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A45548 The first general epistle of St. John the Apostle, unfolded and applied the first part in two and twenty lectures on the first chapter, and two verses of the second : delivered in St. Dyonis. Back-Church, An. Dom. 1654 / by Nath. Hardy ... Hardy, Nathaniel, 1618-1670. 1656 (1656) Wing H722; ESTC R31526 315,886 434

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sin because Christ is in them and they in him whom the Apostle according to this construction here plainly contradicteth and indeed it cannot be otherwise since where ever Christ is there is his Spirit and where the Spirit of Christ is there is a divine light discovering to a man the darkness that is in him and effectually convincing him of his own sinfulnesse But though this be a truth I doe not conceive it the truth of this clause and therefore with the generality of the best interpreters I understand it in the proper and usuall sence not for Christ the word but for the word of Christ not the word which is God but the word of God And thus it will not be amisse to consider this clause both in i●s selfe and in its reference 1. Consider this clause in its selfe and that which we have to inquire is what our Apostle meaneth by this phrase negatives are best known by the affirmatives as privations are by habits and therefore by knowing what it is for the word of God and Christ to be in us we shall learne what this meaneth the word is not in us The word is then said to be in us when according to Christs phrase in the Gospel it doth take place in us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being there according to Camerarius as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and finde entertainment with us and surely then it taketh place in us when it taketh place in our hearts as it did in David who saith Thy word have I hid in my heart The word is then said to be in us when according to St. Iames his phrase it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an ingrafted word and that is when as the tree being opened a graft is set deep into it and so becometh one with it or rather it one with a graft so our hearts being opened as Lydias was the word is deeply imprinted in it and it sweetly closeth with the word If yet more perticularly you ask how this is done I answer in one word by beleeving when the minde giveth a cleare assent and the will a full consent to the word then it is received by and dwelleth in us so interpreters paraphrase Non amplecti●r non intelligimus non retinemus veram ejus doctrinam His word is not in us that is we doe not understand and imbrace by faith the true Doctrine of his word And that this is S. Johns meaning in this place we need no other expositor then himself in his Gospel where he bringeth in Christ saying yee have not his word among you For him whom he hath sent you beleeve not thereby plainly intimating that to have his word abiding in us is to beleeve in his word Look how Christ himselfe is said to be and to dwell in us So is his word now the Apostle Pauls expression is full of Christs dwelling in our hearts by faith indeed on Christs part the Spirit and on our part Faith maketh the union between him and us and both these concurre to the inbeing of the word when the word is received as St. Paul saith of the Thessalonians in the Holy Ghost and in much assurance to wit of faith To end this be pleased to know that there is a great deale of difference between these two his word among us and his word in us his word is among us when published and made known to us but it is not in us unlesse received and beleeved by us and therefore my brethren let us not content our selves with the former but labour to find the latter It is very observable what St. Paul saith of of the Colossians The Gospell is come unto you and bringeth forth fruit in you which it could not doe were it not ingrafted and therefore the Authour to the Hebrews saith of the Iews The word did not profit them because it was not mixed with faith in them that heard it Oh beloved it may be truly said of us that Gospel is come to us but is it in us doth it bring forth fruit in us St. Austin excellently compareth the word to an hooke which then taketh the fish when it is taken into the fist so the word when it is taken into us by faith then taketh us and that not to our ruine but safety and St. Iames when he speaketh of the word as able to save our soules calls it the ingrafted word to teach us how necessary it is to our spirituall and eternall profit by the word that it should be in us the truth is it were farre better never to have had the word among us then not to have it in us that this light had never shone in the midst of us if it be not set up in the candlestick of our hearts and therefore let it be our prayer that the Gospel may come to us not in word onely but in power that the seed of the word which is sowne and scattered among us may be hid in us Finaly that it may please God to give unto us increase of grace that we may heare meekely his word receive it with pure affection and bring forth the fruits of the spirit 2. But further consider this clause in its reference and ye shall find according to a severall reference severall things not unworthy our observation It is not amisse to compare the end of the eighth and of the tenth verse together in the one it is said the truth is not in us the other his word is not in us and if as doubtlesse we may we look upon these as synonimous phrases we may observe that what he calleth truth in the one he stileth Gods word in the other and so it amounts to that which our blessed Saviour himselfe elsewhere asserts Thy word is truth in which respect it is called by St. Paul and St. Iames the word of truth and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eminently and primarily indeed it may be said of many words that they are true but onely Gods word is the word of truth yea truth it selfe consonant to this it is that the psalmist calls the words of the Lord pure words and compareth them to Silver purified in the fire seven times that is fully perfect so as there is not the least drosse of errour in them Indeed when we consider whose word it is namely his word who as he is the first being so he is the first truth we cannot but conclude that it must needs be altogether true therefore if we would have an answer to Pilates question what is truth the text giveth it it is Gods word and if you would know when doctrines are true this word is the onely sure touchstone and therefore the prophet Isay calleth to the lawe and to the Testimony If they speake not according to these it is because there is no light to wit of truth in them 2. If we put these two clauses together We
make him a lyer and his word is not in us We learne how hainous a sinne Infidelity is in that it puts so high a dishonour upon God as to make him a lyer this clause His word is not in us manifestly is added as a confirmation of the former therefore we make him a lyar because His word is not in us and His word is not in us when it is not beleeved by us so that not to beleeve Gods word and to make him a lyer are all one Hence it is that our Apostle in his Gospell saith He that beleeveth sets to his seale that God is true and else where in this Epistle he that beleeveth not God maketh him a lyar because he beleeveth not look as among men if we tell a man we beleeve not what he saith we in effect tell him he is a lyer so when we doe not receive the truth of Gods word we put as it were the lye upon God and now tell me how in excusable nay abominable is the sin of infidelity in excusable because that which we are required to beleeve is no other then truth and abominable because by not beleeving we make God a lyer 3. Lastly put the beginning and the end of this verse together If we say we have not sinned his word is not in us every selfe Justitiary as St. Austins phrase is contrarius est divinae scripturae is so far from having Gods word in him that he is directly contrary to Gods word and so to say we have no sin appeareth to be no other then an odious and damnable errour If then we would not be infected with the poyson of this errour let us alwayes have by us nay in us that powerfull antidote of Gods word let us be carefull to study that we may understand it and by it our own sinfulnesse let us often behold our selves in it as in a glasse which knoweth not how to flatter so shall we no longer deceives our selve and dishonour God by saying we have no sin and so much shall suffice to be spoken of this confutation Let us every one make it our supplication that the Word which hath now been heard by us with our outward ears may through his grace be grafted inwardly in our hearts to bring forth the fruit of an holy life and withall of a lowly mind to his prayse and glory through Jesus Christ our LORD THE FIRST EPISTLE OF S. IOHN CHAP. I. Ver. 9. If we confesse our sins he is faithfull and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness THere are two sorts of persons among others observable in the Church namely glorioli and infirmi presumptuous hypocrites and weak Saints those are commonly lifted up with an opinion of their own righteousnesse these are usually cast ●down with an apprehension of their own sinfulness those boast themselves to be the best of Saints and these abhorre themselves as the worst of sinners Finally those think themselves to have no sin and these account themselves to be nothing but sin Hence it is that Gods Ministers though they must not be double tongued yet must speak in different language to the arrogant words of terrour to the penitent words of support must use both hands with the r●ght hand lifting up them that are cast down and with the left hand casting down them that are lifted up of both these our Apostle sets us a pattern in the three last verses of this Chapter launcing the sores of proud Iustitiaries with the knife of reproof in the eighth and tenth verses and powring oyl● of comfort into the wounds of humble confessours in the tenth verse If we confess our sins c. Not to trouble you with multiplicity of divisions be pleased to observe in the words three generals A duty conditionally required in those words If we confess our sins A mercy annexed to that duty in those To forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness The certainty of that mercy demonstrated in those he is faithfull and just These are the three boughs of this tree of life out of each of which sprout so many branches and groweth so much fruit that it will ask many houres the gathering At this time I shall enter upon the 1. Duty conditionally required for the handling whereof be pleased to consider it two wayes as it is Materia praecepti the matter of a Commandement Cond●tio promissi the condition of a promise In the former I shall unfold the nature and exercise of this duty wherein it consists how it is to be managed In the latter I shall discover the necessity and utility of it as being that whereof the absence excludes and the presence includes forgiveness The former will be as the directive part instructing you in and The latter as the perswasive part exciting you to the performance of it The dispatch of the first consideration will lye in answer to four questions What it is which we are to confess To whom this confession must be made How this confession must be performed Who they are that must thus confess Quest. 1. What it is we are to confess the answer to which is in these two words Our sins and there are three steps by which I shall proceed in the handling of it sin sins our sins must be confessed by us 1. Sin must be confessed Divines do not unfitly take notice of a threefold confession Fidei laudis peccati of faith of praise of sin a declaration of the truth we beleeve mercies we receive sins we commit the first is an act of courage the second of gratitude the last of repentance concerning all of these the word in the Text is used by S. Paul in reference to the confession of faith where he joyneth beleeving with the heart and making confession with the mouth together by the Authour to the Hebrewes in reference to thankefulness where this very word is rendred giving thanks and by S. John here in respect of sin If we confess our sins It is that indeed which both sin and the sinner very much shun sin is so ugly that it loveth not to appear and being a work of darkness cannot indure the light besides the sinner is so much in love with his sin that he is not willing to bring it forth that expression of the Prophet Hoseah You have ploughed wickedness is rendred by the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you have concealed wickedness and not unfitly because the end of ploughing is that the seed may be cast into and hid in the ground this is the practice of wicked men to keep close their sin they hide their talents in the napkin of idleness and their sins in the napkin of excuse indeed it is a disease our first parents were sick of no wonder if we be infected and therefore Jobs expression is If I have hid my sin as Adam if we are not so
give us grace for that little inch of our candle which is yet to burn so to let our light shine before men that they seeing our good works may glorify thee our Father which art in heaven To this end we pray thee enlighten our blind minds incline our crooked wills soften our hard hearts compose our distempered passions mortify our earthly members sanctify our whole man Spirit Soul and Body and preserve us blamelesse to the coming of our Lord Jesus Implant oh God and increase all the graces of thy holy Spirit in us confirm our faith stablish our hope strengthen our patience enlarge our love enflame our zeale quicken our obedience put thy fear into our hearts that we may never depart from thee and do thou never leave nor forsake us but be our God our Guard our Guide even to the death and after death receive us to thy self in that glory which is everlasting Not to us oh Lord not to us alone but to thy holy Catholick Church be thou propitious she is the Vine which thine own right hand hath planted let her be for ever preserved and suffer not Good God suffer not either the wild Boar out of the Forrest to pluck up her root or the many pestilent Foxes that are within her to pluck off her grapes Plant thy Gospel where yet it is not restore it where it is lost continue and enlarge it where it is especially in these Realmes Remit our crying sins Remove thy heavy judgements Restore our wonted blessings Settle all things once again amongst us upon their right and ancient Foundations that Glory may dwell in our Land Let the cry of the Fatherlesse and the Widow ascend into the eares of the Lord God of Hosts that he may give them beauty for ashes and the oyle of gladnesse for the spirit of heavinesse Blesse all sorts and degrees of men among us Let the Gold of our Nobility excell in Grace as they do in Honour purify the Silver of our Gentry from the drosse of vice Engrave upon the brasse of our Commonalty the fear of thy holy Name and preserve thine earthen vessels in whom is laid up and by whom is dispensed thy heavenly Treasure the Pastors and Ministers of thy Church Comfort all the sonnes and daughters of sorrow poure oyle into wounded consciences succour tempted souls settle distracted minds heale diseased bodies releeve impoverished families release imprisoned persons those especially who suffer for the Testimony of a good conscience Oh thou that hast a Salve for every sore a Cure for every crosse a Remedy for every malady apply thy self suitably to all the necessities of thy children And now in Blessing Blesse that Word of all thy Grace which goeth forth throughout all Congregations lawfully and duly assembled in thy fear this day this in particular Oh thou that standest at the door and knockest be pleased to open Open the Preachers lips that his mouth may shew forth thy praise and declare thy message with power and plainnesse open the peoples ears that they may hear thy Word with reverence and diligence open all our hearts that with faith and love we may receive with care and conscience we may obey thy sacred truth so as it may become the power of thee our God to the illumination of our judgements the renovation of our natures the reformation of our lives and the salvation of our soules through Jesus Christ our only Mediator and Redeemer for whom we bless thee To whom with thy self and blessed Spirit of Grace we give all praise and glory and in whose most absolute Form of Prayer we further call upon thee saying Our Father which in Heaven c. THE FIRST Epistle General OF St. IOHN HISTORY PROPHECY and DOCTRINE are the three Channels in which run the Streames of Sacred Writ from whence ariseth the division of its BOOKES into Historical Prophetical and Doctrinal Not but that all the Bookes of Scripture are Doctrinal in which respect the Apostle saith it is profitable for Doctrine but because some Books are chiefly concerned in narrations of things past others in the predictions of things to come and some are chiefly if not only conversant about Dogmatical Truths and Practical Precepts they are not unfitly thus distinguished Of this latter sort are the Epistolary Writings and therefore in this regard the fittest to be discussed among the people The Prophetical Books are most congruous to the Schooles but the Doctrinal most suitable to the Pulpit those for exercising the Learned these for feeding the Vulgar Upon this account I have made choice of an Epistle and in particular not without serious and mature deliberation nor yet I hope without the blessed Spirits instigation of this First Epistle General of S. JOHN to be the subject of my Postmeridian discourses If any shall be inquisitive to know why among all the Epistles of the Holy Apostles I have pitched my thoughts upon this I shall returne this threefold answer which as a threefold cord and that saith Solomon is not easily broken enduced me to this Work One though indeed the least is that I finde not any English Expositor upon it nor yet many among the Latine except those who have undertaken Comments upon all the Epistles whereas either in Latine or English or both I finde several excellent Interpreters upon each of the rest and truly I shall esteem it an high honour conferred upon me by my God if through his gracious enablement by a though imperfect dilucidation of this Epistle I may cast a Mite into the Churches-Treasury A second and more perswading reason is the congruency of it to the age wherein we now live since there is the same occasion as to general if not particular considerations now given to Ministers of handling which St. John had then of writing this Epistle To clear this you may be pleased to know that there were two sorts of men in St. Johns dayes to wit Antichristian-Hereticks and Carnal-Gospellers those expressely denied the fundamentalls of Christian Religion these whilest they had Divine phrases seraphical expressions flowing from their lips were sensual and diabolical in their lives talking of Communion with God dwelling in God knowing the truth and what not and yet practising envy malice hatred and all uncharitablenesse in their actions against both these this Boanerges for so he with his brother James are called by Christ thundereth and accordingly as appeareth by the several Chapters his Scope is double in this Epistle 1. To warne the Orthodox that they were not withdrawn from their Christian profession by the wiles of Hereticks this our Apostle himself expresseth to be one special end of his writing where he saith These things have I written unto you concerning them which seduce you Indeed wherein can the shepherd more expresse the care of his flock then in keeping off the wolves a Minister of his charge then in arming them against Hereticks And is there not as great
salvation which is not to be found either in expresse termes or by evident cons●quences in the holy Scriptures and that I may not wander we meet with a strong argument to this purpose in my text That which is able to give us full joy must not be deficient in any thing which conduceth to our happinesse but the holy Scriptures give fulness of joy and therefore the way to happiness is perfectly laid down in them the major of this syllogisme is so clear that it needs no probation for who can or will deny that full joy is only to be had in a state of bl●sse the minor is plain from this Scripture and may thus be drawne forth That which the Apostles aimed at in may doubtlesse be attained to by their writings for they being inspired of God it is no other then the end that God purposed in inspiring which they had in writing and either God himself is wanting in the means which he hath designed for this end or these writings contain in them what will yeild fulness of joy and to that end bring us to a state of blessednesse 2. To the people whom they expressely forbid to read the holy Scriptures esteeming the permission of them to the vulgar eye to be the casting of pearls before swine and the giving holy things to dogs hence is it that in a seeming reverence to holy writ and withall a pretended care of the Laicks that they may not wrest the Scriptures to their own perdition they lay upon them a prohibition but the truth is as they are but false friends to the Scripture so in this they are manifest enemies to the people bereaving them of that comfort which they might have in the reading of those divine books Certainly the Apostles intended that their Epistles should be read both to and by them to whom they wrote them now these you to whom S. John wrote were ordinary Christians dispersed in several countries such whom in the second Chapt. he calls not only Fathers but young men and children and the other Apostles express●ly direct their Epistles to all that are called to be Saints as well private persons in as publick officers of the Church nay yet further when we consider what singular benefit is to be gained by the reading of the holy Scriptures for correction ●nstruction and in particular consolation surely it is no small injury that the Church of Rome by this prohibition doth to her members even as great as if the mother should deny the dug to the tender infant 2. How odious is the prophanenesse of those Christians who neglect the holy Scriptures and give themselves to reading other books How many precious hours do many spend and that not only on workdays but holy-days in fool●sh Romances fabulous histories lascivious poems and why this but that they may be cheered and delighted when as full joy is onely to be had in these holy books Alas the joy you find in those writings is perhaps pernicious such as tickleth your lust and promoteth contemplative wickednesse at the best it is but vain such as onely pleaseth the fancie and affecteth the wit whereas these holy writings to use Davids expression are right rejoycing the heart Again are there not many who more set by Plutarchs Morals Seneca's Epistles and such like books then they do by the holy Scriptures it is true beloved there are excellent truths in those moral writings of the heathen but yet they are far short of these sacred books those may comfort against outward trouble but not against inward fears they may rejoyce the mind but cannot quiet the conscience they may kindle some flashy sparkles of joy but they cannot warm the soul with a lasting fire of solid consolation And truly brethren if ever God give you a spiritual ear to judge of things aright you will then acknowledge there are no bells like to those of Aarons no harp like to that of Davids no trumpet like to that of Isaiahs no p●pes like to those of the Apostles and you will confesse with Petrus Damianus that those writings of heathen Orators Philosophers Poets which formerly were so pleasing are now dull and harsh in comparison of the comfort of the Scriptures 3. Lastly let us so diligently read stedfastly beleive and obediently conform to these writings that our joy may be full by them It is very observable what the Prophet Ieremy saith concerning himself Thy words were found and I did eat them and thy word was to me the joy and rejoycing of my heart the word caused in Ieremy joy and rejoycing that is a full joy but by what means it was by eating it so must we get comfort in the Scriptures by eating that is reading meditating and applying them to our selves Let then that counsel which St. Ambrose giveth be acceptable to us Eat and eat daily of this heavenly manna that thy hunger may be satisfied and thy soul nourished to eternal life remember the advice which St. Hierom giveth Whatever joyes and pleasures others may take let our delights be in the law of the Lord. Finally hearken to the exhortation of Drogo hostiensis Let not the Law depart from thy heart read and ponder again and again that thou mayst find the savour of this manna with the Bee suck the sweetness of these heavenly flowers And yet more particularly when thou art cast into any danger labourest under any affliction make use of these writings for thy comfort which are as St. Ambrose truly styleth them the onely refuge in all temptations Excellently to this purpose is that even of a Roman Bishop in his exhortation to the Clergy Doth any one labour with ignorance these writings are a light to the feet and a lanthorn to his paths do we weep in this valley of tears here we may find that which will dry our eyes and revive our spirit doest thou thirst after righteousnesse here is a fountain of pure water art thou spiritually hungry here is the bread which came down from heaven indeed there is no condition that can befall a Christian to which these holy writings do not afford a sutable and proportioned consolation I end this therefore with allusion to that expression of the Prophet Esay With joy shall you draw water out of the wells of salvation These wells of salvation are Evangelical truths so St. Hierome spiritual sayings so Procoptus Oh let us by the bucket of faith draw the water of comfortable doctrine out of those wells to the joy and solace of our hearts I have now dispatched the first and most genuine reading of this pronoun the other which the Greek Scholiast taketh notice of would not be altogether passed by which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a pronoun of the first person since not onely some Greek copies but the Syriack version also so renders it that our joy might be full And thus as venerable Bede observeth upon these words it lets us see
THE First general EPISTLE OF St. JOHN The APOSTLE Unfolded and Applied The First PART In two and twenty Lectures on the First Chapter and two Verses of the Second Delivered in St. Dyonis Back-Church AN. DOM. 1654. By NATH HARDY Minister of the Gospel and Preacher to that Parish Orig. hom 2. in divers O Beate Iohannes non immeritò vocaris Iohannes id est cui donatum est cui enim Theologorum donatum est quod tibi donatum est abdita videlicet summi boni penetrare mysteria ea quae tibi revelata declarata sunt humanis mentibus ac sensibus intimare London Printed by E. Tyler for Nathanael Webb and William Grantham and are to be sold at the Black Bear in Pauls Church yard 1656. AQuilae Theologi Christo Discipuli conjunctissimi Fidei Martyris meruenti Charitatis praeconis Ecclesiae insignis Columnae D. Johannis Apostoli Perspicaci Mystae Servo Fideli Confessori invicto Spectatissimo Exemplo Reverendo Patri Johanni D no Episcopo Roffensi In primam Epistolam has Commentatiorum primitias D.D.N.H. In perpetuum grati animi Testimonium Obnixè rogans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut illi res omne genus prosperas Ecclesiae Anglicanae aerumnis erroribus heu penè obrutae antiquam veritatem splendorem pristinum pro summa sua misericordiâ largiri velit THE Epistle to the Reader THE Mahumetans say that the first thing God created was a pen Sure I am the best thing which ever was conveyed to us by a pen is the Bible nor can the one be better exercised then about the other I have often wished that every one of St. Pauls Epistles yea every Book of holy Writ might have a Davenant to draw forth its lineaments nor do I know any work that would be of more general and singular use then a practical Commentary upon the whole Bible Vpon a small yet choice piece of this sacred Volume I have made an essay wherein if any thing be well done let it be ascribed to divine assistance and whatsoever is amisse to my ignorance The chief design of this work is explication of the Text yet I have still annexed a brief application of the doctrine that I might not only enlighten thy mind but enliven thy affections In the prosecution of this design I am sometimes engaged in controversies which are calmely debated and according to my measure of knowledge hope truely stated if thou hast a Starre-light yet contemne not my Candle The prefixing of the prayer is that to which I am necessitated for my own vindication having met with my name affixed in print to a broken prayer made up of some scraps which a scribling pen hath taken from my mouth and phrases which anothers fancy hath added What mistakes misplacings omissions or additions of words thou mayest observe in perusing these discourses pardon and correct those especially which are taken notice of to thy hand If these labours find any acceptance with the pious orthodox and judicious I shall be encouraged to a progresse and the remaining parts may in due time see the light Thy candid censure of and devout prayer for is earnestly desired by him who is Thine in the common Saviour NATH HARDY The Prayer commonly used before Sermon ETernall Jehovah in whose presence the glorious Angels vaile their faces as being not able to behold thy brightness How shall we who are men and not Angels wormes and no men yea dust and ashes rather then wormes dare to appear before the Oh Lord we acknowledge there is an infinite distance between thee and us by our Creation as far as is between the high Heavens and the low Earth Thou art Infinite and we finite Thou art immutable we changable Thou art the Potter and we the Clay Thou our Maker and we all the worke of thy hands But far oh far greater is that distance which we our selves have made between thee and us by our corruption even as far as is between the highest Heavens and the lowest hell Thou art Purity add we Filthinesse Thou ●rt Majesty and we Misery Thou a God of purer eyes then to behold iniquity without fury and we such in whome dwelleth nothing but sin and iniquity We were at first Oh God concluded in sin and in iniquity did our Mother bring us forth and ever since we have conceived nothing but sin and that iniquity hath been a fruitfull Mother of all uncleanesse we are by nature deprived of all good and depraved with all evil throughout the whole course of our life we have neglected much good and committed more evill Which of thy righteous lawes Oh God have not we often violated by impiety against thee and iniquity against man in our thoughts and affections in our words and actions Before we knew thee we knew how to offend thee and ever since thou hast set up a light of knowledge in our minds we have not ceased to act the workes of darknesse in our lives Thy patience hath spared us and our wickednesse hath provoked thee thou hast forborne to punish and we have therefore gone on to R●●ell The raine of thy Word hath not fructified our barren lives The beames of thy love hath not melted our frozen hearts The thunder of thy wrath have not awakened our sleepy consciences but we still continue to adde sin unto sin and thereby treasure up wrath against the day of wrath We confesse O God our just deservings of thy fury yet are we bold to implore thy free bestowings of mercy We have abundantly sinned but thou canst abundantly pardon with us there have been numerous Rebellions but with thy Son Christ Jesus is plenteous redemption According to the freenesse of thy mercy and the fulnesse of his merits the greatnesse of thy compassions and the meritoriousnesse of his passion have mercy upon us be reconciled to us that all our sins may be blotted out of the booke of thy remembrance Do thou Oh God forget our sins but let us remember them doe thou cast them behind thy back but let us set them before our faces open our eyes that we may see open our hearts that we may consider how glorious a Name we have dishonoured how gracious a Father we have provoked how deare a Jesus we have crucified how Holy a Spirit we have grieved how just a law we have transgressed how great salvation we have despised what long suffering patience we have abused what precious opportunities of grace we have mis-spended what Hainous sinnes we have committed that by all these considerations we may be melted into tears of godly sorrow for our sins that so mourning we may loath loathing we may leave leaving we may strive against and striving against we may obtain power and victory over them Be it enough O God for it is enough nay too too much that we have played away so great a part of the candle of our lives in the pleasures of sin oh
represented Glorious things are spoken of thee oh thou Son of God nor is there less verity than dignity in these sayings that as the one cannot but attract our love so the other may engage our faith this holy Apostle and the rest had good ground for clear evidence convincing proof of what they uttered for it was no more than what sensible experience did assure them of That which we have heard c. It is that part of the Text I am now to handle the commendation of the Gospel from certain tradition as being that which the Apostles had heard and had seen with their eyes and their hands had handled of the word of life Out of the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be established so runs St. Pauls maxime loe here no less than three witnesses to wit three sences hearing seeing handling produced by St. Iohn to assert the truth of what he writeth some Expositors restrain it particularly to the resurrection of which the Apostles first heard by Mary Magdalen afterwards they saw him themselves and one of them handled him putting his hand into his side yea Christ bids them all to see and handle him indeed the special work of the Apostles was to be witnesses of the resurrection and therefore it is not improbable that St. Iohn might have a singular eye to it but yet we shall do best to take Scripture in the fullest latitude and so refer this ad totam verbi incarnati oeconomiam to the whole oeconomy of the word incarnate thus according to the several wayes whereby Christ was pleased to manifest himself to them he was heard seen and handled by them he manifested himself in flesh and so was handled in his miracles and so was seen in his words and so was heard That we may the better understand both the intent and extent of these phrases let us consider them severally 1. That which we have heard of the word of life it is a clause which admits of several references To Moses and the Prophets that which we have heard out of their writings concerning the Messiah for it is mentioned of both that they were read in the Iewish synagogues every Sabbath-day whither the Apostles often repaired 2. To the Scribes and Pharisees that which we have heard from their mouths in their expositions upon Moses and the Prophets the Pharisees themselves preached those things concerning the Messiah that were fulfilled in him and so against their wills gave testimony to him whom they rejected 3. To Iohn the Baptist that which we heard from him who was Christs harbenger to go before him and pointed at him with an ecce Behold the Lamb of God 4. To the voyce from heaven that which we heard when we were with him in the holy mount This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased the Father himself by this extraordinary way testifying of him 5. Or lastly and as I conceive most suitably to the Apostles meaning to Christ himself that which we heard from his own mouth for so it seemeth to be expounded at the fifth verse the message that we heard of him not from others at second hand but immediately from his own lips we read in the Gospel that he opened his mouth and spake and as generally to the multitude so more especially to his disciples unfolding to them the mysteries of the Kingdom aperuit os suum qui prius aperuit or a prophetarum he that opened the mouthes of the Prophets at last openeth his own mouth and oracula quasi auracula those sacred oracles which like hony drop'd from his lips were distilled into their eares who continually sate at his feet to receive instruction from him nor was it a naked hearing which the Apostle here intends but an hearing so as to understand and believe for it is such an hearing as put them upon declaring which could not have been unless they had understood nor would have been except they had believed themselves this is that which perhaps the iteration of it at the third verse may insinuate they heard and heard to wit with the ear and with the heart and that is the right hearing when there is internus fidei assensus as well as externus auris auditus an inward assent accompanying our outward attention that which Christ spake to his disciples he many times spake to many others but as when the instrument sounds a multitude hear it yet only the musical eare understands and taketh delight in it so onely the Apostles heard with a divine religious ear by which means it affected their hearts and inclined them to declare and write that they had heard 2. That which we have seen with our eyes that which we have looked upon The next sense which is brought in as a witness is their sight and it is set forth with abundance of emphasis to unfold which observe the extensiveness of the object and intensiveness of the act 1. This that the object is of a large extent and may be taken in reference to both his natures to wit humane and divine 1. The Apostles saw his humanity beheld him a man altogether like to themselves sin onely excepted they saw him eating drinking walking and thereby expressing the actions of an humane body yea they saw him in weariness hunger thirst and so subject to the defects of our frail nature 2. They saw his divinity to wit in the effects of it those powerful miracles which were wrought by him such works may well challenge our aspect They saw him cleansing the Lepers curing the sick opening the eyes of the blind the eares of the deaf nay raising the dead and this Interpreters conceive St. Iohn especially to aime at expounding him by himself in the Gospel where he saith we saw his glory as the glory of the only begotten Son of the Father full of grace and truth yea besides those miracles which he wrought among men whilest on earth they saw his glorious transfiguration on the mount his raising himself from the grave and his wonderful ascending into heaven when from mount Olivet a cloud received him out of their sight all this and what ever else conduced to declaring either his manhood or his God-head may be very well comprehended in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which we have seen 2. The act is set forth with a great deal of advantage to express the intensiveness of it For 1. It is not barely that which we have seen but that which we have seen with our eyes an addition which may seem a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 since if we do see it must be with our eyes but is indeed an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 since as Chrysostome well observeth concerning the like phrase of hearing with our eares it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the usuall custome of men when they assert any thing whereof they are fully assured and that to those who
advantage but the true Apostles esteem godliness gain and therefore chiefly aim at the peoples spiritual benefit and truly this is that which as Calvin noteth should be a singular means to gain your credence to our writing our declarings why will you not believe our report regard our message when our end is onely your good that you may partake the same benefit with us 2. As Christians we may in them behold the frame of a truly pious heart to desire that others may have fellowship with it self in the same spiritual enjoyments good Christians are no niggards of their heavenly dainties they love not to eat their morsels alone but invite others to the same participation hence that wish of Moses would all the Lords people were Prophets and of St. Paul that all were as he except his bonds upon this ground it was that Philip having found Christ called Nathanael and the woman of Samaria having met with the Messiah inviteth her friends to the sight and knowledge of him and if you desire the reason it is plain Because 1. The bringing others into the same fellowship with themselves is a means of inlarging the Kingdom of Christ and so of advancing the glory of God Religion teacheth every good man to pray hallowed be thy name and thy kingdome come and surely we cannot pray this cordially if we desire not endeavour not that which tends to both the winningmen to the faith of Christ. 2. The gaining others to their fellowship will be the means of making them for ever happy and therefore as in zeal for Gods glory so in charity to the soules of their brethren they cannot but desire it this is the different temper of envy and charity envy thinketh it a small matter to be happy it self unless another may be unhappy charity would not be happy alone but striveth to draw in company this Aretius giveth as the sence of these words here We love you as our selves and therefore wish you as well as our selves that you may have fellowship with us 3. The bringing in others is no diminution to themselves it is the manifest difference between spiritual and temporal riches those diminish by imparting but not these Godly men well know that if others have more they shall not therefore have the less and it were strange not to wish a courtesie to another when it may be no injury to our selves the musick is not the less harmonious to thee because others hear it nor doth the candle the less enlighten thee because others see by it as well as thy self nor is our participation of heavenly things the less because others have the same fellowship with us To end this let the same mind be in us that was in these holy Apostles and is in all good Christians Indeed it is that which in a bad way is usually the practice both of the Devil and wicked men the Devil being himself fallen never ceased till he drew Adam into the same pit with him ungodly men would have all partners in the same wickedness wretchedness with themselves they say Come with us cast in thy lot among us let us all have one purse and by these words they seek to intice and inveigle inconsiderate persons for this reason it was that that Epicure Heliogobalus took care for the training up of his Son in the same luxuriant courses wherein himself lived Now there is an oblique imitation even of wicked men which is commendable as sin is boundless so grace must be abounding as sin is infectious so grace must be communicative evill men decrease from bad to worse holy men must increase from good to better wicked men strive to make others as bad or worse than themselves good men must indeavour to make others as holy and as happy as themselves thus we may learn even of the worst of men but rather let Christs Apostles be our Tutors his Disciples our School-Master Thus let believing masters instruct their servants parents teach their children friends admonish their friends and godly Ministers exhort their hearers as here the Apostles did declare and write to the people for this very end that they might bring them into the same blessed fellowship with themselves THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. IOHN CHAP. I. Ver. 3. part last And truly our fellowship is with the Father and his Son Iesus Christ. THe Person of Christ is of all others the most amiable and excellent hence the Psalmist saith mystically of him thou art fairer than the children of men as being indeed more than a meer Son of man and the Spouse in the Canticles being asked in contempt by the daughters of Ierusalem what is thy beloved more than another beloved returneth that high yet deserved encomium my beloved is the chiefest among ten thousand The doctrine of Christ is that then which none more certain and undoubted in which respect the main fundamental axiome of Christs coming into the world is called by St. Paul a fai●hfull saying and the whole Gosspel by St. Iames the word of truth there being infallible verity and fidelity in evangelical sayings The sincere professors of Christ are such as none else but they can be truly happy and blessed hence it is that they are dignified by the Apostle Peter with these honourable titles of a chosen generation a royall Priesthood an holy Nation and a peculiar people And now beloved if you look into this short exordium you shall finde each of these briefly and pithily handled The Gospels certainty as being most ancient and evident is evinced in the first verse Christs excellency as being the word of life that eternall life is insisted on in part of the first and the second verse finally the faelicity of a Christian as being one that hath fellowship with God and Christ and thereby fulness of joy is characterized in the third and fourth verses well may this golden three invite us once and again nay often to look into and peruse this choice preface That which was from the beginning c. We are now come according to our proposed method to the last branch of the second General the commendation of the Gospel from the utility of its end and having made entrance upon the first end as it is propounded in those words that you also may have fellowship with us we are now to handle the Exposition of it in the following and truly our fellowship is with the Father and his Son Iesus Christ. Which words are a plain assertion unfolding the dignity and excellency of that fellowship which the Apostles and all believers with them have inasmuch as it is a fellowship with the Father and his Son it is that which our translators set down with an asseveration truly conceiving this to be the emphasis of the pleonasm which is in the Greek The Greek word which is here rendred fellowship admits both in sacred and prophane Writs of a double construction as
we shall drink deep of the river of pleasure Now we have onely the first fruits hereafter our joy shall be as the joy of harvest Finally now the joy of the Lord enters into us but then it is we shall enter into the joy of the Lord and be as it were swallowed up in the boundless ocean of that joy the truth is according to this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our exultation answereth our participation because this fellowship cannot be perfect till we come to heaven where we shall fully enjoy sanctity and immortality with God and Christ for ever therefore then and not till then shall this be verified our joy shall be filled And now to tell you how full that joy shall be I want words St. Peter speaking of our joy which we have in believing calls it unspeakable and full of glory indeed sentire est cordis dicere non est oris the heart feeleth what the tongue cannot express but oh then how glorious and not onely unspeakable but unconceivable shall that joy be in seeing Surely as when Christ miraculated wine he filled the vessels to the brim so shall he fill the vessels of our souls in that day with the water of joy to the very brim so as there shall not be the least deficiency but an abundance yea a superabundance both over and everflowing to make glad the inhabitants of that heavenly City to all eternity What then is the inference which we are to draw from hence but that we learn what joy to seek after namely that which is full and wherein to that end to place it namely in fellowship with God and Christ. Beloved it is a false slander an odious calumny which by black mouths is belched forth against Christianity as if it were an enemy to all joy whereas it doth not extirpate but ordinate our joy teaching us to place it on the right object you are mistaken when you think that we would rob you of your comfort and spoile your mirth no brethren our aim in indeavouring to bring you to God and Christ is to use Seneca's phrase upon better grounds that you might never want mirth or according to St. Pauls expression that you may rejoyce evermore Indeed this is our scope to confine your carnall joy or rather refine it that it may be pure spirituall and heavenly Oh that you would at last be wise and fix your joy in the right center by elevating it to the things above how should you say with that penitent Father Far be it Lord far be it from the heart of thy servant that I should account my self happy by any earthly joy that is the joy which is not given to the wicked but onely to them who serve thee whose joy thou thy self art and that is the blessed life to rejoyce of thee in thee for thee that is it and no other or in words not much unlike those of St. Paul God forbid that we should rejoyce in any thing save in fellowship with the Father and his Son Iesus Christ. 2. Refer this clause to the former part of this verse and then the truth which is manifestly implyed is that those things which the holy men of God did write are able to give fulness of joy This is the doctrine which I shall endeavour to illustrate both generally of all the holy writings and particularly of the Apostolical writings 1. There is fulness of joy to be had in the holy Scriptures this was that which David experienced and therefore affirmeth concerning himself that the words of God were sweet to his taste and he rejoyced in them as one that found a great spoyle and that holy man Ambrose upon those words breaketh forth into these expressions I have great cause to rejoyce for I have found the spoyles for which I have not laboured I have found the Pentateuch of Moses the writings of the Prophets I have found Christ the wonderfull Counseller and Paul the prudent builder for this reason no doubt it is that the word of God contained in the Scripture is compared to light and wine and honey and milk all which are of a pleasing and exhilarating nature indeed the holy Scriptures are a tree of life whereof every leaf is healing or according to St. Chrysostom a pleasant garden wherein every flower yields a fragrant smell or to use St. Ambrose his comparison a feast in which every book is a dainty dish affording both sweet and wholesome nutriment No wonder if St. Paul speaking of the Scriptures maketh mention of the patien●e and hope and comfort of the Scriptures there being no such ground of hope and patience and therefore no such comfort to be found elsewhere as in these sacred books 2. As this is true in general of all parcels of holy writ so more especially of the Apostolical writings to this purpose St. Cyril mystically interpreting those words of the Prophet Micah that every man should sit under his vine and under his figtree observeth that wine is an embleme of joy the figtree of sweetness and by both is shadowed that joy wh●ch the Evangel●cal doctrine should produce in those who sit under the preaching of it indeed those doctrines which reveal God and Christ satisfaction to God by Christ reconciliation to God in Christ can only give solid comfort to the soule since God out of Christ is a consuming sire onely in Christ he is a reviving Sun out of Christ he is a sin-revenging onely in Christ a sin-forgiving God now these doctrines are no where made known but in holy writ and they are most clearly delivered in the Apostolical writings what Moses and Esay and Ieremy spake obscurely that Paul and Peter and Iohn declare plainly and therefore though we find joy in those yet by these our joy is filled It is not unworthy our obsetvation in the Text that this clause These things we write stands in the middle between our fellowspip is with the Father and his Son Iesus Christ and that your joy might be full as having indeed an influence on both and by effecting the one it produceth the other these things which the Apostles write reveale God and Christ and the way of fellowship with them and by bringing us to this fellowship they convey unto us this fulnesse of joy and comfort To apply this in some short confectaries 1. How injurious is the superstition of the Papists and that both to the Scriptures themselves and to the people 1. To the Scriptures in that they deny to them a perfect sufficiency containing all things necessary to salvation and that for this reason that th●y might advance the esteem of their unwritten Traditions indeed such traditions as are not fictitious but real not particular but universal and clearly appear to be s● we reject not but withall we assert there are no such traditions delivering any thing necessary to
it is that his person being infinite the worth of his blood is infinite and so it became commensurate and adaequate both to the infinite demerit of the sin committed by us and the eternity of the punishment which was to have been inflicted upon us and by the same reason that mans sin being a finite act yet deserveth an infinite punishment because perpetrated against an infinite majesty Christs death though a temporary passion cannot but be infinitely satisfactory because it is the death of an infinite person Christ Iesus the son of God blessed for ever And now what other use should we make of this but as both a looking-glasse and an antidote 1. In this truth as in a looking-glasse let us see these two things the haynous nature of our sins and the unparaleld measure of Christs love 1. View oh sinner the hainous nature of thy sins from which nothing but Christs blood can cleanse th●e sin if looked upon in the glasse of the law cannot but appeare sinfull but when beheld in the blood of Christ it must needs appeare beyond measure sinfull ex consideratione remedii periculi aestimo quantitatem saith St. Bernard excellently take notice of the greatnes of thy disease and danger in the remedy prepared for the cure of the one and prevention of the other Oh how great is that wound which nothing could heal but the Physitians death The truth is Christs blood in respect of sin is both aggravating and diminishing look upon sin in Christs blood one way it appeareth not so terrible because this blood cleanseth from it look upon it another way it appeareth abhominable because it could not be cleansed but by this blood Tell me oh sinner why dost thou make nothing to defile thy self with that which cost thy Saviour so dear to cleanse thee from how much rather should thy sins wring tears from thee since they drew blood from Christ 2. Behold oh Sinner the exceeding love of thy Saviour who that he might cleanse thee when polluted in thy blood was pleased to shed his owne bloud Indeed the powring out of Christs blood was eximium charitatis opus a superexcellent worke of charity hence it is that these two are joyned together and when the scripture speaketh of his love it presently annexeth his sufferings so St. Paul who loved me and gave himselfe for me so St. Iohn who loved us and washed us from our sins in his owne blood We read that when Christ wept for Lazarus the standers by said see how he loved him surely if his tears much more his bloud proclaimeth his affection towards us thus may we see the bowels of his compassion through the wounds of his passion The Iewes were the scribes the nayles were the pens his body the white paper and his bloud the red inke and the characters were love exceeding love and these so fairely written that he which runs may read them I shut up this with that of devout Bernard Behold and look upon the rose of his bloudy passion how his redness bespeaketh his flaming love there being as it were a contention betwixt his passion and affection this that it might be hotter that that it might be redder nor had his sufferings been so red with bloud had not his heart been enflamed with love Oh let us beholding magnify magnifying admire and admiring praise him for his inestimable goodness saying with the holy Apostle unto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his bloud be honour and glory for ever 2. Make use of this truth as a cordiall to revive thy drooping soul in a time of inward affliction it is the note of Oecumenius upon the text Is any one affrighted with the light and sense of sin Let this cleansing by the bloud of Christ make him confident and to the like purpose St. Austin the devil hath put in a caveat an hand-writing against us but let us be secure the blood of Christ hath blotted it out Me thinks I hear some wounded broken sinner crying out in dispaire Woe is me that ever I was born my sins are for number innumerable for measure unmeasurable and I am not able to cleanse my selfe from any no not the least of them Oh what mountaines of grievous sins lye upon my back that I am not able to look up oh what scarlet crimson bloudy sins continually sly in my face that I am not able to behold without desperation oh that I had never been oh that I might be no more whether shall I sly who carry my guilt still along with me What shall I do to be eased of this oppressing burden Ah my sinfull soule what will become of thee Vile wretch that I am where shall I appear But stay thou despa●ring sinner with poore Hagar in the wildernesse thou art crying weeping dying when as behold a well of water is by thee a fountaine of bloud is opened for sin and for uncleanness thou dost well to bewayle thy own sin but thou dost ill to forget thy Saviours bloud Thou sayst thou art a great sinner true else Christ needed not have shed his bloud thou sayst thou art a great sinner be it so yet Christs bloud cleanseth from all sin And therefore is Christs bloud sayd to cleanse from all sin because there is no sin so great from which it cannot cleanse what if thy sins be clouds thick clouds yet the beames of this sun of righteousnesse can dissipate them what though they be mountaines yet this red sea can swallow them what though they be scarlet sins yet this scarlet bloud can make them white as snow View the catalogue of those sinners whom this bloud hath cleansed and thou shalt find fornicatours idolaters adulterers effae'minate abusers of themselves with mankind theeves covetous drunkards revilers extor●tioners have been washed by it for such saith St. Paul to the Corinthians were some of ye but ye are washed look once again and thou shalt find a blasphemer a persecuter for such was Paul himselfe nay murderers even those who had a hand in the murder of Christ himselfe for such were those converts at St. Peters sermon cleansed mercyfully by this very bloud which they shed so cruelly Sinners this bloud still as it were runs afresh and the efficacy of it is as full now as it was at first onely remember that this bloud which was shed cleanseth not unlesse it be sprinkled so much David intimateth in that prayer purge me with hisope hysope being that by which the bloud of sacrifice was sprinkled to which answereth faith wereby our souls are sprinkled with this bloud of Christ. The brazen Serpent cured those who were stung with the fiery Serpent but not without their looking on it The bloud of Christ can cleanse us from all our sins but not without our applying it Go then oh sinner in a sence of thy own filthiness to thy blessed Saviour
Father that he should not be loosed from the root of bitternesse law of sin till he was loosed from his body nor could this sin which separateth between God and us be separated from him till his soule was separated from his body It may be here objected what is by the Romanists asserted that concupiscence in the regenerate is no sin and so though they have concupiscence yet not therefore sin to insist upon this controversie would be a digression it is enough that whilest they only account it paenam and fomitem a punishment of sin and as it were the fuell of sin St. Paul no lesse then fourteen times calleth it by the name of sin in the 6.7 and 8. chapters to the Romanes It may perhaps further be obj●cted what is generally agreed to that baptisme be coming an instrument of regeneration washeth away original sin therefore why may not regenerate baptized persons say they have no original sin But the schools answer to this objection is very ful that Sacraments are administred to the person therfore the person is free from the guilt whilest yet stil the nature is defiled with the stain of original sin whereas it may be retorted that if the sin remaine the guilt cannot be abol●shed guiltiness being an inseperable adjunct of sin I answer that the ●eatus simplex guilt abstractively considered is not taken away but as redundans in personam concretively considered it is taken away so that this guilt shall not be imputed to the person whilest yet there are some remainders of the sin in him so that he cannot say truly he hath no sin to wit no originall corruption 2. If we say we have not sinned by actual transgressions we deceive our selves that expression of the prophet upon the land of my people shal come up briars thornes is not unfitly moralized by St. Gregory to this purpose since the bryers and thornes of iniquity are to be found growing in the land of Gods people the hearts and lives of Gods saints Excellently to this purpose saith L●● who is found so voyd of fault that there is not in his life what justice may blame and mercy perdon it is the position of Solomon in his prayer upon his supposition If they sin against thee for there is no man that sinneth not and the assertion of St. Iames including himself in the number who yet was called Iames the just In many things we offend all yea our blessed Sav●our prescribeth it as part of a forme of prayer for his own disciples Forgive us our trespasses and as St. Cyprian well noteth to check any high conceits of our sanctity he mindeth us of our dayly sins for which we have need dayly to ask pardon Indeed as St. Gregory aptly we must know there are some faults not to be avoyded by the most righteous persons such are those delicta quotidianae incursionis as Tertullian calls them sins of quotidian incursion to which all men are subject yea in respect of these it is St. Ambrose his complaint unus quisque nostrum per singulas horas quàm multa delin● 〈◊〉 in how many things doe every one of us offend every hour no wonder if St. Cyprian assert opus est nobis quotidiana sanctificatione We have need of renewed sanctification that as we sin dayly so we may be dayly purged by repentance nay that the wise man makes the challenge who can say I have made my heart clean I am pure from my sin We can neither ascribe what purity we have to our selves nor yet attribute perfection to our purity To illustrate this more distinctly consider 1. Even the externall conversation of the best men is not exactly pure The life of a Christian is as it were a book his birth the Title page his Baptisme the Epistle Dedicatory his years the leavs and his actions the lines in those leaves and there are some lines in the leaves of the fairest life which by reason of their errata are legenda cum venia to be looked upon with a favorable eye since if God should examine our acts with a severe eye woe would be to the most commendable life as St. Augustine excellently 2. Put the case that a man were free in respect of his externall actions yet who is free from internall motions though thy hands were perfectly cleane yet thy heart is not To be free from all titillations and motions is not for this life which is a continued temptation that expression of our Saviour He that is washed need not save to wash his feet is fitly alluded to by St. Bernard for our present purpose He is washed whose head that is his intentions and hands that is his operations are cleane But our feet which are lusts and affections whilest we walke upon the dust of this world continually need washing 3. And yet further though one might arrive at such a perfection as to say with St. Paul I know nothing by my selfe yet as he saith of himselfe he could not thereby be justifyed Indeed it is most probable that the Apostle there speaketh onely in respect of the discharge of his calling concerning which he knew nothing by himselfe for which he was blame worthy but take it in the largest extent that he knew nothing by himselfe in the present bent of his heart and course of his life yet he as well as David and so every Saint hath reason to pray Cleanse me from secret sins many things being sins which yet we know not to be so and there being much filth and uncleannesse in our hearts which by reason of their deceitfullnesse we are not able to discover and finde out 4. Finally Our holiest services are full of infirmities so that if we say we have not sinned in the best duty that ever we performed we deceive our selves This was visibly represented where Aaron the high priest a tipe of Christ was to beare the iniquity of their holy things and it is not improbably conceived as the assertion of Solomon when he saith There is not a just man on earth that doth good and sinneth not that is who sinneth not in the good he doth yea it is the confession of the Church All our righteousnesses are as filthy rags upon which St. Bern●rd Our righteousnesse though upright is not pure unlesse we think our selves better then those who uttered those words and Gerson upon the same Scripture infers Who dare then boast of his righteousnesse before God No brethren there is a worme in our best fruits drosse in our purest gold smoak in our brightest fire spots in our most beautiful splendid performances our graces are not without their defects our duties not without their defaults who finds not his knowledge d●mme his faith weake his love cold his zeale remisse Who may not complain of dulness deadness wandringnes in his devotion Who ever could say he loved
preist as necessary to remission yea in her last conventicle rather then councill pronounceth an anathema to all who shall deny this particular sacramentall confession ro the preist to be of divine right yea though I abhorre the practice of it as used among them by the priest as a stratagem to vntie the peoples purses and a pick lock to open the secrets of states by the peopl● not as an hedge but a gap to make way for future commissions with more freedome after they have as they suppose cleansed themselves by confession Yet I could heartily w●sh that the right use of private confession to the priest were revived and pract●ced since I am confident that as many having secret d●seases p●rish for want of reveal●ng them to an able Ph●sitian so may sin sick soules either wholly miscarry or however sad●y continue and increase their inward wounds for want of making known their case to some faithfull min●ster But the confess●on which our Apostle here intends is no doubt onely in reference to God for besides that it is a confession to be made by the Apostles and so the m●nisters themselves as well as the people it is clearly intimated that this confession must be made to him who is just and faithfull to forgive and that is onely God indeed this confession is that which must accompany all the rest when wee confesse the wrong to man wee must confesse the sin to God when we acknowledge the scandall to the Church still we must acknowledge the sin to God finally when we confesse too our confession must not be ●erm●nated in the M●nister and though it bee made before him yet it must be directed to God The truth is those confessions without this are not avaylable but this may nay will be without those if God deny the opportunity of them indeed it is God who is ●ither mediately or immediately injured it is Gods law which is d●rectly violated in all sinnes and therefore to him they must be conf●ss●d Thus David said I will conf●sse my transgress●ons unto the Lord and the prod●gall resolveth to goe to his Father and say Father I have sinned against heaven and before thee and St. Chrisostom● adv●seth yea beseecheth the p●ople to acknowledge the●r sinnes continually to God to confesse them before the judge praying if not w●th their tongue yet their hearts and so much bee spoken in answer to the second quaere How this confession must be performed is next to bee resolved to which end be pleased to take notice of the Antecedent Ingredients and consequent of a right acknowledgement 1. There cannot bee agnitio if there be not cognitio peccati an acknowledging unless there precede a knowledge of sin David puts them together I acknowledge my transgressions and my sin is ever before me ●f our sinnes bee not before us how can we set them before God and therefore to the right exercise of this duty th●re is required a praevious examination of our hearts inspection into our lives that we may be enabled to see our sinnes hee that hath not yet asked himselfe that question quid feci what have I done can never make the confession sic feci thus thus I have done in this respect I would though not require yet advise it as a pious and prudent practice and that which I doubt not but many Christians have found benefit by to keepe a constant daily Catalogue as of mercies received so of sinnes committed 2. The Ingredients of this confession are many and such as well deserve our observation A right confession of sin must be 1. Free and voluntary not a confession upon the rack or the gallowes extracted meerely from sence of paine and smart of the punishment wee read of confessions made by Pharaoh and Saul but it was when Judgement either feared or felt compelled them to i● Many cast out their sinnes by confession as Mar●ners doe their war●s in a storm wishing for them again in a calme a true confession must be ingenious and must come like water out of a spring which floweth freely not like water out of a st●ll which is forced by fire 2. Cordiall and sincere confession to men is a worke of the voyce but to God of the hea●t and that so peculiarly as oftimes the heart alone is sufficient without the voyc● but never the voyce without the heart many mens confessions come from them as water runs through a pipe they leave no impression their hearts are not affected with what they confesse O let us learne to be in good earnest with God remembring that as prayer for mercy so confession of sin must not be onely a lip labour since then instead of offering the calves of our lips wee shall but offer the lips of calves 3. Penitent and abasing This is that which puts forth it selfe in a Three fold affection of shame of griefe of hatred wee must confesse 1. With shame This was Ezrahs temper when he saith oh my God I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to heaven to bee ashamed to confesse is bad but to confesse with shame is good those words of the Prophet so wil we render the the calves of our lips are by velasques expounded of penitent confession which whilest it brings by shame redness into the che●ks as it were le ts out the bloud of the sacrificed calfe by the knife of repentance 2. With griefe Thus the publican for shame stands a farre off not daring to lift his eyes to heaven for grief smiteth his hreast David doth not onely say I will declare but I will be sorry for my sin the people of God in the day of their confession not onely say wee have sinned but draw water and poure it out before the Lord in token of contrition wee should in confessing sins have our hearts so affected that our eyes with Job may poure teares before God that with David rivers of teares may run down our eyes yea wee should wish with Ieremy that our head were water and our eyes a fountaine of teares But however nonne stillabit oculus noster if we cannot poure out shall wee not drop a tear or at least if we cannot shed a tear let us breath forth a sigh for our sins it is onely the heart broken with godly sorrow that sends forth a true confession 3 With hatred confession is the soules vomit and looke as what the stomack vomits it loaths yea therefore it casts it up because it loaths it so must wee confess our sins with an holy indignation against and detestation of them There are beloved too many who declare their sin but it is to use the prophet Isaiahs comparison as Sodom with impudency they made a sport of acting and they make a ●east of confessing their sins these are they who according to St. Pauls expression glory in the●r shame mention their sin not with sorrow but joy hatred but delight
for them calls God to record how earnestly he longed after the Philippians in the bowels of Iesus Christ. Indeed to all to whom he wrote he still expresseth his intire affection one of those titles which the holy Apostles use in their Epistles is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the vulgar rendreth and not unfitly Charissimi and our translation dearly beloved nor are we to imagine this a verbal complement but a real expression as they called them so they accounted them their dearly beloved We read concerning Aaron that he was to bear the names of the children of Israel in the brest-plate of judgment upon his heart so did those holy Apostles in a mystical sence nay S. Paul saith of the Corinthians that they were an Epistle written in his heart Let the same mind be in all Ministers towards their people that was in St. Iohn and the other Apostles Non minus vos diligo quos genui ex Evangelio quam si suscepissem conjug●o said St. Ambrose I love you no lesse whom I have begotten by the Gospel then if I had begotten you in matrimonial conjunction pro officio sacerdotis omnes christianos filiorum loco diligimus saith St. Ierome we love all christians as our children and this we do by reason of our office which obligeth us to it and if all much more those over whom divine providence hath placed us and let our love shew it selfe to be a parental love by the purity vehemency and activity of it that as parents love their little children not for their own but the childrens sake with a great measure of affection not sparing any cost pains for their good so let us love our people not theirs but them not coldly but fervently not lazily but diligently watching fasting praying preaching and every way endeavouring their spiritual good To end this first particular It is not unworthy our observation and imitation that this holy Apostle being to presse upon them a duty first expresseth his affection and the better to make way for his counsels coucheth them as it were in sweet and pleasing language verbis non duris sed ad admodum blandis utitur ut eo facilius persuadeat he useth not harsh and rough but sweet and soft words he well knew that the Sun-beams have a greater influence then the boysterous winds and those whom sincecerity hardnesse meeknesse softneth He well knew that if he could perswade the people of his love to them he should the better gain their observance of his advice since that cannot but be be well taken which appeareth to be spoken in love For this reason it is that this and other such compellations as brethren and beloved are frequently made use of by the Apostle yea that we find them so often intreating beseeching perswading that by their gentle expressions they might win upon those to whom they wrote My doctrine said Moses shall drop as the rain my speech shall distill as the dew to wit in a mild and gentle manner and indeed so it did for like a tender nurse he sings to the froward child reproving Israels ingratitude in a song Thus you see how as God did once to Elijah so the men of God to the people have for the most part come in the still voyce and surely it becommeth well all Gods Ministers to write after these coppies and to endeavour that by affectionate expressions and alluring phrases they may prevaile with those to whom they preach Indeed since we are Messengers of the word of truth we must abhorre lying flattery but withall since we are Ambassadours of the Gospel of peace we must use perswading lenity and bespeak the people in the most loving insinuating phrases as here we see St. Iohn did calling them my little children And let this suffice to have been spoken of the friendly compellation which seemeth very fitly to make way for the Faithful admonition These things I write to you th●● you sin not wherein there are two particulars further to be taken notice of The matter of the admonition in these words that you sin not The motive enforcing it as the end of what he wrote in those words these things I write unto you 1. Begin we with the matter of the admonition which is not to sin That I may the better illustrate what is the true full meaning of these words I shall intreat you to observe these ensuing particulars and those such as the comparing of this clause with the three last verses of the former Chapter manifestly prompts to 1. In the end of the preceding Chapter our Apostle tells those who say they have not sinned that they make God a lyar by which it appeares that this sin not is to be understood de futuro in reference to time to come as if he should say though you have sinned heretofore yet sin not that is abstain from sin hereafter and thus this admonition is the same with that of God by the Prophet Isay cease to do evill by the Prophet Ezechiel cast away all your transgressions and of Christ to the impotent man whom he had healed and to the woman which was charged with adultery sin no more It was one of the prohibitions given to the Nazarites that they should not drink vinegar but what need of this when as the sharpnesse of the liquor is enough to disswad● from drinking it the literal reason whereof was no doubt because it came of the wine and strong drink but Rabbanus maketh a moral application of it apt to our present purpose where he saith they drink vinegar who return to the oldnesse of their past sins of which every spiritual Nazarite must beware It is not unfitly observed to this purpose by Mendoza concerning Gods command of turning the rebels censers into broad plates which were fastened to the altar for a covering that this might he one reason that those censors might more●e ●e imployed in that sacrilegious way for whereas had the censors rema●ned and not been beaten into plates or if beaten and not fastened on the Altar they might have been easily again abused now they remained as memorials of their sins and yet no way was left for misimploying them afterwards and surely what should this but teach us how solicitous and careful we should be though we have done iniquity to do so no more and though We have sinned yet not to sin hereafter 2. But further in the ninth verse of the former Chapter he adviseth confession of sin and here he addeth sin not as if he would say as you confesse your sins past so sin not for time to come indeed this is both the truest and the safest the most reall and the most comfortable part of repentance wash you make you clean saith God by the Prophet he washeth and is clean saith St. Austin qui praeterita plangit iterum non admittit who bewaileth sin committed and doth not commit sin bewayled Our
confessions our prayers our tears our purposes may be hypocritical it is our actuall forsaking of sin which evidenceth the truth of all the rest True repentance doth not only decline the Accusative case by acknowledging sin and the Vocative by calling upon God for pardon but the Ablative by putting sin away and thus according to Origens phrase as it healeth those wounds that have been made so it taketh care that the soul be not wounded again Indeed this is the great mistake of very many they content themselves with a generall confessing sin and formal asking of pardon and still they add sin unto sin but alas this is only fingere not agere poenitentiam to pretend not practice penitence optima poenitentia vita nova the repentance of the life by dying to sin is the very l●fe of repentance 3. Lastly In the eighth verse of the former Chapter our Apostle saith if we in which number he include● himself and consequently the holyest men say we have no sin we deceive our selves and yet here he writeth to them not to sin two clauses which seem irreconcileable but may be solved up by a double answer Either thus sin not that is indevour that you may not sin at all hereafter though this cannot be the event let it be your intent the successe let it be your design in execution let it be in intention sin not saith Bede that is let us take heed how we adde to the frailty of our flesh by our neglect and therefore let us strive to the utmost we can that we may be free from all sin and to this purpose is Calvins gl●sse when he saith by not sinning he meaneth that as far as humane weaknesse will permit we should abstaine from all sin 2. Or thus sin not that is be sure you sin not de futuro again as you did de preterito in the dayes of your unregeneracy as if he would say though you cannot but sinne still yet sinne not so as you did before To inlarge this in a double reference 1. Quoad genus not in the same kind Sin not that is beware of those grosse sins scarlet iniquities in which before you lived And thus though it is possible a regenerate person may commit some great sin in which he formerly wallowed yet it is not impossible for him wholly to avoid sins of that nature nay this is that which God expects and requireth of us that though our garment will be spotted yet it may not be rent in pieces and though we cannot be without failings yet that we should be without scandalous falls 2. Quoad modum not in the same manner as before you did not with that fulness of deliberation freenesse of consent strength of resolution frequency of action which you sinned with in times past We cannot but sin but we must not delight in give up accustome our selves to the commission of sin it was Davids prayer keep back thy servant from presumptuous sin and it is every good mans practice to keep himself by Gods grace from sinning presumptuously And thus much shall serve to be spoken of the matter Proceed we now to the motive enforcing this admonition and that is because this was the end of his writing these things The prosecution of this lieth in the various reference of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 these things here spoken of Indeed we may very well understand it both in a general and a particular reference 1 It may have a general respect to the whole Epistle and so we are to take notice of one principal end why he wrote this Epistle that he might take them off from their sinnes And thus here is intimated both finis scribentis and finis Scripturae the end of the writer and the end of the writing and that one and the same their not sinning 1. I write these things that you sin not that was his ayme and scope in his writing nor was it only his but that which all the men of God in all their writings and preachings aymed at and therefore you still find them harping upon that string repent and shooting their forked arrowes at sin Indeed the false Prophets as God complaineth by Jeremy did strengthen the hands of evill doers but the true Prophets endevour was to restrain them the false Prophets as Ezechiels phrase is did sow pillowes under their arm-holes but the true plucked them away Go up and prosper was the voyce of the lying Prophets to Ahab If thou return in peace the Lord hath not spoken by me saith Micaiah flattering Ministers lull the people asleep but faithfull ones awaken them out of their sins oh let us herein approve our selves sincere by striking at and labouring to beat down sin in all our discourses 2. These things I write unto you that you sin not this was the end of all that he wrote nor is it only the end of his but all the writings of the Apostles and Prophets so that the whole Scripture is given us among others for this end that we might not sin If we look into holy writ we shall find precepts reproofs threatnings promises hystories and sin not is that to which they all tend The precepts are clear as glasses to discover sin The reproofs as faithful monitors to mind us of sin The Threats as strong cords to bind us from sin The promises as gentle antidotes against sin and The Histories as memorable monuments of the sad effects of sin To this purpose it is that Gods word is compared to a fire which purgeth away the drosse to water which cleanseth away the filth and to a sword with a double edge the one whereof is to cut the heart of a sinner for sinne and the other to cut sin in the heart of a sinner Oh my brethren as these things are written by those sacred penmen so let them be read heard pondered and observed by us for this end that we may not sinne These things are written in Gods book that we may not and if these things be written in our hearts we shall not erre The Psalmist proposeth it to young men and in them to all men as an excellent help against sin wherewith shall a young man cleanse his wayes by taking heed thereto according to thy word and presently after he sets down a probatum est from his own practice and experience I have hid thy word in my heart that I might not sin against thee When therefore we are to encounter with any sin let us go to the brook of holy writ and thence choose out five smooth stones a precept a reproof a threat a promise an history put we them in the scrip of our hearts Let us throw them with the sling of faith against the forehead of Goliah our lust whatsoever it be so shall we be enabled to overcome for these things are written that we sinne not Besides thls general there may be a more particular
he is an advocate for us with the Father let us be advocates for him with the world let us plead his cause vindicate his honour speak for his Gospel intercede for his members it is but that to which gratitude obligeth to do for him as far as we may what he doth for us and so return like for like indeed he can and will plead his own cause nor doth he stand in need of our help but he taketh it kindly when we expresse our thankefulnesse by becoming advocates for him 3. That when we sin Christ may be our advocate let us be sure to arraign and accuse our selves it is St. Austins advice continually censure and condemn thy self so mayest thou come boldly in confidence of thine advocate Indeed I may here fitly make use of those words towards the end of the former Chapter if we confesse our sinnes he is our advocate to plead for pardon in one word Let us with penitent hearts on all occasions go to him and humbly intreat him that he would intreat for us he desireth no more then to be desired prayer is the only fee this advocate expects Let us therefore confesse and confessing pray to the Father in his name yea to himself that he would pray to the Father and let us not doubt but he will perform what we desire and obtain what we expect the forgivenesse of our sins and not only so but in the end that which is the end of our faith the salvation of our souls THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. IOHN CHAP. II. Ver. 2. And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours onely but also for the sins of the whole world IT is one of those excellencies which are common both to Law and Gospel that they require purity of heart and holinesse of life sin not is the voyce both of Moses and Christ Prophets and Apostles Indeed since they were holy men who wrote and that as moved by the Holy Ghost it was impossible but that all their writings should tend to the advancing of holinesse It is one of those excellencies which are peculiar to the Gospel that it provideth an Anchor in case of a storme a rock of succour in shipwrack a refuge whether to flye when we are in danger indeed the Law doometh the transgressour to the curse and there leaveth him hopelesse helplesse remedilesse Accursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them so runs the comminatory sentence in which the sinner being involved hath no way left by the Law of escaping but must inevitably perish whence it is that the legal ministration is called by the Apostle the ministration of death but by the Gospel cometh glad tidings of pardon and propitiation to disconsolate sinners and whilest we are sitting in the darknesse of despaire by reason of our sin breaketh in upon us with beams of comfort from the Sun of righteousnesse thus as it saith sin not so withall if we fall into sin it saith despair not a careful endeavour against sin it requireth yet when we have sinned it leaveth us not without hope but directeth us to Christ as an intercessor and reconciler for so we find St. John here in those words which may therefore be truly called the Epitome and summe of the Gospel My little children these things I write unto you c We are now come to the second Ingredient in this Remedy to wit the reconciliation wrought by Christ and this in the second verse and he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but for the sins of the whole world concerning which choice and amiable benefit we have two things set before us The nature of it wherein it consists in those words and he is the propitiation for our sins The extent of it how far it reacheth in those words and not for ours only but for the sins of the whole world each of which may well take up an whole discourse At this time only of the former expressed in those words and he is the propitiation for our sins Before I enter upon the matter it will be needful to take a little notice of the connexion of the clause implied in the particle And. A word which may be considered either meerly as conjunctive or as causal 1. If we read it only as a conjunctive particle it lets us see that Christ being an advocate becometh a propitiation indeed the work of reconciliation according to a different notion belongs both to Christs sacrifice and his intercession the meritorious purchase of our peace belongs to his sacrifice the effectual application of it to us belongs to his intercession the shedding of his blood upon the crosse was that which wrought reconciliation for all that should beleeve in him the presenting his blood in heaven is that which obtaineth the actual collation of this benefit upon them who do beleeve in him This was excellently tipified under the Law by the blood and the incense which the Priest made use of in the attonement the former prefiguring Christs suffering and the latter his advocateship by both which the propitiation is made It is that which we have reason to take notice of for our comfort that Christ is such an advocate as hath not only affectum but effectum a desire to do us good but accomplisheth it as doth not only satagere but efficere undertake but perform as he intercedeth for us when we sin so he finds acceptance and he propitiat●th God for our sins oh let it be our wisdom to addresse our selves to him as our advocate when we have offended let us not doubt of being reconciled 2. We may yet further look upon this and as a causal particle signifying after the Hebrew use for and so it lets us see what giveth the efficacy to Christs intercession to wit his propitiation this will the better appear if we consider that 1. This propitiation for our sins was merited by Christs blood and therefore God is said to set him forth a propitiation through faith in his blood and Christ is said to make peace through the blood of his crosse indeed there can be no propitiation of wrath without satisfaction of justice and there can be no satisfaction of justice without shedding of blood whereby the punishment was suffered which justice required 2. Christ maketh intercession in the vertue of his blood our salvation is obtained first pretio and then prece by laying down a price and then plead●ng the payment before God so that what was once offered is continually presented 3. Christ being a propitiation and so our advocate must needs speed whilest a man is angry it is in vain to move him for a favour but his anger being appeased there is hopes of successe especially when he pleads who was the means to pacifie him thus stands the case between God and Christ and us God being ●ncensed
unworthy of the least regard oh tell me i● each of these severally much more all joyntly be not strong obligations of love and thankefulnesse How should every beleeving sinner in the apprehension hereof break forth into these or the like ejaculations Dearest Iesus didst thou procure thy Fathers love to me and shall it not engage my love to thee didst thou snatch me as a brand out of the fire of Gods wrath and shall not I be inflamed with affection towards thee the propitiation which thou hast wrought for me was undeserved nay undesired shall it be altogether unrequited It is true I cannot recompence but surely I will acknowledge it I will love and blesse and praise thee for it saying in words much like those of the Angels Worthy is the lamb that was slain a sacrifice and so a propitiation for my sins to receive power and riches and wisdome and strength and honour and glory and blessing THE FIRST EPISTLE OF S. IOHN CHAP. II. Ver. 2. And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours onely but also for the sins of the whole world WOrds amiable as beauty to the eye harmonious as musick to the ear sweet as hony to the taste and joyous as wine to the heart who can read them and not be affected hear them and not be ravished meditate on them and not be delighted beleeve them and not be comforted Diligenter observanda cordibusque inscribenda sunt haec verba saith Ferus aptly These words deserve to be written yea ingraven upon the tables of our hearts as containing in them that which cannot but afford unspeakeable joy to the wounded conscience The person spoken of is Iesus Christ whose very name is as a precious oyntment the thing spoken of is a pacification between God and sinners then which no perfume can be sweeter finally this benefit is set forth as obtained by this person not for a few but many some but all and so like the light diffusing it selfe through the whole world and therefore I trust since we are all concerned in we shall all be diligently attentive to this precious Scripture And he is the propitiation for our sins c. Having already unfolded the nature we are now to handle the extent of this excellent benefit which is expressed two wayes Negatively and not for ours only Affirmatively but also for the sins of the whole world 1. A word of the former not for ours onely it is that which lets us see the nature of faith True faith applyeth but doth not appropriate or if you wil it doth appropriate but it doth not impropriate to it selfe a beleever so maketh Christ his own as that still he is or may be anothers as well as his and the reason of this is Partly in regard of the nature of the object which is such that it is capable of being communicated to many as well as few for as the ayre is a meanes of refocillation the sun an instrument of illumination and the sea a place of navigation for the people of our country and yet not ours only those being things so communicative that every one may have a share in them nor is one mans or peoples enjoying an hindrance to another so is Christ a propritiation for the sins of St. Iohn and the rest of beleevers then living but not for theirs only he being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a common good and his propitiation such as that the participation of it by some doth not at all impede others from having the like interest And partly in respect of ●he temper of the subject this being the frame of a beleevers spirit that he would have others pertake of the same benefit with himselfe The Apostle St. Paul saith of faith that it worketh by love and accordingly as faith brings Christ home to it self so the love by which it worketh is desirous he might be imparted to others To this purpose it is observable that that Holy Apostle when he speaketh of a Crowne which shal be given to him presently addeth and not to me onely as here St. Iohn for our sins and not for ours onely To wind up this whereas there are two objections amongst others made against the applying act of faith as if it were a bold presumption in regard of Christ and an uncharitable excluding of others from having the same benefit to say he is ours and that he is the propitiation for our sins both will be found no better then calumnies since on the one hand faiths particular applycation is within the bounds and according to the tenure of the Gospel-promise and therefore it s no presumption and on the other hand faiths applying Christ to our selves is not thereby to withhold him from any other and therefore it is no uncharitablenesse for whilest faith saith He is the propitiation for our sins Love addeth and not for ours onely And so much or rather so little of the Negative pas●e we on to the 2. Affirmative clause But also for the sins of the whole world favores ampliandi is a rule in the civill law favours are to be extended to the utmost so doth our Apostle here this benefit of Christs propitiation Amplificatio est misericordiae dei it is an amplification of Gods mercy and Christs merit and that 1. Implicitely in respect of the object since Christ did not pacify God onely for the original sin of our natures but the actuall sins of our life and not onely for one but for all kind of sins The sins of the whole world are a world of sins what a numberless number of sins are every day committed in the world yea what sin is there so vile so heynous which commeth not within this latitude the sins of the whole world so that this propitiation extends it selfe not onely to one but many lesser but greater sins not the multitude nor magnitude of all the sins which are acted in the world can exceed the virtue of Christs propitiation and therefore though the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be ell●ptically cut of in the Greeke both it and its substantive are fitly supplyed in our translation for the sins of the whole world But further this enlargement is chiefly to be considered 2. Expl●citely in regard of the subject the persons to whom this propitiation bel●ngs and it is set forth with the fullest advantage that may be Indeed there are divers phrases by which this universality is represented Sometimes it is sa●d He gave his life a ransome for many and that is opposed to a few more then this it is said that He dyed for all and that He gave himselfe a ransome for all yea the Author to the Hebrews saith He tasted death for every man not onely all in generall but every man in perticular in like manner the usuall phrase of the Scripture when it speaketh of the subject of reconciliation ●nd salvation is in the comprehensive
word world God so loved the world God was in Chhist reconciling the world and again in this Epistle Him hath God sent to be the Saviour of the world and yet as if this were not large enough to this extensive substantive is here in the text annexed an universall adjective whilest he saith not onely the world but the whole world That this is so must be granted or else the Scripture must be denied which hath so frequently and plainly asserted it The onely thing to be inquired is in what sence this is to be understood and how it is verified I well know there is much dispute among learned and Godly men about the interpretation of this and such like Scriptures For my own part I have a reverend esteem of many of them who hold the severall opinions and I could heartily wish that such questions having much to be said either way both from Scripture and reason might be more calmely debated then they are by some and the ass●rt●rs on either hand lesse censorious each of other That which I shall now indeavour is according to the measure ●f light I have received by prayer reading meditation and conference positively to acquaint you what I conceive to be truth and show you how far we may safely extend and so how we may genuinely expound this clause He is the propitiation for the sins of the whole world To this end Let your attention go along with me whilest I shall prsoecute two or three distinctions 1. This assertion Christ is the propitiation for the sins of the whole world may be understood either exclusively or inclusively and in both considerations it is in some respect or other true 1. To say Christ is the propitiation for the sins of the whole world exclusively imports thus much That there is no propitiation for the sins of the whole world but onely by Christ and thus we may take the whole world in its full latitude pro omnihus singulis and need not feare to assert that there never was nor will be any man from the first Adam to the end of the world who did shall or can obtain propitiation for his sins except through Christ. Indeed God according both to Moses and Pauls phrase is a consuming fire and all mankind being fallen in Adam is as stubble and straw to that fire which must needs be consumed by it if Christs blood did not prevent that consumption by quenching the fire of his displeasure Hence it is that S. Paul saith expressely God was in Christ reconciling the world to himselfe thereby intimating That were it not for Christ the world could not be reconciled to him To this purpose it is that the Apostle Peter speaking of Christ useth a negative proposition neither is there salvation in any other and inforceth it with a strong confirmation for there is none other name under Heaven given among men whereby we must be saved where that expression under Heaven is very observable as comprizing in it the whole earth which is under Heaven with all the inhabitants therein It is the promise of God to Abraham That in his seed should all the nations of the earth be blessed that seed St. Paul expounds mistically of Christ and Lyra's glosse is quia nullus consequitur salutem nisi per Christi benedictionen because none can attain eternal life but through Christs benediction and not much unlike is Bezas note on this place Christ is the propitiation for the whole world ut noverimus nusquam esse salutem extra Christum that we may know salvation is not to be had any where without Christ. From hence it is that may be inferred which elsewhere is expressed that since there is no propitiation but by Christ none can pertake of this propitiation but by faith in him and the strength of the inference is built upon this foundation Whosoever have propitiation by Christ must bee in Christ and therefore St. Paul saith of the Ephesians whilest Heathens they were without Christ and presently addeth in the same verse having no hope as if he would say There is no hope of Salvation for them that are without Christ. None but they who beleeve in Chirist are in Him and therefore the Apostle saith Christ dwelleth in our hearts by faith and those two phrases being in the faith and Christ being in us are used by him in one verse as one expository of the other The result of both which propositions is that seeing there is no propitiation without Christ and without being in Christ none can obtain that propitiation but they who beleeve in Him agreeable to which it is that St. Paul saith God hath set him forth a propitiation through faith in his bloud Indeed this must be rightly understood and to that end qualified with these distinctions of seminall and actuall of implicite and explicite faith and of faith in Christ as to come and as come Christ is no doubt a propitiation for all circumcised and baptised children dying in their infancy who yet cannot actually beleeve in him but they have after an extraordinary way the spirit of Chr●st conferred on them and so the seed of faith and all other graces in them Christ was no doubt a propitiation for those before his coming as well as us all of whom only beleeved in him as to come and many of whom had but only an implicite not a clear and distinct faith in the Messiah nor will I undertake to determine what degree of knowledge is necessary to that Faith in Christ which is necessary to an interest in this propitiation but still I say with the Authour to the Hebrewes without faith it is impossible to please God and that faith is not only to beleeve that God is but to beleeve that he is a rewarder of them that seek him which cannot be without some knowledge of Christ since it is onely in an Evangelical sense that he is a rewarder and as he is no rewarder of any that seek him but for Christs sake so none can rightly beleeve him a rewarder who is altogether ignorant of Christ. Indeed when our blessed Saviour saith This is life eternal to know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ Christ whom thou hast sent what doth he but as it were define eternal life by the knowledge of God and Iesus Christ this knowledge being both the way and the end that wherein it consists and that whereby it is obtained and more fully when he saith God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Sonne that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish what doth he but set down beleeving in Christ as the way whereby the whole world must escape perishing Finally when St. Paul speaking of Iew and Greek maketh calling on the name of the Lord Christ the means of salvation and annexeth beleeving in as necessary to the calling on him what doth he
from Gods pleasure not any want of dignity and sufficiency in the price which was payed by him 2 But when the schooles speak of Christs dying for all sufficiently and accordingly some Expositours interpret this expiation sufficient for the sins of the whole world it is as the Learned Davenant hath excellently observed solidly proved another kind of value to wit such as ariseth from divine ordination and thus though we must exclude Angels and consider men onely as viatores whilest they are in the way since as S. Bernard truly The blood of Christ which was shed on earth goeth not down to hell yet we are by the whole world to understand omnes singulos all and every man that hath been is or shall be in the world so that we may truly assert It was the intention of God giving Christ and Christ offering himselfe to lay down such a price as might be sufficient and so upon Gospel termes applicable to all mankind and every individuall man in the whole world To unfold this truth aright I shall briefly present two things to your consideration 1. A price may be said to be sufficient either absolutely or conditionally a price is then absolutely sufficient when there is nothing more required to the participation of the benefit but onely the payment of the money and thus we are not to conceive of Gods ordination that Christs death should become an actuall propitiation without any other intervenient act on our part He dyed not in this sense for any much lesse for all when therefore we say God would that Chr●st should lay down a pr●ce sufficient and so applicable to every man it is to be understood in a conditionall way upon the termes of faith and repentance And hence it is that though Christ dying suffered that punishment which was designed to be satisfactory for the sins of every man yet God doth justly inflict the punishment upon the persons of all them who are not by faith partakers of Christs death because it was intended to satisfy for them onely upon cond●tion of beleeving 2. Know further that though God intend Christs propitiation conditionally appl●cable aequè as well to every as any man yet he did not ex aequo aequally intend it for every man it is one thing to say He is a propitiation not for our sins onely but for the sins of the whole world and another thing to say He is a propitiation as fully for the sins of the whole world as He is for ours It is observable in Scripture that some places speake of Christ laying down his life for his sheep and giving himselfe for his Church and others of Christs dying for all and tasting death for every one in one place He is called the Saviour of the body and in another the Saviour of the world nor will it be hard to reconcile these if we distinguish of a general a speciall intention in God that the fruit of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 love to mankind this of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 good will to some particular persons by the former he intends Christs propitiation applicable to all by the latter He decreth it to be actually applyed to some according to this it is that S. Ambrose saith Christ suffered generally for all and yet specially for some and Peter Lumbard Christ offered himselfe on the Altar of the Crosse for all as to the sufficiency of the price for the elect onely as to efficacy because he ef●ects salvation onely for them that are praedestina●ed Sutably hereunto it is ●hat Divin●s conceive a double covenant to be intimated i● Scripture the one universall and cond●tionall the other speciall and absolute the one made with all and every man upon these termes Whosoever beleeveth in Christ shall not perish the other made with Christ concerning a seed which He should see upon mak●ng h●s Soule an offering for ●in to whom He promiseth not onely Salvation by Christ upon condition of beleeving but the writing his law in their hearts whereby they are inabled to performe the condition and so infal●●by pertake of that salvation By all which it appeareth that notwithstanding Gods speciall affection and d●cr●e of election whereby he hath purposed this propitiation shall be actually conferd upon some we may t●uly assert God hath a generall love whereby He hath ordained the death of Christ an universall remedy applicable to every man as a propitiation for his sins ●f he beleeve and repent And hence it is that this propitiation as it it is applicable so it is annunciable to every man Indeed as God hath not intended it should be actually applyed so neither that it should be so much as a●●ually revealed to many men but yet it is as applicable so annunci●ble both by virtue of the generall covenant God hath made with all and that generall mandate He hath given to his Ministers of preaching the Gospel to all so that if any Minister could go through all the parts of the world and in those parts singly from man to man He might not onely with a conjectural hope but with a certain faith say to him God hath so loved thee that he gave his onely son that if thou beleeve in him thou shalt not perish and that this is not barely founded upon the innate sufficiency of Christs death but the Ordination of God appeareth in that we cannot may not say so to any of the fallen Angels for whom yet as you have already heard Christs death is intrinsecally sufficient And now what should the meditation of this truth afford us but matter of 1 Admiration at the riches of divine love to all mankind and which rendereth it so much the more wonderfull that whilest it is conferd on the whole world of men it is denied to Angels That God should cause his wrath to smoake against those spiritual and noble creatures the Angels and appoint a propitiation a ransome for such crawling wormes sinful dust and ashes as men are is it not to be admired at St. Ambrose speaking of these words the whole earth is full of thy mercy puts the question Why is it not said the heaven as well as the earth and returneth this Answer because there are indeed spiritual wickednesses in high places sed non illae ad commune jus indulgentia Dei remissionemque pertinent peccatorum but the remission of God and propitiation of Christ belongs not to them well may we in this consideration take up those words of the Psalmist quoted by the Authour to the Hebrewes upon this very occasion Lord what is man that thou art so mindful of him and the Son of man that thou visitest him 2. Consolation to all despairing soules it is an excellent saying of Leo The effusion of Christs blood is so rich and availeable that if the whole multitude of captive sinners would beleeve in their Redeemer not one should be detained in the tyrants chaines