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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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and Alypius writ Domum vestram non parvam Christi ecclesiam deputamus We account your house no small Church of Christ Eusebius reports of Constantine that he had in his Pallace the forme of a Church singing of Psalmes and himselfe would begin the Psalme reading of Scripture prayers Oh that all Christian families were like to these Saint Bernard findes fault with Eugerius that the lawes of Iustinian made a greater noise in his Pallace then the lawes of GOD. Suffer no unchastitie no indecencie to reside in the countenance in the habite in the gate of those that be about thee Inter mitratos discurrere calamistratos non decet it is not comely to see uncomely heads among them that weare miters upon their heads Catharinus being himselfe a Bishop is not afraid to say that Philemon vir saecularis a secular man shall rise up in judgement against us the Prelates of the Church who had turned his house into a Church A worthie patterne for all to imitate There is much crying for reformation let every man reforme himselfe and every house-holder his familie then soone would there be an happie reformation in Church and Common-wealth We have had the persons in the salutation there remaines now the matter of it which conteines in it three things Donum datorem mediatorem the gift the giver the Mediatour The gift is double primum ultimum the first which is grace the last which is peace the one is causa fons bonorum the cause and fountaine of all good things the other finis perfectio bonorum the end and perfection of them all Grace first the undeserved love and favour of God By nature we are out of favour with him the children of wrath All have sinned and all stand in need of the favour of God It is a sweet thing to have the favour of Princes yet that is mutable Mephibosheth had Davids favour but he was wounde out of favour Athanasius had the favour of Constantine but he lost it 1. God is immutable not so much as a shadow of turning in him 2. They can pleasure us but with fading things God with durable 3. They dye God lives for ever 4. They can doe us no pleasure when we be dead God can for all live to him he can raise us up againe and set us in heavenly places with Christ let us all sue for his favour The next is peace flowing from the other 1. All kinde of prosperitie especially the peace of Conscience that surpasseth all There is the worlds peace that worldlings have their eyes sticke out by reason of fatnesse they are not in trouble as other men they have more than heart can wish they dye and that peace dyes with them There is CHRISTS peace being justified by faith wee have peace with God through IESUS CHRIST our LORD That is the comfortable peace indeede Is it peace Iehu said Iehoram What peace when as the Witchcrafts and Adulteries of thy Mother Iezebel are yet in great number What peace can a man have when as his sinnes boxe him continually and will not suffer him to bee quiet As the Ghost of NERO his Mother tormented him There is no peace saith God to the wicked he is like the raging Sea foaming out dirt and mire When Herod entended to make Warre with them of Tyrus and Sydon they sued for peace by Blastus his Chamberlaine God Almighty intends to make Warre against us for our sinnes let us sue to him for peace by Christ Iesus who by the bloud of his Crosse hath set at peace all things in heaven and earth Augustus Caesar wished three things to his Son the favour of Pompey the boldnesse of Alexander and his owne fortune Let us wish these two things to all that wee love grace and peace From whom From GOD our Father All the Persons in the Trinitie are our father CHRIST is the everlasting Father the Holy Ghost is our Father I will not leave you Orphans fatherlesse the comforter shall be a father to you They may all be here comprehended Vbi una persona Trinitatis auditur ibi tota Trinitas intelligitur Every good gift and perfect thing commeth from above even from the Father of light from him comes grace peace and all other good things let us all put up our supplications to him By whom He is described three wayes à Dignitate à Charitate à Sanctitate For his dignitie he is the Lord for his love he is IESUS and a Saviour for his Sanctitie he is Christ the anoynted above all CHRIST is the Conduct pipe whereby all blessings are conveyed to us he is the heyre of all we Coheyres by him hee is primarily beloved we secondarily in him and for him As the oyntment powred on Aarons head went downe to his beard and the skirts of his garment So the oyle of gladnesse powred on Christ our head came downe from him to us all we have nothing without him he is to be magnified for all Saint Paul in this inscription hath broached a great deale of Christian eloquence for Onesimus every word is an oratour to plead for him 1. The name of Paul which was renowmed among all 2. The estate of Paul a Prisoner and that of Iesus Christ he may not stop his eares against the crie of such a prisoner 3. Not hee alone but Timothie too Et vis unita fortior 4. Hee is his dearely beloved he may not deny him that loves him so dearely 5. He is his fellow labourer and he must give him leave to labour with him in this businesse 6. Hee puts in the Woman too this night-raven even in bed may sing a sweet note for Onesimus 7. Archippus being appointed their Pastour cannot easily be rejected 8. The whole household will speake a good word for their old fellow servant 9. The name of grace must needs make him to deale graciously with Onesimus Philemon had the forgivenesse of his sins by the grace of God that must induce him to forgive his servant as God of his meere grace and mercy had forgiven him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imitate thy heavenly Master in this it is Chrysostomes observation VERSE 4. Wee have dwelt something long in the porch yet no longer then necessity required let us now enter into the house and come to the substance of the Epistle Where first there is the subject of it secondly the conclusion of it Verse 21. The subject of it is an earnest suit for Onesimus Where 1. There is the foundation whereupon his suit is built 2. The commencing of the suit or supplication to him for Onesimus 3. The foundation is the graces wherewith PHILEMON was beautified they are expressed in a thanksgiving wherein these circumstances are to be considered 1. Cui to whom he gives thankes 2. Quando when he gives thankes 3. Super quo for what hee gives thankes for his love and faith Where
Gods Councell as the Preachers be at this day the Iewes were honoured that God would speake to them by them but to us hee hath spoken by his onely Sonne therefore our honour is the greater we are set in an high chaire of dignity above them happy are the eyes that see that which we see Many Prophets and Kings have desired to see these things which we see and have not seene them God give us grace to use our happinesse to his glory and the salvation of us all In this the Old and New Testament are equall God is the Author of them both God spake by the Prophets then and he speaketh now by his Ministers The word of the Lord the burthen of the Lord thus saith the Lord. These were the preambles of all the Prophets God spake by the mouth of David as he spake by the mouth of all his Prophets So God speaketh by the mouth of the Preachers at this present day It is not you that speak but the spirit of your Father which speaketh in you Wee are the Ambassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us When we teach God teacheth when we exhort God exhorteth when we reprove sinne God reproveth sin It makes no matter what the man be that speaketh so as he be the lawfull Minister of Christ God speaketh by the man when the man speaketh Gods word When the Ambassadour of the King of Denmark of France or any other Countrey speaketh in the Court the King speaketh whose person he doth represent when my Lord Chiefe Iustice gives the charge at the Assizes the King gives the charge for he sustaines the Kings Person and is a Commissioner for the King so when the Preacher speakes in the Pulpit when he in Gods name gives a charge against pride malice c. God himselfe speakes and gives the charge Oh that this were imprinted in the hearts of all that come to Church the Preacher is a man as thou art but God speakes by him and if thou despise him thou despisest God that speakes in him VERSE 2. WE have seene the estate of them in the time of the Law Now let us take a view of our condition under the Gospell Theirs were the first dayes ours be the last In those that were the first dayes some new Doctrine was daily to be expected but in these last dayes GOD hath opened to us his whole counsell there is no mint of any new Doctrine to be looked for now nothing but the second comming of our SAVIOUR CHRIST is to be expected which hath revealed the whole will of his Father to us If an Angel from Heaven preach any other Doctrine than that which wee have received in these last dayes let him bee accursed 2 In the last dayes there is greatest aboundance of knowledge In the last dayes I will powre out my Spirit on all flesh GOD then was sparing of his Spirit he sent it downe by drops but now he powres it out upon the Church they had the Moone-light we have the Sun-light Therefore if we be ignorant our condemnation shall be the greater as GOD knowes a number of ignorant persons are in this glorious light of the Gospell yea in those Towns where the Candle of Gods Word hath shined brightly these many yeares together The preaching of the Word is a well of water but we will not come with our buckets to fetch water at this Well or if we doe we come with riven buckets the water runs out by and by 3 These last dayes wherein we live are the most dangerous sinne overfloweth with a full streame In the last dayes perillous times shall come Never did sin shew her selfe with such a brazen face as it doth now Men now stick not to set themselves against the Word of GOD it selfe to call the authority of the Scripture in question whether all things be true in it or not To band themselves against the Preachers if not openly yet secretly and to pull downe if possible the Church it selfe these be the last times wherein we live GOD keepe us in them by his holy Spirit 4 Seeing they be the last dayes let us not be so much in love with them Will any be bestowing great cost on his house the last day when he is to goe out of it These are the last dayes of the world wherein we are ready to be turned out of the house of this world therefore let us not be inflamed too much with the love of it In the first dayes when they entred first into the farme of the world they might be merry and jocund we live in the last dayes when we cannot have long to tarry in it therefore let us not be glewed and wedded to it let us use this world as if we used it not for the fashion of this world fadeth away in these last dayes let us so live that whensoever Christ comes to judgement we may meet him joyfully in the Ayre and be translated with him into his kingdome of glory Spoken unto us 1. To the Apostles first that saw and heard him then to all Christians His must be understood Mat. 21.37 But last of all he sent unto them his Son in his Sonne Col. 2.9 For in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily The which Sonne speaketh to us by his Ministers to the worlds end they had servants to speake to them but God hath spoken to us by his Son yet even his Son is little regarded Many of the Pharisies knew him to be the Son of God this is the Heire yet they said come let us kill him I am perswaded if CHRIST were now alive and preached many yeeres together in this Towne yet there be some so maliciously set against the Word and the preachers of it that they could finde in their hearts to kill him Hee that heareth you heareth me and he that goeth about to kill them goes about to kill CHRIST too What a vile age doe we live in What manner of Son not adopted but naturall 1 Heire The Son is the Fathers Heire he hath a right and interest to all his Fathers goods and lands when his Father is dead he hath the same power lordship and authority over all that his Father had So Christ Psa. 2.8 Iohn 16.15 Ioh. 17.10 Yet God his Father never dieth He is Heire as God and Man the King and Mediator of the Church All power is given unto mee in Heaven and Earth God appointed Him He did not intrude Himselfe He was not appointed Heire because being in time made He deserved it by His holy life as Photinus said not only Heire in time but with the Father before all times Of all Of all persons as well as of all things CHRIST hath a right to all he that taketh away any thing bequeathed to the Heire by the Will and Testament of his Father robs the Heire and is guilty of theft if we goe about to take
we know the Sunne by his brightnesse so the Father by Christ. And the expresse image of his person The former did shew that CHRIST was of the same nature with the Father but this that he further resembleth the person of the Father every Sonne is of the same nature and essence that his Father is of but every Sonne is not like the person of his Father in stature countenance voice gesture c. Whereas there is nothing in the person of the father but it is expressed in lively colours in CHRIST not a painted forme but an engraven forme As if a mans picture were taken in brasse or Waxe all the lineaments of his face hands and the rest of the parts of the body might evidently be seene in it he that beholdeth the one beholdeth the other Col. 1.15 Io. 14.9 the eternity of the God-head his wisedome power justice and goodnesse may be seene in CHRIST This is the third argument to prove the deity of CHRIST and it is drawne from the identity of the divine essence Hee that is the brightnesse of Gods glory and engraven forme of his person is GOD but CHRIST is the brightnesse of GODS glory and engraven forme of his person Ergo He shewes him in the fourth place to be God by the worke of preservation He that beareth up the world by the mighty power of his providence is God Exod. 15.13 Isai. 46.3 Deut. 1.31 Cap. 32. v. 11. but Christ beareth up the world by the power of his providence Ergo hee beareth it up else it would fall Some say that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ruling all things Yet the metaphor is significant Christ beareth up all things in heaven and earth There were two pillars that bere up the house where Sampson played and the Philistims were assembled together but Christ is the only pillar that beareth up the house of the world The Poets write much of one Atlas that bore up the heavens with his shoulders but our Saviour Christ is the true Atlas that beareth up heaven and earth As he made the world so he beares up the world and keepeth it up from falling If it were not for him the Sunne Moone Stars and all the host of heaven would fall to the ground if it were not for him the birds of the ayre the fishes of the Sea the beasts of the field would drop away in a moment the earth would sinke downe under our feet the Sea would overflow his bankes and drowne us all Our Saviour Christ beares up all in regard of their nature he beareth up the Devils themselves and all his instruments in the world he does not beare them out in their wickednesse but hee beareth up their essence In him all live breath and have their being But more particularly in love and mercy he beareth up his children and the members of Christ as a father beareth his Sonne and taketh him up into his armes so doth he those whom he hath adopted in Christ Nay as a mother beareth the infant so doth he us as an Eagle fluttereth about her young ones so the Lord beareth us on his wings This may bee a singular comfort to us all wheresoever we be on the water or on the land in the day or night though we be among the thickest of our enemies nay among Devills yet the Lord Iesus beareth us in his hands and none can take us out of his hands This should cause us all to stand in aw of him to be afraid to displease him Will any be so madde as to make holes in the ship that beareth them Will any hew downe the pillars that beare up the house Shall a child scratch out the eyes of the nurse that beareth him Our Saviour Christ beares us up all therfore let us not like rebels fight against him by our sinnes let us please him all that we can by whom wee are borne up They of Tyre and Sydon sought Herods favour because their land was nourished by him all men throughout the wide compasse of the world are nourished by our Saviour Christ. The breath would quickly be out of the nostrills of us all if it were not for him Kings Princes Noblemen Gentlemen Merchants Clothiers Rich and Poore depend upon him if he take away his hand we are all gone Therefore let us serve him with all our might that beareth us up with his mighty word It is not our riches our Silver and Gold our Sheep and Oxen that can beare us up then the rich man would never have dyed It is Christ that upholdeth us all Let us all therefore feare and reverence him wee especially that be his Ministers of whom he hath such a fatherly care being the watchman and keeper Let us above all others glorifie this GOD that beareth us up by the hand of his power and mercy The fifth argument to prove the deity of Christ is drawn from the worke of redemption He that hath purged us from our sins is God But Christ c. This is spoken of whole Christ His humanity was the instrumentall cause of this purgation his deity the efficient We are purged by the word as by an instrument applying this to us and by the Sacrament of Baptisme sealing it up in our hearts Ephes. 5.26 but by the bloud of Christ Meritoriè Acts 20.28 by the oblation of his owne body and the shedding of his owne bloud not by an Angell not by the co-operation of our merits with himselfe Not of His owne for He knew no sin but ours that are bred borne and brought up in sin of all our sinnes He hath not left one unpurged Not by our selves nor by Angels Here the slie and nice distinction of the Iesuits is taken away which they invented of late to make us beleeve that by the Doctrine of Merits they derogate nothing from the glory of CHRIST Indeed they say that we may make satisfaction for sin and merit Heaven yet it is not we that doe it but Christ by us not our workes simply in themselves but as dyed in the bloud of CHRIST Our merits are Christs merits and therefore they may deserve Heaven I but Christ hath purged our sins by Himselfe not by our selves he hath done it by his owne bloud immediately not mediately by our workes dyed in His bloud therefore that is a meere delusion to mock the World withall This is a singular benefit that we receive from Christ a purgation from all our sins Sin is an heavie load and importable burthen a man had better have a mountaine than one sin hang on Him Hence it is that they cry O ye hils fall on us In what a pittifull taking was Iudas when he felt the horrour of his sin not purged by the Lord Iesus How did he houle and cry I have sinned and at length tooke a rope and hanged himselfe There is no torment to the torment of sin this is in a manner the only hell
that he might the better pittie us that be men that he might be a mercifull high Priest to us all and shall we be unmercifull one to another As the elect of God put on bowels of mercy Col. 3.12 We have a mercifull high Priest Let us be mercifull one to another It is a token of a wicked man of a reprobate to be unmercifull as that rich glutton was that saw Lazarus dayly at his gates and would have no compassion on him True Christians are mercifull as Christ is Iudas came howling to the high Priests and Pharises Oh I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud what is that to us say they See thou to that So such a neighbour is sicke in the Towne such a one is mourning for the death of his Children his Wife c. Such a poore man hath neither meat nor firing nothing to relieve himselfe and his Children withall what is that to us A lamentable thing There is a thorne in the foot that paines it and makes it to swell shall the head and hands say what is that to us We are members one of another and we have an head that is pittifull to us Let us be pittifull one to another that Christ may have pittie and compassion on us both in this world and in that which is to come This may be a singular comfort to us all They say he is happy that hath a friend in the Court especially if he be gracious with the King wee have a friend in the Court of heaven that is deepe in Gods bookes such a friend as hath a feeling of all our infirmities He and we are as Hippocrates twins weeping and laughing together Saul why persecutest thou me If we be sicke or grieved he is c. This was one speciall end why CHRIST assumed our nature that hee might the better have compassion on us in our calamities As the bowels of the true mother yerned when her Child should have beene cut in pieces so if wee bee in any affliction the bowels of CHRIST yerne towards us therefore let us sound forth the praises of CHRIST with a cheerefull heart that tooke our nature on him let us glorifie this our elder brother LORD and Saviour in this life that we may be glorified with himselfe in eternall glory in the life to come CHAP. 3. HItherto he hath entreated of the person of Christ shewing him to be God and man now he proceedeth to his offices As for his regall dignity it might bee perceived by that which he had already spoken of him that he was above the Angels themselves therefore he sayes little of his kingdome in his other two offices he is ample 1. They are propounded joyntly Verse 1. Then opened Severally and particularly 1. Hee begins with his prophesie which is contained in this Chapter and part of the next to Verse 14. Then with his Priesthood in the Chapter following About his prophesie there be two things 1. An admonition with all reverence to listen to this our Prophet 2. Reasons to induce us to it Within this Chapter there are foure The 1. is taken from his fidelity illustrated by a comparison betweene him and Moses à 2. ad 7. 2. From the testimony of the Holy Ghost who stirreth us up to listen to him where we have the allegation of the testimony à 7. to 11. an application of it Verse 12 13. The 3d. reason is taken from the fruit and commodity we shall have by it a society and fellowship with Christ verse 14. 4. From the punishment inflicted on them that contemne this Prophet to the end In the admonition there be two branches 1. A description of the persons that are to attend 2. Of the person to whom they must attend Vnde whereupon Seeing the Prophet and Doctor of the Church is the high and eternall God above the Angels and all creatures seeing in time he became man that by Gods grace he might taste death for all men therefore let us make an high account and estimation of him The parties admonished to listen to this Prophet and Teacher of the Church are described by their estate and condition and by the gracious benefits bestowed on them 1 For their condition they be brethren dulciter eos alloquitur not carnall but spirituall brethren He doth not call them brethren only because they descended of the Fathers and came of the seed of Abraham as he did but because they were brethren in the Lord Iesus Christ. By this sweet and loving title he doth insinuate himselfe into the Hebrewes and allures them to have a reverent opinion of Christ. Yea he cals them holy brethren such as are made holy by Iesus Christ the Holy one of God 1 Cor. 6.11 By nature we are unholy as well as others but Christ sanctifieth us and makes us holy We that bee Christians must not be unholy brethren brethren in evill as Simeon and Levi were but we must be holy brethren As GOD our Father is holy the Church our Mother is holy Christ our elder brother is holy the Angels our fellow-brethren are holy Heaven is an holy place so must we in some measure be holy Seeing you are holy and have all your holinesse from Christ listen to him 2 For their dignity Partakers together with the rest of the Saints of the Heavenly and glorious kingdome whereunto God in mercy hath called us by the preaching of the Gospell 1 Thes. 2.12 Now as GOD hath beene so gracious to you as to make you partakers of his owne kingdome purchased by the bloud of his Sonne so listen you with all reverence to him and cleave to him alone Of the heavenly calling that is Of the preaching of the Gospell whereby we are called to the kingdome of heaven whom God hath predestinated hee hath called The preaching of the Gospell is the bell whereby we are called to eternall glory As by the sound of a Trumpet the people were called together in the time of the Law so the Word is the silver Trumpet sounding in our eares whereby we are called to the Kingdome of Heaven Blessed are they that be partakers of this calling Such are we in England at this present day if we had eyes to see it and hearts to consider it But GOD cals and we refuse to come wisdome hath made ready her Feast she shath sent her maids into the streets to call us to her banquet but we passe not for it The King made a Supper for his Son sent and invited many to it but they made excuses and came not so GOD calleth us continually but some sit at home in their houses some ride abroad c. when God cals them to his kingdome As we are partakers of the heavenly vocation so let us make a precious account of it that we may be called out of the kingdome of darknesse into the kingdome of light and remaine with Christ for ever Then he comes to the admonition it selfe Consider not lightly as they
with all reverence Secondly a strengthning of the charge by an argument which he disputeth by the example of their fathers Where first the sinne of their fathers then the punishment of the sinne Their sin is set downe first generally then particularly with the circumstances belonging to it of the place where it was committed the persons by whom the nature and quality of the sin amplified by the meanes they had to call from it the time how long they continued in this sinne The punishment is double 1. GODS wrath and displeasure 2. A definitive sentence proceeding from it an exclusion of them out of his rest VERSE 7. SEeing we have such a rare and excellent Prophet as is not as a servant but as the Sonne in the house of GOD let us attend to him and for so much as faith makes us to be of this house and hope is as a pillar for the susteining of us in it let us beware of infidelity that pulls downe the house and shuts up the doore against this Prophet that he cannot enter in into us Now because hee was to make a commemoration of the stubbornnesse and contumacie of the ancient Israelites which in time rejected this Prophet and would not heare him very wisely for offending of the Hebrews he delivers it in the words of the Holy Ghost rather then of his owne They would peradventure have kicked against his reproofe but they durst not spurne at the reprehension of the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost long agoe by the mouth of David provoked the people to lysten to CHRIST the true Prophet of the Church therefore let us all attend to him The Author of this Epistle was not ignorant that David was the penman or Authour of this Psalme for he himselfe affirmeth Hebr. 4.7 yet he doth not say as David speaketh but as the Holy Ghost saith whereby he gives us to understand that the Holy Ghost the third person in the glorious Trinity speaketh in the Scriptures the whole Scripture is given by inspiration of God 2 Tim. 3.16 this heavenly spirit did breath them into those worthy instruments which he used Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost The Manichees sayd that the evill GOD was the Author of the Old Testament and the good GOD of the new yet the Holy Ghost spake in the Old Testament This then is the prerogative of the sacred Scripture above other wrytings In other books men speake but in this God speaketh In other writings Tullie Seneca Plato Aristotle Plutarch speaketh who indeed were wise and learned men but in the bookes of holy Scripture the Holy Ghost speaketh which is the fountaine of all wisdome In them the servants speake in this the LORD speaketh In them the subjects in this the Prince The Holy Ghost speaketh in the bookes of Moses of the Psalmes of the Prophets in the bookes of the New Testament yet such is the blindnesse of our understanding and the corruption of our nature that we preferre humanity before Divinity the writing of men before the writings of God the Moone before the Sunne wee had rather be reading of humane Authors then of these heavenly books wherein the HOLY GHOST speaketh to us Now if yee will heare his voice as God hath commanded you to doe Deut. 18.18 Then harden not your hearts Thus it is as cleere as the noone day that the Spirit of God gives an evident testimony of our Saviour CHRIST To day In the time of the Gospell The law was as the night this as the day While he speaketh to us 2 Cor. 6.2 CHRIST spake in Moses time in Davids time he spake in his owne person on the earth and he speakes in the Ministerie of the Gospell to the worlds end The Gentiles that were not as yet of CHRISTS fold heare the voyce of CHRIST Ioh. 10. but CHRIST is now in heaven therefore the voyce of the Preachers is the voyce of CHRIST He doth not say to morrow post it not off till to morrow but heare it To day while it may be heard VERSE 8. WHat then He doth not say stop not up your yeares we must not doe that neither but it is in vaine for the eare to heare if the heart bee hardned therefore first he beginneth with the heart God opened the heart of Lydia The heart is the principall thing which GOD requireth in the hearing of the Word In vaine doe wee heare with our eares if our hearts bee not opened therefore sayes the Holy Ghost harden not your hearts GOD hardeneth the hearts of men and men harden their owne hearts He hardned the heart of Pharaoh and Deut. 2.30 GOD hardneth not only permissivè but also activè the LORD hath a kinde of act in it his providence is in it He gave up the Gentiles unto their owne lusts Rom. 1.24 Hee sendeth the wicked strong delusions to believe lies He did not only suffer Pharaohs heart to be hardned but he hardned it indeed How Not infundendo malitiam by infusing evill into our hearts for they be as pots full of all impiety already GOD needs not nay GOD cannot it is repugnant to his nature to put any evill into us yet hee doth not harden onely subtrahendo gratiam though that bee one meanes but by having an operation in the action yet so as he is free from the least imputation of sinne As hardnesse of heart comes from GOD it is a punishment of sin of our former contempt of his grace and mercie offered to us as it proceedeth from our selves it is a sinne yea an horrible sinne To conclude we first contemne that grace which should soften our hearts and then God hardens them We our selves properly to speake are the hardners of our own hearts GOD gives us his sacred word as a trumpet to waken us out of sinne he sends us his Ministers and Preachers as bells to toll us to the kingdome of heaven they will us in GODS name to believe in CHRIST to forsake our sinnes be they never so neere or deere unto us we for all that harden our hearts that those heavenly admonitions cannot enter into them Let God say what hee will let him preach by his Embassadours we will still continue in unbeliefe and dwell in our sinnes we say with them in the Gospell we will not have this man to reigne over us Sinne shall be our King Lord and Master CHRIST IESUS shall not rule us by his word and Spirit This is the hardnesse of heart that is in us by nature Oh Hierusalem how often would I have gathered thy children together and yee would not Matth. 23.37 The LORD sent his Prophets early and late 2 Chron. 36.16 and in Zach. 7.12 there is a wonderfull example to this purpose This hardnes of heart reigneth exceedingly at this present day yea even in those townes where there is most plentifull preaching Therefore let us intreat the LORD to give us a new heart to take from us
man at the latter day The very conscience of a man doth tell him at one time or other whether hee will or no that there is a day of judgement Why are men vexed in their soules when they have sinned when they have committed such sinnes as the Law cannot take hold off as oppression and wrongs offered to their brethren secret adulteries c. Why are they grieved for these and can find no rest in them if there were not a judgment to come VERSE 28. HEre is the equity of it He that abrogates it that pulls it out of place that violates it elata manu Num. 15.30 Not he that in a small offence transgresseth the Law but that breaketh it in some monstrous and notorious manner either by blasphemy by contemptuous prophaning by contumacy against father and mother and hee that doth transgresse these lawes in a despite and contempt of them hee must needs be put to death there is no remedy No mercy is to be shewed in it the Law must have his course without respect of persons whether hee bee high or low rich or poore hee must dye for it No bribe may save his life Deut. 19.21.13 8. Yet good advice must bee had in putting him to death there must be an orderly proceeding against him his fault must be convinced by sufficient witnesses All Moses lawes were not written with bloud as Draco's were but only great and capitall crimes Such were to dye without mercy Mercie is an excellent vertue a divine vertue draweth neere to the nature of God which is the Father of mercies be yee mercifull as your heavenly father is mercifull Yet for all that mercy in some actions is to be shut out of doores We must sing of judgement as well as of Mercy as David did Mercy is not so to be imbraced as that Iustice should bee forgotten they that have transgressed the Law especially in contempt of the Law are to dye without mercy the Lord often toucheth upon this string We must not be more mercifull then God will have us Saul spared Agag but it cost him his kingdome Some will say of a thiefe a murderer condemned to dye is it not pitty such a proper man as he should dye no verily foolish pitty marrs the Citty If such a one be permitted to live hee may doe much hurt in the common-wealth therefore no pitty is to bee shewed to him mercy must bee stretched no further than God hath appointed But how must he dye orderly being convicted by the due course and order of Law The fact must be sufficiently proved before sentence of death passe against him and how must it be proved either by his owne confession or by the testimony of others Now one man may be partiall or he may speake on spleene and malice therefore two witnesses at least must be produced Iesabel procured two witnesses against Nabal Two witnesses were brought in against our SAVIOUR CHRIST Timothy must not receive an accusation against an Elder but under two or three witnesses There was thought no probability that two would conspire in an untruth the one at the length would bewray the jugling of the other Therefore if there were two then he dyed but now the world is growne to such an height of impiety as that it is as easie a matter to suborne two false witnesses to get two knaves to sweare an untruth as to take the pot and drinke A most vile age wherein we live but from the beginning it was not so VERSE 29. THe interrogation is more forcible then if it had beene a plaine affirmation they dyed the death of the body but these are worthy of the death where soule and body shall dye for ever Be you Iudges in the matter I dare appeale to your own selves Then he sets forth the greatnesse of their sin which ariseth by three steps or degrees 1. They in the Law despised Moses which was but a man these Christ which is the Son of God therfore they are worthy of a sharper punishment they broke but one particular Law these renounce the whole Gospell of CHRIST the Son of God They have not Christ actually to tread upon he is in heaven at the right hand of God but metonymically in treading his truth under their feete which they make no reckoning of in conculcating the benefits of CHRIST offered to them they tread CHRIST Himselfe or they carry such a spitefull minde against him as if possible they would pull him out of heaven and tread him under their feete They did it not actu but affectu This is the vilest indignity that can be offered to any to make him as dirt to tread on The Souldiers crucified CHRIST but they did not treade him under their feete For Traytors to tread the King under their feete is a monstrous thing yet these as arrant Traytors did tread Christ the King of Kings under their feete Horrible wretches In this they opposed themselves to his kingdome In the next to his Priest-hood Christ by his last Will and Testament gave us a Legacie of the kingdome of heaven Luk. 22.29 the which Testament was confirmed by the bloud and death of the Testatour Matth. 26.28 Now this holy precious and pure bloud wherewith we are washed from our sinnes these impure wretches account an unholy a common a polluted thing Mark 7.2 Acts 10.15 They make no more account of the bloud of Christ then of the bloud of a thiefe nay of a dogge or swine yet they had some benefit by this bloud Last of all they opposed themselves to the prophesie of Christ. It is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they abuse him with some notable reproach and contumelie Which is the fountaine and bestower of all graces He had given them many graces of knowledge of some faith hope love and zeale yet they contumeliously reproach this spirit revile him terming him a spirit of errour that had deluded them all this while For this cause they have sinned against the Holy Ghost In these respects they are worthy of most severe punishment no sacrifice for this sinne Is any pitty to bee shewed to them that In this world there is Mercy but none to bee expected in the world to come Then judgement mercilesse Now CHRIST standeth with open armes venite ad me omnes but then he shall say ite maledicti no mercy to be found for the wicked at the day of judgment God shew mercy to the house of Onesiphorus at that day there is mercy for the godly that be in Christ but none for the wicked that be out of Christ. And who be they that shall be so severely punished From hence may be collected a true definition of the sin against the Holy Ghost It is a malicious oppugning of the truth of the Gospell sealed up in their hearts by the HOLY GHOST they were enlightned in the mysterie of redemption purchased by Christ that he is the only Priest which
to speake wee doe not believe when wee shall see CHRIST our blessed SAVIOUR in the kingdome of heaven then faith is turned into fruition but there is singular use of it in this world and let us entreat the Lord to make bright the eye of our faith daily more and more that with Noah wee may see the things that are not yet seene What entertainment did Noah give to this warning did hee contemne it or set light by it in his heart no verily he reverenced it Wee must reverence the judgements of GOD. When Daniel pondered in himselfe the fearefull fall of Nebucadnezar that such a faire and beautifull tree which reached to heaven should bee cut downe he held his peace by the space of one houre and his thoughts troubled him When the Angels were to blow their trumpets there was silence in heaven they were stricken with a kinde of astonishment and could not speake When the booke of the Law was read before Iosiah his heart melted at it he reverenced the judgement denounced in it When this proclamation was made in Nineveh yet fortie dayes and Nineveh shall be destroyed they all reverenced it from the King to the beggar c. they put on sackcloth fasted and prayed to GOD. Noah hearing of a floud to come feares it after a godly manner and provides against the comming of it But some there be that are no more moved with them then the stones in the Church-wall Ier. 36.24 yet were not they afraid c. When Paul preached of the resurrection and of the day of judgement some in Athens mocked at it and Lots sonnes laughed at the destruction of Sodom that was at hand Let the Preacher thunder out GODS judgements against abhominable swearing lying flattering and dissembling and other sinnes that reigne among the people some laugh at it in their sleeves tell them of the day of judgement when as all nations shall appeare before the sonne of man they set not a straw by it they are worse then Felix he trembled when Saint Paul discoursed of righteousnesse and the judgement to come they are worse than the Devills for they believe that there is a GOD and tremble at it There is great difference betweene trembling and reverencing The wicked that have no portion in CHRIST tremble they cry to the mountaines and rockes fall on us c. but the holiest men of all must feare and reverence the judgements of God and we must prepare our selves for the avoyding of them as Noah did Doth the Lion roare and shall not the beasts of the forrest quake Doth GOD Almighty roare doth he threaten and shall we be mooved with no reverence as Noah reverenced the comming of the floud so let us reverence all the plagues that are denounced by God What doth Noe in this his feare hee is not as a man amazed and besides himselfe but as GOD had commanded him he prepares the Arke he doth not reason with flesh and bloud surely this may be but a scare-crow there is no such inundation to come God will not bee so unmercifull as to destroy all that hee hath made as for the Arke it must be very large to be a receptacle of all kind of creatures an hard and difficult thing to make such a Vessell when it is made how shall I and my family be preserved in it a thousand to one but wee shall be drowned hee admits no such consultation But knowing from GODS owne mouth there was a flood to come he prepares an Arke for the saving of him and his Faith must leape over all difficulties all stumbling blockes that lye in the way if God have sayd a thing let us beleeve it though all the world seeme to be against it GOD hath said there is a Iudgement to come let us all prepare for it as Noah did for the flood The old world prepared and Noah prepared they prepared by building of houses planting of Vinyards So we prepare for the world but not to meete GOD by repentance Noah prepared an Arke for the saving of himselfe and let us prepare the Arke of a good conscience for the saving of our selves at that day When it is said he prepared the Arke it is not to be imagined that he wrought it with his owne hands he was a Preacher and it is not like he could play the Carpenter or shipwright They may be like the Bell in the Steeple that calls others to the Sermon but hath no benefit of it itself they may build up others yet be unbuilt themselves Therefore it shall be good for us to preach to our selves as well as to the people lest while we preach to others we our selves be reprobates He provided all things for it Wood Pitch Nailes made it after the forme God had prescribed with many severall Roomes in it This Arke in the judgement of all interpreters was a type of the Church 1. The Arke was made after Gods appointment not after Noahs So the Church must be framed by GOD 's Will and not by mans 2. All were drowned that were not in the Arke so all regularly are damned that are not in the Catholike Church 3. The Arke was neere drowning yet never drowned it was miraculously preserved by God So the Church may be brought to a low ebbe yet it shall continue still 4. There was in the Arke good and bad cleane and uncleane so wee must never dreame to have all holy and sanctified persons that be in the Church 5. In the Arke there were diverse mansions and roomes some for men some for beasts so in the Church Ioh. 14.2 In my Fathers house there are many dwelling places 6. The Arke had but a few in it eight persons yet there was the Church Vniversalitie is no necessary note of a Church Christ's flocke is but a little flocke Here we see what a priviledge it is to be of the household of a godly man that may bee as a Sanctuary to thee from temporall plagues and judgements All that were in the ship were saved for Saint Pauls sake God gave him the soules of them all Noahs family was preserved for his sake because cursed Cham was of this house-hold he was saved Potiphars house was blessed for Iosephs sake Gen. 39.5 Strive to bee of the house-hold of a man that feareth God that shall be a shelter to thee from earthly punishments thou shalt fare the better in the world for that There is much contending much suit made to bee in the house of a rich man c. If they bee godly and religious men too as many are it is well but thou haddest better bee in the house of a godly poore man who is deepe in Gods books then in the house of a wealthy and wicked Nabal Labour to be one of Noahs house-hold Noe and his family were saved in the Arke yet with much a doe they endured much they were in continuall danger they passed through many difficulties the smell of
joy which they cannot doe if you be peevish perverse and froward therefore submit your selves to them What though wee grieve them what care wee will such a thing grieve him hee shall be sure to haue it then we will doe it for the nonce Some are at this passe But you shall have no benefit by that you hurt your selves more then them Vnprofitable 1. in this life and that two kinde of wayes 1. being grieved they cannot discharge their ministerie so well to your edification they cannot studie so well preach so well as otherwise they might doe and that makes against your profit The worse they preach the worse it is for you They cannot till the ground of your hearts so cheerefully they cannot build you up as an house to GOD so comfortably as it were meete Thus you gaine nothing by grieving of them but loose by it Griefe overthrowes any worke a clothyer cannot labour in his calling well that is grieved Griefe hinders any man much more a Preacher It deprives him of his sleepe and makes him unfit for any thing 2. The Preacher and Pastour being grieved must needs powre out his griefe into the bosome of GOD Almighty whose workeman hee is hee cannot but complaine to God of it Lord what untoward people be these and doe yee not thinke God will take his cause into his hand looke upon the griefe of his steward and by one meanes or other by the pestilence sword famine plague the people for it that are the Authours of his griefe therefore grieve them not You shall finde it very unprofitable for you in the end 2. It shall bee unprofitable you in the life to come if yee repent not of it CHRIST will say to all them that have opposed themselves to his Ministers come you are they that haue vexed my servants depart from mee I know you not Therefore so behave yourselves that they may performe their Office with joy not with griefe In grieving of them you grieve the Holy Ghost and Christ too It is not wee that speake but the Spirit of Father that speaketh in us If wee bee grieved hee is grieved and as Christ said to Saul Why persequutest thou mee So hee sayes to all peevish persons that set themselues to grieve his Ministers Why grieve yee mee Yee shall finde the incommoditie of it in the end Therefore grieve them not give them all the encouragement you can that they may doe their dutie with joy to the Salvation of you all In the former verse hee enjoyned Obedience to their Spirituall Governours now hee requires their prayers for them 1. He requests their prayers 2. hee affordeth them his prayers verse 20. In the former 1. the suit is propounded 2. prosequuted verse 19. In the propounding 1. what they are to doe 2. why they are to doe it VERSE 18. BY all probabilitie it was Paul and the rest of the Ministers that were with him that put up this grace to be prayed for 1. Wee will pray for them whom wee love most Wee are not commanded in the Word of GOD to love any so dearely as the faithfull Preachers Have them in exceeding love sayes the Spirit of GOD. Excesse is dangerous in all things yet wee must exceede in our love to the Ministers Paul hath exceeded in the choyce of his Word and wee must exceede in our Love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abundantly had beene enough yet hee abounds above that hee puts an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to it then an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee could not goe higher Above all abundance in love Wee love them best that doe most for us The Preachers doe more for us then any in the world under GOD. Our Fathers give us our bodies but not our Soules they make both Soule and body new creatures in Christ Iesus Our Fathers bring us into the light of this world which wee must one day loose againe they bring us to the light of the heavenly Ierusalem which wee shall enjoy for ever these then are most to bee loved therefore most to bee prayed for If that heathen King and mighty Emperour did thinke himselfe more beholden to his Schoole-master then to Philip his Father because from the one hee had his Esse from the other his benè esse Truly wee are more to praise GOD for the Preachers by whom wee are made new creatures in Christ Iesus and Citizens of Heaven then for our earthly Fathers by whom wee are made Citizens of the earth 2 We pray for you we sequester ourselves from worldly businesses that wee may give our selves to the word of God and prayer Acts 6. there is never a day but we pray for you wee count it sinne with Samuel to cease praying for you therefore pray you for us Vnum orare pro multis is a great matter and requires much boldnesse and confidence sayes Chrys. But multos orare pro uno nihil est onerosi When one man prayes for many oratio fit unius virtutis intuitu when many pray for one oratio fit multitudinis concordiae intuitu qua Deus ubique potissimum placatur Multi animi dum unanimes congregantur fiunt magni therefore you being many may more boldly pray for us then we for you 3 There is singular use of the Preachers Acts 16.17 we are GODS Torch-bearers that carry the flaming Torch of the Word of God before your eyes to shew you the way to the Kingdome of Heaven They are the Charets and horsemen of Israel Without us ordinarily you cannot be saved how can they heare without a Preacher Saint Peter saved three thousand Soules at a Sermon Saint Paul saved Sergius Paulus the Proconsul Dionysius a Iudge of Mars street Damaris a noble Gentle-woman and sundry others and ordinarily not one man or woman can goe to heaven unlesse a Preacher carry him on his shoulders not one sheafe can get into the barne unlesse a harvest man do carry it and thou canst not bee carryed as a sheafe into the barne of the Kingdome of heaven unlesse some of CHRIST's harvest men carry thee thither therefore pray for them 4 If we doe well the profit is yours postulamus quidem ut pro nobis oretis totum autem fit pro vobis in vos istae divitiae redunda bunt Chrys. If a Nurse have a full dugge it is the better for the Infant If the householder have refertam villam they shall fare the better that be in the house If our gifts of wisedome knowledge discretion of love zeale c. encrease the commoditie shall be yours Then pray for us and that heartily in the Church and in your houses that the Word of God may runne may have free passage may have nothing to stay the running that it may be glorified throughout all England to the joy and comfort of us all Pray for the Reverend fathers of the Church that they may use the Sword of authority which God hath put into their hands to the cutting
Love not in word and tongue onely but indeed and truth Ioabs health and Iudas kisse are too frequent Let us love truely as Saint Iohn did Having averred it for his owne part he do●h amplifie it on the behalfe of others Not I onely It might joy her that hee loved her being the disciple whom Iesus loved but it must needs be a greater joy to her that all did love her Yet it is with a restraint all that have knowne the truth revealed in the Word for thy Word is truth saith Christ. All that have knowne it he speakes De notitia approbationis as Aquinas doth well interpret it of the knowledge not of speculation but of approbation that approve love and embrace the truth for indeed they that be of the houshold of faith are lead by one and the same Spirit therefore where one loves all love But is this so great a matter to be loved of all Woe be to you when all men speake well of you true when all tag and rag good and bad speake well of us For then wee should be happier than Christ himselfe was he could not have every mans good word Some said he was a good man others nay but he deceiveth the people All did not love him but all the godly all that loved the truth and where they love God himselfe loves therefore wee are to rejoyce in the love of the faithfull VERSE 2. THe last is the procreant cause of this love Where first there is the Loadstone that drew this love 2. The permanencie of this love in regard of the foundation whereupon it is built for the truths sake truth lasts for ever so shall this love doe They did not love her because she was an honourable Lady a beautifull Lady c. but because of the truth of the Gospell that had taken firme roote in her heart Some love for pleasure Isaac loved Esau because Venison was his meate that was his delight An adulterer loves an harlot for the satisfying of his filthy lust Some love for profit they love their friends as they doe their cowes horses and grounds for the benefit they reape by them Some love for beauty so Shechem loved Dinah Some love for honour and promotion in hope to be preferred by such a great man All these stand upon a tickle ground pleasure vanisheth and that quickly too then love vanisheth together with it When Amnon had gotten his pleasure of Tamar he hated her more than before he loved her Riches betake themselves to their wings as Salomon speaketh and flie away then love flies away too If a rich man become a poore man we set not much by him Honour is mutable the naile that is now aloft is in the dirt as it fell out with Haman then he is little regarded of any of his followers Beauty fades away like a flower then love fades away too love for the truths sake for Christs sake for the Gospels sake and that will be a permanent love But what is this truth Is not that changeable No verily For as Aquinas doth well distinguish though fides qua creditur ceaseth when we be in heaven yet fides quae creditur shall be in heaven though justifying faith ceaseth for we shall not neede to beleeve in Christ any longer when we shall see him face to face Yet the doctrine of faith which wee beleeve touching eternall happinesse purchased by Christ shall remaine when wee be in heaven the truth shall be with us for ever VERSE 3. THat shall suffice for the description now to the precation Where 1. There is the blessing prayed for 2. the persons frow whom 3. An addition made to those blessings The blessings prayed for are three grace mercy peace these be with you In the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall be with you but the future is put for the imperative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be with you and abide with you forever Aquinas doth thus distinguish them Gratia culpam delens Grace wiping away the guilt of Sinne Misericordiam poenam indulgens mercy remitting the punishment of sinne Pax Deo reconcilians peace reconciling us to God rather Grace is the roote the undeserved love and favour of God by which we are all that we are By the grace of God I am that I am Without him we are nothing the other are the branches budding from it Mercy which hath reference to our manifold miseries Peace arising of our reconciliation to God by Christ Being justified by faith wee have peace with God The persons from whom First from God the Father as the Author of all goodnesse Every good gift commeth from above form the Father of lights c. Then from Christ the Sonne of God and the Mediatour of mankinde who is 1. The Lord the Lord and King of the Church 2. Iesus a sweete Saviour that hath saved us from our sinnes 3. Christ the annointed King Priest and Prophet of the Church the Sonne of the Father Therefore God as well as the Father Where then is the holy Ghost Saint Augustine will have him to be comprehended in the gifts for we can have no gift but by the holy Ghost the destributer of them Or as Aquinas saith the holy Ghost is understood in the other two persons being nexus utriusque he sacred bond that unites them together The blessings annexed and added are truth and love Caietan with some others referre them to Christ the Sonne of the Father in truth and love that is his true and beloved Sonne they be rather to be adjoyned to the former and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with truth i. the vertue of truth and love to God and man these make a demonstration of the former to the world VERSE 4. NOw let us enter into the bowels of the Epistle The matter of it is a gratulation and an exhortation verse 5. First he praiseth her for the time past then he doth incite her for the time to come the gratulation is expressed by a joy wherewith he was ravished where 1. There is the greatnesse of his joy 2 the object of his joy 3. the rule for the ordering of it I rejoyced Christians may be joyfull Rejoyce in the Lord alwayes againe I say rejoyce At that time Iesus rejoyced in his Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he danced as it were for joy as here Saint Iohn rejoyceth in his Spirit and not a little but greatly too As the wise men rejoyced with an exceeding great joy when they found Christ. So he rejoyced with a great joy that he found of her children walking in the truth of Christ there is the object of his joy That I found by diligent observation when I was at thy house and by the constant relation of others since Of thy Children not all but some of them seldome are all good
299. our comfort thereby 299 Christs body a Tabernacle so is ours 310 311. Christ is the sole Mediatour 361. so long as Christ appeares in heaven for us our sinnes cannot appeare 369. Christs second comming notably described 376. Christs flesh called a vaile why 404. Christ more manifest to us than to those of old with the use of it 534 535 Christ his death a cruell death in three respects 541. hee suffered foure kinde of wayes ibid. None so spoken against as he 543 Christians All Christian souldiers especially Christian Ministers 6 7. Reasons why one Christian should be deare to another 28. how and wherein wee are Christs fellowes 67 wee are called Christians of Christ. 68. a Christians dignity 92 93. they should not feare death 95. they are the house of God 121 122. their dignitie 138 139. their dutie ibid. Christians must be simple not subtill 30● cunning cruell Christians are like dogges that will bite before they barke 30● they must be undefiled 302 303. as soone as we become Christians we must looke for afflictions 428. Christians must not be cowards 430 Church how a house or household may be called a Church 7.8.119 All true Churches agree in substance of Religion though not in ceremonie 328. the Arke a lively representation of the Church 334. the Churches protectors and protection how shaddowed out 335. the uses of it 335 336. the Church is Gods house 406. the Ministers are in some sort over it ibid. Vniversalitie no necessary note of the Church 451 452. the Church is compared to a mountaine 572. to a city 573. the Churches universality dignity and stabilily well handled 579 580 c. City the Church compared to a citie 573. Heaven is a city which how we have already see 574 Cloud Its properties applied to the faithfull 536 Comming Christs second comming notably described 376. the joy conceived by Christs comming 390 the differences of Christs commings ibid. the comming of Christs day is fearefull to the sinfull joyfull to the Saints 419 Compasse there are two compassers 539 Condemnation many things condemne a man 452 Conscience It is the soules register to keepe a note of all our sinnes 344. what can secure our consciences ibid. no outward thing can purge the conscience 345. the sting of conscience is grievous 356. there is a conscience in every man what it doth with its divers kindes 385 386. Ministers ought to have a good conscience 635 what a good conscienc● is 635 636. divers definitions of the word 636. Wherein a Minister should examine his conscience 637. a good life is the meate of the conscience 644 Consideration the greatnesse of the word 116. it must goe before provocation 411 Constancie Christians must be constant 622 675. Foure impediments to constancie 677 678 Covetousnesse all a mans doings smell something of it 915 reasons against it 616 remedies against it ibid. a covetous man is never contented 7●4 Countrey how sweete a mans owne country is to him 455 Abrahams forsaking it was a great triall ibid. we must not forsake it without a calling ibid 456. the world is not the Saints countrey 469 Creatures All Creatures are servants to Gods children 510 Cow a red cow in the sacrifice what it signifieth 354 a tipe of Christ. 355 D. DAy how the word to Day is taken 127. Festivall dayes warrantable 333 Dead Dead things and dead workes compared 357 Death good Christians should not feare death 95. there are three that have the power of death 1. God 2. Man 3. the Devill 108 Death is a Serpent without a sting 110. Death common to all men 372. 37● the use of it ibi why the godly should die seeing Christ died for them 373. death is a bitter cuppe but sugared by Christ 374. two benefits come by death 374. after death comes judgement 375. an instance of sudden death 377. they are oft deepest in Gods bookes that are soonest taken away an instance of it 443. Death cannot hurt the godly it rather benefitteth them 4.65 yet the thought of it is bitter to some 469 happy they are that die in the faith 466 a patterne of our behaviour in death 486 487. Death a pretty story against the feare of death 574 Debts they are to be paid before we be too forward in the charges of sacrificing 37. there is little quiet in the honest debter ibid. wee must be marvellous carefull how wee come in debt for others ibid. what debt wee owe to our Ministers 38 Deceive Deceivers there are many 137. sinne deceiveth us many wayes ibid. Deliverance what it is and whom Christ delivereth 109. God doth deliver three wayes 434 Desperation we must beware of it 517 518 Despise Christ is despised two wayes 590 Devill why God suffers the devill to walke up and downe like a Lyon 109 Diligence wee cannot goe to heaven without diligence 231. to diligence we must adde perseverance 232 Diotrephes his name interpreted with the use of giving of names 997 998 Doctrine we must not looke for any mint of new doctrine 55 Doubt Christians must keepe a meane betweene doubting of their salvation and presuming 139 Draw Draw neere the vertues whereby we must draw neere to God 381. what this drawing neere is and how we must doe it 407. Christians must be no with-drawers except it be from the wicked 435 Drunkennesse it pulls on fornication 565 Dulnesse the causes of Dulnesse in hearing 203 E EArth man compared to earth 220 Education wherein childrens Education doth consist 668 Elect Election God hath his chosen among all 25 Enoch of his person and translation to heaven with many cirstances thereof 441 44● c. Esau his Acts especially that of selling his 〈◊〉 right 564. his punishment 566 Erre Errours how Israel Erred 131 Evidence Faith is our Evidence and we must make much of it 431 Evill it is soone imitated 706 what we must doe that are compassed about with Evill men ibid. c. Examples they are more avayleable than precepts 17. we must make use of the Examples of old 134. if good then to be followed 179. Patternes how prevailent 233. wee must follow our Patterne in goodnesse 314. even in all good ibid. three Reasons of the prevailencie of Examples 536 537 Excommunication its definition 705. to be excommunicated is a fearefull condition ibid. Exhort we should mutually Exhort one another 136. Exhor if it be timely taken it will awaken us out of sinne 136 F FAlling whether every falling away be a sin against the Holy Ghost 215 216. the conditions of that falling away 216 Fame of both good and bad with their feete and wings 134. it is compared to a Shippe receiving all passengers 688 Father our Fathers must not bee a Rule for us alwayes to follow 127. foure speciall duties wee owe to our spirituall Fathers 629 630 Faith it is its property to apply God to our selves 11. A justifying Faith cannot be without love 15. unto Faith must bee annexed Hope 122. we must
laudas paenam at non ostendis causam Let no man suffer as a thiefe as a murtherer as a busie bodie in another mans matters it seemes there was a rout of them then but now a rable of them but if any suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but glorifie God on that behalfe It is a glorious thing to bee CHRISTS prisoner and to say with St. Paul for the hope of Israel am I bound with this chaine The second person saluting is annexed to him which is Timothie His mother was a Iewesse and a believer his father a Grecian Eunice his mother had brought him up in the holy Scriptures from a child him he styles his brother when he writes to him he calls him his Sonne because he writes with him he honours him with the title of brother Vt hoc negotium utriusque nomine authoretur that his request being commenced in the name of them both might bee armed with greater authoritie Hee was his brother not only in the faith in generall but in the Ministery in speciall One is your Doctour which is CHRIST and all yee are brethren Sosthenes our brother Saint Peter whom the Papists will have to be head of the Church and LORD over all the Apostles calls Saint Paul his brother though he came Postliminio after him It is said of our blessed Saviour hee is not ashamed to call us brethren and shall we be ashamed to call one another brethren All the faithfull are brethren we have one father and mother too but after a more speciall manner in an honourable office are the Ministers brethren Some are in higher places as the reverend Bishops some in lower as the inferiour Ministers yet all brethren the Maior and Aldermen are brethren the Iudges and Sergeants are brethren Bishops are to be honoured as Fathers inferiour Ministers to be esteemed of as brethren Meis conservis loquor tanquam obediens servus sayes Saint Ambrose Quanto sublimitas notior tanto humilitas pretiosior The higher the place the more precious is the humilitie of the Person I have knowne diverse Bishops that have used their inferiour brethren with greater humanitie humilitie and courtesie then many arrogant Schismaticall preachers would use their superiors Brethren should not be so Lord-like one over another that was a fault in S. Chrys. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was too supercilious Brethren love accord support one another 1. Accidentally they may hate as Cain hated Abel Esau Iacob that is unnaturall naturally they love one another so should we if the people must have us above all abundance in love for our workes sake then we that be the workemen must abound in love one towards another else we are hinderers of the worke 2. Brethren accord sometimes there is discord among them nay rara est concordia fratrum brethren seldome agree that is the Divells pollicie and our corruption nature conjoynes them together So it should be with us in the ministerie CHRIST sent his Disciples two and two not one by one wee should not sever our selves one from another but be linked together one with another We should be like the Muses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they should be together as in place so in affection all Ministers are tanquam chordae in Cythara Colligatae as strings in a Lute tyed together and sounding together that will make a sweete harmonie Oh that all the Ministers in England did accord together in points of doctrine and in rites and ceremonies 3. Brethren support one another wee should not bee underminers but underproppers one of another frater à fratre adjutus est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So it is in the 70. A brother helped of a brother is as a strong and high Citie we should support the good name and the goods one of another brethren must not be like the scoales in a ballance one up and another downe we must not goe about to pull downe one another in our Sermons but to set up one another It is the manner of some labourers almost in every Sermon to declame against ministers because they know it to bee a plausible theme to the people whose servants they are as one told Demosthenes being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 men-pleasers rather then God-pleasers The persons saluted 1. The house-holders 2. The household The house-holders the man and the woman the man is described ex nomine ex amore ex labore 1. By his name his name was PHILEMON Saint Hierom de nominibus hebraicis deriveth it from the Hebrew mire donatus wonderfully gifted of Spalal mirabile Nathan donatus Indeed his gifts were admirable or phi-lechem os panis corum the mouth of their bread But why may it not be a Greeke name He especially being a Grecian of Colosse Col. 4.12 PHILEMON quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our friend Gaius was the Churches hoast he the Churches friend in the same kinde too all that professed the name of CHRIST were welcome to him he was a friendly entertainer of them all 2. He is set forth by love not active but passive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that our dearly beloved above others our especiall friend not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they may be dilecti that deserve no love as our enemies they be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which deserve love in respect of the rare qualities and excellent vertues wherewith they bee adorned as PHILEMON was Some say he was Nobilis a noble man surely he was Dives a rich man in faith and in good workes too that was a load stone to draw love unto him Last of all hee is described ex labore by his labour fellow-labourer not in the harvest of the ministery pray you the Lord of the harvest to send forth labourers into his harvest but in the generall harvest of Christianitie Fuit cooperarius Evangelij non praedicatione sed facto he was a fellow-labourer in the Gospell not by preaching but by doing non praedicando sed praedicatores reciplendo not by preaching but by receiving the preachers Carthusian enlarges it further non fuit praedicator sed fidelium sustentator he was not a preacher but the sustainer and nourisher of the faithfull Fuit magnus quidem Christianus a Christian of great note They that put to their helping hand any kinde of way for the furtherance of the Gospel are the Ministers fellow-labourers that edifie their brethren in the most holy faith that exhort one another while it is called to day that comfort one another that are as bells to toll others to Christ are the Preachers fellow-labourers So was the Woman of Samaria that called the whole Citie to Christ those women that ministred to Christ of their owne substance Priscilla and Aquila tent-makers which expounded to
Iudaei so of Abram Hebraei for Aleph is a gutturall Thus yee see of whom they had the name of Hebrewes To them was this Epistle written and in them to us that bee English men and to all Christian people in the world that which I say to you sayes CHRIST I say to all watch So that which Saint Paul writeth to the Hebrews he writeth to us all therefore let us all with reverence attend to it So much of the inscription Now let us come to the substance of the Epistle It is divided as all others into two parts 1. The doctrine of Christianity which wee are to learne 2. The life of Christians which we are to live The Doctrine hath two branches 1. A large and ample description of our Saviour CHRIST the author and finisher of our salvation 2. A pointing out of the hand whereby we apprehend Christ and that is faith Chap. 11. The doctrine concerning CHRIST may be reduced to his person and offices his kingdome cap. 1.2 His prophesie cap. 3.4 His priesthood cap. 5. c. His person consisteth of two natures The 1. Is his deity The. 2. Is his humanity His deity is first taught in this Chapter then applyed in the next CHAPTER 1. 1. AN introduction is made into the deity of CHRIST 2. A confirmation of it 1. Simply then comparatively 1. For his person 2. For his offices An introduction is made by a comparison betweene them in the time of the law and of the Gospell A comparison is made betweene them in foure respects wherein we excell them 1. In regard of the matter of the Doctrine delivered to them 2. Of the manner how it was delivered 3. Of the time when 4. Of the persons by whom it was delivered For the matter of the doctrine it was dispensed to them at sundry times divided into many parts that is the nature of the Greek word It was given them by piece meale now a part then a part They had one part of it in Adams time another in Noahs one in Abrahams an other in Moses time one in Davids time another in Isaiah's and the rest of the Prophets It was parcelled out to them as the capacity of the people in sundry times did require but we have the doctrine of salvation at one lump propounded to us in one whole and entyre Summe Thus God hath dealt more graciously and bountifully with us They had one flower now and another anon we have all the flowers in Gods garden sweetly smelling all at once in our nostrills They had now a loafe and then a loafe now a draught and then a draught of the Lords Wine the whole Magazen of God Almighty is opened to us Then how thankfull ought we to be to God above them And how carefull should we be to enrich our selves with these heavenly wares that may freely enter the whole store-house of the Lord of hoasts 2. For the manner God delivered his will to them after diverse manners to Abraham by Angels in the shape of men to Moses in a bush and a cloud to Samuel in a dreame to Ezekiel in visions by the oracles and answers of the Priests in a soft winde as to Elias by thunder c. To us he hath delivered his will in one manner by the sweet and comfortable voice by the powerfull and majesticall voice of his owne Sonne never man spake as he which taught in the streets of Ierusalem and of Iudea in his owne person and after his resurrection and ascension he sent his Apostles abroad as his Legats and Deputies into all the world This one manner farre surpassed all the manners whereby God spake to them Those were darke and obscure this plaine many of those were terrible to the hearers insomuch as they ranne to Moses and desired that he might speake to them not God lest they died this was a most milde and amiable manner Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavie laden c. He stood with unfolded armes ready to imbrace them he spread forth his wings as a loving Hen to gather all as chickens under them We are to magnifie God for this one manner whereby he now speaketh to us Variety doth delight yet it is not alwayes the best The World was in best case when they had but one Tongue Speech and Language Variety of tongues in respect of the Originall was but a curse on mankinde and it is far better now with the Church since Almighty God began to speake to us after one manner by his Sonne than when he spake after so diverse manners under the Law Therefore let us be thankfull for it and reverence the voice of his Sonne 3 For the time he spake to them in old time in the first and eldest age of the world he speakes to us in a new time when all are made new by our Saviour CHRIST It was said by them of old times sayes CHRIST Mat. 5.21.27 But I say to you this new time wherin all things are made greene fresh and flourishing by our SAVIOUR CHRIST is far more excellent than that old time of the world 4 For the persons by whom or in whom it was delivered Hos. 1.7 Psal. 63.11 Sweare in him 1. By him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yet there is a great emphasis in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 GOD spake in them moving their hearts and tongues 2 Pet 1.21 The Prophesie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of GOD spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost Mat. 10.20 It is not you that speake but the spirit of your Father which speaketh in you not in those alone that wrote but in all from Adam Ier. 7.25 whereof some were of the bloud-royall as Isaiah Some of the Priests as Ieremie Some of the common people as Amos. GOD spake in them to the Fathers not in the Patriarchs alone but in all But our estate is farre more excellent he spake to them by the Prophets which indeed were rare and singular men worthy to be had in high price and estimation yet not worthy to be named with CHRIST by whom he speaketh to us They were men Christ by whom God speaks to us is GOD and Man they were wise could foretell things to come aptly and pithily interpret the Word of GOD yet all their wisdome and knowledge was borrowed Christ was wise of himselfe clad with his owne feathers they mortall and corruptible dust and ashes CHRIST never saw corruption but abideth for ever and ever they were servants in the House of God Christ is the Sonne yea the Lord and owner of the house Therefore wonderfully hath God honoured us in the time of the Gospell above them in the time of the Law If a King should speake to us by one of his Privie Councell it is much but if he speak to us by his sonne and heire apparant to the Crowne it is a greater dignity The Prophets were of
we are not the Angels Ministers This is thy gracious goodnesse towards us thy name be blessed for it for ever and ever Whether he have appointed to every one of us a particular Angell or not let us not be too curious in the discussing of it this is comfortable for us that wee have many Angels to Minister to us Their Angels saies CHRIST of those that believe in him not their Angell not one Angell but many carryed Lazarus his soule into Abrahams bosome 3. What an unspeakable comfort is this for us What a Tower of defence against Satan and his Angels The Devill compasseth the earth to and fro hee walkes up and downe like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devoure and there be many 1000s of devils there were a legion in one man These by Gods permission raise up tempests stirre up extraordinary windes blow downe houses Nay if God did not bridle them they would quickly teare us all in pieces but let this be our castle to flye unto as there be bad Angels to hurt us so there be good Angels to defend us There were Charrets and horse-men of fire round about Elisha and the Angels of God though we cannot see them with our eyes pitch their Tents round about us these be stronger than the Devill and his angels because they never sinned and have God on their side In the time of Popery the people were much deluded with the walking of spirits they durst not go through a Church-yard in the night for feare of them Sundry are afraid of Fairies and of ill spirits that haunt their houses no doubt but the evill angels are busie in all places yet let us feare none of them all we are guarded with the celestiall guard of holy Angels that are able to protect us from them all especially Christ Iesus is on our side which is above all Angels he sits at Gods right-hand hath all power in heaven and earth he will preserve us from all dangers in this life and bring us to his everlasting Kingdome in the life to come 4 Seeing that God hath ordained the Angels to be ministring-spirits for our sakes which undoubtedly looke carefully to their charge seldome or never are they absent from us some or other are present with us continually Let us do nothing that may grieve these Heavenly Spirits let the Women be covered because of the Angels So let not us sweare and blaspheme the Name of God c. because of the Angels Men would blush to commit filthinesse in the presence of an honourable Personage the Angels are alwayes present with us therefore even in respect of them let us absteine from sin CHAP. 2. IN the former Chapter the Author as in a Glasse shewed the Deity of CHRIST and both simply and absolutely ratified it Now he applies it to them to whom he writeth Where 1. An application 2. A transition to his humanity In the Application 1. the Vse 2. the Reasons whereby it is pressed 1. From the incommodity 2. From the punishment set forth by a comparison 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 forsomuch as CHRIST the Author of the Gospell is not onely above the Angels but is the high and eternall God being the naturall Son of the everlasting Father and engraven forme of his Person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we ought So then it is not left to our discretion we are tied with the bond of necessity to it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intend our mindes that the things may be imprinted in our hearts and practised in our lives 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more aboundantly We should abound more in hearing attention and practice than they did in the time of the Law we should excell them by a more rare and singular attention for though the things are the same yet the party is not the same by whom they are delivered It is not enough to heare Sermons every weeke which is good and commendable but we must yeeld a diligent attention to the things that we heare we especially now in the time of the Gospell when God speaketh to us by his owne Son The people were bound to heare attentively in the time of the Law when the Prophets of God spake to them but much more are we when the Son of God the Prince of Prophets the Prophet of the Prophets speakes to us All Samaria gave heed to Simon Magus that bewitched them and lead them to the Divell and shall not we give heed to Iesus Christ that labours to carry us to Heaven Doe not onely heare but attend to that which ye heare Take heed how ye heare whether loosely or carefully profitably or unprofitably Lydia attended to the things that Paul spake Acts 16.14 We must not only heare the Preacher but attend to the things which he uttereth An Infant doth not only take the dug into his mouth but he sucketh at it and that with greedinesse So we must not onely lye at the big of the Word but we must suck sweet doctrines and heavenly instructions from it The ground that receives not the seed into it will never be fruitfull if it lye aloft and be not hidden in the bowels of the earth it can never yeeld fruit so when the seed of the Word is sowne if we doe not marke it and lay it up in our hearts hide it within us as David did the birds of the Ayre that is the divels that flie up and downe in the Church will pick it up and run away with it Therefore let us diligently give heed to the things which we heare hearing is good and they be commended that heare yet that is not sufficient a diligent attendance must be given to that which we heare When Christ reades a Divinity Lecture to us we that be his Schollers must attend to it It is said of the people that they hung on Christ watching the words that came from his mouth ready to receive them before they came so with all care and diligence we must hang on the Preacher marke his words and be ready to receive them into our eares and hearts even before they are delivered so eager should we be of the Word Especially now in the time of the Gospell what attention is there in the Starre-Chamber when the Lords of the Privie Counsell speake But if either the Prince or the King himselfe make an Oration then there is wonderfull attention In the time of the Law the Prophets spake which indeed were of Gods counsell by whom God revealed his will to the people but now the Prince of peace the everlasting Counsellor the Kings owne Sonne that lay in his owne bosome in whom all the treasures of wisdome are hid speaketh to us Therefore let us listen with all diligence to the things which he speaketh And how doth Christ now speak Not daily from Heaven as he did to Saul but by the mouth of his Ambassadours He that heareth you heareth me will ye have an experience of Christ that
meanes that as man by sin had deserved death so by the death of a man he should be redeemed from sin and death The necessity of Christs incarnation he proves first from the end of it He that by suffering for men was to bring men to salvation must be man Christ by suffering for men was to bring men to salvation ergo Christ was to bring many to glory This he could not do but by afflictions and namely by death it selfe for the Crosse must goe before the Crowne therefore it was requisite that in our humane nature he should first suffer It became this was most comely fit and convenient for him namely that God ver 9. which so graciously gave his Son for us that is God the Father by whose grace and mercy Christ died for us It became him for the better illustration of his owneglory for a more lively demonstration of his mercy and justice to the world of his mercy in not sparing his owne Son but giving him up to the death for us of his justice in punishing the sins of the world so severely in his owne Son 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. These words are to be referred to Christ not to God the Father 1. They are affirmed of him in Scripture 1 Cor. 8.6 Col. 1.16 2. Before hee spake of his humiliation it was meet to premise something concerning his glory power and dignity 3. For so much as it is said he was to be perfected through afflictions by afflictions to mount up to glory that concerning his Deity was well premised that we might know it was no new glory which he took but that which hee had from all eternity as hee was GOD Ioh. 17.5 It became God the Father to perfect the Prince of our salvation through afflictions for whom are all things and by whom are all things after he had brought many children to glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 having made them willing by his holy spirit Wee are said also to be drawne Sed trahit sua quemque voluptas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the Syntaxis might better be referred to CHRIST than to the Father otherwise the participle should have beene in the dative case to agree with the pronoune 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then in the accusative case It ought to bee translated thus for it became him for whom are all things and by whom are all things to consecrate the Prince of their salvation through afflictions bringing many Children to glory Children not friends but Children begotten by the word made the Sonnes of God by faith Iohn 1.12 knowne by the spirit Rom. 8.14 Not a few but many for he is a powerfull SAVIOUR many shall come from the East c. Not all men because all imbrace him not being offered to them Sundry were called to the feast that came not To glory in the kingdome of heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some translate it Sanctifie because of the next Verse but the words are diverse To perfect CHRIST is said to bee perfected because after his suffering hee was glorified in his Humanity as well as in his Deitie CHRIST his afflictions are so farre from being a shame or ignominie to him that they bee solemne rites or sacred ceremonies whereby he was consecrated Bishop of the universall Church Through afflictions in the whole course of his life especially at his death and passion The Arch-duke the Captaine the leader in whose steps wee are to tread the Author of their salvation Acts 3.15 If CHRIST had not become man afflicted and put to death he could not have carryed men into the kingdome of heaven for a purgation must be made for the sinne of man by the fiery furnace of affliction and especially by death therefore it became Christ to be made man too though he were God GOD is the efficient and finall cause of all 1. There is nothing but it is by GOD the Host of heaven the Sunne Moone and Starres are by him the birds of the ayre the fishies of the Sea the beasts of the field the greene and flourishing coat that the earth hath is by him All men yea Angels even the Devils themselves are by him not as Devils .i. malicious accusers of the Saints but as they be invisible and immortall spirits all are by him nay to proceede a little further and yet to keepe our selves within compasse of sound Divinity sin it selfe is not without the providence of God it is not à Deo creante sed disponente he disposeth of all the grosse sins that be in the world to his owne glory as a wise Physition makes a good use even of poyson in his confections Furthermore as all things are by GOD so all for him all serve his holy will and blessed pleasure some unwillingly some willingly GOD makes Satan and his instruments to be for him whether they will or no but the faithfull are willingly for him and serve him with all cheerefulnesse Let us remember that wee our selves and all that we have is for God he made us he redeemed us with the bloud of his Sonne therefore we are his not our owne our wit wealth honour worship learning our soules our bodies our eyes tongues hands feete all are for him with all that wee have we must glorifie him Our tongues are our owne sayd the wicked that is false all that we have is Gods therefore all must be at his commandement The pot is for him that made it and the servant must be imployed about his Masters businesse he must be his masters man not his owne therefore as we were created by God so let us be wholly for him Now it became this high and mighty God for whom are all things and by whom are all things which worketh all as seemeth best to him to consecrate the Prince of their salvation through afflictions bringing many children to glory CHRIST brought them to glory which he could not doe but by enduring many afflictions 1 Here we see that CHRIST could not bring us to heaven without innumerable afflictions which our sinnes had deserved he himselfe knew no sin but he was afflicted for our sins And indeed he was wonderfully afflicted for them from his cradle to his grave A man of sorrowes as the Prophet termeth him he was borne not of a wealthy Lady but of a poore woman base and contemptible to the eyes of the world at his first comming he was not laid in a costly Cradle but in a Cratch not in a Chamber well furnished but in a Stable borne in Winter and in the night when he was an Infant banished into Egypt hee wrought as is thought in the trade of his Father and was a Carpenter he had not a hole to hide his head in women were faine to minister to him of their owne substance as he went up and downe preaching the Gospell he had not bags of silver and gold about him but was faine to send to the Sea for a peece of 20d.
to leane upon is superiour to him greater than he CHRIST trusted in GOD the Father therefore in respect of his humanity he is inferiour to the Father These words whether deduced out of Isai. 12.2 or out of Psalme 18.2 are fitly applyed to CHRIST Chasah I will flye to him as to a strong tower and Castle That song in Isaiah is sung by the whole Church and so consequently by CHRIST the head of the Church The 70. have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the Psalme though David speakes it of himselfe that for all the fury of his adversaries hee would trust in God of whose goodnesse hee had comfortable experience by his deliverance from the house of Saul as in the title yet being a type of Christ figuratively hee speaketh also of him Sundry things in that Psalme cannot be applyed to David as Verse 43. and that Verse 7. Whereas at the passion of Christ the earth quaked Our Saviour Christ in his bitter agony in the garden trusted in God and when he hung on the crosse he knew that though God seemed to forsake him for a time yet hee would deliver him out of all and assume him into his kingdome thus he still put his trust in GOD. If he did trust in God in all calamities from whom the Deitie was never separated much more ought we miserable men in all adversities trust in God Some trust in Charets and some in Horses but let us remember the name of the Lord our God and trust in him Cursed be he that maketh flesh his arme Let us not put our trust in riches though our barnes be never so full of corne our coffers of gold and silver Let us not trust in our strength in the multitude of our men in our walled townes and defenced castles Let us not put our trust in the fortitude of this good yland that is compassed about with the Seas Let us not put our trust in our friends When we be sicke let us not put our trust in the Physitions as Asa did not trust in our pollicie as Achitophel but let us alwayes in all difficulties put our trust in GOD hee is able and willing to plucke us out of all dangers Hee delivered the Israelites from the red Sea Daniel from the the Lions Peter from the fury of Herod Hee can and will preserve us from all the devils of hell the gates of hell shall never prevaile against us Happy are they that put their trust in him he is a sure friend that will never faile them The fourth argument to prove the humanity of Christ is taken from the relatives The Father and the children are of one nature Christ is the Father we his children ergo This is at large amplified by the Apostle 1. He that makes himselfe equall with the rest of the faithfull and of the servants and children of God is a man as they be but Christ makes himselfe equall with the rest of the faithfull of the servants and children of God Ergo. 2. Hee that receiveth children as a gift from God is inferiour to GOD that gave him these children but CHRIST receiveth children as a gift from GOD ergo he is inferiour to GOD which cannot be but in respect of his humanity Ergo he is man as well as GOD. He produces an other testimony Isa. 8.18 That this testimony is to be applyed to the Messiah is evident by many places in that chapter where he is called Immanuel 2. That v. 14. is expounded of Christ in sundry places of the New Testament as Luk. 2. Rom. 9. 1 Pet. 2. 3. Though this was true in the Prophet himselfe and in his Disciples yet it is verified likewise of Christ of whom the Prophet was a Type Behold this argues his prompt and ready obedience presenting himselfe to the Lord so Christ was obedient to God the Father even to the death yea of the Crosse. By children are meant servants followers attendants upon any 1 Sam. 21.4 Acts 4.25 Ioh. 21.5 by them are signified the faithfull which as children and servants waited on Christ and attended to his voice as children doe to the voice of their Father All the faithfull in the world by whose ministery soever turned are Christs children he the chiefe Father we secondarily they are his children principally ours instrumentally It is CHRIST that begets us though not now in his owne person yet by the Ministers and Preachers who are our Fathers under Christ and we their Children GOD the Father gave him those children 1. By the administration of baptisme 2. Then by the working of his Spirit and the powerfull preaching of his word Ioh. 17.9.6 Ioh. 6.37 Iohn 10.29 Properly to speake they are given to no Prophet nor Minister but to Christ alone That they be as signes and wonders agreeth well to Christ and all the faithfull Christ was despised so are we Ioh. 15.18 1 Cor. 4.9 to 14. S. Paul might have had more pregnant testimonies for the confirmation of Christs humanity than these be yet he made choice of these partly because peradventure they were applied by the Rabbins and the Iewes themselves to the Messiah partly because these set forth to us the mercy of God towards us and our honour and dignity that we should be Christ's brethren that he and we should be in a manner equall coupled together in one yoke This is true in the Prophets and in CHRIST too the preachers of the Word have children given them of the Lord. The Prophets in their time had their children the Apostles theirs and we ours Saint Paul begat Onesimus in his bonds GOD gave Lydia as a child to Saint Paul in opening her heart and causing her to beleeve Yea many Nations were given to S. Paul GOD gave those three thousand soules as a great company of children to St. Peter And the Lord by the ministry of the Word gives us children at this present day You are our children and therefore you ought to love and honour us What childe will raile on his Father they be Bastards that endeavour to pluck out their Parents eyes yet some doe on the Ministers their spirituall fathers This also may be affirmed of Christ he is our brother and our father too he is the right and proper father of the faithfull whom he begetteth by the word of truth and they that are truly begotten by the word are Christs children whom the Father gave to him from all eternity before all times and whom in time he giveth to him daily by the preaching of the Gospell to the worlds end 1 We have not these children of our selves simply by our preaching be it never so powerfull It is GOD that gives them to us Children are the inheritance of the Lord so these spirituall children Let us praise God for them A Father rejoyces in his children so may and doe Preachers in their Children 2 There is no Father but will protect his Children as much as lieth in him hee will bee content to
this heart of stone and give us an heart of flesh let us desire him by the dew of his spirit to mollifie our hearts that the heavenly doctrines exhortations and admonitions delivered to us may sinke deepely into our hearts and make a conversion of us that our hearts may melt as Iosiah's did at the hearing of the law Nothing can enter into that which is hard if the ground be hard it cannot receive the seede if the Waxe be hard it cannot take the impression of any seale and so long as our hearts remaine hard they cannot receive the immortall seed of the word nor the print of the Spirit which is GODS seale Wherefore let us be suiters to God to soften our hearts daily more and more Above all evills the Lord deliver us from hardnesse of heart for that is the ready way to hell When yee be at Sermons harden not your hearts against the vices that are reproved but tremble at the word of GOD bee grieved for your sins open the doores of your hearts to the Lord Iesus which standeth knocking at them with the hammer of his word that he may come and suppe with you in this life and you dine and suppe with him in the life to come From this hardnesse of heart he disswadeth them by the fearefull judgement of God that fell upon their fathers for it which he propounds first generally In the provocation Hebr. Meribah in the chiding and contending when the fathers chode and contended with Moses which Saint Paul calls an exacerbation or provocation because God by that was provoked to anger in so much as he became very bitter in words and deeds towards the Israelites Doe not you dance after that Pipe and walke according as they did Temptation Hebr. Massah which is expounded afterwards It is a question among interpreters to what place of the Old Testament Saint Paul heere alludeth Some referre it to that Numb 14. Where after the returne of the Spies they despaired of entring into the Land of Canaan and murmured against GOD and Moses Others to that Exod. 17. where water came out of the rock whereas before they murmured for want of water There may be some allusion to both places for the one place hath her name of the contending and tempting and is called Massah and Meribah and in the other place is contained the forme of the oath that God used Neverthelesse it were fittest to expound it generally of the stubborne and contumelious behaviour of the Israelites in the wildernesse then of any one particular temptation 1. Because he names no particular place but the wildernesse in generall 2. Because the tempting he speaketh of here lasted the whole forty yeeres 3. The word day is often taken in Scripture not for any set and prescript time but for an indefinite time a continuance of time Ioh. 8.56 Psalm 25.5 all the time that the temptation lasteth Psalm 50.15 As to day in the former verse was largely taken So here 4. Num. 14.22 It is apparant that they tempted him many times Then he describeth it by all particular circumstances belonging to it 1. By the place where this sinne was committed in the wildernesse where they were subject to innumerable dangers scarsitie of meat and drinke to the invasion of wild beasts compassed with enemies on every side yet the LORD was as a wall of fire round about them hee carryed them on Eagles wings he suffered none to doe them any wrong but reproved Kings for their sakes Notwithstanding in this place where they were continually under the wings of GODS protection they tempted him and provoked him to wrath as if the Child should scratch the nurses face when hee is in her armes VERSE 9. 2. THe parties that committed this offence were their Fathers of whom they much gloried and boasted Our fathers eat Manna in the wildernesse God made a covenant with our fathers that he would bee their God and they should bee his people The oracles of God were committed to our fathers God talked familiarly with our fathers our fathers were deepe in Gods bookes If we doe as our fathers did we cannot doe amisse I but our fathers must not alwayes bee a rule for us to follow your father 's tempted CHRIST in the wildernesse so must not you doe your father 's resisted the HOLY GHOST so must not you your father 's killed the Prophets your fathers were often ready to stone Moses so must not you The Papists at this day are the Iewes Apes they are likewise wedded to their fathers Our fathers were of this Religion therefore we will be of it our father 's kissed the Popes feete ergo Our Fathers cast off the yoke of CHRIST therefore wee will doe the same our fathers would be joynt Saviours with Christ they would merit heaven therefore we will doe the like our father 's worshipped they knew not what so we will doe But Saint Paul gives us a better rule be yee followers of me as I am of Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 If our fathers followed CHRIST let us follow them otherwise let them goe alone thy father drowned himselfe and wilt thou drowne thy selfe too The Father of lights must bee preferred before the fathers of darknesse the Father of heaven before the fathers on earth If we delight in antiquity let us do as the ancient of dayes prescribeth us let us not dote with our fathers and goe to hell with our fathers Children must bee content to heare of their fathers sinnes for the better avoyding of them If any raile of our fathers that bee dead spew out their poyson against them disgrace our fathers where there is no cause or rake up the infirmities of our fathers a● out of graves we have just cause to be moved at it but if any in the feare and zeale of GOD admonish us of our fathers grosse and notorious offences that we stumble not at the same stones and breake our neckes as they did wee are to take it in good part and profit by it to that end doth the Apostle here make a commemoration of their fathers sinnes but doe not you tempt me as they did The quality of their sinne was a tempting and proving of him probaverunt that is causâ curiositatis exquisiverunt an possem facere Num. 11.18 God is tempted diverse wayes 1. If having meanes we neglect them fondly flying to the supposed providence of GOD if CHRIST having a paire of staires to come downe by should have cast himselfe downe from the pinnacle of the Temple he had tempted GOD. Many that be sicke would faine be well but they are resolute to use no physicke many would gladly fare well have sufficient for themselves their Wives and Children but they will not labour nor take paines that is a tempting of God 2. Men tempt God when having had evident proofe and manifest experience of his wisedome power mercy and goodnesse yet if they be driven into any streights and see no present meanes to
is acquainted with all the infirmities of men he doth not only know them notitia speculativa but experimentali Saepius ipse miser miseris succurrere disco he that ●s in misery himselfe can the better pitty them that bee in misery hee that never tasted of poverty can hardly pitty a poore man a Physitian may pitty a sicke man but unlesse he have beene molested with sicknesse himselfe he cannot have so great compassion on ●hem that be sicke Countrie fellowes that never knew the labour of a student and painefull Preacher thinke it is no labour to preach Nothing can move commiseration so much as a fellow-feeling of the same misery This is in our High Priest our Lord and Saviour being clothed with our nature he is touched with our infirmities 2. When wee are afflicted Christ is afflicted If the meanest Christian suffer he suffers Saul Saul why persecutest thou me non meos We doe not only suffer for CHRIST but with CHRIST hee is not only the master for whom we suffer but the companion with whom we suffer If we be sick he is sick Art thou tempted of the devill sometimes to presumption to desperation so Christ art thou hungry thirsty weary or heavy of sleepe Art thou grieved for the departure of thy friends So was hee for Lazarus Is thy soule heavy and pensive So was Christs my soule is heavy to the death doe thine own familiar friends betray thee So was it with Christ art thou molested with rayling scoffing and backbiting tongues So was CHRIST as he hung on the Crosse in all his paines they derided him and nodded their heads at him art thou tormented with the paines of Death and at the last givest up the ghost So was it with our blessed Saviour No temptation hath fallen to us but the same befell to Christ before us We drink of his cup and are baptized with his baptisme When the Wife is grieved the Husband if he be as he ought to be is grieved We are the Spouse Christ is our husband therefore our griefe is his griefe When any member of the body suffers though it bee the foote that treadeth on the ground the head suffers Wee are the members Christ the head therefore our crosses are his crosses Many are the troubles of the righteous through many tribulations we must enter into the kingdome of God But let this bee a pillar for us to leane upon in all afflictions our sufferings are Christs sufferings and he will one day make a comfortable end of them all VERSE 16. THe other comfortable use wee are to make of this Priest is contained in this Verse which is that we have an accesse to God which is amplified by the manner how the place whereunto and the end Let us not feare him because hee is a great and mighty high Priest but let us goe to him and to God the Father by him This going is not only with the feete of our bodies but of the minde Let us goe by prayer to God not feare to put up our supplications to him Not quaking and trembling as to a Iudge but with boldnesse as to a father uttering our mindes and disclosing our hearts to him To the throne of grace There is thronus gloriae Matth. 25.31 Apoc. 6.16 he speakes not of that but of grace because God is reconciled to us in the bloud of Christ. 1. We must pray to God flie to him by prayer 2. In the mediation of Christ our high Priest 3. In boldnesse with faith Hebr. 11.6 Iac. 1.6 4. The fruit of prayer which is double 1. That wee may finde mercy for all our sinnes and grace for all our miseries 2. To a seasonable helpe to helpe us in due time and season when wee stand in need of it In due time even in the time of trouble The Papists are enemies to this boldnesse they will not have us to be so bold as to goe to God immediately by Christ but we must have other intercessours by the way the Angels the Virgin Mary and all the Saints triumphing in heaven yet the Holy Ghost will have us to goe to God the father boldly in the name of Christ alone observe the words of the Text. Therefore First seeing we have such a compassionate high Priest let us goe boldly in his name to the throne of God 2. He doth not say let us stand a farre off but let us goe 3. Not quaking and shaking like Aspen leaves but with boldnesse 4. Not to the Throne of justice but of grace a gracious reconciliation being made by him betweene God and us 5. Not to finde Iack drummes enterteinments and to be sent packing away but that wee may obtaine mercy c. Therefore let us sue to God in the only name of this our high Priest Whatsoever yee aske the Father in my name hee will give it you Then why should we seeke to any other he makes intercession in the heavens for us not the Saints or Angels there is one Mediatour betweene God and man 1 Tim. 2.5 The Scripture acknowledges but one True say the Papists but one immediate Mediatour yet there be many mediate Mediatours besides him This is a playster for many soares with the Papists There is but one immediate head of the Church whereunto the Church is united as a body but the Pope may bee a mediate head of the Church So there may bee mediate mediatours betweene Christ the immediate Mediatour They might as well say there be many mediate Gods for the text sayes as there is one Mediatour so one God shall we then distinguish as they do but one Immediate God yet many mediate Gods besides him they may affirme the one as well as the other Away with all those mediatours set up by the Church of Rome and let us goe with boldnesse to the throne of grace in the name of this our High Priest and only Mediatour None so gracious with God as hee none hath reconciled us to God but he none loveth nor tendereth us as hee doth having layd downe his life for us Shall we goe to a father in the name of a servant when we may goe in the name of his Sonne Angels and Saints are but servants our fellow servants and brethren Christ is the Sonne of God therfore let us goe to him in his name and if we aske any thing according to his will he will heare us for his sake This incouragement doth the Holy Ghost give us in the next words we shall not loose our labour nor goe away emptie God the Father for Christ his sake will lade us with his benefits In due time even in affliction sayes the Psalmist God will stand by us in all our needs in sicknesse povertie imprisonment banishment yea in death it selfe The examples of Iosuah the three Children Daniel Ionah Peter stand as so many marble pillars to confirme and ratifie this when all leave us he will not forsake us when my Father and Mother
gente cruentus Sanguine fraterno and they use to call him terrae filium whose father is not knowne Iobs Genealogie is not expressed in Scripture But why was his Genealogie omitted Some of the Iewes say because his father was a fornicatour and his mother an whore Eustathius Bishop of Antioch sayes because his ancestours were not worthy to be reckoned with such an holy man Some because he did not appertaine to the stocke of Abraham from whence the Messiah came rather because he might be a full type and figure of CHRIST Sem cannot be Melchizedec the Iewes say he was Lyranus Ierome epist. 126. calls it famosissimam quaestionem 1. Sem his Genealogie is set downe in the Scripture his father and mother are knowne his Grandfather and great Grandfather his posterity Gen. 10.21 Ergo. Object Lyr. his Genealogie indeed is registred under the name of Sem but not under the name of Melchizedec as the Holy Ghost meaneth Sol. I but the Apostle speakes of the man not of the name This man Melchizedec was without father and mother So it may be said that the posterity of Israel is not mentioned Matth. 1. because the name of Israel is not there but of Iacob 2. Sem had the east part of the world allotted to him Gen. 10.31 then how came hee to dwell in Canaan appointed to Cham and his posterity Gen. 10.19 and to Reigne there as a King Whereas Sem and his posteritie had Chaldea allotted to them Abraham came of Sem who dwelt in Vr of the Chaldees from whence he came into Canaan at Gods Commandement Gen. .1.31 he passed over the river Euphrates whereupon he was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the seventie But we never read that Sem was called into Canaan as Abraham and Lot were 3. There is no probabilitie that seeing all this while often and constantly hee hath beene called by the name of Sem the HOLY GHOST should now of the suddaine call him by the name of Melchizedec 4. It is said of Melchizedec Hebrewes 7.6 that his kindred is not counted among the Levits yet Abraham and Levi came of Sem therefore Sem was not Melchizedec 5. Iosephus and Philo Iudaeus affirme that Melchizedec was a Cananite so say Irenaeus Epiphanius Theodoretus Adam and Eve had neither father nor mother they had no earthly Father to beget them nor mother to beare them in her wombe but were immediately created by God All others that descended of them have both father and mother Melchizedec himselfe had father and mother else hee could never have had any being in the world to meet Abraham and to blesse him but he is said to be without father and mother c. because their names are not recorded in the historie of the Bible otherwise both he and all other Men Women and Children have beginning of dayes and end of life We have a beginning and wee shall have an ending there is a time to be borne and a time to die Adam lived so long and hee dyed Methusalem almost a thousand yeeres yet he dyed in the end The rich man also dyed and was buryed Rich and poore high and low Merchants Lawyers and Physitians dye Lords Earles Dukes and Kings dye Some goe merrily to bed and are dead in morning Some lively and jocund at noone and dead by night Some are made exequutors to others that are faine to have executors themselves before they can come to the exequution of the will and testament left to them Such a fraile thing is our life a vapor a bubble a thought a dreame c. Therefore let us so spend the few evill and uncertaine dayes of our pilgrimage in this world as that wee may live with Christ that abideth for ever in the world to come The Priest-hood of our Saviour is an everlasting Priest-hood as for his sacrifice the action is past he offered himselfe once for all on the altar of the Crosse but the fruit and efficacy of it remaineth for ever his intercession remaineth still hee is our intercessour in the heavens and presents the incense of our prayers to his Father in the golden censer of his owne righteousnesse and hee will offer up the sacrifice of praise for us to his Father for ever Therefore let us shew our selves to bee Priests to him offering up our selves our soules our bodies as an holy sacrifice to him in this life that we may reigne with CHRIST our Priest for ever in the life to come VERSE 4. NOw followes the greatnesse of Melchizedec which was a type of our SAVIOUR CHRIST wherby the greatnesse of our SAVIOUR CHRIST Himselfe may shine more evidently to us all The amplification of his greatnesse is set forth by comparing him with two famous persons Abraham and the Levites 1. That he is to be preferred above Abraham he evinceth by these two arguments 1. Hee that takes tithes is greater than hee that gives tithes Melchizedec takes tithes Abraham gives tithes Ergo. 2. He that blesseth is greater than he that is blessed but Melchizedec blesseth and Abraham is blessed ergo That he is to be advanced above the Levites he sheweth by two arguments 1. They are mortall he is immortall 2. They payd tithes to him ergo he is greater than they The first argument hath two parts an affirmation and an anticipation of an objection 1. Argument he that received tithes of Abraham that famous and worthy man of whom the Iewes doe boast more than of any other must needs be acknowledged to be a great man but Melchizedec received tythes of Abraham ergo The proposition dependeth on this tythes were Gods right therefore they that tooke tythes were in Gods roome and for that cause superiour to them that payd tythes Melchizedec was a taker of tithes Abraham a giver of tithes therefore he was greater than Abraham Because it is a matter of importance and worthy the marking he stirres them up to attention by an Epiphonema Consider as they doe that are in a theatre which are wont with serious min●es and carefull diligence to consider of that which they see and heare Melchizedec as a magnificent King and royall Priest commeth forth to play his part therefore consider him well How great Not in stature as Saul was but in honour and dignitie This whatsoever he were Even the Patriarch Abraham Such a rare man as Abraham was the friend of GOD the Archfather a chiefe father the Prince of fathers Ab rab gnam the father of many nations of him the Iewes chiefely boasted that he was their father So Acts 2.29 7 8 and 9. Of the first or chiefe of the fruits taken also for spoyles An ordinary thing among the Gentiles to consecrate some of the spoiles to their Gods when they had gotten a victorie 1 Samuel 15. ver 15. The chiefe of the spoiles hee would not give of the basest they by a Synecdoche are put for the whole spoiles Some translate it praecipua the chiefe things The taking
hee teacheth us to pray he doth not in his owne person make intercession with sighes and groanes for the Holy Ghost cannot sigh and groane but he stirres up to it The Papists say that Christ is intercessor immediatus but the Saints bee mediatores mediat● But wee must goe to God by Christ alone there is one Mediatour and no other As there is but one God So but one Mediatour They might as well say there is but one immediate God and many mediate Gods as to say there is one immediate intercessor and many mediate When thou goest to a King sayes St. Ambrose thou must make a friend with some about him but ad deum non opus est suffr●g●tore sed mente devota Christ is our eye by whom we see the Father our mouth whereby wee speake to the Father Non● loves us so deerely as Christ none is in greater favour with the Father than the only Son that lyeth in his bosome therefore let us go to God by him and him alone We must not imagine that Christ makes intercession for us now in heaven after the same manner he did when hee was on the earth either by bowing of the knee by falling down on his face by praying with sighes and groanes as hee did at the death of Lazarus or with strong cryes and teares as he did in the Garden being glorified in heaven hee doth it not after such a carnall manner but Christ is said now to make intercession for us two kinde of wayes 1. Non voce sed miseratione not by uttering any voice by making prayers to his father as he did on the earth but by having pitty and compassion on us We have not a high-Priest which cannot be touched with our infirmities but a mercifull high Priest that was tempted as we are and can succour us in our temptations 2. He maketh intercession for us by presenting himselfe before the Father for us Hebr. 9.34 the exhibition of his glorious body in heaven the force and efficacy of his passion the recordation of his obedience these intercede with the Father for us Whereupon it is well said of Gregory l. 21. moral cap. 13. Vnigenito filio Deum pro homine interpellare est apud coaeternum Patrem seipsum hominem demonstrare The consideration of Christs perpetuall intercession in heaven for us may be a singular comfort to all Christians We count him happie that hath a friend in the Court then how happy are wee that have such a friend as Christ in the Court of heaven If the Kings Sonne make a request and that earnestly to the King for us shall wee not be in great hope to speede Christ Iesus the Sonne of God makes request to God for us and shall we not assure our selves that whatsoever wee aske in his name according to his will he heareth us In sicknesse poverty disgrace in the assaults and temptations of Satan yea in death it selfe Let us flie to this our Intercessour in heaven Say on my mother said Solomon to Bathshebah I will not say thee nay so sayes God the Father to Christ say on my Sonne make intercession for thy members I will not say thee nay Blessed are we that have such an Intercessour only let us not grieve him with our sins let us glorifie him by an holy life let us bring forth fruits worthy of the faith we have in him then we may boldly commence our suits to him and he will prefer them to his Father to the everlasting joy and comfort of us all VERSE 26. HItherto the Priest-hood of our Saviour hath beene advanced above the Leviticall Priest-hood by foure strong and infallible arguments Now there remaineth an high and magnificent description of the Priest himselfe Wherein 1. The substance of the description ver 26 27. 2. A reason for the confirmation of it In the substance of the description 1. The person of our High-Priest 2. His Ministery Became Not as if wee were worthy of him as wee say the best Preacher in England becomes the King It is better translated as Stephen doth conveniebat nobis was requisite and convenient for us it behooved us to have such an High-Priest Our redemption could not have been accomplished without such a one What manner of one 1. Holy in himselfe and in his own nature not only in respect of his deity but of his humanity also Luk. 1.35 Act. 2.27 The Devills acknowledge this we know who thou art that holy one of God Dan. 9.24 Chodesh Chodashim Some Priests Prophets and others have beene holy men but none so holy as Christ not a spot or blemish of unholinesse in him therefore fit to discharge the office of an high-Priest and to reconcile us to his Father 2. In respect of others doing no harme but all good to all not circumventing any by fraud or deceit nor offering open wrong and injurie to any In regard whereof hee is compared to a sheepe which of all creatures is most harmelesse nay profitable for his flesh and wooll too So was Christ so farre from doing any harme that hee did good to his very enemies a simple man no craft in him 3. As he was harmelesse himselfe so he tooke no harme from nothing 1. Actively 2. Passively 1. Vndefiled of all things The Priests in the time of the Law above others were to be circumspect that they were defiled with nothing especially in the time of the exequution of their office all that while they might not keepe company with their Wives they were to abstaine from wine not to touch a dead body or any uncleane thing Christ was more undefiled than any of them all they might keepe their bodies from being outwardly defiled yet they were stained with sin in soule and body too Christ had no defilement any kinde of way 2. He was undefiled of any person Hee conversed with sinners for the reclaiming of them as the Physition keeps company with sicke persons for the curing of them but he neither gave allowance to their sinnes nor received any contagion from them Then his ministery is set forth to us Where 1. The place where he doth Minister in the Sanctuary of heaven Some expound it thus that is a most high and excellent man But it is rather to be referred to the place where he ministers he is exalted above all those adspectable heavens Ep. 4.10 he is made higher than them and exequutes the office of an high-Priest for us in the highest heavens where he makes continuall intercession for us Is our high Priest holy and shall we be unholy that belong to him Is the head holy and shall the members bee unholy Is the husband pure and shall the wife be an impure strumpet Nay wee must labour in some acceptable measure to expresse the holinesse that is in him whereupon he saith be yee holy as I am holy Indeed wee cannot bee so holy as he is and as certaine Heretickes dreamed that were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pure
our memories Of late a most divellish and never heard of treason was contrived by some Iesuited Papists to blow up the whole realme the which that it might never be forgotten in England a perpetuall holy day is inacted by act of Parliament wherein publike thankes is given to God for it One way or other such extraordinary mercies are to be imprinted in our memories A reservation of some externall relicke is not alwayes necessary there may be danger in that if some part of the Gunpowder or some of the barrels which they had layd in the vault had beene kept it would not have been so good as a solemne day every yeere for the recordation of it But alas we are all exceeding forgetfull of Gods mercies his judgments are soone forgot the terrible pestilence which at the beginning of the Kings raign swept away so many thousands is not remembred much lesse will we remember the favours and blessings of the Lord beneficia nemo ponit in calendario that is good of our own benefits but we must all put the benefits of God Almighty in the calender of our mindes for ever 2. And Aarons rod that budded The occasion was this Whereas Corah Dathan and Abiram with all that belonged to them were destroyed for their malepart dealing against Moses and Aaron the Israelites began to mutter at it came to Moses and Aaron saying ye have killed the people of the Lord Num. 16.41 whereupon a great number of them were slaine Now to the intent that this murmuring against the Priest-hood might be stayed the Lord by a lively token would make manifest to all posterity unto what an high chaire of honor he advanced it he commanded 12. rods to be taken according to the number of the 12. tribes that tribe should have the preheminence in the sanctuary whose rod budded now Aarons budded and no other therefore he and the Tribe of Levi were to bee acknowledged in spirituall matters above the rest for ever This doth signifie to us what a care the Lord hath of his sacred ministery which through the malice of Satan is ready to bee contemned in the world My people are as they that rebuke the Priest A contemptuous rebuking of Gods Ministers is a sinne of sins q. d. they cannot commit a greater offence then this they have no good successe that resist Gods Ministers Corah and his complices were swallowed up by the earth alive Ieroboams hand was dried up which hee stretched out against the Prophet Iesabel was eaten up with dogs that set her selfe against the servants of the Lord. Vzziah was smitten with a Leprosie for his contempt of the Priests Ananias and Sapphira that went about to play mocke-holy day with Saint Peter were smitten with suddaine death Therefore let us take heed how wee oppose our selves to the Ministers how wee murmure against their authority thinke or speake contemptibly of them The world may seeke to depresse Aarons rod but it shall bud and flourish in despite of them all Therefore let us have a reverent opinion of the Ministers let us esteeme them as GOD 's stewards as his Ambassadours such as are over us in the Lord. Let us submit our selves unto them and receive them with feare and trembling as the Corinthians did Titus when his Ministery is despised God is despised and hee will not put it up at our hands The third thing reserved were the Tables of the covenant The Arke is a representation of the Church which above all other things must have the Law of God in it This golden Candlesticke must hold up the Candle of the Word of God Hence it is that she is called the ground and pillar of truth not as if shee were to determine what is truth but as a pillar upholds the house so the Church the truth Then what a Church is that Church of Rome that banishes the Law that burnes up the Bible that seekes to suffocate the Truth She is no Arke but a prison of the faithfull This doth declare to us that the Law is to bee had in perpetuall remembrance Let us that be Christians not only have it in our bibles Let us not only talke of it with our tongues but let us lay it up in the Arke and closet of our hearts for ever I have hid thy Law in my heart sayes David As the two Tables of stone were laid up in the materiall Arke so let us entreat the Lord to write the tables of his Law in the fleshie tables of our heart that it may be our guide and comfort all the dayes of our life VERSE 5. WEE have heard what was in the Arke Now let us see what was over it the Cherubims of glory which are so termed because the glorious God betweene them did make answer Cirbi tanquam puer Carab they were certaine images like to little Children with faire and beautifull faces and they had wings by those were signified the Angels which are the Guardians and keepers of the Church figured by the Arke Gen. 3.24 Psalm 91.11 Capphoreth of Caphar that signifies to cover and to reconcile or pacifie the covering of the Arke where GOD by the High-Priest was pacified with the people and obtained mercie for them Therefore it is called the Mercy-seate and Christ Rom. 3.25 is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from this Mercy-seate did God speake Numb 7.89 Psalm 80.1 Of the Cherubims vid. Exod. 25.18 The Mercy-seat or covering of the Arke was a type of our Saviour Christ who covers the Church with his righteousnesse which is a propitiation for our sins The Cherubims are the Angels that minister to Christ and his Church Mat. 4.11 and an Angell comforted him in the Garden As they ministred to him when he was on the earth so they be ministring Spirits for our salvation to the worlds end As GOD spake to Moses by the mercie seate so doth he to us by Christ. 2. At the Mercy-seate God shewed himselfe to be favourable to the people so is he to us by Iesus Christ. See in what an excellent estate the true members of the Church are they have many to protect them 1. God as an Eagle doth shadow us Deut. 32.11 2. CHRIST as a Henne doth shadow us the Holy Ghost also is a father to us I will not leave you Orphanes the Angels they shadow us they are ministring spirits for our salvation they pitch their Tents about us and hold us in their hands The King of Tyrus is called the annointed Cherub Ezek. 28.14 and 16. the covering Cherub covering his people under the wing of his protection Sundry uses may be made of this 1. We that be Christians may be more couragious then any other we are better guarded then any other the wicked are guarded with the Devill and his Angels wee with the holy and mighty Angels they have the black guard we the white an armie of ten or twenty thousand men may bee with them but an army of an
head of it is in heaven and their conversation is in heaven the Church which is termed the kingdome of heaven should be purified with these that is with earthly things like to themselves They were earthly and they ought to bee purified with earthly things the ashes of an Heifer the bloud of Calves Goates c. But the heavenly things themselves that be under the Gospell which is a Gate and entrance into the kingdome of heaven the Church in the time of the Gospell the true Tabernacle and faithfull Citizens of heaven it was necessary that these should be purified with better sacrifices above these namely with the sacrifice of Christ himselfe else we could never have had any right to the kingdome of heaven Christ's one sacrifice is here called by the name of many because it is compared with the many sacrifices in the Law and opposed to them Not because there be many Masse Sacrifices to represent this one sacrifice Here wee see how wee are advanced above them in the time of the Law they had the patternes wee the things patterned they painted flowers we the flowers themselves they the shadowes wee the body they the picture we the man they the lineaments of the house we the house it selfe How are we beholden to God happy are the eyes that see what we see O that wee could walke worthy of them Better No comparison betweene them no more than betweene the creatures and the Creator What are Bulls Goates Calves to the Son of God that hath offered himselfe for us VERSE 24. THe Holy of Holies was a type of heaven Not made with the hands of Aholiab and Bezaleel Which were antitypes as it were pictures in waxe to represent this a stampe of this Into heaven it selfe whereof that was a type Act. 1.11 Manifestly and openly Not for a little while to goe out againe as the High-Priest did when he had prayed and sacrificed for the people but now and continually Not for himselfe but for us By the demonstration of his own sacred body wherein hee hath suffered for us to make intercession for us So long as Christ appeares in heaven for us our sinnes cannot appeare in the sight of God Of themselves they cry up to heaven for vengeance but Christ our Advocate and High-Priest is in heaven to answer for us Indeed father they are grievous sinners but here am I which in my owne body have borne the burden of their sins In the Courts here on earth men have Advocates and Proctours that appeare for them Christ our Advocate appeares in heaven for us therefore wee neede not to feare Who shall lay any thing to the charge of GODS elect It is CHRIST that appeareth in heaven for us 2. As hee is gone into heaven so we shall one day bee in heaven with him In the time of the Law the High-Priest went into the Sanctum Sanctorum but hee could carry none of the people with him Our High-Priest will bring us all into the true Holy of Holies the kingdome of heaven Father I will that they also whom thou hast given mee be with me where I am The fore-runner is gone before us and we shall follow after hee himselfe hath told us that in his Fathers house there be many mansions and he is gone to prepare a place for us What a dignity is this that dust and ashes should sit in the heavenly place with CHRIST Let this comfort us against all the crosses and calamities of this life What though wee be sicke many weekes together What though wee bee pinched with poverty for a time in this world and with soares as Lazarus c. all these one day shall have an end and wee shall bee in heaven with Christ have Palmes in our hands Crownes on our heads where all teares shall bee wiped from our eyes for ever VERSE 25. HHimselfe Hebr. 1.3 Often as the High-Priest offered often Every yeere whereas Christ but once Other bloud of Goates Calves c. Let us remember that which St. Peter telleth us we are redeemed from our old conversation wee are washed from our sins by the bloud of Christ therefore let us not wallow like swine in the dunghill of sin againe VERSE 26. BEcause there were sins in all ages of the world to bee done away CHRIST 's death was prefigured from the beginning of the world by the death of Abel by the oblation of Isaac by the sacrifice of many beasts in the time of the Law yet hee suffered but once Now not in the precedent or future time but now in the fulnesse of time Gal. 4.4 End of the world 1 Cor. 10.11 1 Ioh. 2.18 Hora. Though 1600 yeeres and moe are passed since yet a thousand yeeres are but as a day with the Lord. Hath he beene manifested 1 Tim. 3.16 appeared in the nature of man truly like to us in all things sin only excepted To the abolishing so as hereafter it shall bee of no force to accuse and condemne us or to shut us out of heaven There is sin still remaining in us but the guilt and punishment thereof is put away how not by the sacrifice of a Lamb Goate Calfe c. but by the sacrifice of himselfe Why did not GOD send CHRIST at the beginning of the world 1. Hee would have sicke man for a time to bee humbled with the sight and feeling of his disease that the Physitian might bee more welcome when he came 2. He would have the prophesies concerning Christ to bee fulfilled before he came A sharpe and evident knife to cut the throat of the Masse withall If CHRIST be offered up in the sacrifice of the Masse then hee suffers at every Masse for there can bee no offering of Christ without suffering but he suffers not even in the judgement of the Papists neither Bellarmine nor any of them all can though full of shifts tell handsomely how to elude this argument for here their unbloudy sacrifice hath a deadly wound There can bee no oblation of Christ without the suffering of Christ. The world then is not eternall as some Philosophers dreamed it had a beginning and it shall have an end onely GOD is without beginning and ending for the Angels themselves had a beginning If the end of the world was in the time of CHRIST and of his Apostles then now it must needs bee at an end now it lyes a gasping and is ready to yeeld up her breath that day is at hand when the world shall passe away with a noyse Therefore why doe wee dote so much on the world wilt thou sit feasting and banquetting in a rotten house that is ready to fall on thy head Such an house is the world therefore rather hasten to bee out of it The wicked are called the men of this world wee that bee the faithfull are men of another world ye are not of the world sayes our SAVIOUR CHRIST yet for all that wee are meere worldlings following the pleasures and
yee shall meete with bad examples every where but let us not be seduced by them To this he induces us by a forcible reason Ye may see it with your owne eyes Almost all the signes are passed already they be blind that cannot see this Here then it is cleere that there is a day of judgment and that day drawes neere If it were neere in the Apostles time how neere is it now a thousand and odde yeeres being passed since Let not us bee like them that put farre from them the evill day not like that servant which saith my Master defers his comming and falls a beating of his fellow servants not like those mockers that say where is the promise of his comming but let us make a just reckoning that this day is drawing neere indeed that CHRIST is ready to open the heavens and to descend in the cloudes and to assemble all nations before him Behold I come quickly said he in the Revelation he comes and he comes quickly therefore let us so live in a carefull discharge of all duties to God and man that our account may bee joyfull at that day that then wee may meete Christ in the ayre and be translated with him into the kingdome of glory If the Assizes at Bury draw neere will not they that have nisiprius to trye provide their Lawyers and have all things ready the generall Assizes of the world is neere therefore let as consider how we shall answer then VERSE 26. WEE had need to make much of the fellowship we have among our selves and provoke to love and good workes for the danger is great if we doe not If we It is good for all to looke to it He doth not simply say if we sinne for then it were woe with us all because in many things we sinne all Neither doth he say if we sinne contrary to our knowledge or if we sinne upon weakenesse and infirmitie as the deerest children of God may doe David sinned against his knowledge when he committed adultery and murder So did Peter when he denyed Christ. But if wee sinne willingly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yeelding our selves voluntarily to Satan maliciously opposing our selves to Christ and his Gospell and rending our selves from the society of his Church and members suffocating and choking the knowledge of the Lord Iesus revealed to us as appeareth by the next words There is a great difference betweene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 volens and voluntariè A man may sinne willing his will consenting to it yet upon a suddaine passion of the minde drawne to it in some sort against his will But he that sinneth willingly doth it upon a mature deliberation with a resolute purpose to doe it come on it what will which indeed is rather a wilfulnesse than a willingnesse Such as doe wilfully and maliciously resist Christ and his Gospell that fall utterly away Not being blind and ignorant but when we have received of Gods gracious goodnesse and as it were with both hands taking some delight in it at the beginning having a taste of the good Word of God Hebr. 6. What the acknowledging of the truth not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 acknowledging it to be the truth of God it being sealed up to them in their hearts and consciences by the HOLY GHOST Their own consciences did tell them that it was the truth of God yet they sinned willingly and oppugned it That Christ is our only King Priest and Prophet that hee by the sacrifice of his owne body hath purchased to us remission of sins and the kingdome of heaven That there is no way to be saved but by him yet this blessed truth they afterwards condemne and resist it by might and maine Their estate is lamentable For the expiation of their sinnes this sacrifice being rejected by them wherewith alone the sinnes of the world are taken away there can be no sacrifice for the abolishing of their sinnes they can have no remission of sins and therefore no place in the kingdome of heaven Their sins are sealed up in a bagge This is it which he said before Heb. 6. It is impossible they should be renewed to repentance and that which Christ said Matth. 12. This sin cannot be forgiven neither in this world nor in the world to come For the better explication of this place errors are to bee avoyded The Novatians have egregiously abused this place sucking this poysonfull doctrine out of this sweete flower that whosoever sins after baptisme is damned no hope of forgivenesse of sin for them In baptisme we have remission of our sins therefore if any sinne after this generall pardon there remaineeh no remission of sinnes for them In baptisme we receive the HOLY GHOST therefore to sin after baptisme is to sin against the HOLY GHOST and there is no expiation of that sin Who then shall be saved Alas then we are all in a wofull case and none should set a foote into the kingdome of heaven Peter sinned after baptisme and after the receit of the HOLY GHOST yet he wept bitterly for his sinne and was received into mercy The incestuous man in the Church of Corinth that lay with his fathers wife sinned fowly after baptisme yet Saint Paul would not have him to bee swallowed up with griefe but admitted into the Church againe The Church of Ephesus had fallen after shee was baptised yet CHRIST raises her from that fall againe Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen and repent and doe the first workes At what time soever a sinner repenteth him of his sinnes though it bee twenty times after hee bee baptised I will put his sinne out of my remembrance We are to know that not all sins after knowledge are the sinnes against the Holy Ghost Aaron knew the Commandement Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any graven Image yet he made the Israelites a golden Calfe for all that he obtained mercy at the hands of God David knew adultery and murther to be grievous sins yet he fell into them St. Peter contrary to his knowledge denyed CHRIST hee said I know not the man yet hee knew him well enough hee denyed him not once but thrise he added an oath a curse an execration to his denyall yet hee sinned not against the HOLY GHOST It is a dangerous thing to sinne against our knowledge for hee that knowes his Masters will and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes It had bin better for them they had not knowne the way of truth c. yet not every sin against knowledge is the sin against the Holy Ghost But this may be a fruitfull caveat to all whom God hath enriched with knowledge They are the most subject to the sinne against the Holy Ghost Ignorant persons may be condemned for the Lord Iesus shall come in flaming fire rendring vengeance unto them that doe not know God
their owne countrey as Themistocles Howsoever God dealeth with us in this world wee shall have an abundant recompence in the life to come therefore let us goe whithersoever G●d shall call us as Abraham did he that forsaketh not father and mother houses and lands nay he that hateth them not for Gods sake is not worthy of him VERSE 9. 1. THe manner of his abode 2. The cause of it 1. Factum the fact 2. Motivum the motive that stirred him to it The land of promise which was so called because it was promised to him by God and that often Hee went not backe againe in a discontented minde but though hee found few outward encouragements to tarry yet hee stayes by it The manner of his abode is set forth 1. By the quality of the place 2. By the forme of his habitation How did he abide in this land not as a Lord and master in it but as a stranger it was a strange Country to him he had no house no land in it no not the breadth of a foot hee was faine to buy a piece of ground to bury his Wife in It was inhabited by a strong and mighty nation that were meere strangers to him This might have shaken his faith Is this the Country that I and my seed shall have what likelihood is there of it yet by faith he abode in it wayting for the accomplishment of Gods promise 2. What was the manner of his dwelling in it he dwelt not in a stately and magnificent Citty in a strong and defenced Castle in a costly and sumptuous house not in a Tower the height whereof reached to heaven as the Tower of Babell did not in one tent but in many remooving his tent hither and thither He dwelt in tents that were soone set up and soone pulled downe againe partly because he might be at Gods call ready to remove when hee would have him as indeed Abraham was a continuall flitter partly also because hee knew his seed should goe into Aegypt and the time was not yet come when he should have a full possession of the land of Canaan Therefore in the meane season he contented himselfe with Tents In commemoration whereof they had the feast of Tents or Tabernacles Yet he kept great hospitality in his Tent a poore house yet a rich house keeper hee sate of purpose daily at his Tent doore as a bell to toll strangers and passengers to him It was wont to be said golden Chalices and wooden Priests so now a dayes it may bee said golden houses wooden house keepers a great house a large house yet little meat in it It may be sufficient for themselves strangers nay neighbours seldome drinke of their cup a great sort of brave chimneys but little smoake in them many a Noble mans house scant smoakes once in a yeere Cornelius a Captaine had no stately house yet his almes were great Gaius had no glorious house yet an hoast to the whole Church wheresoever we dwell though in a Tent or booth yet let us doe good with that which wee have as Abraham did our house shall be the better blessed for it Abraham dwelt in a Tent yet GOD protected him from all enemies and dangers Wee never read that thieves brake into his Tent and spoyled him of that which he had In a tempest thundering and lightning the Tent was not set on fire It is better to bee in a poore cottage under Gods wing than in a magnificent Pallace without his favour Ahaziah dwelt in a sumptuous building yet hee got a fall that cost him his life Michah had a strong house yet the Danites came and tooke all in his house Lot had an house in Sodom Abraham had but a Tent yet Abraham was safer in his Tent then Lot in his house GOD kept Daniel in the Lions denne the three Children in the fiery furnace Ionah in the Whales belly hee preserved Abraham in his Tent and hee will for ever keepe his Children in the meanest Cottage in the world The manner of his dwelling in the land of promise is illustrated by his companions not he alone but Isaac and Iacob Whether he and they dwelt together in Tents at the same time cannot bee defined If wee respect Abrahams age they might for hee lived after Isaac was borne seventy five yeeres and after Iacob was borne fifteene yeeres yet whether that be the meaning of the Holy Ghost or not I dare not affirme they in their time dwelt in Tents as Abraham did in his time because the promise was made to them all to Abraham and his feed They were intailed in the promised land with their father The Canaanites had Cities and beautifull houses to dwell in Abraham Isaac and Iacob dwelt in Tents the wicked may have fairer dwellings in this world then the godly Now wee have sumptuous and magnificent buildings immediately after the floud they erected a Tower the height whereof reached to heaven The Canaanites had townes and Cities that were walled up to heaven Ahab had his Ivory pallace Nebuchadnezar his stately Babel There are many gay buildings in all places but as CHRIST said of marriage from the beginning it was not so What manner of house did Adam and Eve dwell in Abraham Isaac and Iacob these worthy and renowned Patriarcks dwelt in Tents and incommemoration hereof there was instituted among the Iewes a feast of Tents and Tabernacles which was kept with great solemnity by the space of seven dayes they sate in Boothes Let us not be too carefull nor too curious about our dwellings Our Saviour Christ the Lord of all had not an house to hide his head in at his dying day he commended his mother to Saint Iohn who tooke her home to his house There is as free a passage to heaven out of a poore beggarly Cottage as out of a Kings Pallace Let us not spend too much cost about our earthly houses but labour to build up our selves as houses to God in this life that when we must remove out of these buildings be they greater or lesser we may be received up into that house that is made without hands in the life to come GOD doth not immediately performe his promises hee will exercise our faith and patience in the expectation of them This land was Abrahams now by promise yet his seed had not the possession of it many hundred yeares after yet Abraham by faith waited for it he that believeth will not make hast Wee must not be too hasty but tarry Gods leysure So the heavenly Canaan the kingdome of heaven is ours by promise feare not little flocke it is your Fathers pleasure to give you the kingdome yet we must passe through many tribulations into this kingdome Let us with patience beare them all and at the length though it be at a long runne first wee shall bee sure to be partakers of it for heaven and earth shall passe but not one title of Gods Word shall fall to
sayes S. Paul shall have troubles in the flesh Sometimes the wife hath a churlish Husband as Abigail had of Nabal Somtimes the Husband hath a crosse Wife as Iob had of his Sometimes they have both untoward children as Isaac and Rebekah had that made them weary of their lives We must looke for our afflictions in all conditions If we be not Bastards but Sonnes we cannot be without correction Let us intreat the LORD to give us faith wisdome and patience religiously to beare all his fatherly chastisements in this life that wee may have the inheritance of children in his eternall kingdome in the life to come Now follow two other arguments 1. From the lesse to the greater 9 10. 2. From the event and end of afflictions Verse 11. The first argument is 1. Propounded 2. Enforced Verse 10. it is propounded 1. Quoad terrestrem 2. Quoad coelestem patrem 1. If wee have quietly endured the chastisements of our earthly Fathers then much more should wee endure the castigations of our heavenly Father But wee have quietly endured the chastisements of our earthly Fathers Ergo. The assumption is set downe Verse 9. Then the force of the consequence is urged Verse 10. VERSE 9. FVrthermore Besides the consolation out of the Scripture even reason may move us to it Of our flesh the flesh is put for the body because it chiefely consisteth of flesh 1 Cor. 5.5 flesh and spirit are opposite Which corrected us when wee were Children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prov. 13.24 And we did not only take it patiently at their hands but wee reverenced them stood in awe of them were more loath to displease them revereri est cum timore honorem impendere Commonly those Parents are most reverenced of their Children that have wisely and orderly corrected them they that have layd the reynes on their neckes and suffered them to goe without correction are most despised and contemned of their Children afterwards Adonijah whom David would not displease displeased David afterwards Hee doth not say the mothers of our bodies they for the most part cocker their Children seldome or never correct them in wisedome and discretion but Fathers The Fathers are the greater correctours Shall wee not much rather subject our selves quietly to his castigations Father of Spirits From whom wee have the more principall part which is the soule or spirit We have our bodies also from him Thou hast fashioned me beneath in my mothers belly Yet these mediately by the seed of our Parents our spirits wee have immediately from God Num. 16.22.27 16. Zac. 12.1 Arist. l. 2. de gener animal c. 3. sayes that the soule comes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 extrinsecus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one God did not make the soule and another the body as the Manichees said He is the Father of our spirits ratione adoptionis regenerationis salvationis but here ratione creationis There is no comparison betweene these two Fathers 1. These are Fathers of one family of him is named the whole family Eph. 3.15 2. The name of earthly fathers are drowned in him Matth. 23.9 Children have no wit wisdome or experience therefore they submit themselves to their Fathers no more have we but from our heavenly Father Therefore let us subject our selves unto him Children are subject to many inordinate affections which makes them the more quietly to yeeld to the ordering of their Parents so are wee This is amplified by the benefit we reape by it and live Namely in his eternall kingdome being fitted for it by afflictions Though we submit our selves to the chastisements of our earthly Fathers wee cannot but live a while in this miserable world if wee beare his chastisements wee shall live for ever therefore let us doe it Soules are not a parcell of the Substance of God but created of God not traduced by the seede of our Parents Eccles. 12. Verse 7. Genesis 2.7 and 23. As the first mans soule came so doe all others 2. If they proceed from mortall seede they must be mortall and perish with the body Saint Augustine hath foure excellent bookes of it to Barnabas Petrus proselyt to Vincentius Victor 3. It comes either of the body of our Parents or of their soule if from the body it is mortall as that is if from the soule then either the Father conveieth his soule to his Sonne and hath none left himselfe or a part of his soule then the soule should be partible which a spirit is not Object Gen. 46.26 Exod. 1.5 There soules is put for persons Object Hebr. 7.9 Levi was in Abrahams loynes in respect of his body and soule too Christ only in respect of his body But Christ in this place is comprehended under Melchizedec not under Abraham Levi was there in respect of father and mother too Christ only in respect of his mother Object Then GOD should worke with fornicators and adulterers Sol. In the act of generation which is naturall not in the sin and violation of his Law A man steales seede and sowes his ground with it God sends him a good harvest yet God worketh not with his stealing When it is infused and how is scrupulous The soule is good when it is infused by God it is infected by the conjunction of it with the body As good wine put into a bad vessell A cleane man is infected if he come among Leapers VERSE 10. HEre he shewes the equity of the consequent by three dissimilitudes betweene our earthly and heavenly Father 1. They chastened us for a few dayes whyle we were Children during the time of our nonage when we come to mans estate they leave us to our selves they carry no longer such a strict hand over us as before Whereas the father of spirits hath a continuall care over us and holds us under his fatherly rod all the dayes of our lives Therefore we must never exempt our selves from his Chastisements 2. They doe it according to their owne pleasure which oftentimes is corrupt they erre in judgement and affection too Sometimes they correct for that they should not and leave that uncorrected which deserves correction oftentimes they correct in anger and fury doing that they repent of afterwards but Gods pleasure is alwayes good hee is most wise and knowes how to correct hee is not passionate and affectionate as these fathers are 3. They in chastening us oftentimes respect their owne ease and quietnesse their owne credite and commodity more than ours or if they correct us for our profit yet it is but for a temporall profit that we runne not into outrages in the world that we may lead a civill honest life among men that is the marke most Parents aime at Whereas the Father of spirits chasteneth us for our profit he himselfe standeth not in neede of us not only to make us civill men secundum moralem quandam honestatem but that we might be partakers of his holinesse that we might be holy in soule and body in
tamen possunt probare quod dicant let them speake that can speake yet so as they prove that which they speake Ego me istaec ignorare confiteor I confesse I am ignorant of these things Let the like humility bee imitated of us all Let no man presume to understand above that which is written The Scripture makes mention of Arch-Angels Michael the Arch-Angel disputed with the Devill about the body of Moses An Arch-Angell shall sound a Trumpet at the last day 1 Thes. 4.16 Some interpret it of a created Angell that hath the title and office of an Arch-Angell onely for a time for the accomplishment of some weighty and extraordinary worke no perpetuall superiority above the rest Cornelius à lapide saies it is Gabriel who as hee did foretell CHRIST 's first comming to the Virgin so hee shall publish his second comming to the world Saint Ambrose and Aquinas are of that opinion Yet that Arch-Angell rather is CHRIST who is termed Michael our Prince Daniel 10. ult The name is sutable to him and to no other Micha ael Who is like to God Almightie none so like him as his Sonne the ingraven forme and character of the Father 3. For their wisedome and knowledge it is admirable The devils know much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much more doe the good Angels they have matutinam vespertinam scientiam as Augustine speakes their morning and evening knowledge their morning knowledge they have by creation and a continuall contemplation of GOD their evening knowledge they have by observation from the creatures and a diligent inspection into the Church They bee no fooles they be wise guides that have the custody of us 4. For their power it is wonderfull surpassing the power of evill Angels for it is very probable that as the rest of their gifts so their power is weakened since their fall 5. For their office it is to serve God and the Lambs wife the Church they performe many fruitfull offices to us As Souldiers they pitch their Tents about us defending us from the devill and his Angels Isai. 5. I have hedged in my Vineyard that is Custodia Angelorum Gainas sent a great multitude in the night to burne the Emperors Pallace at Constantinople a multitude of Angels met them in the forme of armed men of a great stature they supposing them to bee magnum strenuum exercitum ranne away As nurses they hold us in their armes Psalm 91.12 that wee dash not our foote against a stone Some interpret it to bee Christ the stone of offence but it is to bee extended to all dangers whatsoever They comfort us in our griefes sorrowes and calamities though we bee not able to discerne it An Angell was sent to comfort our Saviour Christ when he was in his agony in the Garden Luk. 22.43 There was one Theodorus a young man that was cast into a scalding lead an Angell in the similitude of a man stood by him with a napkin in his hand that wiped the drops of sweat that trickled downe his body insomuch as it seemed to him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a pleasure rather than a conflict as he himselfe after reported to Ruffinus They observe our doings and behaviour 1 Cor. 11.10 they grieve if we doe ill and rejoyce in our well-doing Luc. 15.10 They make us rhetoricall nitor eloquii per bonos Angelos ministratur the glory brightnesse of eloquence is conveighed unto us by the good Angels They keepe us carefully while we be alive and at our dying-day they take our soules and carry them up into Abrahams-bosome as they did the soule of Lazarus and Greg. in his Dialogues names many holy men whose soules were seene after a visible manner to be carried by the Angels into heaven The Angels sung at the funerall of the Virgin Mary Nicephor lib. 15. cap. 14. They be apparitores Dei as Lactant. calleth them Gods Apparitors for Mat. 24.31 They gather the elect together from the windes and bring them to God at the last day I but you bring us into a fooles Paradise We see none of these things performed by the Angels What then we must walke by faith not by sight Thou seest not GOD yet thou beleevest there is a God thou seest not thine owne soule yet beleevest thou hast a soule So though we see not the Angels ministring to us yet let us believe it It is divinely and elegantly set forth by Bernard Quid si non videmus obsequium cùm experiamur auxilium what though we see not their service when we have experience of their aid quid si non mereamur aspectum cum sentiamus effectum What though we behold not their ministration with our eyes when we feele the fruit and effect of it in our lives This is the Lords doing and it ought to be marvellous in our eyes What am I O Lord said David and what is my fathers house that thou hast brought me hitherto What are we miserable sinners wormes-meat dust and ashes that the high and holy Angels should wait on us This is Gods unspeakable goodnesse his Name be blessed and magnified for it The last question remaineth whether every one of GOD's elect have a particular Angell or not The greatest part of the Fathers affirme that we have Among the Greeke Basil Naz. Theod. Chrys. Theoph. Among the Latin Origen Ierome Aug. Greg. Yet there is some discrepance betweene them Greg. sayes that we have two a good one ad nostri custodiam for our preservation an evill one ad nostri exercitium for the exercising of us Yet the greater sort contend but for one and there is a controversie about that one whether he be assigned to us à nativitate or à baptismo from our birth or from our baptisme Origen disputes it in utramque partem Zanchius a late Divine thinks that both may wel be conjoyned together Extraordinarily as the Lord sees it meet and expedient we have many Angels for our protection yet ordinarily every one of Gods elect hath a particular Angell appointed to him from his cradle to his grave The principall places whereon they build are these 1. Gen. 48.16 The Angell which hath delivered me from all evill blesse the children In the Hebrew it is not Maloac but ham maloac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ille Angelus that Angell 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ Iesus the Prince of Angels which oftentimes appeared to Iacob and delivered him and especially at Bethel insomuch as he stiles him selfe The God of Bethel Gen. 31.11.13 This Angell is expresly called GOD Vers. 15. The God that hath fed me all my life long to this day blesse thee he that fed him sayes Chrys. and he that delivered him is all one 2. Mat. 18.10 Cajetan the Cardinall hath a remarkable annotation on that place bene nota note it well Non dixit singuli Angeli eorum sed Angeli eorum not
come into the haven Runners lose the gold unlesse they runne to the end of the race So runne that ye may obtaine hold that which thou hast that another take not thy crown Ibi tu christiane fige cursus tui metā ubi christus posuit suam saith Ber. There O christian set down thy staffe where Christ set down his factus est obediens usque ad mortem he was obedient to the death so bee thou remember Lots wife she turned backe and was turned into a pillar of salt ut nos omnes condiret that she might be as a salting tub to season us all In Iacobs ladder the Angels were ascending and descending none were standing They that traveile by a wood full of theeves had neede to looke to themselves least they lose their purses we are among many spirituall theeves that will rob us if they can of the precious pearle of celestiall doctrine therefore let us looke to our selves that we lose not the things which we have wrought The second argument à praemio from the reward Let us looke to our selves not onely that we be no losers but that we may be gainers too that we may receive a full reward Why then they that begin well and continue not shall have some reward halfe a one though not a full one Resp. 1. They may have a reward among men in this world for a season the praise of men but they shall misse of that eternall reward in the world to come 2. the particle full hath reference not to the workers but to the reward it is a compleat a full reward fulnesse of glory in soule and body At his right hand is fulnesse of joy for ever the rewards wee have here are Semiplena halfe full this is plenum wholy full Hic jugulantur haeretici saith Catharinus qui mercedem bonorum operum negent here the heretiques throate is cut which deny the reward of good workes he fights with his owne shaddow he seekes a knife where there is no throate to cut for we that be Protestants acknowledge a reward for good workes and wee embrace that Axiom of Bellermines It is lawfull to doe good workes intuitu mercedis aeternae with an eye to an eternall reward reposed for them Moses chose rather to suffer adversitie with the children of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sinne for a season why because he had respect to the recompence of the reward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he looked from the aflictions to the reward Our Saviour for the joy that was set before him endured the crosse and despised the shame so may the members of Christ doe yet not tantum praecipuè yet not onely for that nor chiefely for that but that God may be glorified by our workes Nolo ad praemium diligere Deum saith Saint Augustine doe not love God onely so farre as thou mayest be rewarded and no further Ipse sit praemium tuum let him be thy reward I am thy exceeding great reward Neverthelesse we disclaime that Axiom of Bellermines that merces meritum are relatives Merces opus be relatives a reward and a worke but not merces meritum a reward and a merit God rewards our workes yet not for any merit in them but for his owne mercy For when we have done all that we can we are unprofitable servants for we have done no more than we ought to doe a debt can be no merit all that we doe is a debt Thou hast entred into a bond to pay an hundred pound thou payest it dost thou merit by it An Apprentise serves his master well during his Apprentiship doth he merit by it he was bound by obligation to doe it 2. No free gift is a merit eternall life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the free gift of God feare not little Flocke it is your Fathers pleasure to give you a Kingdome it is given we doe not merit it let every one of us say with Berniard meritum meum misericordia tua my merit is thy mercy But there is a reward even from our lame weake and imperfect workes in keeping of them there is great reward not onely a reward but a great reward too wherein God dealeth with us as a kinde father with his children hee allures us with rewards and that makes the worke more easie as Basil speaketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the consideration of the end of his journey refresheth the travellour the expectation of gaine that encourages the merchant and the spoyle the souldier Let us looke up with the eye of faith to this reward and it will be a Noah to comfort us in all our labours in this vaile of miseries VERSE 9. THe third argument ab incommodo from the great discommodity that ensueth upon it Whosoever of what quality and condition soever Transgresseth that holy commandement of persevering in the truth which we have received from the Father This is my beloved Sonne heare him and none but him And abideth not firmely and unmoveably In the doctrine of Christ the sole Saviour of the world For there is Salvation in no other and this doctrine is conteined in the Scripture Search the Scriptures they they be that testifie of me Hath not God that is his favour in this life nor shall he partake of his glory in the life to come he hath not God and so consequently he hath the devill therefore is in a most lamentable case The fourth from the commoditie He that abideth constantly to the end in the doctrine of Christ revealed in the Word he hath both the Father and the Sonne for they are inseparable they goe together hee that seeth the one seeth the other and he that hath the one hath the other neither is the holy Ghost excluded for the Father and the Sonne dwell in us by him therefore it standeth us all in hand to shut up our eares against false and erronious teachers and to persist in the doctrine of Christ delivered unto us Be no more children wavering and carryed about with every wind of doctrine by the deceit and craftinesse of men What went ye out into the Wildernesse to see a reede we must be stones not reedes and ye as living stones saith Saint Peter There be 4 principall pulbackes from the Doctrine of Christ the 1. is the glosing tongues of heretiques by their faire speeches and flattering they deceive the hearts of the simple The second is ease master pittie thy selfe it is good sleeping in a whole skinne now thou goest whether thou wilt if thou embrace Christ and his Gospell thou shalt be shut up in prison now thou eatest and drinkest of the best and farest deliciously every day then thou shalt bee fed with bread and water now thou lyest soft in fine bedding but then thou shalt endure more hardnesse for thou shalt lye in straw or on the bare boards
Gods glory Let your light so shine before men that they seeing your good workes they may glorifie your father which is in heaven so we shall doe all faithfully as Gajus did The persons to whom his well doing extended were the brethren and strangers Some interpret brethren the faithfull And indeede they were honoured with that title in the Primitive Church Strangers those that be not yet called but are strangers from the common wealth of Israel Rather by brethren are meant Iewes For my brethren the Iewes By strangers Gentiles converted to Christ as appeares by the opposition verse 7. Hospitality is in speciall manner commended to us in the Scripture Love ye the strangers for yee your selves were once strangers We in England were strangers in Queen Maries dayes Some faine to flee into France some into Germany some to Frankford some to Emden Therefore let us have pitty on strangers Be given to hospital●ty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pursuing it as the hunters doe the Deere we must not invite them summis labijs saith Hierom coldly for fashion sake but toto mentis ardore with a fervent affection and desire to have them We must pull them to our houses as Abraham did Origen observeth of Lot We read of no good workes of his that are registred in Genesis save onely hospitalitie for this alone evadit incendia he escapes burning when all Sodome was burnt hospitalem domum ingressi sunt Angeli The Angels entred into the house of hospitality Clausas hospitibus domus ignis ingressus est the fire entred those houses that were shut up against hospitality Audite hoc qui hospitem velut hostem vitatis Heare ye this O ye covetous misers that shun a stranger as ye would do an enemie whereas indeed ye should make your selves friends of this unrighteous Mammon Iulian writing to the high Priest of Galatia excites all to hospitality by a saying out of Homer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All strangers poore folke are sent to us by God himselfe peradventure to try us with all Let us be courteous even to strangers as Gajus was In entertaining of them we entertaine Christ and he will reward us at the latter day Mat. 25. VERSE 6. I But how knowest thou Iohn that I am so full of charity Many have related it to me Who both brethren and strangers they have borne witnesse of thy charity comming from thee to me It was religiously and gratefully done of them For we must all acknowledge our benefactours Of what charitie did they beare witnesse Non habitus sed actus saith Aquinas non affectus sed effectus Not of the habite of the charitie which can not be seene but of the act of charity which all the world might see not that thou haddest a good affection to doe good but of the fruits and effects of thy charity that is poore charity goe in peace warme your selves fill your bellies and give them not a crumme to fill them withall Christ shewed no such charity to the people in the wildernesse hee fed them with loaves and fishes Dorcas did not say to the widdowes warme your selves but shee made them coats to warme them withall Such was Gajus his charity he lodged them in his house they sate at his fire he fed them at his table Such must be the charity of us all wee are full of excuses to keepe us from charitable workes which S. Basil most pithily meeteth with all 1. I have not to give no saith he looke upon the rings that be upon thy fingers tell thy tongue that thou lyest if thou canst not give Zacheus gift give the widdowes gift Diversa dederunt sed ad unum pervenerunt quoniam non diversa amaverunt they gave diverse gifts yet they came both to one and the same Kingdome because they both loved one and the same thing which was God It is not the Coffer but the heart which God respecteth Habet semper unde det cui plenum est pectus charitatis hee that hath a heart full of love to Christ and his members shall ever have something to give that fountaine will never be dried up Coronat Deus voluntatem ubi non invenit facultatem God crownes the will where he findes inability of doing 2. I have children to provide for 1. Sayes S. Basil didst thou say when thou prayedst for children Give me children that might keepe me from the Kingdome of heaven 2. As thou hast children on earth so thou hast a brother in heaven which is Christ reckon him among thy children He that loveth Father or mother wife or children more than me is not worthy of me 3. How knowest thou whether thy children shall live or no death may sweepe them all away and that with one beesome too as it did Iobs 4. If they live art thou sure thy goods shall come to thy children strangers may eate them up they may come to thine enemies as Sauls Kingdome did to David 5. Take not too much thought for thy children he that feedes the young ravens will feede thy young children the rather if thou honourest him with thy goods and lettest him to have a portion among thy children The third excuse I will give by will after my death to that S. Basil answeres 1. Thy breath may be stopped on the suddaine that thou shalt have no time to make a will as Valentinian the Emperour was 2. If thou dost a dash with a pen may invert thy meaning and overthrow thy will 3. Then we may thanke death for the good thou dost if thou couldest have lived ever thou wouldst never have done good like a rotten tree that doth no good till it be cut downe 4. Were it not better for thee to have the praise of a liberall man when thou walkest on the ground than when thou art put into the ground 5. No dead creature was brought to the Altar God requires a living sacrifice 6. Thy life is the time of working not death Remember that thou in thy life time receivedst thy goods wee must doe good with them in our life not in our death 7. Wilt thou commit thy good workes to Inke and Paper rather than to the disposing of thine owne hands 8. If thou didst receive a Noble man into thy house wouldst thou set the reliques of thy table before him and wilt thou serve God with the reliques of thy life while we have time let us doe good to all We are fallen into those dayes whereof our Saviour Prophesied The love of many shall waxe cold now not the charity of many but in a manner of all is not onely cold but starke dead few or none can witnesse of our charity wee are more wedded to our wealth than to our wives many a one can be content to part more readily with his wife then with his money to good uses yet they be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
any thing away from CHRIST we rob Him our soules and bodies are Christs therefore let us not keepe them away from Him but consecrate them wholly to him 2 We are Heires by Him the poorest man that beleeves in Christ is an Heire though he have scant a place to hide his head in nor a good meales meat all the week long Christ Himselfe was Heire of all when He breathed on the Earth yet He was hungry thirsty had no money in His purse when the receivers of tribute came He had not an house to dwell in then He had a right to all though He had fruition of little So is it with us Men are wont to make much of them that be Heires to great Personages the godly are Heires not of Men but of God not of transitory Lordships or fading Kingdomes in this world but of a Kingdome that cannot be shaken in the world to come make much of them If we see the Heire of a Noble man we reverence him especially if he be the Kings Heire Good Christians are the Heires of the King of Kings therefore have them in high price and estimation but the world knowes not these Heires therefore she makes no reckoning of them If the Kings Sonne should come to a towne in a beggars weede no man would regard him no more doe they the heires of God because many of them doe not flourish in pompe and honour and wealth as others doe yet let not that discourage them GOD knowes them the Angels know them and account them their brethren and CHRIST will know us at the day of judgement when he shall say to many that were gay-fellowes here I know you not let that be a sufficient comfort to us 2. Arg. He that made the world is God CHRIST made the world Ergo. CHRIST was not made hee was a maker The ages the times themselves which have beene from the beginning The world continues from age to age therefore the ages are put for the world Hebr. 11.3 The world was made by CHRIST not as by an instrument or an inferiour but as an equall a workeman of equall power with the Father 1. The world is of Gods making therefore it is to be highly esteemed of us The Tabernacle was of Bezaleels making that was furnished with all skill and wisedome therefore the more regarded by the Israelites the Temple was of Salomons making the wisest man that ever was therefore in that respect more honoured by the Iewes A picture of Apelles making would be in great request The world is the glorious worke-man-ship of God Almighty therefore to be admired of us all If a stranger be in a boat on the Thames he cannot but wonder at the brave buildings that be scituate on it shall we passe through this famous frame and superexcellent building of this world set up by God himselfe and not wonder at the wisedome power and goodnesse of God that made it Wee see what a goodly coate the earth hath Salomon in all his royalty was not so clothed as it we see the Sunne in the firmament the Moone the Starres GOD Almighty his Candles birds of the ayre beasts of the field fishes of the Sea the admirable worke of our owne bodies yet they doe not make us almost to thinke of GOD. The Gentiles had no booke but this to looke upon yet it left them without excuse Let us all behold GOD even in the creation of the world 2. Though the world be a worthy worke and that of GODS making yet let us not admire it too much as there was a time when it was set up so there is a time when it shall be pulled downe The Disciples stood gazing on the Temple wondring at the workemanship of it but CHRIST told them that one stone should not be left upon another So the time shall come as Saint Peter speaketh when the whole world shall passe away with a noise the elements melt like fire therefore let us not be too much in love with this world Let us lay up treasure especially in the heavenly Ierusalem that abideth for ever This world is but an Inne wherein we take up a nights lodging If thou commest to an Inne be it never so faire wilt thou alwayes continue there Nay thou wilt leave the Inne and make hast to thy house though it bee nothing so beautifull as the Inne Remember that this world is but an Inne be it never so goodly a piece of worke hasten to that house that is made without hands eternall in the heavens Plato sayd that the world had a beginning but should have no ending that is confuted by Aristotle his Scholler If it had a beginning it must have an end too that cannot be avoyded Therefore he to make it eternall would have it to be without both wherein he bewrayed his ignorance of God and his word 3. All things in the world were made by CHRIST without him nothing was made he is the first begotten of every creature whether principalities or powers c. The Angels were made by him and we men are made by him he is the maker of all things in the world we are all his creatures therefore we are bound to glorifie him especially we men for whom all things are made Men are wont to say of a Noble man or Gentle man by whom they have ascended to great wealth such a one was my maker I am bound to love him I owe him all duty CHRIST is thy maker hee fashioned thee in thy mothers belly hee put into thee the breath of life in him thou livest moovest and hast thy being therefore thou art bound to doe him all the service thou canst Daniel reproved that great King that he forgate the God in whose hand his breath consisted we have all breath by God yet we forget him The Devill is our marrer and undoer CHRIST is our maker yet a number serve the Devill more than him CHRIST made thy mouth therefore praise him with it raile not on him and his Ministers with that mouth which he made he made thy eyes therefore looke up to heaven with them looke not on faire Women with them to lust after them CHRIST made thy feet therefore goe not to the Ale-house with them till thou be past witte and honesty too but goe to the house of God with them for the salvation of thy soule c. VERSE 3. THe former might seeme by participation and similitude to be adscribed to Christians we are the Sonnes of GOD and heyres of GOD you are the light of the world sayes CHRIST Therefore here hee ascendeth higher shewing that CHRIST is of the same nature and essence with GOD as the brightnesse of the Sunne is of the same essence with the Sunne and as the brightnesse proceedeth from the Sun so Christ is of the same essence with the Father and proceedeth from the Father as the brightnesse from the Sunne he is lux de luce and as
the Gospell to give eare to Christ that speaketh to us in the ministery of the Word This is my beloved Son heare him Now in the end the Apostle makes an exposition of the Allegorie and applies it to them to whom he writeth I doe not speake of the Tabernacle or Temple which were glorious houses wherein God in some sort dwelt but I speake of Gods spirituall house the Church a part whereof you are as well as Moses and they in the time of the Law All Christians in all Ages are the house of God What a singular honor is this that we should be Gods house yea his dwelling-house 1. A Nobleman hath many Houses which hee dwels not in himselfe but letteth them forth to other men we are not houses to let but God himselfe dwelleth in us we are his mansion-House The Centurion said to Christ I am not worthy that thou shouldest come under my roofe so may we say we are mortall and sinfull men houses of clay unworthy that God should come under our roofe yet it pleaseth him of his infinite mercy to dwell in such base houses as we are 2 If God dwell in us and we be his house then how neat and handsome should it be kept Shall a Kings house be overgrowne with weeds Shall there be filthy and sluttish corners in a Kings Palace And shall we that professe our selves to be Gods house be full of pride envie and malice that be stinking weeds in the nostrils of God Shall Gods house be full of swearers drunkards adultereres c. The divell found his house swept and garnished to his minde and shall not Gods house be swept for the entertaining of him Let us garnish our selves which are Gods house with the sweet flowers of faith love hope zeale humility temperance patience sobriety that God may take delight to dwell in us 3 There is no man especially if he dwell in an house and it be his owne but will bestow needfull reparations on it and do you think God will suffer his house to lye unrepaired nay being Gods house we shall want nothing for soule or body If we decay in faith zeale and other graces of his spirit he will in due season repaire them againe he will keepe his house wind-tyde and water-tyde he will preserve it from wind and weather yea the gates of hell shall never prevaile against his house 4 A man may have an house and be defeated of it some wrangling Lawyer may wring it out of his hand or he may be weary of his house and make it away none can snatch Gods house out of his hand he is no changling he will keepe his house for ever Blessed are we that be GODS house and the Lord give us grace to keepe us undefiled for his Majesty that he may take pleasure to dwell in us in this World and wee may dwell with him in the World to come What are we the house of God simply Live as we list and do what we will No verily but if we hold fast the confidence c. One speciall quality of a good house is to be firme and stable if it be a tottering house ready to shake in every wind and tempest a man will have small joy to dwell in it even so we that be the house of God Almighty must not be wavering and inconstant but we must stand sure and hold fast the graces we have received There be two things which we must hold fast faith and hope the boldnesse that we have by faith to come into the presence of God to whom we have accesse by Christ apprehended by faith and by vertue whereof we may boldly call God Father and open our minds freely to him that is the nature of the word Vnto faith must be annexed hope faith makes a Christian hope nourishes and susteines a Christian we must hold both fast As we have begun to put our trust in Christ so we must make him our pillar to leane upon continually as we have begun to hope for eternall happinesse purchased by Christ so we must still stand in a stedfast expectation of it Though persecution arise for the Gospell though we be clapt up into prison banished out of our country though we be put to the fire for the name of Christ yet let us not cast away our hope let us not deny Christ and sleepe in an whole skin let not the pleasures and profits of this world carry us away from Christ though death it selfe come yet let us trust in him We are wont to be hold-fasts in our money none shall easily get that from us but let us chiefly be hold-fasts in the Pearles and graces of the Spirit Whatsoever comes let us hold faith and hope fast let Houses and Lands Wife and Children yea our owne life goe rather than them Thus if we hold the confidence that we have in CHRIST and the rejoycing of our hope to the end we shall be Gods houses in this life and be received up into that house which is made without hands in the heavens He doth not simply say hope but the rejoycing of the hope the glorying of hope Satan and his instruments goe about to overthrow our hope and mocke at it It is a goodly thing I warrant you which you hope for What fooles are you in hope of an imaginarie kingdome hereafter to deprive your selves of so many pleasures in this life bee wiser than so A bird in the hand is better than two in the bush Take your pleasure whyle you be here and hope not yee cannot tell for what To that hee opposeth this glorying and rejoycing Yea boast of your hope even before your enemies faces what excellent things are reposed for you and rejoyce in this hope as if you had the kingdome of heaven already Not as if these did make us the house of GOD but by these wee shall have an assurance to our selves that we are the house of GOD. A Father sayes to his Sonne if thou wilt be no Ale-house hunter but doe as I will have thee thou shalt be my Sonne this doth not make him his Sonne for he was his Sonne before but it assures him to be his Sonne A Captaine sayes to his souldier if thou wilt play the man and not shrinke in the wetting thou shalt be my Souldier yet hee was his Souldier before so here if yee hold fast faith and hope ye shall be my house that is all the world shall see indeede that you are my house not for a while but to the end So as neither we faint in persecution nor in the time of prosperity bee drowned in the pleasures and profits of this world Be faithfull to the end he that continueth to the end shall be saved The second argument is desumed from the testimony of the Holy Ghost In the allegation of the testimony first a charge not to shut up their eares and hearts against this worthie and heavenly Prophet but to entertaine him
by the sacrifice of his own body hath made satisfaction for our sins and hath reconciled us to God the Father that by his bloud alone wee have an entrance into the holy place this truth was revealed to them by the Holy Ghost this they once acknowledged and professed before all men but afterwards maliciously they oppugne this truth by blasphemous speeches rayling and reviling books and by all the force they can go about to suppresse it by fire and fagot treading under foote the Sonne of GOD and counting the bloud of the Testament as an unholy thing Paul was a blasphemer and a persecutor of the Lord Iesus Saul Saul why persecutest thou mee yet hee sinned not against the HOLY GHOST because hee did it on ignorance Peter sinned against his owne knowledge when hee denyed and forswore CHRIST yet he sinned not against the Holy Ghost because he did it on weakenes for the preservation of his life Malicious impugning of every truth of the Gospell is of the essence of the sinne against the Holy Ghost To malice a member of Christ a Preacher an Ambassadour of Christ as Ahab did Mich●aiah is a grievous sinne a step to the sinne against the Holy Ghost yet not the sinne against the Holy Ghost That is a malicious oppugning of the truth it selfe As Saint Paul sayes of Alexander the Copper-smith that he resisted not his person but his preaching and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with all his might Such a one was Iulian the Apostata that had beene a Christian baptised into the name of Christ in outward shew a zealous professour of the Gospell a publike reader in the Church of Nicomedia he and his brother Gallus together built a Temple to Mammas the Martyr This simulata Sanctitas proved duplex iniquitas Afterward in contempt of Christ and Christian religion he washed away his baptisme with bloud he was a scoffer and derider of Christ a cunning persequutor of the Gospell not by fire and sword but by sleights and devices because he thought open persequution would make Christianity more glorious In despight of the true God revealed to him in Scripture he worshipped the Gods of the heathen To the last gaspe hee spewed out malice against our Saviour Christ. When the arrow was in his side that gave him his deadly wound he took some of his own bloud into his hand threw it into the ayre and said Vicisti Galilaee c. and so dyed miserably Bellarmine sayes l. 2. de poen c. 15. there bee some among us that knowing the Scriptures and the Fathers yet sinne against their owne knowledge and that of malice to the truth But as for us we will not judge them An horrible sin Let us all take heed of it The damned commit not this sin for men may be damned for lesse sins If thou continuest in adultery unrepented thou mayest be damned nay the least sinne without repentance may throw us into hell but questionlesse they are damned that sin against the HOLY GHOST A sore punishment is reserved for them Therefore let us all beware of this sinne Let us bee thankefull to GOD for the Truth of the Gospell revealed to us let us make much of it Let us not quench the light of the spirit but nourish it in our hearts Let not the least thought against the truth finde any entertainment in us Let us never open our mouthes against it but blesse God for it and defend it by all possible meanes Let us say with that worthy Apostle we can doe nothing against the truth but for the truth yea let us be content if God shall see it good even to lay down our lives for the Truth Let us take heede how upon pride vaineglory or singularity we maintaine any opinion against the truth how upon malice we set our selves against the truth For by these degrees the Devill at the length may carry us into this fearefull sinne against the HOLY GHOST Let us not grieve the good Spirit of God any kinde of way but let us suffer our selves to be guided by him all the dayes of our lives that we never fall into this horrible sin nor be partakers of the punishment due to it but that wee may be preserved from it and all other sinnes and reigne with CHRIST our blessed SAVIOUR in the life to come There is an outward and an inward sanctification hee is not a Iew which is one outward but he is a Iew which is one within Iudas seemed to be a Saint yet he was a Devill Let us entreat the Lord to sanctifie our hearts as well as our hands our soules and consciences as well as our tongues That is true sanctification that beginneth at the heart and from thence floweth to all the parts and members of the body What should we doe with a faire and beautifull Apple if the core be rotten A straw for an outward glorious profession and if there be no truth in the inward parts Therefore let us desire God to sanctifie us in soule spirit and body throughout VERSE 30. The second argument is taken from a divine testimony containing in it the nature of God Where 1. The allegation of the testimony 2. The Application of it In the allegation 1. The manner how 2. The matter of the testimony alleadged which hath two branches the one out of Verse 35. the other out of Verse 36. If GOD bee a just judge and a severe revenger of all impiety even among his owne people then those vile wretches must not thinke to escape that tread under foote the Sonne of God But God is such a one Ergo. Quàm verax potens sit They that bee Christians must bee acquainted with God they must know him of what nature and disposition he is ye erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God Heb. 9.11 If sitting in the lappe of the Church we know not God our condemnation shall be the greater Where hath he said it In the Scripture Moses was the pen-man of that booke out of the which this testimony is desumed yet it is God that speaketh in that booke God spake by the mouth of David by the mouth of all his Prophets Art thou desirous to heare God speake as who would not bee glad to heare the King speake but art thou desirous to heare the King of Kings speake come to the Scriptures and there thou shalt heare him speaking Which ought to enflame us with a love of the Scriptures and cause us to read and heare them with al reverence because not man out God speaketh in them What sayes he he thunders with a vehement voice Vengeance and retribution are mine What may none revenge but GOD Surely no by his owne authority The Magistrate may revenge for he carryeth not the sword in vaine But his throne is Gods throne his sword Gods sword his vengeance Gods vengeance no private man may revenge The King sayes White-Hall is mine the Scepter and Crowne of