod. 20 10 the Housholder is charged to haue care of his Son of his Daughter of his Seruant of his Stranger Iacob called for his people and assembled them together h Gene. 35 2. when he went to Bethell Dauid went with a great traine and company into the house as those that goe to a Feast when he saith i Psal 42 4. When I remembred these thinges I powred out my very heart because I had gone with the multitude and led them into the house of God with the voice of singing and praise as a multitude that keepeth a Feast Behold heere the godly deuotion of a religious heart as the Hart brayeth for the Riuers of Waters so his soule panted after God and his publike worship neither could he content himselfe to goe alone but it was his comfort and delight to leade others as it were by the hand with him that they might finde that sweetenesse in the word that hee found and be partakers of the benefit that hee reaped thereby Vse 5. Lastly seeing it is so necessary a duty to teach our Housholds we must acknowledge that it is as necessary for Children and Seruants to bee taught and instructed It should be therefore our care and desire to dwell and inhabite in such places and houses as that we may be trained vp in godlinesse and learn our duties to God and man It should bee our care and desire to place and bestow our Children with such persons as that they may be brought vp in the feare of God There is not one of those in our Families euen the lowest and meanest but of meate drinke cloathing or wages bee at any times denyed or detained from them they will thinke themselues wronged and misused and are ready to complaine of the iniury How much more if there were in them any care of their Soules or loue of the life to come would they mourn and lament when they are debarred and defrauded of this most necessary portion the knowledge of true Religion appointed by the Lord to be bestowed vpon them If a man be to take any Farme he will not doe it hand ouer head but he will know what Acres hee shall haue what arable ground what Meddow and what meanes of his maintenance but how many are there that seek to others for their seruice who neuer consider what instruction they shal haue or whether they be likely euer to hear of the Name of God There is no Man so simple in wit but if he put his Sonne to bee an Apprentize and his Maister within his yeares doe not teach him his occupation hee will and may iustlie thinke his Childe much misvsed what a wonderfull blindnesse and blockishnesse then doth it argue in them that care not where they put and with whom they place their Children so they learne their occupation they regard not whether they learne any Religion and neuer enquire whether their Maisters take any pains or not to teach them the precepts and instructions that belong to a Christian which of all callings vnder heauens is both the most honourable and in the end shall be acknowledged to bee most profitable Let vs therefore put out our Children to bee the Seruants of those that may learne them to be the Seruants of God Let vs so binde them to their Trade that we may be sure they may learne the Trade of Trades the Art of Arts the Mysterie of Mysteries that is Religion and Godlinesse If wee haue little to leaue our Children and small wealth to bequeath vnto them yet if we bring them vp to this Trade and binde them fast vnto it we shall leaue them a worthy and wealthy portion for all men must bee of this Trade We see how costly other Trades are and what a round summe must be giuen with our children to serue for them but we may k Esay 55 1 2. without cost and without Mony make our Children of this Trade which is the best and most gainefull of all others l 1 Tim. 6 6. For godlinesse saith the Apostle is not onely gaine but great gaine if a man bee contented with that he hath If thou haue not learned this gainefull and profitable Trade thou wilt be neuer but a Begger and a Bankerout for being destitute of this thou art without Grace without God without Heauen Thus much of this doctrine 3 Grace be with you and peace from God our Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ The order of the words and the interpretation of the same Hitherto wee haue spoken of the first part of the Praeface of this Epistle touching the persons writing and written vnto Now we come to the second part to wit the prayers which he maketh which are of two sortes a salutation and a thanksgiuing the salutation is a greeting which the Apostle wisheth to all the persons before named wherein we are to consider two pointes first what blessings the Apostle desireth to be giuen vnto them Secondlie from whom he craueth them The blessings which he prayeth for are two namely Grace and Peace By Grace we must vnderstand the free fauour meer mercy and good will of God towards vs whereby he hath eternally vndeseruedly loued vs in Christ who are a people by nature not beloued but deseruing to be disgraced by him and hated of him The second blessing that he beggeth for them is peace whereby is meant all kind of benefits spirituall and temporall which flow vnto vs from this Fountaine and grow out of the root of grace and therefore ordinarily in other Epistles it is annexed vnto it Grace heere mnntioned is not any gift in vs but it is Gods and in God it is his gratious fauour free loue and good will whereby he is well pleased with his elect in and for Christ Peace is not any guift in God but in vs and is that holy vnity and blessed concord which is in the Kingdome of God among Gods Children this concord and agreement of Gods Children is a fruit and effect of grace Paraphr So then the meaning of the words is this We wish vnto you all the fauour of God in Christ and that concord which is propper to Gods Church and Children hauing peace with God with his holy Angels with his Church with your owne hearts with your enemies and with al his Creatures Secondly in this verse is set downe the cause the worker and author from whom these blessings come to wit the Father and Iesus Christ God the Father the Fountaine of them and Christ our Lord as the Cunduit pipe by whom they are carried and conueied vnto vs. Obiect But it may be obiected why is the holy Ghost left out why is not he named do not these guifts come from him as well as from the Father and the Son
iniurie to other men or to make him peculiar to our selues but to leaue him the same to others that hee is to vs as euery man enioyeth the light of the Sunne without excluding others from the vse thereof Vse 3. Lastly we learne that it is no Doctrine of pride and presumption to teach assurance confidence and certainty of Faith that euery one should beleeue that God is his God that Christ is his Sauiour that the Holy-Ghost is his sanctifier that forgiuenesse of sinnes and eternall life shall bee giuen vnto him If we beleeue not this we beleeue nothing if we deny this or doubt of this all our Faith is in vaine For as wee pray for the forgiuenesse of our owne sinnes so we must beleeue the forgiuenesse of our owne sinnes The promises of the Gospell are generall these we are to knowe do belong to vs and therefore must take them as spoken to vs. It is promised y Iosh 1 5. to Ioshua imediately after the death of Moses that God would not leaue him nor forsake him This the Apostle applyeth and maketh it common to all the faithfull whom he chargeth to haue their conuersation without couetousnesse z Heb. 13 5. seeing it is written That God will not leaue them nor forsake them God commandeth vs to call vpon him with promise to heare vs a Psal 50 15 and 4 3. Call vpon mee and I will heare thee This was the comfort of Dauid and the assurance that hee had When I call vpon the Lord he will heare him Christ our Sauiour giueth vs encouragement to prayer because b Iohn 14. 13 1 Iohn 5 14 Whatsoeuer we aske in his name that will hee do that the Father may be glorified in the Sonne Hence it is that Iohn sayeth This is the assurance that wee haue of him that whatsoeuer we aske according to his will he heareth vs And if we know that he heareth vs we know we haue the petitions which we aske of him When Christ sayde to the poore distressed man in the Gospell If thou canst beleeue all things are possible to him that beleeueth He answered c Marke 9 24 Lord I beleeue help mine vnbeleefe So saith the Prophet d Psal 116 16 and 119 125. Behold Lord I am thy seruant I am thy seruant ô giue mee vnderstanding that I may keepe thy Commandements c. The Lord saith generally e Iohn 3. 15. Math. 28. Whosoeuer beleeueth shall be saued Hence the Apostle inferreth this particular to the Iailor f Acts 16 32. Beleeue thou and thou shalt be saued When God saith g Psal 27. 8. Seeke ye my face the voyce of the faithfull doth returne and rebound this backe again Thy face Lord I will seeke God by his new Couenant bindeth himselfe to the heyres of promise saying h Ier. 31 33. Esay 25 9. I will be their God and they shall be my people whereupon they are emboldned to say Loe this is our God we haue waited for him and hee will saue vs we will reioyce and be ioyfull in his saluation God saith vnto vs I am thy saluation our heart againe with vnspeakeable comfort inwardly ministered answeareth Thou art my God So then when we say aright we belieue in God the Father it is as much as to say I beleeue that God is my God and I haue assurance and trust in him for my saluation And to beleeue that God is my God is to beleeue that he is my life my peace my deliuerance my saluation not onely that he is these things in himselfe and in his owne nature not onely that he is these things to other men that trust in him and depend vpon him but that he is indeede the same to mee that his mercy dooth compasse me his power defend me his prouidence watch ouer me and his fauor keepe and preserue me to himselfe in life and death For there are many degrees of faith i Credere deum Credere Deo credere in Deū one step is to beleeue that God is the second step is to beleeue God that is to giue credit to him that al his words which he hath spoken and the promises which he hath made are true the third step is to beleeue in God which requireth trust in God according to his word and promise being firmely resolued that he will do whatsoeuer he hath said Thus it is required of vs to doe in euery Article of Faith in euery promise of Mercy in euery word of grace offered vnto vs we must by a speciall faith receiue it and apply it Obiection If such a faith be required the question may be asked how Infants can be saued that cannot haue this faith of their owne and therefore it seemeth they must be saued by their Parents faith Answere I answere that the faith of Parents dooth bring the Infants to haue a Title and interrest in the Couenant of grace and in all the benefits of Christ but it cannot apply the merits of Christs death his obedience his righteousnesse vnto the Infant For this the Beleeuer and faithfull Parent doth onely to himselfe and to no other but the merrites and satisfaction of Christ and ingrafting into his bodie are wrought by some speciall and secret working of the Holy-Ghost vnto vs vnknowne but effectuall to the Infant and comfortable to the Parent albeit it be not done by his faith and therefore this that men are iustified by a speciall faith holdeth to be true in men of yeares and discretion not in Infants and children who are iustified and saued by an extraordinary woorking of Gods spirit k Iohn 3 8. Like the wind which bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but canst not tell whence it commeth and whether it goeth so is euerie man that is borne of the Spirit Obiection Againe sometimes the deare children of God faile in this speciall faith want this particular application they are not able to say God is my God Christ is my Sauiour Answere I aunswere this falleth out indeede sometimes in the tentations of Satan and in the infirmities of the flesh so that they haue not a feeling of Gods mercy toward them but euen then they cease not to beleeue We must liue by faith not by feeling A man may haue life in him though the sicke man in extremity do not know it or feele it so may faith bee in vs in some great tentation albeit we feele it not present Dauid lost and wanted this feeling l Psal 151. when he prayed God to create in him a cleane heart and to renew a right spirit within him But was it vtterly lost No for he sayth Take not away thy Spirit from me In this case it shall be good for vs to remember the former mercies of God toward vs and consider how hee hath dealt with vs and thereby assure our harts that howsoeuer God for a season with-holdeth the
we see Christ is made the Author and finisher of our saluation Reason 2. Secondly to put a difference betweene the Creator and the Creatute betweene the things pertaining to God and the things pertaining to men No creature is to be beleeued in nor any blessing that we receiue from Christ We beleeue the Church not in the Church the Communion of Saintes not in the Communion of Saints the forgiuenesse of sinnes not in the forgiuenesse of sinnes as wee shall see afterward Seeing therefore we haue Iustification and saluation from no other then from Christ and seeing we must make a difference and distinction betweene him and all other creatures it foloweth that we must beleeue in him and fasten our Faith as a sure Anchor of our soul vpon him Vse 1. Let vs see what are the Vses of this Doctrine and how wee may profitably apply it to our instruction and edification First seeing it is our dutie to beleeue in Christ we learne that Christ Iesus is true and eternall God equall with his Father to be worshipped and glorifyed together with the Father the blessed spirit This serueth to conuince the Heresie of the Arrians Iewes Turkes Persians and sundry other Infidels who deny the Deity of the sonne of God and cast him downe into the row and ranke of meere creatures who notwithstanding f Phil. 2 6 10. being in the forme of God thought it no robberie to bee equall with God at whose Name euery knee must bowe both of thinges in Heauen and things in earth and things vnder the earth Therefore we saw before that the Apostle in his salutation wisheth Grace and Peace to come vpon them to whom he writeth this Epistle as well from Iesus Christ as from God the Father If Grace and Peace come not onely from the Father but from the Sonne it followeth that he is God equall with the other Hence it is that he sayth in the Gospell g Iohn 14 1. 11 and 12 44. 10 30 and 14 11. 9 38 Ye beleeue in God beleeue also in mee let not your heart be troubled And againe He that beleeueth in mee beleeueth not in me to wit an ordinary man as they falsly imagined but in him that sent me And in another place Beleeue me that I am in the Father and the Father is in me I and my Father are one So when Christ had restored sight on the Sabaoth day to him that was borne blinde he sayd Lord I beleeue and worshipped him Whereby we see that whosoeuer is without the Sonne is also without the Father he that beleeueth not in the Sonne beleeueth not in the Father Hee that worshippeth not the Sonne Worshippeth not the Father So then this is a certaine and inuincible Argument of the Deitie of Christ that wee are to beleeue in him forasmuch as Faith is a Worshippe due onely vnto God Vse 2. Secondly seeing it is a principle necessarie to be holden of al men that we must beleeue in the Son we must put a difference betweene these sayings to beleeue God to beleeue in God For albeit hee that beleeueth in God beleeueth God yet it is not so on the contrary euery one that beleeueth God doth not by by beleeue in God The Deuils themselues as we shewed before do beleeue God they beleeue Christ they confesse him to bee the son of the Father they know him to be the Iudge of the Worlde the Sauiour of mankinde the holy one of God and yet they doo not beleeue in him they put no confidence in him they looke not for life and saluation from him but are assured they are reserued to destruction This maketh them cry out in h Math. 8 29. the Gospell Why art thou come to torment vs before the time And the apostle Iames sayth i Iames 2 19. The Deuils beleeue and tremble They beleeue God touching his Nature and attributes they beleeue Christ touching his Person Natures and Offices They beleeue the Holy-Ghost touching his Person and Guifts They beleeue there is a Church and singular prerogatiues imparted to it and bestowed vpon it And albeit our Faith must goe beyond the faith of the Deuils yet they goe farther then many professors of the Gospell among vs that haue no knowledge of these things So then it is required of vs not onely to beleeue that there is a Sauiour of the world but wee must beleeue that he is our Sauiour beginning our saluation in this life and perfecting it in the life to come This confuteth the Popish opinion that holdeth that wee may beleeue in the creatures as well as in the Creator in the Saints as well as in Christ in mortall men as well as in the eternall God They teach that wee may beleeue not onely the Church but in the Church not onely Moses k Rhem. Test vpon Rom. 10. but in Moses not onely the Prophets but in the Prophets Wee are charged to beleeue in the blessed Trinity in God the Father in God the sonne and in God the Holy Ghost but l Ruffin in Symbol when the speech is not of the God-head but of the Creatures and Mysteries we are not taught to beleeue in them and therefore we are no more to beleeue in the Church then to beleeue in baptisme in the resurrection of the bodie the Communion of Saints and in the participation of glory We are indeede to beleeue m Exod. 14 31 2 Chro. 20 20 Moses and the Prophets that they spake not of themselues that their word is not the worde of man that they ran not before they were sent but we are not to beleeue in them We are indeed to beleeue Peter and Paule n Angast tract 2● in Iohan. but not in Peter and Paule Wee are to beleeue the Scriptuers but not in the Scriptures o Euseb Emissen de Symb. hom 2. for that were to bestow vpon the seruant the honour of the Lorde and to giue to man that which is proper to the diuine Maiesty Wee must beleeue in Christ Iesus our onely sauiour as for those that beleeue in any other or seek saluation in any other then in Christ whether in Saints or in Angels or in themselues they beleeue not in Christ as in their onely Sauiour For p Cyprian de duplic martyr he beleeueth not in God who doth not place in him alone the trust of his whole felicity who doth not put his affiance in him who doth not depend vppon him who is not assured of his good will and fauour looking for saluation from him and for deliuerance from all euils Vse 3. Lastly seeing it is necessary for vs to haue faith in Christ it is our dutie to vse all meanes to attaine to this Faith Many there are which are deceiued in thinking they haue it who indeede haue it not These suppose they are full of Faith who are as empty vessels and neuer tasted the sweetnesse of it as
we dare do not so much only as we ought to do not considering how lawfull it is but how powerfull we are how weake they are All the prophane Histories are full of worthy examples of many Seruants who are commended for their trust and faithfulnesse Wittinesse and Courage Might and Magnanimity to all posterity and haue not doubted to giue their liues to death in their Maisters quarrell It is not therefore much to bee maruelled at that the Apostle perceiuing how t Heb. 4 12. Mighty the word had bin in Operation vpon Philemons Seruant doth account him as his Sonne and seeketh to reconcile him to his Maister in which respect he was willing and desirous to haue u Phile. 13 14 kept him with him to Minister vnto him He claimeth some authoritie ouer him being his spirituall Father howbeit because he was not only his Sonne but also another mans Seruant he would not retaine him without his Maisters knowledge Let them not therefore for their low degree be contemned nor haue the meanes of instruction denied vnto them Thus I haue set downe to thy view Christian Reader the scope of this Epistle wherein the Apostle in a narrow compasse doth couch together many Mysteries of our Religion which I haue laboured to lay open in this Commentary And howsoeuer the worke is growne in bignesse extended in length vnder mine hands more then at the first I purposed and intended yet I hope the manner of handling heerein obserued shall easily recompence thy labour bestowed in reading I cannot in few words comprehend the matters that are heere and there dispersed throughout the Booke Among many other these points are principally handled Touching affliction for the truth and persecution for righteousnesse sake Touching Christian Equity and Moderation Touching Gods free grace forgiuing offences Touching houshold Gouernment and Priuate possessions Touching the conuersion of Sinners and the Communion of Saintes Touching Faith and Good Workes Touching Friendship and Surety-ship Touching Prayer and Hospitality Touching the Gospell and Almes-deeds Touching Gods prouidence and of the force fruite of the Ministry as is more at large to be seen in the Table of the doctrines Accept I pray thee the paines I haue taken in the discussing of these points pardon the escapes if any be into which I haue fallen as in trauelling so long a iourney it is easie to fall into a slumber and wheresoeuer thou vnderstandest the hand of God to haue beene with me in publishing the truth giue him the glory ascribe the praise vnto his great name to whose grace goodnesse I commend thee Thine in our common Sauiour William Attersoll A BRIEFE RECAPITVLATION OF ALL THE DOCTRINES HANDLED AT LARGE IN THIS EPISTLE Out of the Praeface THe course of the Gospell cannot bee stopped but will haue his passage in the world page 1. The Argument and occasion of the Epistle together with the vses thereof page 7. Verse 1 and 2. Doct. 1. Good things must be followed and sought after earnestly and feruently not coldly and carelesly pag. 9 Doct. 2. It is no disgrace or reproch to the Seruants of God to bee cast into prison for the Gospels sake pag 12. Doct. 3. The persecutions of all true Christians are the persecutions of Christ Iesus when they are imprisoned for Christs sake page 15. Doct. 4. All good duties to God or man are better doone by the helpe of others then alone by our selues pa 21 Doct. 5. A christian friend wil performe any christian duty to his friend page 25. Doct. 6. Christian women should be helpers vnto their husbandes as heires together of the grace of life page 29 Doct. 7. The calling of a Minister is a painfull and laborious a needefull and troublesome calling page 33. Doct. 8. It is the duty of all house-holders to teach and instruct their families that belong vnto them page 38 Verse 3. Doct. 1. The free fauour and mercy of God in Christ Iesus is first and aboue all other things to be desired and prayed for page 48 Doct. 2. Such as are in Gods fauor haue his blessings flowing vnto them and following them page 55 Doct. 3. All blessings temporall and eternall are to be craued from God alone in Christ Iesus page 61 Verse 4 and 5. Doct 1. Men ought to take cause of great ioy to see others growe and proceed in good things page 68 Doct. 2. It is the nature of faith to apply the mercies and promises of God to our owne selues page 76 Doct. 3. It is the duty of the faithfull to pray not onely for themselues but also for others page 82 Doct. 4. True Religion must not onely bee inwardly beleeued but also outwardly confessed and openly professed page 86 Doct. 5. Faith and Loue are the cheefest thinges that commend a man to God and his Church page 95 Doct. 6. Faith in Christ and Loue to the Saints do alwaies go together in all the seruants of God pag. 99. Doct. 7. Christ must be the Obiect of our faith we must looke vnto him and depend vpon him page 106 Doct. 8. The workes of mercy are especially and aboue before others to be shewed to the poore Saints that are godly 111 Doct. 9. Such as truely beleeue in Christ and belong to him are Saints page 117 Verse 6 and 7. Doct. 1. It is our duty to stir vp our selues and others to encrease in good things page 126 Doct. 2. The guifts which we haue receiued must not lye hid in vs but be employed to the good of others 140 Doct. 3. The goodnesse of God bestowed vpon our selus or others must be published abroad and made known to others page 142 Doct. 4. The spiritual graces of God bestowed vpon others doe giue occasion of ioy to the Saints pa. 147 Doct. 5. The workes of mercie are to bee shewed to the poore distressed Saints page 154 Verse 8 and 9. Doct. 1. The Office of the Pastour and Minister of God is an Office of power and authority vnder christ 163 Doct. 2. Gentle meanes are to bee vsed rather then seuere to perswade men to holy duties page 172 Doct. 3. Superiors in guifts or age or both are to bee reuerenced and regarded aboue others pa. 177. Verse 10. Doct. 1. The least and lowest member conuerted to Christ must not bee contemned or condemned page 184 Doct. 2. The same affection that is betweene the Father and the Sonne ought to be betweene the Minister the people committed vnto him 189 Doct. 3. The preaching of the word is the ordinary meanes and instrument of our conuersion and regeneration page 205 Verse 11. and 12. Doct. 1. Christian religion maketh a man profitable and helpfull vnto others that before hath been iniurious and hurtfull page 227. Doct. 2. In godly religious and reformed families are many times vngodly obstinate and vnreformed persons both Children and Seruaunts page 237 Doct. 3. Former Offences albeit great and heynous vppon true repentance are to bee
that repent had his hart opened and was by Gods blessing conuerted to the Faith became a sound and sincere Christian and performed sundry duties of loue to Paul ministring continually vnto him in the time of his Captiuity as a dutifull Sonne to his spirituall Father But after the Apostle vnderstood that hee was another Mans Seruaunt and belonged vnto him as it were a part of his possession though he found him in his distressed and afflicted estate very profitable comfortable and necessary vnto him yet he would not detaine him from his Mayster to whom by the Word of God by the light of Nature and by the Law of all Nations he appertained Hence it is that hee sent him backe againe to his Maister with this Epistle in which the Apostle dooth by force of reasons and vehemency of words vrge Philemon to entertaine and retaine with him his fugitiue and offensiue Seruant but now greatly altered and throughly changed by the power of Gods word z Psal 19. 7. Which conuerteth the Soule and giueth wisedome vnto the simple as the Prophet teacheth vs. The vses of the former Argument of this Epistle Thus we see how Paule intreateth and obtaineth pardon for Onesimus a Seruant that was conuerted by the preaching of the Apostle which offereth vnto vs diuers good and profitable vses Vse 1. First we see that Christ Iesus reiecteth none that come vnto him how base and simple soeuer they be All such as repent and beleeue the Gospell whether Maisters or Seruants high or low rich or poore are accepted of him who is Lord of all and with whom is no respect of persons A notable comfort to all of low place and meane condition to consider with themselues that howsoeuer the men of this World haue many times no respect vnto them yet they are deare to God and regarded of him who openeth to them the doore of saluation and reserueth for them a Crowne of righteousnesse He appointeth his Word and Sacraments for them as well as for others and hence it is that for the most part the poore receiue the Gospell a Gal. 3 28. There is neither Iew nor Graecian there is neither bond nor free there is neither Male nor Female for ye are all one in Christ Iesus Vse 2. Secondly this instructeth vs not to contemne or despise any how vile soeuer they may seeme in our eyes but to be carefull for their good and to further their conuersion b Mat 18 10. according to the counsell of Christ our Sauiour Math. 18. See that ye despise not one of these little ones for I say vnto you that in Heauen their Angels alwaies behold the Face of my Father which is in Heauen For the Sonne of Man is come to saue that which was lost Many are basely and badly thought off in this World who are in great price and estimation with GOD. Many are wronged and oppressed of Men of whom the high God of Heauen taketh care and charge We are ready to respect the outward face and person of Men but he regardeth the heart God the Father loueth them woe therefore to them that hate them Christ Iesus came to saue and redeeme them woe therefore to all them that seeke to hurt and destroy them It pleaseth God oftentimes to call the Seruant and to let the Maister alone suffering him to perrish in his sinnes This is the cause that the blessed Virgine magnifieth the Lord and that her Spirit reioyceth in God her Sauiour c Luke 1. 52 53. Because he looked on the poore degree of his Seruaunt and had doone great thinges for her Hee pulleth downe the mightie from their Seates and exalteth them of low degree He filleth the hungry with good things and sendeth away the Rich empty Vse 3. Thirdly we learne that no man ought vnder any colour of Religion and pretence of godlinesse to keepe away other mens Seruants from their owne Maisters Paule found the Seruant of Onesimus faithfull to helpe him and forward to Minister vnto him yea he might be bold with Philemon his Mayster yet he would not detaine him with him without his allowance and approbation The Gospell then doth not destroy and disanull the diuers degrees and orders established in the World but rather confirmeth and strengthneth them It alloweth not the Seruant to resist and rise vp against the Maister although hee should be a beleeuer and his Maister an vnbeleeuer or he be a beleeuer as well as his Maister and in knowledge of godlinesse be equall vnto him but teacheth him to obey for conscience sake d 1 Tim. 6 1 2. and to Count his Maister worthy of all honour that the Name of God and his Doctrine be not euill spoken of And they which haue beleeuing Maisters let them not despise them because they are Brethren but rather do seruice because they are faithfull and beloued and partakers of the benefit These things teach and exhort Vse 4. Fourthly we are to marke that the Lord requireth of vs to bee ready to forgiue and forget the wronges and iniuries that are done vnto vs. Let vs put from vs all rancor and mallice and not suffer the Sunne to goe downe vpon our wrath O how e Math. 18 27 great is the mercy of God toward vs How great is our debt toward him Let vs put on the bowels of pitty and compassion forbearing one another and forgiuing one another f Col. 3 13. If any Man haue a quarrell vnto another euen as Christ forgaue euen so doe ye If we come to any of the exercises of our Religion to heare the Word to receiue the Sacraments or to call vpon the Name of God if the Leauen of maliciousnesse haue infected our heartes the word of life is made the sauour of death the Sacraments are made Instruments of Wrath and our Prayers are turned into Sinne. We are taught in our Prayers to aske g Chrysost hom 1. in Philem. forgiuenesse at the hands of God as we our selues performe this duty toward our Brethren The promise of forgiuenesse is made to them that doe forgiue h Mark 11 25 When ye shall stand and pray forgiue if ye haue any thing against any man that your Father also which is in Heauen may forgiue you your trespasses For if ye will not forgiue your Father which is in Heauen will not pardon you your trespasses This accordeth with the precept of Christ Math. 5. If thou bring thy guift to the Altar and there remembrest that thy Brother hath ought against thee i Math. 5 24. Leaue there thine offering before the Altar and goe thy way first be reconciled to thy Brother and then come and offer thy guift If we desire As new borne Babes the sincere Milke of the word that we may grow thereby k 1 Pet. 2 1 2. We must lay aside all maliciousnesse and all guile and dissimulation and enuy and all euill speaking If we would be
doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiuing our owne soules we must l Iam. 1 21. Lay apart all filthinesse and superfluity of maliciousnesse and receiue with meekenesse the word that is grafted in vs which is able to saue our Soules Now we haue in this Epistle m Illyr arg in hanc Epistol a most worthy example of receiuing them that are fallen of forgiuing the penitent of the pardoning of iniuries of ioy for the conuersion of a Sinner Yea we learne not onely to be louers of peace but to be makers of peace as Paul doth betweene the Maister and the Seruant Our Sauiour pronounceth them blessed n Math. 5 9. That are Peace-makers for they shall be called the Children of God We are charged not onely to seeke peace our selues but to make peace with others whereby we beare the liuely Image of God who is called the God of peace we are made like vnto Christ who is our peace and hath reconciled vs vnto his Father Vse 5. Fiftly we are taught to take heede we doe not rashly sit in iudgement vpon any This euill Seruant had picked and purloyned from his Maister and when he had done ranne his waies yet GOD found him out and gaue him repentance when he sought not after God It is a common Prouerb He runneth farre that neuer returneth Christ Iesus calleth some at the leaueth houre as hee did the Theefe that hung with him vpon the Crosse The Apostle chargeth that o 1 Cor. 4 5. We iudge nothing before the time vntill the Lord come who will lighten things that are hidden in darknesse and make the counsels of the heart manifest and then shall euery man haue praise of God And in another place p Rom. 14 4. Who art thou that condemnest another mans seruant He standeth or falleth to his owne Maister All men are in the hand of God and all times and seasons are disposed by him The Husbandman Tilleth the ground and soweth his Corne but it doth not by and by gtow vp The Disciples of Christ heard many things of his mouth which seemed buried and forgotten but the precious fruit thereof appeared plentifullie afterward Let vs not limit vnto God his times and seasons nor goe about to teach him knowledge Paul was a Persecuter of the truth a Blasphemer of God an oppressor of the Church yet in the end he was called by the voyce of Christ Let vs therefore condemne no man nor iudge any rashly least we be iudged Vse 6. Lastly we see euidently as in a Glasse in this Epistle that all that are elected of God to eternall life shal in Gods good time be called effectually to the knowledge of the truth God hath made all things in number waight and measure As no more shall be saued then he hath appointed so not one of them shall bee lost that he hath prepared to be heires of glory God hath many waies to pull them out of the fire whom he will haue saued So many as belong to him he will at one time or other send them and offer them the meanes of their saluation yea when we least of all seeke our owne good and intend our owne conuersion it pleaseth God to call vs and to gather vs into the bosome of the Church The Parable q Math. 20 1. of the Housholder hiring labourers into his Vineyard teacheth that he calleth at all times and houres of the day We see it in the example of Paul when Christ Iesus called vnto him from the Heauens he thought nothing of his owne conuersion but of the Churches subuersion Wee see it in the Penitent Theefe in Manasseth in Mary Magdalen and many others VVe see it in Onesimus in this place Who would haue imagined that this man playing the vile Runna-gate and the false Theefe and departing out of the religious House of godly Philemon which is honoured with the Name of a Church would euer haue turned a new leafe and come to the acknowledgement of the truth who would haue thought that the prodigal Son r Luke 15 24. going from his Father forsaking his Brother wasting his patrimony and spending his strength and wealth vpon Harlots would euer haue seene his owne folly and that it should be said of him My Son was dead and is aliue againe he was lost but he is found This is that which is set downe in the Actes of the Apostles Å¿ Acts 13 48. When the Gentiles heard it they were glad and glorified the word of the Lord and as many as were ordained to eternall life beleeued God is able to make a way for the execution of his purposes and knoweth how to accomplish his decrees Thus much of the circumstances of time and place as also of the Argument of this Epistle Now let vs come to the words 1 Paul a Prisoner of Iesus Christ and Brother Timotheus vnto Philemon our deare friend and fellow helper 2 And to our beloued Apphia and to Archippus our Fellow-Souldier and to the Church that is in thine House The order of the words and interpretation of them In this Epistle we are to consider two thinges First the Praeface in the three first verses Secondly the substance and matter of the Epistle in the rest The Praeface or entrance containeth the inscription or Title in these two verses sundry prayers in the foure verses following The inscription remembreth both the parties writing to wit Paul and Timothy and likewise the persons to whom the Epistle is written Philemon Apphia Archippus and the Church that was in Philemons house These persons as well writing as written vnto are not barely and nakedly set downe but are described by their seuerall notes and titles giuen vnto them wherein are contained seuerall Arguments of perswasion to mooue Philemon to that whereunto he exhorteth and intreateth him And first for himselfe a Captiue and Prisoner hee mooueth him to respect his suit in regard it was the suit of one vnder persecution bound in chaines and kept in thraldome whom he ought to pitty especially seeing he was a Prisoner of Iesus Christ that is not for any bad cause but for the professing and Preaching of the glorious Gospell of Christ Secondly he ioyneth in this suit with him Timothy a Brother nay more then a Brother a famous Euangelist whose commendation was thoroughout all the Churches who with him intreated for his Seruant Moreouer concerning those to whom this Epistle is written first Philemon himselfe is mentioned with whom he presumeth to preuaile both because there is mutuall loue between them louing one another in the truth and Christian Faith and because he is a fellow-helper seeking to promote and further by all good meanes the course of the Gospell in both which respects there should be a neere familiarity and speciall interest one with another Secondly to him he ioyneth Apphia which seemeth to be his Wife both because she hath the second place after Philemon and
to the Hebrews exhorteth thē e Heb. 13 17. To obey them that haue the ouer-sight of them and to submit themselues because they watch for their soules as they that must giue accounts that they may doe it with ioy and not with griefe for that is vnprofitable for them Secondly it teacheth them to account them worthy of their hire and wages to esteeme them worthy of double honor It is a grieuous and a f Iam 5 4. crying sin to keep back the labourers wages to diminish it to grudge at it and to take it to thēselues and it calleth for vengeance entreth into the eares of the Lord of hosts The Ministers are the Lords labourers and workmen hired to labour in this Vineyard to sow to plant to water to prune to dig he hath appointed to them their portion for their maintenance if this therefore be detained from them by In-iustice it cryeth vnto God and bringeth oftentimes his curse vpon vs both in spirituall and temporall thinges In spirituall thinges because he dealeth with vs in heauenly thinges as wee deale with his Ministers in earthly thinges If we detaine from them their maintenance hee will detaine from vs his blessing If we be sparing in giuing them their hire he also will be sparing in bestowing vpon them his graces As we sow so we shall reape In temporall things because God promiseth a blessing to such as pay the Lord his due and threatneth to cursse them that spoile him in his Tithes and offerings This we see in the Prophet Malachi c Mal. 3 8 9 10. where God complaineth of their spoiling and defrauding of him he saith Yee are curssed with a cursse for ye haue spoiled me euen this whole Nation bring ye all the tithes into the Store-house that there may be meate in mine House and prooue mee now heere with saith the Lord of Hoastes if I will not open the Windowes of Heauen vnto you and poure you out a blessing without measure If then wee desire the blessings of God to come vppon vs in spirituall graces or in earthly thinges wee ought not to with-hold the Labourers wages that plough vp our fallow groundes and Till our barren hearts It is a worthy exhortation which the Apostle giueth to the Church of the Thessalonians touching their Ministers d 1 Thes 5 12 We beseech you Brethren that ye acknowledge them which labour among you and are ouer you in the Lord and admonish you that yee haue them in singular loue for their workes sake For seeing the true Pastours of Christ bestowe their labour among vs and consume themselues as the Candle to giue light to others wee ought to shew the bowels of loue and compassion toward them wee ought not to bee wanting vnto them in the fruites of our loue And to the Church that is in thine House c. Hitherto wee haue handled the third person written to namely Archippus together with the description of him to be a Souldier of Christ and a Fellowe-Souldier with the Apostle Now wee are to proceede to the fourth and last which yet remaineth which is a ioyning of many persons together for hee addeth to the former The Church which is in thine House He adorneth the Household and Family of Philemon with the Honourable and renowned Title of a Church This serueth to commend as well Philemon the Maister who had instructed his Family in the Doctrine of godlinesse as also the Houshold it selfe which had beene taught and trained vp by him We see heere a priuate House is called a Church For seeing where two or three are gathered together in the name of Christ e Math. 18 20 he is there in the midst of them euery assembly or meeting of the Saints is called not vnfitly by that Name Philemon to his perpetuall commendation had by his care and industry made of his house a little Church instructing guiding gouerning framing and ordering them in the knowledge and feare of God Doct. 8. It is the duty of all householders to teach their Families We learne from hence that all Housholders ought to prepare instruct and order their Families in the knowledge of God and obedience of godlinesse that the house of the Maister may be the Church of God And that it is the duty of all such as haue the gouernment and ouersight of others to see thē taught and instructed in the waies of God it appeareth by many precepts and examples set forth vnto vs in the Scriptures This is it which Moses gaue in charge to the Israelites f Deut. 6 8 11 19. and 4 10 11. Ye shall lay vp these my words in your harts and in your soule and binde them for a signe vpon your hand that they may be as a frontlet betweene your eies And ye shall teach them your Children speaking of them when thou fittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way and when thou lyest downe and when thou risest vp So the Prophet speaking of the great workes of God wrought for the safety of his people the ouerthrow of their enemies declareth g Psal 78 4 5 6. How he establed a testimony in Iacob and ordained a Law in Israell which he commaunded our Fathers that they should teach their Children that the posterity might know it and the Children which should be borne should stand vp and declare it to their Children that they might set their hope on God and not forget the workes of God but keepe his Commaundements This it is which Salomon speaketh Prouer. 22. 6. d Pro. 22 6. Teach a child in the Trade of his way and when he is old he shall not depart from it Heereunto also agreeth the saying of the Apostle e Ephe. 6 4. Ye Fathers prouoke not your Children to wrath but bring them vp in instruction and information of the Lorde Now as we haue seene sundry precepts pressing vs to the performance of this dutie so wee haue many examples of the godly that haue put it in practise and gone before vs in their obedience Abraham the Father of the faithfull is commended of God for his care and conscience this way Gene. 18. 19. where he saith f Gen. 18 19. I know him that he will commaund his Sonnes and his houshold after him that they keepe the way of the Lorde to doe righteousnesse and iudgement Iob is reported to haue sanctified his Children when the daies of their banqueting were gone about g Iob 1. 5. Hee rose vp early in the Morning and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all Cornelius a Captaine of the Italian band feared h Act. 10 2. ●od with all his Houshold The Parents of Timothy his Grand-mother and Mother brought him vp in the knowledge of the Scriptures of a Child i 2 Tim. 1 5. and 3 15. Which are able to make vs wife vnto saluation through the Faith which is in Christ
vs and the Gulfe of his wrath ready to swallow vs we shall cry out for one drop of Grace for one drop of Faith for one drop of comfort to refresh our pining Soules and to deliuer vs from the shaddow of death Now is the time to desire and seeke after grace if we let slip the present occasion offered vnto vs we shall afterward cry out for it and complaine of the want of it and yet shall neuer attaine vnto it Thus was it with the rich Man when he entreated Abraham to haue mercy on him and to send Lazarus that he might dip the tip of his Finger in Water to coole his tongue beeing tormented in that Flame Abraham answered Sonne remember that thou in thy life time receiuedst thy pleasures and likewise Lazarus paines now therefore hee is comforted and thou art tormented Thus was it with the foolish Virgins who slumbred and slept and regarded not to procure and prouide Oyle h Mat. 25 10 11. for their Lampes for when the Bridegroome was come and had shut the Gate they cryed in vaine Lord Lord open vnto vs who receiued their answere Verily I say vnto you I know you not Thus it shall be with those in the last day which shall say i Math. 7 22. Lord Lord haue we not in thy Name prophesied And by thy Name cast out Deuils And by thy Name done many great workes For then hee will professe vnto them he neuer knew them depart from me ye workers of iniquity So shall it be with those that haue neglected the time and passed ouer the opportunity k Luke 14 25 26. who begin to say Lord open vnto vs we haue eaten and drunke in thy presence and thou hast taught in our Streets to whom he shall say I know you not whence ye are Let vs all be wise and beware by their examples that we do not delay the time from day to day Let vs craue this guift of God that we may haue it in time of neede and in the houre of tentation If now while we haue time we shall desire and labour to obtaine grace wee shall not neede heereafter to stand in feare of Death or to cry out through horror and despaire O that I had one drop of Faith O that I had one drop of Grace Vse 2. Secondly seeing grace is in the first place aboue and before all other blessings to be desired and required at the handes of God let vs learne the high-way and enter into the beaten path that leadeth to this Grace and when wee haue learned it let vs walke in it in a constant and setled course Now the steppes l Three steps leading vs to finde Gods grace that wee must make to trace it and finde it out are these The first degree or steppe is to dislike our selues and to bee in disgrace with our selues Euery man naturally is in loue with himselfe and his owne shadow But wee must cast off this selfe-loue that cleaueth so fast and hangeth on and learne to know our selues and to hate our selues No man can magnifie Gods mercy sufficiently vntill hee attaine to the knowledge of his owne misery Daniell a man gratious and dearely beloued of GOD acknowledged this in his prayer and as it were ascendeth into the presence of God by this steppe m Dan. 9 7 8. O Lord righteousnesse belongeth vnto thee and vnto vs open shame as appeareth this day to our Kings to our Princes to our Fathers and vnto euery Man of Iudah because we haue sinned against thee This was the course that the Prodigall Sonne tooke and the way that he entred g Luke 15 21 Father I haue sinned against Heauen and before thee and am no more worthy to bee called thy Sonne Thus did the poore Publican insinuate himselfe into the grace of God and departed iustifyed in his sight he smote his breast saying h Luke 18 13 Lord be mercifull to me a Sinner To be proud and puffed vp with our owne righteousnesse and to trust in our owne wisedome is the fore-runner of a fall The second step to obtaine grace is after we haue felt this want and misery in our selues wee must not rest there but earnestly desire and inwardly hunger and thirst after the loue and fauour of God in Christ aboue all earthly thinges First we must feele our selues empty before our Soules can haue this hunger Our Sauiour describing true blessednesse to his Disciples and shewing wherein it consisteth contrary to the iudgement of the World hee saith i Math. 5 3 6. Blessed are the poore in Spirit that is that know themselues poore that feele themselues poore and voide of righteousnesse and then he addeth Blessed are they which hunger and thirst after righteousnesse for they shall be filled We must k Iohn 6 27. and 4 14. hunger after the meat that neuer perisheth wee must thirst after that Well of Water which springeth vp vnto euerlasting life If wee neuer hunger after grace we shall neuer haue grace The whole desire l Math. 9 12. not the Phisition but they that are sicke They m Iohn 9 41. which thinke they see are made blind and their sinne remaineth Lastly it is required of vs to lay hould by the hand of a true Faith vpon the grace and mercy of God in Christ Iesus offered vnto all of vs in the promises of the Gospell generally and learne to apply them to our selues particularly Christ calleth those n Mat. 11 28. that are weary and heauy laden promising to ease end refresh them In the last and great day of the Feast Iesus stood and cryed saying o Iohn 7 37. If any man thirst let him come vnto me and drinke He teacheth p Mark 16 16 That he that shall beleeue and be Baptized shall be saued These are generall promises these require particular application Wee cannot receiue them into our hearts and make them our owne except we lay houlde of them by a speciall Faith This liuely Faith bringeth Christ home to vs and openeth the doores of our Soules to entertaine him If then we feele our owne miserie if we hunger after mercie and if wee apply the promises of the Gospell to vs particularly we shall be assured to finde the grace of God and tast plentifully and abundantly of his loue So many as truely desire grace must looke to attaine it by these meanes and climb vp to the top of it by these steps and degrees as by certaine staires Vse 3. Thirdlie seeing grace is first of all to bee craued it directeth vs to obserue and keepe a good order in seeking and crauing thinges at the hands of God We are taught first to seeke his grace and fauour as the roote and Fountaine and then peace welfare and other blessings He that will receiue fruit from the tree must come to the roote and body before he can come to the braunches so if we would haue peace health
their confusion If any thing may be accounted theirs it is t Dan. 12 2. Math. 13 42. destruction of their Soules confusion of their faces contempt of their persons horrour of their consciences the company of the Deuils the tormenting of their bodies the feeling of Gods wrath and the separation from his presence and glory all these shall indeede be theirs and wholly theirs and onely theirs and alway theirs when their secret sinnes and wickednesse shall bee reueiled Then they shall call to the Hils to couer them and try to the Mountaines to keepe them from the sight of God from the seat of his iudgement and from the fiercenesse of his wrath and indignation And as the Apostle teacheth concerning the godly as we shewed before that all things worke for the best to them so we may truely teach on the contrary that to those which loue not the Lord nor the Lord them all thinges turne to their destruction and further their condemnation the Word the Sacraments and all other exercises of Religion u Deut. 32 15 and 2● 4. as we see in the Israelites and in Iudas whom no instructions could conuert no miracles could mooue no meanes could profit or bring to repentance If a man had any suit in some Princes Court to make or a supplication to put vp and there should finde the Prince the Peeres the Nobles the Commons and all men set against him to crosse him and contradict him to resist and gaine-say him his case would be iudged of all men to bee most miserable but thus the case standeth with all euill and vngodly men that stand in neede of God and of good men and of all Gods Creatures yet shall haue no releefe or refreshing from them God will deny them Christ wil not know them the Spirit will not comfort them the Angels will not guard them the Prayers of the Church will not help them the Gospell shall not pardon them the Sacraments shall not strengthen them the Beasts shall not spare them the Creatures shall not sustaine them And if they shall peraduenture finde any comfort or consolation in them yet what would that auaile them when their owne conscience within their owne breasts should arraigne them as a Malefactor conuince them as a witnesse condemne them as a Iudge and torment them as an Executioner This we see in the example of Caine when hee had made a breach and wound in his conscience he could rest no where he could abide in no place he stood in feare of euery Creature he cryed out x Ge. 4 13 14 My punishment is greater then I can beare Behold thou hast cast me out of this day from the Earth and from thy face shall I be hid and shall be a Vagabond and a Runnagate in the Earth and whosoeuer findeth me shall slay me In this State and condition doe all the Reprobate and vnregenerate stand they shall finde no peace in any Creature in Heauen and Earth and their owne conscience as a thousand witnesses shall torture and torment them And if any time they seeme to haue peace and to finde rest their peace is a false and deceitfull peace They laugh sometimes but it is from the teeth outward and in mirth the heart is heauy They haue riches but they are as Vsurpers and as Theeues haue them who shall come to be arraigned and condemned for them Their outward estate seemeth happy but it is most slippery and vncertaine when they say peace peace then commeth sudden destruction as the paine vpon a Woman in trauaile But the righteous howsoeuer they seeme many times miserable in trouble and destitute of all good thinges do indeede want nothing which God seeth to be for his glory and their good they haue that true peace which our Sauiour promiseth to leaue with them and to bestow vpon them y Iohn 14 27. Peace I leaue with you my peace I giue vnto you not as the world giueth giue I vnto you let not your hart be troubled nor feare Marke then the difference betweene the godly and the vngodly the condition of the godly is in shew miserable but indeede most blessed z 2 Cor. 6 9. They are as vnknowne and yet knowne as dying behold they liue as chastned and yet not killed as sorrowing and yet alway reioycing as poore and yet making many rich as hauing nothing and yet possessing all thinges On the other side the condition of the wicked is in shew blessed and happy but indeede and in truth most wretched lamentable and miserable Their laughter is madnesse their peace is vnquietnesse their ioy is sorrow of heart and the end thereof is heauinesse To this purpose the Wise-man saith a Pro. 14 12 15. There is away that seemeth right to a man but the issues thereof are the waies of death So then howsoeuer the vngodly eate and drinke sing and daunce iest and talke of vaine thinges howsoeuer they labour to auoid greefe and put away the euill day farre from them howsoeuer they passe away the time merily and liue as if they had made a Couenant with death yet they cannot be in quiet and rest for they haue an Hang-man and Tormentor within them from whose hands they cannot be deliuered to wit their conscience which doth checke them and terrifie them before the iudgement seat of God although they striue to make themselues beleeue that there is neither God not Deuill neither heauen nor hell neither saluation nor damnation Thvs much of the blessings craued in this saluation From God our Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ Now we come to consider from whence these guifts come and who is the Author of them to wit from God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost So then these graces heere intreated are craued and wished from the blessed Trinity distinguished into three persons Doctrine 3. All blessings are to be craued from God alone in christ Iesus Wee learne from hence that all good things of what sort soeuer either for obtaining blessings or auoiding iudgements are to be intreated and requested from God All thinges temporall and eternall are to be asked and begged from that one God which is reueiled vnto vs by the Scripture in the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost When Isaac purposed and prepared a Gen. 27 28. to blesse his Sonne Iacob and to pronounce what blessings should come vpon him and his posterity hee said God giue thee of the Dew of Heauen and of the fatnesse of the Earth and of the plenty of Wheat and Wine God gaue this forme to Aaron and his Sonnes of blessing the Children of Israell b Num. 6 24 25. The Lord blesse thee and keepe thee the Lord make his face shine vpon thee and be mercifull vnto thee the Lord lift vp his countenance vpon thee and giue thee peace The Booke of the Psalmes doth plentifully offer this truth vnto vs in the practise of Dauid and other the deare
contrary to the Doctrine deliuered by himselfe contrary to the rest of the holy Scriptures and contrary to the Articles of our Faith Contrarie to himselfe because he teacheth i Rom. 10 13 14. that we cannot call vpon any whom we do not know out of Gods word and beleeue to be both able and willing to help vs saying Whosoeuer shall call on the Name of the Lord shall be saued how then shall they call on him on whom they haue not beleeued Where he reasoneth thus that we must beleeue onely in God and therefore pray onely to God Hee should be contrary to other Scriptures because we are k Heb. 4 16. taught by them To come with boldnesse to the Throne of Grace therefore the inuocation of Saints is vaine and needlesse seeing we haue a free accesse and bold approching vnto God through Christ againe they are l Ier. 17 5. Curssed that trust in man and make flesh their Arme and so with-draw their heart from the Lord. Christ calleth vs vnto himselfe and commaunded m Iohn 16 20 vs to aske the Father in his Name for the Father himselfe loueth vs. He should be contrary to the Articles of Faith wherein we are taught to beleeue onely in God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost Againe such as are not obstinately blinded and peruersely disposed may easily distinguish the Apostles words and see that he referreth not Faith both to Christ and the Saints but Faith to Iesus Christ and loue to the Saints For after that he had commended Philemon for two chiefe guifts of God Faith and Loue in both which consist the perfection of a Christian man he assigneth to eyther of them their propper subiect namely that Faith is in our Lord Iesus Christ and Charity is toward all the Saints which distinction and diuerse Relation may appeare by the Latine Interpretour and by their owne Rhemish Translation altering the preposition and reading it thus n In Iesu Christo in omnes Sanctos Loue and Faith in Iesus Christ and toward all the Saints Thirdly the Apostle else-where hauing occasion to mention these two graces of God he doth describe them distinctly by their seuerall obiectes and expresly referreth Faith to Christ and loue to the Saints o Ephe. 1 15. Col. 1 3 4. as writing to the Ephesians he saith Therefore also after that I hear of the Faith which ye haue in the Lord Iesus and loue toward all the Saints I cease not to giue thankes for you making mention of you in my prayers So in the Epistle to the Colossians We giue thankes to God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ alway praying for you since we heard of your faith in Christ Iesus and of your loue toward all Saints Compare these two places with the words of Paule in this place and wee shall see they serue as a Key to open this and doe vtter that plainely which here is spoken more darkely Thus we see by the way that the Scripture is the best Expositer and Interpretour of the Scripture p August lib. 2 de doctr Christ cap. 6. and that which is spoken obscurely in one Book is made euident and manifest in another Fourthly it were not hard to produce and alledge sundry authorities and testimonies of elder times thus distinguish the words as we doe and auouching that no Faith and confidence is to be put in any of the Saints q Theodoret Ambrose Theophylact as if the Apostle had saide I know how great Faith thou hast reposed in our Lord which hath saued vs and with how great Charity thou hast releeued them that are the Seruants of God and esteeme godlines Lastly Faith in the Saints cannot bee prooued and inuocation of them established and grounded from hence because the Apostle speaketh of the Saints liuing not departed in the Church Militant not Triumphant the Saints on Earth not in Heauen For the Saints on Earth want our help and craue our releefe to be extended toward them but they that are in glory and haue receiued their Crowne doe not stand in neede of our comfort and refreshing and therefore this is a weake foundation to builde the Popish Faith and beleefe in Saints that are dead and departed out of this life seeing the Apostle vnderstandeth it of one sort and they take it and stretch it to another The third question answered The third question is this why the Apostle restraineth Philemons loue to the Saints whereas loue is a common debt that we owe to all men as the Apostle saith r Rom. 13 8. Owe nothing to any Man but to loue one another for hee that loueth another hath fulfilled the Law Seeing therefore loue should not be restrained to the Saints as though we ought to shut vp our bowels of pitty and compassion from others and seeing we are not to despise our owne flesh but honour the Image of God engrauen in our Nature how is it that his loue which ought to comprehend all mankind and enlarge it selfe to all others is onelie mentioned to haue beene toward the distressed Saints and Members of the Church The reason is they which are of the Houshold of Faith are tyed to vs by a stronger and straighter band of friendship and familiarity and God commendeth them vnto vs more particularlie and so they ought to challenge the first place in declaring the fruits of our loue The Apostle doth direct vs to this point when he saith Å¿ Gal. 6 10. While we haue time let vs doe good vnto al men but especially to them which are of the Houshold of Faith We are charged to loue all but we must loue the Saints with a peculiar and speciall loue euen as heires with Christ and Members of the same body with vs. God requireth of vs to loue al men as his Creatures but the godly as his Children Though therefore our loue should be common and extend it selfe farre and neere into all the world yet there should bee certaine degrees and an order in our loue should be obserued We are commaunded to loue all but we are not commaunded to loue all alike We are bound to loue the godly and vngodlie but we are not bound to loue the vngodly as the godly the Reprobates as the elect the Vessels of wrath as the Vessels of honour the Children of Belial as the Children of God We are therefore heere directed whom we are most neerely and deerly to loue euen those that haue Christ dwelling in their harts and grace shining in their faces Contrary to the practise of worldly Men who onely loue such as are of this World their loue is like themselues prophane men a prophane loue carnall men a carnall loue they loue euill men for their euill because they partake with them in euill they hate the godly for their godlinesse because they are vnlike them and will not runne with them into all excesse of ryot t Psal 38
20. according to that which the Prophet hath They that reward euill for good are mine enemies because I follow goodnesse This agreeth with that which Christ told and taught his Disciples u Iohn 15 19. If ye were of the world the world would loue his owne but because ye are not of the World but I haue chosen you out of the World therefore the World hateth you Thus much touching the deciding of the doubts and answering of the questions that arise out of these two verses Now let vs come to the obseruations that arise therein Obseruations out of these verses The wordes beeing interpreted and diuers questions answered let vs see what points offer themselues fitly to bee deserued First he beginneth with a thanksgiuing to teach that it is meete and necessary to giue thanks to God for benefits receiued at his hands according to the Doctrine of the Apostles x 1 Thes 5 18 In all thinges giue thankes for this is the will of God in Christ Iesus Wee are ready to forget such mercies as we haue receiued and thereby make our selues vnworthy of further fauour Secondly consider to whom he giueth thankes to God not to any Saint or Angell or any Creatu●… to guide vs in the performance of this duty Thirdly marke the person for whom for Philemon so that wee are not onely bound to giue thankes for our selues but for other especially when we see Gods word to bring forth fruit in the hearts of Men. Thus doth Paule in this place reioyce for the godlinesse of Philemon and euery where in his Epistles sheweth himselfe exceeding glad for the conuersion of Nations and people to the Faith Thus the Church of the Iewes y Gal. 1 23. are said to glorifie God when they heard of Paules conuersion This is the dutie of all Christians specially of the Ministers to pray continually for the Flock committed vnto them and to praise the name of God for their increase in godlinesse Fourthly obserue that first he mentioneth his thanks-giuing then his praiers for him so that he ioyneth the one with the other Whereby we see that prayers conceiued for our selues or others are not to bee seuered from giuing of thankes For no man is so perfect in this life but be hath neede of dailie encrease in grace and therefore we must so giue thankes for our Bretheren to God in regard of the graces of his spirit which they haue receiued that wee also pray incessantly for their growth in those graces Besides no man standeth so firmely rooted and grounded in grace but hee may fall and by his fall haue his guifts lessened and diminished vnlesse he be strengthened and stayed vp by the meanes and helpes that God hath appointed among the which are Prayers both our owne and others Fiftly hee saith his Faith and loue were heard off and spread abroad farre and neere so that wee see Gods graces bestowed vpon vs will not be hidden and concealed We are set as vpon a Theater to be seene all mens eies are fixed vpon vs all Mens mouths will bee opened to speake of vs z Rom. 1 8. 1 Kin. 18 13. and all mens eares will listen what they can heare of vs euen then when they are absent from vs. On the otherside what euill soeuer we commit wee cannot conceale and couer we haue many eies vpon vs we shall haue a thousand eares to hearken and ten thousand mouths to prattle against vs so that we must so walke as we saw many with vs and many saw vs how we walke Sixtly wee see heere a notable difference betweene vnfained praise and fained flattery The Apostle without any faining and fawning rehearseth in this place the commendation of Philemon a 1 Thes 1 ● 2 13 5 6. as he doth in other places of the whole Churches thereby to encourage them in well doing and to stirre them vp to continue fast and faithfull to the death and to hasten to the end of the race set before them But such as flatter and vse colourable wordes are wholy at the becke of others extolling and admiring whatsoeuer they doe or speake whether it deserue praise or dispraise It standeth vs vpon to consider whom we praise and wherefore we praise them that it be for such good thinges as appeare to be in them I giue thankes to my God c. The Apostle finding and hearing of the excellent and worthy graces of God that were in Philemon was mooued with great ioy and thereby stirred vp to blesse and praise the Lord God Doct. 1. Men ought to take cause of great ioy to see others grow and proceed in good things We learne from hence that al Christians especially Teachers are greatly to reioyce and praise God when they see or know or heare that professors prosper and grow forward in heauenly graces It is a matter of great ioy and comfort to see men grow in graces as they doe in yeares and to encrease in heauenly things as they multiply their daies When the Prophet Dauid saw the forwardnesse of the people in offering willingly vnto the Lord with a perfect heart for the building of the Temple l 1 Chron. 29 10. He reioyced exceedingly and blessed the Lord before all the Congregation And Psal 122. I reioyced m Psal 122 1. when they said vnto me Come let vs goe into the house of the Lord. The Apostle writing to the Romanes giueth thankes through Iesus Christ for them all n Rom. 1 8. Because their Faith was published throughout the whole world When the Churches of Iudea heard that Paule a Persecuter was conuerted to the Faith and made a Preacher of the Faith which before he destroyed o Gal. 1 22 23 They glorified God for him The Apostle Iohn writing to an elect Lady whom he loued in the truth saith p 2 Iohn 4 3 Iohn 3 4. I reioyced greatly that I found of thy Children walking in truth as we haue receiued a Commaundement of the Father And writing to Gaius he saith I reioyced greatly when the Brethren came and testified of the truth that is in thee how thou walkest in the truth I haue no greater ioy then these to heare that my Sonnes walke in veritie By these seuerall places alleadged as by so many witnesses produced wee see that it is our duty greatly to reioyce when we behold the Gospell flourish and the professors of the Gospell grow forward in good things Reason 1. And there are many reasons to warrant and confirme this Doctrine First it serueth exceedingly to aduance the glory of God that men grow in godlinesse which ought to be an effectuall reason to mooue vs to reioyce for what is there that should more cheere and reioyce vs then when Gods Name is magnified and his truth extolled among the Sonnes of Men. In all things that we doe if we doe them aright we should ayme at Gods glorie Now as the Name of GOD is
eye-sore vnto our selues Such as are dull and backe-ward themselues cannot abide those that are forward They that are ignoraunt thinke all others to haue too much knowledge They that are cold and slothfull in the matters of God do carpe and cauill at the zeale which they see in others and thinke them to bee too hasty too earnest too praecise Hence it is that oftentimes the Husband checketh the Wife the Father controuleth the Sonne and one Friend tebuketh another as running too fast and shooting beyond the marke Howsoeuer this is not greatly to bee feared in our daies wherein few runne at all many stand still wherein fewe shoot at the marke yet if it were so it is better to be a little too forward then to bee too backward to haue a little too much zeale then to be stark cold as many or luke-warme as the most are We see this in the state of a mans bodie it is easier to worke an euacuation of that which is too much then to procure a restitution of that which is too little It is an easier cure to purge our grosse superfluous humours when they abound then to repayre and restore Nature when it is decaying and consuming It is much easier to take away the sharpnesse of an edge tool then to set a sharp edge on that which is blunt dulled It is easier to pull downe a part of the building which is ouer-much then to lay a new foundation If there be one among vs that seeketh to be too iust and aymeth at a righteousnes aboue the Law there are a thousand that come too short and fayle in that which is required of them It is a most blessed thing to keepe the Golden meane betweene too much and too little It is easier to bring him that is in the excesse to the meane then to reduce him to the meane that is in the defect When a man lyeth dead in sinnes and trespasses and hath no sparke of the life of God in him to bring such an one to true godlinesse is as it were to raise him from the dead When a man lieth languishing and consuming by little and little and all good things begin to decay in him so that he is growne starke cold nothing is harder then to restore such a one it is as much as to worke a wonder and miracle But when our zeale is growne to be a little too hot and our edge made somewhat too sharpe it requireth no great labour it asketh no great paines to reduce vs backe againe and to make vs returne home the way by which we went There is no cause therefore that wee should so rashly and out-ragiously beare our selues toward those that climbe vp a step too high and beare them-selues a little too forward let vs rather examine our selues and consider whether we do not our selues many wayes faile of our duties so that wee may say and say truely we are vnprofitable seruants Let vs neuer enuy or grudge at the good of others remembering alwayes that what grace soeuer is graunted to one member is giuen to the whole bodie and to euerie particular member of the body As he that doth good to the eye doth good to the whole body the benefite redowndeth to the hand and foot Thus it is in the mystical bodie of Christ a Rom. 12 5. Wee being many are one bodie in Christ and euerie one one anothers Members Wee see in the Actes of the Apostles b Acts 11 18. when the Disciples had heard that Peter was called and warned by an Heauenly Vision to preach to Cornelius and other Gentiles they helde their peace and glorifyed God saying Then hath God also to the Gentiles graunted Repentance vnto life Thus much of the Ioy and Thankes-giuing of the Apostle Now let vs see to whom hee gaue thankes set downe in the next wordes I giue thankes to my God Heere is the first illustration of the Apostles Thankesgiuing declaring to whome it is made to wit to God The Apostle giuing Thankes and praising God hee calleth him his God He saith not simply I giue thankes to God but particularly I giue thankes to my God He calleth him his God and applyeth the promises of the gospel made to all that beleeue peculiarly and especially to himselfe Doctrine 2. It is the nature of faith to apply the promises and mercies of God to our owne selues Whereby we see for our instruction that the nature and property of a true and liuely faith is to aprehend and apply God and his promises particularly to our selues It is a duty required of vs to labor for that faith which may be as an hand to lay holde on the mercies of God and to appropriate them vnto our selues This we see in the vow of Iacob a Gen. 28 21. If God wil be with me and wil keep me in this iourny which I go and wil giue me Bread to eate cloaths to put on so that I come againe vnto my Fathers house in safety then shal the Lord be my God This speciall application we see oftentimes in Dauid b Psal 22. 1. 104 1. My God my God why hast thou forsaken me And againe O Lord my God thou art exceeding great The same appeareth in Thomas one of the twelue when Christ who will not breake the bruised Reed nor quench the smoaking Flaxe had respect to the weakenesse of his Fayth and bad him see the print of the Nayles in his handes and put his Finger into his side hee cryed out c Iohn 20 28. Thou art my Lord and my God This Christ practiseth himselfe and teacheth others when he sayde to Mary d Iohn 20 17. Touch me not for I am not yet ascended to my Father but go to my Bretheren and say vnto them I ascend vnto my Father and to your Father and vnto my God and to your God The Apostle Paule speaking of Christ and the benefites which he reapeth by him saith e Gal. 2 20. I am crucified with Christ but I liue yet not I any more but Christ liueth in me and in that I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith in the sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me And in another place f 1 Tim. 1 12. I thanke him which hath made mee strong that is Christ our Lord for he counted me faithfull and put me in his seruice All these consents of the holy Scriptures serueth to confirme vs in this truth that true Fayth standeth in a particular applying of the generall promises of the Gospell Reason 1. The Reasons will make this yet more manifest vnto vs. For first euerie one that shall bee saued must haue a particular Faith of his owne and not satisfie himselfe with the Faith of another No man can be saued by another mans beleeuing no more then be nourished by another mans feeding The Prophet Habbakuk teacheth this point euidently saying g
of that which is past the other of that which is to come That which is past is our election from euerlasting before the foundation of the worlde was laide that which is to come is our perseuerance and persistance vnto the end of our dayes yet wee see the Apostle professeth some knowledge nay perswasion of them both which is grounded vpon the graces of God bestowed vpon those that are his The more excellent these graces are in quality the more they are in number the greater they are in quantity the better Testimony they giue vnto men and the surer iudgement ariseth from them vnto such as haue them Reason 2. Secondly God hath giuen praise and glory as an vnseperable companion of godlinesse and goodnesse and on the other side he hath appointed and allotted shame to follow sinne He hath ioyned these together to wit glorie with piety and shame with iniquity These drawe together as it were in one yoake so that one cannot be without the other The Apostle speaking of the vngodly saieth i Phil. 3. Their glorie shall be to their shame Seeing therefore the graces of Gods spirite are Testimonies of election and Companions of praise and glory we must from hence conclude that the good giftes of God that are found in vs make vs accepted of God and man Vse 1. The Vses follow to be considered and learned of vs. First seeing faith in Christ and loue toward the Saints giue vs a good report in the Church and lay vp a good foundation for vs in heauen we see that onely godly men haue a good name and euill men shall leaue an euill name behinde them This is one difference betweene the godly and vngodly the godly as hee leadeth a godly and sanctified life so he leaueth behinde him a good report wherby he smelleth sweetly in the Nostrils of God and man But the vngodly as they dishonour God in their liues so he will dishonour them in their persons and names and reward them with confusion of faces This is it which the Prophet k Es 65 14 15 threatneth in the name of God Behold my seruaunts shall sing for ioy of heart and ye shall cry for sorrow of heart and shall howle for vexation of mind ye shall leaue your name as a curse vnto my chosen for the Lord God shall slay you and call his seruants by another name There is a praise and commendation which turneth to shame and infamy to woe and misery and againe there is a shame and reproach that bringeth glory and praise with it This our Sauiour teacheth l Luk 6 26 22 Woe be to you when all men speake well of you for so did their fathers to the false Prophets but blessed are you when men hate you and when they separate you and reuile you and put out your name as euill for the son of mans sake It seemeth to many that looke with an eye of flesh and iudge with corrupt iudgement that the righteous are forgotten and their names buried as in the graue of silence they seeme aboue all other wretched and miserable because no man reuengeth the wrongs and iniuries that are offred vnto thē yet God in the end will maintaine their cause and giue them good estimation with all good men On the other side howsoeuer the vngodly flourish for a season and are famous in the world howsoeuer they are praised of others and praise themselues with their owne mouths yet their names shal be filthy and abhominable according to that which Salomon sayeth m Prou. 10 7. The memoriall of the iust shall be blessed but the name of the wicked shall rot This ouerthroweth three sorts of men that offend and esteeme not of men according to their faith and profession The first reproofe First such as slander the godly and bring vp an euil report of the faithful people of God such as reuile them and seeke to take away their good name from them which is a Iewell more precious then Siluer and Gold But we shall lesse esteeme what they speake if we consider who they are that spake For the witnesse of an enemy is by no Law to bee taken but alwayes to bee suspected The second reproofe Secondly such as magnifie and aduance the vngodly giue them the praise and applause of the world speake well of them as of the onely honest men that deserue to be commended But so long as they liue in sinne their owne wickednesse doth testifie to their faces and their vngodly heartes proclaime their owne shame and shall bring vpon them vtter confusion Let this be written and engrauen in our mindes that vngodlines will bring a blot and leaue a reproach behind it The third reproofe Lastly it conuinceth such as are Ciuill men that can say they are not Drunkardes they are not adulterers they are not Theeues they lead an honest life they pay all men their owne they are ready to pleasure their friendes they deale iustly with their Neighboures these men haue a good liking of themselues and are accounted the onely men among others For this ciuill honest man is reputed the onely honest man But a man may do all this and be a Pharisie yea no better in the sight of God then a Turke and infidell He may carry the countenance and haue the report of such a liuer and yet smell strongly and sauour rankely in the Nostrils of God of ignorance of vnbeleefe of pride and of selfe-loue If we would deserue true praise indeed we must not rest in these outward practises and in this morall ciuility we must plant Religion in our hearts wee must haue a sound Faith in Christ we must know the Doctrine of the Gospel we must worship God aright This the Apostle setteth downe as a rule to direct vs in our praising of men m Rom. 2. 28. 29. He is not a Iew which is one outward neither is that circumcision which is outward in the Flesh but he is a Iew which is one within and the Circumcision is of the heart in the spirit not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God It is the commendation of Dauid that he was a man after Gods owne heart It is the commendation of Iob n Iob. 1. 1. 2 3. that he was an vpright and iust man one that feared God and eschewed euill It is the commendation of Zachary and Elizabeth o Luke 1. 6. that they were both iust before God and walked in all the commandements and Ordinances of the Lord without reproofe If a man be void and destitute of this piety he can receiue no comfort by his ciuility and albeit he haue the estimation of an honest man it shall auaile him nothing vnlesse withall he be a Religious man and if our praise be neuer so great for our externall dealing toward men it shall minister no profit vnto vs except we shew inward deuotion toward God Vse 2.
at home Fot it is their Religion that is a broaching of lies and of all liberty to do euill as all men by the light of Nature not blinded with the loue of error might soone espy Behold therefore some kinds of their Catholick Faith taught by their holy Mother the Church They teach the lawfulnesse of deposing Princes and discharging their Subiects of their allegeance and obedience toward them This Doctrine filleth Kingdomes and Countreyes with Treasons and Rebellions and alloweth Traitours and Assassinates and Murtherers of them at the Popes pleasure They doo teach and allowe the worship of Images and bowing downe to Stockes and Stones whereby the people are drawne away from the liuing God to palpable Idolatry as common experience hath declared o Polid. Virg. de inuent rer lib. 6 cap. 13. and some of themselues haue confessed They publish at large the benefit of Pardons which may easily be procured for money which open wide the Flood-gates of al vngodlynesse For who will spare to commit sinne that is able to redeeme it with his purse Yea this emboldned certaine p Chemni exam conc Trident de poenit men to rob the Popes pardoner who before hand had giuen them a pardon to commit the next sinne though it should bee a great sinne They teach touching the Sacrament of the Lordes Supper that a Dogge or Mouse or Swine or any Beast eating a consecrated host eateth the very flesh and bodie of our Sauiour q Treatise of the Sacram. in the conclusion as I haue shewed else-where They maintaine the filthy Dunghill of Stewes and Brothell-houses which giueth allowance vnto open whoredome and vncleannesse yea they say it is good for a r Hard. against the Apology Common-wealth and the Pope tollerateth the Curtezans in Rome and in other places vpon a yearly rent to practise and professe Bawdry Vnto this rablement of their Catholicke conclusions Å¿ See White of the way to the true Church we might adde many others which suffice to discouer what the holinesse of the Romish Religion is and to direct vs to come out of it betimes least partaking with the same sinnes we also partake in the punishments The second reproofe Secondly this coniunction of these two Vertues ouerthroweth the carnall loosenesse of all Libertines such as are Hypocrites and vaine boasters of Faith which thinke it sufficient to speake of Faith and to boast that they beleeue These men doth the Apostle Iames plainly reproue in his Epistle teaching that where there is want of works t 1 Tim. 1 5. there is also want of Faith of a true Faith which is the right Faith Wee must therefore examine our Faith by the fruits and prooue our beleeuing by our working We haue many such in our daies that glorie of their Faith and boast that they are of a right beleefe and yet lay them to the triall and examine their liues what they are and we shall finde them to be lyars against the truth and deceiuing their owne soules Knowe therefore that our faith is as our liues are A good life a good Faith a dead life a dead Faith an vnfruitfull life an ydle Faith And thus much of Faith and Loue ioyned together Now let vs speake of them seuerally as they are described first touching Faith and afterward touching Loue. Faith in Christ The first Vertue which is heere commended to bee in Philemon is Faith which is saide to respect Christ This Faith is a guift of God whereby we apprehend Christ and his benefits beleeuing the remission of our sinnes and our reconciliation with God Marke therefore that the faith heere set forth is saide to be toward Christ and Christ who is the proper obiect of Faith dooth also point vs vnto the Father who willeth and ordaineth our Saluation Redemption Reconciliation and Saluation and to the holy-Holy-Ghost who applyeth and appropriateth to the elect these benefits which are willed by the Father and merrited by Christ Doctrine 7. Christ is the obiect of our Faith So then when the Apostle saith of Philemon that his faith was in Christ hee teacheth that true faith looketh vnto Christ dependeth vpon him trusteth and resteth in him for saluation and not vpon any creature in heauen or earth Our faith must direct vs to Christ to beleeue in him to haue recourse to him and to looke for saluation from him as the Israelites did health from the Brazen serpent This is proued vnto vs by many consents of the word of God The Apostle Iohn in his Gospell a Iohn 1 12. 3 16 17 20 6 29. 3 14 15 and 12 44 46. and 14 12. offereth plentifull Testimonies of the truth as Chap. 1 12. As many as receiued him to them he gaue prerogatiue to be the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue in his name And Chap. 3. God so loued the world that hee hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life And again Chap. 17. I pray not for these alone but for them also which shall beleeue in me through their word So before in the third Chapter As Moses lift vp the Serpent in the Wildernesse so must the sonne of man be lift vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue eternall life Thus he speaketh in another place This is the worke of God that ye beleeue in him whom he hath sent When Phillip saide to the Eunuch If thou beleeuest with all thine heart thou mayst be baptized He answered b Acts 8 37. 16 31. I beleeue that Iesus Christ is that sonne of God So Paule and Silas willed the Keeper of the prison to beleeue in the Lord Iesus Christ and he should he saued And the Apostle Gal. 2. teacheth That a man is not iustified by the Workes of the Lawe c Gal. 2 16. but by the faith of Iesus Christ euen we I say haue beleeued in Iesus Christ that we might be iustified by the Faith of Christ All these places of Scripture plainly instruct vs in this principle of our holy religion that Faith must be in Christ in whom it findeth a sure ground to rest vpon Reason 1. The Reasons are to be marked and considered which confirme this Doctrine First because the worke of saluation is wholly and onely wrought by him and no part thereof is reserued to any creature in whole or in part To be called Iesus is as it were the proper name of Christ who is a perfect and absolute Sauiout beginning continuing and finishing our saluation This is it d Acts 4 12. which Peter preacheth Among men there is no other name giuen vnder heauen whereby we may be saued but by the Name of Iesus And the author to the Hebrews saith that he e Heb. 7 25. is able perfectly to saue them that come vnto God by him seeing he euer liueth to make intercession for them Thus
chalenge the name of Saints Reason 2. Secondly the seruants of God must be Saintes to the end there may be a conformity and likenesse vnto him that hath had mercy vpon vs. It is requisite that there should be a resemblance betweene God and his people God is holy it is one of his names he is called the holy one Christ is holy and he is called the holy one of God Seeing therefore God is holy that hath called vs it followeth that holinesse belongeth vnto vs. The sonne beareth the Image of his father and thereby is easily knowne whose sonne he is If we be the sonnes of God we must expresse his Image in holines and true righteousnes This is it which Moses declareth and repeateth Leuit. 11. i Leuit 11. 44. I am the Lord your God be sanctified therefore and be holy for I am holy and defile not your selues with any creeping thing that creepeth vpon the earth Heereunto accordeth the saying of the Apostle Peter k 1 Pet 1. 14. 15. As obedient Children fashion not your selues vnto the former lustes of your ignorance but as he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conuersation because it is written be ye holy for I am holy If then he that is the God of all the Saintes be holy if it be one of his essentiall attributes so that he can no more cease to be holy then he can cease to be God the Saintes themselues must be Saintes not onely in name but in deed they must be transformd into a likenes of him they must shew the fruites of holines and be partakers of the diuine nature in that they flee the corruption which is in the world through lust Reason 3. Thirdly the faithfull are called by the name of Saintes that there might be a difference betweene that which we haue of our selues and that which wee receiue from God betweene the old man and the new man betweene our first birth and our second birth betweene nature and grace No man is a Saint by nature we haue not holines from our selues but we are strangers to it and that is a stranger to vs nay we are enemies to holines who loue nothing else but prophanenesse and desire to be any thing else then to be Saintes and holy The Apostle putting vs in mind of our first birth that we might so much the more magnify the grace of God which is marueilous and glorious in his Saintes saith l Ephe 2. 12. 13. Remember that ye being in times past Gentiles in the flesh and called vncircumcision of them which were called Circumcision in the flesh made with handes that ye were at that time without Christ and were Alians from the common wealth of Israell and were strangers from the Couenants of peomise and had no hope and were without God in the world but now in Christ Iesus ye which once were farre off are made neere by the bloud of Christ And to the same purpose he speaketh in the Epistle to the Colossians m Col 1. 21. 22. You which were in times past strangers and enemies hath he now reconciled in that body of his flesh through death to make you holy and vnblameable and without fault in his sight Seeing then that we are called to holines seeing we must as Children resemble our father and seeing God will haue a difference betweene our naturall condition and the estate wherein we stand by grace we may conclude that all such as are in the number of true beleeuers are also Registred in the number of true Saintes sanctified inwardly by the spirit of God Vse 1. Let vs now make vse and application of this Doctrine vnto our selues First wee see plainely heereby that there are Saintes vpon the earth that is men and woemen regenerate and sanctified The prophet Dauid saith n Psal 16. 3. All my delight is in the Saintes that are vpon the earth whereby it appeareth that there are two sorts of Saintes one in heauen the other on the earth one sort is the spirits of iust and perfect men the other such as are clothed with flesh who haue a righteousnes begun in them but are yet farre from perfection some that haue already receiued their Crownes that are already glorified not hauing spot or wrinkle or any such thing others that are yet in warfare against sinne the world and the deuill and carry about with them the remnants of naturall corruption Therefore we professe to beleeue in the Articles of our Faith the Cōmunion of Saints So the Apostle saith o 1 Cor. 6 1 2 11. Dare any of you hauing businesse against another be iudged vnder the vniust and not vnder the Saints Do ye not know that the Saints shall iudge the world And afterward Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God This serueth to reprooue all those which in scorne and derision mock the seruants of God and vpbraide them with their profession saying O you are a Saint you are of the little flocke you are an holy man A yong Saint an old deuil Thus is Religion made a Prouerbe and common by-word and thus are men come to sit downe in the seate of Scorners but heare this O ye contemners of God! and know that whosoeuer is not holye is prophane he that is not pure is impure he that is not a Saint of God is a bond-slaue of the Deuill there is no meane betweene the one and the other He that is not of the little flocke of Sheepe is of the great Heard of Goats and of the multitude of vnbeleeuers that shall be condemned He that entreth not in at the straite gate that leadeth to life walketh in the broad way and entereth at the wide gate that leadeth to destruction He that is not a Saint before hee dieth is a Deuill incarnate before his death This is that which our Sauiour speaketh concerning Iudas p Iohn 6 70. Haue I not chosen twelue and one of you is a Deuill Now he spake of Iudas Iscariot the sonne of Simon for he it was that should betray him This Iudas was not a Saint and he is pronounced to be a Deuill Now choose whether thou wilt be a Saint or be accounted a Iudas a Deuill a member of the deuill For he that is not in some sort changed renewed regenerated and sanctified in the inner man shall neuer see life If we begin not the way to saluation in this world we shall neuer be receiued into glory in the world to come This is the Doctrine which Christ preacheth to Nichodemus q Iohn 3 5. Verily verily I say vnto thee except that a man be borne of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdome of God So the Apostle saith r Ro. 8 13 14 If ye liue after the flesh ye shall
more aboundantly then they all yet not I but the grace of God which is with me So in the Parable of the talents they that vsed their talents well increased much by the vse of them do heare this to their great praise c Math. 25 21 It is well done good seruant faithfull thou hast bin faithfull in little I will make thee Ruler ouer much enter into thy Maisters ioy Moses is reported to be d Heb 3 5. 11 2. faithfull in all the house of God as a seruanr for a Witnesse of the things which shold be spoken after So the Holy Fathers are commended by the Apostle in the Epistle to the Hebrews who through their faith obtaind a good report 3. They are honored of vs by following of their liues and by an imitation of their vertues being as examples and patternes for vs to walke after For this is the glorie of the Saints if wee followe their Fayth Hope Charity Patience Doctrine and other like graces that haue appeared in them The Apostle willeth the Phillippians to be blamelesse and pure as the sonnes of God without rebuke in the midst of a naughty and crooked Nation shining among them as lights in the world and he addeth e Phil. 2 16. Holding fast the word of life that I may reioyce in the day of Christ that I haue not run in vain neither haue laboured in vaine And to this end dooth the Scripture make plentifull recorde of the graces of God giuen to the Saintes that our Faith might be strengthened and confirmed and wee encouraged in all wel-doing This is the right manner of honouring the Saintes and faithfull Seruaunts of God when God is honoured in them and for them when they are praysed and commended and when wee are stirred vp to good things by their example As for Religious Worship of adoration and inuocation of them it is not due vnto them it is proper to God f Reuel 22 9. and the Saints do not desire it or accept it Wherefore it is a notorious slaunder of the Church of Rome cast out against vs that wee contemne and despise the Saints that wee deface them and set them at naught whereas wee honour them as God hath commaunded them to bee honoured and giue them that reuerence that he hath appointed It were horrible impietie to speake reproachfully or to thinke vnreuerently of them whom GOD the Father honoureth whome the Sonne acknowledgeth for his Bretheren and Heyres with him whom the holy spirite calleth his Temple to dwell in The Righteous g Psal 112 6. Prou. 10 7. Luke 1 48. shall bee had in euerlasting remembrance The memoriall of the iust shall be blessed The Virgin Marie saith He hath looked vppon the poore degree of his seruant for beholde from henceforth shall all ages call me blessed On the other side The name of the wicked shall rot h Psal 109 13 and in the generation following it shall be put out But the Romain Church vnder a false Title of honouring the Saints doo hide and couer all their superstitions and bring in their merites and mediation vnder colour of doing reuerence vnto them Now the Scripture hath fore-warned vs that nothing falleth out more often or easily then to erre and offend in honouring of the Saints Christ reprooueth the Scribes and Pharisees i Math. 23 29 who builded the tombs of the Prophets and garnished the Sepulchres of the righteous yet they bare mortall hatred to the Gospel and to the professors of it And he reproueth the Iewes k Iohn 8 44. who magnified the memory of Abraham and boasted themselues to bee his Children yet they shewed themselues to be the children of the deuill and would not do the workes of Abraham But we giue them sufficient honor when we publish their praises and gifts and follow them in our liues as they followed Christ the author and finisher of our faith Vse 3 Thirdly we must beware that vaine-glory be not the end which wee seeke for We are to giue the glory to the Author not to the Instrument to God not to man to the Creator not ●o the Creature When Herod was magnified by the vaine applause of the people and honored for his great guifts as a God l Acts 12 23. Immediately the Angell of the Lord smote him because hee gaue not glory vnto God so that he was eaten of Wormes gaue vp the ghost This is it which Christ obiecteth to the Iewes m Iohn 5 44. How can ye beleeue which receiue honor one of another and seeke not the honour that commeth of God alone Yea this is it which he speaketh of himselfe n Ioh. 8 50 54 I seeke not mine owne praise but there is one that seeketh it iudgeth if I honor my selfe mine honour is nothing worth This vain-glory heere contemned and condemned is as ranke poison to infect as a bitter roote to corrupt and as filthy myre to defile our best workes bee they neuer so excellent What more heauenly worke or profitable dutie can wee performe then to pray vnto God and to call vppon his Name for the prayer of a faithfull man auayleth verie much if it bee feruent yet if it bee a Sacrifice offered with a vaine heart it becommeth vnfruitfull We aske and wee obtaine not because we aske amisse The like might be saide of almes fasting the one a fruite of Faith the other a furtherance of Faith for Charity testifyeth fasting helpeth our Faith if we performe them in hypocrisie hunting after the praise of men not desiring the honour of God wee may haue our reward from men but we cannot receiue any reward from God They shall haue the praise of men they shall not haue the praise of God For as the children of the Prophets among many hearbes gathered one that was bitter and dangerous and shred it into the pot of pottage amongst the rest who when they began to eate cried out and said f 2 King 4 40 O thou man of God death is in the pot So if among the duties we perform to God we mingle the vanity of our own hearts and sprinkle them with the darnell of our owne glory wee may truely say Death is in the worke In all things that we do we must seeke to set forth the glory of God If any man minister g 1 Pet. 4 11. saith Peter let him do it as of the abilitie which God ministreth that God in all things may be glorified through Iesus Christ Likewise the Apostle Paule giueth this precept h 1 Cor 10 31 Whether ye eate or drinke or whatsoeuer yee do doo all to the glorie of God If wee ayme at any other end we misse the marke and marre the worke how good and glorious soeuer it may seeme to bee in the eyes of men For as God seeth not as man seeeth so hee iudgeth not as man iudgeth man looketh vppon the outward appearance but
GOD pondereth the hearts This is it which Christ spake to the Pharisees i Luke 16 15. Ye are they which iustifye your selues before Men but GOD knoweth your hearts for that which is highly esteemed among men is abhominable in the sight of God Let vs therefore publish the guiftes of God vppon our selues and our Bretheren not to the magnifying of our owne persons but to the extolling of his praises and let vs so spread abroad our graces as that wee remember his glorie that wrought them in vs by his Spirite Verse 7. For we haue great ioy and consolation in thy Loue. Hitherto wee haue spoken of the matter of his Prayer now let vs see the reason why hee made this the matter thereof For the Apostle might haue craued and asked of God many other things for him of God yet he desired that his faith might be communicated to many and so bee manifested to bee effectuall working by loue The reason heere rendered is from the effect or fruite of his prayers they were not vttered in the ayre they fell not without profit good successe to the ground but he felt great comfort and consolation wrought in him by the workes of Philemon performed to the glorie of God to the praise of his Faith and with the approbation of the church Heere then he sheweth that he had occasion offred him of great ioy and gladnesse in regard of the graces of God effects of faith fruits of true piety which he heard and knew to bee in Philemon Doctrine 4. The spirituall graces of God bestowed vpon others giue occasiō of ioy to the Saints From hence we learne that spirituall blessings and graces of God bestowed vpon others do giue iust occasion to the Saints of God of great gladnesse and comfort It is our dutie greatly to reioyce when we see spirituall blessings in heauenly thinges giuen to the Children of God This trueth our Sauiour Christ teacheth in the Parables of the stray Sheep of the lost Groat and of the prodigall Sonne The Shepheard a Luke 15 5 and 10 31. hauing found his sheep layeth it on his shoulder with ioy he commeth home he calleth his friendes saying Reioyce with me for I haue found my Sheep which was lost I say vnto you that likewise ioy shall be in heauen for one sinner that conuerteth more then for ninety and nine iust men which need none amendment of life The poore woman hauing lost a Groat lighteth a Candle sweepeth the house searcheth euery corner and when she hath found it she gathereth together her neighbors saying Reioyce with me for I haue found the Groat which I had lost wherevppon hee addeth Likewise I say vnto you there is ioy in the presence of the Angelles of God for one sinner that conuerteth The Father of that riotous sonne which wasted his goods hath compassion vpon him runneth to meete him fell on his necke and kissed him put apparrell on his back a ring on his finger and shooes on his feete reproued his sonne that enuied and repined at it saying let vs eate and reioyce it is meet we should make merry and bee glad for this thy Brother was dead and is aliue againe he was lost but hee is found Heereunto commeth the Thankesgiuing of Christ to his Father when he saw the encrease of his Church and the ouerthrowe of Satans kingdome c Luke 10 21 That same houre reioyced Iesus in the Spirite and saide I confesse vnto thee Father Lord of Heauen and earth that thou hast hid these thinges from the wise and vnderstanding and hast reuealed them to Babes euen so Father because it so pleased thee The Prophet Dauid reioyced with great ioy when hee sawe that the people d 1 Chron. 29 9 10. offred willingly vnto the Lord with a perfect hart he blessed the Lord God of Israel When the Iewes heard of the conuersion of the Gentiles that the Holy ghost fell vpon them as vpon themselues at the beginning e Acts 11 18. They held their peace and glorified God saying Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance vnto life When the apostle perceiued the notable zeal of the Thessalonians in receiuing entertaining the gospel not as the word of man but as it is indeed the word of God f 1 Thes 2 19 20. he witnesseth that they wer his hope his ioy his crown his glory in the presence of our Lord Iesus Christ at his comming Likewise the Apostle Iohn g 3 Iohn 4. reioyced greatly when the Brethren testified of the truth that was in Gaius how he walked therein Hee had no greater ioy then this to heare that his sons walked in the verity Whereby we see there ought to be great ioy amongst the faithfull when they see the Church prosper and flourish and the graces of God to encrease among them Reason 1. The Reasons are many that confirme this vnto vs. First the glory praise of God is much increased which shold comfort the harts reioice the spirits of the Saints The more wee abound with spiritual blessings in heauenly things the more God is honored and his name glorified This the Apostle teacheth speaking of the releeuing of the Church at Ierusalem h 2 Cor. 9 12. The ministration of this seruice not only supplieth the necessities of the Saintes but also abundantly causeth manie to giue thankes to God Where hee sheweth his ioy that he receiued and conceiued for their voluntary submission to the Gospell and compassion to the brethren this was a speciall cause that God was praised this ministered greater gladnesse to him then that the Saints were comforted and releeued Reason 2. Secondly the general good of the church must lead vs to this duty cause vs to reioyce which next vnto God shold be dearest to vs. For whē we see the Church encrease and many soules of many men women saued when we see their hearts conuerted regeneration wrought in them so that they begin to liue to God who before in the time of their ignorance liued to themselus to sin to condemnation who can haue such hearts of Flint or of Iron as not to be moued with ioy euen tickled with a sweet meditation of Gods mercy beholding the enlarging of the kingdom of Christ The prophet reioysed to see the people willingly affected religiously minded i Psal 122 1 2 to go to the house of the Lord Because Ierusalem did thereby prosper peace was within her wals and prosperitie within her pallaces Where he sheweth that his reioysing was for the wealth and welfare of the house of God Reason 3. Thirdly the Ordinances and Lawes of God are walked in and obserued so his blessings procured and obtained For if we hearken obey his voice we haue a promise to be respected and rewarded Such as walke in the Statutes commandements of the Lord to do them shal be blessed
Ecclesiastes o Eccl. 11 2. Giue a portion to seauen and also to eight for thou knowest not what euill shall be vpon the earth In all these considerations being compassed about and hemmed in on euery side with a worlde of vncertainties it standeth vs vpon to follow the counsel and aduise of Christ our Sauiour p Luke 16 9 who willeth vs to make vs friends with the riches of iniquitie that when wee shall want they may receiue vs into euerlasting habitations which is not spoken of goods euilly and wrongfully gotten but of goods that may be wickedly and wrongfully taken from vs by open force or secret fraud by violence of Robbers by pretence of right by colour of Lawe or by the power of the oppressor Reason 3. Thirdly the poore cannot recompence and repay again that which is bestowed vpon them but God himselfe will restore it seauen fold into thy bosome We must heerein imitate our Heauenly Father who is readie to shew mercy to all This is the precept of Christ q Mat. 5 42 45 Giue to him that asketh and from him that would borrow of thee turne not away c. that ye may be the Children of your heauenly Father for he maketh his Sonne to arise on the euill and the good sendeth raine on the iust and vniust So likewise it behooueth vs to follow the example of Christ r 2 Cor. 8 9. Who beeing rich for our sakes became poore that wee thorough his pouerty might be made rich This was the greatest grace and mercie that could be shewed Reason 4. Fourthly the poore haue beene in all ages and shall alwayes remain with vs to the end of the world to the end that their bowels may feele our refreshing and their loynes blesse vs and pray for vs. For if it had pleased God hee could haue made all men rich and none to stand in need of the ayde and assistance of others but this difference in degrees among men placing some aboue and others beneath making some rich and others poore setting some on high and others low serueth most for the aduancement of his glory and the maintaining of fellowship and friendship of concord and vnity one with another If all were rich and abounded in outward wealth we should neither know God nor our selues nor our Brethren we would be ready to say ſ Prou. 30 9. Who is the Lord We would be ready to disdaine and despise our Bretheren If all were poore and in necessity there would be nothing but robbing stealing periury and all confusion Wherefore it is the ordinance of God that some should be rich and some poore some wealthy and others in want Hee maketh some poore to exercise their patience and to try howe they will beare that burden and behaue themselues vnder the crosse He maketh others rich to exercise our mercie to be obiectes of our pitty and compassion and that we should neuer want some occasions to shew forth the fruits of a liuely faith Seeing therefore we shal receiue a great aduantage in this life and be recompenced at the resurrection of the iust seeing we are vncertain what shal happen heereafter and know not what euill may fall vppon the earth seeing wee are commanded to follow the example of God the Father who is good to al and of Christ his sonne who being rich made himselfe poore and of no reputation and lastly seeing we must alway haue the poore to exercise the workes of mercy and to releeue their misery it followeth that we are to distribute the outward blessings of this life to those that be in want and stand in need of comfort Vse 1. The Doctrine being thus cleered and confirmed let vs see the vses that arise from hence First this being so necessary a duty required of all men it teacheth a difference betweene the Heathen and Christian religion The Heathenish Religion neuer tooke order for the poore nor required any compassion toward them but the profession of Christ chargeth this duty vpon all true beleeuers and teacheth that iudgement shal be without mercy to those that shew not mercy When Paule departed from the rest of the Apostles at Ierusalem they t Gala. 2 10. warned him onely that he should remember the poore which thing also he was diligent to doe But this was neuer remembred nor regarded nor intended among the Nations that were vnbeleeuers True it is the Painims and Philosophers haue held and deliuered many morrall instructions and spoken well of Iustice Temperance Clemency Prudence and Friendship of obedience toward parents of Gentlenesse toward men of liberality toward the poore of loue toward our Country of Loialty toward Princes and such other vertues He that should deny u Antimachia preface before the second booke their precepts in part to be wel spoken and in part to be wel practised should do them great wrong But the Christian Religion as it hath all these in common with them approuing and allowing of them yea not disdaining to read their bookes and to learne such Doctrine of them as they haue left in writing so it hath lanched out a great deale deeper and entred farther and considered better of the precepts of good life and the practise of good manners then the Heathen and Infidels haue done It was a rule of one of the wisest among the Gentiles x Plato that we are not borne onely for our selues but that our birth is partly for our Country partly for our Parents and partly for our friendes A goodly and Golden sentence much admired and greatly commended and oftentimes alleaged But if it be compared with the Doctrine of Christ and the duty of all Christians it will be found maimed in his limmes and defectiue in his parts neither hauing a good beginning nor making a perfect ending For first of all he prescribeth that our Charity should be imployed toward our selues which they haue well marked allowed and followed which say that a well ordered Charity beginneth at himselfe But this is farre from the Doctrine of Chist and his Apostles Christ himselfe cōmandeth vs y Mat 22 39. to loue our Neigh-as our selues and Paule teacheth z 1 Cor 13 5. that Charity seeketh not her owne things Againe he maketh mention of our Country of our parents and of our friends and rangeth them into good order but what becommeth of the poore where or in what place of this notable sentence doth he place them he speaketh not of them at all let them shift as they can they are quite forgotten the Philosophers Charity stretcheth not to them let them sinke or swimme liue or die feed or starue it was all one to him and to that Religion that he beleeued And indeed a poore person in the time of the Painims had no other meanes to liue and sustaine himselfe and his family then to sell himselfe as a slaue to him that would buy him if no man were found that would buy him
example of life If wee had learned since wee entered into Christianity but nowe a little and then a little heere a Precept and there a Precept we might in short space haue attained to a great measure of vnderstanding and bee daily fitted to Gods Kingdome But alas such as should bee olde in Faith are verie Babes and Children a thing greatly disgracefull and reproachfull to their yeares condition The Apostle chargeth the Corinthians h 1 Cor. 14 20 Ephes 4 14. that they should not be Children in vnderstanding as concerning maliciousnesse hee would haue them Children but in vnderstanding to be of ripe age Whereby wee see that aged persons do quite degenerat from that which they ought to be when they remaine voyde of knowledge and destitute of spirituall Wisedome and suffer many that are young in yeares to ouertake them yea to ouer strip them and go many degrees before them If a man should binde his sonne an Apprentise to some Science or Occupation and when he had serued his time should be to seeke in his trade and bee neuer a whit the more his Crafts-maister in the ending of his yeares then he was at the beginning we would thinke hee had lost his time and complaine of the iniury of the Maister or of the carelesnesse of the Seruant If a Father should put his sonne to Schoole and hee alwayes continue in the lowest Fourme and neuer ascend higher wee woulde iudge great negligence to be eyther in the Maister or in the Scholler Behold the Church of God is the Schoole of Christ and the best place to learne the Science of all Sciences if we haue liued long therein some of vs twenty some thirty some forty yeares and some longer and yet be no wiser in Religion then a childe of seauen yeares old i Heb. 5 12. is it not ashame for vs and may wee not bee condemned of great negligence in the matters of our saluation Let vs examine our selues how wee haue profited and compare our proceeding in knowledge with the length of time that God hath graunted vnto vs. He may iustly require great things of vs and challenge at our hands much fruite who hath affoorded vnto vs great meanes for our growth and encreasing in all good things Verse 10. I beseech thee for my son Onesimus whom I haue begotten in my bonds The order of the words HItherto we haue spoken of the description of Paule crauing to be heard and respected in regard of his age and office which is the second part of the sentence before remembred Now we are to obserue the third point which is concerning Onesimus whom he setteth forth first by a note of relation My Sonne then by the cause Whom I haue begotten in my bonds The Apostle in this Verse beginneth to enter into his suite shewing for whom he doth intreat and afterward for what he doth entreate To his request hee annexeth diuers reasons first because he begat him that is brought him by the preaching of the Gospell to the true Christian faith and therefore he is earnest to intreat for him Secondly because his Maister should now finde him profitable vnto him that is faithfull trusty and seruiceable for so will true Christian seruants be whereas such as are vngodly will be vnfaithful and such as haue not the feare of God before them cannot answere the trust that is reposed in them for Conscience sake Thirdly because Paul loued Onesimus tenderly and deerely as his owne bowelles not as a seruant but as his son not onely as a Brother but as his owne bowels This is the order of the words The meaning of the words Let vs breefely see the Interpretation of this Verse and reserue the rest to his proper place First of all when hee calleth Onesimus his sonne hee meaneth it not in respect of the naturall birth and generation but of the spirituall and super-naturall So that by a borrowed speech he meaneth one brought to his Faith by his Ministry Likewise when he saith Whom I haue begotten the meaning is whom God by mee did effectually call to embrace and beleeue the Gospell It is not the worke of a mortall man to frame and reforme the soule vnto the Image of God He onely nameth himself as the author of his regeneration which he doth not to oppose himselfe to God but only to shew what God doth by the ministry of man Lastly when he addeth In my bonds he meaneth when he was a prisoner and lay in prison This Verse according to this exposition of the wordes is thus much in effect as if he had said Hauing thus prepared thee for that which I am to intreate from thy hands if now thou wouldst know the party or person for whom it is surely it is thy runnagate seruant Onesimus and vpon these grounds he is my spirituall sonne for I haue begotten him in the time of my captiuity to the true profession and obedience of the Gospell Obseruations out of this Verse Before wee come to handle the Doctrines and instructions arising out of this verse it shall not bee amisse to set downe diuers profitable obseruations that may be considered First we see heer a Rhetorical repitition of the same word I beseech thee being aged and a prisoner I beseech thee for my Sonne Onesimus This redoubling of his prayer and intreating vsed also k 2 Cor. 10 1 2. elsewhere sheweth the desire and manifesteth the earnestnesse of his minde he was not colde in his suite as if he regarded not whether hee obtained it but prosecuted it with his whole desire and full purpose so that he contenteth not himselfe once to beseech him but beseecheth him againe Secondly we see that the person of him whom we will commend to any man hath great force to moue him and to preuaile with him to graunt vnto vs that which we craue and desire at his handes Wherefore whosoeuer would be commended vnto any must looke to himselfe that he haue in him somewhat woorthy commendation For as another mans mouth shoulde praise vs not our own so the matter of praise must be in our selues A false praise is a true dispraise and a wrongful commending is a reall discommending The praise that commeth from others must proceede from a due desert in our selues If the Apostle had not found a great alteration he would neuer haue giuen this commendation to Onesimus Thirdly we see an example in Paule of wonderfull humility and lowlinesse of minde See heer the difference betweene Paule the Apostle and the proud Byshop of Rome Paule beseecheth where he might command but he commaundeth where he hath no warrant to beseech For the Pope vsurpeth authoritie ouer Princes and Kinges hee cursseth and banneth hee threatneth and thundereth out his excommunications It is not so with our Apostle for such is his exceeding modestie and mildnesse of Spirit that he abaseth himselfe to bee a false and fugitiue seruant whom hee embraceth as his owne
Sonne What coulde bee more reproachfull then to robbe his Maister and then to play the runnagate that so he might runne on in his euill course and deliuer himselfe from punnishment Yet wee see the Apostle is not ashamed of him is not ashamed to cal him his Sonne that Philemon might not be ashamed to receiue and to accept him as his Seruant For if he be the sonne of Paule he may bee esteemed the seruant of Philemon Fourthly wee see how effectuall the sounde conuersion of a sinner to God ought to bee and how forcible it should bee to preuayle with vs to winne our Loue towardes him and cause vs to performe all the duties belonging vnto him For wee may not bee ashamed to account him eyther as a Sonne or as a Brother whome GOD accounteth for his owne sonne and seruant We are most vnworthy to be called the sonnes of God if we refuse his children to be our brethren But if we marke this aright we shal find the number of those to be few which regard the Faith conuersion saluation other spiritual blessings bestowed vpon their brethren as they ought and therefore testify no loue shew no ioy performe no duties when they behold sinners conuerted vnto God Fiftly we see that the name and praise of a spirituall Father which is proper to God alone is communicated to the Apostles and Ministers of God whereas God onely doth renew and regenerate vs by the power of his spirit the Ministry onely is mans whether hee be Pastor or Apostle Our Sauior teacheth vs l Math. 23 9. to cal no man Father vpon earth It is no worke of man be hee neuer so excellent to frame and reforme the soule into the Image of God But because we are borne anew by Faith and Faith commeth by hearing the Minister as the disposer of the Mysteries of God doth vnder God perfourme the dutie of a Father So then seeing the word of God preached by the mouth and Ministery of man is the immortall seede of eternall life it is no maruell if he bee called by the Title of a Father from whose lippes we conceiue that seede and receiue that worde Thus much is to be obserued of vs in general out of this verse Now let vs come to the particular Doctrines I beseech thee for my sonne Onesimus c. Wee are heere to marke the scope and purpose of the Apostle in these words We see he vseth exceeding earnestnesse and importunity to haue him receiued to his Maisters fauor The condition of Onesimus was this he was a seruant of the basest calling For men Seruants and Maid-seruants in those dayes were not as they be nowe Men had them not for Wages and hire as they that wer bound to do no more then Couenant but they were Bondslaues to bee bought and sold in the Market and their Maisters possessed them as Oxen and Cattle and hadde power ouer them of life and death Now albeit he were a seruant of this kind and condition and had beene besides a runnagate and a Theefe deseruing greeuous punishment euen death yet he pleadeth his cause being conuerted with as great force and feruency as can be expressed Doctrine 1. The least and lowest member conuerted to Christ must not bee contemned We learne from this loue appearing in the Apostle that the basest person in the Church truly conuerted brought vnto Christ should not be contemned but most louingly tenderly and Brotherly regarded The least lowest member that belongeth to God ought not to be reiected and debased but highly for Christs sake to be honored and respected We see how Christ calleth vnto him all that are weary and heauy laden m Mat. 11 28. promising to ease and refresh them Likewise he embraceth the poore and simple as louingly and cheerefully as the rich and wise of the world The Publicans and sinners are accepted of him that were hated of the Iewes The Woman taken in adultry accused by the Pharises is exhorted by him to repentance The Blinde man restored to his sight n Iohn 9 35. and 8 11. and cast out of the Synagogue is sought out by Christ and taught to beleeue and broght to be a true member of the Church The penitent Theefe hanging o Luke 23 43 vppon the Crosse and hearing Christ preach is conuerted to the Faith and receiued into paradise It is not the will of p Mat. 18 14. our heauenly Father that one of these little ones should perish When the prodigall sonne had wasted his wealth and his strength in riotous liuing q Lu. 15 20 24 so that necessity fell vppon him and Famine constrained him to eate of the huskes wherewith he fed his Swine his Father receiued him into his fauour and had compassion vpon him hee willed him not to returne backe to his Harlots and to betake himself to his former companions but while he was yet a farre off he reioyced to see him and embraced him when he saw him saying This my sonne was dead but is aliue againe he was lost but he is found and they began to be merry The incestuous Corinthian swept out of the Church by the censures thereof r 1 Cor. 5 4. 2 Cor. 2 6 7 and deliuered vp to Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the Spirit may be saued in the day of the Lord Iesus and wandering as a stray Sheepe from the sheepe-fold is brought againe into the house of God and into the assembly of the faithfull The Apostle hearing of his sorrow for his sinne and of his vnfaigned repentaunce saith It is sufficient vnto the same man that he was rebuked of many so that nowe contrary wise yee ought rather to forgiue him and comfort him least the same should be swallowed vp with ouermuch heauinesse The like we see might say of Mary Magdalen who was infamous in life out of whome Christ cast seauen diuels Of the Cananitish woman whom he heard and helped of the Cripple that lay at the Poole whom when Iesus founde in the Temple Å¿ 1 Iohn 5 14 hee exhorted to sinne no more being now made whole least a worse thing come vnto him Likewise the Euangelists declare that by the power and loue of Christ t Math 11 5. the blind had their sight restored the Leapers were clensed the dead were raised the halt walked the sicke were healed and the poore receiued the Gospell So the Apostle willeth u 1 Tim. 6 1. seruants that are vnder the yoke to account their Maisters worthy of all honour that the name of God his Doctrine be not euil spoken of All these places of Scripture serue to teach vs that such as are of meanest account and least estimation beeing conuerted to the Faith and belonging to Christ are greatly to bee regarded and entirely to be beloued Reason 1. This shall not seeme any thing strange vnto vs if we marke the Reasons whereupon it is grounded For first
those that are least esteemed and are of lowest condition were bought with as great and high a price as others and were redeemed not with corruptible things as Siluer and Gold but with the deare and precious bloode of Christ Rich and poore high and lowe great and small had all one price paide for their ransome This is the reason x Math 18 10 11. vrged by Christ See that ye despise not one of these little ones for I say vnto you that in Heauen their Angels alwaies behold the face of my Father which is in heauen for the sonne of man is come to saue that which was lost If then the least be redeemed by his death and saued by faith in him as well as the greatest it followeth that al should bee regarded none contemned all loued none despised Hence it is also that the Apostle chargeth those that are strong to receiue vnto them y Rom. 14 1 3 15. the weaker sort and not to despise them whom God hath receiued and for whom Christ hath dyed Reason 2. Secondly there is no respect of persons with God He doth not esteeme men for accidentall things as for pouertie or riches for honor or dishonour The poore the fatherlesse the widdow the stranger the seruant are as deare to him and as greatly respected of him as those that are set in high places are honoured with great callings When we speake of a person in our talke and communication me meane some man or some woman but the Scripture meaneth a more speciall thing to wit the outward quality or condition of man which may purchase him grace or disgrace fauour or disfauor When God wil cal vs to his truth and bestow his graces vppon vs it is done according to his holy wil and good pleasure he is not moued to it by the outward appearance and condition of the person he respecteth not Country or sex or birth or riches or pouertie or Nobility or wisedome or learning or friends This is it which the Apostle teacheth z Gal. 3 27 28 Al ye that are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ there is neither Iew nor Grecian there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female for ye are all one in Christ Iesus And to the same purpose Peter speaketh a Acts 10 34 35. Of a truth I perceiue that God is no accepter of persons but in euerie Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted vvith him Seeing then God accepteth the person of no man he wold haue no man reiected for the meannesse of his person Reason 3. Thirdly they shal receiue with others the same recompence of reward the same kingdome of heauen the same measure of glory The differences that now are in this life shal cease As there is now the same precious faith so then there shall be the same precious felicity The poorest members of Christ haue the same spirituall graces that are necessary to saluation and therefore shal be partakers of the same inheritance This the Apostle Iames setteth downe chap. 2. b Iames 2 5. Harken my beloued Brethren hath not GOD chosen the poore of this world that they should be rich in faith and heires of the kingdome which he promised to them that loue him He hath not prepared and prouided one place of glorie for those that are Rich and another place for those that are poore he hath not left one inheritance for the Noble and another for the vnnoble but as they haue one Faith to apprehend Christ so they shall haue one glorie to be like vnto Christ The Lord Iesus himselfe testifieth this c Iohn 14 2 In my Fathers house are many mansion places if it were not so I would haue tolde you I go to prepare a place for you If then wee consider these points that the lowest in the Church and the most vnworthy to be of the Church are bought with one the same price that God accepteth and respecteth no mans person and that they shall receiue with others an eternall waight of glory and immortalitie we may conclude this as a necessary truth that we ought not to bee ashamed of any though of the lowest sort and poorest estate and meanest condition to whom God hath imparted and vouchsafed this mercie to beleeue in Christ and to be a member of his bodie and to be in the number of true beleeuers Vse 1 The Doctrine being made euident the Vses will be as apparent First seeing we are bound to loue the lowest in the Church that belong to Christ we learne that our affections must bee carried most earnestly and in the greatest measure to those that haue the greatest measure of heauenly graces not regarding Riches or Kindred or outward respects before the other It is a sound and sanctified loue that is wrought in vs toward those that are faithfull The Apostle in this place was so farre from beeing ashamed of Onesimus conuerted to Christ and gayned to the Gospell though he were a Seruant and had beene a Theefe and a Runnagate that he glorieth in his Faith reioyceth in his Conuersion accounteth him as his Sonne and respecteth him as his owne bowelles This affection no lesse then fatherly toward him hee expresseth afterward d Verse 16 17 Receiue him not nowe as a Seruant but aboue a seruant euen as a Brother beloued specially to me how much more then vnto thee both in the Flesh and in the Lord If therfore thou count our things common receiue him as my self He saw in this man being a Proselite newly conuerted to the Faith such fruits of sanctification as seales of his conuersion that he loued him most dearely and sought by all meanes to procure fauour for him with his Maister Whatsoeuer the former life of men hath beene when once they make Conscience of their waies beginning to leade an holy life and to blot out the infamy reproach of their conuersation led in the time of their ignorance it is our duty to begin to loue them as entirely as our Brethren in Christ and as children with vs of the same Father The practise heereof we see in Christ our Sauiour and haue this instruction giuen vs from his owne mouth Mathew 12. when it was tolde him as hee was preaching his word to the multitude that came to heare him that his Mother and Bretheren stoode without desiring to speake with him hee answered e Math 12 48 Who is my Mother and who are my Brethren And he stretched foorth his hand toward his Disciples and said Beholde my Mother and my Brethren for whosoeuer shall do my Fathers will which is in heauen the same is my Brother and Sister and Mother To this purpose the Prophet Dauid speaketh f Psal 16 1. All my delight is in the Saints that are vpon the earth The Godly must be most dear vnto vs and we are bound to be kind to them as to our Kin.
and preferment vnto them then the want of outward benefites can bring abasement This is a most woorthy and excellent comfort whereof we shall be assured if wee walke in the steppes of faithfull Abraham if we repent and beleeue in Christ and walke woorthy of our calling I beseech thee for my Sonne Onesimus The party for whom the Apostle entreateth is in these words both named and described Hee is described first by relation when he calleth him His Sonne secondly by the meanes and manner how he is his sonne by a spirituall generation through the immortal seed of the Gospell and through the ministry of the worde in the time of his restraint and imprisonment at Rome Touching the former point which is the Title giuen vnto Onesimus hee esteemeth him as his Sonne and therefore accounteth himselfe as his Father If then Onesimus be his sonne the Apostle must needs be his Father and if Paul be his Father he must needs be his son For the Father the Son haue mutual reference one to another cannot consist one without the other Doctrine 2. The same affection that is betweene the Father and the Son ought to be betweene the Minister the people We learne from this name giuen vnto Onesimus conuerted to the Faith that there ought to be the same affection betweene the Pastour and the people which is betweene the Father and the Sonne The same loue that is betweene Parents and their Childeren ought to be betweene the Shepheard and his flocke betweene the Steward the houshold between the Master the Scholler between the Minister the people betweene him that winneth and them that are won to the Faith of the Gospell The Apostle Paule writing to Timothy and Titus calleth them his k 1 Tim. 1 2. 2 Tim. 1 2. Titus 1 4. naturall and beloued sonnes according to the common Faith because he had begotten them by the seede of the Gospell to bee the Children of God without which new byrth they could not belong to his kingdome So when the King of Israell came to the Prophet Elisha who lay sicke in his bed he wept vpon his face and said l 2 Kin. 13 14. O my Father my Father the Charriot of Israell and the Horsemen of the same Likewise Iohn writing vnto his beloued Gaius declareth that he reioyced greatly when the brethren came testified how he walked in the trueth and addeth m 3 Iohn 4. I haue no greater ioy then these to heare that my sonnes walke in verity And Paule writing to the Corinthians toucheth this at large n 1 Cor. 4 14 15. I write not these things to shame you but as my beloued children I admonish you for though ye haue tenne thousand instructers in Christ yet haue ye not many fathers for in Christ Iesus I haue begotten you through the Gospell To this purpose he also speaketh to the Thessalonians o 1 Thess 2 7 8 11 12. Wee vvere gentle among you euen as a Nurse cherisheth her children Thus beeing affectioned toward you our good will was to haue dealt vnto you not the Gospell of GOD onely but also our owne soules because ye were deere vnto vs. And afterwardes in the same Chapter Ye know how that we exhorted you and comforted besought euery one of you as a Father his children that ye would walke worthy of God who hath called you vnto his kingdom and glory These allegations are so many witnesses of this doctrine teaching that it is a most tender affection of Loue and compassion that ought to be between him that teacheth and them that are taught in the word Reason 1. This will farther appeare by the Reasons whereby it is confirmed vnto our Consciences First the Ministers of God giue as a beeing in Christ and consequently to bee the children of God which is the best being and byrth that can be bestowed vpon vs the word of God being the precious and immortal seed and they by teaching and applying it are the Instruments wherby through Gods blessing we are begotten to be new borne babes in Christ and of the children of men or rather the children of the Deuil are made the sons and daughters of almighty God Hence it is that the Apostle saith p 1 Cor. 4 15. In Christ Iesus I haue begotten you through the Gospell And Peter in his first Epistle sheweth q 1 Pet. 1 23. That we are borne againe not of mortal seed but of immortall by the word of God who liueth and endureth for euer So then by their Ministry we are made aliue that before were dead we are made sonnes that before were enemies we are made Cittizens that before were strangers wee are made heyres that before were Aliants Reason 2. Secondly the Ministers of the Gospell are as our Mothers and doe conceiue vs in their wombe trauell with vs in paine and bring vs forth as with labour of Childbed to fashion vs in grace and to perfect vs in Christ We know the Sorrowes the Paines the Passions and the perilles of a Womans trauaile to be exceeding great so the measure of the Ministeriall paines and labour is maruellous great r 2 Cor. 11 23 which the Apostle expresseth 2 Cor. 11 23. He endured labours abundantly stripes vnmeasurably imprisonment plenteously the danger of death continually Eliah being raised vp of God to restore Religion to pull downe Idolatry to destroy Baals Priests and to set himselfe against the enemies of God was at length so worne with care so wasted with sorrowes and so wearied in this busines Å¿ 1 King 19 4. that he desired the Lord to take him out of the world saying It is now enough O Lord take my soule for I am no better then my Fathers The paines and perplexity of the Prophet Esay made him cry out alowde with great anguish of spirite t Esay My leunnesse my leaunesse So Ieremy cryeth out u Ier. 4 19 My belly my bellie I am pained at the verie heart mine heart is troubled within me declaring thereby that his gripings and greefes in his Ministerie were so great that they were like the paines of a vehement Colicke Likewise the Apostle being carefull to bring backe the Galathians to the trueth of the Gospell which they had forsaken saith x Gal. 4 19 My little children of whom I trauell in birth againe till Christ be formed in you meaning that hee endured much trouble and sustained great paines to fit them frame them to Gods kingdome Seeing then the Ministers of Christ be as spirituall Fathers and Mothers Fathers to beget vs and Mothers to beare vs and bring vs forth we may conclvde that the Pastours and people haue as neere a coniunction betweene them as Parents and their children But because somewhat may be obiected against this truth we wil remoue those doubts and take away those Obiections before we proceed any further or handle the Vses that
are to be learned of vs. Obiection 1. First our Sauiour sayeth Math. 23 9. Call no man your Father vpon the earth y Mat. 23 9 10 for there is but one your Father which is in heauen Bee not called Doctours for one is your Doctor euen Christ If then God onely be our Father and no man is to bee called by this name either we must account the Ministers Goddes which were blasphemy or debarre and deny them this Title which were contrary vnto other Scriptures Answere I answere Christ doth not in these words forbid the denomination but restraine the ambition of men as appeareth by the conclusion of the words Verse 12. Whosoeuer will exalt himselfe shall bee brought lowe and whosoeuer will humble himselfe shall be exalted Hence it is that the Apostle calleth himselfe z 1 Tim. 2 7 1 Cor. 4 15. as well the Doctor of the Gentiles as the Father of the Corinthians It is one thing to haue the name and another thing greedily to hunt after it and proudly to challenge it to our selues Besides touching the fountaine of our first birth and the foundation of our faith and regeneration he is our onely Father we ascribe it to no man vpon the earth But euen as touching our naturall being hee hath ordained subordinate causes as his Instruments and fellow-workers to beget vs and bring vs into this world and to giue vs life a Exod. 20 12. whom he doth honor with the titles of Fathers and Mother So touching our new birth although it be the sole worke of the spirite and therefore proper to God yet because he worketh it by the word Sacraments the preaching and dispensation whereof he hath committed to the Ministers and appointed to be conueyed to men by their meanes he dooth communicate to them the appellation of Fathers as those whom he vseth to bring vs beget vs vnto God So then Paul so giueth himselfe the name of Father as that he neither robbeth God nor taketh from him the least iot of the honor that is due to his name For it is a common rule that they are not contrary which are subordinate When one is vnder another and inferiorly ordered ordained to another there is a good agreement betweene them God is the choise cause Paule is the Instrumentall Obiection 2. Againe the Apostle depresseth and derogateth from the Ministerie and sayth b 1 Cor 3 6 7 I haue planted Apollos watered but God gaue the encrease So then neither is he thar planteth any thing neyther he that watereth but God that giueth the encrease How then doth it come to passe that he doeth there so much debase them and heere so greatly honour them as to make them fellow workers yea fellow-fathers with God He may seeme to be vnconstant as a Reede shaken with the winde and to lift vp and cast downe at his owne pleasure Answere I answere the contrariety is not in the wordes of the Apostle the difference is in the persons with whom he dealeth and to whom he writeth So there seemeth a contradiction betweene Paule and Iames in the matters of Faith and Good-works c Rom. 3 20. Iames 2 24. Gal. 2 16. Paule saith We are not iustified by workes Iames saith We are iustified by Workes Paule saith We are not iustified but by Faith Iames sayeth We are not iustified by Faith onely Heere is a shew of dissention but it is onely in shew not in trueth for then in one of them should be no truth The Reason why they vse a different order of teaching is the diuersity of the Schollers which they instructed and the contrary affection of such as they taught and informed Paule had to do with Iusticiaries that sought to be iustified partly by faith and partly by works partly by Christ partly by themselues partly by somwhat in another and partly by somwhat in themselues partly by the merits of another and partly by their own strength and merits Iames had not to do with such persons but with Libertines and loose liuers which confessed in wordes free Iustification thorough Faith in Christ yet they were deceiued and had not learned that all those that are iustifyed are also sanctified that all that are in Christ are become newe Creatures that they are borne anew and walke not after the flesh but after the spirit and therefore thought workes needlesse and fruitlesse Thus Paul dealt in this place If at any time he saw so much honour giuen to the Ministers as that Gods honour was diminished or any way obscured and so hee robbed of his glory then hee pulled downe their estimation that God might haue his right and be vnto vs all in all But if on the other side they were debased and disgraced as in these dayes they are whereby the word also was abhorred and God the Author of it and the ordainer of them dishonoured they ought to haue their due they are to magnify their office and to be esteemed as the Ministers of Christ As for example when we haue to deale either with the Anabaptists that wait for reuelations and vtterly reiect the Ministry Ministers of the worde or with those prophane Atheists of our time who contemn them and count them idle and of no vse and so haue no regard of them or respect vnto them wee are to shew in what an high calling God hath seated them He saith of them d Math. 10 20 It is not you that speake but the spirite in you He saith of them He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me He saith of them Whose sinnes ye remit they are remitted whose sinnes ye retaine they are retained This serueth to stop the mouthes of carnall men and alloweth vs to know our selues when the worlde will not know vs or acknowledge vs. But when we haue to deale with those of the Church of Rome who make their Pope a God on earth and set their Cardinals and Clergy aboue the word we are to be taught what the Ministry is of it self being separated from the spirit of God an empty sound without force and a bare Instrument without effect in the hand of the workeman that can do nothing of it selfe but as it is vsed and applied by the worke-man Thus much of the remoouing of such Obiections as might hinder the vse and profit of this Doctrine Vse 1. Now let vs come to consider the Vses which are either general belonging ioyntly both to the Pastors people or special belonging to either of them First seeing the Minister and people ought to loue as Father and Sonne it teacheth them to cut off all occasions of discord and diuision and to nourish loue and mutuall concorde one with another It may bee many occasions may arise which if by wisedome they be not smothered and suppressed in the beginning they are as little sparkes that quickly break out into a flame and the flame
suffered to continue consumeth al things that are neere vnto it We must shew our selues ready to bring water to quench this fire We must stop the Flood-gates that the streames of contention doo not ouer-flow and in the end drowne vs as in the deepe waters It is a deceitfull snare and wonderfull subtilty of Satan to cast matters of dissention betweene the Minister and people as it were a bone to gnaw vpon that so though the word bee among them yet that it may by that meanes be with lesse fruit and profit with them Well doth this enemy of mankind know that where there is hatred to the person there can be no loue to his preaching and where there is desire of contention there can be no hope of edification For whome the people hate they regard not to heare and where there is no liking to the man there will follow a loathing of his Ministry We see this in the example of Ahab toward Eliah and Micaiah e 1 Kin. 21 19 20. 22 7 8. whom he hated to the death and professeth his enmity toward them and therefore despised the word that came from their mouths When Eliah reproued him for killing of Naboth and taking possession of the Vineyard he saide Hast thou found me O mine enemy So when Iehoshaphat asked if there were not a Prophet of the Lord that they might enquire of him Ahab who had sold himselfe to worke wickednesse in the sight of the Lord aunswered There is yet one man Michaiah the Sonne of Imlah by whom we may aske counsell of the Lord but I hate him for hee dooth not prophesie good vnto me but euill Where we see he hated the Prophet and therfore abhorred his prophesie and regarded not to haue him in his presence We may behold this in the example of the Scribes and Pharisees toward Paule they could not abide him nor his doctrine so that he was employed principally among the Gentiles On the other side as the people loue the Ministers from the heart so for the most part they profit by them The Apostle giueth this Testimony of the Galathians that they loued him exceedingly and therefore regarded his Doctrine accordingly f Gal. 4 14 15 The triall of me which was in my flesh ye despised not neither abhorred but ye receiued me as an Angell of GOD yea as Christ Iesus what was then your felicity For I beare ye record that if it had bin possible ye would haue plucked out your owne eyes and haue giuen them vnto mee Hence it is that Christ and his Apostles labour to plant this truth and to settle this perswasion in the hearts of those whome they taught that they vvere dearely beloued to them When the Disciples were afraid at Christs words he answered again said vnto them g Mark 10 24 Children how hard is it for them that trust in riches to enter into the kingdome of God So the Prophet Esay speaketh h Esay 8 18. Behold I and the children whom the Lord hath giuen mee are as signes and as wonders in Israel Thus do the Apostles write in this manner to the Churches calling them beloued brethren and deare children As we haue louing words in our mouthes so we should haue louing affections in our hearts It is a pittiful sight lamentable condition when the Pastor in any place setteth himselfe against the people and the people against the Pastor when they that should loue together as Father and Son do wrangle together as Cats and Dogs and are euer snarling and byting one of another If a priuate house be diuided against it selfe it cannot stand so if a particular Church be in a bitter mutiny it runneth to ruine and is miserably torn in peeces It is a great praise of that congregation where they are at peace and vnity ioyne together in the word Sacraments and sing the Psalmes and songs of God to his endlesse praise It is a comfortable thing when the people reioyce in their Minister the Minister in his people when the people desire and delight in the companie of their Minister and the Minister in the company of his people and so take comfort in the sweet society one of another This reproueth those that vpon euery slight occasion for euery slender profit yea for euery toy trifle follow suits of Law and bring actions of trespasse one against another whereby they trouble not onely their neighbours at home but the Countrey abroad These haue forgotten the words of Abraham to Lot when a debate arose among their Heard-men i Gen. 13 8. Let there be no strife I pray thee betweene thee me neither betweene mine Heard-men and thine Heard-men for wee are Bretheren It is therefore a great shame and reproach to heare of such iarres and ciuill wars as are in many parishes It is a plaine argument that there is little loue betweene them and lesse good wrought among them The Minister accounteth them not as his Sonnes and Daughters he seeketh not to winne them to the faith he esteemeth them not as his Crown in the day of the Lord. On the other side the people do not reuerence their Minister as their father but hate him as their enemy God is not among such Ministers and people but is gon farre from them and they are departed farre from him God is k 1 Ioh. 4 16 12. loue they that dwell in loue dwell in God and God in them If we loue one another God dwelleth in vs and his loue is perfect in vs. The Deuill is the Father fountaine of all debate and hatred c Iames 4. 16. For where enuying and strife is there is sedition and all manner of euill workes How then can wee otherwise thinke but that Sathan beareth rule among them and possesseth the cheefe holde of their hearts seeing so small tokens of loue and so great fruits of the Old man nay of the old Serpent appeare among them Wherefore to return thither from whence we began we must remember the amiable names giuen to the Pastor and people they must consider they are as Father and Son neerely coupled and ioyned together and thereby stirre vppe themselues and admonish one another of their duties to open their hearts in loue and againe to shut them vp that hatred haue no entrance into them hnd that mallice do not abide in them Vse 2. Secondly these most louing Titles applied to the Minister and people shew the duties required of Pastors toward their charge and teach them to loue them as their children to tender their good to exhort them to lay vp for themselues spirituall riches Great is the loue of Parents towardes their Children If the Childe be sicke or wayward they doe not cast him out of doores or withdraw their affections from him Hence it is that Christ when he saw the people scattered abroad and dispersed heere and there as Sheepe without a Shepheard d Math. 9 36.
He had compassion vpon them and shewed great loue toward them We see how Christ applyeth this to the Conscience of Peter e Iohn 21 15 16. willeth him to try his loue toward him by feeding his Sheepe and Lambes thereby assuring him that if he perswaded himselfe to loue Christ Iesus and yet was not carefull to teach his people he deceiued himselfe and lyed to the holy-Holy-Ghost who would finde him out in his sinne This serueth to reproue sundry corruptions and to meete with many abuses in the Ministers that make them vnworthy of the name of Fathers and testifie that their hearts are empty of this vnfaigned loue that ought to bee in them towards Gods people whom they should affect as deare Children First f What Non-residency is it condemneth the wilfull and ordinary absence of the Pastor from his flocke that is committed to his care and charge whereby the duties of teaching and example of life in his owne person are neglected True it is there may iust and lawfull causes of the Pastors absence sometimes fall out so that the Church be not endamaged but as farre as is possible be sufficiently prouided for as sickenesse g Concil Mogunt Can. 25. August epist 138. Tripart hist lib 6. cap. 22. of body whereby he is restrained Church affayres whereby hee is hindered Persecution whereby he is enforced to flye Priuate affaires whereby he is necessarily constrained for a time to be absent but a wilfull long and continued Non-residency from that particular Congregation enioyned him to feed is euidently conuinced by many Reasons grounded vpon the word of God and the practise of the Church of Christ The Scriptures of the olde and new Testament do directly forbid it The Lord saith by his Prophet Esay h Esay 61 6. Ezek. 44 8. Zac. 11 16 17 I haue set Watchmen vpon the walles O Ierusalem which all the day and all the night continually shall not cease ye that are mindfull of the Lord keepe not silence and giue him no rest till he repaire and till he set vp Ierusalem the praise of the world The Prophet Ezekiell is plentifull in this argument who speaking of vnfaithfull Leuites saith Ye haue not kept the ordinances of mine holy things but you your selues haue set others to take the charge of my Sanctuary So the Prophet Zachary setteth downe this as a great iudgement of the Lord I will raise vp a Shepheard in the Land which shall not looke for the thnig that is lost nor seeke the tender Lambes nor heale that which is hurt nor feede that which standeth vppe but hee shall eate the flesh of the fat and teare their Clawes in peeces It is noted of Salomon i 1 Kings 6 10 1 Chro. 28 11 12 13 19. when hee builded the Temple to bee the place of preaching and Prayer which he did according to the word of God he also builded Houses and Chambers round about the Temple ioyned vnto it to teach the Priestes and Leuites that they should bee neere vnto their charges For this cause also it is expressed k 1 Sa. 1 9 12 That Eli the Priest of God sate at the doore of the Tabernacle to espy the manners and to aunswere the doubts of those that came and resorted vnto him And the Apostle Paul expressing the Priests function saith l 1 Cor. 9 13. They did minister about the holy things and did wait at the altar He m Prosedreuontes vseth a word of great force and strength that bindeth them to a continuall residency and sitting at their charge If wee come to the New Testament we shall see sundry directions importing and implying the Pastours presence with his people The Apostle speaking to the Elders of Ephesus n Act. 20. 28 29. saith Take heed vnto your selues and to all the Flocke whereof the holy Ghost hath made you Ouer-seers to feede the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne bloud for I know this that after my departing shall grieuous Wolues enter in among you not sparing the Flocke The Apostle Peter likewise exhorteth the Elders o 1 Pet 5 2 3 Feede the Flocke of God which dependeth vpon you caring for it not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready mind The Apostle to the Hebrewes warneth the Church p Heb. 1 3 17. To obey them that haue the ouer-sight of them and submit themselues for they watch for their Soules as they that must giue accounts It is a great wonder that negligent Pastors reading these places and considering these charges laid vpon their shoulders can so easily shake them off or so slightly passe them ouer or so soone forget them They may seeme more then sufficient to conuince them of want of loue of abundance of couetousnesse of excesse of idlenesse of hardnesse of heart of contempt of the word which they should teach to others A great and heauy iudgement of God is vpon them that can passe ouer this duty without feare and trembling that can see neyther the daunger of their owne soules nor the danger of the peoples Soules through want of instruction Againe the Titles giuen to the Ministers vnder the Gospell as also to the Prophets and Priestes vnder the Law doe vrge diligence faithfulnesse and carefull attendance and consequently the personall presence of the Pastor They are called q Ephe. 4 11. Shepheards r Ezek. 33. Watch-men Å¿ Luke 12 42. Stewards t Heb. 13 17. Captains u 1 Cor. 3 9. Builders x 2 Cor. 5 12. Embassadours and such like so that though they teach oftentimes by themselues and continually and constantly by others they are not excused The office of the Minister is set forth in the Picture of a Shepheard who by reason of the multitude of rauenous Wolus other hurtfull Beasts keepeth watch day and night ouer his flocke He is a Watch-man set in his Watch-Tower to discry the enemy and to giue warning of the danger He is a Steward to prouide for the Family and to giue them their portion of meat in due season He is a Captaine of the Lords Hoast to lead them into the obedience of godlinesse and to goe before them in example of life He is a Builder to frame them and fit them to be stones in the Lordes building He is an Ambassadour to deliuer the will of him that sent him and to speak being called as the words of God These comparisons as they serue to teach diligence and continuance in preaching so they are forcible to presse him to attend vpon his charge that attendeth vpon him Thirdly the Apostle speaking of the office of the Minister saith y 2 Cor. 2 16. Who is sufficient for these thinges When he hath done all he can and imployed himselfe to the vtmost of his power yet he shall come farre short of his duty how much more when hee is ordinarily absent from his charge
like to the Priestes c Num. 7 9. 2 Sam. 6 3. who beeing commaunded to beare the Arke vppon their owne Shoulders did set it vpon a Cart and draw it with Oxen. So ought the Ministers to feede their Flockes themselues and not put them to bee fed of others Some d Damasus epist 4. compare such foolish and idle Pastours that put ouer their charges to others vnto Harlots which so soone as they haue brought forth their Children by and by commit them to be kept and nourished of others that they may sooner giue themselues to their lusts againe Others resemble them to a e Espenc lib. 3. digress ad 1. Timoth. man that doth marry a Wife and being himselfe vnapt for generation or vnwilling to giue due beneuolence is content she become fruitfull and made the Mother of many Children by another Father so is he accounted and presumed to be as vaine a man who being espoused and married to a Church as a man to his Wife doth vse the help of others in getting spirituall Children vnto God Christ Iesus is the Shepheard f 1 Pet. 5 4. the cheefe and great Shepheard of the Sheepe all other Pastours are but his Seruants and Substitutes and therefore themselues being his Deputies they cannot make a Deputy no more then one Seruant discharge himselfe by another So then we must know that they can no more be saide to preach the Word that preach by others then to be resident that are resident by others or to bee godly that lead a godly life by others and thus they may be saued by others and themselues goe to Hell But as euery man is bound to liue godly himselfe so is euery Pastour bound to preach in his owne person This appeareth vnder the comparisons and similitudes of Builders Captaines Ambassadours Stewards and Shepheards which wee spake of before When a man hath made choyce of a skilfull and cunning Builder to build his house the Worke-man hath not done his duty if he put it out to bee finished by another When a Prince hath made choyce of a Generall to lead his Army against the Enemy he may not send another in his roome and himselfe sit idle at home but his alleageance bindeth him to goe in his owne person The like we might say of the rest Thus we haue seene at large that the loue betweene the Pastour and people ouerthroweth the ordinary absence without iust and conscionable causes the one from the other so that if the Minister would assure his owne heart that he loueth the sheepe which he hath taken vpon him to teach he must shew it by feeding them with the wholesome and heauenly pastures of the word of God Secondly it reprooueth such as outwardly are in sheepes cloathing but inwardly are rauening Wolues vnto the Flocke not carefull Pastours not louing Parents but such as haue no prouision no store no food no Bread of Life to breake vnto them but seeke to starue and famish them through want of Milke and meat to put in their mouthes If they be resident and remaine with them and yet doe not instruct them and preach vnto them it is all one as if they were absent from them If there be meat and drinke in the house and none set vpon the Table or giuen to the Children they may dye and perish for hunger These idle Drones are no better then Murtherers and Man-slayers nay Soule-slayers which is the greatest and most bloody Murther For as the Steward that should feede the bodies of such as are in the Family and pineth them to death is a Murtherer and the Nurse that vndertaketh the nourishing of the Childe and yet eyther through daintinesse or idlenesse or wilfulnesse will not draw out the breast but suffereth the Child to languish and perish is a Murtherer of the Childe so such as are Stewards of Gods house and Nurses of Gods people yet feede not their Soules but starue them to death are Bloud-suckers and Murtherers in the highest degree They are worse then the Canibals that liue vpon bloud for these liue vpon the soules of men and carry them head-long to Hell The Lord complaineth in the Prophet g Hos 4 6. That the people perish through want of knowledge Such as are blindely led doe fall into the Ditch with their blind Leaders The bloud of such as perish in their ignorance through want of teaching h Ezek. 3 18. shall be required at the Watch-mans hand The Prophet Dauid hauing the Water of the well of Bethlehem that he longed and lusted to tast brought vnto him i 2 Sam. 23 17 yet would not drinke thereof when he had it but poured it for an offering vnto the Lord because it was the bloud of the men that went in ieopardy of their liues O that these men would consider of their sinne and had a feeling of their iniquity that they eate and drinke the bloud of Men and maintaine themselues by the destruction of their soules Suppose he lead an vnblameable life giue good example to others keepe hospitality fill their bellies make peace among his Neighbours be able priuately to exhort and comfort them and to performe other common workes of Charity yet he hath not discharged the duty of a Minister vnlesse he preach vnto them diligently and faithfully and diuide the word of truth aright Vse 3. Lastly seeing the Minister and people ought to be as Father and Sonne this sheweth the duty of the people that are vnder their Ministery that they regard their Ministers as their Parents honouring them yeelding them due recompence esteeming them as Fellow-workers with God to beget them to Christ to turne them to Saluation to nourish them vp and continue them in the estate of Christ Nay we should account of them if it be possible more then of naturall Parents Of our Parents wee haue receiued onely to be Of our Ministers we haue receiued to be well Of our Parents we haue taken our first birth of our Ministers we haue obtained our second birth Of our Parents we haue beene brought into the World by Generation of our Ministers we haue bin brought into the Church by Regeneration Our first begetting was to death our second or new birth is to Life and Saluation By the first birth wee are Heires of Wrath by the second we are made the Sonnes of God So then if it be better for vs to be borne againe of Water and the Holy Ghost k Iohn 1 13. which cannot proceede from the will of the flesh nor from the will of Man but of God we ought to esteeme of those that are Instruments of our Regeneration as dearelie and tenderly as if they were our Parents and to say with the Apostle l Rom. 10 15 How beautifull are the Feete of them which bring glad tydings of pcace and bring glad tydings of good thinges Hence it is that he speaketh to the Thessalonians m 1 Thes 5 12 We
both what may bee learned by it and how it may bee applyed vnto vs. First of all it teatheth that though education bee a notable meanes of reformation and working good in the hearts of those that heare instruction and albeit Parents and Maysters bee thereby discharged as they that haue done their dutie yet bare teaching is not sufficient to conuert the soule and to settle the Conscience in good thinges Noah was as carefull for the instruction of Cham and Canaan as of the rest that were of his house belonged to his charge yet they followed not his Doctrine but scoffed at him that was both Pastor and Parent Dauid a man after Gods owne heart walked in the middest of his house in the vprightnesse of his Conscience yet he had an incestuous Ammon a Rebellious Absolom a licentious Adoniah all of them vngodly and vngracious Children So then although education be a good meanes yet it is not a sufficient meanes to worke reformation He that laboureth in planting and watering is nothing except God giue the blessing of encrease We see this euidently in the publicke assembly as well as in the priuate family in the house of God as well as in the house of man There is a difference of hearers according to their diuers dispositions f Math. 13 13 14. some are deafe hearers that haue not their eares boared through to the heart they haue onely outward eares and regarde no more but outward hearing and are no way mooued with that which is spoken dead-hearted dull-eared dim-sighted heauy-headed Others beside their bodily eares haue the eares of their hearts opened by the word and worke of the Spirit made plyable and tractable to receiue imbrace and beleeue that which they heare So is it in the priuate instruction vsed in priuate Families all that heare with the outwarde eare are not reformed all that are instructed are not conuerted Obiection What then Shall not Fathers teach their Children and Maisters their Seruants and Householders their Families because some haue not beleeued and many remaine as blinde and blockish as they were at the first Answere Yes it is their dutie to bee dilligent in teaching them and in laying the foundation of Christian Religion among them howsoeuer it bee receyued or reiected of such as bee in their houses and belong vnto them Were not he a simple Husbandman that would neglect to sowe his Ground because hee knoweth that some of the Corne will neuer grow vppe to bring foorth fruite but dye in the earth Or were not hee an vnwise Law-giuer that will not haue wholesome Lawes enacted and established because some transgresse them and disobey them and make no account of them Or were not hee a very foolish Father who because hee hath one rude and riotous Sonne that will not reuerence his person nor fulfill his Commaundements nor regarde his Authoritie nor feare his threatninges woulde therefore holde his peace and refraine himselfe from instructing and informing his other Children in the wayes of Godlinesse Or were hee not a badde Gardiner who because some of his Ground bringeth forth Weeds and Nettles would therefore refuse to water the Hearbes that are meete for the vse of man When the Lorde sent his holy Prophets to reprooue the stubborne and stiffe-necked Iewes hee knewe what entertainement them-selues shoulde finde and what effect their Doctrine woulde haue taken yet to make them without excuse they were commanded to go that they might be conuinced of sinne seeing there had beene a Prophet among them The Prophet Ieremy being called of God to preach the word is told afore-hand that they shoulde not obey his word g Ier. 1 19. Ezek. 2 5 7. and 3 7. but fight against him Likewise Ezekiell being sent to the children of Israel is shewed that they would not heare him nor cease from their waies Whereby we see that howsoeuer the people were stiffe-necked and stif-harted howsoeuer their faces were stronger then the Flint and their fore-heads were harder then the Adamant yet God would haue his worde offered vnto them and laid before them He hath mo endes then one of the preaching of his word sometimes he vseth it to soften and sometimes to harden sometimes to saue and sometimes to condemne somtimes to be h 2 Cor. 2 16 the sauor of life vnto life and sometimes to be the sauor of death vnto death So should it be with all godly housholders howsoeuer they haue many that harbour in their houses are entertained within their wals that regard not the fear of God but pull away their shoulders from the sweet yoak of God yet they are not to surcease or wax faint and weary but to continue the instruction of them the powring of water vpon the hard stone proouing if God at anytime will soften their harts and giue them repentance that they may come out of the snares of the Deuil of whom they are holdē captiues We know not at what time God may work in them and call them to a sight of their sinnes and to a turning from their sins They may heare that in the time of their ignorance which they may practise in the time of their knowledge They may hear that Doctrine which though it lye hid and couered as Corn in the earth or as fire in the ashes a long time and seeme buried in perpetuall forgetfulnesse yet it may afterwardes break forth as the light and kindle in their harts as a mightie flame Thus peraduenture it might be with this Onesimus when he was conuerted by the Ministry of the Apostle to the Faith of Christ he might cal to his remembrance many good thinges that hee had heard before but neuer a whit regarded nor respected and now profit by that Doctrine that before he had despised and derided The Disciples of Christ did not by and by receiue nor conceiue of his preaching but when i Iohn 2 22. hee was risen againe they remembered what hee had deliuered vnto them So ought wee to deale toward such as are committed vnto vs let vs plant and water committing and commending the successe and encrease of all our labours vnto God Vse 2 Secondly seeing where there are good meanes are many times godlesse and gracelesse men we learne that to heare to saluation and to receiue willingly instruction is no generall or common grace no man can beleeue sauing hee to whom it is giuen It is the guift of God that must open the vnderstanding and boare through the eare and sanctify the heart before any can heare with a desire to vnderstand or lay it vppe with a purpose to practise and obey Hence it is that the Prophet saith k Esay 50 5. The Lord GOD hath opened mine eare and I was not rebellious neyther turned I backe The Euangelist Luke teacheth that when the Apostles preached the Gospell so many as were appointed to saluation beleeued which was a fruite of their election others mocked which was a
helpfull and seruiceable to Gods people shall finde them as their remembrancers to God who will not forget the labour of their loue and the duty of their seruice This ought to bee a notable encouragement vnto vs not to deale niggardly toward the Saints nor to withhold from them the fruits of our loue seeing nothing shall be lost that is bestowed vpon them but we shall receiue an hundred folde into our bosome grace for grace loue for loue blessing for blessing mercy for mercie For this comfort and consolation will arise to them that doe good to Gods people they shall haue fauour with God they shall gaine a good report with the world and they shall purchase the sweet sauour of a good name as of a precious oyntment among the Saints and shall stirre them vp to intreate Gods manifold mercies for them Iehoiada that good High-Priest was so honoured of the people for suppressing the tyranny of Athalia for setting vp the kingdome of Ioash and for restoring the true religion of God that he was accounted a common Father of the Countrey and they gaue him the burial of a King r 2 Chron. 24 15 16. for they buried him in the Citty of Dauid with the Kings because he had done good in Israell and toward God and his house So the apostle Paul declaring that Onesiphorus had done him great seruice prayeth vnto God for him ſ 2 Tim. 1 16 17 18. The Lord giue mercie vnto the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chaine but when he was at Rome he sought me out diligently and found me The Lord grant vnto him that he may finde mercy with the Lord at that day Whereby we may gather that the benefites bestowed vpon the Saints shall not perish although they themselues cannot requite thē for though they want ability to pay them yet they want not harts to pray for them yea the Lorde will not onely haue pitty of them that take pitty of his people but he will shew mercy to their housholds because when Paule praiseth the bountifulnesse and zeale of Onesiphorus he wisheth well for his sake to his whole family The blessing of God shall not rest onely vpon the head of the iust but it shall descend into his whole house such is the loue of God toward those that be his If the consideration of this great promise and rich recompence of reward doe not pricke vs forward to exercise the workes of loue and fruits of compassion we are more then blockish and brutish On the other side such as haue beene not helpfull but hurtful not industrious but iniurious not seruiceable but vnprofitable to Gods people when God shall visit them either with publicke calamities or priuate iudgements their owne Consciences shall gall them and gnaw vpon them when they remember their owne works which shall prouoke men to speak euill of them cause them to pray against them and constraine them to call vppon God to worke their confusion This we see in Paul the Apostle in the latter end of the same Epistle t 2 Tim. 4 14 Alexander the Copper-smith hath done me much euill the Lord reward him according to his workes Thus doeth the Prophet Dauid deale oftentimes in the Psalmes u Psal 74 2 3. Thinke vpon thy congregation which thou hast possessed of old on the rod of thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed and on this mount Syon wherein thou hast dwelt lift vp thy stroakes that thou mayst for euer destroy euerie enemy that doth euil to the Sanctuary Thus wee see the people of God haue from time to time prayed against the malicious enemies of the Church that sought the ruine and destruction thereof Their prayers are of great force enter into the eares of the Lord of hostes whether it bee to obtaine mercies vpon the friends of the Church or to draw downe vengeance vppon the aduersaries thereof that oppresse it with cruelty and blaspheme the name of God which is holy throughout all ages and generations There is no greater honour that we should desire or delight in then to be called the friends of God and the seruants of the Church If we be the seruants of God wee must also account our selues the seruants of the Church The Prophet Dauid did esteeme the faithfull that were in Ierusalem as his Brethren So on the contrary side there cannot a greater dishonor and reproach befall vs then to be reputed the enemies of God and his people For if wee set our selues against his people that are his portion and inheritance hee will no otherwise deale with vs then with his enemies If God come against vs as his enemy we shall not be able to preuaile we cannot stand before him but shall be as stubble in the fire and as chaffe before the winde Vse 4. Lastly seeing God requireth seruice to his Church at our hands to do all good to them by all good meanes it is our dutie to enquire and learne the estate of the distressed Church that we may knowe and bee informed where and when and how it is afflicted How many are there that neuer thinke vpon the people of God to do them good but forget their affliction and oppression The Butler of Pharaoh did not remember Ioseph but forgate him and the kindnesse he shewed toward him when they were prisoners togither who had said vnto him x Gen. 40 14 23. Haue me in remembrance with thee when thou art in good case and shew mercy I pray thee vnto me and make mention of me to Pharaoh that thou mayst bring me out of this house So when Zachariah the sonne of Iehoiada whom we mentioned before was for preaching the truth and denouncing the iudgements of God from his mouth oppressed with enuie and ouerborne by the might of the Rulers the King woulde not deliuer him out of their hands y 2 Chron. 24 21 22. but commanded him to bee stoned with stones and remembred not the kindnesse that his father had done to him but slew his son This is the common course and current of the world wee will not see the afflictions of the poore Saints but turne away our eyes from them or if wee cannot choose but see them we quickly forget them as if wee had neuer eyther beheld them or knowne of them This is one misery of the faithful that men do not regard them when they are in misery The Lord hath determined that there shall be alwayes some obiects offered vnto vs and set before vs to exercise the fruits of our Faith and Loue. He hath saide that the poore wee shall alwayes haue with vs and such as stand in need of our helpe and comfort It is in easie thing to boast of Faith and Loue but if we will be assured that we haue true Faith indeed we must shew it by our workes which are the fruites whereby it is knowne We must not turne away our
haue nothing of vs. This is the reason vrged by the Apostle to the Corinthians l 2 Cor. 9 7. As euery man wisheth in his heart so let him giue not grudgingly or of necessitie for God loueth a chearefull giuer Now that which the Apostle speaketh of charity and of almes may as truely be spoken of euery dutie that God requireth of vs. When wee pray we must call vpon God chearefully for he loueth a cheerefull prayer When we giue thankes to his name for blessings receiued wee must thanke him chearefully for he loueth a chearful giuer of thankes and albeit these be notable parts of Gods worship and excellent duties commaunded of him and required of vs yet without this chearfulnesse they are as a dead thing not regarded Reason 2. Secondly our obedience vnto God must bee answereable to the obedience of Christ that hee performed to his Father for hee hath therein giuen vs an example and taught vs how to obey The maner of his obedience was willing and done of his own accord not extorted and wrested from him for then it could not haue beene accepted of God nor merritorious for vs nor praised in him Hence it is that the Apostle saith m Heb. 10 9 10. Then saide he Loe I come to do thy will ô God he taketh away the first that hee may establish the second By the which will we are sanctified euen by the offering of the body of Iesus Christ once made Thus Christ himselfe speaketh in the Gospell n Iohn 10 17 18. Therefore dooth my Father loue me because I lay downe my life that I might take it again No man taketh it from me but I lay it downe of my selfe I haue power to lay it down haue power to take it againe Where he sheweth that the cause wherefore he suffered was not because Caiphas conuented him or the witnesses accused him or Pilate condemned him or the Iewes executed him but because it pleased his Father and himselfe to make himselfe an offering for sinne For except hee had died willingly all his aduersaries had bin too weake to work any thing against him o Iohn 18 6. as appeareth in euidently the Garden when hee cast them all downe to the ground with a word of his mouth Heere is set down a pattern for vs to follow we must performe the like obedience that he did as his was voluntarily and willing so ought ours likewise to be that it may be acceptable in the sight of God Reason 3 Thirdly the things that are not done in Faith and Loue are sinne For without faith it is vnpossible p Heb 11 6 to please God And though I had the guifts of prophesy and knew al secrets and al knowledge yea if I had al faith so that if I could remoue mountaines q 1 Cor. 13 2 3 and had not loue I were nothing though I feede the poore with all my goods and though I giue my body that I bee burned and haue not loue it profiteth nothing So then we see that no dutie is acceptable without Faith and Loue. But nothing done vnwillingly vncomfortably or hypocritically can be done in Faith and Loue. And therefore such duties as are thus perfourmed haue no life nor vertue in them to giue them any grace or acceptation with God Reason 4 Lastly God knoweth our hearts and seeth hovv vve bring our guifts offer our offerings He looketh not vpon the outward vvorke but regardeth the intent of the heart When Caine brought vnto God an oblation of the fruites of the ground r Gen 4 5. he had no regard to him nor to his offring because he savv the hollownesse and hypocrisie of his heart This is the reason that Dauid vseth to perswade Salomon his sonne to haue a care to learn and to practise the will of God 1 Chro. 28 8. And thou Salomon my sonne know thou the God of thy Father and serue him with a perfect heart and with a willing minde for the Lord searcheth all harts and vnderstandeth al the imaginations of thoghts if thou seeke him he will be found of thee but if thou forsake him he will cast thee off for euer Where we see the Father carefull for the future good of his son mooueth him to endeuour and striue to know God by learning what he willeth to serue him vprightly and willingly by practising as hee enableth because our thoughts are not hidden from the all-seeing eye of God and because he offereth himselfe to them that seeke him but forsaketh them that refuse him when he is offered We may easily deceiue the eye of man that looketh only to the person and beholdeth only the outward worke but it is vnpossible to deceiue the searcher of hearts If then we gather al these reasons into a short sum and set them as in a Table before our eyes if we consider that God loueth a chearfull seruice that Christ performed a willing obedience that faith and loue giueth acceptance to the work and lastly that God giueth recompence according to the heart which he knoweth we see that the strength of them will beare the ful waight of this conclusion that the duties of our Religion must not be performed constrainedly but freely not grudgingly but chearefully not vnwillingly but readily not of necessity but voluntarily Vse 1. Now we are to make Vse of this Doctrine First seeing no man must performe any holy duty to God or man vpon compulsion or against his will but with all his minde and might we learne that euery action or dutie is accounted of by God not according to the greatnesse of the worker or outwarde shew of the worke but according to the will and affection of the dooer it is the manner of dooing that God more accepteth then the action or deede it selfe A Childe in his obedience to his Father is esteemed for his reuerent louing obedient and dutifull heart and not for the greatnesse or worthines of his worke For what can he do when hee hath endeuoured to the vtmost to pleasure his Father So is it with vs when we haue done all that wee can we must confesse we haue bin vnptofitable seruants and therefore God more respecteth the intention then the action the Worke-man then the worke the affection then the effect Mary is commended of Christ t Luke 7 47 and 21 3 4. because shee loued much The poore widdow that cast into the treasury one mite is praised by Christ aboue the rest that offered of their substance and superfluity He that giueth a cup of cold water in the name of a Disciple to a Disciple u Math. 10 42 shall not loese his reward What is the bestowing of a Mite Or what is a cup of colde water Are they of themselues in themselues considered any thing worth Or can they deserue to be accepted No in no wise but God accepteth the manner more then the matter how
least member of the body is honoured and not despised cherrished and not contemned tendered and not abhorred of vs. So it ought to be in the members of Christs body which are all deare to him which hee bought with an equall price and therefore ought to be deare vnto vs if wee beleeue our selues to haue our part and portion in his body Notwithstanding if thorough the pride contempt disdaine and vnthankfulnesse of men we finde our selues little regarded made as a foot-stoole for men to tread and trample vpon as a ball to spurne at with all reproach and so scorned for our well dooing let vs not be dismayed with this dealing but consider that the poor seruants of God haue tasted of the like measure that haue gone before vs so that wee are not the first that haue beene thus vsed and we are not like to bee the last that are in this sort to be abused Marke a little how it fell out with Ioseph one that performed the best seruice and yet one that receiued the worst recompence When he was broght downe to Egypt and bought and sold as a slaue p Gen. 39 1 2 4 5 20. or as Oxe in the Market from one to another at length he came vnto the hands house of Potiphar whom he serued faithfully so that the Lord was with him and made all that he did to prosper in his hand his Maister put all that he had in his hande and made him Ruler of his house neuerthelesse not long after thorough the false suggestion of his Mistris and the hasty and ouer-rash credulity of his Maister his good seruice was forgotten he is cast in prison and lyeth bound in setters The like wee might say of Iacob who serued for his wiues in the house of Laban Who could do better seruice or who could shew himselfe a more painfull and profitable seruant then he had done Hee speaketh it before Labans face and doth not whisper it behinde his backe hee auoucheth it before him that he might take exception to it if he had ought to obiect against it q Gen. 31 39 40. Whatsoeuer was torne of Beasts I brought it not vnto thee but made it good my selfe of mine hand didst thou require it were it stolne by day or stollen by night I was in the day consumed with heate and with frost in the Night and my sleepe departed from mine eyes This duty and diligence did he perform and yet what was the wages of the woorke and the recompence of his labors It followeth in the next wordes r Verse 41. I haue beene twenty yeares in thine house and serued thee fourteene yeares for thy two daughters six yeares for thy Sheepe and thou hast chaunged my wages ten times Thus we see how good and gracious seruants haue bin serued in former times before vs and what hard measure hath bin rendred and repayed vnto them The examples of the Israelites is fit to be thought vpon and worthy to be considered in this case when they soiourned and serued in the land of Egipt according as the Lord fore-shewed vnto Abraham Å¿ Gen. 15 13. Know for a surety that thy seede shall be a stranger in a Land that is not theirs foure hundred yeares and shall serue them and they shall intreat them euill They neuer plotted any rebellion or attempted act of hostility against them but serued their taske-maisters that oppressed them and laboured in making bricke and gathering straw and finishing their taske yet they were blamed and beaten and laden with many sorrowes Let vs therefore by all these examples be encouraged and know that nothing can happen vnto vs which hath not fallen out to others that haue liued before vs who haue done as good and faithful seruice to their superiors as we haue done or can do and yet haue beene euilly entreated and wrongfully pursued and cruelly handled and vniustly rewarded Let vs not suffer for euill doing t 1 Pet. 4 15 16. 2 19 20 and as euill doers but let vs suffer as Christians that so God may be glorified and we not ashamed of our afflictions For this is thanke-worthy if a man for Conscience toward God endure greef suffring wrongfully it is acceptable before him is respected of him albeit among men it go away vnrewarded We herd before of the good seruice of Iacob of Ioseph of the Iewes of Iacob toward Laban of Ioseph toward Potiphar of the Iewes toward the Egyptians and how euilly they were rewarded and recompenced of their cruell and couetous Maisters But they knew they serued a better Maister in Heauen who would not suffer them to want the fruite of their labors nor to loose the worke of their hands Hence it is that he encreased Iacob in substance hee brought Ioseph out of prison he gaue the Israelites fauour in the eyes of the Egyptians that gaue them Iewels of Siluer and of Gold and sent them not empty away Thus will God deale with vs if we suffer with patience and will honor them that are carefull to honor him Aboue a Seruant euen as a Brother beloued We heard before howe the Apostle commendeth Onesimus to his Maister that he was to be receiued of him not so much as a seruant as one that was more then a seruant that is not an Infidell but a Christian This point is in these words declared by the speciall or by a word of Relation a beloued Brother which was more then a simple seruant For if he had any vnbeleeuers that were not of the houshold of Faith either borne in his house or bought with his money they were his seruants but they were not beloued Brethren But this man conuerted to the Faith was aboue the ranke and degree of such persons hee was both a Seruant and a Brother True it is there was great difference betweene Philemon and Onesimus betweene the Maister and Seruant in things of this life one was Superior the other Inferior one was to command the other to obey one was to rule the other to be subiect in the Lord yet wee see how the Apostle in this place is not affraide to call Onesimus his Maisters Brother and would not haue the Maister ashamed to acknowledge it in words to shew it in his practise This is not spoken as if they were naturall Bretheren in the flesh and descended of one Father according to the common generation of the rest of the sonnes of men but they were Brethren in Christ partakers of the common Faith equall in the participation of heauenly graces alike in the fauour of God one not dearer to him then another Hence it is that the Apostle before Verse 7. and afterward verse 20. calleth Philemon his Brother in Christ though he were his sonne in the Gospell because hee had begotten him vnto God by the immortall seede of the word u Verse 19. as wee shall see in the words following where he challengeth as his own and as a
confesse it they haue great names and high Titles of honour giuen vnto them Å¿ Psal 82 6. I haue said ye are Gods and ye are all Children of the most high But ye shall die as a man and yee Princes shall fall like others If then there be so little difference in the life and lesse difference of the death of rich and poor of Maister and Seruant of Magistrate Subiect we shal find a greater equality and parity betweene them in holy and heauenly things We allow them to be as the elder brethren but they must know and consider that other are as the yonger bretheren of the house and haue the same priuiledges giuen vnto them For if the Lord Iesus be not ashamed to call vs all brethren shal they be ashamed to confesse one another to be equall in the matters of our redemption and saluation Shall the rich man disdaine the poore or the Prince his people or the Maister the seruant or the Free-man him that is bond seeing the Lord of life that is equall with his Father in might and Maiesty vouchsafeth to repute vs al in the place of Brethren Hence it is that he saith in the Gospell speaking of lodging the stranger in our houses of cloathing the naked with our Garments of feeding the hungry with our meats of visiting the prisoners with reliefe of refreshing the sicke with our comfort t Math. 25 40. Verily I say vnto you inasmuch as ye haue done it vnto one of the least of these my Brethren yee haue done it vnto mee Who are more disgraced and contemned in the worlde then such as are Strangers or Prisoners or naked in necessity Yet these poore contemptible ones are deare in his sight tender as the Apple of his eye and acknowledged of him to be his Bretheren Wee are not worthy therefore to bee esteemed of Christ if we regard not such as are in greatest price and cheefest account with him So then we must take heede that wee neuer despise and deride and disdain those that are called the Brethren of Christ nor refuse to imbrace them as our owne Brethren This is that vse which the Apostle vrgeth in setting downe the duties of Maisters u Ephes 6 9. Ye Maisters do the same thinges vnto them putting away threatning and know that euen your Maister also is in heauen neither is there respest of persons with him Where we see how hee moueth all Maisters to cast off all pride and high conceite of themselues and to Loue their faithfull seruants as their faithfull Bretheren It is not farre from this purpose which Iob speaketh touching his practise and behauiour toward his Seruants x Iob. 31 13 14 15. If I did contemne the iudgement of my seruant and of my Mayde when they did contend with me What then shall I do when God standeth vp And when he shall visit me What shall I answere He that hath made me in the womb hath he not made him Hath not he alone fashioned vs in the womb Where the holy man commendeth mildnesse in all Gouernors and reprooueth the exercise of cruelty toward their seruants Hee gaue them free libertie to declare and debate the matter with him to alledge what reasonable excuse soeuer they had considering with himselfe that we haue one common Creator and maker and are partakers of the same Nature and concluding thereuppon that albeit such as are bound to serue vs bee of low degree and despised in the world yet they neuerthelesse are our brethren So then such as are aduanced vnto high places and set in authority ouer others are not to trample them vnder their feete to despise and set them at naught to account them as vile persons in their eies but to vse them with mildnesse and to behaue themselues in al lowlines to rule their houses with al gentlenesse We must remember that wee haue a Maister in heauen so that albeit he hath exalted vs on high yet God standeth aboue all and is the Maister both of the Maister of the seruant O that this were well waighed and wisely considered and thoroughly learned of all Superiors that sit at the sterne and guide the ship The higher and greater our places are the lower and lesser ought our hearts to be If we be made Magistrates and Maisters and Rulers to gouern others let vs confesse they be Brethren with vs. This yeeldeth a profitable meditation to all Christian Gouernors when we behold any of our Inferiors thogh they were our bondmen in any trouble or distresse to thinke earnestly vpon these things If God haue made mee neuer so high when I see the people pinched with dearth and famine that they are ready to perish and famish in the streats for want of Bread I must knowe they are not Dogges though many make no better nor farther reckoning of them alas alas they are my Brethren When the Pestilence walketh in the darkenesse and the plague destroyeth at noone day that God striketh downe with his fearfull hand that thousands fall at our side and ten thousands at our right hand for he oftentimes maketh hauocke and bringeth desolation into many houses and families I must thinke it is no Murraine of Cattle they are my bretheren When I behold the oppression of the poore and the grinding of the faces of the needy that they are eaten vp as bread and sold as old shooes for nothing I must haue this feeling of their affliction they are not as Horsses or Asses ouer-laden with their burthen whom yet if it were so y Exo. 23 4 5. we were bound to pity raise vp though belonging to our enemy they are my poore and dear brethren whom God hath created whom Christ hath redeemed whom the holy spirit hath sanctified whom the word hath regenerated whom the church hath nourished whom the Angelles haue guarded and who together with me in the last day shall be glorified At that day shal God be all in al when Christ Iesus shall abolish all power and authority among men when Princes must resigne their kingdomes and cast downe their crownes at his feete then there shall be no more Prince and Subiects Pastor and people Mayster and Seruant Father and Sonne Husband and Wife These degrees indure but for a season which must haue end when Christ shall come to iudge the quicke and the dead If God haue made me a Maister and committed Seruants to my charge they must not be respected as my Swine or Oxen they are my Brethren and therefore I must looke vnto them in time of their sickenesse vse all good meanes for their deliuerance The Centurion in the gospell is commended that when his seruant fell sick was in danger of death he came to Christ z Math. 8 6. for help and succour If a man haue a Bullocke and beast that is diseased he will aske counsel seeke remedy much more ought we to deale mercifully with our seruants which God
are as certaine steppes whereby we climbe vp to the society and mutuall loue of others so the moe steps and degrees there are the greater ought our loue to be To be a man created after the Image of God is one degree and challengeth loue from vs to be performed toward him To be ioyned in a Politicall or Domesticall knot to wit in the Common wealth or in the priuate Familie as the Prince and Subiect the Father and Sonne the Maister and Seruant is another and a neerer degree and ought to be the cause of farther loue But if to these naturall and ciuill respects there be added a spiritual Communion in Christ which is the best band that bindeth faster then all the rest whereby the Subiect is made his Princes brother the Child his Fathers Brother and the Seruant his Maisters Brother this requireth a more faithfull and feruent loue and a farther degree of our affection toward them On the other side if the coniunction betweene them be onely in the two former considerations there can be no true and sincere loue betweene them albeit they bee so closely tyed together no although they be Fathers and Children Husbands and Wiues Maisters and Seruants Princes and Subiects For where Christ Iesus is not there can be no singlenesse and soundnesse of the Soule whosoeuer loueth not in the Lord he cannot loue from the heart and where there is no true piety there can be nothing else but hypocrisie which is the bane and poison of true loue Hence it is that hee which hath an euill Seruant doth not in truth possesse him he hath an interest and propriety in the least part of him he may haue his handes but he cannot haue his heart So the Apostle sheweth that while Onesimus was a wicked man and an vnbeleeuer his Maister Philemon could not commodiously vse him he wandred therefore a while from his House that by changing of the place he might be turned into another and returne a new man before an vnworthy Seruant but now a profitable Seruant nay a beloued Brother made neere and after a sort equall with his Maister thorough Faith in Christ Whensoeuer therefore Kinges and Princes Fathers and Maisters being beleeuers haue vnder them and belonging vnto them such as are vnfaithfull and vnbeleeuers they cannot promise to themselues that they haue the whole rule and command ouer them This appeareth euidently in the Popish sort that beleeue the Doctrine of the Councell or rather Conuenticle of Trent if one that professeth the Gospell haue a Wife or Child or Seruant embracing that falsly named Catholike-Religion that rest vpon the deceiueable errors of the Priests and Iesuits and all of them vpon the decree and determination of the Pope he cannot make his accounts except he account amisse that he hath full power ouer them or the rule of their liues or the loue of their hearts We see it oftentimes come to passe in Subiects adhering to the Dregges of Popish superstition that notwithstanding the bands of fidelity and allegiance whereby they are obliged to their Princes they breake out into actions of open Rebellion and seeke the subuersion of King and Countrey and Religion If then a man would haue an absolute and Soueraigne commaund ouer his Inferiours and be assured to haue a whole and entire Wife that his heart may trust in her and her heart rest in him if a man would haue a dutifull Child and a faithfull Seruant to do his will and performe seruice vnto him for conscience sake he must make choise of such as haue in them the feare of God the Faith of Christ the guifts of the Spirit the loue of Religion the desire of instruction and the care of saluation If these be wanting neuer thinke their affection can be firmely setled toward thee but vpon euerie occasion it will be easilie remooued from thee It is the surest and fastest knot that Christ knitteth all other bands will quickly be broken and loosed Vse 4 Lastlie seeing the encrease of many bands meeting together doubleth and trebleth the care and loue one toward another so that where the smallest number of meanes is found there also is found the smallest loue and where the greatest number of occasions concurreth as it were on an heap there ought to bee the surest knot of friendship and amitie it should put all superiours in minde of a necessary dutie to be carefull to instruct those that belong to their seuerall charges and iurisdictions that so they may tye them with a surer knot to themselues and haue the better seruice at their handes For seeing they are neerer coupled vnto them that are vnder the reach of their authoritie or the roofe of their houses then vnto the rest of mankinde they ought to haue a greater respect vnto them and beare a dearer loue vnto them euen vnto their bodies how much more vnto their Soules But wee cannot better testifie our loue vnto them and shew our care ouer them then by making knowne vnto them the workes of the Lord and the waies of saluation If we be commaunded to l Heb. 3 13. Exhort one another while it is called to day and to stirre vp one another to good things m 1 Thes 5 14 if we must admonish them that are out of order and comfort the feeble minded how much more are wee bound in conscience to perfect it to those that depend vpon vs and are neerer vnto vs It was the first and principall care of all the godly Kings that had true Religion in their owne harts to prouide for the instruction of their subiects The Apostle writing to the Ephesians and prescribing the distinct duties of sundry persons forgetteth not the Father and the Son and as he chargeth Children m Ephe. 6 2 4 To obey their Parents in the Lord so he commaundeth Parents to bring them vp in the instruction and information of the Lord. Thus godly Maisters haue vsed all diligence to bring their Seruants to haue a desire of Religion and a loue to the exercises of pietie whereby oftentimes such a good worke hath beene wrought in them that they haue accounted their Maisters as second Fathers and as spirituall Fathers confessed themselues more bound in all dutie to them then to their naturall Parents hauing learned that to the glory of God and the saluation of their Soules by their Maisters instruction which they could neuer vnderstand by their Fathers education They haue confessed themselues to haue gained more by such a seruice then if a large portion a rich inheritance and great reuennewes had beene left vnto them And indeede this is the onely way to teach Children dutifulnesse and to frame our Seruants to obedience to plant godlinesse in them and to water that which is planted The neglect of this care in vs will make them carelesse and the making of no conscience to teach them will bring them to be vnconscionable in their places If we be dumb and open not
deliuered the Poore that cryed the fatherlesse and him that had none to helpe him the blessing of him that was ready to perish came vpon me and I caused the Widdowes hart to reioyce Where we see how he rendereth an account of his life past being of his Aduersaries charged with great wickednesse and much dissimulation So the Prophet describing the blessednesse of that Man that feareth the Lorde and delighteth greatlie in his Commaundements saith y Psal 112 9. He hath distributed and giuen to the Poore his righteousnesse remaineth for euer his Horne shall be exalted with glorie He sheweth heereby that the godlie doe not spare niggardlie but distribute liberallie according as the necessitie of the poore Saints requireth and as his owne power and abilitie suffereth him Heereunto commeth the precept of Christ z Luke 12 33 Sell that yee haue and giue Almes make you Bagges which waxe not old a Treasure that can neuer faile in Heauen where no Theefe commeth neither Moath corrupteth Let vs consider that God hath made the poore as well as the Rich and that the poore man is our owne Flesh Especiallie let vs alwaies remember that the godly poore are our Bretheren in Christ a Math. 25 34. and that in the last iudgement the Lorde Iesus will account it and reward it as done vnto himselfe whatsoeuer hath beene bestowed vpon his needy and distressed Brethren If we be carefull to practise these duties of Christian Charity and Community it shall auaile to seale vp Gods fauour toward vs in the remission of our sins and much aduantage vs to obtaine many blessinges seeing many supplications shall be made and offered vp for vs and so we shall tast the fruite that wee haue planted and haruest the Corne that wee haue sowed For b Gal. 6 7. Whatsoeuer a Man soweth that he shall reape as the Apostle testifieth to the Galathians and therefore if wee be diligent to helpe the poore and needie we shall receiue a full recompence with much increase into our owne bosomes That impute to me I will recompence thee c. See heere the most earnest affection of Paule for this poore Seruant He offereth himselfe to become Suretie and Pay-maister for Onesimus to answere for his debt and to stand as a debter himselfe in his place in respect of his Creditor and to pay whatsoeuer would be or could bee required at his handes Obiection But before we come to the point of instruction here offered to our consideration it shall not be amisse to answer a question that may here be demanded how he promiseth the paiment of mony to another who vnlesse he were himself helped and sustained of the Churches had not whereupon to liue We know how it went oftentimes with the Apostles by the confession of Peter and of Iohn who said to the Cripple that lay at the gate of the temple c Actes 3. 6. Siluer gold haue we none And the Apostle Paule was also constrained to labour with his owne handes How then is he on a suddaine become so wealthy as to offer his seruice to another and to vndertake to discharge the debt of another Answere I answere the meaning of the Apostle is that he would haue him forgiue his Seruant and to require the debt neither of him nor of his Seruant as appeareth euidentlie by the whole course of the preuenting of this Obiection Hee would not therefore haue him to contend with his poore penitent Seruant nor seeke any trouble against him vnlesse he would account him a debter in his stead And furthermore he addeth forth-with that Philemon was indeede wholy his to whom he owed all that he had so that if he would require the debt he should consider that the paiment was already made From this offer that Paule maketh which is to satisfie another mans debt Wee d Doctrin 2. It is lawfull for one man to become surety for another learne that it is a lawfull thing for one man to become Suretie for another and to engage himselfe for his sure and faithfull Friend of whom he is well perswaded Howsoeuer suretiship be to some very hurtfull and to all dangerous yet it is to none in it selfe and of it owne nature vnlawfull or sinnefull This truth is confirmed vnto vs by diuers examples of such as haue gone before vs in the practise of this dutie When Iacob refused to send his youngest and beloued Sonne Beniamin whom he begat in his old age into Egipt with his other Sonnes to fetch Corne saying Ye haue robbed me of my Children Ioseph is not and Simeon is not and ye will take Beniamin all these things are against me e Gene. 42 36 37. Then Ruben answered his Father saying Slay my two Sons if I bring him not to thee againe deliuer him to mine hand and I will bring him to thee againe Where we see he offereth his Sonnes in hostage and was ready to deliuer them as pledges and to binde to his Father Man for Man Sonne for Sonne bodie for bodie and life for life which is a greater matter then to be bound mony for mony and goods for goods The like we see more euidently in the Chapter following when Iacob did hang backe and seemed resolued not to let Beniamin depart with them Iudah is earnest with his Father saying f Gene. 43 8 9 10. Send the Boy with me that we may rise and go and that we may liue and not dye both we and thou and our Children I will bee suretie for him of mine hand shalt thou require him If I bring him not to thee and set him before thee then let me beare the blame for euer In which words we see that when Iudah considered the cause of their long delay and the extreamitie of the great dearth and the daunger of their present estate that except they had made this tarrying doubtlesse they might haue departed from their Father and returned to their Father againe the second time he vndertaketh the matter and becommeth surety for the Child This is it which he freelie and francklie confesseth before Ioseph when they had beene brought backe to him the Cup being found in Beniamins sacke g Gen. 44 32. Doubtlesse thy Seruant became surety for the Childe to my Father and saide If I bring him not vnto thee againe then will I beare the blame vnto my Father for euer now therefore I pray thee let me thy Seruant abide for the Childe as a Seruant to my Lord and let the Childe go vp with his Brethren Whereby also it appeareth that he considering with himselfe that hee could not without impeachment of his credit without breach of his promise and without heauinesse to his Father returne to him except the Child were with him he offereth himselfe as a pawne and pledge and prisoner to Ioseph as before he had done to his Father This also we see euidentlie in the Actes of the Apostles when Paule was troubled fot
from another So then let vs remember these few points fit to be learned and practised of vs. Knowe what kinde of man hee is for whome thou becommest a surety If he be a stranger to thee meddle not with him if he haue broken his credite with any before suspect him if he bee a shifting Companion discard him if he bee vnsufficient to pay his owne debt deny him if the summe bee great and thy ability little so that it may hinder thee and thy Calling if thou be driuen to pay it enter not into it and if thou canst not see which way thou mayest be freed from the perrill and daunger that hangeth ouer thy head flye away from it as from a Serpent that will sting thee as from a Canker that will consume thee as from a Gulfe that is readie to swallow thee There are ſ Two Cankers that consume the Cōmon-wealth Vsury and Suretyship two eating sores that are in Nature as a Gangrene which are as two Vultures that are continually gnawing vpon the heart deuoure the flesh euen vnto the bones to wit Vsury and Suretyship These are neere of Kinne one to another and are ioyned together as the Father and Sonne as the cause and the effect The vnmercifulnesse of the Vsurer constraineth the poore debter to craue mercie of the suretie I speake of that Vsury that byteth and of such suretyship as vndoeth Of that Vsurie that oppresseth and of such suretyship as when it hath taken away the coat will take away the Cloake also which strippeth a man of the Iewels where-with he was decked of the furniture wherewith he was stored of the Garments wherewith he was cloathed Notwithstanding there is great difference to bee made betweene them t Prou. 30 15 This Vsurer is as the Hunter the Suretie as the prey The Vsurer as the Horse-leech doeth cry alwayes bring bring the poo●… Surety is made as the Porter on the Packe-horse that beareth till his shoulders breake It is necessary for euery man to haue these notes before his eyes that he be not sodainly taken or rather ouer-taken by the instigation and importunity of others This reproueth such as make an ordinarie and common matter of it and a notable point of good fellowship the part of a good nature louing disposition to be of a flexible nature as the soft wax to yeild to euery mans request in this businesse Wee see generally that they which haue the least purpose to pay and the smallest care to performe that which they haue promised are for the most part most forward to vndertake and offer themselues their words their wealth their bandes their bodies for other men But such as are most carefull and Conscionable in payeng their Debtes answearing the Arrerages that accrew by the false-hoode of faigned friends are most backeward to yeelde their neckes to this yoake assuring themselues that it is farre better to walke at libertie then to haue his feete put in the Stockes for Correction Wherefore let no man blame those men that hang backe and are not readie to serue euerie mans turne nor to graunt euerie mans request with their Band and Obligation How many are there in this present and haue beene in former times that haue beene quite vndoone and fallen into decay and with that fall haue throwne downe their Wiues and Children for euer by yeelding to gratifie others and damnifie themselues thorough this meanes of rash Suretyship Such as are cruell Creditors and liue vppon the prey as the u Math. 24 28 Eagle doth vpon the Carkasse wil shew no more mercie to the debter that is come in his danger then the miserable rich man x Luke 16 21 did to the Begger that lay at his Gate This we see in the Creditor mentioned 2 Kings 4 1. where one of the Wiues of the Children of the Prophets commeth cryeth and complaineth vnto Elisha That her Husband that feared the Lorde being dead the Creditor came to take her two Sonnes to bee his Bond-men This also appeareth in the practise of the vnmercifull Rich-men mentioned in Nehemiah 5 1. 4 5. so that there was a great out-cry of the people and of their Wiues against them who sayde Wee haue borrowed Money for the Kinges Tribute vppon our Lands and our Vineyardes and now our flesh is as the flesh of our Bretheren and our Sonnes as their Sonnes And loe we bring into subiection our Sonnes and our Daughters as Seruants and there be of our Daughters now in subiection and there is no power in our handes for other Men haue our Landes and our Vineyards If then wee would not willingly draw vppon our selues the burdens of other men nor see with our eyes the taking away of our goods for which we haue laboured nor heare with our eares the crie of our wiues and Children spoyled of their hope and expectation nor feele our selues bitten with hunger pinched with cold throwne into prison and vexed with all kinde of miseries let vs looke to it betimes least wee repent when it is too late It is profitable and Heauenly Counsell giuen by Salomon Prou. 22 26 27. Be not thou of them that touch the hand nor among them that are surety for debts If thou hast nothing to pay why causest thou that he shold take thy bed from vnder thee It is a true saying He is happy that can by other Mens harmes can learne to beware Let vs not be cruell and vnmercifull to our own Families nor rush our selues into these Quicke-sandes of troubles and turmoyles that after follow at the heeles of this rashnesse Let vs vse all carefulnesse and dilligence to know the party for whom wee promise to become Pay-Maisters Let vs weigh his Truth and Honestie his Estate and Ability his Profession and Piety And withall let vs examine our selues thoroughly and ponder our owne sufficiencie that wee bee not at vnawares surprized and hastily ouertaken Let vs prooue our selues and enter seriously into this Cogitation and consideration whether wee bee able without shaking of our Wealth or Substance or diminishing of our credite and estimation or weakning of our estate to discharge that which wee haue vndertaken if our friend for whome wee are bound should fayle and fall downe Neyther let any Foolish and Vndiscreete persons Obiect that this pretending of daunger and entering with warinesse is to be accounted no better then a wanting of Loue that ought to bee in vs For it is rather a point of good Wisedome and Discretion to looke vnto our owne estate and to beware and to bee warned in time by the falles and ruines of other Men. How manie are falne from great Riches to extreme pouertie from much to little from an high condition to great Beggerie and misery and beene as it were consumed with the scorching heat that this fire of Suretyshippe hath cast out Wherefore let vs learne to bee Wise betimes and take heede by the chaunges and chances of other men least by engaging
and in assurances giuen betweene man and man This is the cause that the Makers of our Lawes are compelled to vse so many wordes and to heap vp so many Tearmes that thereby they might heale this sore and remedie this mischiefe Let vs not therefore greeue or grudge to make sure that whereof wee haue made sale No man ought to be so simple as not to aske it and no man ought to be so peeuish as to deny it We may easily behold such as are friends to day to be enemies to morrow one while they affirme another while they deny at one time they promise to pay or repay at another they hang backe at it and make it strange that they should be challenged of their promise Euery one b Phil. 2 21. Seeketh his owne and not the thinges of other men and how many haue been foulely deceiued and guilefully beguiled by trusting too far But there is no reason or equity that when wee haue receiued Money we should deny or delay to giue good security and that other men should stand to our curtesie Wherefore it is a great iniury and In-iustice to require men to depend vpon vs and our word without further assurance in blacke and white For albeit we mean not falsely but faithfully not fraudulently but honestly and our Word be as firme as our Oath and our Oath as sure as our Band and our Band as good as ready payment and present possession in regard of our honest meaning and true intent yet we cannot liue for euer and we know not what may fall out after our decease Obiection But some man may say what neede so much a doe among Friends And what stirre doe you make as if we were Infidels and not Christians Or what neede so many Couenants and conueyances where there is a shorter course And where the profession of Christ is a stronger band then all the writings that the wit of man can imagine and set downe Answere I answere that all they that professe Christ in word doe not beleeue in him in heart And albeit the sauing knowledge of Christ be a band of all bands to linke vs together yet this doth not hinder or abolish ciuill contracts to be assured to vs and our posterities Be it that we are the greatest friends there is so much more neede of so much the more adoe among them that are Friends thereby to keepe them Friends and to hold the knot of friendship between thē For oftentimes it falleth out that through want of wordes and writings and witnesses such as haue bin most faithfull friends haue become most bitter enemies one to another Were not Paul and Philemon Friends neere Friends yea the neerest and dearest Friends that could be Were they not as the Father and the Sonne Did they not so liue together and loue together c Verse 17. That they had all things common Yet we see Paule offereth assurance of his word and promise in writing subscribed with his owne hand I Paule haue written it with mine owne hand Yea notwithstanding all assurances that can be desired and demaunded we may well perceiue by daily and lamentable experience what sutes and strifes arise about Titles and conueyances of Lands and Liuings how much more would we contend one with another if there were no Instruments drawne no Euidences made no writings ingrossed to testifie the truth among vs All Kingdomes and Citties all Townes and Villages would be full of stirres and strifes of troubles and tumults that would neuer end and the Iudges and Iustices might stand from Morning to Euening to heare cases and decide controuersies betweene man and man to the wearying of themselues and others He that hath an heauy pursse and a strong heart would neuer rest satisfied if no writing or records could be produced against him Wherefore it standeth all men vpon on the one side willingly to yeelde good assurance and on the other side to aske good securitie where they buy and sel or borrow or bargaine and doe giue or take vpon trust through want whereof sometimes not onely the Rents and Reuennewes but the Lands themselues are spent in suits and actions of Law Lastly it reproueth such as notwithstanding assurance giuen do make no conscience to pay debts and demaunds due vpon agreement to their brethren These are forward to giue assurance but backeward to make performance Many there are that are content to yeeld to what promises and enter into what bands you will craue but when they haue done they vse no care and make no account to pay their debts and to performe the Couenants whereunto they haue consented and condescended contrary to the counsell of the Prophet who asking the question d Psal 15 1 4 Who shall dwell in the Tabernacle of the Lord and who shall rest in his holy Mountaine He answereth He that sweareth to his owne hindrance and changeth not It is requisite for euery one to be as wary and well aduised in his promises as he can and to deliberate with himselfe and his Friendes that he doe nothing rashly but when he hath striken hands and made a promise to his Neighbour he ought to performe it albeit it be to his hinderance vnlesse peraduenture he be released Be it therefore knowne vnto all men that as it is lawfull to conuerse and commerse one with another so it is meete and conuenient that they should deale not vpon vncertaineties but vpon assurances as they that builde not vpon a sandy ground but vpon a sound foundation As it is right and lawfull that there should be buying and bargaining purchasing and possessing among vs so is it right and lawfull that there should be Deedes and Indentures to testifie the same and as it were to liue when we are dead And as it is needfull and expedient so long as the world endureth and continueth there should be borrowing and lending so it is as necessarie there should be Bils and Bands to shew the truth and to binde men to the payment of all dues debts and demaunds whatsoeuer and after payment well and truely made to giue discharge acquittance accordingly that controuersies so much as may be may be auoyded and concord as far as is possible may be maintained and established They therfore are vnworthy to liue in any wel-ordered and gouerned Common-wealth that refuse being able to performe their promises and satisfie their Creditors and cancell the Obligations that thēselues haue sealed and deliuered before many Witnesses who albeit they stand not by the high-way side with Swordes or Staues or Rapiers or other Weapons yet are indeede no better then Theeues and Robbers nay many times are worse inasmuch they bring greater damage and are the meanes of vndoing many men Such are they that are angry and much offended with Notaries and Scriueners which by their writings binde them as they imagine too strongly and when they see themselues troubled and arrested vpon the Obligation they hate
be not able to doe the like for vs. This is it which our Sauiour meaneth By lending and looking for nothing againe And thus much touching the naturall Interpretation of that place which these men abuse and peruert as they doe also other Scriptures But to leaue them and to returne to the former matter It is a pernicious kinde of Theft in former daies scarse heard off or at the least not so commonly practised that men regard not how great sums or what value of other mens good they get into their handes If a man bee holpen in his neede and he forget it if he doe not ackno●…ledge it if hee doe not pray to God to requite and recompence it when himselfe hath no meanes to doe it hee abuseth the liberalitie shewed toward him and is no better then a Theefe But to gather the wealth of others to our selues and to borrow Money or take vp Wares of credit as farre as they can be trusted of one an hundred pound of another fiftie of one more and of another lesse neuer purposing to repay but as soone as they haue laid held on it to breake vp is a more monstrous kind of robbery then the former For then a report is noysed abroad that they are Banckrupt and by and by an agreement must be sought with their Creditors to satisfie them forsooth with the third with the sixt with the tenth part they purposing afterward to liue vpon their stolne goods and the labours of other men whereby oftentimes it falleth out that many godly and honest dealing men are vtterly vndone and their poore Wiues and Children brought to great pouertie It is made a propertie of the wicked by the Prophet to make care to borrow but to take no care to restore Psal 73. m Psal 37 21. The wicked borroweth and payeth not againe but the righteous is merciful and giueth It testifies the wonderful care that was among the Seruants of God to make restitution in that when the Iron where-with one was felling of a Tree fell into the Water he cryed out and said n 2 King 6 5. Alasse Maister it was but borrowed Whereby it appeareth he was more troubled for the lacke and losse of it then if it had beene his owne It is likewise to be considered of vs which the Apostle Paule teacheth Rom. 13. o Rom. 13 7 8 Owe nothing to any Man but to loue one another for he that loueth another hath fulfilled the Law Wherefore it standeth vs vpon to restore the thinges we haue borrowed and to pay those to whom we are indebted albeit it be with the sale of the necessary thinges we haue The Widdow of the Sonnes of the Prophets at the commaundement of Elisha selleth the Oyle that God sent her to pay her Creditor as we see 2. King 4. for the Prophet said vnto her p 2 Kin. ● 4 7. Goe and sell the Oyle and pay them that thou art in debt vnto and liue thou and thy Children vpon the rest Where wee see God would not haue the Creditour defrauded but rather then the debt should be vnpaide the Lord himselfe would pay it and the Prophet did not giue her counsell to raile and rage against the Creditor to call him a Miser and couetous Cormorant or to liue in excesse and aboundance without care to satisfie that debt which might bee demaunded but charged her first of all to pay the whole and if any were left she and her Children should feede vpon the rest Obiection 1. But some man may say what if we be not able What if we haue nothing wherewith to pay What are wee then to doe or what course are we to take Answere I answere God accepteth of a ready and q 2 Cor. 8 12. willing minde where there is no farther strength or better abilitie Offer thy labour and seruice shew thy repentance and remorse of conscience testifie the truth of them by thy sorrow and teares and if euer God make thee able thou must doe it actually Obiection 2. It may be further obiected though a man bee able to restore how if in doing it he shall vtterly shame himselfe and his profession Answere If this of necessitie must follow make choyse of some faithfull Friende that may performe this duty for thee and conceale thy Name Secondly it is better to seek the praise of God then the praise of men Thirdly honour and praise and peace are promised to all that be truely conuerted and the reward of sinne not repented off is shame and reproach and contempt both Temporall Eternall according to the Testimony of the Apostle r Ro. 6 21 22. What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed For the end of those things is death but now being freed from sinne and made Seruants vnto God ye haue your fruit in holinesse and the end euerlasting life Obiection 3. But if it be farther asked How if the parties be dead or what if I know not the speciall persons whose goods I possesse Answere I answere restore them to their Heires if they haue none or thou know none yet keepe them not with thee they will kindle a fire in thy Family that shalt wast all thy wealth and store till nothing be left In this case make the poore their Heires deale as Zacheus Luke 19. Be mercifull toward them Obiection 4. Lastly the question may be demaunded whether the Sonne be bound to restore the goods which the Father hath gotten by oppression Answere I aunswere breefly whatsoeuer the Sonne knoweth to be euilly gotten cannot be iustly kept from the lawfull and iust owners thereof Ezek. 18 14 15. c. Prou. 28 8. If the Sonne follow the abhominations of his Father and walke in them or approoue of them he maketh himselfe guilty of the same offences also Vse 4 Lastly seeing it is our bounden dutie to forbeare and sometimes to forgiue such as are poore and not able to pay we may gather from hence for the strengthening and confirmation of our Faith that much more will God with patience forbeare and in mercy forgiue vs our debts and trespasses He teacheth vs to aske forgiuenesse at his hands ſ Math. 6 14. Being assured of it if we forgiue He chargeth vs to forgiue Not onely seauen times t Math. 18 22. but seauenty times seauen times He instructeth vs That if u Luke 17 4. our Brother sinne against vs seauenty times in a day and seauentie times in a day turne againe to vs saying It repenteth me we must forgiue him We haue not one drop of that infinite mercy that is in God whose compassion is higher then the Heauens and greater then the loue of Parents toward their Children He that commaundeth mercy to others will not be vnmercifull himselfe and he that forbids crueltie to others will remember to be mercifull himselfe It is the greatest dishonour done vnto God that can
Flesh it is not accompanied with thankefulnesse but with all loosenesse excesse and riotousnesse Verse 21. Trusting in thine obedience I haue written vnto thee In these words the Apostle excuseth that hee hath hitherto beene so earnest with Philemon declaring that notwithstanding his exact and effectuall manner of handling the matter he doubted not of his receiuing of him into his fauour againe So then his drift is to shew his good opinion of him that he would not sticke to forgiue him but yeeld readily to euery honest reasonable request Hee knew not certainly what Philemon would doe hee knew what wrongs he had receiued and what losses he had sustayned at his Seruants handes yet we see how grounding himselfe vpon the former triall of his Faith and Obedience he hopeth the best he doubteth nor the worst he trusteth in his obedience he feareth not his deniall Doctrine 4. Men ought alwayes to hope well and to thinke the best of their Brethren From hence wee learne that it is our dutie alwayes to hope well and to thinke the best not to suspect the worst of our brethren This appeareth to haue beene in Iacob towards his Children when they had sold their Brother and dipped his Coate in a Kids blood and brought it to their Father Albeit he knew they hated Ioseph whome he loued exceedingly yet hee would not suspect them for the murthering and making away of his Sonne but saide Gen. 37 33. It is my sonnes Coate a wicked Beast hath deuoured him Ioseph is surely torne in peeces The like appeareth in Ioseph who was betrothed to Marie the Mother of Christ when he saw that she was with Childe d Math. 1 19 hee concluded rather that it was by committing Fornication before the contract then by committing adultry after her betroathing When the matter was vncertaine and vnknowne vnto him he iudged the best Thus dealt Ionathan who was faithfull toward Dauid he perswaded himselfe and his friend the best of his Father For when Dauid said e 1 Sa. 20 1 2 What haue I done What is mine iniquity And what sinne haue I committed before thy Father that he seeketh my life He saide vnto him God forbid thou shalt not die Beholde my Father will doe nothing great nor small but he will shew it me and why should my Father hide this thing from me He will not do it There was more Charity in the sonne then there was piety in the Father for he iudged better then Saule deserued Likewise when the Apostle Peter had reprooued the Iewes for crucifying Christ the Lord of glory and deliuering of him into the hands of sinners he exhorteth them to repentance saying f Acts 3 17 19 Now Brethren I know that through ignoraunce ye did it as also your Gouernors amend your liues therefore and turne that your sinnes may bee put away when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. He hopeth the best of them and doth not keepe or hide in his heart any hard conceite against any of them In like manner the Apostle writing to the Hebrewes and denouncing a sharpe and seuere threatning against those that fall from God deny his trueth and renounce his Religion he addeth g Heb. 6 9. But beloued wee haue perswaded our selues better thinges of you and such as accompany saluation though we thus speake Whereby he mittigateth and asswageth al that he had said hoping better of them to whom hee writeth All these Testimonies taken both out of the old new Testament do serue to teach vs that we are bound to iudge the best and charged not to nourish any hard conceits against our brethren Reason 1. The Reasons following will make it more plaine if any thing can yet bee plainer First it is a property of loue to be charitably affected as the Apostle testifieth in his description of it 1 Cor. 13 5 7. Loue thinketh not euill Againe he saith It suffereth all things it beleeueth all things it hopeth all things it endureth all things The Wise man also teacheth h Prou. 10 12 That loue couereth a multitude of sinnes So then where Christian Loue and Brotherly kindnesse is there is the best opinion and iudgement one of another Reason 1. Secondly it is a fruite of a righteous man to hope the best and to iudge charitably of his Brother The best man doth hardly suspect others to bee bad It is saide of Ioseph Math. 1 19. that being a iust and righteous man he was not willing to make the Virgin Mary that was betrothed vnto him a publicke example but was minded to put her away secretly Whereby we gather that the reason why he would not pursue his right with extreamity but conceyued the best according to the rule of Charity was because hee was a iust man ready to giue to euerie man his owne On the other side it is a note of a wicked man to thinke or immagine the worst of men It is a common Prouerbe A man doth muse as he doth vse as himselfe vseth to do so he immagineth of another He that iudgeth lewdly of another by meere suspition or supposition is commonly lewd himselfe For such as are wicked do thinke others as wicked as them-selues and such as are Hypocrites themselues are most forward to tax others of hypocrisie Seeing therefore to be charitably minded is both a property of loue and a fruit of righteousnesse it followeth that we ought to hope the best of all our brethren Vse 1. The Vses remaine to be considered First this serueth to reproue sundrie abuses that are crept in among vs and are too common in our practise directly condemned in the ninth Commaundement which tend to the hurt of our Brothers good name as all hard conceits and euill surmizes all vncharitable opinions and suspitions against them The good name of a man is very precious yet it hath many enemies If then we be charged to conceiue the best in doubtfull cases one of another the capitall sinne of Calumniation or slander is heerby condemned as the chiefe opposite to a mans estimation and credit This hath many branches that are breaches of the Law all of one kinde and Kindred and all enemies vnto the good Names of our Bretheren In this number are ranged these three as Companions one of another the Tale-breeder the Tale-bearer and the Tale beleeuer The first beginner of all the mischiefe is the Inuenter and Deuiser of Tales who forgeth them in the fire of hell who hammereth them vpon the A nuile of malice and enuy who venteth them abroad and letteth them flye vpon the wings of fame and report thereby maliciously intending the disgrace and damage of his Brother There is no sinne maketh a man so resemble the Deuill as this doth inasmuch as he hath his name from slaundering and backbyting These men the Lord doth greatly detest and wil shut them out of his kingdome Secondly heereby is reprooued the Tale-carrier
Isaac Moses Hezekiah Iehoshaphat others Secondly albeit God do not bestow vpon vs alwaies those lawfull things which we desire and demand yet he heareth our prayers and answereth our cries when he giueth some thing proportionable to that we ask As if we craue earthly blessings he giueth vs heauenly and if we craue temporall things he yeeldeth eternal life and if instead of deliuerance of vs out of trouble he giueth vs strength and ability to beare trouble and patience to endure vnder the crosse without murmuring Thus is Christ said to be c Heb. 5 7. heard in that which he feared albeit he suffered death He prayed that the Cuppe might passe from him yet he was to drinke of it his Father had decreed it he had vndertaken it and we were to be d 2 Cor. 12 8 9 redeemed by it Notwithstanding he was heard when God gaue him strength to beare it and sent an Angel to comfort him in his Agony according to that he speaketh Iohn 11 41 42. Father I thank thee because thou hast heard me I know that thou hearest me alwayes So when Paule felt a pricke in the Flesh the Messenger of Sathan to buffet him for this thing hee besought the Lord thrice that it might Depart from him and he saide vnto him My Grace is sufficient for thee for my power is made perfect through weaknesse God did not heare him and yet hee did heare him He requesteth one thing and God graunteth him another He craueth freedome from tentation but he is promised a supply of grace to be made able to ouercome tentations Thus it fareth with euerie one of vs we must consider what we aske and how God heareth vs. Wee must not thinke he forgetteth vs when he doth not feed our fansies and answere our expectations he knoweth what is best for vs and he will giue vs that which he seeth to be best for vs. Vse 2 Secondly as this Doctrine sendeth vs to schoole to learne what true prayer is so it serueth to reprooue three sorts of men First such as are growne to this height of prophanesse that they thinke it to bee in vaine to pray vnto God The faithfull finde by a blessed experience of Gods fauor that nothing is more profitable vnto them They woulde rather leaue any earthly Commoditie and loose their liues then cease to call vppon the Name of God Wee see this in the example of Daniell Chapter 6. 7 8. when a Decree was confirmed sealed and published according to the Law of the Medes and Persians e Dan. 6 7 8. which altereth not That whosoeuer shall aske a petition of any God or Man for thirtie daies saue of the King he should be cast into the Denne of Lyons It might seeme no great matter to forbeare and abstaine from prayer for so short a time yet when Daniell vnderstood that the writing was passed and published hee went into his house and his window being open in his Chamber toward Ierusalem hee kneeled vppon his Knees three times in a day and prayed and praised his God as hee did afore-time It is therefore a Testimony of a very prophane and proud heart not onely not to pray but to contemne and abhorre it as an vnclean thing or as a superfluous and needlesse thing Thus doeth Iob bring in the vngodlie speaking who differ but one steppe from Atheistes the dearest and best beloued sonnes of the Deuill Chapt. 21. f Iob 21 14 15. They say also vnto GOD Depart from vs for wee desire not the knowledge of thy wayes Who is the Almightie that wee should serue him And what profite should wee haue if wee shoulde pray vnto him Ah vile Wretches whether will your blasphemous mouthes reach Will you thus bee at defiance with the most high and Omnipotent GOD and set your selues against Heauen Whereas wee are so oftentimes allured and prouoked to prayer and haue most gracious and precious promises added that God will heare vs Shall we bidde him battell as if we were stronger then hee and say If wee crie vnto him Day and Night what do we gaine or what aduantage shall growe vnto vs Do not they prosper alike that neuer haue God in their mindes and they that frequent diligently and daily the house of Prayer Who are more subiect to troubles then such as trouble themselues with the word of God and studie to keepe his commandements Wherefore whether we pray or not pray al is one all is alike there is no difference we loose our labor wee receiue no profit Thus do many speake thus do g Eccles. 9 2. Mal. 13 14. mo thinke the world is full of such vermine and venome Against which most wicked imaginations wee must oppose the commandement of God willing vs to pray the promise of mercy the examples of the faithfull which haue bin heard when they prayed Secondly this Doctrine reprooueth such as goe to Saints and Angelles from the Creator to the Creature which is a great dishonour done to God and a reproach to Christ Were not hee a foolish and sottish suppliant that when the Kings sonne offereth to speake for him to his father would refuse to vse his mediation and goe to one of his seruants to entreat for him Is it not meete that such a one should be saide nay and depart without his purpose Euen so inasmuch as the father sendeth vs vnto his sonne and the sonne calleth vs to himselfe what madnesse is it to runne as well from the one as from the other to go from the sonne to the Saints from him that can hear to them that cannot helpe Nay as the Father is depriued of his Honour and the sonne robbed of his Office so the Saints themselues are disgraced If a man should set any of the Subiectes downe in the Chaire of estate and then bowe downe before him and giue him any of the Royalties of the King were not this high Treason against the Prince and extreame wrong to the Subiect Thus the case standeth betweene vs God and the Saintes If wee shall aduance the Saintes to so high a degree as to pray vnto them which is proper vnto God and as it were the Princes Regality if they did see our impiety they would blush at it and be ashamed of it The Apostle Peter would not suffer Cornelius h Acts 10 25. when he met him to fall downe at his feet and worship him Paule and Barnabas rent their cloths i Act 14 13 14 when they saw Iupiters Priest bring Bulles with Garlands vnto the gates of the Citty to the end they might offer sacrifice vnto them Did they reiect this seruice done vnto them when they liued vpon the earth and shal we think they doe now affect it or would now accept of it Away therefore with the mediation of the Angels who know not our hearts nor hear our prayers Away with the mediation of the Saints who beeing now in heauen are accepted of God not
for themselues but for the precious merits of their Sauiour Christ I except not the blessed Virgin Mary his Mother but as once shee reioyced in God her Sauiour so now she triumpheth in Christ her Redeemer and is accepted through the deserts of her sonne To conclude this point let vs remember the saying of the Apostle Iohn k 1 Iohn 2 1. If any man sinne we haue an Aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the reconciliation for our sinnes Where we see he ioyneth these two together to bee an Aduocate and to make reconciliation and appropriateth them both to the person of Christ If then the Saints be our Aduocates that wee should present our prayers vnto them they to Christ and Christ to God they must also make reconciliation for our sinnes and appease the wrath of God the father which is vnpossible for them to do and blasphemous for vs to affirme It is our duty therefore to repair resort vnto God the father through the merits of his son Iesus Christ The Prophet complaineth l Psal 20 7. That some trust in Chariots some in horses So in time of troble some seeke to Saints Angels m Leuit. 19 31 Esa 8 19. 17 8. 44 17 18 others flye to Witches Idols but we must remember the name of the Lord our God But of this point we haue spoken before more at large Thirdly it reproueth such as see the want of many blessings in themselues and others feel great iudgements and publick calamities vpon themselues others and yet pray not at all to haue the one bestowed and the other remoued These are like to brute beasts that rore cry out for their prey when they want meat but they neuer consider from whence they receiue it and as the swine that eat the Mast in the woods but neuer look vp to the tree from whence it falleth or as the dog that biteth the stone that is cast at him but looks not to the hand that threw it So do these men they can mourne and murmure when they sustaine any losse feele any plague or finde any want but they haue no knowledge to search out the cause or the meanes how Gods blessings should be obtained or his iudgements be preuented Hence it is that the Prophets complaine of this sencelesnesse and want of feeling of Gods mercie and our owne misery as we see in Ezekiell and in other places n Ezek. 22 30. Esay 59 16. 63 5. I sought for a Man among them that should not make vp the hedge and stand in the gappe before the Land that I should not destroy it but I found none It is a vaine thing for a Physician to know the Disease and not to apply the Remedie so likewise is it a great folly for vs to knowe our owne wantes and yet to want Wisedome to take a right course to redresse the same What deadnesse of heart hath entred into vs that we haue forgotten the commandements of God and cannot remember the examples of his seruantes that haue obtained great things at his hands and cannot be encouraged by his manifolde and mercifull promises that he hath made vnto vs Let vs then bee prouoked to this dutie and not be wanting vnto our selues but respect our owne good and benefit in seeking vnto the Lord daily in calling vpon him earely and late The seruants of Naaman reproue him in that being commanded an easie and ready way to be cured and clensed of his Leprosie yet hee hung backe and would not vse the remedy o 2 King 5 13. If the Prophet say they to their Maister hadde commanded thee a greater thing wouldest thou not haue done it How much rather then when he saith to thee wash and be cleane So may it be said to vs to shake off our drowsinesse and to worke forwardnesse in vs to practise this duty If the Lord in our present wants should require at our hands any hard and difficult thing ought wee not to obey him and to performe his Commandement How much more then when hee respecteth our weakenesse and saith onely Aske and you shall haue seeke and ye shall finde knocke and it shall be opened vnto you We shall not need now to say in our owne hearts Who shall ascend into Heauen or descend into the deepe to bring his blessings vnto vs from thence The remedie is at hand the meanes are neere euen in our mouth and in our heart this is the prayer of faith which auaileth much if it be feruent It teacheth vs the way to the Lords treasures to put our hand into his Cofers to take such benefits as we want and to put vp the arrowes of his wrath into his quiuer which he hath drawn against vs to shoot at vs. Vse 3. Thirdly from hence ariseth great comfort to all the faithfull that call vpon the name of God For are the prayers of good men auayleable for our good Do they procure blessinges and stay iudgements Then haue wee great cause to reioyce and matter of great ioy offered vnto vs in the diligent practise of this duty We are assured that the Lord will not defraud deceiue vs but giue vs those things that we desire and he knoweth what we want Is our Faith weake He will strengthen vs. Are we ignorant He wil enstruct vs. Doe we want the Graces of his spirit He will supply them Is our Loue cold He will quicken it Is our Repentance vnperfect Hee will perfect it On the other side are his Iudgements among vs He will remooue them Are we in distresse He will haue mercie vppon vs. Doe our sinnes trouble vs He will discharge vs. Are we in sicknesse He wil restore vs. p Iames 5 13 14. Are we in any misery He will deliuer vs. If the consideration of this gracious dealing of God and the performance of his precious promises doe not put life into our dead hearts and assure comfort to our feeble spirits and raise vs vp when we are cast downe what weapon can be of sufficient force to pierce our hearts and to driue vs to the Conscionable practise of this duty If we had not a blessed experience of Gods goodnesse towards vs wee should haue the lesse sinne to doubt thereof But seeing there is no faithfull Man or Woman who hath not found the Lord readie to heare him in time of his need and that we are compassed about with so great a Cloude of witnesses let vs comfort our selues and one another in these things and bee stirred vp to call vpon his name Vse 4 Lastly are the Prayers of the faithfull profitable to all things and auaileable to make vs partakers of Gods blessinges and to stoppe the course of his Iudgements Then we must remember that it is our dutie to praise his name when hee hath heard our prayers and graunted our requestes either for our selues or our brethren It is
of the Gospell is accused to breede them but this is a false imputation The true cause is the mallice of Sathan and the furie of his Instruments that cannot abide the Light of the Truth to shine among them So then let vs not thinke it a straunge thing when we see such stirres and tumults arise but Arme our selues with Patience Learne to bee VVise as Serpents and Innocent as Doues and condemne those that are the authors and beginners of those broyles and contentions Fourthly obserue the Titles that hee giueth vnto our Lorde and Sauiour he describeth him by two Names First hee calleth him Christ then hee calleth him Iesus Christ signifyeth as much as Annointed Iesus importeth as much as a Sauiour who was so called h Math. 1 21. because hee saueth his people from their sinnes From whence obserue that Christ is the King the Prophet and the Priest of his Church to gouerne vs to teach vs to Redeeme vs to saue vs. This is his Office for these Ends and Vses hee was annointed of the Father with the Oyle of Gladnesse aboue his fellowes This serueth to our great good and the benefit of it is communicated vnto vs he maketh vs i Reuel 1 6. Kings and Priests to God his Father he armeth vs with power and strength against sinne the Flesh the World the Deuill and maketh vs able to ouercome them thorough him wee haue accesse to the father and may boldly appeare in his sight and offer vp our Prayers with assurance k Rom. 12 1. Yea he enableth vs to offer vppe our selues our soules and bodies an holy liuely and acceptable Sacrifice vnto him which is our reasonable seruing of him hee doth enstruct vs in the will of his Father enlighten vs in the knowledge of the trueth and maketh vs as it were his Household Disciples and Schollers to reueale vnto vs all thinges needefull for our saluation Let vs therefore confesse him to be the onely sonne of God perfect God and perfect Man l 1 Tim. 2 5. the sole Mediator betweene God and Man and let vs acknowledge no other Sauiour able to Redeeme and ransome vs to pay so great a price and to deliuer vs from so great wrath and destruction If wee make other Mediatours and set vp other Sauiours wee renounce the Mediation of Christ and Saluation purchased by Christ This pierceth the verie Marrow and entereth into the bowelles of the Romish Religion which setteth vp other Mediators and consequently establisheth a false Christ of their owne which indeed is no Christ no Iesus no Sauiour no Redeemer Fiftly obserue with me that speaking of Marcus Aristarchus Demas Luke he calleth them his fellow-helpers whereby he putteth the Ministers of the Gospell and all the Children of God in minde to bee helpers to the truth and to further the preaching and propagation of the Gospell by all possible meanes that God hath enabled them For this cause the Apostle commendeth many of the faithfull Rom. 16 3 9. Greet Aquila and Priscilla my fellow-helpers in Christ Iesus We must doe all for the truth and nothing against the truth This reproueth those that employ their wits and bestow their strength to hinder the truth and the professors thereof These haue no part nor fellowship in the Ministration nor in the sound profession of the Gospell but are professed enemies to the faith of Christ Moreouer this shall Minister vnspeakeable comfort vnto vs to consider that wee haue beene helpers to the truth and furtherers of the Faith which is in Christ Iesus we shall leaue a good Name behinde vs and receiue and incorruptible Crowne of eternall Glory Lastly note with mee that when Paule wrote this Epistle hee was at Rome and hee ioyneth with him sundry others which were the cheefe and principall whose verie names might carry some credite and authority to perswade Philemon in this matter which hee vndertooke yet in all this Epistle wee haue no mention of Peter who is supposed to haue liued there to haue dyed there to haue beene Byshop there fiue and twenty yeares He ioyneth to himselfe so many Assistants as he could to obtaine his suite He writeth as we heard before from Rome to haue Onesimus pardoned and hee vseth the name of Timothy to that purpose why is Peter heere forgotten Why doth he not ioyne him with himselfe in the same Epistle if he had been resident at Rome as a good Byshop ought to haue beene Againe we see he specifieth many by name Marcus Aristarchus Demas and Luke but we haue no mention of Peter And it is said that Marke was the Disciple of Peter and by his Commandement wrote his Gospell was it fit to name the Disciple and to forget the Maister to remember the members and to forget the Head To expresse meaner persons and to omit the principall Besides he calleth these men his fellow-helpers Paul was as the Master-workman and cheefe builder they were his helpers and partners in the businesse Was not Peter also one of his bretheren and either a fellow-prisoner or a fellow-helper in the Gospell Wherefore then is hee concealed Obserue with mee from hence and by Conference of many other Scriptures n Peters being at Rome is vncertaine that Peters being at Rome is an vncertaine opinion and an vngrounded assertion It was by composition agreed vpon betweene Paule and Peter o Gal. 2 9. that Peter should preach to the Iewes and Paul to the Gentiles how then could Peter sit as byshop at Rome Or if he preached to the Iewes at Rome how commeth it to passe that the christiā religion was strange in a maner vnknown vnto them when Paul came to Rome as appeareth in the end of the Actes of the Apostles where they say vnto him p Acts 28. 22 We will heare of thee what thou thinkest for as concerning this Sect we know that euery where it is spoken against Againe when Paule wrote to the Romaines hee willeth them to salute manie particularly and by name both men and weomen but he maketh no mention at all of Peter which no doubt he would haue done if hee had at that time also beene at Rome Furthermore the Apostle Wrote many of his Epistles from the Citty of Rome as we shewed in the beginning of this Epistle as for example to the Galathians Ephesians Colossians Phillippians to Timothy this to Philemon and that other Epistle vnto the Hebrewes if it were his and from thence hee sendeth manie salutations in the Name of manie that remained at Rome Among whome Peter is neuer mentioned but his name and beeing there is ouer-passed Lastly the Apostle testifieth that while he was called forth to giue an account of his Faith p 2 Tim. 4 16. All did forsake him and none assisted him wherefore either Peter was not then at Rome or if he were he did shamefully forsake him Thus then we conclude from these and such like Circumstances that it cannot be gathered out of
the little light of Grace and spark of Faith that was in them did so shine and breake out into such a flame that they were not ashamed to professe themselues to be his Disciples when the rest forsooke him they begged his body of Pilate they wrapped it in linnen cloaths with Myrrhe and Alloes and sweet Odours and bestowed the honour of buriall vpon him Thus it falleth out oftentimes that they which are first are last and the last are first We know not what stormes and Tempestes hang ouer our owne heades and what perillous times may come vppon vs we know not what weaknesse wee shall shew in them howe great the Rebellion of the Flesh will be and what comfort wee shall want our selues The Prophet pronounceth him l Psal 41 1. Blessed that iudgeth Wisely of the poore and promiseth that the Lord shall deliuer him in the time of trouble If wee haue any feeling of this happinesse or haue anie Faith in our hearts touching this promise let vs make it manifest by seeking the good of our weake Bretheren It is an hiddeous and horrible cruelty and out-rage by our want of mercy and of feeling their infirmities to hinder the saluation of any one for whom Christ died Hence it is that the Apostle saith Rom. 15 2 3. Let euerie man please his Neighbour in that which is good to edification for Christ also would not please himselfe but as it is Written The rebukes of them that rebuked thee fell on me It cost a great price to Redeeme a soule and to bring it from Death to Life from Hell to Heauen and therefore we must vse all meanes wherewith the Lorde shall enable vs to comfort such as are Comfortlesse by the Comfort where-with wee our selues are comforted of God There is no Man but desireth to finde Peace and Comfort in him-selfe What is this life of ours without it If a man should liue many thousand yeares vpon the face of the earth and haue experience of nothing but sorrow anguish misery and vexation of Spirit so that hee could feele no quietnesse no rest no consolation no tranquility in these daies of his Pilgrimage would he not desire to be out of such a life and preferre death before it Do we then wish for peace And would we finde comfort The greatest comfort in the World that can come vnto vs and refresh and cheere vppe our Soules is to winne and saue Soules Blessed are we if we haue beene Instruments to gaine but one Soule vnto God It is the greatest gaine it is the best Traffique it is the sweetest Marchandize It shall be said vnto vs in the last day Thou good and faithfull Seruant well done thou hast beene faithfull ouer little I will make thee Ruler ouer much enter into thy Maisters ioy Let vs set this before our eyes and consider before hand the price of the reward when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. Vse 3. Lastly seeing God hath such a care of them that are weake that he would not haue them cut off but cared for of all men this ought to serue as a notable encouragement vnto them to labor to grow in Grace and to encrease more and more that they may proceede from strength to strength and so come to a perfect man in Christ Iesus True it is there are degrees of Faith all haue not one measure of Grace and yet the least measure if it be but as a graine of Mustard-seede is of power to saue our Soules If there be wrought in vs by the sanctifying Spirit of God the beginnings and seeds of Faith to wit an humbling of our selues vnder the burthen of our sinnes an acknowledgement and feeling that we stand in neede of Christ an hungring and longing desire to be made partaker of Christ and all his merrits and a flying to the Throne of Grace from the sentence of the Law troubling the conscience trembling vnder the same if these preparations as it it were ploughings vp of the furrowes of our hearts be found in vs God will not cast vs away but make this weake measure of Grace to be effectuall to saluation This is a sweete comfort to all saint hearts that are euery foot like to sinke downe and as it were to giue vp the Ghost This ought to be a forcible meanes to work thankfulnesse in them when in the examination of their hearts they shall finde the least measure of Grace setled in them and know their mercifull Father willing to acknowledge it to accept it and to reward it Not that we should flatter our selues in our wantes or content our selues in our weakenesse to stand alwaies at one stay but heereby to be brought forward in well-doing and to runne the race with all cheerefulnesse that is set before vs. This a notable signe of a true and sincere hart when we feele our strength to come euery day vnto vs and an accesse to be added to our former course For if we desire to be better and better and deale as men that runne in a race who stand not still in the mid-way but presse with might and maine to the marke this is an infallible note of a sincere heart This is it which the Apostle testifieth Phil. 3 14 15. Bretheren I count not my selfe that I haue attained to it but one thing I doe I forget that which is behinde and endeuour my selfe vnto that which is before And follow hard toward the marke for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus It is the goodnesse of God to accept the small measure of Faith that we bring vnto him This graunteth not liberty vnto vs to doe nothing to stirre neither hand nor foote or to content our selues that we go not backward For we must all know and vnderstand that the beginnings of grace are deceitfull and counterfeit vnlesse there be a growth and encrease The kingdome of Heauen is like to q Math. 13 31 33. a graine of Mustard seed which at the first is so small and little that it is scarse discerned but after that it is cast into the ground of a prepared and purified heart it rooteth deeply it groweth speedily it spreadeth exceedingly It is like vnto Leauen which a woman taketh and hideth in three peckes of Meale till all be Leauened The Maister deliuering his Talents vnto his seruants that he had called saith vnto them Occupy vntill I come he doth not bid them hide them in the earth Luke 19 13. Hereunto commeth the exhortation that Paule giueth vnto Timothy who had greatly profited in godlinesse and was brought vp in the vnderstanding of the holy Scriptures from a childe Chapter 1. r 2 Tim. 2 6. I put thee in remembrance that thou stirre vp the gift of God which is thee by the putting on of mine handes The word is a borrowed speach from the fire which must bee euermore kindled and kept with a new supply from going out
in this manner passe them ouer Now let vs handle the perticular Doctrine that ariseth from this Salutation The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ be with your Spirit Amen This is the last clause of the Epistle wherein he wisheth the same that he did in the beginning to wit the grace of Christ If there had beene any more notable or excellent blessing to craue and desire for him then this grace of Christ no doubt he would haue asked it and should haue obtained it for him Hee would haue made some mention of it either in the beginning or at the latter ending or in some other place of this Epistle But seeing we finde no other blessing rehearsed or required beside this grace of Christ it is most certain the Apostle knew no greater or better guift then this grace of christ And indeed he which nameth and commendeth the grace of Christ doth except or exclude nothing which is good for vs or profitable vnto vs either in this life or in the life to come For the grace of Christ whereby we vnderstand the free fauour of God which we by no duties or workes haue deserued or can any way deserue comprehendeth vnder it as it were within the compasse of it euery good thing and euery perfect guift For the spirituall blessings of God as Remission of sinnes Iustification Sanctification and eternall Life doe all flow from this grace as from a Fountaine Now it is called the grace of Christ and that fitly and worthily because he hath obtained it for vs by the price of his owne precious bloud he hath deserued to haue the same bestowed vpon vs. For the grace of God the Father properly belongeth vnto him and Christ Iesus his naturall sonne in whom alone he is well pleased is the Treasure Store-house of his Father by whose hand is bestowed whatsoeuer is bestowed vpon vs. Doctrine 1. Spirituall thinges are to be prayed for and preferred before earthly thinges Seeing therefore the Apostle maketh so great reckoning of this grace that he speaketh of it first and last and remembreth it in the beginning and in the ending and sendeth this Salutation vnto him wee learne from hence that Spirituall thinges are to be prayed for and preferred before earthly thinges they must haue the first place and earthly thinges be set in the last place This appeareth in that forme of blessing which God prescribeth vnto Aaron and to his Sonnes d Num. 4 6 23 24. Thus ye shall blesse the Children of Israell and say vnto them The Lord blesse thee and keepe thee the Lord make his face shine vpon thee and be mercifull vnto thee The Lord lift vp his countenance vpon thee and giue thee peace Heere we see what the Priests and Leuites were especially to craue to wit the fauour of God and his free grace This is plentifully prooued in the Psalmes of Dauid as Psal 4. e Psal 4 6. Many aske who will shew vs any good but Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs where he sheweth that the multitude call for Riches and Honour and Pleasure and account them the onely good thinges but the godly preferre the fauour of God before all and make it their chiefe felicity And in another place f Psal 80 3. Turne vs againe ô God and cause thy face to shine that we may be saued The Church was now in affliction they wanted temporall blessings yet their chiefe desire was to feele the louing countenance of God to shine vpon them This appeareth farther vnto vs in the Lordes prayer left vnto vs by Christ our Sauiour to direct vs to pray he teacheth and prescribeth this order vnto vs that g Mat. 6 9. we first of all aske such thinges as concerne God and his glory and then those thinges that belong to our selues Thus are the prayers directed that the Apostle Paule maketh and offereth vp for the Churches to which he writeth he craueth aboue all thinges grace and peace he desireth that they might haue h Ephe. 1 7 3 16. Collos 1 9. the Spirit of wisedome and of reuelation that the eyes of their minde may be lightned that they may be strengthened in the inner man Yea this is so plaine and pregnant a truth that the very Heathen in their best meditations haue confessed i Virgil. eclog. 3. A loue principium this that God must haue our first thoughts and the beginning of all our workes who blesseth those that are so begun and giueth vnto them good successe If all these Testimonies produced out of the Old Testament alleaged out of the New and confirmed by the vniforme consent of the Gentiles be laide together wee may gather from thence that in our praiers and iudgements we are to preferre and desire especially and principally spirituall things Reason 1. If any doubt remaine in vs let vs consider the reasons that so it may bee remooued First Spirituall and Heauenly blessings are beyond all comparison more excellent and bring more sound ioy of heart then earthly blessings can doe The Prophet testifieth this by his owne experence k Psal 4 7. Thou hast giuen me more ioy of heart then they haue had when their Wheate and their Wine did abound The thinges of this life are corruptible the thinges of the life to come are incorruptible The Apostle Peter speaking of the inheritance of eternall life calleth it l 1 Pet 1 4. immortall and vndefiled and that withereth not reserued in heauen for vs. But among the earthly Treasures what more excellent then Gold Yet he calleth it m 1 Pet. 1 7 18. the Gold that perisheth and afterward Ye are not redeemed with corruptible thinges as Siluer and Gold from your vaine conuersation but with the precious bloud of Christ as of a Lambe vndefiled and without spot If then all worldly thinges euen those that be most pure and precious be transitory and corruptible they are not chiefly to be esteemed Reason 2 Secondly howsoeuer the wedge of Gold preuaileth much with men and can in a manner doe all thinges yet it is of no force with God it cannot remoue his iudgements or turne away his wrath from vs it cannot redeeme or pay the ransome of one Soule we were boght with a greater price Hence it is that the Prophet saith n Psal 49 6 7. They trust in their goodes and boast themselues in the multitude of their Riches yet a man can by no meanes redeeme his Brother he cannot pay his ransome to God If riches that can doe much could doe this then the richest should be the happiest and the poorest men should be the most miserable But this standeth not with the will and wisedome of God To this purpose the Prophet Ezekiell saith o Ezek 7 19. Zeph 1 18. They shall cast their Siluer in the streetes and their Gold shal be cast farre off their Siluer and their Gold cannot deliuer them in tht
of God when we minde not the Kingdome that the father hath prepared for vs and the sonne hath purchased vnto vs. The Beastes were borne and fashioned to looke downe-ward man created after the Image of God looketh vpward and beholdeth the Heauens It is a great discord and iarre betweene the eye and the heart which should goe together when the eye is cast vpward and the heart of man groweth downeward the eye is fixed aboue and the heart delighteth to be alwaies groueling vpon the ground and glued vnto the earth Secondly as this Doctrine meeteth with their corruption that haue their conuersation below in the center and bowels of the earth y Phil. 3 20. y The 2. reprofe whereas it should be in heauen from whence we looke for a Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ so it reprooueth such as regard not the obedience to the first Table and duties of piety and holinesse which are to be perfourmed immediately to God Our Sauiour speaking of the first Table of the Law calleth it the first and great commandement first in dignity and order in dignity because it comprehendeth and containeth the duties we owe to God In order of Nature because from the loue of God proceedeth the loue to our Neighbour Likewise great because it is of greatest waight and stretcheth farthest and is chiefly to be respected of vs. Hence it is that when an expounder of the law asked him a question z Math 22 36 37 38. Maister which is the greatest commandement in the Law He answered him Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thine heart with all thy soule and with all thy minde this is the first the great commandement These precepts are first commanded but they are last practised and least regarded They are called of Christ great but they are very small and little in the eyes of the greatest part and sort of men If they lead an honest and ciuill life before men if they deale iustly and truely with their Neighbours they thinke all is well they esteeme themselues as perfect men though they liue ignorantly prophanely and irreligiously though they haue no knowledge of God and of his worde though they regard not his worshippe priuatelie or publikelie If they can say wee are no Theeues or Murtherers we are not defiled with Fornication and Adultery we pay euery man his owne and do as we would be done vnto they suppose they beare as good a Soule to God as the best and shall bee saued as soone as any But aske them any thing of the worship of God or marke what their practise is touching his worship they haue no loue to it they take no delight in it their meditation is not vpon the word their care is not to sanctifie the Sabboath and consequently the duties which they perfourme toward men haue no right ground to stand vpon and therefore though they may bring profit to others yet can they minister no comfort to themselues The first Table is the heart of all Religion and the foundation whereupon the duties of Righteousnesse are builded If they proceed not from a religious respect to God they are as an house set vpon the Sand which wanteth a sure ground-worke Vse 2. Secondly we are put in mind from hence not to care ouer much for earthly thinges or to runne so farre after them that we forget our selues where we are True it is wee are bounde and charged in duty to vse the meanes that God hath appointed for vs and to exercise our selues with diligence labour and industry in our callings but we must not trust in these meanes and put our confidence in them and distrust the care and prouidence of God toward vs. There is a double care for the thinges of this Life there is a good and godly care which is necessary for euery one the contrary whereof is to be carelesse idle wasting and spending vnthristily and wickedly such thinges as are gotten by our labour This prouidence and fore-cast is commended and commanded in many places of the Scripture This the Apostle teacheth and speaketh off 1. Tim. 5. a 1 Tim 5 8. If there be any that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold he denyeth the faith and is worse then an Infidell The other sort of care is a care ioyned with griefe and pensiuenesse and of this the Apostle saith b 1 Cor 7 32. I would haue you without care This care is an ouer-great care disquieting the heart and maketh it bond to the vnrighteous Mammon this is alwaies to be condemned as that which breedeth in vs a distrust in Gods prouidence and choaketh the loue of heauenly thinges and therefore is hurtfull and pernicious This our Sauiour reproueth in the Gospell according to Mathew Chap. 6. c Math 6 25. I say vnto you be not carefull for your life what ye shall eate or what ye shall drinke nor yet for your Body what ye shall put on c. Behold the Foules of the Heauen for they neither sow nor reape Which of you by taking care can adde one Cubite to his stature And why care ye for Raiment Behold how the Lillies of the field do grow and yet they neither labour nor spinne Therefore take no thought what ye shall eate or what ye shall drinke or wherewith ye shall be cloathed for your Heauenly Father knoweth that ye haue need of all these thinges c. Wee haue the Lord to care for vs who knoweth our wants and the meanes how to supply them He made all thinges before we had our being to teach vs his prouidence All the Mines of Siluer and Gold that lye in the heart of the earth are his and at his commandement Hence it is that the Apostle saith Heb. 13 d Heb 13 5 6 7. Haue your conuersation without Coueteousnesse and bee content with those thinges that ye haue for he hath said I will not faile thee neither forsake thee so that we may boldly say The Lord is mine helper neither will I feare what man can do vnto me Can we therefore doubt of his succouring of vs and the supplying of our wants If we consider his power he is God if his will he is our Father Will God forsake or forget his Creatures Or can a father be vnmindfull or vnmercifull toward his Children This were to make him no God no Father which is Blasphemy and impiety The Prophet Dauid hauing himselfe had a long experience of Gods watchfull eye ouer him teacheth vs also to depend vpon him Psal 55. e Psal 55 22. Cast thy burden vpon the Lord and he shall nourish thee he will not suffer the righteous to fall for euer It is great vanity to be ouergreedy and gaping after the transitory thinges of this world to be carking and caring in the seeking for them and to eate the bread of sorrow in going about them We should vse them as though we vsed them
be extended to all 86 A fruit of loue to admonish 27 We must loue most where God loueth most 112. Not the vngodly most 115 Loue betweene Pastour and people 192 193 Loue those that haue conuerted vs 261 Loue one another 332 355. It is a Christians badge 356 355 Loue God aboue all 340 Loue to the Saints must be feruent 254 257. What it is 256. The manner how we must loue 257 258 Long life a punishment to the vngodlie 308 Losses See comfort in losses Lowest member in the Church must bee respected 184 329 The low estate comforted 1●0 Luke-warme 433 M A Magistrate sustaines two persons 247 Man by Nature sociable 22 A Martyr who is 19 20 Markes of Christ what 18 Marriage must be in the Lord. 32 English Martirs canonized by the Pope were deuillish Traytors 121 Mankind stand in neede one of another 83 Masse 93 Maintenance of the Minister 400 Maner of doing God accepts more then the deede 284 Maisters must pray for their Families 241. They haue comfort in teaching them 242. they are Ministers in their owne houses 45 Meditations to mooue vs to Prayer 462 Necessary after hearing 220. For Patrons 222 A meane to be kept 76 Meanes must be vsed to bring vs to faith 108 109. To further his guifts in vs 129 Members we are one of another 173 Mercilesse men 276 Mercifull men 280 Meritorious workes 458 Merits taught in the Church of Rome 463 Ministers calling painfull 33. they must not entangle themselues in worldlie things 37. They must seeke cheefely the profit of their people 70. It is a greefe to see them go backward 71 Ministers must preach willingly 286. They are Gods Instruments to conuert Soules 165. They must be maintained 287. Giuen to Hospitality 444. Being idle their guiftes are diminished 136 they haue no right to be maintained 137 Ministers must loue the people as Children 194 They must be faithful 216 They shall giue an account for soules 216. They haue comfort in labouring 242 Ministry a worthy calling 165 Ministers are Gods Ambassadours 171 How to be esteemed 171. They must vse mildenesse and gentlenesse 172 173 Mitigation of offences required 363 Three rules belonging thereto Ibid. Mishapen Children See Children deformed Monkish life See Solitary Mocking the Ministers 204 Multitude no rule to try truth 90 N Name that is good onely the godly haue 96 It hath many enemies 427. Euill men haue an euill Name 96. Against such as take away the good Name of the godly 96 Vngodlinesse brings a blot to mens names 97. ciuil men are ignorant of a good Name Ibid Seeke aster a good name 97. how many waies men are deceiued in it Ibid Wherein a good name consisteth 98 The enemies to it Ibid Naturall condition what 299 Negligence in Religion 11 Neglect of Prayer 456 Neighbour who is 256 Nicodemus 481 Niggardlinesse See Couetousnesse Non proficients 128 324 Non residency what it is 194 Notes to proue men voide of Faith 108 Nouatians 317 O Obiections answered pretending that ministers liue idely 35. that they need not heare that haue faith already 130 Obiections against instructing families 40. of them that say they spend nothing but their owne 115. Of miserable men against liberality 158 190. of Non residents 197 Obiections brought to prooue preaching not the ordinary meanes of regeneration 207 Obiections of Anabaptists 265. 367 Obiections made against forgiuing offenders 246. against vsing salutations 247 Obligations lawfull 385 Occasions of doing good must be sought 31. of contention must be cut off 251 Odious tearmes not to be vsed against the penitent 311 Offences of penitents not to be aggrauated 293. they are to be forgiuen 243 Offences forgiuen two wayes 247. they will arise many wayes 487 Old age honourable 178 Old men instead of Fathers 18. their Duties and sins 181 491. their long life is a testimony of Gods mercy 182 Oppression 393 Opportunity 444 Order in praying for blessings 505 Ouer-seers of the Church 221 Outward blessings recompenced with inward 305 P Painims religion what 156. they regard not the poore Ibid Papists no friends to Princes 266. falsely called Catholicks 322. they seuer faith and loue 102 104. they slander vs about Good-workes 105 Parents of deformed children comforted 311 316. they must not reproue their children for good thinges 328. they must pray for their families 241 Pardon open for penitents 217 Pastors ioy 69 Pastors and people are as Father and son 189. they are tied to a particular charge 199. not to discourage people that are forward 329 Pastors of meane guifts must bee heard 203 Patrons admonished 221. whence they had their names Peace giuen to the faithfull 55 58 The three Persons in Trinity worke our saluation 61. the distinction betweene them must be knowne 62 Peace is brought by the Gospel 264 Penitent persons not to be reproached 317. their confession not to be reueiled 321. abuse of the church of Rom therein Ibid. ●alse perswasion of Faith set downe by certaine notes 108. Peters being at Rome vncertaine 46● disagreement of Popish writers about it 471 Persecutions of Christians are the persecutions of Christ 15 Popish Idolatry like the Gentiles 63 Popishe assertions touching the Scriptures 78 Pope held to bee the Saint-maker 121. he is enemy to Princes 266 Popish deuotion 288. Martyrs 10. Religion which giues liberty to sin 105 Church what it is 470. The Popes Supremacy 470. his Saints 120 Poore Saints to be relieued 154. What those poore are 161. Poorest beleeuer is rich 189. the godly are specially to be respected 1●1 Pray for the free passage of the gosp 3●… Praier necessary 63. 437. it must bee made to God for others 82. it is a part of spirituall armour 83. the vse of it ibid. other mens to be intreated 84. We must pray for spirituall strength 91. and for spirituall things 505 Praier what it is 447. it is a medicine against all diseases 83. how made vnprofitable 461. what is required in it 449. why God defers to heare 453. Popish prayers Idolatrous 452 Prayer heard two waies 453 Prayer contemned 454 Prayer to Saints 454. It robbeth God of his honor 155. It cannot merit People must maintaine their Ministers 38. They must delight the heartes of their Teachers 73. They must not thinke it enough not to hurt them 74. They come to entrap them Ibid Howe many waies they grieue their Pastors 75 People must employ their guifts 139. They must not despise the Ministry of the word 170. They must honor their Pastors 202. They must attend theyr owne Pastors 203. they are in the ministers debt 402 Poore vnthankfull 412 Precisenesse not to bee obiected against Professors 93 Presence of the Pastour necessary 190 191. Preaching of the word the meanes of regeneration 205. A token of Gods loue 215 Preachers preach to themselues as well as to others 210 Preaching Ministery necessary to saluation 213 Preparation before hearing 219 Priuiledges of the godly 58 Profession of Faith See Confession