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

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knowledge but the least measure of sauing knowledge of that knowledge that may yeeld him sound comfort no man can ordinarily attaine to but by hearing 1. Cor. 1. 21. It hath pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to saue men The glory of the Lord his power and iustice sufficient to make vs to feare him seruilely may be seene elsewhere but the beauty of the Lord which may make him amiable to vs the comfortable knowledge of God is to be seene no where but in the Temple and in this ordinance of his the ministery of his word Psal 27. 4. 3. It is gotten by earnest prayer the man that neuer prayeth may attaine to knowledge but say he haue the best means the best ministry he shall neuer attain to the least measure of sanctified knowledge if he vse not to pray heartily for Gods blessing vpon the meanes Prou. 2. 3. 5. If thou cryest after knowledge then shalt thou vnderstand c. that made Dauid to cry to God so earnestly for this Psal. 119. 18. 4. It is confirmed by experience Psal 119. 140. thy Word is proued most pure and thy seruant loueth it Rom. 12. 2. Be ye changed by the renewing of your mind that ye may proue what that good and acceptable and perfect will of God is This is that knowledge Iob got by his afflictions Iob 42. 5. Now mine eyes seeth thee saith hee This is that spoken of Ier. 32. 8. Then I knew that this was the word of the Lord he knew before but experience now added to the certainty of his knowledge The effects whereby sauing knowledge is to be discerned from the other are three 1. It puffeth not vp a man as other knowledge doth 1. Cor. 8. 2. but makes him to haue a lowly conceit of himselfe because he discerneth much more ignorance then knowledge in himselfe The cause why the Laodiceans were so well conceited of themselues was for that their eyes were not opened Apoc. 3. 17 18. Experience sheweth this to be true in the best of Gods seruants and such as haue most profited by the word they are humble minded and euer complaining of their owne ignorance surely I am more brutish then any man saith Agur Pro. 30. 2. 3. and haue not the vnderstanding of a man I haue neither learned wisdome nor haue the knowledge of the holy 2. It resteth not in the braine but worketh vpon the heart and affections Esa. 51. 7. Ye people that know righteousnesse in whose heart is my law This light is not like that of the Moone but of the Sunne that not onely giueth light but warmeth and quickneth euery thing Paul prayeth their loue might abound in all knowledge and in all feeling or iudgment Phil. 1. 9. No man truely knowes God with a sanctified knowledge but he loues him also and thus are these two graces coupled together Psal. 91. 14. Because he hath set his loue vpon me thereforewill I deliuer him I wil set him on high because he hath knowne my name No man truely knowes God with a sanctified knowledge but he also putteth his trust in him Psal. 9 10. They that know thy name will put their trust in thee 3. It worketh reformation of heart and life Iob 28. 28. To depart from euill is vnderstanding 1. Ioh. 2. 3. Hereby we are sure that we know him if we keepe his commandements and verse 4. He that saith I know him and keepeth not his commandements is a lyer and verse 11. He that hateth his brother is in darknesse and walketh in darknes and knoweth not whither he goeth because that darknesse hath blinded his eyes Therefore it is said of the sonnes of Eli 1. Sam 2. 12. That they knew not God 4. It makes men strong to resist and stand against temptations Prou. 24. 5. A wise man is strong yea a man of knowledge increaseth his strength The properties of sauing and sanctified knowledge are two 1. It is cleare and certaine not confused and doubtfull 1. Cor. 2. 15. He that is spirituall iudgeth all things yet he himselfe is iudged of no man he is soe certaine that no contrary iudgement or censure of any man can make him to alter his iudgement So 1. Ioh. 2. 27. Ye need not that any man teach you but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things 2. There is no satiety in it but the more a man hath of it the more he doth desire it As a new borne babe saith the Apostle 1. Pet. 2. 3 he desireth the sincere milke of the word that he may grow thereby A wise man saith Salomon Pro. 1. 5. wil heare and wil increase learning Apollo Acts. 18. 24. 26. though he were already mighty in the scriptures and able to teach diligently the things of the Lord yet was glad to haue the way of the Lord taught and expounded vnto him more perfectly by Aquila Priscilla And how earnest is Dauid himselfe a man indued with more then an ordinary measure of knowledge as appeares by that which he saith of himselfe Psal. 119. 69 100. yet how earnest I say is he oft with God that he would giue him more knowledge Psal 119. 18. 26. 27. Euery thing by nature doth desire to increase in that good wherewith it is already indued yea the more it hath of it the more it doth desire because it feeleth so much the more the sweetnes of it as so we see that none are so desirous of riches as the richest of knowledge as the best learned And so is it in sauing and sanctified knowledge also he that hath it indeed cannot choose but desire to increase it THE SIXT LECTVRE ON MARCH VII MDCVIII IOH. IIII. XI XII The woman saith vnto him Sir thou hast nothing to draw with and the Well is deepe from whence then hast thou that liuing water Art thou greater then our father Iacob which gaue vs the Well and dranke thereof himselfe and his children and his cattell WE haue heard in the former Verse how our Sauiour did take occasion vpon this Womans refusall to giue him a little water to drinke both to make himselfe knowne vnto her and to speake and make offer vnto her of a better water that he had to bestow vpon her In these words is set downe a reply that the woman maketh vnto this speech of his for she not vnderstanding his meaning but thinking that he had spoken of materiall water reasoneth against him after this manner The water thou speakest of is either the water of this Well or some other better then this but I cannot see how thou shouldest giue me any of the water of this Well because thou hast nothing to draw with and the Well is deepe And as for any other water that is better then this I cannot see how thou shouldest come by it for Iacob our father gaue vs this Well and this was the best water he could giue for it was the same that himselfe and his children and his cattell did
especially that want yeares or such other means of learning should do any great good that they cannot belieue See this in Christs country-men Mat. 13. 55. 57. They were offended at him and could not honour him as they ought because they knew the meannesse of his parentage and education This doctrine serueth first generally to exhort euery one of vs to take notice of this vile corruption in our selues and to striue against it Take heed brethren saith the Apostle Heb. 3. 12. least there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeliefe Consider with thy selfe 1. Thou canst haue no comfort in God vnlesse thou haue faith Heb. 11. 6. Without faith it is impossible to please him 2. Though it may seeme an easie thing to belieue while thou art in peace and in abundance of all good means of comfort as Papists say this is too easie a way to be the right way to heauen thou wilt find it hard in the time of extremity when that euill day shall come which the Apostle speaks of Eph. 6. 13. Of all things that God hath commanded vs this most needeth the mighty hand of God and the exceeding greatnesse of his power to make vs able to performe it and so speakes the Apostle of it Eph. 1. 19. 3. Thou hast no true faith vnlesse thou canst belieue whatsoeuer God hath said or if thou do distrust the Lord when the meanes do faile Be not therefore too well perswaded of the strength of thy faith but pray and vse all other meanes to get it increased in thee and to haue the infidelity of thy heart subdued more and more The remedy and means for the subduing of it is the consideration of these three points 1. That which the Scripture hath reuealed touching the omnipotency of God Gen. 18. 14. Shall any thing be hard to the Lord ler. 32. 27. I am the Lord God of all flesh is there any thing too hard for me The Lord can do more then he will doe he can of stones raise vp children vnto Abraham Mat. 3. 9. Christ could by prayer haue obtained of his Father more then twelue legions of Angels to rescue him from his enemies Mat. 26. 53. God could haue kept Christ from drinking the cup of his wrath for vs Mar. 14. 36. Yet may no man build on Gods power nor can haue true comfort in it or say God can do this or that if it please him vnlesse he haue his reuealed will to build vpon as well as his omnipotency The Papists in their doctrine of the reall presence and many carnall Protestants in their contempt of the ordinary means are grossely mistaken in this point Therefore the faithfull professing the comfort they tooke in the faith of Gods power vse to ioyne his power and his truth or faithfulnesse together as Psal. 89. 8. O Lord God of hosts who is a strong God like vnto thee or to thy faithfulnesse round about thee And where we haue his word and promise for any thing we may build vpon it and be fully assured that he will performe it be it neuer so vnlike because he is able to do it Thus is the strong faith of Abraham commended by the Apostle Rom. 4. 21. He was fully perswaded that what God had promised he was able also to performe And thus doth Dauid magnifie and set forth the omnipotency of God Psal. 115. 3. Our God is in the heauens he hath done whatsoeuer he pleased See this proued by sundry plaine experiments for of this truth we may say as Psal. 119. 140. Thy word is proued most pure by good experience therefore thy seruant loueth it And these experiments are to be obserued in three points 1. He hath done mighty things by very weak means By three hundred he ouerthrew the huge host of the Midianites and Amalakites who were like Grashoppers in multitude and their Camels without number Iudg 6. 7. 12. 2. He hath done mighty things without any naturall and ordinary means he ouerthrew the mighty wals of Iericho and deliuered the City into his peoples hands onely by the blowing of trumpets of Rams hornes and the shouting of the people Iosh. 6. 20. which made Asa cry to him 2. Chro. 14. 11. It is nothing for thee to helpe with many or with no power 3. He hath done mighty things when all meanes haue seemed as it were to be armed against him and quite contrary to the nature of ordinary means that he might shew himselfe to be indeed the Lord of Hosts as in the case of Israels passing through the Red Sea Exo. 14. 21. 22. And in the preseruation both of the three noble Iewes in the fiery fornace Dan. 3. 27. and of Daniel in the Lions den Dan. 6. 22. 2. To consider how highly God is prouoked with this sinne Psal. 78. 21. 22. 22. 40. 41. They prouoked and grieued him how by tempting and limiting him when Elisha had said To morrow a measure of fine flower should be sold for a shekell because the Prince did but say Though the Lord would make windowes in heauen could this thing come to passe The Prophet in Gods name threatned he should see it for increase of his miserie but not taste of it and so it came to passe for he died a strange and base death 2. King 7. 19. 20. When Zachary a man iust before God and one of whose tongue God might haue had more vse then of many others did but make a doubt vpon this ground he was smitten dumbe for forty weekes Luke 1. 20. Moses and Aaron for doubting vpon this ground also of Gods promise see how seuerely they were punished for it Num. 20. 12. 3. The consideration of the nature of this sinne for as faith is the root of all other good things in vs It is that that purifieth the heart Act. 15. 9. It is that that setteth loue and euery grace on worke faith worketh by loue saith the Apostle Gal. 5. 6. It is that whereby in our whole conuersation we are enabled to liue a holy life The iust shall liue by his faith saith the Prophet Hab. 2. 4. And there is nothing wherein we so much giue glory to God as by our faith Rom. 4. 20. Num. 20. 12. So on the other side nothing so much corrupteth the heart of man as infidelity doth no sinne that we can commit doth the Lord so great dishonour as when we do thus limit him and cannot trust him further then we see him Ioh. 5. 10. He that belieueth not hath made him a lyer And what greater disgrace can you put vpon any man then to giue him the lie Infidelity as it was the first sinne whereby Satan deceiued and poisoned mankind he called Gods truth in question and sought to bring them into a doubt of it Gen. 3. 4. so is it the root of all other our sinnes whereby we depart from God Heb. 3. 12. Therefore doth our Sauiour mention it as the only sinne that the
his fatherly affection and loue in Christ more fully and cleerely to vs then hee had done to his Church vnder the Law Gal. 4. 3. 4 5. We when we were children were in bondage vnder the elements of the world But when the fulnesse of the time was come God sent forth his Sonne made of a woman made vnder the Law To redeeme them that were vnder the Law that wee might receiue the adoption of sonnes From hence then we haue this Doctrine to learne That No man can worship God aright till he know God to be his Father the better a man is perswaded and assured of Gods fatherly loue to him in Christ the better seruice he shall doe vnto him Therefore our Sauiour teaching vs to pray bids vs say Our Father Matth. 6. 9. As if he should say presume not to aske any petition of God till thou canst so conceiue and be perswaded of him And the Apostle tells vs it is the spirit of adoption that makes vs able to pray and makes this the voice of the spirit of prayer it cryes Abba O Father Rom. 8. 15. Yea he makes it an impossible thing for any man to pray aright without this assurance Rom. 10. 14 How shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued The reason of it is first because till we know God is our Father and Ioueth vs in Christ we cannot be assured that he will accept vs. When we know he is our Father in Christ it makes vs goe to him with boldnesse and confidence in Christ we haue boldnesse and accesse with confidence through faith in him Eph. 3. 12. I will arise and go to my father saith the Prodigall Luke 15. 18. and will say vnto him father I haue sinned against heauen and before thee Though he had sinned so outragiously yet the consideration of this that it was his father he was to go vnto gaue him boldnesse It giues vs assurance that not withstanding our infirmities he will accept vs I will spare him and deale gently and indulgently with him saith the Lord Mal. 3. 17. as a man spareth his son that serueth him When the Prodigall was yet a great way off his father saw him and had compassion and ran and fell on his necke and kissed him Luke 15. 20. And nothing graceth our prayers more with God then this confidence and boldnes Let vs come boldly to the throne of grace that we may obtaine mercy and finde grace to helpe in time of need saith the Apostle Heb. 4. 16. But without this faith and perswasion that God is our Father we can haue no assurance that any thing we doe in his seruice pleaseth him without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. And the best thing we doe in his seruice without this assurance that we please him in so doing is sinne Rom. 14. 23. Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Secondly because till a man be per●…waded of Gods loue and fatherly affection towards him in Christ he can neuer serue him of loue nor with a good heart but vpon some by-respects vpon a seruile feare or hope of merit Heb. 10. 22. We can neuer draw neere to God with a true heart till we haue assurance of faith and our hearts sprinkled from an euill conscience No man can truely loue God till he be perswaded by the spirit of Gods loue to him Wee loue God because he loued vs first 1. Iohn 4. 19. true loue comes from a pure heart and a good conscience and faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1. 5. And whatsoeuer seruice we doe to God vnlesse it proceed out of a good heart and from loue to God it cannot please him though a man should giue his body to be burned in Martyrdome yet if that proceed not from his loue to God it would profit him nothing 1. Corinthians 13. 3. For what man would accept of any seruice from him that hee knowes loues him not The Vse of the Doctrine is to exhort vs to get good assurance to our hearts that God is our Father that he beares a fatherly affection to vs aboue all sinnes striue against infidelity Examine your selues whither yee bee in the faith prooue your selues 2. Cor. 13. 5. Many want this assurance and seeke it not many seeme to haue it and haue it not I will giue you foure notes to trie it by 1. God is a Father to no man but in and through Christ Iohn 1. 12. So many as receiued him to them gaue hee power to become the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue in his name Galathians 4. 5. Hee hath redeemed vs that were vnder the Law that wee might receiue the adoption of sonnes so that vnlesse a man ground his assurance and confidence that God is his Father onely vpon Christ if hee ground it vpon this that God hath made him and preserued him c. his assurance is in vaine 2. He that is perswaded indeed that God is his Father will ●…adly and boldly resort to him in prayer Because yee are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father Gal. 4. 6. They that seldome pray or pray with no willingnesse and cheerefulnesse or pray with no confidence doubtlesse are not perswaded that God is their father 3. He that is perswaded that God is his Father will not murmure against nor be put out of heart by any of Gods corrections but be perswaded of his loue euen in affliction according to that of the Apostle Heb. 12. 7. 9. If yee endure chastening God dealeth with you as with sonnes for what sonne is hee whom the father chasteneth not And Rom. 15. 3. Being iustified by faith wee glory euen in tribulation They that in the time of their peace and prosperity onely are confident in Gods loue but haue no heart no comfort in affliction are not indeed perswaded that God is their Father 4. He that is indeed perswaded that the Lord beareth the affection of a Father vnto him will beare the affection of a childe vnto God will loue him and be carefull to please him fearefull to offend him Mal. 1. 6. If I bee your Father where is mine honour Heb. 10. 22. No drawing neere to God in assurance of faith till wee be sprinkled in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies also They that haue no care to please God nor feare to offend him doubtlesse are not perswaded that God is their Father Now come we to the principall Doctrine which our Sauiour teacheth vs in this place namely That the onely true worship of God the onely worship that pleaseth God now especially vnder the Gospell is that which is spirituall the worship that is proper to the Gospell the true Christian worship is spirituall For so saith our Sauiour here The houre commeth and now it is that the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth and againe They that worship
long I haue to liue Behold thou hast made my daies as an hands breadth and mine age is nothing in respect of thee surely euery man in his best estate is altogether vanity And to this end it is profitable to obserue and thinke vpon the afflictions of others Eccles. 7. 4. It is better to goe into the house of mourning than into the house of feasting because this is the end of all men and the liuing shall lay it to heart Obiect And if any shall obiect that this were the way to bring vnnecessary heauinesse vpon our owne hearts when affliction commeth we shall haue griefe enough it were folly to hasten it by thinking and musing of death or sicknesse or losse of our dearest friends aforehand Matth. 6. 34. Care not for the morrow for the day hath enough with his own griefe Answ. I answer that it is folly indeed to care for to morrow with distrustfull taking thought for the things of this life but to thinke afore-hand of the euill day and to prouide for it is not folly but wisedome The heauinesse that these thoughts bring vpon the heart is a wholesome and profitable heauinesse Eccles. 5. 7. By the sadnesse of the countenance the heart is made better And what hope is there that they that put farre from them the euill day Amos 6. 3. and cannot endure to heare or thinke of it should be able with patience and comfort to beare it when it shall come vpon them The second Rule is to make our peace with God and our accounts straight betweene him and vs before the euill day come for then we shall be vnfit to doe it Eccles. 12. 1. Remember now thy Creator in the daies of thy youth before the euill daies come and th●… yeares approach wherein then shalt say I haue no pleasure in them If a man saith our Sauiour Luke 14. 32. haue an enem●…e comming against him with greater power than he is able to resist while he is yet a great way off he will send an ambassage and desire conditions of peace Sith we must looke for a time wherein the winds will blow and flouds beate vpon our house it shall be our wisedome before hand to ground it vpon the Rocke Let vs therefore now treasure vp to our selues good grounds of comfort against the euill day for then we shall not be able for to doe it that will be a time of spending the stocke we haue gotten not of increasing it Pro. 0. 14. Wise men lay vp knowledge Giue thy selfe much to prayer now for in extremity of affliction thou wilt not be so well able to doe it of that time it is that the Apostle speaketh we know not what we should pray for as wee ought Rom. 8. 26. The third Rule is to take heed of esteeming too highly or ouerlouing any of the comforts of this life That that Dauid saith of riches may be said of all other outward comforts Psal. 62. 10 Trust not in oppression become not vaine through robbery if riches increase set not thine heart vpon them This is an extreame vanity for first thou must part with them secondly the nearer thou hast set them to thine heart the lesse comfort and the more bitternesse shalt thou finde in parting with them It is the Apostles counsaile 1. Cor. 7. 29. Let them that haue wiues be as though they had none and they that reioyce as though they reioyced not and they that buy as though they possessed not and they that vse the world as though they vsed it not and he giueth two reasons first the fashion of this world goeth away secondly the time that remaineth is short Let vs rather set our whole heart vpon those comforts that are durable The Word of God and the comforts that it yeeldeth are durable comforts 1. Pet. 1. 24 25. Luke 0. 42. Mary hath chosen the good part that shall not be taken away from her Oh count it miserable folly for thee to haue no other felicity but in this life in eating and drinking in playing in sporting c. Lecture the eightie foure March 12. 1610. IOHN IIII. XLVI XLVII WE haue heard the last day that these verses containe in them the occasion that was ministred vnto Christ to worke this first miracle and that therein three things are to be obserued First that the great man had a great crosse Secondly what his crosse was Thirdly the benefit and profit hee receiued by his crosse The first of these three points we finished the last day it followeth now that we proceede to the two last And let vs now obserue what this crosse was His sonne was sicke yea euen ready to dye whether he had any more than this or no it is not expressed But of this it is said that he was a young one for verse 46. he calleth him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Goe downe before my little boy die And see how this father was affected with this crosse First though he was a great man he commeth himselfe to fetch Christ Secondly and that so soone as he was come into Galile Thirdly he humbly besought him that he would goe downe to him Fourthly see how it troubled him when Christ seemed to make some delay verse 49. he maketh no direct answer to Christ nor seemeth to regard what he saith all his minde was of his sonne Sir goe downe before my little boy dye Fiftly see how thankefull hee was to God for restoring his childe verse 53. In all these points obserue the abundance of tender affection in this great man towards his childe and from hence learne this Doctrine That great is the affection and loue that parents doe beare toward their children Losse of children went nearer the hearts of the Egyptians than any other plagues did Exod. 11. 6. This is so naturall and as I may say so inseparable a property of all parents that when Salomon would finde out the true Mother 1. Reg. 3. 25. he sought to finde her by this note and so indeed he did for the true Mother though she were an Harlot yet chose rather to part with her childe to her aduersary than to see him diuided verse 26. Her compassion saith the Text was kindled toward her sonne and shee said O my Lord giue her the liuing childe and slay him not but the other said Let it be neither mine nor thine but diuide it See this also in Hagar Gen. 21. 16. she could not endure to see her childe dye But though this be naturall yet it is no part of the corruption of our nature but a remainder of that image of God according to which we were first created The holiest of Gods seruants haue beene most full of this naturall affection Three onely examples I will giue you for this though I might giue you many more The first is of Abraham who though he saw nothing in Ismael that might deserue it though he were the sonne of the bond-woman yet see his affection
3. It is a maine hinderance to grace in the vse of the word and prayer as we haue heard in the Doctrine Pro. 15. 13. By the sorrow of the heart the spirit is broken 4. It giues great aduantage to Sathan It is an old saying that Melancholia est vehiculum Daemonum And experience proues that we are neuer so weake so apt to receiue the temptations of Sathan so vnable to resist them as when we are oppressed with melancholy and sadnesse of heart And this is that that is said Neh. 8. 10. The ioy of the Lord is our strength In this respect Paul chargeth the Corinthians to comfort the incestuous person and take heed lest he were not swallowed vp with ouermuch heauinesse lest Sathan saith he circumuent vs. For we are not ignorant of his enterprises 2. Cor. 2. 11. Lecture the ninetie fourth Iuly 23. 1611. IOHN IIII. XLIX L. THe last day we began to speake of the answer that this Ruler returned vnto Christ when he had beene rebuked of him and charged with infidelity which answer is set downe in this verse I haue now read vnto you And in it we obserued that he neither denies nor acknowledgeth the fault Christ charged him and his Nation with Secondly he neither shewes himselfe troubled with it by confessing his infidelity and seeking pardon nor doth he excuse or lessen it any way Thirdly though he esteemed highly of Christ and counted him a Prophet yet seemes he not at all to regard or be moued one whit with this sharpe reproofe he had receiued from him Fourthly no other cause can be imagined of his senslesnesse and stupidity but onely this That his griefe and care for his sonne was so very extreme that it tooke vp all his thoughts and affections it did so oppresse him that he could minde nothing else nothing else could affect him And from hence we receiued this Doctrine That extremity of worldly griefe will make the minde and heart of man vncapable of heauenly things It makes a man vnfit to receiue benefit by the Word and it makes a man also vnapt to pray with comfort For the Word though the heart of man be neuer so apt to profit by it neuer so teachable as it is in the time of affliction and heauinesse if it be moderate yet when it is in extremity it so oppresseth the heart that neither the threats of the Law though they be pressed vpon it by a sonne of thunder nor the sweet promises of the Gospell though they be applyed by such an one as Barnabas a sonne of consolation will be able to moue it or doe it good And as for prayer though we are neuer so fit for it as in time of affliction and heauinesse if it be moderate and secondly the spirit of prayer is such a grace and of that immortall nature as no affliction be it neuer so extreme is able vtterly to quench it or to depriue a man of it that did euer truely enioy it yet if affliction and sorrow be extreme it will make the best of Gods children vnfit to pray with that comfort they were wont And the reason of this I shewed you is the great weakenesse and impotency of mans nature Then came we to make our Vse of the Doctrine And the first Vse was to perswade euery Christian to learne the right way how to preuent and keepe his owne heart from immoderate sorrow specially for worldly things But because most men are apt to stumble at this exhortation and this age is so secure and so set vpon iollity and carnall mirth that it may seeme more needfull for vs to vse all our skill to humble men and bring them to remorse of conscience than to teach them to striue against sorrow I did therefore propound vnto my selfe this order in handling of this first Vse of the Doctrine First to shew you how far forth sorrow is fit and necessary for Christians Secondly that yet they must take heede of excessiue sorrow Thirdly how and by what meanes a man may best preserue and confirme his heart against it And of these three points I finished the two first the last day but the time would permit me to goe no further It now remaines that we proceed to the third and last and so come to the second Vse of the Doctrine All men esteeme it a miserable thing to haue a heart oppressed with griefe and seeke to shun it by all meanes And on the other side all men esteeme it an happy thing to haue a chearefull and merry heart but most men are miserably deceiued in the meanes whereby the heart may be preserued from excessiue sorrow and brought vnto true ioy But we must know that true peace is the peace of God as the Apostle cals it Phil. 4. 7. and true ioy is the gift of God And euery Christian should be able to call the Lord the God of his ioy and gladnesse as Dauid doth Psal. 43. 4. and make no reckoning of that peace and ioy whereof God is not the author So that if we would attaine to true peace and ioy indeed we must seeke it by such meanes as God hath directed vs to vse and not by any other Now I finde foure things especially which God hath in his Word directed vs to vse as remedies and preseruatiues against excessiue griefe and meanes to bring vs to true ioy The first is to get a true iustifying faith and good assurance of our saluation This is a sure way to keepe the heart from excessiue griefe and make it chearefull no ioy comparable to this Lord lift vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs thou hast put gladnesse in my heart more then in the time that their corne and their wine increased Psal. 4. 6 7. The ioy that growes from this ground is vnspeakeable and glorious 1. Pet. 1. 8. This is able to make a man reioyce when he hath neuer so many meanes to make him heauie being iustified by faith we glory in tribulations Rom. 5. 1. 3. this made Paul and Silas sing so merily euen in the stockes at midnight Acts 16. 25. For true faith giues a man many grounds and reasons of sound comfort First it assures him of the pardon of his sinne and when he knowes that no affliction neede trouble him Matth. 9. 2. Sonne be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiuen thee for sin is the very sting of death and of all affliction 1. Cor. 15. 56. Secondly he knowes he shall neuer lose the fauour of God after he hath once obtained it how many signes of Gods anger soeuer may be vpon him Rom. 8. 38 39. I am perswaded that neither life nor death nor principalities nor powers c. shall bee able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ our Lord. Thirdly he knowes God will haue tender respect to his weakenesse in whatsoeuer affliction he shall lay vpon him that it shall not exceede his strength God will by the
as were qualified according to his direction 1 Tim. 3. 5. And surely if we knew our Masters disposition well we would all be as forward and desirous to thrust our selues into his seruice as they were for one houre that we haue been wont to spend in his seruice we would willingly spend three Yea the more time our calling would permit vs to spend in his seruice the happier would we count our selues according to that Psal. 84. 4. Blessed are they that dwell in thy house they will be alwaies praising thee Consider therefore and thinke oft for thy encouragement of the gracious disposition of thy Lord and Master and that in these foure points First he standeth not so much vpon our actions as vpon our affections though we be able to do very little yet if he discerne in vs an vnfained desire to do well he is ready to accept vs Is there be first a willing mind it is accepted 2 Cor. 8. 12. He accepteth the will as the deed Because Abraham was willing and ready to haue offered vp his son in sacrifice to God the Holy Ghost saith of him that he did offer him vp Heb. 11. 17. And for this cause Paul saith of Aquila and Priscilla that for his life they laid down their own necks Rom. 16. 4. Secondly he much more esteemeth of this vnfained desire of our heart to do better than if we could do any thing neuer so well when he seeth vs willing and sorry that we can do no better The Apostle praiseth the Macedonians for this that their will exceeded their ability 2 Cor. 8. 3. So doth he the Corinthians that they had begun before not onely to doe but also to be willing and forward a yeare agoe 2 Cor. 8. 10. Thirdly if he see our heart set and resolued to do his will in any duty he hath enioyned vs he will be ready to helpe vs and make that easie to vs which was full of difficulty and impossibility before Draw nigh to God and he will draw nigh to you Iam. 4. 8. Arise and be doing and the Lord shall be with thee 1 Chron. 22. 16. Deale couragiously and the Lord shall be with the good 2 Chro. 19. 11. Fourthly with how much the more labour and difficulty he findeth we haue serued him in any duty and by how many the more tentations and lets we haue striuen against in doing of it by so much the more acceptable shall our seruice be vnto him God is not vnrighteous to forget your worke and labour of loue Heb. 6. 10. And who would not be glad to serue such a Master The third and last encouragement that this Doctrine yeeldeth to the godly is this that it may cause them to sing at their worke and to take much comfort euen in the poorest seruice they are able to do vnto God A wonderfull thing it is to see how little ioy men take in good duties and the true cause of it is this that they are apt to doubt when they do any good duty they do it not well nor in that manner as they ought and if they espie any infi mitie and corruption of the flesh that mixeth it selfe with th●…●…orke of the spirit in any good action they haue done though they haue striuen against it and grieued sor it they are straight apt to thinke that God will iudge of their worke according to that corruption and reiect it True it is and cannot be denied but that the godly may finde cause enough in themselues to be humbled euen for their best actions when they haue performed them and to cry with Nehemiah Remember O my God concerning this and spare me according to the greatnesse of thy mercy Neh. 13. 22. and they haue also cause of feare before they vndertake them nay it is not possible we should do any good duty well vnlesse we do it in feare None of vs can preach well vnlesse we vndertake this businesse with feare least we should not do it well and approue our selues to God in it Paul professeth of himselfe that he was in the exercise of his Ministry among the Corinthians with them in weakenesse and in feare and in much trembling 1 Cor. 2. 3. None of you can heare well vnlesse you come with feare and reuerence vnlesse ye be humbled at the Lords feet to receiue his word Deut. 33. 3. Paul praiseth the Corinthians for this and saith Titus ioyed much to see it in them that they receiued the doctrine and Ministry of Titus with feare and trembling 2 Cor. 7. 15. In a word we cannot pray or do any other religious duty well vnlesse we vndertake it in feare lest we should not performe it as we ought Serue the Lord with feare Psal. 2. 11. Let vs haue grace whereby we may serue God acceptably with reuerence and godly feare Heb. 12. 28. Nay we cannot conscionably and well performe any duty in our Christian conuersation vnlesse we do it in feare Seruants must obey their masters with feare and trembling Ephes. 6. 5. Yet as there must be in vs this feare rising from the apprehension of the Lords holinesse and our owne great insufficiency to do any good dutie so must there be in vs ioy and gladnesse of heart rising from the consideration of the Lords goodnesse and readinesse to take in good part the poore seruice we do vnto him There must be in vs in euery seruice we doe vnto God these two contrary affections feare in respect of our owne vnworthinesse and insufficiencie ioy and gladnesse of heart in respect of the gracious disposition of the Master whom we do seruice vnto This is that the Prophet meaneth Psal. 2. 11. Serue the Lord with feare and reioyce with trembling We should come with chearefull and glad hearts to his seruice Serue the Lord with gladnesse come before his presence with singing enter into his gates with thanksgiuing and into his courts with praise be thankefull vnto him and blesse his name For the Lord is good his mercy is euerlasting and his truth endureth vnto all generations Psal. 100. 2 4 5. and so should we depart from it And three Reasons there be may moue vs to do so 1 He will not straightly marke but passe by and pardon many infirmities in our seruice we do to him with vpright hearts Who is a God like vnto thee that pardoneth iniquity and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage he retaineth not his anger for euer because he delighteth in mercy Mic. 7. 18. If thou Lord shouldest marke iniquities O Lord who shall stand But there is forgiuenesse with thee that thou mayest be feared I wait for the Lord my soule doth wait and I trust in his word Let Israel hope in the Lord for with the Lord there is mercy and with him is plenteous redemption Psal. 130. 3 4 5 7. 2 He doth not exact of vs that we vtterly banish all corruption so as it may not dwell in vs
and women grew more and more Marke the reason Verse 11 12. By his fearfull iudgements on Ananias and Saphira and sundry other strange miracles wrought by the Apostles God had prepared the hearts of men notably to the receiuing of the Gospell Acts 12. 24. The Word of God grew and multiplied Mark the reason Ver. 23. By a strange iudgement on proud Herod God had prepared mens hearts Act. 19. 10. The Word of God grew mightily and preuailed See the reason Ver. 11. 17. By the wonderfull miracles Paul wrought and the strange iudgements that befell the sonnes of Sceua for counterfeiting of them a maruellous feare came vpon them all in those parts and thus were they prepared to receiue the Word For the second we haue Iob 33. 23. If there be then an Interpreter As if he should say Then there will be great hope of doing good And for the third we haue Act. 2. 41. The same day there were added to them about three thousand soules Marke the reason Ver. 37. They were pricked in their heart with that which Peter had said And this is Gods vsuall course he sends Iohn Baptist before Christ to preach the Law Why Mar. 1. 2 3. To prepare the hearts of men to receiue Christ. And as the Word seldome preuailes at first to the conuersion of men till the heart be prepared to receiue it so it is certaine that it seldome preuailes to confirme and increase grace vnlesse men come to it with prepared hearts As in prayer it makes much to a mans comfort to prepare himselfe to it so is it also in this duty When the people of God were to receiue the Law God commanded they should prepare themselues to receiue it Exod. 19. 10. Goe to the People and sanctifie them to day and to morrow and let them wash their clothes and be ready on the third day Yea when Samuel offered a sacrifice vnto the Lord at Bethlehem 1 Sam. 16. 5. He sanctified lesse and his sonnes before he called them to it And it is noted as the best thing that was in Iehoshaphat 2 Chron. 19. 3. That he prepared his heart to seeke God The reason of the doctrine is That our hearts are ordinarily profane and vnfit to deale with holy things naturally they are so and by dealing with worldly things they are made so more and more Act. 10. 14. Common and vncleane are made all one Mar. 7. 2 Common hands are vncleane hands and certainly of our thoughts and affections it may more truly be said take them as they are commonly and they are vncleane and profane We must striue to haue other than our ordinary and common thoughts and affections when we are to deale with God or els we shall go about to sow good seed among thornes Ier. 4. 8. Yea worse than so for it is not onely the losse of the seed but the losse of our selues also There must be a proportion kept betweene the vessell and the wine or els both will be lost Luke 5. 37 38. New wine must be put into new vessels so both are preserued Men vse to wash the cups that are to receiue their drinke and the dishes that are to receiue their meat but they haue more need to cleanse and sanctifie their hearts that are to receiue the Word For first the heart is fowler than any cup or vessell can be The heart of man is desperately wicked Ier. 17. 9. Secondly put a cleane thing into an vncleane vessell and it will receiue pollution by it If one that is vncleane touch any of these shall it be vncleane and the Priest answered and said it shall be vncleane Hag. 2. 13. Thirdly the honesty and vprightnesse of the heart giues the price and worth to euery good duty we performe and accordingly God doth esteeme of it Our hearts are like Instruments euer out of tune we must either euery time that we go to serue God take some paines to set them in tune or we shall neuer make good musicke in the eares of God That made Dauid say Psal. 57. 7 8. Mine heart is prepared O Lord mine heart is prepared I will sing and giue praise awake my tongue awake violl and harpe I will awake early The first vse of this Doctrine is to exhort vs not to despise or neglect the Lords preparations When God hath by any meanes fitted after a speciall manner and prepared thy heart vnto his seruice take the time neglect not the opportunity for then shalt thou be able to serue God with more fruit and comfort than at another time strike while the Iron is hot Iames 5. 13. Is any afflicted let him pray Is any merrie let him sing So when God by his corrections hath softned and humbled thy heart then giue thy selfe to reading and meditation of the Word thou shalt profit more by it then a great deale than at another time Psal. 119. 92. Except thy Law had beene my delight I should haue perished in mine affliction He found doubtlesse more sweetnesse in it then than at another time The second vse of the Doctrine is to shew to vs the true cause why we profit so little by the Word and find so small comfort in it surely we seldome or neuer come rightly prepared to it We find great comfort and profit in our prayers when the heart is prepared before this is therefore spoken of a condition required in all those prayers that God will giue gracious answer vnto If thou prepare thine heart and stretch out thine hands towards him Iob 11. 13. Thou wilt prepare their heart thou wilt cause thine eare to heare Psal. 10. 17. So is it with the Word men vse to come to it with common hearts nay oft with worse than common hearts If we had care of this we should find more power and sweetnesse in one Sermon than we are wont to do in an hundred And because we must not serue God onely at such times as he by affliction or such like means hath prepared vs after a speciall manner but as we must pray euery day Pray without ceasing 1 Thes. 5. 17. so must we exercise our selues in Gods word euery day euen of the King it is said He shall read therein all the dayes of his life Deut. 17. 19. and if we come not rightly prepared to it we shall receiue little good by it nay we shall be in danger to receiue much hurt by it As we cannot do the work of our Ministry well vnlesse we sanctifie our selues Sanctifie your selues and prepare your brethren said good Iosia to the Priests 2 Chro. 35. 6. so neither can you do the duty of hearers well vnlesse you sanctifie your selues before you come I will therefore shew you how a mans heart should come prepared to the hearing of the Word that desires to receiue comfort by it what affection and disposition of heart we should bring with vs. We must not come in our sins vnto Gods house but labour to
one belieueth what he teacheth not by an humane Credulity from his Author but by a diuine faith from the Word and because he belieueth he therefore speaketh and speaking from faith in his owne heart he speaketh much more powerfully vnto the begetting and strengthening of faith in the Hearer The priuate Christian in the diligent suruey of this Treatise shall obserue liuely decyphered the scornefull vanity of corrupt Nature the lothsomenesse and desperate danger of sin the wonderfull power of Gods Grace in the conuersion of a sinner the tryall of a mans own deceitfull heart the amiable life of Gods grace in the regenerate the comfortable benefit of afflictions sundry sweet consolations of a troubled spirit the vanity of Popery the necessity of a faithfull Ministry the beauty of Gods Ordinances holily administred and the resolution of sundry cases of conscience fitting these times and all deliuered with such euidence of Scripture-light and Christian experience that the hearts of the godly Readers will at once blesse God who hath giuen such gifts to men and blesse the Writer who hauing spent the strength of his yeares in a faithfull and fruitfull Ministry to the great comfort and succour of many Ministers and people far and neare round about him doth now at last adorne his hoarie head with this Crowne of glory to bring forth his workes to more publike Light now more at the last then at the first My hearts desire is that God would adde yet many daies more to the Authors life and support him still both in body and spirit to bring to light many other such monuments of his fruitfull labours not only that elaborate Commentary vpon the 51. Psalme but likewise such Sermons or Treatises or Letters touching cases of Conscience as haply haue lyenby him these many yeares Why should any Talent lye buried in a Napkin or candle lye hid vnder a bushell which being set on a candlesticke might giue light to all that are in the house Such Opuscula little Treatises as himselfe would hardly acknowledge vnder his owne Name might be of speciall vse and much esteeme with others Witnesse those questions and Answers wherein he hath comprized the doctrine of the Lords Supper which though without his Name they be annexed to a little Treatise of the like Argument set forth by a godly learned Diuine M. William Bradshaw yet haue they beene of singular good vse to many poore soules for their worthy preparation to that Ordinance And in very deed they do more fully furnish a Christian to that whole spirituall Duty then any other in any language that I know in so small a compasse yea and that one Letter of his to a Gentlewoman against the separation which without his consent a separatist printed and refuted hath so strongly and clearely conuinced the iniquity of that way that I could not but acknowledge in it both the wisedome of God and the weakenesse of the separatist His wisdome in bringing to light such a beame of the Light of his truth by the hand of an aduersary against the Authors mind and the weakenesse of the other to aduance the hand of his aduersary to giue himselfe and his cause such a deadly wound in open view as neither himselfe nor all his associates can be able to heale In which respect I conceiue it was that the industrious Doctor Willet in his Dedicatory Epistle to CHRISTS Colledge before his harmony vpon the first of Samuel stileth this our Author Schismaticorum quivulgò Brownistae Malleum the Hammer of Schismatiques whom they commonly call Brownists Now the God of all grace prosper the workes of his seruants to those good ends himselfe hath appointed and they haue aimedat the glory of his owne great Name in the edification and saluation of his people in Christ. So I take leaue and rest desirous to prouoke my selfe and thee to a thankfull and fruitfull vse of such mercies The vnworthiest of the least of Gods Mercies and Seruants I. C. A Table of some principall Points that are handled in these Lectures Abstinence See Fasting Admonition See Reproofe Adoption A. NO man can worship God aright till he haue the Spirit of Adoption and can conceiue of God as of his louing Father pag. 182 Foure notes to try whether we do indeed know God to be our Father pag 183. Adoration Worship See Reuerence The whole worship of God is called Adoration pag. 111. Admiring of men It is folly and sin to admire any man much pag 40. Affection He that hath an vpright heart serues God with affection pag. 480. No seruice pleaseth God that is not done with feeling and affection pag. 198 199. Naturall Affection See Parents Affl●…ction In it owne nature it is a curse neither is it a signe of Gods loue to all pag. 394. The greatest may not hope to be exempted from it pag. 388. All men should prepare for it and how 389 It is greatly profitable and necessary for Gods Elect pag. 394. It is no signe of Gods wrath but of his loue rather pag. 398. We may be sure God will doe vs good by it and remoue it when it hath wrought kindly on vs and support vs in it and giue a comfortable end vnto it pag 399. It is a signe of election to profit by it and the contrary of reprobation pag 401. In euery affection we should take notice that God is angry with vs pag. 402. Sixe degrees of Gods proceeding in sanctifying aff●…ctions to vs which may be so many notes to try whether our aff●…ctions be san-ctified pag. 40●… 40●… Extremity of it will make vs vnfit both to profit by the Word and to pray pag. 433 Alacrity See Cheerefulnesse Antiquity How far forth it is to bee regarded in the matter of Religion pag 141. It is dangerous to ascribe too much to it 144 Our Religion is most antient 145. The popish plea touching the antiquity of theirs is most vaine and insufficient ibid. Apostacie See Perseuerance How farre forth the good things that haue beene in a man may be lost ●…0 51. A dangerous thing to fall from grace or to decay in it 54. Two chiefe causes of it ibid. Comfort for the faithfull that liue in times of generall Apostacie 430 431. Apostles Christ hath taught his Church the whole will of his Father by them 207. Apparell See Attire Appearance of euill is to be auoided 86. Application Ministers must apply the Word and hearers must endure it 373 374. Assemblies See Church-Assemblies Assurance of saluation See Certainty of saluation Attention All should attend diligently at the hearing of the Word 125. 134. 135. Meanes to keepe our hearts attentiue from wandring in prayer c. 198. Attire Modesty in attire required of Christians 87. Authority The wicked are apt to abuse the authori●…y and credit of holy men to the disgrace of Gods truth 35 273. This honour is due to Christ alone to be belieued in matter of Doctrine vpon his bare Word 149. Nothing is to be
as Rom. 16. 18. They that are such serue not our Lord Iesus Christ but their owne belly And thus much for the first point 2. The second point wherein I told you the truth of this Doctrine may appeare is this That there is no truth which the naturall man receiues but he turnes and applies to his carnall aduantage he reades and heares onely in hope to find contentment to his flesh The most holy and wholsome parts of Gods truth he vnderstandeth carnally and applies to the feeding of his owne humour and contentment of his flesh This is the onely vse tha●… they make of all that they heare and read that they may sinne with more contentment and quiet of mind Euen as the spider that gathereth poyson of euery flower Unto them that are defiled and vnbelieuing is nothing pure but their minds and consciences are defiled Tit. 1. 15. Whensoeuer they come to heare Gods Word they bring with them an Idoll in their heart some corruption or other and whatsoeuer they read or heare they turne to the seruice of their owne Idoll Ezek. 14. 1 3. These men haue set vp their Idoll in their hearts and put the stumbling block of their iniquity before their face Yea it is certaine that many wicked men receiue not that confirmation that quiet and contentment to their heart in their sinne by any thing in the world as they do by the blessed and holy Word of God Such there were in the Apostles dayes Rom. 3. 8. who did affirme that the Apostles said Let vs do euill that good may come of it They wrest the Scriptures saith the Apostle 2. Pet. 3. 16. to their owne destruction They turne the grace of our God into lasciuiousnesse saith another Apostle Iude 4. Thus most men peruert these most comfortable Doctrines that are taught in sundry places in the holy Scripture as that in Mat. 24 24 that it is not possible for the elect to be deceiued or to perish And that in Rom. 4. 5. To him that worketh not but belieueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse And that Rom. 6. 14. Ye are not vnder the Law but vnder grace And that 1. Ioh. 2. 1 2. If any man sinne we haue an aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world And that sentence wherewith we begin our Lyturgie which though not in the same words yet in sense and effect is deliuered by the Prophet Ezek. 18. 21 22. At what time soeuer a sinner doth repent him of his sinnes from the bottom of his heart I will put all his wickednesse out of my remembrance saith the Lord. And this is also the cause why they will heare and conferre with and moue questions to the best Preachers of the Word because they are in hope to get some what from them that they may make to serue for their purpose and if they can it will quiet and comfort them more then the speeches or iudgements of an hundred other men It is true indeed they loue the corruptest teachers best the good fellow Priest Mic. 2. 11. If a man walking in the spirit and falshood do lie saying I will prophecie vnto thee of wine and of strong drinke he shall euen be the Prophet of this people But yet they will not onely heare such but the best also in hope to heare from them somewhat that may serue their turne These are like Balaam that when God had giuen him his answer Num. 22. 12. yet out of this hope he waited still for another answer verse 19 20. So Ahab 1. King 22. 16. had wont oft to send for Michaia and to charge him to speake nothing but the truth why so It would haue comforted him more to haue gotten somewhat from Michaia for his turne then from all the foure hundred Prophets besides Thus you see then this second point confirmed which I obserued to you concerning the affection that a naturall man beares vnto the Word Now as this is a fearefull sinne so two things are to be obserued concerning the dangerous estate of these men 1. That in all the places where the Scripture speakes of them there the Holy Ghost sets a black marke vpon them and speakes of them as of Reprobates the Apostle Paul speaking of such as peruerted the Word and Doctrine that he taught whose damnation is past saith he Rom. 3. 8. And Peter speaking of them that wrested the Scriptures saith 2. Pet. 3. 16. that they did it to their owne destruction And Iude saith of them that turned the grace of God the doctrine of Saluation by Gods free grace onely into lasciuiousnesse that they were of old ordained vnto this condemnation Iude 4. 2. That the Lord hath threatned to feed these men in their humour so as such men do neuer lightly read or heare but somwhat they find that may serue their turne To Ahab that was vnwilling to be faithfully taught and acquainted with the will of God but willing to be flattered and deceiued God sent a lying spirit with efficacy of terrour Thou shalt perswade him saith the Lord 1. King 22. 22. And preuaile also go forth and do so And of euery one that hauing set vp his Idoll in his heart came vnto the Prophet the Lord saith Ezek. 14. 4. That he himselfe would answer that man according to the multitude of his idols 3. The third point The naturall man will be ready to forsake and renounce any truth that he hath seeme●… to haue beene best grounded in and to haue receiued with greatest comfort when once it becomes an occasion of losse or trouble to him in the world while peace and prosperity lasts he may seeme to like the Gospell and euery truth of it as well as any man but if he cannot professe it without interrupting his peace he is ready to renounce it See the proofe of this in the hearer of the Word that is resembled to the stony ground Mat. 13. 20. 21. He heareth the word and anon with ioy receiueth it but when tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word by and by he is offended And in that rich man that had seemed for a time full of zeale and deuotion towards Christ Mar. 10. 17. 22. Of these the Apostle saith that because they are enemies to the Crosse of Christ and mind earthly things therefore their belly is their God and their end damnation Philip. 3. 18 19. 1. To teach vs how to iudge of others that make profession of Religion and shew loue to the Word Praise God when thou seest any how lewd soeuer they haue beene to do so and hope the best and fret not nor like worse of our assemblies and Religion for this as the Pharisees did of Christ because the Publicans resorted to him Luke 15. 2. But yet build not too much vpon this as if that
baptized and added to the Church Act. 2. 41. euen such as had before mocked and scorned the Apostles ver 13. Surely it was this plaine and effectuall discouery of their sin God hath made saith he to them ver 36. that same Iesus whom ye haue crucified both Lord and Christ. Now when they heard this saith the holy story ver 37. they were pricked in their heart What was that in the Ministry of the Prophets that wrought such a change in the man that was before ignorant and an Infidell of whom we read 1. Corinth 14. 23. Surely it was this plaine and effectuall discouery of his sinne vnto him he was conuinced of all saith the Apostle ver 24 25. he was iudged of all All the Preachers that he heard as if they had conspired together did discouer to him his sinne and damnable estate and euen conuinced his conscience of it And then were the secrets of his heart made manifest and so falling downe on his face he worshipped God and reported that God was in them of a truth The man that knoweth sin aright and the burthen and danger of it will be desirous to know what he may do to please God he will be obedient and tractable ready to do any thing that God shall require of him and till then men will heare what they list and do what they list See this in the fruit of Iohn Baptists Ministry when he in the spirit and power of Eliah had sharply reproued his hearers and denounced Gods vengeance against them and so humbled them deeply with sense of sinne and feare of Gods wrath then euen the Publicans and soldiers also as we read Luke 3. 12 14. came to him and said Master what shall we doe And in Saul Act. 9 6. When he trembled and was astonished by this means then he was ready to say Lord What wilt thou haue me to doe If any man shall obiect and say what need Preachers trouble themselues with this seeing there is no man so simple but he knowes himself to be a sinner yea his owne conscience will tell him that it will tell him that these and these things that himselfe hath done are sinnes as well as the Preacher can tell him I answer yes sometimes it will doe so indeed But yet this is the ordinary meanes to bring a man to an effectuall knowledge of his sinne This Woman was not so simple but she knew that she liued in adultery and that that was a sinne but she came not to remorse and repentance till Christ had told her So also was Dauid brought to a sauing knowledge of his sinne euen by Nathans plaine and effectuall reprouing of him 2. Sam. 12. 12 13. True it is the conscience of euery man will when God shall awaken it tell a man of his sinnes plainely and roundly seuerely and sharpely as we may see Rom. 2. 15 16. But it lyeth a sleepe for a time and will either say nothing or flatter a man and is therefore compared to a Band-dogge that lyeth at the doore Gen. 4. 7. The Ministry of the Word is the effectuall and mighty or dinance of God to awaken the conscience Rom. 3. 20. By the Law comes the knowledge of sinne The vse of this Doctrine is first for the Minister 1. To exhort him not to neglect this part of his Ministry by the consideration 1. Of the great charge that is laid vpon him and the danger he is in if he neglect it Thinke seriously of these two places If thou do st not speake to warne the wicked from his way saith the Lord Ezek. 33. 8. that wicked man shall die in his iniquity but his bloud will I require at thine hand And Ier. 1. 17. Speake vnto them all that I command thee be not dismaid at their faces least I confound thee before them 2. Of the small cause he hath to despaire of good successe in it if he performe it with a good heart How forcible are right words Iob 6. 25. See an example of this in 2. King 5. 13 14. what successe the admonition and reproofe euen of a seruant had through the blessing of God with a great Lord that was but a heathen man 3. Of the recompence and supply God will make of any friends he shall lose thereby There is no man that hath left willingly lost house or brethren or sisters or father saith our Sauiour Mar. 10. 29 30. or mother or wife or children or lands for my sake and the Gospels but he shall receiue a hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren c. and in the world to come eternall life 4. Of the reuerence and estimation that is gained by it vsually euen in the hearts of such as at first most distasted it Pro. 28. 23. He that rebuketh a man afterwards shall find more fauour then he that flattereth with the tongue 2. To exhort him that sith he must be a reproouer of sin in his people he vse all means and carry himselfe towards them so as his reproofes may preuaile with them And those are chiefly two 1. He must so carry himselfe towards them in his whole course that it may appeare he loueth them vnfainedly See the force of this in the Apostles speech Rom. 15. 14. I am perswaded of you my brethren that ye also are full of goodnesse that is of kindnesse and readinesse to do good to them you liue with filled with all knowledge able to admonish one another Teaching vs that no man is so fit to admonish another as he that is both full of knowledge and able thereby to conuince him and also full of goodnesse and one of whom the party may be perswaded that he beares a kind and louing affection toward him 2. He must so liue as by his vnblameable and holy conuersation he may gaine authority in their hearts See how this will preuaile It is said of Herod Mar. 6. 20. that he feared Iohn the Baptist and obserued him and when he heard him he did many things and heard him gladly And the reason that moued him so to do is said to be this because he knew him to be a iust and an holy man And for this cause the Apostle giues that charge vnto Timothy 1. Tim. 4. 12. Let no man despise thy youth but be thou an example of the belieuers in word in conuersation in charity in spirit in faith in purity as if he should say if thou be such a one they will neuer despise thee no not when thou shalt command and teach when thou shalt teach and reproue them with boldnesse and authority though thou be so young a man The second vse of the Doctrine is for all Gods people 1. To admit and accept of this part of Gods ordinance euen of the word of reproofe as well as of instruction or comfort receiue with meeknes the ingrafted word which is able to saue your soules Iam. 1. 21. that is euery part of Gods Word
which will quite change your nature and disposition when you haue once rightly receiued it Count it not pride in the Minister to reproue the sin of any that liues vnder his charge For 1. He hath authority to do it he is set ouer them in the Lord 1. Thes. 5. 12. and therefore hath authority to admonish them He speaks to them in Gods name and by commission from him And who may think himself too good to receiue a reproof from the Lord Heare ye and giue eare saith the Prophet Ier. 13. 15. Be not proud for the Lord hath spoken The faithfull Minister vnto his hearers in Christs stead 2. Cor. 5. 20. 2. The faithfull Minister takes no pride in it but performs it vnwillingly see how Gods holy Prophets haue bewailed their own condition by reason of this task that God hath laid vpon them Wo is me my mother saith Ieremy Ier. 15. 10. that thou hast borne me a man of strife and a man of contention to the whole earth 2. Desire to be acquainted with thy sins and pray as Dauid Psal. 141. 5. Let the righteous smite me it shall be a kindnesse let him reproue me it shall be an excellent oyle that shall not break my head And as Iob Iob 13. 23. Make me to know my transgressions and sinnes Lecture the foureteenth May 30. 1609. IT followeth that we proceed to the second of those foure points we obserued in these words The sinne he discouers to her was a secret sinne vnknowne to all men For though it were well enough knowne to her selfe both that she liued in fornication and that fornication was a sinne yet may it well appeare that she had the reputation of an honest woman among her neighbours and consequently that her sinne was vnknowne to them For 1. Vpon her motion they came forth vnto him as vnto the Messiah vers 30. 2. Yea many of them belieued in him for the report that this woman gaue of him vers 39. and from hence we learne That the Lord is priuy to all the sins of men and able to lay them open and charge them with them how secretly soeuer they haue been committed Who knowes not this may you say vnto me Or what needs any proofe of a thing that is so plaine and euident Surely there is no man will seeme to make doubt of this and yet it appeares euidently by the liues of men that there be very few that belieue it indeed But there is this secret Atheisme lurking in the hearts of all more or lesse that they either fancy to themselues such a god as the Epicure did that sits idle in the heauens and knowes not or regards not what is done here below or at least are not fully perswaded of this or neuer think seriously of it that God seeth heareth them The Prophets make this secret Atheisme the root of all other sins that men commit neither were they Heathen and Infidels whom they thus charged but such as liued in the Church of God Psal. 10. 11. He hath said in his heart God hath forgotten he hideth his face he will neuer see it Ezek. 9. 9. The land is full of bloud and the City full of peruersnesse for they say the Lord hath forsaken the earth and the Lord seeth not We haue all of vs therefore need to be confirmed in this truth by the Word of God whereby faith onely is wrought in the hearts of men Obserue therefore the proofe of this Doctrine in sixe points 1. There is neuer a one of vs but the Lord knowes vs perfectly what we are and what we haue beene There is not any creature saith the Apostle Heb. 4. 13. that is not manifest in his sight but all things are naked and opened to the eyes of him with whom we haue to do There is nothing that euer any of vs did but the Lord is priuy to it Psal. 119. 168. For all my wayes are before thee 2. We neuer vttered any word but the Lord is priuy to it 2. King 6. 12. The Prophet could tell what the King of Aram spake in his priuy chamber Ps. ●…39 4. There is not a word in my tongue but loe thou knowest it wholly O Lord. 3. We neuer had euill thought in our heart but the Lord is priuy to it Iob 42. 4. I know saith Iob thou canst do all things and that there is no thought hid from thee 4. Yea such of our actions and words and thoughts as haue been most secret most closely and cunningly caried those are not hid from him but those chiefly he hath an eye vnto The Lord is therefore called oft by Christ Our Father which seeth in secret Mat. 6. 4. 6. 18. Psal. 90. 8. Thou hast set our iniquities before thee and our secret sinnes in the light of thy countenance saith Moses When Elihu had said Iob 34. 21. His eyes are vpon the wayes of man and he seeth all his goings he adds vers 22. there is no darknesse nor shadow of death that the workers of iniquity may be hid therein 5. He doth not carelesly cast his eyes vpon that we doe but obserues and markes diligently the things we doe yea he ponders and considers whence it proceeds and whereunto it tends Psalme 11 4. The Lords Throne is in heauen his eyes will consider his eye-lids will try the children of men Prouerb 5. 21. The wayes of man are before the eyes of the Lord and he pondereth all his paths Therefore Prouerbs 24. 12. the Lord is called He that pondereth the hearts The Prophet could tell Gehezi not onely what he had gotten of Naaman but also to what vse he meant to imploy it 2. Kings 5. 26. Went not mine heart with thee when the man turned againe from his Chariot to meet thee Is this a time to take money and to receiue garments and oliues and vineyards and sheepe and oxen and men-seruants and maid-seruants Had Gehezi receiued oliues c No but Elisha in the Spirit set his heart vpon that Gehezi did and considered his intent was to raise and make himselfe great by that money he got so 6. He so obserues vs and all our wayes as he can neuer forget them Therefore he is said to write them in a booke Esa. 65. 6. Behold it is written before me and I will render and recompence it into their bosome And as men do their chiefe euidences which they are most carefull to keepe he is said to lay vp these records in store with him and to keepe them sealed vp amongst his treasures Deut. 32. 34. The reason why this must needs be so the Lord must needs be priuy to all the sinnes euen the most secret sinnes of men are two 1. Because he is present euery where This reason is giuen Ier. 23. 24. When he had said in the beginning of the Verse Can any one hide himselfe in the secret places that I shall not see him he adds do not I fill heauen and earth
as the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 4. 5. in another case And euen in this life God doth strangely discouer many vncleane persons that haue liued long in secret Salomon brings in the fornicator complaining and bewailing his misery euen in this respect Pro. 5. 14. I was almost brought into the extreamity of misery in the midst of the congregation and assembly And obserue this in them that are the cunningest in this sinne that though no body peraduenture can conuince them euidently of the fact yet euery body through this iust iudgement of God condemnes them for it As the Lord seeth their secretest villanies so euen in this life oft times hee vseth to testifie against them Lecture the seuenteenth Iune 20. 1609. THe third errour of minde whereby Sathan deceiues men and drawes them to this sinne and hardens them in it is the hope of impunity For saith he admit thou doe slip and haue the ill fortune to be discouered what shalt thou be the worse for it 1. With men thou shalt not fare much the worse for this The ciuill Magistrate will not meddle with thee All the punishment is if thou bee a poore body but to stand a while in the Church and say thou art sorry for it and if thou be rich thou mayest auoid that too but what is that And secondly as for thy credit thou shalt not lose much vnlesse it be with a sort of Precisians whom euery man despiseth But for the most thou seest they will like neuer the worse of any for this not of a seruant nor of a neighbour Nay thou mayst see that men that make most open profession of this sin are esteemed and desired by many as the best companions and professors also will be as ready to shew any kindnesse to such as are noted for this as to any other And thirdly as for the Lord thou canst see no cause to thinke that he likes much the worse of a man for this If he did neither thy selfe nor many others that thou knowest could prosper as they doe This as both experience and the Scripture teach vs preuailes marueilously with most men Eccl. 8. 11. Because sentence against an euill worke is not executed speedily therefore the heart of the children of men is fully set in them to doe euill See also the force that is in this to harden men in all kind of sin Mal. 3. 15. We call the proud happy say the prophane of that age yea they that worke wickednesse are set vp yea they that tempt the Lord are euen deliuered Certainely if the law had as well prouided for and the sword of the Magistrate were as ready to be drawne out for the punishment of this sin as of theft we should haue as few whoremongers as theeues Or if in the want of the law in this case all such as are esteemed honest and free from this sin themselues would but hate it in others and discountenance it as they might doubtlesse they might restraine many from it But first the law hath not appointed any punishment for it that is any way proportionable to the hainousnesse of the sin And secondly the ciuill Magistrate almost euery where is vnwilling to vse that authority that the law hath giuen him for the punishment of this sin but counts it as a disparagement vnto him to meddle with it at all And thirdly the punishment of carting and whipping which was wont to be inflicted especially in Market townes is growne out of vse And fourthly some Magistrates and priuate persons doe make so light account of this sin that it is not to be wondred at that this sin is growne so common as it is For the conuincing of this error and preseruing men from it two things are to be considered First that though the Magistrate doe not yet it is his duty to punish this sinne as farre as law giues liberty and his great sinne that he doth not And though priuate Christians doe not yet it is their duty to shew detestation to this sinne Secondly though men faile in their duty yet is there no cause any should commit this sin vpon hope of impunity for though men doe not yet will God certainely punish this sin For first as for the Magistrate we know that by his calling he is Custos vtriusque tabulae and charged with the law of God to see it kept by those that are vnder his authority He is the Minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill Rom. 13. 4. The authority he hath and the preheminence God hath giuen him aboue other men is giuen him to that end And the Magistrate is bound by Gods law to punish this sinne as well as any other Iob 31. 11. This is a wickednesse and an iniquity to bee punished by the Iudges And both of the Magistrate and of euery priuate Christian this is required as he desireth that Gods mercy should be vpon him and his posterity that he abhorre this sinne and doe that that in him lieth to bring it vnto shame and punishment Amos 5. 15. Hate the euill and loue the good and establish iudgement in the gate it may be that the Lord God of hosts will be mercifull to the remnant of Iacob I know it is esteemed by many a signe of a good nature and disposition to be kind to all persons how lewd soeuer they be But marke what the Holy Ghost in the Scripture speakes of this kindnesse 1. He makes it a signe that a man hath no feare of God in him when he cannot abhorre sin Psal. 36. 1 4. 2. He saith that that man makes no conscience of sin himselfe that is ready to speake in fauour of a lewd man Pro. 28. 4. They that forsake the law praise the wicked and are apt to speake for them and to take their part but they that keepe the law set themselues against them 3. He makes it a greater signe of an vngracious heart for a man to fauour sin in others then to commit sin himselfe Rom. 1. 31. Which men though they know the law of God how that they that commit such things are worthy of death yet not onely doe the same but also fauour them that doe them And whereas on the other side it is counted pride and malice and cruelty for a man to seeke the disgrace or punishment of any lewd person the Holy Ghost saith there is no true loue in any but in such onely 1. There is no true loue to God in any that cannot vnfeinedly hate sinne whereby he is dishonoured Psal. 97. 10. Yee that loue the Lord hate the thing that is euill 2. There is no true loue to our selues to our families and the place wee liue in vnlesse we hate such sinnes as will bring Gods curse vpon vs. Till Achan was punished Gods curse was vpon the whole host of Israel Iosh. 7. 12. Neither will I bee with you any more except ye destroy the excommunicate from among you And
Nation so vnlikely to receiue the Gospell as they Rom. 11. 8. God hath giuen them the spirit of slumber c. vnto this day No people vnder heauen doe beare so bitter hatred to Christ and the Gospell as they doe daily in their Synagogues they blaspheme and curse Christ. 3. Neuer was there any Nation so vnlikely that God should shew this mercy vnto as the Iewes For what people euer did beare so euident markes of Gods wrath and indignation as they haue done What people was euer so like to be a people that God hath hated and accursed and reiected as they Which makes the Apostle to say 1. Thess 2. 16. Wrath is come vpon them to the vttermost These things considered we may wonder that the Lord should euer vouchsafe them that honour as to make them his stewards to put them in trust with the keeping of all his treasure and with the dispensing of it to his whole family but specially we may wonder that euer the Lord should now shew them that mercy againe to become his people No maruell though the Apostle calls this a mysterie Rom. 11. 25. Well hath the Lord reuealed to vs any reason of this why he should thus farre forth honour this nation yes surely 1. They haue thus reiected the Gospell not of meere malice but ignorantly out of a blinde zeale And now brethren I wo●…e that through ignorance ye did it as did also your fathers Acts 3. 17. In persecuting the faithfull they thought they did God seruice Iohn 16. 2. They had in them the zeale of God euen then Rom. 10. 2. 2. The purity and life of Religion which they shall discerne in the Gentiles shall be a meanes to draw them as the Idolatry and other sinnes of Christians hath beene the meanes to harden them thus long Saluation is come vnto the Gentiles for to prouoke them to iealousie that through your mercy they also may obtaine mercy Rom. 11. 11. 31. But thirdly the chiefe Reason is that ancient and vnchangeable loue which God did beare to their fathers Abraham Isaac and Iacob and the Couenant he had made with them With Abraham the Lord had made this euerlasting Couenant Gen. 17. 7. and 22. 18. In thy seede shall all the nations of the earth be blessed This Couenant made with their fathers is oft alledged for the reason why God shewed such mercy vnto this Nation I will remember my Couenant with Iacob and also my Couenant with Isaac and also my Couenant with Abraham will I remember and will remember the land Leuit. 26. 42. And Ezek. 16. 60. Neuerthelesse I will remember my Couenant with thee in the daies of thy youth and I will establish vnto thee an euer lasting Couenant And this is alledged by the Apostle for the onely reason why they were trusted with Gods Oracles Rom. 3. 3. What if some of them did not beleeue shall their vnbeliefe make the faith of God without effect And why notwithstanding the fearefull Apostacie wherein now they lye God will shew mercy to them againe and make them his people Rom. 11. 16. If the first fruits be holy so is the whole lumpe if the roote be holy so are the branches The Vse of this Doctrine is 1. To conuince the Religion of the Papists Who though they do apishly and superstitiously imitate the Iewes in those things which God hath forbidden them to imitate them in for all their pompeous seruice and ceremonies are vsed in imitation of the Iewes and it is euident that God hath long since abrogated that ceremoniall worship Ioh. 4. 21. 23. the houre commeth when ye shall neither in this mountaine nor yet at Ierusalem worship the Father But the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth yea he hath condemned the vse of it Behold I Paul say vnto you that if ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing Gal. 5. 2. yet do they deny that honour to the Church of the Iewes which our Sauiour here hath giuen vnto it For 1. They receiue sundry bookes for the Old Testament which the Church of the Iewes neuer acknowledged Whereas all the Scripture of the Old Testament is called their Law all the Oracles of the euer-liuing and iust God in the Old Testament were committed to them and they faithfully kept them to Christs time or else Christ or the Apostles would haue taxed them for this rather then for any other corruptions yea to this very day they do keepe them truely and faithfully insomuch as though their Rabines haue giuen very many false and blasphemous interpretations and glosses yet they cannot be charged in any of their writings to haue corrupted the Text by adding one word or letter vnto it or by taking or diminishing one word or letter from it 2. They hold Rome to be the mother Church vnto all the world to which all other Churches are to conforme themselues and from which they are to receiue direction whereas we haue heard that honour belongeth onely to the Church of Ierusalem 3. They haue very many things in their Religion which they hold for matters of saluation their whole Hierarchy and many Doctrines also that they teach which neuer came from the Church of the Iewes Whereas it is very euident and certaine that though they can pretend neuer so great antiquity for any thing they hold if they cannot proue it was taught and receiued in the Church of the Iewes it cannot be of God To teach vs how to stand affected to the people and Nation of the Iewes 1. We should obserue and wonder at the fearefull iudgement of God vpon that Nation not onely in that slauery bondage and contempt they haue liued in for these sixteene hundreth yeeres but specially in that strange obstinacy and hardnesse of heart that hath beene thus long vpon them For if God haue thus dealt with that people for their sinne and contempt of his Gospell which of all people in the world he loued best and had most obliged himselfe vnto how can we hope to escape if we sin as they haue done This vse the Apostle makes Rom. 11. 21. if God spared not the naturall branches take heed least he also spare not thee 2. We should obserue and wonder at the truth and mercy of God who for his promise sake hath so strangely preserued that Nation and people all this while insomuch as they remaine at this day an exceeding great people 3. We may not hate their name and Nation but loue them and pray for them and vse all meanes to further their conuersion Sundry forcible Reasons there be to mooue vs vnto this 1. The affection that Gods good and godly seruants yea Christ himselfe did beare vnto this people not withstanding their sin and obstinacy See Pauls affection to them his hearts desire and prayer to God for Israel was that they might be saued Rom. 10. 1. and 9. 2 3. he had great heauinesse and continuall sorrow in his
In a sensible and visible manner he guided his people through the wildernesse in a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night Exod. 13. 51. By a sensible and materiall fire that came downe from heauen he witnessed oft-times his approbation of the sacrifices that his seruants offered vnto him 1. Cor. 21. 26. In a sensible and visible manner his glory filled both the Tabernacle and the Temple 2. Chron. 7. 2. Now since the daies of Christ the Lord hath not beene wont to reueale himselfe to his Church in this corporall and sensible manner but as he is a spirit so in a spirituall manner only hath he reuealed himselfe to his Church It is therefore spoken of as a blessing peculiar to the dayes vnder the Gospel that vpon all sorts of his people he will powre his spirit in a far more plentifull manner then euer he had done before Ioel 2. 28 29. Hauing now finished the Doctrine that our Sauiour deliuereth in these two verses and both the Reasons that he bringeth for the confirmation of it it remaineth that we make our vse of it The first Vse of it is to condemne the religion of the Papists If we had no other reason against Popery this were sufficient to prooue it a false worship such as God alloweth not because it doth euery way match yea farre exceedeth the forme of worship that was vnder the Law euen in that point for which our Sauiour doth here condemne it The vestments their Priests vse in Gods seruice the Church-musicke and many other things are vsed in imitation of the Iewes But 1. In obseruation of daies and times in the number of their holy dayes 2. In the multitude of their significant ceremonies 3. In the pompe and worldly statelinesse of their Prelates and Clergie 4. In their superstitious ringing and set seruice and other ceremonies about buriall they doe farre exceed the Iewes If that forme of worship which God himselfe appointed vnder the Law must needs be abrogated as Christ hath here taught vs and no true worshipper might vse it any longer because it stood so much in externall and carnall rites in shadowes and significant ceremonies then certainely they that vse and delight in such a kind of worship that was but deuised by men must needs be deemed hypocrites and false worshippers of God See the iudgement that our Sauiour giueth of these kind of ceremonies and of them that are addicted to them The Iewes in his time had a ceremony that they would not eate meate before they had washed oft holding the tradition of the Elders Marke 7. 3. This might as lawfully haue beene vsed as any religious ceremony that was deuised by man for it was not vsed in Gods seruice and might haue seemed to be but a ciuill ceremony Yet our Sauiour discerning that it was inioyned by the Elders and was obserued by the Iewes as a significant ceremony a Doctrine to the conscience a meane to put it in mind of a spirituall duty Marke 7. 7. A thing wherein they put holinesse and which they accounted as a worthy seruice done vnto God he would not vse it himselfe Luke 11. 38. and taught his Disciples to refuse it and defendeth them for so doing Marke 7. 6. And this he did though he saw it would prouoke the Pharisees much and be likely to draw him and his Disciples to trouble Marke 7. 3. And three Reasons he giueth against them 1. He maketh it a certaine note of an hypocrite of a carnall man that hath no soundnesse of grace in him to be addicted to these ceremonies Marke 7. 6. In which respect also among others the ceremoniall Law is called a carnall commandement Heb. 7. 16. and the rudiments of the world Gal. 4. 3. 2. That it is a vaine worship Marke 7. 7. there is no profit nor sound edification that can come to the conscience by it The Apostle therefore calleth the ceremonies impotent and beggerly rudiments Gal. 4. 9. Obserue it well where they are vsed with most conscience and deuotion as in Popery they are they worke no knowledge or sanctification in men 3. That where they are vsed they will make the commandements of God of no authority Matth. 15. 6. They will destroy the power of true piety and godlinesse and euen eate out the heart of it And that was the cause why Sathan laboured not in any thing more busily in the Primitiue Church then to bring in againe the ceremoniall worship after God had abrogated it and the Apostle calleth them that were his instruments in this worke dogges that is enemies to all piety Phil. 3. 2. The second Vse of the Doctrine doth more neerely concerne our selues for it teacheth vs to take heed of hypocrisie in the seruice of God Striue to worship him in spirit and truth Luke 12. 1. Take heed to your selues saith our Sauiour of the leauen of the Pharisees which is hypocrisie The Lord doth exceedingly abhorre hypocrisie in his seruice The more seruice thou doest to God the more thou prouokest him if thou be an hypocrite Iob 36. 13. The hypocrites in heart heape vp wrath For the hypocrite is a false worshipper he maketh an Idol of God he thinketh he can deceiue God as he doth men Now there be three kinds and degrees of hypocrites that worship not God in spirit and truth and are therefore called here by Christ false worshippers of God 1. They that doe any seruice to God with their bodies onely without the vnderstanding and feeling and deuotion of the heart in euery seruice we doe to God he calleth still for the heart My son giue me thy heart saith he Pro. 23. 26. Paul had not pleased God in preaching if he had not in preaching serued God in his spirit Rom. 1. 9. Lydia had not pleased God in hearing the Word if her heart had not beene opened if she had not heard with feeling and affection of heart Act. 16. 14. No man can please God in praying vnto him vnlesse he pray with the feeling and affection of his spirit Psal. 86. 4. Reioyce the soule of thy seruant for vnto thee Lord do I life vp my soule nor in singing of Psalmes vnlesse he sing with grace in his heart vnto the Lord Ephes. 5. 19. Our prayers are compared vnto odours Reu. 5. 8. and vnto incense Psal. 141. 2. and the feruency of our affection is as the fire without which these odours and incense can neuer send vp any sweet sauour vnto God In which respect the Apostle biddeth vs be feruent in spirit as seruing the Lord Rom. 12. 11. as if no seruice could be acceptable vnto God without feruency of spirit Let euery one of vs therefore haue a principall care of that both in our prayers and in euery other part of the worship we doe vnto God Two good helpes are needfull to be vsed to this purpose 1. Watchfulnes Continue in prayer and watch in the same Col. 4. 2. for vnlesse we
haue an eye to and watch our hearts well they will be rouing And as this is needfull in all our prayers so especially in prescript and set formes of prayer which we haue oft accustomed our selues vnto 2. To set our selues as in Gods presence and bring our hearts to a reuerent feare of Gods Maiesty before whom we appeare Serue the Lord with feare Psal. 2. 11. in thy feare will I worship toward thine holy temple Psal. 5. 7. The second sort of hypocrites that do not worship God in spirit and truth are they that vse Gods worship or any part of it as a matter of ceremony and formality onely and neuer seeke in it the edification of the spirit and conscience 1. That Preacher is but an hypocrite that seeketh not so to preach as his preaching may haue power in the hearts of his hearers I will know not the speach of them that are puffed vp but the power For the kingdome of God is not in word but in power 1. Cor. 4. 19 20. And he maketh this a note of an able Minister of the Gospell when he is the Minister of the spirit 2. Cor. 3. 6. It is that we should seeke to see Gods seale vpon our Ministry in the hearts of our hearers The seale of mine Apostleship are yee in the Lord yea he saith this was his maine answer and defence to them that examined him and questioned his Ministry 1. Cor. 9. 2. 3. We had therefore need not onely to preach but to teach such Doctrine as is profitable and which particularly concerneth and is of vse to those we teach this was Pauls direction to Titus to teach and stand vpon those things in his Ministry that were good and profitable vnto men Tit. 3. 8. neither onely to teach but to vse application also Preach the Word reproue or conuince rebuke exhort 2. Tim. 4. 2. 2. Those Christians also are no better then hypocrites who so they haue a forme of Gods seruice neuer care whether it edifie their conscience or no. Such are they as rest content with a dumbe Ministry for what power feele they in it Such also are they as heare good Preachers and praise them but neuer examine what profit they receiue in their conscience by them When you praise a good Preacher whose Ministry you frequent with your tongue your life and vnreformed course doth disgrace him Those hearers only praise their teachers indeed that haue profited in reformation of heart and life by their Ministry in whose hearts the spirit of God hath written that of their Ministers commendation as may be read of all men 2. Cor. 3. 2. 3. The third sort of hypocrites that worship not God in spirit and truth are they that will be deuout in the exercises of Religion and zealous in profession Make a shew of godlinesse but deny the power of it 2. Tim. 3. 5. True Religion where it is receiued will command the heart and the whole man Let a man professe what he will if his heart and life be not reformed he is an hypocrite and whatsoeuer worship he doth to God is but a false worship We know that God heareth not sinners but if any man be a worshipper of God and doth his will him he heareth Iohn 9. 31. yea the very seruice he doth to God doth but increase Gods wrath against him either amend thy life or giue ouer seruing of God THE THREE AND FORTIETH LECTVRE ON FEBRVARY XXVII MDCIX IOH. IIII. XXV XXVI The Woman saith vnto him I know that Messiah commeth which is called Christ when hee is come hee will tell vs all things Iesus saith vnto her I that speake vnto thee am he THese words containe the conclusion of that conference that was betweene our Sauiour and the Woman of Samaria In the interpretation of the words for the helpe of your memory these fiue questions are distinctly to be opened and resolued Whom meaneth shee here by Messias seeing it is plaine shee vseth this word as the proper name of some person I answer it is euident by the words following that she meaneth the same person that is called Christ. For as our blessed Sauiour being promised to the Church from the beginning of the world was described and made knowne to them both by his natures specially his humane nature I will put enmity betweene thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head Gen. 3. 15. And Gen. 22. 18. In thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed and by those offices he should exercise and whereby he should procure the saluation of his people viz. 1. His Propheticall office I will raise them vp a Prophet from among their brethren like vnto thee Deut. 18. 18. His Priesthood He shall be a Priest vpon his throne Zach. 6. 13. His Kingly office Reioyce greatly O daughter of Zion shout O daughter of Ierusalem behold thy King commeth vnto thee Zach. 9. 9. and by the place where he should be borne But thou Bethlehem Ephratah though thou be little among the thousands of Iudah yet out of thee shall hee come forth vnto me that is to be ruler in Israel whose goings forth haue beene from old from euerlasting Mic. 5. 2. So had he three proper names in the Old Testament giuen him 1. One in respect of his two natures hypostatically vnited in one person Esay 7. 14. He shall call his name Immanuel 2. Another in respect of the obscure place of his education Zach. 6. 12. Behold the man whose name is the Branch 3. A third in respect of his office Dan. 9. 25. Messiah the Prince Now of all the names whereby our Sauiour was described in the Old Testament this name was the most famous among the Iewes When Herod gathered together all the chiefe Priests and the Scribes to resolue him in the question that the Wise men came to Ierusalem to mooue he asked them where Messias should be borne Matth. 2. 4. For though the Euangelist writing in Greeke vse the word Christ in that place yet it is certaine that he in his language vsed the word Messiah So Iohn 1. 41. We haue found the Messias saith Andrew to his brother Simon Now this Hebrew name Messiah and the Greeke name Christ doe in our language signifie the annointed one and we shall finde it was giuen to sundry others in the holy Scripture for the Kings of Gods people were called the Lords annointed 2. Sam. 19. 21. and so were the Priests Leu. 10. 7. and so were the Prophets Psal. 105. 15. Because euery one of these were by the ceremony of annointing as by a Sacramentall signe assured from the Lord that he would inwardly annoint them that is endue them with such graces of his holy spirit as whereby they might be enabled to discharge those offices that he called them vnto yet was this name of Messiah Christ the annointed of the Lord made a proper name onely vnto our blessed Sauiour 1. Because all those Kings
his owne worke according to that to euery one that hath shall be giuen and he shall haue abundance Mat. 25. 29. And that speech of the Apostle Phil. 1. 6. Being confident of this very thing that he which hath begun a good worke in you wil performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ. 3. The respect God hath to his owne glory which he knowes he shall receiue thereby according to that Psalme 50. 15. I will deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me This ser●…es 1. To answer them be they Papists or carnall Protestants that are wont to complaine so much of the difficultie and obscurity of the Scriptures they say it is not possible for a man by reading or learning the Word to grow vnto any certainety in Religion The Scriptures say they are very obscure and there is great difference euen amongst learned men about the interpretation and meaning of them Therefore say the Papists 1. It is the safest way to depend vpon the Church for the interpretation of the Scriptures 2. And to receiue only that in the matters of our Faith and Religion which the Church teacheth Therefore say they 3. It is not fit that common people should meddle with the Scriptures but it is meet they should content themselues to beleeue as the Church beleeueth Therefore also saith the carnall Protestant it is to no purpose to trouble our selues with the reading of the Scriptures or to busie our heads about matters of Religion it is sufficient to know God is mercifull and to beleeue Christ died for sinners and there 's an end Before we giue ●…ull answer to these men three things are to be granted 1. That the Scriptures and matters of faith and Religion set downe in them are indeed obscure and hidden from most men No man by his owne wit and learning shall euer be able to attaine to a sound and comfortable vnderstanding and a full perswasion in these things therefore Paul saith 1. Cor 2 7. We speake the wisedome of God in a mysterie euen the hidden wisedome verse 8. Which none of the Princes of the world hath knowne and verse 14. The naturall man receiueth not the things that are of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse to him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned Therefore is the true Religion of God called a hidden treasure Matth. 13. 44. Many things there be that hide this treasure from most men 1. The obscurity of the Scripture 2. The differences and dissentions that are amongst learned men about it 3. The scandalous life of such as professe it 4. The great disgrace that it is in with the world These and such like things are so many meanes whereby this treasure is hidden from most men 2. There be some things obscure in the Scripture to the best of Gods seruant For that which Peter said of Pauls Epistles 2. Pet. 3. 16. may much more be said of the whole volume The best learned of Gods seruants may well professe they vnderstand not all things you know who it was that said we know but in part 1. Cor. 13. 9. 3. The true Church and Ministry thereof is a necessary helpe ordained of God to bring his people to the true vnderstanding of his Word neither doth God ordinarily instruct his people but by this meanes for so said the Eunuch Acts 8. 31. How can I vnderstand except some man doe guide me But yet for answer vnto these men these three things we must know 1. The cause why the Scripture is so difficult and this treasure is hidden from most men is not in the Scripture it selfe but in the blind and corrupt heart of man To the carnall man it is darke he cannot vnderstand it no more then the blinde man can see the light of the Sunne when it shines most bright But to the man whose eyes God hath opened whose heart God hath prepared the Scriptures are very plaine All those points the knowledge whereof is necessary to saluation are plainely set downe in them so as the simplest man that commeth to the reading of them with an honest heart may clearely vnderstand them that that is more darkely set downe in one place is clearely set downe in another This is that that Dauid speakes Psal. 119. 130. The entrance into thy Word sheweth light and giueth vnderstanding vnto the simple And Prouerbs 8. 9. They are all plaine to him that vnderstandeth and straight to him that would finde knowledge 2. There is no man that with an humble and honest heart desires to know God but God will giue him a good teacher God hath that care of them whose hearts he hath thus prepared that he will prouide his ordinance for them This you may see in the example of the Eunuch Acts 8. 26. 29. and of Cornelius Acts 10. 20. and of the Macedonians Acts 16. 9 10. And this I dare confidently say that the people that want a good Teacher whatsoeuer their Patron be how bad soeuer the times be if they had good hearts and could vnfainedly desire to be instructed God would send them better meanes The Lord of the haruest is neither so carelesse nor so poore or meane a person that he should suffer any of his corne to be lost for want of labourers to inne it 3. There is no man that with an humble and honest heart desires to know God but God will in his hearing and reading clearely reueale himselfe make himselfe and his will clearely knowne vnto him so farre forth as it shall be necessary and good for him The Spirit that indited the Scripture will interpret them to such and resolue them in the true meaning of it Iohn 6. 45. It is written in the Prophets and they shall be all taught of God And Matth. 5. 8. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God Yea so certainely and cleerely will he reueale his will to such as that though the whole Church should if that were possible iudge otherwise it should not mooue him He that is spirituall iudgeth all things yet hee himselfe is iudged of no man 1. Cor. 2. 15. If the faithfull Martyrs euen simple men and women had not beene thus taught of God and thus clearely and certainely resolued in the truth could they haue suffered such things as they did with such constancie and cheerefulnesse This reason the Apostle giues for this constancie in suffering 2. Tim. 1. 12. For which cause I also suffer these things Neuerthelesse I am not ashamed for I know whom I haue beleeued and am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I haue committed vnto him against that day How chance you differ then so much among your selues Caluinists from Lutherans and Puritans from Protestants We deny not but Gods owne people may be ignorant in some parts of his truth God hath not promised to any the perfect knowledge of euery thing that is reuealed in his Word but in fundamentall
if he cannot hold it with Gods fauour That is a treasure for which a man will be content to sell all that euer he hath Matth. 13. 44. to loose all things and to count them but dung in comparison of it Phil. 3. 8. This made all Gods people in Israel to leaue their dwellings and possessions there and to come to Ierusalem where God was purely worshipped 2. Chron. 11. 16. This made Moses willing to forgoe all his honours and pleasures and hopes he had in Pharaoh●… Court and to ioyne himselfe vnto Gods afflicted and despised Church Heb. 11. 24. 25. 2. It moderateth the affection of a man to earthly things and teacheth him to vse them with more sobriety and indifferency so as he doth neither so greedily desire them nor is so discontented in the want of them nor so lifted vp in the abundance of them as others be it makes him able to say with the Apostle I haue learned in whatsoeuer state I am therewith to bee content I know both how to be abased and I know how to abound euery where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry both to abound and to suffer need Phil. 4. 11 12. He vseth them as the traueller doth his good lodging he findeth in his Inne for his necessity and the better enabling him to goe forward in his iourney homeward but setteth not his heart vpon them Psal. 62. 10. And thus he professeth that he is but a stranger and pilgrime vpon earth and seeketh for another country Heb. 11. 13 14. 3. It so taketh vp a mans heart specially in his first conuersion in his first loue as it maketh him very carelesse and forgetfull of all things else As Peter and Andrew Iames and Iohn straitway left their ships their net and their father and followed Christ Matth. 4. 20. 22. This made Christs hearers Mar. 8. 2. so carelesse of their meat for three daies together and Mary to neglect her hu●…wifry in the entertaining of Christ and leauing all to sit her downe at Christs feet to heare his words Luke 10. 39. The Reason of this Doctrine is this that they haue found another treasure and where the treasure is there will the heart be Matth. 6. 21. He that once counteth Religion his treasure cannot set his heart on the world the heart can no more be deuided betweene them then it is possible for a man at the same time to looke with one of his eyes towards heauen and with another vpon the ground These two things the loue of the world and the loue of God are of a masterfull disposition Into what heart soeuer they enter they will be commanders and rule alone which is the reason of that speech of our Sauiour Matth. 6. 24. No man serues two masters 1. To instruct vs what to iudge of such Christians as vse not onely on the Sabbath day but on the weeke dayes also to goe to Sermons and Exercises of Religion worldly men thinke of these men that they doe more then they need yea more then they ought to doe that this will bring them to beggery Yea many are afraid to be religious or to frequent the Ministry of some men for feare least they should be drawen to doe thus as they see many of their hearers are In handling this point I will shew 1. What is to be said for the warning and admonition of these men 2. What is to be said for the encouragement and defence of them 1. It is indeed a great sinne in any professour to neglect his calling vpon pretence of following Sermons and seruing God specially if he haue a charge and want other meanes to liue by and that many of the better sort of Christians are too much inclined to this sinne appeareth by Pauls beating on this point so much in his Epistles to the Thessalonians Study to be quiet and to doe your owne businesse and to worke with your owne hands as wee commanded you 1. Thess. 4. 11. We heare that there are some which walke among you disorderly working not at all but are busie-bodies Now them that are such we command and exhort by our Lord Iesus Christ that with quietnesse they worke and eate their owne bread 2. Thess. 3. 11 12. but this is a great sinne For 1. Euery Christian should desire to liue of himselfe that he may not be chargeable vnto others 1. Thess. 5. 11 12. When he had charged them to follow their owne businesse and to worke with their hands he giues this for a reason that nothing may be lacking to them 2. If a man haue a family and prouide not for it he is worse then an Infidell 1. Tim. 5. 8. Therefore Paul saith 1. Cor. 7. 33. The marryed careth and that lawfully for the things of the world 3. Say a man could prouide for himselfe and his family sufficiently yet he must also haue a care to follow his calling that he may haue to giue others that need Rather let him labour working with his hands the thing that is good that he may haue to giue to him that needeth Ephes. 4. 28. And this reason the Apostle giueth why himselfe did at Ephesus with the labour of his owne hands minister vnto his owne necessities and to them that were with him and why according to his example others in the like case of necessity and for the auoiding of scandall should doe the like euen the remembrance of the words of the Lord Iesus how he said it is a more blessed thing to giue then to receiue Act. 20. 24 35. 4. Say a man haue enough for all this yet must he haue care of his estate for this cause because if he decay in it he shall be a scandall to his profession and alienate others from the truth Pro. 14. 20. The poore is hated euen of his owne neighbour Therefore Paul maketh this one reason for this 1. Thess. 4. 11 12. Doe your businesse and worke with your owne hands that yee may walke honestly to them that are without 5. Say a mans estate were so plentifull that no decay could be discerned in it to the scandall of his profession yet is he bound to liue and take paines in some calling wherein he may be profitable to others else can he haue no true comfort in any of Gods blessings that he doth enioy for thus runneth the promise Psalme●…28 ●…28 2. When thou eatest the labours of thy hands thou shalt bee blessed and it shall bee well with thee 2. Thessalonians 3. 12. They onely eate their owne bread that labour in a calling 2. It is to be granted that there is not the like necessity of frequenting the publike exercises of Religion on any other day as there is on the Sabbath for that there is an expresse commandement on that euen the poorest is bound to keepe an holy rest vnto the Lord for the commandement bindeth all men and none is exempted from it Exod. 20.
haue neglected their worldly estates their profits or ease out of loue to his seruice No man shall desire thy land when thou shalt goe vp to appeare before the Lord thy God thrice in the yeare Exod. 34. 24. yet were their houses to be left very weake all that while that all the males aboue 20. yeares old were to continue at Ierusalem in those three feasts and they had many enemies in all their borders So we reade that our Sauiour did twice worke a miracle to feed them that came farre and tarryed long to heare him preach Matth. 14. 15. 21. and Mar. 8. 2 9. And no maruell for Heb. 6. 10. God is not vnrighteous to forget your worke and labour of God And what good Master would suffer his seruant to decay and grow to beggery by doing him seruice So that whosoeuer they bee that are thought by following Sermons to haue decayed their estates bee you assured that either their idlenesse and vnthriftinesse otherwayes hath decayed them or else they haue followed Sermons for some by-respects and not with vprightnesse of heart The second Vse is for reproofe 1. To discouer the vnsoundnesse of most mens hearts who make so great reckoning of earthly things and set their hearts vpon them It is euident they neuer yet found the true treasure they neuer truely tasted of heauenly comforts they affect these things so much for that they know no better This is made a note of the man that shall ascend into the hill of the Lord that he hath not lift vp his soule vnto vanity Psalme 24. 4. If any man loue the world the loue of the Father is not in him 1. Iohn 2. 15. Their end is destruction that minde earthly things Phil. 3. 19. 2. To reprooue such Christians as so ouercharge themselues with worldly businesse as they can finde no time for Gods seruice Lecture the two and fiftieth May 8. 1610. IOHN IIII. XXIX XXX THe first point wherein this Woman shewed her zealous endeauour to draw her neighbours vnto Christ we finished the last day and now we are to proceed vnto the two last viz. 1. The thing she mooued her neighbours vnto when she was come vnto them 2. The reason she vsed to persuade them to that she mooued them vnto For the first that we may vnderstand her words well and ground our Doctrine vpon them it is to be obserued 1. Though she was her selfe fully perswaded that Iesus was the Christ and did with all her heart desire that they might be also so perswaded of him yet she taketh not vpon her to teach and conuert them her selfe but seeketh onely to bring them to the same meanes whereby her selfe was conuerted 2. Though she were able by a good argument to conuince their consciences that he was the Messiah and seeketh also to doe it yet she thought not that enough she resteth not in that but would needs haue them to come to him themselues 3. She desires no more of them but that they would come and see him Why may one say what good would that doe could they know by seeing him that he was the Messiah Did she thinke that the beholding of him would suffice to bring them to faith No surely for many saw him that neuer could beleeue in him One would thinke she should rather haue said Come and heare him then come and see him for faith commeth by hearing and not by seeing Rom. 10. 17. If the hauing of Christs picture before our eyes that we may behold it when we pray had beene such a helpe to faith and deuotion as the Papists imagine out of doubt the Holy Ghost would haue so described his stature complexion and countenance in the History of the Gospell as that we might haue had some directions to make his picture by Why then desireth she no more of them but that they would come and see him I answer 1. She doubted not but if they would but come to him he would take occasion to instruct and conuert them as he had done to her selfe 2. When she biddeth them come and see shee meaneth come and prooue and make tryall whether he be not the Christ as the same phrase is vsed Psal. 34. 8. Taste ye and see how gracious the Lord is So that this is the Doctrine we are to learne from hence for our owne instruction That this is a chiefe duty whereby euery man must shew his zeale and desire of the saluation of others to draw them to the same meanes whereby themselues were conuerted to vse that credit and power they haue with them to draw them to the Ministry of the Word True it is this is not all that a priuate Christian may and must doe to procure the conuersion of others For 1. Some priuate Christians are able to teach their families and neighbours themselues and may doe great good that way and all should seeke to be able to doe this Aquila and Priscilla expounded the way of the Lord to Apollos Acts 18. 26. Euen women should be able to teach their children Pro. 1. 8. and 6. 20. and their seruants Pro. 31. 26. and their neighbours Tit. 2. 3. 2. There is great force in priuate admonition and exhortation to further the conuersion of others else our Sauiour would not haue prescribed this course for the restoring of a brother that is fallen that before we tell the Church we should deale with him priuately neither would he haue giuen hope of giuing our brother this way as he doth Mat. 18 15 16. Neither would this haue beene noted as a thing so highly pleasing vnto God and in these desperate and prophane times Gods people did vse this meanes to preserue themselues from the common contagion Mal. 3. 16. Then they that feared the Lord spake often one to another and the Lord hearkened and heard it and a booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought vpon his name 3. A priuate Christian may greatly further the conuersion of others by his holy example Christian women may and ought so to liue as their husbands that obey not the Word may without the Word be won by the conuersation of the wiues 1. Pet. 3. 1. The like may be said of children seruants and neighbours also 4. A priuate Christian may do much for the procuring of the saluation of others by his feruent prayer vnto God for them 1. Iohn 5. 16. If any man see his brother sinne a sinne that is not vnto death let him aske and hee shall giue him life for them that sinne not vnto death When the Holy Ghost had mentioned the feruent prayer that Steuen made for his persecutors Acts 7. 60. immediately he addeth Acts 8. 1. And Saul consented to his death As if he should say Saul was one of these he prayed for and on him that prayer did light whatsoeuer it did on the rest But though a man that hath any zeale and desire of the saluation
of others haue thus many meanes whereby he may procure it yet the chiefe meanes he can vse is to draw them to the Ministry of the Word to perswade them to heare See the proofe of this in the example of all such Christians as the Holy Ghost hath most commended for their zeale in seeking the saluation of others 1. For neighbours when the zeale that the faithfull should haue vnder the Gospell is prophecied of it is said they should shew it this way Esay 2. 3. Many people shall goe and say come and let vs goe vp to the mountaine of the Lord to the house of the God of Iacob and he will teach vs his wayes 2. For parents and Masters of families we haue the example of Elkanah the father of Samuel whose care of his children and seruants is commended in this that though he was well able to instruct them himselfe yet he was wont alwaies when he went vp to Shiloh the place of Gods publike worship himselfe to take all his family with him 1. Sam. 1. 21. 3. For kinsmen and speciall friends we haue the example of Cornelius whose zealous desire of the saluation of his kinsmen and speciall friends was declared in this that though he was one that might haue beene very likely to preuaile much with them both by his prayer example and knowledge yet he rested not there but when the Lord had bid him send for Peter and told him he should speake to him words whereby both himselfe and all his house should be saued he got them all together against Peter should come that they might be partakers of his Ministry with him Acts 10 24. The Reasons of this Doctrine are two 1. It is the best meanes to remoue that preiudice which alienateth the minds of most men from the loue of Religion if they could be got to heare It is a chiefe pollicie of the diuell whereby he keepeth most men from the loue of Religion to worke in them a hard conceit of the best Ministers either for some absurd opinions that they imagine them to hold or for some grosse crimes that they thinke they liue in This was the portion of all the Prophets they had all manner of euill spoken of them falsly Matth. 5. 11 12 Yea this is so vniuersall that our Sauiour maketh it a note of a false Prophet when a Minister hath no slanders raised on him Woe vnto you when all men shall speake well of you for so did their fathers to the false Prophets Luke 6. 26. Now there is no such way whereby this preiudice may be remooued out of the minds of men as if they could be drawne to heare When Philip had spoken much good of Christ Nathaniel could not belieue it Why Nathaniel had conceiued preiudice against Christ how doth Philip seeke to remoue this Come and see saith he Iohn 1. 46. The officers that were sent to apprehend our Sauiour had a very hard opinion of him but when they had once heard him they conceiued better of him and said Iohn 7. 47. Neuer man spake like this man 2. There is farre more power in the Ministry of the Word to preuaile with the heart of man then in any meanes a priuate man is able to vse say he haue as good knowledge and gifts as any Minister No man hath cause to hope that either the instruction he can giue or his good example or his prayers should be able to doe that good as the Ministry of the Word may For 1. It is the meanes God hath ordained to doe this mighty worke by It hath pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to saue such as doe belieue 1. Cor. 1. 21. and is called therefore 2. Cor. 3. 8. the Ministration of the Spirit 2. God hath made a speciall promise to this ordinance of his aboue all other meanes that he will be with it to assist and blesse it Matth. 28. 20. So as 1. A man hath no hope that any meanes he can vse should be able to conuert his childe seruant kinsman or neighbour till he can get him to be an hearer How shall they call vpon him in whom they haue not belieued How shall they belieue in him of whom they haue not heard Or how shall they heare without a preacher Romanes 10. 14. 2. He may be assured this meanes will at one time or other if he belong to Gods election preuaile with him Esay 55. 3. Incline your eares and come to mee heare and your soule shall liue and if this preuaile not nothing will Luke 16. 31. If they heare not Moses and the Prophets neither will they bee perswaded though one rose from the dead The Vse is 1. For all in generall to direct vs in our prayers for the Parliament at this time We must hold our selues bound in conscience to pray earnestly to God for the States of the Realme now assembled in Parliament Ester vndertaking a businesse that did much concerne the whole Church as they now assembled in Parliament doe craued this helpe of Mordecay and all Gods people that they would fast and pray to God for her Ester 4. 16. Pray that their principall care may be to take order 1. That an able and conscionable Ministry may be placed euery where 2. That all the people may be compelled to heare For the first It is said of Iehosaphat 2. Chron. 17. 6. That hee did lift vp his heart to the wayes of the Lord and Oh that our States now would doe so But how did he shew that verse 7. He set Princes throughout all the Cities of Iudah to teach that is to see the people taught verse 9. And see the fruit and effect o●… this verse 10. And the feare of the Lord fell vpon all the kingdomes of the Lands that were round about Iudah so that they made no warre against Iehosaphat This would free vs from feare of the traiterous Papists at home and abroad For a faithfull Ministry if it were placed euery where would be as the charriots and horsemen of Israel 2. Kings 13. 14. Euen the King himselfe acknowledged so much And yet see a second fruit of it 2. Chron. 17. verse 12. And Iehosaphat waxed great exceedingly and hee built in Iudah Castles and Cities of store This would make our State and Kingdome to prosper and flourish if the States would lift vp their hearts to this worke There would be no crying in our streets Psal. 144. 14. no danger of inuasion or such like euills The second thing we should pray for them is that they may take order that where there is such a Ministry planted the people may bee compelled to heare It is to no purpose to bind Papists to come to Church vnlesse order first be taken that they may be well taught when they come there But it is certaine that where there is a good Ministry established the Magistrate may and ought to compell all his subiects to come and heare notwithstanding all
condemnation If 〈◊〉 saith the Apostle 1. Pet. 4 11. let him speake as the oracles of God 〈◊〉 is vsually a slander Many will obiect against the Preacher thus I know he meant me yea he so●…spake as many in the Church knew hee meant me and what call you this but malice if he had loued me he would haue told me in priuate To these men I say 1. A Minister is not bound in reproouing sinne to beate the ayre but he may in his reproofes meane and intend to touch such as heare him yea it is his duty to bring his doctrine home as particularly as he can to the conscience of euery one that heares him like a good steward to giue vnto euery one his owne portion Luke 12. 42. 2. Admit he had spoken out of malice yet if he haue spoken nothing but vpon good warrant of Gods Word and thy heart be so disquieted by it surely thy case is fearefull Gods people haue euer beene wont to finde comfort in his Word euen in that part of it that hath most galled them by discouering to them their sinnes Let the righteous smite me saith Dauid Psal. 141. 5. it shall be a kindnesse and let him reprooue me it shall be as an excellent oyle And thy heart tells thee thou feelest no comfort in it but it vexeth thee so that were it not for such and such an alehouse where thou mayest finde company of thine owne minde that will take thy part in railing and scorning of the Preacher thou shouldst not know what to doe surely thy case is fearefull If thou hadst any grace in thy heart the Word of God would not be so bitter vnto thee Doe not my words saith the Lord Mic. 2. 7. doe good to him that walketh uprightly Doe they not doe him good at the heart do they not cheere and comfort him and because thou maist the better discerne of thine owne case in another mans person then in thine owne I will shew thee in a few examples what thy state is Cain was such a one as thou art for he because he could not be as well accepted as well thought on for his Religion as his brother was Gen. 4. 5. went away from Gods worship in a rage and hi●… countenance fell downe Ahab was such a one as thou art for he because Eliah and Micaiah dealt faithfully with him in their Ministry and effectually discouered to him his sins went neuer from their Ministry but with a discontented and vexed heart he counted them his enemies and hated them 1. King 21. ●…0 and 22. 8. The man that was possessed with a Legion of diuels was in thy case for he being in the Synagogue where Christ preached was tormented by his Ministry Luke 4. 33 34. Mar. 5. 79. Though Christ had not spoken to him in particular euer a word or once medled with him Finally the cursed Iewes that stoned blessed Stephen to death were in thy case for when they heard Stephen Acts 7. 54. They were cut to the heart and they gnashed vpon him with their teeth Lastly this serueth to discouer the sinne of such as are alwaies discontented with the length of the Sabbath and grudge that the Lord should haue one whole day in a weeke allowed vnto him That would haue the Sabbath day but foure houres long at the most euen no longer then the time is that is spent at Church vpon that day That say in their hearts as Amos 8. 5. When will the Sabbath be done that wee may set forth wheat making the Ephah small and the Shekell great and with them Mal. 1. 3. Behold what a wearines is it What a tedious thing is it to keepe a Sabbath for a whole day whereas God hath expresly commanded Exod 20. 10. That on the seuenth 〈◊〉 should doe no manner of worke but keepe it holy vnto him 〈◊〉 giuen sixe dayes to doe all that we haue to doe in and euen on the Sabbath on his owne seuenth part of the weeke allowed vs to doe workes of present necessity And what is the true cause why the Sabbath seemes to vs so long a day aboue any other Surely because we take no delight in it nor in the workes and duties of it we doe not call the Sabbath a delight as we ought to doe Esay 58. 1●… The second Vse that this which we haue heard of the second property of 〈◊〉 zeale serueth vnto is to exhort all Gods seruants to striue against that vncheerefulnesse that they are so much subiect vnto and to labour to serue God with ioy and gladnesse of heart Say vnto thy soule as Dauid did Psal 42. 11. Why art thou so heauy O my soule and why art thou so disquieted within me Know thou that euen when thou hast most cause to be humbled and deiected in thy selfe through any affliction either outward or inward yet euen then thou art bound to striue against thy vncheerefulnesse when thou goest to doe any seruice vnto God euen in thy trembling thou shouldest reioyce Psal. 2. 11. Consider with thy selfe how great reason thou hast to doe so 1. No seruice pleaseth God so well as that which his people doe performe cheerefully and with ioy Deut. 28. 47 48. Because thou seruedst not the Lord thy God with ioyfulnesse and with gladnesse of heart for the abundance of all things therefore thou shalt serue thine enemies which the Lord shall send against thee 2. The Lord is not so strict and seuere as to reiect the seruice that with a good heart we doe vnto him for the infirmities and failings that he doth discerne in it but delights in it notwithstanding Let me heare thy voice for sweet is thy voice Cant. 2. 14. And this is a iust cause of encouragement to all that feare God not onely to doe seruice vnto him but to doe it cheerefully and with gladnesse of heart As for me saith Dauid Psal. 5. 7. I will come into thy house in the multitude of thy mercy and 130. 3. 4. If thou Lord shouldst marke iniquities O Lord who should stand But there is forgiuenesse with thee that thou maist be feared 3. Thou hast cause to doubt the soundnesse of thy heart if thou canst finde no sweetnesse nor comfort in Gods Word and worship for of the godly and vpright-hearted it is oft noted that the Word of God was sweeter to them then the hony or the hony combe Psalme 9. 10. That they reioyced because with an vpright heart they had offered willingly vnto the Lord 1. Chron. 29. 9. The righteous shall be glad in the Lord and shall trust in him and all the vpright in heart shall glory Psal. 64. 10. Lecture the eight and fiftieth Iuly 17. 1610. IOHN IIII. XXXII XXXIV FOlloweth the third Property of true zeale to be obserued in this example of our blessed Sauiour He that hath true zeale reioyceth in the zeale and forwardnesse of others For this was as we heard one cause that made our Sauiour to forget both hunger
minded and dare say nothing for God hath enioyned them silence and forbidden them to meddle with thee therefore they can say nothing therefore they dare say nothing Thou art a priuiledged person I tell thee and I dare say thou gloriest much in it But thou wilt finde it a wofull priuiledge one day Cain had such a priuiledge and protection Gen. 4. 15. God forbad all men to kill him or to touch him because he would haue him to be spectacle of his wrath vnto men And thou hast a priuiledge too God hath forbidden all men to rebuke thee to speake of good things in thy presence that thou maist goe on and fill vp the measure of thy sinne to such as thou art the Lord himselfe speaketh in this manner Reioyce O young man in thy youth and let thy heart cheere thee in the daies of thy youth and walke in the waies of thine heart and in the sight of thine eyes Eccles. 11. 9. If thou hadst so much grace as to iudge rightly of this thy priuiledge thou wouldst take small pride in it but pray rather that thou maist so liue as no godly man may be vnwilling or affraid to reproue thee according as Dauid a great King did Let the righteous smite me said he it shall be a kindnesse and let him reprooue me it shall be an excellent oile Psal. 141. 5. But you must obserue that when our Sauiour Christ was thus silent he stood as a priuate person In his publike ministry he spake good things and taught the will of God neuerthelesse freely and boldly though the Pharisees and other wicked men were present when he taught And by his example we are taught that we should not be daunted nor discouraged in our ministry by the presence of any wicked man whatsoeuer he be but we should do our work faithfully and chearefully whatsoeuer our hearers be For first though any come to heare vs with neuer so bad a minde God can and doth oft catch him and change his minde as he did the officers whom the Pharisees had sent to apprehend Christ Iohn 7. 45 46. and that vnbeleeuer 1. Cor. 14. 25. Secondly and though he doe not so yet our labour shall not be lost vpon them no not vpon the carpers the scorners that heare vs for they shall one day know there hath beene a Prophet amongst them Ezek. 33. 33. yet though this be an infirmity in a Minister to doe his worke heauily amongst such as he seeth no hope to do good vpon yet it is such an infirmity as the best of Gods seruants haue beene subiect to they haue beene apt to receiue great discouragement in their ministry by a bad auditory When God had made knowne vnto Ezekiel what a bad auditory he should preach vnto Ezek. 2. 3 ●…5 They are impudent children and stiffe-hearted surely they will not heare thee neither will they cease for they are a rebellions house it is said Chap. 3. 14. He went to preach to them in much bitternesse and griefe of spirit but saith he the hand of the Lord was strong vpon me that is to say Else I had neuer gone It may seeme by that speech that Iohn Baptist vsed when he saw many of the Pharisees and Saduces come to heare him O generation of vipers who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come Matth. 3. 7. that he was neuer a whit proud of such hearers No more surely are any of vs now to see notorious drunkards or whoremongers or blasphemers or prophane fooles that scorne all goodnesse come to hear●…e vs. On the contrary side when we haue such a people to heare vs as shew by their constancy and chearefulnesse in hearing and by their conuersation also that they are such whose hearts God hath prepared to receiue and obey his truth it doth vs good to preach to such a people be they neuer so learned this giues heart and cheerefulnesse to vs in our ministry and euen set an edge vpon our gifts and makes vs do our worke with more freedome of spirit and with a larger heart than otherwise we should The zeale and feruency which people shew in hearing doth euen warme their Minister and make him more zealous The Apostles had excellent gifts you know and yet the goodnesse of their audience did euen mend their gifts Though they had receiued commission to preach to all Nations Matth. 28. 19. yet they were at first vnwilling to goe to the Gentiles How did God encourage them Surely by making knowne the forwardnesse and readinesse of the Gentiles to receiue the Gospell Before Paul preached to the Gentiles at Antioch they besought him to doe it the whole city came together to heare the Word of God and vpon their first hearing of the Word they shewed much gladnesse when they heard that God had allowed his Word to be preached to the Gentiles and commanded it also yea they glorifyed the Word of the Lord Acts 13. 42. 44. 48. This made Paul so zealous and forward to goe to Macedonia he saw in a vision a man of Macedonia that prayed him saying come ouer into Macedonia and helpe vs Acts 16. 9. That made him shew such a zealous desire to goe and preach to the Romanes because they were so good a people Rom. 〈◊〉 8. 10. Yea our blessed Sauiour himselfe receiued as it were some helpe and increase of gifts by the forwardnesse and zeale of his hearers seeing the multitudes that flocked so to heare him he went vp into a mountaine that they might the better heare him and be opened his mouth set and bent himself to speake so as they might heare and vnderstand him and taught them Mat. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What made him deny so much time to himselfe from preaching as might serue euen for his necessary repast both at this time and also Mar. 3. insomuch as his kinsfolke euen thought him mad for it Mar. 3. 21. Surely the zeale of the people and their great desire to heare the multitude commeth together againe so as they could not so much as eate bread Mar. 3. 20. And if the Apostles and Christ himselfe had euen neede or at least receiued good by this helpe how much more may we The Reasons of this Doctrine are two 1. The faithfull Minister hath no ioy comparable to this when he seeth the forwardnesse of Gods people in receiuing and obeying the truth Iohn the Baptist reioyced to see his hearers flocke after Christ. Iohn 3. 29. The friend of the Bridegroome reioyceth greatly because of the Bridegroomes voice that is that the Bridegroomes voice is so well accepted that he findes so good entertainement with the Bride 2. The more zealous and prepared the audience is the better assistance of his Spirit God is wont to giue to his seruants As it is with thy prayer the better thy heart is prepared to pray the more comfortable and fruitfull shall thy prayer be when he prepares our hearts then will he cause his eare to heare
time he had seldome or neuer preached as is plaine by that we finde from that time after this his comming into Galile Iesus began to preach Matth. 4. 17. and making choice of Galile rather than of Ierusalem or all Iudea to exercise his Ministry and spend most of his time and labour in passeth by Nazaret and refuseth to make choice of that place to preach or liue in Yea it is twice recorded that he passed by Nazaret here in this place when he went to Cana and againe Matth. 4. 13. when he went to Capernaum We reade indeed that once he preached at Nazaret Luke 4. 16. but it was but once he made no abode there and that one Sermon was made not so much in mercy as in iudgement to make them without excuse as appeareth by the answer hee makes to a secret obiection they might make against him Luke 4. 25 27. Which was in effect as if hee should haue said vnto them I am not sent to you God hath forbidden me to preach vnto you Secondly But why did he thus leaue and shunne Nazaret his owne Countrey which he did doubtlesse owe more duty vnto than to any other place For it is certaine euery man owes a duty to the place of his birth and specially of his education and dwelling in respect of the many blessings of God he hath receiued there therefore also euery City and Towne in Israel was called a mother in Israel 2. Sam. 20. 19. In respect hereof the light of nature hath taught men that euery mans Countrey may challenge some right and interest in whatsoeuer gifts or abilities God hath giuen vnto him See what an affection the Apostle expresseth towards his Country-men he calls God to witnesse that he had great heauinesse and continuall sorrow in his heart to see their blindnesse and obstinacy Rom 9. 12. his hearts desire and prayer to God for them was that they might be saued Rom. 10. 1. And doubtlesse Christ loued his own Country as dearely as euer any good man did and more too All good affections were in him in farre greater perfection than in any of vs. What was then the cause why he shewed so little respect now vnto his own Country Was it the basenesse and obscurity of that place No verily For for ought we can reade in the Scripture or any other Author it was euery whit as populous and of as good note as either Cana or Capernaum or Corazin or Bethsaida Yea it had this honour aboue all the Cities either in Galile or Iudea that he had dwelt so long there and bore his name in part from that place Was it then for any notorious wickednesse that did abound in that towne more than in any other towne in Galile Surely ●…o such thing is recorded of it but for ought we can reade it was as ciuill a place as any other that Christ conuersed most in True it is that on a time after he had preached there they thrust him out of their City and would haue throwne him downe headlong from the top of an hill Luke 4. 29. but that was long after this time as will appeare if we well obserue what is written whatsoeuer we haue heard done in Capernaum doe also here in thy country Luke 4. 23. he had done many miracles in Capernaum before that time The onely true cause why he passed by Nazaret and refused to exercise his Ministry there was because he knew he could haue no honour there as it is plainely said here verse 44. Hee himselfe without the disswasion of any had testified that is with great earnestnesse and compassion affirmed to his Disciples as they had had speech of that matter in th●… iourney that neither he nor any other Prophet could haue any honour in his owne Countrey Now these two points being thus obserued in the Text the Doctrine that ariseth from hence for our instruction is this That there is an honour due vnto euery true Prophet and Minister of God and the Lord holds all such vnworthy of the comfort of his Gospell as will not honour his Prophets There be two branches as you see of the Doctrine and we will confirme them distinctly and seuerally 1. That it is the will of God that his people should honour his Prophets and Ministers See the proofe for this out of the Old Testament Iudges 13. 17. Manoah asketh the Angell that brought him word of the birth of Sampson whom he tooke to be a Prophet and Messenger of the Lord what his name was and giueth this for the reason that when his sayings were come to passe and so they should proue that he was a true Prophet indeede they might honour him And Lam. 4. 16. it is noted for a foule sinne and signe of maruellous confusion that they reuerenced not the face of the Priests Plaine places also there be for this in the New Testament 1. Tim. 5. 17. Let the Elders that rule well be counted worthy of double honour especially they that labour in the Word and Doctrine So no man taketh this honour vnto himself but he that is called of God Heb. 5. 4. hold such in reputation Phil. 2. 29. 2. The second branch of the Doctrine is also euident The Lord holdeth all such vnworthy of the comfort of his Gospell that will not esteeme of nor honour his Prophets For this point also I will bring you two plaine places out of the Old Testament and two out of the New When the causes are laid downe 2. Chron. 36. for which God depriued the Iewes of his Word and Worship this is reckoned for the chiefe verse 16. They mocked the Messengers of the Lord and misused his Prophets And Hosea 4. 4. the Lord threatning this fearefull iudgement to the Iewes that they should haue none to rebuke or reprooue them for their sinnes he giueth this for the reason of it For this people are as they that rebuke the Priest Two plaine places also there are in the New Testament for this Matth. 21. 43. when our Sauiour prophesieth that the Kingdome of God should be taken from the Iewes he giues this for the chiefe reason of it which had beene mentioned by him in a Parable in the former Verses specially verse 35. viz. the indignities they had offered to Gods Prophets and Messengers And Matth. 23. 39. when he had threatned them of Ierusalem that whereas he had often preached vnto them and sought their conuersion in as louing and carefull a manner as the Hen gathereth her Chickens vnder her wings now he would leaue them and they should see him no more till the day of iudgement he alledgeth no particular sinne for the cause of this but the dishonour and contempt they shewed vnto the Prophets verse 37. Before I come to the Reasons of this Doctrine let me entreate you to obserue with me what account the Lord maketh of the honour of his Prophets and how highly he is displeased with the dishonours and indignities that haue
or beare honour to the Lord himselfe but he must needs loue and honour the Prophets and Messengers of God he that despiseth you despiseth me Luk. 10. 16. And that is the cause why the Apostle is so importunate with the Thessalonians to perswade them to esteeme well of their Ministers we beseech you brethren to know them which labour among you and are ouer you in the Lord and admonish you And to esteeme them very highly in loue for their workes sake 1. Thess. 5. 12 13. And indeed this was the true cause why our Sauiour in this place stood so much vpon his honour he would preach no where but where he might haue honour and be well esteemed of Why was he a man that cared much for honour No he professeth of himselfe and in his whole life made it good Ioh. 8. 48 49. I honour my Father I seeke not mine owne praise This was then the reason why he would preach no where but where he might haue honour because he knew none ●…ould receiue good by his Ministry that did not esteeme reuerently of his person They that honour not the Teacher cannot honour nor profit by his Doctrine Lecture the seuentie eight Ianuarie 22. 1610. IOHN IIII. XLIII XLIIII IT followeth now that we proceed to the Vses of this Doctrine 1. For vs that are Ministers That seeing there is an honour due vnto vs and it is not possible for vs to doe any good in our Ministry where we haue no honour and all the honour that is due to vs is due to vs onely for our gifts and for our workes sake we should therefore be humbled in our selues and iudge our selues vnworthy to be imployed in this function and both before we are entred this should keepe vs from being ouer-hasty and forward to take this calling vpon vs and when we are entred this should make vs to walke in it with feare and trembling Iohn the Baptist professed himselfe vnworthy to be imployed euen in the basest office about Christ not worthy to beare his shooes Matth. 3. 11. not worthy to stoope downe to vntie the latchet of his shooe Mar. 1. 7. And Paul said he was vnworthy to be called an Apostle 1. Cor. 15. 9. and hauing spoken of such an honour that belongeth to our Ministry which as one would haue thought would haue puffed him vp rather than haue humbled him he presently as admiring that God should euer aduance any mortall man to that dignity breaketh out into these words 〈◊〉 Cor. 〈◊〉 16. Who is sufficient for these things For as God neuer aduanced any to honour aboue others but he requireth some greater seruice from them than from others in omni honore est onus in all honour there is a burden to whom men haue committed much of them they will aske the more Luke 12. 48. In which respect Saul when he was called of God and his people vnto the place of greatest honour shunned it as much as he could and hid himselfe 1. Sam. 10. 22. so hath it fallen out in this No man that hath rightly conceiued of the burthen God hath annexed to this honourable function hath beene ouer hasty to take this calling vpon him no man taketh this honour to himselfe but he that is called of God Heb. 5. 4. till God haue euen thrust him in as it were by violence by the head and shoulders Two famous examples we haue for this the one in Moses who three seuerall times hung of and excused himselfe Exod. 3. 11. and 4. 1. 10. 13. the other in Ieremie who cryed out thus ah Lord God behold I cannot speake for I am a childe Chap. 1. 6. Euery ignorant idle couetous and scandalous Minister is apt to glory in this Doctrine and to challenge to himselfe this honour that is due to the Ministers of the Gospell but he neuer thinketh of the burthen God hath annexed to this honour The second Vse of this Doctrine is for the people that seeing it is euident by this Doctrine that you owe vs honour neither can you profit by our Doctrine vnlesse you can giue honour vnto vs and God esteemeth you as dogges and swine vnworthy of the comfort of his Gospell if you cannot esteeme of vs therefore it standeth you vpon to learne what honour is due to vs and when you know it to giue vs our due in this kinde The Apostles rule is generall Rom. 13. 7. Render to all their dues tribute to whom tribute is due feare to whom feare honour to whom honour First then you must know that the honour you owe vnto vs is not such as is due to the Magistrates and great men of the world we doe not challenge to our selues either that ciuill authority or that reuerence or those titles or that outward pompe and state or that wealth and abundance that is due vnto them Our Sauiour Christ giueth this for the reason why he had not such a retinue and company of seruants as might haue rescued him from them that apprehended him because his Kingdome was not of this world Ioh. 18. 36. The chiefe honour that is due to vs is more inward and spirituall and standeth in foure points principally The first degree of honour that you owe to vs is in your mindes and iudgements that you rightly esteeme of the neede you haue of Gods Ordinance in our Ministry and of the inestimable benefit you receiue by it This is that the Apostle teacheth vs when he saith 1. Thess. 5. 12. I besecch you Brethren that you know them that labour among you And 1. Cor. 4. 1. Let a man so account of vs as of the Ministers of Christ and Stewards of the mysteries of God On the other side a chiefe dishonour it is to the Ministry when men thinke it is a calling of no such necessity but that they may well enough be saued without it as they did among the Corinthians that said they cared neither for Paul nor for Apollo nor for Cephas they were Christs they did so wholly relye vpon Christ for their saluation as that they regarded not the Ministry of any of his seruants 1. Cor. 1. 12. that they can profit better by reading good Bookes c. The second degree of honour you owe to vs is in your affections that you reuerence vs in your hearts and haue vs in singular loue for our workes sake 1. Thess. 5. 13. You should count it your happinesse to haue such Teachers as you may reuerence for otherwise you shall be able to profit little or nothing by their Ministry On the other fide they are to be held contemners of the Ministry that desire none but such as may be their vnderlings such as they may rule at their pleasure euen in the matter of their Ministry and prescribe vnto them what they shall preach and what they shall not preach and say prophesie not vnto vs right things speake vnto vs smooth things Esay 30. 10. 12. or else such
whatsoeuer the Scribes and Pharisees sitting in Moses chaire that is teaching the Doctrine of Moses did bid them to doe though they themselues were most wicked men much lesse may the small infirmities of a godly Minister priuiledge the people to make light account of his wholesome Doctrine Paul reioyceth that Christ was preached euen by those that preached him with an intent to adde affliction to his bands Phil 1. 18. which he would neuer haue done if the grosse sinnes of the Minister much lesse if his small infirmities had force to make the holy Doctrine he deliuered vnauaileable to the comfort of Gods people The infirmities of Gods seruants shall not hinder the fruit of their Ministry nor cause God to withhold his blessing from it This is plaine in the example of Ionah whose Ministry became effectuall to the conuersion of the Niniuites Ionah 3. 4 5. though he himselfe had many and strange infirmities Ion. 1. 2. 5. and 4. 1. 4. Lastly it makes much for your benefit that God teacheth you not by Angels nor by men of Angelicall perfection but by poore weake men that are sinners as well as you for by this meanes we are able to teach you with more feeling experience and compassion than otherwise we could doe This is that which the Apostle teacheth concerning the High Priest vnder the Law Heb. 5. 2. Hee was able sufficiently to haue compassion on them that were ignorant and that were out of the way because that he also was compassed with infirmitie So that we see the infirmities we discerne in Gods Ministers are no iust cause why we should despise or contemne their Ministry 3. The third corruption which causeth men to contemne the Ministers of God specially their owne Pastours is curiosity and desire of nouelty because men cannot esteeme of those blessings that they haue long enioyed but still desire variety and change men are apt to grow weary of their owne Minister be their gifts neuer so good and to preferre a stranger before him though his gifts bee farre inferiour to their owne The remedies I will giue you against this corruption are these three 1. The people of God owe most reuerence and loue to their owne Pastours specially if they be such as in whose Ministry they haue already found the blessing of God and cooperating of his Spirit to such I say they owe more respect than to any other though their gifts be greater 1. Thess. 5. 12 13. Now I beseech you brethren know them that labour among you and are ouer you in the Lord and admonish you and haue them in singular loue That was the cause why the Apostle was so carefull to commend to the people of God their own Pastours as Tychicus to the Ephesians 6. 21. Epaphroditus to the Philippians 2. 25 26. Epaphras to the Colossians 1. 7. and 4. 12 13. Therefore also Gods seruants may without any presumption challenge a more speciall respect from their owne people than from any other as Samuel saith to Saul 1. Sam. 15. 1. The Lord sent mee to annoint thee King ouer his people now therefore obey the voice of the word of the Lord. So Paul to the Corinthians 1. Epist. 4. 15. Though ye haue ten thousand instructers in Christ yet ye haue not many fathers 2. The people of God may receiue much more good and expect a greater blessing from God by hearing constantly one and the same man than by hearing now one and then another For this in a speciall sort is Gods ordinance that euery flocke should haue a Pastour of their owne on whom they may depend and whom they may heare constantly 1. Pet. 5. 2. Feed the flocke of Christ that dependeth vpon you Acts 14. 23. They ordained them Elders in euery Congregation 3. Lastly there is no iust occasion giuen to any to loath or be weary of the Ministry of any of Gods faithfull seruants how oft or how long soeuer they haue heard them For though they heare the same men they shall not heare the same things but they shall haue variety and choice enough euen at their owne table if their Minister be a faithfull steward Matth. 13. 52. He bringeth forth out of his store-house things both new and old Cant. 7. 13. In our gates are all sweet things both new and old Eccles. 12. 9 10. The good Preacher searcheth forth and prepareth many Parables he seeketh to finde out pleasant words and an vpright writing Yea though he teach but the same things that thou hast often heard yet if thou wert such a Hearer as were renewed in the spirit of thy minde thou wouldest finde small cause to complaine Behold it is a wearinesse Mal. 1. 13. For as they that haue Gods spirit when they giue God praises euen for those blessings which they haue long enioyed and oft praised God for doe yet sing as it were a new song Reu. 14. 3. so doe they when they heare the same things they haue oft heard alwaies finde some new increase eyther of knowledge or of holy affections so as they heare it alwaies as a new Doctrine The fourth and last corruption that alienates the heart of Gods people from his faithfull Ministers specially from their owne Pastours is felfe-loue and desire to be flattered and soothed vp in their sinnes Their owne Pastour that knoweth them dealeth they thinke too particularly in his Ministry in all his Doctrines and Reproofes he pointeth at them The Remedies against this corruption are these foure 1. To consider that the Minister should desire to haue that knowledge of all his hearers that he may be able to speake as particularly to euery one as is possible Ier. 6. 27. I haue set thee in a Watch-tower among my people that thou mayst know and try their waies Though he may not make priuate faults publike or so touch the sinne as he note and disgrace the person yet he may apply his reproofes particularly so as the party himselfe that is guilty may know and feele himselfe touched with the reproofe Thus dealt Nathan with Dauid 2. Sam. 12. 7. Yea he ought to be as particular as he can in his Ministry it is the life and excellency of Preaching We must in preaching ayme as directly as we can at him whom we desire to profit Our Doctrine must be as a garment fitted for the body it is made for a garment that is fit for euery body is fit for no body Paul saith of himselfe Col 1. 26. that in his preaching he laboured to admonish euery man to teach euery man to present euery man perfect in Christ Iesus 2. It may well be that our ministry may touch your sinnes particularly and hit vpon the very secret thoughts that are in your hearts and vpon the words you haue spoken in your priuy Chambers though we our selues know no such matter by you For the Word is a searcher and discouerer of the secrets of the heart as the Lord himselfe is Heb. 4. 12. and compared
duty that we must performe vnto others First for our selues We are to be exhorted that we would loue Church-meetings and delight more in them and be more thankfull to God for them than we haue hitherto been Labour for that affection that Dauid had Psal. 122. 1. I was glad when they said vnto me Let vs goe vnto the house of the Lord. Yea pray for the continuance of our solemne Assemblies both here and in other places of the Countrey This was also Dauids heart Psal. 122. 6. Pray for the peace of Ierusalem they shall prosper that loue thee And marke the Reasons Vers. 8 9. For my brethren and Companions sakes I will now say Peace be within thee Because of the house of the Lord our God I will seek thy good And therefore labour to walk worthy of this blessing and to profit by it For no enemy can put downe our meetings till God for our sinnes do put them downe Lam. 2. 6. He hath destroyed his Tabernacle as a garden he hath destroyed his Congregation Secondly concerning others there are two duties we are to be exhorted vnto 1. That euery one of you would call vpon his Neighbour and Friend and draw them to frequent the Church-assemblies When the Lord had prophesied Esay 2. 2. that vnder the dayes of the Gospell All nations should flow vnto the house of the Lord he addeth Vers. 3. that this should be the meane to draw so many to his house Many people shall go and say Come let vs go vp to the house of the Lord. 2. Masters of Families and Parents are to be exhorted that they would not think it sufficient to come to Church themselues but see that their children and seruants come also We should suffer none to attend vs in our owne house that will not attend and go with vs to Gods house Exod. 20. 10. Sonne Daughter Man Maid Stranger Iosh. 24. 15. I and my house will serue the Lord. Dauid speaketh of this as of one of the greatest comforts he had had vpon earth Psal. 42. 4. That he had gone with a multitude and led them into the house of God and Psal. 101. 7. There shall no deceitfull person dwell in mine house Sure he would much more haue said there shall no prophane contemner of Religion dwell in my house The second vse of the Doctrine is for reproofe And there be two sorts of men that are to be reproued by this Doctrine 1. Such as neglect the Church-assemblies in all the parts of Gods worship and se●…uice 2. Such as separate themselues from the Church-assemblies in some parts of Gods publike worship Of the first kind there are foure sorts 1. Such as separate from our Church-assemblies vpon pretence of the corruptions that are in them These are marked with a black coale by Iude vers 19. These be they who separate themselues sensuall hauing not the spirit But herein Christians must learne wisely to distinguish betweene such as are vniustly separated by others from the Church-assemblies and such as voluntarily separate themselues these deserue to be called Schismaticks and not the other Neither are they to be accounted Schismaticks as though they dare not be agents or practisers of any corruption that remaineth in the Church yet can beare and tolerate them as burdens without forsaking the Church for them To this first sort I will say no more but wish them well to weigh the examples of Gods seruants that haue been mentioned in this doctrine which frequented so diligently the publike worship of God vsed in Ierusalem when there were farre greater corruptions both in the Priests and people and worship it selfe than can be found in ours 2 Such as absent themselues from the Church-meetings out of respect they haue to their profit they must needs spend some Sabbaths in going to Faires they must go iournies on that day sometimes and make bargaines c. they cannot spare any time from the works of their calling to come to Lectures on the week day They cannot get their liuing they say by going to Church and when they do come to Church on the Sabbath they cannot bring their whole family with them they must leaue some behinde them to looke to their houses for feare of robbing These are like those Mal. 3. 14 that said It is i●… vaine to serue God and what profit is it that we haue kept his ordinances To these I say no more but this First if thou couldest come to the Church either on the Sabbath or week day with an vpright heart thou shouldest not need to feare that that would make thee poorer The Lord God would be a sunne and shield vnto thee no good thing would he with-hold from thee Psalme 84. 11. Secondly though thou may in sundry cases of necessity leaue some at home when thou commest to Church yet take heed thou pretend not necessity where none is For if thou dare leaue thy house empty when thou goest to a Faire or to haruest worke and canst trust God with keeping of it then and darest not do so on the Sabbath when thou commest to serue God be thou assured thy heart is naught and God will not hold thee innocent For God hath made a further promise to thee for keeping of thine house when thou leauest it vpon this occasion than at any other time Neither shall any man desire thy land when thou shalt goe to appeare before the Lord thy God thrice in a yeare Exod. 34. 24. 3 Such as though they haue nothing to do if their finger be sore or their head do butake will absent themselues I would haue such to remember the example of Hezechiah who in three dayes after he had been sick of a most painfull and mortall disease went into the Temple Esa. 38. 22. and the woman that on the Sabbath resorted to the Synagogue though she had had a spirit of infirmity eighteene yeares Luke 13. 10 11. And because the true cause of their absence is for that they find no comfort nor take any delight in our Church-exercises I would haue them to consider that there is no one more certaine signe of a dead heart void of all grace and sense of Gods loue than this not to be able to take any delight in his publike worship as may appeare by the contrary in these two places Psal. 84. 12. Dauid loued Gods Tabernacles so well because his heart and his flesh reioyced in the liuing God And 1 Pet. 2. 2 3. Such as haue tasted how sweet the Lord is will desire the sincere milke of the Word And know thou that as thou carest not for appearing in the Assemblies of the righteous in this life so hast thou cause to feare that thou shalt not stand in the Assembly of the righteous in the life to come Psal. 1. 5. when thou wilt esteeme better of them than now thou dost 4 Such as absent themselues vpon this pretence that they can serue God as well and spend their time
other is neare vnto a man when his heart is thus hardened and growne obstinate in pride or in drunkennesse or in vncleannesse or in oppression or in any other sinne that the Prophet tels Amazia to his face 2 Chron. 25. 16. He knew by that that God had determined to destroy him as you shall finde he did indeed ver 27. And though the Iewes had many grieuous sinnes yet you shall find there neuer came any strange and common iudgements vpon them till they grew to this Dan. 9. 6. We would not obey thy seruants the Prophets which spake vnto vs in the Name of the Lord. Verse 11. Therefore the curse is powred vpon vs. Secondly God neuer is so fierce and terrible in his temporall iudgements against any sinners as against those that haue enioyed the best meanes and obstinately neglected and rebelled against them God is very terrible in the assembly of his Saints Psal. 89. 7. Under the whole heauen it hath not beene done as hath beene done vnto Ierusalem Dan 9. 12. Wrath is come vpon them vnto the vttermost 1. Thess. 2. 16. Thirdly and principally in Gods spirituall iudgements we may discerne this 1. Such as wilfully refuse to receiue and embrace the truth when it is reuealed vnto them God is wont to take their iudgement and vnderstanding from them hearing you shall heare and shall not vnderstand and seeing yee shall see and shall not perceiue for this people haue closed th●…ir owne eyes Matt. 13. 14 15. Because they receiued not the loue of the truth that they might be saued for this cause God shall send them strong delusion 2. Thess. 2 10 11. 2. Such as vse obstinately to sinne against their conscience God is wont to giue them vp to a reprobate minde and vnto beastly and vile affections Maruaile not therefore to see such as haue had the best meanes if they proue bad to become of all bad men the most profane and vngracious if you see children of most godly parents people that haue liued vnder most faithfull Pastors proue such wonder not It is said of Manasse the sonne of Hezekiah that he wrought more wickedly than all the Amorit●…s that had beene before him 2. Kings 21. 11. 3. God hath threatned against some sinners that he will neuer comfort them nor shew mercy on them and consequently not giue them grace to repent which is the grieuousest plague of all plagues the Lord will not spare that man but the anger of the Lord and his i●…alousie shall smoake against that man and all the curses that are written in this booke shall lie vpon him Deut. 29. 20. And the cause hereof you shall finde in the former verse to be the presumption and obstinacie in sinning that was in that man See this in Pharaoh Exod. 9. 12. the Lord hardened his heart that he could not repent But what was the cause Exod. 8. 15. 19 32. He had hardened his owne heart and wilfully refused to hearken to the message that was brought him from God or to be humbled and moued with his iudgements The Reasons of the Doctrine are two 1. This obstinacie in sinne argues that sinne hath the full possession of the heart and that men loue it vnfainedly and that is one cause why God hates it so much Psal. 11. 5. The wicked and him that loueth iniquity doth his soule hate And 66. 18. If I regard wickednesse in my heart the Lord will not heare me Our sins are then become our idols and gods these men haue set vp their idols in their hearts Ezek. 14. 3. when we giue diuine honour vnto them 2. It argues a rebellion and proud contempt of God when men will not be reclaimed by his Word Iob 34. 37. He addeth rebellion vnto his sinne And 1. Sam. 15. 23. Rebellion is as the sinne of Witch-craft Yea this obstinacy will bring the heart by little and little into that impardonable sinne that is committed in meere malice against God Therefore when the nature of that sinne is described it is called a sinning wilfully Heb. 10. 26. And Dauid Psal. 19. 13. speakes of presumptuous sin as of the next step to the great transgression The Vse of this Doctrine is both for Exhortation and for Reproofe and for Comfort also We are all to be Exhorted by this Doctrine to take heed of obstinacie in any sinne and to count it a great fauour and grace of God which we should pray for and by all meanes labour to attaine vnto viz. to haue tractable and teachable hearts This is made a note of Gods Elect to receiue the Word gladly Acts 2. 41. and with all readinesse of minde Acts 17. 11. Foure notes we may try this by 1. When in going to heare the word we goe with an open heart willing to learne whatsoeuer God shall teach vs. Acts 10 33. We are all here present before God to heare all things that are commanded thee of God 2. When our reason is so captiuated vnto God that we dare not dispute nor cauill against any truth God hath clearely reuealed vnto vs in his Word seeme it neuer so contrary to our reason and affections Iob 6. 24. Teach me and I will hold my tongue and cause me to vnderstand wherin I haue erred as if he should say Reueale to me by thy Word any thing wherein I haue offended thee and I will lay my hand vpon my mouth I will not dare to reason in the defence of it 3. When we are ready to receiue Gods Word and be informed in his will by any how much soeuer he be our inferiour when we dare not reiect good counsell and admo●…ition from any Esay 11. 6. A little childe shall leade them 4. When the Lord hauing reuealed his will vnto vs by any meanes we shew an earnest care and endeauour to obey it Psal. 119. 34. Giue me vnderstanding and I will keepe thy Law yea I will keepe it with my whole heart For Reproofe and terrour of all wicked men that liue in these daies of light Esay 33. 14. The sinners in Sion are affraid saith the Prophet And indeed no sinners vnder heauen haue so much cause to feare as the sinners in Sion haue they that haue enioyed the best meanes They cannot pretend ignorance for excuse of their sins all their sinnes will be iudged to be done obstinately and wilfully But two speciall sorts of sinners are reproued here First such as are wilfull and obstinate against the knowledge of the truth Secondly such as are obstinate and willfull against the practice and obedience of the truth Two sorts there be of them that will not know the truth as first they that refuse to heare because they thinke their ignorance will be some aduantage to them their conscience will be the quieter for it And these are like Felix Acts 24. 26. who when he felt his conscience awakened and troubled by Pauls Ministry would heare him no longer But alas this will be no aduantage to
them for first there is light enough in them by nature to condemne them though they neuer heare Sermon as many as haue sinned without the Law shall also perish without the Law Rom. 2. 12. Secondly the knowledge of the Word will not worke vnquietnesse but peace in the heart of them that doe obey it learne of me and yee shall finde rest to your soules Matth. 11. 29. Thirdly wilfull ignorance shall no way lessen but increase thy condemnation The Apostle 2. Pet. 3. 5. speaking of Atheists and Mockers saith This they willingly know not Mat. 10. 15. It shall bee easier for Sodome and Gomorrah than for them that will not heare The second sort of them that will not know the truth are they that can be content to heare but yet will not be perswaded of many truths that haue oft beene clearely taught them out of Gods Word They cannot be perswaded that preaching is the onely ordinary meanes of saluation that we must so precisely rest from our owne labours vpon the Sabbath that a man is bound to frequent euery part of Gods worship both in Church and house that euery master of a family is charged with the soules of his whole family and shall answer for the sinnes that are committed in it These men I would haue to weigh first that it is spoken to the praise of many and noted as a marke of Gods Elect to receiue the Word with all readinesse Acts 17. 11. and the very entrance of Gods Word giueth light vnto them Psal. 119. 130. And the contrary is noted by the Holy Ghost to the dispraise of men that they were long ere they could beleeue ô fooles and slow of heart to beleeue all that the Prophets haue spoken Luke 24. 25. yea it is spoken of as a marke of a reprobate you therefore heare not beleeue not obey not because yee are not of God Ioh. 8. 47. if our Gospell be hidden it is hidden to them that are lost 2. Cor. 4. 3. Consider the true causes of it and they are said to be three First the badnesse and vngraciousnesse of the heart women laden with sinnes and led away with diuers lusts are euer learning and neuer able to come to the knowledge of the truth 2. Tim. 3. 7. Secondly the speciall worke of Sathan the god of this world hath blinded the mindes of them that beleeue not 2. Cor. 4. 4. Thirdly the iust iudgement of God vpon thine owne wilfulnesse as we heard before out of Matth. 13. 14 15. Remember the Doctrine and take heed of sinning wilfully The second sort that I told you were to be reproued by this Doctrine are such as are wilfull and obstinate against the practice and obedience of the truth and of them there are three sorts First such as will not obey the truth when they see it but glory in this that they can giue vs the hearing and yet are not such fooles as to be ruled by vs they said we will not walke therein Ier. 6. 16. as for the word which thou bast spoken to vs in the name of the Lord we will not hearken vnto thee Ier. 44. 16. Secondly such as will not endure particular admonition be it priuate or publicke Thirdly such as will be the worse for admonition sinne taking occasion by the Commandement Rom. 7. 8. And such for the most part are our youths whose outrages are vsually committed in an opposition and contempt to the Word but let them remember these youthfull sins will be heauy and bitter one day thou writest bitter things against me and makest me to possesse the iniquities the punishment of the sinnes of my youth Iob 12. 26. The third Vse of this Doctrine is for the comfort of the faithfull who though they haue many corruptions yet they are able to say that to will is present with them their will and the desire of their heart is set to please the Lord Rom. 7. 18. 20. Lecture the ninetie two Iuly 2. 1611. IOHN IIII. XLVIII IT followeth now that we come to the fourth and last point that I haue told you is to be obserued in this verse in which that we may the better receiue our instruction from it these things are to be marked First our Sauiour chargeth the whole Nation of the Iewes with this sinne of infidelity and saith that this was the common fault of all the Iewes of that age they would not beleeue except they saw signes and wonders Matth. 12. 29. An euill and adulterous generation seeketh a signe 1. Cor. 1. 22. The Iewes require a signe Secondly that our Sauiour purposing to reproue this Ruler for his infidelity and to humble him and to shew him that for that cause he was vnworthy to receiue help from him doth not say Except thou see c. but in the plurall number Except yee see as if he should say If this were thy sinne onely I could the better beare with it but it is the sinne of you all and this he speakes not to extenuate his sinne but to humble him the more Hence then this Doctrine ariseth That the commonnesse of any sinne is no excuse for sinne No man hath cause to make the lesse account of any sinne that he liues in because he seeth it is common and growne into fashion but to feare it the more to be humbled the more for it because of that A plaine proofe of the Doctrine we haue Leuit. 4. from verse 13. to 35. where the Lord prescribing a forme how attonement should be made for all sorts that had sinned of ignorance he requires more solemnity to be vsed and more to be done for the expiation of a sinne that a whole Congregation is guilty of than either for the sinne of any Magistrate or for the sinne of any priuate man whatsoeuer The Reason of the Doctrine is this That the more common sinne is the more God hateth it and the lesse can he beare with it The more there be that doe conspire in sin the more fierce will Gods wrath be vpon them Nothing hastens Gods vengeance vpon sinners more than this as the generality of repentance and ioyning together in the profession of it is of great force to stay Gods wrath as we may see in two famous examples namely in the fast that Israel kept for successe against the Beniamites and in that of the Niuites Iudg. 20. 6. and Ionah 3. 5. so is the generality of sinne of great force to hasten and increase the iudgements of God See the proofe of this in three famous examples of Gods vengeance vpon sinners First in the destruction of the old World marke the story and you shall finde that the generality of sinne then brought that generall floud Gen. 6. 12. Then God looked vpon the earth and behold it was corrupt for all flesh had corrupted his way vpon earth And verse 11. The earth was filled with cruelty The second example is in the destruction of Sodome of that the
peace with them so far as is possible and as in you lieth but no further Rom. 12. 18. 3. This is not thy case alone but hath euer beene the condition of the godly to go thus alone and to be hated for it if yee were of the world the world would loue his owne but because yee are not of the world but I haue chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you Iohn 15. 19. 4. Consider that thou art not alone but besides those that thou maist see by the eye of faith God and his Angels and all the faithfull that liue already in glory who are all of thy side Heb. 12. 22. 24. In respect of whom thou maist say as 2. King 6. 16. They that be with vs are more than they that be with them you shall also find if you looke abroad and come into such assemblies as this that thou hast a great number euen in this world that are of thy minde And thou shouldest esteeme more of the loue of one godly man than of the hatred of a thousand such as scorne thee 5. The fewer that thou hast to go with thee and the more enemies thou findest for this the surer thou maist be that thy heart is vpright and the more praise shalt thou haue with God Noah was a iust man and perfect in his generation Gen. 6. 9. And that was the thing that highly-commended him vnto God Come thou and all thy house into the Arke for thee haue I seene righteous before me in this generation Gen. 7. 1. I know thy workes and where thou dwellest euen where Satans seat is and thou holdest fast my Name and hast not denyed my faith euen in those dayes wherein Antipas was my faithfull Martyr who was slaine among you where Satan dwelleth Reu. 2. 13. 6. Thy liuing among so many and bad neighbours shall not hurt thee if God haue called thee to it the woman which hath a husband that beleeueth not if he be pleased to liue with her let her not leaue him for the vnbeleeuing husband is sanctified by the wife c. 1. Cor. 7. 13 14. but aduantage thee exceedingly For first it will make thee so much the more watchfull ouer thy waies ought yee not to walke in the feare of our God because of the reproach of the heathen our enemies Neh. 5. 9. Secondly it will increase thy zeale Lots zeale and piety was much increased by liuing in Sodome 2. Pet. 2. 7 8. Thirdly if thou so liue amongst them as thou oughtest it shall much encrease thy glory God hath promised that the faithfull shall be a blessing where they are Gen. 12. 3. And what knowest thou whether God hath placed thee there to that end thou maist win thy neighbour Who knoweth saith Mordecay to Ester whether thou art come to the kingdome for such a time as this Est. 4. 14. what knowest thou O wife whether thou shalt saue thy husband and how knowest thou O man whether thou shalt saue thy wife 1. Cor. 7. 16. Labour so to liue as thou maist stop their mouth and win them also as the Apostle exhorteth all the faithfull that liued among the Gentiles and Christian women that had vnbeleeuing husbands to doe 1. Pet. 2. 12. and 3. 1. THE NINETIE THIRD LECTVRE ON IVLY XVI MDCXI IOHN IIII. XLIX L. The Noble man saith vnto him Sir come downe ere my childe dye Iesus saith vnto him Goe thy way thy sonne liueth And the man beleeued the word that Iesus had spoken vnto him and he went his way WE haue already heard that from the beginning of the 46. verse to the end of this Chapter the Euangelist sets downe the History of the first miracle Christ wrought after his returne out of Iudea into Galile and that this History stands vpon foure parts First the occasion that was offered vnto Christ to doe this miracle Secondly the manner how Christ wrought this miracle thirdly the fruit and effect of this miracle Fourthly the conclusion of the story First the occasion is set downe in the 46. and 47. verses Secondly the manner how it was wrought is declared in the 48. verse and in these two that I haue now read And in setting of them downe we haue heard the Euangelist obserueth three things First the checke and reproofe that Christ gaue vnto this great man and to his whole Nation verse 48. Secondly the answer that this great man made to Christ when he had beene thus rebuked by him verse 49. Thirdly the comfort and satisfaction that Christ gaue vnto this Ruler after he had thus reproued him and receiued this answer from him verse 50. The first of these three points were finished the last day it followeth now that we proceed to the two latter viz. the answer that this great man returned vnto Christ when he had beene thus rebuked by him and the comfort that in the end he receiued from Christ. And first in the answer of this Ruler it is to be obserued 1. That he neither denieth nor confesseth the fault Christ charged him with 2. He is neither troubled by it so as to bewaile his infidelity and seeke pardon and helpe for it neither doth he excuse or lessen it any way 3. Nay which is strange he seemes not at all to haue regarded or beene moued with this sharpe reproofe of our Sauiour though he so highly esteemed of him And what was the cause of it his griefe and care for his sonne was so very extreme that he could minde nothing else nothing else could affect him This had taken vp all his thoughts and all his affections And from this example then we haue this Doctrine to learne for our instruction That extremity of worldly griefe will make the minde and heart of man vncapable of heauenly things The proofe of this you shall obserue in two points which both Scripture and Experience doth confirme vnto vs First it makes the heart vnfit to receiue benefit by the Word Secondly it makes the heart vnfit to pray For the first though it be true that a man is neuer so fit to receiue good by the Word neuer so teachable and tra●…table as when affliction and sorrow hath opened his eare Iob 3●… 16. yea if either affliction or sorrow be extreme it so oppresseth the heart it straighteneth and closeth it so as it makes him vnable to profit by the best teacher that shall come vnto him Tell a man in such a case of his sinnes tell him of the rebukes and threats of Gods Word and you shall not m●…ue him as we finde in this example So let the best Preacher come to a man in that case and tell himof the promises of God and apply vnto him the consolations of the Gospell he will be able to finde no sweetnesse in them yea he will be vnable to regard them A notable example we haue for this Exod 6. 9. Moses and Aaron came to them with as glad tidings as could
Gods deare children when they haue neglected the care of a good conscience and fallen into grosse sinnes great sinnes haue brought them into great sorrowes The sinnes that haue been committed with most iollity and pleasure did of all other bring them to the most sorrow of heart in the end This Iob felt when God caused him to possesse the sinnes of his youth he saith Iob 13. 26. that he did write bitter things against him He found much bitternesse in the remembrance of those sinnes And Dauid though he were of a sanguine constitution 1 Sam. 16. 12. and consequently chearfull naturally though he were likewise an excellent Musitian and a King also that had all outward helps to keep sorrow from his heart yet when he had giuen liberty to himself to commit that sweet sin as the world cals it he lost his chearefulnes and grew to that inward anguish of spirit that he cries out in Psal. 51. 8. Make me to heare ioy and gladnesse that the bones which thou hast broken may reioyce And Ps. 31. 10. My life is wasted with heauines and my years with mourning 1 O think vpon this you Belly-gods and Wantons that can find no pleasure but in offending God As pleasant as you be now you will haue the heauiest hearts one day of any people vnder the Sun Woe be to you that laugh now for ye shall mourne and weepe Luke 6. 25. 2 And you Beloued Would you haue a chearfull heart and be comfortable euen in affliction in the time of your sicknesse and at the houre of your death haue care then of a good conscience take heed of knowne sinnes Do you feele your hearts at any time begin to be oppressed with heauinesse Examine your liues find out your chiefe sinnes purge your selues from them by repentance and so shall ye keep your selues from being ouercome with griefe The third preseruatiue and meanes to keep a mans heart from excessiue griefe specially for any worldly occasion is to make the Lord his treasure and not any earthly thing If a man do not ouer-value these earthly comforts husbands wiues friends children health wealth liberty peace c. nor count them his chiefe treasure but esteeme them as they are indeed transitory comforts and count the Lord his fauour and grace his chiefe treasure If a man set not his heart on these things but loue them only in the Lord then shall he not be oppressed with immoderate sorrow for them when God shall take them away What a notable help it is against excessiue sorrow when a man can keep his heart from the ouer-much loue of these things we shall find 1 Cor. 7. ●…0 where when the Apostle had said Let them that weepe be as though they wept not he adds presently And they that reioyce as though they reioyced not as if he should say Wouldst thou keep thy selfe from weeping and mourning too much for these things when thou shalt lose them then reioyce not too much in them when thou doest possesse them And for the other point what force there is in this to stay the heart from immoderate griefe for worldly things when a man can make the Lord his fauour and grace his chiefe treasure you shall find Esa. 33. 6. There shall be stability of thy times strength saluation wisdome and knowledge for the feare of the Lord shall be his treasure As if he should say In all times the man that hath made the feare of the Lord his treasure shall haue stability and strength and saluation wisdome and knowledge And our Sauiour when he dehorts his Disciples from that care for earthly things as will bring griefe and vexation to the heart prescribes this for a remedy against it Mat. 6. 33. But seeke ye first the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof c. On the other side the man that makes these worldly things his chief treasure and sets his heart vpon them cannot choose but be oppressed with sorrow when he shall be depriued of them as we see in the example of Ahab 1 King 21. 5 6. When he could not get Naboths Vineyard his spirit was exceeding sad and he could not eat his meat And why so His pleasure was his treasure he loued Naboths vineyard too well and it was a death to him to be kept from it Then may I say to euery one of you that haue no felicity but in earthly things in your wealth your belly-cheere your merry company your pastimes and sports your braue apparell your credit and fauour with men you loue them more than God you affect them and care for them more than for God as our Sauiour in another case said Luke 21. 6. Are these the things that ye looke vpon Haue you no better comforts than these Alas how wofull will your case be when you must part with these things Consider what is said Iob 27. 8. What hope hath the hypocrite when he hath heaped vp riches if God take away his soule Can he hope that God will heare his cry when trouble commeth vpon him Will he set his delight on the Almighty and call vpon God at all times Follow therefore the counsaile of our blessed Sauiour Mat. 6. 19. Lay not vp treasures for your selues vpon earth but lay vp treasure for your selues in heauen And marke well the reason of our Sauiour which he giues Verse 21. For where your treasure is there will your hearts be also q. d. If you make earthly things your treasure you will immoderately ioy in them when you haue them and grieue for them when you shall want them Consider first that these things are not our proper goods but cast more plentifully on reprobates than on Gods children If ye haue not been faithfull in that which is another mans who shall giue you that which is your owne Luke 16. 12. But Gods fauour and grace is our peculiar portion These things are not durable neither can we haue any certaintie in them Trust not in vncertain riches 1 Timothie 6. 17. But Gods fauour and grace is euerlasting The feare of the Lord is cleane enduring for euer Psal. 19. 9. These things are vaine and can yeeld vs no helpe no comfort when we shall most stand in need Riches profit not in the day of wrath Prouerb 11. 4. Whereas the sense of Gods fauour and grace will yeeld vs comfort euen in the greatest affliction it will make vs euen to glory in the greatest tribulation Rom. 5. 3. The fourth and last preseruatiue against immoderate sorrow is for a man to be rightly perswaded of his liberty in the vse of the outward comforts of this life as a good diet and good company and following our worldly callings and recreations and such like Let no man say this preseruatiue might well be spared as beseeming the Physitian much better than the Diuine for first many a good soule haue great need of this preseruatiue and giue great aduantage to Satan
saith He laid his hands on euery one of them and healed them Fourthly obserue the place wherein he did these cures he did them oft times in the Synagogues and Church assemblies Matth. 21. 14. Marke 3. 3. Luke 13. 10. 12. Fiftly his readinesse and willingnesse to helpe men in this case He did not this onely when he was sought vnto but of his owne accord many times If he did but see any that was diseased he was ready to offer his help vnto them though they neuer desired it This you shall find obserued especially in all those that he cured on the Sabbath daies whether it were for feare of their Teachers and Rulers or out of a superstitious conceit that themselues had entertained of the Sabbath there was not any one of them all that sought his help this way vpon the Sabbath day but he sought vnto them rather and offered his help vnto them Luk. 6. 6. 8. 13. 12. 14. 2. 4. Ioh. 5. 6. 9. 1. 16. 14. Sixthly and lastly obserue with what affection and compassion of heart he did these cures euen as one that had in himselfe a feeling of all those paines and miseries that they did endure Matth. 20. 34. Moued with compassion towards the two blinde men he touched their eyes And Marke 1. 41. Iesus had compassion and put forth his hand and touched the Leper And Marke 7. 34. He sighed and said vnto him Ephphata Let vs now come to the Reasons that moued our blessed Sauiour thus far forth to debase himselfe as to cure the diseases of the bodies of men in this sort And I finde three principall Reasons of it First he did this to proue himselfe to be the Son of God For the curing of such diseases in such a manner as he did was sufficient to conuince the conscience of euery man that he was indeed the Sonne of God Iohn 15. 24. If I had not done workes among them which none other man did they had not had sinne So doth he reason with the Scribes Matth. 9. 6. That yee may know that the sonne of man hath authority vpon earth to forgiue sinnes then said he to the sicke of the palsie Arise take vp thy bed and goe to thine house If any shall obiect against this argument that the Prophets and Apostles did also miraculous cures vpon all manner of diseases I answer It is true they did so yea the Apostles did greater miracles than those that our Sauiour did according to that promise Iohn 14. 12. Hee that beleeueth in me the workes that I doe hee shall doe also yea greater than these shall he doe for I goe vnto my father And Act. 19. 11 12. God wrought no small miracles by the hands of Paul so that from his body were brought vnto the sicke kerchiefes and hand-kerchiefes and the diseases departed from them Yea it may appeare Acts 5. 15. That the very shadow of Peter di●…ure many But yet I say that though the Prophets and Apostles did the same yea greater miracles than our Sauiour did yet did not they them in the same manner that he did he did them in that manner as neuer any other did and as did euidently proue him to be the Sonne of God Two notable differences therefore you shall obserue betweene the miracles of the Prophets and Apostles and the miracles of Christ. First he wrought his miracles in his owne name and by his owne power and commandement and so did none of them They were wont to vse earnest prayer when they were to doe a miracle that they might declare the power whereby they were to worke was none of their owne but to be receiued from aboue so did Eliah in restoring of the widow of Sareptaes childe to life 1. King 17. 20. 21. and Peter in restoring of Tabitha Acts 9. 40. so did the Elders in the miraculous curing of the sicke by annointing them with oile Iam. 5. 14 15. Or if any time they did not vse prayer but did their miracles rather by way of commanding than of inuocation yet they euer professed they did them not in their owne name or by their owne power but onely in the name of Iesus Acts 16. 18. I command thee in the name of Iesus Christ that thou come out of her Secondly he had this power at all times and could doe these miracles whensoeuer he would so could none of them The Apostles though they had receiued the gift to cast out Diuels Matth. 10. 8. yet could they not doe it at all times Matth. 17. 16. And Paul though he had that maruellous power to heale all diseases euen with the hand-kerchiefes that were carryed from his body Act. 19. 12. yet had he not this gift at all times for then would not hee haue suffered Epaphroditus to haue beene so neare vnto death as he was Phil. 2. 27. The second Reason why Christ wrought so many miracles for the curing of mens bodily infirmities was to proue himselfe to be that Messia and Sauiour that God had promised by the Prophets When the Prophet had foretold the comming of the Messia Esay 35. 4. Behold your God commeth euen God with a recompence he will come and saue you He tells them in the next words verse 5. 6. what manner of miracles he should doe when he came whereby they should know him Then shall the eyes of the blinde bee lightened and the eares of the dease be opened then shall the lame man leape as an Hart and the dumbe mans tongue shall sing And our Sauiour when Iohn Baptist sent two of his Disciples vnto him to know whether he were the Messiah that should come or whether they should looke for another he proues himselfe to be so by the manner and kinde of miracles which he wrought Matth. 11. 4 5. Goe and shew Iohn what things ye haue heard and seene the blinde receiue sight the halt doe goe the lepers are cleansed the deafe doe heare the dead are raised vp And we shall finde this notable difference betweene the miracles of Christ and those of all the Prophets and Apostles that whereas some of their miracles tended to the hurt and punishment of man as Moses miracles in Egypt and Elias in calling fire from heauen to destroy two wicked Captaines and an hundred souldiers 2. Kings 1. 10. and Peters in the destruction of Ananias and Saphira Acts 5. 9. and Pauls in striking Elymas with blindnesse Acts 13. 11. Christ neuer shewed his diuine power in executing vengeance vpon any man but all his miracles tended only to the profit and benefit of man They were all sutable to that office he had receiued from his father and fit to declare him to be the Sauiour and Redeemer of the world they were all agreeable to the Doctrine that he was to teach namely the glad tidings of the Gospell Indeed he shewed in two mighty workes of his in causing the figtree to wither and the souldiers that came to apprehend him
64. 6. All our righteousnesses saith the Church are like filthy clouts But doth God therefore reiect them No first he accepteth them and takes them in good part they are acceptable to God by Iesus Christ 1. Pet. 2. 5. secondly he delighteth and taketh great pleasure in them sweet is thy voice Cant. 2. 14. thirdly yea he will also reward them not onely in this life yet godlinesse hath promises euen of this life 1. Tim. 4. 8. but euen with the reward of the inheritance as the Apostle speaketh Col. 3. 24. When the dead shall be iudged he will giue reward not onely vnto his seruants the Prophets and to his Saints but to all that feare his Name both small and great Apoc. 11. 18. Thirdly and lastly he is so farre from reiecting his seruants for any their infirmities that of all other he hath most care of them that are most troubled with their infirmities he sheweth most tender respect vnto them In this respect it pleaseth the Lord to compare himselfe to a carefull and good shepheard that sheweth his care most of all towards those sheepe that are most weak and feeble in the slock Esay 40. 11. He shall feed his flocke like a shepheard he shall gather the lambs with his arme and carry them in his bosome and shall guide them that are with young And Ezek. 34. 16. I will seeke that which was lost and bring againe that that was driuen away and will binde vp that that was broken and will strengthen the weake In this respect it is said of Christ Mat. 12. 20. Abruised reede shall he not breake and smoaking flaxe shall he not quench See an experiment of this in those two Apostles which aboue all shewed most weaknesse of Faith Thomas and Peter and you shall finde Christ shewed more tender respect to them two than to all the rest For Peter Christ was most carefull that his resurrection should be reuealed vnto him Marke 16. 7. Yea 1. Cor. 15. 5. He was seene first of Cephas and then of the twelue yea to him specially he giues the commandement to feed his sheepe Ioh. 21. 15. And for Thomas see the care Christ had of him Iohn 20. 24 26. first he appeared againe to his Disciples when hee was among them and for his sake chiefly secondly he singles him out from the rest and giues him sensible helpes and meanes to confirme his Faith The Reasons of this Doctrine are principally two first the loue that the Lord beareth to our persons through Christ. Gen. 4. 4. God had respect to Abell and to his offering Through Christ God is become our father he beareth a fatherly affection to vs yea a farre more tender affection than any of vs that are parents can beare to our little ones yea a mother may forget to haue compassion vpon the sonne of her wombe yet will I not forget thee Esay 49. 15. And yet euen we that are euill stand thus affected to our little ones that we cannot loath them or neglect them for any out-breach or looking asquint or any other such like deformity yea many a thing which in another mans eye is a great blemish as the pocke-holes in the face or such like to vs seemeth none at all yea the weaker and more feeble any of our children are the more tender we are ouer them And this is much more so with the Lord toward his children Psal. 103. 13. As a father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion on them that feare him Mal. 3. 17. I will spare them as one spareth his owne sonne that serueth him The second Reason is the respect the Lord hath to the worke of his owne spirit that dwelleth in his children and to the vprightnesse of their heart Psal. 51. 6. Behold thou louest truth in the inward affections therefore hast thou taught mee wisedome in the secret of my heart Vprightnesse of heart is the chiefe worke of Gods spirit therefore Dauid begs this so earnestly of God that he would renew a right spirit within him Psal. 51. 10. and describes the man whose iniquities God hath forgiuen to bee such a one as in whose spirit there is no guile Psal. 32. 2. Where God discerneth this he will beare with many other wants Though Asa had many foule faults yet is he for this commended Asa his heart was perfect with the Lord all his daies 1. Reg. 15. 14. But on the other side it is said of Amazia that though he had not so many faults as Asa but did in many things much better than he yet the Lord reiected him and made not that account of him as he did of weake Asa he did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with a perfect heart 2. Chro. 25. 2. The Vse of this Doctrine Before I can deliuer it I must labour to preuent the abuse of it For whereas this is the childrens bread many dogs and whelpes will be snatching at it many a wicked and vngracious man will be ready to abuse this Doctrine to the blessing of himselfe in his vngodly waies and say The best haue their faults God is not so seuere as to marke euery thing that is said or done amisse he will beare with the infirmities of his children my heart is good c. But to such I say they haue nothing to doe with this doctrine but first as of the godly I haue said that none of all their foulest sins shall euer be imputed to them so to thee I say that all euen the least sinne that euer thou committedst shall be laid to thy charge know thou that for all these things God will bring thee to iudgement Eccles. 11. 9. of euery idle word that such men shall speake they shall giue account at the day of Iudgement Matth. 12. 36. Secondly As the duties the godly haue performed euen those that haue beene most full of blemishes shall be accepted and rewarded so the very best things that euer thou didst are abominable to God and shall increase thy condemnation the sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord Pro. 15. 8. Thirdly As the foulest sin that euer a godly man fell into was but his infirmity so the least offence that euer thou committedst is a reigning sin And because thou comfortest thy selfe so much in this that the godlyest haue their faults and thy sins are but thine infirmities I will shew thee sundry differences betweene the faults of the godly and thy sins betweene the infirmities of the one and the reigning sins of the other First Before the committing of it The regenerate man doth not commit any foule sinne with purpose and premeditation of heart but hee is ouertaken before he be aware and slippeth suddenly into it through the violence of tentation Thus Paul describeth the sinne of a regenerate man Gal. 6. 1. If any be fallen by occasion ouertaken with any fault So Dauid speakes of himselfe Psal. 39. 22.
I said in my haste I am cast out of thy presence and 116. 11. I said in my haste all men are lyars The purpose and desire and resolution of the heart in euery regenerate man is to please God in all things Esay 26. 8. The desire of our soule is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee See an example of this in two that fell into the foulest sins of any regenerate man we reade of in Scripture Dauid and Peter What the purpose and full resolution of Dauids heart was you may see Psal. 119. 106. I haue sworne and will performe it that I will keepe thy righteous iudgements How fell he then into so foule a sinne Surely he was suddenly ouertaken with some passion of lust before he was aware and so he fell So likewise of Peter we may see what the full purpose and resolution of his heart was Matth. 26. 33. 35. Though all men should be offended by thee yet will I neuer bee offended though I should die with thee yet I will not denie thee How fell he then into so foule a sin Surely he was suddenly ouertaken with a passion of feare before he was aware and so he fell Now it is quite contrary with the vnregenerate man For he feares not to sin Pro. 14. 16. The foole rageth and is carelesse he commits sin with prepensed purpose and determination of heart Psal 364. He imagineth mischiefe on his bed he setteth himselfe vpon a way that is not good and doth not abhor euill Rom. 13. 14. He takes thought for the flesh to fulfill the lusts of it Yea as if their inclination to euill by nature were not strong enough They draw on Iniquity with cords of vanity and sinne as with cart ropes Esay 5. 18. The second difference is in the diuers disposition of their heart euen at that time when they doe sinne The regenerate man neuer falls totally into any sinne nor commits it with the whole sway of his soule with full consent of his will But when the flesh tempteth and draweth him to sinne the spirit resisteth the motion and drawes another way euen when they sleepe their heart waketh Cant. 5. 2. 1. Iohn 3. 9. Hee that is borne of God sinneth not neither can hee sinne because the seede of God remaineth in him Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the fl●…sh and these are contrary one to another so that yee cannot doe the same things that ye would He obeyes sin as the slaue doth his master Rom. 7. 14. This though it be not alwaies felt by himselfe yet to another that is a spirituall man it will appeare by two notes 1. Try them euen when they are at the worst and some grace will appeare in them blow away the ashes and yee shall discerne some sparkles of grace in them see this in Dauids readinesse to yeeld to the reproofe of Nathan and to confesse his sinne euen when he had fallen so fearefully and lyen so long in his sin 2. Sam. 12. 13. And in praying and crying to God and calling him most affectionately his God euen when he thought in his passion and tentation that God had forsaken him Psal. 22. 1. As if thou come to the poore distressed Christian that complaines he is but an hypocrite and vtters many words sauouring of nothing but infidelity and despaire and aske him whether he be not affraid to offend God and loue not his children c. and he cannot deny this or if he do yet maist thou euidently discerne that he speaketh falsly against himselfe 2. Obserue them and thou shalt finde their ioy is not as it hath bin after once they haue yeelded to the temptation that made Dauid cry Make me to heare ioy and gladnesse that the bones that thou hast broken may reioyce Psal. 51. 8. so we shall finde the two Disciples that were going to Emaus when they began to doubt and wauer were made sad in heart by it Luke 24. 17. It is with them in this case as it was with Rebecca when she felt the two twins strugling with her Gen. 25. 22. When they say they haue no Faith nor Grace in them aske them whence then comes this sorrow and palenesse and losse of sleepe c. Now the wicked man is of a quite contrary disposition for he is all flesh and hath no such resistance in himselfe vnlesse it be first from the light of his naturall conscience for the effect of the Law is written in their hearts as the Apostle speaketh Romanes 2. 15. or secondly from the repugnancy of his lusts betweene themselues their lusts war in their members Iames 4. 1. Luke 11. 27. All things are at peace he sins willingly and with all his heart Iohn 8. 44. Ye are of your father the Diuell and the lusts of your father you will doe A third difference is the diuers disposition of heart after they haue committed sinne For the godly is wont to finde much paine and griefe in his heart much remorse of conscience euen for the smallest sinnes he hath committed against God as we see in Dauid his heart smote him for cutting off the skirt of Sauls garment and for giuing commandement for the numbring of the people 1. Sam. 24. 6. 2. Sam. 24. 10. and in Paul the remnants of originall sin in him made him cry out ô wretched man that I am c. Rom. 7. 24. If sinne be an infirmity it will put the heart to this paine as all bodily infirmities will the body And though Dauid lay long in his sin before he could recouer himselfe by sound repentance yet from the day he committed his sin this remorse began in him and he neuer found true ioy againe till he had effectually repented Psal. 51. 8. Now it is not so with the wicked but after many foule and haynous sins their hearts are as quiet and as iocund as before An example of this we haue in Iosephs brethren after they had conspired to slay him and being disswaded from it had stript him of his cote and cast him into a pit they sate downe to eate bread Gen. 37. 24 25. Another difference there is in the diuers disposition of their hearts after they haue committed sin which is the fourth and last difference The godly cannot continue in sin but after he hath falne he riseth againe yea he obtaineth further strength against his corruption and power to forsake his sin so that he will not be so apt to fall into it againe as he was before True it is a regenerate man may fall into the same sinne againe neither can any man define how oft and into how hainous sins a man that is soundly regenerate may fall yet doe we not finde that any childe of God hath falne oft into the same haynous and scandalous sinnes Indeed in a smaller slip of concealing his wife and causing her to say she was his sister we finde Abraham taken twice Gen.
secondly so soone as he was called he shewed strange diligence and zeale in executing on Ahabs house and friends the commandement he had receiued 2. Kings 9. 7. compared with verse 14 18. 24. 33. 2. Kings 10. 6. 11. 14. 17. thirdly he destroyed Baals Priests and Images and purged the land of that Idolatry 2. Kings 10. 21 28. fourthly he did all this in a zeale for God 2. Kings 10. 16. in so much as the Lord himselfe commended him for it 2. Kings 10. 30. fifthly he bore a notable hatred to the foule sinnes of Iezabel 2. King 9. 22. sixthly he bore a reuerend regard to Gods Word which he shewed by remembring it so long and acknowledging the certainety and righteousnesse of it and his care to see it performed and by doing that he did by direction of it and in obedience vnto it 2. King 9. 25 ●…6 36 37. and perswading others to acknowledge the certainty and righteousnesse of it 2. King 10. 10. seuenthly he had a reuerend respect to good men 2. King 9. 36. and 10. 10. he mentioneth not Eliah's name without title of reuerence he shewes great respect to Iehonadab 2. Kings 10. 15 16. yet this man was no better than an hypocrite his heart was not sound Iehu tooke no heed to walke in the Law of the Lord God of Israel with all his heart 2. King 10. 31. and therefore God esteemed no better of all that he did than of murder I will auenge the blood of Iezreel vpon the house of Iehu Hos. 1. 4. And the principall if not the onely thing whereby his hypocrisie was discouered was this He did not in all points follow the direction of Gods Law nor make conscience of it though he hated some Idolatry as that of Baal yet he hated not all Idolatry he departed not from the Idolatry of Ieroboam 2. Kings 10. 29. 31. So Herod went very far Mar. 6. 20. but in this his hypocrisie was discouered he could not make conscience of all that Iohn taught him nor forsake all his knowne sins The third note of difference is this The regenerate man though he make conscience of euery duty God hath enioyned him yet makes he most conscience of and is most carefull to obserue the greatest commandements and such duties as God hath most straitly enioyned This note we shall finde giuen by our Sauiour Matth. 23. 24. he makes it a propertie of hypocrites to straine at a Gnat and swallow a Camell this is oft noted for a property of the hypocrite The Pharisees were exceeding precise for the externall rest of the Sabbath euen more than any Law of God required them to be Luk. 13. 14 15. They tithed Mint and Annise and Cummin but they neglected the waightiest matters of the Law Matth. 23. 23. If you aske me which be those waightier matters of the Law I answer They be chiefly of three kinds first the inward worship of God thou shalt shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy minde this is the first and great commandement Matt. 22. 37 38. secondly iudgement mercy and fidelitie towards men Matth. 23. 23. thirdly the duties of our particular and speciall callings this may appeare Esay 1. 17. Learne to do well seeke iudgement relieue the oppressed iudge the fatherlesse pleade for the widow Who must do this Verse 10. Ye rulers of Sodome yee people of Gomorrah And by the Apostles oft beating vpon this point in all their Epistles the duties of Masters Seruants Husbands Wiues Parents Children Subiects Pastor Flocke and by that conclusion Paul makes to this Doctrine Tit. 2. 15. These things speake and exhort and rebuke with all authority On the contrarie side the hypocrite is more carefull and busie about other mens duties and the reformation of other mens faults than his own he can see the least mote in his brothers eye but cannot discerne a beame in his own he seemes very carefull to reforme the least fault he sees in another but hath no care of reforming himselfe Matth. 7. 3 5. He bindes heauy burdens and grieuous to be borne and laies them on other mens shoulders but himselfe will not mooue them with one of his fingers Matth. 23. 4. Herein then I pray you make tryall of your selues if you desire to know the soundnesse of your owne hearts Lecture the hundred and three October 1. 1611. IOHN IIII. L. IT followeth that we come now to shew you the difference betwixt the good works of the regenerate and naturall man in the manner of their doing and performing of them And indeed this is a principall thing we must haue respect vnto if we desire to know whether the good duties we do proceed from true grace yea or no. See this in that direction the Apostle giues he that giueth let him doe it with simplicity he that ruleth with diligence he that sheweth mercy with cheerefulnesse Rom. 12. 8. For the Lord hath oft noted the false and counterfeit obedience of the hypocrite by this property that though he haue done such workes as for the matter of them haue beene right and good yet he hath neuer done them in a right manner not with a right affection as it is said of Amazia 2. Chron. 25. 2. He did vprightly in the eyes of the Lord but not with a perfect heart And on the other side it is noted for a property of true and sauing obedience when there is care not only to doe the thing God commandeth but to doe it also in that manner and with that affection of heart that God hath commanded as we shall see in the example of the children of Israel Exod. 39. 42 43. According to all that the Lord commanded Moses so the children of Israel made all the worke And Moses looked vpon all the worke and behold they had done it as the Lord had commanded And in the speech and example of our Sauiour Iohn 14. 31. That the world may know that I loue the Father as the Father hath commanded me so I doe not onely what the Father hath commanded that I do but I do as he hath commanded I finde therefore in Gods Word foure euident notes of difference betweene the good duties that are performed by the naturall man and by him that hath a sound and sanctified heart euen in the manner of doing of them The regenerate man intends and the end he aimes at in doing good duties is to please and honour God he hath a single and sincere respect to God and nothing else he doth that which he doth because he knowes God hath commanded it he is pleased with he is honoured by that which he doth The notice he knowes God will take of it his allowance and reward contents him and he seeke no more The regenerate man serues God euen in those duties he performes to men euen in the duties of his calling Rom. 12. 11. Not sloathfull to doe seruice he meanes one