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A87554 An exposition of the Epistle of Jude, together with many large and useful deductions. Lately delivered in XL lectures in Christ-Church London, by William Jenkyn, Minister of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The first part. Jenkyn, William, 1613-1685. 1652 (1652) Wing J639; Thomason E695_1; ESTC R37933 518,527 654

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vintage of a judgment he leaves the gleanings of grapes upon the Vine of his Church Hee never shakes his Olive tree so throughly but he leaves at least two or three berries in the top of the uppermost bough four or five in the outmost branches Isa 17.6 Though I make a full end of all Nations whither I have driven thee Jer. 30.11 Jer. 46.28 yet will I not make a full end of thee but correct thee in measure yet will I not leave thee wholly unpunished Let not Israel presume upon mercy if they will sin but yet let them not despair of mercy though they suffer God will not cast off his people Ps 94.14 Though the destruction of his Israel be never so great yet it shall never be totall and should many fall yet all shall not the cause the interest of Christ shall not and though possibly in a wildernesse of common calamities the carcasses of some of his owne may fall among others so as they may never live to enter the Canaan of a longed for peace and reformation in this life yet by faith ascending up to the Nebo of a promise they may behold it afar off and see it possessed by their posterity they themselves mean while repenting of their unbelief and unworthinesse and so entring that heavenly Canaan where they shall enjoy the fulness of that which here they could have enjoyed but in part The third branch of the example of the Israelites is the cause of their destruction viz their infidelity contained in these words That beleeved not EXPLICATION For the Explication whereof two things are considerable 1. In what respect these Israelites are here said not to beleeve 2. Why they were punished for this their not believing rather then for any other sin I. For the first Unbeleevers 1. are frequently in Scripture taken for Pagans and Heathens 1 Tim. 5.8 2 Cor. 6.14 15 1 Cor. 14.23 who are alwayes without the profession of the Faith and oft without the very offer of the Word the means of knowing that Faith which is to be professed and then it s termed an unbelief of pure negation 2. Unbeleevers are said to be such who though they professe the faith and hear and know the word yet deny that credence to it which God requires and their unbeleef called an unbeleef of evill disposition is either a deniall of assent to the truths asserted in the word or of trust and affiance to the promises of good contained in the same and both these are either temporary or totall and perpetuall Into the former sometimes the elect may fall as particularly did those two disciples who by their unbeleef drew from Christ this sharp reproofe Luk. 24.25 Mark 16.11.13.14 O fools and slow of heart to beleeve all that the prophets have written And for this it was that Christ upbraided the eleven when they beleeved not them who had seen him after he was risen Luk. 1.20 And of righteous Zecharie is it said that he beleeved not those words which were to be fulfill'd in their season Into that unbeleef which is totall and habituall Joh. 6.64.65 Joh. 10.25.26 Jo. 12.37.38.39 the reprobabate only fall of whom Christ speaks Ye beleeve not because yee are not of my sheep and afterward the Evangelist They beleeved not nay they could not beleeve because that Isaias said he hath blinded their eyes c. as also Act. 10.9 divers were hardned and beleeved not These abide in unbelief John 3. ult and the wrath of God abideth on them This unbeleef of the Israelites did principally consist in their not yeelding trust and affiance to the gracious and faithful promises made by God to their forefathers and often renewd to themselves of bestowing upon them the land of Canaan for their inheritance Vide Numb Chapters 13. and 14. These promises upon the report of the spies concerning the strength of the Canaanites and their Cities were by the people so far distrusted and deemed so impossible to be fulfilled as that they not only wish'd that they had dyed in Egypt but resolved to make them a Captain to return thither again And probable it is that the unbeleef of the most was perpetnal Certumest complures fuisse pios qui vel communi impietate non fuerunt impliciti vel mox resipuerunt Cal. in Heb. 3.18 but that others even of those who at the first and for a time did distrust the faithfulnesse of Gods promise by the threatnings and punishments denounced against and inflicted upon them repented afterward of their infidelity and so beleeved that God was faithfull in his promise though they by reason of their former unbelief did not actually partake of the benefit thereof However this their sin of distrustfulnesse was their great and capitall sin that sin like the Anakims which they so feared much taller than the rest and which principally was that provocation in the wildernesse spoken of so frequently in the Scripture Heb. 3.8.12 16.18 Psal 95 8. Incredulitas malorum omnium caput Cal. in Heb. 3.18 And hence it is that God explaines this provoking him by not beleeving him How long saith he Numb 14.11 will this people provoke me how long will it be ere they beleeve me and that it was their great stop in the way to Canaan is evident in that the punishment of exclusion from Canaan was immediately upon their unbeleef inflicted upon them as also by the expresse testimony of the Apostle who saith that they could not enter in because of unbelief II. For the second Why they were destroyed rather for their unbelief then for other sins 1. Their unbelief was the root and fountain of all the rest of their sins Heb. 3.12 Jer. 17.5 This evill heart of unbelief made them depart from the living God by their other provocations All sins would be bitter in the acting if we beleeved that they would be bitter in their ending Faith is the shield of every grace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 2.7 8. Acts 15.9 and Unbelief the shield of every sin Faith purifies Unbelief pollutes the heart Vnbeleevers and disobedient are in the Greek expressed by one word Heb. 11.31 What but unbelief was the cause of all those impatient murmurings of the Israelites Had they beleeved a faithfull God Num. 14.27 they would quietly have waited for the accomplishment of his promises Had they believed in him who is Alsufficient they would in the want of all means of supply have look'd upon them as laid up in God The reason why they made such sinfull haste to get flesh was because their unbelieving heart thought that God could not furnish a table in the wildernesse What but their not believing a great and dreadfull Majestie made them so fearlesly rebellious against God and their Governours What but their not believing an All-powerfull God made them to fear the Gyants and walled Cities of Canaan Faith went out and fear and every sin got
in They beleeved God too little and man too much by their unbelief making God as man and man as God Gen. 12.7 13.15 15.18 17.7.8 26.4 Deut. 1.8 Exo. 3.17 and 6.8 2. God had afforded many helps and antidotes against the unbeleef of the Israelites God had given promises first to their Fathers and afterwards to these Israelites their posteritie of his bestowing upon them the land of Canaan for an Inheritance His promises like himself were faithfull and true and impossible it is that he who made them should lie These promises were often repeated to their fore-fathers and themselves and the very land of Canaan is called the Land of Promise Heb. 11.9 1 King 8.56 And afterward Solomon professed There hath not failed one word of all Gods good promise which he promised by the hand of Moses All his promises are yea and Amen The promises of giving to Israel the land of Canaan Gen. 22.16 Gen. 26.3 Psal 105.9 1 Chr. 26.26 Gen. 17.10 God had sundry times confirmed by oath the oath God followed with his seal of Circumcision whereby was confirmed the promise of the earthly and heavenly Canaan To all these God had added the abundant examples of those their holy fore-fathers who openly professed their beleeving of the promise that their Seed should inherit Canaan Heb. 11.9 Act. 7.5 Hence Abraham sojourned contentedly in the land of promise where he had not so much room as to set his foot on without borrowing or buying Hence also he purchased a burying place in that land In terra promissâ sibi emit sepulchrum ut spem suam vel mortuus testaretur Rivet Exerc. 119. in Gen. of which though living he had not possession yet dying nay dead he shewed his expectation How holily solicitous was Jacob and Joseph that their bodies after their deaths should be carried out of Egypt into that Canaan where their hopes and hearts had been while they lived To all these Examples God had given them to prevent unbeliefe their own multiplyed and astostonishing Experiences of his former Power and Love Could not he who by the lifting up of the arms of one Moses destroyed an Armie of Amalekites as easily overthrow the Armies of the Canaanites by the hands of six hundred thousand Israelites Could he who commissionated the very lice and flies to plague Egypt and at whose command are all the hosts of heaven and earth want power to deal with the sons of Anak Could not he who made the weak and unsteady waters of the red Sea to stand up like walls as easily make the strongest walls of the Canaanitish Cities to fall down Psal 78.32.42 But they believed not for his wondrous works they remembred not his hand nor the day when he delivered them from the enemie 3. Their unbelief most of all robb'd God of his though not essentiall yet declarative glory It was a bold sin it rifled his Cabinet and took away his chiefest Jewel Isa 42.8 1 Joh. 5.10 Rom. 4.10 even that which he saith he will not give to another 1. It takes away the glorie of his Truth it no more trusting him then if he were a known Lyer and as we say of such a one No further than we see him It endeavours to make God in that condition of some lost man whose credit is quite gone and whose word none will take now to discredit is to dishonour a man Unbeleevers account it impossible that he should speak true for whom to lye it is impossible After all the promises of giving them Canaan though repeated sworn sealed Israel beleeved not God 2. The Israelites by their unbelief obscured the glory of Gods Goodnesse They did not onely labour to make their miserie greater then Gods Mercy but even his very Mercy to appear Tyranny They often complained that he had brought them into the wilderness to slay them Num. 14.3 Psal 106.24 and they despised that pleasant land which God had promised them yea as some note in regard that the land of Canaan was a type of the heavenly Canaan See M. Perkins on the place they beleeved not that God would bring them to heaven and give them inheritance in that eternall Rest by means of the Messiah So that they rejected at once both the blessings of the foot-stool and the throne the earthly and the heavenly Canaan at the same time 3. Their Unbelief did blemish the glory of his Omnipotency Psal 62.11 They proclaiming by this sin that He to whom power belongs and nothing is too hard who can do all things but what argue impotencie as lying and denying himself who made heaven and earth with a word Isa 40.15 and before whom all the nations of the world are as the drop of the bucket and the small dust of the balance could not crush a few worms nor pull down the height of those Gyants whom by his power he upheld 4. Of all sins the Unbelief of the Israelites most crossed their own Professions They voyced themselves to be and gloryed in being the people of God and they proclaimed it both their dutie and priviledg to take God for their God They sometimes appeared to beleeve him but the unbelief of their hearts gave both God and their own tongues the lye they professed that they beleeved the power of God and remembred that God was their Rock Psal 78.34 35 36 37. but at the news from Canaan they shewed that they beleeved that the Anakims and the walled Cities were stronger They professed that they beleeved the Mercy of God and that the most high God was their Redeemer but at the very supposall of danger they thought that they were brought into the wilderness to be slain They professed that they beleeved the Soveraignty of God They returned and enquired after him and promised obedience to him but upon every proof they shewed themselves but rebells So that by reason of their unbeleef and unstedfastnesse of heart in Gods Covenant they did but flatter God with their mouth and lye unto him with their tongues How hainous a sin is it for Gods professed friends do distrust him How shall a stranger take that mans word whom his most familiar friends yea his own children will not beleeve Thine own Nation said Pilate to Christ have delivered thee unto me Thine own people may heathens say to God wil not trust thee and how should wee 5. Of all the sins of the Israelites unbeliefe was that which properly did reject the mercy by God tendred to them Canaan was by him frequently in his promise offered and though all the sins of the Israelites deserved exclusion from Canaan yet they did not as unbeleef by refusing the offer of it reject the entrance into it As the faith of the Ninivites overthrew a prophesie of judgement Psal 78.32 33 so the unbelief of the Israelites overthrew the promises of mercy The brests of the promises were full of the milk of consolation and
yet these froward children refused to suck and draw them by beleeving and in stead thereof struck and beat them away by unbeleef and rebellion Unbeleef as to the Israelites cut asunder the sinews of the promises so as they could not stir hand or foot to help them and turned the promises into fallacies Heb. 3. ult Num. 20.22 Only unbeleef concluded this people under the necessity of destruction Needs must they perish who cast away the means of recovery What shall be a remedy for him who rejecteth the remedy other sins are sores but unbeleef throwes away the plaister Every sin made Israel obnoxious to destruction but unbeleef made them opposite also to deliverance This sin stopt as it were the spouts and passages of grace Christ * Mark 6.5 Significatur hoc loquendi modo quod incapaces scipsos reddiderint indignósque divinis beneficiis et propensioni animi Christi beneficae impedimentum objecerint non permittunt ut virtutis divinae rivus se in ipsos diffundat Brugens in loc could do no mighty works because of their unbeleef They who beleeve not render themselves incapable of blessings and lay rubs in the way of mercy binding the hands of God lest he should help them Other sins lay persons as it were in the grave this of unbeleef lays the grave stone upon them and makes them rot therein Upon them wrath abides Joh. 3.18 OBSERVATIONS 1. Observat 1. Difficulties soon discover an unbeleeving heart Many seemingly beleeving Israelites upon the news of the Anakims and the walled Cities beleeved not Jorams profane pursuivant discovered his temper when he said This evill is of the Lord why then should I wait upon the Lord any longer 2 King 6.33 Saul appear'd to depend upon God and sought to him in his troubles but when God seemed to neglect him and gave him no answer then left he God and sought to a sorceresse Rotten fruit wil not hang upon the tree in a windy day A shallow a highway-plash of water will soon be dryed up in a scorching sunshine One who is only a beleever by a shallow outside profession will soon leave beleeving and professing 2 Chro. 32.31 Deut. 8.2 13.3 For a while he will beleeve but in time of persecution he falls away Wisely therefore doth God seem somtime to disregard and reject his own children to try the sincerity of their confidence in him and whether they will cease to depend upon him because he seemeth not to provide for them Nec iratumcolere destitit numen Virtus fidei credere quod non vides merces fidei videre quod credis Aug. in Ps 109. They who depend upon God continually depend upon him truly God makes it appear to all the world that his people serve not him to serve their own turn upon him and that they are neither hirelings nor changelings It is the efficacy of faith to beleeve what we see not and the reward of faith to see what we beleeve How improvident are those meer professours and appearing Israelites who please themselves with shews of beleeving and cleaving to God their paint will not endure the washing nor their refuge of lies keep out the storme when sufferings death or judgment approach their confidences will be rejected Christians labour for a faith unfained yea both true and strong there may come times that will require it 2. In vain do they who live in unbeleef Observat 2. pretend against their other sins So long as that lives no sin will dye notwithstanding instructions or corrections Sin may be brought to the place of Execution but it will not die so long as unbelief brings it a protection and while it is back'd by this it will but laugh at all the means used to mortifie it As faith quencheth the fiery darts of the divel so will unbeleef quench the holy darts of the Spirit The sin which is armed with it will not be wounded by the sword of the word but wil save its skin much more its heart till faith set it naked to the stroaks of that sword Our neglect of and coldnesse in holy duties comes from our not beleeving a benefit that will bear the charges of fervency and frequency in performing them Unbelief clips the wings of prayer that it cannot ascend and turns much praying into much speaking Whence is all our trouble and impacience in adversity but from want of that grace which comforts the heart in God and makes us quietly to rest and trust on and in him Whence are those base indirect courses to get a living by lying deceiving c. to be made rich by a worse than the king of Sodome but from the not beleeving God to be an alsufficient portion that he will never leave or forsake us c From what but unbelief proceed all the temporizings haltings and sinfull neutralities In tentations to all these faith is our victory and unbelief our defeat which makes men unworthily to render themselves prisoners to every promise and threat causing them either to have two hearts with the hypocrite or no heart with the coward They who have little faith have much fear and they who have no faith Jer. 17.5 will be all fear even slain and not by the sword Whence proceeds all our carnall confidence and trusting in an arme of flesh but from this sin which makes the heart depart from the Lord. Peccatum furti homicidii sunt peccata carnis et facilè intelliguntur in parte superiore animâ scilicet intellectu sed ipsa anima suum incomparabiliter majus vitium et trabem in oculo suo non sentit sed festucam corporis facilè videt Luth. Trabenses judicant festucenses Id. Whence come the unbrotherly breaches and divisions among brethren but from the distance which by unbeleef is between God and us Christians being like lines which come the nearer to one another as they come nearer to the Center Unbelief lies at the bottom of all these sins And all mortification of sin which comes not from a principle of affiance in God through Christ is imaginary How short sighted are they into their misery who are troubled for their scandalous sins of drunkennesse adultery murther c. but neither observe nor sorrow for their unbelief the mother sin the main sin the nursery of all sins The soul saith Luther is an hypocrite that sees a mote in the eye of the flesh but not a beame in its own eye namely infidelity which is incomparably greater than all sins committed by the body 3. Great is our forwardnesse to fall into the sin of unbeleef Observat 3. God seemed to study the prevention of this sin among the Israelites but it broke the barrs that he put in the way to stop it Covenants Oaths Miracles Plagues were all as easily snapt in sunder by this sin as were the Cords by Samson Even Christ himself marvelled at the strength thereof in opposing the
never stirreth from its place having no props or shores to uphold it but the bare word of God alone Cum rogo te nummes fine pignore non habeo inquis Idem si pro me spondet agellus habes Quòd mihi non credis veteri fidóque sodali Credis coliculis arboribúsque meis Mart. Ep. 25. l. 12. Fides non habet meritum ubi ratio humana praebet experimentum Gregin Evang. God must be trusted upon his promise without a pawn An usurer will trust a beggar a lyar a bankrout for his pledg And shall we beleeve God no further this is not at all to trust him but his security It is a lame faith that cannot go without crutches He that cannot stand when his stilts are taken away was held up by them not by his legges He whose faith keeps not up when outward comforts are removed stood not upon the promise but upon earthly props The faith which Christ commends is that which beleeveth much and sees nothing Blessed saith Christ are they who have not seen and yet have beleeved This was the Commendation of Abrahams and Stevens faith Romans 4.18 19 20. Act. 7.5 Such a faith quiets the heart most in testimony of its own sincerity and against expectation of any threatned and in the sustaining of any incumbent difficulties Oh how sweet a life leads that Christian who doth all by another who gets the blessing without hunting and whose only work is to sit still and trust God and like Josephs Master to leave all in the hand of another to have all its comforts compendiously from one object and not to take a wearysome circuit about the whole world for contentment to sit at his fathers table and not to begg for food from door to door And such a faith honours God as much as it quiets the soul It proclaimes that God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be beleeved for himselfe it desires not that the creature should be bound for God though he seem never so backward to performe his promise and accounts it self as rich in respect of what it hath in hope as what it hath in hand Yea in the enjoyment of comforts it placeth its trust only in God and if God doth not withdraw created props from it yet it will withdraw its confidence from them using them indeed in thank fulnesse to the giver not trusting them in stead of the giver O noble glorious life of beleeving to draw our comforts thus out of the bosome of God himselfe not to be beholding to the dunghill for our delights not to live with worldly men upon mud and corruption but upon the pure and heavenly breathings of the spirit in the promise A life emulating that of the Angels for though indeed beleevers use the world feed and sleep marry and are given in marriage yet they only enjoy God and their better part is wholly sollaced with him that shall suffice them in glory 7. Observat 7. It should be our principall care to get beleeving hearts Even such an holy affiance in the promises as may shelter from that destruction which befell these unbeleeving Israelites To this end 1. Truly and upon the terms of the Gospel wholly and solely accept of him who is the Mediatour of the Covenant and through whom alone every promise in it is made good to the soul and is yea and amen 2 Cor. 1.20 Out of Christ promises are but meer speculations nor can we unlesse united to him by faith challenge any blessing by vertue of a promise A Christlesse person receives blessings as one that finds a piece of silver accidentally in the streets and not as a man who receives a sum of mony due upon covenant 2. In relation to the promises to be beleeved which are the element wherein faith lives 1. Find them out and lay them ready find out a promise sutable to every exigency of thy condition How can a man claim mony upon a covenant who knows not where that distinct bond is laid upon which he is to demand it Go to the severall promises for the supply of thy severall wants Mark what promises God hath made for pardon grace direction protection provision and ever make choice of some one or two of every kind which thou maist run to with speed A Christian should do in this case with the promises as one which is given to fainting fits who carries his aqua-vitae bottle alwayes about him and sets it constantly at his beds head that it may be at hand 2. Ponder the promises Go aside separate thy selfe suck and hide their sweetnesse dwell upon them Dive in thy meditations into their freenesse Consider that promise hath made God a debtor and freegrace made him a promiser Into their fulnesse there being enough to relieve the largest capacity and gretest necessity they having more oyl then thou hast vessels even enough to be revealed from faith to faith Rom. 17. Into their stability they being bottomed upon Truth and Strength it selfe the strength of Israel who cannot lie as sure as Gods owne essence which is pawned by an oath for their accomplishment for he swears by himselfe they being further confirmed by the death of him who hath bequeath'd all the benefits of the promises by his will and testament in which respect they are the sure mercies of David 3. Be convinced by the promises to see the whole heart and meaning of God in them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 11.1 significat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 convincere causam aliquam eò deducere ut objici aut praetexi nihil amplius queat Hyper. and to be under the authority and evidence of them Faith is an evidence conviction or a convincing demonstration Laban when he saw how matters stood between the servants message and the affection of Rebeccah said The thing proceedeth from the Lord we cannot speak bad or good Gen. 24.50 The Lord having brought thee under the condition of the promise and since thou canst not deny but that the promise hath a stable foundation say Lord I must needs yeeld I am unable to gainsay thee I confesse my selfe overcome 4. Consent cleave to clasp about the promises Isai 1.9 as the ivie about the oak roul thy soul and rely upon it concur with it and bee carryed down the stream of it against the motion of thine own rebelling heart As Rebeccah convinced that the marriage was from God being call'd to speak answered I will go 5. Plead the promises In tentation and sense of unworthinesse strong unlikelyhood of making them good may be represented to thee but even then cling to them closely The woman of Canaan would not be put off by silence and vilifying termes she was call'd a dog yet shee held close to the word that Christ was the Son of David happy she that in this she was like a dog namely in that shee would not be beaten off 2 Chron. 20.9 Thus Jehoshaphat pleaded with
Christian of strong grace that can bear the strong wine of his commendations without the spiritual intoxication of pride It s as hard humbly to hear thy self praised as it is patiently to hear thy selfe reproached That Minister of whom I have heard was a rare example of humility who being highly applauded for a sermon preach'd in the Vniversity was by a narrow observer found weeping in his study presently after for fear that he had sought or his auditors unduly bestowed upon him applause Lutb pref in Gen. Ridiculum est si anxius es quomodo honoraretur homo nondum creatus tu es nihil Nieremb de ador in spir How heavenly was the temper of John the Baptist when he said Christ shall increase but I shall decrease It was a good fear of Luther namely lest the reading of his books should hinder people from reading the Scriptures Would wee account our selves nothing and indeed in our selves we are so we should think it as ridiculous a thing to be solicitous for our own as for that mans honour who is not yet created 5. The better the persons are who become wicked Observ 5 the more obstinate they are in wickednesse When angels fal into sin they continue in it with pertinacy the hottest water cooled becoms the coldest They whose light of knowledg is most angelicall sin with highest resolution and strongest opposition against the truth The greater the weight of that thing is which falls the more violent is its fall and the greater is the difficulty to raise it up again They who leave God notwithstanding their clear light are justly left by God to incurable darknesse None should so much tremble at sin as those who are inlightned obstinacy is most like to follow their impiety It may be impossible to recover them Seducers saith the Apostle wax worse and worse and do not only shew themselves men in erring but divels in persevering But of this before Ver. 4. 6. The happinesse of beleevers by Christ Observ 6. Est in nobis per hanc Dei gratiam in bono recipiendo perseveranter tenendo non solum posse quod volumus verum etiam velle quod possumus Aug. de cor gra c. 11. 1 Pet. 1.5 1 Pet. ult 10. is greater than that of Angels meerly as in the state of nature These had a power to stand or fall we by Christ have a power whereby we shall stand and never fall By creation the creature had a power either to abide with God or to depart from him But by Regeneration that fear of God is put into the hearts of his people whereby they shall not depart from God Jer. 32.40 And this power of not falling is in them indeed but not from them The faithfull are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation They are stablish'd setled strengthned Created will hath a power to will to presevere in that which is good Prima gratia data primo Adamo est quâ fit ut habeat homo justitiam si velit sed gratia potentiae est in secundo Adamo quâ fit ut velit tantóque ardore diligat ut carnis voluntatem contraria concupiscentem voluntate spiritus vincat August de Cor. gra c. 12. but it hath not the will it selfe to presevere neither the act of preseverance as the regenerate will hath Of this before p. 64 65. 83 84 85 c. 72 73. Thus far of the sift part of this verse viz. the defection of these angels The second followes namely their punishment and herein first that of the prison is considerable which is twofold 1. Everlasting chains 2. Darknesse EXPLICATION For the first Everlasting chains It may here be inquired 1. What we are to understand by these chains 2. How and why these chains are everlasting 1. What is meant by chains The word in the Originall is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in bonds which bonds are not to be taken literally for those materiall instruments or bonds whereby things are bound that they may stand firm and steddy or persons are hindred from acting what they would or drawn whither they would not but metaphorically as are also those chains into which Peter saith these fain angels were delivered for that condition 2 Pet. 2.4 of punishment and woe wherein they shall remain like prisoners in bonds Certus inclusos tenet locus nocentes utque fert fama impios supplicia vinclis saeva perpetuis domant Senec. in Herc. Fur. The Metaphor being taken from the estate of malefactors who in prison are bound with chains to hinder them from running away that so they may be kept to the time of judgement and execution or who by the Mittimus of a Justicer are sent to the Gaol there to lie in chains till the Sessions And thus these angels are kept in chains or bonds of three sorts 1. They are in the chain of sin bound by the bond of iniquity as the phrase is * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 8.23 and Prov. 5.22 the wicked are said to be holden with the cords of their sins and deservedly may sins be called bonds or chains they both holding sinners so strongly as that without an omnipotent strength they can never be loosed as also being such prison-bonds as goe before their appearing at the bar of the last and dreadfull Judgement The bonds of sin wherein wicked men are held are often by the goodnesse and power of God loosed but the bonds of sin wherein wicked angels are held shall be everlasting there is and ever shall be a total inability in those cursed creatures to stir hand or foot in any wel-doing they are in arctâ custodiâ Non dicit Apostolus peccavit ab initio sed peccat nam ex quo diabolus peccare coepit nunquam peccare definit Bed A peccatis nunquam feriatur quia sicut non dormitabit neque dormiet qui custodit Israel it a nunquam dormitat neque dormit qui impugnat Israel Est in 1 John 3.8 Vid. Jun. in Jud. Non voluntatis confessio sed necessitatis extorsio Hier. close prisoners in these chains of iniquity stak'd down wedg'd wedded to sin chained as it were to a block hence it is said 1 John 3.8 that the divell sinneth from the beginning whereby may be noted not only how early he began but also how constantly he poceedeth in sin for as Bede well observes it is not said he sinned but he sinneth from the beginning to note saith he that since he began he never ceased to sin he keeps no holy dayes makes no cessation from pride and other impieties and as he sleeps not who keeps so neither doth he who opposeth Israel he walketh about seeking c. 1 Pet. 5.8 to this purpose our Saviour saith John 8.44 that the divell hath no truth in him to note his utter impotency saith Junius to any thing of goodnesse and integrity and when he speaks a lie he
AN EXPOSITION Of the EPISTLE of St JUDE Together With many large and useful DEDUCTIONS LATELY Delivered in XL LECTURES In Christ-Church LONDON BY WILLIAM JENKYN Minister of the Gospel of JESUS CHRIST The FIRST PART but not printed as it was p … thed 1 TIM 4.1 Now the Spirit speaketh expresly that in the later times some shall depart from the faith TIT. 1.9 Holding fast the faithfull word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epiph. adv Haer. l. 1. Tom. 2. haer 25. p. mihi 92 London Printed by Th. Maxey for SAMUEL GELLIBRAND at the golden BALL in Pauls Church-yard 1653. To the Right Worshipfull and other my Beloved and Christian Friends Inhabitants in the Parish of CHRIST-CHURCH LONDON THE Souls of men may as certainly be destroyed by poysoning as starving If Satan cannot hinder from some kind of tasting and receiving the grace of the Gospel he often perverts it poysonfully by making men to turn it into lasciviousnesse and even by freedome from sin to allow themselves in sinning freely The Seducers crept into the Church in Jude's time under pretence of Christian Liberty introduced unchristian Libertinism No cheaper stuffe then Grace would serve their turns wherewith to cloath lasciviousnesse and no other Patron then the Lord Christ himselfe to protect their impieties Whether they were the Disciples of Simon Magus or Nicolaitans or Gnosticks as Epiphanius thinks I much enquire not sure I am they were of the Synagogue of Satan he was both their Father and Master whom they resembled and whose works they did In this Epistle the Apostle Jude not only with Holy zeal opposeth them himself but sounds a Trumpet for the rousing up the Christians upon whose Quarters these Seducers had fallen to surprise their Treasure the Doctrine of Faith earnestly to contend for the preservation of so precious a Depositum once and once for all delivered to their keeping The Arguments used by the Apostle are Cogent his Directions Prudent and probable it is that his Pains were in some degree Successfull I know no Spiritually skilfull Observer but apprehends too great a Resemblance between the faces of those and our times Sins in our dayes are not only committed under the enjoyment but in pretence by the encouragement of grace men who now dare not sin are by some derided as ignorant of their Christian liberty and evident it is that many live as if being delivered from the fear of their enemies they were delivered from the fear and service of their Deliverer and as if the Blood of the Passeover were not intended by God to be sprinkled upon the door posts to save them but upon the threshould of the door for them to trample upon Beloved friends if God hath appointed that you should resemble these Christians to whom Jude wrote in the danger of your times it s your duty to imbrace the directions delivered to these Christians for your defence from those dangers A gracious heart considers not how bitter but how true not how smart but how seasonable any truth is My aime in the publishing these Lectures is to advance holinesse and so far as I could do it with following the mind of the Apostle to oppose those sins which if people hate not most are like to hurt them most and to advance those duties with which if people be not most in love yet in which they are most defective and thereby most indangered And now again I beseech you that I may testifie my unfayned affection as well by my Epipistle as my Book labour to keep close to God in a loose age spend not your time in complaining of the licentiousnesse of the times in the mean while setting up a toleration in your own Hearts and Lives That private Christian who doth not labour to oppose prophancnesse with a river of tears would never if he could bear it down with a stream of power Lay the foundation of Mortification deep Reserve no lust from the stroke of Jesus Christ Take heed of pleasing your selves in a bare formall profession Labour to be rooted in Christ He who is but a visible Christian may in a short time cease to be so much as visible He who speaks of Christ but notionally may in time be won to speak against him Love not the world Beware of scandals take them not where they are make them not where they are not the common sin of our times to black Religion and then to fear and hate it Despise not the providences of God in the world they are signs of Gods mind though not of his love Delight in the publick Ordinances and highly esteem of faithfull Ministers they and Religion are commonly blasted together Shun Seducers sit down under a Minister as well as under a Preacher He who will hear everyone may at length be brought to hear none and he who will hear him preach who ought not may soon be left to learn that which he ought not Preserve a tender conscience Every step you take fear a snare Read your own hearts in the wickednesse of others Be not slight in Closet-services and oft think of God in your shops for there you think you have least leasure but sure you have most need to do so Let your speech be alway with grace and a word or two of Christ in every company if it may be and yet not out of form but feeling These Lectures here presented might sooner have seen the light had I not lately met with such hinderances sufficiently known as I once expected should have stopp'd them altogether The main of this imployment hath lien upon me since that time which considering my many other Imployments you know hath not been long though otherwise long enough to have performed this work much more exactly I here present you though not with half of the Epistle yet with more then the one half of that which upon the whole I preach'd I have not knowingly left out any passages delivered in the Pulpit The other part I promise in the same Volume with this so soon as God gives strength more leisure if this find acceptance with the Church of God And now Brethren I commend you to God and to the word of his grace which is able to build you up and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified Resting Your Servant in the Work of Christ WIL. JENKYN ERRATA PAge 8. line 11. for four read three p. 29. l. 27. for going to him for r. we feel its p. 44. l. 15. for them r. it p. 119. l. 32. for feast r. food p. 121. marg r. differenter p. 123. l. 19 for lover r. love p. 128. l. 5. r. saith the soul p. 152. marg r. beneficentia and under it Nieremb p. 164. l. 9. for may r. might p. 202. marg r. omnes p. 212. l. 8. for explication r. exhortation p. 228. l. 12. r. intrusted p. 234. l. 30. r. invincible p. 266. l. 12. r. opinions marg r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
discover our misery and deformity by reason of unholinesse as also to discover the beauty of holinesse and the happiness laid up for holy ones bestowing also upon it an inclining power to bow us to the imbracing and obeing of his holy will the pattern of all holiness 2. From God we have our sanctification not by traduction from our parents Grace is not of an equall extent to Nature Grace is not native but donative not by generation but by regeneration it s from the Father of spirits not fathers of our flesh Who can bring a clean thing out of filthinesse The new birth is not of blood nor the will of the flesh nor of man Joh. 1.13 The purest seed-corn brings forth the stalk the husk and chaff and the holiest men have a posterity with a nature covered over with corruption 4. God sanctifies so as the first infusion of the habit of Grace is without the active concurrence of any abilities of our corrupted nature to the acquiring of grace in the heart the plantation of grace in us being purely supernaturall Gods manner of working is altogether divine beyond the power and without the help of any thing in man only he being a rationall creature is a subject capable of grace and therby in the work of sanctification hath a passive concurrence for of our selves we are not sufficient to think a good thought but our sufficiency is of God He worketh in us both to will and to do We are dead in trespasses and sins c. New begotten new created c. Grace is an habituall quality meerly infused by divine vertue not issuing out of any inward force of humane abilities howsoever strained up to the highest pitch of their naturall perfection All civility sweetness of nature ingenuity of education learning good company restraint by laws with all moral Vertues with their joynt force cannot quicken our souls to the least true motion of a spirituall life 5. God sanctifies so as that in the practice of sanctification man doth actually concurr with God for being sanctified and inwardly enabled in his faculties by spirituall life put into them he moves himself in his actions of grace although even in these actions he cannot work alone he being onely a fellow-worker with the Spirit of God not in equality but in subordination to him Neverthelesse though these actions be performed by the speciall assistance of the Spirit yet in regard man is the next agent they are properly said to be mans actions 2. God the Father sanctifies And yet Eph. 5.26 1 Cor. 1.30 Christ is said to sanctifie and to be Sanctification and most frequently the holy Ghost is said to sanctifie Gal. 5.22 Ephes 5.9 Gal. 5.17 Grace being called the fruits of the spirit the whole work of Sanctification stiled by the name of spirit and the Scripture expresly speaks us sanctified by the Spirit and the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of Sanctification Yet when the Scripture saith we are sanctified by God the Father it doth not contradict it self For the explication whereof I shall briefly set down this Distinction and these Conclusions All the Attributes of God are either 1. Essentiall Dist which are the very divine Essence and pertaining to the very nature of God as to be a Spirit omniscient eternall true good powerful mercifull c. Or 2. Relative And that either 1. Inwardly to the Persons within themselves as for the Father to beget the Son to be begotten the holy Ghost to proceed from Father and Son Or 2. Outwardly And that either 1. to the creatures as to create sustain c. or 2. to the Church as to redeem and sanctifie c. The Attributes that appertain to the Nature or Essence of God are common to the three Persons as to be a Spirit Concl. 1. omniscient eternall c. The Attributes or properties that inwardly belong to the Persons among themselves Concl. 2. are peculiar and proper to each of them both in regard of order of being and working The Father hath his being from Himself alone the Son hath his being from the Father alone the holy Ghosi hath his being from them both The Father alone begetteth the Son is alone begotten the holy Ghost doth proceed from the Father and the Son All works externall Concl. 3. and in reference to the creatures as to create to govern to redeem to sanctifie c. are in respect of the things wrought equally common to the three Persons of the Trinity who as they are all one in Nature and Will so must they be in operation all of them working one and the same thing together John 5.17 19. Most true is that of Christ Whatsoever things the Father doth these also doth the Son the like may be said of the holy Ghost so that we are sanctified by Father Son and holy Ghost there being the same power and will of all three and in works externall and in respect of the creature when onely one Person or two are named the whole Trinity is to be understood Though the works of three Persons toward the creature Concl. 4. world or Church in regard of the thing wrought are common to all the three yet in respect of the manner of working there is distinction of Persons that work for the Father works through the Son by the holy Ghost The Father works from none the Son from the Father the holy Ghost from both Joh. 5.19 8.28 16.13 there being the same order of working in the Trinity that there is of existing the Father works by the Son and the holy Ghost sending them and not sent by them the Son works by the holy Ghost sending him from the Father into the hearts of beleevers and is not sent by him but by the Eather the holy Ghost works and is sent from the Father and the Son not from himself The works therfore of the Trinity are considerable either absolutely or in regard of the works wrought and so they are the works of the whole Trinity in common Or relatively when we consider in what order the Persons work which Person works immediately which by another And so the Persons are distinguish'd in their works This considered Jude in ascribing Sanctification to God the Father is easily reconciled to those that ascribe it to God the holy Ghost and the Son these last named persons being by Jude included in the working of sanctification and only the order of working of the blessed Trinity noted The Father sanctifying through the Son by the holy Ghost the Father sanctifying by sending the Son to merit and giving his Spirit to work the Son by meriting the holy Ghost by working our sanctification and immediately sanctifying us in which respect he hath the title of holy and Sanctification most commonly exprest as his work This for the Explication of the second particular in the first priviledge of the faithfull to whom Jude wrote viz. The Author of their sanctification
God the Father Secondly the Observations follow 1. Even our holinesse administers matter of humility Obs 1. Our very graces should humble us as well as our sins as these later because they are ours so the former because they are none of ours Sanctity is adventitious to Nature Heretofore holinesse was naturall and sin was accidentall now sin is naturall and holinesse accidentall when God made any of us his garden he took us out of Satans waste ws are not born Saints the best before sanctification are bad and by nature not differing from the worst the members that God accepts to be weapons of righteousnesse were before blunted in Satans service when God sanctifieth us he melteth idols and makes of them vessels for his own use Before any becomes as an Israelites wife he is as a captive unpared unwash'd unshaven Sanctification is a great blessing but was this web woven out of thine own bowels the best thou didst bring to thine own sanctification was a passive receptivenesse of it which the very worst of heathens partake of in common with thee having a humane nature a rationall soul and was there not with that a corrupt principle of opposition to God and all the workings of God was not God long striving with a cross-grain'd heart how many denyals had God before he did win thee to himself How far was the iron gate of thy heart from opening of its own accord and if he had not wrought like a God omnipotently and with the same power wherewith Christ was raised Eph. 1.19 20. had thy resistence been ever subdued and when the being of grace was bestowed from whence had thy grace at any time its acting Didst thou ever write one letter without Gods guiding thy hand didst thou ever shed one penitentiall tear till God unstop'd thy spouts smote thy rock and melted thy heart didst thou hunger after Christ till God who gave the food gave the stomack also Was ever tentation resisted grace quickned corruption mortified holy resolution strengthened power either to do or will received from any but from God Doth not every grace the whole frame of sanctification depend upon God as the stream on the fountain the beam on the Sun when he withdraws his influence how dead is thy heart in every holy performance onely when he speaks the word effectually bidding thee go thou goest and do this or that thou dost it 2. Obs 2. The reason why all graces of a sanctified person are for God they are from him Gods bounty is their fountain and Gods glory must be their center He planted the Vineyard and therefore he must drink the wine We are his wormanship and therefore we must be his workmen All our pleasant fruits must be laid up and out for our well-beloved All things but particularly our graces are from him and for him we can never give him more or other then his own when we give all we can The streames will rise as high as the fountain head and so should our graces ascend as high in duty as he who gave them Where should God have service if a sanctified person denyes it 3. Obs 3. From this Author of Sanctification I note t s excellency and worth It s a rare work certainly that hath such a workman a beauteous structure that hath such a builder What is a man to be desired for but his sanctification if we see a beauty on that body which hath a soul how much more on that soul that hath the reflexion of God himself upon it Every Saint is a woodden casket fill'd with pearls The Kings daughter is all glorius within Love Jesus Christ in his worky-day clothes admire him in his Saints though they be black yet they are comely Did the people of God but contemplate one anothers graces could there be that reproaching scorn and contempt cast upon one another that there is Certainly their ignorance of their true excellency makes them enemies they strike one another in the dark 4. Obs 4. Great must be the love that God bears to Sanctification It s a work of his own framing a gift of his own bestowing God saw that the work of the first creation was very good much more that of the second Wonder no more that the faithfull are call'd his garden his Jewels his Treasure his Temple his Portion God hath two heavens and the sanctified soul is the lesser How doth he accept of Saints even in their imperfections delight in their performances pity them in their troubles take care of them in dangers He that hath given his Son for them promised heaven to them and sent his Spirit into them what can he deny them Jesus Christ never admired any thing but grace when he was upon the earth the buildings of the Temple he contemned in comparison of the faith of a poor trembling woman Certainly the people of God should not sleight those graces in themselves that God doth so value as they do when they acknowledge not the holinesse that God hath bestowed upon them Shall they make orts of those delicates that Jesus Christ accounts an excellent banquet 5. The love of God is expressive Obs 5. really and effectually in us and upon us even in sanctifying us Creatures when they love will not put off one another with bare words of bidding be clothed sed c. much lesse doth God If there be love in his heart there will be bounty in his hand Thou sayst that God is mercifull and loves thee why what did he ever do for thee work in thee hath he changed thy nature mortified thy lusts beautified thy heart with holinesse Where God loves be affords love-tokens and such are onely his soul-enriching graces No man knows love or hatred by what he sees before him but by what he findes in him If our heart moves toward God certainly his goeth out toward us the shadow upon the Dyall moves according to the motion of the Sun in the Heaven 6. Obs 6. We are to repair in our wants of Sanctification to God for supply He is the God of grace The Lord will give grace and glory He hath the key of the womb the grave the heavens but chiefly of the heart He that sitteth in heaven can onely teach and touch the heart How feeble a thing and unable is man whether thy self or the Minister to do this He hath the windes in his own keeping and till he send them out of his treasury how necessarily must thy soul lye wind-bound Whither shouldst thou goe but to him and how canst thou go but by him The means of grace are to be used in obedience to him Parum prodest Lectio quam non illuminat Oratio not in dependancy upon them A golden key cannot open without him and a woodden can open with him Man may with the Prophets servant lay the staff upon the fore-head but God must give life How many fat and rich Ordinances have been
Aug. ser 16. de verb. Ap. that we are called not according to works we are not called because of our good works but because we are called therfore are our works good When Abraham was call'd he worship'd other Gods Josh 24.2 Paul was called when he breathed out threatnings and slaughter against the Church Act. 9.1 Gal. 1.13 Rich Zacheus when an extortioner nothing better by nature then the rich glutton in hell God calls those to his kingdom that are with Saul seeking of asses and running after worldly trifles Such were some of you saith Paul fornicators idolaters c. but yee are washed yee are sanctified c. 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. Elijah and Elisha walk'd together before the fiery chariot separated them then one was taken up into heaven and the other left upon the earth so till effectuall vocation makes the difference there 's no differrence 'twixt persons but they all run to the same excesse of riot 2. Persons effectually called considered in respect of God are they and onely they who are elected this eternall decree and purpose of God being the foundation of election Whom he hath predestinated them also hath he called Rom. 8.30 And As many as were ordained to eternal life beleeved Acts 13.48 and God hath called us with an holy calling not according to works but according to his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Jesus before the foundation of the world 2 Tim. 1.9 This purpose of God made the difference 'twixt Esau and Jacob Moses and Balaam David and Saul Jude and Judas 3. The third couple or pair of parallels 'twixt mans calling man and Gods calling man is the Voice of the Caller and the Answer of the Called 1. The Voyce the Lord makes use of is the Ministry of his word it being the ordinary means appointed by God as the Spirit accompanyeth it for this purpose in the preaching whereof the Law of God first convinceth of the sinfull distance we are in from God Rom. 7. manifesteth our misery by reason of sin and so tames a wild sinner that now he will stand still while God speaks to him although of late he was like the wilde Asse Jer. 2.24 snuffing up the winde the terrible convictions and consternations of the Law are not to commend us to God but God to us not deserving grace but preparing for it though that preparation be also from God nor are they alike in every one God comes to some as on mount Sina in thunder and lightning to others more stilly and sweetly yet to all in a way of conviction of sin and losse in themselves Joh. 16.8 remaining in this condition of distance from God To old sinners who have long liv'd in sin God makes conversion more painful as they say the pains of child-bearing are to women who are more then ordinary in yeers and they who have been famous for pleasure in sin are commonly made famous by their greater apprehensions of wrath for sins men of deep insight and perspicuity see sin more in its colours then those of duller capacity Those whom God intends most to comfort afterwards he often deals most sharply with at first as the ball which riseth highest is thrown against the ground hardest or as Land-lords that take a great fine of those from whom they are to receive but little rent How-ever the terrifyings of the Law are not intended to kill John 15.3 2 Thes 2.14 Rom. 1.16 John 1.13 and 3.6 1 Pet. 1.23 2 Pet. 1.4 but to prepare for curing him whom God is calling the wounds made by the Law but making way for the oyl of the Gospel the blood of Jesus Christ This Gospel inviting the poor soul to Jesus Christ is as it is actuated and used by the Spirit the power of God an efficacious organ a spirituall channel for the conveying grace into the soul it is the seed cast into the womb of the soul and blessed by the forming power of the Spirit for the begetting of grace in it imprinting the image of Chrst and bestowing the divine Nature upon it we being his workmanship by this through him efficacious instrument the Gospel 2. The Answering to the call stands in the effectualness and prevalency thereof in making the called obedient to the Caller's voice when the heart is so prevailed with that it s made what it 's invited to be Rom. 4.17 inabled to do what 't is exhorted to when the law is written in the heart which is cast into divine Doctrine Rom. 6.17 2 Cor. 3.18 as into a mould and comes forth bearing the stamp and figure of it when beholding the glory of the Lord in the glasse of the Gospel we are changed into the same image from glory to glory when the heart ecchoeth to that voice Psal 27.8 Seek my face thus Thy face Lord will I seek when the Gospel comes not onely in word 1 Thes 1.4 5. Psal 40.7 Acts 16.14 Ezck. 11.19 Jer. 31.33 and 32.39 Deut. 30.6 John 5.28 but in power and the holy Ghost and much assurance when the ear is bored the heart opened the heart of stone the uncircumcised heart taken away and the heart of flesh the circumcised heart is bestowed In a word God speaks to the dead heart which is made to hear his voyce and live being now inclined to embrace that will of God to which it was refractory against which it rebelled formerly being now made soft plyable receptive yeelding bowed and obedient This for the explication of the third Priviledge belonging to the faithfull viz. Calling The Observations follow * 1. They are mistaken who teach Obs 1. Joh. Arnold cont Til. pag. 397. That the reason of Gods calling of some rather than others by his Gospel is in regard of the greater worthiness of some to partake of it than of others We are all in a state of greatest distance from the Caller and opposition to his Call What worth above others was in the Corinthians when the Gospel came first to them The Apostle tels them 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. Such were some of you namely fornicators idolaters adulterers effeminate abusers of themselves with mankinde theeves covetous drunkards c. Commonly 't is the darkest time of ignorance and profaneness in places immediately before the dawning of the Gospel God washing us when we are in our blood most polluted perswading to reconciliation in greatest enmity calling in most open distance 2 Tim. 1.9 Rom. 9.18 Mat. 11.26 Rom. 5.6 10. Ex duobus aetate jam grandibus impiis Cur iste ita vocetur ut vocantem sequatur Ille autem non ita vocetur ut vocantem sequatur nolito judicare si non vis errare Inscrutabilia sunt judicia Dei Cujus vult miseretur Aug. de bon pers cap. 8. our calling is not according to works but according to purpose so resolved by Christ even so Father because it seemed good to thee Else why God calleth one
the disturbing of their own unsound the accepting of him that deserves the true peace and the walking in the ways of holinesse But peace from God is never desired for men to continue in a state of warr against God 4. Rom. 5.9 10 Rom. 5.1 Eph. 1.6 Hebr. 2.15 1 Cor. 15.31 Job 15.20 21 Jude 19. Gal. 5.22 Ephes 2.12 Rom. 12.12 The faithfull onely have taken the right course to obtain peace They alone are freed from Gods wrath more dreadful then the roaring of a Lion or the wrath of all the Kings of the world it destroying body and soul in hell they onely have pardon of sin the other like guilty malefactors are in an hourly expectation of the worst of deaths through the fear whereof they dye before they dye The faithfull onely have Christ who is our peace and the Prince of Peace the Spirit of God of which peace is a fruit and effect they alone rejoyce in hope and live in expectation of a crown incorruptible an everlasting kingdom others live a hopelesse heartlesse life 2. The part of these parties in which this peace resides is the heart and conscience Col. 3.15 The peace of God rules in the heart Joh. 16.22 Your heart shall rejoyce and Psal 4.7 Thou hast put gladnesse into my heart and Phil. 4.7 The peace of God shall preserve your heart in which respect 1. T is a sustaining strengthening reviving peace so long as the heart is kept safe a man fals not faints not when the heart is relieved with a Cordiall a fainting man revives Now the peace of God keeps up the heart it brings aid and relief to it in all dangers when sin and Satan temptation and persecution lay siege to it It brings strong consolation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 4.7 Act. 16.25 Act. 21.13 2 Cor. 1.3 4 Rom. 5.3.5 Heb. 10.34 Heb. 6.18 It s a Banner over us in warre a Cordiall an Antidote against all Poyson It makes Paul and Silas sing in Prison Paul to be ready to dye for the name of the Lord Jesus the faithfull to be comforted in all tribulation and consolation to abound as sufferings abound it making the faithfull in a cold winter of persecution to be warmest within making a Martyr to go as merily to a Stake as another to a Feast 2. The seat of this peace the heart notes as our sustentation by it so the soundnesse truth and reality of it 't is not in cortice but in corde in the heart not in the habit in the conscience not in the looks It 's in the breast not in the brow not suffering a man to be like some Prisons beautifull without but full of horror blacknesse chaines and dungeons within It 's a Peace not residing in the hall of the senses but in the closet of the heart A Saints peace is a silent calmnesse an unseen quietnesse meat of which those without know not like the windows of Salomons temple narrow without Pro. 14.10 broad within the worst the unbeautifull the black-side of his cloud is seen when the bright is hidden 3. The seat of this Peace the heart implyes it's seriousnes weightinesse Tu illum judicas gaudere qui ridet animus debet esse alacer Res severa est verum gaudiam caeterae hilaritates leves sunt frontem remittunt pectus non implent Sen. Ep. 23. Ego neminem posse scire arbitror quid sit nisi acceperit Bern in Cant. Melius impressum quam expressum innotescit In his non capt intelligentia nisi quantum attingit experientia Id. ibid. greatnesse that the ground of it is not slight and toyish but some great matter not lightly pleasing the fancy and superficially bedewing the senses but like a ground-showr soaking even to the heart-root The peace of a Saint is not like the mirth of a Child caused more by a gay or a toy then by a conveyance of a thousand pounds by the year or like our laughter which is more at a jest than at the finding of a bag of gold of ten thousand pounds No his peace is not idle frothy and ludicrous meriment but deep and affecting the heart with apprehensivenesse of an interest in the great things of eternity a peace that passeth understanding Light either griefs or contentments are easily exprest not so those which are deep and weighty these are joyes unspeakeable and glorious superabundant 1 Pet. 1.8 2 Cor. 7.4 4. The seat notes the safety of this peace the heart is too deep for a man to reach a Saints peace is laid up in a Cabinet that man cannot open Joh. 16.22 men may break into his house but not into his heart Your joy saith Christ no man taketh from you The power of adversaries is but skin-deep There is a three-fold impotency of man in reference to a Christians peace 1 Man cannot give this peace 2 He cannot hinder it from entring 3. He cannot remove it or hinder it from abiding It continues like a Fountaine in the hottest Summer and is warmest in the coldest Winter of affliction like a Candle which is not overwhelmed or quenched in the dismall darknesse of the night but is made thereby to give the cleerer light David in greatest straits comforted himselfe in God 1 Jam. 1 2. 2 Cor. 7.4 Rom. 5.3 1 Thes 5.16 2 Cor. 14.5 Phil. 4.4 Heb. 12.11 the faithfull glory in tribulation they are commanded to rejoyce evermore as the sufferings of Christ abound in them so their consolations abound by Christ The faithfull have oft drawne matter of joy from their sufferings they yeeld the peaceable fruit of righteousnesse A sick man may rejoyce at the coming of the Chyrurgeon though he knows he will put him to paine Phil. 1.19 2 Cor. 4.17 I know saith the Apostle that this shall turne to my salvation The light affliction that lasteth but for a moment procureth an exceeding excessive eternall weight of glory If we suffer for Christ 2 Thess 2.12 Rom. 8. we shall also reigne with him None can separate us from Christ and therfore not from peace the Spirit of peace by us may for a time be sinn'd away but he cannot by enemies be persecuted away The Sun may as easily be blown out with bellowes as true peace be driven away by sufferings 5. The seat of this peace the heart imports the spiritualnesse and sublimity of it it is not sensuall earthly and drossy the heart is no more relieved with worldly comforts then are the belly bags and barnes fill'd with grace and holinesse What is it to the soule that thou hast goods laid up for many yeares The rarest delicacies of the earth are not such food as the soule loves spirituall blessings of Communion with God Illud verum solum est gaudium quod non de terrâ sed de Caelo est quod non de creatura sed de Creatore accipitur Bern. Ep. 114. enjoying of Christ a view of our names as
who hath not love enough for a man Eph. 1.15 where will he find it for a God Love is the pulse of faith and the breath of Christianity Faith worketh by love Gal. 5.6 though love be not a hand to receive Christ yet is it a tool in the hand to work for Christ and that in working for Christians The flames of zeal never consumed the moysture of Charity he who loves God for his own sake will love his brother for Gods Add to your Godliness saith the Apostle Brotherly kindness 2 Pet. 1.7 1 John 3.17 He who shutteth up his bowels to a wanting brother how dwelleth the love of God in him The nearer the lines come to the Center the nearer are they to one another Our love to the godly increaseth with our love to God The Sun-shine upon the dyal moves though not so swiftly yet according to that proportion which the Sun in the firmament moveth and our love to the people of God though it be not so great as unto God yet is it according to the measure of our love to God 7. Observ 7. It 's a great discovery of Gods goodnesse in that with our loving of him he joyns our loving of one another He might have so challenged our love to himselfe as thereby we might neither have had time will strength or allowance to love one another But behold his love he will be served of us in our serving of man He accounts this pure religion Jam. 1. ult Gal. 5.13 to visit the fatherlesse and widow The serving of one another by love he requires as a token of our serving him by faith So gracious is he that he esteems what we do to our own flesh and bloud as done to himselfe Pro. 19.17 Pro. 21.13 Psal 112.9 Mat. 25.40 and accounts himselfe a debtor to us for what we do for our selves he remembers it long rewards it largely and doth both exactly he hath appointed charity as the most safe and gainfull invention in the world Ars quaestuosissima Heb. 13.16 Luke 12.33 It 's a payment to the poor Christian in this place who sends his bill of exchange his prayer to God and he accepts the bill and payes it for our use in heaven we keep nothing as a mercy but what we are willing and one way thus to lose Death robs us by the way if we think to carry our wealth to heaven with us but if we send it by bils we shall receive it safely He who hath laden himselfe with apples in the ortyard and is sure to be searched when he comes out of the gate throwes his apples over the wall to a friend who keeps them for him In this world we lade our selves with gifts death wil undoubtedly search us when we go hence but if while we are here we throw by charity our enjoyments into heaven we have there a friend that keeps them safe He that denyes to give this Interest of his gifts by charity forfets the Principall and he that takes in his worldly commodities without paying God this custome shall lose the whole 8. Prayer is a singular help to bring us to love God Obser ult it was here the Apostolicall Engine in the Text. When we cry for his holy spirit the spirit of love he cannot deny us he heal'd the lame when they cryed When thou cryest and sayest from the heart I would fain love thee but I cannot will he not give thee legs to run after him Prayer brings us into familiarity with God and by converse you know love grows between men God delights to shew himself in his own way and as he did to Moses to send us down from the Mount of Prayer with soules shining with love Prayer exerciseth our love it blowes up the sparkes of love into a flame Love is an especiall gift of the spirit We are taught of God to love one another Gal. 5.22 1 Thes 4.9 'T is he that must warm our hearts with this divine grace and he being sought unto and his power implor'd and acknowledg'd will not deny it Thus much of the first particular in this third and last part of the title the Prayer viz. the Blessings pray'd for mercy peace love The second followeth the measure in which the Apostle desireth these blessings may be bestowed in this expression be multiplyed For the Explication whereof two things would be opened 1. Explicat 1. Wherein stands the multiplication of these Blessings or what it is that the Apostle desireth when he prayeth for the multiplication of these gifts graces 2. Why the Apostle makes this request and prayeth not onely for the bestowing Multiplicari dilatari incrementum capere adimpleri Tum de multiplicatione in quantitate discreta tum de augmento in quantitate continua accipitar Mat. 24.12 Acts 6.17 7.17 9.31 2 Cor. 9.10 1 Pet. 1.2 2 Pet. 1.2 Jude 2. Gerh. in 1 Pet. 1.2 but the multiplying of these Blessings 1. What this multiplying is The word in the original signifieth as to be multiplied so to be increased fill'd enlarged and it is in Scripture indifferently usedto signifie the multiplication of things in their number and their augmentation in measure and greatnesse Whence it is that some render this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multiplicetur be multiplyed others adimpleatur be fill'd or fulfill'd or fill'd up or increas'd It properly signifieth to increase in number and not in measure and when it is applyed to people and the Church as 't is oft in the Acts of the Apostles it 's only used for an increase in number but when 't is spoken of sin or graces as Mat. 24.12 Pet. 1.2 2 Pet. 1.2 in this place of Jude it may signifie an increase in measure onely And so the Apostle prayeth that the gifts graces which these Christians had already obtain'd Eph. 4.16 1 Pet. 2.2 2 ●et 3.18 John 2.5 Psal 84.7 1 Thes 4.1 11 2 Cor. 13.9 might receive a further degree of augmentation that believers might grow abound and increase in them more and more And thus though the mercy of God which was the first of the three blessings here desired by the Apostle as it is in it self and as in God cannot be increased it being infinite yet in respect of the effects and graces flowing from it upon believers it may be increased More particularly when the Apostle prayeth that these Christians may have this increase and augmentation of grace he comprehends in that his request these several blessings 1. That they may be sensible and observing of their wants and deficencies of Grace That they may often cast up their accounts and see as what they have gained so wherein they are defective that they may resent as their gains with thankfulness so their wants with humility They who see not can neither desire nor receive what they want A Christian must be like a covetous man totus in rationibus much imployed in searching
Christ Gal. 1.23 He now preacheth the faith which before he persecuted So 1 Tim. 4.16 Gal. 3.2 So here in this place of Jude Faith once delivered is to be understood of the faith of heavenly doctrine the word of faith which the Apostle saith God had delivered to them and they were to maintain against the opposite errours of seducers This holy doctrine being called faith 1. Because it is the instrument used by God to work faith The Spirit by the word perswading us to assent to the whole doctrine of the Gospel and to rest upon Christ in the promise for life In which respect faith is said to come by hearing Rom. 10.15 And the Gospel the power of God Rom. 1.16 c. to every one that believes The faith to be believed begets a faith believing 2. Because it is a most sure infallible faithfull word and deserves to be the object of our faith and belief The Author of it was the holy and true Rev. 3.7.14 Tit. 1.2 2 Pet. 1.2 the faithful and true Witnesse God who cannot lie The Instruments were infallibly guided by the immediate derection and assistance of the holy Ghost The Matter of it an everlasting truth the Law being a constant rule of righteousnesse the Gospel conteining promises which shall have their stability when heaven and earth shall passe away and of such certainty that if an angel from heaven should teach another doctrine he must be accursed It abounds also with prophesies predictions most exactly accomplished though after hundreds yea thousands of years The form of it which is its conformity with God himself sheweth that if God be faithfull Heb. 4.12 Psal 19.7 9. needs must his word be so its powerfull it searcheth the heart its pure and perfect true and faithfull and all this in conformity with the power omniscience purity perfection truth of God himself The end of it is to supply us with assured comfort Rom. 15.4 Observ 1. 1. The word of life is most worthy of assent and approbation No word so much challengeth belief as Gods it 's so true and worthy of belief that it 's called faith it self When in Scripture the object is called by the name of the habit or affection it notes that the object is very proper for that habit or affection to be exercised about Heaven is in Scripture called joy to shew it 's much to be rejoyced in and the Doctrine of salvation is called faith to shew that its most worthy of our faith Infidelity is a most inexcusable and incongruous sin in us Tit. 1.2 Heb. 6.18 Isa 53.1 when the faithfull and true God speaks unto us It 's impossible for God to lie and yet Who hath beleeved our report may be a complaint as ordinary as it is old How just is God to give those over to beleeve a lie who will not beleeve the truh How miserable is their folly who beleeve a lie and distrust faith it self 2. Observ 2. Deplorable is their estate who want the doctrine of salvation They have no footing for faith they have they hear nothing that they can beleeve Uncertainty of happiness is ever the portion of a people who are destitute of the Word He who wants this light knows not whither he goeth The Fancy of the Enthusiast the Reason of the Socinian the Traditions of the Papist the Oracles of the Heathens are all Foundations of sand death shakes and overturns them all 3. Observ 3. The true reason of the firmnesse and stedfastnesse of the Saints in their profession they lean upon a sure word Spiritus sanctus non est Scepticus ne● opiniones in cordibus sed assertiones producit ipsâ vit â omni experientiâ certiores a more sure word than any revelation a word called even faith it self Greater is the certainty of Faith then that of Sense and Reason It 's not Opinion and Scepticism but Faith The holy Ghost is no Sceptick it works in us not opinions but assertions more sure than life it self and all experience The more weight and dependency we set upon the word so firm a foundation is it the stronger is the building None will distrust God but they who never tryed him 4. Our great end in attending upon the word should be the furthering of our faith The jewel of the Word should not hang in our ears but be lock'd up in a beleeving heart 'T is not meat on the table but in the stomack that nourisheth and not the Word preached but beleeved that saves us The Apostle having specified the thing which they were to maintain Faith he amplifieth it and that three wayes 1. Explicat 2. He saith it was delivered The word in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here translated delivered signifieth to be given or delivered from one to another severall wayes in Scripture according to the circumstances of the place where and the matter about which 't is used Sometime it importeth a delivering craftily deceitfully or traiterously in which respect the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is often rendred to betray as Matth. 2.4.10 and Chap. 26 15 16 21 23 24 25. and Chap. 16.45 46 48. In some places it signifieth a delivering in a way of punishment and suffering As Mat. 4.12 Jesus heard that John was delivered up So Mat. 5.25 and 10.17.19.21 and 17.22 and Acts 7.42 c. In other places it signifieth a delivering in a way of committing something to ones trust to be carefully regarded and preserved as Mat. 11.27 and 25.14 20. and John 19.20 and 1 Pet. 2.23 And thus it frequently signifieth a delivering by way of information or relation of doctrines and duties from one to another to be kept and observed And that both from God first by the speech and afterward by the writing of holy men for the use of his Church as 1 Cor. 11.2 2 Thes 2.15 and 3.6 2 Pet. 2.21 and also from men who often deliver doctrines to others not written in the word Mat. 15.2 Mark 7.9.13 but invented by men In this sense the delivering here mentioned is to be taken namely for such an information or relation of Gods will as they to whom it is delivered are bound to preserve and keep as their treasure In which respect the delivering of this faith or doctrine of salvation comprehends first Gods bestowing it secondly Mans holding and keeping it 1. Gods bestowing it and in that is considerable 1. In what wayes and after what manner God delivered it 2. What need there was of this delivery of the faith by God 1. In what wayes God delivered the faith the Scripture tels us he hath delivered it either extraordinarily Num. 12.6.8 Heb. 1.1 as immediately by himselfe by Angels by a voice by a sensible apparition to men sometime when they were awake at other times when they were sleeping by dreams sometime only by inward inspiration Or ordinarily and so he delivers the doctrine of faith 1. To his
principally means the Gospel with which God had instrusted him So Tit. 1.3 c. 2. But not excluding the former by the Saints to whom the Faith was delivered I understand All the people of God to whom it was delivered by the fore-mentioned servants of God And as some of these were Saints in regard only of visible profession and dedication and others were made Saints in respect of true and saving sanctity so the faith was delivered unto these differently to the former by way of outward administration and visible dispensation to the later who were made true Saints by way of saving and effectuall operation They who were and continued to be onely visible and externall Saints had the faith delivered unto them as the common sort of Israelites had to whom God wrote the great things of his Law and yet they were accounted a strange thing Hos 6.12 and to whom were committed the oracles of God Rom. 3.1 and yet they beleeved not Isai 53.1 contenting themselves in the retaining the letter of the Law declaring Gods Statutes and taking his covenant into their mouth in the mean time never regarding to have the law written in their hearts Psal 50.16.17 c. but hating instruction and casting the word of God behind them They who had the faith delivered unto them by way of efficacious and saving operation did not only hear but beleeve the report of Gods messengers and the arm of God was revealed to them Isai 53.1 To whom it was given to know the Mysteries of the Kingdom of God although to others it were not given Mat. 13.11 and for whose sake alone the faith is delivered to others who got no good at all thereby but onely an estimation for members of the visible Church 1. The Word is to be laid out and delivered to Observ 1. not to be laid up and kept from others The Saints are to be the better for it The Ministry is in Scripture compared to light what more diffusive to seed it must be scattered to bread it must be broken and distributed to every one according to their exigencies to salt it must not be laid up in the Salt-box but laid out in seasoning the flesh that it may be kept from putrefaction He who hides truth buries gold Ministers must rather be worn with using than rusting Paul did spend and was spent The sweat of a Minister as 't is reported of Alexander's casts a sweet savour His talents are not for the napkin but occupation How sinfull are they that stand idle in a time of labour how impious they who compell them to stand so 2. They who retain and keep the Faith are Saints Observ 2. Visibly those are Saints and that is a Church which keep it by profession and ministerially A Church that is which is the pillar and ground of truth 1 Tim. 3.15 Rom. 3.2 to whom the Oracles of God are committed as Paul speaks of the Jewes None are so to complain of the defects of our Church for what it wants as to deny it a Church considering what it hath It holds forth the truth of all Doctrines which serve both for the beginning and increase of faith It 's one of Christs golden Candlesticks wherein he hath set up the light of his Word and though Sectaries do not yet Christ walks in the midst of them I must be bold to fear that because our adversaries cannot rationally deny that while we hold forth the Truth we are a true Church they labour by their errours to extinguish the Truth that so we may be none 3. How much is the world beholding to Saints 3. Observ They have kept the Faith the Word of life for the ingratefull world ever since 't was first delivered Were it not for them we had lost our Truth nay lost our God These are they who have in all ages with their breath nay with their bloods preserved the Gospel kept the word of Christs patience Rev. 3.8.10 And rather then they would not keep the Faith they have lost their lives They profit the world against its will they are benefactors to their severall ages like indulgent Parents they have laid up the riches of faith for those who have desired their deaths It 's our duty though not to adore them yet to honour their memory Satan knows no mean between deifying and nullifying them Imitation of them is as unquestionably our duty as adoration of them would be our sin 4. 4 Observ Vnholiness is very unsutable to them to whom the Faith is delivered It 's delivered to Saints in profession and they should labour to be so in power They should adorn the Doctrine of God Tit. 2.10 How sad a sight is it to behold the unsanctified lives of those to whom this faith hath been long delivered How many live as if faith had banished all fidelity and honesty or as if God had delivered the faith not to furnish their souls with holiness but only their shelves with Bibles Books in the head not in the Study make a good Scholar and the word of faith not in the house or head but in the heart and life make a Christian Oh thou who art call'd a Saint either be not so much as call'd so or be more than call'd so otherwise thy externall priviledg will be but an eternall punishment If God have delivered his Faith to thee deliver up thy self to him 5. 5 Observ The Fewness of faiths entertainers is no derogation from faiths excellency They are a poor handfull of Saints by whom the faith is preserved and to whom it is delivered in the world The preatest number of men and nations have not the faith delivered unto them ministerially and of them the far greater part never had it delivered efficaciously It s better to love the faith with a few than to leave it with a multitude Numbers cannot prove a good cause nor oppose a Great God 6. Observ 6. The true reason of Satans peculiar rage against Saints they have that faith delivered to them which is the bane and battery of his kingdom that word which is an Antidote against his poison that doctrine which discovers his deeds of darknesse Satans policy is to dis-arm a place of the word when he would subdue it he peaceably suffers those to live who have not the weapons of holy doctrine he throws his cudgels against fruitfull trees he lays wait as a thief for those who travel with this treasure They who are empty of this treasure may sing be merry when they meet with him he never stops them Others who have the faith he sets upon annoyeth I have given them thy word saith Christ the world hath hated thē John 1.7 3. Jude saith in this amplification Explicat the faith was once delivered once 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Three things may be touched in the Explication 1. The meaning of the word once 2.
the barren wildernesse and they are by God compared to drossie silver Jer. 6.28 which all the art and pains of the Silver-smith cannot refine and therefore called reprobate silver These seducers in Gods Ort-yard were trees without fruit twice dead pluck'd up by the roots Jude 12. 4. A fourth woe in this condemnation is Gods giving them up to strong delusion a delighting in errour and false doctrine with a believing it and thus seducers are said not only to deceive but to be deceived 2 Tim. 3.13 2 Thes 2.10 11. and those who received not the love of the truth had strong delusion sent them from God and upon them the deceivablenesse of unrighteousnesse takes hold and thus God suffered a lying spirit to deceive Ahab and his prophets 5. A fifth woe in this condemnation is a stumbling at and a quarrelling with the word of life 1 Pet. 2.8 and Christ the rock of salvation Thus Paul speaks of some who were contentious and obeyed not the truth Rom. 2.8 and of seducers who resist the truth 2 Tim. 3.8 Like these in Jude who contended so muth against the faith that all which Christians could do was little enough to contend for it against those who made the Gospel a plea for licenciousnesse 6. A sixth woe in this condemnation is progressiveness in sin 2 Tim. 3.13 and as the Apostle speaks of seducers a waxing worse and worse a walking so far into the sea of sin as at length to be over head and eares a descending to the bottom of the hill a daily treasuring up wrath a proficiency in Satans school a growing artificially wicked and even doctors of impiety 7. Which lastly will prove the great and heavy woe not to be contented to be wicked and to go to hell alone but to be leaders to sin 2 Tim. 3.13 and to leaven others with impiety and thus Paul saith that seducers were deceiving as well as deceived 2 Pet. 2.2 And Peter that many shall follow their pernicious wayes And certainly impiety propagated shall be condemnation heightned 2. Why is this punishment of seducers called Condemnation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the cause for the effect I grant Condemnation is properly the sentence or censure condemning one to some punishment and though in this place it be taken for the very punishment it selfe yet fitly doth the Spirit of God set out this punishment of wicked men by a word that notes a sentencing them thereunto And that 1. Because a sentence of condemnation is even already denounced against them 2. Because it is such a punishment as by judiciary sentence is wont to be inflicted upon guilty offenders 1. It is really and truly denounced c. For besides Gods fore-appointing the wicked to this condemnation as it is the punishment of sin the execution of his justice wicked men are in this life sentenced to punishment 1. By the word of God which tels them that God will render to every man according to his deeds to them who do not obey the truth but obey unrighteousnesse indignation and wrath Rom. 2.8 c. And that he who believeth not is condemned already John 3.18 2. By their own conscience which accuseth and condemneth as Gods Deputy and here tels them what they deserve both here and hereafter If our hearts condemne us c. 1 John 3.20 c. 3. By the judgements of God manifested against those who have lived in the same sins the wrath of God being revealed against all unrighteousnesse Rom. 1.18 4. By the contrary courses of the godly The practices of Saints really proclaiming that because the wayes of the wicked are sinfull and destructive therefore they avoid them Mat. 12.41 42. and thus Noah sentenced the old world by being a practicall Preacher of righteousnesse 2 Pet. 2.5 And all these sentencings of wicked men do but make way for that last and great sentence to be pronounced at the day of judgment Mat. 7.23 Mat. 25.41 to the punishment both of eternall losse and pain 2. It is such a punishment as by judiciary sentence is wont to be executed upon guilty offenders and so it is in two respects 1. Because it is Righteous 2. Severe 1. Righteous These Seducers were not spiritually punished without precedent provocations Rom. 1.28 as they did not like to retaine God in their knowledge God gave them over to a reprobate mind 2 Thes 2.10 and God sends them justly strong delusions that they should beleeve and teach a lie because they received not the love of the truth and because they would not be Scholers of truth they justly become Masters of error 2. The punishment of wicked men is such as is wont to be inflicted upon offenders by a sentence because of its weight and severity It is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not a paternall chastisement or a rebuke barely to convince of a fault but it 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Judges sentence condemning to a punishment the guilty Malefactor It is not medicinall but penall not the cutting of a Chirurgian but of a Destroyer the happinesse of correction stands in teaching us but this punishment is the giving of sinners up to unteachablenesse and what is it indeed but a hell on this side hell for God to withdraw his grace and to suffer men to be as wicked as they will to be daily damning themselves without controle to bee carried down to the gulf of perdition both by the wind of Satans tentation and which is worse the tide of sinfull inclination For God to say Be and do as bad as you will be filthy still Rev. 22.11 sleep on now and take your rest I le never jog nor disturb you in your sins How sore a judgment is it to be past feeling so as that nothing cooler than hel fire and lighter then the loyns of an infinite God can make us sensible though too late OBSERVATIONS 1. Observ 1. The condemnation of the wicked is begun in this life As heaven so hell is in the seed before it is in the fruit The wicked on this side hell are tunning and treasuring up that wrath Rom. 2.5 which hereafter shall be broached and revealed The wicked have even here hell in its causes The old bruises which their souls by sin have received in this life will be painfull when the change of weather comes when God alters their condition by death When thy lust asks How canst thou want the pleasure let thy faith answer by asking another question How can I bear the pain of such a sin Observ 2. Tristitia nostra quasi habet quia in somnis tranfit Qui somnium indicat addit quasi quasi sedebam quasi loquebar quasi equitabā quia cum evigelaverit non invenit quod videbat Quasi thesaurum inveneram dicit mendicus si quasi non esset mendicus non
the Apostle describes it 1. More generally he calls them ungodly men 2. More particularly he shews wherein their ungodliness appeared they turn the grace of God into lasciviousness and deny c. 1. Explicat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used indifferently of true and false worship Act. 18.13 Act. 13.50 Act. 16.14 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to worship God aright and duly 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 noteth one who is of no religion who worships not at all The Apostle expresseth the ungodliness of seducers more generally calling them ungodly Vngodly men For Explication I shall first express more briefly and generally what the Apostle here intends by the term ungodly 2. More fully and particularly explain wherein that ungodliness of which he speaks did consist or what it is to be ungodly The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ungodly is compounded of a word which signifieth to worship or be devout and of a particle which notes a negation or denyall of that thing with which 't is joyned So that the word made up of both properly signifieth one who is indevout or worships not who yields no adoration honour or reverence to God but casteth off his service or as we say is a prophane man and one of no Religion For godliness is properly the same with Religion and Religion is a spirituall bond not onely a divine impression whereby we are possessed with most high and peerless thoughts of God and rapt with admiration of that excellency which shines in him but it 's also a binder Dictam esse religionem quòd quasi in fascem Domini vincti religati sumus Hier. ad Am. c. 9. a golden belt or girdle that ties and confederats and clasps our souls to God The faithfull by Religion are Gods bundle made upon earth to be carried to heaven men tyed together by being tyed to God Godliness is this gentle manacle and bond of love tying us by gratitude to Gods mercy by faith to his word by fidelity to his Covenant by hope to his promises c. and godlinesse layes a most sweet and easie yoke upon all the parts of man voluntarily resigning themselves to draw all together in the service of God and so it ties the head from wicked imaginations the heart from evill cogitations the eyes from vanity the tongue from profanenesse the hand from violence the feet from running into sin And though both religion and godlinesse in their largest extent comprehend the whole duty of man to God and man 1 Tim. 6.6 even holinesse and righteousnesse yet properly and primarily they note piety and the observation of duties belonging immediately to God himselfe And so though ungodliness be often taken in the largest sense as importing all kind of wickedness committed against God and man as Rom. 4.5 1 Tim. 1.9 c. yet alwayes properly and as I conceive in this place principally it is to be understood of wickedness immediatly done against God himself in denying him that reverence honour due Rom. 1.26 Gen. 20. and abusing that worship and service given to him the Apostle * Vngodly by this word at once discovers both the hypocrisie of these Seducers whose great endeavour was to be accounted in the highest form of Religion and also the root of all that following wickedness wherewith he chargeth them 2. More particularly to consider what it is to be ungodly or wherein ungodliness consists I shall open it in three particulars 1. The deniall to God the honour which is due to him 2. The attributing of the honour which is due to him to somthing else beside him 3. The giving to God his honour after a wrong manner 1. To be ungodly is to deny that honour to God which is due to him and that sundry wayes as 1. To deny God his honour by not knowing him Fingunt Deum talem qui non videt non punit c. Psal 14.1 and acknowledging his providence presence justice mercy power The fool hath said in his heart There is no God he knows no such God as the true God is no omniscient just merciful powerfull c. God He who denies any attribute of God denyes God himself 1 Sam. 2.12 thus the sons of Eli knew not the Lord and thus he spoken of Psal 50.21 who thought that God was altogether such an one as himself thus likewise the ungodly who say Job 22.14 How doth God know can he judg through the dark cloud Thick clouds are a covering to him that he seeth not c. This piece of Atheism is the foundation of all the rest He who knows not his Landlord cannot pay his rent 2. Not to honour God by beleeving him Ungodly men totally distrust Gods promises though he seals them with an oath It 's impossible that God should utter a lie to them Heb. 6.18 and that ungodly men while such should do any other than give the lie to God They make God a lyar 1 John 5.10 Heb. 3.12 the greatest dishonour imaginable an evill heart departs from depends not upon the living God 3. Not to honour God by loving him Ungodly men are haters of God Rom. 1.30 and 't is not for want of poyson but power that they expresse not the greatest hatred against him even the taking away his very being Psal 81.11 Hence 't is that some have called an ungodly man a deicide though they meant him not such in regard of execution but of affection 'T is true God himself is out of the reach of an ungodly man but what of him they can come by as his pictures Isa 30.11 his image in his children Job 21.14 ordinances they indeavour to destroy and abolish like theeves who wish the Judge were dead or hurt the ungodly desire that God might cease to be God that he had lost the hand of his justice the arme of his power Timor Domini janitor anim● the eye of his knowledge c. 4. Not to honour God by fearing to sin against him Ungodly men sometimes presume sometimes they despair but never do they reverentially fear him so as to keep themselves from sin they fear not an Oath they fear hell they feare not God they say not How can we doe this great evill Gen. 39 9. Job 21.14 Hos 4.16 Psal 50.17 Jer. 44.16 Tit. 1.10 Luke 19.14 and sin against God they fear sin for hell not as hell 5. Not to honour God by obeying his word Ungodly men cast off the yoke they are sons of Belial They slide back as a back-sliding heyfer They will none of his ways They desire not the knowledge of them They hate instruction and cast the word of God behind them In their works they deny God They will never have Christ for their ruler nor his word for their rule 6. Not to honour God by bearing his stroake Ungodly men are not as children under the rod but as
personally and as signifying some one person of the Trinity thus the Father is called God Mat. 16.16 Joh. 3.16 Rom. 7.25 c. thus the Holy Ghost is called God Act. 5.4 compared with verse the 3. Thou hast not lyed to men but to God Satan hath filled thine heart to lie to the Holy Ghost 2 Cor. 6.16 compared with 1 Cor. 6.19 And thus the Son is called God Act. 20.28 The Church of God which he hath purchased with his blood 1 Tim. 3.16 Tit. 2.13 The great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ c. and this is the person which is here called God To whom 1. Are given the same Titles which are given to God Isai 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Numb 14.22 Psal 95.8 9.6 He is called The mighty God and chap. 6.1 He is called Jehovah for there Isaiah is said to see Jehovah sitting upon a throne c. And Joh. 12.41 This is expresly by the holy Evangelist applyed to Christ of whom he saith that Isaiah saw his glory and spake of him Exod. 17.7 The people are said to tempt Jehovah and the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 10.9 Let us not tempt Christ as some of them tempted It is said of Jehovah Of old hast thou laid the foundation of the earth Psal 102.25 and the heavens are the work of thy hands they shall perish but thou shalt endure c. And the Apostle clearly testifies Heb. 1.10 that these words are spoken of Christ Zech. 13.7 Christ is called the Fathers fellow Joh. 1.1 The word which in the beginning was with God is expresly said to be God And Rom. 9.6 He is called God blessed for evermore And 1 Tim. 3. ult God manifested in the flesh And 1 Joh. 5.20 The true God 2. The same essentiall Attributes and properties of the God-head are ascribed to him as 1. Eternity Prov. 8.22 The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way before his works of old Joh. 8.58 Before Abraham was I am John 17.5 Glorifie me with the glory which I had with thee before the world was And ver 24. Thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world Col. 1.17 He is before all things 2. Omnipresence Mat. 18.20 Where two or three are gathered together in my name there am I in the midst of them And chap. 28. ult I am with you alway even to the end of the world 3. Omniscience Joh. 2. ult He knew what was in man Mat. 9.4 and 12.25 Luk. 5.22 and 6.8 Luk. 11.17 and 24.38 He is also frequently said to know the thoughts yea Joh. 21.17 to know all things 4. Omnipotency All power is given unto me Phil 3. ult He is able to subdue all things Joh. 5.19 What things soever the Father doth these also do the Son 3. The same works which are peculiar to God are ascribed unto Christ As 1. Election the Elect are Mat. 24.31 called his Elect. 2. Creation 1 Joh. 3. All things were made by him and ver 10. The world was made by him Col. 1.16 By him were all things created 3. The Preservation and sustentation of all things Col. 1.17 By him all things consist Heb. 1.3 He upholdeth all things by the word of his power 4. Remission of sins Mat. 9.6 The Son of man hath power to forgive sins 5. Working of miracles works either above or against the order of nature Joh. 9.32 He opens the eyes of the blind Joh. 11. He raiseth dead Lazarus Yea he both raiseth from the grave of sin Joh. 5.21 25 And raiseth all the dead Joh. 5.28 29. 6. The bestowing of eternall life Joh. 10.28 My sheep hear my voice and I give unto them eternall life 4. The worship which is due to God alone hath been both given to and accepted by Christ First Inward worship as 1. Beleeving on him Faith is a worship which belongs only to God enjoyned in the first Commandment and against the trusting in man is there a curse denounced Jer. 5.17 But Christ bids us beleeve in him Joh. 14.1 Beleeve in me Joh. 8. ult He that beleeveth in the Son hath everlasting life 2. Loving him with all the heart commanded above the love nay even to an hatred of father mother wife children yea our own lives Luk. 14.26 and for the gaining of him Blessed Paul accounted all things but loss and dung Phil. 3.8 Secondly Outward worship is due to Christ 1. Dedication in baptism is in his name Mat. ult 19. 2. Divine Invocation is given to him Act. 7.59 Steven calls upon the Lord Jesus to receive his spirit 1 Cor. 1.2 All that in every place call upon the name of Jesus Christ 1 Thes 3.11 God himselfe and our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ direct our way unto you Revel 5.9.12 Praises are offered to him 3 Divine adoration is also given to him Mat. 8.2 A leper worshipped him Mat. 2.11 Though the Wise men of the east who saw Herod in all his royalty worshipped not him yet they fell down before Christ Yea not men only but Angels are commanded to worship him Hebr. 1.6 OBSERVATIONS 1. Observ 1. As groundlesse as blasphemous are all the cavils against the deity of Christ For though he be from and begotten of the the Father by an ineffable communication of the divine essence to his person yet if we consider his deity and essence absolutely he is God of himselfe and hath being from none and he is only God of God as we consider the divine essence in the Son and as it is under a certain and distinct manner of subsistence Though the Father be greater than the Son in respect of his manhood Joh. 14.28 Joh 10.30 Phil. 2.6 yet the Son is equall with the Father in respect of his Godhead Though the Son be truly called the image of God Col. 1.15 yet he is as truly said to be very God For when the Apostle saith that he is the image of God this word God ought not to be taken essentially but personally and by it we are to understand not the divine nature but the person of the Father Christ is the image of the Father not of the deity and the person of the Son bears the image of the person of the Father but the divine essence in the Son is one and the same with that which is in the Father I and my Father are one 2 Vnconceivable was the wisdome Observ 2. justice love and humble condescention manifested in Gods becoming of Man 1. Wisdome None but a God could have contrived it and so far was Man from inventing this plot of Mercy that it had been blasphemie should it have entred into his thoughts before God had discovered it to him The hypostaticall union was purely a divine invention Poor short-sighted man cannot conceive it now since it was much lesse could he have contrived it before it was Infinite was that wisdome which found out a way for God to begin to be what he was not and to remain what he was
Gospel even against the inward operation and supernaturall revelation of the holy Ghost This as I conceive is the unpardonable sin and was the sin of Alexander the copper-smith 2 Tim. 4.14 and of Julian 2. By an open and wilfull apostatizing from the faith and profession of religion haply for fear of persecution and out of too much love of this world This I conceive was the sin of Demas and Spira 2 Tim. 4.10 3. By a politick and terme-serving neutrality a lukewarmenesse and halting between two opinions for fear or shame when a man is oft on either side but truly on neither They on that side think him theirs we on this side think him ours his own conscience thinks him neithers To hold our peace when the honour of Christ is in question is to deny Christ even to a mistaking of the end of our redemption 1 Cor. 6.20 Yee are bought with a price therefore glorifie Christ in your body Joh. 1.20 and spirit Christ is not glorified when his name is concealed John Baptist confessed and denyed not Whosoever doth not openly confesse Christ Pet. 3.15 doth secretly deny Christ Christ is not to be hid as the woman hid the spies in the deep well of our hearts and covered over as she did the mouth of the well with corn for worldly concernments Rom. 10.10 Christum deseserit qui Christianum se non asserit If it be enough to beleeve in the heart why did God give thee a mouth He denyes Christ that doth not professe himselfe a Christian We are bound both consentire and confiteri both to consent to and confesse Christ If it be sufficient for thee to know Christ without acknowledging him for thy Lord it shall be sufficient for Christ to know thee but not to to acknowledg thee for his servant 2 Tim. 2.12 He who refuseth to suffer for dinies Christ He who is not for Christ is against him There may be a sinfull a damnable moderation The following Christ a far off in this life is no sign that thou shalt be near to him in the next No man will be afraid of being too professed a Christian at the day of judgment or will think that he hath lost too much for Christ when he is presently to lose all things by death If the time wherein we live be a night of profanenesse it s our duty the more brightly to shine as lights Phil. 3.15 4. By despairing of salvation offered through the merits of Christ in the promise of the Gospel This is a thrusting from us the hand that would and a casting away the plaister that should cure us 1 John 5.10 This sin makes God a lyar changeth his truth into a lye and Satans falsehood into a truth and justifies the divell more than God He that despairs of mercy what-ever he pretends practically denies the faithfulnesse sufficiency and sincerity of the Lord Jesus and asserts the faithfulnesse of him who is the father of lies 5. Lastly By a loose and profane conversation and this kind of practicall reall denying of Christ I conceive the Apostle particularly chargeth upon these seducers They walked after their own ungodly lusts their lives being full of earthlinesse and epicurism and their mouths of reproaches against holy obedience they encouraging themselves and others herein by perverting the sweet doctrine of the grace of God Ii qui sanguine Christi redempti fuerant diabolo se rursus mancipantes incomparabile illud pretium irritum faciunt Calv. in loc They professed the grace of Christ but led most gracelesse lives Their practice gave their profession the lye If they were not ashamed of Christ yet were they a shame to Christ their Lord who kept such servants they walked not worthy of their Lord. They had the livery of Christ upon their backs and the works of the divell in their hands The merit of his redemption they acknowledged but they denyed the efficacy thereof whereby he fanctifieth and reneweth the heart subdueth sin and quickneth to new obedience They acknowledged Christ a Jesus but denyed him as a Lord Christ they took for their Saviour but Satan for their master They like it well to come to Christ for ease but they will not take his though easie yoke upon them II. 2d Branch of Explicat Wherein appeares the sinfulnesse of this denyall of Christ 1. It plainly comprehends the sinne of Atheism There 's none who denies this only Lord God in his life but first denyed him in his heart and they who serve him not as the word commands apprehend him not as the word discovers They who are corrupt and do abominable works Psal 14.1 have said in their hearts there is no God Life-Atheisme is but the daughter of heart-Atheisme All outward actions are the genuine productions of the inward man they are as I may say the counter-panes of the spirit and so many derivations from that fountain Now think O Christians what an heinous sin it is to deny that being which thine own proves nay to hear to speak of God to plead for God to pray to God so frequently and in appearance feelingly and yet to deny that this God is 2. The denyall of this Lord as clearly contains the sin of unbeleife and distrust They who deny the service of this their Lord truly think what that wicked servant in the Gospel said namely that Christ notwithstanding all his promises Mat. 25.24 is as an hard man that reaps where he did not sow and that there is no profit in serving him Heb. 3.12 'T is this evill heart of unbelief that makes men depart from the living God When men see no excellencie in Christ 't is easie for them to be perswaded to reject him He who beleeves not a jewel is precious will easily part with it He who denyes Christ plainly shews that he hath no trust in him to receive any benefit from him And how great a sin is this unbelief whereby fulnesse it self is esteemed empty Mercy it self is reckoned cruell Gain it self deemed unprofitable and all because faithfulnesse it self is accounted false 3. The denyall of Christ is notorious and unspeakable profanenesse it evidently shews that a man preferrs other things before and loves other things more than Christ No man ever denies and leaves this best of Masters till he be provided of a Master whom he thinks and loves better But how great a disparagement and indignity do they who set up any thing above Christ offer to Him who hath sent and designed Christ Joh. 5.23 and 6.27 the master-piece of all his mercifull and wise contrivements and to Christ himself For there 's nothing which can come in competition with Christ but is infinitely below him All the combined excellencies of creatures put into the balance with Christ bear not so much proportion as doth a feather to a mountain To forsake Christ for the world or a lust is to leave a
power of all he had said and done Mark 6.6 We are carried unto unbelief both by the tide of our own natures and the winde of tentation Our hearts ever since we left God crave and look for relief from sensible objects and having forsaken the true embrace even any opinionative God or good which hath enough to flatter into expectations though nothing to fill or to yeeld satisfaction And so great is our natural pride that we had rather steal than beg rather rob God of glory by resting upon our own crutches then go out of our selves to depend upon another for happinesse The batteries of Satan are principally placed against faith He would not care for taking away our estates names liberties unlesse he hoped hereby to steal away our faith He fans not out the chaffe but bolts out the flour Luke 22.32 Satan saith Christ to Peter hath desired to winnow thee as wheat but I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not Satans first siege in Paradise was laid against the faith of threatnings He knows that all our strength like Samsons in his Locks is from laying hold upon another If therefore he can make us let go our hold which is our faith he desires no more Faith is the grace that properly refisteth him and therefore he principally opposeth it unbelief befriendeth Satan and therefore he most promotes it in our hearts Oh that we might most fear and oppose that sin which is most difficultly avoided and most dangerously entertained Of all keepings keep thy heart and of all means principally use this of keeping out unbeleef 4. Nothing more displeaseth God Observ 4. than the forsaking of our own mercies In the true loving of our selves we cannot provoke God He is angry with Israel because they refuse that which might make themselves happy God loves to be giving and is pleased with them who are alwayes taking in his goodnesse Unbeleef obstructs mercy and God opposeth unbeleef He delights in them who hope in his mercy He hath such full brests that he is most pained when we will not draw them by beleeving The great complaint of Christ was that people would not come to him for life He was grieved for the hardnesse of their hearts and incensed against those guests that would not come when they were invited to the feast of his Gospel-dainties He is so abundant a good that he wants nothing or if he doth he wanteth only wants If he be angry with us how should we be displeased with our selves for rejecting mercy It s the proud and unbeleving soul which God only sends empty away They who will buy his benefits must leave their mony behind them How inexcusable are they who perish they starve and dye in the midst of fulnesse But alasse wee are the poorest of beggars not onely without bread but without hunger Oh begge that hee who bestowes grace upon the desires would first give us the grace of Desire 5. Observat 5. Nullum genus insipientiae infidelitate insipientius Bern. de Consid None are such enemies to unbeleevers as themselves nor is any folly so great as Infidelity The business and very design of unbelief and all that it hath to do is to stop mercy and hinder happinesse Every step which an unbeleever takes is a departing from goodnesse it self Heb. 3.12 And no wonder if such an one carry a curse along with him Jer. 17.5 and ver 6. if he be like the heath in the desert and shall not see when good cometh Unbelief is like the unwary hand of him who being without the door puls it too hard after him locks it and locks himself out Faith is the grace of receiving and unbelief the sin of rejecting all spirituall good How vainly doth the unbeliever expect refreshment by going from the fountain or gain by leaving the true treasure Distrustfull sinner who is the looser by thy incredulity and who would gain by thy beleeving but thy self What harm is it to the cool and refreshing fountain that the weary passenger will not drink and what benefit is it to the fountain though he should What loseth the Sun if men will shut their eyes against its light what gains it though they open them What good comes by distrusting God unlesse the gratifying of Satan in the damning of thy self How foolish is that disobedience that will not wash and be cleansed from a worse leprosie then Naaman's that like a man in a swoun shuts the teeth against a life-recalling cordiall that will not open a beggars hand for the receiving of a Jewell more worth then all the world that beleeves the Father of lyes who cannot speak truth unless it be to deceive and will not trust the God of truth nay Truth it self to whose nature lying is infinitely more opposite than to our good O Unbeliever either thou shalt believe before thou dyest or not if not how scalding will be this ingredient among the rest of those hellish tortures which hereafter shal compleat thy pain to consider that offered sincerely offered mercy was despised that the promise of grace and truth daily desired thy acceptance but had nothing from thee but contempt That thou who art now crying eternally and vainly for one drop hadst lately the offers and intreaties of the fountain to satisfie thy self fully and for ever If thou shouldst beleeve before thou diest how great a trouble to thy heart holily ingenuous will it be that thou hadst so long together such unkind thoughts of Mercy it self that thou didst deem Truth it self to be a Lyer How angry wilt thou be with thy self that thou didst so slowly beleeve and so hardly wert brought to be happie 6. Observat 6. Our greatest dangers and troubles are no plea for unbelief Notwithstanding Israel's tentation their unbelief was a provocation A houling wilderness and dismall tidings excused them not from sin in distrusting of God Even he who hides his face from the house of Jacob is to be waited for When we sit in darkness and see no light we should trust in the Lord and stay our selves upon our God Faith goeth not by feeling and seeing but should go against both It must both beleeve what it sees not and contrary to what it sees Psal 119.49 114. Verbum fidei pabulum Not outward props but the stability of the word of promise should be the stay of our Faith a stud that ever stands though heaven and earth should fail In thy word saith David I do and thou hast caused me to hope The greatness of danger must not lessen Faith Dangers are the element of Faith among them faith lives best because among them it findes most promises When the world is most against us then the word is most for us Faith hath best food in famine and the fullest table in a time of scarcity The very earth which we tread on should teach us this so massy a body hangeth in the midst of the aire and
it is that so many have proved Apostates Constrained goodnesse is never constant The fear of man's lawes may make a good subject it 's only the fear of God in the heart that makes a good Christian 4. Satan can do nothing but by Gods permission Observ 4. God keeps him in a powerfull chain Wicked angels are potent only a good God is omnipotent When God gives way one divel may overthrow a legion Mat. 8.31 1 King 22.21 Job 1.12 a million of men but till God lengthens out his chain a legion of divels cannot hurt one man nay not a silly beast God who made can ruine them and would do so were he not able to over-rule them and to advance his own glory against nay by all their endeavours The consideration of this should both quiet and counsel us 1. Quiet us because our worst enemy is wholly in the power of our best friend Satan takes out a new commission from God for every undertaking against us and as Christ told Pilate He could have no power over us unlesse it were given him from above It was in the power of Satan to carry Christ up but not to cast him downe he that fears God neither need nor will fear Satan As the rage of men so that of Divels shall also praise God and the residue thereof will he restrain 2. Counsell us to take heed of that heathenish error whereby men commonly give the honour due to God to Conjurers and Impostors and of that common fault among Christians in being more angry with the instrument then patient under the hand that smites them 5. Observ 5 Satan cannot hurt us unlesse he gets us within the compasse of his chain If we go not to him he cannot come to us All the wayes of Satan are deviations and swervings from the way and rule of the word He who keeps in this way Non extorquet à nobis consensum sed petit Aug. Non potest vincere nisi volentem Hierom. and walks according to this rule keeps himselfe from the destroyer and peace shall be upon him Satan was fain to beg of Christ to cast down himselfe he cannot cast us down unlesse we cast down our selves he can suggest sin to us he cannot force us to sin No man is hurt but from himselfe and out of the voluntary inclination of his own mind unto evill The divel cannot infuse wickednesse into us but only stir up wickednesse in us he cannot bend the will as God doth who by his own absolute power works in a way of creation in us who without our selves and against our selves giveth a new heart and changeth an heart of stone into an heart of flesh Satan moves not our wills either by any proper power which he hath over them or without our assent first gain'd unto him but by a working upon the imagination sometimes so presenting objects to the understanding as that it apprehends evill in the colour of good Sometimes stirring up the corruption passions and lusts already in us to darken the understanding and incline the will If Satan could hurt us without our own wils he could never be resisted in any tentation The divel is not so dangerous an enemy as our own sin this slayes us without him he hurts us not without this If Satan plow not with our owne Heifer he can get no advantage Many having sinn'd lay the blame on the divell who they say ow'd them a spite whereas it is their sin not the divel which paies it had they not cast down themselves the divel could never have done it The thief indeed is to be blam'd for stealing thy money but it was thy fault and folly to leave thy doors open and give him entertainment Satan never beats us but with our own weapons Though David was stirred up to number the people by Satan 1 Chron. 21.1 yet when he came to see his folly he thought not his sinne lesse because Satan mov'd him to it but took all the blame of sin to himself and said I have done very foolishly Let therefore the time we spend in blaming of Satan when we have sinn'd be spent in opposing of Satan Jam. 4.7 Eph. 4.27 1 Pet 5.10 Eph. 6.13.16 that we may not sin let us not give place to the divel but resist him by faith applying the victory of Christ and viewing present assistances and future recompences by prayer bringing God into the combate by sobriety in the use of comforts and watchfulnesse against all tentations to sin continuing our allegiance and Gods protection Adventure not within the chains of a mad dog supply not their want of length by thy want of watchfulnesse Our natures are tindar and gunpowder we had need beware not only of fiery darts but the least spark 6. God can make an offéndor his own afflicter Observ 6. a Magor-missabib a terror to himselfe and constantly to carry his own chains of terror and torment about him That which makes us enemies to God makes us enemies to our selves Wickednesse is it 's own vexation A sinner though he be truly a friend to none yet never is he so great a foe to any as to himselfe Powder which blowes up the house cannot it selfe escape from burning Such is the power of Gods justice that without any trouble to himselfe he can make a transgressor his own tormentor industriously to fetch in matter of excessive horror to himself out of his owne bosome to gaze willingly into that false glasse which Satan sets before him to be led by that lying cruelty which mis-represents to the sinners affrighted imagination every gnat as a camel Nihil potuit adeo aptè proponi nihil tam accommodatè adferri quod non ille vel refelleret argutissimè vel eluderet callidissimè vel-dissolveret promptissimè Saepe intra meipsum cogitavi eum nequaquam fuisse ita perspicacem in judicio dogmatum ita porro exercitatum in disputationibus theologicis cum sanus esset Hist Fran. Spira p. 120.121 In tantis suis malis filiorum suorum non aliter vultus manus quam tortorum suorum semper exhorrescere c. Ibid. p. 84. every mote as a molehill every mole-hill as a mountain every lustfull thought as a Sodomiticall vallany every idle word as a desperate blasphemy every angry look as a bloody murder every transgression against light of conscience as a sin against the Holy Ghost In this amazednesse of spirit God can cause a man to turn his own artillery his wit and learning upon himself to argue with subtility against the pardonableness his sins to wound his wounds with a conceit that they are incurable to vex his very vexations with refusing to be comforted In a word to turn to his own torment not only his crosses and tentations but even the very comforts of his life wife children gold goods honours as that wofull Spira did If God speak the word the hand shall rebel and strike the
severest punishing of offenders and not wound like murderers to destroy but like Chyrurgeons to cure and to prevent the spreading of sin yea punishment 8. Observ 8. It should be our great desire by all our own sufferings for sin to prevent the like sin in and sufferings of others We must not be like those that have the Plague who love to inffect others with it A gracious heart rather desires to hear of converts by his falls and woes then to have companions in either They who have been by sin examples of imitation should pray that by their sufferings they may become examples of Caution How rare is this heavenly temper in sufferers Most Christians when they are in troubles only desire the removall of them perhaps the sanctifying of them to themselves but who prayes for the sanctifying of them unto others It s ordinary for men under their sufferings to have thoughts of impatience against God and of revenge against the instrument of their troubles but unusuall for men to have aimes of benefiting beholders by their troubles If the Lord would throughly affect us with love to his glory and hatred to sin we should be willing to have the house pulled down upon our own heads so as sin may be destroyed in others and hereby we may do more good at our death then we have done throughout our whole lives The sinners of these laters times sin more heinously then they who lived in former ages Observ 9. The sins committed by those who have others for an example are greater then those committed formerly though they be the same for kind He who falls by stumbling at the same stone at which he dash'd who went before him falls without apology Wee in these times stand upon the shoulders of those who lived of old and therefore ought to see further we may behold by what meanes they stood where also and how they fell and how by either they sped More exactnesse in working and walking becomes us who have more light to guide us How happy were we if as we strive to excell our forefathers in other arts we did not come behind them in that heavenly art of a holy life though their helps were fewer then ours It is a common observation concerning our buildings that though they are of more curious contrivement yet lesse substantiall and durable then those of old time Non tulit nos sine exemplo● ut inveniat sine delicto vel tollat sine patrocinio I fear this may be more truly said of our religion then of our buildings It will be more tolerable at the last day for those who lived in the times of Sodom then for sinners in these days upon whom the ends of the world are come Vnto whomsoever much is given of him shall be much required Surely as we pay dearer for our worldly commodities we must pay much dearer for our sinfull pleasures then our fore-fathers have done We had better never have heard of Sodoms ruin then not to mend our lives by the example 10. Observ 10 It s our duty to make an holy improvement of the worst things which fall out in the world Even Sodom and Gomorrha were our examples and we should make lye to cleanse us of their ashes A good man should sail as they say of skilfull Mariners with every wind and as Samson take honey out of the carcass of the Lion Vespasian raised gain out of an excrement the Estrich concocts iron Even the waters of jelousie which rotted the bellies and limbs of some made others healthfull and fruitfull The sins of the worst should and sometimes do teach the godly to walk more closely and humbly with God Were we not wanting to our selves the sin of Sodom might be to us felix culpa an happy fault But alas most men more imitate then shun the sins of others nay which is much worse they rather take occasion to oppose deride and so get hurt by seeing the holy strictnesse of the godly then to grow more watchfull and holy by observing the sinfull loosenesse of the wicked But here is the excellency of grace to make a man like David Therefore to love the Commandments of God Psal 119. i 27. because wicked men make void the Law 11. Observ ult It is our wisdome to learn how to behold the examples of caution which God hath set forth especially in Scripture with most advantage to our souls Against that which God shews we must not shut our eyes To this end 1. Let us give our assent to the truth of examples as delivered in Scripture which doth not only relate the judgments themselves but their causes also the supreme God the deserving sin Faith takes into its vast comprehension every part of Gods word It hath been the Divels policy to strike at the truths of Scripture-stories either by denying or adulterating them * Prophani quidam ex Schola Porphirii ut miraculū elevarent Confinxerunt Mosem peritissimum naturae observasse fluxum refluxum maris Erithraei refluente illo suos traduxisse Riv. in Exod. Porphiry to overturn the miraculousnesse of the Israelites passing through the Red sea saith that Moses took the advantage of a low ebbing water and so went through safely which the Egyptians not understanding were drowned by the flowing of the water Strabo likewise perverts the truth of this story of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrha Graeci Scriptores Sodomam cum vicinis civitatibus eam ob causam incendio periisse sentiunt quod regio illa cavernosa esset sulphurea atque ita hujusmodi exitio obnoxia Muscul in 19. Gen. by attributing it to naturall causes and reporting that these cities were seated on a soyl sulphureous and full of holes from which fire breaking forth consumed them Examples of the dreadfullest aspect will never affright us from sin when we look upon them in the Divels dress Let us not sport at examples and make them our play-fellows Read not the example of Lots wife as the Poeticall fiction of turning Niobe into a stone What judgement thou readest beleeve though never so severe never so farre beyond thy apprehension 2. Look upon examples with deep and diligent observation They must sink into us we must set our hearts to them Steep our thoughts in them and ponder them in their certainty causes severity Posting passengers cannot be serious observers of any place How profitable is it sometime to dwel in our meditations upon these monuments of divine justice Assent must be followed with consideration Transient thoughts become not permanent examples 3. Look upon these examples with an impartiall examination Enquire within whether was such an one whom vengeance overtook a greater sinner then I am Ask thy conscience that question which the Prophet put to the Israelites are there not with me even with me the same sins against the Lord Ransack thy soul to find out the traytor hide not that in
brats at her Neighbours doors In short the weak ground of this imputation of Rebellion to the Godly hath been their refusing to obey such commands of Magistrates as they apprehended sinfull And truly in this case Bene quod apposuit ●t quae sunt Det Deo hoc est imaginem Caesaris Caesari quae in nummo est imaginem Dei Deo quae in bomine est ut Caesari quidem pecuniam reddas Deo temetipsum Tert. lib. de idol c. 15. Extra territorium jus dicenti impune non paretur Observ ult when Christ calls another way I neither owe buriall to my dead nor obedience to my living though Politicall Father And as Tertullian holily descants upon those words of Christ Render to Caesar the things which are Caesars and to God c. It s well added And to God the things that are Gods that is give the image of Caesar to Caesar which is on his Coin and give the image of God to God which is in man so as Caesar may have thy money but God thy self And as according to the Civillians we must not give obedience to him that gives Law out of his own Territory so neither obey man when he goes beyond his bounds in commanding against the word and in this the Apostles Act. 5.29 and the three servants of God in Babylon have been our examples 7. Lust opposeth restraint is an enemy to Dominion loves not to be bridled Libertines despise Dominion and reject Magistracy because thereby their licencious humour is restrained The mad upon lust like the mad dog are the more inraged by the chain which curbs They who run to excess of riot in this their pouring forth if they meet with opposition like the stop'd stream swell the higher and overflow the banks Act. 19.28 1 Sam. 2.22.25 Judg. 20.14 This opposing of restraint goeth along with every lust but especially with that of carnall uncleannesse they who defile the flesh reject Dominion The sons of Eli were lustfull and withall disobedient to the command of the Magistrate The Gibeonites were as refractory to the message of Israel as they were addicted to filthinesse The Sodomites were at the same time both set upon their uncleanesse and enraged against Lots counsel The Anabaptists of Munster were grown to that heighth of uncleannesse that they openly taught men might marry as many wives as they pleased and John of Leyden their King upon a pretended revelation from Heaven presently marryed three and they who were most bold in this kind and took most wives were accounted the best men and most commendable But the fruit of this Doctrine was their teaching that before the day of Judgement Christ had a worldly Kingdome and in that the Saints only had Dominion that this Kingdom was that of the Anabaptists newly begun wherein Magistracy was to be rooted out and although Christ and his Apostles had no civil government yet that they had committed the same with the power of the sword to those who after them should teach in the Church Nor is it possible but that lust should vehemently oppose restraint considering its propensions and motions are naturall and therefore strong as also furthered by all the helps which a powerfull and impure spirit can invent and apply False then is the pretence of Libertines who would be thought only ro oppose the irregularities of Magistracy or Ministry when as it is clear that their lusts are most offended at the being of their ordinations and the consciencious discharge of them And much should this comfort those who are thus consciencious in the midst of all the rage and reproach with which they are followed for their faithfulnesse It is a sign they have disquieted mens lusts and as Luther once said that when Satan roars they have given him a full blow Nor yet should the unquietnesse and troubles of the world be laid at the door of restraint and Dominion If religious opposition drawes out mens rage it doth it by labouring to keep it in or rather to take it away From mens lusts are warres in that they will not stoop to God who will not lay aside his dominion to gratifie licenciousnesse In a word We may hence gather the insufficiency of humane laws nay any externall means to change the heart from a love of sin they may possibly restrein and curb and frequently they irritate and enrage sinners it s only the power of grace at once to take away the disobedience of the life and the despising of the heart To conclude We may hence learn the direct way to avoid the sin of these Seducers oppose lusts these put people upon opposing of Magistracy Such are 1. Covetousness when men desire to set the Nations on fire that they may steal away the goods and to have States wrackt that the goods may be cast upon their costs 2. Discontentednesse with our condition The trees in Jothams Parable pleased themselves in their own station of privacy and usefulnesse and she was a wise woman who contented her selfe with her abode among her own people 3. Ambition and affectation of superiority it s better to be fit to rule then to rule and not to be fit He is only worthy of honour of whom honour it self is unworthy and to whom it even sues for acceptance Absolom aspired to be high in his life and he was in his death as high as the boughs of the tree a fit reward for his ambitious climbing 4. Envy at the height of others whereby men look into the failings of Magistrates to blemish them and will not see the gifts and graces of their Superiors but only with repining grieving not because things go ill but because they go no worse A cursed temper 5. Selfe conceitednesse whereby with Absolom men think themselves fitter to sit at the stern then any placed there already 6. Implacablenesse whereby private injuries are retain'd with a watching of all occasions of revenge though to the involving of multitudes in the co-partnership of their own sedition and destruction In a word So long as we love lust we cannot conscienciously obey Magiserates and yet so long as we have luft we cannot be without Magistrates The Lord fit us for that condition wherein we shall not be troubled with the former nor stand in need of the later FINIS