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

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one belieueth what he teacheth not by an humane Credulity from his Author but by a diuine faith from the Word and because he belieueth he therefore speaketh and speaking from faith in his owne heart he speaketh much more powerfully vnto the begetting and strengthening of faith in the Hearer The priuate Christian in the diligent suruey of this Treatise shall obserue liuely decyphered the scornefull vanity of corrupt Nature the lothsomenesse and desperate danger of sin the wonderfull power of Gods Grace in the conuersion of a sinner the tryall of a mans own deceitfull heart the amiable life of Gods grace in the regenerate the comfortable benefit of afflictions sundry sweet consolations of a troubled spirit the vanity of Popery the necessity of a faithfull Ministry the beauty of Gods Ordinances holily administred and the resolution of sundry cases of conscience fitting these times and all deliuered with such euidence of Scripture-light and Christian experience that the hearts of the godly Readers will at once blesse God who hath giuen such gifts to men and blesse the Writer who hauing spent the strength of his yeares in a faithfull and fruitfull Ministry to the great comfort and succour of many Ministers and people far and neare round about him doth now at last adorne his hoarie head with this Crowne of glory to bring forth his workes to more publike Light now more at the last then at the first My hearts desire is that God would adde yet many daies more to the Authors life and support him still both in body and spirit to bring to light many other such monuments of his fruitfull labours not only that elaborate Commentary vpon the 51. Psalme but likewise such Sermons or Treatises or Letters touching cases of Conscience as haply haue lyenby him these many yeares Why should any Talent lye buried in a Napkin or candle lye hid vnder a bushell which being set on a candlesticke might giue light to all that are in the house Such Opuscula little Treatises as himselfe would hardly acknowledge vnder his owne Name might be of speciall vse and much esteeme with others Witnesse those questions and Answers wherein he hath comprized the doctrine of the Lords Supper which though without his Name they be annexed to a little Treatise of the like Argument set forth by a godly learned Diuine M. William Bradshaw yet haue they beene of singular good vse to many poore soules for their worthy preparation to that Ordinance And in very deed they do more fully furnish a Christian to that whole spirituall Duty then any other in any language that I know in so small a compasse yea and that one Letter of his to a Gentlewoman against the separation which without his consent a separatist printed and refuted hath so strongly and clearely conuinced the iniquity of that way that I could not but acknowledge in it both the wisedome of God and the weakenesse of the separatist His wisdome in bringing to light such a beame of the Light of his truth by the hand of an aduersary against the Authors mind and the weakenesse of the other to aduance the hand of his aduersary to giue himselfe and his cause such a deadly wound in open view as neither himselfe nor all his associates can be able to heale In which respect I conceiue it was that the industrious Doctor Willet in his Dedicatory Epistle to CHRISTS Colledge before his harmony vpon the first of Samuel stileth this our Author Schismaticorum quivulgò Brownistae Malleum the Hammer of Schismatiques whom they commonly call Brownists Now the God of all grace prosper the workes of his seruants to those good ends himselfe hath appointed and they haue aimedat the glory of his owne great Name in the edification and saluation of his people in Christ. So I take leaue and rest desirous to prouoke my selfe and thee to a thankfull and fruitfull vse of such mercies The vnworthiest of the least of Gods Mercies and Seruants I. C. A Table of some principall Points that are handled in these Lectures Abstinence See Fasting Admonition See Reproofe Adoption A. NO man can worship God aright till he haue the Spirit of Adoption and can conceiue of God as of his louing Father pag. 182 Foure notes to try whether we do indeed know God to be our Father pag 183. Adoration Worship See Reuerence The whole worship of God is called Adoration pag. 111. Admiring of men It is folly and sin to admire any man much pag 40. Affection He that hath an vpright heart serues God with affection pag. 480. No seruice pleaseth God that is not done with feeling and affection pag. 198 199. Naturall Affection See Parents Affl●…ction In it owne nature it is a curse neither is it a signe of Gods loue to all pag. 394. The greatest may not hope to be exempted from it pag. 388. All men should prepare for it and how 389 It is greatly profitable and necessary for Gods Elect pag. 394. It is no signe of Gods wrath but of his loue rather pag. 398. We may be sure God will doe vs good by it and remoue it when it hath wrought kindly on vs and support vs in it and giue a comfortable end vnto it pag 399. It is a signe of election to profit by it and the contrary of reprobation pag 401. In euery affection we should take notice that God is angry with vs pag. 402. Sixe degrees of Gods proceeding in sanctifying aff●…ctions to vs which may be so many notes to try whether our aff●…ctions be san-ctified pag. 40●… 40●… Extremity of it will make vs vnfit both to profit by the Word and to pray pag. 433 Alacrity See Cheerefulnesse Antiquity How far forth it is to bee regarded in the matter of Religion pag 141. It is dangerous to ascribe too much to it 144 Our Religion is most antient 145. The popish plea touching the antiquity of theirs is most vaine and insufficient ibid. Apostacie See Perseuerance How farre forth the good things that haue beene in a man may be lost ●…0 51. A dangerous thing to fall from grace or to decay in it 54. Two chiefe causes of it ibid. Comfort for the faithfull that liue in times of generall Apostacie 430 431. Apostles Christ hath taught his Church the whole will of his Father by them 207. Apparell See Attire Appearance of euill is to be auoided 86. Application Ministers must apply the Word and hearers must endure it 373 374. Assemblies See Church-Assemblies Assurance of saluation See Certainty of saluation Attention All should attend diligently at the hearing of the Word 125. 134. 135. Meanes to keepe our hearts attentiue from wandring in prayer c. 198. Attire Modesty in attire required of Christians 87. Authority The wicked are apt to abuse the authori●…y and credit of holy men to the disgrace of Gods truth 35 273. This honour is due to Christ alone to be belieued in matter of Doctrine vpon his bare Word 149. Nothing is to be
especially that want yeares or such other means of learning should do any great good that they cannot belieue See this in Christs country-men Mat. 13. 55. 57. They were offended at him and could not honour him as they ought because they knew the meannesse of his parentage and education This doctrine serueth first generally to exhort euery one of vs to take notice of this vile corruption in our selues and to striue against it Take heed brethren saith the Apostle Heb. 3. 12. least there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeliefe Consider with thy selfe 1. Thou canst haue no comfort in God vnlesse thou haue faith Heb. 11. 6. Without faith it is impossible to please him 2. Though it may seeme an easie thing to belieue while thou art in peace and in abundance of all good means of comfort as Papists say this is too easie a way to be the right way to heauen thou wilt find it hard in the time of extremity when that euill day shall come which the Apostle speaks of Eph. 6. 13. Of all things that God hath commanded vs this most needeth the mighty hand of God and the exceeding greatnesse of his power to make vs able to performe it and so speakes the Apostle of it Eph. 1. 19. 3. Thou hast no true faith vnlesse thou canst belieue whatsoeuer God hath said or if thou do distrust the Lord when the meanes do faile Be not therefore too well perswaded of the strength of thy faith but pray and vse all other meanes to get it increased in thee and to haue the infidelity of thy heart subdued more and more The remedy and means for the subduing of it is the consideration of these three points 1. That which the Scripture hath reuealed touching the omnipotency of God Gen. 18. 14. Shall any thing be hard to the Lord ler. 32. 27. I am the Lord God of all flesh is there any thing too hard for me The Lord can do more then he will doe he can of stones raise vp children vnto Abraham Mat. 3. 9. Christ could by prayer haue obtained of his Father more then twelue legions of Angels to rescue him from his enemies Mat. 26. 53. God could haue kept Christ from drinking the cup of his wrath for vs Mar. 14. 36. Yet may no man build on Gods power nor can haue true comfort in it or say God can do this or that if it please him vnlesse he haue his reuealed will to build vpon as well as his omnipotency The Papists in their doctrine of the reall presence and many carnall Protestants in their contempt of the ordinary means are grossely mistaken in this point Therefore the faithfull professing the comfort they tooke in the faith of Gods power vse to ioyne his power and his truth or faithfulnesse together as Psal. 89. 8. O Lord God of hosts who is a strong God like vnto thee or to thy faithfulnesse round about thee And where we haue his word and promise for any thing we may build vpon it and be fully assured that he will performe it be it neuer so vnlike because he is able to do it Thus is the strong faith of Abraham commended by the Apostle Rom. 4. 21. He was fully perswaded that what God had promised he was able also to performe And thus doth Dauid magnifie and set forth the omnipotency of God Psal. 115. 3. Our God is in the heauens he hath done whatsoeuer he pleased See this proued by sundry plaine experiments for of this truth we may say as Psal. 119. 140. Thy word is proued most pure by good experience therefore thy seruant loueth it And these experiments are to be obserued in three points 1. He hath done mighty things by very weak means By three hundred he ouerthrew the huge host of the Midianites and Amalakites who were like Grashoppers in multitude and their Camels without number Iudg 6. 7. 12. 2. He hath done mighty things without any naturall and ordinary means he ouerthrew the mighty wals of Iericho and deliuered the City into his peoples hands onely by the blowing of trumpets of Rams hornes and the shouting of the people Iosh. 6. 20. which made Asa cry to him 2. Chro. 14. 11. It is nothing for thee to helpe with many or with no power 3. He hath done mighty things when all meanes haue seemed as it were to be armed against him and quite contrary to the nature of ordinary means that he might shew himselfe to be indeed the Lord of Hosts as in the case of Israels passing through the Red Sea Exo. 14. 21. 22. And in the preseruation both of the three noble Iewes in the fiery fornace Dan. 3. 27. and of Daniel in the Lions den Dan. 6. 22. 2. To consider how highly God is prouoked with this sinne Psal. 78. 21. 22. 22. 40. 41. They prouoked and grieued him how by tempting and limiting him when Elisha had said To morrow a measure of fine flower should be sold for a shekell because the Prince did but say Though the Lord would make windowes in heauen could this thing come to passe The Prophet in Gods name threatned he should see it for increase of his miserie but not taste of it and so it came to passe for he died a strange and base death 2. King 7. 19. 20. When Zachary a man iust before God and one of whose tongue God might haue had more vse then of many others did but make a doubt vpon this ground he was smitten dumbe for forty weekes Luke 1. 20. Moses and Aaron for doubting vpon this ground also of Gods promise see how seuerely they were punished for it Num. 20. 12. 3. The consideration of the nature of this sinne for as faith is the root of all other good things in vs It is that that purifieth the heart Act. 15. 9. It is that that setteth loue and euery grace on worke faith worketh by loue saith the Apostle Gal. 5. 6. It is that whereby in our whole conuersation we are enabled to liue a holy life The iust shall liue by his faith saith the Prophet Hab. 2. 4. And there is nothing wherein we so much giue glory to God as by our faith Rom. 4. 20. Num. 20. 12. So on the other side nothing so much corrupteth the heart of man as infidelity doth no sinne that we can commit doth the Lord so great dishonour as when we do thus limit him and cannot trust him further then we see him Ioh. 5. 10. He that belieueth not hath made him a lyer And what greater disgrace can you put vpon any man then to giue him the lie Infidelity as it was the first sinne whereby Satan deceiued and poisoned mankind he called Gods truth in question and sought to bring them into a doubt of it Gen. 3. 4. so is it the root of all other our sinnes whereby we depart from God Heb. 3. 12. Therefore doth our Sauiour mention it as the only sinne that the
all Ministers yet of all able and faithfull Ministers we are There hath beene long and is at this day great difference of iudgement amongst Gods seruants in our Church some hold that there is a forme of Church gouernement set downe in the Word which was practised in the Apostles times and which all Churches are bound vnto vnto the end of the world other of Gods seruants are of another minde Some hold the ceremonies to be vnlawfull others hold them to be lawfull and fit And this difference in iudgement hath wrought great alienation of heart and affection among Gods seruants but this ought not to be so 1. We should reuerence and esteeme one another so many as we see to be able and painefull and godly men we are to reuerence and esteeme of notwithstanding these differences in iudgement we ought not to despise or condemne one another for these things Rom. 14. 3. Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not and let not him which eateth not condemne him which eateth The odious termes of Puritans or Formalists of Schismatickes or Time-seruers ought not to be heard amongst brethren 2. We should auoide all bitternesse of contention about these things Though we differ in ●…udgement in these things yet should we endeauour that the people may discerne no difference nor disagreement in Doctrine amongst vs. True it is we may and ought to seeke resolution for our consciences out of Gods Word euen in these things seeme they neuer so small Rom. 14. 〈◊〉 Let euery man bee fully perswaded in his minde And when we haue receiued good resolution in these things we ought to hold that fast so farre forth as God hath reuealed his will vnto vs the Minister especially it is required that he hold fast the faithfull Word Tit. 1. 9. But if we dissent one from another in these things it must be without bitternesse in a brotherly manner Ephes. 4. ●…5 Follow the truth in loue saith the Apostle It is not to be held want of zeale or alteration in iudgement but true wisedome in a Minister to shunne in his Ministry and Doctrine so farre as in him lyeth these points that brethren differ in and to spend his time in such points wherein we all agree and which are more profitable for the people to know Acts●…0 ●…0 20. In the building of Salomons Temple it is said that there was no noise of hammer or axe or any toole of Iron heard in the house while it was building 1. King 6. 7. It were to be wished that in our Ministrie whereby Gods spirituall Temples are to be built there might be no noise heard of any iarres or contentions that are among our selues but that we all would doe as Dauid did though his brethren the Iewes had prouoked him much yet could he not be stirred to fight against them but vsed all his skill and force against the Philistines 1. Sam. 27. 7 12. So should we all ioyne our forces against the common aduersary It is promised as a blessed fruit of the Gospell which euery godly man prayeth for and desireth to see Esay 11. 13 14. That Ephraim and Iudah may cease to enuie and vexe one another but that they may ioyne together against the common aduersary 3. Howsoeuer we cannot agree in iudgement yet should we loue one another and be glad to imbrace one anothers acquaintance and to reioyce one in anothers gifts and faithfulnesse and successe in his labours neuerthelesse for the difference that is in iudgement amongst vs about these things Wee haue a worthy example for these things in the Primitiue Church Acts 4. 32. The multitude of them that belieued were of one heart and one soule and therefore it is said of them Acts 2. 46. that they were not strange one to another but maintained a sweet society together and reioyced one in another They did eate their meate together with gladnesse and singlenesse of heart The Reasons that may moue vs to this agreement are these First the great aduantage that all sorts of wicked men Papists Atheists and ignorant persons take at our contentions and disagreements When the Holy Ghost would intimate one cause why Abraham was so loath to fall out with Lot so desirous to compound the differences that were betweene their heard-men he saith Gen. 13. 7. And the Canaanites and the Perizzites dwelt at that time in the land Doubtlesse we haue in our land many Canaanites and Perizzites at this day that doe take great offence at this and make it their chiefe occasion to alienate their hearts from the truth of God and from the reuerence of our calling Matth. 18. 7. Woe bee to the world because of of offences it must needes bee that offences shall come it is iust with God and necessary such wretches should haue somewhat laid in their way to stumble at but Woe bee to that man by whom the offence commeth woe be to vs if we become occasions of such offence vnto them Secondly such as we differ from in iudgement may be Gods deare children and faithfull seruants though they erre and cannot see the truth in these matters as we thinke we do True it is that God hath made this promise to all the faithfull Ier. 32. 38 39. They shall be my people and I will bee their God and I will giue them one heart and one way that they may feare me for euer But this is meant that in fundamentall points they shall all agree True it is also that it is a thing greatly to be wisht and sought after that all Gods seruants might be of one iudgement in all points It is worthy to be obserued how oft the Apostle beats vpon this point 1. Cor. 1. 10. Bee yee knit together in one minde and in one iudgement and 2. Cor. 13. 11. Finally brethren bee perfect bee of good comfort bee of one minde liue in peace and the God of loue and peace shall bee with you Phil. 3. 2. fulfill my ioy that yee may be like minded hauing the same loue being of one accord and of one iudgement The Apostle knew well that the neerer we agree in iudgement the faster will our affections be knit one vnto another But though this be to be desired and endeauoured after yet can it neuer be attained in this life that all Gods faithfull seruants should agree in all points Perfect vnity is not to be looked for in the Church of God till the number of all the elect be fulfilled till the Church be come to her perfection Ephes. 4. 13. Paul speaking of the vnitie of faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God this vnity the perfect vnitie tels vs when it is to be looked for Euen when wee shall all meete together vnto a perfect man and vnto the measure of the age of the fulnesse of Christ. It is great rashnesse and ignorance in any to doubt of the soundnesse of euery mans heart that doth not receiue and imbrace euery
the last day it followeth now that we proceed vnto the second From this then that these Samaritans making here profession of their faith in Iesus Christ i. e. declare their faith by the certainty of their knowledge and expresse what they meant by saying they did beleeue in this manner Now wee beleeue for we know that this is indeed the Christ we learne That there is great certainty and assurance in true faith It is more than an opinion than a coniecture than to hope well it is a certaine and vndoubted perswasion of the heart This you shall finde true in all the kindes of true Faith which the Scripture speakes of 1. They that had the Faith of Miracles neuer attempted the doing of any Miracle but they were certaine they should effect it And therefore Christ told his Disciples that the cause why they could not cast out a Diuell Matth. 17. 19 20. was that at that time they had not the Faith of Miracles in any measure if they had had so much of it as a graine of mustard seede they might haue beene assured to preuaile in that great worke 2. They that haue an Historicall Faith are certainely and fully assured that all that God hath reuealed in his Word is vndoubtedly true They are certaine that Christ was the Sonne of God Iohn 17. 8. They haue knowne surely that I am come from thee and they haue beleeued that thou didst send me They are certaine of euery Commandement God hath reuealed to them in his Word That they may not doe any thing of their owne workes on the Lords day that they may not reuenge themselues c. They are vndoubtedly perswaded that euery curse threatned in the Word against the wicked shall certainely light vpon them and that euery blessing promised to the godly shall vndoubtedly be performed to them though reason sense and experience be neuer so much against it yet are they fully perswaded of it because God hath said it Therefore the Apostle cals faith Heb. 11. 1. An euidence of things not seene Two notable instances are giuen vs for this 1. Concerning the Beginning and Creation of the World 2. Concerning the End and Dissolution of it The one we haue Heb. 11. 3. Through Faith we vnderstand that the World was ordained by the Word of God So that as certainely as we are perswaded that there is now a Sunne in the Firmament whose rising and approching to vs causeth the day whose setting and departing from vs causeth the night because our sense teacheth vs this so are we euery whit as certainely perswaded that there were sundry daies and nights before there was any Sunne to rise or set in the world because God hath said so in his Word that there were three daies before the Sun was Created Gen. 1. 13 14. 2. The other instance for the certainety of this Historicall faith is 1. Thess. 5. 2. Yee your selues know perfectly that the day of the Lord shall come 3. He that hath a true iustifying faith may not only hope well and coniecture but he may be certainely and vndoubtedly perswaded that Christ and all his merits do belong vnto him he may be in this life certainely assured that he shall be saued Now because this is the faith that my Text speaketh of and this is a point that it much concernes vs all to be well instructed in I will be larger in speaking of this kinde of Faith than of the former two And before I come to the proofe of this point I will giue you foure Cautions which shall preserue you from mistaking and mis-vnderstanding this Doctrine and which may serue for answer to all the materiall obiections that are made against it 1. Though we say that euery true Beleeuer may be certaine of his owne saluation yet doe we grant there are degrees of Faith and knowledge that all Beleeuers are not in the like measure certaine of their saluation neither may any from this Doctrine conclude I am but an Hypocrite I haue no true Faith because I haue not the certainety that such and such I reade of in the Word had because I cannot doe as such and such can For God giues all his graces in diuers measures euen to his Elect ones according to his owne good pleasure Matth. 13. 23. The seede of the Word in some brings forth an hundred fold in some but sixtie in some but thirtie One hath a strong Faith as Abraham Rom. 4. 19 20. and the Woman of Canaan Matth. 15. 28. Another a weake Faith as the man whose childe was possessed Mar. 9. 24. A little Faith as the Disciples Matth. 8. 26. And yet this weake this little Faith is as true a Faith as effectuall to iustification and saluation though it yeeld not a man that measure of certainety and comfort as the other It is the truth and soundnesse not the measure and quantitie of Faith that saues vs. 2. They that haue attained to the strongest Faith to the greatest measure of Faith cannot be so certaine of their saluation but they shall haue some doubts and some distrust left in them The Thessalonians are commended for their Faith aboue all the Churches yet it is said of them that they had somewhat lacking in their faith 1. Thess. 3. 10. Yea Paul himselfe was not perfect in faith not as though I had already attained it either were already perfect saith he Phil. 3. 12. It is a good signe of true Faith to discerne grieue and striue against doubts and motions of distrust He may be sure he hath no true Faith that feeles not infidelity in himselfe Yea a man may haue at the same time both Faith and doubting Lord I belieue helpe thou mine vnbeliefe Mar. 9. 24. yet doth this doubting proceed not from the spirit but from the flesh from the vnregenerate part neither is it a vertue as Papists would haue it or a property of true Faith but a thing most contrary and opposite to the nature of it True Faith hath certainety in it and excludeth all doubtings Iames 3. 5. Let him aske in Faith and wauer not Matth. 21. 21. If yee haue faith and doubt not Matth. 14. 31. O thou of little faith wherefore didst thou doubt 3. They that haue the strongest Faith feele not this certainty of their saluation at all times but may for a time be quite depriued of the feeling of it As the Apostle saith 1. Pet. 1. 6. Yee greatly reioyce in your faith though now for a season if need be yee are in heauinesse through manifold tentations They that before were most full of confidence and assurance yet in tentation shew much weakenesse Matth. 14. See Peters confidence vers 28 29. see his weakenesse verse 30. Eliah that before feared not to meet Ahab and deale so roundly with him a while after quaked and fled at the threat of Iezabel and grew impatient 1. King 19. 3 4. Dauid sometimes was full of confidence and certainety and could say as
To the naturall man indeede they are obscure the naturall man receiueth not the things of the spirit of God 1. Cor. 2. 14. 2. But in themselues they are plaine and cleare to them whose eyes God hath opened the entrance into thy Word giueth light it giueth vnderstanding vnto the simple Psal. 119. 130. 3. God hath promised to teach all his Elect and to giue them his Spirit to open their mindes that they may vnderstand the Scriptures in those points the knowledge whereof is necessary to their saluation they shall be all taught of God Ioh. 6. 45. Seeing all are bound to seeke for certainety in the matters of their Religion we are all to be Exhorted First That we would in these matters not rest vpon the credit of any man but seeke to ground our consciences vpon the Word of God else will we be found in the day of tentation no better than the foolish man that built vpon the sand Matth. 7. 26. Secondly That we would labour to bring good and honest hearts to the reading and hearing of the Word because to such onely the promise is made that God by his Spirit will instruct them What man is hee that feareth the Lord him shall hee teach in the way that he shall choose Psalme 25. 12. Followeth now the fruit and effect whereby they testified their Faith Viz. the open profession they make of it to the Woman that first drew them to Christ which teacheth vs this Doctrine That he that hath true Faith will be ready to make profession of it when occasion shall be offered with the heart man belieueth vnto righteousnesse and with the mouth confession is made vnto saluation Rom. 10. 10. Wee hauing the same spirit of faith according as it is written I beleeued and therefore haue I spoken we also beleeue and therefore speake 2. Cor. 4. 13. God sets vp the light of his grace in no mans heart for his owne priuate vse onely but that it might giue light vnto others men light not a candle and put it vnder a bushell but on a candlesticke and it giueth light euen to all that are in the house Matth. 5. 15. 1. To reprooue the Nicodemites of our time such as pretend to haue Faith and to haue receiued the loue of Gods truth and yet are ashamed or affraid to make profession of it among such as will hate or scorne them for it such I would wish to meditate of these two places Iob 6. 10. Then should I yet haue comfort yea I would harden my selfe in sorrow let him not spare for I haue not concealed the words of the holy One. And Matth. 10. 32 33. Whosoeuer shall confesse mee before men him will I confesse also before my Father which is in Heauen but whosoeuer shall deny me before men him will I also deny before my Father which is in Heauen 2. To reprooue the Hypocrites who will pretend to haue grace and yet no man of iudgement that conuerseth with them is able to discerne it eyther in their words or deeds One principall way whereby we are to make profession of our Religion is a holy life Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen Matth. 5. 16. A verball profession without this is little worth THE SEVENTIE SEVEN LECTVRE ON IANVARY XV. MDCX. IOH. IIII. XLIII XLIIII XLV Now after two dayes he departed thence and went into Galile For Iesus himselfe testified that a Prophet hath no honour in his owne Country Then when he was come into Galile the Galileans receiued him hauing seene all the things that he did at Ierusalem at the Feast for they also went vnto the Feast THe last day we finished the History of that speech that our Sauiour had with the woman of Samaria and of the great good that came of it both vnto her selfe and vnto her neighbours it followeth now that we proceed vnto the History of his going into Galile the place which it pleased him to make choice of for the exercise of the greatest part of his Ministry and to spend most of his time in This History was begun in the three first verses of this Chapter and hath beene hitherto interrupted and discontinued by a long relation of that which fell out in the way These three Verses which I haue now read doe summarily set downe our Sauiours returne into Galile But before we come to the diuision of the Text and the handling of the seuerall parts of it one doubt and difficulty is to be remoued to make our way plaine vnto the Doctrine that is to be deliuered from it For it may be demanded whether Galile were not his owne Country and if it were what sense is there in this reason He went into Galile because a Prophet hath no honour in his owne Country To this I answer that though Christ were brought vp in the Prouince and Country of Galile for Nazaret was a city in Galile Marke 1. 9. in which respect also hee was sometimes called Iesus the Galilean Matth. 26. 69. yet in this place by his owne Countrey is meant Nazaret as it is also called Matth. 13. 54. Luk. 4. 23. because though he was not borne there but at Bethlehem in Iuda yet Nazaret was the towne where his parents had dwelt Luke 2. 39. and wherein he was brought vp and had liued by the space of thirty yeares Luke 4. 16. In which respect also the Iewes were wont to call him Iesus of Nazaret Matth. 21. 11. Luke 24. 19. Yea it was necessary he should be brought vp there because of that Prophesie that had beene made of him Matth. 2. 23. Hee came and dwelt in a City called Nazaret that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Prophets He shall be called a Nazaren So that the words that I haue now read are as if the Euangelist should haue said in plaine termes thus After two daies he departed thence and went not to Nazaret for he shund that towne of purpose but into other parts of Galile for he knew that in Nazaret his owne Country he should haue no honour his Ministry would not be regarded at all So that in these Verses that I haue now read there be foure principall points to be obserued First our Sauiours leauing and shunning of Nazaret his owne Country and going into other parts of Galile Secondly the reason why he did so because he knew he could haue no honour there Thirdly the good entertainement that he found in those parts of Galile that he went vnto When hee was come into Galile the Galileans receiued him Fourthly the cause of that good entertainement he found among them They had seene all the things that he did at Ierusalem at the Feast for they also went vnto the Feast For the first it is a thing worthy of our obseruation that our Sauiour being now to begin to preach for till after this
viz. It was so much against his reuealed will that it was impossible euen for him And what was that that disinabled so the Almighty Sonne of God and so bound as it were his hands behind him Surely the Vnbeliefe of the men of Nazaret as it followes in the next words Mar. 6. 6. And he maruelled at their Vnbelief And more plainly Mat. 13. 58. He did not many great works there for their Vnbeliefs sake The other example is of the Nation and Church of the Iewes though their priuiledges and prerogatiues were great euery way yet we know that when some forty eight yeares after Christ or thereabouts the wrath of God came on them to the vtmost so as it did neuer vpon any Nation vnder heauen though they were the naturall branches of the Lords Oliue yet did he breake them off and cast them away And what was the cause of it Surely they were guilty of many hainous sinnes but the Apostle plainly saith the chiefe cause why God reiected them was their Vnbeliefe because they did not giue credit to his Word Rom. 11. 20. Through Unbeliefe they were broken off saith he So that in these foure examples God hath giuen euident demonstration how much he abhorreth this sinne and how it barreth him from shewing mercy on men But yet this will appeare more plainly if we shall looke into some examples of Gods deare children I will onely name two of them one in the Old Testament and the other in the New The first is Moses a man highly in Gods fauour aboue all the men in the world when God had bidden him speake to the rocke before all the people and promised that it should giue forth water in that abundance that the whole congregation and all their cattell should haue enough to drinke Numbers 20. 8. Moses did not absolutely refuse to giue credit to the Word of the Lord but onely doubted and made a question of it and that not so much out of any distrust he had of Gods power and truth as out of the conceit he had of the great vnworthinesse of that wicked people Numb 20. 10. Heare now ye rebels saith he shall we bring you water out of the rocke But see how seuerely God punished his seruant Moses for this For this sinne he shut him out of the Land of Canaan Numb 20. 12. Yea though Moses earnestly sought to him for it as we shall find Deut. 3. 25. I pray thee let me go ouer and see the good Land that is beyond Iordan that goodly mountaine of Lebanon But the Lord was angry with me saith he for your sakes and would not heare me And the Lord said vnto me Let it suffice thee speake no more to me of this matter The last example is Zachary a man iust before God when the Lord had promised him by his Angell that his wife Elizabeth should beare him a sonne Luke 1. 13. Zachary did but doubt and make a question of the matter and said vnto the Angell whereby shall I know this for I am an old man and my wife is of great age Luke 1. 18. But see how sharply God punished his seruant Zachary for this Though he were a Priest and such a one as whose tongue God might haue had more vse of than of many others yet was he smitten dumbe for this and so remained full forty weeks Luke 1. 20. Behold saith the Angell thou shalt be dumbe till the day that these things be done because thou belieuedst not my words The Reasons of this Doctrine are two As there is nothing wherein we so much giue glory to God as when we belieue and giue credit to his Word so there is nothing wherein we do so much derogate from Gods honour and rob him of his glory as when we refuse to giue credit to his Word When we belieue whatsoeuer the Lord hath spoken we do thereby giue him the glory of his truth his power his iustice his goodnesse Iohn 3. 33. He that hath receiued his testimony hath sealed that God is true So the Apostle saith of Abraham that when he doubted not of the promise of God through vnbeliefe but was strengthened in the faith he gaue glory to God Rom. 4. 20. On the other side he that cannot giue credit to Gods Word dishonoureth him in the highest degree 1 Iohn 5. 10. He that belieueth not God hath made him a lyar and what greater disgrace can ye put vpon any man of worth than to giue him the lye The second Reason of the Doctrine is this Because Infidelity as it was the first sinne whereby Sathan got entrance into the heart of man and drew him from God Gen. 3. 4. so is it still the root and mother of all other sinnes Heb. 3. 12. The euill heart is called the heart of Vnbeliefe there it begins that is the first thing that corrupteth the heart As faith is the root and fountaine of all other graces that is it that purifieth the heart Act. 15. 9. If we belieue his Word we cannot choose but loue him feare him obey him and put our trust in him So on the other side Infidelity is the fountaine of all vngraciousnesse and when once men begin to entertaine a doubting of the truth of any thing God hath reuealed in his Word then begins their heart to be poysoned and corrupted then begin they to depart from the liuing God and fall from his feare and loue and obedience Let vs now come to the Vse of this Doctrine and we shall find it serueth first for exhortation secondly for reproofe thirdly for comfort First seeing no sinne offends God so much as infidelity no sinne is such a barre to all Gods mercies no sinne hath that force to poyson and corrupt the heart we are therefore all of vs to hearken to the exhortation Take heed brethren lest there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeliefe Heb. 3. 12. Take heed of entertaining the least doubt of any truth that God hath clearely reuealed to thee out of the Word And because first we are all by nature full of infidelity as appeares by this that Christ so often checks his elect Disciples for this Matth. 6. 30. O ye of little Faith And secondly proportionable to the measure of faith will our feare and loue and obedience and comfort be Striue therefore by all good meanes to obtaine an vndoubted certainty of the truth of Gods Word and to confirme thy heart against all doubts and infidelity And foure principall means I find that we are directed to in this case 1 The consideration of the testimony which the Lord himselfe hath giuen of the vndoubted certaintie of his holy Word Matth. 5. 18. Truly I say vnto you till heauen and earth perish one iot or one title of the Law shall not scape till all things be fulfilled Yea it is a notable thing to obserue how precise God hath been in this point that as it is said of Samuel 1 Sam. 3.
152. Paines must be taken in foure things to profit by that we heare and reade 173. Consider of the true cause why thou profitest not by the means of grace and be troubled for it 250. We may lawfully frequent that Ministry we can best profit by 253. Cautions for them that leaue their owne Pastors to heare others 268. 270. Their goodnes badnes is of great force to hearten or discourage their ministers 293. 295 Though they may affect some Minister more then other yet must they reuerence loue euery faithfull Minister 305. 309. They that haue truth of grace will gladly shew kindnesse to Gods faithfull Ministers 315. 285. The chiefe kindnesse they can shew to their Teachers is to make vse of their gifts and obey their Doctrine 319 320 321. A good signe of Election to profit by that thou hearest presently and by all thou hearest yet all the Elect do not so 305. 308. They must yeeld honour to their Ministers that consists in foure things 358. 362. The Ministers weakenesses should not cause any to despise their Ministry 371. 372. They should esteeme their own minister best the true cause why they do not 366 367. 342. When they are said to receiue Gods Ministers 374. Try thy estate by the iudgement thou hast to discerne of sound teaching 313. The sin both of curious careles hearers 151 A dangerous signe to enioy long good meanes and not to profit by it 305 ●…06 Praise God euen for the great variety of able teachers thou enioyest 308 309. Seeke to liue vnder such a ministry as thou maist profit by 199. What hearers they be that do rightly commēd and praise their Teachers 199. Heare with iudgement 291. They should propound their doubts to their Teachers 227 228. Hearers duty 227. Hearing men of better gifts breeds a loathing of the gifts of their owne Pastor ●…09 It is the Hearers fault that he profits not by the meanest Minister 309. Hearers ought to go with an open heart willing to learne whatsoeuer shall please God to teach them 312. Hearers ought likewise to go with a resolutiō to obey what shall be taught thē of God 312 Hearers ought not to dispute against any truth reuealed of God by their Minister though it be contrary to their reason humour 312. Hearers may not refuse information from any though their inferiour 312. It argues an vngracious heart when a man cannot be perswaded of a truth 314. Partiality in bearers and the grounds thereof 306 307. Holines of places or things Though before Christs death some places were holier then others yet now none are so 153 150. Reasons against popish superstition in this point 15●… Humiliation It pleaseth God highly to see vs hunbled when he shewes himselfe angry 403. Hypocrisie The naturall man hath selfe respects in all the shewes he makes of goodnesse 55. 58. Many loue Religion for their worldly aduan tage 56. God cannot abide the seruice that hypocrites do vnto him 193. Yet must they serue God for all that 194. There be three kinds of hypocrites 198 199. He strengthens himselfe in his sin euen by the Word 57. The Hypocrite is in a wofull case 58. 465. Yet many good things may bee in him 467. 481 482. I. Idlenesse It is a sin and prouocation to lust 92. I●…wes The Church of the Iewes was extreamely corrupt in Christs time 165. The Church of the Iewes is the Mother and Primitiue Church from which all true Churches are deriued 175. 179. How vnlikely it is that that people should find mercy with God aboue all other people 177. Yet so it shall be and the reason of it 177 178 How wee should stand affected to the name and nation of the Iewes 179 180. Ignorance It is the chiefe cause of prophanes al sin 16 The danger of it 16 17. 137 138. How men are kept from the sense of that danger 17 18. The extreame ignorance of most people 18. 152 Wilfull ignorance will bee no aduantage to any 424. Comfort for the faithfull that complaine of it ●…15 The extreame blockishnesse of all men by nature 27. Impatiencie It is a iudgement that iewd men haue cause to feare 83 84. Impenitencie Sin is neuer the lesse dangerous to a man because men punish it not 77 78 79. 388. Impenitencie in sin 68. Infidelity Men are apt to belieue God no further then they see meanes of helpe 30. Remedies against this corruption 31 32. It is a most hainous sin 32. Gods people need not despaire of helpe from him in any distresse 3●… Foure preseruatiues against the doubting of the truth of Gods Word 415. The danger of them that cannot belieue the Word and that most that liue in the Church are such 416. And of such as cannot be perswaded of many truths though most clearely taught 424 Infirmities God will not reiect the seruices of his people for their infirmities 97. The regenerate haue infirmities but no reigning sins 452. All men are too apt to despise their brethren for their infirmities see remedies against this corruption 458. The Lord is displeased euen with the infirmities of his children 452. Yet will not reiect his children for their infirmities 452. Intent A good intent how farre forth it makes mens actions good 433. Ioy. We should ioy much in the conuersion and forwardnesse of others 266. 268. Faith breeds ioy in the heart 336. 436. Foure meanes of sound ioy 436. 440. Vaine is the ioy of all carnall men 437. Day of Iudgement Why the Lord hath appointed it to be at the end of the world 297. Iudgements of God The Lord cannot endure to see men sleight and contemne his iudgements 403 404. See commonnesse of sin and signes and Common-wealth Iudging rashly Despaire of none so long as they haue the meanes and are willing to heare 30●… How far forth we are bound to esteeme well of all that professe the feare of God 457 458 See infirmities K. Kneeling It is the fittest gesture to bee vsed in prayer 124. 134. The sin of such as drink healths kneeling 134. Knowledge We should labour to breed it in all we haue charge of 18. 205. The meanes to bring men vnto it 20. 140. All knowledge in Religion argues not truth of grace 21. 203. 204. How many wicked men attaine to a great measure of it 204. Sauing knowledge is to be sought for 22. He that hath it feeles the want of it and desires increase 22. How it may be differenced from that that is naturall ●…3 206. 469. It cannot be attained without an effectuall knowledge of sin 64. More is required of some then others yet all must seeke for a cleere and certaine knowledge in Religion 1●…6 No man can know God aright but by his Word and the difference of the knowledge got by other meanes and this 160. No vprightnes of heart without sanctified knowledge 468 469. Carnall men attaine to knowledge of the truth and how 204. Why God imparts it vnto them
troubles were not so strong there as in Iudea and about Ierusalem Now in his iourney from Iudea into Galile he went through Samaria not of set purpose to teach the Samaritans for as he forbad his Disciples when he sent them forth to preach to enter into the Cities of the Samaritans and bad them goe onely to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel so he saith of himselfe that he was not sent but vnto the lost sheepe of the house of Israel but by occasion onely because it lay directly in his way from that part of Iudea where he was into Galile and therefore the Euangelist saith He must needs go through Samaria As he passed through that countrey he came to Sychar a City of Samaria that was famous in sundry respects for Iacob had dwelt there and giuen to Ioseph his best beloued Sonne his possession neare vnto it and digged a Well which to this day remained and bare the name of Iacobs Well Vpon this Well our Sauiour sate him downe both because he was weary with trauaile and also because he was a thirst and it was about noone For to shew himselfe to be very man and how he was content to take on him the forme of a seruant and debase himselfe for our sakes he tooke our nature with all the infirmities thereof excepting sin and was as it seemeth euen more wearied and weakened with trauell and more thirsty also then his Disciples were for they were able to go further into the City without resting themselues or desiring water As he was sitting thus vpon the Well to rest coole and refresh himselfe There came a woman of Samaria to draw water and he asketh her some to drinke Not so much because he did thirst after drinke though indeed he did so as hath beene said for he knew before she spake what she would answer him and how she would deny him as because he thirsted after the saluation of this wretched woman and would take occasion hereby to conferre with her and to instruct her For so soone as he was entred into conference he forgetteth his thirst and desireth no more any water of her Now the Euangelist saith the occasion he tooke to aske her water was this that his Disciples whose seruice he might haue vsed for the drawing of him some water were gone into the City to buy meat For our Sauiour though he had no house and land of his owne yet he liued not by begging nor of meere almes but had money of his owne which his hearers and friends bestowed on him The woman perceiuing both by his speech and apparell that he was a Iew giueth him no water but wondereth that he being a Iew should aske any of her being a Samaritan and giueth this for the reason why she wondred because such was the mortall hatred that the Iewes did beare to the Samaritans partly by reason of their difference in Religion and partly because of the old iniuries that they had receiued from them as that the Iewes medled not at all nor would haue any dealing with the Samaritans Hereupon follow the words that I haue now read vnto you wherein our Sauiour doth neither reiect her in wrath for being so void of humanity as not to giue a little water to one that asked it in his need nor answereth directly her question nor importuneth her further for water but gently reproueth her yet not for denying water but for not making that vse of him she should haue done and taketh occasion thereby to discourse vnto her of another manner of water that he had to bestow vpon her which she would haue asked of him if she had knowne him But yet because he would draw her on to further speech and stirre vp in her a desire to question and inquire of him he doth not in plaine termes deliuer his meaning to her but in a parable as if he should haue said thus vnto her Thou takest me to be an ordinary Iew and therefore refusest to gratifie me in this small thing but if thou knewest me well and what a gift the Lord maketh offer of vnto thee and all his people in sending me into the world thou wouldest haue esteemed of me better then thou doest thou wouldest haue thought thy selfe not good enough to haue giuen me water but wouldest haue begged of me and I would haue giuen thee a better and farre more excellent kind of water then this is that I haue desired of thee Now there are in these words three principall things to be obserued 1. What it was that he had to bestow on her and which he was desirous to haue bestowed on her water of life by which though in the letter he meaneth spring-water for so she vnderstood him and so is this word vsed Gen. 26. 19. Isaaks seruants digged in Gerar a Well of liuing water yet thereby as by a Metaphor he meant the Spirit of God 2. What her duty was to haue done and how she might haue obtained this water of life She should haue asked it and he would haue giuen it her 3. What the cause was why she asked it not She knew not Christ whom he calleth here that gift of God and who was the person that now spake vnto her The first thing then that offereth it selfe in these words to our consideration is this that our Sauiour calleth the spirit of regeneration water of life For that he meaneth this of the Spirit it is euident both by that which he saith ver 14. where also we shall haue more fit occasion to inquire why he calleth it Spring water or water of Life and more plainly Ioh. 7. 38 39. Where when he had said He that belieueth in me out of his belly shall flow riuers of water of life in the next verse the Euangelist interpreteth him thus This spake he of the spirit from thence then we haue this to learne That the Spirit of God in what heart soeuer it dwelleth is in effect and operation like vnto water For the proofe of this all those places might be brought where the Spirit of God is compared vnto water but I will content my selfe with one or two Esa. 44. 3. the promise which in the beginning of the verse is made I will powre water vpon the thirsty and flouds vpon the dry ground is interpreted thus in the latter end of the same verse I will powre my Spirit vpon thy seed and my blessing vpon thy buds So Ioh. 3. 5. Unlesse a man be borne againe of water and the spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdome of God In which respect also it is vsed in Baptisme to signifie not onely the bloud of Christ but the spirit of regeneration also The reason is the great similitude that is between the Spirit of God and water in effect and operation which may be discerned principally in foure points First whereas before a man be regenerate the Lord is to him and in his
apprehension as a consuming fire as the Apostle speaketh Heb. 12. 29. He neuer thinketh seriously of him and of his appearing before him but he is troubled and ready to say with them Esa. 33. 14. Who among vs shall dwell with the deuouring fire the Spirit of God and nothing but it like water allayeth this heat cooleth and refresheth the soule of man for by it the loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5. 5. and the bloud of Christ is effectually applied and sprinkled vpon the conscience Secondly whereas before a man be regenerate he is like vnto the dropsie man in a continuall thirst or like him that hath the disease which is called the dogs hunger neuer satisfied neuer contented the Spirit of God like water quencheth this thirst and satisfieth the soule of man by it the hungry soule is filled with good things as the blessed Virgin speaketh Luk. 1. 53. by it the soule is satisfied as with marrow and fatnesse As Dauid speaketh Psal. 63. 3. This by the assurance that it giueth to the heart of the fauour of God in Christ worketh that contentment in it as it makes a man able to say as Iacob did when he heard that Ioseph was aliue Gen. 45. 28. It is enough He that hath once receiued the spirit of grace which is the pledge and earnest of our eternall inheritance will be able out of full contentednesse of mind to glory with Dauid Psal. 16. 6. The lines are fallen to me in pleasant places yea I haue a goodly heritage And whereas nothing so much hindereth the tranquillity of our minds as the immoderate desire of worldly things the Spirit of God slaketh that thirst and vnsatiable desire and teacheth vs to be contented with a little A little wealth a little pleasure a little credit will content vs when we haue this spirit Therefore when Paul had said that Godlines with contentment that is which alwaies maketh a man content with his owne estate is great gaine 1 Tim. 6. 6. he tels vs immediately how meane a state a man will be content with if he be godly indeed if we haue food and raiment saith he v. 8. So that he that hath the spirit of grace vseth not these earthly things with that thirst and greedy appetite that other men doe but with more sobriety and indifferency of mind Vsing but not ouer-using them 1. Cor. 7. 31. vsing them so as he can want them if need be I may do all things saith Paul 1 Cor. 6. 12. but I will not be brought vnder the power of any thing and Phil. 4. 11. 12. I haue learned in whatsoeuer state I am therewith to be content I know how to be abased c. Thirdly whereas a man before he be regenerate is filthy and vncleane his words vncleane Mat. 15. 18 his best actions vncleane Pro. 15. 5. but his heart especially more filthy then any sinke Ier. 17. 9. yea so filthy that as he that was vncleane vnder the Law made euery thing he touched vncleane Num. 19. 22. yea though the thing were otherwise holy Hag. 2. 14. so is it in this case Tit. 1. 15. Vnto them that are defiled and vnbelieuing is nothing pure And thus filthy is the vnregenerate man not in the Lords eyes onely as the Lord speaketh Zach. 11. 8. My soule loathed them and in the eyes of euery good man Pro. 29. 27. An vniust man is an abomination to the iust but euen in his owne eyes also when God shall be pleased to open them Insomuch as the man that taketh most pride in himselfe if the Lord should lay him naked to himselfe would loath and abhorre himselfe as Iob saith he did Iob. 42. 6. If the Lord should break vp that sink that is in him he would not be able to abide himselfe as in that fearefull example of Iudas Mat. 27. 4 5. we may plainely see Now where the Spirit of God commeth it like water cleanseth all things it makes the heart cleane the tongue cleane the whole man cleane The feare of the Lord is cleane saith Dauid Psal. 19. 9. and Ezek. 36. that which is said vers 25. I will powre cleane water vpon you and you shall be cleane is thus expounded vers 26. 27. A new heart will I giue you and a new spirit will I put within you I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walke in my statutes The Spirit of God is this cleane water that maketh vs cleane Fourthly whereas a man before his regeneration is as barren and vnfruitfull as any desert and thereunto compared Esa. 32. 15. 16. yea as vnable to do speake or moue to any thing that is good as a dead man is Eph. 2. 1. Altogether vnprofitable not one that doth good no not one as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 3. 12. Where the Spirit of God comes like water it makes the heart fruitfull vnto God it maketh our desart like Eden and our wildernesse like to the garden of the Lord as the Prophet speakes Esa. 51. 3. Insomuch as though euery one that hath the Spirit of God be not in the like measure fruitfull for in the good ground the seed brings forth in some but thirty in some sixty in some an hundred fold Mar. 4. 8. yet euery one is fruitfull in some measure yea able to bring forth his owne fruit in due season as the Prophet speaketh Psal. 1. 3. Able not onely to wish well and haue good motions but to speake and do well also He that was lame before shall leape as an Hart and the tongue of him that was dumbe before shall sing Esa. 35. 6. yea the Spirit of God makes him that hath it able euen in the time of heat of persecution to continue fruitfull as the tree planted by the waters that spreadeth out her roots by the riuer which shall not see when heat commeth but her leafe shall be greene and shall not be carefull in the yeare of drought neither cease from yeelding fruit Ier. 17. 8. This Doctrine serueth for a touch-stone for euery one to try himselfe by we all professe that we are baptized and so washed with this water euen borne again of water and of the holy Ghost Ioh. 3. 5. without which we shall be as much the better for our outward Baptisme as the wicked Egyptians were by the Red Sea which was a type of it 1 Co. 10. 2. that which was the means of safety and escape vnto Gods people was a meanes of vtter perdition vnto them Neh. 9. 11 and as they are for the Lords Supper that receiue it vnworthily He that eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh damnation vnto himselfe saith the Apostle 1 Corinth 11. 29. We professe we haue the Spirit of God and indeed our case is most miserable without it If any man haue not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8. 9. Let vs try our selues by this Doctrine
fragments and superficiall beginnings of true sanctification and grace may fall quite away and lose them Heb. 6. 4 5. Such as haue beene inlightened and tasted of Christ and of the good word of God and powers of the world to come and haue beene partakers of the Holy Ghost may fall away 2. Pet. 2. 20. 22. Such as had escaped from the filthinesse of the world through the acknowledgement of the Lord and of the Sauiour may be intangled therein againe and ouercome so as that their latter end may become worse then euer their beginning was But he that hath not onely tasted but drunke a sound draught of this water of life and let it downe can neuer lose it neuer cast it vp againe 4. A man that hath not only tasted but drunk of this water of life and truly receiued the Spirit of sanctification may seeme to haue lost it somtime for he may decay for a time in the measure of grace and lose the heate and feruency of the spirit that once he had as Christ complaines of the Angell of the Church of Ephesus he had left his first loue Apoc. 2. 4. 2. He may for a time lose the comfortable feeling assurance of grace and be in his owne sense as a man vtterly void of grace This was the case of the Spouse of Christ Cant. 3. 1. 2. and 5 6. Her well-beloued was gone 3. Hee may lose for a time the power and e●…icacie and operation of grace and fall into as grosse sinnes as any other man Dauid and Peter may be examples of this yea the best are in great and continuall danger to fall thus if they take not great heed vnto themselues Nay it is a very hard thing for any of Gods children to keepe themselues from these decayes Therefore are those exhortations so often vsed 1. Cor. 10. 12. Wherefore let him that thinketh hee standeth take heed least hee fall Heb. 12. 15. Looking diligently least any man faile of the grace of God least any roote of bitternesse springing vp trouble you and thereby many bee defiled Phil. 2. 12 13. Wherefore my beloued as ye haue alwaies obeyed not as in my presence onely but now much more in my absence worke out your saluation with feare and trembling For it is God that worketh in you both to will and to doe of his owne good pleasure You see then how euen they that haue indeed drunke of this water of life may seeme to haue it quite dryed vp in them But yet though this seeme so it is not so indeed for in all those three cases I haue mentioned ye shall see the children of God that had drunke of this Water of life they had in themselues this Well of water they had grace in them euen then when they seemed to haue lost it There is soundnes of grace in many a one that is much decaied in zeale as is plaine in the case of that Angell of Ephesus Apoc. 2. 2 3. Notwithstanding this his delay in his first loue the Lord knew approued of his workes and commendeth him for his labour and his patience and for this that he could not beare with them that were euill and that he tryed them that said they were Apostles and were not that he had borne and had patience and for his names sake had laboured and had not fainted 2. There is much grace in many a one that haue lost for a time their feeling as is plaine in the example of the Spouse Cant. 5. 6. She grieues and neuer giues ouer seeking till she had found her beloued 3. There remaineth grace in the regenerate euen then when they haue falne most fearefully Whosoeuer is borne of God saith the Apostle 1 Ioh. 3. 9. doth not commit sin for his seede remaineth in him and he cannot sin because he is borne of God the seede of God remaineth in him and therefore he cannot sinne as other men doe he cannot sin with the full consent of his will with the full sway of his soule as before he did This is euident in the example of Dauid for when he complaines as if he had quite lost the spirit Psal. 51. 11 12. Euen then he prayeth and prayeth so as he could neuer haue done if he had not had the spirit of grace in him For how can men call vpon him in whom they haue not beleeued saith the Apostle Rom. 10. 14. and Rom. 8. 26. it is the spirit it selfe that maketh intercession for vs and makes vs able to pray Hauing thus cleared the Doctrine let vs heare how it may be confirmed Let vs hearken vnto some plaine and pregnant testimones of holy Scripture to prooue this that whosoeuer hath truely receiued the Spirit of grace can neuer lose it Psal. 15. When Dauid had spoken of sundry fruits of regeneration hee concludes the Psalme thus verse 5. Hee that doth these things shall neuer be moued Psalme 19. 9. The feare of the Lord is cleane and endureth for euer Psal. 23. 6. Surely goodnesse and mercy shall follow me all the daies of my life So he that heares the Word and doth it is compared to a house that is built vpon a rocke which no raine nor flouds nor windes nor tentations how strong soeuer can ouerthrow Matth. 7. 24. 25. And Luke 8. 13. 15. Though the other hearers beleeue but for a time yet he that with an honest and good heart heares the Word shall keepe it Iohn 6. 56. Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud abideth in mee In which respect sauing grace is called The good part that shall not bee taken away Luk. 10. 42. The immortall seede 1. Peter 1. 23. and was fitly resembled by that fire that came downe from heauen that neuer went out Leuit. 6. 12. The Reasons of this are principally three 1. The vnchangeablenesse of Gods loue and decree No man hath receiued the Spirit but onely such as God hath elected to saluation and loued in Christ before all worlds Rom. 8. 30. Whom hee predestinated them he called and none but them Acts 13. 48. So many as were ordained to eternall life beleeued Therefore true faith is called Titus 1. 1. The faith of Gods Elect. A man may make his election sure this way 2. Pet. 1. 10. Now such as are elected cannot possibly fall away this our Sauiour speakes of as of a thing vtterly impossible The false Christs and false Prophets shall shew so great signes and wonders that they shall deceiue if it were possible the very elect faith lie Matth. 24. 24. The loue of God in Christ is vnchangeable Ier. 31. 3. I haue loued thee with an euerlasting loue saith the Lord therefore in mercy haue I drawne thee Whom Christ loues Iohn 13. 2. he loues vnto the end And those that come to him that is which beleeue in him Iohn 6. 35. he will neuer cast away Iohn 6. 37. The gifts and calling of God saith the Apostle Rom 11. 29. that is such
as Rom. 16. 18. They that are such serue not our Lord Iesus Christ but their owne belly And thus much for the first point 2. The second point wherein I told you the truth of this Doctrine may appeare is this That there is no truth which the naturall man receiues but he turnes and applies to his carnall aduantage he reades and heares onely in hope to find contentment to his flesh The most holy and wholsome parts of Gods truth he vnderstandeth carnally and applies to the feeding of his owne humour and contentment of his flesh This is the onely vse tha●… they make of all that they heare and read that they may sinne with more contentment and quiet of mind Euen as the spider that gathereth poyson of euery flower Unto them that are defiled and vnbelieuing is nothing pure but their minds and consciences are defiled Tit. 1. 15. Whensoeuer they come to heare Gods Word they bring with them an Idoll in their heart some corruption or other and whatsoeuer they read or heare they turne to the seruice of their owne Idoll Ezek. 14. 1 3. These men haue set vp their Idoll in their hearts and put the stumbling block of their iniquity before their face Yea it is certaine that many wicked men receiue not that confirmation that quiet and contentment to their heart in their sinne by any thing in the world as they do by the blessed and holy Word of God Such there were in the Apostles dayes Rom. 3. 8. who did affirme that the Apostles said Let vs do euill that good may come of it They wrest the Scriptures saith the Apostle 2. Pet. 3. 16. to their owne destruction They turne the grace of our God into lasciuiousnesse saith another Apostle Iude 4. Thus most men peruert these most comfortable Doctrines that are taught in sundry places in the holy Scripture as that in Mat. 24 24 that it is not possible for the elect to be deceiued or to perish And that in Rom. 4. 5. To him that worketh not but belieueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse And that Rom. 6. 14. Ye are not vnder the Law but vnder grace And that 1. Ioh. 2. 1 2. If any man sinne we haue an aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world And that sentence wherewith we begin our Lyturgie which though not in the same words yet in sense and effect is deliuered by the Prophet Ezek. 18. 21 22. At what time soeuer a sinner doth repent him of his sinnes from the bottom of his heart I will put all his wickednesse out of my remembrance saith the Lord. And this is also the cause why they will heare and conferre with and moue questions to the best Preachers of the Word because they are in hope to get some what from them that they may make to serue for their purpose and if they can it will quiet and comfort them more then the speeches or iudgements of an hundred other men It is true indeed they loue the corruptest teachers best the good fellow Priest Mic. 2. 11. If a man walking in the spirit and falshood do lie saying I will prophecie vnto thee of wine and of strong drinke he shall euen be the Prophet of this people But yet they will not onely heare such but the best also in hope to heare from them somewhat that may serue their turne These are like Balaam that when God had giuen him his answer Num. 22. 12. yet out of this hope he waited still for another answer verse 19 20. So Ahab 1. King 22. 16. had wont oft to send for Michaia and to charge him to speake nothing but the truth why so It would haue comforted him more to haue gotten somewhat from Michaia for his turne then from all the foure hundred Prophets besides Thus you see then this second point confirmed which I obserued to you concerning the affection that a naturall man beares vnto the Word Now as this is a fearefull sinne so two things are to be obserued concerning the dangerous estate of these men 1. That in all the places where the Scripture speakes of them there the Holy Ghost sets a black marke vpon them and speakes of them as of Reprobates the Apostle Paul speaking of such as peruerted the Word and Doctrine that he taught whose damnation is past saith he Rom. 3. 8. And Peter speaking of them that wrested the Scriptures saith 2. Pet. 3. 16. that they did it to their owne destruction And Iude saith of them that turned the grace of God the doctrine of Saluation by Gods free grace onely into lasciuiousnesse that they were of old ordained vnto this condemnation Iude 4. 2. That the Lord hath threatned to feed these men in their humour so as such men do neuer lightly read or heare but somwhat they find that may serue their turne To Ahab that was vnwilling to be faithfully taught and acquainted with the will of God but willing to be flattered and deceiued God sent a lying spirit with efficacy of terrour Thou shalt perswade him saith the Lord 1. King 22. 22. And preuaile also go forth and do so And of euery one that hauing set vp his Idoll in his heart came vnto the Prophet the Lord saith Ezek. 14. 4. That he himselfe would answer that man according to the multitude of his idols 3. The third point The naturall man will be ready to forsake and renounce any truth that he hath seeme●… to haue beene best grounded in and to haue receiued with greatest comfort when once it becomes an occasion of losse or trouble to him in the world while peace and prosperity lasts he may seeme to like the Gospell and euery truth of it as well as any man but if he cannot professe it without interrupting his peace he is ready to renounce it See the proofe of this in the hearer of the Word that is resembled to the stony ground Mat. 13. 20. 21. He heareth the word and anon with ioy receiueth it but when tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word by and by he is offended And in that rich man that had seemed for a time full of zeale and deuotion towards Christ Mar. 10. 17. 22. Of these the Apostle saith that because they are enemies to the Crosse of Christ and mind earthly things therefore their belly is their God and their end damnation Philip. 3. 18 19. 1. To teach vs how to iudge of others that make profession of Religion and shew loue to the Word Praise God when thou seest any how lewd soeuer they haue beene to do so and hope the best and fret not nor like worse of our assemblies and Religion for this as the Pharisees did of Christ because the Publicans resorted to him Luke 15. 2. But yet build not too much vpon this as if that
2. The tongue of the wise vseth knowledge aright To the application of the Word a speciall Wisdome is required 1. Corinth 12. 8. The Pastours gift whose worke stands principally in application is called there the word or vtterance of wisdome 2. Sinne must so be reproued as that the credit and estimation of the person that sinneth may be preserued as much as may be Priuate sinnes must not be made publike Our Sauiour therefore here when he discouers to this Woman her secret sinne doth it in secret betweene them two hee would not haue so much as any of his Disciples by This our Sauiour giues for a rule to be obserued by all that desire to win their brother Mat. 18. 15. Goe and tell him his fault betweene him and thoe alone Yet neuerthelesse this must be done by all that would win soules to God they must plainely and particularly discouer to them their sinnes Let them do it with as much wisdome as they can and with as much loue as they can so they do it This must needs be done This is made a chiefe part of the office and dutie of a Minister when the Apostle had deeply charged Timothy 2 Tim. 4. 12. to preach the word and to be instant in season and out of season he tells him how he should performe that duty to doe it well reproue saith he yea rebuke exhort c. and the contrary noted as the most proper mark of a false Prophet Lam. 2. 14. Thy Prophets haue looked out vaine and foolish things for thee they haue not discouered thine iniquity Yea this must be done 1. Particularly and plainly that the party may feele himselfe and his owne sin touched as plainly appeareth by the Prophet Nathans dealing with Dauid 2. Sam. 12. 12. Thou art the man yea 2. If they be publike and scandalous sins they must be reproued publikely 1. Tim. 5. 20. 3. It must be done effectually and zealously Cry aloud saith the Lord Esa 58. 1 2. lift vp thy voice like a trumpet Yea 4. In some cases with sharpnesse and bitternesse also Tit. 1. 13. Rebuke them sharply This sharpnesse Christ himselfe vsed sometimes Mat. 23. 33. Ye serpents ye generation of vipers how can ye escape the damnation of hell The Reason of this is the benefit that comes to Gods people by hauing their sinnes thus plainely and effectually discouered vnto them 1. Till men haue the true sense and knowledge of sinne they can neuer vnderstand rightly or clearely belieue any thing in Religion with any certainty or assurance This we haue an experiment of in this poore woman how blockish was she till Christ reuealed vnto her her sin and one chiefe reason why she was so vnable to vnderstand the Word of Christ was because she liued securely in a grieuous sin As the earth cannot receiue the seed till it be plowed vp so the heart of man cannot receiue the Word till the Lords plow haue been in it This comparison the Holy Ghost vseth Ier. 44. A kind of knowledge in Religion I grant is in many that liue securely in grieuous sinnes and neuer had their consciences touched with an effectuall knowledge and sense of sinne but you neuer knew any such that did attaine to a cleare and certaine knowledge The Lord will teach sinners saith Dauid Psal. 25. 8. that is such as know and feele themselues to be most miserable and grieuous sinners in the way and vers 9. The meeke such he means as are made meeke this way such as through pouerty of spirit and mourning for that are made meeke and humble according to that gradation our Sauiour vseth Mat. 5. 3 4 5. will he guide in iudgement and the meeke will he teach his way And of the rest the Apostle Paul saith that such as haue pleasure in vnholinesse and vnrighteousnesse cannot receiue the loue of the truth no nor belieue the truth but shall be apt to belieue lies and to be seduced 2. Thess. 2. 10 12. 2. Till men haue the true knowledge and sense of sinne they can neuer know Christ to the comfort and saluation of their owne soules Of this also we haue an experiment in this poore Woman of Samaria She neuer knew the gift of God nor who it was that spake vnto her she knew not Christ aright nor esteemed of him till he had discouered to her her sinne Such onely are fit to come to Christ Matth. 11. 28. Such and such onely shall be refreshed by him as are weary and heauy laden this way And indeed that no man can come to true comfort till he haue the true knowledge and sense of his sinne is euident by this that no man can find mercy with God for the pardon of his sinne till he can with a penitent and humbled heart confesse his sinne vnto God Prouerb 28. 13. He that couereth his sinnes shall not prosper but he that confesseth and forsaketh them shall find mercy And therefore Dauid vseth this as a reason to moue God to mercy Psalme 51. 3. For I acknowledge my transgressions and my sinne is euer before me Many thinke that the Ministry that plainely and powerfully rebuketh sinne serues to no other vse then to bring men to despaire and to fill them with melancholy but this is a fond conceit The true knowledge and sense of sinne is the onely way to comfort Iohn 16. 7 8. Christ saith the Spirit the Comforter which he would send should reproue and conuince the world The Spirit of God neuer comforted any till he had first reproued and conuinced them Therefore Paul reioyced greatly to heare of the Corinthians sorrow 2. Cor. 7. 7. and tels them ver 8. That he repented him not that he had made them sorrowfull and saith ver 9. That he had done them no hurt at all in reprouing them so sharply and bringing them to such heauinesse and giues this for the reason of it ver 10. Godly sorrow causeth repentance neuer to be repented of but worldly sorrow causeth death And the Apostle Iames when he had exhorted them to humiliation for sin and said Iam. 4. 9. Be afflicted and mourne and weepe let your laughter be turned to mourning and your ioy into heauinesse He preuents this obiection and tels them ver 10. if you be once thus humbled then he will lift you vp as if he should say that is the way to sound comfort according to that promise he had spoken of ver 6. God resisteth the proud and giueth grace to the humble 3. Till men haue the true knowledge and sense of sin their hearts can neuer be subdued to the obedience of God nor come to a true reuerence and feare of God This also may be seene in this poore woman till Christ told her of her sin she answered him scornfully and reiected him and obiected and reasoned against him What was it in the Ministery of Peter that wrought that wonderfull conuersion when about three thousand soules receiued the word gladly and were
which will quite change your nature and disposition when you haue once rightly receiued it Count it not pride in the Minister to reproue the sin of any that liues vnder his charge For 1. He hath authority to do it he is set ouer them in the Lord 1. Thes. 5. 12. and therefore hath authority to admonish them He speaks to them in Gods name and by commission from him And who may think himself too good to receiue a reproof from the Lord Heare ye and giue eare saith the Prophet Ier. 13. 15. Be not proud for the Lord hath spoken The faithfull Minister vnto his hearers in Christs stead 2. Cor. 5. 20. 2. The faithfull Minister takes no pride in it but performs it vnwillingly see how Gods holy Prophets haue bewailed their own condition by reason of this task that God hath laid vpon them Wo is me my mother saith Ieremy Ier. 15. 10. that thou hast borne me a man of strife and a man of contention to the whole earth 2. Desire to be acquainted with thy sins and pray as Dauid Psal. 141. 5. Let the righteous smite me it shall be a kindnesse let him reproue me it shall be an excellent oyle that shall not break my head And as Iob Iob 13. 23. Make me to know my transgressions and sinnes Lecture the foureteenth May 30. 1609. IT followeth that we proceed to the second of those foure points we obserued in these words The sinne he discouers to her was a secret sinne vnknowne to all men For though it were well enough knowne to her selfe both that she liued in fornication and that fornication was a sinne yet may it well appeare that she had the reputation of an honest woman among her neighbours and consequently that her sinne was vnknowne to them For 1. Vpon her motion they came forth vnto him as vnto the Messiah vers 30. 2. Yea many of them belieued in him for the report that this woman gaue of him vers 39. and from hence we learne That the Lord is priuy to all the sins of men and able to lay them open and charge them with them how secretly soeuer they haue been committed Who knowes not this may you say vnto me Or what needs any proofe of a thing that is so plaine and euident Surely there is no man will seeme to make doubt of this and yet it appeares euidently by the liues of men that there be very few that belieue it indeed But there is this secret Atheisme lurking in the hearts of all more or lesse that they either fancy to themselues such a god as the Epicure did that sits idle in the heauens and knowes not or regards not what is done here below or at least are not fully perswaded of this or neuer think seriously of it that God seeth heareth them The Prophets make this secret Atheisme the root of all other sins that men commit neither were they Heathen and Infidels whom they thus charged but such as liued in the Church of God Psal. 10. 11. He hath said in his heart God hath forgotten he hideth his face he will neuer see it Ezek. 9. 9. The land is full of bloud and the City full of peruersnesse for they say the Lord hath forsaken the earth and the Lord seeth not We haue all of vs therefore need to be confirmed in this truth by the Word of God whereby faith onely is wrought in the hearts of men Obserue therefore the proofe of this Doctrine in sixe points 1. There is neuer a one of vs but the Lord knowes vs perfectly what we are and what we haue beene There is not any creature saith the Apostle Heb. 4. 13. that is not manifest in his sight but all things are naked and opened to the eyes of him with whom we haue to do There is nothing that euer any of vs did but the Lord is priuy to it Psal. 119. 168. For all my wayes are before thee 2. We neuer vttered any word but the Lord is priuy to it 2. King 6. 12. The Prophet could tell what the King of Aram spake in his priuy chamber Ps. ●…39 4. There is not a word in my tongue but loe thou knowest it wholly O Lord. 3. We neuer had euill thought in our heart but the Lord is priuy to it Iob 42. 4. I know saith Iob thou canst do all things and that there is no thought hid from thee 4. Yea such of our actions and words and thoughts as haue been most secret most closely and cunningly caried those are not hid from him but those chiefly he hath an eye vnto The Lord is therefore called oft by Christ Our Father which seeth in secret Mat. 6. 4. 6. 18. Psal. 90. 8. Thou hast set our iniquities before thee and our secret sinnes in the light of thy countenance saith Moses When Elihu had said Iob 34. 21. His eyes are vpon the wayes of man and he seeth all his goings he adds vers 22. there is no darknesse nor shadow of death that the workers of iniquity may be hid therein 5. He doth not carelesly cast his eyes vpon that we doe but obserues and markes diligently the things we doe yea he ponders and considers whence it proceeds and whereunto it tends Psalme 11 4. The Lords Throne is in heauen his eyes will consider his eye-lids will try the children of men Prouerb 5. 21. The wayes of man are before the eyes of the Lord and he pondereth all his paths Therefore Prouerbs 24. 12. the Lord is called He that pondereth the hearts The Prophet could tell Gehezi not onely what he had gotten of Naaman but also to what vse he meant to imploy it 2. Kings 5. 26. Went not mine heart with thee when the man turned againe from his Chariot to meet thee Is this a time to take money and to receiue garments and oliues and vineyards and sheepe and oxen and men-seruants and maid-seruants Had Gehezi receiued oliues c No but Elisha in the Spirit set his heart vpon that Gehezi did and considered his intent was to raise and make himselfe great by that money he got so 6. He so obserues vs and all our wayes as he can neuer forget them Therefore he is said to write them in a booke Esa. 65. 6. Behold it is written before me and I will render and recompence it into their bosome And as men do their chiefe euidences which they are most carefull to keepe he is said to lay vp these records in store with him and to keepe them sealed vp amongst his treasures Deut. 32. 34. The reason why this must needs be so the Lord must needs be priuy to all the sinnes euen the most secret sinnes of men are two 1. Because he is present euery where This reason is giuen Ier. 23. 24. When he had said in the beginning of the Verse Can any one hide himselfe in the secret places that I shall not see him he adds do not I fill heauen and earth
saith the Lord. Psal. 139 7. Whither shall I go from thy Spirit or whither shall I flie from thy presence Acts 17. 27. Doubtlesse he is not farre from euery one of vs for in him we liue and moue and haue our being 2. Because he is the Iudge of the whole World and is to iudge euery man righteously according to his workes God shall bring euery worke into iudgement saith the Holy Ghost Eccl. 12. 14. with euery secret thing whether it be good or whether it be euill For though he shall not want witnesses at that day yet it is necessary himselfe should haue perfect knowledge of all the actions of men Esa. 11. 3. He shall not reproue after the hearing of the eares Therefore Dauid Psal. 94. confuting the Atheisme of the wicked that said verse 9. The Lord shall not see vseth among other this argument to conuince them ver 10. He that chastiseth the Nations shall not be correct be that teacheth man knowledge shall not he know The vse of this Doctrine is double 1. This Doctrine if the Lord will be pleased to perswade our hearts to belieue it is most effectuall both to moue our hearts to speedy repentance for sinnes past and to restraine vs from sinne in time to come The thing that most emboldeneth to sinne is the hope of secrecy as we may see Gen. 39. 11. It is said of Iosephs Mistresse that he comming into the house when there was no body within but they two verse 12. Therefore she caught him by the garment c. True it is that there be many that are growne to that impudency that they dare speake or doe any thing whosoeuer be by They declare their sinnes as Sodome Esay 3. 9. Such a one was Absolon 2. Sam. 16. 22. Hee went in to his fathers Concubines in the sight of all Israel Such a one was the vniust Iudge Luke 18. 2. who neither feared God nor regarded man Yea that will the rather sweare and speake filthily when such are by as they know they may grieue by it as counting it a disgrace to be restrained by the presence and reuerence of any man but these are farre gone these sinne supernaturally these are in a fit of frenzie and madnesse company and mirth hath made them madd and desperate as indeed it will doe Eccles. 2. 2. For naturally and for the most part the knowledge of men will 1. Restraine them from sinning and 2. Will worke shame and trouble of mind in them when they haue sinned There are many sinnes that men would neuer commit but that they hope to keepe them secret the presence of a godly man would restraine them yea the presence of a little childe would restraine them Darkenesse and hope of secrecy is the principall encourager of men vnto most sinnes they cannot sinne securely vnlesse they may sinne in secret And in this respect amongst others all sinnes are called the workes of darkenesse Ephes. 5. 11. Therefore Iob speaking of sundry kinds of sinners saith Iob 24. 13. These are they that abhorre the light verse 15. The eye of the adulterer waiteth for the twilight and saith none eye shall see me and disguiseth his face and verse 17. If one know them they are in the terrours of death Now if the knowledge and priuitie that men haue of our sinnes bee of such force how much more would the knowledge the Lord hath of them doe it if men were fully perswaded of it For 1. A man may oft sinne so secretly that no man shall know of it but he hath the Lords eye vpon him at all times though no man seeth him God seeth him Yea hee knowes all our waies perfectly obserues them and takes notice of them so as he can neuer forget them 2. No man can possibly dislike or abhorre vs so much for any sinne as the Lord doth Iob 10. 4. Hast thou carnall eyes or dost thou see as man seeth Hab. 1. 12. Thou art of pure eyes and canst not see euill thou canst not behold wickednesse 3. The more cunning any shall vse in concealing his sin and keeping it secret the more the Lord abhorrs him for it Thus is Achans sin aggrauated Ioshua 7. 11. They haue euen taken of the accursed thing and haue also stollen and dissembled also And so is the sin of Israel 2. King 17. 9. The children of Israel did secretly those things that were not right against the Lord their God 4 As he seeth and disliketh all our sins so he certainely will one day charge vs with them either in this life to our saluation as to this woman here by the ministery of his word as he did that poore man that was before ignorant and vnbelieuing 1. Cor. 14. 24 25. which is indeed the naturall property of the word to do it is a discerner and discouerer of the thoughts and intents of the hart as the Apostle speaketh Heb. 〈◊〉 12. or in the life to come to our confusion as he threatneth wicked men that he will doe at one time or other I will reprooue thee and set thy sins in order before thine eyes saith the Lord Psal. 51. ●…1 and Eccl. 11 9. Know thou that for all these things God will bring thee to iudgement 5. He will also bring the secretest sins of men to light one day and lay them open euen to men Pro 10. 9 He that peruerteth his way shall be knowne 1. Tim. 5. 25. They that are otherwise cannot be hid He doth oft in this life discouer Hypocrites by giuing them vp to the committing of open sins Psal. 125 5. Such as turne aside vnto their crooked wayes the Lord will leade them forth with the workers of iniquity But this shall chiefly be done in the great day of the Lord then will the Lord lighten all things that are now hid in darkenesse and make the counsailes of the hearts manifest 1. Cor. 4. 5. This is the reason our Sauiour vseth to disswade men from hypocrisie Luke 12. 1 〈◊〉 For there is nothing couered that shall not be reuealed neither hid that shall not be knowne The conclusion then of this first Vse is that we would not flatter our selues in the secrecie of our sinnes but seeke the pardon of them and pray with the Prophet Psal. 19. 12. Cleanse thou me from secret faults Seeke to haue them blotted out of the Lords Booke of remembrance that he may neuer charge vs with them And the way to obtaine that is now in the time of grace to lay them open before the Lord and to charge our selues seriously with them with penitent and humbled hearts Pro. 28. 13. He that confesseth and for saketh his sins shall finde mercy For as he to whom sinne is forgiuen shall be sure to haue his sinne couered and hidden with the Lord Psalme 32. 1. So he that by remission and repentance hath them not blotted out shall be sure to haue them laid open and brought to light and though they were
is not onely a sinne but a mother-sinne a cause of many other sinnes it drawes men to many other sinnes yea to other most hainous sinnes Pro. 23. 28. She increaseth the transgressions among men Doe not prostitute thy daughter saith the Lord Leuit. 19. 29. to cause her to be a whore least the land fall to whoredome and the land become full of wickednesse 2. It is not onely a sin but a punishment of other sinnes I might alledge the punishments that God hath beene wont and will certainely inflict on this sin But I reserue that to another place Salomon in Eccles. 7. 26. speaking of the woman Whose heart is as nets and snares and whose hands are as bands he addeth He that is good before God shall be deliuered from her but the sinner shall be taken by her Pro. 22. 14. The mouth of a strange woman is as a deepe pit he with whom the Lord is angry shall fall therein So Rom. 1. 24. Speaking of such as God gaue vp to their hearts lusts and to vncleannesse and verse 26. to vile affections and verse 28. to a reprobate sense hee names the sinnes that prouoked God to deale thus with them verse 28. they regarded not to know God and verse 21. when they knew God they glorified him not as God nor were thankefull And therefore God gaue them vp to this sin Many speake much how this sin abounds in such townes where the Gospell hath beene most plentifully and powerfully preached and thinke they haue great aduantage against religion for it but indeed this makes much for the honour of the Gospell that the Lord cannot indure the contempt of it but vseth to punish it in this fearefull manner And who are they that in such places fall into this sin Surely such as either regard not to know God Rom. 1. 28. Or if they doe know him haue not glorified him as they ought Rom. 1. 21. but haue beene hypocrites and nourished vnder the profession of Religion some grieuous sinne Whoso pleaseth God shall escape from her saith Salomon Eccles. 7. 26. but the sinner shall be taken by her Wonder rather there be not more tainted with this sinne seeing there are so many that regard not to heare and of those that doe heare so many that make no conscience of any thing that they heare 3. There is no sin that is so directly opposite to sanctification and holinesse as this sin Therefore as the Spirit of God is euery where called the Holy Ghost because there is no one worke wherein he shewes himselfe wheresoeuer he dwells more then in holinesse So the wicked spirit is called the vncleane spirit Matth. 12. 43. because there is no one sin whereby it may be better knowne where he dwells and raignes then vncleanesse Of all the sinnes that man committeth there is no one that hath more force to quench the Spirit to dull and banish all grace out of the heart then this sinne hath See the proofe of this 1. Thess. 4. 3. 4. 5. For this is the will of God euen your sanctification that yee should abstaine from fornication That euery one of you should know how to possesse his vessell in sanctification and honour not in the lust of concupiscence euen as the Gentiles that know not God verse 7. For God hath not called you vnto vncleanenesse but vnto holinesse See how sottish Salomon became after he had giuen himselfe to fleshly lusts his nines turned away his heart after other gods saith the Holy Ghost 1. King 11. 4. and his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God Yea it puts out the light and iudgement that was in man by nature they that liued in lust were giuen ouer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Apostl●… Rom. 1. 28. in a minde voide of iudgement 4. There is no sinne that is committed with such delight and pleasure as this is and therefore it must needs bring in the end more bitternesse and anguish to the soule then other sins doe For the more pleasure men haue found in sin the more bitternesse shall they finde in their consciences one day for sin Luke 6. 25. Woe be to you that laugh now for yee shall waile and weepe and 16. 25. Remember thou in thy life time receiuedst thy pleasures now therefore thou art tormented Therefore the Scripture speakes so oft of the bitternesse of this sinne Heb. 12. When he had said verse 15. Let no roote of bitternesse spring vp and trouble you He adds verse 16. Let there be no Fornicator Iob 13. 26. When in the beginning of the verse he had said that the Lord wrote bitter things against him charged him with bitter sinnes he adds what those bitter things were Thou causest me to possesse the sins of my youth These tricks of youth will be bitter to men one day Pro. 5. 3. The lips of a strange woman drop as the hony combe verse 4. But the end of her is bitter as wormewood and sharpe as a two edged sword Eccles. 7. when he had said ver 25. That he had compassed about to know wickednesse and folly the foolishnesse of madnesse he adds verse 26. I finde more bitter then death the woman whose heart is as nets and snares c. Lecture the sixteenth Iune 13. 1609. IT followeth now that wee come to the Vses that are to bee made of the Doctrine we haue heard touching the hainousnesse of the sinne of Fornication which the last day being preuented by the time wee could not deliuer And this Doctrine serues To conuince the iudgement and conscience of them that liue in this sinne without feare For it is euident and all honest men complaine of it that this sin abounds euery where Yea many that esteeme themselues Christians reade the Word heare it come to such assemblies as this sit before vs and looke vs in the face when we speake against this sinne doe yet liue in this sin and liue securely in it as if all that is said out of Gods Word against it were but a Fable And what is the cause of this Surely somewhat there is that deceiues them that they cannot perceiue it is so dangerous a matter to liue in this sin as indeed it is It may truely be said of all sin that Sathan drawes a man to it and hardeneth him in it by some errour of his minde or other whereby he deceiueth him How drew he our first Parents first to sin 1. Tim. 2. 14. The woman was deceiued and found in the transgression 2. Pet. 3. 17. Beware least ye be plucked away with the errour of the wicked and fall from your owne stedfastnesse What is that that hardens a mans heart in sin The Apostle will tell vs Heb. 3. 13. Least any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sin What are those strong holds that keepe the Word and grace of God from entring into and conquering the heart of man The Apostle will tell vs that there are certaine imaginations
they seeme to make conscience of this commandement thou shalt not commit adultery yet there is another commandement Flye fornication auoide all appearance of euill which they make no conscience of at all and therefore they are guilty of hainous sinne Such as vse filthy talke and filthy songs It is strange to see what liberty many euen some that in many things will seeme religious will pray dayly and heare deuoutly will giue to themselues this way Though they haue no other exercise of their wit if their company serue them but in scurrulous iests and filthy communication no such musicke in their mirth as amaroas and filthy songs yet if they can say they are honest for all this they thinke they are well These men I would haue to obserue these things 1. Filthy words whatsoeuer thou sayest doe argue a filthy heart Matthew 15. 18. Those things which proceed out of the mouth come from the heart and they defile the man Matthew 12. 34. From the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Yet haue we many old fornicators whose bodies are disabled to this sinne that haue yet as bad hearts as euer they had and shew that by the delight they take in speaking filthily And yet silly fooles they slatter themselues in this that they haue left that sinne 2. Say thy heart were cleane that is not enough thou must also make conscience of thy words The froward mouth doe I hate saith the Lord Pro. 8. 13. 18. 21. Death and life are in the power of the tongue Matth. 12. 37. By thy words thou shalt bee iustified and by thy words thou shalt bee condemned Iames 1. 26. If any man among you seeme to bee religious and bridle not his tongue but deceiues his owne heart this mans Religion is vaine Ephes. 4 29. Let not corrupt rotten communication come out of your mouthes And 5. 4. Let no filthinesse nor foolish talking nor iesting be once named among you Marke how iesting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is ioyned to filthy talking because men are wont to excuse it thus they speake in iest they meane no hurt we must giue them leaue to be merry Such speech though it be vsed but in iest is condemned This is one kind of that mirth that Salomon speakes of Eccl. 2. 2. I said to laughter thou art mad Pro. 26. 18. 19. Like mad men they cast about them firebrands and deadly things and say they are in sport 3. Our tongue of all the members of our body is giuen of God to be the principall instrument whereby we may glorifie God Therefore it is in the Hebrew Phrase called our glory Psal. 30. 12. Therefore shall my glory praise thee and not cease Iames 3. 9. Therewith blesse we God That is the cause why the Lord can worst endure to be dishonoured by that member Therefore Diues is said to haue felt a speciall torment in his tongue Luke 16. 24. Send Lazarus that he may dippe the tippe of his finger in water and coole my tongue for I am tormented in this flame To conclude pretend and glory neuer so much of thy honesty certaine it is if thou didst flie fornication and hate it as thou oughtest thou durst not accustome thy selfe to thy filthy talke Such as delight in or can endure filthy talke such as will prouoke filthy persons to speake filthily such as will call to the Musitians for the filthiest songs they haue For this is a shrewd signe of a filthy heart specially in women because modesty is chiefely required of that sex it argueth an vncleane heart to delight in the lewd speech of others Pro. 17. 4. A wicked do●… giueth eare to a naughty tongue 1. Certainely it will grieue and vexe an honest heart to heare such things Ephes. 4. 29 30. Let no corrupt communication come out of your mouth verse 30. grieue not the holy Spirit of God It is said of Lot his righteous soule was vexed with hearing such things as he heard in Sodome 2. Pet. 2. 8. 2. There is a speciall force in such speech to corrupt them that heare it 1. Cor. 15. 33. Be not deceiued euill communications corrupt good manners 3. The eare is giuen of God to another end that is to heare the Word and to be sensus disciplinae that sence whereby knowledge should be conueyed into the heart he that hath eares to heare Gods Word he meanes let him heare saith our Sauiour Matth. 11. 15. 4. A good man should not endure him that vseth to bring lies to him and raise slanders Psalme 101. 7. Hee that telleth lies shall not tarry in my sight much lesse should hee endure them that talke filthily 5. If any shall obiect How can I let lewd men from speaking lewdely It is to no purpose to reproue such they would be the worse for it I answer that if honest men would shew that dislike as they might they would not be much troubled with such varlets That which Salomon saith in another case Pro. 25. 23. An angry countenance driueth away a backebiting tongue would hold in this also They might euen with a countenance restraine or chase them away And that which hee speaketh Pro. 20. 8. Is not true of Kings and great men onely though in them principally but of all Christians They may scatter away euill and lewdenesse euen with their eyes and countenance Lecture the twentieth Iuly 11. 1609. IT remaineth now that we come to the second branch of the Apostles Exhortation of which we haue already heard and that is this We are bound out of a holy feare least we should at any time fall into this sinne and out of that detestation we should beare vnto it to shunne all occasions and prouocations that might draw vs to it and to vse all good meanes that may be to preserue vs from it True it is that it is God onely that preserues any of vs from this or any other sinne Psalme 18. 35. Thy right hand hath stayed me and 56. 13. Thou hast kept my feet from falling But the meanes whereby he doth it is by working in vs a feare of falling which makes vs carefully to shunne tentations See how this feare is commended to vs in Gods Word as a wise man feareth and departeth from euill Pro. 14. 16. And blessed is the man that feareth alwaies Pro. 28. 14. and worke out your owne saluation with feare and trembling Phil. 2. 12. 2. An endeauour to vse all meanes that may preserue and strengthen vs from falling I kept my selfe saith Dauid Psal. 18. 23. from mine iniquity and 1. Iohn 5. 18. Hee that is begotten of God keepeth himselfe and that wicked one toucheth him not There is none so strong or full of grace but he may fall into the most fearefull sinnes that are if he be not carefull to shunne temptation and to vse the meanes God hath appointed to preserue him from sinne Therefore Christ chargeth his Disciples both to watch and to pray against
that we may truely say that though we our selues are bound to account the corruption that remaineth in vs an intolerable burden which we must be continually humbled for and groane vnder and striue to lessen and desire to be eased of as the Apostle did Rom. 7. 24. because our most holy and heauenly Father is grieued and offended by it and because it is euer budding and bringing forth in vs such fruits as are most bitter vnto vs and breed vs much woe yet the infinite wisedome and power and goodnesse of our God maketh this a great benefit to vs that we are not in this life perfectly regenerated but that the Lord suffers sinne to dwell in vs so long as we abide in this tabernacle If any man shall demand of me the reasons of this Doctrine the cause why the Lord should thus loue his Elect and be so partiall towards them that though he hates sinne in all and hates the Reprobate and damnes them for their sinne yet he hates not his Elect for their sinnes but loues them euen before there is any grace in them at all euen before they haue repented of their sinnes I can giue no other reason of it but his own good will and pleasure onely he hath mercy on whom he will haue mery saith the Apostle Rom. 9. 18. and Ephes. 1. 11. He worketh all things after the counsell of his owne will And in this it becommeth euery mortall man to rest without inquiry any further and to say with the holy Apostle Rom. 9. 21 22. Hath not the Potter power ouer the clay What if God will doe thus 2. The respect God hath to the Sonne of his loue to whom he gaue them before the world was He hath chosen vs in him saith the Apostle Ephes. 1. 4. before the foundation of the world and verse 6. He hath made vs accepted in his beloued Now of this Doctrine I may say as the Prophet doth in another case Esay 28. 9. To whom shall we teach this Doctrine Who is fit to heare and receiue it The Apostle speakes of some that stumble at the Word 1. Pet. 2. 8. and such there haue euer beene in the Church But there is no part of the Word no truth of God that so many doe stumble at as at this Doctrine of the infinite mercy of God vnto sinners For where shall we finde a man almost that doth not abuse this Doctrine to the incouraging of himselfe to sin and to the hardening of his heart against all checke of conscience for sin yet must this doctrine so cleerely and plentifully deliuered in the holy Scripture and tending so much to the comfort of Gods people be taught though there be neuer so many wicked men that will take hurt by it The childrens bread must not be kept from them because of the dogges that will be ready to snatch it out of our hands when we breake it to them Yet before I giue the children their bread and apply this Doctrine to them vnto whom it onely belongeth I will endeauour to driue away the dogges by shewing that the profane and impenitent sinner that turnes Gods grace into wantonnesse and encourageth himselfe to sinne by the knowledge of Gods mercy hath nothing to doe with this Doctrine nor any cause at all to take comfort in it For 1. All this that is spoken in the Word of Gods mercy belongs onely to the Elect which are therfore called Uessels of mercy not to the Reprobates which are called Vessels of wrath Rom. 9. 22. 23. If thou say I may be one of Gods Elect too I answer thou mayest indeed but till thou knowest thy selfe to be so and canst finde the markes of Election in thy selfe thou canst take no comfort in this Doctrine Therefore euery where in Scripture this mercy of God is restrained to them that feare him the Scripture euery where teacheth that none else haue cause to glory in it or trust to it Psal. 118. 4. Let them that feare the Lord now say that his mercy endureth for euer And 115. 11. Ye that feare the Lord trust in the Lord. 2. This is noted by the Holy Ghost to be a fearefull signe of reprobation and that thou shalt neuer tast of Gods mercy because thou stumblest and takest occasion of being more wicked euen from the pure and holy Word of God and from the doctrine of his mercy 1. Pet. 2. 8. 3. This God whose mercy thou so much gloryest in and the doctrine of whose mercy thou dost so much abuse and Christ Iesus through whom thou trustest to finde him so mercifull will appeare vnto thee one day so terrible as thou shalt cry to the hils and rocks to fall vpon thee to hide thee from his presence Apoc. 6. 15 16. Yea this shall increase thy horrour at that day that thou hast sinned against so mercifull a God and when thou shalt discerne that he that is so infinite in mercy toward others yea haply toward such as were more notorious sinners then thy selfe hath no mercy for thee at all Luk. 13. 28. There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth when ye shall see Abraham and Isaac and Iacob and all the Prophets in the Kingdome of God and you your selues thrust out But to let them passe and to apply this Doctrine to such as to whom indeed it onely belongeth First it serueth for the vnspeakeable comfort of all such as can finde in themselues the assured tokens that they are the Elect of God And indeed this Doctrine is to such the foundation of all true comfort If thy sinne cannot hurt thee nothing can hurt thee neither prosperity nor aduersity life nor death the world nor the diuell For as sinne is the sting of death 1. Cor. 15. 56. So is it of euery other thing that thou hast cause to feare Now if thou be Gods Elect thou mayest be thus secure that though thy sins may make thee subiect to many a correction and scourge in this life yet shall they neuer bee able to separate thee from the loue of God or hinder thy eternall happinesse Euery man therefore that desireth to enioy this comfort must labour to make his election certaine to himselfe and that shall he doe by making his effectuall calling certaine to himselfe 2. Pet. 1. 10. And this is an argument of an effectuall calling when hee findes that through Gods grace he is able vnfainedly to repent of all his sinnes that is so to grieue for offending God by them that he can hate and forsake them For this grace of vnfained repentance is giuen to none but them that are of the Israel of God the Elect of God Acts 5. 31. And the departing from iniquity is made a certaine note of Election 2. Timothie 2. 19. So that if thou finde thy selfe able through Gods grace to repent of thy sinnes there is no cause thou shouldest feare damnation for thy sins or the losse of Gods fauour For if
worship we doe not also adore and giue bodily worship vnto him and by the reuerent behauiour of our body testifie the inward submission and reuerence of our hearts vnto him though our soules therein were neuer so full of reuerence and deuotion yet doe we but serue him by the halues neither can our seruice be acceptable vnto him You shall heare this confirmed to you by the examples of Gods seruants that are commended to vs by the Holy Ghost See the conscience Gods people haue made of this in all the parts of Gods worship Obserue it in fiue points 1. In prayer when they euen in priuate haue prayed to God they haue beene wont to kneele For this we haue the example of Daniel Dan. 6. 10. and of our Sauiour himselfe Luke 22. 41. 2. When they haue giuen thanks though but in priuate they haue vsed adoration When Abrahams seruant perceiued that God had prospered his iourney so far forth as to bring him and guide him safely to Bethuells house presently he lifted vp his heart in thankfullnesse to God yet thought not that enough but Gen. 24. 26. The man bowed himselfe and worshipped the Lord. And as his successe increased so his thankefullnesse to God increased and so did the outward reuerence of his body also verse 52. When Abrahams seruant heard them giue consent that Rebecca might goe with them then he bowed himselfe to the very earth to the Lord. So Iacob being to giue thankes vnto God and vnable through weakenesse to stand or kneele yet in token of reuerence raised himselfe vp to his beds bead and being not able through feeblenesse to sit vpright he leaned and bore himselfe vpon his staffe and so adored God Gon. 47. 31. Heb. 11. 21. See the conscience the good old man made of this duty and the paines he tooke in it 3. When they haue taken an oath they haue beene wont to vse such gestures of their body as might stirre vp reuerence in their hearts Gen. 14. 22. Abraham when he sware he lift vp his hand to the Lord the most high Possessour of heauen and earth 4. When a message hath beene brought them immediatly from the Lord they haue beene wont in token of their reuerence to rise and stand vp Iudges 3. 20. When Ehud told Eglon that he had a message to doe to him from God presently Eglon rose out of his throne though he was a wicked man yet this he doubtlesse had learned from the custome and practice of Gods people So did Balaam likewise require Balaac the King to doe Num. 23. 18. Rise vp Balaac and heare Nehem. 8. 5. When Ezra opened the booke of the Law to reade all the people stood vp Rise vp yee women that bee at ease saith the Lord Esay 32. 9. heare my voice alluding doubtlesse in that speech to the holy custome vsed among Gods people at the first intimation giuen them of a message from God 5. Lastly in the publike and solemne worship of God specially they haue held themselues bound to shew this outward reuerence Psal. 29. 1 2. The Psalmist calls vpon great men to giue to God the glory due to his name and tels them how they may doe that adore him bow your selues to him in his glorious Sanctu●…y So Psal. 95. 6. Marke how many words the Prophet vseth to perswade to this when he calls men to the publike worship Come let vs adore and fall downe and kneele before the Lord our maker Therefore the reuerence to be done in Gods publike worship is made a chiefe meanes to preserue Religion and coupled with the obseruation of the Sabboth Leu. 19. 30. and 26. 2. Ye shall keepe my Sabboths and reuerence my Sanctuary The Reasons of this Doctrine are of two sorts Some concerne the outward reuerence to be vsed in all the parts of Gods worship whether priuate or publike some peculiarly concerne the publike solemne worship of God 1. The humility that befits euery one euen the greatest person to shew when he hath to do with God See this in Dauids speech to Michol 2. Sam. 6. 20. 22. when he danced before the Arke she scoffed at him he answers it was before the Lord and adds I will be more vile and I shall lose no honour by it It is no disparagement for the greatest to debase and humble himselfe to the very dust before the Lord nay we can neuer be humbled enough Behold now saith Abraham Gen. 18. 27. I haue taken vpon me to speake vnto the Lord which am but dust and ashes and indeed who are we euen the best of vs that we should presume to speake vnto God or to appeare before him It becomes all men to cast downe their crownes before him as the 24. Elders did Reu. 4. 10. Yea the holy Angels Esay 6. 2. couer their faces in his presence No seruice we can doe is pleasing to him vnlesse it proceed from an heart humbled in the sense of his high Maiesty and our owne vilenesse Psal. 2. 11. Serue the Lord with feare Mic. 6. 6. Wherewith shall I come before the Lord and bow my selfe before the high God Eccl. 5. 1. Be not rash with thy mouth neither let thine heart be hasty to vtter a matter before God for God is in the heauens and thou in the earth c. 2. Our bodies are the Lords as well as our soules and therefore he will be serued with the body also They are his by right of Creation Redemption Sanctification This Reason the Apostle giues yee are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit which are Gods 1. Cor. 6. 20. 3. That the humility and reuerent gesture of the body may helpe to humble and worke reuerence in the heart Our hearts are profane and stand in need of all good outward helpes to stirre vp deuotion in them That is a chiefe reason why it was vsed both by Daniell 6. 10. and Christ Luke 22. 41. euen in secret prayer and if they needed to doe so how much more doe wee 4. To professe and testifie the humility of the heart and reuerence of the soule Therefore is this put for the whole profession of our homage and obedience to God Vnto me euery knee shall bow Esay 45. 23. Because in matter of Gods seruice hypocrites are wont to pretend they haue as good hearts as the best the Lord is wont also to call so oft for the seruice of the body Let not sinne reigne in your mortall body Rom. 6. 12. and present your body as a liuing sacrifice holy acceptable vnto God Rom. 12. 1. and glorifie God in your body 1. Cor. 6. 20. The reasons of that outward reuerence that is to be vsed specially in the publike and solemne worship of God are three 1. The presence of Gods people There is a reuerence due from the greatest Prince to the meanest of Gods seruants his brother must not seeme vile vnto him no not then when
Congregation according to Christs ordinance or 2. When a family is of it selfe a competent and distinct Congregation and such as vseth to ioyne together in all parts of Gods publike worship without offence to Church-gouernement For so we reade of Baptisme administred in Cornelius house Acts 10. 44. 47. and the Communion in a chamber at Tr●…as Acts 20. 8. But the most solemne and publike and best frequented assemblies of Gods people are much fitter places for Gods publike worship then any priuate Chappell 's or Chambers and to be preferred before them And for any through nicenesse or idlenesse or out of disdaine to ioyne with the base multitude to neglect the Church-assemblies and to rest in their domesticall deuotions is a great sinne See what account the godly made of the publike assembly and what an aduenture they made for it and that euen in such a duty as they might haue performed in priuate namely in prayer Acts 16. 13. Nay see what account our Sauiour himselfe made of the publike assembly Luke 4. 16. his custome was euen before he was a Preacher to frequent the Synagogue euery Sabboth day Three Reasons there be why all men should preferre the worship that is done in most publike assemblies before that that is done in more priuate places 1. The respect of our owne good for we may looke for a greater blessing from God vpon his ordinances in the publike assemblies then in more priuate meetings Euen to our Church assemblies that may be applyed that we reade Psal. 87. 2. The Lord loues the gates of Zion aboue all the habitations of Iacob Matth. 7. 7. Prayer is compared to seeking of a thing that is lost and to knocking at a gate we desire to enter into And when many seeke a thing there is more hope of finding it when many knocke at heauen gates they will be the better heard Therefore when Gods people haue shewed more then ordinary desire to preuaile with God in their prayers they haue shewed more then ordinary care that the assemblies might be as publike as might be Ioel 2. 15. Blow the trumpet in Zion sanctifie a fast call a solemne assembly verse 16. Gather the people assemble the children c. as if he should say leaue none out Iehosaphat 2. Chron. 20. 3. proclaimed a fast throughout all Iudah verse 13. All Iudah stood before the Lord with their young ones wiues and children and Iudg. 20. 20. Then all the children of Israel went vp and all the people came also into the House of God and till then they preuailed not That is the reason also why Hezechias was so carefull to gather such a solemne assembly to keepe the Passeouer 2. Chron. 30. 1 2. 2. The respect we should haue to the good of others for we may much benefit others by our good example Dauid professed he receiued much good by beholding the forwardnesse of his people in going to the House of God Psal. 122. 1 2. How much more good will the example of great men doe of the multitude when they are such diligent frequenters of Gods worship That is the reason why the Lord would haue the Prince not onely to ioyne with Gods people in his seruice but to be in the midst of them that they might all see him Ezek. 46. 10. It is said that the scaffold Salomon made for himselfe in the Temple was in the midst of the Court so as all the people might see him 2. Chron. 6. 12 13. And of King Ioash it is said that so soone as euer Athalia came into the Temple she saw the King stand by the piliar as the manner was 2. King 11. 14. So it is also said of Iosia 2. King 23. 3. By which three examples it is plaine that the Kings seate was so set in the Temple that all might see him there 3. The respect we should haue to the honour of God for the more publike the assembly is wherein we worship God the more publike is the profession which we make of the homage and duty that we owe vnto him Therefore it is required Psalme 29. 12. of great men to worship the Lord in the Sanctuary that so they might giue vnto the Lord the glory due vnto his name That is the reason why Dauid vowed he would giue thankes to the Lord in a great Congregation and praise him among much people Psalm 35. 18. And Hezekiah resolued to goe vp to the House of the Lord the third day so soone as euer he was recouered 2. Kings 20. 8. And Dauid professed that it had beene one of the chiefe comforts he had in the world that he had beene wont to goe with the multitude to leade them to the House of God Psalme 42. 4. Lecture the nine and twentieth October 17. 1609. THe third sort that offend in refusing to be present at Gods publike worship are such as make no conscience to come to the beginning of it and to stay to the end of it I condemne not all that sometimes come after the beginning nor all that sometimes goe out before the end but them that do this ordinarily them that make no conscience of this I condemne nay the Doctrine that I haue taught you out of Gods Word concerning the outward reuerence that we owe to Gods publike worship condemneth such And because I see many of them that haue most knowledge and are forwardest professours offend this way I will manifest the sin of these men in three seuerall respects and considerations 1. They sinne against themselues and they hinder themselues of the profit they might receiue by the worship of God For as he that is away from any part of the Sermon shall profit the lesse by that which he doth heare if he come after it is begun or goe away before it be ended So is there no one part of Gods seruice not the confession not the prayers not the Psalme not the blessing but it concernes euery one and euen one may receiue edification by it as I prooued to you at large not long since Besides it would be a great helpe to mens profiting by Gods seruice if they would not rush suddenly into it out of their worldly businesse or worldly and prophane talke but come so into Gods House that they may haue some time to set their hearts in tune and lay aside all worldly thoughts before Gods seruice doe begin This is that that was signified by that ceremony which God inioyned Moses Exod. 3. 5. Put off thy shooes for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground The promise that is made to our prayers runnes thus Iob 11. 13. If thou prepare thine heart and stretch out thine hands vnto him the stretching out of our hands or of our voice either is to little purpose if our heart be not prepared first If we could say before euery part of Gods seruice as Dauid did Psal. 57. 7. My heart is prepared O my God my heart is prepared I will
words of my mouth are righteous 2. The Reason why no mans word is to be taken in matters of Doctrine or Religion is this because all men are subiect vnto error 1. Cor. 13. 9. There is imperfection in our knowledge and imperfection in our prophecying and teaching of others Rom. 3. 4. Let God bee true and euery man a lyer This is proper to God that he cannot be deceiued himselfe nor deceiue others And Gods people haue beene in great danger in giuing too much credit and authority euen vnto very good men as we may see in these three examples first that of the old Prophet 1. King 13. 18. that of Peter Gal. 2. 13. and that of the brethren who diswaded Paul from going to Ierusalem Acts 21. 12. This Doctrine serueth both for exhortation and for reproofe The first Vse is to exhort euery one of vs to giue this glory vnto Christ as to beleeue him vpon his Word to giue credit vnto the Word of God euen without the testimony or authority of any man yea though we see no reason for it yea though it seeme neuer so contrary vnto our owne reason We must in this case be like Pythagoras his schollers and so rest in that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 When once we heare Thus saith the Lord this must suffice vs in stead of all reason here wee must rest and satisfie our selues This is called the obedience of faith Rom. 16. 26. Yea this is the first and chiefe obedience that God requires of vs discente●… oportet credere The first worke of his grace in vs is to subdue our reason 2. Cor. 10. 5. Casting downe the imaginations and bringing into captiuity euery thought to the obedience of Christ. Till we haue attained to this simplicitie we shall neuer become wise vnto saluation nor come to any comfortable certaintie in the matters of Religion This is that simplicity which is spoken of Psal. 19. 7. The testimony of the Lord is sure and giueth wisedome to the simple and Pro. 1. 4. To giue vnto the simple sharpnesse of wit The second Vse of this Doctrine is to disswade vs from giuing that honour vnto any man as to receiue any thing in Religion vpon his word or credit For this honour as you haue heard belongeth vnto Christa lone The Apostle requires indeed that Gods people should obey them that haue the ouersight of them and subiect themselues Heb. 13. 17. But this obedience is not Coeca obedientia such as the Iesuites bind themselues and their schollers vnto absolute obedience to receiue and beleeue euery thing that they teach but there is liberty and commandement also giuen to all Gods people to try the Doctrine of their teachers whether it be agreeable to the Word of God or no and accordingly to receiue or reiect it You know that the Beraeans are commended for doing this though they had no meaner teachers then Paul and Silas Acts 17. 11. And it was to the people that that commandement was giuen 1. Thess. 5. 20 ●…1 Despise not prophecyings proue all things and 1. Ioh. 4. 1. beleeue not euery spirit but try the spirits whether they be of God The third Vse of this Doctrine is for reproofe For many there be that giue too little credit vnto Christ and too much vnto man 1. The Papists giue euery whit as much credit vnto the Church as they doe vnto the Word of God nay more a great deale They will not beleeue the Scripture vnlesse the Church giue testimonie vnto it but the Church they will beleeue euen in those things wherein the Scripture giues no testimony to it at all Let the Scripture teach any thing neuer so plainely neuer so cleerely they will still make doubt of the meaning of it and how know you this to be the meaning say they as if the Scriptures of which the Holy Ghost saith Rom. 15. 4. What soeuer is written is written for our learning and 2. Tim. 3. 16. The whole Scripture is profitable to instruction were vttered and written like Apolloes oracles so darkely as none could haue any certaintie of the meaning of them on the other side let the Church hold any thing be it neuer so absurd so contrary to Religion and to reason also yet may there not any question be made of it So that to them doubtlesse that curse belongeth Ier. 17. 5. Cursed bee the man that trusteth in man and maketh flesh his arme and withdraweth his heart from the Lord. 2. The disputer of the world of whom the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 1. 20. Where is the disputer of this world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such as will receiue no more in Religion then they can see reason for Scripture will not serue their turne they must haue reason Such as giue liberty to themselues not onely to nourish in their owne hearts many reasonings and oppositions against such truths as are manifestly taught in the holy Scripture but dare also openly reason and maintaine argument against the Word of God 1. I blame not any for asking doubting or making question of the meaning of such places of Scripture as are obscure as some places indeed are 2. Pet. 3. 16. For the Disciples did so Mar. 4. 20. and are not reprooued for it But this I blame that they dare reason against such places of Scripture as are plaine and manifest 2. I doe not deny but a Christian may desire to know the reason of that he holds and beleeues in Religion and of whatsoeuer is taught him so he do it 1. With reuerence 2. Out of a desire to be further confirmed in the truth 3. With a resolution to yeeld to that reason which God hath reuealed in his Word and to seeke no further For euery one should be able to answer them that demand a reason of him of the hope that is in him 1. Pet. 3. 15. And Christians should seeke to bee not children but of a ripe age in knowledge 1. Cor. 14. 20. and the blessed Virgin is not blamed for asking with this mind How can this bee Luke 1. 34. But it is a dangerous sinne not to rest in the authority of the Scripture not to count it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let euery man take heed how he giues himselfe liberty to cauill and dispute against such truths as are cleerely reuealed in the Scripture that is that which the Apostle doth so reprooue Rom. 9. 19. 20. speaking of the high mystery of Gods Predestination Thou wilt say then vnto mee why doth hee yet finde fault for who hath resisted his will Nay but ô man who art thou that replyest against God Those things which we cannot vnderstand we must admire and say as the Apostle doth Rom. 11. 33. O the depth c. Laying the fault not vpon the Scriptures but on our owne blockishnesse and inability to conceiue the reason of it For there be many truths of God reuealed in the Word which are such mysteries as it is not
then there can be in those that any of them shall make seuerally and apart The ioynt forces of many must needs preuaile more with God then if they were single Prayer therefore is compared to seeking and knocking Matth. 7. 7. And when many seeke a thing there is more hope of finding when many knocke at heauen gates they will be the better heard Matth. 18. 19. Verily I say vnto you that if two of you much more if many shall agree on earth vpon any thing whatsoeuer they shall desire it shall be giuen them of my Father which is in heauen See the force of publike prayer wherein many of Gods seruants do ioyne together Therefore Gods people at such times as they haue most desired to preuaile with God in prayer haue beene carefull to gather together as publike assemblies as they could possibly ●…oel 〈◊〉 15 6. vt supra pag. 125. 4. Christ hath promised to be present in a more speciall and comfortable manner in the assemblies of his people then in any of our houses or in any other place Matth. 18. 20. 28. 20. So that for the assemblies sake the seruice we doe to God in the Church is to be preferred before that we can doe in any other place not for any holinesse that is in the place it selfe And so much for the cleering of the Doctrine from the obiection that might be made against it Now I come to the confirmation of it And to this purpose we must obserue a notable difference in this case betweene the time before the death of our Sauiour Christ and that that followed Before our Sauiours death we shall read of diuers places that were holier then others 1. The whole land of Canaan because it was a type of the Church of Christ and of the kingdome of heauen was esteemed by Gods people a better and more holy place then any other in the world That among other reasons made Iacob and Ioseph to be so desirous to bee buried there Fiue things are worthy to be obserued in Iacobs desire of this He desired to be buryed in Canaan Though 1. It was a great way off 2. It could not be without great offence Of Iacob we read he calls Ioseph and chargeth him Gen. 47. 29. 31. And not contenting himselfe with that he chargeth all his sonnes with it Gen. 49. 29. 2. When immediately before his death as a matter that he had the greatest care of Gen. 47. 29. 3. In what manner exceeding affectionately and earnestly Gen. 47. 29. If I haue found grace in thy sight deale mercifully and truely with mee bury me not I pray thee in Egypt 4. He bound his good sonne Ioseph by oath to it and would not take his word Gen. 47. 29. 31. 5. When he had gotten Ioseph to sweare his heart was so comforted that hee gaue solemne thankes to God for it Genesis 47. 31. 2. In the land of Canaan some places are said to haue beene more holy then others namely such as wherein God did manifest himselfe in a speciall and sensible manner So the place where the Sonne of God appeared to Moses in the fierie bush is called holy ground Exod. 3. 5. And that wherein he appeared to Ioshua Iosh. 5. 15. And the Mount wherein he was transfigured is called by Peter The Holy Mount 1. Pet. 1. 18. But these places were no longer accounted holy then during the time of this speciall presence of the Lord in them Neither can we reade that any of Gods people did either goe on pilgrimage to those places after or gaue any religious respect vnto them 3. Ierusalem because it was the place that the Lord had chosen to put his name there was euer from the dayes of Dauid to Christs time holier then any other place of the world beside It is called the holy City Matth. 4. 5. yea euen to the very moment of Christs death it so continued notwithstanding the maruellous sins and corruptions of it it is called the holy City still Matth. 27. 53. 4. The Temple because God had hallowed it to put his name there for euer 2. Chron. 7. 16. was yet a more holy place then any other place in Ierusalem and is therefore oft called The holy Temple Psal. 5. 8. Fiue things there be that shew their Temple to haue beene a most holy place 1. Gods people were bound wheresoeuer they dwelt to resort thither at certaine times three times euery yeare all the males were bound to appeare there Exod. 23. 17. and the Eunuch you know came euen from Ethiopia to worship there Acts 8. 27. 2. Many parts of Gods worship they might performe no where but onely there thither shall yee bring all that I command you your burnt offerings and your sacrifices your tithes and the heaue offering of your hand and all the choice vowes which ye vow vnto the Lord Deut. 12. 11. 3. Those parts of Gods seruice which they might performe in other places as prayer euen priuate prayer was much better and more pleasing to God and more auaileable to their comfort there then in any other place In which respect it is called Matth. 21. 12. The house of prayer And 2. Chron. 7. 15. Mine eyes shall bee open and mine eares attentiue to the prayer made in this place Therefore Dauid desired to behold Gods power and glory as he had beheld it in the Sanctuary Psal. 63. 1 2. Therefore it is said of Anna that though through the affliction of her mind shee could not partake with her husband in the sacrifice and offerings yet shee went vp with him duly to the House of the Lord euen to make her secret prayers there 1. Samuel 1. 12. Shee continued praying before the Lord. Dauid went thither to make his priuate prayers 2. Sam. 7. 18. So did the good Publican Luke 18. 10. Yea 4. when they could not goe thither to pray yet the very looking towards the Temple made their prayer more acceptable with God according to that prayer Salomon made in the dedication of the Temple that it might be so 1. King 8. 44. 48. 5. Yea so holy was that Temple and such religious reuerence did Gods people beare vnto it that after the Caldeans had burnt it they honoured the very place where it had stood and esteemed it holier then any other This appeares by those 80. persons whom Ishmael murthered Ier. 41. 5. And by Daniels opening his windowes towards Ierusalem when he prayed Dan. 6. 10. 5. In the Temple it selfe though all the parts of it were holy yet some places in it were more holy then other some For there was a place where the people stood separated from the Priests Luke 1. 10. And this was an holy place so holy that Mar. 11. 16. Christ would not suffer any to carry any vessell through it And there was a place where the Priests executed their Ministry which was holier then that that the people stood in and is therefore called the holy place Leuit.
worke is to be ascribed wholly vnto God the Word is but the instrument that God is pleased to vse in this worke God onely is our Sauiour 1. Tim. 2. 3. 2. Neither is it as a naturall instrument that hath vertue in it selfe to regenerate or saue as food hath to nourish and a medicine to heale the bodie but onely as a toole God is pleased to vse in this worke So that as the excellentest toole the Ioyner hath or vseth can worke nothing vnlesse his hand goe with it and worke with it So is it in this case The Word saues and regenerates men not by any naturall vertue that is in it but onely by a supernaturall power it receiues from God the weapons of our warfare are mighty through God 2. Cor. 10. 4. Nay the Word it selfe say it be deliuered in the Ministry of a man that hath the most excellent gifts is not able to worke the least measure of sauing grace in the heart of any A man would thinke it was no great degree of grace in Lydia that shee attended to the thing that Paul spake yet could not the word that Paul spake though he had such excellent gifts worke so much but God opened her heart Acts 16. 14. To come to Christ is the least measure and degree of sauing faith yet could not the word that Christ himselfe spake as he was man mooue a soule so farre this is the onely worke of God No man can come to mee vnlesse my Father draw him Iohn 6. 44 45. I haue planted saith Paul and Apollos watered but God gaue the increase 1 Cor. 3. 6. The Preacher if he desire his Ministry should doe good had need to crie to God for his helpe and the hearer if he desire to profit by the Word had need to cry to God to make his Word effectuall to his saluation Therefore Christ when he was to send forth his Apostles spent a whole night in praying to God for his blessing vpon their Ministry Luke 6. 12. And doubtlesse one chiefe cause why the Word saues so few is this that men rest too much vpon it and cry not earnestly to God that he would blesse it and make it effectuall in their hearts This being so it may be demanded why the Word should be called the Word of life the Kingdome of God the saluation of men The Reasons why these glorious titles are giuen vnto it by the Holy Ghost are these 1. Because it is the onely meanes the Lord hath sanctified to worke sauing grace in his elect and to bring them to eternall life Though where this cannot be had he doth saue by other meanes or without meanes as pleaseth him yet hath he not said nor reuealed that he will saue men by any other meanes then this which caused the Apostle to mooue that strange question How shall they belieue on him of whom they haue not heard or how shall they heare without a Preacher Rom. 10. 14. And to pronounce of all that are strangers from the couenants of promise that they haue no hope of saluation Ephes. 2. 12. 2. Though men may haue many good things in them without the Word the Gentiles which haue not the law doe by nature the things contained in the Law Rom. 2. 14. yet sauing grace such good things as may bring a man to saluation none can attaine to ordinarily but by the Word for that 's the incorruptible seed whereby we are regenerated 2. Pet. 1. 23. 3. Though there be many other meanes of saluation besides this yet all the rest receiue their force and vertue from this nothing can doe vs good without this 1. Meditation of the workes of God must be acknowledged to be a good meanes of grace and so of saluation Dauid made great vse of it to further himselfe in grace Psal. 8. 3 4. But no man can profit by that till he haue first profited by the Word Make mee to vnderstand the way of thy precepts and I will meditate in thy wondrous workes Psalm 119. 27. 2 Affliction is a great furtherance to our saluation Hee chasteneth vs for our profit that we may be partakers of his holinesse Heb. 12. 10. But it can doe vs no good till it be sanctified to vs by the Word Psal. 94. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastisest O Lord and teachest him in thy Law 3. The Sacraments are great helpes to our saluation 1 Pet. 3. 21. Baptisme saueth vs. The Bread that we breake is it not the Communion of the body of Christ 1. Cor. 10. 16. but they haue all their efficacie from the Word Christ sanctifieth and cleanseth his Church by the washing of water through the Word Ephes. 5. 26. and that was the cause why Paul in that Congregation that was assembled principally for the celebration of the Lords Supper spent so much time in preaching Asts 20. 7. 4. Prayer is an excellent meanes of saluation Whosoeuer shall call vpon the name of the Lord shall bee saued Rom. 10. 13. But no man can pray with comfort till the Word hath wrought with him How shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued and how shall they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard Rom. 10. 14. Till the Lord hath first said to a man by his Word thou art my childe he can neuer say to God in his prayer thou art my father Zach. 13. 9. I will say it is my people and they shall say the Lord is my God 2. Because it is euer powerfull God euer vseth to make it effectuall vnto the saluation of his Elect. This may appeare in two points 1. Though it be sometimes sent in iudgement and to be a sauour of death vnto death in some Goe and tell this people heare yee indeed but vnderstand not and see yee indeed but perceiue not Make the heart of this people fat c. Esay 6. 9 10. yet was it neuer sent to any place onely in iudgement onely to harden but to worke the saluation of some When God sent Paul to Corinth and continued his liberty there but one yeare and an halfe The reason is giuen Acts 18. 10. That God had Much people in that place The like wee shall finde noted of all places the Apostles preached in that some were conuerted by them in euery place 2. In Gods Elect it will certainely be effectuall to their saluation as many as were ordained to eternall life beleeued Acts 13. 48. And though not at the first yet it will be effectuall one day as the doctrine that Iohn the Baptist taught became effectuall in sundry of his hearers after his death and not before Iohn 10. 41 42. And when this will not saue and conuert nothing will be able to doe it If they heare not Moses and the Prophets neither will they be perswaded though one rose from the dead Luke 16. 31. Therefore is so much spoken of the power and efficacie of the Word that it is liuely
him must worship him thus Now for the right vnderstanding of this Doctrine sixe questions must be mooued and resolued 1. What our Sauiour meaneth here by worshipping God in spirit The answer is that to worship God in spirit is to worship him without such ceremonies as were vnder the Law This appeareth by this note of diuersity which our Saulour here vseth but as if he should say the worship the Iewes now vse which chiefely consisteth in their sacrifices oblations purifications and such like ceremonies is good because it is done vpon knowledge of Gods will reuealed in his Word but now such as worship God aright shall worship him in another manner namely not in such ceremonies but in spirit and truth So that to worship God in spirit is opposed to the ceremoniall worship because that was not a spirituall but a carnall worship See this in that opposition Paul makes Gal. 3. 3. Are yee so foolish hauing begun in the spirit are yee now made perfect by the flesh So the ceremoniall Law is called a carnall commandement Heb. 7. 16. and all the ceremonies are called carnall rites Heb. 9. 10. A strange terme to be giuen to the worship that God himselfe ordained But the ceremonies are so called Because 1. They were all outward and bodily actions Yea if we looke ouer all the ceremoniall Law we shall finde nothing inioyned either to the Priests or people but externall and bodily things the seruice of the spirit and conscience is seldome or neuer mentioned Heb. 9. 9 10. The first Tabernacle was a figure for the time then present in which were offered both gifts and sacrifices that could not make him that did the seruice perfect as pertaining to the conscience which stood onely in meates and drinkes and diuers washings and carnall ordinances imposed on them vntill the time of reformation Whereas the seruice God requires vnder the Gospell is in a manner wholly inward and spirituall For thus the Lord speaketh of the daies of the Gospell wherein he will make a new Couenant with his people Iere. 31. 34. They shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord. And verse●…3 ●…3 I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts Now the Lord still calls for the seruice of the spirit and heart at our hands Our preaching pleaseth not God vnlesse it be the action of our spirit Paul serued God with his spirit in the Gospell of his Son Rom. 1. 9. Our hearing pleaseth him not vnlesse it be the action of our heart and spirit the Holy Ghost opened the heart of Lydia to attend Acts 16. 14. Our prayers please not God vnlesse they be the seruice of the heart and spirit pray with all prayer and supplication in the spirit Ephes. 6. 18. Our singing making melody in your hearts to the Lord Ephes. 5. 19. Our communicating in the Sacrament pleaseth not God vnlesse it be the seruice of our spirit no man receiueth worthily vnlesse he examine himselfe before and be able to discerne the body of the Lord in that ordinance 1. Corinthians 11. 29. 2. They are called carnall because they were all transitorie and to inindure but for a time To this reason the Apostle hath respect Heb. 7. 16. 18. When he calls the Law of the Leuiticall Priest-hood a carnall commandement because it was to bee disanulled Whereas our worship shall continue and neuer be altered and in this respect the Apostle preferres the state of the Church now before that of the Old Testament Heb. 1. 1 2. that whereas the Lord deliuered his will to his Church not all at once but at sandry times by the Prophets he hath by his Sonne fully made his minde knowne vnto vs in these last daies not at sundry times but at once And therefore also the Apostle Iude calls it the faith that was once for all deliuered vnto the Saints Iude 3. In which respect the whole time since Christs Ascension is called also the end of the world 1. Cor. 10. 11. And the last times 2. Tim. 3. 1. Acts 2. 17. 1. Pet. 1. 20. 1. Ioh. 2. 18. 3. Because the effect and fruit of them reacheth no further then to the body and outward man they could not make holy concerning the conscience him that did the seruice Heb. 9. 9. and 10. 1. they could not make the commers thereunto perfect but sanctified onely as touching the purifying of the flesh Heb. 9. 13. Therefore they are called Gal. 4. 9. Weake and beggarly elements Whereas the seruice of God vnder the Gospell worketh wholly in a manner vpon the conscience and inward man the Kingdome of God the true Religion and the sincere profession of it is not in word but in power 1. Cor. 4. 20. If the Word be preached and heard the Sacraments administred and receiued prayer vsed as they ought they will worke vpon the conscience not vpon the outward man onely Therefore it is called 2. Cor. 3. 8. the ministration of the Spirit 4. It is called a carnall worship because it is very pleasing to the naturall and carnall man hee makes great conscience of it and delights much in it In which respect also the Apostle saith Gal. 4. 3. it was a seruice fit for Gods people when they were children Our Sauiour obserues the Pharisees to haue beene very precise in the obseruation of the ceremoniall Law and to haue made much more conscience of it then of the morall they paid tithe of mint and annise and commin and omitted the weightier matters of the Law Iudgement Mercy and Fidelity Matth. 23. 23. And the Lord by his Prophet speaking of such as for their wickednesse he calls Princes of Sodome and people of Gomorrah saith they offered a multitude of Sacrifices brought many oblations to God and much incense obserued diligently the new Moones and Sabbaths and solemne dayes Esay 1. 11. 13. Yea all heathen men and pagans haue had their sacrifices and ceremonies Balaam and Balak vsed them Numb 23. 1 4. Whereas the seruice that God requires of vs vnder the Gospell is such as no naturall man can relish or finde any sauour in Nay none but such as haue the spirit can make any account of our worship can heare receiue pray with conscience and delight 1. Iohn 4. 6. Hee that is of God heareth vs hee that is not of God heareth vs not So 1. Cor. 2. 14. The naturall man receiueth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can hee know them because they are spiritually discerned Thus wee see what our Sauiour here meaneth by worshipping God in spirit Lecture the fortieth Ianuary 30. 1609. WHat meanes he by worshipping God in truth The answer is to worship God in truth is to worship him without such ceremonies as were vnder the Law This appeareth by that note of diuersity here vsed but which I obserued before Truth then is not
haue an eye to and watch our hearts well they will be rouing And as this is needfull in all our prayers so especially in prescript and set formes of prayer which we haue oft accustomed our selues vnto 2. To set our selues as in Gods presence and bring our hearts to a reuerent feare of Gods Maiesty before whom we appeare Serue the Lord with feare Psal. 2. 11. in thy feare will I worship toward thine holy temple Psal. 5. 7. The second sort of hypocrites that do not worship God in spirit and truth are they that vse Gods worship or any part of it as a matter of ceremony and formality onely and neuer seeke in it the edification of the spirit and conscience 1. That Preacher is but an hypocrite that seeketh not so to preach as his preaching may haue power in the hearts of his hearers I will know not the speach of them that are puffed vp but the power For the kingdome of God is not in word but in power 1. Cor. 4. 19 20. And he maketh this a note of an able Minister of the Gospell when he is the Minister of the spirit 2. Cor. 3. 6. It is that we should seeke to see Gods seale vpon our Ministry in the hearts of our hearers The seale of mine Apostleship are yee in the Lord yea he saith this was his maine answer and defence to them that examined him and questioned his Ministry 1. Cor. 9. 2. 3. We had therefore need not onely to preach but to teach such Doctrine as is profitable and which particularly concerneth and is of vse to those we teach this was Pauls direction to Titus to teach and stand vpon those things in his Ministry that were good and profitable vnto men Tit. 3. 8. neither onely to teach but to vse application also Preach the Word reproue or conuince rebuke exhort 2. Tim. 4. 2. 2. Those Christians also are no better then hypocrites who so they haue a forme of Gods seruice neuer care whether it edifie their conscience or no. Such are they as rest content with a dumbe Ministry for what power feele they in it Such also are they as heare good Preachers and praise them but neuer examine what profit they receiue in their conscience by them When you praise a good Preacher whose Ministry you frequent with your tongue your life and vnreformed course doth disgrace him Those hearers only praise their teachers indeed that haue profited in reformation of heart and life by their Ministry in whose hearts the spirit of God hath written that of their Ministers commendation as may be read of all men 2. Cor. 3. 2. 3. The third sort of hypocrites that worship not God in spirit and truth are they that will be deuout in the exercises of Religion and zealous in profession Make a shew of godlinesse but deny the power of it 2. Tim. 3. 5. True Religion where it is receiued will command the heart and the whole man Let a man professe what he will if his heart and life be not reformed he is an hypocrite and whatsoeuer worship he doth to God is but a false worship We know that God heareth not sinners but if any man be a worshipper of God and doth his will him he heareth Iohn 9. 31. yea the very seruice he doth to God doth but increase Gods wrath against him either amend thy life or giue ouer seruing of God THE THREE AND FORTIETH LECTVRE ON FEBRVARY XXVII MDCIX IOH. IIII. XXV XXVI The Woman saith vnto him I know that Messiah commeth which is called Christ when hee is come hee will tell vs all things Iesus saith vnto her I that speake vnto thee am he THese words containe the conclusion of that conference that was betweene our Sauiour and the Woman of Samaria In the interpretation of the words for the helpe of your memory these fiue questions are distinctly to be opened and resolued Whom meaneth shee here by Messias seeing it is plaine shee vseth this word as the proper name of some person I answer it is euident by the words following that she meaneth the same person that is called Christ. For as our blessed Sauiour being promised to the Church from the beginning of the world was described and made knowne to them both by his natures specially his humane nature I will put enmity betweene thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head Gen. 3. 15. And Gen. 22. 18. In thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed and by those offices he should exercise and whereby he should procure the saluation of his people viz. 1. His Propheticall office I will raise them vp a Prophet from among their brethren like vnto thee Deut. 18. 18. His Priesthood He shall be a Priest vpon his throne Zach. 6. 13. His Kingly office Reioyce greatly O daughter of Zion shout O daughter of Ierusalem behold thy King commeth vnto thee Zach. 9. 9. and by the place where he should be borne But thou Bethlehem Ephratah though thou be little among the thousands of Iudah yet out of thee shall hee come forth vnto me that is to be ruler in Israel whose goings forth haue beene from old from euerlasting Mic. 5. 2. So had he three proper names in the Old Testament giuen him 1. One in respect of his two natures hypostatically vnited in one person Esay 7. 14. He shall call his name Immanuel 2. Another in respect of the obscure place of his education Zach. 6. 12. Behold the man whose name is the Branch 3. A third in respect of his office Dan. 9. 25. Messiah the Prince Now of all the names whereby our Sauiour was described in the Old Testament this name was the most famous among the Iewes When Herod gathered together all the chiefe Priests and the Scribes to resolue him in the question that the Wise men came to Ierusalem to mooue he asked them where Messias should be borne Matth. 2. 4. For though the Euangelist writing in Greeke vse the word Christ in that place yet it is certaine that he in his language vsed the word Messiah So Iohn 1. 41. We haue found the Messias saith Andrew to his brother Simon Now this Hebrew name Messiah and the Greeke name Christ doe in our language signifie the annointed one and we shall finde it was giuen to sundry others in the holy Scripture for the Kings of Gods people were called the Lords annointed 2. Sam. 19. 21. and so were the Priests Leu. 10. 7. and so were the Prophets Psal. 105. 15. Because euery one of these were by the ceremony of annointing as by a Sacramentall signe assured from the Lord that he would inwardly annoint them that is endue them with such graces of his holy spirit as whereby they might be enabled to discharge those offices that he called them vnto yet was this name of Messiah Christ the annointed of the Lord made a proper name onely vnto our blessed Sauiour 1. Because all those Kings
to vse as a reason of all our petitions Matth. 6. 13. For thine is the kingdome and the power and the glory for euer And in that of the Apostle Romanes 11. 36. For of him and through him and to him are all things to whom bee glory for euer Therefore saith he 2. Tim. 2. 20. In a great house there are not onely vessells of gold and of siluer but also of wood and of earth some to honour and some to dishonour The lewdest men are Gods vessells and such as he hath necessary vse of 2. The speciall and fatherly affection he beares to his children i●… Christ as there is no wise and good Father but how many how great or publike soeuer his affaires be in the midst of them all he will haue a speciall care of his own children haue them in speciall remembrance so is it with our heauenly Father the very haires of your head are numbred Mat. 10. 30. And he is the Sauiour or preseruer of all men specially of those that beleeue 1. Tim. 4. 10. The Vses of this Doctrine are of two sorts 1. More generall 2. More speciall The generall Vse is this Labour to be fully perswaded of this truth Iob 5. 27. Heare thou it and know it for thy good and to see and discerne this prouidence of God in all thy waies and in all things that haue befalne thee in the whole course of thy life in thy wealth and pouertie good and ill successes marriage children dwellings credit discredit health sickenesse life and death This is Salomons counsell Pro. 3. 6. In all thy waies acknowledge him Thus did Dauid Psal. 139. 3. Thou compassest my paths and my lying downe and art accustomed to all my waies And this will yeeld vnto a man many vnspeakeable comforts Some few of those many I will name vnto you and they shall serue for those more speciall vses I told you this Doctrine serued vnto 1. To perswade vs to the vse of prayer They that are assured God by his prouidence ordereth all things and the good successe of euery thing we take in hand depends vpon his prouidence must needs be carefull to commend the successe of euery thing they take in hand vnto God by prayer Our Sauiour teacheth vs to vse this as a reason why we begge all good things of God because his is the kingdome and the power Matth. 6. 13. When Abrahams seruant was to take a iourney he commends it to God by prayer Gen. 24. 12. When Nehemiah was to make a suit to the King his Master he commends it to God by prayer Neh. 1. 11. and 2. 4. When Christ was to feede the people he commends the creatures to Gods blessing by prayer Matth. 14. 19. Yea the Apostle saith that marriage and euery creature of God is sanctified to vs by the Word and prayer 1. Tim. 4 5. And on the contrary side the chiefe or onely cause why men neglect to pray is that men know not or beleeue not this Doctrine of Gods prouidence when Dauid had said that the foole saith in his heart there is no God Psalme 14. 1. he giue this for one reason to prooue it verse 4. they call not vpon the Lord. 2. It will free the heart from those cares wherewith it is wont to be disquieted and vexed about the successe and euent of things The time and successe of euery thing and action is appointed of God and depends wholly on his prouidence To euery thing there is a season appointed of God he meanes a time to euery purpose vnder the heauen as Salomon sheweth at large Eccles. 3. 1 8. And thereupon he inferreth verse 9. What profit hath he that worketh in that wherein he laboureth seeing things doe not depend only or principally vpon the labour or endeauour of any man It is therefore a vaine thing for men to disquiet themselues with care of the successe of things a man must do his duty inioyned him of God and with a quiet and cheerefull heart commit the successe vnto him alone Many haue no heart to doe good duties God calls them vnto because they can see no likelihood of good successe many vexe themselues with care and feare of that that may fall out hereafter He that truely is perswaded of Gods prouidence is free from this care when he hath done his duty and commended the matter to God by prayer he casts his care for the successe wholly vpon God to whom onely it belongs Be carefull for nothing saith the Apostle Phil. 4. 6. but in euery thing by prayer and supplication with thankesgiuing let your request bee made knowne vnto God Cast all your care vpon him for he careth for you 1. Pet. 5. 7. This is able to free our hearts from care concerning our children euen at the houre of death hast thou laboured to bring them them vp in Gods feare giuen them good education commended them to God cast thy care then vpon him 3. It will worke patience in all afflictions I was dumbe I opened not my mouth because thou didst it Psal. 39. 9. See a notable example for this 2. Sam. 16. 10. Who dare then say wherefore hast thou done so See the vse Iob makes of this in affliction Iob 1. 20. 22. 1. It kept him from charging God foolishly 2. It made him rent his garment shaue his head fall downe to the ground and worship God 3. It made him giue thankes this was much but no more then his duty 1. Thes. 5. 18. In all things giue thankes He knew that sith God the ordering of it it should tend to his good in the end 2. Sam. ●…6 12. It may be the Lord will looke vpon mine affliction and doe me good for his cursing this day 4. It workes security in the heart and quietnesse from all feare of wicked men and of Sathan himselfe And it is not possible that any who considers rightly how infinite dangers his life is subiect to how many witches how many vile men there be should be without continuall feare were it not for this For what is it that preserues vs from danger surely the Lords prouidence 1. He so ouer-rules their hearts for without him neither Sathan nor wicked men can mooue in him all liue and moue and haue their being Act. 17. 28. that they haue not so much as a will or desire to practise any mischiefe against vs Exod. 34. 24. No man shall desire thy Land 2. He watcheth and keepeth vs and our houses Behold he that keepeth Israel shall neither slumber nor sleepe The Lord is thy keeper Psal. 121 4 5. He wat●…heth vs when we are asleepe and protecteth vs from many vnknowne dangers without any care or forecast of ours when Ioseph was asleepe he admonisheth him of the danger they were in Matth. 2. 13. This is that that Iob professeth that in the daies of his youth and prosperity Gods secret for so it is in the originall was vpon his tabernacle that is
the men Come see a man that hath told me all things that euer I did The word therefore implieth that somewhat that is mentioned before was the cause of her so suddaine and hasty departing from Christ and running into the Citie and what was that Surely if we looke backe into the two former verses we shall finde two causes of it 1. Because the Di●…ciples were now come out of the City with meat for him and she thought he would be gone as soone as he had eaten somewhat therefore shee made hast to goe and call her neighbours for feare he should be gone before they could come 2. Because Christ had plainely told her he was the Messias therefore she went her way Why but that should rather haue stayed her still with him and made her desirous of further speech No verily for she did vndoubtedly belieue that he was so indeed as he had said and her heart was so astonished with suddaine ioy and earnest desire to draw her neighbours to him that she could neither speake nor tarry any longer but away shee goeth into the City and telleth her neighbours But why did she leaue her paile behind her Surely though she came to the Well of purpose to fetch water and she had need and vse of water for some worke she had to doe at home yet the ioy she found in the knowledge of Christ and the zealous desire she had to win her neighbours made her carelesse both of the water and of her paile also and forgetfull of the worke she had to doe at home 2. She left it for haste because if she should haue taken it with her and carried it home she could not haue gone with that speed to fetch her neighbours as she thought it was needfull she should doe 3. It is to be obserued that the Euangelist saith when she came into the City she said to these men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as the best translaters reade it to the men of that place that is the neighbours among whom she liued and all of them without difference she sought to draw them all vnto Christ. Hauing thus opened the meaning of this verse let vs now obserue two points in it for our instruction 1. The zeale she had to run and fetch her neighbours 2. The leauing of her paile behind her And first in that the Holy Ghost hath here obserued that this Woman so soone as she knew and beleeued in Christ was so zealous to draw her neighbours to him that for their sakes shee was content to leaue Christ though no doubt she desired much to continue with him and to depriue her selfe of the comfort and benefit she might haue found if she had tarryed longer with him 2. And made such hast to fetch them for feare he should be gone before she could bring them 3. And called them all shee saith to the men one as well as another without speciall respect to any with neglect of others 4. And thus she did being but a woman a poore and simple woman We haue this Doctrine to learne That euery one that truely knoweth Christ and findeth comfort in him will be carefull and ready to draw others to him 1. When they haue found this comfort they cannot choose but speake of it to others their hearts would burst if they should not speake of it Gods grace is like fire in their bones as Ier. 20. 9. They cannot hide it Though Christ had charged the two blind men he cured that they should say nothing of it Matth. 9. 30. Yet when they departed they could not for their liues conceale it 2. That which the Apostle requireth of all that haue receiued the wealth of this world 1. Tim. 6. 19. that euery one will doe that hath receiued the heauenly riches of Gods grace they will doe good with it to others they will be ready to distribute and communicate it to others Paul wished heartily that both Agrippa and all that heard him were altogether such as he was excepting his bonds Act. 26. 29. in this is grace not vnlike to worldly wealth no vsurer is forwarder so soone as money commeth in to put it out againe then euery true belieuer is to put out the grace that he hath receiued hee that had receiued the fiue talents went and traded with them Matth. 25. 16. See this in sundry examples Psal. 51. 13. Dauid saith he would teach Gods Wayes to others they that feared the Lord spake often one to another Mal. 3. 16. So soone as Christ had found Philip Philip went and found out Nathaniel Iohn 1. 45. So soone as Matthew was conuerted he gathered together a great company of Publicans and others to meet at his house Luke 5. 29. The Reasons why it must needs be so are many 1. They know the Lord hath straightly commanded and bound them that no man should content himselfe to know belieue repent but seeke also to cause others to doe it Ezek. 18 32. Cause therefore one another to returne and liue yee Luke 22 32. When thou art conuerted strengthen thy brethren 1. Pet. 4. 10. L●…t euery one as hee hath receiued a gift minister the same one vnto another as good disposers 2. The loue they beare to God prouoketh them to doe all they can to enlarge his kingdome Knowing the terror of the Lord we perswade men 2. Cor. 5. 11. verse 14. and the loue of Christ constraineth vs. 3. The loue they beare to their neighbours The first and chiefe worke of faith is loue faith worketh by loue Gal. 5. 6. And there is no loue in him to his neighbour that loueth not his soule Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour and not suffer sinne vpon him Leuit. 19. 17. Count him not as an enemy but admonish him as a brother 2. Thess. 3. 15. If the conscience of the Lepers accused them for not acquainting the City that was ready to be famished with the victuals and spoile the Assyrians had left behinde them 2. Kings 7. 9. how much more will it doe that in this case 4. They know it is the best meanes to increase the grace they haue The more they draw to knowledge and faith the more will their owne knowledge and faith increase in them I long to see you that I may impart vnto you some spirituall gift that I may be comforted together with you Rom. 1. 11 12. As the casting forth of your seed bringeth it you backe againe with great increase 2 Cor. 9. 6. Because God knew Abraham would make good vse of that he knew for the instruction of his family therefore he would hide nothing from Abraham Gen. 18. 19. 5. They know no good worke they can doe will haue the like recompence of reward as this the workes of mercy men haue done but to the bodies of others haue oft turned away Gods plagues from them that otherwise would haue fallen on them for their sinnes
the Baptist also did oft frequent Christs Ministery not onely on other dayes but euen on Sabbaths also yet I cannot finde that our Sauiour did euer blame them for it 2. Though the Lord doe oft-times worke most mightily by weakest meanes yet ordinarily and for the most part as by the wholesomest and best food he giues the best nourishment so by the Ministry of them that haue the best gifts he doth most edifie his people Therefore the great successe of Iohns Ministry is partly ascribed to the excellent gifts God gaue him and whereby he fitted him for that worke he shall go before him in the spirit and power of Elia to turne the hearts of the fathers to the children Luk. 1. 17. So this is alledged for one cause of the successe of Barnabas his Ministry in Antioch Act. 11. 14. Because he was a good man and full of the holy Ghost and saith and of the fruit that both his Ministry and Pauls had in Iconium that they preached in such a manner so soundly so substantia●…ly with such euidence of the spirit Act. 14. 1. They so spake that a great multitude both of the Iewes and also of the Greekes beleeued Therefore ●…aul calleth vpon Timothy to stirre vp his gift 2 Tim. 1. 6. and to giue himselfe diligently to study for the increase of his gifts 1 Tim. 4. 14 15. and telleth him this was the way to saue himselfe and them that heare him ver ●…6 So. Cor. 14 12. He exho●…t them to seeke for such gifts as whereby they might excell to the edifying of the Church Why might some haue obiected what needeth this seeing wee may doe as much by meane as by excellent gifts But the Apostle plainely declareth by these exhortations that he was of another minde 3. Euery Christian hath right and title to the gifts of all Gods seruants and therefore it is no sinne for them when conueniently they may to make their benefit of them Whether Paul or Apollo or Cephas all are yours 1. Cor. 3. 22. yet must euery Christian take heed that he doe not so admire Gods gifts in any as that he despise the Ministry of the meanest of Gods seruants nor commend one to the disgracing of others nor rest or addict himselfe so to one as that he despise others This was that sinne for which the Apostle so taxeth the Corinthians euery one of you saith I am of Paul and I of Apollos and I of Cephas 1. Cor. 1. 12 For 1. It is our sinne and shame and iust cause of humbling to vs if we cannot profit by the meanest Minister that God hath sent ye may all prophecy one by one that all may learne and all may be comforted all may learne by euery one that prophecyeth and preacheth the word soundly and may receiue comfort and edification by him 1. Cor. 14. 31. 2. The power of the Ministry dependeth not as we haue heard on the excellency of the teachers gifts but vpon Gods blessing that he hath promised and is wont to giue to his owne ordinance 4. The fourth and last Vse is to encourage euery man in his place to do his endeauour to draw others to God both Ministers and Masters of families and priuate Christians also For 1. If thou doe preuaile and God make thee his instrument to conuert but one soule the comfort and blessing of it will be vnspeakeable Let him know that hee which conuerteth a sinner from the error of his way shall saue a soule from death and shall hide a multitude of sins Iames 5. 20. 2. If thou endeauour it with an honest heart be thy gifts neuer so weake and meane thou hast cause to expect Gods blessing and that thou shalt preuaile with some 2. Chron. 29. 11. Deale couragiously and the Lord shall be with the good An example of this we haue in this poore woman 3. Say thou preuaile with none yet shall thy endeauour vsed with a good heart be euery whit as well accepted of God and rewarded also as if thou hadst conuerted many Thy worke shall bee with the Lord Esay 49. 4. 2. Cor. 2. 25. For wee are vnto God a sweet sauour of Christ in them that are saued and in them that perish THE FIVE AND FIFTIETH LECTVRE ON IVNE XXVI MDCX. IOH. IIII. XXXI XXXII XXXIII XXXIV In the meane while his Disciples prayed him saying Master eate But hee said vnto them I haue meate to eate that yee know not of Therefore said the Disciples one to another hath any man brought him ought to eate Iesus saith vnto them my meate is to doe the will of him that sent me and to finish his worke WEe haue heard in the former verses what zeale the Woman of Samaria being conuerted her selfe did shew in seeking the conuersion of all her neighbours and what a blessing God gaue to her endeauours therein For vpon her perswasion they went out of the City and came to Christ. Now in these verses that I haue read and those foure that follow the Euangelist reporteth the speech that passed betweene Christ and his Disciples in the meane time while the woman was in going to call her neighbours and they in comming out of the City vnto Christ. And this speech consisteth of two parts 1. The declaration of our Sauiours zeale in preferring the worke of his Ministry before his meate and drinke contained in these foure verses I haue now read vnto you 2. The exhortation that he giueth vnto his Disciples to follow his example therein in the foure verses following And in the first part the verses I haue now read foure things are noted by the Euangelist 1. The motion which the Disciples make vnto him that hee would eate somewhat a motion no whit vnfit or vnseasonable for them to make at this time For 1. It was now dinner time as appeares ver 6. and his manner was as it seemes to eate two meales in a day as we reade also that Eliah notwithstanding his strict course of life was wont to doe 1. Kings 17. 6. 2. They perceiued him to be weary verse 6. and in that respect also to haue need of refreshing 3. They found him to be now at leisure and free from other imployment 4. They thought they should haue gone forward their iourney to Galilee that afternoone verse 3 4. 5. They perceiued by him that though he was hungry and had sent them into the Towne to buy meate yet now they were come to him with meate and had set it before him he had no disposition to eate any and therefore out of their duty and loue vnto him they desire him to eate verse 31. 2. The answer Christ makes vnto this their motion verse 32. Hee had meate to eate that they knew not of He saith not that he had eaten already yet was he doubtlesse refreshed with the paines he had taken and good he had done already vpon the Woman of Samaria but he lookes for a second and a better seruice and
in this case they may say with Paul Rom. 7. 22. I delight in the Law of God after the inward man whereof this is a signe that they are not satisfied with ought they doe in Gods seruice if they feele not ioy and comfort in it And whatsoeuer they doe if they feele they do it with an vpright heart they reioyce in it as they did 1. Chron. 29. 9. This you shall finde obserued by the Holy Ghost and commended in Gods seruants as a notable signe of their zeale and of the vprightnes of their hearts that Gods seruice was as meate and drinke vnto them they tooke great comfort and delight in it Dauid reports that he and the rest of Gods people with him were wont to goe towards Gods house With the voice of singing and prayse as a multitude that keepeth a feast Psal. 42. 4. And so he stirres vp all Gods people to doe Psal 120. 2. Serue the Lord with gladnesse come before him with ioyfulnesse So it is said of euery part of Gods seruice that Gods people haue found ioy and comfort in it Of Abraham Isaac and Iacob it is said Heb. 11. 1●… That when God preached the Gospell and the promises of saluation by Christ vnto them they receiued them thankefully saluted and welcomed them they ioyed in them And of three thousand that Peter conuerted it is said Acts 2. 4●… That they receiued the word gladly That hearer heares with zeale that can doe so It is said likewise of the faithfull that they found great comfort and ioy in prayer It is said of Dauid that as in all his heauinesse and extremity his manner was to betake himselfe to prayer Psal. 109. 4 so that he was wont to find exceeding ioy and comfort in it when he maketh mention how in his great affliction he betooke himselfe to prayer Psal. 30. 8 9 10. He tells vs verse 11. what comfort he found in it Thou hast turned for me my mourning into dancing thou hast put of my sackcloath and girded me with gladnesse according to that promise made vnto the faithfull Esay 56. 7. I will make them ioyfull in my house of prayer Thus haue they ioyed also in the receiuing of the Sacrament 2. Chron. 30. 21. They kept the feast of vnleauened bread with great gladnesse which is also againe repeated ver 25 26. The like is also reported of the Passeouer that was kept in Ezraes time Ezra 6. 22. they kept the feast of vnleauened bread with ioy for the Lord had made them ioyfull Yea euen in giuing of almes for the reliefe of Gods seruants the faithfull haue found great ioy Thus the Apostle reporteth of the Macedonians 2. Cor. 8. 2. In great tryall of affliction their ioy abounded and their most extreame pouerty abounded vnto their rich liberality It was a great comfort vnto them that God had giuen them a heart to shew such loue vnto his Saints To conclude this is obserued to the praise of Gods seruants that as they were wont to come to Gods house as to a feast so were they also wont to goe away from it as from a feast refreshed and comforted in their soules They found such sound and lasting comfort in Gods House and in all the parts of Gods worship as they were wont to goe from it with ioy And the comfort they found in it wrought in them a loue vnto it and a desire to frequent it often It is said of Gods people Neh. 8. 12. that after Gods seruice was finished they shewed a great deale of ioy because they had vnderstood the words that had beene declared vnto them by the Leuites And when Dauid professeth Psol 84. 1 2. That his soul longed and euen fainted for the Courts of the Lord his heart and his flesh cryed out for the liuing God He giues this for the reason of it because he had found such sweetnesse and comfort in Gods worship and ordinances there Oh how amiable saith he are thy Tabernacles O Lord of Hosts The Vse of all this that hath beene said of this second property of true zeale is 1. For reproofe Is this a note of one that serues God with true zeale when the seruice of God is as meat and drinke vnto him when it doth him good at the heart and euen refresheth him he finds ioy and comfort in it Then surely haue we all cause of shame and humbling cause to suspect that we are no better then Laodiceans lukewarme Professors of whom I told you the last day that they are in some respect in worse state then such as are key-cold then Idolaters and men of no Religion Doe wee come to Gods House as to a feast Truely some do some goe further to a Sermon and with more gladnesse of heart then euer they did to a feast But the most goe to Gods house as vnto ward children goe to Schoole or as malefactours that are vnder baile goe vnto the Assises they must needs goe but they goe with no ioy 2. Can we say we haue found comfort in euery part of Gods seruice many cannot tarry till all be done but by their going out proclaime to the whole Congregation that they account it a wearinesse and most tedious thing like those Mal. 1. 13. 2. And of many of them that tarry it out it may be said that the tryall of their countenance testifieth against them that they heare with no ioy they are so drowsie they looke so heauily as a man may easily discerne by their very lookes that they feele no sweetnesse nor sauour in any thing that they heare It is said of a poore lame man Acts 14. 9. that hee heard Paul preach with so ioyfull and cheerefull a countenance that Paul beholding him perceiued by his very countenance that he had faith to be healed True it is that Paul could see further then any of vs yet may we also giue a great ghesse when you heare with any spirit and affection euen by your lookes and haue cause giuen vs thereby many times to wish that either you would heare with more cheerefulnesse or that you would sit behind vs that you may not grieue and discourage vs in the worke of our Ministry as you doe 3. A third signe that many take no co●… in Gods Word is this that whereas Gods seruants as we haue heard vse to goe away from the hearing of the Word more comfortable then they came vnto it and loue 〈◊〉 it and the messengers of God from whom they receiued it much 〈◊〉 then they did before these men seldome or neuer goe fro●… 〈◊〉 but they are much more vexed and disquieted in their mi●… 〈◊〉 they were before they hate the Preacher more then they did 〈◊〉 Now I would haue these men to consider what it is that disqui●… 〈◊〉 I know they will pretend that the Minister hath either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 error or that he hath maliciously girded and rayled vpon the●… 〈◊〉 ●…urely if any Preacher doe so he shall beare his
yet this comparison holdeth betweene the Prophets and all the Ministers of the Gospell they were sowers and we are reapers This is plaine by another speech of Christ Matth. 11. 11. for there hauing preferred Iohn Baptist before all the Prophets and that in this respect among others because he gained more to God by his Ministrie than any of them had done as appeareth Verse 12. From the time of Iohn Baptist hitherto the Kingdome of heauen suffereth violence he addeth in the latter end of that 11. verse Notwithstanding he that is least in the Kingdome of heauen that is in the new estate of the Church is not in respect of his person and gifts but of his Ministry greater than Iohn Baptist. Hitherto belong those prophesies that in the dayes of the Gospell the Church should so increase Esay 54. 2 3. Enlarge thy tents for thou shalt encre ase on the right hand and on the left and that knowledge should then abound Esay 11. 9. and sanctification also after those daies the daies of the Gospell he meaneth saith the Lord I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts Ier. 31. 33. Nay the Lord neuer sendeth any faithfull Minister to a people but he vseth to make his Ministry fruitfull vnto some the sower neuer goeth forth to sowe but he meets with foure sorts of ground whereof the one is good as our Sauiour teacheth vs in that Parable Matth. 13. 3 8. Yea this is made a note of an able Minister of the New Testament 2. Cor. 3. 6. he is a Minister not of the letter onely but of the spirit The Reasons of this Doctrine are three 1. All things that concerne our saluation are more clearely taught and more fully in the Ministry of the Gospell than they were vnder the Law This is plaine Colos. 1. 26. where the Apostle calleth the Gospell a mystery which had beene hidden since the world began and from all ages but now is made manifest to all his Saints 2. The mercy of God and his free grace is more fully made knowne and offered vnto men in the Ministrie of the Gospell than it was vnder the Law This reason the Apostie giueth the grace of God that bringeth saluation hath appeared vnto all men Tit. 2. 11. 3. The Spirit of God which onely maketh the Word of God effectuall in the heart of man is much more plentifully bestowed since the time of Christs Ascension than euer it was before This is plaine Iohn 7. 39. The Holy Ghost was not yet giuen because Iesus was not yet glorified This Doctrine serueth for the Vse and profit both of vs that are Gods Ministers and for all you that are Gods people First we that are Ministers are to be exhorted by this Doctrine that we labour to be fruitfull and profitable in our Ministry Seeke not wealth or ease or credit but fruit Labour to finde that thy Ministry hath done good that it hath beene effectuall to the conuersion of some This made Paul so earnestly desirous to see the Romanes that he might haue some fruit among them also as he had among the other Gentiles Rom. 1. 13. Foure Reasons may be giuen to mooue vs to this care 1. God hath placed vs in this calling and giuen vs the gifts we haue to this end euen for the perfecting of the Saints and for the edifying of the body of Christ Ephes. 4. 8. 12. the manifestation of the spirit is giuen to euery man to profit withall 1. Cor. 12. 7. 2. Euery man should count it his misery to be vnprofitable it is noted for a great part of the misery of our estate by nature that we are altogether vnprofitable Rom. 3. 12. how much more a Minister Matthew 21. 30. cast yee the vnprofitable seruant into vtter darkenesse there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth 3. Nothing will yeeld vs that comfort in life or death as this not all the wealth we haue gathered nor the credit and applause we haue had 1. Thess. 2. 19. they whom he had won to God were his hope and ioy and crowne of reioycing 4. This is the chiefe thing that will assure vs that God hath indeed called vs to be Ministers of his Gospell and approueth of our Ministry when we are fruitfull when the porter the Holy Ghost appeareth vnto vs and giueth entrance to our Ministry into the hearts of the people Iohn 10. 3. as we know he did to Pauls Ministry into the heart of Lydia Act. 16. 14. We haue heard all the Ministers of the New Testament are reapers The seruants to whom God committed his talents if they were good and faithfull seruants gained somewhat to their Master Matth. 25. 23. Thus Paul approoueth himselfe to be an able Minister of the Gospell the Corinthians that were conuerted by his Ministry were his letters of commendation written in his heart yeilding him much inward comfort and assurance of his calling and also knowne and read of all men such an euidence of his calling as was apparant vnto all men 2. Cor. 3. 2. this he calls the very seale of his Apostleship 1. Cor. 9 2 Now seeing this is so necessary I will giue some few rules out of Gods Word which if we follow we shall be sure to reape fruit of our labours 1. We must be diligent and painefull both in study and in preaching giue attendance to reading to exhortation to doctrine neglect not the gift that is in thee but both by diligence in study and in preaching labour to stirre it vp and increase it saith the Apostle vnto Timothy 1. Tim. 4. 13 14. 2. When we teach we must labour to teach that not wherein our selues may shew most learning or eloquence but which may be most profitable and of vse to them we teach speake thou the things which become sound wholesome doctrine Tit. 2. 1. and the things that he would haue Titus to affirme constantly and to insist vpon in his Ministry are the things that are good and profitable vnto men Tit. 3. 8. 3. Striue to teach in that manner as may most profit thy hearers Marke 4. 33. Christ preached so as they were able to heare This was Pauls minde though he excelled all the flaunting preachers at Corinth in the tongues yet he professed that in the Church he had rather speake fiue words to the capacity and edification of others then ten thousand words in an vnknowne tongue 1. Cor. 14. 18 19. Hitherto belongeth that exhortation preach the Word reprooue rebuke exhort that is apply thy doctrine alwaies to the present estate and condition of thy hearers 2. Tim. 4. 2. 4. Take heed to thy life that thou do nothing to hinder the fruit of thy labours take heed vnto thy selfe and vnto the doctrine 1. Tim. 4. 16. And 1. Cor. 9. 15. it were better for me to die then that any man should make my glorying void that is rather then that any man should be able to obiect ought
119. 33. Teach mee O Lord the way of thy statutes and I will keepe it vnto the end And Uerse 34. Giue me vnderstanding and I will keepe thy law yea I will keepe it with my whole heart Yea euen when he had fallen grieuously yet so soone as God sent his seruant to him to shew him his sin he yeelded presently 〈◊〉 Sam. 12 13. 3. When once God hath reuealed his will by his Word vnto vs in any thing we must not dare to dispute or cauil against it be it neuer so contrary to our reason be it neuer so much against our owne humour Rom. 9. 20. O man who art thou that wilt reason the case with God Euery thought within vs must be brought into that captiuity into that obedience of Christ 2. Cor. 10. 5. as that they may not dare once to rise vp within vs against any truth of God For this we haue a notable example Iob 6. 24. Teach mee and I will hold my tongue and cause mee to know wherein I haue erred As if he should say Reueale to me by thy Word wherein I haue offended and I will lay my hand vpon my mouth I will not dare to reason in the defence of it 4. We should be ready to receiue Gods Word and be informed in his will by any how much soeuer he be our inferiour This is that that the Prophet speaketh of the powerfull work of Gods Word and Spirit Esay 11. 6. where it preuaileth it maketh them that were before as Wolues and Leopards and Lyons so tame that a little child may lead them This Iob professeth of himselfe Iob 31. 34. Though I could haue made affraid a great multitude my wealth and authority was such that I could haue crushed them by my power yet the most contemptible of the family did feare mee so I kept silence and went not out of the doore If the meanest of my family had come to me and said Sir you haue broken Gods law you haue sinned against God I durst not haue fretted against him or reiected his counsaile but I would haue yeelded to him and humbled my selfe and shut my selfe within my closet till I had made peace with God The like example we haue in Dauid 1. Sam. 25. 32 33. Abigal a weak woman and the wife of his enemy that had contemned and reuiled him commeth to him euen when he was in a great heat against Nabal and putteth him in mind that if he should follow his passion and reuenge himselfe he should sin against God he scorned not her counsell nor said Shall I that am a Prophet and a King be taught and directed by a foolish woman But he yeelded presently though he were in so great a passion he durst not but receiue Gods Word at the hands of any person how meane soeuer yea he praiseth God for her Blessed be the Lord God of Israel which hath sent thee this day to meet me and blessed be thy counsaile and blessed be thou which hast kept me this day from comming to shed bloud The Reasons of this Doctrine why we must receiue Gods truth when it is once reuealed vnto vs with such readinesse why we must be so apt to beleeue it to yeeld vnto it are these 1. Because the Lord hath promised that such as shall offer themselues to be taught by him with such yeelding hearts them he will teach and guide he will preserue them from errour he will resolue them in the truth and giue them a comfortable assurance in the matters of their saluation the law of the Lord will giue wisedome to the simple Psal. 19. 7. The meeke he will guide in iudgement and the meeke hee will teach his way Psal. 25. 9. If any man will doe his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speake of my selfe Iohn 7. 17. so this here in this place And on the other side such as are vnwilling to see the truth will not with loue receiue it the Lord is wont to leaue them in vncertainty and to send them strong delusions that they may beleeue lies to shew himselfe as vnwilling to teach them as they are vnwilling to learne of him When our Sauiour had spoken of that fearefull iudgement vpon the Iewes hearing they should heare but should not vnderstand and seeing they should see but should not perceiue he giues this for the reason that they had closed their owne eyes and had not beene willing to see and receiue the truth that God reuealed vnto them Matth. 13. 14 15. And the Apostle prophesying of them that should fall away vnto Popery tels vs that therefore God would send them strong delusions that they should belieue any lye because they would not receiue the truth with loue when it was taught vnto them 2. Thess. 2. 10 11. An example hereof we haue in Ahab he was not willing to be taught by Gods faithfull Prophet but hated him and therefore God sent a lying spirit into his false prophets that might deceiue him 1. King 22. 8. 12. 2. The Lords soueraignty ouer vs is such as it becommeth vs to yeeld absolute obedience to him without all reasoning or gaine-saying O man who art thou that replyest against God Rom. 9. 20. This reason the Lord giueth yee shall keepe my Sabbaths and reuerence my Sanctuary and why I am the Lord Leuit. 26. 2. This made Eli so to yeeld that he durst not once winch against a message God had sent him by young Samuel It is the Lord saith he let him doe what seemeth him good 1. Samuel 3. 18. 3. It is not possible Gods Word should deceiue vs Thy testimonies are very sure Psalme 93. 5. All the words of my mouth are in righteousnesse there is nothing froward or peruerse in them Prouerbs 8. 8. and therefore there is iust cause wee should receiue it with all readinesse The Vse of this Doctrine is for Reproofe For if this be a signe of grace to be so apt to receiue Gods truth when once it is reuealed vnto vs then surely many of vs will be found to be void of grace that yet thinke very well of our selues 1. There be many haue heard sundry truths often taught and plainely confirmed by the Word of God that cannot discerne them nor be perswaded of them as touching the obseruation of the Sabbath the frequenting of the exercises of Religion c. And why canst thou not yet see nor be perswaded in these things Surely if thou hadst a good heart halfe the teaching thou hast would perswade thee the very entrance into Gods Word the first hearing of it would haue giuen thee light Psalme 119. 130. Thou hast an vngracious heart and that is the cause thou canst not see these truths nor be perswaded If our Gospell bee hidden it is hidden to them that are lost These women that were euer learning and neuer able to come to the knowledge of the truth were such as were laden with
you the Euangelist sets downe their increase and proceedings in Faith and what vse they made of our Sauiour in those two daies that he spent among them And in setting this downe he offereth foure principall points to our consideration 1. That by this abode which Christ made among them they encreased greatly in the number of Beleeuers for many that made no reckoning of the Womans words nor would vpon her perswasion stirre out of their doores to goe to him yet when he was come vnto them and they had heard him teach beleeued in him Many more beleeued because of his owne word 2. That they increased greatly in the measure of their Faith also for whereas they that had beleeued in him vpon the Womans speech were but weake in Faith and not fully resolued whether he were the Messia or no now by hearing him they were confirmed and fully assured that he was indeede the Christ the Sauiour of the world 3. The reason is set downe why they did thus increase both in the number of Beleeuers and in the measure of their Faith Because of his owne Word because they had heard him themselues 4. They make confession of this their Faith and certainty they were growne vnto as also of the meanes whereby they were brought vnto it vnto the woman that was the first instrument of their conuersion and professe plainely to her that the good they receiued by her was nothing to that which they had gotten by hearing him themselues They said vnto the Woman now we beleeue not because of thy saying for we haue heard him our selues First then we must obserue here that which the Euangelist speakes of the increase of the number of Beleeuers among the Samaritans in that short space that Christ tarried with them Many more beleeued because of his owne Word From whence we learne That a man may be one of Gods Elect though he cannot profit by some meanes of his saluation that God offers vnto him though he do not profit by the meanes of his saluation at the first See the proofe of this Doctrine first in the example the Holy Ghost hath giuen vs in this place 1. These Samaritans mentioned in the 41. verse were the Elect of God as well as those mentioned in the two former verses else they could not haue beleeued 2. Looke what meanes the other had to bring them to the faith these had the very same for the woman had spoken and perswaded and dealt as earnestly with them as with the other vers 28. when she ran from Christ into the city Shee said vnto the men that is to all indifferently Come and see c. 3. These had had greater meanes to bring them to Christ than the other for beside the speech of the Woman they had also the example of many of their Neighbours to prouoke them 4. Yet neither the Womans speech nor their Neighbours example could preuaile with them but when they had heard Christ themselues then they beleeued on him Now before I proceed further in the confirmation of this Doctrine three Cautions must be first premised to preuent the mistaking of it 1. All whom God meanes to saue ordinarily shall haue the meanes of grace vouch safed vnto them at one time or other and shall haue also grace giuen vnto them to profit by them Other sheepe I haue saith our Sauiour Iohn 10. 16. which are not of this Fold them also I must bring and they shall heare my voice And againe vers 27. My sheepe heare my voice And as it is a good signe God hath an Elect people in that place that he giueth the meanes of grace vnto as is plaine by that reason he giues to Paul why he would haue him continue in Corinth for I haue much people saith he in this city Acts 18. 9 10. and on the other side an euill signe that a people are such as God hath no gracious eye or respect vnto when he denieth them the meanes of grace the time of this ignorance while he denied to the people that liued in that time the meanes of grace God regarded not Acts 17. 30. So is it also a good signe of Election to euery particular person when God giues him not onely the meanes of grace but also a heart to profit by them so many as were ordained vnto life belieued Acts 13. 48. and the contrary is a fearefull signe of Reprobation when God giuing to a man the meanes of grace denies him a heart to profit by them ye therefore heare not because yee are not of God Ioh. 7. 47. I know that God hath determined to destroy thee saith the Prophet to Amaziah because thou hast done this and hast not hearkened vnto my counsell 2. Chron. 25. 16. 2. It is a comfortable signe of a mans election when he receiues the Word with all readinesse and his heart makes answer vnto God so soone as he cals vpon him when thou saidst seeke ye my face my heart said vnto thee thy face Lord will I seeke Psal. 27. 8. These were more noble then those in Thessalonica in that they receiued the word with all readinesse Acts 17. 11. And on the other side it is a dangerous signe of Reprobation when a man doth wilfully put the Lord off and takes day with him He that refuseth thus to come when God calleth him hath iust cause to feare God will call him no more Because I haue purged thee vsed the meanes and endeuoured to purge thee and thou wast not purged thou shalt not be purged from thy filthinesse any more Ezek. 24. 13. 3. The Lord hath beene wont when he hath giuen the meanes of grace to a people to make them effectuall to the Conuersion of so many as he meanes to saue within a very short time after they haue first enioyed them And if we obserue this well we shall finde that such Preachers as God hath made most fruitfull in their Ministry haue conuerted more to God at their first comming to a People and that their labours afterward haue serued rather to confirme and build men forward than to conuert them It is noted of Peters Ministry Acts 10. 44. that euen while he was preaching vnto Cornelius and those that were there assembled the Holy Ghost fell vpon all them that heard the Word And Paul Phil. 1. 5. speaking of the successe of his ministry among the Philippians praiseth God for the fellowship they had in the Gospell from the first day that he had preached vnto them vntill then And he twice puts the Thessalonians in minde of their state when he came first among them 1. Thess. 1. 9. They shew what manner of entring in we had vnto you and how yee turned from Idols to God to serue the liuing and true God and 2. 1. Your selues Brethren know our entrance in vnto you that it was not in vaine As if he should haue said vnto them O those were comfortable times So doth he put the Galathians in minde
I vnto you This peace is Christs peace his gift and that no common gift It is another manner of peace than that that is in worldly men 1. It is a sounder and a greater and a more hearty peace than theirs is Psal. 4. 7 8. Thou hast put gladnesse into my heart more than they haue in the time that their corne and wine encreaseth I will lay me downe in peace c. 2. It maketh the heart quiet and secure not only in time of health and prosperity but euen in time of greatest danger and affliction Psal. 112. 7 8. Hee shall not bee affraid of euill tidings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord his heart is established Yea in the time of tentation and inward affliction of minde 2. Cor. 5. 6. We are alwaies confident He meanes not at all times for this peace may be for a time interrupted but in all estates Matth. 7. 25. The raine descended and the flouds came and the windes blew and beate vpon that house and it fell not for it was founded vpon a rocke 3. It frees the heart from slauish feare not onely of the rage and power of men as it did those three noble Iewes Dan. 3. 16. and the Martyrs but it makes the heart secure and quiet euen against the sense of Gods wrath due to sinne Rom. 5. 1. Being iustified by faith wee haue peace with God 4. The least measure of true Faith workes this peace Indeed according to the measure of our Faith so shall the measure of our peace be but not onely the strong Faith such as was in the Martyrs and other extraordinary men but the least measure of Faith will worke this sound peace in some measure as the least Faith will iustifie vs so will it worke this peace in vs also Rom. 5. 1. See therefore how generall tearmes are vsed in this case Matth. 7. 24. Whosoeuer heares my word and doth it And 1. Iohn 5. 4 5. Whatsoeuer is borne of God ouercommeth the world and this is the victory that ouercometh the world euen our faith Who is he that ouercommeth the world but he that beleeueth that Iesus is the Sonne of God Now the faithfull that know that the Lord is great in power and will not at all acquit the wicked Nah. 1. 3. and that none can be saued that doth not continue to the end Matth. 24. 13. could neuer haue this peace vnlesse they were certaine not onely that they are for the present in Gods fauour but also that they shall so continue according to that speech of Christ Iohn 6. 35. I am the bread of life he that commeth to me shall neuer hunger and hee that beleeueth on mee shall neuer thirst 2. It worketh in them ioy in the Holy Ghost It worketh a sound constant and vnspeakeable ioy in the heart of euery one that hath it Acts 8. 37. Hee went his way reioycing 1. Pet. 1. 8. In whom now though you see him not yet doe you beleeue and reioyce with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious Yea it makes a man able to reioyce euen in the greatest affliction it made Paul and Silas after they had beene shamefully and grieuously scourged sing merily euen at midnight euen in the dungeon euen in the stockes Acts 16. 25. As we haue also seene in the example of the Martyrs no threats no torments could daunt them but they haue expressed a maruellous ioy euen in the midst of all their tortures What was the cause of it The Apostle tels vs 1. Iohn 5. 4. This is the victory that ouercommeth the world euen our Faith And though euery one of the faithfull attaine not to that measure of ioy as these yet in euery true beleeuer Faith workes this ioy in some measure It is the same Faith we haue that they had the like precious faith 〈◊〉 Pet. 〈◊〉 1. and the same worke it will haue in euery one Being iustified by faith we haue peace with God and reioyce in hope of the glory of God and not only so but we glory in tribulation also Rom. 5. 1 2 3. Now they could not thus reioyce vnlesse they were certaine not onely for the present that they are in Gods fauour but also for the time to come that they shall so continue For otherwise it were extreme folly in them thus to reioyce as they that triumph before the victory And indeed the Papists doe deride vs for this Doctrine we teach of confidence and glorying and say to vs as Ahab did to Benhadad 1. King 20. 11. Let not him that girdeth on his harnesse boast himselfe as he that putteth it off It is a folly for men say they to be so confident and to glory thus seeing we haue not yet gotten the victory but are in warfare we know not how farre we may fall before we die But to them we answer as Esa●… 40. 2. Our warfare is accomplished the victory is already gotten our iniquity is pardoned whatsoeuer we may fall into we haue in our head receiued at the Lord●… bands double for our sins and therefore we are so confident 3. It makes a man able to goe to God in prayer 1. At all times euen in times of greatest anguish of heart as we shall see Psal. 88. When he had said verse 7. Thy wrath lyeth hard vpon mee and thou hast afflicted me with all thy waues yet euen then he prayed as he saith verse 9. Lord I haue called daily vpon thee 2. In all his occasions Phil. 4. 6. In euery thing let your requests be made knowne vnto God 3. And that not for himselfe onely but for others also If any man see his brother sin a sin which is not vnto death hee shall aske and he shall giue him life for them that sin not vnto death 1. Iohn 5. 16. 4. And that with great assurance to speed and preuaile with God 1. Iohn 5. 14. This is the confidence we haue in him that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth vs. Yea 5. with a maruellous confidence and boldnesse Ephes. 3. 12. By him we haue boldnesse and entrance with confidence by faith in him It makes vs able as Etiphaz saith Iob 22. 26. to life vp our face to God Heb. 4. 16. Let vs goe boldly vnto the Throne of grace Therefore also we shall oft obserue in the Scriptures a maruellous familiarity betweene the faithfull and God Iob 13. 24 25. Wherefore hidest thou thy face and holdest me for thine enemie c. Psal. 13. 1. How long wilt thou forget me O Lord for euer How long wilt thou hide thy face from me c. Psal. 89. 46 47. How long Lord wilt thou hide thy face for euer Shall thy wrath burne like fire Remember how short my time is wherefore hast thou made all men in vaine Now the faithfull knowing that to be true of all wicked men that liue in their sins which Ioshua speaketh Iosh. ●…4 1●… Yee cannot serue the Lord for he is an holy
that his mercy endureth for euer 2. We are weake and vnable to resist the least tentation much lesse those mighty enemies that we haue to encounter with and therefore Christ bids vs Mat. 26. 41. Watch and pray that yee enter not into temptation We might for any strength that is in vs fall quite away from God euery day But the Lord our God is strong and of power sufficient to keepe that that is committed vnto him 2. Tim. 1. 12. I suffer and am not ashamed for I know in whom I haue beleeued and I am perswaded that hee is able to keepe that that I haue committed vnto him vntill that day Wee are kept saith Peter 1. Pet. 1. 5. by the power of God through Faith vnto Saluation This reason our Sauiour giues for the perseuerance of the faithfull Iohn 10. 28 29. They shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of mine hand my Father which gaue them mee is greater than all and none is able to plucke them out of my Fathers hand This is that that keepes the Faithfull from falling irrecouerably Psal. 37. 24. Though he fall hee shall not be cast off for the Lord putteth vnder his hand 3. We do enough euery day to deserue that God should take his holy spirit from vs and cast vs off for euer But though we deserue no better Christ hath deserued that God should continue his grace and fauour towards vs vnto the end and this is that that is sealed and confirmed to vs in the Lords Supper yea he continually pleades this merit of his for vs before his Father and makes intercession for vs. The cause why Peter though he fell fearefully yet could not fall totally nor finally was that Prayer that Christ made for him Luke 22. 31 32. Now looke what prayer Christ made for Peter he made for all the faithfull as is plaine Iohn 17. 20. neither pray I for these alone but for them also which shall beleeue on me through their word And this is a chiefe part of that prayer he makes for them verse 11. Holy Father keepe them in thy Name euen them that thou hast giuen me and verse 15. I pray not that thou wouldst take them out of the world but that thou keepe them from that euill one And that prayer was but the summe of that intercession that he makes for vs continually at the right hand of his Father Heb. 7. 25. He is able perfectly to saue such as come to God by him seeing hee euer liueth to make intercession for them And therefore to conclude seeing the Faithfull haue such a rocke to build their assurance vpon what maruell is it though they be so fully assured and vndoubtedly perswaded of their saluation Lecture the seuentie fiue December 11. 1610. IOHN IIII. XLII IT followeth now that we proceede to the Vse that is to be made of the former Doctrine for it is certainely a Doctrine of great vse And in teaching you the vse of this Doctrine I might first apply it to the confutation of the Papists who directly contradict this Doctrine which hath beene so clearely and euidently confirmed vnto you by the holy Scriptures But that I hold not to be so needefull or profitable in this place specially because in confuting the errour of the Papists in this point I should but repeate what I haue already taught in the confirmation of the Doctrine I will therefore make but three Vses of this Doctrine whereof the first shall be for Exhortation the second for Reproofe the third for Comfort First if a man may in this life grow so certainely and vndoubtedly assured of Gods fauour and of his eternall saluation we are all to bee exhorted by all meanes to seeke for this certainetie 1. Many thinke they haue faith that yet are not nor euer were certaine of their saluation haue no assurance from God what hee meanes to doe with them what shall become of them after this life but goe blundring on in an vncertaine opinion or wauering hope of Gods fauour and rest in that neuer seeking for any certainety 2. Some that are possessed with the spirit of bondage and often vexed with terrible doubts and feares about this matter yet will neuer set their hearts to seeke for this certainety 3. Some that haue felt in themselues this comfortable assurance and now through their folly haue lost it yet seeke not to recouer it as if it were a matter of no worth Well we are I say to be exhorted to vse all good meanes to be deliuered from the spirit of bondage and not to rest in an vncertaine opinion or wauering hope but to seeke to haue this assurance if we haue lost it labour to recouer it if we haue it take heed we lose it not Cause not the light of his countenance to fall as Iob speakes of himselfe in another case Iob 29. 24. Heb. 10. 35. Cast not away your confidence This is the exhortation of the Apostle 2. Pet. 1. 10. Giue diligence to make your calling and election sure for if yee do these things yee shall neuer be moued As if he should say This certainety may be attained vnto if ye be diligent If we hold any land or lease we will spare no paines nor cost to make it as sure as we can specially if we haue euer an aduersary that contends with vs about it how much more doth it stand vs vpon to make this certaine This is a matter we can neuer make too sure Paul prayeth for all the faithfull Col. 2. 2. That their hearts may be comforted in all riches of the full assurance of vnderstanding And Verse 7. That they may bee rooted and built in Christ and stablished in the Faith abounding therein with thankesgiuing And for the Ephesians he prayeth Ephes. 3. 17 18 19. That being rooted and grounded in the assurance of Gods loue they might be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the loue of Christ which passeth all knowledge that they might bee filled with all fulnesse of God Mee thinkes I should not neede to vse reasons to perswade and moue you to seeke for this assurance yet because we haue all so great neede to be stirred vpto this duty I will giue you a few First it would free the heart from all slauish feare that vexeth and disquieteth it and worke a maruellous quietnesse and holy security in it Psalme 46. 1 2 3. God is our hope and strength therefore will we not feare though the earth be moued though the mountaines fall into the midst of the sea c. Rom. 8. 31. If God be on our side who can be against vs And without this we can haue no true quietnesse of minde specially in the time of extreme danger Secondly it would make our hearts maruellously comfortable and chearefull in euery estate 1. Pet. 1. 8. You beleeue and reioyce with ioy vnspeakeable In prosperity it would
19. That God let none of his words fall to the ground So hath he shewed himselfe carefull of the words and writings of all the rest of the Prophets yea of the least iot and title of them that it might not fall to the ground but be fulfilled Matth. 〈◊〉 18. When the Holy Ghost will giue a reason why Christs parents fled with him into Egypt rather than into any other place Mat. 2. 15. And why after his returne he was brought vp at Nazaret rather than in any other place Matth. 2. 23. Why at his death the soldiers cast lots for his garments Matth. 27. 35. Why when he was crucified the vngracious soldiers brake not his legs according to the custome but one of them with a speare pierced his side Iohn 19. 36 37. This is onely giuen for the reason of all that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the mouth of the Prophets that the Scripture might be fulfilled Now consider with thy selfe that these things were but iots and titles in the Writings of the Prophets and therefore if God were so carefull to see these small things fulfilled how much more will he be of the weightier matters of the Law that concerne mercy and iudgement and fidelity Mat. 23. 23. 2 The diligent and conscionable vse of Gods ordinance in the Ministry of his Word and Sacraments For as Faith comes by hearing Rom. 10. 17. so the constant vse of it is appointed of God to this end to bring men into certainty in the matters of their Faith Ephes. 4. 14. That we henceforth be no more children wauering and caried about with euery blast of Doctrine 3 Feruent and hearty prayer when our Sauiour had taught his Disciples a truth that to flesh and bloud seemes most incredible namely that we are bound to forgiue our brother vpon his repentance though he wrong vs neuer so oft They said vnto the Lord increase our faith Luke 17. 5. For no man can be vndoubtedly assured of the truth of Gods Word without the reuelation of the Spirit Flesh and bloud hath not reuealed this vnto thee but my father which is in heauen Matth. 16. 17. Yea it is a mighty work of God Paul cals it Ephes. 1. 19. the exceeding greatnesse of his power towards vs that belieue according to the working of his mighty power 4 An honest heart and care to please God Mar. 1. 15. Repent and belieue the Gospell Ioh. 7. 17. If any man shall do his will he shall know of that Doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speake of my selfe The second vse is for reproofe and to discouer the wretched estate of all vnbelieuers First if they had no other sinne yet this is enough to make their state miserable Secondly how ciuill soeuer they seem in shew doubtlesse they are as painted sepulchers for their heart must needs be corrupt and naught Thirdly neither the power of Christs merits nor the infinitenesse of Gods mercy can profit them but the knowledge they haue of the sufficiency of Christs merit and the infinitenesse of Gods mercy will but increase their misery as in the case of that Prince in 2 King 7. 2. Behold thou shalt see it with thine eyes but shalt not eat thereof And surely this is the case of most men euen of such as liue in the Church and professe the truth That that is said of the time when Christ shall come to iudgement may be said of these times When the Sonne of man commeth shall he find faith on the earth Luke 18. 8. This appeares by three apparent signes First the contempt of the word of exhortation in the Ministry of Gods seruants which if they belieued the Word they would giue credit vnto Belieue in the Lord your God so shall you be established belieue his Prophets so shall ye prosper 2 Chro. 20. 20. The people belieued the Lord and his seruant Moses Exod. 14. 31. Obiect You cannot agree among your selues and how should we giue credit to you Answ. In matters the knowledge whereof is necessary to saluation we all agree against thee and such as thou art we all agree Thou art conuinced of vs all thou art iudged of vs all 1 Cor. 14. 24. Secondly the truths they seeme to haue receiued with greatest assurance yet are they glad to heare ought obiected against them whereas the contrary is in them that belieue when occasion of doubting was giuen vnto the two Disciples that went towards Emaus that that which they had belieued concerning Christ was not true it made their hearts sad Luke 24. 17. Thirdly their hearts and liues are vtterly vnreformed which were not possible if they had true Faith Lecture the ninetieth Iune 18. 1611. IOHN IIII. XLVIII IT followes that we now proceed to the three other points that I told you are to be obserued in this Verse And first in that our Sauiour charging them with infidelity doth not say simply they would not belieue but saith that vnlesse they see signes and wonders they would not belieue therefore they had not Faith This Doctrine ariseth That true Faith is grounded vpon the Word of God and is able to giue credit to the Word though it see nothing else to confirme it They that cannot belieue except they see haue no true Faith Before I confirme this Doctrine I will explaine it in foure points 1 True it is that the Lord is wont by his works to giue testimony to his Word and to confirme it yea all the mighty works that God worketh in his Church are done to that end to ratifie his Word and to gaine credit vnto it Marke 16. ●…0 God confirmed the Word with signes that followed And Acts 14. 3. God gaue testimony to the Word of his grace and caused signes and wonders to be done by their hands Surely the Lord would not doe this vnlesse he saw it needfull and if he see it needfull why then doth he blame the Iewes here for desiring this And to this purpose it is that though the Lord haue appointed the day of generall resurrection to be the day of iudgement Acts 17. 31. Yet is there neuer a curse that he hath in his Word denounced against the wicked nor blessing he hath promised to the godly but in euery age and in euery place he hath made it good vpon some that men may sensibly see his Word confirmed vnto them by his works Psal. 7. 11. God iudgeth the righteous and him that contemneth God euery day In which respect it is said Psal. 107. 42. The righteous shall see it and reioyce and all iniquity shall stop her mouth 2 It cannot be denied but the heart of man may be notably prepared to the Faith before his conuersion by many things which he may see so the miracles which the Iewes saw Christ worke were notable preparatiues vnto them and made them much more willing to heare and receiue his Doctrine than otherwise they would haue been Of this we haue
reads in the Word though he see or feele little to perswade him to it yet he hath the promise Godlinesse hath the promise both of this life and of the life to come this is a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation for therefore we labour and suffer reproch because vpon this ground we trust in the liuing God c. 1 Timothie 4. 8 9 10. And this promise is of great force and account with him Hauing these promises let vs cleanse our selues 2 Corinth 7. 1. The third Vse of the Doctrine is for comfort to the godly that know they feare God vnfainedly and yet are often perplexed because all sensible tokens of his fauour both inward and outward are taken from them First in thy outward affliction and distresse acquaint thy selfe well with Gods promises made vnto thee namely such as that they that seeke the Lord shall not want any good thing Psalme 34. 10. Secondly assure thy selfe God with-holds from thee the sensible performance of them to prooue whether thou canst belieue though thou see not To humble thee and to proue thee and to know what was in thy heart whether thou wouldst keepe his commandements or no Deut. 8. 2. Thirdly giue thou glory to God in belieuing and say as Iob 13. 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him And all will be well assuredly If thou canst belieue all things are possible to him that belieueth Mark 9. 23. In the affliction of thy mind and losse of the feeling of Gods fauour first acquaint thy selfe with the promises Whom Christ euer loued he loues to the end Ioh. 13. 2. The gifts and callings of God such gifts and graces of God as do accompany an effectuall calling are without repentance Rom. 11. 29. He hath said I will neuer faile thee nor forsake thee Heb. 13. 5. Secondly rest assured God doth this for thy profit he alwayes chasteneth vs for our profit that we might be partakers of his holinesse Heb. 12. 10. Thirdly consider not too much of nor reason too much with thy temptation Abraham considered not thought not much vpon nor reasoned with or obiected against the promise of God his owne body now dead when he was about an hundred yeare old neither yet the deadnesse of Sarahs wombe Rom. 4. 19. Fourthly though thou feele nothing yet say with Dauid Psal. 56. 10. In God will I praise his word in the Lord will I praise his word Lecture the ninetie one Iune 25. IOHN IIII. XLVIII IT remaines now that we proceed to the two last points obserued in this Verse The first thing then that we are now to obserue is this That our Sauiour chargeth the Iewes with obstinacy and aggrauates their infidelity by their wilfulnesse Ye will not belieue saith he And this ye shall find oft charged vpon them and made the chiefe cause of their reiection Iohn 5. 40. But ye will not come to me that ye might haue life And 8. 44. Ye are of your father the Deuill and the lusts of your father you will doe Matth. 23. 37. How oft would I haue gathered you together as an Hen gathereth her chickens vnder her wings but ye would not Rom. 11. 25. Obstinacy is come to Israel vntill the fulnesse of the Gentiles be come in They had had all good meanes to perswade them to belieue in Christ the Scriptures did beare witnesse vnto him and so did the Shepheards and Simeon and Anna and Iohn the Baptist and the miracles that Christ himselfe had wrought therefore it must needs be wilfulnesse and obstinacy in them that they did not belieue From hence then this Doctrine ariseth That this greatly aggrauateth euery sinne in the sight of God when it is committed with wilfulnesse and obstinacy When men sinne not of simple ignorance but God hauing giuen them the ordinary meanes of knowledge and faith and reformation of life they stand out against the meanes and will not be reclaimed Obserue the proofe and demonstration of this Doctrine in all the wayes whereby the wrath of God is reuealed from heauen and ye shall euer find he hates the man that sinnes wilfully against the meanes aboue all other First in the euerlasting punishment and torments of Hell Though Turkes and Pagans that neuer sinned wilfully against the meanes of grace shall be damned and therefore it is said Mar. 16. 16. He that belieueth not not he that will not belieue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall be damned And 2 Thes. 1. 8 In flaming fire rendring vengeance on them that do not know God And Rom. 2. 12. As many as haue sinned without the Law shall perish also without the Law yet shall there be certainly in those euerlasting torments the least measure whereof shall be such as no heart of man is able to conceiue and because the least shall be vnconceaueably extreame and euerlasting it passeth mans reason to imagine how there should be any degrees in it great odds and difference And the Lord who is infinite in wisdome and iustice and power hath appointed farre more grieuous and fearefull torments in that Lake for them that haue sinned wilfully and obstinately against the means than for any other sinner This is plaine by that speech of our Sauiour Matth. 10. 15. of euery City that refuseth the Word Truly I say vnto you it shall be easier for them in the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of iudgement than for that City And of Capernaum that did not refuse to heare but did wilfully refuse to belieue and obey the truth which they heard Matth. 11. 24. I say vnto you it shall be easier for the Land of Sodom in the day of iudgement than for thee And that of the Apostle Rom. 2. 8 9. Indignation and wrath tribulation and anguish shall be vpon the soule of euery man that doth euill of the Iew first and also of the Grecian And why of the Iew first or chiefly Because as I haue shewed you obstinacy is come vpon Israel their obstinacy against the meanes of grace which they had aboue the Grecian is the cause of it 2. In those corporall and temporall plagues that God is wont to bring vpon men in this life God shewes this also euidently in those he inflicteth vpon wicked men in their bodies and goods and good name in their children and posterity For first though God in this life shew wonderfull patience in bearing with sinners yet some he cannot forbeare till the life to come but Iames 1. 15. sinne when it is finished bringeth forth death And the thing that makes vp the measure and perfection of sinne is this when men grow obstinate in sinne and will not be reclaimed Thus saith Daniel to Belthasar of the King his Father Dan. 5. 20. When his heart was puffed vp and his mind was hardened in pride he was deposed from his Kingly Throne and his heart was made like the beasts And this is so certaine a signe that some iudgement or
them for first there is light enough in them by nature to condemne them though they neuer heare Sermon as many as haue sinned without the Law shall also perish without the Law Rom. 2. 12. Secondly the knowledge of the Word will not worke vnquietnesse but peace in the heart of them that doe obey it learne of me and yee shall finde rest to your soules Matth. 11. 29. Thirdly wilfull ignorance shall no way lessen but increase thy condemnation The Apostle 2. Pet. 3. 5. speaking of Atheists and Mockers saith This they willingly know not Mat. 10. 15. It shall bee easier for Sodome and Gomorrah than for them that will not heare The second sort of them that will not know the truth are they that can be content to heare but yet will not be perswaded of many truths that haue oft beene clearely taught them out of Gods Word They cannot be perswaded that preaching is the onely ordinary meanes of saluation that we must so precisely rest from our owne labours vpon the Sabbath that a man is bound to frequent euery part of Gods worship both in Church and house that euery master of a family is charged with the soules of his whole family and shall answer for the sinnes that are committed in it These men I would haue to weigh first that it is spoken to the praise of many and noted as a marke of Gods Elect to receiue the Word with all readinesse Acts 17. 11. and the very entrance of Gods Word giueth light vnto them Psal. 119. 130. And the contrary is noted by the Holy Ghost to the dispraise of men that they were long ere they could beleeue ô fooles and slow of heart to beleeue all that the Prophets haue spoken Luke 24. 25. yea it is spoken of as a marke of a reprobate you therefore heare not beleeue not obey not because yee are not of God Ioh. 8. 47. if our Gospell be hidden it is hidden to them that are lost 2. Cor. 4. 3. Consider the true causes of it and they are said to be three First the badnesse and vngraciousnesse of the heart women laden with sinnes and led away with diuers lusts are euer learning and neuer able to come to the knowledge of the truth 2. Tim. 3. 7. Secondly the speciall worke of Sathan the god of this world hath blinded the mindes of them that beleeue not 2. Cor. 4. 4. Thirdly the iust iudgement of God vpon thine owne wilfulnesse as we heard before out of Matth. 13. 14 15. Remember the Doctrine and take heed of sinning wilfully The second sort that I told you were to be reproued by this Doctrine are such as are wilfull and obstinate against the practice and obedience of the truth and of them there are three sorts First such as will not obey the truth when they see it but glory in this that they can giue vs the hearing and yet are not such fooles as to be ruled by vs they said we will not walke therein Ier. 6. 16. as for the word which thou bast spoken to vs in the name of the Lord we will not hearken vnto thee Ier. 44. 16. Secondly such as will not endure particular admonition be it priuate or publicke Thirdly such as will be the worse for admonition sinne taking occasion by the Commandement Rom. 7. 8. And such for the most part are our youths whose outrages are vsually committed in an opposition and contempt to the Word but let them remember these youthfull sins will be heauy and bitter one day thou writest bitter things against me and makest me to possesse the iniquities the punishment of the sinnes of my youth Iob 12. 26. The third Vse of this Doctrine is for the comfort of the faithfull who though they haue many corruptions yet they are able to say that to will is present with them their will and the desire of their heart is set to please the Lord Rom. 7. 18. 20. Lecture the ninetie two Iuly 2. 1611. IOHN IIII. XLVIII IT followeth now that we come to the fourth and last point that I haue told you is to be obserued in this verse in which that we may the better receiue our instruction from it these things are to be marked First our Sauiour chargeth the whole Nation of the Iewes with this sinne of infidelity and saith that this was the common fault of all the Iewes of that age they would not beleeue except they saw signes and wonders Matth. 12. 29. An euill and adulterous generation seeketh a signe 1. Cor. 1. 22. The Iewes require a signe Secondly that our Sauiour purposing to reproue this Ruler for his infidelity and to humble him and to shew him that for that cause he was vnworthy to receiue help from him doth not say Except thou see c. but in the plurall number Except yee see as if he should say If this were thy sinne onely I could the better beare with it but it is the sinne of you all and this he speakes not to extenuate his sinne but to humble him the more Hence then this Doctrine ariseth That the commonnesse of any sinne is no excuse for sinne No man hath cause to make the lesse account of any sinne that he liues in because he seeth it is common and growne into fashion but to feare it the more to be humbled the more for it because of that A plaine proofe of the Doctrine we haue Leuit. 4. from verse 13. to 35. where the Lord prescribing a forme how attonement should be made for all sorts that had sinned of ignorance he requires more solemnity to be vsed and more to be done for the expiation of a sinne that a whole Congregation is guilty of than either for the sinne of any Magistrate or for the sinne of any priuate man whatsoeuer The Reason of the Doctrine is this That the more common sinne is the more God hateth it and the lesse can he beare with it The more there be that doe conspire in sin the more fierce will Gods wrath be vpon them Nothing hastens Gods vengeance vpon sinners more than this as the generality of repentance and ioyning together in the profession of it is of great force to stay Gods wrath as we may see in two famous examples namely in the fast that Israel kept for successe against the Beniamites and in that of the Niuites Iudg. 20. 6. and Ionah 3. 5. so is the generality of sinne of great force to hasten and increase the iudgements of God See the proofe of this in three famous examples of Gods vengeance vpon sinners First in the destruction of the old World marke the story and you shall finde that the generality of sinne then brought that generall floud Gen. 6. 12. Then God looked vpon the earth and behold it was corrupt for all flesh had corrupted his way vpon earth And verse 11. The earth was filled with cruelty The second example is in the destruction of Sodome of that the
strength of his Spirit support and enable him to beare it the spirit it selfe will helpe his infirmities Rom. 8. 26. 1. Cor. 10. 13. God is faithfull that will not suffer you to bee tempted aboue that you be able Fourthly he is assured that whatsoeuer affliction God layeth vpon him it shall in the end tend to his good and to the furtherance of his saluation Rom. 8. 28. Fifthly he knowes the end will pay for all and that after a while all teares shall be wiped from his eyes and he shall enioy vnspeakeable comfort Psal. 27. 13. I should haue fainted except I had beleeued to see the goodnesse of the Lord in the land of the liuing Now on the other side the man that wants this assurance of his saluation though he haue all the meanes in the world to secure and quiet his heart and to make it merry yet can he neuer attaine vnto true ioy and comfort nor keepe off extremity of griefe when the euill day shall come vpon him If any shall obiect against this that many of Gods children that are assured of their saluation are yet much oppressed with heauinesse and their liues are very vncomfortable and on the other side that many who want this assurance are knowne to haue the lightest and merriest hearts of all other men I answer For the faithfull first That they haue much inward ioy though they shew it not as other men yea oft times when their life seemes most vncomfortable to the worldly man and most full of misery Yea as Salomon saith of wicked mens ioy Pro. 13. 14. Euen in laughter the heart is sorrowfull so of the heauinesse of the godly it may be said oft times that euen in weeping their heart is full of comfort 2 Cor. 6. 10. As sorrowing yet alwayes reioycing That as Christ said Vers. 32. of this Chapter I haue meat that ye know not of so haue the godly much comfort which worldlings haue no skill of Pro. 14. 10. The stranger shall not meddle with his ioy 2 Though they be sometime in great heauinesse indeed yet it is not possible they should be ouercome of it but they shall certainly recouer themselues as 2 Cor. 4. 8. We are afflicted on euery side yet are we not in distresse in pouertie yet not ouercome of pouertie we are persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but perish not Because they haue euer in them the seed and root of true ioy Psal. 97. 11. Light is sowne for the righteous and gladnesse for the vpright in heart So that as it is not possible for him that is once truly regenerate to sinne as other men do because the seed of God and Spirit of Sanctification abideth in him 1 Ioh. 3. 9. So it is not possible for him that hath once attained to true assurance of his saluation to sorrow as other men do or to perish in despaire because the seed of God the Spirit of Adoption which is called the oyle of gladnesse Psal. 45. 7. abideth in him For this is that that Christ saith of this ioy Ioh. 16. 22. Your hearts shall reioyce and your ioy shall no man take from you And that makes Dauid say so confidently Psal. 37. 37. Marke the vpright man and behold the iust for the end of that man is peace And as for that which is obiected concerning the ioy of them that haue no assurance of their saluation I answer First that many times their mirth is but forced and counterfeit and when outwardly they make shew of much mirth their hearts within them are as heauy as lead 2 Cor. 5. 1●… They reioyce in the face and not in the heart Pro. 14. 13. Euen in laughing the heart is sorrowfull And secondly though they seem very secure and pleasant in the time of prosperity while like drunken or mad men they haue no apprehension nor sense of their own estate yet in the euill day when their conscience shall be awakened their ioy will faile them and stand them in no stead That which is said of riches Pro. 11. 4. may be said likewise of merry company good cheare pastimes and musick They will not auaile in the day of wrath While they are out of Gods presence and forget him and their owne estate they are quiet and merry but when Gods glory shines but a little in their soules they are troubled out of measure as we see in the example of Balthazar Dan. 5. 6. O consider this ye that forget God esteeme not of the ioy of worldly men giue no rest to your selues till you haue gotten good assurance of your saluation and of the fauour of God in Christ For without this nothing will be able to giue you content and comfort in the houre of death and in the euill day Let this be thy desire and daily prayer to God that was Dauids Psalme 106. 4 5. Remember me O Lord with the fauour of thy people visit me with thy saluation that I may see the felicity of thy chosen and reioyce with their ioy The second preseruatiue against excessiue sorrow is the care of a good conscience That man that in all things is carefull to please God and to keep his conscience pure that he fall not into any knowne and grieuous sinne shall euer haue a quiet and chearefull heart 2 Cor. 1. 12. Our reioycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly purenesse we haue had our conuersation in the world Yea this will make a man chearefull at all times and preserue him from sorrow not in prosperity only but euen in aduersity he that is of a merry heart he meanes whose heart is made merry this way euen with the testimony of a good conscience hath a continuall feast Pro. 15. 15. And in this respect the Apostle Ephes. 6. 14. cals righteousnesse the Brest-plate that will defend the heart euen in the euill day But on the other side the man that hath no care of a good conscience but giues himselfe liberty to liue in any one knowne sinne can neuer haue any sound ioy in his heart but must needs be ouer-come of sorrow and swallowed vp with heauinesse when affliction shall come vpon him For sinne certainly will bring sorrow sooner or later not onely in the life to come There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Mat. 8. 12. but euen in this life sinne will bring sorrow it is the proper and naturall effect of sinne and cannot be auoided Pro. 29. 6. In the transgression of an euill man there is a snare that is matter of sorrow and teares as appeares by the other part of the Verse But the righteous doth sing and reioyce They that haue multiplied their sinnes shall haue their sorrowes multiplied yea great sinnes will bring great sorrowes as we see in the example of Iudas Mat. 27. 3 5. And many such examples God giues men in euery age Neither hath it beene so with such as Iudas onely but euen with
till the euill day is That no man can tell how long he shall enioy the meanes of grace no man can meet the Bride-groome vnlesse he haue oyle in his lampe and that he cannot haue but of them that sell it Mat. 25. 9. No affliction or sicknesse is able to saue a soule without the Word that made the Prophet say Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law Psal. 94. 12. Nay euery Preacher will not serue the turne but he had need to be a rare man that should do good in such a case Iob 33. 23. If there be then a messenger an interpreter one of a thousand he had need haue the tongue of the learned that should know to minister a word in time to him that is wearie Esa 50. 4. And who can assure himself to haue such a man to be with him in his last sicknes They only that haue esteemed the Word in their health may assure themselues to haue it for their comforter in sicknesse But the wicked man that hath despised the ministry of the Word in the dayes of his health and prosperity hath iust cause to feare God will depriue him of the comfort of it in his sicknesse and affliction For so God hath threatned such contemners of his Word Amos 8. 12. They shall wander from sea to sea and fr●… the North euen to the East shall they run to and fro to seeke the Word of the Lord and shall not find it and Ezek. 7. 25 26 When destruction commeth they shall seeke peace and shall not haue it Calamity shall come vpon calamitie then shall they seek a vision of the Prophet but the law shall perish from the Priest and counsell from the ancient q. d. O then let euery man make his benefit of the means of grace now while he doth enioy them while Gods merchant men are among you make you prouision of oyl for your lamps No man can be sure to haue the like means when he would himselfe 2 Cor. 6. 2 Behold now the accepted time behold now the day of saluation The third reason to perswade men to reconcile themselues to God and to get assurance of their saluation presently in their youth and in their best health is this that though a man were sure he should haue as good means for his instruction and conuersion and comfort in his last sicknesse as he hath now yet he shall find himselfe most vnfit at that time to make his benefit of them Sicknesse and extreme affliction will so dull the mind and make the heart so heauy yea a man shall then haue so many meanes to trouble and distract him as he shall not be able to relish any sweetnesse in the best counsaile that is giuen him in the holiest praiers that are made by him These are the daies which Salomon speakes of Eccl 12. 1. Wherein a man shall say I haue no pleasure in them Remember what case the best of Gods seruants haue beene in in their extreme affliction They haue been vnable to pray they haue been astonied and could not speake Psal. 77. 4. yet thou saist thou wilt then pray They haue beene vnable to relish or profit by the best meanes They harkened not vnto Moses for anguish of spirit Exod. 6. 9. Yea their soules haue refused comfort Psal. 77. 2. and thou saist then thou wilt send for the Preacher and take his counsaile They haue beene oppressed with the burden of their sinnes Dauid saith of himselfe at such a time that his iniquities had taken such hold vpon him as he was not able to looke vp that they were more in number then the haires of his head and that therefore his heart failed him Psal. 40. 12. and thou saiest then thou wilt cast off all thy sins and get assurance of the pardon of them They haue been faine to spend vpon the old stock and to comfort themselues not with that which they haue found in themselues for the present but by calling to mind the good things they knew were in them in former times Iob seeks to recouer his comfort this way as is plaine Chap. 29. 30. 31. and so did Dauid likewise when his spirit was ouerwhelmed within him his heart within him was desolate then he remembred the dayes of old Psal. 143. 4 5. They haue sowne before vnto themselues in righteousnesse as the Prophet speaketh Hos. 10. 12. And all thy hope is in the comfort you shall find then Thou deferrest to sow till that time when thou shouldst reape O foolish man deceiue not thine owne heart any longer do not imagine thou shalt be in better case when sicknesse and extreme affliction shall come than the best of Gods children haue been Whilst thou art now in health get assurance of thy saluation for thou wilt be then vnfit to do it Seeke and lay vp knowledge now for that will be a time of spending thy stock that thou hast gotten not of increasing it Giue thy selfe much to prayer now and get assurance that thou hast the spirit of prayer for then thou wilt be hardly able to do it The fourth Reason to disswade a man from putting off his repentance till sicknesse is this That though he were sure to haue neuer so good meanes of repentance and though sicknesse and griefe it selfe had no force to hinder him from profiting by them yet shall he be vnable to receiue good by them vnlesse the Lord be pleased to worke with them O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe It is not in man that walketh to direct his steps Ier. 10. 23. And euery man that hath wilfully deferred and put off the time of his repentance hath iust cause to feare that God will not then worke with the meanes to doe him good For first as God hath in his counsell set and determined the day of euery mans visitation the iust time and moment of euery mans conuersion which if he passe he shall neuer be conuerted So is euery man to account not the time to come but the present time when God by his Word and Spirit moues him to repent to be his day the time of grace and repentance to him Therefore Heb. 3. 4. this is foure times repeated To day if you will heare his voice Secondly the nature of sinne is to harden the heart and the longer that any sinne is continued in the harder it will make the heart and the more vnable to repent No man that once giues libertie to himselfe in any sinne is able to say Thus far will I go and then I will stay my selfe thus long will I continue in it and then I will repent The longer a man continues in this net and snare the more he shall be intangled in it and with the more difficultie get out the deceitfulnesse of sinne will harden the heart Heb. 3. 13. Thirdly the Lord hath threatned to punish the presumptuous sinner
12. 13. and 20. 2. But for their foule sinnes we shall finde that Noah was neuer drunke but once nor Dauid committed adultery but once neither Peter returned euer againe to his Apostasie nor Paul to his persecution after they had once repented This is expresly said of Iudah after he truely saw his sinne hee knew Tamar againe no more Genesis 38. 26. Secondly it 's made a property of them that are in Christ Iesus in the state of grace that they walke not after the flesh Rom. 8 verse 1. Though they cannot kill or restraine all outward lusts yet they are made able to keepe them from reigning in them so as willingly to obey it in the lusts thereof as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 6. 12. but they by little and little at the least in the vnfained desire and endeuour of their hearts doe mortifie the deeds of the body by the spirit Rom. 8. 13. And it is a shrewd signe that it reignes when it hath once the body at command which made the Apostle say Let not sin reigne in your mortall bodies neither yeeld you your members as instruments of vnrightonsnes vnto sin Rom. 6. 12 13. On the other side he is called an enemy of God that Psal. 68. 21. goes on in sin And 2. Pet. 2. 19. its made a note of a gracelesse man when he cannot cease from fin The Reason is plaine because the vertue of Christs death is neuer separated from the merit of it When the merit of it is effectuall to iustification and pardon of sin then the vertue of it is effectuall to sanctification to the destroying of the power of sin when once the Lord hath sprinkled cleane water vpon vs and through the imputation of Christs sufferings and righteousnesse made vs cleane when he hath thereby cleansed vs from all the filthinesse of our sinnes then he will also giue vs a new heart and a new spirit he will put into vs he will take the stony heart out of vs and giue vs a heart of flesh Ezek. 36. 25 26. He so speakes peace vnto his people and to his Saints that they may not turne againe vnto folly Psal. 85. 8. Now the vnregenerate man continueth and walketh in sin yea like the dropsie man the more he sins the more he may one foule sin being as a shooing-horne to draw on another Lecture the ninetie eighth August 27. 1611. IOHN IIII. L. NOw hauing the last day preuented the mistaking and abuse of it it remaines that we proceed to the Vses that are to be made of this Doctrine and they are principally three The first is for instruction to teach vs that for as much as the Lord reiects none of his children for their infirmities but loues and esteemes of them neuerthelesse for their weakenesse Therefore we should learne not to despise or reiect any childe of God because of his infirmities for therein the perfection of a Christian shall appeare euen in following and striuing to be like his heauenly father Matth. 5. 45. And we are his children when we resemble him and are of his disposition be ye therefore followers of God as de are children Epes 5. 1. And will any of vs seeme to be holier than God to dislike sinners more than he doth That were grosse hypocrisie Obiect But you will say there is small consequence in this reason seeing they that are Gods children and vpright in heart are perfectly knowne to him so are they not to vs. If we knew who were Gods Elect and who had vpright hearts indeed we would hold our selues bound to loue and beare with all such notwithstanding many weakenesses that we discerned in them but we know the world is full of hypocrites that will make a good profession and yet haue but false hearts Answ. I answer that if a man professe the feare of God and his course of life be agreeable thereunto though he haue many frailties we are bound to esteeme him the childe of God Rom 8. 1. They are in Christ Iesus that walke not after the flesh And 1. Sam. 16. 7. Man iudgeth according to the outward appearance And though we may well be deceiued in this because mens hearts are deceitfull Ier. 17. 9. yet this is a safe and holy errour I may say Our iudgement though it be erroneous in this yet it is the iudgement of true charity and therefore such as God commands and we may haue comfort in 1. Cor. 13. 5. It thinketh not euill verse 7. It beleeueth all things it hopeth all things Now it cannot be denied but in many of these there be sundry infirmities in some error in iudgement in other much frowardnesse vnthankefulnesse pride nay in some foule faults and slips in their conuersation I say not that thou art bound to thinke well of all that professors doe No we heard the last day the Lord fauours not the faults of his dearest children But three duties thou owest to euery one that so professe the feare of God First thou must delight and gladly take notice of the good things that are in him obserue him well to see if you can discerne any one testimony of soundnesse of heart any one signe of the life of grace and gladly take notice of it Let vs consider one another saith the Apostle Heb. 10. 24. and 1. Cor. 16. 17 18. Hauing spoken of the excellent things that were in Stephanus Fortunatus and Achaicus he chargeth the Church that they should know or acknowledge such men Therefore it is to be wished that Christians when they meet would exercise themselues so as they might haue proofe of that grace that is in each other and this would exceedingly encrease loue Secondly because if he doe in any measure soundly feare God thou art bound to honour him in thine heart Psal. 15. 4. None shall goe to heauen that cannot honour them that feare the Lord. Therefore you must not be glad but loth to see or heare of his faults or infirmities Thou shouldst doe to euery childe of God because thou art bound to honour him as Sem and Iaphet did to Noah because they were bound to honour him Gen. 9. 23. couer his nakednesse Euery one of vs should count it a foule corruption in our nature be ashamed of it bewaile it to God and striue against it that we are so like the Beetle or Horse-flie that if he flie into a field that is neuer so full of sweet flowers yet if there be but a little filthy dung in it his eye and sent is onely to that and vpon that onely will he light So are we apt to passe by all the good things that are in any Christian but his slips and infirmities we gladly obserue we heare and inquire of them with great delight Matthew 7. 3. And why seest thou the mote that is in thy brothers eye c. Why art thou so curious an obseruer of his smallest infirmities And yet this is not the corruption of wicked men only but euen of
the weake Christian him-that is weake in the faith receiue you Rom. 14. 1. we that are strong ought to beare with the infirmities of the weake Rom. 15. 1. Take heede lest by any meanes this liberty of yours become a stumbling blocke to them that are weake 1. Cor. 8 9. If any be ouertaken in a fault through infirmity yee that are spirituall restore such a one in the spirit of meekenesse Gal. 6. 1. support the weake 1. Thess. 5. 14. Secondly the consideration of this how many and how grosse infirmities may be in a man whose heart yet is found and vpright before God If thou knewest a man to be Gods childe and a temple of the Holy Ghost thou durst not but loue him and esteeme well of him but thou canst not be perswaded that such and such in whom thou seest so many faults can possibly be Gods children Consider therefore and weigh this well that a man may be the childe of God and soundly regenerate and yet haue many strange infirmities in him A man may be very ignorant of many truths yea though he haue neuer so many meanes to informe him in the truth he may be long ere he can be perswaded of many truths and yet be Gods childe of all the elect Apostles it is said euen after Christs resurrection as yet they knew not the Scripture that he must rise againe from the dead Iohn 20. 9. See also what pride and ambition was in Iames and Iohn Mar. 10. 37. what strange peeuishnesse and frowardnesse was in Barnabas Acts 15. 39. See how impatient Iob was Iob 3. 1. and how rebelliously Ionah murmured against God Ionah 4. 3. 8 9. how Peter and Barnabas both dissembled Gal. 2. 13. These things I repeate not to encourage or giue comfort vnto any that liue securely in any of these or the like sinnes For first he that doth so sins presumptuously and hath cause to feare God will neuer be mercifull vnto him Deut. 29. 19. specially when he stumbles at the Word and makes that a Bawd to his sinne and an imboldner of him in it 1. Pet. 2. 8. Secondly none of these whom I haue named did walke in these sins nor wallow in them But I speake this onely to stay men from iudging rashly of other men for their faults Surely if we should see in any that professe Religion far lesse faults then these that I haue named we would be ready to cry Are these your professors Fie vpon these hypocrites for shame follow Sermons no longer carry the Bible no longer vnder thy arme But stay thy selfe man and say as Psal. 73. 15. If I say I will iudge this behold I should offend against the generation of thy children The third meanes to preserue vs from rash iudgement is the serious consideration of our owne frailties how many and grosse they haue been and that euen since the time of our calling This remedy we shall find prescribed Iam. 3. 1. My brethren be not many masters or teachers and marke the reason which he prescribeth as a remedy Ver. 2. For in many things we finne all So Gal. 6. when he had said Ver. 2. Beare ye one anothers burden he addeth Ver. 3. For if any man seeme to himselfe that he is somewhat when he is nothing he deceiueth himselfe And Ver. 4. Let euery man proue his owne worke Mat. 5. 5. He that is poore in spirit and can see and mourne for his owne sinnes will be meeke that is void of pride and malice against others Mat. 7. 5. Hypocrite first pull out the beame out of thine owne eye The fourth remedy against this corruption is the euils and dangers that a man shall draw vpon himselfe by this sinne and those I find to be principally three First thou shalt be sure to find others that will be as apt to censure and mislike and slander and iudge thee as thou hast been to do thus vnto thy brother that will haue as little care of thy credit as thou hast had of the credit of thy brother This is plaine Matth. 7. 1 2. and Luke 6. 38. it is said that men shall mete the same measure to vs againe that we haue measured to other men Secondly this will prouoke the Lord to leaue thee to thy selfe and to giue thee ouer to the power of the like temptation whereby thy brother was drawne to euill this reason the Apostle giues Considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted Gal. 6. 1. And certainly to this may many impute their owne foule slips that they were so rigorous and extreme in the censuring of the frailties of their brethren when themselues seemed to stand Thirdly this will prouoke the Lord to be more sharp and extreme in his iudgement vpon thee His Lord was wroth and deliuered him to the tormenters till he should pay all that was due vnto him Matth. 18. 34. He shall haue iudgement without mercy that hath shewed no mercy Iam. 2. 13. Whereas therfore the best of vs haue cause to pray as Psal. 143. 2. Enter not into iudgement with thy seruant for in thy sight shall no man liuing be iustified let vs be more sparing and charitable in censuring of our brethren Lecture the ninetie ninth Septemb. 3. 1611. IOHN IIII. L. IT followeth that we come now to the two other vses that are to be made of the Doctrine that we heard the last day The second vse then that this Doctrine serueth vnto is for the comfort and encouragement of all the godly It may make them chearefull and comfortable at all times in all the occasions of their life And this incouragement the best of Gods seruants haue need of for we shall find by experience that many who haue greatest care to serue God and to please him in all things haue sadder hearts and are subiect more to feares than any others And if we enquire into the cause of it we shall find it groweth from this principally that the conscience of their many frailties and infirmities putteth them into continuall feare that they are not in Gods fauour that he accepteth nothing that they doe This hath beene the old complaint of Gods people Esa. 49. 14. Zion said the Lord hath forsaken me and my Lord hath forgotten me Now we haue heard in this Doctrine that if a man haue in him the least dram of sauing grace if he be able to say he is no hypocrite though he haue many frailties his heart is vpright then may he assure himself that the Lord will not reiect him nor like the worse of him for any of his infirmities as the Lord answereth his people in the same place Can a woman forget her sucking child that she should not haue compassion of the sonne of her wombe yea they may forget yet will I not forget thee Esa. 49. 15. so that such a one is bound to striue against the heauinesse and vncheerfulnesse of his owne heart and to say to his soule as Dauid doth Psal. 4●… 11. Why
duties which are the fruits of true grace be discerned from such as proceed from some other root If a man doe truely loue the Word and the profession of it he will perseuere in his loue and profession and neuer forsake it Matth. 13. 20 21. of that hearer that heard the Word and incontinently with ioy receiued it and endured but for a season our Sauiour saith the cause was because he had no roote in himselfe He neuer had sound heart And 1. Iohn 2. 19. They went out from vs but they were not of vs for if they had beene of vs they would haue continued with vs. So is it likewise in all other good duties which any man hath beene giuen to if they were the fruits of grace if euer a man did vse to doe them with a good heart he will doe them still I cannot stand vpon all good duties in particular I will instance but in one whereby we may iudge of all the rest for there is the like reason for all If euer a man were wont to be mercifull and liberall in relieuing Gods poore seruants out of a good heart he will be so still You shall see this Esay 32. 8. The liberall man will deuise of liberall things that is he will studie and thinke with himselfe which of Gods seruants stand in neede and how he may shew himselfe mercifull to them and he will continue his liberalitie Another notable place there is for this Heb. 6. The Apostle saith of the Hebrewes verse 9. He was perswaded there were better things in them than in such hypocrites as he had spoken of before and such as accompanied saluation And verse 10. he giues this for the reason in that saith he yee haue ministred to the Saints and yet minister and he adds verse 11. We desire that euery one of you shew the same diligence to the end And why so To the full assurance of hope saith he As if he should haue said There is no full assurance of hope no not in so excellent a fruit of faith as this is vnlesse yee continue to the end Two obiections you may haply make against this which I must giue you to answer to That in many that haue beene truely regenerate great intermissions and giuing ouer of good duties haue beene found the fruits of grace haue beene strangely interrupted and broken off in them He that had come to Dauid at that time when after his adultery hee practised the death of Uriah or to Peter when he forsware his Master and with such direfull curses denied that he knew him would haue beene able to discerne no more fruits of grace nor conscience of their dutie to God in them than in Saul or Iudas A man therefore you will say may be Gods childe and haue a sound heart though he be not thus constant in his obedience as you haue said To this I answer first That though in the time of temptation or of some spirituall desertion the case may be thus with Gods childe for a time yet he cannot continue so but he shall recouer himselfe and doe his first workes againe according to that Psal. 55. 22. Hee will not suffer the righteous to fall for euer Secondly that during the time of this his fall and giuing ouer the practise of those good duties hee was wont to performe the childe of God hath lost the assurance of his hope and of the soundnesse and vprightnesse of his owne heart neither can any other man or himselfe say that any good thing he did before was done in truth now he hath giuen it ouer And indeed if thou obserue it thou shalt finde that none such take any comfort at all to heare or thinke of any good thing he did in times past Heerein I may appeale to the consciences of euery one of you if any such be here that were in times past diligent zealous and conscionable Preachers or such as vsed conscionably and carefully to pray in priuate or such as were carefull to haue the exercises of Religion in your families and haue now quite giuen ouer these things is it any comfort to you that you were such kinde of people in times past Nay is it not rather a vexation to your mindes to thinke of those times because your hearts are apt to tell you all that was done but in hypocrisie Certainely till you recouer your selues and doe your first workes againe you cannot haue any assurance that there was euer any truth or soundnesse in your hearts Yea but will you say though they that are quite falne from the good duties they were wont to performe can haue no assurance of the truth of their hearts yet there is many a one that hath a good heart that yet findes great inconstancy in himselfe and that he oft omits the good duties he should performe and hath not at all times that aptnesse and alacrity in prayer and such like holy exercises as he hath at some times Can such a one haue no assurance of the vprightnesse and soundnesse of his heart I answer First that it is certaine that many a good man may decay in the measure of his practice and doing of good duties euen through a naturall decay of his spirits by age or sicknesse Secondly he may also lose that heate and feruency of spirit that sometimes he had This is plaine in the Angel of the Church of Ephesus Apoc. 2. 4. He had left his first loue and yet had much grace in him still verse 2. I know how thou canst not forbeare them that are euill And verse 6. Thou hatest the deeds of the Nicolaitans which I also hate Yea without daily watchfulnesse and stirring vp of our selues it will not be possible to keep our selues from this decaying in our first loue and feruency in good duties if we do not exhort and stir vp our selues daily we shall be in danger to be hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sin Heb. 3. 13. But yet this you shall finde in euery regenerate man ordinarily vnlesse it be in that case of tentation and spirituall desertion that I spake of in the former obiection First he doth still performe good duties of conscience toward God though not with that chearefulnesse and aptnesse as at other times He keeps his way still and goes on though not so fast and comfortably as he was wont grieuing for his decaies and striuing against his dulnesse and this God greatly delighteth in euen in this Labour of loue as the Apostle calls it Heb. 6. 10. Secondly he rests not in any thing he hath done but is carefull to perseuere and continue to the end For this we haue two notable examples First in Dauid Psal. 146. 2. I will praise the Lord during my life as long as I haue any being I will sing vnto my God And 101. 2. I will do wisely in the perfect way till thou commest to me And Psal. 119. 11●… I haue applied my heart to fulfill
and women grew more and more Marke the reason Verse 11 12. By his fearfull iudgements on Ananias and Saphira and sundry other strange miracles wrought by the Apostles God had prepared the hearts of men notably to the receiuing of the Gospell Acts 12. 24. The Word of God grew and multiplied Mark the reason Ver. 23. By a strange iudgement on proud Herod God had prepared mens hearts Act. 19. 10. The Word of God grew mightily and preuailed See the reason Ver. 11. 17. By the wonderfull miracles Paul wrought and the strange iudgements that befell the sonnes of Sceua for counterfeiting of them a maruellous feare came vpon them all in those parts and thus were they prepared to receiue the Word For the second we haue Iob 33. 23. If there be then an Interpreter As if he should say Then there will be great hope of doing good And for the third we haue Act. 2. 41. The same day there were added to them about three thousand soules Marke the reason Ver. 37. They were pricked in their heart with that which Peter had said And this is Gods vsuall course he sends Iohn Baptist before Christ to preach the Law Why Mar. 1. 2 3. To prepare the hearts of men to receiue Christ. And as the Word seldome preuailes at first to the conuersion of men till the heart be prepared to receiue it so it is certaine that it seldome preuailes to confirme and increase grace vnlesse men come to it with prepared hearts As in prayer it makes much to a mans comfort to prepare himselfe to it so is it also in this duty When the people of God were to receiue the Law God commanded they should prepare themselues to receiue it Exod. 19. 10. Goe to the People and sanctifie them to day and to morrow and let them wash their clothes and be ready on the third day Yea when Samuel offered a sacrifice vnto the Lord at Bethlehem 1 Sam. 16. 5. He sanctified lesse and his sonnes before he called them to it And it is noted as the best thing that was in Iehoshaphat 2 Chron. 19. 3. That he prepared his heart to seeke God The reason of the doctrine is That our hearts are ordinarily profane and vnfit to deale with holy things naturally they are so and by dealing with worldly things they are made so more and more Act. 10. 14. Common and vncleane are made all one Mar. 7. 2 Common hands are vncleane hands and certainly of our thoughts and affections it may more truly be said take them as they are commonly and they are vncleane and profane We must striue to haue other than our ordinary and common thoughts and affections when we are to deale with God or els we shall go about to sow good seed among thornes Ier. 4. 8. Yea worse than so for it is not onely the losse of the seed but the losse of our selues also There must be a proportion kept betweene the vessell and the wine or els both will be lost Luke 5. 37 38. New wine must be put into new vessels so both are preserued Men vse to wash the cups that are to receiue their drinke and the dishes that are to receiue their meat but they haue more need to cleanse and sanctifie their hearts that are to receiue the Word For first the heart is fowler than any cup or vessell can be The heart of man is desperately wicked Ier. 17. 9. Secondly put a cleane thing into an vncleane vessell and it will receiue pollution by it If one that is vncleane touch any of these shall it be vncleane and the Priest answered and said it shall be vncleane Hag. 2. 13. Thirdly the honesty and vprightnesse of the heart giues the price and worth to euery good duty we performe and accordingly God doth esteeme of it Our hearts are like Instruments euer out of tune we must either euery time that we go to serue God take some paines to set them in tune or we shall neuer make good musicke in the eares of God That made Dauid say Psal. 57. 7 8. Mine heart is prepared O Lord mine heart is prepared I will sing and giue praise awake my tongue awake violl and harpe I will awake early The first vse of this Doctrine is to exhort vs not to despise or neglect the Lords preparations When God hath by any meanes fitted after a speciall manner and prepared thy heart vnto his seruice take the time neglect not the opportunity for then shalt thou be able to serue God with more fruit and comfort than at another time strike while the Iron is hot Iames 5. 13. Is any afflicted let him pray Is any merrie let him sing So when God by his corrections hath softned and humbled thy heart then giue thy selfe to reading and meditation of the Word thou shalt profit more by it then a great deale than at another time Psal. 119. 92. Except thy Law had beene my delight I should haue perished in mine affliction He found doubtlesse more sweetnesse in it then than at another time The second vse of the Doctrine is to shew to vs the true cause why we profit so little by the Word and find so small comfort in it surely we seldome or neuer come rightly prepared to it We find great comfort and profit in our prayers when the heart is prepared before this is therefore spoken of a condition required in all those prayers that God will giue gracious answer vnto If thou prepare thine heart and stretch out thine hands towards him Iob 11. 13. Thou wilt prepare their heart thou wilt cause thine eare to heare Psal. 10. 17. So is it with the Word men vse to come to it with common hearts nay oft with worse than common hearts If we had care of this we should find more power and sweetnesse in one Sermon than we are wont to do in an hundred And because we must not serue God onely at such times as he by affliction or such like means hath prepared vs after a speciall manner but as we must pray euery day Pray without ceasing 1 Thes. 5. 17. so must we exercise our selues in Gods word euery day euen of the King it is said He shall read therein all the dayes of his life Deut. 17. 19. and if we come not rightly prepared to it we shall receiue little good by it nay we shall be in danger to receiue much hurt by it As we cannot do the work of our Ministry well vnlesse we sanctifie our selues Sanctifie your selues and prepare your brethren said good Iosia to the Priests 2 Chro. 35. 6. so neither can you do the duty of hearers well vnlesse you sanctifie your selues before you come I will therefore shew you how a mans heart should come prepared to the hearing of the Word that desires to receiue comfort by it what affection and disposition of heart we should bring with vs. We must not come in our sins vnto Gods house but labour to
went his way Secondly the meanes whereby this faith that was begun in him was confirmed and increased in Verse 51 52. and part of 53. Thirdly the confirmation and stablishment which he receiued in his faith by these means and the fruit whereby he declared it in the latter end of the 53 Verse Now for the first it is said that the man belieued the word that Iesus had spoken vnto him and to declare that he did so indeed he gaue ouer importuning him any more and went his way It may seeme somewhat strange if we mark it well to see so great and sudden a change wrought in this great man Euen now he was of that mind that he would not belieue vnlesse he might see signes and wonders now he belieues Christs bare word though he did see nothing at all done Before he thought Christ could do his sonne no good vnlesse he would go downe to him to see him and pray ouer him or touch him and vse some solemne ceremony about him now he belieueth his sonne is recouered though Christ did none of all these but onely spake the word And if we enquire into the causes of it we shall find them to be principally two the first in the Lord the other in himselfe First the Lords gracious pleasure was the cause of this who worketh mans conuersion when and by what means it pleaseth him Ioh. 3. 8. The wind bloweth where it listeth and who had appointed this to be the time of this Noblemans conuersion and this word of Christ to be the means whereby it should be wrought This should make vs carefull to be constant hearers of the Word For first some point of great importance may be taught in one Sermon which haply we shall not heare againe in an hundred Secondly though at all times Gods Elect may profit by their hearing yet hath God his times and moments determined with himselfe wherein he will work with his Word more mightily than at other times And who can tell which is the Sermon that God hath appointed to do him most good by We should therfore frequent Sermons as good husbands do their faires and markets and prouident Merchants the times of the Royall Exchange that no opportunity of a good bargaine may escape them Secondly his heart was well prepared to receiue good by Christ both by that hand of God that was vpon him in the sicknesse of his sonne and also by that reuerend and good opinion he had conceiued of Christ by that that he had heard or seene of him before he esteemed him to be a great Prophet one that was able and willing to do him good And this reuerend opinion he had conceiued of him made him willing as great as he was to come himselfe to him so great a way Now by these meanes his heart was much better prepared and made fit to giue credit vnto that that Christ should say vnto him than otherwise it would haue been From this first point then we haue this Doctrine to learne That It is a matter of great vse and necessity for our profiting by the Word to come to it with a heart that is rightly prepared The man that brings to the Word a prepared heart shall receiue more good by once hearing of it than another shall do at many times True it is that many a man hath receiued some good by the Word felt himself much moued by it that yet hath come to it without a due preparation as not only Agrippa that was almost caught Act. 26. 28. but euen Foelix also Pauls ministry wrought mightily vpon his heart it made him to quake and tremble Act. 24. 26. and Herod though doubtles his heart was neuer well prepared when he came to heare Iohn yet can it not be denied but he receiued much good by hearing him he heard him gladly and reformed his life in many things by hearing of him Mar. 6. 20. Yea many haue felt a diuine power in the Ministry of the Word as haue come to it with very bad hearts such were those officers that were sent to apprehend our Sauiour Iohn 7. 46. Yea sometimes God hath so farre forth glorified his power in this his owne ordinance as he hath wrought thereby euen the effectuall conuersion of some that haue come to it without all good preparation of heart as the Athenians which heard Paul Act. 17. first with what hearts they came to heare him it is plaine Ver. 18. Some said what will this babler say and the best of them heard him onely out of a desire to heare newes Vers. 21. and yet see how God wrought by that Sermon in the hearts of sundry of them Vers. 34. Howbeit certaine men claue to Paul and belieued among whom also was Denis Areopagita and a woman named Damaris and other with them And vpon these experiments it were much to be wished that all men euen the wickedest would be brought to heare yea though they came but by occasion or as intending some other thing yea though they came euen with an euill intent to carp or to mock yet I would they would come Possibly they might be caught though they came euen with such hearts Yea it were to be wished that such as can by no other meanes be drawne to heare might euen be compelled and forced to it by Authority Iosiah is commended for this 2 Chro. 34. 33. That he compelled all that were found in Israel to serue the Lord and if you looke into Ieremy and others that prophecied in Iosiahs time you shall find there was many a notorious lewd man in Israel in those dayes And if there be any part of Gods seruice that men may and ought to be compelled vnto certainly it is rather this than any other therefore euen the excommunicate persons by the ancient Canons of the Church were allowed to come to the Sermon It is therefore a great errour in any to imagine that it is to no purpose to vrge such and such to come to Church because they think they are either so sottish or so lewd that they can receiue no good by comming and therefore it matters not whether they come or no. But though all this be so as you haue heard yet first this is a singular helpe and furtherance to our profiting by the Word to come to it with a prepared heart secondly and where God meanes his Word shall prosper to worke sauing grace there he prepares the hearts of men to receiue it thirdly neither doth it ordinarily preuaile to worke true faith and sound conuersion but in a prepared heart The former examples are very rare Marke this therefore in the course God hath beene wont to keepe in the conuersion of men either by his miracles and strange works or by his corrections or by the terrours of the Law he hath been wont to fit the hearts of his elect to receiue the Gospell Acts 5. 14. The number of them that belieued in the Lord both of men