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A09443 A godly and learned exposition or commentarie vpon the three first chapters of the Reuelation. Preached in Cambridge by that reuerend and judicious diuine, maister William Perkins, Ann. Dom. 1595. First published for the benefit of Gods Church, by Robert Hill, Bachelor of Diuinitie; Lectures upon the three first chapters of the Revelation Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1606 (1606) STC 19732; ESTC S114701 362,972 238

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Christ deliuereth vnto them as hath bene shewed before verse 7. In this commaundement of Christ note two things First that all men in Gods church are bound in conscience to frequent Sermons whereby they may come to the knowledge of those things that God prescribeth vnto them At the natiuitie Easter and such good times as they are called ignorant people will come to the church but it may bee not once more of a moneth after or a quarter of a yeare But Christ saith My sheepe heare my voyce So that hee that will not come to heare the voyce of Christ is none of his sheepe Math. 16.19 Christ saith to Peter I will giue thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen There the preaching of the gospell is the key of the kingdom of heauen So that looke how necessary it is for a man to haue his soule saued and to enter into heauen so behoouefull is it for him to heare Sermons for that is the turning of the key whereby we enter into this kingdome 2. Cor. 5.18 the preaching of the gospell is the doctrine of reconciliation and therefore looke how necessary it is for a man to be reconciled to God so needfull is it for him to heare the word preached He that is of God beareth Gods word and he that beareth it not is not of God 1. Iohn 4.6 But men haue manie excuses to exempt themselues from hearing Sermons Some say if God himselfe would preach or Christ or an Angel from heauen then they would heare but so long as sinfull man preacheth it is no great matter though they absent thēselues Answ. This is a presumptuous reason for the preaching of the gospell by man is Gods owne ordinance and that for these causes First since Adams fall man cannot abide the voyce of God so as if man should heare God speake he would cry out with the Iewes Exod 20.19 Let not God talke with vs lest we die And with Peter Depart from me I am a miserable sinner Secondly God speaketh by man to trie the obedience and humilitie of men to see whether they would bee content to receiue and beleeue his word being propounded by sinfull man that is like vnto themselues And thirdly to maintaine loue betweene man and man by mutuall conuersing in this holy ordinance Others doe say they may well inough keepe themselues in their families for there they haue their Bible wherein bee the Sermons of Christ and of his Prophets and Apostles than which no minister can preach better Ans. It is Gods ordinance that these Sermons of Christ of the Prophets and Apostles should be againe handled preached and expounded in his church and therefore euerie man is bound in conscience to come into the congregations there to heare with reuerēce Gods holy word Others will not come to the church for they thanke God they can serue God with as good a heart on horse-backe or on their iourneys as those that come vnto the sermons Answ. These persons are blind and ignorant a seduced heart beguileth them and therefore they despise the ordināce of God but let them heare what Salomon saith He that turneth away his eare from hearing the law that is the doctrine of God euen his prayer shall be abhominable God speaketh vnto vs in the ministerie of his word and if wee refuse to heare him there shall we thinke hee will heare vs when wee pray Know therefore if thou refuse his word hee will refuse thy prayers neither indeed can any without the word pray aright Such people deceiue themselues their prayers in their needlesse iourneyes shall bee their iudges to condemne them for therein they confesse God is to bee worshipped and yet in practise they reiect his direction for the same Lastly others say they haue knowledge inough the ministers can teach them no more than they know and therefore they need not go heare so much preaching Answ. These that pretend such perfect knowledge are commonly the most ignorant not knowing the end of this ordinance of God for preaching serueth not only to teach men to know God and his will but also to increase in knowledge and to yeeld obedience to that which they know If therefore thou hast knowledge it is well but that is not inough if thou wouldest be blessed thou must doe that which thou knowest Iohn 13.17 And for this cause the most learned man that is must still frequent the hearing of Sermons to further himselfe in obedience because a man may know much and yet want conscience to obey Secondly in this commandement men are inioyned the reading of the word hearing of it read not onely publickly but also priuatly in their families that therby also they may come to the knowledge of that thing which Christ propoundeth vnto them Luk. 10.26 Christ saith to one of the Scribes what is written how readest thou Taking it for granted that men must read the Scripture priuatly And the Lord saith My people go into captiuitie because they haue no knowledge yea they perish Hose 4.6 But wofull is the defect of this duty for many haue not the Bible in their houses for their priuat exercise in the word and in many families it is set vp for a shew or lieth couered with dust when as cards and tables are worne with vse It is not amisse for men to get the statutes of the land into their houses and to read therein for the knowledge of mens lawes but yet herein they are blame worthie that either they haue not or else regard not the booke of God whereby they might bee acquainted with the statutes of the Lord for the better guiding of our vnruly affections Other things in this commandement haue beene obserued before The second part of this conclusion is an excellent promise made to him that ouercommeth which for substance hath beene handled in the conclusions of the former Epistles Here onely some speciall blessings are particularly promised In the handling whereof two points are to bee considered First the persons to whom the promise is made To him that ouercommeth whereof entreatie was made before verse 7. Secondly the blessings promised comprised in this threefold gift of God First To eate of the Mannah which is hid Secondly To receiue a white stone Thirdly A new name written in the stone All which three signifie in effect The election vocation iustification and glorification of Gods people But I wil handle them in particular The I. benefit is The giuing of the hidden Manna to eate Manna properly signifieth that food which God gaue from the clouds to the people of Israell which for the excellencie of it is called The wheate of heauen The food of the strong o● the food of Angels In forme it was like Coriander seed and in colour white in tast it was pleasant and sweete Herewith God fed his people in the wildernesse 40. years to teach them That man liueth not by bread only but by
Gospell when he preacheth Gods word is in the roome of Christ and speaketh that vnto the church which Christ wold speake That they may be faithfull witnesses sundry things are required at their hands First they must deliuer the testimonie of Christ aboue all other things and before all testimonies of man in the office of their ministerie This was meat and drinke to Christ to teach his fathers will Eleazar Abrahams eldest seruant shewed his fidelitie in that he would not eate or drinke till hee had done his masters message Gen. 24.33 Much more ought the ministers of Christ haue speciall care of that weightie message committed vnto them Secondly they must testifie all the will of God concerning matters of salvation as faith obedience and a godly life among men wee count him a faithfull witnesse which testifies all the truth and no more but the truth so shold it be with all ministers that be Gods witnesses to his church Herein Paule cleared himselfe That he was free from al mens bloud seeing he deliuered the whole will of God in matters necessarie for saluation and kept nothing backe Thirdly he must neither add vnto or take away much lesse in any case depraue the word of God And this is the true marke of a faithfull witnesse For false prophets teach some truth but withall they adde something of their owne or detract from Gods truth something that they ought not In the church of Rome a man may hear things concerning morall vertues handled soundly but come to Iustification and thereto they adde the merit of mens works so they deale with Faith and Repentance matters of saluation they take away one part and adde another to the scriptures they hold the Creed in word yet in deed they denie the same as by their doctrine may appeare so shew themselues false witnesses Fourthly a faithfull witnesse must deliuer the testimonie of Christ in that spirituall manner which best beseemeth the maiestie of God and which he best approoueth that is in a plaine easie and familiar kind of speech that the conscience of the sinner may be touched the vnderstanding of the simple may be edified When the word is otherwise deliuered as in the entising words of mans wisdom or for ostētation of wit or much reading though nothing be said but the truth yet he that so dispenseth it is an vnfaithfull witnesse because he corrupteth the word by his vaine deliuerie And this is the sinne of this age in many ministers who teach the truth indeed but yet in such sort as it may appeare they seeke thēselues and not Gods glory respecting little the edification of the simple so themselues may bee famous for wit eloquence and learning But these men make marchandise of the word like to huxters that by starching blowing and spicing set a glosse vpon their ware to make it seeme that which it is not which is a greeuous sinne and such as will banish the Gospell out of our land vnlesse it be reformed Secondly this title of Christ That faithfull witnesse doth discouer vnto vs the damnable practise of men in the sinne of vnbeleefe for Christ this faithfull witnesse hath giuen testimonie to his word which is preached that the same is true And therefore they that beleeue it not doe make Christ a false witnesse and a lyar than which what can be more horrible yet this is the common sinne of this age For when the law is applied who is afraid and when the gospell is preached yet who beleeueth our report Gods ministers may say with the little children Wee haue piped vnto you but you haue not daunced we haue mourned vnto you but you haue not wept This deadnesse of heart whereby men are not mooued with the word preached vnto them is an euident argument of this fearfull vnbeleefe whereby they make Christ a false witnesse This therefore should moue vs to consider in our selues the heinousnesse of this sinne that so we may striue against it and labour to giue free passage to the word into our hearts trembling at the law and reioycing in the Gospell that so each part thereof may haue his perfect worke in vs for which end also wee may consider That amongst those which shall haue their portion in the burning lake vnbeleeuers are set in the first ranke Reuel 21. vers 8. Thirdly seeing Christ Iesus is that faithfull witnesse which giueth testimonie to mens consciences in particular of their saluation we learne That euery one which professeth himselfe to repent is bound in conscience to beleeue that the promises of the Gospell and the benefits thereof as Election Redemption Iustification Sanctification and Saluation belong to him particularly And though this be against all humane sence and reason yet seeing we haue a faithfull witnesse auouching the same wee must submit our selues vnto his testimonie for by vnbeleefe we greatly dishonour our witnesse bearer by denying truth vnto his record Here then wee see it it no presumption as the Papists say to beleeue our election and saluation in particular nay it is an horrible sinne in euery one that repenteth not to beleeue it seeing Christ a most faithfull witnesse testifies the same to our consciences by his holy spirit Hereto also serue the sacraments instituted by God to seale vp vnto euery worthy receiuer Christ and all his benefits The ministers giuing of the bread and wine to them that truly repent is as much as if Christ should say Beleeue thou and life eternall belongs to thee And the first begotten of the dead In these words is contained the second office of Christ namely his Priesthood the principall actions whereof stand in dying in rising againe from the dead and making intercession for vs. And here S. Iohn alludeth to the estate of the families amōg the Iewes comparing Christ to the first borne for as among them hee which was first borne and eldest of the familie had many priuiledges and preheminences aboue his brethren as Lordship right of the Priesthood and double portion c. so Christ he hath his priuiledges yea euen Christ crucified hee hath his prerogatiues among the dead aboue all that are dead So Paule expounding this title calleth him The first borne and beginning of the dead that hee might in all things haue the preheminence Coloss. 1. vers 18. The priuiledges of Christ dead and buried among all the dead are two first That he was the first that euer rose from death to life and so to glorie Some indeed haue risen before Christ from naturall death to naturall life as Lazarus but it was to die againe And Moyses and Elias assumed their bodies in the Mount with Christ in his transfiguration but yet they laid them downe againe to the former miserie of corruption for a time But Christ Iesus ros● from death to life eternall neuer to die againe And his resurrection was the first steppe into his glorie Secondly that by his owne power he raised vp
shew mercie exercise iudgement keepe courts assises begin end and continue warre according to his commaundements And so in euery thing the direction of Christ should be their guide as it was to Dauid Thy lawes O Lord haue beene my counsellours Psal. 119.24 Fourthly if Christ bee soueraigne king then all earthly princes are bound to plant and establish in their kingdomes the religion of Christ else how can they shew themselues his loyall subiects Many imagine That earthly princes may admit vnto their subiects any religion for the peace of the ciuile state but this is against the equitie of Gods word in this place for wherein can earthly princes doe homage vnto Christ if they maintaine not his religion And their dutie in this behalfe is signified plainely in the parable of the mariage For when they that were bidden did not come the king sent forth his seruants which may be vnderstood of Christian magistrats to compell men to come to the mariage for that is the magistrates dutie in respect of the outward profession of true religion Fiftly seeing Christ alone is prince of the kings of the earth hence we learne that kings on earth in their dominions are soueraigne gouernours ouer all persons and in all causes next vnder Christ he is king of kings absolutely and they are vnder him alone and haue no other head but him Whereby wee see the presumption and arrogancie of the Pope and Sea of Rome in claiming supremacie aboue all kings and princes in the whole church vpō earth This is a deuice of the diuell and high treason against Christ for hereby hee is robbed of this royall prerogatiue to be the only prince of the kings of the earth Lastly seeing Christ is king of all kings we must not be discouraged when we be called to suffer any affliction for his truth let the tyrants of the earth rage and bend their force to hurt vs yet wee haue a king aboue them al for whom we suffer he is their king hee can stay and bridle them and if hee please confound and bruise them in peeces They cannot do any thing but that which he permits for hee rules in the middest of all his enemies Psal. 110.2 he can breake them in pieces like a potters vessell Thus much of the offices of Christ. The second part of Christs description is by the execution of his offices which consists in foure works The first contained in these words Vnto him which loued vs the second in these Which washed vs in his bloud the other two in the two verses which follow viz. 6 and 7. For the first which loued vs that is Iohn and the churches of Asia by proportion all other churches being parts of the true church The loue of Christ hath three degrees the first is a generall loue wherby he loues all his creatures approuing the same to be good as they be his by creation The second is the loue of mankind in that he was content to become a redeemer for mankind after their fall and not ●or any other creature no not for the Angels which fell as well as man who therefore remaine without all hope of saluation The third and principall is that wherby he loues his elect and chosen children which is that speciall sauour whereby he accepts of them to life euerlasting This third degree hath two parts First it is taken for his purpose to loue as when he saith I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau Rom. 9.13 Secondly for the act of louing which is the declaration of his purpose by spirituall benefits 1. Iohn 3.1 Behold what singular loue God hath shewed vnto vs that wee should be called the sonnes of God noting the declaration of his loue in the gift of adoption So in this verse by the loue of Christ vnto his church is meant the actuall declaration of his speciall fauour in accepting them for his children and bestowing many singular blessings vpon them Whereas S. Iohn placeth this in the first place of all the benefites of Christ That he loued vs hee would teach vs That this speciall loue is the very ground of mans redemption which excludeth all foreseene faith and workes from being motiues of mans election in Gods eternall councell and so proportionally all foreseene sinnes from being motiues in God of mans reprobation It may be obiected The loue of God as also of man respects a thing as it is good First the thing must be good and then it is loued and so in mans redemption God first foresees their goodnesse and therefore chuseth them Ans. There is great difference betweene the loue of the creature and of the creator The loue of the creature followes the goodnesse of a thing because he seeth it is good therefore he loues it But God the creator first loues the creature before it bee good and hence it comes that it is good because he loues it Secondly whereas Saint Iohn and all the churches of Asia as other true churches do beleeue and are assured that Christ loues them for that Saint Iohn taketh for granted this should moue all men to haue this care to labour aboue all things to be rooted and grounded in the loue of God seeing hee placeth that in the first place This is the principall thing wherein the Apostle would haue the Ephesians rooted and grounded and therefore prayeth That with all Saints they may be able to comprehend what is the breadth and length deapth and height th●●of Ephes. 2. vers 17 18 19. This we doe when we are assured in heart and conscience by the working of Gods spirit that he loues vs in Christ. So that he which denies vnto vs the assurance of Gods loue in Christ takes away the very ground of our saluation Now that we may haue this assurance of Gods loue wee must in all good duties to God and man draw neere to God with our hearts keeping a good conscience in all things and then will God draw neere to vs. If any man loue me saith Christ he will keepe my word and then my father will loue him and we will come in vnto him and dwell with him Iohn 14.23 meaning by the holy ghost which shall shed this loue into our hearts Rom. 5. vers 5. causing vs to increase in the feeling thereof as wee grow in faith and obedience towards him And hath washed vs from our sinnes in his bloud Here is the second benefit and action of Christ to his church Where first of all the very phrase hath washed vs doth import that the sinnes of men are as filthie spots in their soules and that himselfe and this church of God were touched with a serious consideration of their vilenesse by reason of their sinnes for washing presupposeth former filthinesse and pollution Thus did Dauid most sensibly feele his owne filthinesse and see his miserable estate when he desired the Lord to wash him throughly confessing thereby that his soule and body were so foulely stained and
their common houses which is vntrue for in the new Testament all such diuersitie of place is abolished in regard of Gods seruice and presence the dwelling house is as holy as the church Indeed churches must bee maintained because in them the people may more orderly and conueniently meet together to serue God publickly in the word and prayer for which time all due reuerence must be obserued in them but we must not think that they are more holy than other places More particularly in this circumstance of place note two things First by what meanes Saint Iohn came thither Secondly to what end and for what cause The meanes was banishment by the emperour Domitian the cause was for the word of God For the first hee came and abode in Patmos being banished thither for the Gospels sake In this his banishment consider many excellent things First Saint Iohn was a most worthy Apostle endued with rare gifts a singular maintainer of the Gospell and a famous founder of the church of God and chiefe pillar thereof in those dayes when he wrot this booke and for this cause most hated of the cruell persecutor Domitian and of the Romanes And yet obserue That whereas many other true Christians were put to the sword S. Iohn is not but escapeth by banishment The cause of this was Gods speciall prouidence by which hee reserued him for the benefit of the church that hee might receiue this Reuelation and commit it to writing for the perpetuall good of all his children And so though Domitian was a cruell tyrant and wanted no malice towards Iohn yet hee could not kill him God ouerruled him that he did but banish him and that into such an Island wherein he might quietly receiue these visions and pen the same for the good of the church By this wee see the great care and prouidence of God ouer his church that hee doth bridle and ouerrule the cruell minds and might of bloudie persecutors that they cannot for their hearts do any thing but that which serueth for Gods glory and the good of his church though they intend the contrary For Domitian intended onely the hurt of Iohn yet see by his banishment into that Isle he had fit place to receiue these visions for the good of the church So in the death of Christ the Iewes and Gentiles and all the people banded themselues together to put Christ to death and the diuell he laboured to stirre them on to practise their intended malice Yet the ouerruling power of God who bringeth light out of darkenesse directeth and ordereth this their malice and wicked practise to the most excellent worke that euer was euen the redemption of mankind So Iosephs brethren intended no such deliuerance as God wrought by him in selling their brother This consideration should comfort all Gods children in the time of any outward distresse euen the remembrance of Gods ouerruling hand Secondly in that Iohn went into banishment when it was so appointed wee learne That when we are oppressed and persecuted by tyrants for Christs sake we must not make resistance or offer violence but suffer all iniuries with patience for as one sayth truly The Christians weapons in persecution are onely prayers and teares And Saint Iohn often in this booke addeth this conclusion after the foretelling of persecution Here is the patience of Saints shewing that patience must be the complete armour against all our bloodie enemies Thirdly here also obserue That Iohn came into this Island not of his own accord as chusing a solitarie life to bee the most happie state of perfection but by violence and constraint For if hee had come into it voluntarily being little or not inhabited hee could not haue done the duty of his Apostleship in preaching the Gospell and laying the foundations of the church This then confuteth the Monkish life which is no life of holy perfection as Papists call it but of glorious superstition and slat impietie before God for hereby they forsake their callings and vtterly disable themselues to do those duties which God requireth of them in church commonwealth or familie Fourthly whereas Iohn being banished receiued his visions in a barren and base desolate place we see that those which honour God shall be honoured of God euen then when men seeke most to disgrace them for what greater disgrace could they haue put vpon Iohn than to banish him into so base an Island Yet because it was for Gods glory euen there doth the Lord appeare vnto him and honour him much in reuealing vnto him these visions So when Ioseph was sold of his brethren and most dishonoured of them then did God exhalt him most of all The same may bee sayd of Daniell in Babylon whom God did most aduance when his enemies sought his greatest ruine and the same is true of all Gods children Them which honour God will he honour II. point The cause for which hee came into this Isle is expresly set downe for the word of God that is because he was a publisher and preacher of the word of God for the performance of which dutie he was banished By which wee may note That all naturall men as Domitian and his court and all the Gentiles without Gods speciall calling doe beare a deadly hatred towards Gods word For S. Iohn was a most worthy Apostle a famous man for gifts a singular preacher of the word of God yet is hated nay banished not for his owne cause but for the word of God This hatred hath appeared in the heathen emperours by their bloudie persecutions against the preachers and professors of this word and yet though men hate it naturally the same word winneth them and taketh place in their hearts for their conuersion and causeth them to loue it so as successiuely it hath beene spread ouer all the world Which shews against the Atheist That the word taught by the Prophets and Apostles is indeed the true word of God not the inuention of man for mans word being hated cannot win vnto it him which hateth it but the word of God preuaileth by grace in the hearts of those who hate it by nature which it could not doe vnlesse there were in it some diuine power Againe seeing Iohn was banished for Gods word all ministers are to cast their accounts and make this reckoning that they may and must suffer trouble persecution yea sometime banishment it selfe for the Gospels sake if they will be faithfull For that which befell the principall founders and chiefe builders of the church cannot bee auoided of them which are ordinary ministers if they will be faithfull Christ acquainteth his disciples with this telling them That they are euen accursed when all men speake well of them Let none therefore thinke it strange at this day if for well doing they heare and receiue euill nay let them feare the curse when all men prayse them And for the witnessing of Iesus Christ. Here Iohn doth note more specially the
bee an inducement vnto all those that are indued with gifts fit for this calling to affect the same Lastly euery minister of the gospell must hereby learne to bee faithfull in his calling and holy in his conversation for by vertue of his calling hee is placed in Christs right hand Now shall we thinke that Christ wil long bear in his right hād any that are vnfaithfull or prophane Nay he will take them out of his right hand and put them vnder his feete of brasse and there grind them to powder For as they are honoured aboue others by their place so shall their confusion be the greater vnlesse they be faithfull This wee may see in Nadab and Abihu Leuit. 10.1 and Hoph●●● and Phineas 1. Sam. 3.13 And in the same respect ought all the people of God to be carefull to their wayes for by their calling of christianitie they be members of Christ. Now if they be not faithfull and answerable to their profession hee will surely deale with them as with vnfaithfull ministers put them vnder his feet of brasse confound them for euer They must therefore make conscience of all sin and become not hearers onely but doers of his will so shall Christ protect them in this life and saue them eternally And out of his mouth went a sharpe two edged sword This sword that came out of his mouth is nothing else but the doctrine of the Law and the Gospell vttered and propounded in the writings and ministerie of the Prophets and Apostles Heb. 4.12 The word of God is liuely mightie in operation and sharper than any two edged sword And it is thereto compared because as a sword with a double edge entreth sharply into the flesh and pierceth deeply into the bones euen to the very marrow So the doctrine of the Law and the Gospell entreth sharply and pierceth deepely into the very marrow of the heart of euery man to the diuiding of the thought and the spirit This two edged sword the word of God hath a twofold operation One vpon the wicked Another in the elect It woundeth the wicked at the very heart with a deadly wound and thereby brings them to eternall death Isay. 11.4 Christ shall slay the wicked with the breath of his lippes that is with his word which is this two edged sword Herewith shall he consume Antichrist 2. Thes. 2.8 visit Leuiathan and slay the dragon that is the greatest enemies of his church Isay. 27. vers 1. Here consider how the word of God should kill an impenitent sinner There be three degrees of spirituall death First in this life where an impenitent sinner receiueth his deadly wound The second at the end of this life when the bodie is laid in the graue but the soule goeth to the torments of the damned The third at the end of the world when bodie and soule together go to hell eternally Now a sinner receiueth in this life his deadly wound after this manner Christ in the giuing thereof hath a threefold worke in his heart by the ministerie of his word which is this two edged sword First hereby he reuealeth vnto him his sinnes as hypocrisie pride and rebellion of heart with all other his horrible and damnable transgressions against the first and second table 1. Cor. 14.24.25 When all Prophesie and there commeth in one vnlearned he is reproued of all the Prophets by the word iudge him and thereby lay open vnto him the secret sinnes of his heart with the sinnes of his life Secondly Christ hereby reue●leth vnto him his indignation and wrath which is the curse of the law due vnto him In which regard the law is called a killing letter shewing no mercy but onely thundreth out the fierce wrath of God vpon transgressors Thirdly hereby Christ awaketh his guiltie conscience sharpneth the sting thereof and terrifieth him at the hearing of his word Thus wicked Felix trembled when hee heard Paul preach of temperance righteousnesse and the ●udgement to come So when king Belshazzer saw the palme of the hand writing things against him vpon the ●all his countenance was changed his thoughts troubled him his ioynts were loosed and his knees stood one against another And al these are wrought in the wicked without apprehension of mercy or reformation of life It may please God to recouer one that ●s 〈◊〉 wounded but while he is 〈◊〉 this estate hee hath receiued a deadly wound and without vnfamed repentance is alreadie in th● first step toward● eternal death for these horror● o● conscience seuered from the apprehension of Gods mercie in Christ are no grace but the flashes of hell fire and the beginning of eternall woe And thus we see how Christ by this sword woundeth his enemies Hence we are to learne sundry duties First how to earne our selues towards them that after they haue heard the word preached vnto them will rage and storme against it and the preachers therof because it touched them We must not despise or maligne them but rather be mooued with compassion towards them For this their behauiour is a token they are wounded with the sword of Christ at the verie heart and these their ragings are nothing but struglings before death eternall vnlesse the Lord in mercy recouer them of this deadly wound II. Hereby wee are let to see and know the lamentable state of the greatest number in those congregations where the word hath long bene preached for we shall find by lamentable experience that in those place● few come to true knowledge repentance and obedience but most remaine ignorant and impenitent now this their condition is most fearefull A terrible iudgement of God is vpon them for when men haue long heard Gods word and are not thereby bettered for knowledge in mind and obedience of life they are thereby wounded vnto death This two edged sword hath alwayes his worke it either cureth vnto life by working repentance and other graces of saluation or woundeth vnto death them that receiue it not We must therefore lament the case of such persons as remain● ignorant and impenitent vnder the ministerie of the word for they are as yet dead men for ought wee know how soeuer they may make a faire shew by their ●●ill honestie If any man should come into a field and there behold many thousands slaughtered and 〈◊〉 ou● blo●d some in the ●ead some in the side c. this sight would make his heart to bleed Wel this 〈…〉 God 's church though it be not seene with bodily eyes the most men are wounded with this sword of Gods word and lye 〈◊〉 wallowing in the blo●d of their soules 〈◊〉 they continue in ignorance in se●uritie and want of repenta●ce III. This m●st admonish vs all to labour earnestly to haue further things wrought in vs than a knowledge of our sinnes an apprehension of wrath o● horrour of conscience namely 〈◊〉 faith and repentance and sound reformation of life for without this wee haue nothing in vs
hated namely Idolatrie and Adulterie which are ioyned together in these Nicolaitans Adulterie is the punishment of Idolatrie and Idolatrie the punishment of Adulterie Spirituall Adulterie is punished with bodily adulterie This was verified in the old Iewes when they fell a whoring after strange gods God gaue them vp to vncleane lust And it is palpable in the Church of Rome they being fallen to idolatrie doe abound in all vncleanenesse for they tollerate stewes for fornication and adulterie and Sodomic are common among them Againe sundry men may here be well admonished who will bee of no Religion because there are many sects and schismes among the professours thereof These men should consider That in the best Churches planted by the Apostles there were sects and heresies euen in the Apostles times as here in Ephesus And therefore no maruell if there bee sects and schismes among vs at this day This offence should not mooue any to dislike the gospell but rather cause them more firmely to cleaue vnto the truth Which I also doe hate This Christ addeth to encourage them to goe forward in the vertue for which hee commended them in hating euill workes for what could more prouoke them to zeale and constancie therein than to know they did that which Christ himselfe did And here wee see that Christ would haue euery member of his Church to be like minded and like affected vnto him as he was man Wee must loue those things which Christ loueth and hate those things which Christ hateth reioyce wherein Christ reioyceth and mourne for those things for which Christ mourned And great reason it should be so for wee professe our selues to be members of Christ bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh for out of his bloud sprung the Church and there must bee consent and conformitie betweene the head and the members Quest. If Christ hated these wicked men why did hee suffer them to liue and not cut them off from troubling his Church Answ. Because hereby hee would manifest his loue to his Church and his iustice vpon the wicked for hee can bring light out of darkenesse and good not onely out of good but out of euill Verse 7. Let him that hath an eare heare what the spirit sayth vnto the Churches To him that ouercommeth will I giue to eat of the tree of life which is in the middest of the paradise of God These words containe the conclusion of this Epistle the scope whereof is to excite this Church to the more carefull performance of the duties before prescribed This conclusion hath two parts a commaundement and a promise The commaundement in the beginning of the verse Let him that hath a●●are he ar● what the spirit sayth vnto the Churches In this commaundement note three points I. who are commaunded These which haue eares II. The dutie commaunded They must heare III. What they must heare namely What the spirit sayth vnto the Churches I. point The parties commanded are thus set forth He which hath an eare who these bee Christ doth more fully expound Matth. 13.9 when hee saith Let him that hath an eare to heare heare Where he maketh this distinction of hearers that some are deafe hearers some hearing hearers The deafe hearers are those that bring with them to the ministerie of the word their outward eares only but their hearts are not affected with it neither do they care to learne to beleeue or obey that which is taught them The hearing hearers are all such as beside their bodily eares haue eares pi●●ced in their hearts by the spirit of grace whereby they doe not onely heare the word outwardly but their hearts are also affected with it and made pliable vnto it so as they beleeue it and bring forth obedience vnto it This hearing eare is set foorth by Dauid when he saith Sacrifice and burnt offering● thou wouldest not haue but mine ●ares hast thou opened and prepar●d and then I sayd Lo● I come Hereof Isay saith Thou openedst mine eares and I was no● rebellious And this hearing eare 〈…〉 giuen her when God opened her heart whereby she became attentiue to the word of God preached by Paule By this distinction of hearers which Christ maketh we may learne that Gods grace vnto saluation is not vniuersal that is God giueth not vnto al men such measure of grace whereby if they will themselues they may beleeue repent and be saued For in Christs time and euer since there haue bene in the church these two kind of hearers whereof the deafe hearer doth not receiue nor beleeue the gospell vnto saluation Neither is it true that God giueth grace sufficient vnto all whereby they might be saued if they by their malice and sinne did not abolish the same For though he admit all sorts into his church yet not all but some onely haue eares pierced by the spirit of grace that they can heare And therefore when the Disciples asked Christ Why hee spake in parables he answered thus To you it is giuen to know the will of God and the secrets of his kingdom but to others it is not giuen Shewing plainly that the gift of hearing to saluation is not giuen to all and in some made void by their own wilfulnesse but to some it is giuen and they haue hearing eares and to some it is not giuen and their eares are deafe Secondly seeing this commaundement is directed to the hearing hearers we must hereby be admonished to vse all good meanes to become good hearers of Gods word bringing with vs not onely the bodily eares which we haue by creation but the spirituall eares of the heart which we haue by regeneration For it is not sufficient to our saluation to receiue the word into the outward bodily eares vnlesse the inward eares of the heart bee opened that our soule may bee affected with the word and fitted to receiue to beleeue and obey the same Thus did good king I●sias heare the law read the text saith His heart 〈◊〉 within him And thus did Dauid heare when the Lord sayd to the church Seeke ●ee my face his heart answered I seeke thy face O Lord. And as we must bee carefull to get spirituall eares so wee must take heede of deafe eares Which is when a man commeth heareth the word of God but yet hath no care in his heart to learne beleeue or obey the same This deafe eare is a fearefull iudgement of God whereof we may read Isay. 6.9 where the Prophet is sent To make their eares heauie and their harts fat that they might not beare nor beleeue lest they should turne and be saued And this the rather we must looke vnto because it is a iudgement of God vpon many among vs at this day The greatest part of hearers are deafe hearers which appeareth by this that after long teaching they neitheir increase in knowledge nor in faith nor in obedience but remaine the same for blindnesse of mind hardnesse
signe or rule whereto hee will conforme and square the last iudgement Secondly whereas euery man must bee iudged that is saued or condemned according to his workes hence wee may gather that good workes are necessarie to saluation yet not as causes thereof either efficient or helping any way but onely as a way or meanes to come vnto saluation For faith is necessarie and good workes are the tokens and fruits of faith and so are necessarie Thirdly here we must bee admonished to bee carefull to abound in good workes not to win heauen by them but to get assurance of saluation in our selues And these good workes are the doing of the duties of pietie vnto God and of charitie vnto our brethren euen the duties of the Morall law or more plainely the doing of the generall duties of a Christian and the particular duties of a mans calling for if these bee done in obedience to God and to his glory proceeding from faith and loue vnto our brethren though the calling bee neuer so base they are good workes And on the contrarie this must admonish vs to make conscience of euery euill way for sinnes be the markes of condemnation and so many wicked workes as we commit so many markes and brands doe wee set vpon our selues of our iust and deserued condemnation vnlesse wee repent Lastly hence wee may gather that there bee degrees of ioy in heauen and of torments in hell For iudgements and rewards goe according to mens workes And therefore they that testifie their faith by great and many good workes shall haue great reward they that testifie their faith by lesser and fewer workes shall haue lesser reward and so for sinnes the more heynous they bee the deeper condemnation they doe procure Vers. 24. And to you I say the rest of them of Thyatira as many as haue not this learning neither haue knowne the deepenesse of Sathan as they speake I will put vpon you none other burden 25. But that which you haue already hold fast till I come Here Christ commeth to a second part of his counsell which concernes the Angell and the better part of this Church of Thyatira and first hee beginneth with the Preface of this counsell wherein wee may obserue two points First who speaketh Secondly to whom hee speaketh For the first hee that speaketh is Christ. I say hereby Christ challengeth vnto himselfe the absolute and all sufficient authoritie of the supreme Doctor of his Church in that hee speaketh in his owne name Whereby hee putteth a plaine difference betweene himselfe and all other his Ministers either Prophets Apostles or ordinarie teachers for they must not propound any thing vnto Gods people in their owne names but in the name of Christ. But Christ teacheth in his owne name being the fountaine of all diuine knowledge and vnderstanding that i● reuealed in the word of God And thus Christ himselfe speaketh in his owne name to strike the hearts of the Angell of this Church and the better part thereof with reuerence and to mooue them to receiue and obey the counsell following considering it comes immediately from Christ the Doctor of the Church II. point The parties to whom he speaketh To you that is the Angell and the better part of this Church for so Christ expounds it in the words following though first hee say in generall To you that is The rest of them of Thyatira When as Christ will behaue himselfe as the doctor and chiefe Angell of this Church note that he maketh a distinction of the persons in the Church and also deuideth his counsell giuing one doctrine and one iudgement to one part and a diuers doctrine and iudgement to another This giueth vs good direction for sundry actions for some may aske how must doctrine bee deliuered in a mixt congregation where some are Papists some Protestants some are hardened others despaire Answ. The persons must bee distinguished after the example of Christ and sutable doctrines deuided for them that euery one may haue his due Impenitent sinners must be terrified and threatenings deliuered against them with exception of them that repent Comforts must be propounded and applied to them that despaire with restraint from all impenitent persons that goe on in sinne If any demaund more particularly who these bee whom Christ calleth The rest of them of Thyatyra Christ answeres directly as the words import to as many as haue not this learning neither haue knowne the deepenesse of Sathan Where Christ giueth two notes whereby to discerne who bee the rest of them of Thyatira The first is the not receiuing or maintaining of the false doctrine of Iezabell whereof entreatie hath beene formerly made The second note is ignorance in the deepenesse of Sathan neither haue knowne the deepenesse of Sathan that is neither haue acknowledged nor approoued the doctrine of Iezabell which is the deepe and profound learning as themselues doe iudge In this obserue a most wicked practise of Iezabell and her followers they esteemed highly of their owne opinions calling them profound and deepe learning but for the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles in the Old and New Testaments in it there was no such matter This in all ages hath beene the practise of wicked persons highly to esteeme their owne conceits and basely to neglect the word of God The teachers of the Iewes doe hold to this day That the Lord gaue to Moses a most plain and easie law which he deliuered to his people but the most secret and profound doctrine was vnwritten shewed to Moses by reuelation and by him deliuered to the Priests and Leuites which they keepe still in their Cabbala And of the like iudgement touching Scripture are the Popish Churches The Word written is but an inkie word a dead letter or a nose of waxe but the most perfect Scripture is vnwritten which is the consent of faith and of doctrine in the hearts of all Catholickes And by such great tearmes the Anabaptists Libertines and Arrians maintaine their doctrine and abuse Scripture calling the written Word milke for euery nouice but the consent of heart among themselues with reuelations that is the strong meates Yea this opinion hath crept in among vs in part men thinke basely of Scripture and preferre other mens writings before it For let a man preach plainely the bare word of God and deliuer doctrines and exhortations out of the same this is but plaine preaching But let another come and vtter his mind partly in Latine and partly in Greeke and other languages alleadging withall the testimonies of Fathers Counsels and other Writers that is the learned preaching And thus doe most men abase Scripture and exalt the writings of men aboue it But seeing this is the practise of Iezabell and wicked men let vs on the contrary learne to reuerence the written word and giue place thereto aboue all the testimonies and sayings of men whatsoeuer The deepenesse of Sathan As if he should say They count it deepe learning but
of mankind neither is there any other meanes appointed hereunto in the word of God This sheweth that their opinion is false who teach that God calleth all ●he world effectually vnto saluation for how can th●y bee called that neuer heard of the 〈◊〉 of God but all in all ages neuer 〈◊〉 of the word of God Albeit 〈◊〉 the comming of Christ their sound hath gone foorth into all nations Secondly this sheweth the fondnesse of their opinion who defend the Doctrine of vniuersall grace that God should giue grace pertaining to saluation vnto euerie man in the world so as he may be saued if he will for the meanes to receiue grace is the hearing of the word which all men in all ages neuer had vouchsafed vnto them The second dutie prescribed is the holding fast of this doctrine To hold fast here signifieth two things first to maintaine the doctrine of the Gospell receiued and taught by the Apostles Secondly to put the same in practise in a godly life of these wee haue spoken before cap. 2.25 The third dutie is to repent where by repentance is not meant the beginning of repentance but the renewing and restoring of the same for their hardnesse and deadnesse of heart whereby they did slackly and coldly practise the good duties which they did professe Hereby we are taught not to content our selues with the begining of repentance but we must renue the same continually that not for grosse sins only but euen for the wants that bee in vs as for our dulnesse and deadnesse of heart and for our hypocrisie and decay in Gods graces And because this Church was verie dead and dull of heart therefore Christ addeth a reason to mooue them to the practise of this dutie which is a most terrible threatning in these words If thou wilt not watch I will come on thee 〈◊〉 a theefe and thou shalt not know what houre I will come vpon thee Here marke Christs order and dealing hauing prescribed a remedie for their fault hee giueth them a direction to practise the same and after addeth a most terrible threatning to driue them therevnto as if he should say if thou wilt not watch against sinne and against death and for that end remember my word hold fast the same and repent then look as a theefe comes vpon a man on a suddaine and spoyles his goods and cuts the throate of his children so will I come on thee on a suddaine and power vpon thee my wrath whereby I will 〈◊〉 cut the throat of thy soule and thou shalt haue no means to escape my punishment Here Christ threatneth suddaine and speedie destruction but yet with condition and limitation of repentance Now because we be like this Church as hath been shewed by reason of the long peace which we inioy we may also vse the same reason and threatning at this day to stirre vp our dead harts We must watch against all sinne and against death and for this end must haue in memorie the word of God and hold fast the faith vnto the end and repent continually of all wants but if we doe not this then are the vengeances and eternall punishments of God to be powred vpon vs without measure and that sodenly when wee cannot preuent them If a man haue but a sparke of grace the consideration hereof will mooue him to repentance and to watchfulnes but if this will not awake a man out of his sinnes then nothing remaineth but a fearfull expectation of the wrath of God which shall be vnauoidable and endure for euer Indeed if a man had some thousand yeares allotted for the punishment of his sins there were some cause why hee might continue in them but seeing this punishment is eternall and when many thousand yeares are expired they are as farre from the end of their woe as euer they were therefore it must stirre vp all dead and drowzie harts vnto repentance and cause them to shake off securitie ignorance and coldnesse in Religion and to breake off the course of euerie sinne Vers. 4. Notwithstanding thou hast a few names yet in Sardie which haue not defiled their garments and th●y shall walke with me in white for they are worthy Heere beginneth the second part of the matter of this Epistle namely the praise and commendation of some part of this Church The words doe thus depend vppon those which went before wheras Christ had sayd that this Church was dead in sinne and had onely a name to liue some man might a●ke how it could bee a true Church To this Christ answereth in the beginning of this verse that though the greatest part in this Church were dead in their sinnes yet some few there were among them that were aliue in Christ and did testifie the the same by true and sincere obedience In this coherence we may obserue two instructions I. that a particular congregation on earth is made a Church of God and so called in regard of Gods elect therein who doe truely belieue For the priuiledges of a Church belong vnto particular congregations onely by reason of the faith of the elect among them The Catholick church is the whole Company of the elect truly beleuing in Christ particular congregations are members of it so farre forth as they doe truely beleeue the rest that doe not truely belieue are not members of the Church before God but 〈◊〉 in the iudgement of men like vnto superfluous humors which are in the bodie but no parts thereof This confuteth the Doctrine of the Church of Rome who teach that wicked men that are reiected in Gods decree may yet bee true members of the Church of God Secondly in this coherence Christ intimateth vnto vs a distinction betweene man and man in this Church for all that were in this Church were men called professing Christ and his Gospell and yet of them some were dead in their sinnes and others were aliue in Christ. Touching this distinction of men wee must search the cause thereof It must not be ascribed to any power or will in man but to the good pleasure of God as the scripture teacheth for when the bodie of the Israelites had giuen themselues to Idolatrie there were yet seuen thousand that neuer bowed the knee to Baall what was the cause why they did not liue like to the other Israelites Surely nothing in the will of man though the Idolatrie of the other was to bee ascribed to themselues but the text is cleare it was the good pleasure of God who had preserued and kept them By this wee see how erronious and false the Diuinitie of some Protestants is which ascribe the cause of this distinction betweene man and man to the libertie of mans will being renewed by grace saying That GOD giues to euerye man sauing grace by vertue whereof hee maye repent and beleeue if hee will but yet because the will of man doth still remaine sinfull hence it commeth that hee hath libertie to obey
neuer seeketh it This his mercie is verified in all Churches and vnto vs VVhich must be an occasion to enlarge and stirre vp our hearts to blesse the name of Christ for this vnspeakable mercie in vouchsafing vs fauor when we neuer sought it but refused it Quest. How doth Christ knocke Answ. The words going before wherto these haue reference giue light vnto this Question Before Christ had threatned this Church euen to spew her out of his mouth for her luke-warmenesse and after hee counsels her to buy of him gold and other remedies Now vpon this greeuous threatnings the Church might despaire of his mercie But Christ to comfort her tels her here that these reproofes and rebukes were but knocking 's at the dores of their hearts to make them open For then Christ knocketh at the hearts of any people when he vouchsafed them means to see their sinnes and threatens them for the same and withall giues them coun wherby they may escape the fearefull punishments thereby deserued Here then note the state of any people that haue the ministrie of the Gospell vouchsafed vnto them they haue Christ among them standing at the dore of their harts and knocking to come in by exhortations admonitions threatnings and by promises which is a great and endlesse mercie First seeing wee haue Christ knocking at our dores there ought not to bee in vs such dulnesse and deadnesse of heart in hearing him knocke If a man of any account come and knocke at the dore of our house oh what a stirre will we make to let him in quickely VVhat a shame then is it that we should be dead-harted when Christ Iesus the King of Heauen knockes at the dore of our hearts Secondly this must admonish vs with all speed to turne vnto God by true repentance for wee knowe not how long hee will continue knocking and if wee doe not heare and turne before he withdraw himselfe from vs wee perish eternally For if we refuse when he knocketh at the dore of our harts he will refuse when we knocke at the dore of his mercie Prou. 1. 25.26 Mat. 25.11.12 Note further this knocking is not ordinarie but it is ioyned with crying For he saith If he heare my voice so that hee both knocks cries It is then the knocking of one that would enter we therfore ought answerably with serious regard to receiue the threatnings of the law and the promises of grace and so bee as earnest in receiuing and embracing him as hee is in knocking to come into vs. The second token of Christs loue is a gracious promise of fellowship with them in these words If any man heare my voice and open the dore I will come in vnto him and will suppe with him and hee with mee These wordes haue beene much abused and therefore I will stand to set downe the true vse and meaning of the same Marke the forme of speech is such as giues vnto a mans will soule an action in his conuersion whereby hee comes to Christ and receiues Christ. This may seeme strange but it is for iust cause vsed by the holy Ghost for in the conuersion of a sinner there be three workers the holy Ghost the word and mans will The holy Ghost is the principall Agent inlightning the minde with true knowledge softning the heart and changing the will from euill to good The worde is the instrument of the holy Ghost for now he worketh not by reuelation or speciall instinct but ordinarily in and by the word when a man is reading hearing or meditating either publickely or priuately for the word preached is the power of God to mans saluation from faith to faith Thirdly mans will though by nature it be euill and dead vnto grace yet being renewed by the holy Ghost in the first act of conuersion moueth and striueth to bee turned It is not like a peece of waxe onely passiue which without any action receiueth impression But as fire so soone as it fire doth borne and so soone as it burneth it is fire so the will though by nature it mooue not yet being renewed by grace it mooueth and so some as it mooueth it is renewed And hereupon it is that the holy Ghost ascribeth action vnto a sinner that is to bee conuerted which argueth not that by themselues men can haue a will to bee conuerted but that being renewed they may will their conuersion And for this cause is the Gospell preached in these tearmes Repent and beleeue not to shew that man by nature can repent or beleue but that God in mans conuersion doth giue him grace to will and desire the same Hence then it followes thar this text hath been diuers waies abused First by the Papists who hence would gather Free will of conuersion in a sinner by nature True it is a man hath free will in his conuersion yet not by nature but by grace neither can any more be gathered hence for here it is onely said If any man heare and open when I knocke Nay hence wee may rather gather that a man by nature cannot heare nor open because the counsell is giuen to such as are poore and blinde and naked by nature Secondly they also abuse this text that hereby would prooue a flexible free will by grace to be in man which is this Sundry men thinke that after the fall of Adam all being wrapt vp in sinne God gaue a generall grace whereby any man might will and receiue that which is good and this grace though it dispose the will in some part to that which is good yet it takes not the corruption away but that remaines still whereupon if hee will he may receiue Christ by that general grace or if hee will not hee may refuse Christ by his naturall corruption which yet remaineth in him It is saide this may bee gathered from this text But the truth is here is no foundation for flexible free-will all that can here be gathered is that man hath free-will in his conuersion yet not by a generall but by Gods speciall grace Nay Christs ministry serue● for this end that those which before could not turne of themselues might by grace be conuerted This flexible grace is against Gods word Christ sayth Euery one that hath heard and hath learned of the Father commeth vnto me He saith not may come if hee will but peremptorily commeth For mans will cannot dispose and ouer 〈◊〉 the worke of God but the worke 〈◊〉 God ouer-rules the will of man though man be vnwilling yet when God calleth effectually hee cannot but come For the creature cannot reiect or resist the will and calling of his creator If any man open vnto me I will come c. The proper intent of Christ in this conditional promise is to prouoke them that be dull and heauy to listen diligently to Christ words and to receiue the doctrine of saluation from him gladly In the example of this Church we are taught our dutie Seeing
giueth entrance to grace accesse to God in prayer made the Elders well reported of and each Christian to stand to the profession of Christ. It is that hand by which wee must apprehend Christ that shield by which wee resist all the fierie darts of the diuell and that meanes by which we do good to others By faith we receiue the spirit are members of Christ we are risen with him he dwelleth in our hearts we feed on him continually resist Sathan are the children of God and the word which we heare becommeth profitable And what shall I say faith is of such a qualitie that it vniteth vs to Christ maketh vs certaine of our saluation bold in our profession ministreth true ioy giueth temporall blessings sanctifieth our gifts and maketh vs refuse the pleasures of this present world In a word no sinne can condemne him who hath this true faith and no vertue can saue him who wanteth it To come to the second which is Christ the obiect of faith The most comely garment that euer we can weare it is to be couered with the robes of Christs righteousnesse Iacob was blessed by Esaus garments and we are blessed by Christs garments What wee see through a greene glasse seemeth all to be greene and what God seeth through Christ it is all amiable We must put on this apparell not as the Church in the Canticles I haue put off my clothes how shall I put them on againe or as a gowne that wee cast off when we come to our home but we must so put him on that we neuer put him off againe Wee must put him on by imputation imitation infusion and profession by imputation of his righteousnesse imitation of his vertues infusion of his spirit and profession of his name Thus we must labour to get Christ for what though a man could command the earth with Alexander the sea with Moses the fire with Eliah and the Sunne with Iosuah What though he were as rich as Salomon as wise as Achitophel as strong as Sampson as swift as Ahimaaz as beautifull as Absolon as fortunate as Metellus and descended as Paul was of the bloud royall of Princes yet hauing not Christ hee hath nothing Yea say a man had the abstinence of Aristydes the innocencie of Phocion the holinesse of Socrates the almes deedes of Cimon the moderation of Camillus the honestie iustice and faithfulnesse of both Catoes all these out of Christ were but splendida peccata and to be esteemed as dung in regard of Christ. For haue him and haue all things want him and want all things he is in at and after death aduantage I come to the last it is profitable to repent for if we turne to the Lord he will turne to vs and that wee may turne consider his mercies in forgiuing his benefits in giuing his patience in forbearing and his iudgements in punishing The word preached sinnes committed and that few shall be saued the shortnesse of life the vncertaintie of life and the certaintie of death the ioyes of heauen the torments of hell the comfort of the elect and that else wee can haue no comfort in death pray wee cannot vnlesse wee repent and perish wee shall vnlesse we repent but blessed shall we be if we do repent But manum de tabula Magister adest this discourse following will teach vs these things and it am I bold to present to your worships Iohn sent his Reuelation to manie Churches and I present his Epistles to manie worthie personages and to whom may I better present them then to you Iohn was a Disciple full of loue and you are brethren full of loue The Preacher of these Lectures was well knowne to manie but to none better than to many of you especially to those who were in my time worthie members of that most worthie Colledge with him And the rather I do it that times to come may reioyce in the Lord that from one honourable roote haue issued so manie profitable branches to the Church You are six brethren as pillars of your house there were three sisters as fruitfull vines of the same one is not but is with the Lord and her I knew a Ladie of admirable vertues the other two are and long may they be so You are all brethren by nature of one venter nation of one country grace of one spirit affection of one heart fortune in great fauor and of one hope by your holy behauiour And concerning brotherly loue I need not to write vnto you for you are taught of God to loue one another Your Scilurus at his death need not to teach you concord by giuing to each of you a sheafe of arrowes which cannot well bee broken whilst they are conioyned for you by your amitie make your selues inuincible If Chilo the Lacedemonian died for ioy to see one sonne crowned at Olympus and Diagoras Rhodius did the like when his three children got the garland at a wrestling and Iacob so reioyced to heare of his sonne Ioseph to bee aduanced greatly in the kingdome of Aegypt how might that happie father of yours reioyce to see at one time one son sitting as high Sheriffe of the shire another preaching before the Iudges of Assize and the third pleading as Councellor at the barre and all the rest of great expectation in the kingdome Thus wise sons are a ioy to their parents and all may behold how good and comely a thing it is for brethren to dwel together in vnitie Aristotle could say that parents were not blessed vnlesse they were after their death blessed in their children And surely it is no small part of a fathers blessednesse to see his children like to flourish when he is gone Nay of all monuments that parents can leaue behind them there is none as one saith like to a vertuous son But all parents are not to be blessed Adams two sonnes could not agree in one field Abrahams in one house Isaaks in one wombe Dauids in one pallace nor two brethren in the diuision of an inheritance And though concord amongst brethren especially such as deuide the inheritance be very rare yet do you euen in this most comfortably agree You are not as Simeon Leui Romulus and Remus Eteocles and Polynices Atreus Thyestes Aeta and Perseus but as Castor and Pollux Dauid and Ionathan Ioseph and Beniamin and as a true friend is described to be one soule in two bodies It seemeth that as Agrippa the brother of Augustus was beholding to Salust for that one sentence Small things increase by concord but perish through discord so you haue all learned the same lesson as being
persuaded that as the members of a body being once dismembred they cannot possibly be ioyned againe so if naturall brethren be once vnnaturally disioyned no glue will conioyne them fast againe It were infinit to shew examples of brotherly loue and hatred and othe●s haue eased me of this paines Now that good God who hath brought you from one roote placed you in one countrey aduanced you to like credit and giuen you one heart giue you also one inheritance in the kingdome of heauen Thus right worshipfull I am bold to speake vnto you and the world knoweth I speake the truth and the Lord knoweth I desire not to flatter Go on therefore I beseech you continue in loue bee setled in the truth and labour to honour him who thus honoreth you Be not caried away with the shew of this world but thinke religion the best nobilitie and that as Prudentius sayd Generosa Christi secta nobilitat viros Cui quisquis seruit ille verè est nobilis He noble is that comes of Christ his race Who serues this Lord he surely is not base And this made Theodosius more to thanke God that he was a Christian than a king considering that hee must lose the one hee could not lose the other Now as to one of you I am bounden in parcicular and by him being a Minister the despised ministerie is not a little graced ●o for him I pray that hee may be an Abraham to our Abimelech a Nathan to our Dauid a Iehoida to our Ioash an Ebedmelech to Ieremiah an Elisha to the widow of this Prophet deceased a light in the Court a trumpet in the Church and that Ahashuerosh may long hold out his golden Scepter vnto him that by his meanes great men may not want such as will tell them the truth no earthly Alexander accounted a sonne of Iupiter and that no man may be more respected than a good Pastor and that he may euer remember that saying of wise Salomon He that loueth purenesse of heart for the grace of his lips the King shall be his friend His Cyrus will not be spoken to verbis bissinis in silken words to his Alexander he needeth not speake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either sweet words or no words For if one Antiochus might bee surnamed holy and another good Prince called the Good King much more may he whose religious knowledge surpasseth all the Princes that haue beene of this nation and whose humilitie is such that hee will haue his sonne to remember that hee differeth not in stuffe but in vse from the rest of his people and that by Gods ordinance I am the bolder for that one to make choyce of all in the dedication of this booke no man knew loued conuersed with and respected this Author more than he He resorted to him in his health visited him in sicknesse and preached a learned Sermon for him at his death Concerning this author as he sayd of Carthage I had rather bee silent then say little and his worthie labours doe speake enough for him by name that his Posthume dedicated to his excellent Maiestie by an excellent Diuine In a word therefore whatsoeuer this man did he desired to profit others by it he thought as it is written of Bernard in his life that hee was not his owne man but deputed to the seruice of others He was neuer idle but as Hierome reporteth of Ambrose and Bernard of himselfe he did either reade or meditate or pray or conferre or counsel or comfort or write or preach And thus as the Embleme is of a faithfull Teacher he like a waxe candle in giuing light to others in a short time extinguished himselfe Yet in this short time of his what art was he not maister of what vertue was hee not endued with He was a complet Diuine and hath his blessings in the Church that no mans writings are read of all sorts and in all countries with greater grace and profit than his Hee was peaceable in the Church patient of wrongs and free from ambition For as Ierome sayd of Nepotian Aurum calcans schedul●s consectabatur hee regarded not his purse but followed his booke and as Bernard sayd he liued in terra auri sine auro in a kingdome of gold without gold An excellent gift he had to define properly diuide exactly dispute subtilly answere directly speake pithily and write iudicially and how hee preached if these Sermons doe giue a testimonie what witnesse had they who often heard him themselues I haue published of his now two Discourses and I onely did it that these his labours might not perish I haue no benefit by them but exceeding great paines And since I vnderstand that his other labours are in the hands of his friends to make benefit for his children I will ease my selfe of the like labour and be a meanes that they may haue the benefit of the future impressions of this booke the which how faithfully I haue published I appeale to the godly and indifferent Reader and I hope no honest minded man will be hired to calumniate it Thus as one desirous to be seruiceable in my calling profitable to the Church not forgetfull of my friend and to testifie the happinesse of your house which was in your fathers time and is now as it is sayd of Aurelian the Emperours Refertapi●s Ecclesia Dei replenished with the godly and a Church of God and withall to leaue a monument of my duty to you all I haue as you see published this exposition of seuen Epistles vnder your eight names nothing doubting but it will bee as welcome to you as by your countenance it may bee profitable to the Church The God of heauen giue you all that blessing of blessings which if Ierome say true few men haue that you may transire à deliciis ad dilicias go on from grace to grace and be a long time happie in this life and euer for happie in the life to come London Saint Martins in the fields from my worshipfull friend Maister Oldisworths house by which familie as Paul was by the house of Onesiphorus in the time of this late and I wish I may say the last visitation I haue receiued no small refreshing March 12. 1604. Your Worships to command Robert Hill Fellow of S. Iohns Colledge in Cambridge To the Godly and Christian Reader Grace and Peace I Am not ignorant good Reader how vngratefull a thing it is to deale by way of Censure or reformation in those things wherin others haue gone before and many times for the smart that followeth do men beshrow their owne fingers Yet the warrant of a good calling will breed peace in his conscience that herein shall endeuour the obseruance of these rules of Loue to wit Iudge the best of that which is done and referre his owne paines to the glorie
may obserue that the doctrine of Gods word is an infallible marke whereby to know the true Prophet of God and also to distinguish h●m from all false prophets God foretold his people that false Prophets should come among them for their triall Deut. 13. But how shall they discerne them surely by their doctrine for though they shew wonders yet if their doctrine tend to draw men f●om the true God to idolatrie they are false prophets and should die When our Sauior Christ was asked By what authoritie hee did those things Luk. 20.2 3. He approoued his authoritie by the testimonie of Iohn who bare witnesse of him Iohn 1.15 and confirmed the calling of Iohn by the truth of his doctrine which themselues being witnesses was from heauen Luke 20. ver 4 5. Hereby then we see the error of the Papists who teach That the onely note of a true Prophet is to confirme his doctrine by a miracle and that hee which cannot doe so is a false Prophet But this note of difference is not true for false Prophets may confirme their lying vanities by signes and wonders as we may see Deut. 13. And so doth Antichrist 2. Thess. 2.9 The sixt argument by which this Reuelation is described is the order and man●r of propounding it to the Church and it stands in foure degrees First God the father giueth it to Christ the mediator and head of the Church Secondly Christ giueth it to an Angell Thirdly the Angell conueyes it to Iohn the Apostle Fourthly Iohn di●ected and assisted by the holy Ghost deliuereth it to the Churches Now as this particular booke was so no doubt all other holy Scriptures were conueyed to the Church from whence we may obserue First the constant loue of God to his children by this his special care in propounding and deliuering his will and word to his Church Secondly that this booke and so all other parts of holy Scripture are in their kind most perfect and excellent Thirdly that the Church of Rome blasphemeth in calling the written word of God a dead letter and dumbe Iudge matching generall councels with it for authoritie and teaching that the vniuersall consent of the Church is about Scripture f●r ●●terpretation and giues life and sence thereto which otherwise of it selfe were but an inckie letter and dumbe word Verse 3. Blessed are they which reade and they that heare the words of this prophesie and keepe those things which are written therein for the time is at hand Here is the seuenth and last argumēt whereby this Reuelation is described to wit the fruit effect and the profit which comes of it euen true happrnesse This prophesie concerneth the present and future state of the Church the reading and hearing whereof ioyned with carefull keeping bringeth with it true blessednesse that is fellowship with God and life euerlasting In this argument we may obserue First the end of this booke and so of all other bookes of Scripture viz. ●o bring men to happinesse to fellowship with God and life euerlasting These things were written saith S. Iohn that yee might beleeue that Iesus is the Christ and so beleeuing might haue eternall life Iohn 20.31 Againe hee declared to them the word of Christ that by it they might haue fellowship with God the father and with his sonne Iesus Christ. 1. Iohn 1.3 In which fellowship is true happinesse Christ himselfe sayth Search the Scriptures for in them you thinke to haue eternall life Iohn 5.39 And in this they differ from all other bookes and writings of men for mens writings bee penned either by the light of nature and so be erronious and misse the end of true happinesse or els they be penned by them which haue direction from the word and so all the truth they haue leading to true happinesse is borrowed hence when as the Scriptures of themselues doe directly guide men thither From the consideration of this blessed end of holy Scripture wee may obserue first That the opinion and practise of the church of Rome is damnable who barre the people of God from reading and hearing the Scriptures in their vulgar tongue For in depriuing them of this meanes as much as in them lieth they barre them of their saluation and they doe directly crosse the purpose of S. Iohn who doth therefore pronoūce him blessed that shall heare and reade this booke with conscience to keep and obey it that he might allure and draw al men to doe it with delight Secondly we are hereby admonished with all care and diligence to reade and meditate in Gods word That place before named is most excellent Search the Scripture Iohn 5.39 Euen as wee would search for gold or some precious thing which we would fain find So the word imports And he addeth the reason For in them you thinke to haue eternall life The same is wisdomes counsell Prou. 2.4 But some will say I cannot reade I was neuer brought vp in learning and therefore I cannot search S. Iohn cuts off his excuse in the next wordes saying Blessed he is also which beares the wordes of this prophecie As if he should say though hee cannot reade yet if hee heare and keepe it he is blessed Here then i● the dutie of those which cannot read the Scriptures they must procu●e others to reade vnto them and by hearing and keeping they shall be blessed Thirdly by this scope and end of Scriptures wee must learne to carrie in mind this plaine difference between the bookes of God and writings of men Gods word bringeth a man which keep● it to happinesse but mans writings of themselues cannot doe so vnlesse they haue light from the word of God If this distinction were imprinted in our harts we should not bee so delighted as many are to heare or speak the words of God mixed with the wordes of sinfull men specially in the publicke ministerie In former times the Lord forbad his owne people to sowe their field with mingled seede 〈◊〉 to make them garments of diuerse things as of linnen and woollen Leuit. 19.19 And no doubt the same God doth mislike that the pure seed of his word should be mingled with the sayings of erroneous and sinfull men when the same is sown vpon the furrowes of mens hea●ts Secondly in this seuenth Argument wee may obserue the right manner and way of hearing and reading the Scriptures a point worthie all serious consideration I● stands in two things First we must set downe with ourselues a certaine end why we reade and heare the Scriptures which is that we may attaine to true happinesse standing in fellowship with God and life euerlasting This end must bee the motiue to induce vs to heare and reade the word of God and when this ta●es place in our hearts it wil be of force to make vs reade and heare with care and conscience which beseemeth Gods word Secondly wee must keepe in mind the things wee reade or heare so fayth the text And keepeth the things which are
written which word imports that by diligent obseruation wee should lay them vp in our hearts This is a weightie dutie and seriously commended vnto vs of God Bind vp the testimonie seale vp the law among my disciples Isay. 8.16 And Marie is therefore commended because she kept in her heart the words of Iesus Luke 2.19 ●1 It was Dauids practise I haue ●id thy saying in my heart Psal. 119. ●● And hereto ●endeth Christs encouragement pronouncing them rather blessed which heare the word and keepe it than those which bare Christ and gaue him sucke Luk. 1● 27.28 And Iames calleth it the ingraffed word Iames 1.21 because it should abide in our hearts like a syence in a stock and neuer be remooued but there grow and fructifie vnto life eternall Now because this is a point of great difficultie and the want hereof the cause of so little profiting after much hearing and reading I will therefore shew how by Gods grace in hearing and reading the word of God a man may keepe the same in memorie First a man must learne the grounds or elements of religion commonly called the Catechisme for they are the foūdation of all knowledge without which a man shall neuer vnderstand the Scripture to his comfort nor keepe the same in memorie The Apostle sayth the Hebrewes were dull of hearing the deepe things of God in Christ because they had not well learned the first principles of the word Hebr. 5.11.12 This all ignorant persons should well obserue specially the aged that they may find in themselues the cause of their ignorance and dulnesse euen want of knowledge in the Catechisme They thinke it a disgrace to bee brought vnto it now they are old but if they would not be euer learning and neuer come to the knowledge of the truth they must lay in themselues this good beginning and learne the principles of religion Secondly wee must not rush vpon Gods holy ordinance but before we either come to heare or reade with reuerence prepare our selues thereto Most men at this day vse to prepare thēselues before they come to the Lords table and so they ought to doe before they come to heare the word for God ordained both for this end to bee meanes to bring men to true happinesse they differ onely in this that the Sacraments are the visible and the Scriptures the audible word of God At the giuing of the law The people that must ●eare it were sanctified three dayes before Exod. 19. And when they did offer sacrifice or eat the Passeouer both priests and people must bee sanctified and the same thing for substance must we perform before we come to heare the word of God This preparation stands in two thing● First wee must put out of our hearts al by thoghts all delights and cares of wordly affairs and set our hearts as Ezra did to seeke the law of the Lord Ezra 7.10 Secondly we must make our earnest prayers to God that he would open our eyes that wee may see his will soften our hearts and make our eares attentiue as L●diaes were and also giue vs grace to embrace his word and keepe it for Christ is the onely doctor of the heart by his spirit without whose inward teaching wee can neuer learne vnto saluation Thirdly when we are about the holy exercise of Gods word the frame of our heart should be thus disposed I. It must bee an humble heart for the Lord resists the proud and giues grace to the humble Iam. 4.6 Them that be meeke will he guide in iudgement and teach the humble his way Psal. 25.9 A proud heart is so stuffed with selfe loue that there is no room for the word of God to lodge in But the heart that is lowly in it selfe through the conscience of sinne that is the heart in which the Lord by his graces will take vp his abode Isay 57.15 II. It must be an honest heart such as hath no manner of purpose to liue in any one sinne whatsoeuer but though it feele corruption in it selfe is resolued to please God in all the wayes of his commandements and that continually such an heart haue the good hearers resembled by the good ground Luke 8.15 As on the contrarie that is a wicked heart which resolueth to cherish though it be but any one sinne whatsoeuer III. It must bee a beleeuing heart The old Iewes heard the word but it profited them not because they mingled it not with faith 〈◊〉 their hearts Hebrew 4.2 where he compares the heart to a vessell in which there must bee both the word and faith these two must be mingled together and then it will be a word of power of life and saluation Therefore when we heare the threatenings of the law or the promises of the Gospell we must labour to resolue our hearts of the truth thereof But incredulitie wherby men except against the word as not pertaining vnto them is the mother of forge●fulnesse The old world knew nothing of the flood because they did not beleeue Matth. 24.39 IV. It must bee an hearing heart such as is pliable to the word Sacrifice and burnt offerings sayth Dauid thou wouldest not but mine eares hast thou prepared Psal. 40.6 As if hee should say beside those bodily cares which thou hast giuen me by creation thou hast bored new cares in my heart so as I can by thy grace attend and listen to thy word And when God saith Seeke ye my face this hearing heart will answere I seeke thy face O Lord Psal. 27. vers 8.9 Fourthly after we haue heard or read the word we must become doers of the same euen in the duties of our vocation We see euery man more skilfull in the works of his owne trade by reason of his dayly exercise therein euen so the constant practise of Gods word will make vs expert in it and cause vs to keepe it in perfect memorie And these are the right meanes to become good hearers and readers of the word of God Thirdly this benediction pronoūced vpon them that heare read keepe the prophecies of this booke serues to induce euery child of God as much as in him lieth to keep in memory the whole word of God but specially these prophecies of things to come that concerne the state of the Church for therefore did God reueale them that they might bee remembred When the Angell had told Daniel the state of the church from his time to the comming of Christ hee bids him Shut vp the wordes and seale the booke till the end of the time Dan. 12.4 meaning that he for his own comfort should hide them in his heart And Christ sayth to his disciples When ye see the abhomination of desolation spoken of by Daniell the Prophet let him that readeth consider it Matth. 24.15 Behold I haue told you before meaning things to come verse 25. shewing That hee would haue his children to marke and remember those weightie things that are foretold concerning the state
of the church For the time is at hand Here is a reason of the former benediction for seeing the time of the accomplishing of this prophecie is at hand must shortly be fulfilled therefore those be blessed which reade and keepe the same in memorie And it is an answere to a secret obiection for they might haue said we need not to reade or remember this prophecie seeing it shall not be fulfilled in our dayes but he addeth The time is at hand wherein they must be fulfilled and therefore it must bee marked These wordes for substance were in the first verse where it is said The Reuelation was of things that must shortly be done And here they be repeated againe Whereby hee would teach vs That these prophecies containe weightie matter to be deepely considered and earnestly thought on And S. Iohn repeates the same for two causes first to awake the members of the church out of the sleepe of security and make them stand vpon their watch continually for though they cannot fall into the dead sleepe of sinne yet the slumber of securitie may ouertake thē the wise virgines slumber as well as the foolish Matth. 25.5 And the spouse of Christ the true Church confesseth That shee sleepeth though her heart waketh Cant. 5.2 Secondly to confirme and hearten the church and all true members of Christ against the afflictions to come for herein is the common saying true He that is forewarned is fore-armed Now in these words The time is at hand Christ would teach vs to obserue That whatsoeuer thing may befall the members of Christ in this life whether afflictions temptations death or the last iudgement it selfe all will come shortly This consideration ought to take place in our hearts being of great vse in our liues as to stay vs from many sinnes so to mooue vs to doe all things with good conscience And the want hereof is the cause of much euill The bad seruant beates his fellowes because hee thinkes his maister doth deferre his comming Matth. 24.48.49 The old world went on in sinne neuer regarding Noahs prophecie and so knew nothing till the flood came and swept them all away Matth. 24.39 We should lay these to our harts and alwayes thinke with Paule the Lord is at ●and The rather because wee haue had the Gospell and peace with all temporall blessings these eight and thirtie yeares now the state of the church is interchangeable one while peace and then trouble so as it is like this peaceable state will not long continue but we must bee tried And the time of ou● triall is at hand for whatsoeuer must befall the Church will come shortly We must therefore prepare for trouble and so wee shall finde it the lesse greeuous Vers. 4. Iohn to the seuen Churches which are in Asia Grace be with you and Peace from him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seuen spirits which are before his throne Here beginneth the second part of the Preface to wit the inscription of this vision and it hath two branches First a dedication in these words Iohn to the seuē Churches which are in Asia Secondly a salutation in the next words Grace be with you and peace c. to the ninth verse In the dedication obserue first the penman that dedicates this booke secondly the parties to whom it is sent For the first the penman is Iohn who here againe repeats his name to shew and certifie euery reader of this booke that he was without al doubt the true penman of the holy ghost in writing this Reuelation But though he repeat his name yet he doth not adde any titles of honour or commendation as hee did in the first verse Wherein he giues vs a true patterne of modestie and humilitie which is neuer to speake in our owne cause to our owne praise but onely in cases of necessitie when Gods glory may bee aduaunced and the credit of our particular callings maintained This Paule practised who often humbles himselfe and cals himself the least of all the Apostles yea the chiefe of all sinners yet when the credit of his Apostleship came into question then he sets out himselfe shewing he was a true Apostle one of the chiefe and aboue those which did falsely call themselues so as wee may find in both of his Epistles to the Corinthians Secondly the persons to whom hee wrote were the seuen Churches in Asia concerning them note two things first hee writes to churches secondly to the churches in Asia For the first why writes he to the churches rather thā to the church seeing there is but one only Catholicke church Ans. The church may be considered diuers waies first as it is the whole companie of the elect so it is but one secondly as the same is parted into seuerall branches and companies one part being in one countrey and another part in some other Wherein also euery seuerall congregation professing the gospell is a particular Church And so there may bee many Churches all of them beeing members of one Catholicke Church As the sea is onely one yet it consisteth of many parts which taking their names of the countreyes whereto they adioyne are called so many particular Seas as the English Sea the Spanish sea French Italian Scottish Seas c. And of particular Churches must Iohn bee vnderstood in this place Now Iohn chuseth rather to write to Churches than to particular men First because the matter of this booke concerneth the Church being a Propheticall hystorie touching the state of the Church to the end Secondly because particular Churches which bee true members of the Catholicke Church are the pillars and ground of truth 1. Timoth 3.15 And the Church is so called not that her authority is aboue the word but first because it is the treasure house wherein the Scriptures are preserued from age to age against the rage of Gods enemies Secondly because the Church giues testimonie to the truth of Gods word And thirdly because it publisheth the truth of God word by vertue of that ordinary ministery which God hath ordained therein Secondly in the dedication of this booke among all particular Churches God directs him to make choise of those seuen in Asia no doubt for speciall cause First because they were then most famous Churches as the chapters following and the histories of the Church doe plainely shew Secondly that the calling of the Gentiles to the light of the Gospell which long before had beene foretold might bee more euident for here the Iewes are passed by and the Gentiles sent vnto Lastly we may here obserue That S. Iohn knew no prerogatiue of the church of Rome aboue other churches for if it were the mother church whereon al● other churches should depend as the Papists would haue it I would know of them why Iohn passed by it in the dedication of this booke which containeth matter needfull for al churches to know Grace be with
write that he put into them by the holy ghost The matter and the style and phrase of the Scripture all came from Christ. Nay when any particular man comes to vnderstand the Scriptures this is by the working of Christ he opens his eyes Hee gaue the disciples vnderstanding as they went vnto Emaus to vnderstand the Scriptures The second dutie of Christs propheticall office is to certifie men in conscience of the truth of his fathers will This certificate is two fold generall or particular generall when he certifieth men in conscience That the word written or spoken by man is the word of God neither nature nor learning can doe this but it is proper to Christs propheticall office And for this he sayth to his disciples He will send them the comforter which shall lead them into all truth that is reueale Gods will vnto them and assure their heart that the same is true Vnto this assurance two things are required The outward meanes which is the word it selfe and an inward cause which is the principall to wit the operation of the holy spirit By this doctrine three points are resolued First this demaund of the Papists How a man can come to know that the Scriptures read and taught be the word of God Answ. Wee must here haue recourse to this faithfull witnesse and desire of him his spirit whereby the mind must bee enlightened and made able to discerne the things of God for naturall man can doe it of himselfe Secondly wee must haue Christ his testimonie of Scripture in the Scriptures themselues for in them he setteth downe his testimonie of the Scriptures But some will say if Christs testimonie of scripture bee set downe in the scriptures why doe not al● men know this testimonie and receiue it I answere The shining of the sunne before a mans face is not sufficient to cause him to see vnlesse he haue in his eyes the gift and sence of seeing Euen so it is not ynough for a man to haue in Gods word the testimonie of Christ that scripture is scripture but withall hee must haue in himselfe the light of the spirit reuealing that testimonie to his conscience and then in reading or hearing the scripture in marking the manner and style the maiestie and power thereof he shall bee able to see in euery sentence the testimonie of Christ assuring his conscience that the same is vndoubtedly the word of God A second doubt resolued by this doctrine is this How can a man know the true religion seeing the Turke Papist Iew and Protestant haue their seuerall religions and die in them I answere Wee must haue recourse to Christ this faithful witnesse and looke whereto hee giues his testimonie that we must hold for true religion Now the scriptures be as a letter sent from heauen to the Church wherein Christ hath set downe his owne testimonie of the true religion which in triall shall be found to bee the religion of the Protestant and not the religion of Iew Turke or Papist A third doubt to be resolued by this doctrine is How to know the particular truth in matters of religion when as sundry men professing the same religion bee of diuers opinions Answ. Still wee must haue recourse to this faithfull witnesse and Prophet of the Church he is the Iudge of all controuersies in religion and in the scriptures if we marke them we shall see his iudgement Quest. But if there be diuers opinions about scripture it selfe and euery one giue a seuerall sence vnto it who must then be Iudge Answ. In this diuersitie of opinions yea of the scriptures themselues we must still haue recourse to Christ and that in the scriptures alone for though there were a thousand diuerse expositions of one place yet by the scope and circumstances thereof conferring it with other like places of scripture a man shall bee able to find out the true sence for Christ in the scripture expoundeth himselfe The particular certificate of Christ belongeth also to his propheticall office and that is to assure men in their consciences that the promises of the Gospell with all the benefits therein contained as Iustification Sanctification and life eternall which in the word be generally expounded doe belong vnto them particularly as to Peter to Iohn c. And this assurance as the former is principally wrought by the word not barely read but preached for therein by the inward worke of the spirit the generall promises be particularly applied This Paule imports saying Yee haue the spirit of adoption which testifies with our spirit we be the sonnes of God Rom. 8.15 16. Hence we learne that the doctrine of the Church of Rome and of all others which hold That men cannot bee assured of their saluation by faith is wicked and damnable for hereby they cut off a part of Christs propheticall office wherein the dignitie thereof doth consist that is to assure a man particularly of the truth of Gods promises vnto himselfe And in this he differs from all other Prophets and Apostles which bee witnesses for they can witnesse onely outwardly to the eare but he can speake and testifie to the conscience Neither can any of them certifie any man particularly though their ministerie tend to that end Secondly obserue Christ is not only a witnesse but a faithfull witnesse and so he is for these causes First because hee testifies not his owne will but his which sent him namely his fathers Iohn 8.26 Secondly he testifies all his fathers wil neither adding thereto nor detracting from it Iohn 17.4 Thirdly because he teacheth his fathers will sincerely in the same maner which hee receiued it not altering changing or deprauing any part therof As my father taught me so I speake these things Iohn 8.28 Thirdly Christ is called that faithfull witnesse to distinguish him from all other witnesses The Lord hath sundry faithfull witnesses as the Prophets Apostles the Church nay the Sun and Moone Psalm 89.37 but Christ alone is that faithfull witnesse First because his witnesse is authenticall sufficient of it selfe and needs no other confirmation The testimonie of the Apostles and Prophets is not of it selfe authenticall and certaine but as it consents with Christs witnesse and proceedeth from his spirit Secondly hee is that witnesse because hee is the Lord of that house whereto he giues witnesse namely the Church but the Apostles and Prophets are but seruants there Hebr. 5.5 6. Thirdly Christ his witnesse is inward it speakes directly to the conscience and there giues vndoubted assurance but the witnesse of men as of the Prophets and Apostles is outward only it comes to the ears it neuer binds and assures the conscience of it selfe And thus wee see why he is called here that faithfull witnesse First whereas Christ the Doctor and Prophet of the church is called that faithfull witnesse we learne That all ministers of the Gospell ought to be faithfull witnesses for euery minister of the
himselfe and by the vertue of his godhead quickened his manhood The most godly man that is or euer was cannot doe so but all the saints of God are raised from death by vertue of Christs resurrection through that mysticall vnion which is between Christ the head and all his members by meane whereof the power of Christ his godhead which raised vp his manhood is conueyed to all his members in their resurrection frō death to life And therefore is Christ called The first fruits of them that sleepe because as the first fruits of corne which was offered vnto God did sanctifie the whole crop so Christ his resurrection did make acceptable vnto God the resurrection of all his members In this title is comprised a notable comfort for all Gods children against the immoderate feare of death If Iohn had said Christ is the first borne among the liuing it had beene a great comfort for then had he shewed that the liuing saint● on earth were children in Gods familie hauing Christ for their eldest brother but calling him the first begotten of the dead here is a further comfort the Lord sheweth hereby what speciall regard he hath to the faithfull that be dead for euen then when they be dead they continue members of his familie and haue Christ Iesus dead and buried reckoned among them for their eldest brother In regard whereof Christ hath a double right among the dead first of a King secondly of a Priest The right of a king hee hath to commaund his members to rise againe and to enter into glorie after him The right of a priest whereby hee offered vp himselfe in death a sacrifice acceptable to God for the sanctifying of the death of all his members for by his death he tooke away the sting of death and hath made it vnto them a sweet sleep in the graue as in a bed of downe out of which they shall one day rise to eternall life and glorie And Prince of the kings of the earth Here is the third title giuen to Christ wherein his kingly office is expressed He is called a Prince of the kings of the earth in two respects First as he is God the sonne of God equall with the father and so is king together with the father and the holy ghost gouerning all things with them by the same diuine power in heauen in earth and in hell Secondly as hee is Mediatour and Redeemer God and Man in two natures In this respect hee sayth of himselfe All power is giuen to me in heauen and in earth Matth. 28.18 And Paule sayth God gaue him a name aboue euery name at which euery knee should bow euen as he is Mediatour And in this second respect he is called A Prince of the kings of the earth in this place Now Christ being a king must needes haue a kingdome which is not of this world standing in the might and policie of man as earthly kingdomes doe but it is spirituall directly concerning the hearts and consciences of men where he ruleth by his lawes And this is his priuiledge which cannot be giuen to any creature man or Angell to rule and raigne spiritually in the heart and conscience This spirituall kingdome of Christ is exercised not by dint of sword or force of armes but by his holy word through the worke of the spirit for hee is as a king which carrieth his scepter in his mouth euen his word Isay. 11.4 That is the r●d of his power by which hee rules the heart and conscience euen in the middest of his enemies Psal. 110. vers 2. Now Christ is here entituled Prince of the kings of the earth in two respects First because he and he alone as Mediator can giue lawes to bind the consciences of men yea of the greatest Monarch in the world Secondly because he hath soueraigne power ouer all kings and potentates as well as ouer others to saue and to destroy for not onely hath hee power to make a law to bind their consciences but also if they keepe it to saue them if they breake his law hee hath power to destroy them bee they what they may bee Hee hath the keyes of heauen and of hell to open and to shut at his pleasure Reuel 3.7 He can if he will lead them to life and saue them or els leaue them to their owne mind and so destroy them Hence arise sundry instructions First seeing our Sauiour Christ is a prince of the greatest Monarchs of the world and is farre aboue them we must then with all feare and trembling reuerence his high maiestie Great is that reuerence which men yeeld to earthly princes Oh then what reuerence should we performe to him which is prince and Lord of all the kings of the earth We cannot conceiue what honour wee owe vnto him which is aduaunced in the throne of all maiestie And this our reuerence wee must shew by hearing his word with trembling and beleeuing hearts as Isay sayth cap. 66.2 We must not dare to thinke or speake of Christ without great reuerence At his name euery knee must bow that is at the consideration of the great maiestie whereto hee is now exalted euery heart euen of the greatest Monarchs should be touched with submission awe and reuerence If this tooke place in mens hearts the name of Christ would not bee so prophaned and blasphemed as it is in ●easting sports in cursing and swearing whereby men tosse it like a ball without all reuerence to so great a prince as is the king of kings Secondly seeing he is king of kings wee must giue him absolute obedience Princes on earth must be obeyed so far as they commaund in Christ but he must be obeyed without exception not onely absolutly and perpetually in all his commaundements but most willingly and freely as it is said his people come freely in the day of assembling Psal. 110.3 Men will say they beleeue in Christ as he is their Sauior but that is not ynough they must obey him also as he is the king of princes Many persuade themselues they haue a good faith in Christ their sauiour which little regard obedience to him as their King and Lord. But they deceiue themselues for none can haue Christ for their Sauiour which haue him not for their Lord master neither doth that man beleeue in Christ which will not striue to doe his will And this our obedience must bee shewed in performing those duties which we heare and learne out of his holy word Thirdly seeing Christ is king of kings all princes must doe him seruice for they be all inferiour and subiect to him Psal. 72.11 This is the counsell of the holy ghost Be wise now O yee kings be learned yee Iudges of the earth kisse the Sonne c. that is inwardly reuerence and outwardly obey him This their homage must bee shewed in all the affaires of their kingdomes They must frame their lawes after the lawes of Christ Iesus they must
are the sonnes of God by adoption in his sonne so that our right to that kingdome is not by nature but by grace Secondly Christ is an vniuersall king ouer the Angels in heauen the church on earth and all other creatures wheresoeuer his regiment is absolute in the hearts and consciences of men and hee can by his word bind all things but true beleeuers bee not vniuersall kings for they haue no superioritie aboue good Angels and the church Neither are they absolute kings as he is nor of themselues but by Christ Iesus and as they participate with Christ in his kingdome The second part of the dignitie of true beleeuers stands in this That they bee priests consecrate and set apart by Christ to the worship seruice of God here in this life in spirit and truth and in the life to come to serue and praise him eternally Christ hee is a priest so are all his members but yet there is difference First Christ hee is an externall and reall priest of the new Testament which offers vp a true reall and externall pr●pitiatorie sacrifice to God the father for the sinnes of mankind As for beleeuers they are not reall and externall priests but spirituall offering vp spirituall sacrifice vnto God As when any member of Christ giues an almes hee offers a sacrifice to God not a corporall sacrifice though the thing giuen be a bodily substance but it is euery way spirituall for to offer a reall outward sacrifice in the new Testament is proper to Christ. Againe our Sauiour Christ he is a perfect priest and offers vp a perfect sacrifice but we being imperfect doe offer vp imperfect sacrifices tainted and blemished with sinne yet accepted as perfect for the worthinesse of Christs sacrifice The second point to be considered is the time whē beleeuers be made kings and priests namely in this life For as in the entrance into an earthly kingdome there bee degrees first to haue good right and title to it secondly to get possession of it which is more than title only and yet if a mans title be good thogh hee want possession he may be called a king So it is with Gods children they haue the right giuen them of the kingdome of heauen in this life and in that respect are kings Further in the possessing of a kingdome there bee two degrees first the entrance vpon some part secondly the full and perfect enioying of all Now euery true beleeuer begins to enter possession of the kingdom of heauen in this life for it stands 〈◊〉 rig●●eousnesse ioy and peace and they which 〈◊〉 these things in their harts haue the kingdome of God begun in them in this life But the full fruition and perfect posses●●on of this kingdome is reserued to be giuen at the end of this life and at the d●y of iudgement And as true beleeuers be kings in this world so likewise bee they priests in offering spirituall sacrifice to God and dedicating and consecrating themselues to his seruice all the dayes of their life The third point is the manner how true beleeuers become kings and priests they are not such by nature neither doth this dignitie come by descent in bloud or birth-right or by any other priuiledge they haue from man but onely from Christ Iesus who by diuine calling makes them spirituall kings and priests like as vnder the law by solemne election and ordination some were made earthly kings and priests Now in this calling of Christ two things concurre First Christ giueth his members right to his owne kingdome and priesthood yet not so that they can execute the regiment sustained by Christ or perform the office of his priesthood but because they haue right in part to these offices and the benefit of them both redoundeth to them wholly And this right they haue is brought to passe in the couenant of the Gospell wherein they are bound to beleeue in God through Christ and God is bound againe to giue vnto them Christ with all his benefites among which these two must be accounted for indeed euery thing which belongs to Christ as he is mediatour is conueyed in some sort to euery true beleeuer Secondly in this diuine calling Christ endues all his members with gifts and graces whereby they are enabled for the duties of spirituall kings and priests vnto God For as Christ is annointed so are all his members So the Psalmist speaking of Christ sayth He is annointed with the oyle of gladnesse aboue his fellowes Psal. 45. vers 7. Therefore his fellowes that is beleeuers are annointed with the same oile though in lesse measure And Saint Iohn sayth Yee haue receiued the annointing 1. Iohn 2.27 yea God himselfe chargeth wicked men not to touch his annointed Psal. 105.15 meaning not onely Patriarkes Kings and Prophets but all true beleeuers who are then annointed when they are endued with the gifts of the same spirit in some measure wherewith Christ in his manhood was filled aboue measure The fourth point To whom hath he made them kings and priests Answ. To God euen the father This is added for speciall cause to preuent that carnall libertie which mans nature might claime from this spirituall royaltie for men might say if all beleeuers be kings then may they liue as they list but these words vnto God do shew that the right of their kingdome with the offices of their priesthood must all bee referred to the honor and prayse of God vnto whom they are made kings and priests Lastly he addeth Euen his father by way of exposition to shew more particularly to which of the persons they are first of all made kings and priests for the title God must not here be taken absolutely for the diuine nature but with restraint to the first person the father vnto whom all true beleeuers are made kings and priests in the first place and from the father to the sonne and from them both to the holy ghost And the first person in Trinitie is here named aboue the rest not as being aboue them in degree or honour for so they bee equall but because he is the first in order and the fountaine of the Godhead which is conueyed from him to the Sonne and from them both to the Holy ghost Thus much for the meaning of the words Now follow sundry vses from the consideration of these two dignities of beleeuers And first their kingly dignitie affoordeth matter both of instruction and consolation Instruct. I. Whereas all true beleeuers are made true kings in this life hereby euery one that professeth Christian religion is taught to carry himselfe as an enemie to all those that are of the kingdome of darkenesse as namely to sinne and Sathan to the flesh and the world euen through the whole course of his life for by calling euery Christian hath title to the kingdome of heauen What affinitie then can wee haue with those that bee both enemies of this kingdome and of Christ himselfe that made vs kings
sonne of God which is the friend of friends who shall giue them not onely life and motion but eternall life with his owne maiestie This was Iobs comfort that though he died yet he beleeued he should see his redeemer with his eyes And this should be our comfort against the feare of death and last iudgement Secondly this is a terror to the wicked and to all impenitent sinners that they shall will they nill they be brought to the barre of Christs iudgement seate there looke on him who is their iudge whom they have in their life contemned and despised And this consideration may serue to moue them to repentance which haue no● begunne to repent and to labour to become the members of Christ a● also to increase and further repentance in them who haue by Gods grace begun the same It may be some do thinke when they die all is done and there is no further account to follow but though we lie rotten in our graues a thousand or two thousand yeares yet we shall rise and looke vpon our iudge with our owne eyes And if we haue not in our life time repented we shall heare him with our owne eares giuing the dreadfull sentence against vs Go ye cursed into euerlasting fire And therefore it is best for vs in this day of grace to preuent this danger and now repent and beleeue in Christ that then we may rise with ioy and stand with hol●nesse before Christ Iesus No doubt if we were persuaded that we should thus appeare it would moue vs to repent Thirdly Euerie eye shall see him that is all men with their owne eyes shall looke on him Hence it may bee gathered that those who wanted their fight in this life shall haue it then restored It is granted of all Diuines that the elect shall haue all their senses and other defects restored wherein they were wanting in this life And it may also bee added that the wicked shall then haue some of their senses restored if they wanted the same in this life as hearing and seeing at the least for the deafe shall heare the blind shall see this Iudge And this can be no glorie to them seeing it is to increase their miserie for the more senses they haue the more punishment they shall feele because by sense we apprehend miserie Euen th●se which peirced him Here is added a further euidence of Christs manifestation of his comming and that for three causes First to shewe that no power or wisedome in the world can free any one from his appearance For if any could escape in all likelihod it would be those Iewes and Gentiles who preuailed most against Christ and put him to death But none of those can escape his iudgement for euen they which peirced him they shall see this Iudge and bee summoned before his maiestie For though they had power to kill him yet none of them shall haue power to absent themselues from before his bar of iudgement at the last day Secondly to shew the case of all wicked men namely that such woe and miserie shall befall them as they neuer once thought of The Iewes and Gentiles which crucified Christ neuer dreamed of this that he whom they then put to a temporall death should one day be their Iudge and condemne them to eternall death vnlesse they had repented Thirdly to shew the rufull and wofull estate of all impenitent sinners they shall rise to iudgement and haue the greatest enemie their Iudge who will shew rigor vpon them and iustice without all mercie for this peircing of Christ is meant not onely of the Iew which put him to death but of all vngodly person● because all such do by their sinnes as with swords and speares wound him at the heart as the souldiers did Impenitent sinners be as the Iewes which crucified Christ as Iudas which betrayed him and as the soldiers which goar●● his side and vnlesse they now repent they shall one day be iudged as his enemies Euen they which peirced him Out of these words some gather that the body of Christ hath still the wounds and scarres which were giuen him at his death the print of the nailes in his hands and his feete and that these shall be seene in him at the last day adding withall that it is no blemish to Christ to haue these but rather an increase of his glorie But this cannot be gathered hence for though it be sayd They shall see him whom they peirced yet it followeth not that they shall see him as he was peirced what though they see the person whom they wounded shal they therefore see his wounds Manie shall see kings and queenes whom they crowned in this world but it followeth not that therefore they shall weare their crownes So we shall see our fathers and mothers but not as fathers and mothers IV. point The fruite and effect of his comming especially in the wicked in these words And all tribes of the earth shall waile before him Where S. Iohn speakes of the whole world according to the condition of the land of Canaan for only that part of the world was diuided into tribes As in like case our Sauiour Christ setteth out the iudgement of the whole world according to the state and manner of iudging the visible Church Math. 25. So that his meaning is that they which repented not of what nation soeuer of what state or condition soeuer they haue bene shall wayle and mourne at that day And hee addes a reason of this their mourning in these words for him before him or ouer him That is they shall wayle and lament with exceeding lamentation because they beleeued not his word but contemned him and his doctrine and therefore now they want all help to free them from the punishmēt of their vnbeleefe and contempt of the gospell for this life is the only time of grace and mercie afterward there is no worke nor inuention that can alter mans estate Hence then we are admonished first that in this world we labour aboue all things to be reconciled to God in Christ to get our sinnes pardoned to beleeue and imbrace his holy word and vnlesse we attaine hereunto in this life we shall wayle eternallie for when the last day is co●e there is no hope of help no way to escape no time of grace to repe●● Remember the foolish virgins that sought for oyle when it was too late and knocked when the doores were shut Math. 25. But if by Gods mercie we can in this life get his loue and fauour in Christ then shall we enioy the same eternally yea at this dreadfull day to all the wicked we shall lift vp our heads and our harts when wee shall see Christ comming to our full redemption all teares shall bee wiped from our eyes when the wicked shall crie and houle woe and alas for euermore The diuell knowing the worth of this admonition will labour by all meanes to keepe it from our hearts
be in euerie one of vs towards the poore afflicted seruants of Christ seeing they bee our fellow members wee should haue a fellow-feeling with them weeping with them that weepe and shew our compassion in pittying them If the foote be pricked the head stoopes the eye beholds and lookes on it the finger puls it out the hand applies the plaister the other foote is readie to runne for helpe the tongue to aske for counsell all the members are readie to affoord their mutuall helpe in pi●tie and fellow-feeling so when any members of the church suffer affliction be pricked with persecution for Christs cause then should we as members of the same body be readie to do all the helpe wee can to them especially in shewing our fellow-feeling with them The second thing wherein he is this copartner is in the kingdome of Christ that is the kingdome of heauen Where obserue that he placeth fellowship in affliction before companion in the kingdome to giue vs to vnderstand that through afflictions crosses for Christs sake is the readie way to the kingdome It is that way which is beaten and troden by the Prophets Apostles and the Saints of God as the Apostle saith th●ough manifold tribulations we must enter into heauen And this momentarie affliction causeth to vs an inf●●it weight of glorie not by deseruing it but by shewing the plain way thither Wherby we are taught not to thinke it hard when trials do befal vs but rather to count it a good thing yea exceeding great gladnesse when any affliction doth befall vs for Christs sake for herby we are brought like wandring sheep into that beatē path which leadeth to heauen Nay we must rather maruell when we professe the Gospell and haue no affliction then we may feare wee be out of the way seeing the Lord afflicts euerie child which is his Thirdly hee is Copartner in patience which he addeth because it is a most worthie vertue whereby wee are made able to perseuer in affliction till we come to heauen Afflictions are the beaten way heauen is our ioyfull end patience is the meanes to make vs go on till wee come thither Whatsoeuer things are written are written for our learning that we through patience comfort in the Scriptures might haue hope Rom. 15.4 Where true hope to come to heauen is obtained by patience which maketh a beleeuer to go on in suffering till he come to life eternall There is much fruit in the good ground but not broght forth without patiēce the true beleeuer is saued by hope in this world yet cānot come to heauē without patiēce Ia. 5. for therby he must possesse his s●ule Now because men will say patience is an hard matter and so are discouraged from seeking for it therefore to set an edge on ther desire he addes It is the patience of Christ and it is so called either because he commands it or because it is his gift and commeth from the spirit of Christ or chiefly because hee himselfe suffereth in his members and as their miserie and suffering is his so is their patience The consideration whereof is a singular motiue to enduce euery child of God to patience in bearing the crosse for Christ his sake for they haue Christ their fellow sufferer he takes part with them and puts vnder his shoulder Who would not then be content to suffer with patience And thus much of the branches of his fellowship seuerally Now consider them ioyntly and they containe a notable description of the communion of saints which is a speciall article of our faith standing in three things In tribulation In the kingdome of heauen And in patience And marke well that this communion begins in tribulation therein we must be partners and that with patience before wee come to haue fellowship in the kingdome of heauen That man therefore that hath afflictions layd on him must beare them patiently and when the members of Christ are vnder the crosse hee must in tender compassion be touched with their miseries and when he doth truly feele in his heart this Christian patience and compassion then may he assure himselfe he is entred into this communion and shall vndoubtedly with all saints be partaker of the ioyes of heauen But if patience and compassion bee wanting wee persuade our selues in vaine of this communion and therefore let vs striue against impatience and against the deadnesse and hardnesse of our hearts that we may neither murmur against God in our owne afflictions nor ye● want compassion towards our brethren that any where suffer affliction for the name of Christ. Thus much for the circumstance of the person Was in the Isle called Patmos In these words is the second circumstance namely the place where this vision 〈◊〉 giuen to Iohn This Patmos is one of those Islands which the Geographer● call Sporades lying in the West part of 〈◊〉 the lesse neere to the churches to whom Iohn writ and by the sea commonly called the Eg●●n sea This Island was a small base and poore Island little or neuer a whit inhabited Saint Iohn had his vision not at Ierusalem at Antioch or Rome but in Patmos a base poore and little inhabited Island By this we see that in the new Testament there is no respect of one place aboue another in regard of Gods presence and our fellowship with him hee doth as well manifest himselfe to Iohn by this vision in Patmos as to other his Prophets and Apostles in Ierusalem the holy citie In the old Testament there was difference of places in regard of Gods solemne worship and presence as the Lord shewed his presence and tied his worship especially to his Tabernacle and Temple at Ierusalem This Daniell sheweth by his gesture in prayer for being in captiuity when he prayed in his chamber He opened the window which was towards the Temple at Ierusalem and turned his face thitherward But now in the new Testament that difference of place is abolished in respect of Gods worship And therefore Paule willeth That men pray euery where lifting vp pure hands vnto God and so for all the duties of religion wee must thinke the like I. Then away with Popish pilgrimage to churches and chappels of Saints or to their reliques This is meere superstition for God is present euery where and a man that will worship God in spirit and truth may haue fellowship with him in one place as well as another II. Also this may serue to correct a false conceit which many haue of our churches and chappels for when they come to a dwelling house they thinke it not their dutie there to humble themselues to kneele downe and call vpon God but if they come into a church or chappell neuer so often vpon ordinarie affaires they fall downe to prayer The reason is because they thinke these places bee more holy and God more present there and they shall sooner be heard in them than in
alone on the house toppe Act. 10.11 And so doubtlesse finding Iohn thus imployed this Lords day he reuealed his will vnto him touching the state of the church to the end of the world Hence we learne sundry instructions First whereas Iohn being in a sollitarie Island kept the Saboath wee may obserue that all persons who are seuered from the assemblies of the church as the prisoners and those which are sicke of a dead paluesie or other great diseases As mariners though they bee in the middest of the sea should keepe holie the Lords Saboath by performing such duties as God requireth as prayer confession of sins and thanksgiuing whereby God may be glorified though they cannot come to the publicke ministerie of the word Secondly in that Iohn receiued his vision on the Lords day when hee gaue himselfe to prayer and holie duties Hence ariseth a consolation to Gods church that God draweth neere vnto them that draw neere to him as Iames 4.8 And so let vs humble our selues and draw neere to the Lord by prayer and thanksgiuing and the Lord in mercie will shew himselfe sundry wayes and draw neere vnto vs. The cause why men haue so little tast of Gods mercie and loue towards them is because they do not draw neere vnto him by doing those duties which he requireth at their hands For when men draw backe from God is it not good reason hee should draw backe from them This therfore must stirre vp our harts and moue vs to come often to God by prayer and thanksgiuing for by vse in these duties shall wee get acquaintance with the Lord. Thus much of the circumstances of this vision And I heard behind me a great voyce as it had bene a trumpet First here followeth the parts of this vision which are two The beginning or entrance into it in this verse and part of the twelft Secondly the matter and substance thereof from the twelft verse to the end of the third chapter The entrance into the vision is a preparation whereby the Lord maketh Iohn more fit to apprehend and receiue the things reuealed In which preparation we must obserue first the meanes secondly the parts thereof The meanes whereby God prepareth him is a voyce And I heard a voyce The like manner of preparation hath God vsed in former times when hee intended to make with Adam the couenant of reconciliation in the seed of the woman First he prepared him by a voyce speaking vnto him before he appeared and by this voyce caused him to slie for feare Then hauing rebuked him for his sinnes he made with him this couenant of grace Genes 3. And in mount Synai before the Lord gaue the law hee first came downe in thundering and lightning and with the sound of a trumpet to terrifie the people and then hee vttered his law to Moyses and to his people So when the Lord would instruct Samuel touching the house of Elie he awoke him by a voyce again and againe and then spake plainely vnto him And in all visions vsually and generally the Lord vseth to prepare his seruants by voyces by signes and words that they might bee more fit to receiue such things as hee reuealed This dealing of God with Iohn in preparing him to the worthy receiuing of this vision teacheth vs that wee much more should bee prepared to heare and receiue the will of God for wee come farre short of those excellent gifts of God which were in Iohn who yet must be prepared Our comming to heare Gods word is to learne the same for the increase of knowledge faith and obedience Now the word of God is hard and we dull to learne wee must therefore by all good meanes prepare our selues that our minds and harts may be fit to receiue the same with profit The cause of so little profit after long hearing is want of preparation but hereof we haue entreated alreadie vpon the third verse This voyce is here set out vnto vs three wayes First by the place whence it came Secondly by the qualitie of it Thirdly by the matter and substance which it contained For the place it was vttered from behind him which the Lord obserued to stirre vp ●●re attention in Iohn for vsually men doe more carefully marke those things which come on a sudden behind them than those which are spoken or done directly before their face Secondly for the qualitie of it this voyce was great as is expressed further by a similitude Like the sound of a trumpet that is full of power and maiestie Which also God added vnto it to further attention in Iohn For if it had beene an ordinarie voyce or small hee would not so much haue regarded it but being so sudden so great and full of maiestie it could not but make him verie attentiue Now seeing Christ is so carefull to prepare Iohns mind with attention and diligence to receiue the things which should bee told him This teacheth vs that when we come to heare Gods word we must vse all meanes of attention for if it were needfull to Iohn then is it farre more necessarie for vs who are farre inferiour to him in all gifts of vnderstanding and memorie And here also is another cause of small profit and little liking of Gods word namely want of attention in the heart Wee must therefore like godly Lydia Act. 16. stirre vp our dull and heauie spirits and with all diligence marke the things wee heare And here we must take heed of two enemies to attention the first are by-thoughts as when the body indeed is present but the mind wandereth from the word and is wholly possessed with thoughts of pleasure or other worldly affaires For these bee thornes in the ground of our hearts which choke the good seede of the word Many will complaine they cannot marke and remember that which is taught now the cause is in themselues their wandering thoughts which hinder both vnderstanding and memorie for the mind conceiuing other matters cannot obserue how one point dependeth on another much lesse remember them afterward The second enemie to attention is dulnesse and heauinesse in body soule a common fault in many hearers which sheweth it selfe by drowsinesse and sleepinesse in the time of preaching when they ought to stirre vp their bodies and hearts to all attention If a man should bee dull and heauie when his prince is speaking vnto him of some weightie matter that is for his good it would bee taken for a part of contempt and disloyaltie towards his maiestie What disloyaltie then is this vnto the king of kings that we should bee dull and heauy when himselfe vouchsafeth to speake vnto vs out of his word the mysteries of our saluation And surely among other things this drowsinesse is one cause of small profit by the ministerie of the word And therefore if wee would encrease in knowledge and in the gifts of grace vnto saluation we must prepare our selues before we come and in hearing
cast off all dulnesse of flesh and spirit and with all might stirre vp our selues to attentiue hearing so shall the word be blessed vnto vs otherwise our hearing shall turne to our deeper condemnation Verse 11. Saying I am Alpha and Omega the first and the last and that which thou seest write in a booke and send it vnto the seuen Churches which are in Asia vnto Ephesus and vnto Smyrna and vnto Pergamus and vnto Thyatira and vnto Sardai and vnto Philadelphia and vnto Laodicea These words containe the third description of this voice whereby Iohns heart was prepared touching the substance and matter which was vttered which consisteth in two things The first is a testimonie in these words I am Alpha and Omega the first and the last The second a commaundement in the wordes following That which thou seest write and send c. I. Touching the testimonie the substance thereof is set downe in the eight verse where the words were handled and the meaning shewed They do serue directly to proue the Godhead and eternitie of Christ which Christ himselfe doth here auouch to giue vnto Iohn and vnto the Church full assurance that the things now vttered and deliuered were from God for saying I am Alpha and Omega the first and the last it is as much as if he had said I which speake vnto thee am God and therefore the things I deliuer are from God In this testimonie note Gods speciall care in regard of his truth hee doth not content himselfe with reuealing his will vnto his Church but more specially his care is to certifie the Church of the truth thereof that it is indeed from God This hath beene Gods care from the beginning When Peter receiued a vision from God withall Gods spirit assured him that the things reuealed therein were certen sure And so when Christ preached the will of his father among men hee did withall worke strange miracles to confirme and seale vp the truth of his doctrine that it was from God This speciall care of God ouer his Church doth first confute the Papists opinion touching Scripture They hold the Scripture to bee certen in it selfe but not vnto men till the Church giue testimonie thereunto But this is false for God euer had this care ouer his Church not onely to reueale his will vnto them but also to vse meanes for the assurance of their consciences that that which was reuealed was his vndoubted and perfect will And therefore the word of God is certen and euer was not onely in it selfe b●t to the consciences of beleeuers and that without the testimonie of the church and so should bee through the testimonie of the church should neuer come thereunto Secondly hereby are confuted many carnall men who will be of no religion because say they there is no certainetie in the matters of religion mens opinions therein are so diuers that so many men so many minds almost and no man can tell who speakes the truth Answ. It may be that men in sundry matters hold sundry priuat opinions yet in the church of God all the true members of Christ hold the same opinions touching the foundation of religion But let it bee graunted That all men on earth were of diuers opinions touching matters of religion should religion therefore bee vncertaine God forbid For religion is certaine vnto men by the meanes that God hath appointed to certifie the conscience of the truth thereof and thereby might men come to the truth and certaineti● of religion taught by the Prophets and Apostles though all men in the world were of diuers opinions touching the same Thus much of the Testimonie II. point The commaundement giuen to Iohn is in these words That which thou seest write in a booke and send it to the seuen Churches which are in Asia This commaundement hath two parts First To write the things seene in a booke secondly to send the booke to the seuen churches here named And both these must Iohn do being now disabled by his exile to preach these things vnto them personally for these causes First that these churches might be edified in the faith and strengthened in these most grieuous times of persecution Secondly that they might become keepers of this booke for the good of others for the church of God is the pillar of truth not onely for that it publisheth Gods truth but also because it keepeth it and giueth testimonie therunto In this commaundement note sundry things First that the word of God written and penned by the hand of man is a notable helpe to the church of God and a worthy meanes to edifie the same els Christ would neuer haue commaunded Iohn to haue written these visions and sent them to the Churches Which serueth to confute the blind Papists which say the word written is but an inkie letter and a nose of waxe because the sence thereof may be turned euery way as man will This also confuteth the Anabaptists which so much magnifie their Reuelations and make no account of the word written If the Lord had thought it best hee would haue taught these churches by reuelations but they must learne by the word written Secondly that the reading of Gods word either publickly or priuately is an ordinance of God for the Lord commaunding Iohn to write this booke and send it to the churches hereby implieth that they must reade the same as they did other bookes of Scripture The preaching of the word is indeede the most worthy instrument for the founding and confirming of Gods Church whereby ordinarily iustifying faith is wrought in the heart and yet reading must haue his due reuerence as a meanes to confirme and encrease true knowledge faith and repentance where it is begun Thirdly here note that a man may be vnder the crosse and in persecution and yet remaine in the speciall fauor of God for this banishment into such a desart place was vnto Iohn a grieuous crosse and yet the Lord vouchsafed there to reueale himselfe vnto him and to make him the penman of this booke Which honour hee vouchsafeth not to all but to them that are most dear vnto him Which thing each one should carefully obserue for our nature is so corrupt that when wee are vnder the crosse it would persuade vs we are cast out of the loue and fauour of God In the end of the verse the seauen Churches Ephesus Smyrna and the rest are named Which seuen places were seuen famous cities in Asia wherein were planted the most famous churches that were in those parts and for their excellencie are they named And thus much for the meanes of Iohns preparation Now follow the parts thereof which are two first is hearing folded vp with the former meanes And I heard a voyce Second is Turning of himselfe to see the partie that spake vnto him in these words Verse 12. Then I turned backe to see the voice which spake with me and when I was turned I saw seuen
golden candlestickes That is so soone as I heard this sudden and mightie voice I turned my selfe to see who it was that vttered the same In this behauiour of Iohn we are to learne our dutie so to dispose our hearts towards God in the receiuing of his word as Iohn disposeth himselfe towards Christ in the receiuing of this vision So soone as the voice spake Iohn hearkened and because the sound thereof came behind him he turned himselfe to looke on him that vttered it Euen so must we doe we are by nature strangers with God slow to heare when hee speaketh and readie to turne our hearts from God when we heare Therefore when God speaketh vnto vs in the ministerie of his word we must hearken And though we bee going another way yet wee must turne our selues from our euill wayes and encline our hearts to his voice that we may haue fellowship with him Saint Iohn had not seene this maruellous vision vnlesse hee had turned himselfe to behold him that spoke No more shall wee at any time feele true fellowship with the Lord vnlesse we turne our hearts vnto his word and that betimes while he speaketh vnto vs in the ministerie thereof Thus much for the first part of the vision viz. the entrance thereunto The second part it the matter and substance of the vision containing a most worthie representation of Christ in his maiestie as he is the Prophet King and Priest of his church set downe at large by a description of Christ continuing from this twelfth verse vnto the end of the third chapter wherein Iohn sheweth what hee receiued of Christ partly by hearing and partly by seeing And first he beginneth his description of Christ as hee saw him represented in vision and so describeth him by two arguments First by the place where he saw him Secondly by his forme and figure wherein he appeared I. For the place Iohn saw him in the middest of the seuen golden candlesticks These seuen candlestickes here seene are the seuen Churches of Asia the particular churches of God being compared to candlesticks as Christ expoundeth himselfe vers 20. Now the particular congregations of Gods church bee called candlestickes for that resemblance which is between them For as the candlesticks serue to bear vp and hold forth the light that is set therein so the particular churches of God on earth they beare vp and shew forth the light of the gospell vnto the whole world partly in the ministerie of the world and partly in the profession of the faith of Christ. From hence sundry things are to bee learned first obserue that the churches are rather called candlestickes than candles To giue vs to vnderstand that they haue no light of themselues or from themselues but onely are Gods instruments to beare vp and hold forth the light in the ministerie of the word and profession of the faith for Christ Iesus is the onely true lampe and candle that giueth light to the heart and conscience by his holy spirit in the word Secondly hence euery one that professeth himselfe to be a true member of Gods church must learne his duty which is earnestly to labour to become a shining and burning candle Indeed this principally concernes the ministers of the church and therefore Iohn Baptist is called a burning and shining light Iohn 5. vers 35. but yet it must also bee verefied of euery member thereof as Saint Paule commaundeth Shine sayth hee as lights in the world in the middest of a naughtie and c●●oked nation holding forth the doctrine of life that is the gospell Quest. How shall euery member of the church become a burning light Answ. First hee must haue his mind enlightened in the knowledge of Gods will and word and then as a candlesticke hold out and send forth the bea●es thereof to others partly by teaching within the compasse of his calling and partly by example of an honest and blamelesse life and conuersation Thus we should doe if wee would be answerable to our profession And to induce vs hereunto let vs obserue the reasons following First it is Gods commandement Shine as lights sayth S. Paule in the world Philip 2.15 And walke as children of the light Ephes. 5.8 Secondly consider the fruit hereof which is wonderfull great For by godly instruction in our places and by answerable obedience in our liues we win many to the Lord shewing forth such lights whereby others may walke in this darke world to the kingdome of heauen which is a most blessed light In the Winter season men thinke they doe others great pleasure if in the night they hang forth a light to guide passengers a little way in an earthly walke What a blessed thing then is this that a man should alwayes hold forth that light which shall guide a sinfull wicked wretch to leaue the wayes of death and to walke in the pathes of righteousnesse to eternall life But on the contrarie when men liue in Gods church like candles put out by reason of the blindnesse of their minds and the badnesse of their liues hence commeth great hurt and danger to others with whom they liue for they lead others that depend vpon them to the pit of destruction especially they who know the will of God and yet make not conscience to shew forth the same by good example of a godly life For as in an hauen towne if any man in the night time doe remooue the sea-marke which guideth the ships in the right channell he doth as much as in him lieth cast away all the ships that are comming neere the shore by causing them to run on rockes and sands euen so they that should giue light in the church if they giue either no light or false light to such as depend vpon them who are sayling in the sea of this sinfull world hereby they lead and direct them to a wrong hauen and instead of heauen bring their soules to eternall perdition which must terrifie vs from ignorance and euill workes and make vs labour to shine as lights in this world by good instruction and godly conuersation Third reason Consider the fearefull iudgments of God against such as liue in his church as members thereof and yet giue no light they doe incurre the fearefull wrath of Christ. In the Temple the keeping of the lampes and lights belonged to the priest and therefore he had his snuffers and other instruments to trim the same which notably figured the dutie of Christ in the Church of the new Testament for hee is our high priest who looketh to euery light in the Sanctuarie that is to euery member of his church who ought to shine as a lampe and when they burne but dimly and darke he hath his snuffers to trim them and make them giue a better light both by godly life and good instruction But when hee hath snuffed them againe and againe if still they burne darke and dim and giue either no light or else a false light
yet so long as Christ is present their commission must cease and it is as great pride and greater for any to presume to be head of all churches in Christs presence than for a man to sit vicegerent in the presence of the prince Secondly seeing Christ is alwayes present with his church wee are taught to walke with God and before God as Enoch did Genes 5.22 Which duty stands in these points First whatsoeuer we say or take in hand wee must do it as in the presence of Christ. Secondly we must continually depend vpon Christs providence who is euer present with his church prouiding all things for the good of his church and of euery member therof Thirdly we must do all our actions as looking for approbation at the hands of Christ for which end wee must take direction for the same out of his word The practise of this dutie is most excellent for by walking with God we shall be enabled to many good duties as namely liue vnblameably in this wicked world making conscience of all sinne and approuing our selues both to God and man in hart and life And thus much for the place where Iohn saw Christ. The second argument wherby Iohn describeth Christ is his figure or forme in these words One like the sonne of man Some thinke that these words are a description of some Angell not of Christ because he is sayd to be like the sonne of man not the sonne of man himselfe but they are deceiued For he which is here described is before called the first and the last it is he which was dead and is aliue which cannot agree to any but to Christ. Now the words may more significantly bee translated thus One like to a sonne of man for if it be translated that sonne of man then Christ must needs bee the resemblance for so hee is called Act. 7.56 But here Christ is sayd to be like to a sonne of man by the vsuall phrase of the Old testament whereby is meant that he is like vnto a man And Christ is not here called a man but is sayd to bee like vnto a man because hee appeared vnto Iohn not in his true manhood which was then in heauen but in the likenesse of his manhood And note this that as Christ here appeared to Iohn in this vision so did he alwayes appeare after his ascention Steuen indeed saw his true manhood Act. 7. but it was in heauen and Paul heard his voice when he was conuerted Acts. 9.5 and saw the Lord 1. Cor. 9.1 But no man can prooue that Chrst appeared vnto him in his true manhood vnlesse it were in heauen And in all these visions Iohn saw not his true manhood but a resemblance thereof Now Christ appeared thus for speciall consideration For man is too much addicted to his bodily presence this was the fault of his owne friends and Disciples Therefore Christ would hereby teach vs not to seeke for his bodily presence but rather to lift vp our hearts to heauen and therefore seeke to haue fellowship with him by faith For this cause he sayd to Marie after his resurrection Touch me not I am not yet ascended to my father Iohn 20.17 This Paule had learned Though we had knowne Christ saith he after the flesh yet henceforth know we him no more 2. Cor. 5.15 Now if Christ after his ascention neuer appeared in his true manhood i● teacheth vs that the defence of Christs reall presence in the Sacrament is needlesse For if Gods church haue spirituall fellowship with Christ by faith it is sufficient Againe whereas Christ appeareth in the shape and forme of man after his ascention the Papists gather that wee may make images of Christ and so answerably of the father and of the holy ghost in those formes wherin they appeared as of the holy Ghost in the forme of a doue and of the father in the likenesse of an old man Ans. It is not vnlawfull to make or to haue an image of Christs manhood so that it be out of religious vse though it bee doubtfull whether any now haue a true picture therof but if it bee to represent whole Christ God and man or bee vsed to remember Christ thereby or to worship Christ therein it is an idoll As for the formes of an old man or of a doue they may bee made for the manifestation of the hystori● of the Bible when it is painted or pictured but then wee must conceiue that these formes are no images of the father sonne or holy ghost but onely representations of such visible appearances as sometimes were signes and pledges of the presence of those persons But now to abstract those formes apart from the hystorie and to make them images of any person in Trinitie is flat against the second commaundement which doth generally forbid all images of God not excepting those very shapes in which himselfe tooke libertie to testifie his presence for some time And there being no exception against Gods cōmaundement it is in vaine to seeke shifts excuses for a thing forbidden specially considering wee may not meddle with God beyond our commission from God Clothed with a garment downe to his feete Here Christ is further described by his attire The first part whereof is A long garment reaching to his feete The causes why he so appeared may be these First to signifie that hee is the high priest of the new Testament and so continueth doing the offices of the high priest for his Church after his ascention in presenting the merit of his one onely sacrifice and making intercession to God the father for them For the long garment was one of those wherewith the high priest was cloathed in his ministration vnder the law Secondly to signifie that hee is The Prince of peace for the long garment not onely in the Church of God but among the Heathen hath beene alwayes a note of peace and so Christ is called Isa. 9.6 Thirdly to shew that he had in his breast the treasures of the wisedome of the father and the spirit of counsell For this long robe alwayes pertained to them that excelled in counsell and wisedome and so Christ is described Isay 11.2 Now in this example of Christ we may learne a dutie touching our attire namely that the outward garment of the body should be sutable to the good things that ought to be in the heart as to our wisedome knowledge feare of Gods name to our sobrietie modestie temperance humilitie and all other vertues whatsoeuer Wee must not onely in speech and action as in hearing Gods word and receiuing the Sacraments shew our selues to bee burning lights but euen by the gesture and attire of our body both for matter and forme shew forth the grace of our harts But miserable are these times wherein mens attire is sutable not to the graces of God that should bee in their hearts but to the common corruptions of the times For such it is
God wee must acknowledge them pure and iust In sundry points of religion there is a learned ignorance whereof this is not the least to hold our selues content and to reuerence the workes of Christ though wee see no reason thereof nay though to vs they seeme against all reason for all the wayes of God are vncorrupt Though the blind eye of men cannot discerne the light of the Sunne yet the Sunne is full of light so though our blind eyes cannot ●e ●old the puritie of Gods workes yet they are all done in iustice and equitie yea they are iustice it selfe for his will is the rule of iustice And we must not thinke that God doth a thing because it is good and right but therefore is the thing good and right because God willeth and worketh it Examples hereof wee haue in Gods word God commaunded Abimele● to deliuer Sarah to Abraham or els hee will destroy him and all his houshold In mans reason this might seeme vniust for why should Abimelechs seruants be punished for their maisters fault So Achan sinneth and all the hoast of Israell is punished Dauid committed adulterie and the child which he begat ●●eth Dauid numbreth the people but the people are smitten with the plague 2. Sa. 24. All this to mans reason may seeme vnequall yet being the workes of God we are withal reuerence to iudge them most iust and holy Againe the Scripture sheweth plainely that God in his eternall counsell hath decreed to saue some and to reiect others and his reason mouing him thereto is not any thing foreseene in them but his will and pleasure alone This in mans reason seemeth to be crueltie towards some and therefore sundry men disclaime this doctrine as charging God with iniustice and tyrannie But herein they greatly offend for it is the manifest truth of God in his word therfore ought with reuerence to be acknowledged though we can see no reason thereof For who art thou oh man that pleadest against God Rom. 9.20 And his voyce as the sound of many waters The voyce of Christ is resembled to the sound of many waters for two causes First to signifie the loudnesse and greatnesse of it the sound whereof hath bene heard through all the world in the ministerie of the Gospell Secondly to shew the power and efficacie thereof in the eares of his creatures for such power it is of that when the creatures were not He but spake the word they were made He. 11.3 This powerfull voice of Christ brought Lazarus out of the graue after he had bene dead foure dayes bound hand and fo●●e And by this voyce of Christ shall they that haue bene dead six thousand yeares before be raised vp to life The houre shall come in the which all that are in the graues shall heare his voyce and shall come forth to iudgement Iohn 5.28 29. Hereby then we may see the great securitie and the deadnesse of mens hearts in this age For though the powerfull word of Christ be daily sounded into the eares of many yet it entereth not into their hearts They liue securely in their sinnes though they be daily exhorted to repentance But shall dead Lazarus start out of his graue when Christ saith Lazarus come forth Nay shall they that were consumed to dust many thousand yeares before at the hearing of Christs voyce rise out of their graues And shall we which liue in body bee no whit affected with it in our soules Oh fearefull death in sinne And yet this is the state of all those that will not bee mooued to leaue their sinnes by the ministery of the word It may bee the outward eare receiueth the sound but the dead heart receiueth no instruction We must therefore apply our hearts to this powerfull voyce of Christ and leaue the sinnes wherein we haue lien dead that so the quickning power hereof vnto saluation may appeare in vs. Verse 16. And he had in his right hand seuen starres and out of his mouth went a sharpe two edged sword And his face shone as the sunne shineth in his strength Here Iohn proceedeth further to set out the parts of Christs body and the properties thereof By seuen starres wee are to vnderstand seuen Angels that is as Christ expoundeth them verse 20. the seuen ministers of the seuen churches of Asia And they are called starres for these causes First starres giue light to men on earth And so the ministers ought to giue spirituall light to them that liue in the church both by doctrine and by an vnblameable conuersation Secondly starres haue their continuall abode in heauen and descend not vnto the earth So ministers aboue all others ought to haue their conuersation in heauen This indeed is the duty of euery christian but especially of the minister in regard of his calling And this heauenly conuersation he must expresse first by seeking the conuersion of his owne soule and then the conuersion of others that they may haue an eternall mansion in heauen Thirdly they are called stars because if they be faithfull they shal be honored of God and made to shine a● the starres for euer and euer Dan. 12.3 It is added that they are in Christs right hand Whereby is signified that to him belongeth the regiment and gouernement and the whole disposition of the ministerie for matters that concerne the church From whence arise sundry instructions I. That it is Christ who giueth to his church ministers which preach the Gosspell For he ascendeth vp on high and gaue gifts vnto men some to be Apostles some Prophets and Evangelists some Pastors and teachers for the gathering together of the saints and for the worke of the ministerie and for the edification of the body of Christ. And for this cause we ought to pray daily vnto Christ that he would thrust forth laborers into his haruest that the remnant of Gods elect may bee gathered and so we see an end of these miserable dayes wherein we liue Secondly in that Christ holdeth them in his right hand wee may gather that Christ giueth protection and defence vnto his ministers when they are faithful and walke in their calling according to his will which is a matter to bee considered of al that are called into this office For they haue sundrie occasions of discouragement as the negligence and backwardnesse of their people the slanders and mockings of the enemies But this protection of Christ must comfort them against them all seeing they are in Christs right hand they must go on with all godly boldnesse Thirdly this sheweth the dignitie of this calling Indeed it is despised and reputed base in the world and hereby many are driuen from it But let the wicked iudge what they will Behold Christ honoureth it for his faithfull ministers are not onely present before him which were no small thing but hee holdeth them in his right hand then which what greater glorie can be done vnto them This must
but the deadly wounds of Christs enemies And 〈◊〉 much for the worke of the Word vpon the wicked The second worke of this two edged sword is in Gods elect in them it hath sundry workes all which ●end to their subiection First it woundeth to the quicke the corruption of their nature This is one speciall cause why it is called a two edged sword because it entereth deeply into the heart of Gods children and giueth their corruption such a deadly blow as it shall neuer recouer againe It killeth not the person as it doth in the wicked but quic●ening the soule it woundeth his corruption Paule ministred the Gospell that the offering vp of the Gentiles might be acceptable Where resēbling Gods church to a sacrifice hee giueth vs to vnderstand that euery true Christian must be slaine though not in body and soule yet in regard of sinfull motions corrupt affections and rebellious actions by this two edged sword of the spirit And this is his conuersion whereby the roote of corruption is stocked vp Secondly after conuersion this two edged sword serueth to cut off and pare away the remnants of vnbeleefe doubting impietie anger and other sins that be in the elect Euery branch saith Christ that bringeth forth fruit in mee my father the husbandman gruneth to make it bring fo●rth more fruit Thirdly it serueth to keepe Gods children in awe and subiection vnto him In this vision Christ standeth in his church holding vp the scepter of his kingdome which hee beareth in his mouth for this end that though his enemies will not bee brought in subiection vnto him yet his owne children might hereby be kept in awe of him He therefore that will not at the lifting vp of this two edged sword tremble and feare before Christ is but a rebellious subiect If there bee brawling in humane societies let the magistrate but shew himselfe with the sword of iustice and straightway euery one is quiet if any resist he is taken for a rebell Now shall this be effected in ciuile policie and not bee true in Christs spirituall gouernment vnlesse therefore wee will shew our selues rebels against Christ let vs cease from sinne and tremble before him seeing hee holdeth out vnto vs the scepter of his word Fourthly this sword serueth notably for our defence and victory in all temptations Ephes 6. ●● This sword of the ●pirit the word of God is one piece of the complete armour of a Christian. Herewith did Christ vanquish Sathan Matth. 4 And thus wee see how the word of God is a two edged sword in regard of the elect Hence we are taught that when wee haue the doctrine of the Law and of the Gospell preached vnto vs we must with all reuerence heare and receiue the same Men will heare it while it is taught generally but if it once touch their particular faults then they cannot brooke it But wee must suffer it to ransacke our hearts and be glad thereof for by this meanes our corruption is wounded and sinne slaine in vs our soules are conuerted vnto God and shall bee saued If any man were diseased with a fistula or any other dangerous sore he would willingly suffer the surgeon to search and pierce into the fame Shall wee doe this for our bodily health and shall wee not suffer the word of God to enter into our hearts to rip vp our sinnes that they being wounded and subdued wee may bee healed and so our soules liue for euer wee cannot liue vnto God till wee die vnto sinne and wee can neuer die vnto sinne till the same bee wounded in vs by this two edged sword Away therefore with all nicenesse in disliking the word when it crosseth our humour and if wee loue eternall life Let vs then embrace it most willingly Saint Iohn sayth f●●ther of this two edged sword that it came out of Christs mouth Other kings carry their swords and scepters in their hands but Christ beareth his in his mouth to teach vs this speciall point That wee must receiue no doctrine from any man which hee hath not receiued from th● mouth of Christ. For first God reuealeth his will vnto his son Christ deliuereth it vnto his Prophet● and Apostles by the spirit and to his ministers in their writings They therefore must deliuer nothing vnto Gods people but that which they haue from Christ if they deliuer ought els they hold no● forth Christs sword neither can it haue that powerfull effect either in the godly or in the wicked And his face 〈…〉 the Sunne shineth i● his brightnesse Here is the last braunch of this description of Christ his face is compared to the shining of the Sunne and that in his strength because Christ is vnto his church● as the Sunne is to the world And looke what duties the Sunne performeth vnto the world the same duties Christ performes vnto his church in a more excellent manner as their resemblance will euidently declare First the Sunne in the world dispelleth night and darkenesse and maketh the day by bringing light so Christ the sonne of righteousnesse Malach. 4.2 sendeth downe the bright beames of knowledge and grace into his church wherby blindnesse and ignorance is taken away 2. Corinth 4.6 And hereby euery one of what sort or place soeuer is taught first to labour for knowledge of the will of God A great shame it is for any to bee ignorant her●in when the day commeth we set open our windowes to let in the light of the Sunne for our comfort behold Christ Iesus is euer a shining light in his church Why then should wee not open our hearts that the beames of light and knowledge which descend from him may enter into vs and giue vs light Secondly wee must hereby learne in our whole conuersation among men to walke by this light We are here but pilgrims trauelling towards heauen and the way of this miserable word is full of darkenesse yet Christ Iesus is in the middest of his church shining as the Sunne in his strength to giue the light of knowledge whereby wee may see the right way thither Without him there is nothing but darkenesse and wandering his word is the light and himselfe the day starre We therefore must attend vnto him in all our affaires of this life and in the particular duties of our lawfull callings take direction from the light which shineth from his face Secondly the Sunne serueth most excellently to comfort and reuiue cold and dead starued bodies as experience in the spring time teacheth So Christ Iesus by the worke of his spirit conueyeth spirituall life and heat ●nto the dead and frozen heart of man he is of power to comfort them that mourne to giue life to the broken hearted and to reuiue the spirit of the humble Isay. 57.15 and for this most excellent worke may well bee called the Sunne of Righteousness● In regard wherof wee must labour aboue all things to bee partakers of this life and ioy which commeth
reuerence as from the Lord. Lastly in this exceeding feare of Iohn who was an Apostle and a very godly and righteous man wee learne that the most holy man that is will be astonied euen to death with the presence of Gods glorious maiestie And if no man be he neuer so holy can stand before Gods presence much lesse can the most righteous workes of any man endure the triall of his iudgement if his person cannot abide his presence his workes will neuer beare his iudgement For the person must first bee approoued before the workes be accepted Therefore damnable is the doctrine of the church of Rome which teach that such as in themselues are sinfull men must stand before Gods iudgement seate bringing with them works of grace as meanes of their iustification and part of satisfaction to Gods iustice It is a doctrine of desperation for how can our works be perfectly holie seeing our persons are but sanctified here in part And who can thinke that the infinit iustice of God can bee satisfied by the imperfect righteousnesse of man II. point The effect of this feare in his body He fell downe as dead at his feete This was no small feare but exceding great astonishing his senses and laying him downe as dead Physitions say and that truly the mind followeth the temperature of the body But hence we may as truly say That the body followeth the disposition of the mind for the affections of the soule wil worke vpon the body like vnto strong diseases Iohns feare casteth his body into a sound And so horrour of conscience when the heart is cold will make the body hot and the intrals to roule in the body The same may be sayd of anger 1. Reg. 21.4 When Ahab could not obtaine Nabals vineyard he layd him downe on his bed in displeasure and was almost dead Euen so will other affections worke vpon the body Hence wee learne that the bodies of men being diseased must not alwayes be cured by bare physike but somtimes by curing of the mind and ordering of the affections for when the distemper of the body ariseth from the disorder of the mind then till the mind be well composed and setled physicke will little auaile III. point The kind of this feare is insinuated in these words he fell at his feet Wherby the holy Ghost giueth vs to vnderstand that this was a religious reuerent feare which hee bare to Christ For this kind of prostrating the body betokeneth humilitie and argueth a reuerent estimation of the thing feared Hence we are taught when we come into the presence of Christ we must prostrat our selues as Iohn did and looke that we be striken with a religious feare of his maiestie If any shall thinke that Christ is now ascended into heauen and therefore we cannot now fall down at his feet as Iohn did I answer though Christ be now in heauen yet hath he his feet vpon earth at which we must fall downe In the old testament the mercy-seat was the pledge of Gods presence and therefore it is called Gods footestoole Psal. 99.5 before which the Iewes were to fall downe Well though the mercy-seat be now taken away yet some thing is instead thereof For wheresoeuer Gods people assemble themselues in the name of God there is his footstoole and therfore in the assemblies of Gods saints we must cast downe our selues before Christ Iesus and do all duties vnto him with all feare awe and reuerence of his maiestie This feare of Iohn though it was holy yet is it tainted with some sinne and corruption for it was an immoderat feare of death which made him thus astonished and affright Whence wee learne that the most holy affections of righteous men are not per●ectly holy but mixed with imperfection according to the measure of their sanctification which is alwayes in part in this life Whereby it appeares that no man hath in him a filiall feare of God alone but some seruile feare whereby wee feare God for his iudgements is mixed therewith And thus much for Iohns feare which is the occasion of his confirmation Now followeth the meanes of his confirmation in these words Then he layd his right hand vpon me saying feare not I am the first and the last and I am aliue but I was dead and behold I am aliue for euermore Amen and I haue the keyes of hell and death Here note two things first the time when Christ vsed these meanes for Iohns confirmation secondly the means themselues The time is noted in this word then that is after his presence had stroken a feare in my heart which made me as dead then the Lord vsed meanes to comfort me The meanes of comfort and confirmation are then vsed when the party is humbled And thus the Lord dealeth with all his seruants in the matter of their saluation First he bruiseth their stonie hearts and woundeth their sinfull soules before hee powreth in the oyle of grace First a man must bee a lost sheepe and then Christ findeth him and layeth him on his shoulders and bringeth him home And indeed they that would feele sound comfort by Christ must first be humbled in themselues And the reason why men reape so little comfort either by the word or sacraments is the want of true humiliation before they come whereby the soule is fitted for grace and consolation II. point The meanes vsed by Christ to confirme Iohn and they are two First a sensible signe He layd his right hand vpon me Secondly comfortable words Feare not Here first obserue in generall Christs gratious dealing with Iohn he vseth not one meanes apart but in great mercie that he may throughly confirme Iohn he giueth him both a signe and words And so hee hath alwayes dealt with his seruants When he called Moses to bee a deliuerer of his people First hee gaue him his word saying I will be with thee and then a signe saying Vpon this mountaine shal ye serue God Ex●d 3.12 So when he would confirme the heart of Ahaz against his enemies he first giues him a promise of deliuerance verse 7. then biddeth him aske a signe vers 11. And for this cause Christ in the publishing of his Gospell added signes and miracles vnto his word that the truth thereof might be fully confirmed And so in the worke of our saluation besides his mercifull promises which were sufficient in respect of his fidelitie he giueth vs further signes and seales to support our weaknesse and to confirme our faith in the assurance thereof euen the vse of the holy Sacraments This teacheth vs that Christ hath a speciall care ouer his church and people in that he doth so condescend and abase himselfe vnto their weaknesse adding vnto his word which of it selfe were sufficient signes and tokens that by both he might more euidently giue that assurance which by one alone our weaknes would not so well conceiue Againe in this meanes of confirmation note the order which Christ vseth
another and yet beseecheth them to increase therein Phil. 3.13.4 in Pauls person we haue a worthie president which we must follow if wee thinke to come whither he is gone before though hee had gone farre in the loue of God yet he laboured to perfection and therefore considered not that which was past as resting in it but rather how farre hee was too short that so he might vse meanes to increase in loue and in all other good graces till hee come to perfection A christian mans life is a way that leadeth to heauen wherein we once setting foot must ●uer go forward and not stand still or turne backe lest we neuer come there The state of a christian is like vnto a child which still groweth till it come to a perfect strength and so must euerie child of God labour to grow in the graces of God till they bee perfect men in Christ For if they stand still Christ hath something against them The Rhemists in their annotations abuse this place to proue that a man may quite fall away from grace Therefore to cleare this text and to confirme our hearts in the truth of Gods word thi● question must be scanned Whether a man may quite fall away from grace Answ. Grace in Scripture is taken two wayes First for that fauour of God whereby hee accepteth of some for his children in Christ. This is the first grace and the fountaine of all other and taking grace in this sense I say that the signes of grace and the sense thereof in the heart may be lost But the f●●our of God it selfe cannot bee lost of them that truly beleeue When an earthly father is displeased with his child for some notorious crime hee will turne the signes of his fauour into signes of displeasure and shew the same partly by words and partly by stripes and yet he still continueth his father and holdeth him for his sonne without any purpose to disinherit him Euen so God dealeth with his children for their sins and corruptions he will turne away his louing countenance from them and change the signes of his fauour into anger and displeasure when as yet the good purpose of their adoption is not altered but remaineth firme for euer and God is still their father though an angrie father through the prouocation of their sinnes Secondly grace in Scripture is taken for the gifts of grace which are bestowed on them that beleeue in Christ. These gifts of grace be of two sorts some more principall of absolute necessitie vnto saluation without which none can bee saued as faith and also hope and loue which proceed from faith There be others also lesse principall which be very profitable and requisit yet not absolutly needfull vnto saluation As the feeling of Gods fauor alacritie in prayer sense of ioy and comfort in the holy Ghost These lesse principal graces may quite be lost The principall graces also may be decayed lessened and couered in regard of operation euen in Gods children but quite extinguished they cannot be for God vpholdeth them by perseuerance where faith hope loue are once truly wrought by Gods spirit they are neuer wholly or finally taken away but onely in part and in sense and feeling for a time This answer is agreeable to this text for the church of Ephesus is here blamed not for quite loosing her loue● but because she had left her first loue suffering it to decay and waxelesse than it was at their first conuersion And because this doctrine is oppugned earnestly not onely by the church of Rome but also by some churches and schooles of the Protestants I will first shew the truth hereof out of Gods word and then scan the cheefe reasons that are brought against it That grace cannot bee wholly and finally lost these reasons proue I. Matth. 16.18 The promise is made to Peter and in him to all the faithfull That vpon that faith which he professed Christ would build his temple and the gates of hell should not preuaile against it Which last words must be marked for they intimate that the diuell with his adherents would shew much force and violence against the faith of the elect but yet they should neuer get the victory or ouercome it wholly II. Matth. 24.24 Christ foretelling that false Prophets should come sayth They should seduce if it were possible the very elect Where he taketh this for graunted that the elect albeit they may bee assaulted greeuously yet they can neuer be wholly or finally drawne away from their faith III. Iohn 10.27 28 My sheepe heare my voyce sayth Christ and I know them and they follow me and I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish To this they answer It is true they shall neuer perish so long as they remaine the sheepe of Christ. But that cauill is cut off in the next wordes Neither shall any plucke them out of my hands my father which gaue them me is greater than all and none is able to plucke them out of my fathers hands And therefore neither the deuill nor the world nor the flesh can by any temptation draw the sheep of Christ from their faith and make them to be no sheepe IV. Reason Iohn 3.36 Hee that beleeueth in Christ hath eternall life They say hee hath it in hope and no otherwise I answere if they haue it in hope they shall neuer perish For hope maketh not ashamed V. Reason Rom. 8.30 Whom hee predestinat them also he called and whom hee called them also be iustified and whom hee iustified them also be glorified Those which are elected called and iustified by faith must needs be glorified and therefore cannot fall away finally for such shall neuer be glorified And in the end of the chapter vers 38. hee addeth That neither death nor life Angels principalities nor powers nor any thing els can separate vs viz. the faithfull from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. But if the faithfull might fall away finally then they might be seuered from the loue of God VI. Reason Rom. 11.29 The gifts of Gods calling that is the peculiar gifts that pertaine to saluation are without repentance They say it is true God indeed neuer repenteth him of his gifts but yet a man may perish and fall away because he may refuse and reiect Gods grace giuen vnto him This answere is friuolous maintaining this absurditie that the powerfull will of God should be broght vnder the silly will of the creature if man could repell Gods grace giuen vnto him then should mans will take place and Gods will bee made frustrate and void VII Reason 1. Iohn 3.9 Whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not because his seede remaineth in him neither can bee sinne because he is borne of God How is that true for chap. 1.10 Hee that sayth he hath not sinned maketh God a lyar and his word is not in him Answ. The place must bee vnderstood thus He that is borne
that thence we may offer vp acceptable sacrifices of praise and thanksgiuing vnto the Lord. Secondly we must stir vp the gifts of grace that are in vs as Paule sayth to Timothie 2. Tim. 1.6 vsing a comparison from the fire which burneth more bright and cleare when it is stirred vp Lastly wee must exercise our selues in the duties of pietie as faith repentance loue and such like so shall they not decay And thus much for the sinne of this church Verse 5. Remember therefore whence thou art fallen and repent and doe thy first workes or els I will come against thee shortly and will remooue thy candlesticke out of his place except thou amend Our Sauiour Christ the faithfull physition of our soules hauing sharpely rebuked this church doth here prescribe vnto them a soueraigne remedie against their sinne of decay in loue Frō whence we may learne that the law whereby sin is reproued is to be taught but yet with this qualification that withall the doctrine of the Gospell be ioyned thereunto that the sinnes which are ripped vp by the law may be cured by the Gospel This is Christs manner of preaching in this place whose practise is a most worthie platforme for all his ministers for we haue no warrant at this day to preach the law barely which onely maketh the wound without the Gospell which alone sheweth the remedie This remedie here prescribed is of speciall vse and worthie our consideration generally by it we haue direction to answer to two necessarie questions of practise which often fall out in the life of man First a man is effectually called to professe the gospell and yet after his conuersion either through the corruption of his nature or by the temptation of the diuell and the world falleth into sinne againe what must this man do for his recouerie Ans. He must remember whence he is fallen and repent of those his sinnes and do his first workes The second question is this A man that hath all his life long liued in ignorance and sin is now touched in conscience for his loose life how shall this man escape the wrath of God become reconciled vnto him Ans. He must first remember whence hee is fallen by Adams sinne and by his owne transgressions Secondly hee must repent of his sinnes Thirdly endeuor to do the first workes whereto he is bound by the law of creation so shal he escape the wrath of God and be receiued into his loue and fauour In particular this remedie hath three parts The first Remember whence thou art fallen The second And repent The third And do thy first workes The words following Or else I will come against thee c. Are a reason of this remedie to persuade them to do the duties prescribed For the first Remember whence thou art fallen The words beare this sence Examine thy selfe throughly see in thy selfe the decay of thy former loue and then ponder the same in thy heart seriously and throughly Here Christ inioyneth to this church two duties I. Examination whereby shee must descend into her owne heart and search out her owne wants especially the want of her loue to God to his word and to her brethren II. Consideration whereby she must often thinke of these her wants and lay the same to her heart vnfainedly This course which Christ taketh with this church teacheth vs first that it is a dangerous thing for any person in Gods church not to bee acquainted throughly with his owne estate that so hee may search out his owne wants and deeply consider of the same For this very thing Ieremie blamed the people in his time that no man sayd with himselfe what haue I done And Christ layeth this sinne to the charge of the people of the old world that they were ignorant of their estate They knew nothing till the floud came and ●●oke them all away And this is the common sin of this age no man almost doth examine himselfe consider in his hart his owne estate by reason of his sinnes and wants Nay men are growne to this that they count it a meanes to breed melancholie and therefore do ●lie the practise of this dutie and so nuzzell themselues in their fearefull securitie Secondly here wee learne that it is a speciall dutie for them that liue in Gods church to be throughly acquainted with their owne estate to examine and search out their owne sinnes and often to consider seriously of their particular wants Zephanie preaching the doctrine of repentance vnto the people beginneth thus Search ye search your selues oh nation not worthie to be beloued Where the word translated search signifieth such a search as a man would make for some small thing in a great heape of chaffe This is the Lords counsell Hag. 1.7 Consider your owne wayes in your hearts and it must be our practise if we would be saued This duty is the beginning and ground of true repentance and therefore Christ here giueth it the first place for no man can truly repent before hee bee acquainted with his owne infirmities and with his owne fearefull and damnable estate by reason of his sinnes And therefore Dauid saith I first considered my wayes and then I turned my feete into thy testimonies The cause why so few in the world doe truly repent is want of consideration from whence they are fallen and what bee their sinnes and the dreadful iudgements thereby deserued For till the mind doe truly conceiue her owne miserie the hart can neuer rightly hunger after mercie Sinne must bee our greatest woe before Christ become our chiefest ioy The second part of this remedie is Repentance i● selfe for after a man is well acquainted with his wants and hath throughly considered of his owne misery then he commeth to repent In the handling hereof fiue points are to be obserued I. What repentanceis II. How it is to be practised III. Who commandeth it IV. To whom it is commaunded V. For what they must repent For the first Repentance properly is in the mind as the word in this place doth import for it signifieth thus much After some follie or ouerslip to be better aduised Repentance then in the mind is a change from euil to good or a turning from sinne vnto God Act. 26.20 Repent and turne to God Which latter words expound the former plainly shew what repentance is And this change in the mind standeth in this resolution whereby a man by Gods grace purposeth to leaue all his former sinnes and to cleaue vnto God in holy obedience vnto all his commandements And when this resolution is in the mind therwithall followeth a turning of the whole man in will in affections and in all the actions of his life This appeareth by that description of the practise of repentance which Paul reduceth to seuen heads viz. Care clearing of themselues indignation feare great desire zeale and reuenge 2. Cor. 7.11 wherof some are renewed affections
of hart and profanenesse of life that they were at their first hearing of the word these must know that Gods iudgement is on them and if they would bee saued they must labour to come out of this estate endeuour so to heare with their hearts that they may be turned vnto God both in mind heart and life II. point The dutie commaunded namely to heare Hearing in Scripture is not onely to listen with the bodily eare but to be attētiue to that which is taught and with attention to bring faith conuersion and obedience euery way Eph. 4.21 22 the hearing of Christ is notably described It is not so much to conceiue the doctrine of Christ in our mind● and to be able to vtter it as to die vnto sinne and to the lusts of the flesh and to ris● 〈◊〉 new●●sse of life And indeed a man doth heare and learne no more of Gods word than hee doth beleeue and practise From whence we are again to be admonished that we so heare with attention that by hearing we suffer our selues to be changed and that with our change we ioyne ●are to beleeue and conscience to obey This i● that sauing hearing which bringeth eternall life all other hearing doth increase our sinnes to our further condemnation Whereby also appeareth the fearefull state of many who lend onely the outward bodily eare to h●●re the word but then hearts bee not mooued nor their liues changed thereby III. point What is to be heard namely That which the spirit saith ●nto 〈◊〉 Churches Which words must bee referred to that which went be●ore not to that which followeth for thi● commaundement belongs to the matter of the Epistle which went before The promise following rather concerne the persons themselues than the matter The things then that are to bee heard are these Christ his sharpe reproofe for sin his threatnings of punishment a remedie prescribed motiues to practise the same especially repentance for of all these Christ spake before From this that Christ bids them heare these things which cōcerned their estate in sinnes amendment by repentance we learne two things First that it is a most necessarie thing for euerie church of God and euerie member thereof to know and consider their own wants and sinnes and also the iudgements of God that hang ouer them for the same Secondly that after any man or any church hath considered of theri sinnes and of Gods iudgements it is a most necessary thing to turne vnto God by true repentance if they haue not repented and if they haue repented to renew the same daily do it more that so Gods iudgements both priuat and common may be auoided We therefore must hereby be moued to search into our own wayes to find out our owne sinnes and to consider of Gods iudgements thereby deserued that by true repentance wee may turne vnto God and so escape his fearefull iudgement● Further these words What the spirit saith vnto the Churches containe 〈◊〉 reasons to moue euerie man to heare I. Because they are spoken 〈◊〉 the spirit that is the holy ghost II because they 〈◊〉 spoken to one man o● one church alone but to all churche● For the first● It may 〈◊〉 demanded seein● Christ sp●ke th●se word● How 〈…〉 be sayd that the spirit speaketh the● Ans. Both may stand first because all the outward 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 person in 〈◊〉 are common to the 〈…〉 to ●each the church is an outward action of Christ and therefore it agreeth to the father and to the holy ghost As when the father created thing● in the beginning the sonne also created and the holy ghost created them So her● when the sonne ●eacheth the father teacheth and the holy ghost teacheth For as the three persons are one in nature so must they be ioyned in all outward actions Secondly Christ saith the spirit speaketh because he now sitting at the right hand of the father doth not teach his church in bodily presence but hy his spirit which after his ascention hee sent to be their comforter and instructor Here then obserue that the holy ghost speaketh to the church in Scripture The church of Rome appoints a Iudge to speake vnto men in al matters of controuersie which is the church because say they A iudge must speake and Christ is absent from his church and the word is a dumbe letter and cannot speake Therefore the church must needes bee iudge But they erre grosly The church cannot be iudge It is but Christs minister to put in execution that which hee commandeth Christ therefore must bee iudge vnto his church by Scripture which is not a dumbe iudge for therein his spirit speaketh plainely and sufficiently for the resoluing of any point in controuersie that is needfull in Gods church The second reason to attention is because these things are spoken to all Churches Where we see that things spoken to one church agree to all From whence we must learne this speciall dutie in reading and hearing Gods holy word namely to read and heare with applicacation We must not rest in a flourishing knowledge of the storie but apply euery precept and example vnto our selues If it be an example of vertue wee must apply it to our selues for imitation if it be an example of vice we must apply it to our selues to moue vs to eschew and auoid the like For God would haue all to learne that which hee speaketh vnto one And thus much of the commandement To him that ouercommeth will I giue to eate of the tree of life which is in the middest of the paradise of God These words containe the second part of this conclusion to wit a most excellent promise wherein consider two points First to whom it is made Secondly what is promised For the first The promise is made to him that ouercommeth That is to him that in fighting preuaileth against all the spirituall enemies of his saluation sinne sathan hell and condemnation There bee three things requisit to make a man able to ouercome these enemies First he must be borne anew in Christ of water and of the spirit 1. Ioh. 5.4 He that is borne of God ouercommeth the world so by regeneratiō he is freed from the bondage of hell death sinne and Sathan Secondly hee must haue true faith by vertue whereof hee must denie and renounce himselfe and bee whatsoeuer he is in the death passion obediēce of Christ. Therfore S. Iohn saith in the same place This is the ●ictorie which ouercommeth the world euen your faith For when a man is in Christ by faith hee is made partaker of Christ his victorie vpon the crosse and by it receiueth power to subdue his owne corruptions the world and the diuell Thirdly hee that would ouercome must keepe faith that is true religion and a good conscience standing out in life and death against all aduersarie power whatsoeuer In this that life euerlasting is promised to them that ouercome First we obserue that
III. Those that for a time shew forth many good things as care to get knowledge and to keepe faith and a good conscience but after suffer themselues to be intangled and drawne away with the profites and pleasures of the world or els to bee driuen backe by trials and persecutions And of these three sorts be most men generally whose case is fearefull and dangerous for they shall neuer haue the crowne of life if they continue thus vnfaithfull To induce men to fidelitie Christ addeth a most forcible reason promising thereunto The crowne of eternall life Hence the Papists conclude that Martyrs by suffering martyrdome doe merite the kingdome of heauen because it is called a crowne therefore say they it is a reward Whereto I answere two wayes I. The kingdome of heauen is called a crowne onely in resemblance because as with men after the race is run they receiue the garland euen so after men haue fought the good fight of faith and kept good conscience in this life then in the life to come they receiue the crowne of glorie For the keeping of faith good conscience is not the cause but the antecedent of eternall life Secondly the reward is promised not to the martyrdome but to the martyr and yet not for his sufferings but because hee is a member of Christ and by suffring death hath shewed his faith in Christ for whose merit alone hee is so rewarded And so must this and all other promises of like sort be vnderstood for the Papists do foulely erre when they apply the promises vnto the workes which are made vnto the workers By this promise wee all that haue made our vow to God in baptisme must learne to become faithfull in keeping the same vnto the end It is a shame for a man to be vnfaithfull vnto men much more with God And the more fearefull is this sinne because onely the faithfull shall inherite eternall life Secondly all such as haue made a shew of good things heretofore and now doe suffer the same to decay must call to mind from whence they are fallen and become faithfull keepers of the graces of God holding fast true religion and good conscience and walke constantly in obedience and then shall they haue the crowne of life though not for their deserts but only for the merits of Christ. Verse 11. Let him that hath an eare heare what the Spirit sayth vnto the Churches he that ouercommeth shall not bee hurt of the second death These words containe the last part of this Epistle namely the Conclusion Wherein obserue generally as also in the two next verses that Christ repeateth the same things which he spake before in this and the former chapters yea in the very same words This must bee considered because it is done by Christ who is the doctor of his church whose example both for matter and manner of teaching must bee our rule and precept The like did the Apostles It grieued not Paule to write the same things Phil. 3.1 And Peter sayth vnto the dispersed Church That he will often put them in mind of the same things before his departing wherein they had knowledge and were established Hereby all the Ministers of the gospell in their Ministerie haue warrant often to teach and repeat the same points of doctrine euen in the same words Yea Gods faithfull Minister may preach the same Sermon oftentimes if hee doe it not for ease to himselfe but for the benefit of the people And therefore if any hearer of Gods word shall at any time marke the Minister to deliuer the same things often he is not curiously to find fault with his Ministerie for by that reason they may find fault with Christ who seuen times repeateth the same things vnto these churches This Conclusion hath two parts a Commaundement and a Promise The words of this commaundement haue beene expounded in the seuenth verse with the doctrines and vses thereof yet here is to bee obserued what the spirit commendeth thus seriously to our hearing The things are three which were handled in the former verses First touching Gods prouidence that hee seeth and regardeth the tribulations of his church The second touching triall that Gods church and people ought before-hand to consider of the day of visitation and thereby arme themselues with courage against all afflictions that they suffer not themselues to bee ouermuch daunted with any feare The third touching faithfulnesse Gods people must consider what promises they haue made to God in baptisme namely to keepe faith true religion and good conscience vnto the end and these they must performe vnto death These things being so carefully commended vnto vs by Christ wee must labour to haue them engrauen in our hearts that we may practise them in our liues And to incite vs hereunto wee must marke the two reasons contained in the words First because the Spirit of Christ speaketh to vs. Secondly because they concerne all Churches though principally they were spoken to the church of Smyrna and therefore none may seeke excuse to exempt himselfe from learning and obeying these things The Promise Hee that ouercommeth shall not be hurt of the second death Of the meanes of ouercomming we haue spoken in the seuenth verse By second death is meant the condemnation of the soule and bodie for euer and euer For there be two kinds of death mentioned in Scripture The first is the separation of bodie and soule asunder at the end of this life The second is when soule and bodie both are s●●ered for euer from Gods comfortable presence Reu. 21.8 This second death is expounded to bee an abode in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone The meaning therefore of the promise is this that they which ouercome thogh they may suffer the first death yet they shall neuer suffer damnation their soule and bodie may be seuered one from the other for a time but neither soule nor bodie shall euer be seuered from God to goe into that lake that burneth with fire and brimstone Which is a most gracious and happy promise Here first marke to whome this promise is made namely To them that ouercome Where learne that it is not sufficient for a man to professe and approoue or to teach the doctrine of the gospell but withall he must ioyne a fight against himselfe against sinne the world the deuill and against all the enemies of his saluation and not suffer them to raigne ouer him but so fight as by Gods grace hee may ouercome and then shall the second death neuer hurt him It is nothing to professe if we still liue in sinne and therefore wee must not content our selues with knowledge but labour to feele in our hearts such power of grace as will make vs truly to say we are conquerours ouer our spirituall enemies This is that blessed state of all those vnto whom life euerlasting belongeth who shall neuer taste of the second death Secondly here is answered a great question which
people doe not repent the Lord will come vnto them to execute his iudgements vpon them Yea though they haue before repented if for particular sinnes and wants they doe not renew their repentance hee will surely come to punish them This might be proued at large by testimonies of the Prophets Apostles but it is so euident in this text that I omit all further proofe onely I will applie it to this our Church of which this may bee truely sayd Thou doest not repent nor renew thy repentance for thy dayly sinnes For albeit there bee some among vs that by Gods grace repent and set themselues dayly to the exercise thereof yet take the greater part of our congregations and they are so far from renewing their repentance that they doe not repent at all for either they haue no knowledge of Gods will or if they haue knowledge yet they want care and conscience to put the same in practise This being our case and condition what man may not bee a Prophet against our churches and congregations being thus directed by this portion of Scripture to say and that truly That God will come vnto vs in iudgments to plague and punish vs for our sinnes and iniquities Wee may sooth our selues in hope of mercie still but the state of our Church continuing as it is nothing can bee expected but iudgements from the Lord. This then must be a motiue to persuade vs to repent euery person apart and euery family congregation apart we must humble our selues in dust and ashes for our sinnes past entreating the Lord to be reconciled vnto vs and purpose fully in our hearts and striue in our liues to obey God in all his commaundements yea though we can say wee haue repented yet for our dayly wants and sinnes wee must renew our repentance Thus doing we shall stay the Lord when he is comming against vs. But if we goe on in blindnesse ignorance and rebellion following the lusts of our own hearts then nothing but vengeance and iudgements are to bee expected for this conclusion must stand with all churches and people If they repent not God will come in iudgement against them The second threatening or commination is directed vnto the Nicolaitans in these words And will fight against them with the sword of my mouth that is I will bee at emnitie with them and testifie the same by waging battell against those among you that maintaine the lawfulnesse of eating things sacrificed to Idols and of fornication Thus I say will I fight against thē with the sword of my mouth that is with the preaching of my word the law and the gospell In this commination Christ alludeth still to the storie of Balaam for when hee was sent for by Balac to curse the people of God the Lord stood against him in the way with a naked sword to keepe him from going and when his eyes were opened that hee saw the Angell of the Lord withstand him in that sort hee fell downe and adored the Angell for it was the Lord yet because he ceased not from his wicked couetousnesse but gaue bad counsell against the Israelites when he could not curse them to cause them to sinne therefore hee was slaine with the edge of the sword among the Midianites by the children of Israel Num. 31.8 Euen so Christ dealeth with the Nicolaitans because they goe on in their bad counsel persuading the lawfulnesse of eating things sacrificed to Idols also of fornication therfore first he will fight against them with the sword of his mouth the ministery of his word therby to reclaime them from their wicked wayes if it bee possible but if that will not serue hee will still fight against them and with the same sword destroy them for euer First here marke Christ sayth not I will kill them but fight against them for hee intended not at the first to destroy these Nicolaitans but his purpose was to withdraw them from their wicked wayes yet so as afterward if they would not be reclaimed by his word he would therewith destroy them Wherein wee may behold the exceeding patience of Christ Iesus towards leaud and grieuous sinner● that maintained the lawfulnesse of idolatrie and fornication and gaue themselues thereunto So the Lord in spirit stro●e with the old world and spared them 120 yeares to withdraw them from their wickednesse by the preaching of Noe. So likewise hee spared the Ammonites till their sinnes were come to the full and the Egyptians also for many hundred yeares though they were most cruell persecutors of his owne people And though the Iews most maliciously crucified the Lord of life yet he spared them fiftie yeares before hee cut them off from being a people Yea dayly experience teacheth vs this his long suffering we may heare most bloudie and bitter oathes from blasphemers whereby they dayly crucifie Christ with their tongues The like may be said of the adulterers and all cruell persons and yet he forbeares the same yea in our owne selues we dayly tast of this his patience for so soone as we were borne we deserued to be cast into hell and yet in mercie he vouchsafeth vnto vs to some twentie to some thirty and to some moe years for a time of repentance when as euery day hee might in iustice condemne vs. This therefore must admonish vs in the feare of God not to abuse this his long suffering any longer but now while the day of mercie lasteth to humble our selues and turne vnto him by true repentance These are the dayes of grace but how long they will last God onely knoweth For when death once commeth he sheweth no more mercie The old world because they abused the long suffering of God were destroyed and are now in hell in prison for it as Peter teacheth And vndoubtedly the same prison will be our portion if wee take the same course that they did Secondly in this threatening we may obserue that all irrepentant sinners haue God for their enemie to fight against them with a drawn sword For this cause sinne in Scripture is called rebellion and euery sinner is a rebell against God A fearefull thing it is to haue God for an enemie and yet this is the condition not onely of such as did neuer repent but of all those that hold the name of Christ in profession and yet continue in any one sinne without renewing their repētance This also must serue to induce euery man that hath not repented now to begin and if they haue begun to repent more dayly renewing the same for their daily slips and so shal they be the friends of Christ as Abraham was and a● his disciples were Io● 15.15 Thirdly in these two threatening● Christ sheweth himselfe to bee the true Doctor of his Church for he will fight against these Nicolaitans when as hee will onely come vnto his Church Where wee see hee deuideth his word aright wherein consisteth the principall wisedome of a true
Prophet giuing comforts to whom comfort belongeth and threatning iudgements to whom iudgement is due and making difference of iudgements according to the state of the persons against whome they are threatened For the heauie iudgements of God must not be threatened against all persons but against the impenitent And because there be degrees of iudgements temporall and eternall therefore temporall iudgements must be threatened to those to whom they belong eternall iudgements denounced against those to whom they belong obseruing the circumstances of time place and persons according to Christs example in this place and else where So likewise the benefites of the Gospell are not to bee propounded to euery person hand ouer head without difference but with restraint to some onely as Gods Prophets haue done It is often a great offence in the Church when the benefits of the Gospell are propounded to all and the threatening of the law denounced against all without limitation or restraint The conditions therefore of repentance impenitencie of faith and vnbeleefe and also the degrees of them all must carefully bee obserued in the dispensation of the Law and the Gospell Fourthly the end of Christs fighting must be considered for first hee intends to reclaime them from their euill wayes but if they will not be reclaimed then to cause the same word to be an occasion of their deeper condemnation This must be deepely weighed of vs all who haue had by Gods mercie for many yeares the plentifull preaching of the gospell by which God hath continually rebuked checked the sinnes that bee among vs as ignorance blaspemie and filthinesse crueltie and all iniquities whatsoeuer and the same thing the Lord yet continues to doe vnto vs. Wee therefore must thinke that all this while the Lord is fighting against vs when ignorance is reprooued in the ministerie of the word the ignorant person must thinke the Lord is fighting against him and so all Atheists blasphemers adulterers oppressers and cruell persons when their sinnes are reprooued they must know that the Lord stands face to face against them with the sword of his mouth seeking to reclaime them from these iniquities as hee did to Balaam in his way And when any mans sinnes be thus touched hee must not rebell but humble himselfe as Balaam fell before the Angell considering it is the Lord that wageth battell against him When wee heare that forraine nations shake their swords against vs how are wee mooued both high and low Shall wee feare the sword of mortall man and shall we not tremble when we heare that the sword of the euerliuing God is shaken against vs Those therefore whose hearts are guiltie of any one sinne must humble themselues by true and speedie repentance there is no withstanding of the Lord if his sword doe not cure vs it will cut vs in pieces if his word doe not conuert vs from our sinnes it will bee an occasion to cast our soules deeper into hell Thus he dealt with Balaam when he would not be restrained from giuing bad counsell he was slaine among the Midianites Few thinke on these things from whence commeth such great contempt of Gods ordinance in the ministerie of the word as we see at this day but they must know that either death or life come by the stroke of this sword and therfore they must repent Fiftly note the title giuen to Gods word it is called The sword of Christs mouth not onely because it was once deliuered by himselfe from his own mouth but because it doth dayly proceed from his mouth for the Ministers of the gospell which bee truely called are the very mouth of Christ from which Gods people receiue his word If thou shalt returne sayth the Lord to Ieremie and shalt separate the precious from the vile then shalt thou stand before me and be according to my word 2. Cor. 5.19 Wee are the embassadors of Christ beseeching you in his steed which is an high and wonderfull honour The consideration whereof is a ground of sundry duties First all students that are in the way of preparation to higher callings must hereby learne to conceiue a good opinion of the Ministerie of the gospell and to affect the same aboue other callings For though the blind world count it a base calling yet Christ wee see maketh the minister his owne mouth which honour is not giuen either to the Lawyer or to the Physition Secondly hereby euery Minister of the Gospell is taught to deliuer nothing in his publicke Ministerie but the pure word of God so farre foorth as Christ shall enable him and that also in so pure a manner as in the persuasion of his owne conscience hee thinkes Christ would speake if he were there present like vnto faithfull embassadours who speake onely the will of their lord and prince and in that manner which their lord and prince doth best approoue If this were well weighed wee should not haue such preaching as is commonly vsed consisting of a mixture of testimonies partly diuine and partly humane considering that neither Christ nor his Apostles preached so Thirdly the people also are hence taught their dutie when they heare a sinfull man like vnto themselues speake vnto them in the Ministerie of the word they must not despise Gods ordinance because it is deliuered by man but receiue the same as from the mouth of Christ and as the pure word of God so far forth as it consenteth with holy scripture In this behalfe Paule blessed God for the Thessalonians That they receiued the word from him not as the word of man but as it is indeed the word of God 1. Thess. 2. vers 13. Sixtly where Christ sayth I will fight against them with the sword of my mouth We may obserue that the kingdom of Christ is spirituall and not of this world for if it were worldly then a ciuile sword wielded by the hand of man should belong vnto him But he hath no such sword he gouernes his church and people by the sword of his mouth his holy word Wherby appeareth that the primacie of the sea of Rome is from hell not from heauen for the Pope sayth he is Christs vicar and yet he will be armed with both swords when as Christ dealeth not with the ciuill sword but onely vseth the sword of his mouth Verse 17. Let him that hath an eare heare what the spirt saith vnto the Churches To him that ouercommeth will I giue to eate of the Manna which is hid and will giue him a white stone and in the stone a new name written which no man knoweth sauing he that receiueth it These words are the conclusion of this Epistle which containeth two parts a commaundement and a promise The commaundement in these words Let him that hath an eare heare what the spirit saith vnto the Churches The promise in the words following To him that ouercommeth c. The commandement serueth to stir vp Gods church to attention in marking that which
charitie to bee persuaded that godly professors are the sons and daughters of God But the man himselfe that hath receiued this new name and new estate hee knowes it otherwise and therefore certainely and infallibly Secondly if no man know this name but hee that receiueth it then can none beside God and the conscience know from within the man his particular faith and adoption And hereby we are to bee admonished to beware of charging the euill and hard censure of hypocrisie vpon any that liue in the church in so doing we ouershoot our selues this iudgement belongs to God not to man saue onely to the man himselfe for wee cannot discerne the good within the man properly but by effects Quest. How farre forth may a man iudge of another mans election Answ. There be two degrees of iudgement iudgement of certentie and iudgement of charitie Iudgement of certentie is when a man can set downe certainely such a man shall be saued This is peremptorie iudgement belonging vnto God and to some men onely so farre forth as the Lord reuealeth it vnto them as he did the estate of some men to Dauid and to some Prophets Whereupon Dauid sometimes prayes for the finall destruction of his enemies but this is not giuen ordinarily no not to Gods ministers The iudgement of charity is that which bind● a man to iudge the best of another and herein bee two degrees First touching the vnregenerate charitie binds vs not to despaire of such as yet liue profanely but to hope that God will in good time call them And touching the regenerate who haue giuē good testimonies of their vocation charitie binds vs to be persuaded without doubt that they be the children of God And this we may doe without repugnance to this place for though wee cannot from within the man know his estate yet by the fruits we may which is the highest degree of iudgement that charitie can exercise Thirdly here wee see the church of Rome is deceiued who make Visibilitie the marke of Gods church for Gods church is a companie of men which beleeue the ground of the church is Gods election and adoption and mans faith which none other can see but the parties that haue them The signes thereof may be seene but properly the church cannot bee seene It comes to bee visible by the fruits of election and by the outward works of loue which proceed from faith We therefore hold farre better that wee beleeue there is a church and not that we see the church Lastly if others know not the name of Gods children then what maruell is it if the wicked miscall them 1. Iohn 3.2 The world knowes vs not Gods children therefore must not be daunted at the reproches of the wicked but pray with Christ Father forgiue them they know not what they doe Luk. 23.34 Verse 18. And vnto the Angell which is at Thyatira write These things sayth the sonne of God which hath his eyes like to a flame of fire and his feete like fine brasse Here followeth the fourth particular commaundement of Christ vnto Iohn as also the fourth particular Epistle The commaundement in these words To the Angell which is at Thyatira write of the substance of this commaundement I haue spoken before onely remember the end thereof which is to certifie this church of Thyatira that Iohn had a calling and commaundement from God to write this Epistle vnto them and further to certifie the whole Church of God to the end of the world of his calling to write this booke of the Reuelation The Epistle it selfe containeth three parts a Preface a Proposition and a Conclusion The Preface in these words These things sayth the sonne of God which hath his eyes like vnto a flame of fire and his feete like fine brasse all which things almost haue beene handled in the beginning of this chapter and in the former from whence they are borrowed In the Preface first is set downe in whose name the Epistle is written to wit in Christs name the causes thereof we haue shewed before Then Christ is described by three arguments First To be the sonne of God Secondly To haue eyes like a flame of fire Thirdly To haue feete like fine brasse For the first In the former chapter he was called The sonne of man but here he is called The sonne of God where by God wee must not absolutely vnderstand the godhead of the whole Trinitie but the person of the father who being opposed either to the sonne or to the holy ghost is vsually called God not that he is God more than the sonne or than the holy ghost but because he is the first in order and because hee is that person from whom the godhead is communicated to the sonne and to the holy ghost So that here Christ is called the sonne of the father which mysterie wee cannot fully vnderstand for the word hath not reuealed the same neither can wee find it elsewhere out of the word But yet for the better conceiuing thereof remember these two rules I. That Christ is the son of the father not in respect of his godhead but in respect of his person For the godhead of the sonne is the same with the godhead of the father The godhead of the father doth not beget neither is the godhead of the sonne begotten II. Rule Christ is the sonne of the father not by creation as the Angels and Adam were nor by adoption as euery beleeuer is but by nature in that hee is begotten of the substance of his father before all worlds for the father communicates from himselfe the whole godhead that is in himselfe vnto his sonne Christ is here called the sonne of God to stirre vp reuerence attention and care in this church in marking and obeying the things that follow in this particular Epistle And in their example Christ also teacheth vs that when we heare the word of God preached or read vnto vs wee should receiue it with fear and trembling and reuerence because he that speaketh vnto vs out of his word is the sonne of God When Pilate was about to condemne our Sauiour Christ he heard it said that Christ was the sonne of God And thereupon hee trembled and was the more afraid Ioh. 19. verse 8. shall a ●illie heathen man that knowes not Christ tremble towards him when hee heares his name and yet wee that professe our selues to beleeue in him bee nothing mooued with reuerence towards him when hee speakes vnto vs in his word At his presence the hils melt and at his voyce the rockes cleaue in sunder and therefore if our hearts shall not melt and cleaue asunder with a reuerent feare when he shall speake vnto vs wee are worser than these sencelesse creatures Secondly Christ is sayd To haue eyes like a flame of fire which we must not conceiue literally The words are borrowed from the former chapter vers 14. where Christ is described not as hee is in truth but
day for some certaine time carrieth a faggot for his own burning in the end Secondly from this end of life all that haue not repented must learne not to deferre their repentance but now begin while it is called to day and in the exercise thereof spend the whole time of their life The end of all our endeauours while wee liue should be this to get a roome in the kingdome of God which wee can neuer haue without repentance Next consider who it is that giues this time of repentance neither man nor Angell hath this time in his hands but the power of appointing it belongs vnto Christ alone Hereby then all persons whatsoeuer are to bee admonished without delay to repent The young man will take his pleasure in his youth and repent when he is old but hereby he robbeth Christ of his honour who onely hath power to point out the time of repentance Vse therefore the time present while thou hast it and deferre not repentance for how knowest thou that thou shalt liue to bee old And though thou doest yet how canst thou tell whether God will giue thee repentance considering thou diddest refuse while he called for it Men thinke that if they die quietly and peaceably all is well they goe to heauen straight but herewith many are deceiued for vnlesse they haue truely repented they goe straight to the deuill let their manner of dying be what it will A quiet death is a comfortable thing but no sure signe of grace because it may come by reason of some easie lingering sickenesse Considering therefore wee haue no title vnto this grace of repentance to clayme it at our pleasure it being the rare gift of God nor any lea●● of our life but bee meere tenants at will let vs seeke to turne to God with full purpose of heart while 〈◊〉 is called to day and if we haue begun let vs dayly renew this grace to the end of our life Thirdly consider to whome God giues space of repentance namely to a wicked woman as wicked as Iezabell Wherein behold the endlesse mercie of God that vnto such a wicked person who blasphemed God in fathering her sinnes vpon the spirit of grace and dishonoured God by seducing his seruants doth yet vouchsafe a time of repentance This hath beene and is the dealing of God with most grieuous sinners Manasses was one that sold himselfe to worke wickednesse giuing himselfe to sorcerie and idolatrie and yet vpon his heartie repentance God receiued him to mercie And Salomon fell most fearefully but yet before his death wee may persuade our selues hee repented and was receiued to mercie for hee was a penman of Scripture all which were holy men of God as Peter sayth 2. Pet. 1.20 The Israelites were a people of Sodome and of Gomorrha as bad as those who are condemned in hell and yet mercie is offered vnto them vpon their true repentance and conuersion Hereby no man must take occasion to liue in his sinnes but those that feele themselues laden with the huge burden of their transgressions haue here a comfort to keepe them from despaire for if they can humble themselues and turne vnto Christ and pray for the pardon of their sinnes there is yet with the Lord mercie in store that they may bee saued Lastly Christ saith He gaue her space to repent of her fornication No doubt she had many other sinnes whereof shee was to repent for no sinne goeth alone but euery capitall sinne draweth many with it Christ his meaning therefore is not that she should let passe other sins without repentance but he nameth this one sin of fornication because it was a principall sinne in her for she both practised it in her owne bodie and so made her selfe the stable of the diuell who should haue bene the temple of Gods holy spirit and also maintained this sinne and so drew others thereto Now speciall and principall repentance must be of principall sinnes Here then is a patterne for all sinners how to practise repentance They must beginne with their capitall sinnes which burden their conscience and whereto they are most addicted and repent of them For the man that truly repenteth of one sinne repenteth of all for true repentance maketh the heart alike affected to all sinnes And that heart which is brought to hate his speciall sinnes will neuer approue of pettie sinnes This lesson ought carefully to be learned put in practise For the repentance of most men is onely in generall to say wee are all sinners Lord haue mercie vpon me or God forgiue me But this confused repentance is not good it stands with a purpose to sinne againe In particular therefore we must search our consciences and see wherein we haue most dishonored God and what sinne hath neerest plunged our soules to the pit of hell and with that we must beginne to bring our soules to heauen by repenting truly for the same and turning from it with all our hearts Hence the Papists gather that man hath free will to doe that which is truly good before God as namely to repent for say they God gaue Iesabell space of time to repent and therefore shee had power to repent or else the giuing of that time vnto her had bene in vaine Answ. Their reason is nought it followeth not because God gaue her time to repent therefore she had power of her selfe to repent as will easily appeare if wee consider the ends for which God giues men space time of repentance and commandement so to do The ends are two I. That in that time of repentance which hee allotteth to men hee may giue his children grace whereby they may be enabled to obey his commandement and to repent for the Lord vseth the commandements and threatnings of the law and the promises of the gospell as outward meanes of giuing grace vnto men by the worke of his spirit II. He giueth commaundement and time to repent that men may see what they should doe not what they can doe and that the wicked may bee without excuse at the day of iudgement and be ashamed of their slauerie bondage vnto sinne in this life And shee repented not Here the sinne of Iezabell is expressed namely her impenitencie and hardnesse of heart Whereby without remorse shee liued in her fornication and idolatrie For the vnderstanding of this her sinne two points are to bee considered I. Where this sinne of impenitencie is forbidden in Gods word II. What is the greatnesse of this sinne for the first there bee two parts of Gods word the Law and the Gospell which must not be confounded but distinguished or else wee shall ouerturne manie points of Christian religion The law giues commandements touching things that were by nature in Adam before his fall forbidding those things which are contrarie to those vertues which were in his perfect nature But the gospell commands forbids things that are aboue nature and in that part of Gods word is this
hearts As if he should say to Iesabell and her companie you may persuade your selues that because your sinnes are secret therefore my iudgements shall not befall you But know that I will discouer your secret sinnes and practises in such sort as all Churches shall know by experience in your persons that I do see and discerne the most hidden thoughts of mans heart First here obserue to whome Christ will discouer their sinnes not to all the world but to the Church of God All Churches shall know This Christ doth to terrifie Iesabell her companie For as it is an excellent honour to bee well esteemed of with the Churches of God so it is a most shamefull dishonour to bee in disgrace with the Churches of God For whatsoeuer is bound or loosed by the Churches on earth the same is bound or loosed in heauen And therefore by due proportion it followeth that they which are in disgrace with God● Churches on earth are also in disgrace with God himselfe in heauen Hence wee are taught that howsoeuer we must so much as in vs lieth endeuour to approoue our selues to the whole world yet especially wee must labour to bee in good account with the Churches of God and the members thereof And on the contrarie we must continually auoide the doing of all such things as may iustly bring vs into disgrace with the Church of God Rom. 16.16 The Churches of Christ salute you And 1. Cor. 16.19 All the Churches of Asia salute you Where the Apostle meaneth not that they did by word of mouth send greetings vnto them But hereby hee would signifie that all Churches did approue of them which hee saith for their great comfort Paule receiued Timothie into the companie because the Churches gaue him a good report Act. 16.2.3 But what is the thing that all churches should know by experience in the persons of Iezabell and her company namely that Christ is he which doth indeed search the reynes and the hearts where by Reynes and hearts wee must vnderstand the same things namely the thoughts and affections of men for in that sence those words are often vsed in the old Testament Quest. How can reynes signifie the thoughts and affections seeing the thoughts are seated in the braine and the affections in the heart Answ. The reynes are put for the thoughts and affections not because they are seated therein but for that resemblance and analogie that is betweene them for as the reynes are seated in the most secret part of the bodie so the thoughts and affections are seated in the most secret place of the soule and the heart is p●rt for the thoughts and affections first because the affections are there seated secondly because the thoughts though they bee seated in the braine yet they haue their operation in the heart for ioyfull thoughts make a merry heart and fearefull thoughts an heauie heart Againe the word Search signifieth a most narrow search and such a one as goeth with finding thereby shewing that nothing is so secret in man but the Lord both can and doth see and discerne the same Hence wee learne first that Christ our Sauiour is not onely man but very God one person standing of two natures That Christ is man heretickes denie not but whether he be God or not there is the question Which yet is here euidently prooued for hee that hath in him the peculiar properties of God must needs be God But Christ hath in him the true properties of God he can search and discerne all the thoughts and all the affections of the hearts of all men which none can doe but God onely Ierem 17.9 10 The heart is deceitfull and wicked aboue all things who can know it I the Lord search the he●●t and trie the reynes And therefore Christ is the true and very God Secondly hereby wee are taught to beware and take heed of hypocrisie in all things but especially in the matters of religion Hypocrisie is when a man seemes outwardly to be that which hee is not inwardly But wee must haue care to bee truly in heart that which we appeare to bee in life and profession wee must come as neere Christ in thought and affection as in our outward action for Christ knowes as well the whole estate of euerie mans reynes and heart as he doth their speeches and their deeds Thirdly hereby wee must learne to suspect our selues of our vnknowne sinnes as of our vnbeleefe and presumption not contenting our selues with an acknowledgement of our known sinnes for wee can neuer discerne the depth of our corrupt heart and yet God knoweth them This was Dauids practise after due examination of himselfe hee yet crieth Lord cleanse mee from my secret sinnes As if he should say I haue O Lord searched my heart but I cannot sufficiently know mine owne corruptions therefore doe thou O Lord helpe to cleanse mee from them If this were practised true religion would flourish for many iustifie themselues when as they know not what is in their hearts little considering what Christ sayth vnto the Pharisees You are they which iustifie your selues before men but Christ knoweth your hearts And I will giue to euery one of you according to your workes Here Christ proceedeth to remooue a second wicked conceit whereby they might seeme to illude Gods iudgements threatened For they might say Let the Lord send iudgments and plagues vpon vs yet wee shall escape them as Isay sayd of the wicked in his time That they made a league with death and hell and sayd the iudgements of God shall passe ouer them Isay. 28. verse 15. But to cut off this vaine conceit Christ threateneth a iust reward to euery one according to his workes As if hee should say You may sooth vp your selues and falsely thinke that you shall escape my iudgements but know it that I will reward euery one of you partly in this life and principally at the day of iudgement according to your workes bee they good or bad For these words must especially ●ee vnderstood of the day of iudgement as they are vsed 〈◊〉 2. ● and Reuel 2● 12 Hence the Papists gather that men are saued not onely by faith in Christ but also by workes for thus they reason ●y that whereby wee must bee iudged must wee bee iustified and ●a●ed but by workes wee must bee iudged and therefore saued Answ The Proposition is false There is great difference betweene iustifying and iudging for iudging is onely the declaration of a man to bee iust but iustification is the making of a man iust And because the declaration of a man to bee iust is by workes therefore is iudgement by workes Againe it is not sayd I will giue to you for your works but according to your workes If he had sayd I will giue to euery one of you for your workes then it might haue seemed they had bin iustified by them But here Christ doth only make works an outward
it is the learning of the deuill wherein you may see his profound craft and pollicie Where note that when Christ will alleadge the speech of Iezabell and her followers hee doth it with disgrace vnto them for they counted their doctrine deepe learning but Christ repeating their opinion calleth it the deepenesse of Sathan Hence I gather that Christians cannot safely act and play the Comedies of heathen men for they are full of many blasphemous speeches and oathes flat against the word of God which they ought not to repeat but with disgrace vnto them For Christs practise must bee a patterne for our imitation hee would not repeat so much as one word of a wicked woman without some note of disgrace If it bee sayd they repeat these speeches with disgrace and dislike I answere it is not so for if they did that would take away the whole Comedie being full of such bad speeches And this I take to bee the equitie of Gods word thus to reason from Christs example As they speake These words Christ addeth First to shew that the words going before were not his owne but the words of Iezabels followers touching her doctrine Secondly to shew the proud and presumptuous minds of heretickes in maintaining their wicked opinions Thus haue false teachers vpheld their errours by proud and swelling words as Iude the 16. and 2. Pet. 2.18 The pure word of God is not so maintained but in the humilitie and lowlinesse of spirit and in the practise of pietie from an humble heart for God teacheth the lowly his wayes and giueth grace to the humble Psal. 25.14 And therefore this is a note of false doctrin by swelling words to maintaine the same Hitherto we haue spoken of the Preface before Christs counsell now followeth the counsell it selfe in this sentence Though I lay no other burden vpon you yet I would haue you to hold fast that which you haue alreadie till I come This sentence is a distinction containing two parts First in these words I will lay no other burden vpon you than that which you haue alreadie that is howsoeuer I threaten my iudgements vnto Iezabell and her followers yet I will lay none other punishment vpon you but my reproofe onely for suffering Iezabell among you with her false doctrine and followers This braunch of this distinction containeth a most comfortable instruction namely that all those that giue themselues to maintaine puritie of doctrine and synceritie of life shall be safely preserued in the time of common iudgements vnder the blessed protection of God so farre forth as is for Gods glorie and their good And considering this mercie is offered to the godly wee must hereby learne to become followers of this Church of Thyatira that is we must endeuour to maintaine the pure truth of Gods holy word and withall haue care to shew foorth synceritie of manners in making conscience of euery sinne and endeuoring our selues to walke in all the wayes of Gods commaundements with cheerefulnesse Hereby we shall get protection from common iudgements when they are layed vpon the wicked but if wee partake with the wicked in their sinnes wee shall receiue part in their plagues The second part of this distinction is in these words But that which you haue alreadie hold fast till I come that is mine Apostles haue deliuered vnto you the pure and sound doctrine of saluation now I charge you that you hold that fast and maintaine it vntill I come to iudgement Here is a plaine and most excellent commaundement containing speciall instruction mee● for this Church of Thyatira and all Churches Before our Sauiour Christ had commended this Church for not approouing the doctrine of Iezabell and her companie but here hee giueth them another commaundement To hold fast the true doctrine of Christ taught them by his Apostles Wherby he would teach them and in them all Churches to content themselues with the pure doctrin of the Apostles and not to affect or approoue any other doctrine besides whatsoeuer According as Paule biddeth the Galatians though wee or an Angell from heauen preach vnto you any other doctrine than that which we haue preached vnto you let him be accursed By the light of this commaundement wee are directed in sundry duties First not to regard vnwritten traditions which the church of Rome doth so highly magnifie for it cannot bee prooued that the Apostles euer taught them Secondly not to regard the doctrines of men which some bring vnto vs vnder colour of Reuelation from God since the Apostles times Thirdly hereby wee learne what to thinke and iudge of the three great religions of the Turkes the Iewes and Papists at this day The Turkish religion is not to bee regarded for it had it beginning sixe hundred yeares after the Apostles time with whose doctrine onely we must content our selues Also the Iewish religion wee must not regard for they reiect the doctrine of the Apostles And the religion of the Papists we must renounce because it is not of the Apostles teaching but had it beginning by little and little long after their times If this commaundement were safely kept which is laid on this Church men would not bee of so many religions but all would bee of one religion cleauing fast to the doctrine of the Apostles and contenting themselues with it which is the true rule for reformation of life and the right way to attaine saluation Lastly here is a rule and direction for those which will bee of no religion because of the diuersitie of opinions touching the same They must haue recourse to the doctrine of the Apostles and content themselues therewith nothing regarding new doctrines bee they neuer so glorious Till I come Here Christ sheweth how long the doctrine of the Apostles must bee held fast namely not for a short time but till his second comming to iudgement Whereby wee learne that it is the dutie of Gods Church to preserue and maintaine the puritie of true religion vnto the end of the world This is no small matter but a most needfull dutie enioyned vnto vs by speciall commaundement and withall a matter of great consequence for the puritie of religion is the foundation and marke of the Church and the right way to direct mens soules to eternall life For this cause Paule chargeth Timothie To keepe the true patterne of wholesome words and to continue in the things which hee had learned And in regard of this dutie the Church is called The pillar and ground of truth And Christ for this cause gaue to his Church both Pastors and Teachers Pastors to instruct in righteousnesse for the maintenance of puritie in manners and Teachers to maintaine the puritie of doctrine in soundnesse of iudgement This therefore must admonish vs that we haue care not onely to learne religion in our owne persons but also to convey the same to ages following that the puritie thereof may bee preserued to the comming of Christ.
first a man must euery day bethinke him selfe of his ende and of the comming of Christ either in generall to all the world or particularly vnto him by death and in this consideration he must esteem and iudge of euery day as of the day of his death or the day of iudgement Secondly he must prepare himselfe against death against the day of iudgement euery day euē this present day as though hee should now die or meete Christ in iudgement and the next day do the like and so goe on continually to the day of his death And for our furtherance in this Christian watch we must be mindefull of temperance and sobrietie that we keepe mediocritie in the vse of the creatures of God and of the things of this life For when men plunge themselus either in the cares of this world or in earthly delights they quite forget both sinne and death and the day of Iudgement and thus wee see what Christ meaneth by watchfulnesse As Christ prescribeth this dutie vnto this Church so are we in the name of Christ to bee enioyned the same Christian watchfulnesse both against sinne and death and the day of Iudgement And to mooue vs hereto consider these reasons First wee are watchfull for the preseruation of the things of this life as if a towne be in danger of sacking or burning there is watch and ward kept continually and if a mans house bee in danger of robbing hee will sit vp night and day to saue his goods yea euery man is verie painfull and watchfull to heape vp to himselfe the things of this world Now what a shame is it that men should bee watchfull for temporall things and yet haue no care of their soule that must liue for euer Againe want of watchfulnesse is the forerunner of death and eternall destruction I. Thess. 5. vers 3. When men say peace and safetie then shall come vpon them sudden destruction When the rich man had enlarged his barnes vpon the encrease of his substance he promised to himselfe case and securitie saying Soule soule take thy rest c. but it was sayd vnto him Oh foole this night shal thy soule be taken from thee And the old world knew nothing till the flood came and destroyed them all Now if the want of watchfulnesse bee the forerunner of destruction how great a cause haue wee to watch The second dutie inioyned is to confirme the graces of God decaied in them Strengthen the thinges which remaine that are readie to die as if hee should say sundry be the graces which I haue bestowed on you but many are lost and gone and those which remain are about to perish vnlesse you confirme them therefore see nowe that you strengthen and repaire the same In this dutie Christ teacheth this church and vs an excellent lesson that whosoeuer hath receiued any gift of God must haue care to preserue it and to make the same gift strong in him by continuall increase If a man haue receiued knowledge faith and repentance or any other gift of grace he must not suffer the same to lye dead in him but stirre vp increase and confirme it dayly that hee may bee a perfect man in Christ. For the gifts which men haue are not their owne but Gods also who looketh to receiue his owne with aduantage And therefore men like good Stewards must so vse the gifts receiued that they may returne them to God with increase Thus Paul perswadeth Timothy stirre vp the gift of God that is in thee for else the receiuer is an vnfaithfull seruant and so shall be rewarded And for the better perfourmance of this dutie we must often read the word of God and meditate therein we must heare it often preached and with due reuerence and preparation receiue the sacrament And pray continually striuing earnestly against the corruptions that bee in vs and dayly stirring vp our heart to all good duties Thus did Dauid checke the corruption and deadnesse of his heart Why art thou so cast downe oh my soule and also stirre vp the same vnto all good duties saying I haue applyed my heart to fulfill thy statutes alway euen to the end Ps. 119.112 Hereby are reprooued the common sort of professors hearers of the word who stand at a stay and goe not forward in grace This is a great fault for as we haue receiued grace so we ought to stirre vp the same that we may confirme and increase it dayly Further Christ addeth Which are about to die where he answereth to a question that is mooued by sundry at this day namely whether graces that concerne saluation may be vtterly lost or not Christ answeareth by a distinction that some graces that pertaine to saluation may be lost quite and others may be decayed so as they are about to die For the graces of God that pertaine to saluation be of two sorts some be absolutely necessarie so as without them a man of yeares cannot be saued and such are faith and regeneration Others bee lesse necessary which sometime goe with faith but not alwaies such are A plentifull feeling of the fauour of God ioy in the holy Ghost and boldnesse in prayer these may be lost wholy for a time in the seruants of God Yea faith and regeneration themselues may decay greeuously and be readie to di● as this text saith Secondly consider fayth and regeneration in themselus and they may be wholly lost for nothing in it selfe is vnchangeable but God The state of the elect Angels by nature is changeable for they stand by the power of God Thirdly these graces may perish and decay finally vnlesse thy bee confirmed Question Why then doe not the elect finally fall away after their calling Ans. Their standing cometh not from the constancie of grace or faith but from the promise of God made vnto them to their faith so Christ saith to Peter Thou art Peter and vpon this rocke that is vpon thy faith which thou hast professed will I build my temple and the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it that is though they may assault it and greeuously weaken it yet they shall neuer bee able finally to ouercome it Seing sundry graces of God may be lost and the most necessary graces greatly decay yea of themselues quite die wee that haue receiued from God any grace either of faith or repentance are hereby taught not to bee presumptuous or ouer confident in our selus but with feare and trembling worke out our saluation Phillip 2.13 The reason to enforce the former remedie is this For I haue not found thy workes perfect before God and therefore watch and confirme the decayed graces of God that be in thee In this reason Christ giueth thē vs to vnderstand that he maketh a search in his church of al the works that men doe in the same that he may accordingly reward them for not finding doth presuppose a search And so the
scripture speaketh of God vsually Before the old world was destroyed it is sayd The Lord saw that the wickednesse of man was great vppon the earth as if he had looked from heauen vpon the earth and beheld that it was corrupt speaking after the manner of men to signifie that search which he maketh into mens actions And so he is sayd to come down from heauen at the building of Babell Gen. 11. and before he destroyed Sodome and Gomorrha He came downe to see whether they had done according to that crie which was come vp to him and so before the Lord punished the wickednes of the Israelits He made a search into their wai●● and the second Commaundement is this God will visite the sinnes of the father vpon the children that is he will make a search whether the sinnes of the fathers be among the children and if they be he will punish them Seing Christ makes this search into all mens actions we are taught in all things to haue care to conforme our selus to the will of Christ and to set our selues to the doing of all good duties according to his word If we knew a Magistrate would come to make search in our house wee would bee sure to set all thinges in order against he came shall we be thus circumspect to prepare for the comming of an earthly man shall we not much more prepare our selues against the search of our Sauiour Christ the euerliuing God from whom nothing can be hid I haue not found thy works perfect Works are perfect two waies by the law or by the Gospell By the law whē in our works wee doe all that the law requireth and thus are no mans workes perfect in this life By the Gospel our works are perfect when they proceed from a belieuing hart that hath a care to please God in all things these works are perfect not in thēselus but in the acceptation of Christ. Here by perfect works Christ meaneth not the perfection of the law but of the Gospell as if he had sayd I haue searched into your waies you doe many workes in shew but they proceed not from sincere faith nor from a heart that hath care to please God in all his commandements and a full purpose not to sinne against him you haue a shew of godlynesse but you want the power thereof Here obserue that Christ condemneth this church not because their works were not outwardlye conformable to the will of God but because they proceeded not from a beleeuing hart that had a full purpose to forsake all sinne and to please God in all things Wee therefore must take heede of all hypocrisie by the Example of this Church and labour to bee of Dauids minde and praye with him That our harts may be vpright in the Statutes of the Lord that wee may say with Hezekias Behold Lord how I haue walked before thee with an vpright minde for this is a notable token of grace and an infallible badge of him that is the child of God Before God Some may say Christ here distinguisheth himselfe from God and therefore hee is not God Answere By God in this place we must vnderstand not God simply but God the father For Christ here speaketh of himselfe not as he is God but as he is mediator God man in which respect euen as he is now glorified he is inferiour vnto his Father Where note that Christ being now glorified in heauen carrieth himselfe as mediator whence we gather that we may lawfully and without presumption pray vnto Christ without the meanes or intercession of Saints or Angels The church of Rome denie this and say because Christ is now in full glorie in heauen therefore wee must vse vnto him the mediation of Saints but Christ being now in heauen marks our workes in particular and therefore we may without presumption come vnto him by prayer Vers. 3. Remember therfore how thou hast receiued and heard and hold fast and repent If therefore thou wilt not watch I will come on thee as a thiefe and thou shalt not know what houre I will come vpon thee When Christ hath reprooued them for their sinne of hypocrisie and prescribed them a remedie with a reason thereof he doth as a good Phisitian pastor shew them the way how they may practise that remedie For they might say we are commanded to watch and to renew our decayed graces but how shall we doe this Christ answereth by doing three things I. by remēbring that which thou hast receiued by hearing II. by holding fast III. by repenting of thy sinnes For the first Remember therefore that is call to mind the doctrine of saluation which thou hast been taught by mine Apostles This remembrance is a most excellent means to mooue a man to subiection to Gods will to repent and to practise all good graces When Dauid saw the prosperitie of the wicked his fect had almos● steps but his remedie against that temptation was his go●●g to Gods sanctuari● and there calling to mind the end of those men Againe I haue remembred thy name oh Lord in the night and haue kept thy law Peter denied his Master when he forgot his words but when hee was put in mind thereof by the looke of Christ and the crowing of a Cocke he then repented and wept bitterly Luk. 22.61.62 Sinnes committed by men of ignorance are many and grieuous and therfore all sins are called ignorances Heb. 9 7. but if men wold by faith keepe in mind the word of God it would bee a notable meanes to keepe them from sinning Here then we haue a soueraigne remedie against sinne namely wheresoeuer we are or whatsoeuer we doe we must call to minde the word of God and the promises of God and those will bee a lanterne vnto our steps and a light vnto our paths The Diuell laboureth aboue all things to bring vs to forget the word for then he knowes he can easily draw vs into any sin Quest. How shall we keepe in minde the word and promises of God Answ. That is a grace of God and for the attayning vnto it we must first labour to haue our hearts affected with the loue of Gods word and promises for a man can neuer keepe in mind that whereof he hath no liking Secondly we must labour to belieue the word of God For faith giues it rooting in our hearts Colos. 2.7 The cause why there is so little remembring of that which is taught is for that it is not mixed with faith in those that heare it Againe the thing to be remembred is How thou hast receiued and heard that is looke what Doctrine thou hast receiued by hearing and that remember Where we see Christ ioineth receiuing and hearing together Whence wee may gather that ●●aching and receiuing of the word of God by hearing is the prescribed generall meanes whereby God reuealeth his will counsell and purpose touching the saluation
them signifying that this Church had speciall care of keeping Gods word in euerie Commaundement both legall and euangelicall Happie were our Church if the same might truely be said of vs that we had care of obedience vnto God and of the true profession of his name But generally we faile in practise though in outward profession we make some shew thereof Thus much of the praise of this Church Vers. 9. Behold I will make them of the Synagog of Satan which call themselues Iewes and are not but doe lye behold I will make them that they shall come and worship before thy feete and shall know that I haue loued thee Heere followes the second part of this Epistle namely the Promises of Christ which are two First concerning the conuersion of certaine Iewes vers 9. Secondly concerning the deliuerance of these Philadelphians in the time of temptation vers 10. For the first of these promises In all likelyhood there was in this Citie of Philadelphia a Synagog of the Iewes which bare an outward shewe that they were the true worshippers of God albeit they denyed the name of Christ and persecuted his Church Yet Christ here promiseth that he will conuert them and make them members of his Church and cause them to worship him in the congregation before this Church of Philadelphia In this promise note three points touching the conuersion of these Iewes The Author thereof The parties conuerted and the fruit of their conuersion For the first I saith Christ behold I will make them The wordes are verie significant being doubled and they make Christ the whole and sole author of their conuersion Hence we learne that in the conuersision of a sinner God hath the whole and sole worke true it is that a man willeth his conuersion in the act thereof but yet it is God that worketh that will in him it is not of himselfe This confuteth the erronious Doctrine of free-will in the Church of Rome whereby they teach that a man can dispose himselfe to worke out his saluation being onely helped by Gods grace Like vnto a sicke man who though he bee weake yet being holden vp by another can goe of himselfe Ans. But Saint Paul teacheth vs That a man by nature is not sick or weak with sinne but starke dead in sinne and can no more mooue himselfe in the worke of his conuersion thā a dead man in the graue in the worke of his resurrection But they say by this wee make a man like vnto a blocke Answ. Not so for though hee cannot turne himselfe vnto God yet hee hath his will and vnderstanding free to vse in ciuile and outward actions and besides the●e is a possibilitie in his nature to bee conuerted by grace which is not in a blocke Again wheras Christ sayth I will make them come and they shall come Heere is plainly confuted the Doctrine and opinion of some which hold That a man being effectually called may come vnto Christ or not come at his pleasure when God hath giuen grace man may receiue it or refuse it if hee will This is flat against this text for God will make them come and mans will must bee plyable to Gods will in this matter But they alleage Mat. 23.37 Oh Ierusalem Ierusalem how oft would I haue gathered thee as a hen c. but thou woldest not Answ. Christ there speaketh not of the wil of his good pleasure for that cannot be resisted But of his signified will in the ministerie of his Prophets and by himselfe as hee was a Prophet and the Minister of circumcision vnto the Iewes for so he might will their conuersion and yet they will it not Obiect 2. Act. 7.51 Ye stiffe-necked Iewes ye haue alwayes resisted the holy Ghost Answ. That must be vnderstood of the ministerie of the Prophets and Apostles who spake by the spirit of God and not of the spirit himselfe II. point The parties conuerted namely Them of the Synagog of Satan Such as called themselues the onely true worshippers of God and yet indeed and in truth were no better than the slaues of Satan This is to be obserued for hereby we may see that not onely sinners which commit small sinnes are conuerted vnto God but euen grieuous and ancient sinners such as haue long conc●●ued the slaues of Satan Christ died not for painted sinners but for grieuous sinners and therefore Paul chargeth Timothy and the Ministers with him To waite for the conuersion and repentance of them that were taken in the snare of the Diuell and that according to the Diuels owne will Rom. 1.28 Paul speaketh of some Gentils that were giuen vp to a reprobate sence which was a fearefull case and yet no doubt many of them were after turned to beleeue the Gospell for such are they that are taken in the snare of the Diuell and yet there is repentance to be wayted for of them This Doctrine must not bee abused to libertie in sinning for that is the right way to cast our soules into the pit of destruction But yet seeing Christ will bring home into his kingdome most greeuous sinners we must hereby take occasion not to be discouraged either by the greatnesse or multitude of our sins from comming vnto Christ. For marke Christ only raysed three that were dead to life Iayrus daughter that was newe dead the widowes Sonne that lay on the herste and Lazarus that lay stinking in the graue This is a notable figure of the conuersion of sinners hee will not onely call to repentance small and young sinners but euen great and old sinners that lye rotting and stinking in the graue of sinne as Lazarus did in the graue of death Hee came to call sinners to repentance and to saue the lost sheepe which are readie to bee deuoured by Woolues and wilde beasts Wee must all blesse the name of Christ for this his large mercie and in time lay hold vpon it and repent III. point The fruite of their conuersion in these wordes They shall come and worshippe before thy foote and shall knowe that I haue loued thee These wordes may bee fitly expounded by another place of scripture 1. Corinth 14.24.25 If all prophesie and there come in one that beleeueth not or one vnlearned he is rebuked of all men and iudged of all so as the secrets of his heart are disclosed and he will fall downe on his face and worship God and say plainly God is in you indeed so that the meaning of these words is this I will cause thē to come to the cōgregation of Gods people at their feet to fall downe and worship the true God Heere are set downe twoo notable fruits of the conuersion of a sinner First concerning God The second concerning the Church The fruit of conuersion that respecteth God is The true worship of God noted in these words I will make them come and worship that is In spirite and truth with bodie and soule to adore the true
God This fruite no man can bring forth till hee bee conuerted For the wicked and naturall man cals not vpon God True it is they will acknowledge there is a God and that the same God is to bee worshipped and therefore they will come outwardly and heare the word and receiue the elements of the sacraments but the true worship of God is in spirite and truth from the heart which a naturall man cannot perfourme vnto God This is the fruit of true cōuersion which when a man receiueth hee doth heare the word of God with reuerence tremble at Gods iudgements and mingle the Doctrine of the Gospell with faith in his heart and in calling vpon God hee feeles his sinnes and therefore by prayer doth earnestly desire the supply of grace and the remission of his sins hauing his hart also beleeuing that he shall receiue mercie And in thankesgiuing his heart is filled with ioy and the grace of thankefulnesse so as being conuerted all his worship vnto God is in spirit and truth In the worship of these Iewes are noted three properties required in God● seruice First it must bee willing and cherefull so did these Iewes worshippe GOD For they are sayd not onely to worship GOD but to come and worship GOD and thus doe all Gods children worship him Isay. 56.7 Those whom God bringeth to his mountaine hee maketh ioyfull in his house of prayer Psal. 110.3 They shal come willingly in the day of assemblies By this propertie wee may see a great number at this daye euerie where come farre short in the true worship of GOD for most men neuer regard the preaching of the word but content themselues with morning and euening prayer which they frequent to auoide the penaltie of the lawes of the Magistrate and the shame of the world But these are miserable worshippers of God his worship ought to bee free and willing The second propertie The worship of God must bee expressed with seemely meet and conuenient gesture The word translated Worship signifieth doing of reuerence with bowing of the body and knee and therfore it is not an indifferent thing but necessarie to vse conuenient gesture in Gods worship that thereby the grace and humilitie of the heart may bee expressed The Angels that stand before the throne of God haue two winges to couer their feete and two to couer their faces therby testifying their reuerence to Gods Maiestie In this point also many come short for as the common complaint is the maner of many is to lie snorting and sleeping vnder mens elbows at sermons and in the time of prayer to sit vnreuerently with their heads couered These things ought not to be for God is Lord of body and soule and ought to be worshipped with both The third propertie All that will truly worship GOD must first bee humbled for their sinnes and haue the pride of their hearts brought downe and bee stroken with a feare of GODS glorious Maiestie So these Iewes did prostrate their bodies at the feete of the congregation when they came to worship GOD. The Iaylor that imprisoned Paul and Silas ouer-night and put their feete in the stockes would then haue verie little regarded Paules Doctrine beeing so cruell and rigorous to their persons Yet when he was about to haue killed himselfe with his sword supposing the prisoners had beene gone because hee sawe the dores open hee was glad and ioyfull to heare the voice of Paul who called vnto him that hee should doe himselfe no harme for they were all there then being humbled by that strange and woonderfull worke of GOD he comes in vnto them humbles himselfe and fals downe before them crauing them to tell him what hee must doe to bee saued In like manner so long as men haue not their proud hearts beaten downe they will neuer worship God in spirit and truth Would wee therefore know why the most part worshippe God formally Surely it is because they haue not beene humbled with a feare of Gods maiestie and a terrour of hell Neither can it bee hoped that we shall euer worship God sincerely till our hearts bee thus broken within vs and we touched with the feare of Gods iudgements The want hereof is the cause why men and women content themselues with a bare mumbling ouer of the words of the Lords prayer the Creede and ten Commaundements neuer seeking in the sinceritie of their heart cheerefully and willingly both with soule and bodie to doe worship vnto God The second fruite of true conuersion concerneth man and that is A reuerence of the true worshippers of God noted in these words Before thy feete These Iewes when they were conuerted did not think themselues worthy to bee members of this congregation but submitted themselues to be foot-stooles vnto them This reuerence shewes it selfe in this one thing which is the ground thereof namely a base opinion which euery true conuerted person hath of himselfe by reason of his owne vnworthinesse This was in Paul causing him to call himselfe the cheefe of all sinners And the same ought to be in euerie one of vs for this is true grace and a note of true repentance when a man or woman can truely abase themselues beneath all Gods people so as if the question were who is the vilest person in the Church the conscience of euerie man should answere I my selfe The proude and pharesaicall heart is farre from true conuersion but the humble hart is pleasing to God And shall know that I haue loued thee These words contain a reason of the former submisse behauiour of these Iewes for it might bee asked why shall these Iewes come to ioyne themselues with Gods people and bee content to make themselues foote-stooles vnto them The answere is because Christ will make them know that hee hath loued his Church Here marke and see the ground of all true reuerence Gods loue and fauour Sundrie pe●sons both in Church and Common wealth haue reuerence due vnto them as Maisters from their seruants parents from their Children and all superiours from their inferiours Now if these men would attaine to true reuerence indeede first they must seeke to be in the loue and fauour of God and of his children and so shall they procure vnto themselues true reuerence for when men set their hearts to feare God then will God turne the harts of men to reuerence them This ought to be thought vpon of those that be great in birth and wealth They must not stand on these things but look to the foundation of true reuerence namely the fauour of God which they must seek for and getting that God will get them reuerence euen of wicked men The cause why many in high place as Magistrate Maisters c. want due reuerence is for that they care not for the fauour of God the ground thereof Vers. 10. Because thou hast kept the word of my patience therefore will I deliuer thee from the houre of temptation which will
come vpon all the world to trie them that dwell vpon the earth These words containe the second promise of Christ vnto this Church concerning their preseruation in time of most bloodie persecution for this Epistle vnto this Church as also this Booke was written by Iohn after the Ascention of Christ in the daies of Domitian the Emperour of Rome after whome succeeded Tra●anus who when hee was seated in his Empire raysed vp greeuous persecution against GODS Church in all places of his Dominion wherein he put to death innumerable thousandes of Christians for the space of foureteene yeares Of this persecution our Sauiour Christ fore-tels this Church calling it The houre of temptation and withall he promiseth to preserue this Church in the time of this bloodie persecution adding a reason thereof Because they had constantly and syncerely professed his Gospell In this promise of preseruation note sundry points I. the occasion thereof The keeping of the word of his patience II. The thing promised deliuerance vnder Traianus III. A pr●diction of this persecution That it shall come vpon the world for this end to trie them I. point The word of Christs patience some expound to be Christs commandement of patience but that exposition is too strait here it signifieth the whole Doctrine of saluation by Christ which is called the word of patience first because it teacheth patience Secondly because it is the instrument of patience for when a man knowes saluation by Christ and also bel●eues the same to belong to him that will make him patient in all the miseries of this life Thirdly because it cannot bee professed and holden vnto death without patience but as it is sayd of the good ground It bringeth forth fruit with patience so must euerie one doe that professeth this Gospell In this occasion of Gods promise obserue that Gods grace well vsed is rewarded with increase Those which haue receiued but small measure of grace at the first by becomming faithfull therein haue receiued increase which serues to mooue vs to bee faithfull in the vse of those tallents which wee haue receiued For heereby wee shall receiue increase when as those which hauing receiued good gifts from God as knowledge and such like because they haue not beene faithfull in the vse thereof haue beene depriued of the same Wherefore whosoeuer hath begun to know the will of God to beleeue and to repent let the same parties proceed to vse those giftes still to Gods glorie and the good of his Church and people among whom they liue and they shall see the Lord will double and treble and greatly increase the same vnto them Againe note the doctrine of the Gospell is a Doctrine of patience This sheweth how good and meete it is for euerie one to learne the Gospell in the dayes of peace for euerie one in times of tryall wold wish for strength and patience and wee know not how long these dayes of peace will last Againe each man in his calling is subiect to many crosses and miseries for in the sweat of our face must wee eat our bread And who is free from paines and diseases yea who can scape death it selfe Now in all these and in all other troubles wee haue neede of patience And therefore in the time of health and ease let vs hide in our hearts the seedes of this grace to wit the Doctrine of the Gospell and then in due time wee shall reape the fruit of patience which will make vs contented in all distresses both of life and death And if wee would know why most men are so impatient in afflictions it is because they haue so little knowledge and faith in the Gospell of his grace Secondly seeing the Gospell is the word of patience heereby all persons that looke to bee saued by the Gospell must learne to put on patience keeping a moderation in all their thoughts wils and affections for when wee be impatien● any way wee are not sutable to the Doctrine of our saluation Thirdly this word of patience is called Christs The word of my patience because Christ is the author of it This is added to beat downe the pride of this Church for when God doth praise them for their obedience their hearts might haue beene puff●d vp with pride But to preuent this euill in this Church whom he now praised hee calleth it his patience that they might not thinke this good thing was of themselues And the same consideration must checke the proude thoughts that rise in our hearts namely to remember that no good thing wee haue is our owne but Christs What hast thou which thou hast not receiued Why then shouldest thou boast 1. Corinth 4.7 II. point The thing promised is preseruation and deliuerance in the bloodie persecution vnder Traianu● in which for the space of fourteene yeares innumerable Christians were put to death I will deliuer thee from the houre of temptation Here first obserue that God hath appointed certaine set houres and times for the triall of his Church as well for the gift● of his grace as of their wickednesse and hypocrisie Thus he led the Israelites fortie yeares in the wildernesse to see whether they would obey him and hee sent false Prophets amonge them to trie whether they would turne from the true God or no. And as God thus dealeth with his Church so hee bath appointed particular times and houres wherein hee will trie particular persons God bid Abraham kill his Sonne and that was his tryall And Hezekias was left vnto himselfe That the Lord might see all that was in his heart And so for euerie Christian God hath a set time of triall wherin he will either make manifest his grace or disclose their hypocrisie This point ought to bee well weighed for herein the Lord dealeth like the worthie founders of great Schooles who haue appointed certaine set times of posing for the tryall of their Schollers to see what euerie ones proceeding is that they may be accordingly rewarded And as it is a shame for one to haue been long in a good Schoole and to haue made no proceedings in learning so it is for any one that hath liued long in the Schoole of Christ and hath not profited in grace This therefore must teach vs these duties First to try our selus and that staightly concerning our progresse in knowledge faith repentance and obedience for God himselfe will trie vs whose eyes wee can neuer blinde though wee may deceiue men He will lay open our hearts and make knowne what is in vs whether it bee true grace or false hypocrisie Let vs not couer our selues with figge leaues for God will strip vs naked but rather let vs search our selus touching our sins and Gods graces and neuer rest contented till wee haue found in our soules the good gifts of grace which will abide his tryall Secondly hereby we are admonished as neere as we can to conforme our harts and liues vnto the word and wil
nor hot I would thou werest cold or hot Vers. 16. Therefore because thou art luke-warme and neither cold nor hot it will come to passe that I shall spew thee out of my mouth In these words and so forward to the 21. vers is contayned the substance or matter of this Epistle and it hath two parts A dispraise vers 15.16 17. And Counsell vers 18.19.20 They are dispraised for two vices first luke-warmenesse vers 15.16 Secondly for their pride vers 17. I know thy workes This is a generall reproofe signifying thus much All thy workes are knowne vnto mee and I vtterly dislike them Then followeth the reason of this dislike Thou art neither cold nor hot which is a comparison borrowed from waters wherof there be three sorts hot cold and luke-warme Now hot and cold waters doe not so much annoy the stomacke as luke-warme water doth they are sometimes comfortable to the stomacke but luke-warme water doth disquiet it till it bee cast vp and to these three kindes of waters hee compareth three sorts of men By cold water he vnderstanding such as are enemies to Reliligion as at this day are the Iewes and Turkes and other barbarous people By hot water he vnderstandeth men that are earnest and zealous of the truth So that when hee sayth of this Church Thou art neitheir cold nor hot his meaning is thou art neither an open enemie nor truely zealous of my Gospell I would thou werest cold or hot Christ wisheth not simply that they were enemies vnto him but onely in respect of that estate of luke-warmnes in which they were as if hee should say I had le●er thou werest either cold or hot than thus luke-warme as thou art For if we should vnderstand it simply wee should make Christ to desire that men should bee his enemies By luke-warme men he vnderstandeth a people who are in shew Gods Church but in truth wante the power of godlynesse and the zeale of the spirit Because thou art such saith Christ to this Church therefore I will spew thee out of my mouth that is looke as hee that hath drunke luke-warme water cannot abide it on his stomacke but must needs spew it vp againe so am I wearie of this thy securite I cannot abide it and therefore will I cast thee off from all fellowship with mee and make of thee which art a Church in shew to be no Church Thus we see their fault namely luke-warmenesse the greatnesse whereof hee aggrauates first by comparing it with the extreames cold and hot both which he preferreth before it as may appeare by his wish and desire And secondly by the punishment thereof namely vtter reiection Hereby wee must examine our selues whither this fault may not iustly be charged vpon vs after due triall it will appeare that wee are guiltie of this sinne The which that it may the better appear I will note the seuerall kindes of luke-warme Christians The first luke-warme Professor is the Papist as the tenour of his Religion and the manner of his worship of God doth plainely shewe for hee doth part stakes with Christ in the matter of saluation affirming that he receiueth frō Christ to work out his owne saluation and so assumeth part of Christs glorie to himselfe Secondly all time-seruers are luke-warme Gospellers that is all such as alter their Religion with time and state and of this sort are the bodie of our people who professe themselues to be of the same Religion the Prince is of which sheweth euidently what they will doe in time to come namely turne with the time as their Forefathers haue done The Third sort are the followers of Nicodemus who came to Christ by night onely that is such as say and thinke that they may goe to masse with their bodies if they keep their hearts vnto God these halt betweene two opinions and neither serue God nor Ba●ll Fourthly all Mediators such as will make pacification between the Religion of the Protestant and the Papists so holding our Religion as not caring ●o embrace theirs also because they think they differ not in substance but in circumstances onely Let these pretend what they will they are in heart Laoditians Fiftly all Worldlings which as Christ sayth Luk. 16.13 Serue God and Mammon God and the world by setting their heart vpon riches These men abound euerie where for though they heare God in the ministrie of his word and as it were touch him in the Sacrament yet their hearts are farre from him running after their couetousnesse Ezech. 33.31 and who are such their consciences will witnesse yea their behauiour proclaimes it to the world for though they wil heare the word yet their wit and strength is spent vpon the world and the thinges thereof Sixtly those that professe Christs Reliligion in outward actions of his worship but yet in their liues giue themselues to the common sinnes of the time some to drunkennesse to fornication to couetousnesse or crueltie some to this sinne and some to that To this sort we must referre those that in word approoue Religion and yet their hearts delight is in garnishing themselues with the monstrous brutish and irreligious formes of strange and forraine attire These spend their time and wit in the decking of their bodies and so suffer their soules to goe to wracke when as apparell should bee an occasion to put vs in minde of a shame through sinne and by modest attire we should expresse the vertues of the heart but these hereby professe the vanitie of their minde Now though we be not intangled with these grosse sinnes yet we cannot excuse our selues from this sinne of luke-warmenesse For the want of zeale of Gods glorie of loue to his truth of care to obey his commaundements and to keepe good conscience the want of hatred of sinne what argue all these but luke-warmenes Herein wee must lay our hand vpon our mouth with Iob for wee cannot plead with God no not for this common sinne But that we may be out of all doubt that this sinne of luke-warmenesse hath infected our congregations as it did this Church of Laodicea I will make it plaine by the signes thereof which are common amonge vs that so wee may the better know our fearefull estate The first signe is Negligence in the duties of that true Religion which we professe this appeareth sundrie waies for first howsoeuer wee come to the assemblies where the word is preached yet fewe doe profite there by increase in the knowledge of that Religion which is taught and in the amendment of life This may any man see to be true that hath halfe an eye to looke into the state of our assemblies and mens owne consciences will heerein witnesse against them Againe where Gods word is ordinarily heard there are verie fewe that spend any time in searching out and trying whether the thinges bee so or not which are taught them Nay men wil not be at cost to buy a Bible and if they haue one
Thirdly men will professe that they are rich in loue both towards God and their neighbours when as they loue the world and the pleasures thereof more than Christ and so haue no true loue of God in their harts Fourthly to make more plain that this spirituall pride raignes in mens harts mark this let any bodily calamity be made knowne to a man that is newly befallen him oh how is hee presently perplexed but let Gods Minister out of his word make knowne vnto him his inward fearfull estate that by reason of sinne hee is in danger of Gods iudgements and a firebrand of Hell hee is not affraide Worldly newes doth affright men much when as the threatnings of the word mooue them nothing What argueth this but that their hearts are fore-stalled with this false conceit I am rich The drunkard in his drunkennesse the filthie person in his vncleannesse and euerie man in his sinne sootheth himselfe with this God is mercifull I am rich and in his fauour hee will not condemne me Well it being thus manifest that spirituall pride is our common sin We must labour to see it in our selues and vse all good meanes that it may be remooued The means follow afterwards And increased with goods or am made rich so the words are these words are added onely for amplification to shew that this church had not any smal portion but an exceeding measure of spirituall pride The doubling of the words sheweth the strength of this conceit What 's the cause that this Church was growne to such an height of pride Answ. It may be it was knowledge wherewith no doubt the Angell of this Church and many therin did abound now the holy Ghost saith That knowledge pusseth vp This is true in all places great knowledg without speciall grace great pride This is the sinne of the Schooles of learning Where knowledge abounds there pride of heart abounds and men are puffed vp according to the measure of their gifts vnlesse by his grace and the sight of their sins God doe humble them And haue need of nothing This is a further signe of their great pride that they thought they needed not the helpe of any thinge or any person beside themselues And all such as thinke they haue no need of the blood of Christ for the washing away of their sinnes doe surfet and abound with this spirituall pride of heart This serues further to conuince our congregations of this damnable spirituall pride If any one be sicke in bodie hee streight sendeth to the Phisitian but not one of a thousand seeketh to the Minister till the pange of death draw neere The soules disease by sin is not felt there is no complaint for want of the blood of Christ. But if wee would be emptied of this pride wee must labour to see that wee stand in neede of Christ and euerie droppe of his blood till such time as wee feele that in vs there is no goodnesse in our hearts VVee are but the proude Laodiceans and our case is wretched and damnable And knowest not how thou art wretched and miserable and poore and blinde and naked Christ intending to strike this sin of pride to the verie heart doth here set downe the true cause thereof to wit Ignorance as if hee should say Thou knowest not thine owne naturall estate as thou art borne of Adam out of Christ and therefore thou art proude and thy pride maketh thee luke-warme Then he sheweth whereof they were ignorant namely of their naturall estate For the first Christ making Ignorance the cause of their Pride teacheth vs that Pride is not the first sin that euer was in the world as many both Papists and others haue thought True it is Pride is a great and mother sinne and the cause of many fowle iniquities but yet Ignorance is a mother sin wherof Pride springeth The cause why any person swelles with pride in himselfe is Ignorance of his owne naturall estate By this then wee are taught to learne to knowe our owne estate what wee are by nature in our selues without Christ for that is the way to pull downe our hearts For this cause the Prophets of God vsed to call men To a searching of themselues Zeph. 2.1 when they would bring the people to humilitie and grace that men seeing their estate by reason of their sinnes to bee damnable might bee humbled and caused to forsake themselues and come vnto Christ. And surely till such time as men bee humbled for their sinnes they will neuer get sound grace but be as the proud Pharisie hypocrits and dissemblers though they haue much knowledg But when a man hath searched his naturall estate then besides knowledg of himselfe come other most excellent graces as humilitie the feare of God and true obedience with good conscience And therefore first of all let vs labour to be acquainted with our own estate in our selues with our personall sins with Gods iudgmēts due vnto vs for them For this is the ground of true grace The spots and blemishes of our bodies we can soone espy and wipe away and why should wee bee lesse carefull of our soules which be farre better That Christ might fully make knowne vnto them their ignorance of thēselues it pleaseth him to desrcibe to thē their naturall estate so proportionally the naturall condition of all Churches of all people which is the state of mans miserie This he propoundeth two waies first generally in these wordes and knowest not how thou art wretched and miserable then by the parts thereof which be three Pouertie Blindnesse and Nakednesse For the first The word translated Wretched signifieth one subiect to calamities griefes and in a word to all miseries And that we may know who is thus wretched I will enter into a description of mans miserie whereof that we may conceiue aright two things are to bee considered First the roote and fountaine thereof for therein wee shall best see what miserie meaneth This root is originall sinne and it hath two braunches First that particular transgression whereby Adam sinned which was not only the sinne of his person but also of the whole nature of man spreading it self to all his posterity Christ excepted Secondly the defacing of Gods Image and the corrupting of mans heart which by reason of the fall of our first parents hath in it a pronesse vnto all sin both in will affection and in all the faculties of the soule In these two stands originall sin and in them and with them must wee conceiue of mans misery as in the root thereof Secondly we must conceiue of mans misery vnder the forme of punishmēt hauing relation to the first sin of Adam to the corruption of ech mans nature therby receiued The punishent of sin must be considered sundry waies according to the diuers kind of mans being either in this world or after For it is either in this life or at the end of this life or after this life
Here see the proper ●nd of all reprofes and corrections namely the reformation and amendement of mens faults misdemeanors whatsoeuer that so they may bee more carefull of their wayes and more zealous in good duties then euer they were Whensoeuer therefore wee are reprooued by the word of God or when the Lord shall visite vs in body minde or goods by any kind of crosse wee must remember to take occasion thereby to repent and amend knowing that by all these as by so many Sermons the Lorde calles vs to amendement Nowe come to the remedie of their Luke-warmnesse Be zealous That wee may vnderstand this Commandement we are to handle some points touching Zeale First what is zeale Zeale is a burning affection in regard of Christian Religion and the true worship of God This Zeale is compounded of two affections of loue and anger or indignation so that in this Commandement are two duties enioyned vnto this Church First that they should loue Christ and his Religion aboue all things Secondly that they should be greiued especially for this that Christ was dishonoured his worship prophaned and his doctrine not embraced but insteed thereof false worship and false doctrine entertayned when both these concurre then zeale is in the heart A most notable Example hereof wee haue in Christ Psalm 69.9 where the Prophet Dauid in his person saith The zeale of Gods house had eaten him vp Whereby thus much is signified that the heat of his loue for the maintaining of his Fathers glorie had euen consumed him and that his indignation was so great because his Fathers Name was dishonoured and his worship prophaned that it did euen care him vp This wee shall see to bee true in Christ if wee read the Hystorie of his life Iohn 2.17 Yea hee professeth of himselfe that it was meate and drinke vnto him to doe his Fathers will Ioh. 4.34 That thing he preferred before his owne life or safetie nay for the accomplishment thereof hee was content to suffer the pangs of hell The like zeale was in Elias when all Israel was fallen to Idolatrie his heart was zealous for the Lord of Hosts 1. King 19.14 II. point The kinds of zeale Zeale is either good or bad In good zeale are these things required I. True faith as the roote thereof 1. Tim. 1. vers 5. The end of the commandement is loue 〈◊〉 of a pure heart and of a good conscience and of faith vnfained Now one apart of zeale is loue and therefore 〈…〉 proceed● from true faith so must true zeale 〈◊〉 and that which is not grounded on faith is rather rashnesse and fiercenesse of nature than true zeale II. Repentance 2. Cor. 7.11 There are seuen 〈◊〉 of repentance recyted whereof zeale is one that is good zeale Euen a burning loue of true Religion and a godly indignation when false religion is embraced There may bee zeale in a man that hath no repentance as was in Iehu 2. King 10.16 Come with mee sayth hee and see the zeale that I haue for the Lord. Yet he wanted repentance for Vers. 29.31 It is said Iehu regarded not to walke in the Law of the Lord God of Israel with all his heart for hee departed not from the sinnes of Ieroboam which made Israel to sinne and therefore he had not in him the true zeale that is heere commanded III. Zeale must come from knowledge for without knowledge it is but rashnesse and bold-hardinesse such as the Iewes had Rom. 10.2 whose Zeale was without knowledge And such as Paul had before his conuersion Phil. 3. vers 6. In Zeale hee persecuted Gods Church Knowledge therefore in Gods word must bee the guide and conductor of our zeale III. point The fruites of zeale must be considered for the better discerning of true zeale First true zeale constraineth a man in euery thing to seeke to please God Whether we be out of 〈◊〉 wits we are it vnto God or whether we bee in our right mind we are it vnto you For the loue of Christ constrayneth vs. So wheresoeuer this true zeale is in any measure it offereth violence to the heart so as a man cannot but endeuour to doe his dutie for the loue he beareth vnto Christ. Elihu sayd The grace of God was in his heart as new wine in a vessell which must needs vent out Iob. 32.18.19 Secondly true zeale makes a man indeuour to serue and please God with all his heart power and strength So good king Iosiah hearing the words of the Law read hee turned not slackely or negligently but with all his heart and all his soule and with all his might according to all the Law of Moses so as like him was no King before neither after him arose there any like him Psal. 51 Dauid humbling himselfe for his sinnes prayes for the pardon of them with such maruellous zeale as no tongue can vtter desiring God to remember him according to the multitude of his mercies often repeating the same thing in diuers tearmes that in some sort hee might expresse the earnest desire of his heart And in giuing God thankes for his benefits he putteth all the strength of his heart thereto crying out My soule prayse thou the Lord and all that is within mee Psa. 103.1 And thus we see what a thing it is to be zealous whence true zeale ariseth and what it worketh in mans heart Seeing wee as hath beene shewed are tainted with this sinne of Lukewarmnesse and coldnesse in religion let vs here learne how to redresse this vice Wee must become zealous hauing in our heart a feruent loue of true religion and a vehement indignation when the same is disgraced and false worship takes place Let Religion therefore take place in our hearts and let vs bee feruent and shew that same in our liues by zealous obedience Away with all slacknesse and lukewarmnesse it were better to bee Iewes and Turkes and to hold no Religion then to be luke-warme in the true profession And thus much for zeale The second part of this remedie is to Repent or amend This they are also enioyned because zeale without repentāce is nothing but rashnes Iehues zeale was no true zeale because hee wanted repentance euen then when hee was zealous But wherefore was this Church inioyned to repent Namely for Lukewarmnes not for that she had committed any horrible sinne but because she was slacke in good duties Here then we haue a good Lesson for the ignorant sort that challenge Gods mercie vnto themselues because they are no notorious malefactors as murtherers adulterers they hate no man but do good vnto all but heere they are taught to reforme this their blindnesse and ignorance For repentance must be for want of good duties yea for slacknesse therein therefore let no man sooth himselfe in his ignorance with a false perswasion that all is wel if he liue not in grosse sinnes This is the enchantment of the deuill whereby he rocks many asleepe in
their sinnes till hee carry their soules to hell A good meaning will not serue the turne God requires true zeale in well-doing Vers. 20. Behold I stand at the doore and knocke If any man heare my voyce and open the doore I will come in vnto him and will suppe with him and hee with me Heere Christ to keepe his Church from despaire ministers vnto them the signes and tokens of his loue and fauour and before the same sets downe this note of attention Beholde hereby intending to make them more attentiuely to marke the tokens of his loue that plainly seeing the same they might not doubt thereof Heereby in generall wee are taught that if wee would arme our selues against desperation and distrust in any distresse wee must both often and seriously consider and marke the tokens of Gods loue vnto vs and that will fortifie our faith Read Psal. 23 In euery Verse saue the last hee sets downe tokens of Gods loue and fauour towards him and then in the last concludeth thus Without doubt kindesse mercie shall follow mee all the dayes of my life and I shall remaine a long season in the house of the Lord. Our hearts are naturally filled with doubting which will bewray it selfe in any distresse But to preuent and cut off all hurt that may come therby let vs marke the good dealing of our God towards vs and obserue the tokens of his loue and mercie in his ordinarie prouidence and these will notably strengthen vs against distrust And surely no person is so full of despaire but if hee could looke backe into the mercies of God from the beginning of his dayes and lay them to his heart they would minister comfort vnto him in regard of his loue and fauour at that instant More particularly Christ ministring comfort vnto this Church doth expresse his meaning by a borrowed speach comparing euery man vnto an house his heart vnto a doore whereby entrance is made and himselfe vnto a guest or stranger desiring to come and enter in not so much to find courtesie as to shew fauour and kindnesse In the words of this verse there bee two signes of his loue set downe First a heartie desire of their conuersion which hee earnestly seeketh Secondly a promise of mutuall fellowship after their conuersion The first in these wordes Behold I stand at the doore and knock In this desire Christ expresseth two things First that this Church if wee regard the greatest part thereof had no true fellowship with Christ nor Christ with them for hee stands at the doore of their hearts which were closed vp against him This may seeme strange but the case is euident for though they had in them many good things as knowledge of Gods will and did professe the Gospel and were partakers of the signes and seales of the Couenant of grace yet they were tainted with this notorious sinne of Luke-warmnesse which closed vp the doore of their heart against Christ and barred him out Here then we are carefully to obserue that a man may haue in him many good things and yet by liuing in one sin we be quite cut off from all true fellowship with Christ. Iudas had many excellent gifts he forsooke all and folowed Christ he preached the Gospel and administred the Sacraments and yet by couetousnes the doore of his heart was quite barred against Christ. So Herode reuerenced Iohn and heard him gladly and did many things at his instruction Mark 6.20 yet by the sinne of Incest his heart was so closed that he had no fellowship with Christ. And so it is with vs It is good that wee know the will of God and approue the same and professe the Gospel and also receiue the Seales of the Couenant But yet for all these our case may be such as wee shall haue no true fellowshippe with Christ. For if wee nourish though but one sinne and liue therein that will make a separation betweene Christ and vs bee the sinne what it will as couetousnesse adulterie prophanenesse or such like Heereby then all that desire to haue true fellowshippe with Christ are to be warned to purge their liues from all sinne so as their hearts bee not taynted with nourishing any one sinne for euen one sinne w●●●●soeuer it bee is a strong barre 〈◊〉 will keepe Christ from comming into vs. Secondly whereas hee saith I haue stood at the doore for so the wordes are Heere hee speaketh to this Church as hee vsed to speake by his old Prophets As by Ieremie I haue sent vnto you all my Prophets rysing early euery day and sending them And by Esay I haue spread out my handes all the day vnto a rebellious people which walked in a way that was not good euen after their owne imaginations So heere I haue stood at the doore That is long euen till night as the word supping importeth Hereby Christ would signifie his great pacience in waiting for the conuersion of this people of Loadicea In iustice hee might long agone haue cast them to the pit of destruction for their sinnes and yet in mercie he waiteth for their conuersion and complaines that he hath waited long Here then we haue iust occasion to take a view of Gods patience in wayting for the conuersion of a sinner And that which hee saith to this Church hee may as iustly say vnto vs for hee hath stood very long at our doores euen 36. yeares and vpward and yet still continueth knocking so as he may iustly complaine of his long waiting Let vs then here learne to know the day of our visitation which is then to any people when Christ stands at their doores and knockes and vnto vs this day is present Wee haue the ministerie of the Gospell and therefore we must be perswaded that this is the time of our visitation and hereupon learne the dutie which Christ teacheth the Iewes namely Acknowledg the day of our visitation which if we doe not wee must looke for like vengeance which fell vpon the Iewes because they regarded not when God sent his owne Sonne from his bosome to knocke at the dore of their hearts And knocke Heere is a further signification of his desire of their conuersion Wherein we may behold his great vnspeakable mercie towards this Church and in them towards all other his Children This Church had bard out Christ by their sinnes and yet he pursues them he knockes hee vseth meanes to enter for 〈◊〉 good and vouchsafes them mercy 〈◊〉 then when they refuse it Thus when Adam had sinned and fled and hid himselfe did the Lord seek him in the garden make with him the couenant of grace And therefore it is truely sayd in Isay The Lord is found of them that neuer sought him Luk. 15.4.5 Christ fetcheth the lost sheepe that was gone astray All which shew and set out vnto vs the vnspeakable greatnesse of Gods mercie in Christ vnto miserable man who then shewes mercie vnto him when he
Christ in the ministrie of his word knockes both by threatnings by promises and good counsell therefore we must all of vs listen vnto the words of Christ open the dores of our hearts and receiue him into the same But alas the practise of the world is far otherwise men are churlish Nabals vnto Christ who though he come friendly yet they repell him making no account of such against Nay we are Bethlemites which haue no roome for Christ in the Innes of our harts if Christ will needs lodge with vs hee must lye among the beasts in the filthy stable Nay many send him out of their gates with the Iews and crucifie him with their sinnes But let vs abandon this greeuous sinne for it is the right way to plunge our soules into the pit of destruction Quest. How must a man open his hart to receiue Christ Answ. By doing two things First hee must labour to see his owne vilenesse that hee is vnworthy to receiue so blessed a Guest then hee must humble himselfe and acknowledge this his vnworthinesse Euen as the ruler did when he sayd vnto Christ Lord I am not worthy that thou shouldest come vnder my roofe Mat. 8.8 This humiliation is the beginning of grace This done hee must by true faith lay hold on Christ that is beleeue that Christs death and passion is for the pardon of his sinnes and for the saluation of his soule For as Christ dwels in mens hearts by faith so by faith he must be receiued into their harts Here some will say if this be to receiue Christ then all is well But take heede thou deceiue not thy selfe with a vaine imagination of thine owne braine in stead of faith Looke therefore that thy faith be true sound If it be true faith it will work by loue euen a true loue of Christ and his members which will appeare by keeping his Commaundements Ioh. 14.23 I will come in vnto him and suppe with him and he with me Here is the thing promised to wit mutuall communion and fellowship with Christ. This is the principall token of Christs loue being indeed the verie ground of all true happinesse ioy and comfort and therefore it is added to mooue them to open vnto Christ. This societie is here propounded in two parts First the sinner being conuerted makes a feast vnto Christ I will come in vnto him and suppe with him Secondly Christ makes a feast vnto him And hee shall sup with me And in these two consists the sum of Salomons song of songs where Christ entertaineth the Church and the Church againe feasts Christ. For the first some may aske how can a poore sinner make a feast for Christ Answ. Cantic 4.16 The Church or euerie Christians soule calleth Christ vnto a feast in his Garden to eate his pleasant thinges This Feast consisteth of these things First of the fruits of true repentance Psal. 51 17 A broken and contrite heart is a daintie di●● acceptable vnto God Secondly of an hart beleeuing the word and promises to God for without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 Thirdly the penitent sinner must giue vp himselfe in soule and bodie a holy and acceptable sacrifice vnto God by seruing God faithfully not only in the duties of piety but also in the faithfull perfourmance of the duties of his particular calling these be the delightfull dishes wherwith Christ is fed The second feast is made by Christ and hee shall sup with me Christ comes not to bee entertained onely but to entertaine And the feast which he makes is his own bodie and blood For his flesh is meat indeede and his blood is drinke indeede The vessels whereon these meates are caried are the Word and Sacraments And all that bee his welcome guests are true penitent sinners which haue hungring and thirsting hearts after his bodie and blood Luk. 1.58 And from this feast arise these blessings Righteousnesse peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost Seeing this fellowship with Christ is here promised to those that open receiue him into their hearts First hereby we are taught to renounce all earthly and carnall pleasures and not to addict our selues to drinking and quaffing or sumptuous fare for heere is a better feast sette before vs whereupon we must set our hearts turning our eyes from all worldly pleasures We know by experience how friends entertaine each other but wee must labor to know how to entertaine Christ and to feast him with his owne graces that hee may suppe with vs and we with him and so haue true fellowship with him Againe by this we may see a notable abuse of many that come to the Lordes table for heere wee see is required an interchange of feasting betweene Christ and a Christian but many there bee that will come to the Lords table and feast with Christ that will neuer feast Christ againe And yet we ougt to be as carefull to feast him as to feast with him It is a shame to suppe often with Christ and yet like vngrateful Nabals neuer to haue one good dish of grace and holy obedience to set before him wherewith indeede we should feast him dayly Others will seem to giue him good entertainment for that day whereon they feast with Christ but soone after they giue him gall to eate and vineger to drinke by their dayly sinnes Vers. 21. To him that ouercommeth will I make to sit with me in my throne euen as I ouercame and sit with my father in his throne Vers. 22. Let him that hath an eare heare what the spirit sayth vnto the Churches Here is the conclusion of this Epistle and it hath two parts A Promise vers 21 and a Commaundement vers 22. In the Promise note two things First to whome it is made To him that ouercommeth Hereof we haue spoken Secondly the thing promised that is fellowship with Christ in glorie I will make to sit c. whereby is not meant equalitie of glorie and honor for that is not possible for any creature to receiue But a participation onely of some part of his glorie so much as shall suffice for his perfect happinesse And because it might bee thought no great matter therefore it is illustrated by a comparison as I ouercame and sit with my father in his throne As if hee should say I will aduance them that ouercome their spirituall enemies into the participation of my glorie euen as my Father when I had ouercome aduanced me into the fellowship of his glorie Now Christ as hee is Mediator is inferiour to his father and in that regard is not aduanced to equall glorie with his Father though he sit with him So the members of Christ being inferiour vnto him may sitte with him in his throne though their glorie be vnequall These things for substance haue beene handled Chap. 2. vers 26.28 The second part of this conclusion Let him that hath an eare heare c. hath also