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A15525 A commentarie vpon the most diuine Epistle of S. Paul to the Romanes Containing for matter, the degeneration of our nature by Adams Fall; and the restauration thereof, by the grace of Christ. Together with the perfection of faith, and the imbecillity of workes, in the cause of iustification of elect sinners before God. For forme and maner of handling, it hath the coherence and method, the summe and scope, the interpretations & doctrines the reasons and vses, of most texts. All which, are set downe very familiarly and compendiously, in forme of a dialogue, betweene Tlmotheus [sic] and Silas, by Thomas Wilson, one of the six preachers in the cathedrall church of Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1614 (1614) STC 25791; ESTC S120148 882,533 1,268

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the law either by natural strēgth or as it is made easie by grace for then Paul shoulde not haue spoken of righteousnesse by faith but of sanctification and newnes of life which is quite besides his drift and scope which is out of Moses to commend the righteousnes of faith as is very plaine in the text Tim. But the Apostle doth not report Moses words Silas True not in so many letters and sillables for something is altered also added and taken away but in sence and meaning hee doeth alledge them and that is sufficient Tim. What is meant by saying in thy heart Sllas Thus much thinke not doubtfully within thy selfe or let not thy minde bee perplexed with wauerings thoughts and reasonings Tim. What is meant by this question who shall a seend into heauen Silas Thus much as if it were sayd Who shall goe thither for vs to bring vs word whether God bee pacified with vs and meaneth to giue vs saluation there Tim. What is meant by the other question who shall descend to the deepe Silas By the deepe is meant Hell as Reue. 9. 1. 11. 20. 1. To descend to the deepe signifies to goe downe into the place of torment the meaning is who shal go down thither to tell and assure vs that we are free from the malediction and damnation of hell and shall neuer be throwne down into that deep burning lake Tim. What are we to learne from these questions Silas First that they which sticke to their owne workes and thinke to be saued by their owne deseruings they haue wauering and vnquiet consciences troubled with doubtings tremblings and feare for that which the righteousnesse of faith speaketh not that the legall iustice doeth speake The reason of this doctrine is because the lawe which promiseth life to perfect obedience giues no power to obey it threatneth death against euery transgression but giues no remedy against any such euill and misery Therefore it must needs be that such as follow the righteousnes of the law must still be filled with anguish of Soule because their conscience witnesses vnto them that they haue not done all which the law commaunds but are transgressours manifold wayes in many thinges and so remaine perplexed and without rest Tim. What is the vse of this poynt Silas This sets foorth the miserable condition of all such as seeke righteousnes and life by their owne deedes for such can neuer haue any sounde ttanquility well may they haue benummed dead consciences but pacified conscience they cannot haue because they alwayes lack what is required by the law which condemneth to death euery fault euen the least Tim. What other thing is to be learned out of these questions Sil. That there are two maine doubtings which vse to perplex and trouble mē that are without faith in Christ the one is how to be saued and to attaine heauen The other how to escape hell and damnation And these two doubtings are continuall and necessary effects of legall righteousnesse for a man that hath not wholly kept the law must needes doubt whether hee shall haue eternall life For it is promised vpon no other condition but of exact and strict performance and he who knoweth that he hath done things against the lawe must needs bee in feare of damnation because it is threatned vnto euery sinne Tim. Haue ye yet any other instructions out of these questions Sil. Yea namely this that these doubtings are contrary and repugnant to the nature and property of faith whose property is to expell doubting as heate expels coldnesse as appeareth by Iames which tels vs that faith forbids vs to wauer Iames 1 6. and by the wordes of Paul the Apostle Rom. 4 20 21. Tim. But how then comes it to passe that beleeuers are often troubled with doubtings Silas This happens through the infirmity of their flesh and naturall weakenesse which wrestles and striues with the assurance of faith which though it be certaine and firme yet it is not perfect and full And from the imperfection of faith there comes doubting as Christ saith to his Apostles Why doubt ye o ye of little faith For the hand shaketh through palsie or some other weakenesse though the property of the hand be to holde fast so of the weakenesse of faith ariseth doubting but the property of faith is to breed affiance and confidence and to driue away doubtings and feares euen as the Sunne scatters mists Ephes. 3 12. Hebrewes 10 2. 2. Colossians 2 2. Tim. What vse is to be made of this point Silas It teacheth a maine difference betweene the righteousnesse of the law and of faith for of this springs tranquillity through the assurance of Gods loue and of the other trepidation and trembling through conscience of sinne Secondly it confutes the Papists who deny infallible assurance and certainty to bee the office of faith and destroy the very nature of faith which is to assure men Thirdly it warnes vs to detest doubting as a thing contrary to faith and out of an hatred of it to fight against it Fourthly it exhorts all men to seeke after faith by which alone they are able to get victory ouer doubtings which may well assault faith but must be ouercome by faith 1. Iohn 5 4. Tim. But from whence fetcheth faith a remedy against doubtings and feares Silas From the ascension of Christ into heauen against the doubting of saluation for if Christ be ascended and possesse heauen in our names and there make request for vs then wee must needs deny his ascension and fetch him backe from heauen againe if wee make question how to be saued Tim. Whence haue wee the remedy against the feare of condemnation Silas From the faith of Christ his death and resurrection For if Christ be dead and raised from the graue then hath he gotten victory ouer sinne death hell and Sathan Therefore what is it else but to deny his death and to bring him backe againe to the Crosse and graue if wee should greatly feare the torments of Hell Consider this well Tim. What are we to learne from hence Silas That an vnbeleeuer denies the death resurrection and ascension of Christ whatsoeuer profession he make Secondly that the articles of Christs death and resurrection and ascension be as a fortresse against infidelity doubtings and feares and serue as notable meanes and helpes to confirme and establish a Christian hearte in faith therefore they ought to be well knowne and often with good study meditated on DIAL VII Verses 8 9. But what saith it the word is neere thee euen in thy mouth and in thine heart And this is the worde of faith which we preach For if thou confesse with thy mouth and beleeue with thy heart that God raysed vp Iesus from the dead thou shalt be saued Tim. VVHat is the scope of this text Silas To commend vnto vs the righteousnesse which is by faith in Iesus Christ without
as a glorious Lady after her doth draw a traine of Christian graces which alwaies be where faith goeth before as Ruth would be whersoeuer Naomy was and righteousnesse of workes containeth all vertues in it Also the ministry of the word prayer and Sacraments though externall things yet they haue relation to these spirituall things whereof they be the helping causes or instruments to beget or increase and so belong to the kingdome The reasons why the kingdome standeth in such spirituall things is God beeing a Spirite Iohn 4 24. the things of his kingdome must bee spirituall and sutable to himselfe whoe is the King Secondly his kingdome is not of this world Iohn 18 36. therefore not in worldly but in inward heauenly things his kingdome consists Tim. What is the vse of this doctrine Silas It serues to prouoke all men with all endeuour to seeke after righteousnesse to haue their sinnes forgiuen them to be partakers of Christs iustice and to worke righteousnesse leading a iust life to get the blessing of an appeased and pacified conscience and a ioyfull heart vnder hope of glory without which we haue no fellowship with the kingdome no part in saluation and let all such as haue receiued grace to beleeue and by their faith doe receiue the iustice of Christ to bee their owne and are regenerate to liue iustly hauing peace with God and men reioycing vnder the hope of glory though but in a weake measure and with much imperfection Let them I say much comfort themselues and continually praise the God of heauen which hath imparted to them such thinges that are so necessary to true religion and eternall saluation Thirdly heere is a reproofe to such as be earnest in externall slight things and neglect the chiefe matters yea of such as rest in generall knowledge profession outward reformation of life some delight in the worde and in the brethren in a certaine zeale against superstition and prophanenes in the cōmnuication of the mysteries c. which be good things yet such as others haue had and very many haue who neuer set foote within the threshold of the kingdome whereof a man or woman shall neuer become a true member so long as they lacke regeneration and the fruites thereof righteousnesse peace and ioy Tim. What other incouragement to labour for these things Silas That not by these things as if wee could merite by them for they are effects of grace not causes of the kingdome but in these things we serue Christ and please God to serue Christ is by faith and obedience to cleaue to him After this manner Christ will be serued and God will be pleased and both wee and our doings will bee accepted of him if we fetch righteousnes from Christ alone drawing from him and his promises matter of sound tranquility and in ward cheerefulnesse indeuouring to liue vprightly and godlily Now what should wee study rather to procure then that we may serue Christ our Redeemer and please God our Creator and preseruer for it is the end of our creation redemption and conseruation to serue and glorifie Christ and to please God Therefore how earnestly should these things bee striuen for and searched after which doe inable vs to honour and please both God the Father and Christ the Sonne See how much they are deceiued which in popery doe place the seruice of God and pleasing of Christ for the most part in outward rites and ceremonies deuised by themselues whereas the Sacrifices of the law and the ordinances of the Gospell beeing seuered from these inward things are abhorred of God Esay 1 13 14 15. Mat. 7 22 23. Gods owne holye institutions are no whit auaileable to serue please Christ nay they be an abhomination if they bee not ioyned with faith c. Tim. But why doth hee say they are approued of men which haue these things seeing the world hates Gods children and thinke the worse of them because they loue and obey Christ as Caine hated Abell and the Iewes and Pharisies in the Gospell for that reason condemned Christ and his Disciples Sil. Yet euen wicked men are compelled to approue sometime to honour them which are crowned with these gifts of the Spirit as the Philistims and Hittites Abraham and Dauid and the Egyptians Ioseph and Herod Iohn the Baptist and Pilate and the Centurion Christ Foclix reuerenced Paul Howbeit in our Texte are meant men of sincere iudgement These will alwayes accept commend and giue good testimony to the faithfull as Enoch had a good report so had all the faithful Heb. 11. Learne hence that wee may not vtterly contemne the iudgement and witnesse of men Rom. 12 17. Howbeit in order we must begin at the approbation of GOD to seeke that most and first Math. 6 33. and asterward the allowance of men He is not the seruant of God which either pleaseth men rather then God or God without all care of men God first and for himselfe Men after and for God Tim. What are we to learne from verse 19 Silas First that we must pursue peace with our Brethren that is seeke it with vehement desire not coldly nor carelesly seeing peace pertaineth to Religion and saluation it must needes be eagerly followed after after the example of Abraham exercising and hunting after peace with Lot and of Dauid who sought to liue peaceably with all men Psal. 120. whose counsel is we should follow peace Psal. 34 14. Haue peace with all See Rom. 12 18. Secondly as we loue peace we must get and look after such things as belong vnto peace euen all graces which be Parents to breed or Nurses to foster peace as milde speech courteous behauiour forbearing reuenge pardoning errors passing by offences interpreting of doubtfull thinges to the best part soft aunsweres direct silence or whatsoeuer else may cause or confirme peace Thirdly we must beware of the quite contrary of all things which may be hinderances to peace as hatred enuy desire of reuenge fiercenesse busie medling debate strife whispering backbyting and tale-bearing c. as a sword point or as a Scorpion so are these to be auoyded of them that loue peace Fourthly Christians are to embrace such peace as tends to edification We are Gods house and Temple 1 Cor. 6 19. 1 Cor. 3 9. 2 Cor. 6 16. As in a naturall building many workemen ioyne their labout together to perfect one building so Christians must with ioynt care diligence and study do such things as make men better more godly and religious more strong in Faith and this is to edifie which principally pertaineth to the Ministery Eph. 4 11 12. yet reacheth euen to professors who as liuing stones must strengthen and helpe one another to Godward There is a peace in euill when persons agree in superstition heresie in vnrighteousnesse theft and cruelty as Simeon and Leui brethren in euill Herod Pilate against Christ the false Apostles against Paul agreed This is a wicked peace
may we take from this verse thus opened Sil. Heere is laide foorth the condition of weake Christians which lacke the knowledge of the word such are apt to stūble like blind men like sicke persons they be weak ready to trip and to fall vpon euery occasion This must serue to humble the infirme and weake of iudgement stirre them vp to seeke for more store of grace and light of knowledge to be able to walke more firmely Secondly it is much better in case of offence to sorbeare our liberty in things indifferent then to vse it as the saluation of a Brother is a farre more precious thing then the nourishing of our flesh or body Also thereby we preferre peace and edification to our pleasure Tim. In the 22. Verse what is meant by Faith Thou hast Faith for with M. Beza I had rather reade these Wordes by way of concession then by interrogation Hast thou faith Silas Faith signifies the knowledge and perswasion of our liberty in indifferent things as verse 14. in his owne example he expounds it These words contain another secret obiection in the behalfe of the strong thus I know and beleeue my liberty which I haue by Christ that nothing is vnpure to me why should not I prosesse it in words and expresse it in acte without respect had of others This Obiection the Apostle answeres first by granting Thou hast this Faith I yeeld it vnto thee Secondly by distinguishing thus Haue thy faith vnto thy selfe in thine owne Conscience but expresse it not to the hurt of thy Brother for this must be vnderstood necessarily enioy thy knowledge to thy edification but vse it not to anothers destruction Tim. What then shall my Faith lye hid and be smothered Silas No saith the Apostle haue it before God approoue it vnto him vse it so as one that knowes he must giue an account of it before God and comfort thy selfe in it in his sight and be thankfull to him for that knowledge which he hath giuen thee and that is fufficient in this case Thou needest not make any ostentation of it to the hurt of thy brother let it euen be enough to thee that God knowes thy faith This is like vnto that precept of Christ Math. 6 6. Thy Father that seeth in secret shal reward thee openly As in some cases and sometimes wee may hide our Prayers so the profession of our faith lest we boast vnto the danger of others Tim. What then is it lawfull for Christians to dissemble their Faith and profession of it Will it bee sufficient in time of persecution to haue Faith in his heart before God Howe then hath Christ commanded vs to confesse him before men Also see Rom. 10 10. where both faith and confession are required vnto saluation Silas Our Apostle heere speaketh neither of generall Faith by which we beleeue the whole word both of Law and Gospell nor yet of iustifying Faith whereby wee receiue Christ or the promises of Christ vnto saluation but of a particular faith whereby we beleeue something to be lawfull Secondly euen this particular faith which is a perswasion of our liberty in indifferent things is thē onely to be concealed when it cannot bee professed and practised without offence and scandall vnto our weake brother Not the profession then but the vnseasonable hurtfull profession of this faith is heere prohibited Heerewith a greeth the iudgement of Chrysostome vpon this place This text saith he is not to be vnderstoode of the faith of doctrine but of that which appertaineth to the argument in hand namely the Faith about things indifferent Touching the former faith saith hee it is written With the Mouth confession is made to Saluation Againe He that denieth me before men before my Father will I deny him This faith is oppressed if it be not expressed but the other faith about middle things is then subuerted when it is vnseasonably shewed Tim. Tell vs now what the Apostle doth in the rest of the Chapter to the end thereof Silas Hee giueth three short and pithy rules to direct both strong and weake in the vse of things indifferent The first concernes the strong onely the second the weak onely the third them both The first is set downe by way of acclamation O blessed is the man which condemneth not himselfe in that which he allowes Touching the vnderstanding of which rule note that Apostle speakes first touching a mans condemning himselfe and not beeing condemned of others or making themselues worthy to be condemned of others Secondly he speaketh of condemning and allowing in the same person not of disallowing in another what he persormes in himselfe Thirdly hee is to be vnderstood of one and the same instant whereby one man in his iudgement condemneth and in his practise alloweth one and the same thing The summe then of the rule is thus much that hee is indeede a happy man whose practise in outward acte agrees with the inward iudgement of his conscience More plainely thus In conscience to be perswaded that a weake brother is not to bee offended by vndue and vntimely exercise of our liberty so to allow this as by no contrary deede to condemne it it is the happinesse of a man not to bee accused of his heart Let all men striue for this happy condition after the examples of Iob chap. 27 6. and of Paul 2 Corinth 1 12. Tim. What is the second Rule which belongs to the weake Silas He that doubts is damned if he eate because hee eates not of faith that is not beleeuing so in his heart as hee shewes in acte The rule more at large is thus much that such a one is guilty of sinne hurts his conscience and offends God which eyther eates or doth any thing else with a wauering doubtfulnesse and not beeing well perswaded whether they doe well or ill please God or displease him A Christian which will please God and keepe his conscience pure and vnspotted must be able to discerne of that which he doth whether it bee lawfull or vnlawful according to that which is written before Let euery man be perswaded in his owne minde to doe a thing which is good and yet do it doubtingly the minde beeing tossed too and fro with diuers reasons doth pollute the action to him that doth it and makes it to be sinne lacking right rule and end for it is neyther gouerned by knowledge of the word nor done to Gods glory Let men therefore learne to resolue of their deeds before they acte it and enterpise nothing so long as ones conscience and minde is doubtfull what he may doe for so long our deeds cannot be referred to Gods praise and this very thing is enough to make it sinfull for it is sinne whatsoeuer misseth of the due end Tim. What is the third rule Silas That it is sinne whatsoeuer is not of faith where the word faith cannot bee interpreted of conscience for this interpretation is against the beginning
Iewes acquitted themselues wel for they safely kept the scriptures from falsity and corruption euen to this day and in the dayes of our Sauiour when many other faults both in manners and doctrine were laid to their charge yet they were not charged with deprauing the word DIAL II. Verse 3 4. For what though some did not beleeue shall their vnbeliefe make the faith of God of none effect God forbid Tim VVHat then is the summe of this Text Sil. An answere to a newe obiection of the Iewes which was this that the Oracles of God were in vaine committed to the Iewes and that God did delude his people with empty promises seeing many of them did not beleeue Gods worde and promises vnto which the Apostle answereth that the vnbleefe of men cannot change the trueth of God seeing it is Gods propertie to bee true whereas all men are liars naturally which constancie of God in his trueth hee proueth by testimony of the Psalme 51. 4. Tim. Expound the words contayned in the obiection to make a way thereby vnto some lessons doctrines and duties Sil. These words for what though imply this to depend and follow of the former as thus in the Oracles which GOD gaue his people there passed a mutuall couenant God on his part promising grace and life the Iewes on their part promising faith and obedience though they proued perfidious and disobedient why should this derogate from the trueth of God Whereas hee sayeth some this word distinguisheth the holy and beleeuing Fathers from the multitude of vnbeleeuers so then albeit the greatest part were perfidious and gaue no credite to these Oracles which God had left with them of credite and trust to bee both preseruers and dispensers of them yet also there was still in that people such as were elect and faithfull in respect of whome the promises were not frustrate and voyd By vnbeliefe is meant here not only their not beleeuing the things promised by God in his word but withall their rebellion in falling from God and his true worship vnto Idols and vanities and by faith vnderstand the fidelity of God or his constancy in keeping his word and promises as the Heathen Oratour hath described faith to bee a constancy and truth in obseruing sayings and couenants and herewith agreeth the notation of the word fides quia fit quod dictum est For this faith to bee of none effect is asmuch as to bee voide and vnsulfilled as who should say shall God be held vnconstant and spoyled of his truth for the infidelity and perfidiousnesse of men This introgation hath the force of a negation it is as if he saide No it is not so because whiles many were vnbeleeuers yet not a few there were to whome God fulfilled his faith and truth euen to so many as brought with them the condition of obedience Tim. What learned we out of the obiection Sil. Sundry things first all that haue Gods Oracles and heare and reade them doe not beleeue them because it is not in themselues who are all alike vnable to beleeue but in Gods purpose who hath ordained some to faith and not othersome Tim. What is the vse of this Sil. That such as doe beleeue should heerein acknowledge the free mercies of God Secondly that such as yet doe not beleeue should earnestly begge it by prayer and waite for it with patience in the constant vse of the meanes with all simplicity and diligence Tim. What other instruction from hence Sil. That the word of God as it standeth of letters and sillables hath no strength to be get faith in mens harts because many heare the sound of the word and yet neuer beleeue nay are thereby more hardened in 〈◊〉 as the Iewes in Esayes time Esa. 6. 9. Tim. Whence had the word this power to beget faith Sil. From the ordinance of God appoynting it to such an vse Secondly from the spirit of Christ working together with it the like is to bee thought of the Sacraments for the elements or the action about them hath not any force in them to encrease faith but all this dependeth vppon the will of GOD who at his good pleasure giueth grace when he will and to whome he will Tim. What vse was made of this paynt Sil. That none ought to rest in the woorke of hearing or receiuing the mysteries but must pray that the spirit of Christ may ioyn with his word and mysterle to make them effectuall for good to vs. Secondly that euery one that meaneth to profit by the worde and mysteries shoulde fitte and prepare themselues as they are commaunded in the word Tim. What other things 〈◊〉 arne we from the obiection in the third verse Sil. This though al beleeue not yet all which be within the visible Church stand bound to beleeue the word because there is a mutuall couenant betweene God and euery member of his Church for God on his part promiseth his sonne and eternall life with him this is the faith of God and we for our parts promise and vow that wee will beleeue his word and this is the faith of men The faith of God is passiuely that whereby God is beleeued so here or actiuely that whereby we beleeue God Tim. Where vnto should this serue Sil. As a weapon to fight against our naturall distrust and vnbeleefe considering that we haue vowed against this Tim. What are we taught from this second part which is the answere Silas Diuers Lessons First this speech God forbid it being a word of detestation to shew how hee doth abhorre the thing obiected shold not be vsed in vain and childish matters as most commonly it is but in graue and serious businesse and when the heart is affected Secondly the vnbeleefe of men cannot frustrate make voyde Gods promises because howsoeuer some remain vnbeleeuers yet others which do beleeue they feele the effects of Gods promises Tim. What followes of this Sil. Two things first that the blindnes and contumacy of some hearers must not discourage the ministers in their function Secondly that the people shoulde not refraine from holy things for the wickeds sake because there will alwayes be such as to whome Gods word and ordinances will bee offered in vaine yet they shall not goe without a blessing to the humble and contrite sinners DIAL III. Verse 4. Yea let God be true and euery man a lyar as it is written that thou maist be Iustified in thy words and ouercome when thou art Iudged Tim. WHat is the drift and purpose of this Text Silas It doth set foorth and extoll the constancy of God in keeping his worde Secondly he doth confirme that which he had said concerning the truth of God by the authority of Scripture which he fetched from Psalme 51 4 5. Tim. How is the truth and constancy of God set forth Sil. By the contrary that is by the vanity and falsehood of men who are lyars Secondly by the authority of Scripture out of the Psalm 51
things Sil. First they obtained remission of sinnes Secondly they were made inwardly new and outwardly they liued hohly Thirdly they called vpon God with perseuerance communicating together in prayer doctrine breaking of bread and all holy workes Fourthly they stedfastly put their trust in God Fistly they regarded not riches for they laid the price of their things at the Apostles feete Sixtly they gaue testimony of Christ boldly Seauenthly in his quarrell they bestowed their liues and cheerefully shedde their bloud For proose of all these haue your recourse to the history of the Acts. Tim. How is this righteousnes manifested without the law Sil. That is without the workes of the law or without this that the law be fulfilled of vs for some Gentiles were iustified which knew not the lawe also some Iewes were iustified which regarded not the lawe and though some did both knowe regard and doe it as Nathanael and Zachary yet the obseruation of the law by them was not the cause why they were iustified The law then is an helpe to iustification in somuch as it doth accuse and condemn vs and so driues vs to Christ accidentally as a disease brings to the Phisition but the law of it selfe hath no strength to forgiue sinne and to suggest and work faith into our harts or to enable vs to keepe it perfectly that we might bee iustified thereby Tim. How many wayes hath this righteousnes witnes of the law and the Prophets Sil. Sundry waies First by euident and cleere sentences which prophesied of Christ and of faith that iustifieth Secondly by tipes and figures which went before in the old Testament as the brasen Serpent and Ionas his beeing in the Whales belly three daies also the Paschall Lambe the Rocke the Cloud did shew Christ. Thirdly by Sacrifices Offerings and ceremonies of the law the bloud of Lambs Goates did signifie Christ to be slain for sin Fourthly by the Sacraments as Circumcision and the Passeouer all which doe beare testimony that our righteousnes remission of our sinnes and eternall life are not to bee founde in our selues but to be sought by faith in Iesus Christ. DIAL XII Verse 22. I meane the righteousnes of God through the faith of Iesus Christ in all and ouer all that heleeue Tim. IN what sence is the faith of Iesus vsed here Sil. Not actiuely for that which Iesus had but passiuely for that faith whereby hee is had and receiued Tim. What is the drift of this text Sil. To open and vnsold more at large that which hee spake concerning the righteousnes of God laying foorth first the instrument whereby it is applied vnto vs which is faith Secondly the persons or subiect vppon whome it is bestowed which be all beleeuers without difference of nations Thirdly the efficient and principall cause of righteousnes which is God And fourthly the materiall cause which is Iesus Christ. Tim. What is the righteousnes of God Sil. That which commeth meerly by Gods good guift and maketh vs acceptable to God euen able to stand before God this righteousnesse wee doe attaine through faith which iustifieth obiectiuely because it leadeth to Christ and instrumentally as the hand of the soule to apprehend it therefore it is written the righteousnes of God through faith Tim. What are the kinds of faith Sil. Foure first historicall which is a knowledge of the history and letter or of the doctrine of the Scripture thence called dogmaticall faith Secondly temporarie faith which is a knowledge of the trueth with an assent to it for a time Math. 13. 21. Thirdly miraculous which is a beleefe that by the power of God straunge wonders may be done 1 Corin. 13. 1 2. Fourthly iustifying faith by the which the righteousnes of God is receiued Of this iustifying faith there are two parts the first is a knowledge of the things to be beleeued as Iohn 6. 69. wee know and beleeue Secondly application of them to our selues Tim. How proue ye that there must bee application in true faith Sil. First by the commaundement beleeue the Gospell Marke 16 1 5. Secondly by the nature of faith which is an hand to drawe Christ to vs. Thirdly by the example of Scripture as Dauid Psalme 18 2. Mary Luke 1 28. Thomas Iohn 20 28. Fourthly by reason for howe can Christ profit vs if he be not applied and put on by faith And 5. by the testimony of the learned which teach true faith to be particular with application as Hierom Cyril c. Tim. What actions are required vnto faith Sil. These fiue First approbation of the things beleeued Secondly expetition in an ernest desire of them 3 〈◊〉 apprehension in a fast laying hold of them Fourthly oblectation in delighting my selfe in them Fiftly expectation in looking certainly to inioy them Tim. What be the degrees of faith Silas Three-fold First such a faith which is a true and earnest desire to beleeue the promises of Christ. Secondly a little faith which is a certaine assurance that the same belongs to vs. Thirdly a full perswasion when the heart is strongly assured thereof ioyned with a sure and certaine knowledge of things hoped for Heb. 11 1. Tim. What is the obiect of Faith Silas Christ Iesus in whom wee do consider three things First his person God and Man Secondly his Offices King Priest and Prophet Thirdly his benefits Remission of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reconciliation adoption sanctification eternall life Tim. What are the persons vnto whom God 〈◊〉 Christ with his benefits Sil. All the beleeuers and onely the beleeuers Tim. What thinke ye of the elect Infants are they Beleeuers Tim. Some think them to be iustified by the beleefe of the Church Others thinke it to be by the beleefe of their parents Others by the beleefe of sureties Others by some secret worke of the spirit But I think that they are saued by their owne faith as it is generally written The iust shall liue by his owne faith Tim. But they want knowledge without which there is no Faith Sil. True they lacke knowledge which is by discourse yet they are not altogither without some knowledge such as for their age they are capeable of as appeareth by this that reason is in children though they want the vse of it Also by the example of Ieremy Iohn Baptist and Christ all which had the light of the Spirit in their infancy being sanctified in the wombe Tim. What vse was made of this Sil. That men which haue not true faith should labor to get it seeing no righteousnes is had without it nor saluation but by it Secondly such as haue it should cherish and labour to encrease it by all good means and be thankfull to God for it Thirdly to take comfort to our selues vpon the death of young children seeing God who hath made a Couenant of life with them doeth worke in them to beleeue in him DIAL XIII Verse 23 24. For there is no difference for all haue sinned and are
elect who before being not beloued are now beloued Hos. 2. 23. Tim. What may we note from hence Silas The easinesse of creating and regenerating which with God is no harder for vs then to cal a man to vs or to call any thing by the name Wee see also what an effectuall calling is a powerfull woorking causing persons to be what they were not of enemies and sinners sonnes of God and righteous DIAL XI Verse 18. Which Abraham aboue hope beleeued vnder hope that hee should bee the Father of many Nations according to that which was spoken so shal thy seede be Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To extoll and praise Abrahams Faith by two reasons First that it did not giue place to sence nature or humaine reason For he beleeued aboue the hope of man Secondly that it did embrace the truth of Gods promise contained in these words So shal thy seed be And thirdly that he made the Diuine promise the support and prop of his Faith according to that was spoken Tim. What is meant when he saith He beleeued vnder hope aboue hope Sil. That he beleeued vnder the hope of God aboue the hope of man for when things were dosperate in the reason of man and there was no hope at al yet looking vp vnto God he had hope he conceiued inuincible faith in his heart ioyned with an infallible hope euen against hope of flesh nature and all mans reason Tim. Do ye not by hope vnderstand things hoped for Sil. It is true then the meaning is contrary to that which might by man haue beene hoped for hee waited for things which were set forth of God to be hoped for ouercomming by his faith all difficulties absurdities impossibilities which natural reason might obiect and oppose to him Tim. What was our instruction from hence Sil. This that a true faith dooth enable vs to expect such things as the reason of man would neuer look for Example heereof we haue in Abraham who beeing an hundred yeare old it was against reason that he should looke to bee a Father yet his faith beleeued it seeing God promised it Also Dauid against all humaine reason and hope beleeued that he should be King of Israel Also when Moyses beleeued that the people should passe through the Red sea as on dry Land it was against reason the like is to bee saide of Ioseph and of many others Tim. Is it not dangerous in things which are set forth to be beleeued to take counsell with the wisedom of the Flesh or with humaine reason Silas It is so as appeareth in the example of Sara of Zachary and Moyses all which were punished because they consulted with flesh and bloud instead of beleeuing Also in the example of wicked men who haue receiued hurt by leaning too much to the wisedom of the flesh more then to the word of God as they which perished in the wildernes also a Prince which was seruant to Iehoram King of Israel 2 Kings 7. Lastly Zedekiah K. of Iudah Ier. 39 7. Therefore in things which are propounded by the word to be beleeued of vs we must renounce that which our owne and other mens reason can obiect seeme it neuer so absurde and vnpossible which God promiseth yet it must absolutely be beleeued Tim. What was further commended to vs out of the first part of this sentence Silas That it is the propertie of a true faith to keepe men in hope euen when things seeme desperate Example heereof we haue in our Sauiour Christ Math 27. My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee And Saint Paul Act 27. Iob Ieremy For faith doth beare it selfe bold vpon the truth of Gods promises For faith doth beleeue the whole word of God according as is written Faith is by hearing and hearing by the word of God Rom. 10 17. But the word of promise is that whereabout Faith is properly occupied and especially the word of the Couenant wherein God promised to bee mercifull to our sinnes Tim. Yet the promise that Abraham is saide to beleeue was of a temporal blessing euen of a large posterity Silas It was so but this dependeth vpon the Couenant of grace and helpeth him to beleeue that For he that can beleeue God to be faithfull in smaller thinges can also beleeue that he will keepe his truth in greater thinges Againe all earthly pronuses are fulfilled for Christ who is the substance of the Couenant Againe all earthly promises proceede from mercy and Christ is the foundation of Gods mercy towards vs. DIAL XI Verse 19 20 21. And he not weake in Faith considered not his owne bodie now dead when he was almost an hundred yeare olde neyther yet the deadnesse of Sarah her wombs hee doubted not at the promise thorow vnbeleefe but was strong in faith and gaue glory to God being fully assured that he which had promised was able to performe it Tim. WHat was the drift and end of this Text Silas To praise the faith of Abraham by these few Reasons First by setting downe the hinderances of his faith as the deadnesse of Abrahams body and of Sarah her wombe Secondly by opposing to it the contrary which is vnbeleefe Thirdly by the measure of his Faith which was a strong and full assurance Lastly by the end of his beleeuing which was the giuing of God the glory Tim. What is meant heere by being weake in Faith Silas Sometimes Faith is put for the Doctrine beleeued Rom. 14 1. then to be weake in Faith is to be rude and ignorant of the truth and not to be weake is to be verie expert and skilfull But faith is heere put for the guift of faith and by not being weake in faith he meaneth that he did strongly beleeue God This speech is a figuratiue kinde of speech when one meaneth more then he expresseth as Psal. 〈◊〉 1. 17. not to despise is put for to hold in great account Tim. What were the hinderances which might haue troubled and hurt Abrahams faith Sil. The deadnesse of his owne body and of Sarahs wombe which he did not consider that is he thought not these things so able to hinder the promise of God as Gods power was able to fulfill the thing promised neither did he reason by vnbeleefe against the promise of God saying he mocks me or it will come to nothing Tim. What was the instruction from hence Sil. Thisꝭ a strong faith yeeldeth not to such lets which discourage or daunt it but breaketh thorough and ouercommeth them all bee they neuer so many and so great whereby the faithfull are to be admonished of their duty which is to striue against the impediments of their faith not to yeeld Tim. What thing is contrary to faith Sil. Vnbeleefe by which is meant either a meere priuation of faith when there is none at all as in Turkes and Iewes and wicked men or a defect in beleeuing whereby one beleeueth a thing faintely through infirmity of
might misse of glory then it should make ashamed contrary to the saying of the Apostle Secondly great and many sins cannot make hope vaine because all sinnes are forgiuen to the godly which beeleeue and repent 1 Iohn 1. 9. Thirdly the godly are taught of Christ to pray for forgiuenesse of sins and the confirming of their wils to the end Math. 6 12. And that which they aske according to the will of God is granted them Finally though mens wils in their nature bee changeable yet the hope of glory is founded vpon the vnchangeable will and counsel of God Tim. What vse and profit is to be made of this doctrine Sil. First it controlleth the opinion of the Papists which ground hope at least in part vppon merit of good workes from whence will follow continuall vn certainty and doubt of saluation for that they neuer are sure when their merits are sufficient Also their corrupt opinion wil proue vnsound by these reasons First because all hope and confidence is accursed which doth not rest vpō God Iere. 17. 10. and our good woorkes are not God therefore no hope is to be put in them Secondly such as are newly conuerted vnto Christ from some wicked life and grieuous sins they haue hope then but they 〈◊〉 no merit of woorkes going before therefore their hope cannot rest vpon their merits which be not but as for those who haue good workes and liue well they haue more cause to hope well because good workes are a good signe of good hope and some prop they are to helpe hope but they may not be hoped in or taken as a cause why we must hope If any say that patience is a good worke and Paul faith hope springeth of patience therefore hope springeth out of works I answere hope commeth of patience but not as from a cause of it no more then afflictions bee cause of patience Furthermore from hence wee are admonished that such as alwaies doubt of their Saluation can haue no Christian hope therefore they must striue against doubting Lastly there is great vse for them which feele themselues indued with Christian hope for whatsoeuer their afflictions or enemies or sinnes bee yet they cannot bee confounded but at last must be happy for we are saued by hope Rom. 8. Tim. Now come to the second part of this text and tell vs how many wayes is the loue of God taken in Scripture Sil. Two wayes either passiue for that loue wherewith God is loued of vs 1 Iohn 4 12. or actiuely for the loue wherewith God doeth loue vs in his Sonne this is meant here Tim. How may it appeare that it is put here for that loue wherewith God loueth and embraceth vs Sil. First by the reason vsed in the next verse for Christ dyed for vs which proueth Gods loue to vs. Secondly by the 8. verse following where it is written God commendeth his loue to vs. Thirdly wee haue not our hope certaine and vnshaken because we loue God but because God who deceiueth not loueth vs. Tim. In what meaning is Gods loue said to bee shed abroad in our harts Sil. It is thus much that the sence and feeling of his loue is shed and powred into the hearts of his children Tim. Did not God loue the elect from euerlasting before they were borne Silas It is true howbeit that was onely in purpose and decree and so it was secretly knowne to himselfe But Paul speaketh of the manifestation of this loue vnto the elect after they are borne a new for when the elect are regenerate then God dooth expresse his loue vnto them and they do by faith lay hold of the loue of God beleeuing that they are loued of God and haue their harts affected with a ioyous feeling of it For as the box of costly and precious ointment which the woman poured vpon Christs head Mathew 26 7. gaue no fauour while it was shut up in the box but being shed powred out did yeelde a most sweete sent and sauour vnto all which were in the roome euen so the loue of God is pent and shut vp as it were in Gods decree before regeneration and faith so as it is not felt of the elect but at their new birth when they haue faith to beleeue the promise of saluatiō by Christ thē this loue is as an ointment powred out and doth exceedingly and plentifully refresh the hearts of the elect with the sence and feeling of it Tim. What then is the doctrino we learne heere Silas That the most louing God is content not onely to loue his children but withall doth assure them of his loue so as they certainly know that they are loued and are cheared in their hearts by the perswasion of his loue For as it is nothing to a blinde man to know that the Sunne is a glorious bright creature when himselfe cannot see it or to a poore man to know where much treasure is whiles himselfe cannot come at it so it is nothing to heare and know that there is much loue hid in God except our selues feele it and become partakers of it Examples we haue of the Apostles many other beleeuers Acts 5 41. Rom 8 38 39. who haue had the sence of Gods loue in their hearts and haue reioyced therein euen in their extreame afflictions in the flames of fire and depth of Dungeons horrible and darksome Tim. Haue the faithfull a feeling of Gods loue alwaies in one tenor and like measure Silas Neither of both but by sinnes and temptations it is often interrupted as the light of the Sunne is darkned and lessened by mistes and clowdes yet this loue of God shall alwayes endure in them because God altereth not Tim. Whence commeth the feeling of Gods loue Silas It is the especial worke of Gods spirite of Adoption Rom. 8 16. and it commeth by the free gift of God who giueth it to all the members of his son Rom. 8 9. Ephes. 1 13. Tim. What doth the sence of Gods loue giuen them by the spirit worke in the faithfull Silas First a feruent and vnfaigned loue of God 2. Cor. 5 14. 1 Iohn 4 19. We loue him because hee loued vs first Secondly an hearty loue of our neighbor for Gods sake 1 Iohn 4 21. Thirdly ioy in the holy Ghost 1 Pet 1 8. Lastly great encrease of hope in a more full assurance of inioying the glorie looked for inasmuch as God who loues vs and holds vs deare vnto him cannot change nor deceiue vs. Silas I pray you tell vs heere is it the nature of hope to bee certaine and to giue this assurance ye speake of Silas Of hope generally taken it is the property only to looke and expect for a thing which wee haue not Rom. 8 24 25. but the certainty and assurance of hope growes from the nature of the things hoped for which if they be certaine and haue sure and certaine causes the hope is certain and assured otherwise it is not for hope
Christ. This reioycing is a speciall good thing and it is as it were the very life of a mans life Tim. How many kinds of reioycings be there Silas There is a naturall reioycing common vnto all men when the hart is cheared either by an in-bred liuelinesse or by outwarde occasions as in the presence of things pleasant or agreeable to our nature This reioycing is not meant heere Also there is a spirituall and Christian kinde of reioycing which ariseth from the spirit of God stirring vp the heart to reioyce in spirituall and heauenly things when they are present with vs or certainly hoped for As first when the Church flourisheth Psal. 137 3. Secondly when a sinner returneth to the Lord Luke 15 10. Thirdly in the meanes of saluation Ps. 122 1. Fourthly in doing righteousnes iudgement and equity Fiftly in the exercising our selues in the praises of God Psal. 95 1. Sixtly in the reconciliation that we haue with God through Christ when it is beleeued or felt of this our Text speaketh Tim. What is it to reioyce concerning God Silas To haue ioy of heart in this respect that hee is become our Father and loueth vs as his Children and Sonnes Tim. What difference is there in these speeches concerning God as heere and to reioyce in God as 1 Cor. 1 31. and to reioyce with God as Rom. 4 2 Sil. To reioyce in God it is to attribute all thinges which be good vnto God and to render him all thanks for them this we may doe Secondly to reioyce with God it is to to bring something with vs of our owne wherein to glorie and reioyce besides Gods fauour and this we may not doe Thirdly to reioyce concerning God it is to be merry in our hearts for this that we do vnderstand how God doth loue vs as a father his children The like vnto this we haue in Ier. 9 24. Let him that reioyceth reioyce herein that he knoweth me to be mercifull and righteous whereas others reioyce in riches or pleasure or honour or wisedome the Christian ought to reioyce in Christ. Tim. Is there great and iust cause to reioyce for such a gift bestowed on vs as Gods Fatherly fauour through Christ Silas Yea very great for heerein consistes all mans happinesse both now and for euer to haue God reconciled that he may bee a Father to take vs for his sonnes sake and loue Such onely do reioyce therefore such as waigh these things and do inwardly feele them so as they are are affected with them do from hence gather exceeding strong hope of enioying euerlasting life For God is such a Father so constant in his loue as though he will correct them yet neuer will he disinherit them Tim. By whom is it that God is become a fauourable Father vnto vs Silas By Christ his beloued sonne who by his death on the Crosse hath made attonement for our sinnes being there in our stead by the will of his Father and by meanes of our receiuing it thorough faith in the promise of the Gospell we haue made it ours Tim. What thinges doe yee consider seuerally in this attonement spoken of in this place Silas First God to whom wee are reconciled he louing vs and giuing his sonne for vs. Secondly his Son comming to worke our attonement by his obedience passion and Sacrifice Thirdly our Faith embracing this attonement and receiuing it Fourthly a great reioycing of hart in the Faith and certainty of this reconcilement with God Tim. What do ye collect from this whole Doctrine Silas That our Christian and spirituall reioycing it is as our measure of beleeuing is none if our Faith bee none little if our faith be little great if our Faith bee great Therefore as any do long for much true Christian comfort let them endeuor a daily increase of Faith by the humble sincere and constant vse of al those holy meanes priuate and publicke whereby God vseth to enlarge the beleefe of his children DIAL X. Verse 12. Whereas by one man sinne entred into the world aud death by sinne and so death went ouer all men in whom all haue sinned Tim. WHat is the purpose of the Apostle in this Text Silas Hauing spoken hitherto of the first part of Iustification touching remission of sins by faith in the sufferings and death of Christ and laide out the same in the causes effects now he proceedeth to handle the other part of Iustification touching the imputation of Christs perfect obedience vnto vs which beleeue Tim. Is there any necessity of this part of Iustification Sil. Yea very great for we were two wayes endangered to God 1. by not fulfilling and keeping the law as we are bound we lost all right and title to Heauen Secondly by our sinnes done against the Law wee become worthy for euer of eternall punishment in Hell and therefore wee haue neede of a double remedy from Christ one to haue a satisfaction for the deserued punishment and this wee haue by the death and bloudshed of Christ imputed to vs. The other to restore vs to the right of our lost inheritance and this wee haue by the perfect obedience of his life put vpon our faith Tim. How may it appeare that Paul doth thus distinguish the parts of our Iustification Silas Two wayes First by the word reioycing or glorying vsed in the former verse wherein hee makes his passage to this Treatise Tim. What doe ye gather from hence Silas Thus much beleeuing Christians cannot fully reioyce and glory concerning God vntil together with the discharge from the paine due to their sinnes by free forgiuenesse through Christs passion they know and beleeue themselues to be decked and blessed with that absolute obedience and righteousnesse which the Law requireth and vnto which by the promise of the Law eternall life is due which seeing they haue not nor can haue in themselues therefore they haue it of Christ. Tim. What is the second way how ye gather this distinction of two parts of Iustification Silas By the comparison of Adams vnrighteousnesse and his disobedience with Christ his obedience both communicated to all elect persons though in diuers sorts and fashions the which he doth begin in verse 12. and continueth it to verse 20. Tim. Wherein be Adam and Christ compared together Sil. Both in things wherein they are like one to the other and in things wherein they are contrary one to the other They are alike in this generally that each of them conueyeth that which is his vnto such as are theirs and be of them particularly Adam sendeth ouer to all that come of him guilt of sinne and death by his disobedience imputed Christ conueyeth ouer righteousnesse and life to his members by free imputation of faith Also they differ in this that the offence of Adam by which death came vpon all men was but one but the obedience of Christ imputed to beleeuers doth not only couer and doe away that one but all other offences of
newes to all beleeuers that they shall not be condemned yet this comfort should be most effectuall to the godly poore because amidst many worldly wants and miseries which trouble them it may and should excedingly ioy their heartes to thinke vppon what great good thinges they haue by Christ as forgiuenesse of all sinnes freedome from all punishment of sinne from Gods anger and hell fire yea and more then this euen perfect righteousnes and eternall life of which things the least is more worth then a whole world and therefore whosoeuer cannot reioyce in these thinges whatsoeuer their worldly crosses be it argueth deepe vnthanksulnesse and is a signe of vnbeleefe Finally touching the godly rich they are to be admonished here that they are more to cheere themselues with the comfort of this freedome then with all their wealth and worship Tim. But seeing none shall haue this comfort but such as are in Christ and walke after the spirit tel vs what it is to be in Christ Silas To be knit and ioyned vnto him through faith as members be to the head or as branches be to the vine Tim. What are we to learne from hence Silas First that none saue the faithfull are capable of the former comfort because onely they are in Christ therfore howsoeuer hypocrites and other wicked men yea prophane men and Atheists do lay claime to this comfort yet it doeth not at all belong vnto them because they are out of Christ. Secondly wee cannot be partakers of any benefit by Christ except first we be in Christ as the members must be one with the head and the branches with the vine ere they can draw any life from them Thirdly such as beleeue in Christ and abide in this faith may be sure and certaine to be saued the reasons hereof bee first because euery beleeuer is iustified and is freed from the guiltinesse of his sinnes and therefore must needs be saued Secondly hee is one with Christ in whome there is nothing but righteousnesse and life therefore he is free from sinne and damnation Tim. Yea but though hee is freed from sinnes past and the punishment of them yet euery beleeuer by his dayly sins makes himselfe worthy and guilty of death Silas True beleeuers neede not feare neither sins past present nor to come for this vniuersall negatiue particle No excludes all sinnes the beleeuer being iustified from sins past sinnes present are pardoned and sinnes to come shall not be imputed therefore he needs feare no destruction Tim. Will not this doctrine make men secure and carelesse Silas This doctrine shakes out of mens heartes the feare of condemnation and therefore in that behalfe they may bee spiritually secure but it nourisheth the feare of God beeing an enemy to carnail security Psalme 130 4. Rom. 12 1 2. Tim. Yea but we cannot be so certaine of our saluation as S. Paul who had his certainty by speciall reuelation Silas This is not so for first Paul speakes not here of his owne particular assurance but giues a generall comfort common to all the faithfull therefore he writeth not there is no condemnation to mee but to them Secondly the signes and tokens of this comfort to wit to bee in Christ and to walke after the Spirit are common with Paul to all other true Christians verse 1. Therefore the certainty of saluation and the comfort from thence must needes be common Tim. Yea but it is no where written that thou art in Christ and that thou shalt not be condemned and it is the doctrine of Protestants to beleeue no more then is written and therefore no man can be assured to be saued Silas When wee teach that no more is to be beleeued then is written it is to be vnderstood of vniuersall doctrin and generall points of sauing trueth to which wee are not bound to giue credit nor can we firmly assent vnto them vnlesse wee finde them in the written word which is the onely sufficient perfect rule of faith and manners Iohn 5. 29. and 21 24. and 2 Tim. 3 16. Secondly wee affirme and hold that the certainty of euery mans owne saluation is written in the fleshy tables of his heart by the finger of the Holy Ghost for as this vniuersal trieth that there is no condemnation to such as are in Christ is written in the word so this particular assumption of the faithfull but I beleeue and am in Iesus Christ is written in his owne heart by the Spirit which alwayes togither with Faith workes and engenders a feeling and testimonie of his owne Faith whereby he knowes he is a beleeuing person 2 Cor. 13 5. 2 Timoth 1 12. Marke 9 24. all which places shew that a man hath in himselfe a witnesse of his owne Faith Now wee are bound no lesse certainely to beleeue the inward particular witnesse written by the Spirite in the hearts and consciences of ieuery faithfull person then that outwarde vniuersall testimony which is written in the word for both these testimonies come from one Spirit and the sence of faith is as firme as an article of faith Tim. Yea but this singular Faith what is it else but a singular presumption For how common is it for euery euill liuer to say I trust to be saued Silas It is verie true that such as haue no faith and so be not in Christ if they say they trust to bee saued it is presumption but for a truely faithfull man to beleeue and to say it is no presumption but dutie and godly submission to him that commands to beleeue in his Sonne Tim. But how shall we bee able to know the presumption of the Flesh from the assurance of faith they be so like the one to the other Sil. By this marke which the Apostle himselfe giues vs that such as haue Faith and be in Christ walke after the Spirit that is by the Spirit they do mortifie the flesh and the workes thereof Tim. What other instructions ariseth there hence Silas It teacheth vs the exceeding priuiledge of a true Christian beleeuer in that he is freed from all feare of condemnation and eternall punnishment in Hell fire Tim. But tell vs whether it may be knowne who they are that are knit to Christ by faith Silas Yes it may surely be knowne though not to others yet to themselues for otherwise this freedome priuiledge from condemnation could bee no ground or matter at all of any comfort Secondly the taking of an elect soule out of Adam and the corruption of nature to graft it into Christ is not such a sleight worke but that it may be knowne and percciued of him in whom it is wrought being a person come to yeares and discretion For it is the opening the eyes of the blinde the quickening of the dead the translating from darkenesse to light the healing of the withcrcd hand the making of the lame to walke the setting at liberty him that was in prison All which shewes this work to be both mighty
sinner this is the voice of euery mans owne conscience conuicting him of the breach of the law sundry wayes Now the conclusion followes necessarily Therfore I am a most accursed wretched man worthy of eternall damnation in hell fire This conclusion is the worke of the holy Spirite causing euery elect sinner to apply vnto himselfe the most horrible threatnings of the law whereuppon there ariseth in the conscience great feare horror and astonishment for which there is no salue in the law which is able to kill but not to make aliue Tim. But are all the elect partakers of this feare before their connersion and all in a like degree Silas All the elect which come to yeares and discretion are not conuerted without this feare but all haue not a like portion of it for God dispenseth the measure of this feare as it pleaseth him to some more to some lesse it faring with men in their new birth as with men in their naturall birth where some are borne more easily some with more payne as some sores are let out with the pricking of a pin and some need much lanching Tim. Tell vs what profite and vse wee are to make of this doctrine touching the degrees that are vsed in the conuerting of elect sinners Silas First we are taught how miserable we are by nature we being the children of Gods wrath and condemnation liuing alwayes as bondmen in fear of his punishment Eph. 2 1 2 3. Secondly we are taught how needfull it is to haue Gods Law soundly opened and applyed vnto vs seeing we haue not the Spirit of adoption till we haue the Spirit of feare and this is gotten by the ministery of the Law Thirdly we are warned what duties men are to do vpon the hearing and reading the Law that they may further their owne conuersion which be these First by the Law to get distinct and sound knowledge of sin Rom. 3 and 7 7. Secondly rightly to vnderstande what that curse is which the Law threatneth vnto sinne sinners Thirdly a diligent search and examination of our selues whether we be not guilty of these very sinnes against which the law denounceth the wrath and curse of God Fourthly Legall faith beleeuing that we are breakers of the Law and do deserue the curse of the Law Lastly vpon the application of the Law to our selues to labour and worke our owne hearts to get them humbled and broken with feare and terror of Gods iudgements For then and not before the heart is made meet to receyue the Spirit of Adoption Heere are reproued such as gather too much hope from the Gospell ere the Law haue duly feared and taken them downe with griefe shame Tim. Is there any other vse to bee made of this former point Silas Yea these three First they that had neuer any portion of this Legall feare haue iust reason to feare mistrust their owne conuersion Secondly if any bee vnder this discipline of the lawe hauing their conscience feared and troubled with the consideration of the condemnation due to their sinnes let them not bee much discouraged for they are in a good way to true conuersion Lastly let such as haue the spirit of feare not rest there but passe on till they haue the Spirite of Adoption least it fare with them as it fared with Esau Caine and Iudas Tim. What is the next degree of a Christians conuersion Silas To receiue the Spirite of Adoption Tim. What are we consider in this third degree Silas These three things First of Adoption what it is Secondly what is the Spirite of Adoption and thirdly what it is to receiue the Spirite Tim. What is Adoption and how may it be declared Sil. Adoption is the making one actually a son by grace which is no sonne by nature Ephe. 2 3. Gal. 4 4 5. For this word Adoption is borrowed from the custome of men who being Childlesse doe adopt and take to them of fauour the childe of another to bee their sonne This benefit of Adoption may be declared many waies First by the person of him who adopteth to wit God who hauing a naturall Son yet wanting sonnes in our kinde hath Adopted men woemen to be his Children which is not the wont among men but quite contrary Secondly by the persons of vs who are Adopted beeing both beggerly and void of all goodnesse being also his enemies full of all vnrighteousnes Rom. 5 6 7 8. Thirdly by the dignity of the thing it being a matter of wondrous excellency to haue such a sonne-ship more a thousand times then to be the sonne of a most mighty Prince Fourthly by the manifold and exceeding benefits which comes by Adoption namely to bee heire of the world and of Heauen Lastly by the duty of adopted ones being briefly touched in Malachy 1 6. and more largely in 1. Pet. 1 14 15. Tim. What is meant by the Spirite of Adoption Silas A speciall grace of the Spirite certifying our Adoption vnto vs. A grace which flowes from Adoption and is proper to Adopted ones seruing to witnesse their Adoption and therefore fitly called the Spirite of Adoption Tim. What be the two effects and fruites of the spirit mentioned in this Text Silas The first is to seale or assure in the hearts of the elect children of God the witnesse of their adoption by Christ hence it is called the Spirit of Adoption and in the same sence also it is tearmed the earnest of our inheritance Ephes. 1 14. The second is to open their mouths with childlike confidence and godly feruency to pray vnto God as to a most louing father Hence it is called by the Prophet Zachary the Spirit of Grace and of praier Zach. 12 10. Tim. How do the elect receiue the spirit of Adoption Silas By the Ministery and preaching of the Gospell as the Spirit of feare and bondage is giuen by the preaching of the Law Hence the Gospell preached is called the Ministry of life of righteousnesse and of the Spirit because through the Ministry of the Gospell the Spirit is effectuall to quicken the dead hearts of the elect thorough Faith in Christ thereby to be made righteous before God and to become his sonnes and heires of eternall life This is proued by the word of the Apostle Gal. 3. 2. This would I know receiued ye the spirit by the workes of the Law or by hearing Faith preached that is by hearing the Doctrine of the Lawe or by the doctrine of Christ apprehended by Faith Tim. But how and after what sort doth God worke in the Gospell when by it he will worke in his Children the Spirite of Adoption Silas The Spirit of Adoption is receiued into the harts of the elect by these degrees or seuerall works of grace First after the Conscience is humbled and terrified by the Lawe being brought to see and feele an extreame neede of Christ crucified there is engendered an earnest desire and longing after him and his merites such
beleeuers whosoeuer and by saued is meant the fulnesse and perfection of saluation in heauen when bodie and soule shall be glorified at the day of iudgement and not the beginning of saluation in our newe birth which consisteth in remission of sinnes and reconciliation with God by faith for this the faithful already haue they neede not hope for it but the accomplishment of this is that which is heere signified by saluation and which they are saide to hope for Tim. What do ye call hope Sil. That grace of the soul whereby euery true Christian doth surely expect and look to inioy promised saluation Tim. What is the doctrine from hence Silas That our perfect saluation cannot in this life be otherwise possessed of true beleeuers then by hope the reason is because our perfect saluation is a thing to come and to be enioyed after this life ended also because it is to be enioyed onely in heauen therefore now it is not had nor can be Tim. Yea but the Scripture saith we are saued by Faith Ephes 2 8. How then is it saide heere we are saued by hope Silas We are otherwise saued by hope then by faith the difference stands heerein First by faith we beleeue the promise of saluation by hope wee do looke for the thing promised Secondly Faith doth enter and beginne our saluation in apprehending remission of sins reconciliation with God the perfect righteousnesse of Christ and purifies our hearts that we may liue holily but hope lookes forward vnto the end full perfection of blisse Thirdly Faith saueth as an instrumentall cause without the which we cannot lay hold of Christ Hope saueth as a fruite of Faith as a signe of a person iustified and reconciled as the way wherein we are to walke towardes Heauen as that which lookes to inioy saluation because God hath truely promised and Faith hath surely beleeued that promise Tim. What vse is to be made of this Doctrine Silas First it reproues such as place all their happynesse in worldly things these are no truc beleeuers for they haue no hope of saluation in heauen Secondly this admonisheth howe to make triall of our Faith euen by that hope which we haue of saluation to come for these two are inseparable none can certainly expect saluation except they do beleeue it to be truly promised and whosoeuer can vndoubtedly looke for heauenly glorie by Hope it is because first by faith they haue receiued the promise of it Thirdly it teacheth that the faithfull by infallible certainty may assure their hearts of their own eternal saluation because they are saued by hope which doth not make ashamed or confoundeth which it should do if the hope of glory might be frustrate Tim. Proceede to the next matter the Nature of hope and tell vs what is meant heere by Hope when he saith Hope which is seene Silas Not the gift of Hope which is inward seated in the heart but the thing which is hoped for euen that which is present and now enioyed and possessed or now in our hands Tim. What is heere meant by Hope Silas That the gift of hope hath no place but when the thing hoped for is absent This may bee prooued by common sence for euery man seeth and perceiueth that one cannot hope for any thing that he already hath and which is now already in his possession of this we speak improperly and abusiuely if we do say that we hope for it for it is present Tim. What is the Doctrine from these words thus declared and opened Silas That this is the property of hope to expect and looke for that which we yet haue not but is absent and to come Tim. Will it not follow heereof that Christian Hope is vncertaine and doubtfnll seeing of thinges to come it cannot bee knowne many times whether they will come or no Sil. No it will not follow because the things which Christian hope looketh after they are alwayes absent in such wise as they must needes be fulfilled because they are promised by such a God as both can for his almightincsse and for his mercie in Christ will performe them It stands vpon his honour to make good his worde as a good christian at the houre of death said in my hearing Tim. Tou doe not thinke certainty or assurance to bee of the Nature of Hope Doth Hope simply considered breede 〈◊〉 and affiance Silas No it is not but assurance ariseth from the quality of the thinges which bee absent and hoped for which if they haue causes contingent then the Hope is doubtfull and vncertaine but if they bee of necessarie causes then the hope is vndoubted and firme Now the saluation of the Saints to come hath sure vnmooueable and firme causes as the truth and mercy and Oathe of God the promiser the merites and Mediation of Christ our Redeemer deade and raised againe the witnesse of the Spirit Tim. What is the vse to be made of this point of Doctrine Sil. It doth warne the faithfull that they haue continuall cause to grieue and sighe euen in this regarde that their full and absolute happinesse is yet absent Towant so great a good is cause enough of greefe many will grieue and sigh for want of farre lesse good things then their eternall life Secondly from hence wee may see that true beleeuers haue reason to reioyce insomuch as though their perfect felicity be absent yet they are most sure in the end to haue it So cannot Papists bee whose hope resteth vpon Gods grace and mans merit Tim. What is their duty in the meane time Silas With patience to waite for it till it come And this is the other part of the nature of hope euen to expect with courage and patience that which it hath not Tim. But what neede is there of patience Silas A two-fold neede First because their hope is deferred therefore Christians must haue patience for it is no small triall and temptation to bee long kept from that which one doth earnestly and truly loue beeing of such inestimable worth Secondly because the faithfull are heere subiect to many and manifold miseries therefore they must possesse their soules in patience it being the will of God to afflict them diuersly and deepely and not onely to holde their inheritaunce from them for a while and therefore they haue neede of patience that hauing done the wil of God they may be glorified This may be set set forth by the example of Merchants Soldiers and Labourers who are all of comfort because they do looke verie surely to obtaine a good end of their labours yet in the meane time they make account to meet withall and to resist diuers difficulties in their voyages warres and affaires Tim. What vse heereof Silas It instructeth vs that such are vnmeete for heauen as promise to themselues ease and freedome from troubles here Secondly it doeth admonish the faithfull to get patience because through
after the committing whereof men become more humble and warie Which yet is not the proper meaning of this place because it doeth particularly treate of afflictions and of the crosse and of the good that comes thereof which is eternall life or the saluation of our soules which being the chiefe good whither all good things tend is heere called of the Apostle by an excellency that good Tim. What is meant heere by working together Silas It signifies thus much that afflictions themfelues in their owne nature doth not bring foorth that good heere spoken of Tim. But how then comes it to passe that they are so profitable Silas By the force and vertue of another supreme cause working togither with afflictions to wit the maruailous goodnesse and wisedome of God disposing the afflictions of his people to their good As Ioseph said to his Brethren Gen. 50 20. When ye thought euill against me God disposed it to good euen to saue much people aliue so when as Satan by afflictions meanes to driue vs to despaire God disposeth them to an happie end euen to encrease hope Rom. 5 34. For if a Physitian who is but a man can so temper Hemlocke or other poysonous things to make it become medicinable much more can God so temper and dispose of afflictions that they shall be wholesome to his children Tim. What is the Instruction to be gathered from hence Silas That afflictions through Gods great mercy do helpe forwards the saluation of his children the reason heereof is because they are Instruments whereby the holy Ghost mortifieth their sinnes weaneth them from the loue of the worlde stirres them vp to better obedience quickens their prayers exerciseth their patience lastly humbles the pride of their heart Iob 33 16 17 Rom. 5 4. 1 Cor. 11 32. Psal. 119. Tim. What vse is to be made of this point Silas It serueth much to strengthen our mindes vnto godly and constant patience Secondly to reproue such as faint in their troubles Also to see how to make our profit of euery thing Tim. Proceede now to the latter part of this verse 〈◊〉 me how those persons be described vnto whom afflictions shall do good Silas They are described by these three markes First they be such as loue God Secondly such as are called 3. they are such as are elected or called of his purpose Tim. How do these three markes depend one vpon another Silas Thus loue is the effect of Gods calling and calling is the fruite of Gods purpose None can loue God except first he be called our calling proceedeth from the eternall purpose of God Thus our Apostle setteth downe things first more manifest and afterward thinges more secret First the effects and then the causes For as Gods purpose is the cause of calling so is calling in order before Faith and Faith before Loue in order of causes Tim. Tell vs now first what it is to loue God Silas It is to set the delight of our heart vpon him and to take pleasure to thinke and speake of him of his properties word and workes with liking and ioy studying by all meanes in all thingsto set foorth his glorie They which hate and abhorre God do the quite contrarie to all this Tim. Whence springeth this loue of God in vs Silas From the sence and feeling of Gods loue toward vs 1 Iohn 4 19. For it cannot bee that any man shoulde certainly perceiue the loue of God towardes himselfe in Christ for eternall life but that that loue will constrain him to loue againe 2 Cor. 5 14. Also the goodnesse and mercie of God in Christ is such a beautifull and amiable thing as being certainely knowne it will bee both earneftly loued and desired Tim. Why is it written they that loue God and not they that are loued of God Silas Because it is better knowne to vs namely in afflictions what loue we haue to him then what hee hath to vs for this is out of vs the other is within vs God striketh those he loueth Tim. By what speciall note may one know himselfe to be one of their number which loue God Silas By an vnfained purpose and endeuour to obey his word Iohn 14 15. If ye loue me keepe my commaundements Also verse 21 23. Tim. What is the reason that the Apostle speaking of patience suffering afflictions doth rather mention the loue of God then of our neighbor Silas Because our loue to God is that that maketh the burthen of afflictions more easie and light to bee borne euen as a man is ready to beare any calamitie for his sake whom he loueth at his heart thus did Ionathan for Dauid And as the seruice of Iacob 14. yeares seemed nothing to him for the loue which he bare to Rahel so they that truely loue God will for his sake suffer such aduersities as he sendeth either for correction or triall and this is the reason also why hee rather mentioneth loue then faith For howsoeuer patience springeth from Faith yet the next and immediate cause of it is loue Secondly it is to put a difference betweene counterfet sincere faith which cannot bee seuered from loue Gal. 5 6. whereas they that professe faith and say they beleeue when they do not haue their hearts void of al loue either to God or to their neighbour or themselues as appeareth in the example of Cain Esan and Iudas Tim. What instructions are we now to gather from this first marke Sil. Two First that the sound loue of God is needfull to all those which shall beare afflictions patiently Iames 〈◊〉 12. First because it maketh the godly valiaunt keeping them from fainting vnder the greatest crosses which is to be seene in the example of the Apostles Paul and Peter and other Martyrs who because they loued God were therefore ready to endure much for him Secondly it kindleth their zeal and maketh them earnestly bent to glorifie God by their constancy Tim. What profit are we to make of this point Silas First it stirreth vs vp to seeke for the loue of God and for the encrease of it in our hearts seeing we cannot be patient without it Secondly it warns vs by our patient-bearing to shewe our loue to God as God by his chastisements shewes his loue vnto vs Heb 12 5 6. Tim. What other instructions ariseth from hence Silas This none but Gods children can be patient in afflictions because none can loue God saue his owne children therfore they haue but the shadow of patience and be blockish and sencelesse rather then patient Tim. What vse is of this Silas It affoords comfort to such as haue patience in afflictions because this is a testimony vnto them of their adoption Secondly it teacheth vs that wicked men how quiet soeuer they are in afflictions yet they haue not true patience but an apearance of it they are rather blockish then endued with true Christian patience Ti. What is the
sake he maketh noble or base Eightly Paul saw no other cause of election but the will of God and it is dangerous to assigne that to bee a cause of election which Paul purposely entreating of this matter saw not this is to make our selues wise and him blockish nay our selues wiser then the Holy-Ghost Ninthly if the cause of election were workes or faith or vnbeleefe cause reprobation what need he say Oh the depth or obiect Is their iniquity with God and therefore it necessarily followeth that election is most free and absolute without any dependance vpon them Yet God did not chuse vs to the end without respect to the meanes for his decree concerneth both meanes and the end This is sufficient to stoppe the clamours of the Lutherans Tim. Doe ye thinke so of reprobation that it is free also without dependance on infidelity or ill workes fore-seene Silas In that some are not chosen to life it is without all respect of their vnbeleefe as a mouing cause but in that they are not onely refused but also appointed vnto destruction this is not without reference to infidelity sinne which as it is the proper cause of damnation so it moued God to ordaine to destruction but not to refuse and cast out from saluation for this was done to Esau ere he had done euill Secondly it is written God hardneth whom he will his will then is the high and first cause why men are not saued Thirdly God as a Potter may make vessels to ignominy for his wils sake Fourthly as we were corrupt in Adam God could see nothing in any man saue vnbeleefe and sinne And therefore if these had moued him not to chuse all had beene reprobated then Paul also should haue said that the purpose might remaine according to merite Lastly there is no vnrighteousnesse to cast off and refuse for sinne all will confesse this to bee iust Tim. What is the end or finall cause of election Sil. The vtmost end is the praise of his free grace Eph. 1. 5. hence elect are called vessels of mercy Rom 9 23. The nerest cause is mans saluation to attain eternal life and the final cause of reprobation is the praise of his iustice and the destruction of sinners Tim. What be the effects of election Silas Two First grace in this life as redemption by Christ vocation faith iustification adoption sanctification repentance good works perseuerance in grace Secondly vnspeakable and endlesse glory in heauen Tim. Are men and women elected to both these Sil. They be so for first Iacob and Isaac were chosen to the grace of the promise verse 8. but this comprehends al. Secondly it were absurd to separate the means from the end or end from the meanes Thirdly Scripture speaketh thus Acts 13 48. So many as were ordained to life beleeued Fourthly hec speaketh of election which is a preparation of the Vessell of mercie to glorie and which is ioyned with loue which is a willing of eternal life to men and all things which bring thither Tim. What vse of this point Silas It confuteth the Papists which say it is to grace and not to glory this they attribute to mans merits Secondly it reprooues such as thinke themselues elect to life they wanting notwithstanding the meanes of effectuall calling and good life Thirdly it comforts such as haue the means that they are sure they be elected to the end for meanes and end be linked together Ti. May they perish whō God hath chosen purposed to saue Sil. No they cannot for the purpose remaines firme Secondly God is vnchangeable and his loue is so too Thirdly then God should not be Almightie if he were not able to saue such as hee was once willing to saue Fourthly there would be no sound comfort to the godly except this foundation of God remaineth sure God knoweth who are his 2 Tim. 2 19. Tim. May such as be elect know themselues to be such Silas They may know it by their calling therefore is election heere ioyned with calling and before Rom. 8 28 30 because the counsel of election being hid before in the counsell of God is manifested in our calling Tim. What should this teach vs Silas First that such as haue but an outwarde calling by the Gospell ought to hope well of their owne election that it cōmeth of his purpose to saue them by saith Secondly because many are called which be not chosen it should stirre vp all sorts of Christians to examine their owne hearts whether they haue obeyed their Calling hauing their hearts changed from vnbeleefe and loue of sinne to faith and loue and practise of righteousnesse Thirdly let such as yet feele not this calling not dispair for who knoweth what may be tomorrow God calleth and turneth at all houres Mat. 20 1 2. Example in Paul and the theefe c. Tim. What are we to thinke of the election of others Silas First let euery man be most careful of his owne to assure it to himselfe by graces of the Spirit 2 Pet. 5 6 7. Secondly in charitie we are to hope well of all which heare the word and outwardly obey it 1 Thess. 1 6. Leaue to God the iudgement of certainty and the searching of hearts DIAL VII Verse 12 13. It was sayde vnto her the elder shall serue the yonger as it is written I haue loued Iacob hated Esau. Tim. VVHat is the end and scope of these words Silas To declare that the difference betweene one man and another touching grace and eternall life depends onely vppon Gods purpose and election and not vpon our worthinesse or vnworthinesse This is declared by two Oracles of God or testimonies of Scripture The first is taken out of Genes 25 23. The latter is taken out of Mal. 1 2. Tim. What is the meaning of the former place of Genesis Sil. That Iacob the younger brother should be Lord and Esau the elder should serue him Tim. This difference might come by chance or by their own deserts Silas Not so for first it was spoken ere they had done good or euill Secondly by another place of Malachy it is shewed that Iacobs dominion came from Gods loue and Esaus bondage from his hatred therefore it is Gods onely purpose which discerned between them and consequently betweene all other men Tim. But doe these words taken out of Genesis fitly belong to proue Gods eternall election to be the soueraigne cause of eternall saluation in heauen Silas Yea they are so or else Paul being ledde by the Spirit of God would not haue alleadged thē so for it were blasphemy against Christ to say that Paul did alleadge the Scriptures false or vnfitly being an Apostle of Christ who in his doctrine was priuiledged from erring as all other Apostles were Tim. Tell vs then how the lordship of Iacob and seruitude of Esau may proue that for which it is cited men may bee poore and lye in prison and be
as it were a hand to leade vs to the verie secret place of God Fiftly this Doctrine serueth to admonish all the godly laying aside all other means when they seeke for proofe of their own election to go down into their owne hearts to finde out that precious worke of Gods grace in their calling to Christ. Tim. Yea but this may 〈◊〉 vs for Hipocrites wicked men say they haue a calling And such as haue a true calling cannot alwayes discerue it Silas It is true therefore there be some few tokens by which a sauing vocation is to be discerned from that which is common As first a distinct speciall knowledge of the word not confusedly and generally Secondly to beleeue the promises of the Gospell with sincere loue to them and ioy in them Thirdly to take sound delight in the whole word of God euen the threatnings reprehensions exhortations aswell as consolations Fourthly to begin obedience to the Lawe of God euen from the heart and throughout in one thing aswell as in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though not perfectly Fiftly to haue a Spirit of discerning to put difference betweene the voice of Christ which calleth vs to himselfe and the voice of strangers Iohn 10. Sixtly an earnest desire with constant Prayer to haue othere brought to the participation of this heauenly calling specially such as bee vnder our charge as family seruants children wife c. Lastly to loue the Brethren called because they belong to Christ and the Ministers and instruments of our calling being thankful to them as to the Messengers of God and 〈◊〉 of our good To the which may bee added the Prayer of faith and the testimony of the Spirite of God and ours Rom. 8 15 16 and our 〈◊〉 for our Fathers glorie guided by knowledge 2 〈◊〉 7 11. Tim. Haue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 her vse of 〈◊〉 former doctrine Sil. Yea 〈◊〉 for Christian consolation euen to comfort at the heart all such weary heauy laden hungry and thirsty soules as do couet aboue all things to be certified of Gods loue towardes them and to finde rest and perceiue the assurance of their owne saluation Let these neuer feare their owne estate if they can finde in truth Gods effectuall calling to bee vpon them by these markes though in a weake measure for thereby anie of these shall clearly and firmely see their owne predestination which being an vnchangeable purpose of GOD that alter not it cannot be that such should perish Tim. What other instruction arsseth out of the first part of this verse Sil. That such as haue the word preached must thankfully receiue it The reason is because it is the ordinarie meanes of an effectuall calling to bring men to Christ such as are Adulti of yeares and stature able to heare Tim. What vse heereof Sil. It shewes the wretched estate of estate Papists and prophane Atheists which dispise the Ministerie of the word also of carelesse worldlings which regarde not such a blessing Secondly it warnes such as liue vnder the word preached to norish an hope that they are called according to Gods purpose and therefore to labour to get an inward spirituall calling ioyned to their common calling Tim. Have ye yet any other instructions out of the first part of this Silas Yea by Pauls putting himselfe into the number Vs wee learne that his owne election was certainely knowne into him and so it may be and is to euery child of God that liues to yeares of diseretion Secondly that by the worke of a true calling the Apostle was assured of his owne saluation therefore not by speciall reuelation onely Thirdly by his example hee ensturcteth vs to hope well of the saluation of others that be members of the visible Church The seasons bee first because they haue the Sacraments of Gods grace whereby they are set apart and sealed vp to God to be his people Secondly God inuiteth them by his word to faith and repentance Thirdly they make profession of God to be their father and Christ their redeemer Lastly in their liues they doe yeeld outward obedience to the worde Now charity requireth vs to think that al this is done in truth and therefore to hope well of them that they belong to Gods election as Paul doth heere by speaking in the plurall number of others as well as himselfe Tim. But what may we thinke of those Christ ans that are apparantly wicked Silas Euen of such we are not to despaire because we know not what to morrow will bring foorth Also the parable of the vineyard shewes that God calles at all houres euen at the last and the example of the theefe and Paul being wicked men and yet called in the ende of their life instruct vs that we must not cast away hope of any how wicked soeuer they bee none more wicked then such as haue beene called Also it is as easie for the infinite power to conuert a greeuous as a lesse sinner Tim. What then is there no reprobation in the visible Church none reiected which be in Noahs Arke in the outward Church Silas Wee may not determine or giue finall sentence vpon any that they are Reprobates Rom. 14 10 11 12 but leauing secret things to God who onely knoweth who be his and who bee not 2. Tim. 2 19. wee doe so out of charity hope well of all as yet wee holde it for a certaine truth that all in the visible Church be not elect That this is so appeareth first by Scripture Math. 20. 16. Many called few chosen also 1. Iohn 2 29. Some went out from vs that were not of vs. Againe the Iewes being Gods people it is written of them that they were not all Christs sheepe nor giuen vnto him of his Father Iohn 10 29. nor were Iewes within Rom. 2 29. nor children of the promise Rom. 9 4. nor the children of Abraham Iohn 8 39. Secondly this truth may bee proued by the similitudes of Scripture which set foorth the estate of the visible Church for it is likened vnto a floore hauing wheate and chaffe Mat. 3 12. to a dragge net hauing good fish and badde Mat. 13 47. to a fielde of tares as well as of good Corne Mat. 13 24. to a house wherein are vessels of earth and of gold to Noahs Arke wherein were vncleane beasts as wel as cleane Thirdly it may bee confirmed by examples as of Esau Rom. 9. 12. and Iudus Iohn 6 70. who were both reprobates and yet liued in the visible Church so of Caine Ismael Saul D. mas Lastly this appeares by reason because were all elect all must be saued which is not true Mat. 7 13 Secondly it opens a gap to security Thirdly were all elect then should all haue an effectuall calling to Christ Mat. 13. and 20. Wee are therefore thus to holde and beleeue that the holye and inuisible Church consists onely of elect and none other But in the visible Church there
euen the best out of themselues and enforceth thē to goe to Christ for righteousnesse and life eternall by beleeuing that he hath fulfilled the law for vs by his obedience and death and this is indeed the right meditation of the doctrine of the lawe when it schooleth and swindgeth a sinner vnto Christ to fetch from him alone righteousnesse and saluation Now heereby shall wee know that the preaching of the righteousnesse of the law hath driuen vs to Christ First if we trust not to the workes of the law to seeke life by the merite thereof in whole or in part Secondly if wee striue to order our workes according to the leuell of the law making it the rule of our Christian life still suing to Christ for pardon of faults Lastly learne hence that if the righteousnesse of the law hauing promise of life do consist in doing thinges commanded in all perfection therefore Christ cannot be the end of the law for tighteousnes vnlesse beside the passion of his death there be allowed vnto beleeuers his actiue obedience and integrity of life that in him wee may claime life as well as escape death DIAL VI. Verses 6 7 8. But the righteousnesse which is of faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thy heart who shall ascend into heauen that is to bring Christ from aboue or who shall descend into the deepe that is to bring Christ from the dead but what saith it c. Tim. VVHat is the scope of this Text Silas As before he described the righteousnes of the law out of Moses so now by an antithesis out of Moses he setteth foorth the righteousnes of faith by the effects obiects and properties plainely shewing that it driueth away doubting and feare frō the conscience leaneth vpon the word of promise beeing possible easie and certaine and in all these it is quite opposite vnto the legall iustice Tim. Declare now plainely the summe of this Text. Silas It is thus much that the righteousnesse of faith neyther leaueth the conscience doubtfull of saluation nor striketh in it any feare of condemnation but staying it selfe vpon the manifest and sure worde of the Gospell concerning Christ dead for our sinnes and risen againe for our righteousnesse it engendereth firme quietnesse in the hearts of beleeuers and draweth free confession from their mouth of Christs death resurrection and ascension Tim. What be the parts of this Text Sil. Two the first negatiue shewing what faith speaketh not or forbiddeth with the cause and reason why verse 6 7. The other affirmatiue teaching what it is that faith faith and what manner of thing it is Tim. What doth faith forbid and why Silas All doubting about eternall life in heauen vpon this ground because Christ is ascended thither for vs. Secondly it forbiddeth all trembling and feare of beeing tormented in hell vpon this reason because Christ being dead hath by his death ouercome eternall death not for himselfe but for his members Tim. Come wee to the words and tell vs what is meant by the righteousnesse of faith Silas That which before in verse three is called the righteousnesse of God standing wholly in beleeuing or the righteousnesse of Christ being laid hold vpon by faith or a person iustified by faith in Christ it is no matter which of these we follow Tim. But how may this righteousnesse bee saide for to speake Sil. By a figure called Prosopopoia as Rom. 8 19 20. Paul putteth a person of a reasonable creature vpon the iustice of faith and bringeth it in speaking and declaring it selfe what manner of thing it is and what it works in beleeuing hearts Tim. What may we learne from these first words Silas That a liuely faith is necessarily required as an instrument to receiue true righteousnesse before God Secondly whosoeuer is indued with this faith hath that righ teousnes which God alloweth of in iustice not that faith as it is a quality a worke or guift is this iustice but because God imputeth to faith the iustice of his Son Christ which alone is able to appease him and to abide the rigor of his law which faith as a worke cannot doe Tim. What may wee learne by this that Paul confirmes the doctrine of free righteousnesse by faith out of Moses his writings Silas That Paul the Apostle and Moses writings had good agreement in the doctrine of the Gospell Secondly that the righteousnesse of faith hath witnesse from the law and the Prophets Thirdly that Moses knew and preached the Gospell as well as the Law hence it is that Moses lawe doeth oftentimes signifie the whole doctrine of God as Psal. 19. 7. Tim. Why then is Moses accounted a Preacher of the lawe and set against the Apostles and Christ the preachers of the Gospell Iohn 1. 17. Silas Moses had this denomination of that which hee did for the most part and that was to publish and expound the lawe to the people howbeit the promises of grace are contayned in his writings also he prophesied of Christ Iohn 5. 46. For Moses wrote of mee euen as Christ and his Apostle did preach the law and vrged repentance Marke 1. 15. Yet because their chiefest endeuor was to set forth the promises of grace they are therefore called the Ministers of grace and dispencers of the Gospell Tim. What vse of this poynt Silas It serueth to draw the Iewes the sooner to embrace the righteousnes of faith since it was taught by Moses a Prophet whome they much honoured and respected and yet refusing to beleeue in Christ euen for that they thought therby to be drawn away from this Moses wheras Paul tels them that there is no such matter if they would beleeue Moses but contrariwise they must receiue Christ whome hee preached as Iohn Baptist so Moses prepared Disciples for Christ the one more the other lesse clearely Tim. But how may it appeare to vs that Moses in this testimony did speake of Christ and the Gospell Silas First out of Moses wordes Deut. 30. 6. 11. the promises of conuersion to God and circumcision of the heart are parts of the Gospell and this was the commaundement and not the legall precepts which that day hee spake Secondly out of Paul who in this place tearmeth the word which Moses spake to be the word of faith verse 8. Thirdly if Paul had vsed this text of Moses by allusion agreement or proportion onely as if such wordes as were spoken by Moses touching the law might fitly be applied by Paul to the Gospell then had they not serued the purpose of the Apostle which was to confirme by testimony of Moses that which hee had spoken before touching Christ being the end of the law for righteousnesse to him that beleeues They are then deceiued which think that Paul alludeth to Moses citing him by way of consequence and not directly or that he doth speake of the bare knowledge or performance of
all respect vnto workes by the certainty facility and fruite that followes it and no we affirmatiuely Paul sheweth what it is that faith speaketh Tim. Howe is the certainty of this righteousnes gathered Silas From the nature of the obiect which is the word of God not euery word but the word of faith euen the promise of Christ apprehended by faith verse 8. The sum where of is this that Christ Iesus is dead and rose againe to iustifie all that beleeue in him verse 9. Tim. How gather ye the facility of the righteousnes of faith that it is easie and possible Silas By this that vnto our iustification there is no more required then this that the hearte beleeue and the mouth make confession of the death and resurrection of Christ. Tim. What is the summe of this whole text Silas Thus much hee that truely beleeueth and accordingly doth professe the promise of God made vnto mankinde concerning blessednesse by the incarnation life death and resurrection and intercession of Christ hath a ready and certaine way to attaine righteousnesse and eternall saluation without al consideration of merit of works either done before or after grace Tim. Come we to the eighth Verse and tell vs what parts it hath Sil. These three First a question which is imperfect must be thus supplyed But what saith the righteousnesse of Faith This question serueth to stirre and quicken vp attention Secondly an answere This it sayeth that the word is neere thee c. Thirdly a declaration what worde hee meaneth not of the Lawe but of the Gospell Tim. Come we to the Interpretation and tell vs in vvhat 〈◊〉 it is saide That this word is neere vs Sil. That is to say it is propounded and offered vnto vs plainly to be vnderstood by the ministerie of the Gospell so as we neede not crosse the Sea nor climbe vp the Mountaines or take any long painfull iourneyes to seeke it out Tim. How is it saide to bee neere in our hearts and in our mouthes Silas It is neere in our hearts by beeing grafted or planted in our hearts by faith and it is neere in our mouthes when wee make profession of it before men when cause requireth so to do for Gods glorie or the benefit of others Tim. Why is the Gospell called the word of Faith Silas First effectiuely because it begetteth faith thorow the Spirit as verse 17. Secondly obiectiuely because it is receiued by Faith as the proper and especiall obiect thereof Also because it teacheth and requireth not workes but Faith onely vnto righteousnesse before God The Papists doe erre which say that the doctrine of faith and life is meant by the word of Faith Heere Paul medleth not with good life elsewhere hee dealeth about it Tim. Let vs now know what Doctrines we haue out of this eight verse Silas These three First that a liuely Faith hath the worde of God for the foundation and grounde of it to builde and stay vpon whereby Word we may vnderstand either generally that word which is reuealed vnto vs in the Scripture of the Old and new Testament For Faith doth beleeue and assent to all that which GOD speakes in the Scriptures because they proceede and come from him who is the God of truth al whose words are most true and faithfull howbeit our Christian Faith doth more specially respect the word of the Gospel the promise of Grace touching the remission of sinnes and eternall life by Iesus Christ as it is saide heere by way of exposition This is the word of Faith which we preach And wheresoeuer wee finde Faith and Christ his blood and death coupled together wee are giuen to wit that the Doctrine teaching Christ his person and office is the proper obiect of our iustifying Faith which is therefore by Diuines defined to bee an affiance in the promise of Grace Tim. What may bee the reason that Faith looketh in the matter of iustifying onely to the word of promise Silas Because that word alone doth offer vnto sinners the merits of Iesus Christ to bee freely enioyed of them vnto remission of sinnes and saluation so as they be imbraced and receiued and therefore they bee called the word of his grace and the Gospel of Christ the word of saluation and reconciliation because both the free loue of God and Christ and al his benefits be propounded to the elect in the word of promise Tim. What vse are we to make of this first doctrine Silas It confuteth the Papistes which make not the word alone but their Apocrypha writings humane Traditions to be the Anchor and stay of faith which is with the foolish Builders to lay our Foundation vppon the sand and not vpon the rocke Tim. What is the second Instruction Silas That Faith is no wauering vncertaine opinion fleeting through ignorance and feare but is a firme vnmoueable and sure knowledge because it resleth vpon Gods worde and promise then the which nothing is more sure and certaine For it is written The word of God is true 2 Sam. 7 28. His testimonies are sure and endure for euer Psal. 19 7. 1 Iohn 2 17. Also Heauen and earth shall perish but one tittle of Gods word shall not perish and Rom. 9 6. 2 Cor. 1 20. 1 Cor. 1 9. Now then Faith it selfe must needs bee a thing vnmooueable and bring with it an infallible certainty sithence it leaneth on such a firme rocke Mat. 7 25. as the sure words of the faithfull promises of God who neither is deceiued nor can deceiue vs seeing he cannot lye Tit. 1 2. but is onely truth yea truth it selfe Ro. 3 3. Hence it is that Plerophorie or full assurance is attributed to Faith in Scripture Col. 2. 2. Hence also it is that godly Christians rather then they will deny the doctrine of Christ or anie part of it so ascertained vnto their vnderstanding and with such firme assent of their mindes receiued they choose to loose their liberties liuings yea and liues also if the will of God bee examples heereof we haue in many thousand martyrs of Christ in all ages Tim. Can ye giue vs examples of any whose Faith hath remained stable and vnshaken by reason of Gods Worde and promise Silas Yea of Iacob Gen. 32 9. of Abraham Rom. 4 21. Gods power promises being the two props of Abrahams Faith Heb. 11 17 19. Of Dauid Psal. 119. In thy word is my trust Tim. By what comparison may this bee illustrated and set foorth Sil. Of a good man whose word deserues credit and ehaseth away doubting from such to whom it is giuen so or much more then so ought the word of God to be rested in and that without wauering and anxity of minde perplexed with feare forsomuch as God is the authour of all that truth and fidelity that is in all good men and being himselfe the fountaine of all truth without mixture offalshood therefore his word may be
our selues he working in vs both will and deede Ephes. 2 10. Phil. 2 13. but this righteousnesse of Faith is easier in regard of the manner of the worke because the Law requireth the ful obedience thereof to be performed by our selues which cannot be in this infirmity Ro. 8 3. But Faith referreth and sendeth vs to Christ for the perfourming of the Law and in regard of the manner of the worke it is farre easier to beleeue the Law to bee done by another who was able to fulfill it and was sent for that end then to do it our selues Also much easier it is to beleeue and giue assent to a true promise then to keep strictly without failing all Gods commandements If a King should say to a Subiect Conquer mee such a kingdome and I will giue thee my daughter with large dignities and liuings were it not harder then if he should say doe but trust my word and I will do all this for thee In these considerations one saith that saluation hath but a short cut it requireth no external labour but inward beleefe and Caluin saith that by the operation of the Spirit thou maiest easily beleeue with thy heart and confesse with thy mouth And Lyranus saith heere is shewed the facility of the righteousnesse of faith And Faius thinketh this saying of being neere in the heart and mouth to be a Prouerbiall speech commending the readines of that which is in the heart and mouth Tim. What vse heereof Silas It ministreth comfort to Christians to consider that the meanes of passage to heauen be not vnconquerable and vnable to bee attained Secondly it declares how vncomfortable Popish Doctrine is which excludes and shuts out all hope of being saued by tying saluation vnto an impossible condition of fulfilling the Lawe Thirdly it stirreth vs vp to the loue and praise of Gods goodnesse in appointing so easie a condition and giuing vs power to keepe it For Faith is the gift of God DIAL VIII Verse 10 11 12. For with the heart man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse and with the mouth man confesseth vnto saluation For the Scripture saith c. Tim. WHat doth this Text containe Silas First a repetition and confirmation also of that which was saide touching saluation the effect of righteousnesse by faith togither with an explication of the persons to whom righteousnesse and saluation belongeth The thing here repeated is that a Christian that beleeueth in Christ dead and raised to life and confesseth this his faith before men shall certainly and without doubt be saued Wherefore let vs obserue these things that faith and confession are coupled together as the tree and her fruite and as the Mother and the Daughter Also they be set soorth by their proper subiect or seats whereto they cleaue and wherein they sticke and rest Faith in the heart and confession in the mouth Lastly not the parts but the degrees of saluation be pointed at The first degree or beginning of it is righteousnesse to wit absolution from sinne by free pardon through the merit of Christ his death and being accounted iust before God by the worthinesse of his obedience to the Morall Law The second degree is perfection of saluation in heauen all the proceedings thereunto from Iustification till Glorification in Heauen heere called saluation Tim. Whence is the Confirmation of this proposition fetched Sil. From authority of Scripture as of Esay 28 16 v. 11. and Ioel 2 32. verse 13. Tim. What dooth Paul in the explication of the persons which shall be partaker of this saluation Silas First hee noteth them by an vniuersall particle Whosoeuer without difference of Nation or sex or age or condition Secondly he particularly nameth both Iew and Gentile which in respect 1. of saluation 2. and the neede thereof by sinne 3. with the meanes thereof by Faith are equal as he proueth by two Reasons one from the vnity of Gods effence who is the same Creator and Sauiour of all the elect Iew and Gentile Secondly from the immensiuenesse of Gods mercie which is so large as that it can suffice all sortes of people which trust in his Sonne and cal vpon him verse 12 13. Therefore by calling of the Gentiles nought was taken from the Iewes these were no whit endamaged by sauing them God is sufficient for both Tim. Come we now to the Interpretation and tell vs what is meant by Man As also what is meant by beleeuing Sil. By man is meant euery true Christian man or woman And by beleeuing is meant not onely to assent vnto the Doctrine of Christ but with confidence and sure affiance to embrace it Tim. What is meant by the Heart Silas The soule with all the faculties thereof but especially the will and affections which are therefore in phrase of Scripture tearmed the heart because the soule keepeth her chiefest residence in that fleshie part of man called the heart sitting and shewing her selfe there as it were in her chaire of estate Tim. What is it With the heart to beleeue to Righteousnesse Silas It is the same with that phrase Ro. 4 5. to haue Faith imputed for righteousnesse or with that Ro. 9 30 to attain to the righteousnes of faith or Gal. 3 14 24. To receyue righteousnesse or to bee made righteous by Faith Tim. What Lessons are wee to learne from the first part of the tenth verse Silas First that vnto righteousnesse before GOD that is to remission of sinnes and perfect Iustice by Christs death and resurrection there needes on mans part nothing but a true and liuely Faith Indeede good workes are witnesses to testifie the truth of this faith before men and vnto our selues but when the speech is of getting and receiuing righteousnesse euen pardon of our sinnes and eternall life by Christe workes are cleane to be shut out and excluded as hauing no power to enable vs to embrace Christ and this is the controuersie between vs and the Church of Rome that whereas they do part the instrumentall cause of our righteousnesse betweene Faith and workes wee attribute it vnto Faith onely according to the doctrine of the Scripture Rom. 3 27 28 29 30. Gal. 2 16. and of the Fathers agreeable thereunto The beleeuing man shall bee iustified in Faith onely Ambrose on 1 Cor. 1. Whosoeuer trusteth in Faith onely is blessed Hierom Chap. 3. vnto the Gal. By Faith onely shall Christ saue the offenders of the Lawe Chrysostome on the Ephesians To these might bee ioyned Basil Theophylact Hilarie Cyprian many more which teach the same truth as we now do Tim. What vse of this Doctrine Silas First it instructeth vs to know how necessarie Faith is for where this is there righteousnesse is and there is no righteousnesse where Faith is wanting Secondly it conuieteth the Papists of greeuous slaunders in that they charge Luther to be the first inuenter of this Doctrine touching righteousnes by Faith alone Whereas
before him the learned Doctors of the Church yea Apostles Prophets and Christ himselfe had deliuered this truth to the Church euen from the beginning How then can it bee an heresie in Luther to teach thus but it must be an heresie also in the Pen-men of the holy Ghost to write thus Tim. What is the next Doctrine Silas That the seate and subiect of Faith is not the minde alone but the will also which is more speciallie signified by heart Acts 8 37. Ephes. 3 17. For this confidence is at least a necessary companion of faith but confidence hath place in the heart therefore Faith lodgeth there also Tim. What vse are we to make of this Doctrine Sil. It serueth to teach that vnto a liuely Faith there is required a double worke of the Spirit First to enlighten the minde that it may certainly see and assent to the things written in the Gospell Of this first worke it is that Faith is often in Scripture tearmed Vnderstanding and knowledge and seeing The other worke is to bow the affections that they embrace and fully rest in that which the minde hath fully assented vnto From this worke Faith in Scripture is tearmed trust confidence and affiance Secondly this Doctrine serueth to confute the Romanists which place Faith in the supernal part of the soule onely and will haue it to bee nothing else but the assent of the minde to the will of God whereas it is not written heere that with the vnderstanding but with the heart man beleeueth to righteousnesse There may indeede bee worthy knowledge and notable assent in the vnderstanding part but it is the heart which beleeueth to iustification Thirdly here is an exhortation to all Christians as they will bee assured of this iustifying faith not to rest content with a naked knowledge of the Gospell or that in their mindes they haue yeelded agreement and consent to the trueth of it but neerely to looke vnto this whether faith haue taken holde of their will and affections to make them obediēt to their illuminated vnderstanding with some measure of peace and ioy and to resist all contrary thoughts and motions with a loathing of them being ready to make confession of Christ in our mouthes Tim. What is signified here by confession of the mouth Silas Not onely a plaine and cleere acknowledgement of Christ to be the onely Lord and Sauiour of mankinde and of all that doctrine which concerns his office natures persons and benefits but the calling vpon his name with trust in him as in our owne Lord and Sauiour as it is expounded in the 13. verse following wherein vocation is put for consession Tim. Wherefore is this worke of confession added vnto fayth Silas To distinguish and put difference betweene a dead and a liuely faith by a peculiar fruite of it Tim. But why is this work named as the witnes of faith rather than any other worke Sil. First because it is easily gathered out of the words of Moses before alledged in verse 8. where Moses spake of the mouth and ioyned it with the heart Secondly because it is a principall token of a true faith when occasion serueth sincerely to confesse the doctrine of Christ and to call vpon his name faithfully which no hypocrites doe for they draw neere with their lippes onely Math. 15. 8. but this consession which is a sure marke of faith comes from faith as from the root of it Thirdly because great promises are made to this duty of confession Math. 10. 32. and heere saluation is promised to such as confesse Christ out of a liuely faith Tim. But in what sort and sence is saluation annexed to confession Silas Not as the effect to his cause but as the way to the end for confession is but the way onely by which iustified persons doe come to their perfect blessednes in heauen which is here signified by saluation as the highest degree of our happines Seeing righteousnes is attributed to faith and saluation necessarily follows righteousnes therfore faith is the onely instrumentall cause whereby we be iustified and saued and not confession which is but the path onely wherein the godly are to walke to heauen and a 〈◊〉 of a sauing faith 10 as vaine is that Popish note vppon these wordes that faith without workes iustifieth not it iustifieth without workes but it is not in a Christian without workes What doctrines are taught from this latter part Silas That a liuely faith bringeth forth good workes and namely the consession and inuocation of Christ which where they are there is true faith and there is no true faith where they bee not as there is no fire where there is no light nor heat for it is the nature of faith to witnesse it selfe vppon occasion as fire sendeth forth heate Therefore are wee wronged by the Papistes who accuse vs to teach a weake and a dead faith voyde of workes and Christians are to be warned to get such a faith as can shew it selfe by workes and such workes as proceede from faith for wee teach that true faith workes by loue and all works which come not of faith to be sinnes Secondly we learne that confession is a worke necessary to saluation and is to bee done of all those that will be saued necessarily as a duty and a thing commanded vs of God but not as a meritorious cause Tim. But what things belong vnto Christian confession Silas First knowledge to see the trueth concerning Christ. Secondly wisedome to espy the due occasion of confession to wit when God may bee glorified and our neighbour edified Thirdly boldnesse to doe it freely without feare of man Fourthly sincerity without dissimulation and guile Fiftly reuerence as in Gods quarrell and presence Sixtly meekenesse 1. Pet. 3 15. Such as bee drowned in ignorance of the Gospell and vnbeleefe also rash presumptious and vaine-glorious persons timorous and fearefull ones hypocrites and false-hearted men and women proud and mallepart people be not fit and meeke to performe this duty of confessing Christ. DIAL IX Verses 11 12 13. For the Scripture saith whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not be ashamed For there is no difference betweene the lew and the Grecian for he that is Lord ouer all is rich vnto all that call vpon him For whosoeuer shall call vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To proue by authority of Scripture what he had said before in verse 10. where he ascribed righteousnesse vnto faith as to a cause and saluation to confession as to a way which leadeth vnto saluation The argument standeth thus It is not possible that the scripture should be broken and vntrue but the Scripture promiscth righteousnesse and saluation vnto such as truely beleeue and call upon Christ. This is proued by these three verses of our Text touching faith verse 11. touching confession in
Thus the Publican prayed Luke 18. 13. and Dauid Psal. 25. 1. This latter kinde of calling on God is either in heart only as Moses prayed at the red sea Exodus 14. 15. and Hannah 1. Sam. 1. 13. or both with hart and mouth as Dauid prayed Psal. 116. 1 2 3. They are both meant here vocall and mentall prayer but chiefly the latter Tim. What learne we from hence Silas That true prayer is a certaine vndoubted note of saluation euen as the want of the guist of prayer is a plain marke of a wicked man Psal. 119. Saue me O Lord for I call vpon thee Psal. 14 4. They call not vpon the Lord. Tim. What vse of this point Silas It serues to moue such as would bee saued and lacke the guift of prayer to striue to haue it and such as haue it to make precious account of it and to be heartily thankefull to God for such an vnspeakeable guift yet we ought not to thinke that by the worke of prayer we merite saluation the roote and cause whereof is faith from whence it hath all efficacy and commendation Tim. What may it teach vs that we must beleeue in him on whom we do call Silas That faith in Christ is necessary vnto true prayer yea so necessary as without it wee not onely cannot pray aright with hope to speede Marke 11 24. Iames 1. 6 7. but our prayers are turned into sinne Rom. 14 23. The reasons heereof be first because it is written he that commeth to God must beleeue that God is and that he is a rewarder of them that seeke him Heb. 11 6. Secondly because trust and confidence of the heart that God will heare is that which begetteth prayer whereof as of all other good guifts and good workes liuely faith is the mother and roote whence they spring fetching all their praise and vigor from faith therefore it was that Moses cryed for deliuerance from the Egyptians Dauid from Saul and other enemies the Syrophenissian prayed for her daughters safety the blind mā for his sight and the Publican for the remission of his sinnes c. because they beleeued that God could and would grant their petitions As we in our necessities when we need other men do willingly become sutors for helpe at their hands when we haue trust to bee heard and succoured so it is the affiance of Gods goodnesse which doth bring foorth inuocation and calling on his name as Dauid said Wee beleeue and therefore wee pray Psal. 116. Tim. What profit is to be made of this instruction Sil. First it doth admonish vs that when we pray we bring faith hauing assurance of Gods loue in Christ that for his sake he is our sather and also will faithfully keepe his promises which he hath made to them that call vpon him Secondly to reprooue such as doe offer to pray hauing their hearts voyd of this holy confidence without which all prayers bee vaine and idle Thirdly to comfort such as feele their hearts stirred vp to desire of Gods blessings with a confidence to obtaine because this is a certaine note that they haue faith without the which they could not haue such desires and such confidence Ephe. 3 12. Fourthly to conuict the Papists of error for their calling vpon Saints departed in whome because they may not put any trust for cursed is he that trusteth in man therefore no prayer ought to bee made to them but to God alone in whom alone it is that wee may put our confidence Therefore all religious prayers to him are onely to be made and to none other Also this confuteth Bellarmine who saith that vnto prayer it is not needefull that hee that prayeth haue faith to assure him of being heard directly against this Scripture and Iames 1 6 7. Tim. Proceed and tell vs what hearing he speakes of in saying How can they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard Silas Not onely the hearing which is inward of the minde and heart but of the outward hearing by the sence of the eare neyther is it the hearing of euery sound or voyce but the hearing of the word euen the word of the Gospell which is meant in this place Tim. What is the instruction from hence Silas That vnto true beleefe in God the hearing of the Gospell with our bodily eare is necessarilye required Tim. But how then shall elect Infantes beleeue seeing they are not capable of this hearing through the weakenesse of their Organ Silas This text speaketh of the meanes how to come by actuall faith which is ioyned with discourse and is got by institution and not of that habituall faith or faculty of beleeuing whereby insants are endowed thorough the wonderful secret operation of the Spirit engrafting them into Christ for saluation Tim. What are wee to thinke of them that are borne deafe and cannot heare Sil. The Holy-Ghost both by his extraordinary motion in their hearts supplies the want of outward meanes in so many deafe ones as be his chosen whereof sundry examples both in former and in this age Our text speaketh of the ordinary way whereby Christians doe obtaine the guift of faith to wit by externall hearing which is as necessary to faith as faith is to prayer or prayer to saluation Tim. What reasons can bee giuen why externall hearing of the word should auaile vnto faith Silas First Gods ordinance hath appointed it to bee so that by hearing faith should be engendered 1. Cor. 1 21. Secondly his promise heere made vnto hearing that there by he will worke faith Thirdly actuall faith cannot bee had without some good measure of actuall knowledge which we haue put into vs by such as instruct vs in the truth whose voyce therefore it is needfull to heare for the thing beleeued is Gods word and that is receiued by hearing Fourthly as our first parents were turned from God and drowned in vnbeleefe by hearing the Serpent so it is but conuenient that the elect by hea ring Christs voyce should be conuerted to the faith and so returne to God Tim. What vse are Christians to make heereof Silas First it teacheth the sence of hearing to bee a great and necessary blessing The Philosopher Aristotle calleth this the sence of vnderstanding sensus discipline and Paul calleth it the sence of beleeuing sensus fidei Our other senses especially our eyes are good helpes of many notable thinges for thereby wee reade in the great booke of Gods creatures wherein we beholde the glory of the Creator his maruailous wisedome his eternall power and God-head Psal. 19 1 2. 1. Cor. 2 21. Rom. 1 19 20. Yea moreouer by our eyes wee reade in the word of God and other good bookes made and penned for increase of godly knowledge sithence the sight of the creatures and workes of God is sufficient to leaue vs without excuse Rom. 1 20. but vnsufficient and effectuall to breed faith And
bring you tydings of great ioy c. Tim. What signifies to obey the Gospell Silas To beleeue the doctrine of saluation by Christ and thus the word is vsed in Acts 6 7. and Romanes 1 5. whereupon it is tearmed the Lawe of Faith Rom. 3. 27. because it requireth obedience Tim. For what Reasons is Faith called Obedience and to Obey put for Beleeue Silas Because to beleeue is the chiefest obedience it is commanded vs to beleeue in Christ 1 Iohn 3 23. and our reason and iudgement is naturally repugnant to the Doctrine of the word for they are darknesse Ephes. 5 8. Therefore to assent to the word and willingly to beleeue the truth without reasoning and gainsaying it is a verie great obedience Secondly this obedience of Faith bringeth forth obedience in practise for faith purifieth the heart Acts 15 9. and workes by loue Gal. 5 6. No Christian shall obey God by louing him and our neighbour by slaying sinne and dooing righteousnesse vnlesse he first beleeue that the word is from God and submit to it by Faith Tim. What will follow heereof Sil. First that all vnbeleeuers are obstinate and rebellious sinners against God though they think otherwise and be held for honest men Secondly that such as lacke Faith cannot perfourme any obedience vnto God it is sinne if it be not of faith Tim. What Doctrine ariseth from hence That all which heard the Apostles did not beleeue them Tim. That the Faith of the Gospell is not common to all which heard the Gospell as it is written All men haue not Faith 2 Thess. 3 2. Also experience proueth the truth heereof for the Prophets complaine that few beleeue their preaching Esay 53 1. Also Christ when hee preached the doctrine of the Gospell most clearly and mightily confirmed it by myracles yet but one heere and there did receiue it scarse one man of a thousand such also was the successe of the Apostles preaching as this place proueth and such it is continually Tim. But Paule had sayde that hearing bringeth foorth Faith Silas It is true that hearing of the word is necessarie to faith but not on the contrary doth faith necessarilie follow of hearing If any man do beleeue it is thorough hearing as an outward meanes but not euery one that heareth proueth a beleeuer Iustification presupposeth vocation but vocation is not alwaies accompanied with Iustification Tim. What is the reason why all which heare do not proue beleeuers Sil. Because all are not elect and it is a certain thing that onely such as are ordained to life do beleeue Actes 13 48. Thence it is called the Faith of the elect Titus 1 1. and they are said to be called which are predestinate Rom. 8 31. Secondly because outward hearing is not enough to engender faith there must be also an opening of the eyes and heart by the Spirit Acts 26 18. and 16 14. But this Spirit the world cannot receiue Iohn 14 17. Such onely receiue it to whom it is giuen Math. 13 11. And Esay 53 1. hauing saide few beleeued their report addeth this as a reason because The arme of the Lord was not reuealed that is Gods powerfull spirit did not touch their hearts effectually Thirdly in some their pride and ouer-weening by conceyuing too highly of their owne wit and vnderstanding leaning vnto their owne naturall wisedome is a very great hinderance to faith Math. 11 25. 1 Cor. 1 26. Fourthly many stumble at the pouertie of Christ and his followers Mat. 11 6. To which may be added the wicked examples of preachers and professors of the Faith as a great obstacle Tim. What vse is to be made heereof Silas That we now do not the lesse esteeme the Gospell though we see it generally vnfruitfull because this hath beene the portion of other times and ages herewith Christians must arme themselues that they bee not offended to see the multitude of vnbeleeuers and there is no place so ful of vnrighteous men as where the word is most preached which is a great occasion of stumbling to cause men to thinke ill of the Doctrine as if it were the proper cause of wickednesse or at the leastwise vnable to conuert sinnes whereas the faulte is not in the word nor alwayes in the teachers but in the indisposition naughtines of the hearers the seede being good but the ground barren and euill Secondly it confutes such as thinke the Faith of the Gospell to proceede in part at the least from the naturall strength of mans free will whereas this beeing equall and of the like force in all men then should all men haue Faith and equally obey the Gospell If free will were the cause of beleeuing that is if men did therefore beleeue and receiue Grace offered because they are willing to receiue it might refuse if they would if Faith might come after this fashion who is it but he would be content to be a beleeuer But the Scripture teacheth vs that Faith is the gift of God Tim. From whence doth the Apostle fetch this testimonie of Esay to prooue the fewnesse of beleeuers what is the drift of that Oracle Silas He doth fetch it from Esay 53 1. the drift both of the Prophet there and the Apostle heere is all one euen to complaine of the Iewes infidelity namely that the ioyfull message of the Gospell had so harde successe and vnhappy end among them as that the greatest number should still abide in their vnbeleefe wherewith seeing men were not mooued therefore Paul turneth his complaint to God and mourneth for it before him Tim. What are wee to vnderstand by this Question Who hath Sil. This question signifies sometimes None at al as Rom. 10 6. and it is sometimes put for Few as Psal. 15 1. and heere likewise Tim. What signifies Report Silas The word in the Hebrew signifies hearing or the Doctrine which was heard not which the Apostles themselues heard of God but which the Iewes heard from the Apostles therefore it is saide Our report in which word the thing which is the obiect of hearing is put for hearing it selfe Tim. What Doctrines from hence Silas That the Prophets by the Spirit of prophesy did foresee what effects would follow the Gospell preached to the Iewes God foreseeth all thinges of himselfe primarily men do it secondarily by the helpe of his Spirit Secondly we learne that it is a cause of great greefe to the Ministers of God to see none or little fruite to come of their teaching Heb. 13 17. wherein they must shewe patience considering it was the portion of Christ his Prophets and Apostles Thirdly wee learne that when the Gospell was first deliuered to the Iewes the smallest number did receiue it euen an handfull in respect of the rest which resisted it like to the gleannings in haruest or Grapes after the vintage The cause heereof was not the prophesie of Esay because he foretold it but the cōtrary rather beeing true
made and constituted members of Christ and are planted into the tree of his Church to become branches thereof As good fruite causeth not a tree to be good but is a witnesse of the goodnesse of the tree So good workes and all other good gifts doe testifie vs to be Christians but faith onely makes vs to be such For by faith we liue Gal. 2 20. Rom. 1 12. Whereas both our English Diuines and others doe write that we are ingrafted into Christ by baptisme it must be meant that it is a sacrament and a seale of that faith which regenerateth and ingrafteth into Christ Rom. 4. 11. for which purpose reade M. Fulke on Acts 22. 17. and Rom. 6 4. Tim. What reasons are there to proue this that faith onely makes vs to be Christians Silas First wee are Christians by that which quickens vs to God but it is faith alone by which wee are quickened to Godward for before faith be come we were dead in sin Ephe. 2 1 2 3 5 8. Secondly we are not the members of Christ till we bee vnited to him as to our head but this vnion is wrought by faith Ephe. 3 17. Till wee bee adopted by grace to bee made the Sons of God and haue Christes righteousnesse imputed to vs wee are none of Christs but both our adoption and iustification are done by faith Roman 3. 28. Galat. 3. 26. therefore it is by fayth that wee are the branches of the true Oliue and do please God Tim. What profit are Christians to make to themselues of this doctrine Silas It confutes both the Papists who teach that the very acte of Baptisme makes vs to become Gods children and so doth iustifie regenerate and sanctifie vs as also the phantasticall spirits which taught that wee are the sonnes God before we beleeue Secondly it warneth vs of the miserable estate that the Pagans Turkes Iewes and all Infidels which be without the Church do liue in as also all wicked men and hypocrites which are within the Church who hauing no faith rightly to ingraft them into Christ and his body therefore they partake not in the roote nor fatnesse of the Oliue but wholy want Christ with his Spirite grace and saluation in which regard they are much to be pittied of vs and God is earnestly to be prayed that such among them as belong vnto him he would in graft them into his Sonne by faith Thirdly it exhorts all men that haue not the blessing of a beleeuing heart aboue all things to labour for it that they may be made one with Christ and bee blessed by beleeuing Gal. 3 9. For albeit faith be a guift freely bestowed out of Gods mercy to whom hee will yet God vseth not to giue it to the snorting Christian but to such as labour and seeke for it Lastly wee are by this doctrine called from pride and arrogancy vnto humility of heart for seeing wee become Christians and Gods children by faith and faith comes not from our selues but it is the guift of God we ought not to boast as if it were not freely giuen vs Ephe. 2 8. 1. Cor. 4 7. If faith both do spring from and wholly relye vpon mercy then the faithfull haue no cause of glorying but to reioyce rather in this that they know God to be mercifull Iere. 9 24. Further seeing faith findes nothing in man to make him accepted to God but sinne and death and doth send men out of themselues to fetch righteousnesse and life from another Therefore the faithfull haue great reason to walke humbly before God and mē Rom. 3 28. Rom. 4 1 2. Tim. Proceede and tell vs what is meant by high minded Silas Some referre this to the wisedome of the mind and expound it thus Be not wise in your selues or bee not wise in your owne conceite whereupon the Papists build their absurd implicite faith against Scripture and reason But they doe much better which referre it to the affections of the heart expounding it thus Be not haughty in heart or be not proud in your thoughts The word feare which signifies humble reuerence of God shewes that thus we ought to take the word high minded Tim. What is our doctrine from hence Silas That pride of heart or high mindednesse ought to be farre from such as be professed Christians The reasons heereof be these First it is forbiddē of God maketh vs odious to God and men Secondly it takes Gods glory from him and giues it to men and this is an abhomination to giue his glory to any Thirdly it is an absurd thing to be proud of that which is none of ours for we haue nothing at all no not a crumme of bread or a drop of water but of free guift Mat. 6 11. Iames 1 17. If it be a sencelesse thing that a stage player should bee proud of anothers apparell which he borrowed must by and by put it off how voide of sence should we be to be proud of such things as come without vs nay for such things as God might condemne in vs and vs for them because wee eyther abuse or corrupt Gods guifts and therby haue cause to be humbled in our best estate Lastly pride is a very dangerous thing for it pulled downe Gods iudgements vpon Angels and vpon Kings as Nabuchadnezar and Herod vpon nations as the Romanes and Iewes vpon Apostles as Peter therfore pride is by all meanes to be eschued and striuen against both by good meditation and earnest prayer to haue it mortified by grace if wee will please God and prosper now and for euer Tim. Haue we heere any present need of this admonitiou Sil. Yea very much and greatly because all manner of pride abounds among vs it was neuer more rise both outward and inward pride and in all sorts and degrees as our apparell words lookes gate title hunting after dignities striuing for precedency our boasting in our knowledge and disdaining of others all this doth testifie to our faces that wee are proude and therefore haue need to repent least we doe perish Tim. Tell vs what is heere meant by feare Silas It is set as contrary to high mindednesse and signifies humble reuerence of God or reuerence of God ioyned with humility for as pride and presumption of heart stirred vp by Gods guifts hath for companion carnall security which is the greatest enemy to grace and faith So humility arising from the sight of our great vnworthinesse and manifold infirmities is euer coupled with a reuerent awe of Gods displeasure which is a speciall conseruer of faith or of a Christian in the estate of faith Tim. But how agreeth this precept of Paul but feare with that commandement of Moses Exod 20 20. Feare not and with that of Christ Luke 12 4. Also that of Iohn 1. Iohn 4 18. Charity casteth out feare Silas The feare forbid in these places is eyther the immoderate feare of mighty men driuing others to forsake true religion
all to increase and preserue them what we can This must moue vs both to pray for greater measure of grace to be able to performe this better heereafter and instantly to beg pardon of God through Christ for our failing heeretofore for the debt of charity being neglected doth increase the debt of sinne and looke how much wee come short of paying the debt of loue so much we multiply the debt of sinne and therefore stand in need both of faith to beleeue the forgiuenesse of that which is past of repentance to amend our liues for time to come to walke henceforth in charity dooing all our things in loue Tim. Come now to the reason of the Apostle why we should loue one another and tell vs what is meant by the law and by the fulfilling of it Silas Among sundry acceptions of the word lawe as first for the books of Moses Secondly for the whole doctrine of the word Thirdly for the morall precepts giuen in Mount Sinai c. heere it is put for the second 〈◊〉 because he discourseth of the duties to our neighbour the loue whereof beeing coupled with the loue of God as an effect with the cause therefore it may well comprehend the whole morall law By fulfilling is meant heere not the exact keeping in euery point without any swaruing but the careful endeuour to do one commandement as well as another without baulking any of them The drift of the Apostle heere being this to teach that the law is generally kept by the exercise of loue which is therefore saide to bee the fulfilling of the law First because it is the end of the commandements 1. Tim. 1 5. Secondly for that it is the motiue to stirre vp to euery duty both to God man Thirdly because it is the summe of the law Math. 22. 37. 38. 39. Finally because it is the perfection of the lawe and were it perfect in vs would make vs perfect keepers of the law Tim. What is the doctrine we are to learne from hence Silas This ought very much to kindle our loue seeing it is such a helpe to the fulfilling of the lawe then which there is nothing except faith in Christ eyther of more honour and beauty or of more profite and benefit then to be keepers of the lawe by which first wee haue 〈◊〉 with God whose image of holinesse and righteousnesse is most absolutely and liuely purtrayed in the lawe the neerer therefore we come to the law the liker we are to God Againe our study to walke in the law is both a signe of a blessed man and the way to blessednesse Psal. 119 1. and 112 1. If the keeping of the law be so beautifull and beneficiall iudge how behouefull it is to imbrace loue which inables vs to keepe the law heere in some measure and in heauen perfectly As Paul saith of loue if wee had all graces without it they were nothing so may I say if we could keepe all the commandements and not do them in loue it were nothing Wherefore let all men that haue their hearts endued with loue thinke they haue a great blessing and thanke God for it and as the Apostles prayed Lord increase our faith so let euery good Christian pray Lord encrease my loue for the more we loue the more we fulfill the law and the more we fulfill the law the more we resemble God the giuer of the lawe and the liker wee are to God in holinesse the more we are to be like him in happinesse Besides all this though loue bee not the forme of faith yet it is a necessary effect of iustifying faith which workes by loue Gal. 5 6. and a fruite of the Spirite Gal. 5 22. The bond of perfection Col. 3 14. The badge of a Christian Iohn 13 35. Touching the properties works of loue also for the excellency and continuance read 1. Cor 13 4. to the end Tim. But whereas many pretend loue and haue it not how shall wee know when we haue indeede the gift of Christian charitie Silas First by the obiect of our loue if it bee right that is if we loue euery one that is our neighbour louing one man as well as another without partiality though some men more then others being wel affected vnto all howsoeuer others be affected vnto vs as Christ loued his enemies so must we This is one and the best triall of our loue Secondly by the measure or maner rather of our loue that we loue our neighbor as our selus that is as constantly without fainting as sincere without dissembling being as carefull through loue to bee helpfull to the bodies and soules of others and to euerie thing that is deere vnto them as we would haue it done to our selues Thirdly by the quality and nature of loue which stirs vs vp to respect one man as well as another though not so much so to tender him in one thing as well as in another for what God ioynes no man may separate that God which commaunded loue to our Neighbours persons hath enioyned charity towardes all the things of our neighbors not to hurt him in any of them no not so much as by a thought much lesse by disgrace or cruelty or vncleannesse or oppression or slander For if we do keepe that Law of not stealing and dooing wrong and breake the other which forbids adultery or incontinency or keepe this and trespasse by false witnesse being full of lies and euill reporters or false accusers of others or vntouched in all these yet be cruell vnmercifull and fierce offending against that Lawe which prohibits murthers or at a word caring somewhat to obserue one and being loose and licentious in transgression of some other not dooing many euils against our neighbors yet stiffely and obstinately culpable in some one or few certainly our loue is not that christian godly loue which looketh to euery precept and preuenteth the euill and harme of our Brethren in euery thing as much as lyeth in vs for loue dooth none euill vnto our neighbor Touching these singular and particular Precepts note that that of honouring Parents is omitted because they might be contained vnder powers also in an other Commandement the Commandement of Adulterie is prefixed vnto the Commandement of Murther Lastly this of fulfilling the Lawe by loue is ill wrested of Papists to proue Iustification by workes for this is not heere the Apostles purpose and when they shall proue that any meere man hath perfect charity such as the Law exacteth we will then confesse that righteousnesse before God may come by loue Meane while wee dare not crosse the doctrine of the Spirit teaching in so many plaine texts righteousnesse to be attained by faith without the workes of the Lawe which yet wee may in some sense bee saide to fulfill both because in our head it is perfectly kept that is allowed to such as beleeue in him Also with Augustine we say Quicquid 〈◊〉
good or the euill offered to them redounds to him Mat. 25 45. Also how can wee by our offence giuen make voide the fruite and force of Christs death towards our brother offended by v so much as we may and no thankes to vs if it bee not so what other thing I say can this be then to sinne against Christ by plucking from him one whom he hath so dearely bought Which ought not to bee vnderstood as if any effectually redeemed by the death of Christ and by faith ingrafted in him could indeed perish as Huberus many Lutherans teach for this is most firmely to be held as Augustine saith That none of the predestinate can vtterly fall away from grace for then Gods election should be frustrate and Christ vntrue who saith It is vnpossible Mat. 24. And his loue changeable Iohn 13 1. His couenant broken Iere. 31 32. Christs intercession vnauaileable Iohn 17 15 20 21. Gods wisedome decelued his power and goodnesse ouercome and vanquished by mans sinne all which are not onely absurd but impossible howbeit in respect of mans weakenesse ready to fall euen as a young childe or a sicke person soone ouerturned and the extreame power and malice of Sathan that like a Dragon is able to shake and pull downe Cedars euen strong ones if God permit And lastly in regard of the great dangerous temptations and scandals which sore tempt vs it is true that the beleeuer may be destroyed and when any offence is giuen them then what lyeth in the party that put the blocke in his brothers way hee casteth his brother downe headlong to eternall destruction but the mighty God with his hand vpholds all his not from falling but from falling away Tim. What duties may this doctrine of offences teach vs Silas It instructeth vs to know that such things as in respect of their nature bee not euill and which otherwise we might doe yet if they proue scandals and hurts to our brethren we ought to shun them as things sinfull and vnlawfull for that meate which may be eaten if no offence follow to eate it with offence is euill to him that doth it Rom. 14 20. and the like we are to iudge of all other indifferent things that accidentally by the scandall annexed to them they cease to be indifferent and pollute him that doth them with offence Secondly here is an admonition to all Christians which openly commit grosse sinnes and by their example teach others to doe the like Also to parents Maisters and all Gouernors which in the presence of their inferiors haue spoken or done wicked things or foreslowed good duties as prayer reading c. edifying them in iniquity by such naughty practises and by sins of omission that betimes vpon the former reasons they moue themselues to hearty repentance for the scandall and offences they haue set before others For seeing Christ hath said it Woe must bee to such by whom offences come except such as giue thē be truly humbled turning to God desiring forgiuenesse of his mercy fully purposing to walke without offence heereafter for certainely they shall feele the curse of God which doe giue occasion of harme to the soules of heedelesse men seeing a cursse is threatned Deut. 27 18. Will God poure his curse and vengeance on them who make the blinde stumble to the hurt of his body wil he not much more do this to soul destroyers Tim. Now that we haue done with the doctrine of offences and proued it by reasons both forreigne and bred in the Text let vs heare what we are to learne from the obiection in the 14. verse and first what it is to be perswaded through the Lorde Iesus Silas Through the Lord Iesus signifies not the merit of his death as some thinke for before the time of his passion nothing was vncleane in his owne nature but either 1. generally through Adams sinne which polluted all or 2. morally by intemperancie and ryot or 3. Ceremonially prohibited as certaine Beasts vnder the Law or 4. scrupulously and superstitiously of such as doubt of the lawfulnesse of lawfull meates It signifies therefore by the teaching and instruction of Christ by whose spirit he knew and was perswaded not probably and couiecturally as the word is vsed when the Scripture speaks of other mens faith and constancy as Rom. 15 14. 2 Tim. 1 5. Heb. 6 9. but certainly infallibly and assuredly so as he knowes it could not be otherwise In which sence the word is vsed when a man speakes of his owne Religion and saluation as Rom. 8 20. For euery man knowes best his owne heart and those things that himselfe hath receiued of God 2 Cor. 2 12. Tim. What is our Doctrine hence Silas That Christian faith is not a bare opinion or a doubting thinking a thing to bee so but an vndeceiuable certainty of that wee doe beleeue containing in it these three distinct things First a sound distinct knowledge of the thing beleeued I know Secondly a firme perswasion strongly assuring the heart Thirdly a confidence resting and reioycing with satisfaction vnto our mindes surely looking to enioy that we beleeue Tim. What Vse is to be made of this doctrine Silas That ignorant Christians who do either hate knowledge or seeke not for it also the wauering minded which do not rest with any gladnesse in the promises of Christ they are quite destitute of Faith what socuer they thinke of themselues And they doe falsly teach the doctrine of faith who deny to it infallible certainty And lastly it is a good token both of the being and growing of faith in a Christian heart the more firmely and strongly it doth apprehend and sticke to the word Moreouer from the 14. verse we are taught that the Papists defile pollute Gods creatures to themselues because they iudge them to be vncleane for meates bee as they are esteemed vncleane to him that thinks them so Of the purity and impurity of meates we shall say more in verse 20. Tim. Then in the meane time expound and collect the instructions from verse 16. the last verse of our text Silas It hath a new argument to disswade from giuing offence to the weak in our christian liberty about meats thus We may not do ought which may cause our Christian liberty to be euill spoken of but for the strong to eate with offence to the weake it wil cause our commodity to be euill spoken off therefore offences ought to be auoided For exposition of the words howsoeuer by your good or commodity some vnderstand their faith or hope of glory or godlinesse yet the matter in hande which is to direct to the right vse of christian libertie in middle things and the comparing this Text with 1 Cor. 10 29. wher that is stiled Liberty which here is phrased Good doth clearely open this place to be meant of this liberty which might be blasphemed that is reproched and euill spoken of and Christ also by it
the Conenant standing in reconciliation with God and newnesse of life It consisted of a reciprocall promise GOD promised pardon and grace the people promised faith and obedience Gen. 17 1 2. Tim. Vpon what things or in what respect was this Sacrament profitable to such as did keepe the law by performing morall obedience vnto God Silas In these respectes First it did serue to distinguish Gods people from al other people Secondly it did serue as a Seale to assure them of the forgiuenesse of their sinnes and of Gods fauour Thirdly it did admonish them of their duty that they must abandon all sinfull and wicked desires and affections and remaine holy to God Lastly it was an instrument of the Holy Ghost to the mortification of sinne Tim. What was further taught from this that hee saith Circumcision was profitable Sil. Namely to grant and yeeld vnto any with whom we haue to doe in causes of Religion what is in reason and truth to be yeelded Tim. What was learned from this that he saith Circumcision profiteth him that is a doer of the Law Sil. That the fruite and profit of sacraments dependeth vpon the faith and godlinesse of the receiuers and not vppon the action done and the word spoken for sacraments they doe not make a wicked man righteous but he that is already righteous they confirme him in his righteousnes and encrease graces giuen but as for wicked men neither sacraments nor any other externall thing can profit them whilest they liue wickedly without faith and repentance Tim. Then sacraments haue not grace inclosed in them as the vertue of healing is enclosed in the medicine nor do not regenerate iustifie and saue men by the very worke done Sil. No verily but all their vertue is from God who at his good pleasure maketh them profitable to his children which feare him and receiue them duely walking before God and being vpright Tim. But sithence none are so vpright but that still they be transgressors and therefore no keepers of the Law which implieth an exact performance of the whole Law therefore the Sacraments cannot bring profit vnto any And then in vaine were they ordained Sil. This Text which saith Circumcision is nothing to such as keepe not the Law speaketh of impenitent transgressors such Hypocrites as doe sinne and continue in their sinnes without any godly griefe for their falles or confidence in the grace of Christ for remission of their faults to these indeed Sacraments bring no benefit at all Howbeit such as do transgresse the law by infirmity against their owne purpose and resolution being heartsorry vpon their disobedience once espied groning with vnfeigned sighes for the offence of God thereby and endeuouring to arise by repentance such haue fruit by the holy Sacraments because they stand to the condition vpon which the force and benefit of the Sacraments do depend For they keepe the Law tho not in their owne person yet in Christ in whom they beleeue and for whose sake their daily slips and faults of frailty are not imputed Christ being made to the fathfull the end of the Law for righteousnesse Rom. 10 4 5. of which righteousnesse as Circumcision to Abraham and the godly Fathers before Christ so Baptisme the Lordes Supper since Christ his comming be seales assuring vnto the godly Beleeuers their iustification with God by faith in Christ. Whereas to the vnfaithfull wicked liuers they are vtterly voyde and of no force except it be to seale vp their iust condemnation and to be a witnesse against them Sil. How do you proue that godlinesse is required in them that shall profitably receiue the Sacraments and that to vngodly men they are vaine and of no vse Tim. By 1 Corinthians 11 24. the end of their examination is to finde faith and repentance which wicked persons do want Also by the example of Iudas and of Simon Magus and by infinite testimonies of holy Scripture namely by this Text which vnto the promise of grace on Gods behalfe mentioneth on the peoples part the conditiō of obedience without which God is not bound to stand to his promise Tim. What is the profit that a godly man taketh by the Sacraments if he come repentantly and doe beleeue the promises of the Sacrament Silas Manyfold and verie great First it stirreth vp and strengthneth faith in the forgiuenesse of our sinnes by Christ and so knitteth vs more straightly vnto God the Father by him Secondly it kindleth our loue vnto God Thirdly it kindleth our loue one towardes another Fourthly by it God mortifieth and killeth our corrupt lusts Fiftly it encreaseth hope of heauenly glory in the faithfull Lastly it prouoketh thankefulnesse praise to God for all his free mercies by Christ Iesus DIALOGVE XVII Verse 28 29. For he is not a Iew which is one cutward neither is that Circumcision which is outward in the flesh but hee is a Iew which is one within and the Circumcision is of the heart in the spirit not in the letter whose praise is not of Men but of God Tim. WHat is the drift of this Text Sil. To teach who is the true Iew and what is true Circumcision and who is the false Iew and counterfeit Circumcision Tim. What is false Circumcision and who is a false Iew Also what is true Circumcision who is a true Iew. Sil. The false Circumcision is that which is outward onely in the flesh and in the Letter whose praife is of men True Circumcision is that which is inward also in the heart and in the spirit whose praise is of God Tim. What do ye call outward Circumcision and a Iew outward Silas That is outward Circumcision when the foreskin of the flesh is pared away without any mortification of sinne and he is an outward Iew which is one by profession onely and before men without any inward renewing of his minde by the spirite of God working Faith and conuersion of the heart vnto God which was the thing promised on the part of the Circumcised Tim. Let vs heare now more fully the difference betweene one that is a true Israelits and one that is a counterfeit by consequence of a true Christian and an Hypocrite Sil. The differences are many which I wil rehearse in order First of all the true Israelite loues God for himselfe The counterfeit loues God for his benefites the one loues the word because it is his word the foode of his soule the other because of knowledge which delighteth him which is a natural thing The one loueth Gods Children because they belong to God the other loues them for some carnall respect as for profit credite kindred The true Israelite seeketh the praise of God the false praise and reputation of the worlde the one desires chiefly to haue himselfe and his dooings approued of God the other chiefly desireth this that he and his workes might be seene of men The true Christian looketh as much to the manner of doing as to the
therefore let none with Caine say my sinne is greater c. but rather with Paul 1 Tim. 1 15. Tim. But will not this Doctrine giue some liberty to sinne Sil. Nay it is a restraint rather and bridle from sinne for Gods children are made the more carefull not to offend him by how much the more they feele his mercies to be great towards them Therefore if any abuse this Doctrine to licenciousnesse it is a maruailous bad signe and a fearefull token that they are growne desperate Tim. What are we to learne by the beginning of the 21 verse As sinne hath raigned to death Silas First that sinne rules as a king in al vnbeleeuers Secondly while sinne beareth rule whatsoeuer men do tendeth to destruction Thirdly all Gods elect are first vnder the raigne of sinne and death First Prisoners wounded dead ere they be healed deliuered and restored to life Tim. When are we to iudge of sinne that it raignes as a King Silas When the lusts and motions of our sinnefull nature are willingly obeyed and followed Tim. What are we to learne by this where it is saide That grace might raigne Sil. That as there is a kingdome of sinne so also there is a Kingdome of Grace vnder which two Kingdomes the elect must passe For they are translated from the raigne of sinne to the raigne of Grace as the people of Israell were drawne out of AEgypt into Canaan and seeing euerie one must belong to one of these kingdomes therefore our care must bee to examine vnto which we are subiect Tim. What do ye cal the raigne and kingdome of Grace Silas When our conscience beeing assured that our sinnes are accompted Christs and his righteousnesse accompted ours we begin to leaue and withstand our sins and to liue vnto God thinking on those thinges which please him with care and study to do them Tim. What is meant heere by righteousnesse Sil. Christes obedience imputed to vs to iustifie vs before God Tim. What is meant heere by life Silas That blessed estate wherein we are set by means of this righteousnesse whereunto it is annexed as a fruite Tim. Why is eternall added vnto life Silas To shewe that the blessednesse of iust men shall continue for euer in Heauen as long as God endureth Tim. Why doth he mention Iesus Christ Silas To teach vs that it is by him alone that we obtaine Grace righteousnesse and life Tim. Wherefore is there no mention of Faith Silas In the matter of Iustification Christ is neuer mentioned without respect to Faith which apprehendeth him CHAP. VI. Of Sanctification DIAL I. Verse 1 2. What shal we say then Shall we continue in sin that Grace may abound God forbid How shal wee that are dcad to sinne liue yet therein Timotheus WHat doth the Apostle entreate of in this sixt Chapter Silas Of Sanctification whereby they which are Iustified and haue their sinnes forgiuen them thorough Faith in Iesus Christ are enabled to walke in a new life and to doe good workes so as they cannot licentiously liue in sin though through infirmity they do sinne Tim. What may we learne from this order of the Apostle in teaching Sanctification after Iustification Sil. Two things First that the Doctrine of free Iustification by faith dooth not destroy good works but produce them rather 2. the doctrine of good works or Sanctification must follow the Doctrine of Iustification as an effect the cause and fruit the roote Tim. What be the differences betweene Iustification and Sanctification Sil. Iustification is an action of God imputing to vs the perfect righteousnesse of Christ when wee beleeue in him Sanctification is a worke of the Spirit framing in the hearts of the elect a new quality of holinesse Secondly Iustification remoues from vs the guilt curse of sinne Sanctification remoues and takes away the rule and power of sinne Thirdly Iustification is as the cause and roote Sanctification is as the fruite effect thogh both done to vs at one time Fourthly Iustification is perfect heere Sanctification is vnperfect and encreaseth daily till at length by degrees it bee perfected in Heauen Tim. What be the parts of this Chapter Silas Two the first entreateth of the Doctrine of Sanctification prouing that such as bee sanctified cannot serue sinne vnto the 12. verse The second hath the dutie of sanctified persons who are exhorted to flye the seruice of sinne and to liue holily seruing righteousnesse vnto the end of the Chapter Tim. How doth the Apostle enter vppon the Doctrine of Sanctification Sil. By a Prolepsis wherein he preuenteth a certaine Obiection against his former Doctrine Tim. Where is this Obiection contained Sil. In the first verse in these words Shal we remaine in sin that Grace may abound Tim. What is it to remaine in sinne Sil. To fulfill the lusts of sin with a purpose to continue in the obedience of sinfull lustes which is a thing that cannot stand with grace howsoeuer grace and sin may stand together Tim. Tel vs now the obiection made against Pauls Doctrine what it was or what is the effect of it Silas This that he had taught men to liue and abide in sin that grace might abound Tim. How did they raise this Obiection and from whence did they gather it Silas From Pauls words when he saide Where sinne abounds there grace more abounds Tim. How did they collect reason from hence Silas Thus it is a good thing that Grace should abound therefore to liue securely and purposely to sin it is a good thing for by that meanes grace shall abound the more Tim. But if the encrease of sinne do cause grace to encrease why should it not be good to encrease and multiply sin seeing it is a very good thing that grace should abound Sylas This obiection is very faulty and absurd for first it maketh sin and encreasing of sin to be the cause of grace whereas it is but the occasion onely as a discase makes a Phisition famous by occasion onely for his skill in his Art is cause of his fame so our sinnes beeing many and great are occasions of illustrating and magnifying the grace of God and not causes to purchase grace for vs they are indeede properly causes ofire and vengeance But howsoeuer sins are not nor can bee causes of grace yet there needed an aboundant and infinite grace to take away sinnes beeing mightily encreased this then is the first fallacy in their reason that which is no cause put for a cause The next fault it is in the ambiguity of the word for they take this word where as if it were as much as wheresoeuer sin abounded which is not so many beeing ouerwhelmed with sinnes as Cayne Esau Iudas 〈◊〉 c. which had not a drop of grace affoorded them The meaning of the Apostle is this where sin abounds that is of whome sin is aboundantly knowne and felt with desire of the remedy which is Christ towardes them grace is more aboundantly shewed and
both the duty and testimony of a truely deliuered sinner which hath indeed by the death of Christ escaped death Tim. But tell me what course sinners are to take that they may get the sound feeling of their owne woefull damnation due to their sinnes Silas It is no easie thing to get it nor euery sinners case to come by it yet I will commend vnto the sinner desirous to be humbled foure looking-glasses wherein if he vse often and intentiuely to behold himselfe hee may haply through Gods mercy attaine his desire to his euerlastaing good The first is Adams fall wherein hee shall see not onely himselfe depriued of all goodnes and exposed to all sin and misery but the whole race of mankind and al creatures in heauen and earth folded in gods fearefull malediction and vengeance The second is the curse of the Law in which he shall see God as a most terrible Iudge most seuerely denouncing vnto his Creature the worke of his hands all the miseries of this life bodily and spirituall which are innumerable separation in the end of life of the body from the soule which is terrible and after this life ended euerlasting destruction both of body and soule which is most horrible and all this euen for the least transgression of his Law Deut. 27 26. The third is the estate of a damned man in Hell where he shall see a liuely picture of misery it selfe to with a man for sinne chained vp in a prison where there is a continuall night and most lamentable roaring and outcries hauing for his companions the Diuell and his Angels and the Reprobate his tender flesh extreamely pained in euery ioynt and sinew his soulc lying in vnexpressable horror filled with hatred of God blasphemy and despaire fretting and vexing not so much in the sence of present punishment which yet is easelesse and endlesse as in remembrance of his exceeding losse beeing cast out of Gods kingdome without hope of recouery And here remember I pray that this woefull estate euery one hath deserued a thousand waies The fourth and last is the most bitter death and passion of our Lord Iesus wherein let him see and consider himselfe as principal debter and Christ but as his surety suffering for his sinne euen at the hands of his owne vassals the Iewes Gentiles most greeuous tants scornes and reproaches most smartfull buffeting whipping crowning and piercing with thornes speares and nayles in his head hands and feete his most tender parts and at the hands of his angry reuenging Father receiuing such inuisible strokes in his soule as drew from his body abundance of bloudy sweat in the garden and from his mouth a most dolefull complaint and crie vpon the Crosse My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Heere vpon if a man will consider this deepely that if Gods wrath did lye so heauy vpon Christ for sinne imputed who also had his diuine power to vphold his man-hood in suffering it how heauy will it lye when it lighteth vpon a meere man and that for his own sin This meditation may preuaile much to bring downe the stoutest and proudest heart and stomacke that is in the sight and feeling of his owne misery which by desart of sinne is due to him in iustice or if this doe it not the case is very hard for it is a signe of a full hard heart not to be touched with griefe for such greeuous things as the onely Sonne of God for our cause endured Tim. Now that you haue told vs how the Law doth kill vs by engendering in vs a sence of Gods wrath and eternall death let me heare you declare vnto me by what meanes sinne did kill Paul Silas Sinne deceiued him and so slew him deceitfull sinne killed him Tim. What is the instruction from hence Silas That sinne is a deceitfull thing may appeare by these three wayes First by the testimony of Scripture as Heb. 3 12 13. Take heed least any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne also in Ephe. 4 22. the lusts of sinne are called deceiueable lusts now whatsoeuer God saith is deceitfull must needs be so for hee cannot lye Secondly by the example first of Paul confessing that sinne deceiued him he being very wise learned and heedfull Secondly of Peter who was deceiued by his sinfull presumption Thirdly of Salomon and Dauid by incontinency Fourthly of Iudas who was deceiued by couetousnesse Lastly of Herod by pride Thirdly by reason because it is the brood of the Diuell that olde Serpent full of subtilty who deceiued the whole world by his guile and craft the Child being like his father such damme such broode Second reason sinne is in quality contrary to holinesse therefore as holinesse hath sincerity and truth so sinne hath deceit and guile annexed to it Lastly seeing it makes our hearts deceitfull therefore it selfe must needs be full of deceite For that which maketh a thing to be such it selfe is more such Quod facit tale id est magis tale Aristot. Tim. What hurt and daunger is there in being deceyned Silas From this deceite of sinne springs hardnesse of heart and spirituall deadnesse Heb. 3 13. And after this there followes eternall death without the mercies of God and great repentance Sil. Are all men deceiued alike Silas No the wicked are deceiued wholly willingly and vnto their destruction The elect in some things are deceiued by sin euen after calling but neuer wholly and finally Tim. After what sort and wayes doth sinne deceiue vs Silas First by making men thinke that they are aliue and happy when they are dead and miserable thorough sinne Secondly by causing them to neglect their inward thoughts and lusts resting in outward obedience onely as if that were enough and could iustifie them Thirdly by insinuating it selfe into their harts becomming more pleasant and delightfull to them by the prohibitions of the Law forbidding and condemning it By these three waies especially was Paul deceiued with sin Fourthly by blinding our iudgement by putting out the eyes of our minde that we should not be able to see it to be a sin in our selues which we see to be a sin in others not to be a fault in particular which men do know to be a fault in the generall As the couetous proud malicious will condemn couetousnes pride hatred in general yet perceiue not that their owne actions sauour of these vices Fiftly sin perswades mē that the things which the law forbids are good commodious for them as some kind oflyes and some litle breaking of the Saboth and vsury such like sin dooth often put on the name and countenaunce of vertue as pride of cleanlinesse niggardnesse of thrift great swearing and reuenge of manhood courage c. Seauenthly it turneth away our thoughts from thinking earnestly vpon the punishment due to sin Eightly when we do any good it maketh vs ascribe it to
It serues for our humbling to consider our imbecility naturall ignorance whereby we hang doubtfull and stagger of seeblenesse and sticke by ignorance Secondly it shewes that none be perfect seeing we are ignorant what to aske in prayer Thirdly it confutes the Pelagians which ascribe too much to naturall strength yet we are so feeble as we cannot tell what is profitable much lesse be able to persorme any thing by any power in vs. Lastly it teacheth what neede wee haue of consideration and helpe to pray greater then most yea then good men commonly thinke of Tim. Come now vnto the next part of the sentence and tell vs how the Spirit maketh request Silas By stirring vp requests in vs and causing vs to pray That this is the meaning of the words apeareth by comparing this Text with the 15. verse of this chapter where it is written We haue receiued the Spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father the Spirit crieth by making vs cry Thus vnderstand that in Gal. 4 6. Tim. What gather ye from these words Silas Thus much that when the Scripture saith the Spirit crieth and maketh request the meaning is that it maketh vs to cry and to make request and this is an vsuall thing to attribute vnto God those things which the godly do by diuine inspiration Thus God is sayde to know by teaching others and illuminating their minds that they may know as Augustine obserues out of those words in Gen. 18 19. I know thou fearest me and in the Galathians 4 9. Forasmuch as ye know God or rather are knowne of God that is taught that yee may know So Deut. 8 2. God is saide to tempt the Hebrewes that he may know what is in them that is make themselues and others to know what is in them so heere the Spirit maketh request that is moueth vs to request Tim. I but the Scripture saith that Christ maketh request for vs Rom. 8 34. how then doth the Spirit make request Silas Christ maketh request as Mediator the Spirite maketh request for vs as Author and inspirer of requests and desires Tim. What is the doctrine from hence Silas That the prayers of the godly come from Gods Spirite The text is plaine heerein to which may be ioyned that which is written 1. Cor. 12 3. No man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the Spirite that is eyther confesse him or pray to him in faithfull confidence and reuerence but by a speciall grace of the Spirite Tim. What are we to learne hence that the Spirite is the worker and kindler of prayer in the godly Silas First that no Turke nor Iew nor Idolator nor Hereticke can pray because they haue not the Spirite Secondly that no wicked man nor hypocrite can pray because they receiue not the Spirite Thirdly that in our best prayers we ought to be humbled seeing they are not our owne but come from the Spirite which is our prompter moderater and Schoole-maister Fourthly that in beginning of prayer we craue of God the assistance of his Spirite Tim. What is signified by sighes vnexpressable or which cannot be expressed Silas This is meant eyther intensiuely for such sighes as are most feruent no man beeing able to vtter them for their greatnesse and exceeding vehemency or properly for such sighes as wee cannot vtter by any speech because of their weakenesse and feeblenesse The godly in whom they be know not of them through the infirmity of the flesh and strength of temptations they are not aware nor doe know that they doe pray much lesse speake any thing expressedly in prayer yet they are grones and sighes wrought in them by the holy Spirite which though the beleeuers feele them not yet God seeth and heareth them for they make a loude cry in his eare as in Exod. 14 15. This is the fitter sence therefore the better because it suteth with scope and matter the phrase also will beare it Tim. What instructions arise from these words Silas That the sighes of the heart albeit neuer a word be spoken be prayers euen as a desire to beleeue and to repent in a truely humbled heart be accepted for faith and repentance with God who will not breake the bruised reede and accepts the will for the worke so the desire to call vpon God is prayer in his sight God will fulfill the desires of them that feare him Psal. 145 19. See Maister Perkins Graine of Mustard seede at large of this point Tim. What vse is to be made of this point of doctrine Silas It affoards a singular comfort to the godly in their afflictions for that Gods Spirite workes wonderfully in their hearts to list them to Godward euen aboue that that themselues can perceiue in minde or bee able to declare in words Secondly it serues for to strengthen the weake against a temptation that they cannot pray whereas they are to consider that if they do but sighe it is a prayer before God a desire is a prayer a continuall desire is a continuall prayer Thirdly it repoues hypocrites whoe imagine that they can pray well when they speake many wordes and yet haue their hearts within voyde of secret sighes and grones which doe accompany true prayer DIAL XXIIII Verse 27. But he that searcheth the heart knoweth the meaning of the Spirite for he makes request for the Saints according to the will of God Tim. VVHat is the drift of this text with the summe of it Silas To comfort the godly Romanes and all other beleeuers in great afflictions The summe of the comfort is thus much that their prayers how feeble soeuer which come from Gods Spirite are knowne and granted of God This is proued by three reasons First from the infinite knowledge of God Secondly because their prayers are framed after the will of God Thirdly because they which pray are Saints and deare to God Tim. Let vs examine these three reasons and tell vs howe is God sayd to search seeing he needs no inquisition but knowes all things without search Silas It is true hee doeth so for his knowledge is infinite whereby hee knoweth most perfectly both himselfe and all other thinges euen the most darke and hidden 1. Cor. 4. 4. But this is a speech borrowed from the manners and doings of men and applied vnto God for the better vnderstanding of his nature for that which men desire perfectly to knowe that they search for and by search they come to the exact vnderstanding of things Tim. What is signified here by heart Sil. The Soule and all that is in it euen the most secrete thoughts purposes and motions al which God doth most perfectly behold and this is such a priueledge as agreeth to none saue to God alone 1 Chron. 28. 9. Tim. Yet Paul sayeth that the Spirit of man knoweth what is in a man 1 Cor. 2. Silas First a man may know his owne thoughts and what is in his heart but nothing without a
Cor. 15. 57. Ttm. What vse of this Silas It warnes the Saints in their greatest patience constancy to be humbled seeing they haue nothing but what they receiue from Gods loue Secondly it must stirre them vp to great thankfulnesse to God so graciously and mightily confirming them Thirdly it admonisheth weake Christians in the time of any calamity to flye to the throne of grace for succour distrusting themselues as Iehosaphat did Lastly it teacheth that the faithfull can neuer fall from Gods loue Of this before 2. Dialogue on verse 2. Chap. 5. DIAL XXXII Verses 38 39. For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Tim. VVHat doeth this text containe orwhereto tendeth it Silas The same which did the former euen to prooue that no enemies or euils how many sundry or mighty soeuer can breake off Gods loue to the faithfull that hee should cease to loue them and cast off the care of their saluation which beleeue in his Son Iesus Tim. What be the parts of this text Silas Two first an enumeration or rehearsall of the seuerall enemies which may terrifie and threaten our separation from Gods loue Secondly a most sweet consolation that Gods loue to beleeuers is constant doe all enemies against them what they can doe This comfort is set foorth by the certainty thereof in these wordes for I am perswaded c. Thirdly by the cause of it verse 39. because it is grounded on the merits of Christ the Redeemer and not on themselues or any creature Which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Tim. Resken vp those enemies which wrestle against beleeuers and shew vs the meaning of euery one of them in particular Silas They bee nine in number as 1. life 2. death 3. Angelles 4. principalities 5. powers 6. things present 7. things to come 8. height 9. depth Saint Paul in Ephe. 6. 12. reduceth them all to two heads First flesh and bloud Secondly spirituall wickednesses the meaning of them is this By life and death is meant all things which endanger vs about life and death or prosperity and aduersity which be companions of life and death By Diuels is meant wicked Spirits which seeke by all meanes to lead vs from God and endeauour to separate vs from his loue yea good Angels are meant too by supposition hyperbolical like to that saying Gal. 1 8. Also by principalities powers is meant such Angels as are set ouer Empires and Kingdomes also ouer Cities and particular Countries as Dan. 11. or tyrants of the world with their whole power according to that threatned Mat. 10 17 18. Moreouer by things present and to come wee are to vnderstand all things which do presently or heereafter may happen to vs in this worlde and the worlde to come or all both good and euil things which now or heerafter shal come to vs. By height is meant things high and marucllous or whatsoeuer strange and vnaccustomed thinges happen from Heauen by high and by deepe is meant whatsoeuer thinges burst foorth of the lower partes and Regions of the earth and lastly by Creatures is meant euery thing created in the vniuersality of this whole world Tim. What learne we by this magnificent rehearsal Silas That Christians and Christianity bee assaulted with meruailous and sundry enemies Of this see before what hath bin said Tim. What is the vse of th s Silas That euery Christian hath neede of a strong Faith and much patience and continuall watchfulnesse so much the more by how much the more the malice number of enemies are greater Tim. What are we to learne of this that hee sayth of these particulars that they cannot separate vs from the loue of God Silas That the loue which God beareth his elect is immoueable and most firme the reasons hereof are First because nothing in the world is able to hinder break it off Secondly he himselfe will neuer alter it because hee is vnchangeable Tim. What vse heereof Silas It conuicteth both the Papists and Lutherans of error who teach that such as are in the state of grace Gods loue may loose it and fall from it Se condly it affordeth much consolation and ioy in time of deep temptations to al such as are infallibly assured that they stand in the loue of God whatsoeuer they lose yet they keep still Gods loue whereof before enough Tim. But may any Christian be after this sort assured Silas Yes Paul the Apostle was so as himselfe confesseth in this place I am perswaded c. Tim. Yea but he speaketh this of his owne person what is that to vs there is great diffrence between Paul other christians Silas Paul speaketh many things of himself which are not peculiar to himselfe but in common do belong to al Christians as Gal. 2 20. 6 14. Phil. 1 21. and often elswhere Secondly in the last words of this text he wraps vp all other beleeuing Christians with himselfe saying Who shall separate vs. Thirdly euery true beleeuer may be certainly assured of his own saluation vpon the same grounds that Paul was of his which grounds are eyther Theologicall and necessary others are but Logicall and profitable only The Theological and necessary grounds bee first the foreknowledge and immutable purpose of Gods election Rom. 8 30. manifested in calling Iustification Sanctification The second is the inward perswasion of the holy Spirit witnessing to their spirites that they are Gods children Rom. 8. 16. Thirdly the most faithfull promise of God that such as do beleeue in him shall haue euerlasting life Iohn 3 18. Fourthly Christ his deliuering himselfe to death and his nowe making request in heauen for them Rom. 8 32 33. Lastly the effects of Gods sanctifying Spirit in their hearts to wit vnfained faith and diligent loue 1 Thess. 1 3 4. The Logicall and probable grounds be all the outward protections and blessings of God which being very many great though they haue no force in themselues to perswade vs to the loue of God yet being ioyned vnto the former they helpe well to strengthen our assurance and to make the matter more euident For Gods Children haue them as testimonies of their Fathers loue and fruits of redemption Tim. Now shew vs what vse is to be made of this Silas First it conuicteth the Papists of errour in that they teach that we haue but a probable and coniectural assurance of our election to wit by hope as they speak to hope well of it vnlesse it be some certaine men who knew by reuelation Gods loue as Abraham Isaac Iacob Dauid Paul c. or of the predestinate in generall but for any particular man to assure himselfe that God loues him and that he is iustified and shall be saued they esteem it presumption
Secondly sencelesse security when such disobedient sinners are neither mooued with the benefits nor correctiōs wherby they are called to repē tance nor yet allured by promises nor terrified by threatnings hauing harts like brawne or an adamant and yron Thirdly desperate obstinacy when after all meanes vsed of God by his worde of iustice and mercy instead of being better and better sinners grow worse and worse more carelesse to please God and keepe his commeandements and more frowarde in their behauiour toward God and man Tim. What is the vse of this doctrine Silas First it affoords comfort to all soft and melting heartes which by the worde and iudgements of God are moued to relent and turne from their sinnes vnto God by true and serious repentance such are no reprobates Secondly it teacheth the miserable condition of all such men as haue stony and brawny hearts they bee in a fearefull condition and had need to looke to it betimes Thirdly it admonisheth all men to beware of and striue against hardnesse of heart whereunto the neerer they are the neerer they are to reprobation and therefore let euery man examine himselfe and with al diligence vse al means to soften their owne hearts See Dialogue on Chap. 2. verse 4 5. DIAL XII Verse 19 20 21. Thou wilt then say vnto me why doth he yet complaine for who hath resisted his will But o man who art thou which pleadest against God Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made me thus c. Tim. VVHat doth this text containe Silas A new obiection against predestination with an answere to it The first obiection was touching Gods vnfaithfulnesse if he did reiect the Iewes to whom hee had promised to be their God The second was of iniustice if hee should elect some and not other some without respect of any worthinesse or vnworthinesse in themselues Now in this our text they charge God with cruelty and extreame rigor For if God harden whom he will and after punish them for that hardnesse this seemes vnto carnall reason to be cruelty This obiection is fortified and backt by two reasons closely coucht in this text The first is this It were cruelty in God to bee reuenged on that hardnesse which himselfe willeth verse 19. But Pharaoh and all wicked men are hardened because God will as before verse 18 therefore he hath no cause to be angry or to punish or if hee doe it seemeth to mans reason to bee all one as if a man should binde his seruant and after beate him because he did not his worke or as if a Magistrate should bid a prisoner breake the Iayle and yet hang him when hee hath done The other reason is this that God must bee accounted cruell if he should punish that which men cannot resist and auoyde but the omnipotent will of God whereby reprobates are hardened cannot bee resisted therefore the hardened without cruelty cannot bee reprehended and punished Tim. What are we to learne for our instruction from this obiection or first part of our Text Silas That the will of God cannot bee withstood and made voyde The reason heereof is because God being himselfe almighty there is nothing to crosse and hinder what he willeth Tim. Yet Steuen accuseth the Iewes Acts 7. that they resisted the will of God so doe the Prophets blame the Iewes of brason faces iron sinnewes stiffe-neckt vntamenesse Silas True the will of God is daily resisted to wit his reuealed will his will manifested in his worde and workes But our text speaketh of the secret and hidden wil of God De voluntate bene placiti non signi as Schoolmen write and distinguish Tim. What vse is to be made of this instruction Silas It affoords matter of singular comfort to all the godly who beeing assured by true faith and the fruites thereof of the good will of God from euerlasting may surely resolue that doe Sathan or sinne or the worlde what they can against them yet shall they neuer perish 〈◊〉 Gods will cannot be resisted Tim. What other instruction are wee to draw out of the 19. verse Silas That mans reason corrupted doth draw or gather false conclusions out of true propositions an example heere of we haue in this text For it is true that God hardeneth whom he will and that his will cannot be resisted but heereof it followes not that he may not iustly complaine of and punish obstinate sinners which set and willingly settle themselues in a course of disobedience Againe as it is true that we are freely iustified by faith alone but heereof it will not follow that wee neede not doe good workes as Papists blindly and badly collect Also because in some Churches the Ministry or Leiturgy may be faulty we ought not therefore to conclude that we may not liue in such Churches where such defections be not amended as if any would affirme a body to be no body because it is a lame one or an eye no eye because there is a web and pin in it Tim. But what error is in the conclusion of this obiection Silas First there is a falsity or error heerein that they put the secret will of God for the cause of perishing vnto the reprobate whereas none of them are destroyed but for the contempt of the knowne manifest will of God Secondly though there be a necessity that they be hardened on whome God will shew no mercy yet no reprobate is hardned against his owne will for they are so farre from auoyding the hardnesse of their owne hearts as that they rather contract it by their owne voluntary faults as Pharaoh did and as the obstinate Iewes did also Iohn 8 44. Tim. What vse is to be made of this last instruction Sil. That we must diligently beware how we conferre with mans vnreformed reason in the matter of Gods eternall predestination because thereby we shall bee carried into infinite errors and blasphemies against God Our duty therefore is with meekenesse and reuerence to stoope to that which God reucales in the Scripture admiring with Paul Rom. 11 33. Or with Mary pondering what our dull minds cannot at first conceiue Luke 2 51. Tim. Come we now to the answere of the Apostle to the former obiection and tell vs how he proceedeth Silas First by his Apostolicall authority he beateth downe the malepertnesse of man in disputing with God and this he performes by comparing the exceeding infirmity of man the creature with the high maiesty of God his Creator O man who art thou that pleadst against God Tim. What is meant here by pleading Silas A saucy ouer-bolde questioning with God to call him his decrees and doings vnto our account or examination Tim. What is the instruction out of these words Silas That it is a great impudency for any man to subiect the deepe counselles of God to the blinde poore and beggerly reason of man This is proued first by Deut. 29. 29. where it is written that secret
dolefull estate giuing their eyes no slumber nor rest to their eyelids till they find rest to their soules Tim. What other doctrine from this Text Silas That blissefull is the condition of such as are called to Christ Iesus and endowed with his faith and spirite because such as bee called to Christ and beloued of God are exalted to bee his people and Children which is the greatest dignity and blisse in the whole world Tim. How d ee ye proue this doctrine Silas First by Scripture Psal. 144 15. Blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. Iohn 1 12. To them that beleeue in him there is giuen this dignity to bee called the sonnes of God 1. Iohn 3 1. Secondly by by reason for first Gods children are Christs brethren Heb. 2 12. and Gods heires Rom. 8 18. Secondly they haue their sinnes fully forgiuen them Rom. 4 4 5. Psal. 32 1. Thirdly they haue the blessing of beleeuing harts Luke 1. Fourthly they are led by the Spirite of sanctification which fils them with the feare of God and godly vprightnesse of life Psal. 112 1. and 119 1. Rom. 8 9. Fiftly if crosses and troubles come they are supported and comforted vnder them and reape much good by them Iohn 14 Rom. 8 28. Sixtly the Angels are their seruants Heb. 1 14. and all creatures are at league with them Hosea 2 18. Seauenthly they are freed from the power of sinne Diuell death and hell and all their enemies Luke 1. 74. Rom. 6 7. Acts 26 26. Thirdly comparisons of Scripture proueth this point as of a tree standing by the Riuers of waters planted in Gods house set vpon a Rocke of a Prince and a king full of riches glory of an Oliue and of a Vine Psal. 45 and 92 12 13 Mat 7 24 Iohn 15. Rom. 11 17. Tim. What profit of this doctrine Silas First it reproues such as speake basely of Gods children Secondly it warneth vs of the great danger of such as offer them any wrong in word or deed also what blessings are ouer their heades which kindely entreate them Mat. 10. 42. and 25 40. Thirdly it exhorteth Gods children by remembrance of their great dignity to beare the crosse patiently to flye sin carefully to liue holily and iustly And lastly it must encrease and double the prayses of the faithfull who bee by grace set in such an happy estate Tim. Howe can it bee sayed of the same persons that they were a people and no people that they were beloued and not beloued Silas The Scripture speakes of Gods elect sometimes according to their predestination and sometime according to their present estate Secondly their present estate being two-folde either in corruption and grace one succeeding the other in regard thereof they are sometimes beloued and not beloued according to the diuersity of times and conditions Tim. Why is God called the liuing God Silas Because God liueth of and by himselfe eternally and is authour of life to all which liue Acts 17. 28. which shewes Idols to be no Gods and the Sacrament not to be God for they neither liue nor infuse life into other nor can preserue themselues from violation Tim. How comes it that while the Iewes were Gods people the Gentiles were not and now the Gentiles bee the Iewes are not Silas O the deepenesse of the wisedome and knowledge of God how are his wayes past finding outfor who hath knowne the minde of the Lord or to whome hath he told this counsell DIAL XVIII Verses 27 28 29. Also Esayas cryeth concerning Israel Though the number of the children of Israel were as the sand of the sea yet shall but a remnant be saued for hee will make his account and gather it into a short summe with righteousues for the Lord will make a short account in the earth And as Esayas saide before Except the Lord bad left vs a seede we bad bin made as Sodome and had beene like to Gomorrah Tim. WHat is the purpose of this Text Silas Hauing proued the calling of the Gentiles by the Testimony of Hosea nowe he doth the like touching the Iewes whose calling to Christ he proues by the testimonies of Esaias Chap. 10 22. and 1 9. Tim. What is the summe of this Text Sil. That of the Iewes some few onely were called to Christ the most part of them being reiected according as God had from euerlasting determined For the Aposile reasons heere from the effectes to the cause Fewe called therefore few chosen Tim. What be the parts of this Text Sil. Two First hee teacheth that a small number of the Iewes were saued verse 27 28. Secondly the reason heereof Gods mercy verse 29. Tim. What is meant heereby Crying Silas A plaine and earnest speaking the truth without feare or fainting Tim. What is to be learned from hence Silas That the Ministers of Christ must boldly and distinctly declare the minde of God Esay 58 1. Hence is Iohn Baptist called a crier Math. 3 3. It is a speech borrowed from common criers in Cities who so speak as they may be heard of all Thus Christ spake for he lift vp his voice Iohn 7 37. The reasons heereof be first the commandement of God Esay 58. Secondly the example of Christ and the Prophets Iohn 7. Thirdly this maner of teaching stirres vp and quickens attention Fourthly it helpes the vnderstanding causing things sooner to bee vnderstood and perceiued Fiftly the vntoward rebellion of mans heart requires such plainnesse and earnestnesse to humble and tame it Tim. What is the vse of this point Silas It reprooues such teachers as suppresse their voices The other extreame is too much to exalt it Secondly it warnesh hearers to loue such vehemency seeing their owne dulnesse needs it Tim. What is meant by the sand of the Sea Sil. The exceeding great number of the Iewes being for multitude like to the sand of the Sea as God promised Abraham Gen. 15. Tim. What is meant by remnant Sil. It is a speech borrowed from Tradesmen who cut out a whole cloath till onely a little peece be left which they call a remnant or remainder by which is meant a verie few and small number of the Iewes as it were an handfull shall be called Tim. What signifies saued Silas It signifieth deliuerance from bodily and spirituall dangers Tim. Of what times did Esayas speake this Silas First of the times of Ezckiah when all Iuda being ouerrun by the Assyrians onely Ierusalem was spared Secondly of the times of the deliuerance out of Chaldea when most of the Iewes tarried behinde the fewest returned home many dyed in Babylon others willingly abode there But the Prophet hath yet a further relation namely vnto the times of Grace when the greatest number of the Iewes spurned against the Gospell some few onely receyuing it Those externall Redemptions and deliuerances beeing Types of the Spirituall Tim. What is the Doctrine from hence Silas That though the Nation of the Iewes were full of
strectes or blockes in the high way and thus will God try our stability Tim. But what else is to be learned from hence Silas That the force of incredulity is such as can alter the nature of things and make Christ the worde sacraments Ministers creatures and benefits yea God himselfe who all be good to become occasions of the greatest euill As nothing is so euill but Gods infinite goodnesse and wisedome can draw good out of it as out of mans fall and Iudas treason and the Iewes abiection So nothing is so good but mans sin can make it pernitious and hurtfull to him euen Christ to bee a stumbling stone Tim. What learne we by this that God laide this stone Silas That nothing falleth out in the world or in the Church but by the decree and appointment of God Tim. What doth this teach vs that this stone is laide in Syon in the visible Church Silas That more miserable is the case of vnbeleeuing Christians then of other Infidels because by falling on Christ they deserue to haue him fall vpon them with more waight of vengeance they which heare the doctrine of Christ and receiue it not haue the greater sinne Iohn 9 41. Iames 3 2. Woe Corazin c. and it shall be easier for Sodome then for Caparnaum Tim. But was this Gods purpose to make men stumble by laying this stone in their way Silas God indeed had set Christ to be the rising and fall of many Luke 2 34. A stone precious to such as beleeue but a rocke of offence to disobedient ones 1. Pet. 2 6. But this is to bee imputed to the wickednesse of men who turne to their destruction that which might haue been to their wealth howbeit this is certaine that howsoeuer God delight not in the stumbling and vnbeleefe of reprobates as their contumacy is a sinne yet as it is a punishment of former sinnes and a meane to manifest his iustice he hath willed and determined it Tim. What more is to be learned from verse 33 Silas That vnbeleeuers are in a most miserable 〈◊〉 because they refuse Christ out of whom nothing is to be lookt for but confusion and death eternall Secondly that most happye are such as haue founde mercy to beleeue because they shall enioy the thing in which they doe beleeue and therefore shall not be put to confusion Whereas such as through vnbeleefe make hast to be iustified by their owne merites shall misse of true righteousnesse whereof will follow extreame confusion Men which run headlongly without looking what is in their way doe stumble and take harme yea sometime to their vndooing So it fareth with all vnbeleeuing persons which hasten vnto saluation by their owne running and working not thinking of Christ to become righteous through faith in him they doe misse of that they shotte and aymed at and meete with extreame confusion Finally once for all I note it that in the disputation of righteousnesse by works or by faith heere in the end of this Chapter and in the beginning of the next as in ver 3. and in the 3 4 5. Chapters of this Epistle it is at any hand to be taken heed of that wee vnderstand no other faith but that which worketh by charity Gal. 5. which purifieth the heart Acts 15 9. which hath vertue and godlinesse ioyned with it 2. Pet. 1 6 7. which hath repentance for a necessary companion and fruite Acts 20. 21. which is shewed by works Iames 2 18. For though wee teach that onely faith iustifieth yet this iustifying saith is not alone but as a Queene is attended with a traine of Christian graces As I obserue this in behalfe of the Papists which falsly charge vs to set foorth to the people in our bookes and Sermons a bare barren idle and dead faith so in regard of certaine other Heriticks Seruetus executed at Geneua and Sorinus and Harminius Bertius who of late troubled the Churches in Holland Zeland I further note that wee eschue as a Shelfe or Rocke their dangerous if not blasphemous conceite that faith properly taken or the act and worke of beleeuing doth iustifie vs and is accounted to the beleeuer for perfect righteousnesse with God as if in his owne person he had done the law fully which erronious conceite crosseth the exposition of all Christian Churches and Diuines expounding this proposition we are iustified by faith figuratiuely Faith by a Metonimie or Metalepsis put for the obiect Christ applied by faith and all those plaine Scriptures which say the obedience of one man made vs righteous Rom. 5 19. and Christ is made to vs of God righteousnesse 1. Cor. 1 30. and wee are made the righteousnesse of God in him not in vs in our faith 2. Cor. 5 21. and Christ the end of Law not faith for righteousnesse Rom. 10 4. And fighteth also with such texts as make equipollent these propositions a man is iustified by faith and a man is iustified by the blood of Christ by the redemption of Christ Rom. 3 23 24 25. Lastly it is repugnant to all sound reason for faith or to beleeue it is a worke and all works vniuersally both of Law and Gospell bee excluded from iustification as works also it is but one part of legall iustice to beleeue God ergo not our whole iustice yea it is vnperfect contaminated with ignorance doubting c. How then can it absolue vs before the most iuste Iudge CHAP. X. DIAL I. Verse 1 2 3. Brethren my hearts desire and prayer to God for Israell is that they might be saued For I beare them record that they haue the zeale of God but not according to knowledge for they being ignorant of the righteousnesse of God and going about to stablish their owne righteousnesse haue not submitted themselues to the righteousnesse of God Timotheus WHat is the purpose of this present Chapter Silas To proue his distinction of a double righteousnesse first by the law and secondly by faith mentioned in the former Chapter verse 30 31. and in verse 3 4 5. Secondly he intendeth to proue that the righteousnesse of the law doth no whit auaile the Iewes before God but that it is the righteousnesse of faith that doth stead vs vnto eternall life verse 6 7 8. c. Thirdly to shew that this righteousnesse was to be preached and offered no lesse to the Gentile then to the Iew by the Apostolicall Ministry which God appointed to be the onely outward instrument of this righteousnesse verse 11 12 13 14 15. c. Lastly to set foorth the entertainement which this righteousnesse of faith found in the worlde The Gentiles through free and effectuall vocation of God receiuing it The Iewes through vnbeleefe and obstinacy refusing it and therefore being iustly refused and reiected of God verse 18 19. c. Into these soure things as into parts may this present Chapter be distinguished Tim. How doth the Apostle prepare himselfe an entrance and a way to the handling
of these things Sil. By a prolepsis or rhetoricall in sinuation protesting his good will towards them and preuenting of suspition and hatred towards him in the Iewes Tim. Was there any inst cause or necessity why the Apostle should vse any such entrance by preoccupation Silas Yea very iust For in the former precedent Chapter he had prooued that the promises of grace belonged not generally to the Iewes beeing the most part of them reprobates and had saide that they stumbled at the stumbling stone verse 33. In this Chapter he takes from them all praise of righteousnesse by the workes of the law which were two things they much boasted of the promises and the lawe also hee directly speakes of their reiection from God Now least the Iewes should ascribe these discourses vnto Pauls hatred of their Nation and so become vnwilling to entertaine his doctrine therefore it seemed very behoouefull hee should testifie his good will towards them and to pacifie their mindes that they be not exasperated with such sharpe and harsh things as the Apostle wrote of Tim. What lesson are wee to learne from this arte and proceeding of the Apostle Silas That the Ministers of Christ are so to speake truth as they be carefull to doe it out of louing affections and the hearers ought to haue a good perswasion of their teachers good will towards them The reasons heereof be First if all Christians must reprooue out of loue much more the Ministers of the Gospell because it behooueth them to excell in all graces for example sake Secondly the Spirite of the Gospell is a Spirite of loue and compassion and the Ministers ought to be led with this Spirite Thirdly reproofes will hardly or not at all profite them when the teachers loue is suspected and his person hated Lastly it is a very good preparation for the hearers to be forestalled and possessed with a good opinion of the Teachers good will towards them as Physitions by sweetning bitter potions make the patient the willinger to take it And Rhetoritians being to speake of vnpleasant things wila first mollifie their mindes and win their good will by some artificiall insinuation so ought Preachers to do much more as occasion and cause requires by how much it imports him and his flocke the more that his hearers thinke well of him And if the Scorpion will first lay fast holde on them with his claw whom he purposeth to strike with his tayle then ought much more they to imbrace them by loue whome they must cure by reproofe Tim. What profit is to be made of this lesson Silas It teacheth that Ministers haue neede of great wisedome to discerne their 〈◊〉 and that also which they teach that they may know what it is that is likely to giue offence also when to vse friendly admonitions and sharpe reprehensions Secondly it teacheth that Ministers ought to be endowed with a spirit of singular loue and to expresse good will euen to such as are contrary minded so long as there is any hope for to winne them Thirdly that they ought to haue an vpright heart that in shewing loue and preuenting offence they may not conceale any truth or smoothe any vice out of flattery and desire to please man Fourthly heere is a reprchension to such as will bee Ministers and yet altogether lacke these graces as if a lame man would attempt to runne and a blinde man to take vpon him to be a guide Lastly heere is an admonition to all hearers to striue in themselues against all suspition that their teachers exhorte and reprooue out of hatred of them as they would euer desire to take any profite by their labours For wee are verye apte to mistrust and Sathan by his suggestions will drop into vs ill affections and therfore looke to it and put away iealousie Tim. Come wee now to the Text and tell vs what bee the parts of his prolepsis Silas These foure First hee protests his good will towards them Secondly he proues it by an argument from the effect to wit his earnest prayer for their conuersion and saluation verse 1. Thirdly he mentioneth the engendering cause of his loue towards them to wit their zeale of God Fourthly he rehearseth three faults in their zeale First ignorance Secondly spirituall pride Thirdly obstinate contempt of the grace of Christ verse 3. Tim. In what sence doth be call them brethren Silas Because they were his kinsmen by naturall generation see Rom. 9 3. Thus hee calleth them that hee might both expresse and excite good will and prouoke readinesse to heare and beleeue him Tim. What is meant by hearts desire Sil. Exceeding great pronenesse and readinesse of loue or more then common euen singular good will such as is ioyned with delight and exceeding great pleasure in those which are loued For the word heere vsed is the word whereby the eternall loue of God towards the elect is notified as Mat. 3 17. Ephe. 1 5. Luke 2 14. Tim. What doctrine is to be gathered from hence Silas That in all the prayers which wee make to God for our selues or others the desire of the heart must goe before The reasons heereof bee these First the commandemenr of God Prou. 23 26. My sonne giue mee thy heart Secondly the nature of God who being a Spirite will bee worshipped spiritually with the desire of the heart Iohn 4 24. Thirdly this is the very cheefe thing in prayer Psal. 25 1. Marke 11 24. Fourthly without this prayer cannot be feruent and vnfained and therefore cannot be heard For the promise is made vnto feruent prayers Iames 5 15. Marke 11 24. Lastly such prayers as come from hearty desires are onely pleasing and acceptable to God and they onely testifie that we haue the Spirit of God Rom. 8 26 27. Tim. By what meanes are these desires stirred vp in the hearts of Gods Children Sil. By the due and godly meditation First of the excellency of the thinges we pray for Secondly of the necessity in that we cannot be happy if wee be without them Thirdly of our greeuous sinnes which deserue things quite contrary to the things we doe pray for Tim. What vse of this point Silas It teacheth that the thing cheefest in prayer is that the heart be set on work in sending vp good desires towards heauen as sparkles out of a furnace Secondly it sheweth the true cause why that many prayers of the godly speed not euen for that their desires are cold and faint and slender Thirdly it warneth that the prayers of the wicked are but bablings vaine abhominable because they call on God with their lippes the desire of their heart being farre from him Mat. 15 8. Lastly the distinction of mental and vocall prayer is iustified by this place and indeede no distinction in diuinity is currant but that which hath ground in the Scripture directly or by good deduction Tim. In that the Apostle prayeth for them
taken without stammering or doubting and that Faith which leaneth vpon it must needes bee verie firme and strong against all assaults of Satan whose fierie darts of doubtes and despaire are quenched by the Faith of Gods word If in marriage for wedlocke duties and comforts we stay vppon our mutuall promises how much more may the spouse of Christ euen euery faithfull soule quietlie and firmely rest vpon the promise of our husband Christ for all good thinges present and future both nowe and in Heauen Tim. What profit is to be 〈◊〉 of this second instruction Sil. First heereby is ouerthrowne the Popish doctrine which alloweth vnto iustifying Faith no more but probable or coniecturall knowledge leauing mens consciences full of feare and doubting of their owne blessednesse wherein vpon the matter they disable the word of Gods promise and make his word false For to teach that men ought still to sticke in doubts of their own saluation though God haue promised it by Christ to such as beleeue in him what is this else but to play the Butchers of mens Consciences which are euen kept vppon the racke by Romish Diuinity and also to charge the word of God with forgerie and falshoode as if hee did not meane in good earnest Secondly heereby wee see how slanderous they are which accuse the affiaunce and confidence of Faith to be a wicked and damnable presuming sithence it is dutie and Christian submission to relye vndoubtedly vpon the worde of God and not godlesse presumption which rather they are to bee 〈◊〉 with who haue all or most of their trust in their owne innocencie and good workes and not alone in the truth and mercy of God Thirdly heere is matter of great comfort vnto all faithfull soules who in all temptations stirring them to doubt of their owne happinesse they may enfree thēselues from all terror by hauing recourse to the word and promise of God as Dauid did I had perished in my trouble sayth hee but for thy promise thy worde hath comforted 〈◊〉 For as the palsie man in the Gospell hauing Christs word be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiuen thee was thereby cheered aud made both quiet and ioyfull So the promise of the Gospell being applyed to a trembling Soule will fortifie and stablish it in tranquility and peace This Sathan knoweth and therefore his practise is to hide the promises of grace from troubled consciences or else to suggest vnto them this as though that such promises were not made to them or did not belong vnto them Tim. What is the third doctrine out of this 8. verse Silas That the preaching of the Apostles was all one with the Gospel which was written for that word of faith first written by Moses and afterwards by Paul to the Romanes is that selfe same word which Paul and other Apostles preached Therefore it is false which the Manichees and Papists auouch that the Apostles taught other things then that they then wrote that hence they may haue power to ioyne thereunto their Apostolicall traditions vnwritten which errour of theirs must bee reiected as Apocriphall and false If they bee not confonant to the Scriptures they came not from the Apostles but are counterfet Tim. Let vs proceede vnto the 9. verse and tell vs what is meant by confession Silas An open and plaine profession that Iesus who is Lord of all is our Lord also for that hee is Lord the Diuils know and acknowledge Therefore Christians must goe further and beleeue it with affiance Tim. In what respects is Iesus our Lord Silas Both by right of Creation and power ouer vs and also by grace of redemption hauing as well ransomed vs to bee his owne peculiar people as created and gouerned vs. Tim. What is it to beleeue in thine heart Silas It is not onely in our mindes to see and assent vnto the trueth of the history of Christ which euen wicked men and hypocrites yea vncleane spirits doe but to embrace in our hearts will and affections with holy confidence the benefites of Christ his death and resurrection euen reconciliation with God remission of sinnes righteousnes and life eternall Tim. Why is confession set before faith which is the cause and roote of confession Psalme 116. 10. I beleeued therefore did I speake Silas First because Moses did in this order propound them as in the 8. verse is cited Secondly we cannot discerne other mens faith or other men our faith but by our outward profession of it before men it is declared by our confession and action Tim. Why 〈◊〉 hee onely name Christes resurrection seeing faith respects his birth life death and all which Christ did and suffered Sil. First because the faith of the resurrection of Christ doth distingush Christians from Pagans and Infidels who do easily accord to beleeue that the man Christ was born liued and dyed but they deny his resurrection as a thing which exceedeth compasse and reach of reason the Philosophers discerned it not but derided it rather saying What new doctrine is this Acts 18. Secondly because all that Christ did and suffered had profited vs little vnlesse hee had risen againe wherein hee obtained a perfect victory ouer sinne death hell and damnation for all the elect Lastly the article of the resurrection presupposeth al the rest and knitteth together as a linke both antecedents and consequents his incarnation life and death which went before and his ascension sitting at his Fathers right hand and his intercession which followes after his rising Vnder which then by a Synecdoche all the other passions and actions of Christ be contayned Tim. What doctrine ariseth out of this 9. verse Silas Onely this one to wit the facility and easinesse of that righteousnesse which is by faith in Christ 〈◊〉 vnto our righteousnesse before God and saluation in heauen there is no more difficult and hard thing exacted of vs but with the heart to beleeue and with the mouth to confesse Christ and by this meanes Christ will be neere to vs both in possibility and efficacy in possibilitie because it is a thing possible which may bee that elect sinners shall haue grace to beleeue especially God hauing ordained them vnto Faith Actes 13 48. but it is vtterly vnpossible that they should keepe the whole Law perfectly Gods decree and mans corruption being against it And secondly hee is neere and easie to vs in efficacie because through the holy Spirit hee is made to dwell in a faithfull heart really and actually and his righteousnesse as a robe or garment is put vppon them to couer their sinnes and vnrighteousnesse Tim. Yea but to beleeue in Christ is no lesse impossible hard then to fulfill the Law for we haue no more power to doe the one then the other Silas It is true but this facility is to be vnderstoode not in regarde of the beginning and efficient cause of Faith which is meerely Gods gifte without
verse 13. Therefore men doe beleeue with the heart to righteousnesse aud saluation pertaineth to such as confesse him Tim. What may we learne heereby that Paul prooueth his doctrine by testimony of Scripture Silas These lessons First that the Scripture is sufficient not onely to teach al needfull truths of godlinesse but to confirme and prooue it also Secondly that the word written is the infallible rule of al doctrines which are to bee deliuered vnto the Church for direction of faith or manners for in that Paul doth prooue and stablish all doctrines of Christianity by the Scripture alone not vsing any other testimony for that end Thence it followes that Scripture onely is the most certaine and vndeceiueable rule of all doctrines The reasons heereof bee first because God the author of all Scripture is most perfect in knowledge and of infinite wisedome therefore his word must needs containe a perfect rule direction whereby to iudge of doctrines Secondly our faith springs from Scripture alone Romanes 10 17. Therefore wee must beeleeue that onely for sound doctrine which can be drawne from the word of God written Tim. What vse of this doctrine Silas First it serues to admonish vs to try all things which is taught of any Ministers by the touchstone of the Scriptures as the Christians of Berea did Acts 17 11. receiuing willingly what wee finde grounded vpon and consonant vnto the Scriptures but refusing all that is diuerse from it The ancient fathers and Doctours of the Church nay the Apostles submitted their sermons and writings to this tryall 1. Thes. 5 21. 1. John 4 1 2. As we like that Gold onely that will abide the touchstone so wee must holde onely such doctrines as agree with the word of God Secondly it confuteth the Papists which make vnwritten traditions to be a rule equal to holy Scriptures being indeed a leaden rule of deceit vncertaine and subiect to change and to falshoode and error yet they will haue them imbraced with like reuerence and affection as the holy Bible Tim. From whence is this first authority fetched Sil. Out of Esay Chapter 28 verse 16. Tim. Tell vs first what ye doe obserue in the manner of alleadging this authority and what ye note in the matter Silas Touching the manner the Apostle doth so alleadge the place of Esay as withal he doth interpret and expound it which is the best manner of alleadging scriptures so to cite them as to giue some light to them For whereas Esay said he indefinitely Paul writeth whosoeuer vniuersally to shew vs that an indefinite proposition is equipollent to an vniuersall Secondly Paul mentioneth the obiect of our faith in him that is Christ whereas Esay saide onely hee which beleeueth Thirdly in Esay it is written shall not make hast in Paul shall not be ashamed that is frustrate of his successe being deceiued of that they looked for which is a fruite and consequent of hast for such as are hasty and precipitant doc their businesse vntowardly and naughtily as Saul did when hee made hast to offer sacrifice before Samuel came wherein hee did greatly sinne and was thereby brought to shame As also Peter his precipitation caused shame to him whereas the true beleeuers without such shame shall obtaine forgiuenesse of sinne by Christ. Tim. What note ye in the matter of this sentence cited out of Esay Silas First that as the high cause to wit predestination or election is not restrained to the Iewes onely but powred out vpon all sorts of men as well as Iewes Rom. 9 29. so is faith the next cause equally giuen to all people without difference of nation whatsoeuer Secondly that the reason why many Iewes and others bee ashamed and confounded is for that they beleeue not because who-soeuer beleeueth shall not bee ashamed Thirdly that the true iustifying faith hath no other proper obiect but Christ Iesus and him as he is both dead quickened this is that brazen Serpent towards which our faith looketh Fourthly that Christ is very true God because we are bound to beleeue in him see Iohn 14 1. This confuteth the Arians denying Christs eternall and naturall diuinity Fiftly that the vniuersality of the promises of the Gospell are restrained and limited to beleeuers and to them also they be extended and to euery one of them and to none other there is an vniuersallity of beleeuers as there is of vnbeleeuers Tim. But the Iewes did appropriate the promises of God to themselues alone as the true and sole heires thereof Sil. They did so but vniustly for now vnder the Gospell howsoeuer before there was manifolde and great difference see Rom. 3 2. Also 9 4 5. there is no distinction but Iew and Gentile are al one For first they haue all neede of saluation all being sinners destitute of Gods grace and of the gift of true righteousnesse Esay 53 6. Rom. 3 23. Or if wee looke vnto the meritorious cause which is Christ in him all haue like intrest by Gods mercy Rom. 11 32. or the meanes whereby to be made partakers of Christ which is Faith a guift bestowed by God indifferently vpon the Iewes and Gentiles Gal. 3 8. Ephes. 2 17 18. Tim. In what sence is God saide to be Lord of all Silas Because hee is the common Creator of all who made both Iew and Gentile Secondly because he is the iustifier of all without respect of countrey euerie one which beleeueth in Christ shall haue righteousnesse before God who is one which doth iustifie the circumcision by Faith and the vncircumcision through faith Rom. 3 30. From whence it doth follow that God accepteth not persons Acts 10 30. so as to loue one the more because he is a Iew or the lesse because he is a Gentile but is of like affections to all the faithfull of what people or language soeuer as a Father is well affected vnto all his children which do well and a workeman to all his work made by him so is God good to all his people without distinction of place Therefore a Gentile though not circumcised yet if he haue faith he shall become righteous and liue for euer whereas an vnbeleeuing Iew shall be sent away vniustified though he be circumcised Tim. What is meant by this that God is good to all Silas That he is abundantly louing and kinde not to euery particular person without exception of any singular but to all men of all sorts for Riches signify plentifull goodnesse as Ephes. 2 4 7. and by all is often meant some of all kinds Countreyes and degrees as 1. Tim. 2 3. Rom. 11 32. Tim. What are we to learne from hence Silas Not that euery man and woman be elect called and iustified as some falsely collect from hence beeing the enemies of Gods grace sufficiently confuted from this place where the vniuersall particle all is limited to such as call vpon him which none do in truth but beleeuers onely but that
it the death of the soule by punishing sinne with sinne Secondly other punishments haue with them desire of release so hath not this Thirdly it is an high ready way to that vnpardonable sinne Marke 3 29. Fourthly all other punishments may be and are inflicted though not without paine yet without sinne but in this there is alwaies an addition of sin both of greater corruption and guilt and withall a greater desert of punishment Fiftly it is the peculiar marke and note of the childe of perdition as a broken and contrite spirit is a sure note of the childe of God Rom. 11 5. Ps. 51 19. Sixtly it doth in the end most certainly bring men not onely to temporall destruction but to eternall death Deut. 2 30. Ro. 2 5. 1 Sam. 2 25. Rom. 9 17. Lastly both some of the heathens haue acknowledged the truth of this as Sophocles in Aiax some of the Iewish Rabbins as Rabbi Kimchi for so much Maister Peter Martyr testifieth in his Commentary vpon this Text. Tim. What profit is to be made by the knowledge of this trueth Sil. First it teacheth that all good things turn to the hurt and damnation of the wicked Secondly it sheweth the strange blockishnesse of those wicked men which are vnder such a sharpe and bitter scourge without all sence and dread of it like drunken men which are asleep in the top of the Mast 〈◊〉 the ship is ready to be drowned with a great tempest Moreouer it must mooue the godly to compassion towardes such as they may suspect or see to bee stricken with this iudgement of blindnesse and hardnesse Men pitty such Malefactors as they see drawne vppon hurdles to Tiburne but to see so manie men to be hardned in vnbeleefe and sin deserues much more commiseration Thirdly it admonisheth all Christians to beware of this punishment to feare it long before it come and to shun all such meanes and wayes by which men vse to fall into it as first ignorance of Gods will reuealed ln his word Ephesians 4 18 19. especially where it is ioyned with careles contempt of knowledge Prou. 1. Secondly ordinary and daily disobedience to the word in such things as are knowne to men especially if it grow to a hatred of the Ministers and admonitions by them giuen as in Ahab and Herod toward Elias and Iohn Baptist. Thirdly vnbeleefe or distrust of Gods promises Heb. 3 12 13. Fourthly couetousnesse immoderate desire of riches Math. 13 22. Luke 6 14. Lastly pride of hart which where it raigneth it euer causeth the sinner to resist God as is to be seene in the example of Pharaoh Nabucadnezzar who would not obey the commandement of God because they were high-minded Tim. What profit is to be made of these things Silas First it must serue to warne vs all that as wee tremble at the iudgement of a hard heart so especially we labour against these forenamed sins euen against the very first motion of them beeing greatly humbled that we haue so farre proceeded in them Tim. Let me heare some of those signes by which men may know whether they be neere vnto or within this iudgement of an hardned slumbering minde Silas They arc principally these foure First to be vtterly without feeling or feare of this punishment such as neuer thought of it to feare and shun it are vndoubtedly caught by it their consciences are benummed blinded Secondly to heare the word without sound affections as of feare griefe ioy hope loue according to the matter Thirdly when after plaine often warnings by the word there followes no amendment Pro. 1 21 25. Zach 7 9 10 11. Psal. 50 16 17. 2 Chro. 36 15 16. Lastly when neither Gods seuerity can terrifie nor his kindnesse mollifie the heart being like the foole spoken of by Salomon which though he should be brayed in a Mortar yet will learne no wisedome or like restiue wel-fed iades which spurne against their feeder Deut. 32 15 Tim. How may we apply this to our profite Silas If we be stirred vp by it to enter into a serious examination of our owne hearts whether these tokens belong to vs that we may heartily thanke God if wee finde ourselues free and speedily repent if they haue taken any hold of vs. Tim. You haue told vs what hardnesse of heart is and also what manner of iudgement it is but now declare from whence it comes that the wicked are blinded in vnbeleefe and sinnes Sil. There be three maine causes of hardnesse of heart First the wicked themselues Secondly Sathan Thirdly God The wicked harden themselues as authors by wilfull resistance Sathan hardeneth as a tempter by inspiring vncleane thoughts and God as Iudge by punishing God when he hardens is author of the punishment or iudgment but not of the sinne The Diuell when hee hardens is author of the sinne but not of the punishment but man is author of his owne punishment through his sinne and contempt of the word Tim. How proue ye that the wicked are causes of their owne spirituall blindnesse and obstinacy Sil. First it is expresly saide that Pharaoh hardened his heart Exodus 8 15. When Pharaoh saw that hee had rest be hardened his heart or made it heauy Againe it is written in the Prophet Hosea Chap. 13. verse 9. O Israel thy destruction is of thy selfe which proueth plainely men to bee the proper causes of all the euill that commeth to them eyther in this world or in the next Lastly in Mat. 13 15. and Acts 28 27. The blame of hardening is laide vpon the vngodly them selues who winked with their eyes least they should see hereby giuing vs to vnderstand that those thinges which they saw against their wils they made as though they did not know them they saw and would not see they were wilfully blinded their owne peruersenesse corruption is the cause of their blindnesse in soule and of hardnesse of heart Mat. 23 37. Heereunto accordeth learned Augustine Pharaoh saith hee hardened himselfe by his owne free will And againe in his booke de 〈◊〉 gratia Chap. 4. he saith mans heart being infected from his birth whatsoeuer more hardnesse falleth out after that first corruption he suffereth it righteously and deseruedly And againe whensoeuer wee reade that men were hardened or had their eyes shut or eares made heauy let vs not doubt saith he but that their sinful deseruings were such before as made them worthy of that punishment which followed in his booke de lb. gratia This sheweth this ancient father to haue beene of this iudgement that euill men were themselues the principall and proper cause and procurers of hardening their owne hearts As an hot burning coale or fiery Ouen and Furnace sendeth foorth sparkles so the corrupt heart of man sendeth out those wicked effects in sinfull thoughts and actions which causeth and makes his heart more obstinate and repugnant vnto God Tim. What profite is to be made of this point Sil.
First it cleares Gods iustice against such as fasten the blame of their destruction vpon Gods seuerity because hee hardeneth and destroyeth none but such as by their owne malice haue deserued it Secondly it prooueth the Papists slanderers and false accusers for they are not ashamed to write of the Ministers of the Gospel that wee teach God to bee the chiefe author and proper cause of hardnesse euen as it is a sinne whereas with one consent we all doe teach the proper cause of vnbeleefe and sinne as it is a sinne to lurke in our owne nature and doe wholly discharge God of this God neyther willeth approueth nor worketh sinne saith Philip Melancton vpon the first Chapter to the Romanes Euery one sinneth willingly saith Peter Martyr and no man is compelled of God to sinne vpon the 9. Chapter of Iudges The originall of sinne is not in God saith Caluine vpon Iames 1 13. Wee hold him for impious and blasphemous faith Beza contra Castil which saith there is iniquity with God yet both Dureus the Iesuite and the Rhemish Priestes doe charge vs that we doe make God the proper authour and worker of hardnesse of heart and the actiue cause of sinne Yea hereupon Stapleton the Diuinity reader at Doway inferreth that the God of the Catholikes and the God of the Protestants is not one For saith hee the Catholikes God is not the cause of sinne but the God of the Protestants is so which is a wicked calumniation may be iustly retorted thus The true God allows no Masse Transubstantiation Purgatory prayer to or for the dead merites c. Tim. But you sayd that spirituall blindnes and hardnes proceedeth from Sathan how proue you that Silas First from the text which maketh the slumber or sencelesnesse of the Soule in heauenly matters to be an effect of the euill spirite sent by God into the wicked to make them more blinde and obstinate then they were afore Also it is written 2. Cor. 4 4. that Sathan doth blind the mindes of the wicked and 1. Kings 22 22. Sathan is sent of God with authority to leade into error and blindnes that wicked King Ahab Tim. But how is Sathan the cause of hardnes of heart Sil. As a tempter and instigator and inspirer to breathe and droppe in vngodly and vnrighteous cogitations into wicked mens hearts as liquor is distilled and dropped into a vessell Hence hee is sayed to woorke in the children of disobedience Ephesians 2 2. and to bee effectuall in the wicked strongly to delude them 2. Thes. 2. 9. and to haue entred into Iudas by his suggestion to encrease his malice against Christ. Tim. Is this power giuen to Sathan ouer any which are born of God Silas No ouer none of them but ouer the reprobate only for it is written that that wicked one toucheth them not 1. Iohn 〈◊〉 8. also by watchfulnesse and prayer they are kept from falling into his snares though they bee sore and often tempted Mat. 6 13. and 26. 41. His tyranny is exercised onely vppon and ouer them which are addicted and wholly giuen to disobedience ouer the reprobate in whome hee raigneth and worketh euen at his pleasure 2. Thes. 2. 10. Thereason here of is because wicked men are worthily committed to Sathan to be gouerned by him because they want only and wilfully shake off the regiment of God and will not bee ledde by his worde and Spirite Psalme 2 3. That which Pharaoh spake with his mouth the same all wicked men thinke in their harts and say in their soules Who is the Lorde that wee should obey him And therefore they haue an euill Spirite sette ouer them as it did happen vnto Saul who resisted the good Spirite of GOD and had therefore an euill Spirite sent to rule and vexe him Tim. What is the profit to be made hereof Silas It should teach all Christians willingly to obey God labouring to keepe his worde and suffering it to gouern their wayes lest after their deseruings he do put them into the hands and power of Sathan to be by him carried along vnto destruction for there is no remedy such as cast off the yoke and gouernment of Christ must be put vnder Sathans rule and dominion Tim. Why did you affirme that God was the cause of a blind and hardned heart Sil. Because the Scriptures both in this Text and in innumerable other places doe attribute it to God in Esay 6. 9. God commands Esay to goe and make their hearts fatte and Esay 29. 10. the Lorde is sayed to couer them with the Spirite of slumber and to shut their eyes and Esay 19 14. the Lord mingled amongst them the Spirite of errour and often in Exodus it is affirmed of God that he hardned Pharaohs heart of Sihon King of Hesbon that the Lord God hardned his Spirite and made his heart obstinate Deut. 2. 31. also Rom. 1 24. that God deliuered vp to vile affections c. and 2. Thes. 2 11. that God sent strong delusions that they should beleeue lyes and Iohn 12 40. God hath blinded their eies and hardned their hearts These and many other texts shew that God hath a hand and a worke in the hardning of sinners else wee should deny the word of God and take from God more then halfe the gouernment of the world if wee should deny him to haue an operation in the sinfull workes of the wicked whose soules and bodies are subiect to God who made them and are to be disposed by him Tim. Will not this bring in God to be the author and cause of sin seeing hardnes of heart and blindnes of minde is a sinne and if it be of God then God doth worke sinne Silas No not so this will not follow hee is the author of the iudgement but not of the sinne There bee two things to be considered in hardnesse of heart The first is apostasia the repugnancy or aberration from the will of God this God neither willeth approueth nor worketh but abhorreth and punisheth it as comming from Sathan and from the corruption of mens harts and being contrary to his image and worde The other is antimisthia Rom. 1 27. the recompence or iudgement which is executed when a sinner that was blinde and obstinate before is further indurate and blinded as a reward due to his contempt of God Of this punishment and due recompence God is the authour and cause for it is a iust thing with God to punish sin with sinne lesser with greater former with latter sinnes All punishment being an act of iustice is good Therefore sinne as it is a punishment commeth from God and not as it is a transgression for so it proceeds from Sathan and the wicked Thus Augustine teacheth Pharaoh sayeth he hardneth himselfe libero arbitrio and God hardened him iusto suo indicie againe God hardeneth not as an euill auth our but as a righteous iudge who though hee doeth not instill any sinne into the creature
nor make his hearte hard or blinde which before did see and was soft yet hee doth not tame and soften them and he is sayed to harden whome he doth not mollifie Yet he doth not only forsake the sinner which had before forsaken him depriuing him of his grace but also deliuereth him vp to Sathan and his owne malice to be ruled thereby as a malefactour is put ouer by a Iudge into the hands of an executioner besides he both 〈◊〉 occasion of stumbling vnto them by presenting many 〈◊〉 vnto them and disposeth their sinfull thoughts and deeds vnto the praise of his owne Iustice to their deserued confusion for as he worketh in the hearts of the godly to encline their thoughts to good workes according to his mercies so hee workes in the willes of the wicked to encline and order them vnto euill actes according vnto their owne merites either by secret or manifest but euer by iust iudgement Tim. What Vse is to be made heereof Silas It confutes such who to excuse God do therefore say that he doth permit and suffer the euill of sinne to bee done contrary to the plaine phrase of Scripture which ascribes an actiue power to God as a soueraigne Iudge Secondly it must mooue all to feare God who can sinite tho heart spiritually and dreadfully Quis non contremiscat 〈◊〉 has 〈◊〉 Dei iudicia faith Augustine Who woulde not shake and tremble at these horrible iudgements of God at the due consideration of them it might euen 〈◊〉 our flesh to quake and rottennesse to enter into our bones as it is saide of Habbakuk He must haue an heart of flint who is not moued with them DIAL VIII Verses 9 10. And Dauid sayth Let their table be made asuare and a 〈◊〉 and a flumbling blocke euen for a recompence vnto them Let their eyes be darkened that they see not and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their backe alwayes Tim. WHat is the drift and end of this Scripture Silas To prooue the relection of the Iewes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and their blindnesse thorough which they did not receiue Christ and his Gospell 〈◊〉 wilfully contemned it being wholly possessed with a Spirite of slumber And this Paul proues by a testimony out of the Psalme 69 22 23. wherein Dauid bearing the person of the 〈◊〉 of whom he was a Type dooth complaine of the extreame iniuries and oppressions wherewith the Iewes his owne people and countreymen should vexe Christ. Amongst other things that they should mingle his meate with gall and Vineger with his drinke and now in this Texte by way of imprecation or curse hee prayeth for Gods horrible wrath and punishment to come vpon them and namely that their mindes might be spoiled of all iudgement and discretion to discerne or choose thinges and their bodies of all strength that they might be able neuer to attaine good thinges desired nor to hurt the godly and their life to be voide of all comsorts that al their most pleasant things might be turned to their destruction Now the holy King Dauid hauing by a propheticall spirit prayed for such miseries to the Iewes they must be fulfilled therefore the generall vnbeleefe and hardning of the Iewes is no incredible thing to be wondered at Note that though Paul changeth some words yet he holdeth the sence like an Apostolicall Prophet keeping and explaining the meaning by alteration of words Tim. What things are to be considered in this Text cited out of the Prophet Dauid Silas Two things First the parts or seuer all kinds of punishment Secondly the equity of the punishment wished vnto the malicious Iewes for resisting and resusing Christ the redeemer of mankinde Tim. What is the first kinde of punishment Silas That their Table may be made for a snare Tim. What signifies the Table Sil. It is a figuratiue and borrowed speech signifying all things where in the Iewes delighted and tooke pleasure because men who bee rich and great doe furnish their Table with goodly delicacies meats and drinkes pleasant to the taste and sight also for that men come to the table to be refreshed and merry Hence it signifies whatsoeuer is acceptable and delightful vnto vs giuing vs contentment and comfort in this life I say that by a Synecdoche the Table importeth riches feasts prosperity peace and publicke estate yea all their spirituall and temporall blessinges as Scriptures Sacrifices Temple or whatsoeuer they had which was good prosperous and glorious as Chrysostom Caluin Peter Martyr and Paraeus expounds it he prayeth that all this may be turned to their hurt ruine and downfall Tim. By what comparisons is this hurt and ruine set forth in our text Silas By three similitudes First of a snare wherein Birds are taken when they thinke to feede Secondly of a net or trap such as wilde Beasts are caught in Thirdly of a stumbling blocke or stone whereat blinde men or drunkards do stumble and fall This first punishment how it is fulfilled in the Iewes experience of many hundred yeares haue made it so plaine to all men as it needeth no proofe at all For all men know what was the name dignity renowne glory riches priuiledges and benefits bestowed on that Nation and now what calamities of body and soul they are tormented with being plagued with extreame infamy and indignity being vagabonds hatefull to God and all men their wealth or whatsoeuer may make for their welfare beeing made their snare to entangle them whiles they are banished in sundry countreyes and cruelly slayne for their Riches sake Tim. What is our Doctrine to bee learned from this first punishment Silas That vnto wicked men which are Gods enemies their most deare and precious things are made the meanes of their owne destruction howsoeuer they lifte vp their hornes and exalt their heads on hie and flourish like a greene Bay tree and seeme to be rooted in prosperity as though they should neuer be remooued yet it is certaine that whatsoeuer is giuen for their benefit shall be conuerted to their bane and mifery The reason hereof is because they do abuse Gods gifts by pride Wantonnesse riot and excesse or else by couetousnesse and vsury cruelty and oppression Hence it is that God in his iudgement wil at length destroy them bring them to sudden and horrible desolation as it hapned to these Iewes and to Balthazar in Daniell to the rich man in the Gospell and to Caesar Emperor of Rome who was slaine in the Senate where his Table his glory was and to Absalon who was hung vp in his lockes wherein hee delighted as a man doth in his table and dainties Tim. What profit is to be made of this point Silas It teacheth the forcible poyson of sin when it is continued in changing the nature of things making that hurtfull which is healthful in it selfe as the Gospel to be a sauour of death the Sacraments a iudgement 1. Cor. 11 24. Christ a rocke of offence 1 Pet. 2 7. a Table a place
of safety and security of mirth and friendship to be a snare and trap and an occasion of ruine Secondly it teacheth also the condition of such as liue in the seruice of sinne without turning to God to be most vnhappy to whom all things not sinnes and afflictions onely but Gods gifts and blessings also shall bee turned vnto their euill both temporall and eternall Thirdly it serueth as a bridle to restraine the children of GOD from fretting and repining at the great welfare of the vngodly liuers If 〈◊〉 Iob and Dauid repined and grieued at the prosperity of sinners let others feare a fall where such Saints so strong did stumble See Psal. 37 1 2 3 c. Let God alone with them and bee not troubled about them Fourthly it makes much for the consolation of the godly to whom not onely things desirable good but euen hard vnhappy bitter and deadly things shall turne and become wholesome and good as sickenesse weakenesse pouerty imprisonment banishment infamy and death c. All things shall worke together for good to such as loue God Rom. 8 28. The reason is because Christ by his crosse hath sanctified the crosses of the faithfull and pronounced them blessed which mourn and suffer Mat. 5. therefore Christ by death was broght to his resurrection and glory so his Apostles and other professors by most cruell Martyrdome haue had theyr faith tried as Golde in the furnace and haue been translated to eternall blisse and glory in heauen Lastly it warneth all men to pray God earnestly to blesse his benefits vnto them that as they are good in themselues so they may proue good to the possessors of them Tim. Come now to the second punishment and tel vs what it is Silas The blindnesse of vnderstanding in Heauenlie things Let their eyes be darkned This is a speech borrowed from the body and applied vnto the minde which is as it were the eye vnto the soule The darkening of this eie signifies the taking away of vnderstanding from the Iewes making them witlesse and blockish that they might see no more in the matters of God and of saluation then a blinde man can see at noone day in worldlie matters Tim. What is the Doctrine which doth ar se now out of these words thus openad Silas To bee depriued of the vse of vnderstanding in things pertaining to God is a dreadfull iudgment The proofe heereof is from Deuter. 28 28 29. where GOD threatneth the disobedient to his Lawe to smite them with blindnesse and with astonishment of heart that plaine and easie and familiar matters should be as harde and obscure vnto them as the Sunne is darkesome vnto him that lacketh his sight Example of this iudgement we haue first in Pharaoh who hauing disobeyed Gods warnings bidding him let the people go and after many and most sharpe plagues hauing hardned his heart against Gods knowne will was stricken iustly of GOD with such a spirituall madnesse as hee was not able to perceiue it to be a sinfull and hurtfull thing vnto him to keepe the children of Israel still in his land but after hee had let them go he wold needs obstinately follow them vnto the red Sea which was the destruction of him and his people Likewise the Pharisies had their mindes so darkened of God as they could not discerne any sinne or danger in putting to death Iesus though they had often felt that he had done them no euill at al but much good and in their presence had many wayes and manifestly witnessed by his life doctrine patience myracles both the innocency of his manhood the truth of his Godhead A certaine shadow of this iudgement we haue set forth in the Sodomites Gen. 19 11. who being smit with blindnesse did in the day-light euen grope after the doore of Lot his house If wee do account it a verie great euill to haue the eyes of our bodie put out then to bee depriued of the light of vnderstanding must bee a more heauier iudgement and calamity by how much the soule is more excellent then the bodye and the benefit of inward vnderstanding is greater and more necessarie then the profit of an outward and fleshly eye Tim. How may Christian edifie themselues by the knowledge meditation of this Doctrine Sil. First in respect of themselues it must stirre them vp vnto thankefulnesse to blesse God for clearing their eyesight by the Spirit of Wisedome Also to pray vnto God for the continuance and encrease of it and to be deliuered from the iudgement of a blind heart Lastly that to this end they endeauour alwayes to glorifie God by their knowledge by turning it into practise and actions Now in respect of others to take compassion of such as are vnder this iudgement For if wee will pitty poore blinde men which cannot see their way and Idiots or fooles which lacke the vse of naturall reason much more we ought to greeue for such as haue lost the vse of spi ituall vnderstanding not being able to see the way vnto saluation and take it for a surety that hee hath a verie 〈◊〉 heart that cannot mourne for such or at least bee ḡrieued for that his heart is so hard Tim. What was the third punishment Silas The bowing of their backs or loynes wherein there is another Metaphor translating that to the soule and the estate of the Iewes which is proper to the body the strength wherof doth chiefly consift in the backe or loynes the bowing whereof importeth as much as the weakening or diminishing of this bodily strength by all which is signified vnto vs that the malicious Iewes for the contempt of Christ his Gospell should loose their whole strength both spirituall lacking all endeauour to doe that which is good and temporall hauing their ciuill authority and gouernment taken from them This iudgement began to bee executed vpon them before the birth of Christ when Augustus Caesar was Emperor of Rome and afterwards was more thoroughly inflicted when the Emperor Titus tooke the Citty burnt the Temple brake downe their wals put the people to the sword and laid all wast so as there was not any more any face or forme of a Common-wealth amongst them being vtterly voide of all lawes and regiment and beeing made vassalles and vagabonds vpon the face of the earth and so haue remained now fifteene hundred yeares and aboue which continuance of this iudgement is noted in this word alwaies When it had lasted but 3. hundred yeeres Chrysostome wondered at this iugdement of God how then ought we to be astonished at the consideration of it Let vs learne from it generally the extreame fiercenesse of Gods wrath against vnbeleefe for the which he would so exceedingly and seuerely plague his owne peculiar people More particularly let vs obserue that it is a plaine and and a sure token of Gods indignation against any Country to haue the chiefe props or staies thereof eyther sore shaken or wholly remoued
and to become like a tottring wall or broken hedge for lacke of good lawes wise Gouernours the power of the sword c. For proofe heere of see Esay 2 2 3 4 5 6. c. which should preuaile with vs to moue vs to be thankefull to God both in word deed for that little strength that is left vnto vs least if we continue in our vnthankfulnesse and sinfull course we doe worthily thereby prouoke God to bowe our backs and strike through our loynes and strip vs of all our strength to become not only feeble stooping and crooked but fall downe flat till our enemies tread trample vpon vs as on myre and dirt in the streete If God did thus vnto Ierusalem and the Iewes which were great among the Nations euen his beloued people whom he had honoured with fame and renowne aboue all people yet if hee spared not them for their transgressions but made their strength to fall so as they were not able to rise vp Lamen 1 14 15 then iudge ye what cause we haue to feare the like iudgement whose sinnes are so much the more greeuous then theirs by how much the mercies that we haue abused are more and greater then were the mercies bestowed on them Wherefore let vs speedily repent and turne to the Lord with all our hearts earnestly praying him to heale our Land which is sore shaken by the losse of very many worthies in all professions and degrees of men amongst vs let vs beware least we giue God cause to take vp that complaint against vs which sometimes hee tooke vp against the Iewes by his Prophet Esay Chap. 57 verse 1. The righteous perisheth and no man considereth in his heart Tim. We haue heard hit her to of the three 〈◊〉 of punishments wished or prayed for against the Iewes let vs heare what is to be saide touching the equity of these punishments how inst they be Silas That is pointed at and noted in the worde recompence in the end of the ninth verse whereby is signified a retaliation and requitall to the wicked Iewes that as they had taken pleasure to afflict the righteous and to make all things greeuous vnto them and especially had perfecuted Iesus the sonne of God giuing him vinigar to drinke and gall to eate to vexe him with all So it was but rightfull that God mete home the Iewes with their owne measure paying them with their owne coyne and for a recompence to them should strike them with blindnes for sinning against their knowledge and should make their most pleasant and prosperous things to proue bitter and dangerous and finally should turne their greatest strength to weakenesse and feeblenes because they had abused it vnto wickednesse Tim. What instructions are we to gather from hence Silas First that it is a righteous thing with God not onely to punish sinners but to proportionate the paine and make it like vnto the sinne as it were eye for eye tooth for tooth bloud for bloud spoyling for spoyling iudging for iudging c. Touching which thing looke more vpon Rom. 1 25 26. This ought to awake sinners which haue iniuried eyther God or man that by hearty repentance they may preuent and turne away Gods righteous recompence Secondly from this word recompence wee learne another lesson namely that blindnes and ignorance from God hath not the nature of sinne simply and onely but of a recompence when it is inflicted as a due requitall for former sinnes and in this respect sinne is from God as author to wit as sinne hath the condition of a recompence but not as it hath the quality of a trangressiō for so it proceeds from Sathans suggestion and mans corruption In sinnes mans euill worke in offending God by breaking the law must bee seuered in consideration and truth both from the good worke of God and his iudgement by punishing offences righteously which if Papists would confesse for they cannot but see it they would cease to slander vs Protestants by speaking and writing that wee make God the proper cause of sinne as it is sinne whereas wee teach that in sinne beside the anomia which is from man himselfe there is also antimisthia which is the proper worke of God Tim. We haue seene what is to be learned from the parts of this text is there not some thing to bee learned from it beeing wholly considered Silas Yes and namely thus much that sometime and in some causes and from some persons imprecations and curses be lawfull Tim. In whom be imprecations lawfull and towards whom in what causes things in what manner Silas First it is lawful in God himselfe the soueraigne and righteous author of blessings and curses Leuit. 26. Deut. 28. For God being himselfe most holy can neyther blesse nor cursse no otherwise but holily Also in the Prophets and Apostles which had the Spirit of Prophesie a warrant by a speciall calling to curse others it was in thē absolutely lawful so to do Thirdly in publicke persons as Magistrates Ministers and Parents it is lawfull conditionally that the cause of their curse be not priuate but publickly to wit Gods glory 2. that their affections be not partiall nor maliciously distempered with desire of reuenge Now for the persons towards whom imprecation must bee vsed they must bee such as shew themselues to bee desperate and professed enemies to God and godlinesse such as were Ananias Simon Magus Elmas the Sorcerer the Traitor Iudas the cruell persecuting Iewes Thirdly curses must bee vsed onely in such matters as do concern God or his church And fourthly not in those thinges that are eternall for no man without peculiar reuelation may pray for the damnation of any man but in things which are temporall so farre forth onely as they may tend to the saluation of the parties Finally as touching the manner curses are to be wished no otherwise then with this affection of the conuersion of others expressed or vnderstood if they belong vnto God or otherwise that they may be confounded Tim. Whereunto may the knowledge of this doctrine helpe and further Christians Silas First to reproue such as rashly out of spleene or choller do banne or curse either themselues or others their children or neighbours and secondly to warne them to take care of repenting for that which is past hence-forward to take heede how they rush thorough indiscretion or impatiency into such wicked imprecations least besides the taking of the sacred name of GOD in vaine contrary to the third commandement they do puli downe vppon their owne heads these verie curses which they haue pronounced with their owne mouths as it is threatned in that verie precept and as it hapned vnto one Charles Duke of Bourbon who was slaine with a Gun-shot in the assault of a Towne as hee had wished vnto himselfe and vnto one Henry an Earle of Schuartzbourgh who miserably perished being drowned in a Iakes according to his vsuall imprecations and vnto
reprobate because howsoeuer no man in Gods eternall counsell is refused for sinne yet God in time doth not destroy men but by reason of their ignorance vnbeleefe and sinne so as man beareth in his own bosom the roote of his own ruine he may blame nothing but his owne vnbeleeuing heart reiecting Gods promises most wickedly Secondly wee learne that vnbeleefe is a sin most odious vnto God and dangerous vnto men in whom it raigneth For as it cast Adam out of Paradice and kept Moses from entring into the promised Land So it depriued the Iewes of the couenant and promises of saluation The reason why God doth so detest it is first because it robbeth him of his glory quite taking from him the praise of his truth power and mercy which in effect is to make no God at all but an Idoll Secondly vnbeleefe doth reproach God and maketh him a lyar which is to make him not a God but a Diuell who is the father of lyes 1. Iohn 5. 10. Thirdly because as faith is the mother of all good workes so infidelity is the mother of all euill for from thence it is that we runne into all euill because we doe not beleeue the word of God whereas other sins spoile God of his authority the vnbeleefe strips him of his efsence and very being Lastly vnbeleefe is such a sinne as doth violate deface the whole doctrine of the Gospell whereas other sins are committed but against some one part or parcell of the word of God Tim. What profite are Christians to receiue from the knowledge and meditation of this doctrine Silas It serues to informe vs in what miserable case the members of the Church of Rome liue aud dye in in so much as they do flye to the merite of their owne works for life and saluation before God reiecting the grace of Christ by vnbeleefe euen as these Iewes did Secondly it serueth to exhort vs Christians that we neuer seeke otherwise to be iustified and saued then by the faith of Iesus Christ. For if the Iewes fell from the couenant of God and lost all their dignity temporall and eternall because they set vp their owne righteousnes by workes and would not seeke to be iustified by beleeuing in Iesus Christ how may we looke to keepe our dignity degree and standing if we shall refuse Christ through infidelity and trust in our owne merites Lastly it warneth vs aboue all other sinnes to striue against an vnbeleeuing heart for whatsoeuer sinnes wee haue yet they destroy vs not so we haue faith to beleeue the remission of them and wicked men are damned not so much for committing sinne as for vnbeliefe because they refuse mercy and pardon offered Not but that the least sin hath in it the merite of eternall death Rom. 6. verse last much more the greatest But as the smallest sin shall bee imputed to him which is an vnbeleeuer so not the foulest shall bee laid to his charge which truely repenteth and beleeueth in Christ as wee learne from Marke 16. 16. Iohn 3. 16. 18. 35. Acts 10 43. DIAL XVII Verses 20 21. And thou standest by faith bee not high minded but feare for if God spared not the naturall branches c. Tim. OF what kinde be these wordes Sil. They be extraordinary stirring vp the beleeuing Romanes vnto Christian humility and godly feare and they bee dehortatory dehorting them from pride arogancy and security Tim. What be the parts of these words Silas Two first a proposition be not high minded set foorth by the contrary humble reuerence of God or reuerent humility Secondly the rendring of reasons to confirme the duty propounded These be two the one is taken from their present good condition to wit their free insition or grafting into Christ by faith thoustandest by faith The second is drawn from their future danger if they should grow proud and carnally secure then they also should bee broken off as the Iewes are This reason should be thus amplified by an argument a minori for it is lesse likely that God would cast away and cut off the naturall branches and true Oliue the Iewes his first and peculiar people then the wilde braunches the Gentiles which were afterwards planted in Therefore if hee haue done that hee will also doe this except they feare the offence of God and bee humbled by the due sight of their vnworthines The summe and scope then of this Scripture is to perswade the beleeuing Gentiles in regard of Gods free and great mercies also in respect of very great perrill that they bee not puffed vp with Gods benefits and so waxe proud and carelesse but rather be carefull labouring day and night in godly feare to preserue their faith and to keepe themselues in that gracious estate wherein they are settled by the faith of Christ. Tim. Come to the wordes and tell vs what is meant by thou Silas The whole body and congregation of the Gentiles of what countrey soeuer and namely the Christian Romanes which had receiued the religion of Christ which are here spokē vnto as if they were but one man that euery person might thinke himselfe spoken vnto and so apply it Tim. What signifies standing Sil. Sometimes the certainty of faith and grace Rom. 5 2. sometimes constancy 1. Corint 15 1. and 16 13. but here it signifies the state and condition of a Christian or of a member of a Christian Church standing is the same with grafting verse 19. Tim. What signifies faith Sil. Either the profession of faith in the mouth if wee referre this vnto such as be hypocrites which are known to God onely or the guift of true and liuely faith in the heart freely apprehending Gods grace in Christ if wee referre it to true beleeuers The summary meaning is thus much that our condition and estate as we are Christians and members of Gods Church doth consist wholly and onely by the mercies of God embraced by fayth in Christ either seemingly as by counterfet Christians or truely and indeed as by right Christians which are so indeed as they be named Tim. What is the doctrine out of these first words Silas That the state and very being of a Christian dependeth on faith For as before Paul layed downe infidelity to be the true and proper cause of the breaking off destruction of the Iewes so now he signifieth faith to bee the very cause of ingrafting the Gentiles into Christ. Faith is it then that makes vs to bee Christians and members of Gods Church Galat. 3 26. Wee are made the 〈◊〉 of God by faith in Christ and againe We are made righteous by faith And herein is a maine difference betweene faith and all other graces and works of the Spirit as hope loue repentance c. that those doe not make vs but declare vs to be the children of God as it is sayed of loue that thereby wee are knowne to be Christs Disciples Iohn 13 35. 1. Iohn 3 23. but by faith we are
spirite be more easily led then drawne and doe better like of meekenesse then feare Lastly admonitions are like a bitter potion that must be sweetned with kinde words as it were with Sugar Tim. What vse heereof Silas It serueth to admonish the Preachers to pray for a meeke and louing heart and for discretion to know towardes whome to vse their mildenesse 2. Tim. 2 25. Iude 22 23. Secondly hearers also by this are to be admonished to bee bowed and wonne with their pastors beseeching voyce least they deserue to heare his chiding and threatning voyce remembring what hee looseth or bindeth on earth according to the word shall be loosed and bound in heauen Tim. What may wee obserue by the illatiue particle therefore Silas It hath respect vnto the doctrine taught formerly as if he should fay Seeing the Iewes are cast out of the Church for their 〈◊〉 and you Romanes are elected of God and called to the faith of Chirst in their roome euen for this cause you must bethinke your selues what seruice and thankfulnesse you owe to God how deepely ye be engaged and obliged to him Tim. What is the lesson we are to take from hence Silas That Christians are to be moued vnto duty towards God and man after the doctrine of his grace and loue towards them be manifested For as the eye guides the body so doctrine gouernes duty and what a foundation is vnto an house that the doctrine of grace is vnto an holy life euen the ground worke roote spring of all good workes Tim. What vse of this instruction Silas It confutes them which holde the doctrine of grace to be an enemy to a good life and to open a window or gappe vnto liberty in sinne from which it recalleth rather Also it serues to reproue them that teach duties without doctrine or do not leade their liues answerable to the doctrine of grace which they doe know and professe Tim. Come now to the matter or thing exhorted vnto and tell vs what is meant by sacrifice Silas The word sacrifice is not heere put properly for some outward sensible thing as beasts offered vnto God by a leuiticall Priest properly taken to testifie mans subiection to God and Gods dominion ouer man wherof some were gratulatory to giue God thanks after some speciall benefite receiued Others were propitiatory to make atonement with God after certaine sinnes committed for Paul expresly speaketh of liuing and reasonable sacrifice and he writeth vnto all Christians to offer them not to Priests and Ministers onely Therefore Bellarmine doth dote who in libro de missa 10. Chap. 20. would build the sacrifice of the Masse vpon these words as if sacrifice were heere vsed in a proper sence which if it were so yet would it not make for the sacrifice of the Masse wherein no externall oblation is saide to bee giuen to God for Christs body was once offered of himselfe and is now in heauen there to remaine till the end but it is vsed heere vnproperly for the mortification of our sinfull lusts sticking in our corrupt reason and will euen after regeneration Tim. For what reason doeth the Apostle chuse to call this crucifying and killing of our lusts a sacrifice Silas First to meete with an offence of the Iewes who misliked the Christian profession because it had no sacrifice as now the Papists except against our religion for that wee haue no Altars no Priests no Oblations whome we doe answere as here Paul doeth the Iewes that the Christian faith hath sacrifices but spirituall ones as good duties of all sorts Psal. 141 2. Secondly prayses Heb. 13 13. Thirdly Almes Heb. 13 16. Fourthly a contrite heart Psa. 51 17. Fiftly workes of our calling Rom. 15 16. Sixtly martyrdome Phil. 2 17. Seauenthly mortification as in this text but externall sacrifices we want indeed because their date was out at the sacrifice of Christ vpon the crosse Iohn 18 30. Heb. 7. Secondly to set forth the dignity of Christians being nowe by Christ aduanced to be themselues both the sacrifices and the priestes euen as himselfe was a royall priest-hoode 1. Pet. 2 9. Priests and Kings to God Reue. 1 6. which should warne vs of our duty in being carefull to liue well Thirdly to put vs in mind that the mortification of our corrupt nature and the desires thereof is as gratefull to God as sacrifices vnder the lawe yea more grateful sithence they without repentance and faith were alwayes displeasing vnto God see Esay 1. Psal. 51. outward sacrifices beeing seuered from internall worship offēded God which ought to encourage Christians very much to be conuersant in this inward seruice of faith Fourthly it instructeth vs that the exercise of Christianity is vnpleasing to our nature and very painfull insomuch as it requireth a death and slaughter euen of our dearest affections that wee may liue to God for there can be no liuing to God without the sacrificing and killing of sinne as the bodies of beastes were first killed and then offered and as Christes body on the crosse was cruelly murthered So if we will bee true Christians must the body of sinne be vsed euen mangled cut apieces pierced tortured yea the heart-bloud of sinne let out by the exercise of repentance and mortification Tim. To what vse may this knowledge serue vs Silas It reproues such as thinke it an easie thing to be a Christian Math. 7 14. 1 Pet. 4. 18. or that they can bee currant Christians when they neuer striue to kill and destroy their lustes such doe but deceiue their owne heartes Iames 1 22 26 27. let men take neuer so much paynes in prayer reading hearing c. yet if they suffer pride couetousnesse malice fornication hypocrific and other affections vnmortified they be no Christians indeede though they be in name Secondly it exhorteth all which will haue any comfort or fruite of their profession to set a work the Spirit of grace which is in them to crucifie the flesh that is their remayning corruption and to this end to take to them the sword of the Spirite Gods worde and to strike through the heart of sinne by applying the threatnings of the law to it and giue themselues to earnest prayer and often fasting to vnfaigned confession of dayly sinnes auoyding occasions of euery sinne not sparing nor pittying our darling sinne bee it sinne of nature of custome of trade bring it neuer such sweetnesse of pleasure or profit or worship with it yea though the reuenues of our sinnes were 500 pound a yeare let not your eye pitty it nor your hand spare it take it by the throat strangle and kill it that it kill not thee As Agar the bond woman was cast out of Abrahams family so cast all thy slauish vices out of thy Soule Remember what God did to Saul for sauing some of the Amalokites Cattell aliue he deposed him of his kingdome so will hee banish thee out of his celestiall kingdome
if thou suffer but one sinne to raigne As the hoast of Israel had peace and safety when Achan was found out and executed so search thy heart for that hidden and deare sin which as yet liueth and is mighty and slay it or else thou shalt neuer haue peace to thy Soule or safety from destruction for he that beareth but with one sinne is guilty of all Iames 2 10 11. The obstinate transgressors of one known law despise the whole authority of the law maker and Sathan can enthrall and draw to hell by one sin serued as wel as by forty Tim. You haue spoken of the Christian Sacrifice it is nowe time we heard the cond tions opened vnto vs Silas First it must be free and willingly offered noted in this word present or giue vp a speech borrowed either from sacrifices of Beastes freely presented at the Altar to be giuen to God or from seruants willinglie presenting themselues in their 〈◊〉 presence readie to do them seruice so ought our Christian duties to be performed with a good will Rom. 6 16. Psalme 119 14. That which Paul saith of giuing to the poore must bee applied to other good workes they are not accepted vnlesse they bee cheerefully done for God loueth no compulsion or necessity in his seruice but a chearefull doer Secondly it must be of the whole man bodie put for our selues as Rom. 6 12. 1 Cor. 9 27. both bodie soules with the affections in them both Body is rather named then minde because sinne entred into the soule by propagation from the body and are shewed forth in and by the members of the body Tim. What are we to learne from this second condition Silas That God requireth the whole man First he created the whole Secondly the whole was redeemed by him 1 Cor. 6 20. Thirdly the whole must bee glorified Fourthly the whole was giuen to sinne before new birth Fiftly God giueth himselfe wholly to his Children therefore they must not giue him a part and indeede we giue nothing except wee giue all for God deseructh and is worthy of all euen the whole hart soule mind and might Tim. What vse hereof Sil. This doctrine reprooueth Nicodemits which giue their bodies to Idols and keepe as they say their heart to God God will not bee serued with the one halfe offer to him all or none Secondly such as outwardly worshippe God with their bodies but keepe their hearts and affections for the seruice of sinne as hypocrites doe Thirdly it exhorteth all Christians with all their faculties of Soule body to decline from euill of all sorts and to doe all good duties of all kinds towards God and man let their iudgement stoope to the wisedome of the worde and their affections bow and yeeld obedience to the authority of the word let their bodily members bee no seruants to sin but instruments of right cousnes Rom. 6 13. Tim. What bee the next conditions of our Christian sacrifice Sil. It must bee liuing that is of our selues which liue and not of dead bodies of beastes and to shewe the chiefe part of this our sacrifice to be Faith whereby our soules liue to God Also the more we do liue to God the more sinne is killed righteous persons alone are fit to offer this sacrifice for they alone liue to God Rom. 1 18. Gal. 2. 20. vnregenerate men cannot sacrifice themselues to God for they be dead in sinne Ephe. 2 1. they doe not liue by faith Fourthly it must bee holy that is pure and separated from all earthlinesse and sinfull corruption so is this sacrifice in part the sanctification of the Spirite which causeth the faithfull to offer vp pure hearts to God in a good measure separated from mixture of sinne This was represented in the spotlesse Sacrifice of the Lawe therefore wicked men cannot offer this sacrifice for they still liue in their 〈◊〉 without holinesse and so themselues and their offerings are abhominable Tit. 1 5. Fiftly it must bee reasonable that is spirituall so expounded by Peter 1 Pet. 2 5. Our Sacrifices may not be Massing popish or Mosai call outwarde ones but inward of the Spirit and minde Iohn 4 24. For this is reasonable because a reason of it may bee giuen out of the word for God is a spirit they be of our selues which are reasonable and offered to Christ our redcemer as a reasonable thing More particularly our reasonable seruice be our Theological vertues faith Hope loue 1 Cor. 13 13. The oricall gifts knowledge wisedome c. Our morall giftes 〈◊〉 mercy chastity our politicall vertues all these are reasonable sacrifices Tim. What is the first reason whereby this sacrifice is confirmed and 〈◊〉 to vs 〈◊〉 text Silas From the mercies of God euen his spiritual mercies which are called mercies in the plurall number because they are many to wit election of grace calling to Christ iustification by faith sanctification by the spirit by all these mercies which are euery one of them more woorth then a thousand worldes hee beseecheth them to obey God by mortification of their lusts Tim. What is our Doctrine Silas That the meditation of Gods mercies in Christ are a most effectuall motion and sharpe sputre to a godly life As if a Mother should beseech her childe to doe something by the wombe that bare him the paps which suckt him the knees which dandled him and all her entire compassions towardes him how 〈◊〉 should his heart bee not to yeelde to her so we should shewe our selues more then stony hearted if we yeeld not to God when he that might condemne dooth beseech euen by those tender mercies whereby he begat vs pardoned vs called vs renewed and saued vs. For this is the main end why he bestowes his mercies see Psal. 130 4 Also Luke 1 73 74. Secondly whatsoeuer wee are or haue bodily or spiritual blessings it is al of his mercies Thirdly there can bee no sound obedience giuen vnto God but that which springs from the 〈◊〉 of his loue and mercie for that which is constrained by feare is hypocriticall Tim. What Vse are we to make of this Doctrine Silas It condemnes such as by Gods mercies are the more emboldned to offend it is a fearfull signe of a desperate wicked man when by the kinde vsage of God he is made more wicked as hee is a bad sonne which is worse by his parents loue Secondly such as forget his mercies whereof good Christians ought to keepe as it were a register that as they are tempted to any sinne they may checke it with remembrance of some mercie as Ioseph did or as they become dull and slow to good duties they may quicken themselues with meditation of some mercifull kindnesse and with thoughtes of some mercy alwayes resoluing that the more deepely they haue drunke of the mercies of God the more they bee bounde to liue well and godlily as our Sauiour saith God will require much where he hath giuen much
of iudgement because he is that euerlasting and mighty Iehouah of whom Esay the Prophet spake before Esay 45 25. where the people of God oppressed by Tyrantes are exhorted to make the Lord God their refuge and to flye to him for saluation and suecour I haue sworn by my selfe saith God that vnto me euery knee shall 〈◊〉 and euery tongue shal swear Heere we must note that Paul as hee leaueth out some wordes beeing vnpertinent to his purpose so instead of swearing he puts heere confession being a more generall worde for a more speciall For an oath is a solemne profession of God that he is the searcher of the heart the iust Patron of truth the seuere auenger of salshood Also obserue that bowing of the knee by a metonimy of the signe is put for that whole subiection and diuine homage and worship which belongeth to the maiesty of God our Lord as in Phil. 2 9 10. and Ephes. 1 21 22. is expounded Now these things spoken of Iehouah first by Esay and after by Paul applyed heere to Iesus Christ this euidently sheweth that he is that Iudge and soueraigne Lord vnto whom all knees must bow in token of subiection before whose tribunall all must appeare and bee driuen willingly as Angels and men elect or vnwillingly as reprobate men and Angels to confesse him to bee the very true God and vniuersall 〈◊〉 of the whole world at what time the Arrians Samosatenus Seruetus Iewes and all other hereticks which baue denyed directly or by consequence the euerlasting diuinity of the Sonne of God shall haue their mouths stopped with perpetuall contempt and shame yea and all vngodly sinners which eyther haue not regarded to know or refuled to obey this Christ speaking and commanding in his word shal then be filled with horror when they shall see him to be God and Iudge of all whom by their disobedience to his voyee they spurned against It were therefore a happy thing if now disobedient impenitent sinners would often thinke of this that they must al stand before the tribunall seate of Christ which is not so terrible to the vngody and contentious that loue not peace and holinesse but it is as comfortable to such as study to liue peaceably and holily for they shall stand to be absolued and crowned as the other shall stand to bee condemned and confounded Therefore let euery Christian not so much looke to others what they be or do as to their owne life how they themselues liues for euery one must giue an account of himselfe and his owne dooings and not of others and euery one shall receiue according to that not which another but which himselfe hath done 2. Cor. 5 14. Repent therefore as all other secure sinners hauing this dreadfull day euer in your thought as a whip and Scorpion rather to driue from the loue and seruice of your sinfull lusts especially ye busie medlers curious priers and obseruers of other mens actions and waies presumptuous Criticks of other mens persons whose holinesse and goodnesse is to thinke and talke how prophane and bad other men bee beeing henceforth to accuse your selues examine and iudge your selues and what yee finde euill and out of order at home speedily without delay and sincerely without dissimulation redresse that that when the Iudge commeth he is euen at the doore ye may haue reioycing in your selues Holde it for a grand pollicy of Sathan abusing our naturall curiosity to conuerte our eyes vnto the persons and wayes of others that wee and our owne workes being foreslowed wee might place our comfort in this that we can see how euill others bee and that wee are not so ill as they be as the Pharisie in Luke To remedy this alwaies remember and let it neuer bee forgotten at thy rising vp and lying downe thinke of it that thou must bee countable for thy selfe to answere thy owne cogitations words and actions Euery one shall beare his owne burthen then euery tub shall stand on his owne bottome euery fish hang by his owne gril This maketh nothing against wise charitable care of thy neighbours good but to draw thy eyes to looke to thy owne field to see it bee not too much ouergrowne and rest vnpurged whilst thou art foolishly and maliciously occupied in weeding another mans garden at a worde sithence the meditation of the iudgement of Christ is a strong preseruatiue against security and curiosity therefore enter into couenant with thy selfe euery day to consider it till thy heart be thorowly awakened Imitate blessed Paul 2. Cor. 5 11. 2. Tim. 4 1. DIAL VI. Verses 13 14 15 16. Let vs not therefore Iudge our another any more but vse your iudgement rather in 〈◊〉 that no man put an occusion to fall or a stumbling blocke before his Brother I know and am perswaded c. Tim. SHew vs the Coherence Scope and Method of this Text Silas His generall exhortation both to strong weak in the first v. is now closed he passeth to a special dehortation to the strong and more skilful Christians that about meates and other indifferent matters they offend not their weake 〈◊〉 So as the scope is to stay the strong from being on offence to them of lesse knowledg by the abuse of their Christian liberty As for the Method heere is a proposition dehorratory be circumspect and heedfull that ye 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Brother which though it be meant of meates yet it is put downo in the Thesis to teach that about all things not meates onely of indifferent Nature scandal is to be taken heed of that none be giuen v. 13. In v. 14. there is a secret obiection in Pauls person I beleeue that nothing is vncleane why then shold I abstain frō any meats for my Brothers sake To which Paul answereth two waies First by a distinction thus By it self or in it own nature nothing is vnclean but it becomes vncleane to him that so iudgeth of it Secondly it becomes vnclean when it is eaten with offence and griefe of a Brother verse 15. where three reasons are rendred 〈◊〉 disswade from offending or making sad our Brother First it is against the rule of charity secondly from the hurt which may come to our Brother who is in daunger of destruction by the offence giuen him yea a wrong is done to Christ in spilling the price of his bloode verse 15. Thirdly from an euill effect it will cause so great good as Christian liberty yea God the author of that good to be reproached verse 16. Tim. Now hasten to Interpretation and Doctrine with the vses and duties which we are to follow Begin first with v. 13. Silas The meaning is secing euery one must giue account of himselfe to God let vs no more iudge others but take heede and looke vnto our selues and our owne wayes that they be not offensiue Whereas Paul may seeme with one breath to speake contraries Iudge not but Iudge it is an elegancy
comfort the more feeble members Tim. What is the vse to be made of this lesson Silas First to exhort the strong as they desire not to misse of the right end and vse of their guifts in all meekenesse and loue to accommodate themselues to the more ignorant to instruct and amend them Also it warnes the weaker not to looke that others do condescend and yeeld vnto them further then will tend to their good and edification eyther to bring them to Christ if so be they strayed from him or to confirme them in his faith and religion if they stand and abide in the truth Tim. Come to the argument taken from Christs example verse 3. What is meant by not pleasing himselfe Sil. Heere is an ellipsis it would be supplyed thus not himselfe but vs and not vs but his Father The meaning is he spared not himselfe to doe good to others hee refused no shame nor smart to procure vs eternall case and glory being in his estate poore in his name reuiled rayled on in his body whipt pierced wounded crucified in his soule filled with anguish sorrow heauinesse astonishment horror he being Lord of all yet seruant to all most blessed yet made a curse for sinners This was foretolde in Psalme 69. 9. which to bee well fitted to Christ appeareth by comparing this text with Iohn 2 17. By rebukes or blasphemies are meant not onely reprochfull words cast vpon God which no lesse greeued Christ then if they had beene laid vpon himselfe his Fathers contumelies were as greeuous to him as his owne but by a Synecdoche of the part one hainous sinne of blasphemy or reproch is put for all kinde of sinnes which are so many contumelies reproches and ignominies against the maiesty of God these all fell vpon Christ by the eternall decree of his Father who so appointed it 1. Peter 1 20. and the voluntary obedience of the Sonne so willing to haue it so submitting to his Fathers pleasure and command Phil. 2 8. He had al the sinnes of all the elect in the world laide vpon him alone that he as a common pledge and surety might beare them and by bearing be made a propitiatory sacrifice to purge them and satisfie Gods iustice for them as it is written Esay 53 4 5 6 7. The iniquities of vs all were laide on him also Iohn 1 29. This is the Lambe of God that taketh away the sinnes of the worlde also Iohn 10 15. Hee laide downe his life a ransome 1. Pet. 2 24. He bare our sinnes c. which is all one with our text verse 3. The rebukes of thee sell on me Tim. What is our doctrine from hence Sil. That Christ in Scripture is set out not only as a redeemer but as an example of good life as of beneficence 2. Cor. 8 9. Of forgiuing trespasses Ephe. 4 33. Of mutuall loue Ephe. 5 23. Of a free and constant confeision 1 Ti. 6 13. and 2. Tim. 2 8. Of suffering the Crosse Heb. 12 2. Of fidelity in his function Heb. 3 2. Of meeknesse 1. Pet. 2 21. and 3 18. Of lowlinesse Phil. 2 5. and in our texte of patience and charity in bearing reproaches Our Lesson then hence is that it is Christians duty to treade in the steps of their Sauiour Christ and walke as hee gaue example 1 Iohn 2 5. For we are vn worthy to bee counted Christians if we professe him in name and bee not like him in workes If he be our Lord indeede like worthy seruants we must striue to do as hee giues vs example Iohn 13 15. Tim. What Vse to be made of this point Silas This reprooues such as wil protest they beleeue in Christ and are his seruants and followers yet do not conforme their actions after his patterne neuer thinking to liue as Christ liued forgetting and neglecting such a perfect and noble president to whome the more nearer men do come in holinesse and loue more like they be to God and neerer vnto perfection Also it condemnts such heretickes as made of him but an exemplary Sauiour to giue vs example to liue so as we may at last come to saluation For he is so to vs a patterne as hee is our Highpriest too he suffered and by his paines and death redeemed sinners giuing himselfe a price his bloode a ransome to set free such as were vnder sinne death and Satan By our Text it is plaine that then hee became an expiation to cleanse our greatest sinne euen our blasphemies not lesser sinnes onely when hee also shewed foorth a worthy example of louing and patience who being creator and King of glory yet bare so much and heauy things would teach vs beeing his seruants and creatures to beare a little and some smaller matters in our neighbour Let vs shame with our mouth to cal him Lord and our Redeemer except we finde our hearts willing to do as he hath done Nor euer let vs looke to haue him our Sauiour except we make him our Sampler DIAL II. Verses 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13. For whatfoeuer things were written afore time were written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of Scripture might haue Hope Now the God of patience and consolation grant you to bee like minded one towards another in Christ Iesus that yee may with one accord and one minde glorify God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ. Wherefore receiue ye one another as Christ also receiued vs vnto the glory of God Tim. SHew what be the parts of this Text then interpret the words of euery verse seuerally with the Doctrine and vse of them Silas This Text containeth first a secret obiection with the answere The Obiection is thus Yea but the place in the Psalme belongs to Dauid or Christ and not to vs. Vnto which hee aunswereth that it is a bad consequence For it so concerneth them as it was deliuered to writing for our learning also Secondly a petition vnto God for vnity or agreement in doctrine and wils verses 5 6. Thirdly the first exhortation in verse 1. is rehearsed with the two Arguments from Christs example verse 7. which example is applied first to the Iewes verse 8. then to the Gentiles verse 9 10 c. whose vocation is proued by many Oracles of Scripture vnto verse 13. Tim. Now returne to verse 4. what is meant by thinges written afore time and to what Vses serue they Silas The Books of the old Testament Moses Psalmes and Prophets The vses to which they were ordayned are particularly many but generally two First doctrine or learning which is the foundation or roote whereon the other fruites do rest and grow Secondly life or practise of manners as patience by which Christians in their warfare and wrestling against their enemies are armed and enabled to endure without being broken in minde or fainting through euils The next is Consolation which stayeth their mind in the full confidence of Gods assistance and a good
instructions in these words thus opened Silas That in the beginning of the Gospell when the Doctrine thereof was yet newe vnwoonted or vnknowne and the Church yet being as a tender plant or as a childe in the Cradle it pleased God to accompanie the publishing of his trueth with the gift of woorking myracles the better to countenance and confirme both doctrine and the Church Marke 16 20. These Tokens and wonders which at the first did ratifie the Doctrine as seales establish couenants are stil to this day of force to giue credite to the same doctrine taught now in the reformed Churches to be diuine and from heauen So as he which without a myracle will not now beleeue it when all the world beleeueth it he himselfe may be accounted a wonder We doe vse to water plants when they are newly set and but tender afterwardes being growne vp to be trees we cease then to water them so the Church and doctrine of grace when it was new needed confirmation by myracles but now it is growne old and vniuersally receiued there is no such vse of Myracles Let vs rather suspect the Popish religion to bee the new Religion and their Church no Church of Christ because they build the truth and credit thereof vpon wonders which are no perpetuall nor effentiall notes of true Prophets and true Church but common to all Prophets both false and true See Deut. 13 1 2. Mat. 24 24. 2 Thes. 2 9. and Reuel 13 13. False Prophets false Christs yea that Antichrist shall be permitted for the probation of the faithfull and perdition of the vnfaithfull to worke wondrous workes which are called lying wonders 2. Thess. 2 9. both because they be many of them but iugling trickes packed by the cunning of Friars and for that they tend suppose they should be done to deceiue men to establish their lyes superstitions and heresies of Popery also because oftentimes they are done or do proceede from Satan the Father of lies Whereas all true myracles as our Text teacheth for their end doth serue to confirme the truth of the Gospell and for their beginning they alwaies be wrought by the mighty Spirit of God who alone can alter the course of nature and do wondrous things Satan and his imps do some things to be wondred at of such as cannot perceiue the causes of those things which impostures cunningly hide But if that miracles were necessary we are not vtterly destitute The straunge proseruation of Luther and Q. Elizabeth against many deadly enemies is maruailous if not myraculous also the discouering of the Gun-powder Treason in so strange a sort Maister Hawks clapping his hands thrice for ioy in the fiery flame Cranmers hart whole in the fire his body being burnt as it hapned to others are not these wondrous matters Tim. What may wee obserue from the end of the 19. verse with the 20. and 21 Sil. It commends to vs these few instructions Whereas Paul had filled with the Gospell that is had brought to the faith of Christ by plentifull and diligent preaching the Gospell so many people and prouinces as were mightily distant one from the other as I Hyricum which is thought to be that which at this day we call Slauonia is distant from Ierusalem the Metropolis of Iudea which in a right line is iudged to be about 350. Germain miles but was much larger space going by circuites and fetching compasses as it is knowne he did In this example of the Apostle I say carying the word to such Barbarians and superstitious places with such extreame labour and both manifest and manifold dangers whereof we reade in the Acts and in 2 Cor. 11. wee haue the Image of a faithfull Minister filled with loue of Christ his Kingdom and mans saluation to the reproofe of such as with farre lesse paines and no perrill at home may and ought to preach Christ euery Saboth and will not and it giueth due encouragement to all such as do the Lordes worke with fidelity and industry to perseuer in theyr godlie course whereof they haue Paul such a noble president patterne As God will looke for much of them to whom he committeth much so they which doe improoue their Talents and encrease them vntill they come to be tenne Talents such shall be set ouer ten Cities and enter into their Maisters ioy when the sloathfull shall heare Take him and binde him c. Furthermore as Paul in few words ran ouer an heap of Myracles and an infinite company of Cities in ver 19 to set forth his infinite labours to the example of others so in that he studied and did euen in an holy ambition as men striue which be greedy of worldly honour contend to fulfil the prophesies concerning the carying the name and Gospell of Christ where it had neuer beene preached by any before him yea where the sound of Christ neuer came Heerein first he did approue himselfe a true Apostle whose office was to call ignorant heathnish people to Christ and to constitute Churches which they might leaue to others to builde forwarde as Paul did in Ephesus and Creta 1. Timothy 1 34. Titus 1 4 5 6. Faire vnlike to that which Iesuites boast to bee done by them in India for neyther bee they commissionated for the whole world as the Apostles were neyther preached they the truth of the Gospell but their owne errors the traditions of Rome and gathered Churches not to Christ but to Antichrist to increase not Gods but Sathans kingdome making them an hundred times worse then they were before yea by their extreame cruelties making the name of Christ odious to those Pagans Secondly in that Paul sought as well to instruct such as were conuerted as to gaine to Christ such as were strangers from him we see againe his affection to Christs glory and kingdome which should bee a spur in the sides of all Christs true Ministers to quicken them to al care and labor for the enlarging of Christs flocke and getting to themselues testimony of their calling from God by the zeale of their hearts and fruites of their indeuour as Paul had from the accomplishment of propheticall Oracles whereby his extraordinary Apostolicall function was warranted to him selfe and the Churches of Christ. DIAL V. Verses 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29. Therefore also I haue beene let oft to come vnto you but now seeing I haue no more place in these quarters and also haue 〈◊〉 desirous many yeares agoe to come vnto you when I shall take my iourney into Spaine I will come to see you c. Tim. VVHat is contained in all these verses Silas The hope and promise of Pauls cōming to the Romanes which he setteth foorth by the mouing cause to wit the vacancy of his businesse in these parts where he was Secondly by the feruency of his desire which he had a long time to see them in verse 22 23. then by the circumstance of time when hee woulde come to wit when