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A89915 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of writers, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seuen yeeres weeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1617 (1617) STC 4217; ESTC S107140 703,811 512

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Sunne how fearefull then is the case of many of vs Rom. 11.20 that can haue no other standing then by Faith Fiftly Nothing is pure to the vnbeleeuing Sixtly If we beleeue not we cannot be established Titus 1.15 Seuenthly if men refuse to beleeue when they haue the meanes of Faith their sentence is already gone out He that beleeueth not is condemned already Isay 7 9. Eightly It is a matter of ease and profit and pleasure to liue in sinne John 3.18 especially some sinnes but what is it to die in them Except that yee beleeue that I am hee yee shall die in your sinnes Iohn 8 24. Ninthly consider the contrary to the benefits before if we get not faith we abide in darkenesse we are vnder the rigour and curse of the Law subiect to the dominion of heart pollutions dead in sinne full of spirituall diseases hasting to euill meanes pierced through with fierce temptations wicked in Gods account not iustified neither the Seede of Abraham nor of GOD without Christ without hope of immortall blisse without peace with God comfort in afflictions without Grace without communion with God The Scriptures while we are in this estate are but as a dead Letter wee are easily ouercome of the World vnconstant in friendship without the Couenant of Promise entangled with euery pleasure and baite and as Bondslaues abiding in the guilt and power of sinnes past Lastly how fearefull are those threatnings Marke 16.16 Reuel 21.8 Heb. 3.12 There remaine yet foure things to be considered The incouragements to beleeue 1 The Incouragements to beleeue 2 The Lets of Faith 3 How Faith may be knowne 4 How farre short the Faith of the common Protestant is For the first we haue many incouragements to beleeue First because wee haue a Sauiour in respect of merit both in suffering and dying able to deliuer vs his Redemption being both precious and plentifull Secondly hee is ready to make Intercession for vs at the right hand of God when we set our selues in any measure to seeke Gods fauour Thirdly wee haue certaine and sure ordinances vnto which if wee seeke we may finde Fourthly what greater ioy to Angells or Saints then the comming home of the lost Sheepe none greater in the house of the Father then the Prodigall Sonne returned Fiftly there is no difficulty so great either in respect of sinne or the meanes c. but it hath beene ouercome by euery one of the Saints to shew that we may be cured and get Faith Sixtly Esay 55.1 Iohn 3.16 God maketh a generall Proclamation without exception of any in particular that will beleeue but he may be saued Seauenthly Christ himselfe most graciously inuites men Obiect Oh but he doth not call mee Answ He cals all Mat 11.28.29.30 Reuel 3.18 Iohn 7.37 Obiect Solut. Obiect Solut. Obiect therefore he excepteth not thee but least men should encourage themselues in sinfulnes he addeth a limitation All that are weary and heauy laden If we can once finde that sinne is the greatest burthen that euer our soules bare and that once wee could come to be weary of them we might haue comfort in Christ Obiect Oh but if I should take that course I should lead a dumpish and Melancholy life Ans It is a false imputation cast vpon Religion and Christ for the promise is I will ease you Obiect Oh but to exercise such a communion with God and Christ requires so many graces that I can neuer get them Solut. Ans Learne of mee that I am lowly and meeke as if he should say Get this one grace which I my selfe haue laboured in and thou maist continue in the case and comfort once had from Christ without interruption If men still thinke this improbable he wils them to put it to triall and they should certainely finde rest to their Soules Obiect 3. Solut. Obiect Oh but to be thus yoaked is a most irkesome and impossible seruitude Ans This he reiects as most false and saith My yoake is easie and my burthen light both in respect of the power of the meanes and the secret comforts of God able to support the Soule Eightly we are commanded to beleeue and therefore it is a heauy sinne to disobey 1 Iohn 3.23 Ninthly God doth beseech men to be reconciled Wonder at this admirable Clemencie in our God 2. Cor. 5.20 Nay then perish and that iustly if so great and infinite goodnesse cannot perswade These things should the rather affect if we consider who it is that proclaimeth inuiteth commandeth beseecheth namely GOD who is able to doe it and speakes out of his Nature If a couetous man should offer vs any great kindnesse wee might doubt of performance because it is contrarie to his nature but it is not so with our God his name is gracious and his nature is to be faithfull in performance where he hath beene true in offer or promising Thus much of incouragements The lets of Faith Le ts in the Minister Rom. 10. The hinderances of Faith follow to be considered of The lets of Faith are sometimes in the Minister sometimes in the People Ministers are guilty of the want of Faith in their Hearers First when they teach not at all because Faith cannot be had without hearing Secondly if wee teach not Faith and that plainely if they intend not the chiefest part of their labours to informe men in the doctrine of Faith vnder which is contained the whole doctrine of the Sinners conuersion with his God though they informe manners both for Pietie and Righteousnesse and busie themselues in other contemplatiue Diuinitie yet haue they not answered their Calling but are wofull hinderances of Faith in the hearers Le ts in the People Secondly in the People Faith is letted three wayes 1 By errors in their Iudgements 2 By corrupt affections in the Heart 3 By certaine things that befall their Conuersation There are fiue especiall Errors with any of which whosoeuer is infected Faith is letted First when men thinke they are bound to follow their Callings and to mind their worldly imployments and therfore cannot spend the time about thinking of Sermons Luke 14.16 c. Our Sauiour Luke 14.16 in the Parable showes that though men giue Heauen faire words yet they take not a course to get it but what lets them Is it Whoredome Drunkennes Idolatry Murther breach of Sabbath c. No such matter but onely the abuse of lawfull profit and pleasures What more lawfull then a Farme what more honourable of all pleasures then Marriage onely obserue that the voluptuous person saith flatly He cannot come and the worldly man I pray you haue me excused Obiect Obiect Oh but I confesse it were a great fault to leaue minding heauenly things to get superfluity and more then needes as Farme vpon Farme But I want necessaries if I had but sufficient my minde should not bee so taken vp Solut. c. Ans
Gods children will still pray vnto God And looke how many promises are made in Scripture to the prayers of the Saints so many consolations are inuiolably preserued vnto them against the rage of whatsoeuer extremitie wicked men can cast vpon them this is a singular comfort Miserie breeds vnitie Wee Doct. Miserie breedeth vnitie The Apostle that in more prosperous times iarred with Peter and Barnabas can now hold peace and firme vnitie with meaner men and therefore he saith Wee not I. And thus wee see it was in the times of persecution in Queene Maries daies the Bishoppes and Pastors that could not agree when they were in their Seates and Pulpits willingly seeke agreement when they are in prison and must come to the Stake And so it many times falls out in common Iudgements as the sword and pestilence Esay 24.2 in such times the words of the Prophet are fulfilled Like People like Priests like Seruant like Master like Buyer like Seller like Borrower like Lender like Giuer like Taker to vsury Great and preuailing Iudgements take away all that vanity of conceit and swelling of pride which difference of gifts and places bred before The Lord for his mercies sake grant that at the length there may be found some remedie to cure the wound and heale the breach which proud contention hath made and continued with effects prodigious and vnheard of lest the Lord be at length prouoked to plague with more fierce and cruell Iudgements and worke vnion at least in one furnace of common calamitie the same God for his Sonnes sake worke in all that any wise loue the prosperitie of Ierusalem on all sides that they more regard the glory of God and the good of the Church then their owne greatnesse either of place or respects amongst men and that they may more seeke the truth then victorie And as for those that neither loue the truth nor peace the Lord open their eyes and conuert them or else giue them to eate of the fruite of their owne wayes Doe It is not safe to put ouer good motions Not safe to deferre good motions Note When Paul findeth fitnesse to pray and giue thankes he doth not omit the occasion In spirituall things delay is alwaies dangerous but in sinfull motions the only way many times is to deferre the execution Many sinnes are preuented by the very benefit of taking time enough to execute them Giue thankes It is good to praise before thou reproue Paul giues them to vnderstand before he comes to dispraise their vices and the corruptions crept into the Church that hee takes notice of their praise-worthy vertues hee reserues his taxation to the second Chapter and this course hee holds with them for diuers Reasons First to assure them of his loue and that he did it not of malice a thing especially Reasons 1 to be looked to in all admonitions in familie or else-where as well to praise for vertue as dispraise for vice Secondly hee holds this course to let them Reasons 2 see that he did account them as Christians though they had their infirmities It is a secret corruption in the affection of the reproued to conceiue that the Reproouer likes them not at all They are not fit to reproue others that cannot loue them for their vertues at the same time that they dispraise their faults and therefore they are farre short of holy affections that say I neuer liked him since I saw that fault by him Thirdly hee did thus that they Reasons 3 might the more hate sinne seeing it did darken their graces which else would more appeare Fourthly that they might be made thankefull themselues for their owne graces a shame that others should praise God for his Reasons 4 mercies to vs and we neuer praise God our selues Lastly it carrieth with it Reasons 5 a secret taxation of vnthankfulnesse as the cause of their fall for had they beene more thankfull for the sinceritie of the preaching of the Gospell and for the riches of the grace of Christ offered the honourable opinion of the excellencie and sufficiencie thereof to giue all sound contentment would haue preserued them from mixing the worship of God with mens traditions or admitting contrary doctrine and from dishonouring the mediation of Christ with Angell-worship Then did Popish traditions ouerflow when the Scriptures were contemned and the light of them suppressed and in generall an vnthankfull man is euer a vicious man More specially in the dutie here mentioned two things are to be considered 1. What they doe Wee giue thankes 2. To whom viz. to God euen the Father c. We giue thankes Eucharist is sometimes appropriated onely to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper but most commonly is generall to all holy thankfulnesse especially to God There is a flattering thankefulnesse to men Acts 24.3 Luke 18.11 and a Pharisaicall proud conceited thankesgiuing to God Concerning the spirituall mans thankefulnesse to God I propound three things onely in the generall briefly to be noted First Reasons to incite vs to the practise of continuall thankefulnesse to God Secondly for what things we are to be thankfull Thirdly what rules to bee obserued for the manner of performance of it There are many reasons scattered in Scripture Motiues to thankfulnesse to incite vs to Thankefulnesse first because it is a speciall part of Gods worship or one way by which we yeeld worship to God Hence 1 Cor. 14.16 that the Apostle accounts it a great losse if the people cannot say Amen when the Teacher blesseth in the spirit or giueth thankes Againe when he would exhort them to liberality hee vrgeth them with this reason that the supplying of the necessities of the Saints would cause much thankesgiuing to God d 2 Cor 9.12.13 1 Cor. 4.16.2 And in the 4. of the 2. of Corin. he sheweth that the thankesgiuing of many would breed both a plenty of grace and an abounding of much praise to God Secondly the Apostle hauing dehorted the Ephesians from Fornication and all Vncleannesse and Couetousnesse Filthinesse Iesting and foolish Talking hee addeth but rather vse giuing of Thanks e Ephes 43.4 As if hee would note that thankefulnesse for Gods Blessings and Graces duely performed would preserue them from the filth and power of these base vices Besides it is a thing that becommeth the Saints nothing better Thirdly it is a signe of three worthy things wherein it behooueth euery man to be well assured first it is a signe of a heart that hath rightly receiued Christ and is firmely rooted built and stablished in the Faith f Col. 2.6.7 Secondly if men in all things let their requests be shewed vnto God with giuings of thankes it is a signe of the peace of God euen that the peace of God that passeth all vnderstanding will preserue their hearts and mindes in Christ Iesus g Phil. 4.6.7 Thirdly it is a signe nay a very meanes of a contented mind He that
c. 1 Corin. 13.3 Lastly for that grace by which felicitie and the thiefe good is applied and thus it is called the faith of Gods Elect Tit. 1.2 and by Diuines iustifying Faith Secondly there are diuers sorts of Faith The sorts of Faith I will not speake of Faith generall or speciall infused or acquired formed and vnformed but leaue them to the troublesome Schoole-men onely I rest in the vsuall distribution which hath ground in Scripture thus Faith is Historicall Temporary of Miracles and iustifying First Historicall Faith Historicall Faith is to beleeue the doctrine of the word of GOD to be true and therein is supernaturall and differeth from all humane knowledge whatsoeuer neither is it in the power of Nature alone to perswade men that the Scriptures are Gods word further then the remnants of Gods former image doe giue a glimpse of it and is cleared by the spirit of generall illumination This Historicall Faith doth both vnderstand the Doctrine and giue assent that it is true yet doth not iustifie and therefore their case is so much the more fearefull that haue not so much as their ignorance any way redressed nor gotten so much as any knowledge by the Word of God Secondly Temporary Faith Temporary Faith goeth yet further for such as haue that Faith doe not onely get knowledge and yeeld assent to the truth but also professe the truth with some earnestnesse not sticking at it to giue their names in some more speciall manner then others to a respect of Religion yea they reioyce inwardly in the doctrine of the Word and lastly bring forth some kinde of fruit and amend some faults Luke 8.13 Heb. 6.4.5 onely because the Word of GOD would haue them so to doe Therefore is this Faith vnprofitable because they neuer had the particular assurance of Gods fauour in forgiuenes of sins nor will bee brought to dislike much lesse to humble their soules for those speciall sinnes wherein they haue transgressed but nourish some one particular presumptuous sinne or sinnes which raigning in them doth wholly engrosse and take vp that inward worship which is due to God onely And this is the Faith of our better sort of people Thirdly Faith of Miracles Faith of Miracles was that Faith by which many in the Primitiue Church were able to worke Miracles and was of two sorts eyther Faith to heale or Faith to be healed this Faith may bee in such as are reprobates as Matth. 7. some shall say Haue wee not cast out Deuils by thy name to whom Christ shall answer Depart I know you not Fourthly but that Faith in the enioying of which is comfort for euermore is iustifying Faith Iustifying Faith The nature of this Faith will appeare if wee consider The Obiects The Parts The Degrees of it The obiects of Faith First of the Obiects this Faith may be perceiued by that which it carrieth the minde vnto and from which it seeketh the comfort of the chiefe good and thus the obiect is three-fold The Merits of Christ The Promises of God The Prouidence of God So that wouldest thou trie thy Faith consider then what it is that thou makest thy refuge and the foundation of thy comfort What is it that thou most laboured after is it the assurance of Gods fauour by the application of Christ is it the distinct applying of such and such promises of life in Scripture dost thou liue by thy Faith in the course of life if so thou hast met with the right Faith without Christ it is not possible to attaine the chiefe good neyther is it enough to beleeue that Christ dyed for sinners c. vnlesse we labour in the day of our visitation for the certaine and particular apprehension of the efficacie and merit of Christs righteousnesse for the particular assurance of Gods fauour in remitting such and such our transgressions And because it is not easie at all times to discerne by the working of the Spirit of Adoption the imputation of righteousnesse from Christ therefore hath the Lord discussed the cases of conscience so comfortably in Scripture that if men examine themselues before the conditions of Gods promises they may finde in diuers of them the cleare determining of their estate Here may bee iustly taxed the grosse ouer-sight and securitie of many otherwise the deare Seruants of God that are no better acquainted with the promises of life vpon the truth of which depends their happinesse and both present and future comfort And lastly by the same Faith whereby the iust are saued by the selfe same they liue in the course of life in this world the ground of his Faith for his preseruation is the prouidence of his God whiles the men of this world wonderfully please themselues in sacrificing to their nets ascribing in their affections the stay of their maintenance vnto their labour friends inheritance c. The Parts of Faith Secondly that the nature of this Faith may yet bee further opened the Parts of it must be considered Faith is eyther in the minde or in the heart and by the change of both it may be discerned Faith in the minde In the minde it shewes it selfe in two things Knowledge Iudgement There is something in the very illumination of the Vnderstanding of the Saints which is of the nature of Faith Hence it is that the Prophet Isay saith of Christ Isay 53.11 By his knowledge he shall iustifie many that is make iust Iudgement is either of truth or of goodnesse Iudgement of truth is when we giue glory so farre forth to the way of life and the meanes of Reconciliation that our hearts being conuinced our vnderstandings doe clearely resolue that this is the way to bee happie and no other Iudgement of goodnesse is when we doe not onely beleeue the Doctrine of happinesse to be true as before but to be the onely good tidings our hearts can rest vpon Faith as it shewes it selfe in the heart stands in three things Faith in the heart Desires Fiduce or Confidence Perswasion or Apprehension and application It may not be dissembled Desire to beleeue is of the nature of Faith that there are in the world many definitions or descriptions of Faith such as doe not comprehend in them that only thing which is the chiefe stay of thousands of the deare Seruants of God and that is Desires which may not be denied to be of the nature of Faith I expresse my meaning thus that when a man or woman is so farre exercised in the spirituall seeking of the Lord his God that he would be willing to part with the world and all the things thereof if he had them in his owne possession so that by the Spirit and Promises of God he might be assured that the sins of his former life or such as presently doe burthen his Soule were forgiuen him and that hee might beleeue that God were now become his God in Christ I would
not doubt to pronounce that this person thus prising remission of sinnes at this rate that hee would sell all to buy this Pearle did vndoubtedly beleeue not onely because it is a truth though a Paradoxe that the Desire to beleeue is Faith but also because our Sauiour Christ doth not doubt to affirme that they are blessed that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse because they shall be satisfied And to him that is a thirst Math. 5.6 Reuel 21.6 Psal 10.17 I will giue to drinke of the water of life freely And Dauid doubteth not to say The Lord heareth the desires of his poore Fiduce or Confidence in the heart is a part of Faith and shewes it selfe in this when the Soule resteth vpon Christ and the Promises of God as the only ground of all that happinesse which he must euer get vnto himselfe Perswasion or an apprehending application is the last thing in Faith and that in the beginnings of Faith is more in the power of the Spirit then in the sense and feeling of the conscience yet herein it appeares that though the Soule be tost with many temptations and feares and terrors yet more or lesse one time or other they are much refreshed with a sweet ioy arising they know not how from the very perswasion that they belong to God in and for Christ So that if wee would try our Faith we must examine what knowledge we haue gotten what Iudgement of the way of life what Desires wee haue of remission of sinnes how our hearts are setled and what it is that supports vs. There are two Degrees of Faith a weake Faith and a strong Faith The Degrees 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a weake Faith is described before for all the former parts of faith are found in the weakest Faith that is a strong Faith hath in it a certaine and full assurance of Gods fauour in remission of sinnes so as doubts and feares are stilled and ouer-come and such was the Faith of Abraham commended Rom. 4.18.19.20.21 and this faith may be attained vnto by all sorts of the seruants of God if they liue and may vse the benefit of the ordinances of God yet a grosse fault in the definition of Faith as it is made by many must be carefully shunned and that is that they make the Genus to be a full assurance which is onely proper to a strong Faith and is not vsually found in the weake Faith and yet that Faith is such as doth iustifie for the present and will saue for euer The Benefits come by faith And that we may be affected with an holy desire after this necessary grace two things are further to be considered 1 The Benefits men might haue by Faith 2 The wofull estate of those that want it The Benefits may be ordered into fiue rankes 1 What Faith deliuereth vs from 2 What it preserues vs against 3 What the weakest Faith getteth 4 What we might get if we laboured for a greater growth in Faith 5 How it fits vs for heauen For the first Faith doth deliuer vs First from the darkenesse and blindnesse wee liued in before Whosoeuer beleeueth in mee shall not abide in darkenesse What Faith deliuereth vs from John 12.46 Isay 25.8 Wee no sooner by Faith taste of the Bread of life but the vaile of ignorance which naturally couereth all flesh is torne and rent as the Prophet Isay sheweth notably Isay 25.8 Secondly it deliuers vs from those wofull euills which as so many abhominations doe defile both the Vnderstanding and Affections Faith purifieth the heart Acts 15.9 No wonder though men bee continually surcharged with euill thoughts and most vile affections and strange euills within seeing wee are so hardly gotten to set about the earnest labour after spirituall application of the merits and righteousnesse of Christ which righteousnesse neuer can be imputed by Faith but grace is infused by the Spirit of Sanctification at the same time Neither is there any more clearer testimonie of the want of iustifying Faith then the continuall preuailing of euill thoughts and affections Thirdly it deliuers vs from the Law not onely from the Ceremoniall Law and other biggerly Rudiments but also from the Morall Law in two things onely first from the Curse of it which is wholy taken away by the imputation of Christs Passion secondly from the Rigour of it so that as it is commanded in the Gospell it may not exact of Beleeuers an impossible perfection but onely an Euangelicall and accepted vprightnes wee are not now vnder the Law Rom. 6. but vnder Grace as the Apostle shewes in the Epistle to the Romanes and Galathians at large And hence it is that the same Apostle saith that the Law is not giuen vnto a righteous man 1 Tim. 1.9 but vnto the lawlesse and disobedient meaning that so long as we continue in our naturall estate so long we haue this as one part of our miseries that wee are liable to the curses and impossible exactions of the most righteous Law but from the time that we are effectually called and gathered vnto CHRIST wee are not vnder the Law in these two respects which is an admirable mercy Fourthly Faith deliuers vs from the power of the first death being by Nature dead in sinnes and trespasses Iohn 5.29 hauing no more sense of the things that belong vnto the Kingdome of Chtist Ephes 2.2 then a dead man in nature hath of the benefits of life By the power of Faith eternall life is begunne here which is called while we liue here the life of Grace and after death is stiled by the name of the life of Glory Iohn 3.16 Lastly it deliuers men from eternall destruction for Whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not perish Thus of the first sort of benefits Secondly Faith hath a power to preserue vs and that in three things First it preserues from many fearefull spirituall diseases in the soule hence commeth that Metaphoricall speech of being sound or whole Tit. 1.13 Heb. 10.39 or healthfull in the faith Hence that he saith Wee follow Faith vnto the conseruation of the Soule Heb. 10.39 Secondly it preserues vs against the vse of ill meanes for He that beleeueth maketh not hast Herein is a speciall triall of Faith Isay 28.16 and is a worthy testimonie of vprightnesse when men can so rest vpon God that they will not be entangled with those profits that either the time makes vnseasonable as the Sabbath or the meanes make sinfull as deceipt lying c. but can chearfully beleeue that the same God that now tries him with the occasions of profit in such time and manner can giue him as much profit at a lawfull time and by lawfull meanes It is most difficult for an vnsanctified minde to forbeare either time or meanes when profit and pleasure intise Lastly how miserable is our life here many times in respect of the temptations with which Sathan doth fire vs Ephes 6.16
Now if there were in vs conscionable respect of certaine application of Gods fauour there is a secret power in Faith as a Sheild not onely to keepe off but extinguish the fiery darts of the Diuell And the true reason why our life is continually assaulted and why the world lieth vanquished vnder a thousand miseries is onely because men doe not labour for a particular assurance of GODS loue in Christ which being once had wee should soone see an happy victorie ouer the World Hell and Death in respect of the beginnings of many heauenly contentments In the third place we are to consider the benefits which the weakest Faith obtaineth and they are especially sixe First it iustifies and giues vs a portion in the most meritorious intercession of Christ at the right hand of God it is no sooner had but it makes the sinner iust before God this is euery where proued Secondly it gathereth men into the familie of Abraham Gal. 3.7.9 and that as Sonnes yea the least Faith makes a man blessed with faithfull Abraham so that if Abrahams case were happy then is euery Childe of God so Thirdly it makes men not onely the Sonnes of Abraham but the Sonnes of God also by Adoption As many as receiued him Iohn 1.12 to them hee gaue power to bee the Sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue in his name Fourthly by Faith the Sonne of God by an vnutterable presence doth dwell in the hearts of the Sonnes of men Ephes 3.16 Epes 3.16 Fiftly the meanest Faith that is a true Faith doth euer come attended with many holy Graces and therefore to dispute of Faith Acts 24.25 is to dispute of Temperance Righteousnesse c. Acts 24.25 Lastly Faith according to the measure of it is the foundation of all the hope that makes men happy Heb. 11.1 therefore it is called the ground of the things which are hoped for and the euidence of things not seene Fourthly if men would labour for the increase of Faith and once get a certaintie concerning Gods fauour they might enioy many blessings more then they doe euen in this life First it might be vnto vs according to our faith what greater indulgence can be desired from God Math. 9.29 Secondly men might liue by their Faith that is they might haue from their Faith continually arguments both of comfort and direction Heb. 2.5 euen in their carriage about the things of this life Thirdly we might haue the sense of peace with God accesse vnto Grace wherein we might stand Rom. 5.1.2.3.4.5 and be filled with ioy in the hope of the glory of God to be reuealed yea to be made able to hold vp their heads reioice in afflictions c. Fourthly 2 Tim. 3 15. there is a power in Faith to put such life into the sacred Scriptures that they would be able to make vs wise euen to saluation Fiftly how hard a thing it is for the Creature to haue accesse vnto the Creator with any boldnesse or confidence the lamentable experience of the world shewes insomuch that the Apostle saith wee are naturally without God in the world Ephes 3.12 able to minde any thing and to effect any thing but God But now this which is vnpossible to Nature is become possible to faith as the Apostle shewes Ephes 3.12 And how vnspeakeable a mercy it is to haue a comfortable communion with God and easie accesse for our prayers the Saints may conceiue but not vtter Sixtly by Faith wee might be able to ouercome the world so as wee might easily contemne the glory of earthly things 1 Iohn 5.4 the Millions of euill examples and scandalls the thousands of temptations allurements disswasiues lets and impediments which the world casteth in our way and with which wee are often entangled insnared and many times most shamefully vanquished to the dishonour of God and our Religion the wounding of our Profession and our Consciences c. If men had that power of Faith which the ordinances of God were able to giue how might they astonish Epicures Papists and Atheists which now differ little from them Seuenthly Faith would euen make our friendship and mutuall societie a thousand times more comfortable then now it is as the APOSTLE intimates Rom. 1.12 Rom. 1.12 Eightly by Faith wee might worke righteousnesse and attaine to innocencie of life Heb. 11.33.34 wee might receiue the Promises with all those sweet comforts contained in them which are matters of as great wonder as to subdue Kingdomes to stop the mouthes of Lyons c. Ninthly Faith would make vs to contemne the pleasures of sinne and account affliction with Gods people better then perfection of pleasure for a season Heb 11 25. as it is obserued in Moses Hebr. 11. whereas now euery base delight is able to captiuate our affections and we haue scarse strength to stand against one temptation Tenthly Faith by continuance in the Word of God would make vs free euen Gods spirituall free-men Iohn 8.32 so as wee should clearely see that no naturall Prentise or Bond-slaue could finde so much ease and benefit by his release as we might by Faith Lastly we might haue the cleare apprehension of the remission of all our sinnes past as is manifest Rom. 3.25 Acts 10.43 onely for sinnes to come God giues no acquittance before there bee a debt and the discharge sued out And as Faith furnisheth or would furnish men with these wonderfull benefits in this life so it prouideth an assurance of an immortall inheritance in heauen for all eternitie as these places shew Acts 26.18 Iohn 6.47 1. Pet. 1.9 2. Thes 1.10 with many other Thus much of the benefits by Faith Quest Obiect Oh but what if men doe not beleeue Ans First I might answere that it is yet a comfort that though thousands neglect Faith yet their vnbeliefe cannot make the faith of God of none effect Ans The miseries of such as haue not faith Rom. 3.3 though the whole world contemne the doctrine of Faith and please themselues in their spirituall securitie yet God knowes how to shew mercy to his seruants that desire to beleeue in him and feare before him Secondly I read in S. Marke that CHRIST maruailed at their vnbeliefe and iustly Marke 6.6 they were affected with his doctrine it was confirmed by miracles and yet they beleeued not we miserable men are a wonderment to God Christ and Angels and an astonishment to Heauen and Earth for our incredible incredulity Thirdly I read in S. Mathew that hee did not great workes there for their vnbeliefe sake Math. 13.58 Surely we are iustly debarred the benefit and comfort of many of the workes of God which might discouer the glory of his goodnesse to vs onely because of our vnbeliefe Fourthly if the Iewes were cut off for their vnbeliefe being naturall branches and such as God had reason to fauour as much as any people vnder the
Our Sauiour shewes that this is no sufficient excuse by bringing in the man that had bought his fiue yoake of Oxen then which what could be more needfull seeing hee could not follow his Husbandrie without Oxen Secondly a second Error letting Faith is a close opinion of merit which stickes fast in our nature Thirdly Faith is hindered when the minde is fore-stalled with an opinion Psal 50. Esay 1. that an outward seruing of God will serue to bring them neere enough to God If they heare Seruice and Sermons and receiue the Sacraments c. they haue done so much as they thinke is enough Fourthly many therefore neuer labour to get Faith because they thinke it is impossible to take any such course that they should get any assurance of the remission of their sinnes in this life or if it be possible for others yet it is not for them Lastly others thinke it possible to be had and it is good to bee humbled so farre as to seeke it with teares and prayers and they thinke they doe well that will not giue ouer till they haue comfort that way but yet they thinke all this adoe vnnecessary and that they may be saued without it In the Heart Faith is letted fiue wayes Le ts in the heart First when men nourish the secret euills of their hearts both in thoughts and affections and make not conscience to repent for them An euill heart is alwaies an vnfaithfull heart Heb. 3.12.13 therefore men are exhorted to take heede of being hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne Secondly Wordlines is a great let of Faith when men suffer their thoughts and affections to be continually taken vp with minding of things here below though they cannot be charged with any great couetousnesse Thirdly there is in mens affections an vnwillingnesse to part with worldly pleasures and delights and they are loath to loose their credit with their carnall friends which they say they must doe if they take this course Fourthly the world is full of common hope and presumption of Gods mercy men say God is mercifull when they haue neither comfort from the Promises of God nor ground of assurance nor witnesse of the spirit of adoption Fiftly Faith is letted and men are kept from vsing the meanes to get Faith and to seeke God while hee may be found onely through a feare least if they should examine themselues and search whether they had a true faith or not they should finde they had none and then they should be troubled and driuen into Melancholy despaire c. Lastly Le ts in conuersation there are some things in mens carriage which greatly let and hinder Faith First a prophane contempt of the word of God either men will not heare or but by starts or they attend not or not apply it to themselues or not meditate of the doctrine afterwards or not labour for the power of it in practise c. Secondly the example of the multitude hinders much a Math. 7.13.14 Luke 13.23.24 especially the example of wise men and great men in the world b John 7.45 to 50. Thirdly some when they go about the duties of mortification and Faith they are turned off before they get Faith either because they finde hardnesse of heart or are ouer charged with temptations or doubts of audience and acceptance and that God will neuer looke after such broken desires c. or else because they haue not comfort presently they grow desperate and say they shall haue none at all or else are vanquished with thoughts of Atheisme iniected which many times preuailes so strongly that they can hardly bee recouered againe to any care to labour for Faith till either bitter crosses or feare of Death or Hell awaken them Lastly Closenesse is a great cause of want of Faith when people will not discouer their doubts and feares especially to their Pastors being wise and mercifull and yet know not what to doe and cannot get information from publike hearing Here may be taken vp a iust complaint of the strangenesse betweene the Shepheards and the Flockes the one thinking hee hath done enough if he preach to them and the other if they heare him There remaines two Vses of this Doctrine of Faith Vses First seeing there are diuers sorts of Faith and that many benefits may be had by a true Faith and seeing that on the other side there are wofull effects of the want of Faith c. It should teach vs to try whether wee haue Faith or no and that this may be knowne we must vnderstand First that before Faith can be wrought the heart must bee mollified by afflictions The signes of Faith by the continuall dropping of the word of God by the knowledge of our miserie by Legall feare or lastly by terrors from God Secondly before Faith can appeare Repentance will shew it selfe and that especially in two things First in godly Sorrow for sinne past Secondly in the change of the thoughts affections and life As for godly Sorrow it may not be denied but that it may be without terrours in some but neuer so easie in any but these three things are true 1. That they grieue because they cannot grieue 2. They hate their speciall sinnes 3. They reforme both inwardly and outwardly Thirdly Faith after the softning of the heart and Repentance shewes it selfe in sixe things First in an honourable opinion ready to belieue all the word of God though it make neuer so much against our pleasure or profit Secondly by the Combate betweene the flesh and spirit Thirdly by the holy Desires after remission of sinnes and holinesse of life witnessed by constant Prayers and diligent Vse of the meanes Fourthly by a fixed Resolution reposed vpon the way of God though they finde not comfort presently Fiftly by the forsaking of the world and pleasures of sinne c Heb 11 25. Lastly by the purging out of the euills of the thoughts and affections d Math 5.7 Acts 15.9 As for Ioy Peace Thankefulnesse Admiration Loue and desire to conuert others c. they belong to Faith growne not so apparantly to Faith begunne Vse 2 Lastly here might iustly be taxed the defects and wants that are found in the common Protestant The defects of the common Protestants Faith The Faith of the Protestant at large is faultie First because hee knowes no time of spirituall birth and yet he can tell to a day when he was borne in nature Secondly they seeke not vnto the meanes spirituall to get Faith Thirdly they rest in other things in stead of Faith as Knowledge Hope c. Fourthly their Faith is commonly either Historicall or Temporarie for either it is enough to beleeue that Christ died for sinners or else if they beleeue the Articles of the Creede to be true and bee no Papists but sound in the matter of Iustification and receiue the Sacrament especially when they are sicke all is well or if they
5. Phil. 2. Foure things make glory vaine and to be heard of amongst men Ans It is not simply a sinne to seeke an honest report amongst men let them contemne their names that meane to bee allowed to liue in presumptuous sinne A good name is better then riches And Christ commandeth that our light should shine that men might see our good works And the Apostle wils them to hold forth the light of the word of truth in the middest of a crooked and froward generation But glory is then vaine first when it is sought in vaine things secondly when men seeke praise for the shew of that that is not thirdly when they make it the chiefe end of their actions fourthly when it makes men proude and vicious otherwise it is an honest ioy that comes of a good name and a reason to beare many crosses in other things patiently where men may support themselues with this comfort of a good Name And of your Loue to all Saints HItherto of Faith by which wee embrace CHRIST the head Now it remaines that I entreate of Loue by which we embrace the SAINTS the members By the one wee are ioyned to Christ by the other to the members of Christ Iohn 3.17 Loue is either in God or in man In God it is an Attribute in man an Affection or a quality in the affection Loue is a vice three waies Loue in man is either a vice or a grace It is a vice when it is set vpon a wrong obiect or is disordered and that three wayes first when wee loue things vnlawfull as Sinne secondly when wee loue things lawfull but too much as the World thirdly when Loue is turned into Lust and so is the mother of Fornication Adultery Incest and such like As Loue is a grace for I omit bare naturall affections It is onely in the Saints and so they loue first God and Christ as the fountaines of all Naturall and Supernaturall blessings secondly they loue the meanes of communion with God and Christ and thus they loue the word of God Psalme 1.2 and thus they loue the second appearing of Christ 2. Tim. 4.8 thirdly they loue man and so their loue is either to all men to their enemies or to the Saints Of this last heere Concerning this loue to Gods children if the coherence and the generall consideration of the words be obserued seauen things may be noted first Concerning loue 7. things may be noted from the coherence that the loue to Gods children is a grace supernaturall as well as faith Hereby we know that we are translated from death to life because wee loue the brethren And againe Let vs loue one another for loue commeth of God and euery one that loueth is borne of God Hence it is called The loue that God hath in vs. Yea it is Obseruat 1 deriued from that precious loue wherewith God loue Christ Secondly we must first be ioyned to Christ by faith 1 John 3.14 1 Iohn 4.7 1 Iohn 4.16 Iohn 17.26 before wee can get any sanctified affection to man all humane affections in carnall men want their true comfort profit and constancie because they are not seasoned by faith in God till a man doe labour for his owne reconciliation with God he Obseruat 2 can neuer get a sound affection to Gods children nor reape the heauenly priuiledges of communion with Saints Thirdly to loue Gods children for any other respects then because they Obseruat 3 are Saints is a meere Naturall affection not a Spirituall grace a wicked man may loue a childe of God for his profit pleasure or credit sake for his company sake or for his amiable qualities in conuersing and such like but the right loue is to loue them as they are sanctified as they are begotten of God 1 Iohn 5.1 and for Spirituall respects and thus hee that giueth a Disciple a cup of cold water in the name of a Disciple shall not loose his reward Math. 10.41.42 Fourthly nothing can make more to the praise and credit of men then Obseruat 4 faith and loue the highest praise of a mans good estate is to bee able to shew that he beleeueth his owne reconciliation with God and that he loueth Gods children He doth not say he was glad at heart when he heard of their riches honours c. But when hee heard of their loue to the Saints and their faith in Christ 1 Thessal 3.6 The good tydings of the faith and loue in the Thessalonians was a great consolation to Paul in his affliction and all his necessities No better newes can be brought him and therefore hee prayes the Lord to increase them not in riches and the pleasures of this life but to make them abound in loue one to another Fiftly whosoeuer doth actually beleeue doth actually loue they are inseparable Obseruat 5 companions Faith worketh by loue Galat. 5.6 Ephes 6.23 1 Tim. 1.14 Hence he wisheth the people not barely loue but loue with faith so as commonly they are together in the same degrees also If no faith no loue if a shew of faith but a shew of loue if a purpose of faith but a purpose of loue if a weake faith a weake loue if an interrupted faith an interrupted loue if often at oddes with God often at iarres with men they are begotten by the same seede giuen by the same God receiued by the same Saints and lodged in the same heart Sixtly there is no hope of heauen if no loue to the brethren Hee that Obseruat 6 saith he is in the light and hateth his brother is in darkenesse vntill this time And 1 Iohn 2.9.10 1 Iohn 3.16 Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a man-slayer And we know that no man-slayer hath eternall life Seuenthly and lastly he that loues one Saint truely loues any Saint and Obseruat 7 therefore the Apostle in the praise of their loue commendeth it for that it was towards all the Saints to haue Gods children in respect of persons is not to respect them at all aright he that cannot loue grace any where loues not any for grace The vses of all these obseruations briefly follow first heere is reproofe Vses and that first of such wicked wretches as can loue any but the Saints these are in a wofull and damnable case whatsoeuer their estate be in the world secondly of such as allow themselues liberty to hold Gods children in suspence they do not hate them 1 Iohn 5.1 but yet they will be better aduised before they be too forwards to ioyne themselues with them But let these be assured that till they be loued God will not beloued Secondly heere we may make triall by our Loue to Gods children both of our faith and hope as also of our loue to God and lastly the manner of our affection viz. for what wee loue other For naturall affection hath his naturall rewards Lastly the doctrine of loue is a comfort two waies
Patience is a good signe that men are good hearers of the Word and that they practise what they heare g Luke 8.15 Men are not therefore miserable because they suffer much h Matt 5.10 Christians neede not to be ashamed to suffer i 2 Tim 1.22 they may bee troubled on euery side yet not distressed they may be perplexed and yet not despaire they may be persecuted and yet not forsaken they may be cast downe and yet not destroyed k 2 Cor 4.8.9 Patience is a vertue full of good fruites it appeaseth strife l Prou 15.18 25. it helps away the Crosse it is impatiencie and stubbornnesse that makes the Father continue to beate his childe it fits vs for perseuerance with comfort as the Coherence shewes The patient abiding of the poore shall not perish for euer m Psal 9. but they shall receiue at the length a crowne of life n Iames 1.12 The worth of this grace appeares by the hurt of impatiencie for Impatiencie exalts folly o Pro 14.17 depriues a man of the possession of his owne soule p Luke 22.19 dishonours all a mans gifts and graces and all the good things hee hath before done q Iob 4.6 c. c. Let vs therefore runne with patience the race that is set before vs. Thus did Christ endure the Crosse and now weares the Crowne r Heb 12.1.2.3 The things we commonly beare are nothing to that Christ and the Martyrs haue borne wee haue not yet resisted vnto bloud ſ Vers 4. by suffering wee may reape the comfort that wee are Sonnes and not Bastards t Vers 5.6.7.8 besides the profit of our sufferings which God euer intends to the patient viz. the holinesse of the heart and fruitfulnesse of the life u Ver. 9.10.11 What wee must doe that wee may be patient That wee may be patient first wee must get Wisedome and if we want it aske it of God It is Ignorance makes men passionate a great vnderstanding is slow to wrath x Pro 14.29 Iames 1.3.4.6 Secondly wee must get Faith to beleeue our owne reconciliation with God our hearts neede not to be troubled if we beleeue in God the Father in Iesus Christ y Iohn 14.1 When the heart is possessed with peace in the assurance of Iustification by Faith then it is easie to be patient in tribulation yea to reioyce in affliction z Rom 5.1.2.4 John 14.27 Thirdly we must be much in the meditation of the comforts of another life Fourthly we must be often and constant in prayer * Rom. 12.12 Fifthly the hearing of the word faithfully and conscionably breedes a patient minde and therefore is the Word called a Word of Patience a Reuel 3.9 the Comforts of the Scripture beget both Patience and Hope b Rom. 15.4 Sixthly wee must be temperate in the desires after and vse of outward things therefore are men vnquiet vnder the losse absence want or desire of earthly things about their bodies or estates because they haue not sobriety and temperance in their hearts and carriage c 2 Pet. 1.6 Seauenthly if we would haue patience wee must be carefull by godly Sorrow and Confession to cast off the sinne that hangeth on so fast it is our wretched corruption of Nature that makes vs so vnquiet it is nothing without vs d Heb. 12.1 Lastly we must be diligent in our callings and trust vpon God and cast all our care on him Idlenesse and vnbeleefe are the great nurses of impaciencie We must shew Patience in seuen things Thirdly wee must exercise Patience in seauen things 1. In bearing the common crosses that accompany our mortall estate of life and therein to put on as neare as wee can Iobs minde and in all losses or wants to giue glory to God acknowledging that he hath as much right to take away as reason to giue 2. In bearing with the infirmities of such as are about vs with whom wee converse that shew themselues to be so out of weaknesse Rom. 15.1.3.4 3. In enduring persecution of all kindes for the truths sake 2 Tim. 3.12 2 Thes 1.5 Reu. 2.8 1 Pet. 4 12. c. 4. In tentations there is vse of Patience both in waiting vpon God for succour and issue and in keeping the soule at as much rest and quietnesse as may be it is the Diuels desire to set vs on a hurry hee knowes his tentations will then worke best Iames 1.4 5. In the expectation of the performance of Gods promises and our spirituall happinesse in Christ Hebr. 6.12 and ●0 35 36 37 38. 6. In the troubles of the minde and conscience beleeuing Gods truth and wayting for the appearing of his face and the healing of the soule 7. In perseuerance in well doing vnto the end Mat. 24.13 Rom. 2.7 Reuel 2.2 Gal. 5.9 1 Iohn 3.2 Long-suffering This vertue in case of wrongs Motiues to Long-suffering must order vs aright in our selues and toward other in our selues it must restraine Anger and desire of reuenge and great reason for God himselfe suffers wrong and that long too and it is Gods commandment we should suffer long f Mat. 5.21.22.45 Rom. 12.21 besides e Exod. 34.6 1 Pet. 2.22 iniuries befalls vs by Gods prouidence g 2 Sam. 16.10 and reuenge is Gods right h Rom. 12.19 Moreouer these raging and reuengefull affections are great hinderances both to Prayer i 1 Tim. 2.8 and to the profit of the Word k Iames 1.21 And lastly anger lets the Diuell into a mans heart l Ephes 4.21 Quest 1. But how should I preuent it being wronged Ans First carry some of thine owne sinnes alwayes in thy minde that being prouoked thou maist turne the course of thine anger thither Secondly auoyd the occasions which are both contentions m Phil. 2.3 and contentious persons n Prou. 22.26 Thirdly Quest bee daily iealous ouer thine affection and keepe them downe by prayer Quest 2. What if passion do sodainely surprize me Ans 1. Ans How to preuent anger desire of reuenge being wronged Conceale it o Prou. 12.16 2. Depart from them with whom thou art angry p 1 Sam. 20.34 Gen. 27.43.44 3. Appoint at the least that bound vnto thine anger that the Sunne goe not downe vpon thy wrath q Ephes 4.26 Towards others we must shew the practise of this vertue thus In things that might displease vs but not hurt vs endure them without any notice at all and in things that doe hurt if they be lesser iniuries Quest see them and forgiue them and in the greater wrongs Ans thou must seeke the help of the Magistrate and the Law after thou hast sought all priuate meanes by intreaty offers of peace desire of Arbitration c. follow the Law with loue to thy aduersarie without passion or rage and in the issues bee moderate
should greatly reproue such Ministers as labour not either for want of gifts or pluralitie of places or distraction of businesse or for very idlenesse or vnwillingnesse to take paines Woe vnto them for as they prouide euill for their peoples soules so they reward euill to their owne soules Note the Apostles affection in obseruing GODS prouidence in the successe of his labours According to his working that worketh in mee mightily Before I consider particularly of these words I note how feelingly the Apostle speakes of Gods Prouidence and with what affection hee sets out the obseruation hee made of it which greatly shames the most of vs that are so excessiuely dull in apprehending and so affectionlesse in the thought of things Now if any would know what should be the reason wee are so dull and the Apostle so tenderly sensible of Gods power and prouidence I may answere that a number of vs are not throughly perswaded of Gods particular prouidence besides hee was excellently acquainted with the word of God and thereby hee saw liuely how euery promise or threatning came into execution there could hardly any thing fall out but hee remembred some Scripture that fore-told or fore-shewed it And no question hee knew how vnable the meanes was to worke without Gods blessing Further it is certaine that such holy men as hee sought Gods blessing by prayer and therefore now they were affected when they obserued what followed their prayers And besides the Apostle did walke with God in a great measure of sanctitie and holy care in all things to keepe his communion with God whereas wee are estranged by our corruptions and for the most part negligent in a daily walking with GOD. Lastly hee was humble and not conceited of his owne gifts and had consecrated himselfe and deuoted his life to Gods glory and therefore hee was sensible of the glory of God in his working prouidence But the maine particular Doctrine is It is God that workes in the ministery of the Word that in the Ministery of the Gospell there is Gods speciall working for it is Gods worke to raise vp men that will labour in the Gospell considering the ill successe in many hearers and the infirmities in themselues and the strange discouragements from the world and when the Lord hath gotten him Labourers it is his working that they can get fit Meditations and Affections into their hearts in priuate and fit vtterance in publike it is not Art and learning alone that will furnish them with powerfull matter And thirdly it is Gods working to extend the power of the word to the hearers so as the heate of it goe not out before it kindle in the peoples hearts What shall I say it is Gods mighty working that the people are preserued and daily built vp by the word in Grace All which should teach vs to place our Faith not in men but in the power of God And let wicked men bee aduised least by resisting the Ministery they bee found fighters against God and it may bee a great comfort to a Minister to for if God worke for vs and by vs it matters not who be against vs. And lastly Christians should make much of and bee thankefull for and greatly admire all Knowledge and Grace gotten from the word for it was wrought by the very finger of God FINIS THE ANALYSIS of the second Chapter TWo things are contained in this Chapter First the continuation of the exhortation begun in the 23. verse of the first Chapter to v. 7. Secondly a dehortation from verse 8. to the end The exhortation is continued two waies First By alleaging more reasons v. 1. 2. 3. Secondly by prolepsis remouing sundry obiections v. 4. 5. 6. 7. There are three reasons to presse them to care of perseuerance in the doctrine they had receiued The first reason is taken from the care of the Apostle for the deliuerie and defence of the Gospell in these words I would you knew what great fighting I haue for your sakes and for them of Laodicea and for as many as haue not seene my face in the flesh vers 1. The second reason is taken from the effects of the Gospell and they are two 1. consolation that your hearts might be comforted 2. loue and knit together in loue The third reason is taken from the adiuncts of the Gospell and they are three First certaintie vnto all riches of full assurance of vnderstanding 2. Sublimitie to the ackowledgment of the mysterie of God euen the Father and of Christ v. 2. Thirdly perfection in these words in whom or in which are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge v. 3. Thus of the reasons The answer of obiections followes Ob. 1. Why doth the Apostle vrge vs so largely with this exhortation Sol. This I say lest any beguile you with inticing words Ob. 2. But how doth he know our estates being absent Sol. To this he answereth that though he were absent in the flesh yet he was present in spirit Ob. 3. But it is charitie to entertaine surmises of vs Sol. He saith he did reioyce in there order and stedfastnes present But he wrote this to warne them to take heed Quest Tell vs at once what you would haue vs doe Answ v. 6. 7. two things are to be done the first concernes holy life the second faith Concerning holy life there is first a precept walke on secondly a rule after which that precept is to be squared viz as yee haue receiued the Lord Iesus Christ Concerning faith there is first a precept they must be rooted built vp and stablished secondly a rule as they had been taught And thus of the exhortation The dehortation followes from v. 8. to the end There are three parts of the dehortation First hee setteth downe the matter from which he dehorts v. 8. Secondly he giues six reasons to confirme the dehortation from verse 9. to 16. Thirdly he concludes and that seuerally from v. 16. to the end In the 8. verse he sets downe three thinges from which he dehorts 1. From Philosophie which he calls vaine deceits 2. From traditions of men 3. From the ceremonies of Moses which he calls the rudiments of the world The reasons are 1. because they are not after Christ v. 8. 2. Because in Christ there dwels all the fulnes of the God-head bodily v. 9. where note an excellent description of Christ In him he notes his person the Godhead his diuine nature corporally his humane nature and dwells the vnion of both and for the measure it is in all fullnes 3. Because we are compleat in Christ without any of these thinges v. 10. Here note the persons yee the time are the benifit compleat the author Christ the limitation in him 4. Because we are circumcised without hands and therefore need not circumcision made with handes and consequently no ceremonies This reason is propounded v. 11. confirmed by prolepsis v. 12. Concerning Circumcision without hands fiue
if they would bee carefull to please God but alas they were neuer washed from their olde sinnes and they quickly returne with the dogge to their vomit and corrupt their waies being of purpose set on by the Diuell to make a clamorous profession that so their fall might more dishonour the glorie of an exact and circumspect conuersation Alas what should I say There is wonderfull want of order in the very liues of Gods children Scarce the tithe of professours of sinceritie of the Gospell that haue gathered a catalogue of holy duties and obserued out of the word that frame and order of settled holy conuersation Ten helpes of order in conuersation There are 10 helpes of order in holy life 1. knowledge 2. vprightnesse that is an vnfained resolution to shew respect to all Gods Commandements 3. constant diligence 4. watchfulnesse 5. contemplation or meditation 6. prayer 7. reading the word daily 8. frequent hearing of the Gospell preached in the power of it 9. a tender conscience 10. societie and fellowship with gracious Christians in the Gospell There are many impediments of an orderly conuersation Nine lets of order 1. Men are not reconciled to God and so not being in Christ they receiue not influence of grace from Christ to enable them to walke in an holy course 2. In others t is negligent mortification the staine of former sinnes being not washed away there remaines in them an ill disposition to sinne 3. Many are ensnared with euill opinions either in doctrine and so errour of life is the scourge of errour in opinion or else about practise as that such strictnesse is not required or it is impossible or none doe liue so 4. Many know not what order to appoynt vnto themselues 5. Many are confirmed in a heart accustomed to euill and they loue some one sinne wherein they especially breake order 6. Sathan striues aboue all things to keepe men in a dead sleepe that they might not awake to liue righteously or expresse the power of godlinesse 7. Many are so set in the way of the vngodly that their very euill society chains them downe to a necessitie of dissolutenes 8. Many are put out of all order by their daily distempers and disorders in their families Lastly some faile and fall through very discouragement receiued either from opposition or contempt or scandall Now if any be desirous to know in generall what he should do to bring his life into order I shall profitably aduise fiue things First Rules for bringing our liues into order that hee doe resolutely withdraw himselfe from the sinnes of the times and keepe himselfe vnspotted of the world in respect of them Now the sinnes of the times are apparant pride of life contempt of the Gospell coldnesse in faith and religion swearing profanation of the holy Sabbath domesticall irreligiousnesse contention vsury whoredome drunkennesse and drinkings oppression and speaking euill of the good way Secondly that hee obserue the more vsuall corruptions of the calling of life hee liues in and with all heedfulnesse shun them whether he be Magistrate Minister or priuate person Thirdly that he especially striue against and subdue the euils that by nature hee is most prone vnto Fourthly he shall doe wonderfully profitably Vse of catalogues if hee would get a catalogue of duties out of the whole law that directly concerne himselfe in particular which is very easie especially by the helpe of some that are experienced to be distinctly gathered labouring to shew all good faithfulnesse in duties of pietie as well as righteousnesse and to striue for inward pietie as well as outward resoluing to continue as well as once to begin Hence it is if wee marke it that the holy Ghost in diuers Scriptures drawes for the people of those times diuers catalogues either of grace which specially tended to their praise or of duties that most fitted their state or of sinnes that they must most carefully auoyd as being most commonly committed yea it could not but be of excellent vse if we did taske our selues to the more strict obseruation of some of those catalogues either of grace or sinnes or duties as wee might perceiue they most fitted vs. But if euer we would goe about the order of our liues More rules wee must in generall 1. labour to weaken the loue of earthly things 2. We must resolue to keepe our hearts with all diligence I meane we must with all care and conscience striue against inward sinnes 3. We must put on a minde to liue by faith whatsoeuer befall vs. 4. If we fall we would speedily recouer our selues by confession and prayer and not accustome our selues to sinnes either of omission or commission Vpon the consideration of all this what should we doe Vses but euen pray the Lord that he would make his way plaine m Psal 5.8 before our face and direct the workes of our hands n Psal 90. vlt. and hold vp our goings in his pathes o Psal 17.5 ● that our steps doe not slide And to this end we should euery one be p●●cing and amending his waies making his paths straight being ashamed and confounded for all the disorder of our liues past But if thou goe about this bee not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a man that hath two hearts for then thou wilt be vnstable in all thy wayes either goe about it with all thy heart or else let it alone What shall I say but this let vs all learne the way of God more perfectly Thus of order The second thing hee commends is their faith which hee praiseth for the stadfastnesse of it The stedfastnesse of their faith Concerning stedfastnesse of faith I propound fiue things to be considered of 1. That it may bee had and ought to be sought 2. What the nature and properties of it are 3. What is the cause why the faith of many is not stedfast 4. What we must doe to attaine it And lastly concerning vnstedfast faith The stedfastnesse of faith may be had For the first that it may be had is manifest for God that giueth the earnest of his spirit and sealeth and annoynteth vs in Christ doth stablish vs in him p 2 Cor. 1.21.22 There is a sure foundation of God q 2 Tim. 2.19 Matt. 7.24 vpon which we may found our affiance And God willing more abundantly to shew vnto the heires of promise the immutabilitie of his counsell interposed himselfe by an oath to confirme his promise that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie we might haue strong consolation which flie for refuge to lay hold vpon the hope set before vs which hope wee haue as an anchour of the soule both sure and stedfast r Heb. 6.17.18 And we are commanded to resist stedfast in the faith ſ 1 Pet. 5.9 And wauering is secretly threatned and disgraced by the Apostle Iames after he had charged that wee should pray in faith
There are many other benefits signified and assured vnto vs by baptisme The benefits signified in baptisme then these here mentioned for baptisme doth signifie seale vnto vs 1. Our deliuerance from the seas of Gods wrath g Mat. 3.8 1 Pet. 3.21 2. The resurrection of our bodies h 1 Cor. 15. 3. Our communion with the whole Trinitie i Matth. 28. 4. Our adoption k Gal. 3.27 5. Our communion with the Saints l 1 Cor. 12.13 6. Remission of all sinnes m Act. 2.38.39 Baptisme is auaileable for these respects when we amend our liues and confesse our sinnes n Math. 3.38 and gladly receiue the word o Cant. 2.41 and lay hold vpon the promises of grace p Mar. 16.16 especially when the conscience maketh request vnto God q 1 Pet. 3.21 for the application and fruition of the things signified by baptisme Hitherto of the effects The causes follow 1. Faith 2. The operation of God 3. Christs resurrection Through the faith of the operation of God The faith that is mighty through God to make baptisme effectuall and to raise vs vp after the buriall of sinne is neither historicall nor temporary nor of miracles but that which is in scriptures called the faith of Gods elect and by Diuines iustifying faith Nor is it enough to bring hither the perswasion of Gods mercy in Christ which is the first and chiefe act of iustifying faith but we must beleeue the power of God in the particular successe of the meanes for effecting both of mortification and viuification which as I suppose is here meant What faith doth in baptisme where he calleth it the faith of the operation of God Quest But shew vs how faith hath to doe in baptisme or in sanctification Answ In baptisme faith is needfull not onely the faith of explication but also the faith of application for we are bound not onely to beleeue that those things there shadowed out are so as they import but that also they are fulfilled not onely to the faithfull in generall but to my owne soule in particular And for sanctification faith must needs be of great vse for without faith The vse of faith about sanctification nothing we do can please God r Heb. 11.6 And by faith Christ liues in vs Å¿ Gal. 5.20 It quencheth the fiery darts of the deuill t Ephes 6.16 It lightneth our darknes u Ioh. 12.46 It purifieth the heart * Act. 15.9 It ouercomes the world x 1 Ioh. 5.4 It breeds ioy and consolation y Rom. 5.2 And loue to Gods children z Gal. 6. It maketh the Scripture auaileable to saluation a 2 Tim. 3.15 And lastly our prayers to be such as God cannot denie b Mat. 21.22 Hovv vve may come to beleeue the effects of baptisme Quest How may we attaine to it to beleeue that baptisme doth signifie and assure these things to vs Answ 1. Labour to expresse that which on thy part is required that is set vp the confession of thy sinnes and amendment of thy life 2. Then goe vnto God and let thy conscience make request for the answer of the spirit of adoption by which the Lord may assure thee that in the mediation of Iesus Christ thy baptisme is giuen to thee as a particular seale of Gods couenant and grace Quest But how may I doe to be assured that my sinnes shall be subdued and that I shall be raised vp in holy graces and duties Answ 1. Acquaint thy selfe with Gods promises of this kinde and grow skilfull in them 2. Cry strongly to God for the testimonie of Iesus in thy heart that by his spirit hee would settle thee in this perswasion 3. Waite vpon the word and prayer till God doe effect it 4. Strengthen thy selfe both by the experience of others as also with due obseruation of successe in the subduing of any sinne or the exercise of any graces or duties Vses The vses may be diuers First for information we may here see how vaine the common faith of the common Protestant is shew me thy faith by thy fruits how canst thou beleeue aright and yet thy sinnes not mortified and thy heart and life vnsanctified Againe we see we haue not comfort of our baptisme till the power of holinesse in some measure appeare in our liues Secondly for instruction we should all examine our selues whether we haue faith or no and whiles we haue meanes of assurance make vse of all aduantages to settle our hearts in the faith and to this end we should deliuer vp our soules to be nursed vp in the words of faith and wholesome doctrine Lastly we might here be greatly comforted if we had true faith we see God can denie nothing vnto faith it should be to vs in the sacraments in mortification Three rules if vve vvould reason from Gods povver to the effect and in graces and duties according to our faith Of the operation of God The doctrine of Gods power and working is of singular vse in the Church great is the interest of Gods seruants in his power and therefore great cause they haue to rest vpon it The elect onely can reason from Gods power to the effect he is able to doe it therefore he will do it but then these three things must be noted 1. They must be beleeuers that looke for this priuiledge 2. They must bring a particular faith to draw out this power of God into operation 3. It will not be set a worke about euery thing but such things for which there is promise or meete examples in the scriptures * In vvhat things vvee may beare our selues vpon Gods povver Now it is a matter of singular weight to know in what things we may haue warrant to beare our selues vpon the power of God The power of God is engaged for operation in foure things for the benefit of the faithfull First in their afflictions Secondly in their temptations Thirdly in the difficulties of holy life Fourthly in his ordinances In afflictions God hath bound himselfe to shew his power 1. In giuing strength to endure them c Phil. 4.13 Esay 41.10 2. In moderating the afflictions to their strength d Esay 27.7 3. In guiding them to the right ends e Job 36.22 Esay 27.11 Zach. 13.9 4. In deliuerance out of them f Psal 71.20 Esay 43. If we looke vpon the enemies of the godly in particular God shewes his power 1. In restraining or disappointing them g Iob 12.16 Esay 54.16 17. 2. In rewarding and ouerthrowing them h Exo. 15.6 7 Esay 42.13 41.15 So likewise in temptations the power of God though it be secret yet it is wonderfull in dissoluing the works of the deuill and in vpholding his seruants and destroying the strong holds and fortifications of Satan i 1 Cor. 10.12 2 Cor. 12.9 Esay 27.1 Thirdly in the difficulties of holy life the
value it should teach vs when Grace is offered in the meanes or any way bestowed by Gods Spirit 1 Cor. 6.1 neuer to receiue it in vaine so as it should be tendered without effect or kept without aduantage but especially let it euer be farre from vs to turne the grace of God into wantonnesse Iude 4. to abuse either the promises of Grace or the pledges of Gods Loue to become either bawds for perseuerance in sinne or props to secure and bolde presumption And aboue all things wee should with all watchfulnesse take heede of wronging the Spirit of Grace Heb. 10. eyther by resisting tempting greening quenching or dispising it And further wee should learne by all good meanes as constant hearing 2 Tim 1.6 2 Tim. 2.1 prayer reading conference and meditation to stirre vp the Graces giuen vs to labour for spirituall strength in Grace and to search so carefully into the euidence of Faith for what wee haue and Hope for what wee want as neuer to giue ouer to examine our selues by the signes and promises of Gods Loue till our hearts were setled and stablished in Grace Lastly Gods Children should solace themselues in the feeling and experimentall knowledge of Gods grace Iob 15.11.12 so as their hearts should neuer carry them away to make them account the Consolations of God small or to despise the Grace giuen them but rather in the middest of all combats with temptations within or afflictions without to support their Soules with that gratious Promise My Grace shall bee sufficient for you 2 Cor. 12.9 and my Power made knowne in your weakenesse Peace The second thing here wished for and to bee desired of all that loue their owne good is Peace that is tranquillity of heart with other spirituall blessings accompanying it with outward things also so farre as they may further our happinesse but the Scripture layes a restraint vpon the getting of this peace and giues rules for the vse of it For if euer wee would haue Peace wee must first be righteous persons that is men that are broken in heart for our sinnes humbled at Gods feete for forgiuenesse and such as hang vpon the Worde of GOD to receiue the certaine meanes of our soules reconciliation and the righteousnesse of CHRIST imputed vnto vs such as to whom there is a way and their path is holy Esay 35.8 But on the other side vnto the wicked is no peace and they are taken by the Prophet for wicked men that are neuer humbled in the duties of Mortification for sinne that in the hardnesse of their hearts frustrate the power of Gods Ordinances so as they cannot worke vpon them Esay 57.21 these haue no Peace neyther with GOD Angels men the Creatures or their owne Consciences Againe hast thou gotten peace and tranquility of heart euen rest and ease from CHRIST then let this peace preserue thy heart and minde Phil. 4.6 Col. 3.15 and let it rule Be carefull to reiect all matters in thoughts or opinion in affections or desires in words or actions that it might any way interrupt thy peace but by all meanes nourish it delight in it and let it guide to all holy meditations and affections and gainefull practises and endeuours Let the peace of thy heart and Gods spirituall blessing be a rule for all thy actions And lastly with all good Conscience and holy conuersation hold out that when Christ shall come eyther by particular Iudgement to thee in death or by generall iudgement to the whole world in the last day 2 Pet 3.14 Esay 9.6.7 Luke 1.79 thou maist be found of him in Peace so shall Christ be vnto thee a Prince of Peace and guide thy feet for euer into the way of Peace And thus farre of the good things he wisheth vnto them now follow the efficient causes viz from God the Father and our Lord Iesus Christ Diuers things may be here obserued First a proofe of the Trinitie or at the least a plaine proofe of two persons the Father and the Sonne vnited in one essence Secondly GOD is here plainely affirmed to be a Father and that hee is in diuers respects first to all by Creation secondly to all the faithfull by Adoption thirdly to Christ by the grace of Vnion as man and a naturall Father as God Thirdly heere wee may obserue that grace and blessings must not bee looked vpon without some honourable meditation of God and Christ the giuers Fourthly seeing beleeuers haue a God a Father a Christ a Sauiour a Lord they are sure to be in a happy case and may haue what is needfull if they will seeke for it Fiftly wee may obserue we can haue no comfort in the enioying or hope of any fauour or blessing spirituall or temporall vnlesse first God be our Father secondly we be in Christ Lastly if GOD be a Father and CHRIST a Lord it stands vs vpon to looke to it that we performe both honour and seruice And thus of the Salutation The Preface followeth Verse 3. Wee giue thankes to God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ alwaies praying for you The Diuision THE Salutation hath beene handled already the Preface followeth and is contained in this Verse and those that follow to the 12. Verse in which the end and drift of the Apostle is to winne affection to the Doctrine afterwards to be propounded and this he doth by shewing his exceeding great loue to them which he demonstrates by two things which hee did for them viz. he both gaue thankes vnto God in their behalfe and also made many a prayer for them which spirituall duties are better kindnesses and signes of true affection and respect then all ciuill curtesies or outward complements are or can be These things in the Preface are first generally set downe in this Verse and then particularly enlarged in the Verses afterwards first the Thanksgiuing from ver 4. to the 9. Secondly Prayer v. 9.10.11 In this Verse hee doth two things ●●rst hee giues thankes Secondly he prayes In the Thankesgiuing consider first what hee doth in these words Wee giue thankes Secondly to whom he doth it in these words To God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ Thus farre of the order of the words The Doctrines follow which must bee considered generally from the whole Verse and specially from the seuerall words Two generall Doctrines The first generall Doctrine is this that it is not enough to salute others kindly but we must doe and performe the sound duties of loue this is from the coherence and condemnes the sinfull barrennesse of many that know a necessity of no duties of loue vnlesse it be to salute curteously Secondly wee see heere that Tyrants may take away the benefit of hearing reading conference and such like but they cannot hinder vs of praying Paul can pray and giue thankes in prison for himselfe and others as well as euer before Let wicked men doe their worst
Obiect The faithfull themselues discerne not any such excellencie in their earthly condition Sol. Wee must distinguish of Christians Solut. some are but infants in grace and babes these may be entituled to great things and yet haue no great sense of it as the Childe in Nature hath no great discerning of the inheritance hee is borne to or his owne present condition wherein hee excels others A kingdome is neuer the worse because the infant Prince cannot discourse of the glory of it Some Christians fall away for the time into grosse sinne or error and these are in matters of grace like the drunken man or Paraliticke in nature their discerning is lost with their vprightnesse other Christians either want the meanes in the power of it or are tossed with great afflictions or are in the fit of temptation and then they haue but a darke glimpse of their felicity in Christ but the strong Christian that hath digested the assurance of Gods loue in Christ and is exercised in the word of righteousnesse sees such a glory in the Kingdome of Grace and doth acknowledge it with such vnmoueable firmenesse of heart that all the powers of either earth or hell cannot alter his iudgement in the high estimation of such a condition Vses The Vse of this Doctrine concerning Christs Kingdome is First for Consolation Gods Children should much exult and reioyce in their estates and in as much as Christ sitteth as king for euer all that are in his Temple should speake of his glory p Psal 29.10.18 and if there were nothing else for a Christian to ioy in yet let all the children of Sion reioyce in their King q Psal 149.2 Yea the thought of this that God is our King should vphold vs and fence vs against all crosses r Psal 74.12 for Christ is a hiding place for the winde and a couer for the tempest as riuers of waters in a dry place and as the shadow of a great rocke in a weary Land Å¿ Esay 32.2 And therefore let our eyes neuer grow dimme in viewing this glory or our eares grow dull in harkening to the word of this Kingdome Secondly for Reproofe and terrour vnto all wicked men that harden their hearts and refuse to returne What greater losse then to lose Christs Kingdome and what fairer seruice then to serue the Sonne of God Who would not feare thee O King of Nations t Jer 10.7 accursed is the estate of all such as subiect not their neckes to Christs yoake that refuse to let him raigne ouer them by his Word and Spirit that come not vp to doe their homage in Ierusalem euen to worshippe this King the Lord of Hoasts u Zach. 14.17 If Iesus Christ be a great King then where shall they appeare that say to the King Apostata x Iob 34.18 Euen all such I meane that dare reproach the way of Christ and deride the sinceritie of such as desire to imploy themselues in the businesse of the Kingdome c. Is hee a great King how dare wee then offer that vnto him which they durst not offer to a meane King on earth What meane the blinde and the lame in Gods house y Mal 1.13.14 how dare men so securely offer vp their blinde lip-seruice and lame deuotions It is a Kingdome that is offered why doe wee then trifle why doe they excuse What meanes these fond excuses I haue married a wife and cannot come I haue bought fiue yoake of Oxen and must goe proue them I haue bought a Farme and must goe see it I haue this pleasure and that profit and therefore cannot come Will they lose a Kingdome vpon so silly a pretence when thou needest not to lose either Wife Farme or Oxen. God doth not bid thee leaue thy Wife thy Labour thy Calling thy Liuing but onely wils thee to attend thine owne further aduancement in the season of it seeke lawfull profit but seeke Grace first Vse thy lawfull pleasures but chiefly seeke the pleasures of God euen these spirituall ioyes that are more worth then a Kingdome Thirdly for Instruction it should teach vs aboue all things to seeke our happinesse in this excellent estate vnder the gouernement of Iesus Christ Wee should in respect of the worth of it forsake our Fathers house and the immoderate desire of any earthly thing so that the King will please to delight in vs z Psal 4.5 Wee should open our hearts wider that the King of Glorie by his Word and Spirit may come in * Psal 24.10 Wee should labour for all those Graces by which an entrance is ministred into this Kingdome a 2 Pet 1.8.11 and whatsoeuer we are vncertaine of wee should make our Calling and Election sure and though we bee neuer so many waies opposed yet seeing wee fight for a Kingdome nay in a Kingdome wee should hold it alwaies a good fight b 1 Tim 6. and continue constant and vnmoueable and if Christ lead vs into his Chambers c Cant 1.3 of presence and delight vs with the sweete ioyes of his presence wee should remember such princely loue and ioy in him alwaies Let the Christian sing and make a ioyfull noyse to the rocke of his saluation and let him worshippe and bow downe let him serue with all reuerence and heare without all hardnes of heart d Psal 95.1.3 let no discontentment possesse the heart of the true Christian for to serue Christ is to raigne and all his Subiects are Kings and the worst estate of the meanest Christian is a rich Kingdome Of his Sonne Quest Quest Why is it called the Kingdome of the Sonne rather then of the Father Ans Answ Because God hath giuen all the power to the Sonne and this Kingdome is assigned ouer to him The merit of this happinesse is onely in Christ and the vertue that gathers vs into this kingdome is onely from CHRIST and no man commeth to the Father but by Christ Sonne of his loue Christ is the Sonne of Gods loue first because hee is most worthy of all others to be beloued As Iudas is the Sonne of perdition that is most worthy to be damned Secondly because hee was from euerlasting begotten of the loue of his Father hee is Gods naturall Sonne Thirdly because he is infinitely filled with the sense of his loue so they are said to be the Children of the marriage that are full of ioy in respect of the marriage Fourthly because it is hee by whom loue is deriued into others It is hee that makes all other Sonnes beloued Lastly in respect of his humane nature he is that Sonne vpon whom God hath shewed his principall loue in respect of the gifts with which that nature is admirably qualified The meditation of this that CHRIST our Sauiour is the Sonne of Gods loue is very comfortable for hee is like to speede in any thing hee requests the Father for vs and hee will be
necessitie of preaching the greater the Mysterie is the greater need of laborious and studious men that are thereunto set apart to make manifest those secrets of the Kingdome for this is the appointment of God our Sauiour that by preaching committed to certaine men thereunto sanctified as the Apostle saith the word promised before the world beganne should be manifested in due time n Tit 1.2.3 Thirdly this should teach vs diuers duties 1. Let euery man account of faithfull Teachers as the Ministers of Christ and such as dispence the Mysteries of God o 1 Cor 4.1 2. Wee must bring Faith to the Gospell else it will not profit p Tit. 1.1.3 Heb 4.2 Reason and Sense are no competent Guides or Iudges in these diuine Mysteries And the Lord hath commanded these secrets to be manifested and reuealed by the Scriptures for the triall of his Elect and for the exercise of their obedience in beleeuing as well as in doing q Rom 16.25.26 3. As we should bring a resolution to beleeue Gods word in all things though it be neuer so contrary to sense and to common reason of the world So when the Lord doth reueale his promises and statutes to vs wee should hide them in our hearts as great Iewels and worthy Treasures meete to bee kept in our secretest remembrance and the very bowels of our Affections r Jer 31.34 4. This Doctrine vrgeth the necessitie of obseruing the rules of preparation and to this purpose wee may finde fiue things charged vpon vs all drawne from this consideration of the mysterie of the Gospell First wee must be sure wee be turned to the Lord by true repentance for till then the vaile cannot bee taken away ſ 2 Cor. 3.16 though the word were neuer so plaine in it selfe yet wee cannot discerne it by reason our vnderstandings are couered with a vaile and no man can looke vpon this bright Sunne till his eyes bee annointed with eye-salue t Reuel 3.18 Secondly in as much as the Booke is sealed with seauen seales and no man nor Angels is able powerfully to vnfold and open Gods eternall comforts to the conscience of man for his saluation saue onely the Lyon of the Tribe of Iudah which is also the Lambe slaine hauing seauen eyes which are the seauen spirits of God therefore in acknowledgement of his wisedome and power wee must go vnto him importunately begging this Blessing for his glory that the Booke may be opened euen to enrich vs u Reu 4.1.3.4.5.6.12 and that to this end hee would make acceptable the odours of our desires and prayers to God Thirdly wee must remoue lets for if it be a mysterie in it selfe wee had not neede to bring hardnesse of heart with vs or worldly cares or troubled affections or a sluggish spirit or preiudicate opinions or inordinate lusts or any such impediments Fourthly wee must bring with vs the loane and aduantage of former doctrine communicated to vs for to him that hath for practise and increase shall be giuen but from him that hath not for imployment and conscionable vse shall be taken away that which he hath x Math 13.11.12 Fiftly wee must bring a pure Conscience as a holy vessell to receiue this mysterie of faith in y 1 Tim. 3.9 and the conscience is then pure when it is purified by the bloud of Christ and doth daily excite the desire of puritie of heart and life bearing with the loue and liking of no sinne Ministers must also here learne with all reuerence and painefulnesse to behaue themselues as becommeth those great Mysteries they must not only be cleane themselues by holinesse of heart and life but must in compassion to the people and the holy feare of the Maiestie of Gods truth and presence teach with power frequencie perspicuitie and authority and since the Lord hath made them his Stewards of his Mysteries and holy Iewels and Treasures it is required of them that they be faithfull z 1 Cor. 4.1 both in applying them to the right owners and in setting them out according to their truth Lastly the meditation hereof may serue for singular comfort to all those that finde mercy from the Lord in the reuelation of his Mysterie blessed are their eyes that see it and their eares that heare it * Math. 13.16 They are more happy then many millions of men besides Hid since the world beganne and from ages 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The first of these words is diuersly accepted sometimes it is translated from Eternitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Psal 52.1 The goodnesse of the Lord hath endured from all eternitie as Beza thinkes writing on Luke 1.70 sometimes Since the world beganne as Luke 1.70 Acts 3.21 sometimes it signifieth but of old or a long time agoe as the Hebrew word which is thought to answer it is rendred Psal 119.52 sometimes it is taken for the space of a mans life as Peter said Thou shalt not wash my feet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is neuer while I liue and in the 3. Eph. vlt. there is such a phrase as this Glory to God c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if it should be rendered vnto or throughout all the generations of the world of worlds that is of the world to come And 2. Pet. 3. vlt. hee saith glorie to him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is hencefoorth to the day of eternity There is vnto man two worlds the one begins with his life the other with his death But some would haue it thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à seculis i. à filijs seculi huius from the men of this world sometimes the word notes the state of things in the world as Rom. 12.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bee not conformed to this World and Ephes 2.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 According to the course of this world but other render it Ages and so from ages may note the time of the Gentiles or the time since the world began so that is well rendred in the last Translation Hid from ages and from generations And if any will haue the two words distinguished then it may be from ages quoad Tempora from generations quoad successiones hominum but howsoeuer it is it fully imports the great antiquity of the Gospell If the Papists will plead antiquity let them haue recourse to the Word or if their Trumpery will not beare the triall of this antiquity it is because there is no truth in them and let this bee a sufficient stay to all godly mindes that our Doctrine is grounded vpon the Doctrine of the Prophets Patriarkes and Apostles which are the best ancients but this is generall Ages and generations From the particular consideration of these words diuers things will arise First the transitory estate of the world may heere be noted the things of the world in their best frame are so mutable that they expire and are altered with varieties and the
ministerie of Christ in his owne person of the Prophets and extraordinary Men and Angels is now ceased so as vnto vs this Mysterie is reuealed by the Spirit in the ministerie of Gods Seruants and in the vse of the Scriptures Quest But was not the Gospell reuealed till now since CHRIST Quest Answ Yes it was as these places may proue Iohn 8.56 Ans Abraham saw his daies and Moses wrote of him All the Prophets gaue witnesse vnto Christ 1 Pet. 1.10 Act. 10.43 Rom. 1.2 Christ is the same yesterday and to day and for euer Heb. 13.8 but the Gospell was hidden in respect of the time of the manifestation of the glory of Christ especially to the Gentiles and diuers things in the manner of Christs kingdome were not reuealed vnto them h 1 Pet. 1.10 as also in respect of cleerenesse of reuelation and the more ordinary life and power of the graces of the Messias and the more plentifull efusion of the gifts of the spirit Fiftly that it was not reuealed before viz. as it is now they had before Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the promise of the Messias to bee exhibited and wee haue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the tidings of the Messias exhibited Two things may be here obserued First That Gods Seruants may know their owne particular blessednesse for he saith it is reuealed to the Saints Secondly that the seasons of the reuelation of the Gospell in the power of it are singular priuiledges and greatly to be heeded and therefore woe is to those soules that neglect such dayes of grace it is double condemnation It is damnable to sit in darkenesse and haue no meanes of life but it is much more the condemnation of these worlds of prophane persons that light is come into the world yea into the Countrie yea Ioh 3. euen to their owne Townes and Congregations and yet they will loue darkenesse rather then light And on the other side it should teach men that know the time of such visitation both to beare witnesse to the light by presence countenance maintenance and establishing of it for them and theirs and also to walke as the children of the light euen as a people exceedingly priuiledged and blessed of God To his Saints The word Saint is somtime giuen to Christ i Psal 16.10 somtimes to Angels k Iob 15.15 somtimes to the blessed in heauen l Math 27.52 somtimes to the faithful on earth m Psal 16.3 The Pope hath his Saints and such are the choyse of the most desperate Traitors as he ordereth his Canonisations in our daies And the world hath his Saints to and they are ciuill honest men but here by Saints hee meaneth the faithfull on Earth and they are Saints that are holy by the righteousnesse of Faith n Act 26 18. that haue the spirit of Sanctification o 1 Cor 3 16.17 that are separate from sinners by a holy calling p Rom 1 6. 1 Cor 1 2. that are reformed from the principall euils of their former conuersation q 1 Cor 6 11. that call vpon the name of the Lord r 1 Cor. 1 2. that are consecrate to God in speciall holinesse of life Quest But if a man liue ciuilly in the world will not that serue the turne Quest Answ It will not Ans The defects of the ciuill honest man our righteousnesse must exceede the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises And it may be profitable oft to recount the defects of the ciuill honest man First he wants sinceritie in the first Table Secondly hee sticks not at the inward corruptions of the second Table Thirdly his praise is of men in his best actions or else some other corrupt ends Fourthly hee is wholy voide of the inward worship of God and in the outward hee is either secure or superstitious Fiftly hee neuer trauelled in the new birth for his honesty Sixtly he wants the righteousnesse of Faith Seuenthly for the most part his heart is not sound nor vpright in his family especially for matter of Gods worship Verse 27. To whom God would make knowen what is the riches of his glorious mysterie among the Gentiles which riches is Christ in you for hope of glory THese words containe the fifth generall reason taken from the excellency of the subiect the Gospell in the preaching of it propounds vnto men and that is Christ And in this reuelation of Christ consider 1. to whom viz. to the Saints 2. by whom viz. God 3. what is the cause viz. the Will and good Pleasure of God Hee would 4. the manner 1. if we respect the vnregenerate world it is in a Mysterie 2. if we respect the grace communicated it is a glorious and rich mystery 3. if wee respect the place where Christ as a Sunne of righteousnesse riseth it is in you that is in the heart of man 4. if wee respect the persons hee makes choyce of it is the miserable Gentiles Amongst the Gentiles 5. if wee respect future things he is reuealed as the hope of glory To whom Of the persons to whom I haue spoken in the end of the former verse onely this Doctrine may be added That only the Saints that is holy men find Treasures Riches in the power of the glorious Gospel of Christ The Lords secret is onely with them that feare him a Psal 25.14 till faith be reuealed men are shut vp b Gal. 3.23 as in a dungeon or prison the Lord speakes peace onely to his people and his Saints c Psal 85.8 The righteousnesse of God is reuealed to the iust man that will liue by faith d Rom. 1.17 Flesh and bloud till there be a new birth is not capable of this reuelation e Matt. 16.17 men that hate to be reformed haue nothing to doe with Gods Couenant f Psal 50. Hence we may see where the fault is when men be so auerse and vnteachable when people haue the meanes and cannot vnderstand to profit and doe good it is onely in their owne hearts lusts and wickednesse of life and therefore let euery one that would grow rich in knowledge labour to bee abundant in practise for the sauing knowledge of this mystery encreaseth as grace and holinesse groweth God Doct. God is the author of all sauing knowledge he is the Father of lights The vse is therefore First if any man lacke wisdome let him aske it of God g Iames 1.5 Secondly let all that would haue knowledge vse good means Those people that are too wise to vse reading hearing conference and prayer are but in a miserable case those they account silly people euen as babes sucklings h Matt. 11.25 in comparison of them carry away the blessing while they liue and die in their sinnes Thirdly in the ministery of men we must beleeue them no farther then they bring warrant from the word of God it is Gods word and
despise not this riches of the bountifulnesse of God when in the Gospell it is offered vnto vs though wee may goe on with the hardnesse of our not repenting hearts yet if by speedy repentance wee preuent not our ruine we shall heape vp wrath against the day of wrath euen the day of the declaration of the iust vengeance of God vpon such obstinate and secure sinners h Rom 2.4.5.6 3. Let not worldly rich men glory in their riches i Jer 9.24 but rather vse their outward riches as helpes to further them vnto this true treasure else their riches shall not shelter them in the day of Gods wrath against the woes denounced against them k Iob 36.18.19 Luke 6.12 Lastly would any man know some sure way how to thriue with great successe in these spirituall riches let him then amongst other things especially remember to pray hard for the Lord is rich to all them that call vpon him l Rom 10.12 Thirdly CHRIST is in the faithfull m 2 Cor. 13.5 hee liues in them n Gal. 2.20 hee dwels in them o Ephes 3.18 but that this doctrine may be more fully vnderstood I propound fiue things 1. How Christ is conueied into the soule of the faithfull 2. By what effects he discouereth himselfe to be there 3. What they get by his comming 4. What intertainement they ought to giue him 5. Who haue not Christ in them How Christ is conueied into the faithfull For the first there is this order First God secretly giues Christ to the beleeuer and the beleeuer to Christ p Rom 8.32 Esa 9.6 Iohn 17.6 then Christ begins to manifest himselfe riding in the Chariot of the word q 2 Cor 2.14 The word that before was a dead letter receiueth life by the presence of Christ and that both in the Law and the Gospell The law being made aliue attacheth the particular sinner and playeth vpon him the part of a Sergeant accuser Iaylor or Iudge And the sinner putting in baile the Law brings him to Christ and will not let him goe to another r Gal 3.24 then the Gospell gets aliue and crucifies Christ before his eyes Å¿ Gal 3.1 and propounds varietie of sweet promises The sinner being beaten and wounded almost to death before hee would yeelde to the arrest of the Law seeing now whither he is brought laments with vnspeakeable groanes his owne sinnes and the horrible torments hee sees the Sonne of God put to for his sake and at the same time the spirit of the Sonne working saith a wide doore is opened Christ enters in with vnvaluable ioyes wrought in the heart of the sinner How we may know that Christ is in our hearts Now if you aske by what effects Christ discouers himselfe to bee there I answere there is a light when Christ comes in that giues the Knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ t 2 Cor 4.6 And being rauished they behold as in a mirrour the glory of God and are transformed into the same Image the spirit of God making them suddainely new Creatures u 2 Cor 3 18 2. The conuert now findes a sauour of the things of the spirit and his heart is bowed to be subiect to the law of God x Rom 8.5 7. 3. Hee is baptized with the fire of zeale and holy affections and desires y Math 3.11 4. There appeares a battell and combat in the soule and much lusting on either side the spirit resisting with teares and strong cries 5. In this combat Christ vndertaking the battell sends out by his ordinances his arrests and apprehends one by one euery imagination that rebelliouslie puts it selfe forward in the opposition and exalts it selfe and will not leaue till it be brought in subiection so as the obedience of Christ may haue the vpper hand z 2 Cor 10.5 6. The spirit of the Sonne discouers himselfe as a spirit of supplications by which the tender infant beginnes to learne with holy desires and secret incouragements to speake in Gods language and by prayer to make knowne his griefes and wants in the best manner vttering his affiance in God as a Father x Gal 4.6.7 7. The loue of God and of Christ and of Gods Word and Gods people is shed abroad in his heart and it now constraineth him to holy dueties a Rom 5.9 2 Cor 5.14 8. The body growes dead in respect of sinne and the spirit is life for righteousnesse sake b Rom 8.10 resolution more and more increasing both for reformation of sinne and new obedience 9. Hee findes himselfe proclaimed free the prison doore set open his fetters knocked off his wounds made by the law healing apace his depts paid himselfe in a new world inioying a true Iubile c 2 Cor. 3.17 Esa 61.1.2 10. He liues thenceforward by the faith of the Sonne of God for Saluation for Iustification and for preseruation d Gal 2.20 2 Cor 13.14 11. The heauenly dewes of spirituall ioyes often water and refresh his heart in the vse of the meanes with delightfull peace and tranquility in his heart and conscience e Hos 14.6 Rom 14.17 Lastly in a holy couenanting with God his daily purposes and desires are to cleaue vnto God deuoting and consecrating himselfe and his vowed sacrifices vnto God in the mediation of Christ Thirdly the benefites hee hath by the inhabitation of CHRIST The benefits come by Christ dwelling in vs. are such as these 1. GOD is in Christ reconciling him not imputing his sinnes f 2 Cor. 5.19 2. Christ is made vnto him Wisedome Sanctification Righteousnesse and Redemption g 1 Cor 1.30 3. All the promises of Christ are to him Yea and Amen hauing the earnest giuen in the spirit and the same sealed by the same spirit h 2 Cor. 1.20.22 4. Hee is not destitute of any heauenly gifts i 1 Cor 1.6.7 but hath the seeds and beginnings of all sauing graces 5. The grace of Christ shall be sufficient k 2 Cor. 12.9 against all temptations by the power of Christ that dwels in him and as his outward afflictions doe abound so shall the consolations of Christ abound also l 2 Cor 1.5 6. Paul is his and Apollo is his yea all things are his as he is Christs m 1 Cor 3.22.23 he hath his interest in all the means of saluation 7. God hath giuen him Christ how shall hee not with him giue him all other things also n Rom 8.34.35 Finally eternall life is the gift of God in and with Iesus Christ o Rom 6.23 For the fourth if you aske what you must doe when you finde Christ in your hearts I answere if you liue in the spirit walke in the spirit p Gal 5.24 let olde things passe and all things be new for if you be in Christ Iesus you must be new Creatures
thinges are to be noted 1. the persons yee 2. the time are 3. the manner set downe negatiuely without hands 4. the form of it affirmitiuely putting off the bodie of the sins of the flesh 5. the efficient cause the circumcision of Christ Ob. But it followes not we are circumcised without hands therefore need not circumcision with hands Sol. It followes to vs now in the new Testament because we haue baptisme in steed of circumcision with hands we are buried with Christ by baptisme Ob. But was not Circumsion a more liuely signe Sol. It was not which he shewes to be true both in respect of mortification buried with him and in respect of viuification raised vp together with him by baptisme which is amplified by setting downe what is required in them to whom baptisme is thus effectuall viz. the faith of the operation of God 5. Because none of these can helpe vs in miserie nor further to happinesse when we want it v. 13. The words in themselues expres a two fold estate of Christians First what they are by nature and so 1. they were dead in actuall sinnes 2. they were in the vncircumcision of the flesh in respect of originall sinne Secondly what they were in the state of grace 1. they were quickned 2. they were forgiuen all their sinnes 6. Because Christ hath cancelled the Chyrographie that was against vs which were these ceremonies v. 14. 15. concerning these two things may be noted 1. what the ceremonies were in themselues 2. how the Church was discharged of them For the first they were for honor ordinances of God for vse hand-writings for effect they were against vs. For the second Christ on the crosse cancelled them fastned them and tooke them out of the way yea he spoyled the Diuels and triumphed ouer them openly who had the power to serue execution for forfeitures v. 15. Thus of the reasons the conclusion followes from v. 16 to the end The conclusion hath three branches For first hee concludes against ceremonies v. 16. 17. Secondly against philosophie v. 18. 19. Thirdly against traditions v. 20. to the end In the conclusion against ceremonies note 1. the thinges which are named to be abrogated viz. the respect of meats and drinks 2. of times which are threefold 1. daies 2. moneths 3. Sabbaths these are the things v. 16. The reason is v. 17. because these are but shadowes of things to come and the body is Christ In the conclusion against philosophie note first the thing which in speciall hee reasons against viz. Angell-worship Secondly the reasons by which he condemnes them that brought it in 1. they did it hypocritically vnder pretence of humblenes of mindes 2. they did it ignorantly aduancing themselues in things they neuer saw 3. they did it proudly rashly puft vp in there fleshly minde 4. they did it dangerously their danger is laid downe and amplified Laid downe in these words not holding the head amplified by a digression into the praises of the mysticall body of Christ 1. for ornament furnished 2. for vnion knit together by ioynts and bands 3. for growth increasing with increase of God In the conclusion against traditions obserue first the matter condemned why are yee burthened with traditions amplified by the kinds touch not taste not handle not v. 21. Secondly the reasons 1. yee are dead with Christ v. 20. 2. Yee are dead from the rudiments of the world therefore much more from traditions 3. They are burthens 4. The matter of them is light and vaine and idle v. 21. 5. They all perish with the vsing 6. They are after the commandements and doctrines of men v. 21. Ob. But there seemeth to bee a depth in them Sol. Hee confesseth that they haue a shew of wisdome and that in three things 1. In voluntarie religion 2. In humblenesse of minde 3 In not sparing the bodie But yet he censures them two wayes 1. It is but a shew all this 2. It with-holdeth the honour due vnto the bodie neither haue they it in any estimation to satisfie the flesh v. 23. THE METAPHRASE vpon the second Chapter VERSE I FOr I would yee knew what great fighting I haue for your sakes and for them of L●odicea for as many as haue not seene my person in the flesh FOr I would ye were throughly informed of it what greate care conflict strife and fighting I haue for your sakes and for them of Laodicea and for such as I neuer knew but onely heare of to be such as embrace the Gospell which we preach and to this end I tell you of my care and fighting so to moue you to be much the more resolute in perseuering in the faith and hope of the doctrin you haue receiued Verse 2. That their hearts might bee comforted and they knit together in loue and in all riches of the full assurance of vnderstanding to know the mysterie of GOD euen the Father and of CHRIST Greate are the benifits which you and all those that belieue in your parts receiue from our paines in the Gospell for heereby both your hearts are comforted with true refreshings and besides you are hereby knit one to another and established in brotherly loue and as the benifits of the adiuncts of the Gospell should much moue you to sticke still to it if you consider how rich GOD hath made you in the infallible and full perswasion of vnderstanding which you haue felt and withall what admirable desires there are in the doctrine of the Gospell concerning GOD the Father and CHRIST Verse 3. In whom are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Vers● 4. And this I say least any should begu●le you with inticing words V●rse 5 For though I bee absent in the flesh yet am I with you in the spirit reio●cing and beholding your order and the steef●stnesse o● your faith in Christ Verse 6. As yee haue therefore receiued CHRIST IESVS the LORD so walk ye in him Or lastly if you consider the perfection of the doctrine of the Gospell either as it conteines the treasures of wisedome and knowledge or as it shewes vs CHRIST in whome are all admirable perfections of all sorts of rich knowledge Now if you aske me why I am so tedious in vrging these things I answere it is only for feare least any should by plausible and probable inticements of speech beguile you from the simplicitie that is in CHRIST And if you say I know not your estate I answere though I be absent from you in the flesh yet I am present with you in the spirit and if you thinke that this discourse implies that I dislike you know that I do truly reioyce to heare of your good order of life both publike and priuate and how stedfast your faith in CHRIST is Now if you aske me at once what is the summe of all I would haue you to doe I answere that as concerning holy life I would haue you walke on in the same manner
not the hearts of men be delighted with other things and mans estates made happie with other treasures Sol. No it is more to bee desired the word is then fine gold yea then much fine gold sweeter also then hony and the hony-combe Ob. But if I should deuote my selfe thus to the word the world would account me a very foole and that I would grow to strange simplenesse Sol. By them is thy seruant made circumspect Nothing teacheth men true discretion but Gods word and if many hearers bee not circumspect t is either because they attend not to the word or because they are not Gods seruants Ob. But what profit will come of all this Sol. In the sound practise of the directions of the word there is great reward Thirdly this may comfort Gods seruants in their choice they haue chosen the better part in that they haue set their hearts vpon the word howsoeuer the world thinke of them Fourthly wee may heere see the state of scorners and contemners of the word implyed let them mocke on but this they shall haue they shall neuer taste of the ioyes of God Fiftly Gods seruants should bee admonished from hence to expresse the power of the word in their carriages that the world might see and know there is wonderfull comfort and contentment in following the Word Lastly this may serue for the humiliation of all such as haue long heard the Gospell and yet haue not gotten any sound contentment Now that men may not bee mistaken it will not be amisse to discouer the true causes of this want of contentment in many that enioy the Gospell Causes vvhy many find no more comfort in the Word It is true that the proper effect of the Gospell is to comfort but it is true also that it comforts only Gods seruants a Esay 65.15 Againe if men haue not mourned for their sinnes no wonder though they bee not comforted b Matth. 5.4 Esay 61.1.2.3 Besides many doe not lay vp the word in their hearts and then how can it comfort their hearts We must be a people in whose heart is Gods law c Esay 15.7 if we would feele this inward ioy and consolation Many also are ensnared with grosse sinne whereas only the righteous sing and reioyce d Pro. 29.6 Many want assurance and therfore no wonder though they reioyce not with those vnspeakable ioyes which are companions of faith and the loue of Christ only e 1 Pet. 1.8.9 Besides many haue but little ioy because they vse but little praying we must pray much if we haue our ioy full f Ioh. 16.14 Further some through vnbeleefe resist comfort g Psal 77.3 There are seuen inconueniences of an vncomfortable heart 1. Seuen inconueniences of an vncomfortable heart It is exceeding liable to temptations 2. It is vnder the raigne of continuall vnthankfulnesse 3. It is easily perplexed with euery crosse and turned out of frame and quiet 4. It is a daily let to the efficacie of all Gods ordinances 5. It is accompanied with strange infirmities in doing good duties 6. It is vsually barren in the very disposition to doe good 7. It prouokes God to anger Deut. 28.47 Being knit together in loue Loue is in God in Christ in Angels in Saints glorified Difference of loue in godly men conuerted and in carnall men also In the Trinitie it is infinite in Christ without measure in Angels and men glorified perfect but measured in godly men on earth vnperfect but holy in carnall men vnholy yet naturall in the other creatures without reason by instinct T is a religious holy loue amongst the members of Christ is here meant The author and fountaine of this loue is God 2 Cor. 13.11 The Author Bond Seat Effects The bond internall is the spirit externall is the Gospell the subiect or seat of it is the heart yet not euery heart but a pure heart 1 Tim. 1.5 The effects are a heauenly comfort in the Gospell with all the fruits of it If thou as●e whom thou must especially loue I answer the Saints that is Objects such as thou seest to striue after holinesse of life making conscience of their wayes These and all these are to be loued Neither will bare affection to them serue Properties of loue but thou must seeke to haue fellowship with them in the Gospell Phil. 1.5 and 2 1. If thy loue to Gods children be right 1. it is diligent h 1 Thess 1.3 2. in things indifferent it doth not willingly offend i Rom. 14.15 Gal. 5 13. 3. it will couer a multitude of sinnes k 1 Pet. 4.8 and it will forgiue great offences vpon repentance l 2 Cor. 2.7.8 4. it is compassionate and liberall m 1 Joh. 3.17 2 Cor. 8.24 Rules for preseruing loue lastly it hath the properties mentioned 1 Cor. 13.4.5.6.7 That this holy and religious loue might be preserued amongst Christians diuers rules must be obserued 1. Men must not so much respect their owne earthly things n Phil. 2.4 2. Men should labour with all meeknesse for vnion in iudgement without all contention and vaine glorie o Phil. 2.2.3 3. Men must take heede of reioycing in the euils one of another p 1 Cor. 13. 4. Men must get more patience to suffer longer and vpon more occasion q 1 Cor. 13. 5. Wee should with all possible care endeuour to encrease in knowledge and sense of Gods loue for that enflames to the loue one of another r Phil. 1.9 6. We must studie to be quiet and meddle with our owne businesse ſ 1 Thess 4.11 Lastly wee must much and often thinke of our liuing together in heauen for the hope of heauen and the loue of the Saints are companions The restraint of this loue Yet that wee may not mistake there are diuers sorts of people with whom we may not hold open and professed loue and vnion and amity and societie 1. With such as are open enemies to the truth by Infidelity or Idolatrie t 1 Cor. 6. 2. With men that liue in notorious wickednesse and prophanenesse such as are Atheists swearers drunkards adultererers vsurers c. u Psal 26.5.6 Ephes 5.6 Phil. 3.18 3. With scandalous brethren that make shewes of religion and yet are lewd in conuersation * 1 Cor. 5. 4. With corrupt teachers and seducers that would draw men from the sinceritie that is in Christ and speake euill of the way of righteousnesse x Phil. 3.2 5 With those members of the Synagogue of Satan whose tongues are set on fire with the fire of hell in respect of slandering and disgracing such as truely feare God y Reuel 2.9 6. With such professors of religion that liue idly and in that respect walke inordinately and will not be reclaimed but in that respect liue offensiuely z 2 Thess 3.6 7. With such as openly refuse to obey the sayings
7. It is carried with full sailes vnto holy duties for so the word signifies and is fruitfull in good workes 8. It is able to admonish u Rom. 15.14 What we must doe to get full assurance If wee would obtaine this plerophorie wee must bee much in hearing and prayer for they doe both exceedingly settle faith especially wee must attend much vnto the promises of God and the testimony of the spirit of adoption and we must get calme and quiet affections we must grow in grace and striue to be strengthened in the inner man But especially we must begge it often of God by prayer and striue against hardnesse of heart and vnbeleefe carefully discerning and reiecting the obiections of Sathan and the flesh consulting daily with such as haue the ouersight of our soules Vse The consideration hereof may both confute the Papists that plead so earnestly against the assurance of faith and it may serue also to scourge the wanton distempers of carnall Protestants that against a principle of their owne Religion will so commonly disgrace the assurance of faith by saying men cannot be so certaine of their owne saluation And it may excite all that feare God to labour after it and the rather considering the worth of it as the word riches of full assurance imports Riches of full assurance There are two sorts of rich men there is a worldly rich man Wherein our spirituall riches lie and a spirituall rich man Now our spirituall riches lie 1. in the word of Christ dwelling in vs * Col. 3.16 2. in the spirit of Christ x Tit. 3.6 3. in works of mercy and liberality y Ephes 2.4 2 Cor. 8.1 9.11 4. in sufferings and patience 5. in praiers z Rom. 10.11 6. in good works a 1 Tim. 6.18 7. in vtterance and all holy knowledge b 1 Cor. 1.5 lastly it lies in our faith c Iam. 2.5 and so the more full assurance we haue the more rich we are Now this in generall may informe how to conceiue of rich men and who are to bee accounted indeede great rich men and it may lesson worldly rich men not to swell in the thoughts of their greatnes but rather reioyce that God hath made them low and withall it should teach them to thinke more highly of poore Christians that haue the true grace of Christ whom God hath enriched with faith and holy graces of his spirit Assurance is riches in many respects Worthily is full assurance of faith called riches for it doth all that riches can doe vnto men It comforts the heart it defends from dangers much better then outward riches can for the iust liue by their faith It gaines the godly more true reputation then houses or land or money could doe It abounds more to spirituall mercy and well-doing with more sufficiency then outward riches can and it buyes for the soule all necessaries it is vnto Gods seruants according to their faith and vnto faith all things are possible yea it doth that that all the riches in the world cannot do for it will settle a mans heart against all earthly mutations yea it will make a man stand vndaunted against the rage of tyrants yea of death it selfe yea in some sense it will fence a man against the weapons of God himselfe though God kill Iob in the battell yet he will not let goe his hold but hee will still trust in him yea the Lord is pleased many times to yeeld the victorie to the wrestlings of faith and accounts it no disparagement to bee ouercome of the faith of his seruants and to let them binde his hands that he should not doe what otherwise he might and would haue done how can it be but great riches when it brings a man the assured pardon of all his offences and how doth it establish the heart of a man in his religion more then ten thousand arguments or volumes of controuersies Thus of the adiunct certainty the sublimity of the Gospell followes To the acknowledgement of the mysterie of God euen the Father and of Christ The Gospell is a diuine mysterie both for the admirable depth of it for it is a secret only God can reueale and for the excellency of the subiect it entreats of which is God the Father and Christ How the Gospell is a mysterie and to whom hath been shewed in the former chapter onely let vs from the repetition of it here be confirmed in this neuer to trust the iudgement of carnall persons in matters of godlinesse and saluation for they pronounce of things they neuer effectually vnderstand they cannot perceiue the things of God and withall we should be excited to a daily care of faith for reason will not reach heere Further we may here obserue That when the Lord doth reueale this mysterie vnto vs we must not only beleeue it but we must acknowledge it euen by an outward profession of our faith in Christ and our consecration of our selues to the worship and knowledge of God The world wonderfull hardly brooks acknowledgement most men aske what needs this profession they will not vnderstand that we must beare about and hold out the light of the truth receiued labouring to winne glorie to God by the power of confession and obedience Of God euen the Father and of Christ Diuers things may bee from these words particularly obserued 1. We may see here the glorie of the Gospell and the studies of Christians they haue the onely excellent subiect in the world other sciences consider of the creature but Theologie of the Creator 2. Heere is a plaine proofe of the diuine nature of Christ for God is sayd to be the Father of Christ 3. From coherence wee may know that as men grow in faith and loue so they will be more and more settled in the doctrine of the persons of the Trinitie t is such a mysterie as is reuealed by degrees as holinesse and other sauing knowledges increase in vs. 4. That wee neuer rightly know God till we know Christ Matth. 11.27 1 Ioh. 2.23 5. Wee may hence obserue the miserie of all vnregenerate men they neither know God nor Christ aright 6. That howsoeuer we be ignorant in many other knowledges and that of matters of religion too yet it is a glorious riches to know God to be our father in Christ and to be fully assured of Gods loue in Christ VERS 3. In whom are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge IN whom In quo is referred either to Christ or the Gospell it is true either way or rather both are conioyned together in one sense In Christ who is the subiect of the Gospell is all treasures c or in the Gospell as it entreats of Christ is all treasures c so that these words containe a third adiunct of the Gospell and that is singular perfection of wisdome Note heere with what feeling the Apostle speakes when he fals vpon the
persons excommunicate witches and such like diabolicall practisers Hypocrites Apostataes the vnmercifull troopes of the ignorant besides the swarmes of vicious liuers and prophane persons such as are swearers drunkards filthy persons of all kindes liers vsurers raylers and such like workers of iniquitie Why Sathans vvorking is not perceiued by vvicked men It is true worlds of men feele not this power of theirs but alas this warre is spirituall these enemies are inuisible their sleights are of infinite depth their soules are already in their possession and all is couered with grosse darknesse and done in a spirituall night and wicked men are like dead men in their sinnefull courses senselesse and secure Vses The vse is to shew the miserie of all impenitent sinners though they go in braue clothes dwell in faire houses possessed of large reuenues abound in all pleasures of life c. yet alas alas for their wofull estate with all this Oh the Diuels the Diuels are their masters and rule ouer them as effectually as euer did tyrant ouer his slaue Oh if men haue eares let them heare and awake and stand vp from the dead and not dare to continue in so wofull a condition and let the righteous leape and sing for true ioy of heart whatsoeuer their outward estate bee in the world Oh let them praise the rich grace of God that hath translated them out of this kingdome of darknesse and giuen them a lot among the Saints The third thing is the victory expressed in three degrees He spoyled them This is to be vnderstood in the behalfe of the faithfull for whose sake he hath and doth daily smite them with his great sword m Esay 27.1 Hee reproueth them and rebuketh them n Zach. 3.1.2.3 hee casteth them downe like lightning o Luk. 10.20 He breakes their head p Gen. 3 15. yea and sometimes treades them downe vnder the feete of his Saints q Rom. 16.20 making them in many tentations and tribulations more then conquerors r R●m 8.34 pulling downe their strong holds which they had within ſ 2 Cor. 10.4 when they compasse the righteous with their tentations hee euer openeth a doore for issue and deliuereth the righteous t 2 Pet. 2.9 sending succours u Heb. 2.18 and making his seruants often to lead Sathan captiue He spoyled them by taking from them the soules * Acts 26.18 of the righteous which they possessed as their booty he spoiled them by loosing the workes of Satan x 1 Ioh. 3.8 he spoiled them by taking from them altogether the power they had ouer death y Heb. 2.14 so farre as concernes the righteous He hath so farre spoiled them that they are not only iudged by the word of the Saints in this life z Ioh. 16.11 but the Saints shall also sit vpon them to iudge them at the last day a 1 Cor. 6.3 Vses And all this may serue for constant comfort vnto all the godly each word being a well of consolation if we wisely apply it And withall it may encourage them against the remainder of the power of euill spirits it is true they accuse still they hinder the word what they can still they will steale the seede still they will raise trouble and oppositions still they sow tares still they will bee casting their snares still they buffet them by tentations still but yet the same God and our Lord Iesus Christ that hath thus farre subdued them will prosper his owne worke and make vs stand in all the euill dayes so as wee will put on the whole armour of God Now whereas he saith he hath spoiled him it is true of the time past 1. In the person of Christ himselfe 2. In the merit of our victorie 3. In our iustification hee is perfectly foiled 4. In our sanctification hee is spoiled by inchoation And made a shew of them openly These words containe the second degree of victorie and are true in a double sense For first hee hath made a shew of them in that he hath discouered them and made them known to the Church This is a dragging of them out of their cels of darknesse in the light of obseruation by shewing their natures and practises by vnmasking them to the view of the soule thus are they displaied in the doctrine of the Gospell and the soules of the righteous behold this detection of Sathan from day to day by the word with as much admiration as euer the Romans did behold any great rebell or barbarous rebell or monster subdued and in triumph brought into Rome Neither may this detection of Sathan seeme to be the least part of Christs victorie for it is certaine it is a worke that euill men or euill angels neuer beare but vanquished There is a hot opposition in all places before Sathan will abide this Secondly he made a shew of them that is as some thinke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he made them to be for examples and that three wayes 1. In shame making detestation to be their portion 2. In confusion and an inexplicable kinde of astonishment and benummednes and blindnes 3. In torments and punishments 2 Pet. 4.5 Iud. 9. The vse may be for increase of consolation Vse wee see Christ will neuer cease till he hath finished this victorie Why should wee then faile through vnbeleefe or faint in the resisting of the deuill The Lord will more and more make a shew of them and giue vs increase of experience of the power of his word and presence herein Here also mens waywardnesse may be reproued that cannot abide to heare talke of the deuill or his courses this is but a worke of Sathan in them to hinder their saluation for to make an open shew of them is one part of Christs victorie The word rendred openly signifieth sometimes eminently b Joh. 7.4 sometimes without authoritie c Act. 4.29 sometimes with confidence and vndaunted resolution with assurance or plerophorie d 1 Ioh. 5.14 sometimes with plainenesse and euidence e Ioh 16 25.29 sometimes with libertie f ● Tim. 3.13 But I rest in the word openly here vsed And triumphed ouer them Here is the third part of the victorie This triumph was first begunne in the resurrection and ascension of Christ g Eph. 4.7 2. It was continued in the publication of the Gospell h 2 Cor. 2.14 which is newes of victorie and in the life of Christians for what is the life of euery Christian but the shew of a brand taken out of the fire or of a soule preserued out of darknesse The soule is mounted in the chariot of the word praier and holy liuing this chariot is followed with the applause of Angels and the approbation of the Saints the place is in the new Ierusalem on earth in the temple of their God The chariot is drawne with white steeds sincere teachers it is prouoked and driuen on by the
men wilfully imbrace fancies superstitions in opinion especially in such things as they neither doe nor can vnderstand and such is the ignorance here condemned Doct. But the maine doctrine is That it is a great sinne and a hatefull vice to be rash and aduenturous to venture vpon opinions in matters of Religion either that concerne worship or practice where men are not first well informed in iudgment by true grounds of knowledge Hence men are aduiced to take heed how they heare and to trie the spirits and to be wise to sobrietie h Rom. 12.3 and to beware of fables i 2 Tim. 2.16.23 4 3.4 1 Tim. 1.4 4.6.7 6.20 Tit. 1.14 3.9 2 Pet. 1.16 This condemnes the strange coyning of opinions without all warrant of the word in the Papists that so confidently tell vs of the roomes in hell and of the Queene of heauen and how many orders there be of Angels c. And withall it may restraine such as professe the feare of God and reformation of life to be well aduised in their opinions and not pitch resolutely vpon opinions in things the word doth not warrant Blinde zeale hath no more allowance then superstition hath to coine opinions to tye mens consciences withall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aduancing himselfe The word signifieth to take possession and to go proudly and to search hidden things with deepe insight as it is here applied it may note in their sinne three things 1. A deepe insight or out-reaching into a thing beyond ordinary knowledge 2. A mighty approbation or very possessing of a mans selfe in a peculiar content arising from his owne inuention 3. An externall aduancing or vaine-glorious priding of a mans selfe in his fancie There is a strange corruption in the nature of all sorts of men a secret inclination to deuices and reaches both in opinion and life the Scripture giues warning of the doctrines of men k Matth. 15.9 of opposition of science l 1 Tim. 6.20 of the deepnesse of Satan m Reu. 2.24 of transformation in euill Ministers into Ministers of light n 2 Cor. 11.14 c. And thus are men in their practise though they commit the same foule euils they condemne in others yet they haue such deuices with which they please themselues that they are called counsels o Psal 5.10 and they are said to seeke deepe to hide their counsels c. They haue their turning of deuices p Esay 29.15 Euery man almost thinkes he hath some conceit which others haue not c. such as these Either they may doe it though others might not or the manner is different or the issues will not be alike or he will repent at such a time when he hath tried so farre or he will make amends or it shall not be knowne or God is mercifull or his fault is not so great as others or the Scripture doth not condemne it in expresse words These and such like conceits in themselues are dull and sillie But where the loue of sinne hath warmed the heart and the deuill hath put life into them it is incredible to conceiue how miserably pertinacious men will shew themselues to be and so doe men approue of their owne deuices that vsually there is no error or sinne so vile but men can blesse themselues against any terror or threatning and if men finde their deuices to haue any entertainment they will aduance themselues wonderfully and not only swell in great thoughts of themselues but outwardly vaine-glory will ouer-spreade their carriage words and actions The consideration hereof should teach vs to trust more in God and lesse in men q Psal 92.8.9 and to labour for plainenesse of heart and simplicitie r Prou. 12.5 21.8 and to long to heare God speake and shew vs the secrets of his wisdome ſ Iob 11.5.6 and to suspect our selues when wee feele a selfe-liking or an inclination to boast of our deuice especially wee should pray that the Lord would keepe vs from desire of vaine-glory t and accordingly we should endeuour to doe nothing through strife or vaine-glory u but rather set our glory and boasting in knowing God * and in the crosse of Christ x and in the hope of the glory of the sonnes of God y daily examining our selues and prouing our owne workes lest we thinke our selues something when we are nothing z Thus of their ignorance Rashly puffed vp These words are a taxation of their swelling pride described 1. by the nature of it puffed vp 2. by the effect in vaine or rashly 3. by the cause in the minde of their flesh Puffed vp What is pride but a winde a winde to fill and a winde to torment Men may bee spiritually swelled both in life and opinion There is a swelling for abundance of riches a there is a swelling behauiour in mens carriages b there is a swelling in sinne but here is a swelling for opinionsc. Oh that we could learne to abhorre pride and swelling by considering how much the Lord abhorres it as many Scriptures shew Prouerb 8 13. and 16.5.19 Iob 40 6. Hab. 2.5 Mal. 4.1 and many such like Oh that we could be in loue with a meeke and quiet spirit in the hid man of the heart But let vs obserue the effects of pride Rashly The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and it signifies either rashly or in vaine Sure it is a great fault to be rash light sudden in opinion or practise It is a great fault to be rash in reprouing in praising in dispraising or taking or mistaking doctrine in iudging or censuring and we should pray that the Lord would giue vs a staied spirit and a minde not easily hurried into distemper Pride is in vaine in three respe●ts If we reade it in vaine it notes fitly that pride alwayes is in vaine In vaine I say first in respect of God who resisteth it Iam. 4.7 Luk. 1.51 Secondly in respect of other men who will not regard it Prou. 11.2 Psal 101.5 Thirdly in respect of themselues who inherit nothing by it but follie Prouerb 14.18 1 Tim. 6.4 Our hearts desire then should be that the Lord would hide our pride and mortifie our naturall corruption herein In the minde of the flesh Here hee shewes whence all this stuffe and swelling comes it came from the minde of the flesh euen from the fairest part of the soule The minde of the flesh is that acumen that sharpnesse of wit that perspicacie that is in men and so we may see that wit sharpnes of vnderstanding carnall reason is in vaine whatsoeuer men sauour of themselues a meere puffe of winde a very vanitie whether it be in opinion or in life the very wisdome of the flesh is enmitie with God our owne very mindes are so defiled and corrupt Which should teach vs to gird vp the loynes of our mindes and restraine that selfe-conceit might arise from the pride of
a quarrell to another euen as CHRIST forgaue you euen so doe yee Verse 14. And aboue all these put on Loue vvhich is the bond of perfectnesse Verse 15. And let the peace of God rule in your harts to the vvhich also yee are called in one body and be thankfull And sixtly Clemencie which stands in two things in forbearing and forgiuing Forbearing in respect of wrongs and infirmities and forgiuing freely one another And this forgiuing must be extended to euery man and it must be as Christ forgaue vs and that is though they be our inferiors though they haue done vs great wrong so as we forget aswel as forgiue But seuenthly aboue all other be sure you cloth your selues with loue for this will knit vs together perfectly and by this all the Saints and all the graces of the Saints tend vnto perfection Eightly Get the peace that peace I meane that GOD only giues and let it rule and preuaile with you and if you cannot be at peace in your life yet let it be in your hearts still how vnreasonable soeuer men be and the rather should you be carefull hereof both because you are called of GOD to it and besides you are all members of the same body Lastly adde vnto all these amiablenes and thankfulnes one to another And thus of the matter of holinesse Now I must also stirre you vp to a due respect of the meanes of holines which is the word Verse 16. Let the vvord of CHRIST dvvel in you richly in all vvisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymmes and spirituall songs singing vvith grace in your hearts to the LORD And so both the word in generall and the Psalmes in speciall For the word in generall you must remember it is the word of CHRIST both as the subiect and the cause of it and you should neuer be satisfied till you grow familiar and plentifull in it through the daily vse of it both in your hearts and houses also and that with all iudgement and discretion not seeking or vsing it coldly peruersly carnally or indiscreetly and this word you must imploy both to teach you and one another what you know not and to admonish you and other for what you doe not And in speciall be carefull of the Psalmes remembring that they also are the word of CHRIST and the rather considering the exquisite variety of sweet matter in them but in singing obserue these rules First exercise the graces of the heart according to the matter of the Psalme Secondly doe it with attention and vnderstanding Thirdly respect GODS glory in it and his holy presence Lastly be carefull of the end of all your actions Verse 17. And vvhatsoeuer yee shall doe in vvord or deede doe all in the name of the LORD IESVS giuing thanks to GOD euen the Father by him Verse 18. Wiues submit your selues to your Husbands as it is comely in the LORD Verse 19. Husbands loue your Wiues and be not bitter vnto them Verse 20. Children obey your Parents in all things for this is vvell-pleasing to the LORD Verse 21. Fathers prouoke not your children to anger lest they be discouraged Verse 22. Seruants be obedient vnto them that are your Masters according to the flesh in all things not vvith eye-seruice as men pleasers but in singlenesse of heart fearing GOD. Verse 23. And vvhatsoeuer yee do do it heartily as to the LORD not vnto men Verse 24. Knovving that of the Lord ye shall receiue the revvard of the inheritāce for ye serue the Lord Christ Verse 25. But he that doth vvrong shall receiue for the vvrong that he hath done there is no respect of persons both that all be done to the glory of GOD in CHRIST all I say both in word and deed beginning with calling on the name of CHRIST and ending with the sacrifice of thanksgiuing which must be offered vnto GOD in the mediation of CHRIST aswell as your prayers Thus I haue briefly laid before you the rules that concerne holinesse as you are Christians in the generall Now I thinke it meete to propound some duties that are more particular and I will onely instance in the familie and there I begin with Wiues whose word is be subiect an epitome of their duty and a thing GOD most stands vpon and which Women most faile in And great reason for here lieth the true comelinesse and beauty of a Wife t is not in her face and garments but in her subiection to her Husband And the rather should you be subiect because GOD hath prouided you shall not be pressed but in the LORD not in any thing against the word Now for Husbands their word is loue as that GOD most stands vpon and they most faile in And in particular I giue them warning to looke to one vice aboue many and that is that they be not bitter to their Wiues And for children their word is obedience and they must know that GOD so inioynes it that he will haue it done throughly they must obey in all things and submit their wills and desires to their Parents For this is a thing that will not only keepe and increase their Parents loue to them but it is also wondrous well-pleasing to GOD himselfe Parents also must take heed they sin not against their children not only by too much indulgence but also by prouoking them and that not onely to sin but to passion by vniust precepts or contumelies and disgraces or hard vsage or immoderate correction and that as for other reasons so lest they be discouraged either from loue of well-doing or of obeying them You that are Seruants must also with great care attend your duties your word also is obedience and the rather because your Masters haue authoritie but onely ouer your flesh not ouer your consciences but in your obedience see to it it be in all things that concerne the subiection of the outward man But let not your seruice be onely when your Masters looke on or fitted onely to please men but obey euen in the singlenesse of your hearts as in GODS presence where you should feare to displease Neither let what you do be done out of a slauish feare but from the heart with all willingnes as doing therein seruice to GOD and not to men only Knowing infallibly that if men would not reward you for your paines faithfulnes yet GOD will who will not vse you as seruants but prouide for you as sons and heires to him For in all this labor GOD accounts you as the seruants of Christ and will reward all as if all had bin done to him And contrariwise he that doth wrong be he Master or Seruant shall receiue of the LORD for the wrong that he hath done for GOD is no accepter of persons CERTAINE OF THE choisest and chiefest points handled in the third CHAPTER A Threefold resurrection fol. 2. How a man may know whether he be risen with Christ fol.
in this work beares the Image of Christ and in him Christ riseth before our eyes not onely because the Lord Iesus doth in this gracious worke giue vs a daily and fresh remembrance of his resurrection by renewing such fruits of it but also because he imprinteth a secret kinde of heauenly mindednesse the Christian in some weake measure liuing as Christ did in the interim betweene his resurrection and ascension waiting alwayes for his exaltation into heauen Now the consideration of this worke is heere vsed by the Apostle to perswade vnto the meditation of heauenly things and that fitly for if wee bee risen as Christ was then we must bee minded as hee was now wee know that after hee was risen againe hee was not encumbred with this world nor did he conuerse with the men of this world but liued with the Lord as it were immediately in a heauenly manner waiting for Heauen so should a Christian doe he should euery day bee striuing to get vp his heart by faith and prayer and meditation and voluntary abnegation by all meanes begging and seeking the vertue of Christs resurrection that being enabled to forsake the world and the vnnecessary society with worldly men he might haue his heart and conuersation in heauen euery day waiting when the time of his changing should come Quest How may a man know whether he be risen with Christ Ans Hovv a man may knovv vvhether he be risen vvith Christ Who are not risen vvith Christ This question may bee resolued both negatiuely and affirmatiuely For first they are not risen with Christ that are in bondage to traditions as the coherence with the latter end of the former chapter shewes nor they that are drowned and made sencelesse with the cares of this life or the pleasures of voluptuous liuing i Luk. 21.34 nor they that confirming themselues in a dead presumptuous common hope plead the abounding of Gods grace to auouch their continuance in sinne k Rom. 6.1.4.5 1 Pet. 1.3 For the Apostle in the Epistle to the Romans vseth a reason taken from our conformity to the resurrection of Christ to confute this vicious and prophane plea of carelesse men Further they that worship the Beast the great Antichrist of Rome and receiue his marke vpon their foreheads or their hands are reckoned among the dead men that haue not their part in this first resurrection l Reu. 20.4.5.6 Also the Prophet Esay seemes to say that such men as will not see Gods high hand of Iudgement nor will learne to doe vprightly in the land of vprightnesse nor can bee allured to godlinesse though mercy be shewed them are to bee accounted among the dead men that shall not liue m Esa 26.9.10.14 Lastly they are not risen with Christ that doe not beleeue in Christ n Joh. 11.25 Now for the affirmatiue They may haue comfort in the first resurrection that haue felt a diuine power in the voyce of Christ quickning their hearts with effectuall desire and endeauour to rise out of the graues of sinne o Ioh. 5.25 and to stand vp from the world of the dead p Eph. 5.14 2. That are constantly affected with an holy estimation of the knowledge of Christ crucified and risen againe an effectuall knowledge I meane valuing the meanes and signes of it aboue all earthly things q Phil. 3.9.10 3. That finde their hearts changed from the cares and delights of this life to a constant desire of the second comming of Christ to translate them to the presence of glory in heauen 4. That shew a daily care to walke in newnesse of life yeelding their members as weapons of righteousnesse striuing to crucifie the olde man and destroy the body of sinne as they that are aliue vnto God r Rom. 6.4 5.6.13 2. Againe in that the Apostle saith if yee bee risen againe with Christ seeke those things that are aboue wee may note that it is as hard a thing to get vp the heart of men to the study of heauenly things as to lift vp a massie corps out of the graue and to inspire it with the desire of life As easie to reuiue a dead man as persvvade a carnall man there is neede of the spirit and power of Iesus to doe it And therefore wee should not wonder to see naturall men so heartlesse nor should we attribute it to any inefficacy in the meanes if carnall men bee not perswaded for a man may long perswade a dead man to rise before he will get vp and it should touch vs with all thankfulnesse to acknowledge Gods mercy if he haue giuen vs a minde to heauenly things to desire them and delight in them Thirdly in that he saith if yee bee risen speaking not onely conditionally but doubtfully it imports that one should bee exceeding carefull to search and trie whether they haue their part as yet in this first resurrection and withall implyes that many a man may seeme to himselfe and others to bee deliuered from the kingdome of darknesse and yet lie buried still in the graues of sinne Seeke th●se things which are aboue Heere the Apostle enters vpon the proposition of the first maine exhortation or rule of new life Now before I bring in the Apostle vrging this duty imagine with thy selfe how farre the Christian thus now to bee instructed for order of life hath already proceeded by faith for before a man can bee truely capable of direction of life there bee diuers things requisite in the preparations of faith The preparations of faith before a man can be capable of directions of life And these things are necessarily to be presupposed 1. That faith hath plucked him out of the world of sinners or dead men so that hee is already withdrawen from the society of the wicked 2. It hath shewed him Gods fauour and ioyned him to Christ 3. It hath shewed him in some measure such things in the Kingdome of Christ as his naturall eare neuer heard nor his naturall eye neuer saw nor his naturall heart neuer conceiued ſ 1 Cor. 2.9 4. It hath ioyned him to the liuing Saints so as he now with great desire delight conuerseth with them 5. It hath made him to suffer in the flesh for his sins and withall hath refreshed his spirit and cured him of his distrustfull and solitary sorrowes 6. It hath garnished his soule with new budding graces and opened for him a fountaine and spring of grace within him euen in his bowels t Ioh. 7.38.39 7. It hath raised in him a true and constant desire of new obedience of life with a secret resolution not to depart from any thing the Lord shall command all the dayes of his life Now presupposing the Christian to bee thus farre proceeded the Apostle comes in and to beginne his institutions of manners hee first chargeth him with this rule Doct. Seeke those that are aboue teaching vs that the first maine thing to be
thou hast gotten all thou canst together thou knowest not whether hee shall bee a wise man or a foole that shall enioy them after thee k v. 19. Fiftly to attaine those things men vsually spend their dayes in sorrow trauaile and greefe and their hearts take no rest in the night l v. 23. In the third chapter these further reasons may bee noted First all things are swayed with the swinge of their seasons and times Ch. 3. v. 1. 9. So as nothing is steady though bee borne and now plant and build and laugh and daunce and embrace and sow and loue and liue in peace yet there will bee a time to plucke vp and breake downe and weepe and mourne and cast away and hate and mourne and die too Secondly though the Lord should set the world in a mans heart yet hee might spend all his dayes and neuer know the full nature of these things m v. 11. Thirdly all things are subiect to Gods vnauoidable disposing Let man get what hee can yet God will haue the disposing of it and whatsoeuer God shall doe it shall abide to it can no man adde and from it can none diminish And this God will doe that man may feare him n v. 14. Fourthly such is the state of the children of men that they may lose all they haue at the very place of iudgement o v. 16. Fiftly yea the verie state of mortified men in the reason of carnall men because of these oppressions and vncertainties seemes little better then the state of beasts p v. 18. In the fourth Chapter note Ch. 4.1.2.3 first that when a man hath set his heart vpon these earthly things if euer hee lose them he is filled almost with vnmedicinable teares and sorrow so as hee would praise the dead aboue the liuing and wish he had neuer been borne Secondly they are occasions of a mans enuie q v. 4. Thirdly the eying of these things infatuats many a mans heart so as wee may see many a man that hath neither sonne nor daughter nor brother and yet there is no end of his trauell and he hath not the iudgement to say with himselfe for whom doe I trauaile and defraud my selfe of pleasure r v. 8. Fourthly a man may get much with sore trauaile and liue to see himselfe despised of him for whom he prouideth them so as they that shall come after him will not reioyce in him Å¿ v. 15.16 In the fift chapter there are also seauen other reasons First Chap. 5.8 these earthly things leade the greatest men into bondage by dependance For the King cannot consist without the tilling of the field Secondly hee that loueth siluer shall not bee satisfied with siluer and hee that loueth riches shall bee without the fruit thereof t v. 9. Thirdly when goods encrease they are encreased also that eate them and what good commeth to the owners thereof but the beholding of them with their eyes u v. 10. Fourthly many times the seruant sleepeth when the master can get no sleepe x v. 11. Fiftly there is an euill sicknesse often seene vnder the sunne that riches are kept for the owners ruine y v. 12. Sixtly or else they will perish while the master looketh on z v. 13. v. 13.14.15 Seuenthly but certaine it is he can carrie nothing out of the world when hee goeth but must leaue them where hee found them In the sixt Chapter there are these reasons First Chap. 6.1 to 7. a man may haue all abundance and yet not haue a heart to vse them and so bee worse then an vntimely fruit Secondly what needs all this adoe for all is but for the mouth and nature is content with a little And therefore to haue a soule so vnsatiably greedy of hauing is a prodigious madnesse a v 7. Thirdly the hauing of all these things makes not a wise man better then a foole what wants a poore man if hee know how to carry himselfe with the wise Fourthly all cannot make thee cease to be mortall For it is knowen man cannot striue with him that is stronger than he c v. vlt. In the seuenth Chapter there is this reason A man may spend all his dayes before hee can come soundly to know after many trialls what is the best vse to put these earthly things to And for honour in the eighth Chapter three things are worthy noting First a man is not Lord of his owne spirit to keepe himselfe aliue in his honour d Chap. 8 8. Secondly many men rule to their owne ruine e v. 9. Thirdly men after death are quickely forgotten They that come backe from the holy place remembreth them not long Yea a man may be quickly forgotten in the City where he hath done right f v. 10. Chap. 9.1 And in the ninth Chapter two reasons more are added First no man can know the loue or hatred of God by these things Secondly they are not gotten alwayes by helpe of meanes For the race is not alwayes to the swift nor the battell to the strong nor riches to men of vnderstanding nor fauour to the wise which makes the Atheist and Epicure conclude that time and chance commeth to all things The summe of all that Salomon can say is vanity of vanities all is vanity And now that wee haue heard Salomon let vs in the next place heare a greater than Salomon Our Sauiours reasons Our Sauiour Christ in the sixt of Matthew diuides the care of earthly things into two sorts For either men are greedily transported with the desire of getting treasures that is abundance and superfluities or else they toyle their hearts with distrustfull and distracting cares about necessaries as what they shall eat and what they shall put on From the first kinde of care he disswades with foure reasons Foure reasons against the care for superfluities First all treasures are subiect either to vanitie or violence Either the moth will eat them or the theefe will steale them g Mat. 6.19.20 Secondly these things bewitch and steale away mens hearts h v. 21. Thirdly the minding of these things darkneth the eye of the soule with greater darknesse then can be exprest i v. 22.23 Fourthly a man cannot serue God and riches k v. 24. Eight reasons against distracting cares for necessaries From the second kinde of care he dehorts with eight reasons First the life is more worth then meat and the body than rayment l v. 25. And if the Lord haue giuen the greater why should he not be trusted for the lesse Secondly God prouideth for the very foules that haue not such meanes as man hath and will he not prouide for man m v. 26. Thirdly all thy care will not adde one cubit to thy stature n v. 27. but if thou wouldest swelt thy heart out t is God only must increase thy
their owne husbands or wiues then must they begge affection of God by daily and earnest praier But in the second place vnclean persons must know that marriage alone will not serue turne but they must adde repentance for lamentable experience shewes that marriage without repentance abates not the power of lust And therefore such as would deliuer their soules from the vengeance to come due vnto them for vncleannesse whether inward or outward must seeke to God and with many prayers and teares begge pardon they must be washed from filthinesse by the bloud of Christ and the teares of true repentance Neither let men deceiue themselues a little sorrow will not serue turne for these pollutions and therefore the Apostle vseth the word washed l 1 Cor. 6.9.11 to note the repentance of the Corinthians from these and such like sinnes Now there can be no washing without water neither will a droppe or two serue turne The second sort of remedies Secondly that those that are not guilty may be preserued against vncleannesse these things are of great vse and profit First the word of God and the sound knowledge of it for saith the Lord in the second of Prouerbs If thou wilt receiue my words and hide my commandements within thee if thou callest after knowledge and criest for vnderstanding if thou seekest her as siluer and searchest for her as for treasures Pro. 2.1.3.4.11.12.16.17 then shall counsell and vnderstanding preserue thee and deliuer thee from the euill way and from the strange woman which flattereth with her words and forsaketh the guide of her youth and forgetteth she couenant of her God And hereunto agreeth Dauid for propounding this question by what meanes a young man might cleanse his heart hee answereth by taking heed to the word m Psal 119.9 So S. Iohn speaking to the young men saith the word of God abideth in you and ye haue ouercome the wicked one n 1 Ioh. 2.14 Secondly meditation is another great preseruatiue wouldst thou remoue wickednesse from thy flesh euen all the vanities of youth then thou must remember thy creator in the daies of thy youth o Eccl. 11. vlt. with 12.1 Thou must much and often think of the Lord God that made thee not that thou shouldest wallow in the mire of these swinish pollutions Besides it is profitable to force thy heart to the often meditation of thine owne mortalitie that the thoughts of thy death may be a kinde of death to thy lusts this the Apostle Peter implies when he saith as strangers and pilgrims abstaine from fleshly lusts manifestly importing that if we did seriously thinke that we are here but strangers and pilgrims it would tame the violence of these hatefull lusts Also we should much ponder vpon the examples of such as haue sinned and the Lord hath fearfully visited them both for and in their sinne for all those things came vnto them for ensamples and were written to admonish vs vpon whom the ends of the world are come p 1 Cor. 10.6.8.11 The third preseruatiue is daily earnest and constant praier vnto God against them And if wee feele the beginning to rise in vs we should labour for speciall sorrowes euen with griefe of heart to racke and crucifie them Lust will not vsually out of the soule if it get any footing till it be fired out with confession and godly sorrow And therefore the Apostle vseth the pl●●●●● of crucifying the lusts of the flesh q Gal. 5.24 And that praier is a remedie the Apostles owne practise shewes for when Satan buffeted him he praied vnto God and that thrice that he might get the temptation to depart from him r 2 Cor. 12.9 The fourth preseruatiue is to walke in loue I meane Christian loue to Gods children and such a loue as hath both affection and societie and spirituall imployment in the furtherance of the Gospell When the Apostle would charge the Ephesians to auoid fornication and all vncleannesse hee doth first aduise them and that seriously to walke in loue ſ Eph. 5.2.3 as knowing that the exercise of true Christian loue breeds such contentment and desire of holinesse that it mightily fenceth the heart against all base lusts whatsoeuer For they cannot stand together and vsually such as are withdrawne by concupiscence are likewise withdrawne from all profitable fellowship with Gods children The fift preseruatiue is watchfulnesse in the daily obseruing of the first motions of lust and in carefulnesse in directing the heart into Gods presence deuoting in our couenants and desires our thoughts and affections to God Thus Salomon when be would giue direction against the whorish woman aduiseth My sonne giue mee thy heart and let thine eyes delight in my wayes t Prou. 23.26.27 The causes and occasions of lust The last preseruatiue is to auoid the causes and occasions of lust and vncleannesse The first is idlenesse This was one of the causes of the detested vncleannesse of Sodome as the Prophet Ezechiel shewes u Ezech. 46.49 And contrariwise diligence in our callings is a notable helpe to keepe out inordinate desires and vaine thoughts and commonly persons ouertaken with vncleannesse abound with idlenesse The second is fulnesse of bread that is by a synecdoche excesse in meats and drinkes either for the measure or daintinesse of them And contrariwise to beat downe our bodies x 1 Cor 9.27 either by abstinence or sobrietie in the vse of the creatures is a notable meanes to quench and abate those flames if they be risen and to keepe them also from that speciall aptnesse to rise The third is the high estimation of earthly things and the too great liking of them for this loue secretly brings in lust Thus the Apostle to Timothie saies that the loue of mony and riches breeds noisome lusts which in short time drowne man in perdition y 1 Tim. 6.9 The like may be said of the estimation and too much viewing of apparell beautie c. The fourth is ignorance and hardnesse of heart for thus it was in those the Apostle mentions in the fourth to the Ephesians z Eph. 4.17.18 that greedinesse to defile themselues with all sorts of vncleannesse arose and increased in them by reason of the insensiblenesse of the heart and the blindnesse and emptinesse of their mindes And on the other side lust cannot get such a head so long as any sound measure of knowledge is stirring in the minde or tendernesse remaines in the heart lust desires both a darke house and a darke minde The fift is euill company and therefore the holy Ghost giues this rule to those that would not bee ensnared with the strange woman Walke thou in the way of good men and keepe the way of the righteous Prou. 1.20 The last is care for the flesh It is the libertie men take not only to feed themselues in contemplatiue wickednes but also to plod and cast about how to satisfie fulfill
thoughts and desires of a man Secondly carnall confidence when man placeth his felicity and chiefest stay and trust in the things he either possesseth or hopeth for I adde yet vaine because let the couetous person bestow neuer so much care or attaine to neuer so much successe of his cares yet as Salomon saith He that loueth siluer shall not be satisfied with siluer and he that loueth riches shall be without the fruit thereof k Eccles 5.9 And after all his trauell his riches may perish whiles he lookes on or if they were more sure to continue yet he shall not continue with them himselfe For as he came forth of his mothers belly he shall returne naked to goe as he came 14. and shall beare nothing away of his labour which he hath caused to passe by his hand 15. In all points as he came so shall he goe and then what profit hath he that he hath trauelled for the wind The obiect of this care and desire is earthly things for if it were a couetousnesse or desire of the best things or spirituall gifts that were both commended and commanded l 1 Cor. 14.1 These words for his owne priuate good note the end of the couetous mans care For if all this care for earthly things were for Gods glory or the good of the Church it might be allowed And I say for his good because that he propounds to himselfe though many times when hee hath gotten much together the Lord will not let him haue the vse of it Note the best thing in the description is the effect of couetousnesse The effects of couetousnesse and that is the singular detriment of the soule which may appeare diuersly For first couetousnesse doth infatuate and besot the minde of man that it cannot vnderstand The Prophet Esay saith of those dumbe greedie dogs that they could not vnderstand and he giueth the reason For saith he they all looke to their owne way euery one for his aduantage and for his owne purpose and profit m Esay 56.11.12 And Salomon seems to say that if couetousnesse be in the heart of a Prince it will make him destitute of vnderstanding n Prou. 28.16 And it is certaine marke it worldly minded persons are the most dull and incapable persons in spirituall things almost of all other sorts of men For though they would get a little vnderstanding while they are hearing yet the cares of life presently choakes all Secondly couetousnesse pierceth the soule through with many a sorrow o 1 Tim. 6.10 The couetous person is seldome or neuer free from one notable vexation or other His heart is troubled and he will trouble his house also as Salomon saith he that is greedie of gaine troubleth his owne house p Prou. 15.27 All is continually in a tumult of haste and hurrie what with labour and what with passion and contention the couetous man and his household neuer liue at hearts ease and rest Thirdly couetousnesse and the desire to be rich bring into the soule a wonderfull number of temptations and noisome lusts enough to damne him if he had no other sinnes q 1 Tim. 6.9 Fourthly it is here added that couetousnesse is idolatrie it makes a man an idolater Mammon is the idoll and the worldling is the Priest that sacrificeth to Mammon Now the couetous man serues his mammon with a two-fold worship for with inward worship he loues desires delights in and trusts in his wealth and for his outward seruice he spends all his time vpon his idoll either in gathering or keeping or increasing or honoring it Lastly what should I number particulars Couetousnesse why the Apostle saith it is the root of all euils For there is almost no kinde of sinne but the sap of couetousnesse will nourish it If the Lord had but the ripping vp of the heart and life of a couetous person and would describe his vices before vs oh what swarme of all sorts of euils could the Lord finde out Well let vs be assured of this generall that howsoeuer couetous persons may colour matters yet indeed they are wonderfull vicious persons Neither are their sinnes the fewer or lesser because they discerne them not for the dust of earthly profits hath put out their eyes they cannot see nor discerne as was before shewed Q. But who is couetous For all men while they crie out against the sinne denie that they are couetous T is rare to finde any couetous person that will confesse that he is couetous And therefore for answer hereunto it will not be amisse out of the word of God to shew the signes of a couetous man The signes of a couetous man The first signe of a couetous man is the desire to haue the Sabboth ouer that hee might be at his worldly affaires A couetous man thinkes all the time set apart for Gods seruice exceeding tedious and long and hee hath a great inward boiling of desire to haue such times and imployments past The Sabboth is wonderfull burdensome to a worldly minde especially if he be restrained from worldly imploiments The Prophet Amos bringeth in the couetous men of his time saying thus in the discontentment of their hearts When will the new Moone be gone that wee may sell corne and the Sabboth that wee may set forth wheat Prou 28.16 1 Thess 4.6 The second signe of couetousnesse is oppression and fraud When men to compasse gaine care not how they vex and racke the poore or such as liue vnder them or in buying or selling out of greedinesse of gaine circumuent and pill and defraud others by customary lying or false weights measures or ballances or any other fraudulent course this is an euill couetousnesse Vsury also that is a desire to increase riches by interest is a palpable signe of couetousnesse especially in these times when the sinne of vsury is so vniuersally condemned for if men were not besotted with the loue of riches they would not dare to liue in such a damned sinne But I thinke all men easily know that Vsurers are couetous and therefore I need not proue it The third signe of couetousnesse is greedy and distracting care I meane such a care as deuoures a mans thoughts that euery day will keepe possession in a mans soule and run in his minde continually both sleeping and waking plodding and carking cares And this may be discerned by comparing these cares with our care for eternall things When we haue more care for this world then for heauen we need goe no further but resolue vpon it couetousnes hath deceiued vs. Neither doe I meane that they only are couetous that immoderately disquiet themselues with continuall cares for getting of treasures and the superfluities of abundance for it is sure that couetousnesse may bee in vs in a high degree though our cares be but about things that are necessary as about the things we must eat or put on as the comparing of the
his exceeding great reward c Gen. 15.1 The third preseruatiue is the daily practise of pietie If we would seeke the kingdome of God first both in the first part of our life and in the first part of euery day of our life as well in our houses as in Gods house these religious duties constantly performed would be a great and continuall helpe against worldly cares they would cleanse our hearts of them and daily prepare our hearts against them But how can it be otherwise with a man then it is They must needs liue and die the drudges of the world seeing they haue no more care of holy duties at home or abroad they liue like swine without all care of any thing but rooting in the earth The fourth preseruatiue is the due preparation for Christs second comming For when our Sauiour Christ had dehorted men from the cares of this life he adioynes this exhortation Let your loines be girded about and your lights burning and ye your selues like vnto them that wait for their master when he will returne from the wedding that when he commeth and knocketh they may open vnto him immediately blessed are those seruants whom the Lord when he commeth shall finde waking c. One great reason why couetous men doe so securely continue in the immoderate cares for this world is because they doe so little thinke of death and iudgement Whereas on the other side Christians doe with some ease withdraw their hearts from the world when they haue inured themselues to die daily by the constant remembrance of their latter end and by holding fast the euidence of faith and hope waiting when Christ will call for them The fift preseruatiue is to shun the meanes and occasions of couetousnesse And to this end it is good not to conuerse much with couetous persons or to get our selues libertie to conceiue the hope of any long prosperitie and rest in the world and generally we should labour to obserue our owne hearts and other mens liues and what we finde to be a meanes to kindle or inflame couetous desires that wee should auoid and betimes set against it or mortifie it And thus farre of couetousnesse And thus also of the catalogue of sinnes from which he doth disswade The reasons follow VERS 6. For the which things sake the wrath of God commeth on the children of disobedience VERS 7. Wherein ye also walked once when ye liued in them THese words containe two reasons to enforce the exhortation in the former verse The one is taken from the euill effects of the former sinnes vers 6. The other is taken from their owne experience while they liued in the estate of corruption vers 7. In laying downe the reason from the effect two things are to be noted First what sinne brings viz. the wrath of God Secondly vpon whom viz. vpon the children of disobedience Before I come to intreat of the wrath of God apart I consider of it as it stands in coherence with the former reason For in these words we are assured that man liuing and continuing in filthines and couetousnes shall not escape Gods wrath for they incurre both his hatred and his plagues both which are signified by the word wrath Gods wrath vpon vncleane persons And if any aske what plagues filthy persons and couetous persons shall feele I answer briefly and distinctly that neither of them shall scape Gods wrath as the Scriptures plentifully shew The filthy person brings vpon himselfe Gods curse temporall corporall spirituall and eternall Temporall for whoredome and any kinde of vncleannesse brings vpon men many temporall plagues in their estate the fire of Gods iudgements consuming many times their whole increase as hath beene shewed before Corporall for God many times meets with the sinnes of the body by iudgements vpon the body so that many filthy persons after they haue consumed their flesh and their body by loathsome diseases which follow this sinne in the end say with the foolish young man Oh how haue I hated instruction and despised correction d Pro. 5.11.12 Now I am brought almost into all euill in the middest of the assembly Spirituall for vncleannesse breeds in many a reprobate sense e Rom. 1.24.29 c. and finall impenitencie Many also for their filthinesse are pursued with secret and fearfull terrors of conscience and sometimes phrensie and desperate perturbations Eternall for the adulterer destroyes his owne soule and is shut out of the kingdome of heauen as hath beene also before declared Neither let the couetous person thinke hee shall speed any better for God hates him wonderfully And therefore the Prophet Ezechiel saith that the Lord smites his fists f Ezech. 22.13 at the couetous which is a borrowed phrase to expresse most bitter and sharpe threatnings Now lest the people should obiect that those were but great words the Lord would not doe so they would deale well enough with the Lord he preuenteth it and saith Can thy heart endure Vers 14. or can thine hands be strong in the dayes that I shall haue to doe with thee I the Lord haue spoken it and will doe it Let couetous persons without further enquirie assure themselues that couetousnesse is a maine cause of all the euils are vpon them or theirs and besides they may be assertained that all the seruice they doe to God is abhorred and meere lost labour It were to no purpose if they would bring him incense from Sheba and sweet calamus from a farre countrey their burnt offerings would not bee pleasant nor their sacrifices sweet vnto him g Ier. 6.13.20 Ob. But couetous persons are of most men so well furnished that there is not that meanes to bring them to any great hurt Sol. The Prophet shewes that God can lay a stumbling blocke before them and father and sonne together may fall vpon it and neighbour and friend may perish together h Ier. 6.21 The Lord hath meanes enough when men little thinke of it to bring downe rebellious sinners Ob. But wee see couetous persons and wealthy worldlings scape the best and longest of many others Sol. The Prophet Amos saith Amos 8.5 6.7 the Lord hath sworne by the excellencie of Iacob will neuer forget any of their workes Though the Lord may deferre yet certainly hee will neuer forget and therefore they are not a iot the better for scaping so long But howsoeuer they might escape outward iudgements yet they may be infallibly sure they haue sinned against their owne soules k Hab. 2.10 and that they shall know in the day of their death their riches shall not then profit them when the Lord taketh away their soule l Iob 27.8 he that is a great oppressor shall not prolong his dayes m Pro. 18.16 for he that getteth riches and not by right shall leaue them in the midst of his dayes and at his end shall be a foole n Ier. 17.11 How horrible then shall
aske it of him Thirdly if the contention be yet secret follow Salomons counsell say nothing of it to others but debate thy cause with thy neighbour himselfe and discouer not thy secret to another c Prou. 25.4 peace might soone be made with many men if the discord were not made so publike Now for auoiding of contention and malitious discords there are diuers rules of great vse I. Meddle not with the strife that belongs not to thee d Pro. 26.17 II. Contend not with fooles thou shalt neuer haue done if thou meddle with foolish persons for whether they rage or laugh there is no rest e Pro. 29.9 III. Let nothing be done through vaine-glory f Phil. 2.3 IV. Speake euill of no man g Tit. 3.2 V. Be courteous and tender-hearted h Eph. 4.31 32 VI. Wrong no man but follow that which is good both amongst your selues and towards all men i Thess 5.11 Lastly pray for a couering loue for hatred stirreth vp strife but loue couereth all sinne k Pro. 10.12 The vse of all this may be both for reproofe for instruction For reproofe of many men that are fearefully sowred with this leauen they doe not onely let the Sunne goe downe vpon their wrath but they let the Sunne goe his whole course and can finde no time from the one end of the yeere vnto the other to compound and lay aside their discords Nay so hath malice seated it selfe in some dogged and spightfull natures that it seemeth to proclaime it will neuer loose possession till the deuill the father of malice hath full possession both of soule and body But let euery godly minde be perswaded to auoide this monstrous sinne yea let vs striue to auoide the very beginning of it or if nature haue such corruption that for the present we cannot get our hearts rid of all secret poyson of dislike let vs be sure we be but children in malitiousnesse it is a monstrous wickednesse to haue a head that is exercised to strife and a heart that hath a kinde of sinfull dexteritie in framing and plodding for malitious courses And thus much of malice Cursed speaking The word in the originall is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blasphemie Now blasphemie or cursed speaking it is a sinne either against piety or against righteousnesse As it is against piety it is blasphemie to reproch or reason against the person or nature of God or against the prouidence and works of God or against the worship of God and the meanes thereof and so it is cursed speaking and a kinde of blasphemie to repine at Gods works m 1 Cor. 10.10 to reproch Gods sabboths n Lament 1. or messengers o 1 Cor. 16.16 or his word Also there is a cursed speaking which is against righteousnesse in the second table and thus it is cursed speaking When subiects curse the King p Eccl. 10. vlt. When Masters threaten their seruants q Ephes 6.9 When Parents prouoke their children r Ephes 6.4 When Husbands are bitter to their Wiues ſ Colos 3.19 When wiues brawle and chide with their Husbands t Pro. 25.24 When great men lord it ouer the poore u Prou. 13.8 and the like Cursed speaking is either before the face and so it is strife of words or behinde the backe and so it is backbiting or whispering * 2 Cor. 12.20 It is cursed speaking to mocke and scorne it is cursed speaking to iudge and censure it is cursed speaking to slander and disgrace it is cursed speaking to be euer complaining in all places Finally it is cursed speaking when men speake euill of any man and there is a speciall kinde of it in speaking euill of godly men and this properly is blasphemie in the second table for the Lord for the honor he beares to his people is pleased to afford the name of blasphemie to their reproches as importing that he takes it as if he were reproched himselfe We should all of vs take heede of cursed speaking of what kinde soeuer for it ariseth of ill causes as enuie or malice and it hath effects for it is certaine thou werest as good pierce others with a sword as smite them with thy tongue And therefore a bitter and cursed tongue is often compared in the scripture to the stinge of adders and to a sword yea a sharpe sword to a razor and to arrowes and the like besides the hurt it doth to thy selfe for if thou bite and deuoure take heede thou be not deuoured x Gal. 5.15 And it is iust with God thou shouldest be iudged and censured that accustomes thy selfe to iudge and censure y Matth. 7.1 And though thou speake euill neuer so secretly yet God doth many times wonderfully discouer the shame of it before others and if man would not iudge thee for thy euill tongue yet it is certaine God will z Jam. 5.9 And it is many times seene that men and women of distempered and spightfull tongues are made a very abhomination amongst men a Prou. 24. so as all men are weary of them and shun them Lastly scornefull and cursed speaking proues a notable hinderance to the successe of the word b 1 Pet. 2.1 2. and that these kinde of people might obserue when they come to heare they receiue not a blessing and why but because blessing is so farre from their lips as they loued cursing so it commeth to them The vse of all may be to exhort vs to put away far from vs a froward mouth and peruerse lips c Prou. 4.24 and that nothing be done through strife but rather that all things be done without murmuring or reasonings or brawlings or reuilings And herein such as feare God should striue to giue good example seeing they are as lights in the middest of crooked and peruerse people Q. Quest But what are the remedies of cursed speaking Answ Answ If we haue sinned through bitternesse Remedies we should obserue two rules 1. Let thy owne words grieue thee d Psal 56.5 that is labour by prayer and godly sorrow to beate downe the power of they peruersnesse without defending excusing or extenuating of thy frowardnesse 2. Keepe thy heart with all diligence e Prou. 23.24 Looke to the first risings of thy passions For bitternesse is first in the heart before it can come into the tongue Now for preuenting of euill speaking in others the only rule is to giue them no occasion either by words or iniurious and wicked life Ob. Obiect But they will raile and reuile without a cause Answ Answ Then obserue these rules 1. Betake thy selfe to prayer so did Dauid f Psal 104.2 3 4. 2. It is good oft-times to be as deafe man that heareth not g Psal 38.13 14 3. Be sure thou be carefull thou wrong not the names of others else though thou be innocent in the things imputed yet thou art iustly
presence and commandements Lastly we may here learne how to loue for God loues First those that are holy Secondly those whom he had chosen so it should bee with vs first we should chuse for holinesse and then loue for our choice This may teach the people how to loue their Magistrates and Ministers and so wiues and seruants And contrariwise Thus of the motiues the manner followes Obseru 1 Put on viz. as men doe their garments it is true that these graces for the worth of them are royall and so must be put on as the King doth his crowne or the Prince elected his robes it is also true that for safety these graces are as armour to defend vs against the allurements of the world or the reproches of euill men and so may be put on as the souldier doth his armor Besides these graces are required in vs as the ornaments of a renued estate and so are to be put on as the new baptized was said to put on his new garments But I thinke the metaphor is taken generally from the putting on of rayment Diuers things may be here noted 1. It is apparant that these graces are not naturall the shadowes and pictures of them may be in naturall men And what wicked men can get is but by the restraining spirit or by reason of naturall defect or for ill ends It is certaine a man may be said to be borne Note as well with clothes on his backe as with grace in his heart 2. How should the hearts of many smite them to thinke of it how they Obseru 2 neglect this clothing of their soules with graces They euery day remember to put on apparell on their backes but scarce any day thinke of putting on vertue for their hearts Oh when thou seest thy naked body clothed shouldst thou not remember that thy soule in it selfe more naked then thy body had need of clothing also Oh the iudgement that abides many a man and woman how excessiuely carefull are they to trimme the body and yet are excessiuely carelesse of trimming their soules that haue so many gownes for their backes that they haue neuer a grace for their hearts yea the better sort may be humbled if they search their hearts seriously for either they want diuers parcels of this holy raiment or else they are not well fitted on them they hang so loose many times there is little comelinesse or warmth by their wearing of these graces But let vs all be instructed to remember these graces and by praier and practise to exercise our selues in them and daily to be assaying how we can put them on till by constant vse of all good meanes we can grow spiritually skilfull in wearing of them and expressing the power of them in conuersation as plainely as we shew the garments on our backes resoluing that these vertues will be our best ornaments and that they are best clad that are clothed with these godly graces in their hearts Thus of the manner the enumeration of the graces follow Bowels of mercy From the Coherence I note two things concerning mercy First that it is not naturall we are exhorted to put it on naturally wee are hatefull and hate one another a Esay 11. which should teach vs to obserue and discerne the defects of our hearts herein b Iam. 3.17.19 and by praier to striue with God for the repaire of our natures and in all wrongs from wicked men to bee lesse mooued as resoluing it is naturall with them Tit. 3.3 2. We may note here that mercy is as it were the doore of vertue It stands here in the forefront and leades in and out all the rest it lets in humilitie meeknesse patience c. Now in these words themselues I obserue 3. things 1. That mercy is of more sorts then one therefore he saith mercies More sorts of mercy than one Luk. 6. Math. 25. one mercy will not serue the turne hee that hath true mercy hath many mercies or waies to shew mercy many miseries in mans life needes many sorts of mercy There is mercy corporall and mercy spirituall it is corporall mercy to lend to giue to visit to cloath to feed to protect from violence Corporal and Spirituall mercy hospitality to strangers and the buriall of the dead are also corporall mercies Spirituall mercies are not all of a sort for wee may shew mercy sometimes in things wherein no man can help as by praying vnto God for helpe now in things wherein man can helpe the mercy to be shewed respects either the ignorance or other distresses of other men The mercy to the ignorant is either instruction in the things they should know or councell in the things they should do Now his other distresses arise either from his actions or from his passions his actions are either against thee and so thy mercy is to forgiue or against others and so thy mercy is to admonish or correct Thy mercy towards him in respect of his passions or sufferings is either in words and so it is consolation or in deeds and so it is confirmation What shall I say there is the mercy of the Minister and the mercy of the Magistrate and also the mercy of the priuate man 2. Mercies notes that it is not enough to be mercifull once or seldome but we must be much in the workes of mercy seldome mercy will be no better accepted with God then seldome praier we are bound to watch to the opportunitie of mercy and we shall reape not only according to the matter but according to the measure of mercy b Hosea 10 12. What is bowels of mercy 3. It is not enough to be mercifull but we must put on the bowels of mercies and this hath in it diuers things For it imports 1. That our mercies must be from the heart not in hypocrisie or for a shew it must be true and vnfained mercy 2. That there should be in vs the affections of mercy we should loue mercy and shew it with all cheerefulnesse and zeale c Mich. 6.8 Rom. ●2 8 2 Cor 9.7.15 ● 8.3.4 3. That there should be a Sympathie and fellow-feeling in the distresses of others These bowels were in Christ in Moses and Paul 4. That our mercy should be extended to the highest degree wee can get our hearts to That was imported by the phrase of pouring out our soules to the needy d Isa 58.10 Vse The vse of this doctrine of mercy may be first for instruction to teach vs to make conscience of this holy grace and to be sure we be alwaies clad with it according to the occasions and oportunities of mercy And to this end we should labour to stirre vp our selues by the meditation of the motiues vnto mercy Motiues to mercy such as these God hath commanded it e Zach. 7.6 Hosea 12.10 They are our owne flesh that need our mercy f Esay 58. Our heauenly Father is mercifull yea
not require vs to loue their vices or to hold needlesse society with their persons or to further them in such kindnesses as might make them more wicked or to relinquish the defence of our iust cause but to loue is not to returne euill for euill g Rom. 12. neither in words h 1 Pet. 3.8 9 or deeds and to pray for them i Matth. 5. and to supply their necessities as we haue occasion k Rom. 12.19 Exod. 23.4 2 Chro. 28.8 9 13.15 2 King 6.22 Loue of brethren ouercomming their euill with goodnesse and in some cases to be extraordinarily humbled for them l Psal 38.13 But I thinke the loue of brethren is principally here meant this is a fire kindled by the sanctifying spirit of God m 2 Tim. 1.7 this was intended in our election n Ephes 1.14 this proues our faith o Gal. 5.6 this nourisheth the mysticall body of Christ p Eph. 4.17 this loue is without dissimulation q Rom 12.9 2 Cor. 6.6 it is diligent labouring loue r 1 Thess 1.3 Heb. 6.10 it is harmeles and inoffensiue ſ Rom. 13.10 it woundeth not by suspitious prouocations or scandals t Rom. 14.15 it is not mercenarie for as God is not to be loued for reward though he be not loued without reward so we must loue men not for their good turnes they do vs but for the good graces God hath giuen them And we should shew our loue in vsing our gifts for the best good of the body u Rom. 12.6 7. and manifest our compassion and fellow-feeling by counsell and admonitions * 2 Cor. 2.4 and consolations x Phil. 1.7 and alwaies of edification y 1 Cor 8.1 and by workes of mercy z 2 Cor. 8.24 auoyding contention a Phil. 2.3 and couering the infirmities one of another b 1 Pet. 4.8 Loue is the bond of perfection three vvaies Thus of the dignitie and nature of loue the vse of it followes which is The bond of perfection Loue is said to be the bond of perfection three waies 1. Because it is a most perfect bond and so it is an Hebraisme for all vertues are not as it were collected in loue all other vertues will soone be vnloosed vnlesse they be fastned in loue neither doth it only tye vertues together but it giues them their perfection mouing them and perfecting them and making them accepted And it is most perfect because it is most principall among vertues nothing is in this life well composed that is not directed hither But let none mistake he doth not shew here how we be made perfect before God but how we might conuerse perfectly amongst men And so the summe of this sense is that all should be well with vs in liuing one with another if loue flourish amongst vs perfection consisteth in loue by way of bond Secondly it is a bond of perfection because it is the bond that ties together the Church which is the beauty and perfection of the whole world Thirdly it is a bond of perfection as it leads vs to God who is perfection it selfe yea by loue God is ioyned to man and dwels in him The vse of all is seeing loue is of this nature vse dignitie and perfection Vse therefore we should labour to be rooted in loue euen euery way firmely setled in it And to this end we should labour more to mortifie our owne selfe-loue and the care for our owne ease profit credit c. And this may wonderfully also shame vs for those defects are found in vs. It may greatly reproue in vs that coldnesse of affection that is euen in the better sort and those frequent ianglings and discords and that fearefull neglect of fellowship in the Gospell in many places and all those euill fruits that arise from the want of the exercise of this grace such as are suspitions blinde censures c. And thus of loue VERS 15. And let the peace of God rule in your hearts to the which also yee are called in one body and be thankefull IN this Verse he exhorts vnto the two last vertues Peace and Thankfulnes In the exhortation to peace there is the dutie and the reason The dutie in these words let the peace of God rule in your hearts where I consider the nature of the vertue peace the author of it God the power of it let it rule the seat or subiect of it in your hearts the reason of it is double first from their vocation to the which yee are called Secondly from their mutuall relation as members of one bodie Peace Peace is threefold internall externall and eternall Threefold peace Internall peace is the tranquilitie of the minde and conscience in God satisfied in the sense of his goodnesse a Rom. 14.17 Externall peace is the quiet and concord in our outward estate and cariage b Ephes 4.3 Eternall is the blessed rest of the Saints in heauen c Esay 57.2 the last is not here meant Of God Peace is said to be of God in diuers respects 1. Because our peace should be such as may stand with the glory of God so we should seeke the truth and peace d Zach. 8. vlt. 2. It may be said to be of God because he commandeth it e 1 Cor. 14.31 3. Because he giueth it he is the author of it hence peace is said to be a fruit of the spirit f Gal. 5.22 and God is said to be the God of peace g 2 Cor. 13.11 1 Thess 5.23 Heb. 13.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In this last sense I thinke it is meant here Let it rule The originall word is a terme borrowed from running at race and it imports Let peace be the iudge let it sit and ouer-see and moderate all the affections of the heart seeing we are in a continuall strife whereas our affections would carry vs to contentions discords brawlings grudges and diuisions c. Let the victory be in the power of peace Let peace giue the applause and finally determine the matter Thus of the explication of the sense of the words Now all these words may be first vnderstood of internall peace with God and then God may be said to be the author of it in diues respects Hovv peace is of God 1. It may be said to be of God because he sent his Sonne to merit it Hence Christ is said to be our peace h Eph. 2.14.17 Prince of peace i Esay 9.6 Lord of peace k 2 Thes 3.16 Secondly because he sends his messengers to proclaime it and invite men to it l Esay 52.7 Thirdly because he sends his spirit to worke it m Gal. 5.22 Hovv it rules Now this peace of God is said to rule First when it ouerswayes doubts and tentations establishing the heart in the confidence of the assurance of Gods loue in Christ which is when a
God vpon her Thus of what is required Loue viz indefinitely First in heart as well as in word Mal. 2.15 Secondly not before others onely but priuately Thirdly not sometimes or the first weeke moneth or yeare but for euer constantly Fourthly for conscience sake and not for shame or respect of her friends or while her meanes doe last Your Wiues This is added First to exclude all others all others I say not from Christian loue in the generall but from coniugall loue Secondly to include all wiues though poore lesse wise or frugall froward c. Thus of the exhortation The d●hortation followes Be not bitter vnto them In these words the Apostle doth mollifie the authoritie of the husband and prouides that it passe not into tyrannie Here I consider foure things First what it hath not in it Secondly how men shew themselues bitter to their wiues Thirdly the meanes to cure this bitternesse Fourthly the reasons to moue thereunto For the first this exhortation to loue and dehortation from bitternes doth not binde them 1. To loue their vices they may know them to be the weaker vessell yea take notice of the weaknesse of the vessell 2. To lose his owne authoritie by lightnesse and vaine behauiour 3. To omit the performance of holy duties to please her humour 4. To giue her a licence to doe what shee list and liue how shee will 5. From finding fault and reprouing so as they vse not their owne words but Gods Lastly distinguish their natures wiues of soft and gentle natures must be vsed with all gentlenesse but that lets not but that wilfull and stubborne wiues may be held downe to a meet subiection Men shew their bitternesse First by words and that diuersly when they reproch them for their infirmites Of bitter husbands or deformities or when they grow quarrellous finding fault with euery thing or grow into passion vpon euery occasion Secondly in deeds by vsing them discourteously or by vniust restraint Or lastly by blowes Many men haue litle growing in their furrowes but wormwood they haue a true gall of bitternes in them they may be compared to the starre in the Reuelations 8.11 for as that made the third part of the waters bitter so are more then three parts of the words of many husbands bitter words yea as if their naturall frowardnes were not enough some men will sharpen and whet their tongues to sound out cursed words like swords or arrowes yea some are so vnappeasable their anger is like the fooles wrath Prou. 27.3 these are a brood of Caldeans a bitter a furious nation For the cure of this bitternesse foure rules are to be obserued 1. Men must pray God to cast something into their fountaine to sweeten it Foure rules for curing of this bitternes in men 2. They must turne the course of this humor and spend it vpon their sins in the practise of the duties of mortification 3. Eat Gods booke for that will inable men to godly sorrow by being bitter in their bellies and will sweeten their mouthes 4. Looke to the rootes of bitternes stay the spring of it in the beginning take heede of a custome in frowardnesse for then onely custome in the vse of the meanes will cure thee againe it will cost them daily sorrowes before they can get their natures throughly healed Lastly the reasons follow why they must mortifie bitternesse Reasons against bitternesse 1. It is a wise mans glory and discretion to passe by infirmities Prou. 19.10 2. Shee is not his footestoole but his helper 3. Seeing we are heires of blessing let vs blesse and not curse if God hath sweetned our hearts with grace let not our fountaines send forth bitter waters and sweet 4. The Apostle requires that all bitternesse be put away all for degrees it is not inough we are not so bad as some be and in all persons 5. Lastly it is a part of our good workes and holy conuersation to mortifie bitternesse and enuie and strife hereby we must shew that we haue the wisdome that is from aboue for if our knowledge be right it will make vs peaceable gentle and easie to be intreated On the other side if men sharpen their tongues to cursed and bitter speaking they may not boast of their knowledge For such wisdome is carnall sensuall and diuelish and they are liars against the word Iam. 3.13.17 Vse is for instruction to all husbands that feare God to approue themselues vnto God in their sincere and louing behauiour towards their wiues especially they should take notice of this vice of bitternesse or if they haue failed this way they should recouer themselues repent and amend and not be like those wretched persons that draw iniquitie with cords of vanitie and call bitter sweet it is ill to fault this way but worse to excuse defend or denie it Thus of the husbands dutie The next couple in the familie is parents and children The duties of children is set downe first because the inferiors are charged first and chiefly to mend and performe their duties VERS 20. Children obey your Parents in all things for this is well-pleasing to the Lord. THe exhortation hath in it two things First their dutie Secondly the reasons of it Their dutie hath in it foure things First who are charged Children Secondly what is charged vpon them obey Thirdly to whom they owe it your Parents Fourthly the extent how far forth in all things The reason is because though it were not gratefull pleasing to the Parents by reason of their waywardnesse yet it is well-pleasing to God Children viz All children without difference of sex both sonnes and daughters or of age not onely infants but children growne and of riper and full yeares of condition the children both of poore and rich Obey The obedience of Children must be considered More specially at sometimes and so they must obey The obedience of children considered of more especially or more generally 1. In the choice of their callings 2. In the election and disposing of their mariages it must be with consent of Parents Thus did Isaac Gen. 24. Thus euen Ismael Gen. 21.21 Thus Iaakob Gen. 27.46 28.9 Thus Sampson Iudg. 14.2 And this power hath euery Father ouer his Virgin 1 Cor. 7.36 37. More generally here I consider First that they must obey not in some things at some times but alwaies throughout the course of our liues this is plaine here and likewise charged Ephes 6.2 Secondly how they must obey Children must performe obedience 1. With reuerence internall and externall internally they must conceiue a holy estimation and tendernesse of respect and honour and obseruance of their Parents And externally they must shew it by all reuerent behauiour as by rising vp before them by giuing them the honour to speake first 2. With readinesse to receiue and heare instruction Prou. 1.8 Thirdly with endeuour to fulfill their desires by their labors or otherwise Fourthly with submission first
their faithfulnesse standeth in two things 1. In diligence of labour hee is not a faithfull seruant that eats the bread of Idlenesse as many seruing-men do that can tell of no calling but attendance 2. In trustinesse and in this seruants must be faithfull two waies first in their care to see their Masters directions executed in the familie as if they had beene present secondly in their speedy dispatch of busines abroad a sloathfull messenger is an exceeding prouocation to them that send him and it is a wretched fault in seruants when they are sent forth of the familie about businesse they cannot find the way in againe in any due time Thus of the dutie to which they are exhorted To them that are your Masters They must be subiect and obedient to all Masters indefinitely without difference of Sexe and so to the wife or widdow 1 Tim. 5.14 Pro. 31. or of condition they must bee obedient to the poorest as well as the rich Thus of the laying downe of the exhortation The explication followes and first of the prouisoes According to the flesh These words may be referred to Masters and then the sense is this that seruants must be obedient euen to such Masters as are fleshly and carnall men they must obey though their Masters be Ethnikes or prophane persons it is a great praise for a seruant to men to bee Gods seruant also but it is a greater praise to be a religious seruant of an irreligious Master to feare God in a prophane house 2. To seruants and so they are a limitation they are subiect onely in respect of their flesh and bodies and so here is two things to be obserued The one exprest the bodies of seruants are in the power and at the disposing of the Masters and therefore seruants must learne to subiect their flesh to their Masters both commands restraints and corrections The other implied the soules of seruants are not in the power and at the disposing of Masters their spirits are free nor Master nor King can command the conscience Vse is first for reproofe of such seruants as giue more to their Masters then is due thou oughtest to be of the same calling trade labour c. that thy master is of but thou art not bound to be of the same religion or humour with thy Master It is a great fault not to giue the body to thy Master but a great fault also to giue both body and soule to bee at his disposing both are extreames Secondly should seruants feare their Masters because they haue power ouer the flesh how much more should we feare God that hath power to destroy both soule and flesh in hell Math. 10. Thirdly this may be a great comfort to a seruant thy soule is as free as the soule of him that sits on a throne thy seruice in the flesh derogates nothing from the libertie of Christ in thy heart Thy best part is free In all things Seruants must obey in all things euen in things that bee against their credit profit liking ease c. There is a great sturdinesse in many seruants either they will not doe somethings required or not at the time when they are bidden or not in the manner but as they list these courses are vile and here condemned Ob. Obiect But vnlawfull and vnmeet things are required Sol. I answer that in cases of this nature three rules are to be obserued by inferiours First If the matter required be only inexpedient and vnmeet thou must obey neither doth this rule let but that seruants or inferiours may vse all humble and lawfull meanes to preuent vnmeet things Secondly thou must be sure it be sinne that thou refusest thou must not disobey vpon conceit or coniecture nor vpon thine owne humour and opinion but it must appeare by the word of God to bee a sinne or else thy coniectures are no ground of disobedience if thou must needs doubt on both sides it is better doubt and obey then doubt and disobey Thirdly when it is apparant to be impious and sinnefull that is required yet thou must looke to the manner of disobedience thou must yeelde thy selfe to obey by suffering yea it is a wretched fault in seruants or inferiours that are vrged to vnlawfull things to refuse with sturdie and insolent and prouoking words or behauiour God frees thee from disobedience in act but he frees thee not from reuerence and from an holy estimation and humble demeanour The vse is for great reproofe of seruants both indiscretion and stubbernes and withall it chargeth masters they must not require their seruants to lie and sweare in their shops onely to please and profit them nor may they make their seruants breake Gods Sabbaths to satisfie their wils Obiect But are they not required to obey in all things Answ They are but before he saith according to the flesh in labour not in sinne and after he saith they must so please men as they feare God too Thus of the prouisoes The forme of their obedience is set downe First negatiuely not with eye-seruice not as men pleasers Secondly affirmatiuely 1. With singlenesse of heart 2. Fearing God 3. Heartily Eye-seruice Some take it thus not with outward seruice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not onely doe the Labour of the body but bring the care prouidence affection of the heart or thus be obedient to your Masters and let not your eye bee onely vpon your Masters but vpon God the great Master of all Masters and men But I thinke the proper meaning of the word is not with eye-seruice that is not onely in the presence of your Masters not onely when their eye is vpon them so that he meets with the wretched faultinesse of such seruants as when their Masters backes are turned neglect their labour fall to loitering or get them out of the doores or which is worse fall to wantonnesse drunkenesse filching smiting of their fellowes and quarrelling these seruants shall haue their portion at the day of Christ Math. 14.48 and if eye-seruice be concondemned what shal become of such seruants as are not good no not so long as their Masters are by them Not as men pleasers Obiect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is it a fault for seruants to please their Masters Answ No it is not for they are commaunded to please in all things Tit. 2.9 But two things are here condemned First so to please men as neuer to care for pleasing God so to attend a corporall seruice as not to care for the sauing health of their soules this is prophannesse Secondly such seruants are here taxed as seeke by all meanes to please their masters but not to profit them such are they that are flattering soothing persons that serue their Masters onely with faire words but else are emptie persons such or rather worse are they that apply themselues to their Masters humors to feed them with tales or praising their ill courses and counsels or executing their sinfull
mindes these seruants are many times the firebrands of contention alienate parents from their children friend from friend and keepe malice on perpetuall foote these are here rebuked But let vs consider further is this such a fault in poore seruants that can pretend many things to be men-pleasers how foule a vice is it in freemen that are in no wants or restraint how hurtfull is it to be a man-pleaser in the Courts of Princes and in the houses of Nobles how detested a vice is it in such as are Magistrates and publike states And is it nought in the Court and Countrey certainely it is much more vile in the Pulpit and in Churchmen and euen the greater they are the worse and more abominable is their soothing and daubing Thus of the negatiue In the affirmatiue are three things and the first is singlenesse of heart In singlenesse of heart Concerning singlenesse of heart I consider it two waies 1. In the generall as it is in Gods seruants 2. In speciall as it is in mens seruants Singlenesse or sinceritie of heart as it is in Gods seruants I consider of in two things 1. In the nature of it 2. In the signes of it Singlenesse of heart may be discerned by the contrarie to which it is opposed 1. As it is opposed to hypocrisie a sincere hearted man is no hypocrite and shewes it three waies Hovv to knovv singlenesse of heart by 6. things to vvhich it is opposed First hee had rather be good then seeme so as in case of almes Rom. 12.8 compared with Math. 6.2 so in the practise of piety he had rather haue grace and sound knowledge then an emptie shew of it Secondly he will serue God at all times as well as at one time it is a note of an hypocrite that he will not pray at all times hee will serue God when he is sicke but not when he is well Iob. 27.7.8.9 So it is vile hypocrisie to come to Church in Lent to heare Sermons but neuer come there or but seldome all the yeere after Thirdly he minds inward secret domesticall holinesse and piety as well as outward open and Church holinesse hee is an hypocrite that kneeles downe when he comes into the Church and neuer praieth in his family at home It is vile hypocrisie and palpable in such men as haue knees of praier when they first come vp into the pulpit and no words of praier when they are risen vp to speake for or to Gods people 2. As it is opposed to fleshly wisedome 1 Cor. 1.12 There is a threefold wisedome of the flesh that batters and keepes out singlenesse and sinceritie of heart 1. The first is a reaching after priuate ends in publike imployments as preaching for gaine 2 Cor. 2.17 2. The second is a cunningnesse in committing or hiding sinne It is sincerity to be wise to doe good and simple concerning euill to be a bungler in acting it and to haue nothing to say in defence of it when it is done Rom. 16.19 3. The third is fraud shifting subtiltie and guilefull and deceitfull dealing in mens course for the things of this life Thus Esau is a wild and cunning man able by reason of his craft and subtiltie to liue in a wildernes but Iaakob is a plaine man a single hearted man he can make no shift to helpe himselfe in earthly things by fraud or craft but is open and plaine in all his dealings for the world but a man of great reach for matters of his soule This is a patterne of true singlenes simplicitie and sinceritie 3. As it is opposed to a double heart opposed I say to a heart and a heart and a double hart is either a wauering heart or a diuided heart men haue a double heart that wauer and are tossed with vncertainties such as are now for God and godlinesse and shortly after for sinne and the flesh now are resolued to leaue such a fault as perswaded it is a fault and by and by they will to it againe as perswaded it is not a fault here is no singlenesse of heart And thus the heart is double in respect of times it is double also as diuided in respect of obiects I instance in two things first in matter of worship the people that came to inhabite Samaria had a diuided heart for they feared the God of the Countrey because of the Lions and they feared the gods of the nations also 2 King 17.33 Such are they that feare Gods threatnings in his word and feare the signes of heauen too Secondly our Sauiour instances in matters of the world The minde which is the eie of the soule cannot be said to be single when it is distracted men cannot serue God and Mammon Math. 6.21.22.23.24 4. As it is opposed to spirituall pride a single heart is an humble heart as Iob sheweth Iob. 9.15.16 and sheweth it selfe in two things First that if God send crosses it will not answer or iustifie it selfe but make supplication and so acknowledge Gods loue as withall it will confesse that God doth iudge them for their corruptions Secondly if the sincere hearted man pray to God and the Lord be pleased to answer him by vnutterable feelings euen by the witnesse of the spirit of adoption yet hee will be so farre from spirituall pride and conceitednesse that fearing before Gods mercies he will be as if he beleeued not that God had heard his voice 5. As opposed to perturbation and disquietnes of the heart arising either from the cloudinesse and muddinesse of the Iudgement not able to discerne things that differ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 1.10 or from the vnrest of the conscience shewed by hourely or frequent checkings 2 Cor. 1.12 or from the infidelity or grudging or distrustfulnesse of the heart Act. 2.46 6. As opposed to offensiuenesse and so the single harted man is neither offensiue by wrongs nor by scandals in respect of wrongs he is innocent as the doue he is no horned beast to pelt and gore others 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Math. 10.16 and in respect of scandals hee is desirous to liue without blame from those that are without or griefe to the faithfull Phil. 2.15 1.10 Out of this may be gathered 12. Signes of a single hearted man the signes or properties of a single or sincere hearted man 1. He had rather be good then seeme to be so 2. He striues to be good in secret at home in heart as well as openly and abroad 3. He serues not God by flashes or fits but is constant and will pray and serue God at all times 4. He is a plaine man without fraud and guile in matters of the world he loues plainnesse and open dealing yet he is not simple for in matters of his soule he is of great reach and forecast and discretion c. 5. He is a bungler in sinne he knowes not the methode of Sathan 6. Hee dotes not vpon the world he can vse it as
them in that cleerenesse we now see them Thirdly willingly to suffer for righteousnesse 2 Thess 1.5 Lastly Ministers should here be informed and prouoked by all meanes possible in season and out of season to exhort perswade beseech men and turne themselues into all formes to preuaile for it is about a kingdome they labour Thus for instruction 2. It serues for reproofe first of such as can be so easily content either to want or lose the meanes the kingdome of God is taken from them Math. 21.43 Secondly of the waiwardnesse of caueling hearers that can neuer be set downe but are still obiecting against this word of doctrine or the estate of Christians these are condemned Math. 11.16 c. Thirdly it is a great terrour to rich men in speciall who are threatned with impossibilitie to enter into this kingdome if they doe not aboue all other men looke to themselues Math. 10.23.24 Fourthly of the discontentments of Gods seruants vnder crosses is there no king in Sion or is it no priuiledge that the first Dominion is come vnto them Mich. 4.9 Fiftly it specially reprooues those wicked persons that professe by their workes they will not haue Christ to raigne ouer them by his word Luk. 19.14.27 Zach. 14.17 woe is vnto them and woe to such as shut vp the kingdome of God before men Math. 23.13 3. For comfort to all Gods seruants Did so great Kings and Prophets desire to see these things we see what is it to enioy such a Kingdome was it a great offer in Herod to offer halfe his kingdome what is it in God to giue a whole Kingdome better then any kingdome on earth yea this comfort is the greater in that such christians whose grace is but like the graine of mustard seede may be possessed of this Kingdome Which haue beene to my consolation Doct. The labours of Gods seruants are a great comfort vnto good men it is a comfort to see Gods worke prosper and besides ioy in the holy Ghost is wrought in their hearts by the power of the word preached Quest What should be the reason Why many hearers haue no more comfort in hearing why many that come constantly to heare Gods seruants yet get not consolation or not the comfort they desire Answ The lets of comfort are either 1. in men or 2. in God In men they are either of frailty without any great sinne or such as arise of sinne The lets of frailtie are specially two 1. Bodily distemper by sicknesse or melancholy but this may be tried thus if they bee dead hearted in all other things aswell as hearing and praier c. 2. Waiwardnesse in the distresse of conscience when the soule refuseth comfort Psal 77.3 The lets of comfort that arise of sinne may be considered two waies first as they are in the worser sort of men Secondly as they are also in the better sort In the worser sort these are the lets First impenitencie Ier. 8.6.8 Secondly peruersnes Ier. 6.10 Thirdly vile affections such as are 1. Worldly griefe or fretting 2. Worldly cares these are thornes 3. Rage and passion Rom. 15.4 4. Lust 2 Tim. 3.6 5. Enuie 1 Pet. 2.12 4. A spirit of slumber Rom. 11.7.8 c. 5. Contrariety or contradiction in opinions Phil. 2.1.2 In the better sort 1. want of preparation plowing must go before sowing Math. 17. Of attention Isa 55.3.4 Of estimation of comfort receiued Iob. 15.11 Of godly sorrow Isa 61.62 2. Preuailing of other ioyes 3. An ouer high expectation 4. Presumptuous sinnes 5. Spirituall satiety and fulnesse when they seeme to haue grace enough and want nothing too like the Laodiceans Reuel 3. Thus in men 2. God doth restraine consolation sometimes for reasons secret to himselfe sometimes for reasons reuealed but not to vs as 1. To teach vs to know that comfort is his gift and to draw vs to looke aboue the meanes 2. To teach vs to liue by faith and not by sense 3. To scourge vnthankfulnesse 4. To compell vs to the vse of other of his ordinances too much neglected Thus of the lets To passe from this point we may here obserue 1. An imitable praise in the Apostle he enuies not the labours of his brethren he is so farre from it that he reioyceth in it 2. We may see that the wisest and greatest men haue need to be comforted of meaner men 3. Here is a reproofe of such workemen as by their labour grieue Gods people and are as thornes and goades in their sides but comfort them they doe not Thus of the salutations of the Iewes The salutations of the three Gentiles follow the first is Epaphras who besides the report of his salutation is described 1. by his office the seruant of Christ 2. By his relation to them who is one of you 3. By his loue to them shewed by striuing in praier for them 4. By his zeale not onely for them but for the two neighbour Churches vers 13. This Epaphras was the Cities preacher among the Colossians he is kept back at Rome for a time that so Tichicus might confirme the doctrine before taught by Epaphras Quest But why is the Apostle so long in speaking of him being so short in the mention of the rest Answ It is the Apostles discretion to honour him before his owne people A seruant of Christ He was a seruant of Christ first as a man and so by the necessitie of creation he must serue Christ whether he would or not 2. As a Christian man and so he serues him willingly and in religious workes 3. As a Preacher of the Gospell and so he serues Christ in a speciall function in the Church Doct. 1. Ministers are Christs seruants whence followes two things first they must doe his workes Secondly they must not be seruants of men Doct. 2 The estate of the Ministers of God is an estate of seruing not of raigning they are not Lords ouer Gods heritage nor must they thinke to be like the Prince of the Nations Doct. 3. It is a great honour to be Christs seruant for all his seruants are freemen and their wages is euerlasting and therefore wee should loue to be his seruants neither should it euer seeme euill vnto vs to doe his worke Besides it is a great comfort to poore Christians though they cannot be Kings and Apostles yet they may be Christs seruants which Kings and Apostles haue accounted their greatest honour Thirdly men must take heed of despising or abusing Ministers seeing they are Christs seruants yea it is not safe to abuse any Christian for that very reason Lastly seeing it is so great a dignitie to serue Christ both Ministers and people must be carefull to performe Christs seruice with obseruation of what Christ requires for the manner or rules of his seruice Ministers must not seeke their owne things Phil. 2.21 they must not bee giuen to wine nor to filthy lucre nor fighters nor couetous not prophane in their families not young schollers not
of Gods ordinances filling more and more by the influence of Christ till it come to be brim-full Hence we may see cause to be greatly humbled because our workes are not full before God Now if any shall thinke this doctrine of fulnesse to bee a doctrine of discouragement he may note these things for remoouall of that obiection 1. That it is a kingdome men labour about and therefore should not think much if much be required of them 2. We may fill spiritually though we do not discerne it 3. God requires not fulnesse at first but by degrees 4. That the Lord hath in many Scriptures promised to help vs against all tentations and impediments whether arising from our owne weakenesse or from without vs. In all the will of God Caietan a Papist makes a stop at all and reads it in euery thing by the will of God and deliuers the sense thus That ye may be consummate in respect of your selues and full in respect of others in euery spirituall thing by the will of God that is not by your owne merits note that but by the grace of Gods will But I thinke it should be read as ordinarily it is read and so I obserue that we should take counsell for the informing of our faith and reforming and perfecting of our liues at the will of God Which serues for great reproofe of the course of the most men who are aduised and guided either by carnall reason or by the lusts and wils of their carnall friends or the lusts and tentations of Satan himselfe l 1 Pet 4.2 Ioh. 8.44 or the inclination of their owne flesh how are worlds of men swayed by these or some of these almost in all matters of religion if reformation and the practise of the sinceritie of the Gospell may not get the consent of their owne carnall reason or of such and such friends c. then it must neuer be gone about But contrariwise we should learne to sticke to Gods will in all things yea we should pray earnestly that we might neuer be beaten from this Anchor hold but that in all estates in prosperitie and aduersitie in life and death we might constantly exalt the glory of Gods will to yeeld it for euer our acknowledgement of soueraignty ouer vs m Psal 40.8.10 Secondly note here that wee must respect all Gods will and thus wee are tyed to respect all the will of God both in respect of knowledge in respect of practise for we should labour to be made rich in all things in all kinde of vtterance and in all knowledge n 1 Cor. 1.5 we should be expert in the word of righteousnesse accustoming our selues continually to exercise our wits about discerning of good or euill out of the word o Heb. 5. vlt. in practise we must haue respect to euery commandement of God and as Dauid did we must labour to doe all Gods will and not bee like Saul or Herod This may serue first for confutation of the Papists that will not allow the will of God to be the onely rule though they grant it to be a perfect rule But let vs detest that subtle distinction and in the simplicitie that is in Christ Iesus acknowledge that there is a will of God for euery opinion and worke of euery man of God sufficient to make him perfect in all knowledge and euery good worke p 2 Tim. 3.16 Againe if this doctrine were soundly vrged thorough euerie commandement it would ransack the hearts of carnal men and then manifestly let them see The arraignment of the ciuill honest man the vanitie of their false and wilde presumption of ciuilitie and Gods liking of them and their honest meanings It is true they dare not say with their tongues there is no God but is there not such talke in their hearts or could they not wish there were no God * Psal 14.1 They worship not Sunne Moone nor Stars but is there in them that warmth of loue to the true God that they can loue him with all their hearts and all their soules q Deut. 6.5 where is that liuely knowledge of God r Io. 17.3 where is that trembling feare of God Å¿ Hab. 3.16 where is that glorying in God t Jer. 9.24 where is that cleauing vnto God u Act. 11.23 doe these men euery day commit their waies and their workes vnto God * Psal 37.5 Pro. 16.3 These men vse to wonder at Hereticks but what formes of God do they conceiue in their heads euery day They will not blaspheme God to his face it is true but will they not murmure from day to day at the worke of his hands x 1 Cor. 10.10 They place no diuinitie in the signes of heauen but will they not feare them neither yet this is condemned as well as the other y Ier. 10.2 It is true popish Images are gone out of their sight in the Churches but are the pictures of the Trinitie gone out of their houses They thinke indeed it is too bad neuer to come to Church or to giue God no worship but do they make conscience of cold seruice of God or luke-warmnes z Reuel 3.15 and continued hypocrisie For may it not be truly said of them their hearts almost neuer come to Church a Esa 29.13 sure their soules will be indited in the day of Christ and conuicted too for obstinate Recusants witchcraft coniuring and charming is naught they say but is going to witches and coniurers and charmers naught too in their opinion b Leuit. 20.6 Esay 8.19.20 To forsweare a mans selfe they hold it somewhat vile if it may be discerned but what conscience make they of swearing in their common talke especially by petty othes and that which is not good c Math. 5.34.37 They dare not curse God but they dare curse the creatures of God by the name or iustice of God they dare not talke directly against God but they dare vse Gods titles without reuerence d Deut. 28.58 They say they know all comes from Gods blessing but doe they daily seeke the sanctification of their callings and the creatures by the word and prayer e 1 Tim. 4.4 Wee all say the Sabbath must be sanctified but who makes it his delight we condemne labour on the Sabbath but where are those Nehemiahs that will restraine this monstrous abuse in the Citie of hyring labourers on the Sabbath Though for many Sabbaths one after another they trauell hither many hundreds of all sorts from all parts round abount and fill the streets almost with tumults on the Lords day from the morning till neere the euening yet none seekes the reformation of this matchlesse abuse or if any would restraine it how are they opposed The Lord giue repentance to those that haue sinned this way and lay not the toleration of this damned abuse to their charge Men say at length it is naught to