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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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any true wisdome had it from the Scriptures to which wee must still hold our selves both as the ground as also the judge of consent 4 If any Father or Fathers shall by a common error by word or writing condemn any point of our doctrin without the authority of the Scriptures we will willingly dissent neither do wee give credence to any Doctrin because the Fathers have taught it but because that which they teach is founded in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles 5 Wee cannot hold consent to bee a note of the true Church unless it be in the true doctrin and therefore wee justly blame sundry of the learned Papists who make unity a note of the Church but make no mention of verity at all for the strong man may hold all at peace and unity whilest Paul and Barnabas having the truth may bee at oddes between themselves On which conditions as wee are able to justify our whole Religion by antiquity and consent of the most ancient Churches and Fathers so also hath it been and may bee made as clear as the light that the Doctrin of the Church of Rome wherein they dissent from us is a stranger and novelty never known to the Prophets and Apostles nor the purest Churches after them neither had it ever that which they brag of the consent of the ancient Fathers neither do they consent in it among themselves The force of consent wherein it sta●deth Secondly Note hence what is the force and work of consent of the Church in Doctrin it is not to work Faith for that is in the next words tyed to the word and witness of the Prophets and Apostles which is called the word of Faith because it is by Gods Ordinance a means to work that Faith by which it self is beleeved but to move the heart and prepare the way to Faith For it cannot bee that any spiritual grace such as faith is can bee wrought by any but super-natural means of which kind no outward ●estimony if it come backed with the voice of all the Churches in the world can bee for all this is but an humane witness simply and in it self consider●● If they say the Churches testimony is a Divine testimony I answer so far as it carrieth with it the agreement of the Scriptures and Holy Ghost speaking therein it may bee said to witnesse a Divine truth And thus in no other respect can the voice of the Church bee called a divine testimony than the preaching and writing of some other teacher in the Church who delivereth nothing but what is agreeable to the Scriptures From this ground it followeth that the doctrin of the Church of Rome is wicked and derogatory to the Glory and Majesty of the Scriptures in that they stifly after conviction avouch and maintain that the authority of the Scriptures depend upon the testimony of the Church some of them blasphemously saying that they have no more credit than Esops Fables further than the Church giveth it unto them which is to say that God must not bee beleeved for himself and as if the Kings word should have no credit or command but from his guard In reading the prophets thou must be led still nearer unto Christ 3 Hence note That in our reading of the Prophets wee must still bee led further unto Christ for as all the Scriptures so the writings of the Prophets were reserved for this purpose and set apart by God to bee the ordinary outward stay and foundation of the faith of the Church And if our Lord Jesus himself whilest hee was yet in the flesh present with his Disciples did for the confirmation of their Faith in his Doctrin Life Death and Resurrection interpret unto them the writings of the Prophets how much more need have we now in his bodily absence to read with diligence these same writings to help us forward being so wavering and staggering in our faith and the attendent graces of it And hereunto answereth that commandement Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures namely Moses and the Prophets that is do not onely procure these writings to your selves nor onely read perfunctorily but diligently and studiously search to finde out the chief scope and matter contained therein which lyeth not in the crust or shell but within in the very bowels of them and this kernel himself in the next words sheweth to bee himself and life eternal through him And why must wee thus search the Scriptures of the Prophets himself rendereth the reason the very ground of our exhortation because they testify of mee This is the natural scope of them to bring men to the acknowledgement of the persons offices and benefits of Christ Thou losest all thy labour in searching the Scriptures if thou searchest any thing but Christ if thou hast not and holdest him not in thine eye if thou givest over searching before thou hast met with him and then thou hast met with him in the Scriptures not when thou Historically knowest something of him which thou didst not know before nor when thou art able to discourse or di●pute of deep points of Divinity but when thou commest unto him as the context sheweth when by the quickening of thy faith and repentance thou layest faster hold upon him for life everlasting Alas how few searchers of the Scriptures thus search them to say nothing of them who search them not at all but cast them aside as refuse waters of whom wee may renew the woful complaint of Christ against the Jews who when hee had exhotted them to search the Scriptures presently addeth But ye will not come to me that ye might have life Joh. 5.40 The second point is The scope of all the Prophets witnesse and this is to bring men to beleeve in the name of the Son of God which is by faith to receive Christ as hee hath described and propounded himself in the Word and Promises of the Gospel For although the Apostle might sooner have said that whosoever beleeve in him yet hee useth this phrase rather of beleeving in his Name thereby secretly to refer us unto the word of the Prophets and Apostles which testify of no other name to bee saved by but onely the name of the Lord Jesus For our better clearing of this point wee will consider 1 What this saith is 2 The benefit of it 3 The marks and signs of it 4 The use First What this Faith is It is a supernatural gift whereby every beleever apprehendeth and applyeth unto himself Christ and all his merits unto salvation Faith what it is I say it is a gift nay the Scripture saith that it is the gift of God Phil. 1.29 and it is given you to beleeve as also to suffer And that it is supernatural all the commandements wee have to beleeve plainly evince for were it natural we should need no commandement to do it Further it is such a gift Opera naturalia non indigent p●aecepto as whereby wee
apprehend and apply unto our selves Christ and all his merits for the very nature of justifying and saving Faith standeth in these two degrees 1 In apprehension and receiving of Christ for to beleeve and receive Christ are all one Joh. 1.13 2 In applying to ones self Christ and his merits particularly which is not only to know that Christ is God in himself and all other parts of truth necessary to bee beleeved but a full perswasion of the mercy of God through Christ to belong unto himself in particular so as hee bee able with Thomas to say My Lord and my God not onely confessing that Christ dyed for sinners which the very Devils beleeve but as Paul describeth the true Faith in the Son of God by the proper speech and voice of it Gal. 2.20 Who dyed for mee and gave himself for mee Further the description restraining this grace to beleevers giveth us to understand that faith is not of all 2 Thess 3. Faith is not of all nor so common as men take it to bee not every one that can say I beleeve in God hath faith nor every one that will boldly say Christ is his Saviour hath presently saving Faith For. 1 The Prophet Esay speaketh of a number that beleeved not the Prophets report and to whom the arm of God was not revealed Isa 53.1 The Evangelists and the Apostles also complain in their times how this prophecy was accomplished notwithstanding they heard the blessed word of truth from the mouth of truth it self and saw the wonderful Miracles in the hands of Christ himself and his Apostles for the confirmation of that truth 2 The end of Faith which is salvation belongeth not to the most and therefore not faith it self the means for there are few which shall bee saved 3 The Word the parent of faith is wanting to many people and where it is so neglected by the most as grace and Gods blessing is withdrawn from it besides that the unfaithfulnesse of Teachers and abundance of iniquity in all sorts of men provoketh the Lord to revenge with his fearful stroak of slownesse of heart to beleeve that in the midst of means men should wilfully perish now if there be no seed-time what fruit or harvest of faith can be expected 4 The Scriptures not only deny true and saving faith to the reprobate whose eyes the Lord blindeth and whose hearts he hardneth lest they should see and beleeve Isa 6.9 but impropriateth it to the elect whence it is called the faith of the elect Tit. 1.1 To them whom God hath predestinated to life for so many as were ordained to life everlasting beleeved Acts 13 48. to the sheep of Christ Joh. 10.16 But yee beleeve not for yee are not of my sheep to them that are regenerate by the Holy Ghost as 1 Joh. 5.1 Whosoever beleeveth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God Lastly the description addeth the final cause of faith to bee Salvation namely in regard of beleevers for the main end of all graces is the glory of God and so Abraham by beleeving is said to give glory to God Rom. 4.20 but the subordinate end of faith is the salvation of the elect and therefore is it called saving faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In salutem animae Be●● Faith never quite lost Heb. 10.39 we are not they which with-draw our selves unto perdition but we follow faith to the conservation of the soul 1 Pet. 1.9 Receiving the end of your faith even the salvation of your souls And from hence followeth it that saving faith can never be quite shaken out of the heart of him that once hath it being 1 but once given to the Saints Jude 3. and a gift of which God never repenteth him 2 A gift flowing from Gods eternal election as we have shewed out of Acts 13.48 3 A seed of God perpetually preserved in the regenerate who sin not because this seed of God remaineth in them 1 Joh. 4.4 4 It hath the promise of the Father to be the victory that overcometh the world the intercession of the Son of God that it fail not Luke 22.32 and the confirmation of the holy Spirit who by it sealeth up and giveth his earnest into the hearts of beleevers 2 Cor. 1.22 so as unless the mighty power of the Father Son and holy Spirit upholding it can bee shaken it can never be by all the gates of Hell so shaken out of the heart but that the end of it shall be salvation which could not be if the elect did not ever abide in communion and fellowship with Christ Popish doctrin teacheth not true faith to this day From which description of true justifying faith it is evident that Popish Doctrin knoweth not teacheth not nor suffereth men to be taught the true Doctrin of saving faith because it utterly disclaimeth the very essential form of it which is special application of Christ and his merits with affiance and resting only on them unto salvation yea and more they condemn this glorious work of faith as a mortal sin and stile it by the name of presumption and so by Gods just judgement they take up such a faith in stead of it as is common not only to Hereticks and Reprobates but to the very Devils themselves who beleeve as much as Popish doctrin requireth to salvation yea and more they tremble also For doe not they know and assent that there is one God that all that is in the Word of God is true and certain that all the Articles of the Creed are the true grounds of Christian religion and if you goe any further excepting the thrusting in of general Councils and Traditions which every good Catholick must take in with the former Popish faith leaveth you and biddeth you farewell and even those things which are absolutely necessary to salvation to bee beleeved by saving faith as that the Scriptures are Gods Word that the Articles of faith comprised in the Creed of the Apostles are of undoubted truth they embrace only by Historical faith by which yet was never man saved for if ever man were then might the Devils also by the same faith But justifying faith is another manner of thing it seateth not it self in the understanding only as the former but takeeth up the whole soul even the heart will and affections also all which lay hold and cleave unto Christ for salvation Neither is it a common and general work of the Spirit upon good and bad as the former illumination and assent is but a special favour and extraordinary grace proper to the elect as wee have heard and the stranger entreth not into this their joy The second point to be considered is the benefit or excellent fruit of this grace 1 It is the first stone to be laid in the building of a Christian Five excellent fruits of saving faith and therefore called a substance and foundation Heb. 11.1 and the Colossians are said to be rooted and built and
by which God tryeth the graces of his and manifesteth their infirmitie and out of which his grace giveth evasion and deliverance seem they never so dangerous as for example What a great temptation was that of Israel in the red Sea Yet God brought them out of it So for evil of sin What strong temptations were they that seised on Peter David Solomon wherein they seemed utterly lost Yet the Lord held under his hand and left them sufficient grace to raise them againe Gods faithfulness was such to David and Solomon and Christs prayer that Peters faith did not utterly fail Reasons 1 Wee are the Lords souldiers and servants and therefore hee will help us David thought this a good Argument Psalm 86.2 O thou my God save thy servant that trusteth in thee And this is Gods manner of dealing When hee hath a great work or Tryal for his children hee arms them with boldness constancy and courage as Sampson when hee was to encounter many Philistims what a measure of strength was hee indued withall when the Prophets were to bee sent to rebellious and stubborn people the Lord made their faces as brasen walls Jerem. 1.18 and as adamants Ezek. 3.9 The Apostles being called to the great function of calling in the whole world the Holy Ghost fell first upon them and furnished them with singular gifts fit for that calling How boldly Peter preached and professed Christ at Jerusalem to the beards of those that had put him to death even the Rulers and Elders appears in Act. 4.8 but the cause of this was that hee was full of the Holy Ghost The like wee may observe in Elias his reforming of Gods worship and in the restoring of Religion by Luther who was wonderfully gifted 1 With undaunted courage as appears in his burning the Popes decrees and his disputation at Worms 2 With fervent Prayer 3 With admirable and heavenly preaching So the faithful Witnesses and Martyrs that are called to a hot brunt are first armed with a singular spirit as that Prote-Martyr Steven Act. 6.8 10. who was full of the Holy Ghost full of Faith and power full of wisdome and grace that they were not able to resist the wisdome and spirit by which hee spake And was it not so in Q. Maries daies that poor Creatures were lifted up with such excellent spirits as that all the learning and wisdome of the Doctors or all the power of authority could not daunt them God should lose his honour if any of his servants should be utterly overcome but onely those unmerciful Arguments of fire and faggot could put them to silence 2 The battel and cause is Gods the question between Satan and us is Gods glory and our Salvation This was Moses his Argument why the Lord should spare his murmuring people see Numb 14.15 16. Now if the Devil prevail against us God shall lose his honour which is dear unto him But he will not suffer himself to bee so disgraced as to let us bee overcome by his enemy neither shall the salvation of his bee prejudiced for this were against the truth of God whom Satan accuseth to be a lyar 3 Hee hath armed us with his own armour and furnished us with his own strength and will not have his weapons bee thought so weak and insufficient as to bee foiled in it The Sword of the Spirit is not so blunt The shield of Faith is not so dull the breast-plate of righteousness is not so thin as to receive every bullet that comes to hurt us 4 Christ hath made us members of his own body and when the head can with patience suffer the members which it is able to defend to bee pulled off from the body then shall the sound members of Christ bee pulled away by temptation from him which they must needs bee if they were not conunually supported by his strength Object 2 Cor. 1.8 Wee were pressed out of measure passing strength insomuch that wee desparred even of life Answ 1 The Apostle speaks of humane strength which could never have passed through those tryals But the power and strength of God shewed them an issue 2 The Apostle speaks according to the sence of his flesh and what they were in their own feeling as it is plain in the reason of his deliverance in the next words That wee should not trust in our selves but in God that raiseth the dead 3 The very scope of the place is to shew not the unmeasureableness of affliction but a great measure of them thereby to amplify Gods mercy Vse Wee should not bee discouraged though our tryals bee very great for wee shall not want sufficient to strength to carry us through them Yea let us check our weakness while wee torment our selves with needless fears that God takes little or no knowledge of our Tryals or will with-draw his grace and absent himself for ever No hee tenders the weaknesse of his chosen on whom although the Spirit fall not so visibly as upon Christ yet by vertue hereof they have the secret distilling and sensible yea forcible working of the Spirit in their hearts such graces of faith hope patience and boldnesse in case they keep their watch as whereby they may as surely perswade themselves of victory as if they had received the Holy Ghost visibly as Christ did Add hereunto these considerations Strong ●●●tives to stand to ●tions 1 That it is impossible to bee exalted to Christs Kingdome if thou bee not assaulted first with temptation thou canst not bee victorious unless thou fight nor obtain the crown unless thou bee victorious Rev. 3.21 2 That if thou beest in great perplexity yet think not the Lord hath forsaken thee For 1 not to bee chastised of God is to bee hated of him 2 He hides his face but for a season from his children as the mother doth till the child get knocks and falls onely to let them see their weakness and more to depend upon him 3 That there is a time when God makes intimation to all his children of their election and salvation and commonly before this that they may bee fitted with hungring desire after grace and make much of it when they have it there goeth a trouble of mind and fear and disquiet so as a man thinks God is quite gone when hee is drawing gratiously unto him and that hee shall never hear more of him when hee is knocking by the Holy Spirit to have entrance into his heart Therefore wee may trust perfectly on this grace and wait Gods time for his full manifestation of it the just liveth by faith and maketh not haste Job if the Lord killed him would still trust Remember Mr. Robert Glover that blessed Martyr at Coventry crying to his friend Austen Hee is come He is come hee looked for the Holy Ghost two or three daies before and made great moan that hee came not yet hee continued waiting and hee came at length but not before he came to the sight of the
malice against God If hee durst thwart so Divine a truth so strengthned from Heaven and that to Christs own face he dares and will contradict Gods VVord to thee 2 Consider if thou sufferest Satan to wrest away the credit of any part of Divine truth or the VVord of God what shall become of all our religion and the ground of our salvation all which is laid upon the truth of the word or all which our Saviour saith that not one jot of it shall fail 3 Know that by yeelding a little to Satan herein God in his justice may give thee up to such strong delusions as the Devil himself cannot be so besotted as to beleeve See it in some instances Satan beleeves there is a God and trembleth saith S. James and yet he so farre deludes a number as their sottish hearts say There is no God Psal 14.1 Satan knows there is a day of reckoning and judgement as the Devils confessed Art thou come to torment us before the time and yet he so besotteth and blindeth others that they make but a mock of all as those in Peter who mocked and said Where is his coming 2 Pet. 3.1 Satan knows that God is all an eye to whom day and darkness are alike yet in tempting men to secret sins he will make them say Tush who sees us can God see through the thick cloud The Devil knows that God is just and will not take the wicked by the hand and yet he makes the sinner beleeve his case is good enough being a most graceless man and makes one wicked man say of another as in Malachi We count the proud blessed c. The Devil knows that he that goeth on in sin shall not prosper yet he makes the sinner who turns from the word to beleeve he shall prosper As this temptation aimed to overthrow the Word of God so also the faith of Christ in that word namely to bring him from his assurance that hee was the Son of God Whence we may learn that Satan in all his temptations seek● to overthrow the faith of men Doct. 2. Satan in his temptations against all the members of Christ aimeth to destroy their faith This Christ himself witnesseth that Satan desired to winnow the Disciples but himself prayed that their faith might not fail Luk. 22.31 1 Thess 3.5 For this cause when I could no longer forbear I sent Timothy that I might know of your faith lest the tempter had tempted you in any sort And hence his continual practice is to bring men to the extreams of faith in adversity to despair in time of prosperity to presumption Reasons 1 He maligneth faith as being a special gift and mark of Gods elect because it is given to them only and to all them and therefore is called the faith of Gods elect Tit. 1.1 and to faith is the work of regeneration ascribed Acts 15.9 2 All Satans temptations tend to break off the Covenant and communion between God and his children and therefore must in special manner aim against faith for by faith we are made the Sons of God Gal. 3.26 and God espouseth and marrieth us unto himself by faith Hos 2.20 and by faith wee are brought into the grace by which we stand 3 He knows that faith is our shield whereby wee both keep off the fiery darts of Satan and quench the same and that faith is the victory whereby we overcome the world this is it that makes all his temptations forceless for though we have no power of our selves to withstand him yet faith gets power from Christ and lays hold on his strength which quells all the adversary-power of our salvation We stand by faith saith the Apostle and Satan sees the truth of Christs speech that the gates of Hell shall never prevail against it He hath reason therefore to labour to weaken it and to root it if it were possible out of the hearts of men and out of the world 4 All his temptations bend themselves to cut off and intercept the course of Gods love and his favours to his children he bursts with envie at the happiness of the Saints But unless he gain their faith he cannot interrupt this for by faith as by an hand we receive Christ himself given us of the Father Ephe. 3.17 and with him all his merits and all things belonging to life and godliness VVe receive the promise of the Spirit by faith Gal. 3.14 yea the presence of the Spirit who dwells in our hearts by faith we receive the hope and hold of our blessed inheritance hereafter Gal. 5.5 And whereas Satans continual drift is to estrange God and us faith only crosseth him by which wee have entrance and boldness to the throne of grace by our prayers to speak unto God freely as to our Father Ephes 3.12 Heb. 10.22 yea to ask what we will and obtain not only all corporal blessings good for us but also the sanctified and pure use of them whereas the unbeleever corrupts himself in them continually 5 Satan well knows that faith is the ground of all obedience without which the word and all Gods Ordinances are unprofitable Heb. 4.2 without which there is no pleasing of God Heb. 11.6 in any thing for whatsoever is not of faith is sin Hath he not reason then to assay by all his strength to take this hold from us Doth not he know that the foundation being overthrown the whole building must fall and the root overturned all the tree and branches come down with it Sever a man from his faith he tumbles in impiety and unrighteousness he is odious to God in all things Satan tramples upon him and leads him at his will From all which reasons we see that Satan especially in temptations aimes at our faith as he did at Christs Use 1. Those who never felt any temptation but ever beleeved never doubted No temptation no faith as they say never had faith for never had any man true faith but it was assayled most fiercely never was faith laid up in the heart of any child of God but the combate between nature and grace faith and frailty flesh and spirit was presently proclaimed Eves faith was won from her quickly Abrahams faith was mightily assayled which because in such a combate he retained hee was renowned and stiled the father of all the faithful and faithful Abraham Moses his faith was shaken and his great sin was unbeleef Job in his misery was many ways assayled to distrust God as his words import If hee kill mee I will trust in him still and Satans aym was to bring him to blaspheme God and dye Vse 2. As the Devil laboureth most against our faith Because Satan most oppugneth our faith we must most fortifie it so should we most labour in fortifying it Policy teacheth men to plant the most strength at that fort or part of the wall where the enemy plants his greatest Ordnance and makes the strongest assault And nature
them to God his Father so as being now redeemed and bought with a price they are no longer their own but the Lords that bought them 1 Cor. 6.20 3 Because when he hath thus dearly purchased his Church he contracteth himself in spiritual Marriage with her and so becometh her Lord Hos 2.18 I will marry thee for ever unto my self yea I will marry thee unto me in righteousnesse in judgement in mercy and in compassion Ephes 5.23 As the husband is the wives head so is Christ of the Church So as if a man bee a Lord of that which is given him of that which he hath redeemed and ransomed of her whom he had married into his bosome in all these regards by as good right is Jesus Christ the Lord of his Church and every member of it Object But how can Christ be a Lord and a servant too Isa 42.1 Behold my servant I will lea●e upon him and hee took upon him the form of a servant Phil. 2.7 Ans Christ considered as Mediator is after a special manner both his Fathers servant and yet the Lord of his Church In all the work of mans Redemption he served and obeyed his Father being sent of his Father for this end he was subject to the death he prayed unto him gave him thanks learned obedience by the things he suffered not as God equal to his Father but as our Mediator and Surety and yet by all these things he became our Lord and the King of his Church And herein the Apostles travel as in their main scope to prove that Jesus Christ whom the Jews put to death hath shewed himself the Lord of glory and the true Messias Acts 2.34 Let all the house of Israel know assuredly that God hath made that Jesus which they crucified Lord and Christ. Object But how can Christ be the Lord of all seeing many yea the most will not obey him Ans Doth a King cease to be the Lord of all his Country because some which were his subjects are gone out in rebellion against him besides howsoever it standeth with his glory and grace to suffer with patience the vessels of wrath yet at length he shews his power against them in bringing forth his whole displeasure upon them Vse Hence in that Christ is in general Lord of all we learn that all Creatures are his and therefore we must never use any of them without leave from him or without return of praise and thanks unto him none of them are sanctified to our use without the Word and Prayer And if wee have leave from him we ought in sobriety to use them 1 Cor. 10.26 Eat whatsoever is sold in the shambles making no question for conscience sake Hence followeth it also that he having an absolute power over all hee may doe with his own what he will who shall hinder a Potter to frame one vessel to honour another to dishonour which I speak because many cannot endure to hear of a decree of reprobation who must frame their judgement to his will who cannot but be just and good and leave off to reason with God Hence also he may make one rich another poor at his pleasure The rich and poor meet this Lord maketh them both Secondly in that Christ is in special Lord of his Church sundry things are to be noted as first That none can have Christ to be a Jesus that is a Saviour who have him not for their Soveraign and Lord whosoever thou art that challengest him for thy Saviour see thou acknowledge him thy Lord. Quest How may a man have Christ to be his Lord A man hath Christ his Lord by four things Ans By the practice of four duties 1 By preserving in the heart a fear and reverence towards his person Malac. 1.6 If I be a Lord where is my fear Lordship requires subjection Psal 45.11 He is thy Lord and reverence thou or bow unto him Now this fear must proceed from love for if any man love not the Lord Jesus let him be accursed and wheresoever this love is it must needs bee attended with a fear to displease him 2 By professing him to bee thy Lord as servants by their livery or cognisance speak and proclaim to all men to whom they belong so if Christ bee thy Lord thou must not bee ashamed of him but bee ever speaking of him commending his goodness thou must glory of such a service accounting it thy greatest honour that thou art become his servant thou must defend his name where ever thou hearest it called into question thou must suffer with him and take part with him in affliction 1 Pet 4.13 an unfaithful servant is hee that can bee dumb in his Masters dishonour but especially if his Master be assaulted and in danger then to forsake him when hee hath most need of him 3 By acknowledging thy self to bee countable unto him for all thy waies and for all thy receites Make account to be countable of all to this Lord of all The servant not being at his own hand must go about no business but his Masters whatsoever matter of trust hee receiveth from his Master it is not his own hee is faithfully to discharge himself of it by a true and just account Thus therefore must thou reason the case with thine own heart what am I now in my Masters work had I commandement from him did his word or warrant set mee about the business which is now in my hands Again what gifts have I received of body minde wealth authority credit I am to be countable for all all the Talents I have are his If I gain nothing I am unprofitable If I gain I must be profitable unto him By absolute obedience unto his will revealed To this Lord only must be given absolute obedience Thus himself being to give his Law beginneth thus I am the Lord thy God thou shalt do thus and thus other Lords and Kings must bee obeyed in him yea disobeyed for him if they command contrary unto him onely hee must ever by Kings themselves bee obeyed absolutely in all the parts of his will revealed Which may bee considered in three heads 1 It is his will that wee beleeve in him Joh. 6.40 The will of Christ reduced to three ●eads This is the will of him that sent mee that every one that seeth the Son and beleeveth in him not onely beleeving his word to bee true but leaning upon him only for thy salvation If a Master should promise a servant that if hee will but beleeve him and seek to please him hee will provide for him for ever it would adde cheerfulness to such a servant and hee would think none of his Masters commandements burdensome but yet wee having larger and surer promises are slow of heart and hand to beleeve or yield obedience 2 It is his will that wee shew forth this faith of our hearts in the fruits of sanctification 1 Thess 4.3 This is the will of God even
To beleeve the resurrection is an hard point what an hard thing it is to beleeve the resurrection from the dead yea if wee should hear it Preached from the blessed mouth of the Son of God himself The Disciples of Christ had often heard him teaching them particularly of his resurrection the third day they had seen him accordingly risen yea they had handled him with their hands yet unless hee condescend to admit them as familiarly to eat and drink with him as before they scarcely beleeve neither can wee think the Disciples flower of heart to beleeve than our selves are who are ready to say in any thing that our eyes see not with Mary How can this be But that neither they nor wee should sink down in this weakness hee hath pleased to condescend to our infirmity to remove all scruple from them and us in this main article of our religion His wisdome saw how necessary it was that they who were to bee witnesses unto him should bee enabled with much perswasion both by lively voice and by writing to assure all other beleevers of the certainty of his Resurrection till his return to judgement and therefore to all the other means of manifesting himself hee added this to sit down among them to eat and drink with them not to feed himself by that meat but their faith and in them the faith of the whole Church For what is it that more confirmeth and strengtheneth our Faith than the boldnesse and liberty of the Apostles both in their Sermons and Writings and whence is this but from their own full perswasion of the truth which maketh them bold and whence is this perswasion but from certain sense and undoubted knowledge arising from their familiar converse with him after his resurrection Vse 1. To strengthen this our weak Faith by this consideration conceive with thy self that Christ ate and drunk with his Disciples that thy Faith might bee nourished as well as others and in that they saw him heard him handled him ate and drunk with him and being faithful witnesses have Preached and by writing avouched the same to all the world thy Faith must bee as fully assured as if thine own eyes had seen him thine own hands handled him and thy self had sit with him at the Table while hee ate and drunk among them yea so often as thou hearest or readest or thinkest of any of these things so often must thou bee renewing and adding something to thy Faith in this behalf as every new apparition or manifestation of Christ added something to the faith of his Apostles 2 In that our Lord after hee was gloriously raised from the dead would still for those forty daies depart from his glory abasing himself to converse with sinful men yea to eat and drink corruptible creatures of which his incorruptible body had no need and would still humble himself to condescend to the weaknesse of his Church wee are to learn the same lesson towards our Brethren to be of a yeelding disposition ready to depart with some of our right for their good and edification and carry our selves as weak to the weak and become all things to all men to save some Vers 4● And he commanded us to preach unto the people and to testifie that he is ordained of God a Judge of quick and dead A Third argument to prove that Christ is raised from the dead and so is indeed the true Messiah and Lord of his Church is that he gave Commission and Commandement to his Apostles to become Preachers and witnesses as of other points so especially of this that howsoever hee was adjudged to death according to that judgement executed and laid as one foyled by death for the space of three days yet he is now gloriously raised again and appointed of God the Judge of all that ever have lived doe or shall live to the end of the world In the verse we have three things to be handled 1 That preaching is a reverent and necessary ordinance of Christ himself And he commanded us to preach unto the people and to testifie 2 The object of this ordinance or what wee must preach namely Christ that he is c. 3 What particular doctrin concerning Christ must more especially be preached that he is ordained of God a judge of quick and dead In the first of these are two branches to bee cleared 1 That preaching is the ordinance of Christ. 2 The necessity which will easily bee deduced from the former That Christ instituted this holy ordinance is plain Matth. 28.19 Goe preach to all nations baptizing them c. the which commission that it was extended beyond their persons to such as should in after ages succeed them appeareth by his last words and behold I am with you to the end of the world Preaching the ordinance of C●rist And that the ordinary teachers are no lesse the gift of Christ than the Apostles themselves is as plain Ephes 4.11 he therefore gave some to be Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists some Pastors and some Teachers Neither must this trouble us that both in this place alleadged as also in some other it is attributed to the Father to send and give Pastors according to his own heart Jer. 3.15 25.4 and sometime to the Holy Ghost Acts 20.28 Take heed to your selves and the flock over which the Holy Ghost hath made you over-seers 1 Cor. 12.11 and all these things worketh even the self-same Spirit distributing to every man severally even as he will For 1 All those external works are common to all the three persons and where any one of them are named in any action done without themselves no one of them is excluded but all the three must be included 2 The Divinity of Christ is not obscurely proved in that the same glorious actions of the Father and the Holy Ghost are ascribed also unto him as from Heaven whither he ascended to give several gifts for the work of the Ministery 3 That we might better instruct our selves in their several order and manner of working the self same action for the Father is the Fountain and the first Author of all these gifts the Son properly is the distributer and giver for the Father worketh all in us by the Son and both of them by the communication of the blessed Spirit even as the Sun by his beams sendeth light and heat unto the inferiour creatur●s Object But this ordinance of preaching seemeth not to be Christs because it was long before his Incarnation and now remaineth after his ascension when hee cannot call men as he called the Apostles while he was on earth Ans The Ministry of the Gospel in the proper acception of it hath two things to be considered First the being of it Secondly the vertue and efficacy of it The being of it as it was the Ministery of the New Testament wherein glad tidings were published to all Nations was temporary beginning in the time of Christ and shall
have end with the world yet can it be called no new doctrin because the summe and substance of it was though more obscurely delivered to Adam and the Fathers of the Old Testament But if we consider the vertue and efficacy of it it is an eternal Gospel Rev. 14.6 during from the beginning of the world to all eternity Now therefore will it not follow that because it was before his Incarnation it was not his but rather therefore it was his who was before Abraham was the chief Prophet of his Church that raised according to the several ages of his Church such men as were fit either more obscurely as before his coming when rather some Evangelical promises of things to come were preached than the Gospel it self or else more manifestly to preach and open the mysteries of the Kingdom of God And this latter kind of preaching was not before his incarnation neither was it fully setled before he ascended into Heaven and from thence gave gifts to men that thereby hee might shew himself a careful Head and Governour of his Church even then when hee was set down at the right hand of his Father It is true indeed that before Christs suffering he called his Apostles instructed and furnished them with many gifts of the Spirit yea and these gifts were increased very much after his resurrection whereby they were more confirmed in their Apostleship and although they did before Christs death exercise the office of Apostleship in Judea amongst the lost sheep of the house of Israel yet had they not received that fulnesse of the Spirit and power from above which was necessary to Apostles before they had received in the visible form of fiery Tongues the Spirit in abundant measure whereby they were before all the people of the world after a sort solemnly inaugurated and confirmed to bee the Apostles of Jesus Christ neither had they till after Christs resurrection received this Commandement of which our Apostle speaketh To preach to all Nations and to every creature under heaven the practice of which Commadement they took up after that they having stayed at Jerusalem for the promise the Spirit came upon them and they were endued with power from on high Luke 24.49 As for the second branch of the objection that because ordinary Pastors and Teachers are not immediately called by Christ being now in Heaven therefore they are not ordained by him it is false for of the Pastors and Elders of Ephesus it is said that the Holy Ghost made them over-seers and Paul accounteth Apollos ordained by Christ as well as himself 1 Cor. 3.5 What is Paul and who is Apollos but the Ministers by whom yee beleeve and as the Lord gave to every man only the difference must be observed in their calling both are called of Christ but the Apostle by himself immediately not by men the ordinary Pastor called of him by the Ministery of man I call it a Ministry because the whole power and authority of the Church in calling Ministers is but a service unto Christ approving declaring and testifying to the Church those whom Christ hath called And therefore both before his incarnation a long time and after his ascension also the exhortation which was enforced upon beleevers run in this tenor to day if yee hear his voyce harden not your hearts Psal 95.7 Heb. 3.7 Whence we conclude that his voyce hath ever sounded in the Church and so shall doe in the ministry of his servants until his coming again to Judgement Luke 10.16 hee that heareth them heareth him he that receiveth them receiveth him hee that refuseth them refuseth him he by his servants entreateth men to be reconciled by them hee bindeth and looseth saveth and destroyeth Necessity of p●eaching ●vinced by four reasons Secondly for the necessity of this ordinance can any deny it who seeth the Son of God so careful before his death after his resurrection and ascension also into Heaven to furnish and fit with an extraordinary measure of the Spirit Apostles and Apostolick men for the founding of the Church of the New Testament and not only so but now sitting in his glory at the right hand of his Father is mindful of his promise and is with his Church to raise up successively faithful Pastors and Teachers gracing them with variety of excellent gifts and blessing those gifts for the building up and repairing of his body and the gathering of the Saints of whom as of living stones is reared a spiritual house or temple fit for his own use But because most men are willingly ignorant of this necessity of preaching I will a little inlarge it by some reasons 1 Consider the condition of those that are unconverted In regard of the unconverted and it will appear necessary for them No man was ever saved while hee was in his natural blindnesse no unbeleever could ever get within the gates of the holy City no hard-hearted or impenitent person could ever so remaining see the life of God Neither was ever any man ordinarily drawn out of this fearful estate of Damnation but by the Word of God preached which is the light to the blind eyes the ground of faith for how can they beleeve except they hear and the hammer of the Lord to break asunder the hardest stones in mens hearts Jer. 23.29 Who were ever begotten to God without this immortal see● 〈◊〉 ●here spiritual Fathers Who ever became living stones in the building wit● 〈◊〉 ●e hewing and polishing of Gods builders What harvest was ever ●●ought in to God without these labourers What soul was ever pulled out of the kingdome of darknesse and brought to bee a member of Gods Kingdome but by this means The word in this ordinance is called the Gospel of the Kingdome of God Mark 1.14 that is whereby men attain both the parts of Gods Kingdome both that of grace here in this life and that of glory in the life to come from which effect it is called 1 The word of grace Acts 20.32 2 The Gospel of glory 1 Tim. 1.11 also the word of reconciliation because hereby sinners are reconciled to God Ephes 1.13 the word of life because it quickneth the dead in sin the Gospel of peace chap. 6.15 because it alone pacifieth the conscience and setleth it in the peace of God to conclude The good word Heb. 6.5 because it only revealeth Christ who procureth all good unto beleevers Who seeth not then the necessity of preaching seeing none are added to the Church without it Act. 2.41 no spiritual life can bee preserved without this feeding Act. 20. No Saints are gathered nor no body of Christ built up without Pastors and Teachers Ephes 4.11 12. And it pleased not God by any other means but by the foolishness of Preaching to save such as beleeve S●condly If wee consider those that are called to knowledge and faith In regard of the converted it will appear also a most necessary ordinance in regard of them For
stablished in the faith Colos 2.7 this is that rocky foundation which shall bear up the house against all winds and weathers It is the first work of change in the heart and the first difference between man and man when God by faith purifieth the heart Acts 15. It is the foundation of all obedience for whatsoevee is not of faith is sin It is the root of all Gods worship for till we beleeve in God we can neither trust nor hope nor love nor pray nor perform any other part of his service truly or acceptably It is the mother of all good works the word is the seed of them which faith conceiveth and digesteth and so bringeth forth commanded and commended actions General faith knoweth the work to bee good in the kind of it and special justifying faith beginneth it and maketh it good in the person and endeavour of the doer and layeth hold upon Christ to cover the defects of it Hence is it that often in the Scriptures we read it to bee the first Commandement given by Christ and his Apostles to such as were desirous to know the way of life and how they might please God The Jews come to our Saviour and ask him what they might doe to work the works of God and Christ beginning here telleth them that this is the work of God that they beleeve in him whom he hath sent Joh. 6.28 29. And 1 Joh. 3.23 This is his Commandement that we beleeve in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and love one another for we cannot perform any work of love before we beleeve In one word faith is the very soul of all obedience without which the most fightly and glorious actions be it of alms prayer preaching hearing worship or miracles themselves all are but very Corpses and Carcases of good works dead and liveless Secondly faith exalteth it self above all other graces not only in the excellent object of it which is Christ and Salvation but also in the excellent work of it above them all notwithstanding they all have their special excellencies it espouseth us unto Jesus Christ and in these espousals and contract for the present it assureth us of our marriage with him hereafter And being the condition of the New Covenant of life Joh. 3.16 it tyeth God himself unto us who is not further bound to any man than he is a beleever True it is that Love placeth it self upon Christ but it is after faith for hee must bee apprehended before he be loved Hope waiteth for salvation but faith first beleeveth it Trust leaneth upon the promises but faith first layeth hold on Christ the Author and accomplisher of them And though the Apostle say that of Faith Hope and Love Love is the chiefest 1 Cor. 13. himself interpreteth it to be in respect of durance and continuance but not in respect of our justification or acceptation with God Love indeed surviveth and lasteth longest for our sight of God as he is shall vanish faith but yet faith is before it and the mother of it Thirdly saving faith is a living thing and maketh a man to live by it It purgeth his own dwelling by purifying the heart and conscience it reneweth the spirit and mind it quickneth to all good duties for it being an instrument to unite unto Christ by it as by a bond of union wee receive from him our Head life and power to move and stirre in Christian duties yea it so governeth the whole life that we henceforth live not but Christ liveth in us In our business and labour it maketh men diligent in the work but leave the successe to God In temporal wants it faith with Abraham God will provide at least in the mountain it careth not so much for bread as the staff of it if it have means it blesseth God and useth them but trusteth not in them if it have them not it resteth on God but useth no unlawful courses for them In afflictions it stablisheth the heart with assurance of a good issue and still waiteth the Lords leasure without making haste In temptations it goeth against sence and feeling and resteth upon the naked promise yea when it can scarce apprehend any thing but wrath it will uphold the heart and rear it even when God seemeth to ●id him to trust in his mercy In the use of things Spiritual● as the Words Sacraments Prayer and other holy means only faith draweth vertue from Christ and all of them are unprofitable further than they are mingled with faith In the use of Temporal it is faith that weaneth the ●ea●● and k●epeth it that earthly cares choak it not earthly pleasures possess it not and ear●hly comforts oppr●ss it not but it holdeth the mind heavenly in the midst of earthly business and suffereth it not to love pleasures more than God not to enjoy any comfort of the Creature above or against the comforts of God and his Word whom they acknowledge the very life of their lives and the soul of their souls and bodies here and for ever Thus is faith every where diffused if we walk we walk by faith if we live we live by faith in the Son of God if we stand we stand by faith if we dye we must dye in faith as the Patriarks did Heb. 11.13 4 This excellent grace only fenceth against temptation quieteth the distressed soul and keepeth it from sinking as once it did Peter Matth. 14.20 This is the only shield which quencheth all the fiery darts of the Devils Ephes 6.16 and 1 Pet. 5.9 Your adversary the Devil goeth about like a roaring Lion whom resist stedfast in the faith This is the victory also that overcometh the world even our faith 1 Joh. 5.4 This is the conquest over the lusts of our own flesh 1 Thess 5.8 Be sober and put on the breast-pla●e of faith Again as it moun●eth and fenceth so it stilleth the heart disquieted and distressed when it seeth it self beset with spiritual wickednesses and lusts and even almost drowned in the gulfs of sinful and earthly courses Therefore the poor Jav●or that could not tell what to doe with himself that of an unhappy man now ready to kill himself he might become happy and an heir of Salvation was sent n● where else by the Apostle but to the doctrin and practise of this grac of faith This only resolveth fully the question Oh what shall I doe to be saved Beleeve in the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved he getteth no other answer of Paul because he well knew that no other would have answered his question nor setled his conscience now touched with sence of his sin If he had sent him to the Word that could have done him no good if he did 〈◊〉 mingle it with faith If to his prayers only the prayer of faith is available Jam. 5.15 If to the Sacraments they must be seals of faith Rom. 4.11 or else d●e no more good than seals set to blanks If to a good life
things are by communication the more increased for wee read not of any man that laid out his Tallent but to increase and as the light of the Sun is never a whit impaired by communicating it self to the whole world or as hee that lighteth one candle of another dimisheth not in either but increaseth the light so is it in the light of the Sun of Righteousnesse much more and in the kindling of these heavenly sparkles whose property is to diffuse themselves as fire and the further they spread the greater and brighter is the flame 3 The third fruit or effect of Faith is an undaunted confession of it Rom. 10.10 With the heart wee beleeve to justification and with the mouth we confesse to salvation For where faith is in the heart it will bee also in the mouth The spirit of Faith and the speech of Faith are undivided as 2 Cor. 4.13 And because wee have the same spirit of Faith according to that which was written I beleeved and therefore I spake even so wee beleeve and therefore also wee speak Now there bee three actions of Faith which help forward this free confession 1 It maketh a man bold in a good cause Act. 5.29 Peter being full of faith with a bold spirit told the Council that had the power of Life and Death in their hands and himself in their power wee ought rather to obey God than you 2 Faith keepeth a man in a preparedness to suffer by leading him along in the denial of himself and hereof wee have a notable example in Paul Act. 21.13 who professed how ready hee was not onely to bee bound but to dye also at Jerusalem if God called him thereunto 3 It worketh joy yea much rejoycing in the heart in the suffering for Christ and a good cause Rom. 5.3 after the Apostle had laid down the justification of faith as a ground hee saith that wee then rejoyce in tribulation and that they did so indeed is plain Act. 5.41 They departed from the Council rejoycing that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for his name hence could they sing Psalm● at mid-night in the dungeon and fetters and hence could the Martyrs imbrace the fire kiss the stake and testify such joy in the flames as all men might acknowledge the truth of the speech of our Saviour Your joy shall no man take away from you no Tyrant no tormentor nor any kind of torment The fourth and last fruit or work of faith is that wheresoever sound faith is it is most diligent in preserving yea and increasing of it self The most covetous man is not more complaining nor gathering than the beleever who is ever complaining of want of Faith or of the weaknesse of it Mar. 9.24 and knowing the want of it to bee so dangerous and hurtful as without which hee wanteth Christ himself as also that the weaknesse of it depriveth him of much comfort and many goods things for a man of weak estate must needs want many rich commoditys and sweet comforts which the wealthy enjoy in abundance Therefore hee useth all good means to increase his stock as 1 Hee is much in hearing reading and meditating in the word because he knoweth Means to increase the stock of faith faith commeth by hearing and every thing is preserved and nourished by that whereof it is begotten 2 Hee is much in godly talk and Christian conference by which as the fire by the bellows so is the grace of God blown and stirred up in him 3 Because hee seeth how without prayer both his own but especially Christs his faith is as ready to fail as Peters was Luk. 22.32 hee is much in prayer and with the Father of the Childe cryeth with tears often Lord I beleeve help my unbeleef Mark 9.24 and with the Disciples Lord increase our Faith Luke 17.5 And these are the marks by which the soundness and currence of Faith as by a touchstone may bee tryed and distinguished from all that false and counterfeit Faith which is so stiring in the World and wherby most men are lamentably deceived The use of this Doctrin is 1 To stir up men to examine and by these notes to prove themselves whether they are in the Faith or no to try their faith of what kinde it is least in the end they find that they have leaned upon a staffe of reed By which examination I fear it will bee too evidently seen that these are the last daies wherein the Sonne of man shall come and scarcely find faith upon the face of the earth Sure it is that the common faith of men is neither thus 1 Founded 2 Nor qualified The most common faith of men is not thus qualified 3 Nor attended 4 Nor thus fruitful as will briefly appear in the particulars First Every man saith he hath Faith but whence had hee it it was never begotten by the Word he never cared for that that was ever as a sixt finger and superfluity unto him It was never founded in repentance nor dwelleth with Humility for most men never saw change in themselves they have loved God and beleeved in Christ ever since they can remember It was never cherished with the duties of prayer and invocation they could never pray in all their lives except after the Minister or by set forms but the spirit of prayer never dwelt there It was never conflicted with unbeleef they wonder what that should bee or that any man should not ever beleeve so as indeed here is no character of the faith of the Elect and nothing all this while but a voice and very carkase of Faith 2 Others say they beleeve and brag of a saving faith in Christ but they feed a bare fancy for they could never beleeve God for lesser things they want the faith of Gods providence even for meat and drink which is apparent in that they can use wicked and unwarrantable means for them their strong faith they brag of waiteth not for Gods provision but will shift for it self by hook and by crook it holdeth not the heart to patient bearing of the Cross but flingeth out in distempers it putteth not forth in inferiour businesses to give directions to the particular actions of life and therefore seeing this faith faileth in lesser and smaller things how can it bee sound in the greatest of all 3 Others boast of a sound faith which were it so it would lay hold upon the promise and beleeve for themselves and their seed but this it doth not for many who for themselves would rest in the providence of God upon the good and warrantable m●●●s will yet indanger themselves for their children And hence is it that many who have lived conscionably in single estate have remitted much of their care and fear in their married condition and come short of their former uprightnesse and why is this else but that they conceive not the Lord to bee all sufficient for them and theirs Gen. 17.1 4 Others there
bee that challenge as sound a faith as any but never prise such a pearl as it is can a man have such a commodity but hee shall value it according to the worth but these think themselves never the richer for it they have more sence and joy in the smallest and most trifling earthly profit then that Christ is become their gain which although they profess yet this undervaluing of him in their hearts giveth their tongues the lye Besides it they did esteem of faith indeed they would profess it boldly and confess it to all the World whereas they are ashamed of Christ before men and cast themselves into the night with Nicodemus as fearing lest if they should come to Christ by day men would see them whose praise they love above the praise of God and whose reproach they fear above the rebuke of the Almighty But how unlike is this to the faith of the Saints whereby they could esteem the rebukes of Christ above the treasures of Egypt And further were it so they made reckoning of their faith they would much more care for the end of it for sound faith carrieth the heart even in the constant waiting and wishing for Christs appearance but these rather fear it than hope it Now what a faith is that which never careth to come to the end of it that fain would still bee pitching upon earth saying with Peter when hee wist not what hee said It is good being here Is this Faith an evidence of things not seen or doth it look at things within the veil 5 Another sort would be loath to be otherwise accounted but true beleevers and yet their faith worketh no change in them how their hearts are purified witnesse the uncleannesse envie drunkennesse oathes injustice covetousnesse contempt of the Ministery prophanations of the Sabbaths of God in themselves and theirs these and the like proceed from within and by the Waies in the shop any man may know how the Warehouse is stored And as this faith purgeth not the nasty corners of the heart no more doth it the mouth but that venteth according to the abundant foulnesse of the heart and is filled with unclean unsavoury or unfruitful speeches Further as they were at first enemies to God and goodnesse so they abide still and are no changelings Here is no faith working by love neither to God for they will doe nothing for him will be at no costs or pains for him and as little will they suffer for his sake not a reproachful word much lesse will they rejoyce in suffering neither to Gods children these can they pinch and disgrace where as l●ved they him that begat they would love those that are begotten of him As for helping others to Heaven they are so farre from it as that if any will cast an eye that way they can tell what he is presently and they would be loath to be such an hypocrite or precise tool as he is To conclude although true faith is most industrious in the means of preserving and increasing it self these men hold their wont enemies to the Word were they and so are they still they neglect the means and absent themselves from the Ministry and can no more beleeve than Thomas who was absent when Christ came and sh●wed himself to the rest of the Disciples Joh. 20.24 and that which they doe hear they mingle not with faith and so it becom●th unprofitable The Lion roareth they fear not in their hearts because they apply not the threats of the Law against their own sins The Gospel propoundeth promis s of life and salvation but they trust God no further than they see him they rejoyce no more in them than they can in another mans mony or evidences they pray not to be taught of God nor hear to bee increased in faith nor meditate nor conferre 〈◊〉 things they hear further to edifie themselves and others in their most holy ●aith Now will these fruits stand with faith or if they will not is faith so common as men pretend but I hope I have a little helped many a man to see by this application how that his Gold is turned into Copper and his faith but into a dream and fancy Labour for the truth of faith ● earnestly as for salvation Vse 2. This doctrin teacheth every man to labour for the truth of this grace as earnestly as for salvation it self for this is the scope of all the Prophets to bring men not so much to faith as to the end of faith through the Messiah which is salvation And hence is it that faith is said to save beleeve and thou shalt be saved and in many places and phrases besides the Lord ascribeth that to the instrument which belongeth to himself the principal efficient Necessity of this grace to him that expecteth salvati●n 1 Both to shew the excellency of the grace in it self in that it comprehendeth such an excellent object as Christ Heaven and happinesse which are infinite and holdeth such great things being absent as present in the hand of it 2 As also the n●cessity of it to the party that looketh for salvation for hee that beleeveth not must needs be damned yea is damned already Rom. 4.11 For 1. He hath not set his seal that God is true but so far as he can hath made him a lyer 1 Joh 5.10 2 He hath defiled all his actions and lost all his labour 3 He hath disabled God from doing him good who cannot save him that lieth in the state of infidelity 4 Hee hath shut Heaven against himself for without shall be unbeleevers and if infirmity of faith in Moses the Servant of God shut him out of Canaan what shall the want of it in the wicked doe but shut them out of the heavenly Canaan which is a r●st prepared only for the people of God 3 To teach in what an high reckoning it is with God who is the Author of it the finisher of it the accepter and approver of it yea of a grain of it and not of it only but of our persons and imperf ct works because of it and c●nsequently that every beleever should make as high account of it as of salvation it self it leading to the very g●te of Heaven nay being the threshold over which every one m●st step that meaneth to enter into the holy City Vse 3. This teacheth us that seeing the Ministry of the Prophets Apostles Pastors and Teachers was instituted to this purpose to beget and confirm men in the faith all such as frequent the Ministery must be careful to grow up in the strength of faith For otherwise they frustrate to themselves this holy ordinance for the sum of our commission is this Goe teach all Nations hee that beleeveth hall be sav●d Mar. 16.16 And what is Paul Apollos or any other ordinary Minister but the Ministers of your faith both for the begetting and confirming of the same Grow up in the strength of faith So as
wickedness into the heart belongs only to Satan because of his Spiritual nature and ready entercourse with our spirits Now seeing these temptations of the Devil are so wicked coming from evil and tending to evil two points are worthy our consideration 1 How Christ being so holy and powerful could be tempted of the Devil 2 Why he would be so tempted For the former How Christ so holy and so powerful could be tempted of the Devil 1 It is not against the holiness of Christ to be subject to temptation without sin no more than to hunger thirst weep 2 Nor against the power of Christ to be tempted no more than it was a sign of infirmity and weakness in Adam so to be before infirmity and weakness came in It argued not impotencie in Christ to dye nay so to dye argued omnipotency So it was not weakness in Christ to be tempted but willingness and so to be tempted argued vertue and strength But howsoever the Apostle saith Christ was tempted and like us in all things yet without sin and Christ himself Joh. 14.30 The Prince of this world cometh and hath nought in me that is no sin at all yet it is hard to be conceived and therefore wee will explain it by these propositions 1 That temptation that wholly riseth from another and not from a mans self is not necessarily mixed with sin But such were the temptations of Satan to Christ wholly hatched by the Devil for there was no manner of evil thought no corruption in the holy person of Christ for any such to rise forth of Wee indeed have many temptations arising out of our own corruptions which are sin in the beginning though no consent be given unto them but are presently resisted but no such thing could bee in the holy Nature of Christ A fire kindled within the house is dangerous but the lightning coming from without being but a flash is without danger Joseph allured by the words of his Mistris resisted and fled away Gen. 39.12 this was not his sin And Hezekiah provoked to distrust by Rabshakies rayling letter resisted and was confident 2 King 19.10 it was not his sin the temptation was wholly without 2 Those temptations which are offered by others either by voyce gesture or outward objects or else by inward thoughts utterly abhorred without the least liking are not the sins of them that are tempted their exercises and trials they be not their sins But such were the temptations of Christ he was troubled and vexed with them as appears by his Avoyd Satan and the voyces and objects carried to his ear and eye yea motions to infidelity covetousness and Idolatry to his mind but yet by the perfect light of his mind and the unchangeable holiness of his will were instantly repelled and gained not the least affection and much less left the least infection behind them True it is that evil thoughts cast into our mindes can hardly bee cast out without some taint for we are ready as tinder to receive such sparkles we must pause upon them till they gain some delight if not content But it was not so with Christ whose perfect holiness was as water to quench all such sparkles Three degrees of temptation 3 Of temptation there are three degrees 1 Suggestion 2 Delight 3 Consent Suggestion is the meer motion of another altogether without us and cannot be our sin if neither of the latter come to it either of which two is a token of infirmity But Christs temptations were all in suggestion because he stood last without alteration of his minde without the least delight or consent to the thing tempted unto VVhereunto serveth that distinction of glancing and permanent motions the former passing through the heart without any footing against no Commandement the latter either without consent against the tenth or with consent against all the nine Hence note 1 Seeing Christ himself of so holy condition was subject to bee tempted let no man living look to be exempted from temptations Our Lord Jesus that had no inward corruption to stirre up any motion in him cannot avoyd outward objects and perswasions to sin But our case is farre otherwise for suppose there were no Devil assayling us no outward object that could bee presented to us yet we are tempted and led away by our own concupiscence we need no moving or stirring but run headlong of our selves into sin It we had no enemies to batter down our walls and holds without us wee have inward and domestical rebells and traytors which continually betray us VVhere is the man now that boasts hee was never tempted and hee hath so strong a faith and is of such holiness as he defieth Satan and will spit in his face and he never was molested by him But pitiful is this delusion Is thy faith stronger thy holiness greater than Christs No no Satan is gone away with all the strong man hath all in peace else thou shouldst hear of him and tell mean other tale This example of Christ well considered would teach thee another lesson The greatest temptation of all is not to be tempted namely like a wise man 1 To expect temptations 2 Learn to resist them as Christ did 3 That the greatest temptation of all is not to be tempted for where Satans malice shewes not it self there is no good thing at all 2 Note hence That all Satans temptations be they never so hellish and violent yet cannot hurt us if we yeeld not to them He never more fiercely assayled any than Christ himself yet Christ giving no way to him was a little troubled and grieved Satan may allure but hee cannot force us but not hurt So all that Satan can doe to us is but to assayl and allure us but force our wills he cannot for God hath not put our wills in his power VVhich should teach us 1 More carefully to resist the Devil who never getteth advantage of us but by our own voluntary yeelding which rolls us into his sin and condemnation 2 Being fallen into sin to accuse our own cowardliness and carelesness many being fallen into mischief lay load upon the Devil Oh the Devil ought them a spight and hee hath paid it and so lay all the blame on him not considering their own sin True it is the Devil spights every man and the best most but if thou hadst not more spighted thy self thou hadst done well enough the Devil did move and gave a rise to a sin but who bade thee perfect and finish it Can the Devil make thee sin without thy self I deny not but that thou canst not lay too much blame upon the Devil but see thou layest not too little upon thy self 3 Note in that therefore Christ fully overcame and was not touched with temptation because by the perfection of his holiness hee resisted at the first we must learn this wisdome if we would not fall by temptation to resist the first motions and beat back the
should eat they should dye and yet hee labours to make them doubt of that truth which both hee and they knew too well This was ever his practice Reasons 1 Because of his great malice to God who hath every way set himself to confirm his word that his own truth might shine in his word to all the world Therefore hee hath outwardly confirmed it by many powerful and glorious miracles such as the Devil could never make shew of as raising the dead the standing and going back of the Sun the division and standing of the Sea and rivers and the bearing of a Virgin and inwardly his holy Spirit perswades testifies confirms and sealeth up the Word in the hearts of Gods Children 1 John 2.20 2 Cor. 2. Now to make God a lyar and to shew himself most contrary to the Holy Spirit hee contradicts and opposeth stormeth and rageth 2 Hee hateth the word of God because it is the greatest enemy to his Kingdome every way resembling God the author and carrying his image It is light and no marvel if the Prince of darknesse resist it it discovers his subtilties and fenceth the Christian against his policies it discerneth spirits that let him come as an Angel of light hee shall bee uncased As hee prevaileth in darkness so hee worketh in impurity now here the word resembling God himself crosseth him it is pure in it self and a purifyer as Christ saith Yee are clean by my word Further his chief power being in the Sons of disobedience and in the hearts of infidels here also the word clips his wings being the word of faith and John 17.20 Christ prayed not onely for his disciples but for all those that should beleeve in him by their word In a word seeing hee exerciseth his chief power in the sons of perdition who are given him to rule at his will here the word is his enemy because it converteth sinners and saveth soules called therefore a word of salvation 3 He opposed Gods word through the malice he beareth Gods children for hee ever opposeth true professors casts them into prison and would never let them have a good day in the world if hee might have his will and follows them with temptations and with outward afflictions But this is the sword of Gods mouth and the sword of the Spirit by which they cut thorow his temptations and make them forceless it is that which comforts them and sustains them in their troubles and directs them happily to heaven so as no way he can have his will of them 4 It stands him in hand to oppose Gods word for his long experience hath taught him that so long as men hold to the word they bee safe enough under Gods protection and hee could never win his Captain-sinners to such high attempts in sin were it not that hee had first shaken the truth of Gods word out of their hearts How could hee have brought Pharaoh to such obstinacy against God and his people as to say Who is the Lord and I will not let Israel goe but that he had brought the word in Moses and Aarons mouth into contempt further than the sting of the miracles forced him When Saul had once cast off the Word of the Lord Satan lead him as in a chain to hunt David to throw a dart at Jonathan to seek to the Witch against whom himself had enacted a severe law The like of Ahab Herod Nero Domitian c. 5 The Word of God is the sentence and rule of righteousness which condemneth Satan and therefore no marvel if he cannot endure it and wish it false and love it no better than the bill of his own condemnation and death eternal Vse It is a note of a man foyled by the temptation of Satan and of a devillish spirit to call Gods Word into question either to deny it as false or doubt of it as uncertain either of which if Satan can perswade unto he hath his wish for he knows they are no subjects to God that will not acknowledge his Scepter but doubt of the rod of his mouth he can easily blind-fold them and lead them whither he will that deny the light hee can easily vanquish them and lead them captive to all sin if he can get them to cast away their weapons Yet what a number of men hath the Devil thus farre prevailed with in this violent kind of temptation Some call in question whether the Scripture be the Word of God or no swarms of Atheists and Machevillians that hold the Word but an human devise and policy which is to open a door to all carnal and brutish Epicurism and to confound man and beast together Others doubt not of all but of some Books and others not of some Books but of some places of the holy Scripture But we see that Satan would have Christ but to deny or doubt of one sentence and what Eves calling into question of one speech of God brought on all our necks all we her posterity feel And it is in our natures when God speaks plainly against that sin we make ifs and pervadventures at it and so turn it off As for example 1 Our Saviour teacheth plainly that whosoever are of God hear his Word and his sheep hear his voyce Either men must beleeve it or deny it and yet how few can we perswade conscionably to hear the VVord all who must plainly either make the voyce of Christ false or themselves none of Gods none of Christs sheep for not hearing it 2 Our Saviour saith expresly He that heareth you heareth me Luk. 10.16 and that God speaks in the mouthes of his Ministers 2 Cor. 5.20 and that they have an heavenly treasure in earthen vessels But how few are of this mind never did any Heathens so despise the voyce of their Priests and the answer of their Oracles as Christians in general despise our voyce in which God and Christ profess they speak 3 Christ plainly saith this word is the immortal seed of our new birth the sincere milk to nourish the soul the bread of life heavenly food But who beleeve him for generally men have no appetite no desire to it and can well be content to let their souls languish in grace and be starved to death And whereas they would goe as farre or farther into other Countries as Jacob and his Sons into Aegypt when there was no Corn in Canaan to supply their bodies with food this they will not stirre out of their doors for VVell take heed of calling Divine truths into question No Divine truth to be called into question for three reasons stand not in them upon thy reason and understanding which are but low and shallow suspect them in things thou canst not reach rather than the truth of Scripture and make good use of these rules 1 In the rising of any such temptation know that Satan seeks advantage against thee and would bring thee into the same condemnation with himself by the same sin and
renewed in knowledge wait at the gates of Wisdom shut not thy heart and eyes from the beams of this blessed light 3 Grow up in holiness and righteousness as God himself is not only free from all evil but infinite in goodness most just most holy and as hee letteth his light shine before men so must thou let thy light shine before men that they may see thy good works Matth. 5.16 2 Cor. 7.1 cleanse your selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit that yee may grow up to full holiness This holiness must not only fence the heart from uncleaneness but the eye the ear the mouth the hands and feet and all the members when they bee ordered according to the Word prescribing rules for them all Rule 2. VVhen thou feelest grudgings of diffidence arise and Satan will urge thee how thou canst think thy self respected of God being beset with such a world of trouble and almost drowned in a sea of vexations without bottom or bank Now call to mind and set before thee Christs blessed example in whom as in a glass thou mayest see the sharpest of thy sorrows in any kind not only sanctified and sweetned but mingled with admirable love of his Father VVhat evil befalls thy body and soul or thy estate inward or outward which he hath not born and broken and yet never the less loved of his Father Thou wantest comforts of body House Land Meat Money hee had not a foot of land not a house to hide his head in not any money till he borrowed of a fish not a cup of cold water till he had requested it of the Samaritan who would give him none Thou wantest friends respect in the world yea where thou well deservest yea where thou mightest justly expect it Remember it was his case his friends became his foes his scholar a Traytor the world hated him causeless he came to his own and his own received him not he was without honour in his own Countrey hee had evil repayed him for good he wept over Jerusalems misery but Jerusalem laught at his Thou wantest peace of conscience canst not see a clear look from God nor feel any ease from the sting of thy sins thy sorrowful mind dries up thy bones all outward troubles are nothing to this But remember that never was any so laden with the burden of sin as Christ when his bitter torment expressed such words as these My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee 3 Rule From these crosses by which Satan would drive thee from God Sundry waies of God drawing neer his Saints in their troubles labour to see how near and graciously God draweth towards thee and thus beat him with his own weapon 1 The Lord helpeth forward our salvation by them being sour sawces to bring us out of love with our sweet sins and of this evil world plowing of ground kills the weeds and harrowing breaks the clods they be the Lords sharp salves to draw out our secret corruptions and the Lords sope to wash foul linnen white they bee the Lords ushers to teach us his statutes to teach by a little smart both what thou hast deserved in the life to come and what Christ hath suffered for thee in bearing the whole punishment of all thy sins to teath thankfulnesse for contrary blessings by poverty sickness trouble men learn to bee thankful for wealth health peace to teach pity and compassion towards the misery of others to teach circumspection in our waies and more care of obedience to all Gods Commandements 2 The Lord by crosses tryeth and exerciseth the faith patience and sincerity of his servants whether they will hold out as Job for as a man by wrestling knows his own strength better than before so is it here 3 The Lord is never nearer his children than in trouble in fire and water in six troubles and in seven to support them with strength and patience to give a blessed issue and use● and turn it to his own glory in their mighty deliverance and to their best all things are turned to their best to recompence their light afflictions with an eternal weight of glory As Christ said of Lazarus This sicknesse is not to death but that God may bee glorified John 11.4 so wee may say This poverty loss disgrace c. is not to the utter undoing of a man but that God may have glory in his deliverance and glorification So much of the third drift of Satan in this first temptation now of the fourth In that the Devils last drift in it is to have Christ in his want and hunger to use an unlawful means of supply note that Doct. 4. It is an ordinary instigation and temptation of the Devil To use unlawful means to help our selves is diabolical or a Devillish spirit to use unlawful means in our want to help our selves Because Christ had no ordinary means of getting bread hee must provide for himself by extraordinary Gen. 25.29 32. Esau comes out of the field weary and hungry and almost dead for meat how must hee supply his want Sell thy birth-right said Satan and so hee did Peter was in great danger in the High-Priests Hall how must hee help himself out of their hands Deny thy Master said Satan forswear him and curse thy self and thus hee gat out Saul was in great straights God was gone from him hee was not answered by Urim nor Oracle how shall hee do for counsel hee must go to the witch of Endor and so the Devil sends him from himself to himself who can tell him more than all his Vrim his Dreams his Prophets Sarah wanted a Child shee had a promise of one but shee laught at that Gen. 16.2 yet must she have one another way shee gives her maid to her Husband and shee brings an Ismael a mocker and persecutor of the promised seed Reasons 1 Satan sees how easily hee can weaken our confidence in God seeing wee are ready to trust more in the means than in God hee knows our infidelity which makes us hasty and soon weary of waiting 2 Hee knows how derogatory this is to the promise truth power and providence of God who can sustain his children as well above means without means yea against means as with them His hand is not shortened that he cannot help 3 Hee easily draws on this temptation under of a colour of necessity which wee say hath no law but falsly Hence is the common speech of the world to defend any injustice Why I must live I must not put forth my wife and children to beg I must so exercise my calling as to maintain my wife and family I must utter my wares though I lye and swear and exact and deceive and so under a colour of good and pretence of necessity no wickedness comes amiss in the course of ones trade Use 1. This teacheth us to bewail the pittiful estate of numbers of men taken in this snare of the Devil as 1 Numbers of
many and mighty powerful miracles which were signs from heaven shewing that hee was from heaven And yet for all this they beleeved not So Matth. 27.42 the High Priests Scribes and Pharisees said If hee bee the King of the Jews let him come down from the Cross and woe will beleeve him No doubt Christ could but bee would not not onely because it was an hour of darknesse but because hee know they would never have beleeved him Psal 22 2● 23. I will declare thy name to my brethren to the seed of Jacob to Israel Reasons 1 This practice of Christ is answerable to his precept Matth. 7.6 Cast not holy things to doggs nor pearls before swine By holy things and pearls are meant the things of Gods Kingdom Christ and his merits c. so called both to shew the excellency of them in themselves being above all pearls Prov. 3.14 as also our duty to prize and lock them up in our hearts and keep them as we doe our pearls safely in our memories By Doggs and Hoggs are meant malicious and obstinate enemies convicted of enmity against Gods Word of whose amendment there is little hope every man naturally is an enemy to God and his Word and so a dogg and a swine as Christ called the Heathens and Gentiles It is not lawful to take the children bread and cast it to doggs Now to such as these we must preach and offer the Sacraments yea Christ offered himself and came to call sinnets but when his Word and Miracles were rejected and himself evil intreated as among the Pharisees then saith Christ Let them alone they are blind leaders of the blind 2 Christ shews himself unto none but such as he loveth and love him Joh. 14.11 and this was the ground of Judas his speech Lord what is the cause that thou wilt shew thy self to us and not to the world the world sees him not for none seeth him but to whom he sheweth himself and he sheweth himself to none but such as love him and none love him but such as love his word and keep it vers 23. 3 This was one cause why Christ spake so many things in Parables that such as would be blind might not see and such as would not make a right use of his holy doctrin might not understand Matth. 13.13 For many that heard them let them goe without further question in a careless manner whereas the Disciples of Christ inquired of him his meaning and one learned of another and so that which for the difficulty drave others away became in this manner of teaching much more easie and familiar yea much more perspicuous and clear than any other 4 Never could extraordinary means convert such as beleeved not the word the ordinary means and therefore Christ never or seldome gratified the Scribes and Pharisees with Miracles or extraordinary means because they resisted his Doctrin Person and Works or if any wicked men saw any of his mighty VVorks and Miracles they saw not himself in them as Pharaoh what a number of Miracles saw he yet he was never the better he would not acknowledge God nor his servants and in the Wilderness they who saw Miracles every day and moment yet not beleeving the VVord of God in them were never the better the arm of the Lord was not made bare unto them Vse 1 Ignorant persons that know not Christ nor desire to know him are in a woful estate being such as Christ counts unworthy to reveal himself unto and therefore he either keeps the means from them or leaves them without grace to make an holy use of them Numbers of men to whom Christ never revealeth himself Vse 2. In worse case are they that have the means and yet no tast of them no reformation by them their covetousness their pride their drunkenness and uncleaneness will not be left as many that come to Church to hear the VVord and receive the Sacraments and yet are no better than Doggs and Swine and altogether unreformed in their lives and courses Some draw the VVord of God into question and would be taught by Angels or Miracles as Satan here but Christ will not make himself known to them no more than to him so saith Abraham to Dives in Hell when he denied his request They have Moses and the Prophets if they will not beleeve them neither would they beleeve if one should rise from the dead Some are resolved to live as they list let the Preachers say what they can whereas he that is in Christ to whom he reveals himself is a new Creature for Christ speaks to the heart not to the ear only Others say they are decreed to life or death and therefore doe what they can they cannot change Gods mind and hence never goe about to change themselves But had Christ shewed himself to these he would have directed them to the means of saving knowledge namely to the Scriptures which testifie of him Joh. 5.29 and to faith which unites to him and to the fruits of faith which testifie the truth of it to his glory and their comfort Others will be saved by saith alone and by a profession of the Gospel and so neglect the works which justifie it and the power of godliness whereas if Christ in the Ministry had revealed himself to such he had quickned their faith and not left it as a Carkass for faith without works is dead Others poor simple people will be saved by mercy alone and never labour for knowledge faith or true feeling of their own estate and care not how sin abound that mercy may abound much more But had Christ met with them hee would let them see their misery in the causes and effects and teach them to hunger after mercy in the means and having obtained it to goe and sin no more lest a worse thing follow Others disclaiming the doctrin of mortification and self-denial therefore dislike the VVord as too straight a Doctrin stripping them of their pleasures and profits and hence some hold on in their lusts some return with the Swine to their wallowing in the mire they cannot dye to sin they cannot live without laughter mirth and sports Whereas had Christ revealed himself unto them he would have taught them that his yoke is an easier yoke than the yoke of sin Three properties of such as to whom Christ will make himself known and that there is no sound comfort but in mortified affections and actions Vse 3. VVhosoever would have Christ reveal himself fully unto him must labour to be thus qualified 1 He must be humble for he teacheth the humble in his ways Psal 25.9 but the proud hee sends empty away as rain makes vallies fruitful but falls off the mountains which are therefore barren 2 He must long and desire to meet Christ in his Ordinances for Christ is the scope of the VVord and Sacraments therefore desire to know nothing but Christ Crucified goe to the tents of Shepheards where
Obj. 1. But it is in vain to serve the Lord and what profit is there in his ways Word cutteth off temptations to presumption the worse the man is the better is his estate and the more godly the more crossed in the world Ans It is written It shall be well with them that fear the Lord not so to the wicked and again that the light of the ungodly shall be put out when the light of the godly shall rise brighter until perfect day and the end of the just is peace Obj. 2. What need so much fear of Condemnation seeing there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Ans It is written that such must walk after the Spirit and not after the flesh and that such must work out their Salvation in fear and trembling Obj. 3. But if thou beest predestinate what needest thou care and if thou beest not all thy care will not avail thee Ans It is written that I must study to make my election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 and that I must beleeve in the Lord Jesus Christ and bring forth fruits worthy amendment of life Obj. 4. But what needest thou be so strict shall none come to Heaven but such strict persons thinkest thou why God requires no such strictness Ans It is written that the Master is a hard man who will stand strictly for justice and that we must walk precisely Ephes 5.15 Obj. 5. But why shouldest thou respect these Preachers so much doest thou not see how they take upon them to disgrace thee for such and such courses and they are men as well as others no better many of them worse Ans It is written 1 Thess 5.12 Have them in singular love for their works sake and that our Saviour said He that heareth you heareth me and that the least Minister in the New Testament is greater than John Baptist who yet was greater than any Prophet Matth. 11.11 and that God did send two Bears and destroyed forty two of those wanton children that mocked and reviled the Prophet Elisha 2 King 2.23 Obj. 6. But thou art young thou mayest swear and game and swagger and be wanton these are but tricks of youth and sowing the wilde oats c. Ans It is written As a man sowes so shall he reap and remember that for all this thou must come to judgement Obj. 7. Oh but thinkest thou that God sees or takes notice of every thing or if he should hee is merciful and easily entreated and thou hast time enough to repent Ans It is written that all the ways of a man are before the eyes of the Lord and to him day and darkness are alike and that to abuse the patience of God is to treasure up wrath against the day of wrath Obj. 8. Oh but thou hast now a fit opportunity and occasion to take thy delight the Husband is gone a farr journey Bathsheba is at hand and now it is twilight why shouldst thou deprive thy self of thy pleasure take thy time thou canst not have it every day Ans It is written Prov. 5.3 8. The end of a strange woman is more bitter than worm-wood and keep thy way farr from her and come not neer the door of her house and that neither fornicators nor adulterers shall enter into heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 and Ephe. 5.3 but fornication and all uncleanenesse and covetousnesse let it not once be named among you as becometh Saints III. The third rank of instances is in motions to pride and self-conceit The word cutteth off temptations to pride wherein sin hath great strength Obj. 1. You are a man rich and high well friended well monied why should you stoop to such a one this were a base thing indeed let him seek to you or doe you crush him Ans It is written God resists the proud 1 Pet. 5.5 and in giving honour goe one before another and pride goes before the fall and that the haughty eye is one of the six things which the Lord abhorrs Prov. 6.17 Obj. 2. But you are a man of knowledge wise and learned what need you be so diligent in hearing Sermons especially of such as are farr your inferiours you can teach them not they you Ans It is written Isa 5.21 Woe be to them that are wise in their own conceits and Christ hath said Hee that despiseth you despiseth me Luke 10.16 and that Job despised not the counsel of his maid much less must I of the least Minister and that we know but in part and are to consider not who but what is spoken and that the same Spirit is mighty in one and in another Obj. 3. But you are a man of gifts and authority and these will carry you through all and you may rise and tread such and such under your feet who dare say any thing to you Ans It is written Matth. 18.6 Whosoever offendeth any of these little ones that beleeve in me it were better for him that a Milstone were tied about his neck and he cast into the midst of the Sea and He that doth wrong shall receive according to the wrong that hee hath done and there is no respect of persons Coloss 3.25 Obj. 4. But you may follow the fashions of the world in strange apparel ruffian behaviour monstrous tyres who may else how else should you be known to be a gentleman or a gentlewoman Ans It is written 1 Pet. 3.3 That even womens apparrelling must not bee outward as with broydered hair and gold c. but the hid man of the heart must be uncorrupt for Sarah and other holy women trusting in God did so attire themselves and again Fashion not your selves according to this world but bee renewed in the spirit of your mind Bee ever of the newest fashion there Obj. 5. But it is a small matter and of great credit to swear and curse and speak bigge words it is away to get reputation and bee respected as a man of spirit Ans It is written Levit. 24.16 Hee that blasphemeth the name of the Lord shall be put to death all the Congregation shall stone him and Jam. 5.12 Above all things my brethren swear not neither by heaven nor earth nor any other oath but let your Yea be Yea and your Nay Nay IV. The fourth instance is in motions to wrong and injustice The word cutteth off motions to injustice Obj. 1. Thou art a great man thou hast Tenants thou mayest and must live by them they are thy Servants and thou must enrich thy self by them rack their rents bind them to sute and service they cannot resist thee Or thou art a Master keep thy Servants wages from him make thy use of it weary him poor Sneak what can he doe pay him at thy pleasure hee will endure any thing rather than lose thy work Ans It is written Jam. 2.13 Judgement mercilesse belongs to them that shew no mercy and those that grinde the faces of the poor shall one day bee
was the Sanctum Sanctorum and in it the Oracle called the inner house of God into which only the High Priest went alone once a year and that in the Feast of expiation wherein all the Jews must fast and afflict themselves A most notable type of Christ for as it was called an Oracle because God thence gave answer in doubtful cases so who is the Fathers Oracle but his Son who is the word of his Father by whom he speaks to us by whom we speak to him and through whom the Father heareth us In this Holy of Holies was the Ark of the Covenant and in this holy place stayed the Ark almost four hundred and thirty years signifying Christ the author of the Covenant between God and us In which Ark or Chest were kept three things 1 The Tables of the Covenant written with the finger of God signifying Christ who is the fulfilling of the Law 2 The Rod of Aaron which had budded a type of the Priesthood of Christ who in the world seemed a dead branch and dry but after his Death and Resurrection began again to flourish and bring fruits of life to Jewes and Gentiles 3 The Pot having Manna a holy type of Christ the bread of life and that Manna that came down from heaven Joh. 6.35 In this Holy of Holies over the Ark was the holy cover called the Propitiatory prefiguring the Lord Jesus whom the Father hath made our Propitiatory by faith in his bloud Rom. 3.25 Here also were the two glorious Cherubims set like Angels on either side the Ark looking upon the Ark figuring the holy Angels ministring to Christ and earnestly desiring to look into the mystery of our salvation 1 Pet. 1.12 These were the chief holy things established in the Temple at Jerusalem but not all for there were besides these the observation of all holy Rites appointed by God the Chair of Moses and in it the Law read and expounded there were the holy persons the High Priest with all his holy garments with Urim and Thummim and on his fore-head Holiness to the Lord there were other the holy Ministers of the Lord who had the Lords holy Oyl upon them of Gods own composition with straight charge that no other should make or use it out of this use Yea here had lived the ancient Kings and Prophets David Salomon Josiah Hezekiah who were special types of Christ In which regard Ierusalem the seat of God and Gods worship is called the City of perfect beauty the joy of the whole earth 3 It is called an holy City by comparison unto other great Cities of the neighbour Countries wherein Idols and Devils were worshipped in stead of God as Babylon or whose worship was the devise of mans brain and no institution of God as Samaria Cesarea and others 2 King 17.33 4 It is called holy in type two waies 1 As it was a type of the Church militant of which the members are holy in part at least in profession For the whole Church of God was gathered together three times every year before the Lord at the feasts of Passeover Pentecost and Tabernacles Psal 122.4 Thither the Tribes of the Lord go up and appear before the Lord. 2 As it was a type of the Church triumphant even that Celestial Jerusalem which is above that new Jerusalem into which no unholy thing can enter but is the eternal habitation of the holy God the Holy Angels and Saints 5 It was called holy or the holy City because it was the fountain of Gods holy Religion which being first seated there by God must be derived thence and sent out to all other Nations Micah 4.2 The Law shall go out of Sion and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem Therefore was it the Metropola and mother City the heart of the earth placed in the midst of Nations by Gods own confession Ezek. 5.5 Nay there must the pretious blood of the holy Son of God be shed which must stream and run out to the salvation of all Nations and himself Preached the King of the Jews upon the Cross as upon the theater in Hebrew Greek and Latine and that in the time of the Passeover when there was a concourse of all the people of Jews and other Nations There the Apostles must give their first witnesse of Christ and thence must carry it into Judea Samaria and all nations to the utmost parts of the earth Act. 1.8 And 8.1 the Church of the New Testament was first gathered at Jerusalem and thence by persecution scattered into all Nations In this regard it was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Holy City for all the holinesse of all other Cities was derived thence Doct. 1 Wee learn out of this title what it is that makes places and persons holy even the presence of God of his word and worship Thus the ground was called holy Exod. 3.5 and the place where Joshua stood when the captain of the Lords Host appeared unto him chap. 5.15 1 Whatsoever was in the Law separated to God and his service was called holy the Sabbath was holy the Priests Garments holy Exod. 28. Thou shalt make holy Garments for Aaron thy brother Holy both because they were peculiar to the holy Priesthood for none else might put them on and because they were to bee used in the holy place for when they came forth of the Tabernacle they must put them off and thirdly consecrate to holy uses and to bee an holy type of Christs righteousnesse a precious robe wherein all our Sacrifices are offered The flesh was holy which was offered to the Lord in sacrifice Hag. 2.13 For places Bethel was an holy place when Jacob saw the vision of the Ladder there and the Temple was holy For people the Jews were called an holy Nation and Christians an holy Priesthood and Saints by calling 1 Pet. 2.9 For persons some are sanctified in the wombe to some special service as Jeremy chap. 1.5 and John Baptist Yea every faithful mans heart is as it were an Ark of God in which are kept the Tables of the Law yea the Tabernacle of God and the Temple of the Holy Ghost where hee pleaseth to dwell And thus was Jerusalem an holy City so long as it continued in the true worship of God 2 This appears by the contrary seeing his holinesse was no further annexed to this place than God tyed his presence to it for when as the Jews had crucified the Lord of glory both the Temple and City as prophane were destroyed and delivered into the hand of the Romans and are now in the hands of the Turks a nest of unclean and Idolatrous beasts most savage enemies of Christ and Christian profession 3 That place must needs bee holy where the Lord dwelleth as a master in his house teaching ordering and supplying all necessaries where Christ the Holy Son of God walketh in the midst of the seven Golden Candlesticks being conversant among the flocks of Shepheards where the Holy
evening solemnly on our knees making confessions of sins and requests to God together with thanksgiving Psalm 55.17 Evening and morning and at noon will I pray and make a noise Daniel three times a day prayed and praised God in his house as hee was wont chap. 6. v. 10. The excellent use of which is the opening of the door of Gods treasury to the family by which it is inriched with the best blessings of God Besides the Lord shall hereby have some honour that is due to his mercy upon the family 5 In edifying the family with Psalms and melody to the Lord as it is Col. 3.16 In these daily duties doth the sanctification of a family consist Whereunto wee may bee perswaded by these motives 1 In that they are the practises of men fearing God such as Joshua and his house Cornelius and his houshold 2 In that by these exercises the family shall not only be sanctified but also blessed as Obed Edom and his house for the presence of the Ark. 3 What madness is it to reject and banish Gods word and worship out of doors and yet think God is there Nay where found grace comes there is the Spirit of Prayer and Supplication in every family apart Zach. 12.14 and where the worship of God is not set up in families there is nothing but a conspiracy of Atheists and a wicked brood bringing Gods judgements on themselves and the business passing through their hands Use 3. Jerusalem is called holy being once sanctified to the Lords use which teacheth us that wee should reverently both conceive and speak of all such things as are set apart to the Lords use 1 Some persons are consecrate to the Lord as the Tribe of Levi of whom the commandement was Thou shalt not forsake the Levite all thy daies And the Prophets Touch not mine annointed and do my Prophets no harm So in the New-Testament The Minister that rules well is worthy of double honour Yea if the widows which were set apart to inferiour offices about the poor must be honoured 1 Tim. 5.3 much more the Minister that standeth in Gods place and stead Heb. 13.17 Obey them that have the oversight of you Thus Cornelius reverenced Peter and the Eunuch Philip. Nay not onely the Minister but every beleever is separate to God and sanctified to carry the Covenant and hath the annointing of the Spirit which the Lord acknowledgeth on them and speaketh reverently and lovingly of them calling them his holy ones yea the apple of his eye They see not this who can persecute and revile them for hypocrites and count them as the Apostles whose doctrin they profess the scum of the world 2 Some places are for their use to bee accounted holy because God is there present in his worship as the places of our meetings not that any inherent holiness is annexed to the place or cleaveth to it out of the action of Gods worship but while God is present in his Worship wee must account it holy ground and the house of God When God appeared in Bethel to Jacob hee said How fearful is this place surely it is no other than the house of God Wee must therefore put off our shooes with Moses that is our base and vile our sinful and sensual affections yea our lawful if earthly thoughts when wee come to this holy place Look wee bring no thoughts with us unbeseeming the place where God is separated from other common places to holy uses Look that in this place wee use no gesture or behaviour unbeseeming a man that hath business with God being present To sit talking or sleeping or laughing or gazing sutes not with this place And further if God please to account the very places holy for the use and presence of God in this use what shall wee think of them that conceive so basely of them as they would love a Parish better in which is no Church Others prophane them with base practices and unconscionably suffer them to fall or decay and will bee at no charge to make or keep them handsome sweet and beautiful Styes were fit for such swine As their affection is so is their devotion 3 The holy Ordinances of God must not bee touched but with holy respect and reverence of which it is said It is not safe to play with holy things 1 The word must bee received read heard spoken as the holy word of God To make jests of Scripture is a wicked practice God looks graciously on him that trembles at his word Isa 66.2 as good Josiah whose heart melted hearing the words of the Law So the names and attributes of God are never to bee used in frivolous admirations but every knee must bow unto him Phil. 2.10 Neither ought wee to laugh at Gods judgements on others 2 An Oath is one of the holy Ordinances of God and to swear in common talk vainly is not to shew reverence to this holy Ordinance Swear not at all that is uncalled Mat. 5.34 35. neither being called but in truth justice and judgement for an Oath is appointed to decide controversies which other means cannot How few consider whether the matter bee worth an Oath or whether they bee called to it or whether it might not have been better passed by Yea or Nay or by a bare asseveration A wicked man is described by being a Swearer Eccl. 9.3 but a godly man not only not swears from which a man by education or civility may abstain but also fears an oath in what company soever hee is or what occasion soever hee hath 3 A Lot is another special Ordinance of God to decide a controversy from heaven by God himself when all means on earth fail Therefore Lots must not be used without great reverence and prayer because the disposition of them commeth immediately from the Lord Pro. 16.33 and not but in great matters not for recreation for it is said to cause contentious to cease among the mighty Prov. 18.18 neither do wee read that it was ever used but in very great things as the dividing of the land of Canaan the election of High Priests and Kings and the surrogation of Matthias into the place of Judas Hence it follows if dice and cards bee Lots as I think they bee that all play by them is unlawful 4 Some times are sanctified above other as the Sabbath day all which must bee passed holily with much reverence and respect both remembring it before it come yea rejoycing in the approach of it and when it is come to sanctify it 1 In our hearts for external observation of the Sabbath without inward holiness and affection to the duties of Gods service is hypocrisy 2 We must not meddle with any part of the duties of our ordinary calling for that is no holy thing 3 Much less travel to Markets or Fairs but every man must stay in his own place Exod. 16.29 Neb. 13.15 to 19. 4 Least of all must wee set any part of it apart
with rebellion Lament 1.18 and to acknowledge the righteous judgement of God against it Never were the Oracles of Heathens despised so amongst them as Gods holy Word is generally of our people no man almost lets it come near his heart a manifest argument that God will one day speak so as hee will bee heard A Jerusalem would not take knowledge of the day of her Visitation as appears in Luke 19.43 and Matth. 23.37 therefore her habitation was made desolate As little know we the worth of our blessed means but perhaps wee may know it better in the want of them 3 Jerusalem remembred not her latter end therefore she came down wonderfully Lam 1.9 she was careless and never considered the account she was to make of her liberties and so hardned her self in sin and grew to contemn the good means shee had through the daily custom of them This also was the immediate fore-runner of Ninivehs destruction Zeph. 2.13 This is the rejoycing City that dwelt careless and said in her heart I am and there is none beside mee How is shee made wast and the lodging of beasts Every one that passeth by her shall hiss and wag his head And the reason is shee bore her self upon her priviledges her holy things her strength wealth populous and flourishing estate specially upon the Promises of God which they perverted being all made with condition of obedience which they had long before forfeited yea so likely and constant an estate shee had as none in the world would have beleeved that the enemy should have entered the gates of Jerusalem Lam. 4.12 so as hee came unlookt for The same is our conceit wee think our staffe so strong that it can never bee broken wee remember not what is the end of security when men cry Peace Peace comes sudden war 4 Jerusalem had two sorts of Prophets in her First False Prophets which flattered them and sought out vain things false prophesies and causes of banishment Lam. 2.14 Such was Hanani who opposed Jeremy and said the Lord would within two years break the yoke of the King of Babel Jer. 28.2 and Ahabs false Prophets would bid the King go up to battle against Gods Commandement and prosper This was one cause of her ruine Lam. 4.13 for the sins of her Prophets and Priests not that the people had not sinned but when Leaders and such as should preserve purity of Religion and manners are so corrupt it argues a general corruption running down from the head to all the members which must needs bring the whole to a consumption A second sort were faithful and sincere and the entertainment of these was such in Jerusalem as God most severely revenged Jeremy was cast into the dungeon Micaiah into prison nay our Saviour challengeth Jerusalem of such cruelty against the Prophets as did bring all the righteous blood upon them from Abel unto Zachariah Mat. 23.37 But of all cruelty they filled their measure in crucifying the Lord of the holy Prophets Matth. 21.38 the Housholder sent his servants to receive fruits but they evil-intreated them and beat some and slew others at last hee sent his Son saying They will surely reverence my Son but they said This is the Heir Come let us kill him and the inheritance shall bee ours Now what will the Housholder do He will certainly destroy those wicked men and let out his vineyard to others Expressing plainly in this parable Gods dealing with Jerusalem and theirs with him and what was the immediate cause of their destruction A dangerous thing it is to wrong the faithful Ministers of God Do my Prophets no harm saith the Lord and to persecute Christ in his members shall not bee unrevenged 5 Jerusalem had many warnings before their utter overthrow It was besiedged by Pharaoh Necho by Senachetib in Hezekiahs time in Rhehoboams time by Shishac King of Egypt it was sacked and overthrown 1 King 14.26 It was subdued thrice by Nebuchadnezzar King of Babel twice under Joakim and the third time under Zedekiah the City was wasted the Temple burnt and the people captivated into Babylon 2 Kin. 24. and 25 After seventy years when by the permission of Cyrus King of Persia the Temple was builded by Zerubbabel the City by Nehemiah and the law restored by Ezra and the Lord came again to his Temple yet being again provoked some years after it was taken by Antiochus Epiphanes King of Syria the Law burned the Temple prophaned the daily sacrifice removed the sanctuary of strength polluted and the abomination of desolation set up as Daniel had foretold chap. 11. v. 31. and made a wonderful effusion of blood After this the City and Temple was re-edifyed by Judas Assomanaeus and began to flourish but it was not long before it was again taken by Cu. Pompeius a Romane Captain whom Aristobulus called to help him against his brother Hircanus for the Priesthood All these were fair warnings whence they might perceive 1 How righteous the Lord was in not forbearing their sins 2 With how little reason they could stand upon any outward priviledge if they would go on in provoking the Lord 3 How loath the Lord was to reject them utterly if by any means they could bee reclaimed But when no means would do them good the Lord gives them to utterdesolation by Titus and Vespasian who ruinated the City defaced the Temple and left not one stone upon another as Christ prophesied Matth. 24.2 And since that time it hath ever been prophaned and in the hands of the greatest enemies of God and man next Satan himself polluted with most horrible idolatries the Jews driven from thence into all Lands and in all Lands Vagabonds the blood of the Sonne of God lying upon them and their children till this day Oh the patience of God toward us the many warnings and threatnings that wee have had by many treasons conspiracies sundry open and secret practices of our enemies by Sea and by Land Remember 88. and 1605. by sundry plagues of many kinds and every day renewed renews some warning or other And yet how fall wee back more and more how strong are the Papists how bold how malicious and furious as mastives that have been long in the chain Oh that wee were so wise rather to take example by others than to bee made examples to others and to take warning by others harms to prevent our own Why should wee think our selves so safe from the touch of this doctrin or exempted from the lot of all Churches and Lands Where was there ever a more holy place a more holy City a more holy Temple than at Jerusalem yet by security departing from the Lord the Lord left them What Church in all the World whose flourishing estate hath alwaies lasted Cast wee our eyes upon the Churches planted by the Apostles themselves that of Rome Corinth Galatia Ephesus the Churches in Asia they had their times but knew it not till it was too late now all are
stand in vallies not on mountains Joseph was raised out of Prison to be the second man in the kingdom David was by little and little raised from a Shepherd to a Warriour from thence to a Kings Son from thence to a Kingdom Mordecai was first in danger of his life and in great distress and afterward his head was lifted up This humility 1 will not suffer a man to affect pinacles as seeing their danger but content himself in a mean estate which is safest 2 It will make a man rejoyce rather in Gods humiliation than in Satans advancing the former tending to exaltation the latter to ruine and down-fall Rule 3 As Satan is ever plotting to cast thee down so be thou ever raising thy self up 1 By means of the VVord which is the staff of a Christian raising him in his falls and strengthening him in his standing 2 By Prayer which gets Gods hand with thee to uphold thee so as the hand that must cast thee down must be stronger than Gods 3 By heavenly conversation lift up thy soul and affections daily seek the things that are above minde heavenly things Satan would not have a man mount above the Pinacle nor will suffer him if he can hinder to get up to Heaven therefore in regard of his malice we must put more labour to this business Our affections are like the leaden plummets of a Clock by their own weight ever tending downward and Satan often hangs his weight upon them and therefore we must every day be winding them up 4 By fostering nor quenching the motions of the Spirit Thy self Quest Why doth not the Devil cast Christ down Did hee want power who had now carried and set him on that dangerous pinacle or did hee want will to throw him down Ans There wanted no will in Satan any way to mischief our Lord to which purpose he strained all his wits in these temptations but 1 He wanted power and strength being bound in chains and bridled by God so as it is as farre as he can now goe to tempt Christ to cast down himself His Commission went no further than to carry his holy body to the pinacle and there set it 2 For him to have cast down Christ and Christ to bee a meer Patient had not furthered him a whit in his drift and scope he intended to bring Christ to sin and if Christ cannot be gained to be an Agent or a voluntary Patient he cannot sin Besides he specially intendeth to bring Christ to the sin of presumption in throwing himself down which he could not effect by his casting him down unless himself bearing himself upon his Fathers protection can be brought to cast himself down 3 Although afterward Satan had power by his instruments to put our Saviour Christ to death yet now he could not by casting him down the pinacles doe it no more than the people could when they attempted to cast him down the hill for his hour was not yet come he had not yet done that great work which he came into the world to doe and the hour for the power of darkness was not yet Hence hee is a suter to Christ to cast down himself Doct. 2. Satan can tempt and perswade us but he cannot force us to sin or Hee cannot cast thee down unless thou cast down thy self He setteth Christ on the pinacle he cannot throw him down but perswades him to throw down himself He crammed not Eve with the Apple nor gave it into her hand but perswaded her to reach and eat it He did not kill Saul himself but perswaded him to cast down himself upon his own sword He did not put the halter about Judas his neck nor was his Hangman but was of his counsel and made his own hands his own executioners therefore it is said Acts 1.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 factus praeceps he threw down himself from an high place not only of his Office but from off the Tree whereon hee hanged himself 1 This comes to pass by Gods restraining power Reasons which suffers not Satan to doe what he list for then he would suffer no good thing or person upon earth but destroy all the order and government of God both in Church and Common-wealth then should every man not be a Wolf only but a Devil to a man Hence he is fain to take out a new commission and power from God for his several designs and cannot goe beyond the limitations of it though the greediness of his prey be never so great 2 No man is hurt but from himself Dico peccatum non esse si non propria voluntate peccetur August contra Forum Manich and out of the voluntary inclination of his own mind unto evil which Satan knows well enough and therefore he ever worketh on our corruptions and cannot poyson us unless either hee get us to drink of his cup or entoxicate us by our own 3 God hath made the will of man as a fountain of all humane actions whether Natural Civil Moral or Divine and herein hath given a man a kind of power under God over himself by investing every mans will with this natural property that his will is free from co-action and force for a man to say Voluntas cogi non potest Arist the will can be forced is to speak a contradiction and as much as to say that the will in the same time and thing can be willing and nilling which if it could be forced were true To understand this better wee must know that there bee onely two waies to move change or bend the will First from an internal agent or principle and this is twofold 1 God himself the Author of all naturall faculties in whose hand the heart of Kings and all men bee to turn as he pleaseth as the River● 2 The man himself to whom God hath committed this will who hath power to dispose it to this or that object as Adam in innocency had freedome in things Divine and Humane and now wee his posterity in the latter Secondly by external movers and these are either 1 The natural object of the will which is some good so apprehended in the understanding and strongly urged upon the will or 2 some passions Lusts Affections and Appetites which incline the will this way ●or that Quest How then is it said that the Devil filled Ananias his heart to lye to the Holy Ghost Act. 5.3 and of Judas that the Devil entered into him and put into his heart to betray his Lord if he cannot move the will Answ It is not denyed but that something besides God can move the will but the Question is of the manner God moves it by his own and absolute power even without our selves and against our selves as when hee changeth an heart of stone into an heart of flesh But others without us cannot move our hearts neither by any proper power that they have over them nor yet without our selves first gained unto
that as our provocations bring temptation upon them so our petitions for them may help them through all Vse 2. Such as are in any eminency or place above others must be so much the more watchful and let this meditation bee as an antidote to expel the poyson swelling and inflammation of pride that the higher thy hill is the more is Satans malice and plots against thee If a man stand upon the top or any part of Mount Sion that is be a Teacher in the Church hee must know that he is a light set upon an hill or mountain all eyes are upon him and therefore Satan that stood at Jehoshuahs right hand will not bee far from him let him make right steps to his feet lest hee treading awry many be turned out of the way Let such as are eminent in profession above others bee more watchful than others Satan is more busy with thee because thou shalt open many mouthes against thy profession and hee will wound many through thy sides hee will make many ashamed because of thee and because of thee hee will make Gods enemies to blaspheme 2 Sam. 12.14 Thy slip or fall shall make all Gath and Askelon ring of all thy profession for they are all alike never a good one of them all c. Such as are carried into the mountain of earthly prosperity must labour for more strength and wachfulnesse than if they were in a lower estate else Satan will make this condition as the dead sea in which no grace can live Shew mee one excepting our Lord Jesus that ever came better from the mountain that is was the better man for his prosperity Numbers there are that have come out like Gold brighter and pu●●er out of the fire of affliction but so dangerous it is to stand upon this mount as the Lord once and again forewarned and charged his own people that when they should come into the good land which he had given them then to beware that they waxed not fat and forgetful and rebellious against him We know that the Moon being at full is furthest from the Sun and commonly fulness and abundance withdraw us from our Sun of righteousness whence wee have all influence of light and grace Vse 3. Let this point work contentment in our hearts and cause us to prize a mean and comfortable estate wishing no mountains but that holy mountain of God where wee shall bee free from all gun-shot and safe from all temptation Here is an holy ambition to affect and aspire to a Kingdome wherein wee shall reign as Kings In the mean time if wee desire superiority or command let us labour to overcome sin the Devil our selves and our Lusts let us depose them from reigning in our mortal bodies And if at any time we begin to admite our selves and others for outward prosperity and greatnesse in the World let us turn our eyes another way and esteem Gods Wisdome and fear above all outward happiness This was the Wisdome of Solomon with which God was so well pleased that having it in his choice to ask Riches or long Life or Victory hee asked Wisdome before them all and God gave him b●●● that and them Let this ever bee our wisdome to affect goodness not greatness this brings Satan upon us that drives him away from us The second thing in the preparation is the sight represented in which consider these things I what was the sight All the Kingdomes of the World and the glory of them 2 How Satan represented them hee shewed him 3 How long this sight lasted in a moment saith Luke I. The sight was all the Kingdomes of the earth both the Kingdomes themselves and the Majesty Beauty Glory and order of them yea their wealth and whatsoever was in them by which the minde of our Saviour might bee rapt into the admiration of them and after to desire them For the end of his temptation is Idolatry and his means is covetousness Quest But were there not many sorrows vexations and tumults in the World why doth Satan shew none of these Answ 1 His policy and subtilty would not make show of any thing which would hinder his temptation but did all to further it His scope was to bring Christ into love with the World and for this purpose hee must make it as lovely as hee can as a cunning fisher must hide the hook and shew nothing but the bait 2 Hee knew that by this very trick hee overthrew the first Adam to whom hee shewed nothing but the fair side of the Apple and benefit and bettering of their estate how by eating of it they should bee as Gods but hid all the inconvenience that it was a breach of Gods Commandement and that the issue was death And so he goes about to circumvent the second Adam II. The manner of this sight And shewed him Some think in a Map But hee needed not have carried him into a Mountain for that Neither in a vision illuding his minde and phantasy because this hee might have done in the Wildernesse or on the Pinacle if it could agree so well to the perfection of Christs mind But I take it hee offered the images and representations of them all sensibly and actually after a wonderful and strange manner making their Images to appear to his senses And if a man by his Art can represent to the senses in a glass any person or thing so lively by which hee that sees not the thing it self discerneth a notable image of it how much more may wee think that Satan by his Art and Cunning can represent to the sense the Images of things which are not indeed present A lively confirmation whereof appeareth in his lumber I mean Sorcerers and Juglers who by the Devils help most cunningly delude the senses But Christ did indeed see the Images and most glorious representations of the World and the Kingdomes of it the which that hee might think to bee the things themselves and the better to perswade him that hee saw the things indeed hee set him on an exceeding high mountain notwithstanding hee knew that the highest mountain of the World could manifest but a small part of the whole and if it could yet the strongest eye of man could reach but a little way and were not able at least in so small a time to distinguish the particulars thereof III. The time how long this sight lasted In a moment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In accurate consideration a moment is the fortieth part of an hour for a point of time is a quarter of an hour and a moment of time is the tenth part of a point of time But I think wee are not to take the word so strictly which here noteth a very short time much shorter than the fortieth part of an hour and with Chemnitius I think it to bee the same with that in 1 Cor. 15.52 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a moment and explained in the next words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the twinkling of an eye which is indeed no time but the beginning rather of time seeing there is no distinction between time past and time to come Howsoever wee must take it for a very short space of time and that the sight was gone before Christ could well consider of it For so the like phrase is used concerning Sodome that it was destroyed in a moment for the Sun rose very fair and before ever they could consider of such a storm the Lord showred down fire and brimstone Now the reason why the Devil used such a speedy and quick representation was to ravish Christ suddenly and stir up his affections by the absence of it to desire to see it again dealing with Christ as we with our little children when wee would make them earnestly desire a thing wee let them see it and hide it again give it them into their hands and suddenly take it away again So did Satan Secondly Satan might have another trick in it to disturb the minde of our Saviour for as a suddain flash or light doth dazle the eyes of the body so doth a suddain flash or sight of this or that object easily dazle the eyes of the minde and instead of pleasure with it at least it brings some trouble and perturbation However he thought it would fit and bring on his temptation Thirdly shadows will abide no looking on no examining and therefore the Devil is so quick in taking them in Doct. 1 It is an old practice of the Devil to let death into the soul by the window of the senses and especially by the sight for here hee would overcome Christ by the sight of the World and the glory of it Thus hee had gained Eve to sin by the sight of the apple which was beautiful to the eye by hearing that shee should bee as God if she did taste it by touching tasting and pleasing all her senses with it The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair and took them to them for wives which was the cause of the deluge Ahab saw the vineyard of Naboth lye so conveniently to his demeans as he must needs compass it by murther Reason 1 The Senses are the near servants of the Soul if Satan can make them untrusty he knows he can by them easily robb the soul yea and slay it For senses work affections and affections blind judgement David sees Bathsheba presently affects her his violent affection blinds his judgement he must have her company though it cost Uriahs life I saw said Achan among the spoyl a goodly Babylonish garment and two hundred sheckels of silver and a wedge of gold of fifty shekels and I coveted them and took them Josh 7.21 How was Adam otherwise deceived by Eve but first in his affection and then in his judgement 2 As Satan lays his baits in all the Senses to steal the heart so especially in the eyes dealing as the Chapman that would vent his wares he lays it forth on the stall that men may see it and oftentimes the very sight of it without further offer draws on the buyer to a bargain He knows he loseth not all if he gain but an unlawful look because there is sin begun though not perfected 3 The Sense is to the Soul as a door to the house A man that would come in or send any thing into an house must goe in and send it in by the door Even so although the Devil by his spiritual nature can and doth apply himself to our spirits without our senses yet other tempters cannot reach the soul so immediately Eve could not work Adams heart directly but by the outward senses of hearing and seeing especially sent in the temptation Poysons cannot reach the heart unless by the senses they bee drawn in So wicked Mates cannot convey their corruption one into another but by the outward senses hearing their wicked and incentive speeches and seeing their graceless and infecting actions But besides this so full of malice is our spiritual adversaty that he would not only immediately take up our hearts but fill up all our senses and by them continually sendeth in burning lusts and by the same door covetous desires and by the same ambitious and aspiring thoughts and by the same revengeful intentions and such like till the house be full of wickedness 4 Satan knows that God hath appointed the senses for the good and comfort both of body and soul especially the sight and hearing to bee the senses of Discipline to furnish the mind with knowledge of God with faith which is by hearing with hope of his gracious promises with heavenly meditations and contemplation of his great Works which our eyes behold Now Satan would cross all this gracious constitution of God and make the lights of the body be means to blind the mind he would fill up the senses and take them up with such objects as shall not only corrupt the heart but keep out those means of grace which the Lord would by them convey into the heart so that the soul should be further poysoned by the same means which the Lord hath prepared as an Antidote by which natural poyson and corruption should be expelled Vse 1. This doctrine enjoyneth a diligent custody of the senses A good Housholder suspecting Theeves and Robbers will bee sure to keep his doors and windows fast And we knowing that our senses are the doors and windows of our souls must look to these doors lock them barre them bolt them fast that the Devil enter not this way True it is that the inside must first be made clean for out of the heart proceeds an evil eye Mark 7.22 But whosoever is resolved to keep his heart in any rightness must think it his next care to shut out and keep out whatsoever might be let in to decline it and turn it from God again What made the holy Prophet Psal 119.37 pray so earnestly that God would turn his eyes from beholding vanity but that hee knew that even a good heart such as his was could never hold out unless the outward senses especially the eyes which by a Synecdoche are there put for the rest both because they are special factors of the soul and because of the multitude of their objects and in regard of the quickness of sight above all the rest of the senses laid together were well safe-guarded Can the heart or Market-place of a Town or City be safe from the siege of the enemy if the Gates be cast open or the Wall demolished or the Ramparts bared of their sence and munition Why did Job make such covenants with his eyes but that he knew that without such a sence every object would be as a snare to entrap his soul Job 31.1 Nay let an heart never so seasoned with grace suffer the senses to leak the soul is in danger of shipwrack Was there ever heart of ordinary man or woman more innocent or more filled
is when a man useth any superstitious or diabolical means for the effecting of his desire which hee knows neither in themselves not from Gods institution have any such power to effect things but from the power of the Devil a● the use of Charms or spells figures character An●●ie● S●●atching of a Witch or the like which having no power in themselves not by Gods Ordinance can do no good but by a secret saith in the Devil who by Gods permission puts power in them to heal men for their delusion Secret consent unto the Devil is yet more common than the former though the former bee the common cure of common people namely when Satan secretly suggesteth and offereth to make a Covenant and bargain with a man without any expresse form of contract but by inward temptation putteth the motion into the heart as of Judas that if he will use such an unlawfull means or upon such a condition hee will effect his purpose which hee earnestly desireth to attain now the party blinding his own judgement by the eagerness of his affection gives his consent to Satan and accepts the condition which mutual and silent consent of party with party is a real bargain and covenant Satan solicites the heart and the heart consents to Satan here is a secret compact by which numbers of men are in league with the Devil that would bee loath to bee thought so to bee Yea numbers there are that receive the greatest part of their earthly portion at the hands of the Devil by vertue of this compact secretly beleeving or consenting unto him Vse 1. This serves to let us see the difference between Gods gifts and the Devils in four things 1 Gods gifts come all from Grace and Love hee freely bestows his blessings for his love is everlasting before our own being and our inheritance is eternal above our merit and in the Heavens above our reach But Satans gifts proceed out of his endless hatred and are wages of unrighteousness 2 Gods gifts are derived to us by good and warrantable means diligence labour prayers Satans for the most part by wicked means Gods conditions are profitable and safe Satans hurtful and dangerous by the breach of some Commandement by impiety or injustice 3 Gods gifts are first bestowed upon us and then obedience is required as a testification of Thankfulness not as merit Satans are after our work as a merit and wages of sin first fall down and worship mee and then I will give thee all these things 4 Gods gifts are in mercy for our salvation and comfort and incouragement in his service Satans to draw us from his service and to drag us to destruction Use 2. Let this Doctrin make us afraid to receive any thing from the hand of the Devil and accept of nothing but God offers For 1 God is more able and willing to do us good than the Devil is unless wee think with those wicked ones that it is in vain to serve the Lord. 2 An enemy is never so dangerous as when hee flattereth and fawneth hee never kisseth but killeth with Joab or betrayeth with Judas his gifts are dear bought his conditions are intollerable hee will have a better thing for it even our pretious souls 3 A little from Gods hands is far better than if wee could receive all the World and the glory of it at the Devils for this comes with blessing with Promise with Contentment with good conscience so doth not the other Therefore bee the just mans portion small or great it is ever pretious it hath no sorrow added to it as Solomon speaketh Quest How may I know I receive any thing from the Devil Answ When any thing is gotten by the breach of any Commandement of God as by Swearing Lying Deceit Oppression and the like this is a gift of the Devil and the wages of unrighteousnesse Use 3. Note here how like the Usurer is to the Devil the Devil saith hee will give so the Usurer saith hee will lend which should bee free as gift but then comes a condition of ten in the hundred which is more than the lending is worth Satan is an enemy to all charity and so is hee The like may bee said of Covetous men who will do no good but where they look for return of the like or more as like the Devil as may bee and altogether unlike to God who doth good where hee can receive none sowes where hee reaps not Use 4. See the misery of men who accept of Satans profers 1 Such as are in open league with him as Wizzards who bind themselves to renounce God and their Baptism and Redemption by Christ and to beleeve in the Devil to expect aid from him and give him Body and Soul for that help which is the substance of the solemn Leagues made by such limbs of Satan hee is of the sure side with them they can gain nothing by him unless hee gain themselves first And such by Gods Law ought not to live 2 Worldly-minded men with whom hee deals as with Esau hee gives them a messe of pottage but on condition to sell their birth-right a silly match is made presently an exchange of Earth for Heaven 3 Men impatient in Losses or sicknesse who run to the Witch as not knowing what to do with themselves But Satan never easeth the body of temporal pains but to cast the Soul into eternal 4 Ambitious and discontented persons that take preferments of Satan upon base conditions Absolom shall have a Kingdome on condition hee will rebell against his own Father Zimri a Captain under Baasha 1 King 16.10 shall have the Kingdome of Israel if hee will rebell and slay his Master Discontented Papists shall divide the Land among themselves if they will blow up the Parliament-House Now if wee would avoid the dangerous compacts with Satan let us observe these rules 1 Beware of prophanenesse which is a sin where men carelesly lose Heaven and the joies thereof for these lower and earthly things as Esau to satisfy his lusts despised the blessing Heb. 12.16 Let there bee none such amongst us 2 Beleeve the truth of Gods profers and promises to relye on them and thou shalt bee senced from Satans lies 2 Thess 2.10 3 Consider how easily men pour out themselves for Balaams wages Covetousness carries away their whole heart and yet in the end they are deceived as hee was instead of his reward he was slain in his return homeward Numb 31.8 4 Consider how little joy there is in that which is received at the Devils hand neither Ahab nor his posterity injoyed Naboths Vineyard Judas brought back his thirty peeces and hanged himself According to that of Solomon The wicked resteth not that which hee taketh in hunting 5 Moderate thy affections not to desire the Kingdomes of this World and the glory of them but a far more glorious Kingdome in the World to come and all these transitory matters onely to help thee forward to that The
●farre off whilst your Country shall be reaping the encrease and your self the comfort of those hopeful seeds which every one that know you acknowledge with gladness in you Thus humbly craving pardon for my boldness I commend this Book to your Worships acceptance which for the whole argument containing a plain unfolding of the most grounds and main pillars of our Religion is worthy your respect and your selves with your vertuous Ladies and hopeful Children together with all your studies and endeavours for the Church or Common-wealth to the rich blessing of God who fill your hearts with heavenly wisedome and preserve you both blameless till his appearing Amen Your Worships to be commanded THOMAS TAYLOR Watford July 20. AN EXPOSITION UPON S. Peters Sermon BEFORE CORNELIUS ACTS 10.34 c. Vers 34. Then Peter opened his mouth and said Of a truth I perceive that God is no accepter of persons 35 But in every nation hee that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted of him 36 Yee know the word which God hath sent to the children of Israel preaching peace by Jesus Christ which is Lord of all 37 Even the word which came through all Judea beginning in Galilee after the baptism which John Preached 38 To wit how God annointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power who went about doing good and healing all that were oppressed of the Devil for God was with him 39 And wee are witnesses of all things which hee did both in the land of the Jews and in Jerusalem whom they slew hanging him on a tree 40 Him God raised up the third day and caused that hee was shewed openly 41 Not to all the people but unto the witnesses chosen before of God even to us which did eat and drink with him after hee arose from the dead 42 And hee commanded us to preach unto the people and to testify that he is ordained of God a judge of quick and dead 43 To him also give all the Prophets witness that through his name all that beleeve in him shall receive remission of sins THe occasion of this worthy Sermon breathed not only by an Apostolike spirit but from such an instrument also as was worthily accounted a Pillar of the Church Gal. 2.9 is laid down in the former verse which containeth an abridgement of the most of the Chapter going before included in these three points 1 Cornelius his obedience in sending for Peter Then that is having so good a ground even a Commandement from God by the ministery of an Angel vers 5. I sent for thee to Joppa which was somewhat above thirty miles from Caesaria Immediately as soon as ever I had received the Commandement Cyprian without delay yea or deliberation which being dangerous divine things admit not of Secondly his kind entertainment of Peter to encourage him and thou hast well done to come Thirdly his preparation and readiness of himself and his to heat whatsoever God by Peters ministery shall enjoyn them Now therefore wee all hee would have that holy doctrin communicated to his family friends and kinsfolks here present before God the place of Gods pure worship is the place of his presence to hear with attention understanding affection and obedience for all these go to the hearing ear all things for that is sound obedience which is universal to one Commandement as well as another every one being of like authority and necessity that are commanded thee of God for Peter himself m●st bee confined within his Commission and speak onely what God commandeth neither are hearers bound to receive any thing else The Apostle Peter by this speech perceiving both the occasion and scope of their meeting as also the readiness and attention of his hearers addresseth himself to speech Then Peter opened his mouth and said The phrase of opening the mouth some think to bee but a more full kind of speech Pleon●smus as wee say I heard it with mine ears or I saw it with mine eies But wee must conceive it rather to bee fetched from the Hebrews who in this form of speech signifye not the uttering of any trivial or vulgar matter or in a slight or carelesse manner but the relation of some excellent matter of great moment and that in grave and serious manner and not without premeditation and preparation such as is fit to attend things of worth and weight Thus is it used Psal 78.2 I will open my mouth in a Parable I will declare sentences of Old Job 33.1 Behold I have opened my mouth my tongue hath spoken in my mouth my words are in the uprightness of my heart and my lips shall speak pure knowledge Yea our Lord Jesus himself when hee begun his most heavenly Sermon on the Mount Matth. 5.2 is said to open his mouth and say Whence 1 wee have the Doctrin in the Sermon following commended unto us to be for the matter of it grave and high and neerly concerning the salvation of men wherein are laid down the main grounds of all Religion and whatsoever wee are to beleeve concerning Christ unto salvation as wee shall see when wee come to open the several points 2 Wee are secretly incited that seeing the Holy Ghost hath opened the mouth of such a worthy instrument wee are also to open our ears yea our hearts to let in the matter following that as it proceeded out of the treasury of a good and sanctified heart so wee also may hide it in good hearts as in good treasures to bring it forth as our needs and occasions shall require 3 Ministers must come with their mouthes open and not onely not to be dumb dogs which cannot or seal up their lips and will not protest against the sins of the times but also must have care to speak the words of wisdom judgement sobriety for if the holy men of God Prophets Apostles nor the Son of God himself did not preach without preparation and due consideration both of what how and to whom they spake how much more should ordinary ministers use all diligence in fitting themselves to speak from God and for God and even as God himself would speak to his people 4 Every Christian may hence also take up his duty namely that hee never open his mouth but to edification For it is attributed to every iust man that his mouth speaketh wisdome and his tongue talketh of judgement Psa 37.30 he judgeth of his speeches before he let them pass the doo● of his lips and of the vertuous woman it is said Shee openeth her mouth with wisdome and the law of grace is in her tongue Prov. 31.26 Now the Sermon following consisteth of three parts The parts of the Sermon three The first is an entrance or preface in the two first verses 34 35. 2 The Proposition or Narration that Jesus Christ was the Messias now exhibited in the flesh and Lord of all vers 36. 3 A confirmation of that narration partly from the Apostles and
The Herodians could say that Christ taught the way of God truly because he respected not the face of man Mark 12.14 What a straight charge giveth the Apostle Paul to Timothy that he should preferre no man in his ministry and doe nothing with partiality 1 Tim. 5.21 It was a worthy commendation of Levi that the law of truth was in his mouth iniquity was not found in his lips he walked with God in peace and equity and so turned many from iniquity Mal. 2.6 Whereas on the contrary what a wicked thing it is to preach for hire reward favour and yet lean upon the Lord See in Micha 3.11 3 Ordinary Professors may not accept persons 1 Not in civil things For when elections offices and common benefits are passed and bestowed partially for friendship money kindred favour or entreaty this is the ruine of all societies and a bringer in of all corruption especially when men have taken oathes to a Corporation to the contrary the sin is like an infolded disease more incurable and dangerous 2 In matters of religion much less notwithstanding this sin be many ways committed As 1 To have the faith of God in respect of persons which the Apostle James noteth in this instance Jam. 2.2 When a man with a gold ring or goodly apparrel be he never so wicked is magnified and advanced above another who is not so outwardly gaudy but inwardly arrayed with the white garments of Christs righteousness and adorned with the Jewels of faith love holiness and sincerity which the world taketh little knowledge of 2 To accept the word because he is a man of pomp that bringeth it a rich man or a friend the Corinths were justly blamed for partial hearing and holding some to Paul some to Apollos some to Cephas 1 Cor. 3.4 who is Paul who is Apollos who is Cephas are not they all Ministers by whom yee beleeve Ahab will not hear Micah because he hateth his person but he shall justly fall for it at Ramoth Gilead 1 King 22.37 3 To reject the profession of religion because it wanteth countenance and credit at most hands and a few poor ones only receive it Many Protestants can hear us justly confute the Popish doctrine and practice in that they embrace their religion in respect of persons that is of the outward appearance of it because they pretend a perpetual succession consent of Councils defence of Princes antiquity universality the most part of Europe having generally taken the mark of the Beast in their hands and foreheads and yet the same men see not how themselves are slipt into the same Popish error that refuse one course because it wants outward supporters and props and chuse that by which they may swim with the stream they hate Popery because the Laws hate it and love religion because it is now crowned established and establisheth their prosperity 4 To disdain the persons of poor professors which is so general and common a sin as that nothing can they doe or speak but it passeth much unjust censure nay things by them exceeding well and holily performed are so farre from being drawn into example as that thereby they can bee traduced Wherein yet they are conformed unto the Son of God the head of their profession whose powerful doctrine and mighty works were carped at and depraved because they knew his Father his Mother himself at the best but a Carpenters Son not brought up at study and learning For example how was that great work of healing a man miraculously so farre from affecting the Jews as that they fell very foul and were angry with him and the reason is rendred by our Saviour Christ Joh. 7.23 24. Because they judged according to the outward appearance and not with righteous judgement concerning him 5 For professors themselves to look too bigge upon some meaner ones as they conceive but by the Gospel members of Christ and his Kingdom as well as they Isa 65.1 Christ who preached to the poor as well as the rich hath spoken to their hearts as well as their own and hath equalled them or perhaps made them superiour in graces to the other Now should not those that profess God herein resemble him who though he bee high and excellent inhabiting eternity and dwell in the high and holy place yet he looks to the humble and lowly yea and dwels also with him that is of a contrite and humble spirit Isa 57.15 To think too basely of him whom God chuseth is to erre from Gods righteous judgement and what can the blind world doe more disgraceful to the profession than to pass by the graces of God as not knowing what they mean 6 Not to speak here of Popish spirits who seek to disgrace our Religion because Artificers and simple women are as they say Scripturers not considering that in Christ neither male nor female are rejected Gal. 3.23 and that God chuseth even weak and foolish things to confound the wise and mighty and the poor ones of the world to be rich in faith 1 Cor. 1.26 27. Vse 2. If God accept not persons for outward respects If outward things could bring us into acceptance with God we might see our hearts on them why should any outward thing gain our hearts our affections our studies seeing if we could gain them all we are never the further in Gods books Many are ready to say oh God loveth them and judge themselves highly in savour because he suffereth his light to shine upon their habitations their hands find out wealth they are encreased in possessions and prospered in their labours peaceable in their houses without fear therefore doth pride compass them as a chain But with one word doth the wise man shatter down all the pillars of this foolish erection Eccles 9.2 No man knoweth love or hatred of all that is before them And if outward things could commend a man to God Antiochus Nebuchadnezzar Nero and such wicked Tyrants had been highest in favour with him whose feathers hee pluckt whose pride hee brought low making them spectacles of his vengeance to all the world who for their outward greatness had been the terrours of the world And yet much less should these things swell the hearts of men with pride above others who perhaps have a better part in Heaven than themselves The proneness unto which sin the Lord perceiving he hath expresly charged that the rich man should not glory in his riches nor the strong man in his strength Jer. 9.24 but if any man glory let him glory in this that he understandeth and knoweth me All other rejoycing is not good that is is hurtful and perilous besides the vanity of such vain boasting common experience shewing that the higher scale is always lightest We must stand naked in Gods Iudgement seeing no outward thing can commend us to him Vse 3. If God accept no man for outward things then when we enter into Gods judgement we shall appear naked stript of all outward
all other mens And here is to be observed a plain difference between Christs anointing and all mens besides For whereas all other shadowed anoyntings were imperfect and some had more gifts bestowed and some lesse but none all nor all in one degree Christ was perfectly anoynted and even in his Human nature was adorned with gifts without measure for God gave not him the Spirit by measure Joh. 3.34 and not only with gifts but all gifts in the highest degree above all his fellows Psal 45. men or Angels in none of which ever dwelt the fulnesse of the God-head bodily as it did in him Coloss 2.10 2 Whereas all other received gifts only for themselves and could not by their gifts make others Kings as they were or Priests or Prophets Christ was so anoynted with the Holy Ghost and with power that he could impart his gifts to others in such manner and measure as they might become like unto himself that look as the oyl which was poured out upon Aarons head run down by his beard even to the skirts of his garment and so sweetned his whole body even so such abundance of grace was poured as out of a full horn upon Christ the head of his Church as it distilleth from him to the sweetning and perfuming of all his body to make the same acceptable in the sight of God This the Evangelist expresseth Joh. 1.16 Full of grace of truth and of his fulnesse we receive grace for grace Coloss 2.10 In him dwelleth the fulnesse of the God-head bodily and yee are compleat in him Quest But when was Christ thus anoynted Ans The anoynting of Christ is two-fold 1 In respect of his gifts and with these he was anoynted by the very union of his two Natures into one Person in the Wombe of the Virgin from the first moment of his conception for being admirably conceived by the Holy Ghost his Humane nature was anoynted by the Divine uniting it self thereunto 2 In respect of his calling to the exercise of those gifts and this was then compleat when in the thirtieth year of his age at his Baptism he was solemnly inaugurated by a voyce from Heaven by the opening of the Heaven and the descending of the Spirit of God in a visible shape abiding upon him not that be wanted the Spirit before but that herein as in the former respect also a main difference might be put between his and the anoynting of all that went before who neither were anoynted in the Wombe nor by the union of the Deity nor by any other than material oyl whereas hee was anoynted with the Holy Ghost lighting upon him And this was that which was prophesied before of him Isa 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because hee hath anoynted me that I should preach c. In the exposition of which place when Christ begun his Ministery in Galilee he said This day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears Luk. 4.17 Hence we learn None can bee cap●●le of the Office of a Redeemer or Mediator but Ch●ist because none was so anoynted as he 1 That Christ was and is an all-sufficient Saviour and Redeemer for being to this purpose anoynted with the Holy Ghost and with power he cannot but be able fully to work and absolve the work of mans redemption This is not a work to be committed to any King or Emperour nor the greatest state and Potentate in the earth no nor to any Angel or Archangel in Heaven none of these are fit for it because none are capable of this anoynting with the Holy Ghost and with power but hee alone who therefore is able to subdue all the Devils of Hell though they come rushing upon him all at once to overthrow all the armies of Hell Sin Death and Damnation assaulting himself and members with all their might and force in a word able to make his enemies although principalities and powers never so mighty and never so cruel his very foot-stool 1 A greater King than Salomon is here who not only can tread down his enemies but give us strength also so to doe who not only can give us Laws but of his fulnesse grace to keep them God hath anoynted him King and set him upon his Throne and endued him with rare Gifts fit for government in all which regards wee owe unto him simple and absolute obedience 2 A farre more excellent Priest also than Aaron is here he is not anoynted to offer the bloud of Bulls or Goats but to offer himself a sweet smelling Sacrifice and that not often but once for all Heb. 8.6 neither doth he offer only this sacrifice but by this spirit and power with which he is anoynted he applieth it to his Church neither need he offer for himself as they because he was a holy harmlesse and undefiled High Priest Heb. 7.26 neither doth he only pray for his Church but meriteth also to be heard is never denied neither ever dyeth but liveth for ever to make intercession for them vers 25. 3 A more famous Prophet than Moses is here anoynted he was but a servant in the house this is the Son Moses was but the Instrument this is the Author of the word he delivereth Moses could teach but the ear this Prophet teacheth the heart Moses was a Minister of the outward Circumcision this Circumciseth or rather baptizeth with the Holy Ghost and with fire let not us therefore despise him that speaketh from heaven for if they escaped not which refused Moses that spake on earth much more shall not we escape if we turn away from him that speaketh from heaven Heb. 12.25 And can we want reason 1 In his anoynting we are commanded by a voyce from Heaven hear him Mat. 17.5 2 He delivereth the whole will of his Father we shall therefore be perfectly taught if we hear him 3 We may safely rest in his Doctrin because with him are the treasures of wisdome 4 In a word hee hath only the words of life everlasting and whither should we goe Joh. 6.68 Secondly hence we learn That seeing every beleever is anoynted with Christ Every Christian must partake of Christ his anoynting and in Christ we must all be careful to find this holy oyl running down from the head upon us the members 1 Joh. 2.27 The anoynting which yee receive of him dwelleth in you And indeed our very name of Christians putteth us in minde that we must have our measure of that oyl of grace which was poured on Christ without measure so as if we carry the name and title of Christ wee must see that the nature and gifts of Christians appear in our lives Revel 1.6 hee hath made us Kings and Priests unto God And it was long before prophesied of the Church of the New Testament that the sons and daughters of it shall Prophesie Joel 2.28 and all this by vertue of this anoynting Adde hereunto that Christ is not perfectly anointed till his Church bee for Christ
seeing God doth not extraordinarily save men where the ordinary means are afforded or offered the neglect of this means is to despite great salvation and to make themselves unworthy of life eternal And from the evidence of truth I avouch against every soul that turneth his ear from hearing the word preached that hee despiseth the pardon of the King of Heaven hee refuseth life and salvation offered hee chooseth death and forsaketh his own mercy Joh. 10.27 hee is no sheep of Christ for then would hee hear his voice Joh. 8.47 and if hee were born of God hee would hear the words of God Secondly The object of this Ordinance or what wee must Preach Christ the matter of our preaching and that is Christ The scope of the whole Scripture is Christ and it is wholly resolved into him The Law that is a School-master to Christ for by convincing of sin and making the sinner exceeding sinful it leadeth him forth of himself to seek salvation in Christ The Gospel preacheth nothing but Christ and him crucified for sin 1 Cor. 2. Wee preach Christ the power of God and the wisdome of God Hence is called the Gospel of Jesus Christ Mark 1.1 and the word of Christ Col. 3. not onely because it is from him being God a● an ●●h●●ent cause and preached by him as the chief Teacher of his Church but also for the material cause which is Christ The Apostle Paul calleth it the word of Truth n●t onely for the truth of it but because it publisheth that eternal Truth Jesus Christ as also the word of the cross not onely because the cross ordinarily attendeth the faithful preaching and profession of it but because the matter of it is Christ crucified 1 Cor. 2. Quest What is it to preach Christ Answ It standeth in two things To preach Christ wherein it stande h 1 In plain manner to preach the docttrin of Christ concerning his Person his Natures his Offices and the execution of them from his incarnation to his ascension 2 In powerful manner so to apply this Doctrin to every hearer that every one may feel a change to follow both in his heart and life For to teach onely the History of Christ his Doctrin his Miracles his Life his Death is not the full teaching of Christ for thus the unbeleeving Jews know Christ and the Infidel Turks can easily come to this knowledge of him But to reach Christ as the truth is in Christ is to apply every particular to the heart of a sinner that hee may bee framed to conversion and repentance which is the most difficult labour of the Ministery and most to bee striven in Many Teachers who can choose hard Texts and make learned discourses and shew much dexterity of wit reading and humane literature have not thus learned Christ themselves not can after such a lively manner teach him to others And pitty it is to see that whereas so great an Apostle as Paul who wanted not Arts Tongues and humane Learning desired to know nothing but Christ and him crucified among the Corinths themselves it should bee the study of many men to shew the knowledge of any thing rather than of Christ and how they may paint out themselves rather than Christ in their Preaching Is not the end of preaching to make Disciples of Christ Mat. 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was it instituted to please the ear or to prick and pence the heart Let the Minister therefore strive to ransack the hearts of men with whom hee is to deal that discovering their secret things they may fall down and say God is in him indeed Let him think hee hath spoken the word of Christ when hee hath both taught him and led his hearers unto him And this will not bee done but by the plainnesse of words and evidence of the Spirit It is thought a reproach to preach a plain Sermon whereas indeed that is the best Sermon which teacheth Christ most plainly 1 By true interpretation of Scripture 2 By wholesome savory and proper Doctrin gathered thence 3 By sound application of that Doctrin for the information of mens judgements and reformation of their lives where Christ crucified is thus held out there need no wooden Images nor Pictures nor the real sacrifice of the abominable Mass to put men in mind of him 2 Hearers may hence learn to judge of themselves whether they have heard aright or no. And then have you heard well when you not onely know that which you did not before but when you beleeve more love more hope more and are more changed than before When you find our Sermons as the glass wherein you see and discern the true estate of your souls when you are cast into the form of this Doctrin when your Lusts stoop and yeeld to this Scepter of Christ without this no knowledge is saving but all our preaching and your hearing tendeth to damnation if yee know these things blessed are yee if yee do them Joh. 13.17 The Apostles commanded in special to teach the doctrin of the last judgement Reasons The third point is what is the particular Doctrin which the Apostles and wee in them are so straitly enjoyned to preach and that is the Article of Christs comming again to judge the quick and the dead And surely it is not without reason that our Saviour should wish them to insist in this doctrin above others 1 Because this being the last work of Christ remaining to be done after his ascension it could not be so easily beleeved as those things which were ●●re●●y done and accomplished being still in fresh memory and so much the less deniable by how much they were still fixed even in the sences of all those who were eye-witnesses of the same And therefore hee would have his Apostles careful to help the weakness of mens faith in the expectation of his return to judgement by much and often beating upon it as a point that needeth more instance and perswasion than such as being past and so sensibly confirmed by many hundreds and thousands as they were are far more easily apprehended and beleeved 2 The Scriptures teach that the remembrance of this judgement to come is a notable means to quicken the godly in their duty to work in them a reverent fear and shake out security which breedeth hardness of heart therefore did the Apostle Paul considering the terrors of the Lord 2 Cor. 5.11 provoke both himself and others unto their Duty and no marvail seeing the children of God have even at the consideration of more particular judgements been stricken with the fear of the Almighty The Prophet Habakkuk when hee heard but of judgements to come saith That his belly trembled his lips shook and rottennesse entered into his bones Habak 3.16 And David being a noble King hath these words my flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I am afraid of thy judgements Psal 119.120 A special example whereof wee have in that famous
shall gild no matters here for what shall gold or silver pearls or jewels doe when Heaven and earth shall bee on a light fire Here shall be no sanctuaries nor priviledged persons or places to hinder the course of justice hence shall be no appeals but every person shall receive an eternal sentence of every cause according to the truth and equity of it for else the Judge of all the world should not doe right Vse 1 To comfort Gods children Gods children who here have all sentences pass agai●st them shall have justice at this day who in this world are herein conformed unto Christ for the most part causes and sentences passe against them and their light is darkned their innocency by the might and malice of the wicked trodde● down but then shall they be sure of the day God will cause their uprightnesse to break out as the Sun in his strength for when wickednesse shall ruin the sinner into Hell righteousnesse shall deliver their souls from death 2 To teach them to possesse their souls in patience when they see the confusions that are in the world to beware of revenge but commit all as Christ himself did to him that judgeth righteously Wee must be content for a while to see our righteous waies depraved our good repaied with evil by evil men and bee so far from thinking hence that there is no providence o● care in God over his Children as that wee must necessarily conclude hence this judgement day Observe the rule Eccl. 3.16 When thou seeest in the pla●e of judgement wickednesse and iniquity in the place of justice think in thy he●rt surely God will udge the just and the wicked for there is a time for every purpose and work and Chap. 5.7 If in a Countrey thou seest oppression of the p●or and the defraud●ng of judgement and justice bee not astonied at the matter for hee that a● higher than the highest regardeth it The same ground do the Ap●stles ●ft●n lay to raise this same exhortation unto patience in induring wrongs as Phil 4.5 Let your patient mind bee known unto all men the L●rd 〈◊〉 at hand Jam. 5.7 Bee yee also patient and settle your hearts for the c●mming of the Lord d●aweth neer As if these holy men had said with one m●uth look not to hav● your right here in this World as neither the wicked have their liv●e but wait the appointed time as the Husband-man doth for the we●ks of Harvest and this time is the comming of the Lord before which ti●e neither is the full recompense of righteousnesse given to the Saint● not punishment rendred unto the wicked in the full measure of it Grow n●t weary of well doing though yee meet with nothing but discouragements not out of love with the practice of piety although the world ha●e you f●r it as it did your head before you for in due season ye shall reap ●f yee faint not 3 This teacheth men carefully to look to all their works and waies that they bee just and justifiable The works and words of men which shall abide the tryal of that d●y must now be tryed before h●nd such as will hold water as wee say For there is a day of tryal when all those causes which they have by Mony Friends or wicked policy contrived and over-wayed in shall be brought about again into a clear light and put into the ballance of equity it self where they shall bee found too light And think seriously with your selves how those cause● words and actions will abide the tryal of that day which even for the present can bring no sound comfort to the heart but rather heaviness to the heart accusation and guiltinesse to the conscience fear in the thoughts and shame in the face if any man should know how impiously and injuriously they have been contrived how many Oppressions Wrongs Cruelties Usuries Revengeful sutes onely commensed to make men spend their goods and lose their peace how much of many mens estates would give a loud witn●ss against their owners but that men will not so long before hand trouble themselves with such thoughts Well look to thy self whosoever thou art If thy conscience now accuse thee or can accuse thee but thou wilt either stifle it or stop thine ears against the cry of it know that it hath a voice and will do good service to this Judge one day a thousand witn●sses cannot do more than it will do it will bring back old reckonings which Christ hath not reckoned for and set them in order before thee when thou that canst find none now shalt have leisure enough to look into them but all to the breaking of thy heart and increase of thy torment that thou didst not till too late look into thy reckonings Now to all such as mind hereafter to look into so main a business as this is The touchst●ne of this tryal is the word of God I will for the present commend onely one rule whereby they may discern whe●her their actions will abide the tryal that abideth them and that is this If the Word of God do now approve them they will then bee justifiable but whatsoever word or action hath passed from thee for which thou ●a●st not bring thy ground thence the same will cast thee in judgement This is that our Saviour telleth the Jews The word that I speak shall judge you at the last day J●h 12 48. The str●ctne●s of th● l st j●dgement 1 In regard o● pe●sons judged Thirdly This judgement of Christ shall bee most strict and accurate 1 In regard of the persons that shall bee judged who shall bee inquired into and brought to give accounts of themselves not onely generally as men or Chri●tians but in special according to the particular places and courses of life wherein they were set in this world For example publike persons must give account for themselves and others that have been committed unto them Magistrates for their People Ministers for their Flocks both of them how they entred how they ruled how they walked in and out before their people what faithfulness they used in discovering and discountenancing sin and ungodlinesse how diligent they have been to draw and force men to the keeping of the two tables how they have acquitted themselves from communicating in other mens sins and whether they have faithfully in their places denounced and executed the judgements of God whilest both of them have stood in the room of God In like manner private men must bee countable not onely for themselves but or all those that are under their charge as Fathers for the education of their Children Masters for the instructing and governing of their Servants and Family Tutors for their care or negligence towards such as are committed unto them for the rule of the Law is general and will take fast hold upon many a soul that think it enough to look to themselves that whosoever hindreth not that sin which hee can hinder
it for this being as Queen among the vertues goeth not alone but with all the train of vertues as hand-maids attending upon her The chief of them are these four 1 A true knowledge of the Word of God acknowledging it in part and in wh●le to bee the truth of God and that himself is straightly bound to believe and embrace the same and that hee hath a special part in the promise of grace and life by Christ in which grace he resteth himself daily growing up in the certainty and assurance of his salvation 2 A sound ●oy of the heart which the Apostle Peter calleth unspeakable and glorious breaking out into thankful praises in that the Lord hath begun 〈◊〉 ●iness by making Christ his Wisdome Righteousness Sanctification and 〈◊〉 ●tion The Poor Blind and Lame persons of whom wee read in the 〈◊〉 never leaped more joyfully when they had met with Christ and had 〈◊〉 ●s opened and their limbs restored by him than hee that hath met with him and received him into his heart to enlighten him to quicken him and to heal him of all his infirmities How gladly did Zacheus receive Christ with what joy of heart findeth any man the hidden pearl Mat. 13.44 how did the Eunuch converted go away rejoycing Act. 8. And all this is because they can value such a commodity as this is which they see God hath made their own for if they either knew it not or not to bee theirs they could not thus joy in it 3 Christian Hope is another hand-maid of Faith for so the Apostle teacheth Rom 5.2 Being justified by Faith wee have peace c. wee rejoyce under the hope of the glory of God For this is the special work of hope to wait for and rejoyce in the expectation of the glorious appearing of the Lord Jesu And hence is it that whereas unbeleevers are glewed to the earth and cannot think of Heaven but either with sorrow of a formal and false joy and what marveil is it that those who have no better should set their hearts upon the worse beleevers have preserved in them a willingness to leave this World and to bee with Christ which is best of all yea so sweet is their present tast of Christ through Faith and Hope that they are unquiet till they bee filled with the fruition of his fulness being often in his absence sick of love and pine away till they bee with him whom their soul loveth 4 An assured trust relying upon God beleeving hi● word of promise to raise and feed the heart of threatning to shake it and cast it down and submitting it se●f to the counsel and good pleasure of God because his faith hath let him see the truth the wisdome the equity and righteousnesse of all these Such a mans heart setteth nothing above God in prosperity it distrusteth not but hath God for his God in adversity it indeavoureth in all things to walk with God it is a sweet usher and disposer of the whole life so as it is most obedient to the word and most full of comfort and sweetness to it self The fourth mark or note or true Faith is taken from the infallible fruits IV. The infallible fruits of it four and effects of it which are many I will onely note four of the principal First it frameth and fitteth the own habitation it purifieth the heart Act. 15. it suffereth not unclean thoughts unlawful lusts or wandring motions to harbour there it guideth the affections of Love Hatred Joy Sorrow and the rest that a man love nothing more or so much as God and his Image hee hateth not mens persons but their sins and no mans sin so much as his own hee rejoyceth in nothing so much as in doing the will of God this is as his meat and drink hee sorroweth for nothing in the world so much as for offending so good and patient a God This pure heart also guideth the words with wisdome and maketh it his chief study how to preserve with faith good conscience in every thing Act. 24.16 Secondly Faith worketh by love Gal. 5.6 bo●h towards God and towards man towards him that begat and him that is begotten yea and him that is ye● not begotten This love of God expresseth it self 1 In much thankfulness unto him who hath loved us first Our love of God express●d in three things who hath given so much even his Son and all things with him pertaining to life and godliness who hath forgiven us so much and to whom many sins are forgiven they must love much who hath done so great things for us by becomming our portion our treasure and our chief good 2 In shame for our unkindness unto him both before and even since we knew this his love in Christ and have been acquainted with his waies taking up with shame in our faces sorrow into our hearts for the sins of our youth and of our age against the law the rule of righteousness but especially against the glorious Gospel which of all other are least of served 3 In desire of that blessed fellowship of his when and where wee may never sin against him any more accounting one day within his holy of holies better than a thousand besides and much more to bee ever with the Lord and to injoy the p●easures at his right hand for evermore to bee at home with him and sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob yea with Jesus Christ himself should make us groan in our souls and say with David Oh when shall I appear in this thy presence The Spirit saith Come and the Spouse saith Come Even so come Lord Jesus come quickly The love of men by which Faith worketh discovereth it self not onely in just dealing with them as wee would bee dealt by which many civil men indued onely with civil righteousnesse have excelled in nor onely in merciful distribution of outward comforts for the releeving of the bodies of our brethren yea and of our enemies which hardlier goeth down with the unconverted than the former but also in shewing most love unto their souls in helping forward their conversion and salvation For so soon as any man is converted hee will strengthen the brethren Faith wheresoever it liveth it loveth and love being an hand giving out moveth men converted to counsel exhort rebuke admonish comfort pray and wait when God will give unto others the grace of Repentance As soon as Andrew was called hee bringeth his brother Simon to Christ No sooner had Christ found Philip but Philip finding Nathaniel hee bringeth him to ●hrist The woman at the well no sooner heareth that Christ was the Messiah but shee bringeth all the City In finding this treasure the Christian cannot hide his joy neither can any mans joy bee so full unlesse hee with others rejoyce together For it is not here as in earthly things which the more they are communicated the more are they diminished and every mans share is the less but heavenly
judgement and punishment of that sin but that now at this present time hee would bee pleased to appease his great anger so justly conceived and desist from that great judgement of the utter destroying of them threatned v. 12. as may appear both by the arguments used by him as by that hee expresly noteth the manner of this fo●giveness vers 19. as thou hast forgiven this people even from Egypt till now and forgive them even according as thou hast spoken v. 17. but how the Lord had after they came out of Egypt forgiven them appeareth Exod. 32.35 when they had made a calf and the Lord wished Moses to let him alone that hee might consume them yet by Moses intercession the Lord did not consume them but plagued them with a great plague and destruction and yet the holy man prayeth hee would forgive them as hee had done from Egypt till now And what was it the Lord had said which Moses taketh hold on namely in verse 34. of that 32. of Exod. Go now bring the people unto the place which I commanded thee behold mine Angel shall go before thee but yet in the day of my v sitation I will visit their sin upon them So as this place rightly interpreted yeeldeth no patronage to any such Popish and wicked collection Further for the second objection That death remaineth though the sin be pardone Though death remain after sin is pardoned both the fault and pun shment is removed I Answer it remaineth not as any satisfaction to the justice of God to beleevers nor as a punishment of sin to such as have their sins remitted but it hath lost his sting which is the guilt of sin and is become a remedy rather than a punishment physick rather than poyson an end of their misery and an entrance into a better life So as it still abideth firm against all such detestable devises of Popery that remission of sins carrieth with it the removal of all the guilt and punishment of sinne to such as have their parts in the same And it is lastly to bee observed in this description that I say the guilt and punishment of all sin is taken away for if any bee not remitted they bee either greater sins or lesser to remit the lesser and not the greater what were wee the better how could our salvation bee effected or perfected how could grace bee every way grace or do wee pray for remission of lesser and not of greater also seeing our selves must forgive our Brethren not only lesser offences but even the greatest A●ain to remit the greater and retain the lesser were to say that the Lord is either not s● able or so willing to forgive lesser sins as greater Shall a ma● frankly forgive a debt of thousands of pounds and will he not forgive also to the same party a few pence The Popish Church confidently avouch A bundle of P●p sh blasphemies that many sins need no remission as concupiscence which they say is not prop rly a sin albeit indeed it is the mother sin of all And all the heap of their venial sins which they say are not against but besides the commandement because they are not attended unto or deliberately done with full consent o● reason because they cannot hinder the hab●● of vertue but the act of it and that a very little nor turn us from our end but hinder so much as it is our progress unto it and because they though themselves displease God yet they make not God displeased with the party committing them for they can stand with grace and have not properly and simply the reason and respect of sin or offence therefore are they not to bee punished with eternal but only temporary punishment These need not the blood of Christ nor Grace nor confession in particular nor abs●lution nor any new habit of charity but these are easily wiped away with a little holy water or any meritorious work or by the Sacraments received or by general Confession or by a small humiliation as knocking the brest fasting almes the Lords Prayer an ave Maria or by entring into a consecrated Church or by a Bishops blessing or if all these help but a little presently after death they are all consumed in the fire of purgatory Oh horrible blasphemies derogatory to the blood of Christ which purgeth us from all sin and to the truth of the Scriptures which teach us that when wee had nothing to pay our Master forgave us our whole debt Matth. 18.32 But I have followed them too far were it not that the discovery of their impieties may bring some profit to su●h as are not so well acquainted or exer●ised in their writings Thus much of the description of this Grace The second thing propounded is what it is to receive remission of sinnes which because it implyeth a gift or oblation therefore we must know that pardon of sin is offered generally to all in the word of grace publikely preached and conferred unto beleevers not onely in the beginning of their conversion but through their whole life Now to receive this remission How remission of sin is received is when a capable that is a contrite heart by Faith which is an hand taking in receiveth Christ and all his benefits among which remission of sins is the chief Preached and published in the Gospel And this it doth on this manner 1 Upon a touch of sin and sence that without this gracious pardon there is nothing b●● 〈◊〉 p●rdition the heart beaten down beginneth seriously to meditate of the promise of m rcy in Christ and of the means of deliverance from this woful estate 2 It desireth to beleeve and wisheth that mercy to belong to it self it sendeth groans to God it hopeth for pardon and weakly applyeth the general promises of grace 3 After such desires and groans of the heart the Lord most gratiously answereth by his Spirit and by little and little settleth and quieteth the heart perswading it that Christ himself and consequently reconciliation with God doth indeed belong unto him so as he resteth in that assurance Thus the Lord will not only give us mercy but letteth us know that he doth so that our joy and peace and boldness in him might be more full Thirdly the persons receiving this remission are all beleevers Whosoever beleeve in his name whose faith intitles them to the main promise of life and all other depending thereupon Beleeve in the name of Christ why they must beleeve in his name For 1 There is no other name to be saved by In him alone is the matter of our salvation seeing remission is obtained by his bloud Ephes 1.7 2 Hee alone is God and man both which natures are necessary to our Surety by the former he hath power by the latter a right to us not only more general of propriety as the Father and Holy Ghost also have but more special of propinquity being our brother and first-born of our
comes amiss to an idle person Besides discredit bad report and poverty come as an armed man upon such a one Prov. 6.11 3 To others 3 To others whether wee bee Masters or servants as knowing that in our Calling wee are to practise most Christian duties as love to our brethren patience truth fidelity uprightness as being ever under Gods eye 3 Be not busie in other mens Callings 3 Another point of Wisdome in our Callings is not to meddle with other mens business but follow our own close 1 Thes 4.11 Study to be quiet and to do your own business And every where the Apostle reproves busie bodies who going beyond their own bounds thrust their sickle into every mans harvest and being out of their own places and business intermeddle with that which no way concerns them And these are disturbers of peace and civil tranquillity kindling and blowing up contentions for lack of other work The same rule is for women also that they bee not gadders but house-keepers Tit. 2.5 4 In earthly business carry an Heavenly minde Phil. 3.20 4 In all earthly business study to carry an heavenly minde A Christian while hee converseth in earth must have his conversation in Heaven And know that in all the ways of this present life hee ought never to step out of the way to eternal life Neither shall a man bee a loser by this course seeing wee have an express promise that if wee seek Gods Kingdome first and principally these outward things should so far as they are needful for us without such carking care bee cast upon us 5 Intend most the most necessary duties of them 5 As all duties of the Calling must bee profitable in themselves and for the publike good so the most profitable must bee most intended and specially performed A Minister must read the Word but must apply himself more to Preaching as being more necessary A Magistrate must execute Justice upon transgressors of mens Laws but especially against open transgressors of Gods Law Masters of families must provide for the bodies and health of their family but especially for the good and salvation of their souls CHAP. XII Rules of Wisdome concerning a mans estate and first for adversity THe rules of Wisdome concerning a Christian mans estate are these One general Rule for all estates is to think the present estate best for thee First General Secondly Special The general rule for all estates is this Bee prepared for any estate contented in every estate and assure thy self the present estate whatsoever it is is best for thee though not ever in thy sense yet in Gods gracious and wise ordering of it This lesson the Apostle Paul had well learned Phil. 4.11 12. I can want and abound I can bee full and hungry I have learned in all estates to bee contented The special rules are either for prosperity or for adversity Rules for affliction Concerning adversity and afflictions these are the rules of Christian wisdome 1 Consider thou art not placed here in the world by God 1 God may as well be injoyed in Adversity as Prosperity to injoy the pleasures of the World but to injoy God which thou mayest do as well in affliction as in prosperity and to cleave to him in his service looking for nothing but afflictions as a Pilgrim going to thy Country the way whereunto lyeth through afflictions This ground not laid men count troubles a strange thing 1 Pet. 4.11 and start at the mention of them as the Apostles Joh. 11.8 when they heard Christ speaking of going into Jury where the Jews had lately sought to stone him And note it to bee a corruption of the heart to bee more grieved for thine own troubles than the troubles of the Church for private than publick evils 2 Lay up strength and comforts aforehand As first Humility 2 Lay up strength and comfort aforehand to over-master and tame the pride and rebellion of our hearts and to bring in contentedness to sweeten our troubles and our labour will be well spent for if wee can relish the hardest part of our life our whole life else will assuredly bee more sweet and joyful 2 Grow up in the knowledge of God which will make thee rise up in much comfort and will bring in comfort against that confused heaviness distrust and dangerous affections and passions which else in trouble might beat us down and off him 3 Get assurance of faith which will sweetly warm the heart in the sense of Gods love in Jesus Christ The fruit of which will bee first To inable us to trust our selves with God in any estate and bee assured the Lord is with us in fire and water in the midst of the Valley of the shadow of Death Secondly to depend on him for strength Psal 23.4 for howsoever Satan would make us beleeve our affliction is greater than it is or wee are for it yet wee shall assure our hearts that the Lord hath measured it out for our strength and not above Thridly 1 Cor. 10.13 to wait upon him for a good issue and seasonable deliverance who hath promised to turn it to the best This shall keep us from fainting distrust and despair Rom. 8.28 3 In all evils of punishment take occasion to set upon the evil of sin 3 In evils of punishment to set upon evil of sin and revenge upon that complain of it to God and men murmure and grudge at nothing else If affliction bee sharper than ordinary it is sure some sin or lust addes a sting unto it But this rule mortifies sin and unruly passions and will weaken the heart and make a man say with the Church Mic. 7.9 I will bear the wrath of the Lord because I have sinned 4 Make them no heavier than God maketh them by impatience 4 Make them no heavier th●n God hath made them frowardness and looseness of heart God sometimes layes on a little finger and the froward heart lays on the whole hand and loyns to make the burden heavier with faithless heaviness and distrust which is but an addition of new and worse troubles than the former How inconsiderately do many men load themselves with troubles too too light in themselves and on the shoulders of wise men who can make a vertue of necessity and step over a number of rubs which others stoop to remove and infinitely toil themselves How do many in smaller troubles as discourtesie of neighbours unruliness of children unfaithfulness of servants smaller losses and crosses in Family-matters give place to unquietness impatience and passion till their folly have by seeking to case their burden increased it from a dram to a talent And now how unmeet are they for the service of God How unprofitable in any Christian society How sowr and heavy in countenance disguised in speech Levius sit pationus Quicquid corrigere est nosas Horat. and impotent in their behaviour All which
all as meat drink apparel recreation i● uses marriage and the like are these 1 The most indifferent action that is must bee used by warrant and leave from God Warrant is from the word leave is by prayer and thus must every creature of God bee sanctified by the Word and Prayer 1 Tim. 4.5 Our meat our apparel our houses our recreations must all bee undertaken and used First by the warrant of the word for else it cannot bee done in faith Former by the Word Rom. 14.23 and whatsoever is not of faith is sin The word must direct mee in this particular as meat apparel recreation that it is lawfull in it self and to mee or else I sin in it Sec n●ly by prayer for wee must lift up our hearts Latter by Prayer at least in the use of them all 1 In invocation for an holy use suspecting all our wayes and our inclinations to corrupt our selves in every thing 2 In thanksgiving for our liberty in all the creatures that were justly forfeited and Gods blessing in them This neglected 1 Wee have the creature Reas but want the bl ssing have bread but not the staff of bread have money but not a bag to hold it cloaths but no warmth marriage but not the comfort of it and so in the rest 2 Wee do not distinguish our selves from the brute beasts who live by things before them and never look above them to the giver 3 Wee have no title recovered in any of them but they all remain unclean as was signified in all the unclean beasts as all other had been but that they were permitted by special leave without which wee are but usurpers 4 God is not acknowledged the Authour of our life and liberties and so is deprived of his honour and homage which no Lord among men will indure in such as hold the least coppy under them The most indifferent action that is must bee done for God that is 2 The most indifferent must bee done for God to the glory and honour of God whatsoever wee eat or drink c. 1 Cor. 10.31 For while wee take our part in the comforts of the creatures God will not lose his part of them that is his glory by them Doth my eating and drinking make mee heavy and unfit for the service of God to perform it with cheerfulness here I have sinned in a lawful thing for God looks to bee served with cheerfulness and a good heart in the abundance of all things Deut. 28. v. 47. Doth my apparel tend to pride up and advance my self This is a sinful use of a lawful thing wherein I should glorifie God Do my recreations and sports not onely justle out my duties of Christianity of reading and meditating and private prayer but ingross my time so that I neglect my special calling Herein I use my liberty unlawfully and turn it into a wicked licentiousness Recreation was never ordained by God to bee an occupation but onely an help unto it 3 The most indifferent action that is must bee used in love 3 The most in●ifferent must bee used in love 1 N t offending others as well as in faith to edification as well as in sanctification This general rule is in 1. Cor. 14.26 Let all things bee done to edifying Rom. 14.21 It is evil to eat with offence and it is good neither to eat fl●sh nor to drink wine nor to do any thing whereby thy brother stumbleth or is offended or made weak and Paul would never eat rather than offend a weak brother In case of offence indifferent things lose their indifferency and become sins and must not bee done bee they never so small never so profitable never so powerfully injoyned by authority because an higher authority of God bids is nor offend our brother the conscience of our brother must bee more tender unto us than our own peace and preferment Dan. 1. ● Daniel and his fellowes refusing the Kings meat might seem very unwise and too strict for so small a thing to lose the Kings favour and their own advancement but it was not frowardness in them nor disobedience to the King but conscience and obedience to Gods commandement in a case offensive to themselves and others so they would not do the least evil for the greatest good So is this garment lawful to mee and offensive to other of Gods children Then have I no liberty in it Is this eating or drinking or Tobacco-taking lawful to me and may it offend in circumstances I must avoid occasion of offence Is this sport and recreation lawful in it self and to others but is it offensive in mee a publick man a Professor a Preacher Wisdome teacheth to refrain it So the Apostle saith All things that is indifferent of which hee there speaks are lawful but all things are not expedient 2 But building them up N●w as wee must bee far from offending any so our endeavour must bee to build up our brethren and our selves in the use of every indiffernt action Quest How may that bee Answ When in the civil use of them wee adde some spiritual meditation as Christ when hee spake of bread stirred the people to meditate on and labour for the food that abideth to eternal life So in eating and drinking wee should sometime think of feeding on Christ the true bread and water of life in putting on our cloaths of putting on Christ as a garment in putting them off of putting off the old man and the lusts thereof In Marriage of the contract between Christ and the faithful soul in our j●urnies abroa● and return home meditate with the Apostle Paul of our being from home and at home wi●h the Lord c. Thus shall wee cherish and refresh our souls with our bodies 4 The most indifferent must be used in sobriety 4 The most indifferent things must bee used in sobriety and moderation And this is 1 When wee use them as helps not hindrances to our Calling general or special but our hearts are kept by them in a fitness unto both This is our Saviours rule Luke 21.34 Take heed that your hearts bee not oppressed with surfeiting or drunkenness or the cares of this life that that day come unawares 2 When wee exceed not in them our ability and degree but square our selves to the most sob●r of our age and condition The neglect of which rule makes the feast of churlish Nabal like the feast of a King and brings soft apparel out of Kings houses into very Cottages to the great confusion of all degrees so as every man is out of order the servant more gallant than his Master or Mistress Scholars arraied in unseemly sort like Souldiers the Gentle-man like a Noble-man and the Carter like a Courtier and every Degree many degrees beyond it self 3 When wee hold them indifferent not in our judgement onely but also in affection keeping the command of these and bee sure they command not us 1