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A13209 Lectures vpon the eleventh chapter to the Romans. Preached by that learned and godly divine of famous memorie, Dr. Sutton, in St. Marie Overies in Southwarke. Published for the good of all Gods Church generally, and especially of those that were then his hearers Sutton, Thomas, 1585-1623.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1632 (1632) STC 23507; ESTC S118002 306,616 538

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common to all true Christians as well as Paul As first on the death of Christ Hee that spared not his owne Son but gave him for us all c. vers 32. Secondly on Gods free justification Who can lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect it is Christ that justifieth c. Thirdly upon Christs intercession Hee is at the right hand of God making request to God for us vers 34. Vpon these grounds commonto all true Beleevers doth the Apostle ground his resolution Thirdly to all the promises of God are added the seales in the true use of the Sacraments Reason 3 that if any of the faithfull should doubt of the generall promises he might there have it sealed to his particular person Circumcision a seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4.11 So Ephes 1.13 After yee beleeved the Gospell you were sealed with the spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance And 2 Cor. 1.22 Hee hath sealed us and given us the earnest of his spirit in our hearts Ephes 4.30 Grieve not the Holy Spirit whereby ye are sealed to the day of redemption 2 Tim. 2.19 I end it with the consideration of the phrase the Apostle useth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee hath given us the earnest of his spirit the word signifies a pledge given or a seale annexed that wee may not doubt of the promises as men that lend a little money and take a good pawne are sure to bee no losers So hath God given us not onely his word but his covenant nor only his covenant but a seale nor only a seale but an oath nor only his word covenant seale and oath but a pawne and pledge and that no ineane one it is his holy Spirit He hath sent the spirit of his Son into our hearts Gal. 4.6 I come to let you see how a man may be sure of his salvation by infallible signs and marks 1. A conscionable care of the meanes of salvation and a desire to use them when wee doe enjoy them The signes whereby we may be assured of our election for the end and the meanes to the end are never severed in Gods purpose and decree and therefore it followes that all such as doe carefully use the meanes of salvation are sure in the end to attaine saluation For example the best means of saluation is the hearing of the Word that is the Bread of life whereof hee that eateth shall live ever Ioh. 6.27 that is the treasure hid in the field Matth. 13.44 They that seek Christ there shal not misse of him Search the Scriptures for in them ye thinke ye have eternall life Ioh. 5.39 And our Saviour allowes of this doctrine Ioh. 10.27 They are my sheepe that heare my voyce and follow me Audiunt lupi boedi sed non sequuntur Musc in Joh. Wolves and goats heare but follow him not saith Musculus upon Iohn They that seed in the greene pastures and are led forth to the waters of comfort have the Lord for their shepherd and keeper and then hee converts their soules and brings them forth into the paths of righteousnesse these men need feare no evill for with his rod and staffe the Lord comforts them they that follow the steps and the voyce of that heavenly Mercurie Qui pias laeth anlmas reponis sedibus Virgaque levem coercet anrea tur bam Hor lib. 1. Od 10. He amnica nobu incumbit sellicitudo ut audiamus vocem sequamur Aug. lib. de ovibus cap. 3. Who seateth holy soules in joyfull places and with his golden rod ruleth the unconstant multitude as Horace Lib. 1. Ode 10. need never feare what death and hell can doe against them This onely care lieth upon us that wee heare his voyce and follow him saith Augustine Therefore much too blame are they that are so slacke in this dutie that they much care not whether they heare or no and are kept from this house upon small occasion it makes mee feare they want a love of the meanes and therefore in the end must want the consummation of all comforts the salvation of their soules 2. The spirit of supplication and prayer The second signe of our Election when a man can open his heart and poure out his soule in strong cries and effectuall prayers unto God confessing his sinnes and suing for mercie and forgivenesse For this prayer is a worke and effect of the Spirit which by meanes naturall cannot be attained for we know not what to pray for as we ought Rom. 8.26 And therefore they that have a minde and love to pray they that finde a sweetnesse and comfort in it have surely the Spirit of God in them There is an holy anoynting that teacheth us what to pray 1 Ioh. 2.27 that anoynting is the Spirit and that verie Spirit witnesseth with ours that wee are the sonnes of God Rom. 8.16 a good comfort for such as love to be talking and conferring with God that are still commending their soules to him in prayer I would have you to be like Iames the Iust whereof Eusebius Booke 2. Chap. 23. Genua epu in morem Cameli obdurata sensum contaclus amiserunt His knees being hardened like to a Camels lost the sense of feeling and resolve with Ambrose Bishop of Millaine when he was to be exiled by Iustina the mother of Valentinian told them he would never run away but if they had any purpose to kill him they should at any time finde him in the Church praying for himselfe and his people as Charion remembers it Chron. Booke 3. I would have you to bee like Anna the daughter of Phanuel that never departed out of the Temple but served God in prayer night and day Luke 2.37 so might you know that Gods Spirit is in you indeed 3. To be wained and estranged from the world The third signe of our election to entertaine heavenly conference to minde heavenly things as Phil. 3.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our conversation is in heaven If our hearts and that his soule is not filled O wretch that I am c. Rom. 7.24 Lastly a greedy desire of that which is able to satisfie an hungrie soule for I follow hard toward the marke Phil. 3.14 If any thus hunger and thirst blessed are they If any man thirst let him come to me and drinke c. Ioh. 7.37 what shall he drinke see Apoc. 21.6 I will give to him that is a thirst of the water of the well of life freely Yea but will that save Yes For he that drinketh of this shall never die nor be thirstie againe Ioh. 4.14 So that wee may say with Marie Hee will surely fill the hungrie with good things Luke 1.53 If any man thirst after God and his righteousnesse the Lambe that sits in the midst of the throne shall guide him and lead him to the fountaines of living waters Apoc. 7.17 If then you can say with David Psal 42.
for Rahab the harlot nor want for poore Lazarus shall bee accepted of God at the judgement A singular comfort for such as live in prophane and wicked places Vse that are enforced to complaine as David did Psal 120.5 Woe is me that I am constrained to dwell with Mesech that I dwell in the tents of Kedar for though the place where thou livest bee as Sodome and the sinnes of it mount as high as Heaven yet if thou bee a Lor that lovest holinesse and hatest iniquitie thou shalt surely be saved from the fire Though the place where thou livest be like the old world so sinfull that God repented that ever hee made it Gen. 6.6 yet if thou bee a Noah faithfull and holy thou for thy part shalt surely bee saved from the water what if thou live in Mesech amongst the untoward Ishmaelites that bend their bowes against the Lord and shoot their arrowes against Heaven like the Thracians in Herodotus his Melpomene For if thou bee a David David after Gods heart when thousands fall beside thee and ten thousand at thy right hand the plague shall not come nigh thee what if thou dwell amongst thornes prepared for the fire yet if thou be a Lilly or a Rose it shall goe well with thee in the day of vengeance what if thou live in the salt sea yet if thou retaine thy sweet and pleasing rellish there shall no harme happen unto thee What if thou passe thorow the weeds and gravell of a brinish Ocean yet if thou be like the river Arethusa commended for that rare qualitie by Virgil in his 10. ●clogue Quamvis fluctus subterlabere Sicanos Dor is amar a suam non intermiscuit undam Thou shalt bee è mult is millibus unus one of a thousand Titio ereptus ex igne one whom God will choose out of the midst of a perverse and crooked generation what then remaines but this that we continue constant and unmoveable in our most holy faith and though wee live in such evill dayes and dwell in such prophane places where wickednesse over-flowes the banks as the sea at an high tide and a full spring though wee be reserved ad tempora novissima to the last times and dwell neare the outsides and the common sewers where all Heretiques make their nests and like to Toads and Frogs engender in these sens and puddles Aug. de temp Scrm. 232. as Augustine is pleased to stile them though wee dwell amongst Papists Anabaptists Familists and have our residence amongst the Bastards of Barrow Browne c. yet if wee beleeve and repent if wee turne to the Lord though we turne from them if wee cleave to the Lord and renounce them if wee keepe our selves unspotted our consciences untouched we shall undoubtedly bee saved and received unto mercie notwithstanding all their peremptorie sentence of condemnation which they passe upon us Before I come to the two other branches let me note unto you the drift of all it is to prove that the Iewes are not all cast off and how it is proved because Paul knowes that hee himselfe is not cast off Here we have Paul sure and certaine of his owne salvation From whence gather A man while he is in this life may be sure and certaine of his owne salvation Doct. and life eternall And I adde ordinarily because I meane to oppose the Trent Councell denouncing the deepe Anathema upon them that say it a Si quis dixerit bominem ronaium justificatum toueri ex side ad credendum se esse ex numero praede stinatorum anathema sit If any man say that a man regenerate and justified is bound by faith to beleeve that he is in the number of the elect let hm bee accursed as Chemnitius notes to be in the 6. Session Canon 15. b Possunt quidom bon sperare peccata sibi remitti sed sine cerid siducia They may indeed hope well that their sinnes are forgiven but not with any certaine assurance In any particular man yet saith Christ Sonne thy sinnes are forgiven thee to one and to another Thy faith hath saved thee viz. the woman that had the bloudie issue Mar. 5.34 I fetch my reasons first from the nature and propertie of a free promise made by God as unto Ioshua I will never faile thee unto Abraham Gen. 17.7 I will be thy God c. So that if Gods promises be certaine and sure then is the salvation of the faithfull certaine and sure and because some men might doubt the Apostle tels us Heb. 6.17 18. that God was willing to confirme the promise And therefore bound himselfe by an oath that by two immutable things wherein it is impossible that God should lye that they might have strong consolation the one is his word the other his oath whosoever shall not beleeve God in these two maketh God a Liar in this that hee saith he hath given eternall life through his Son 1 Ioh. 5.10 That which the Papist replyes that the promises of God are true in generall but are not certaine to particular men by the certaintie of faith because it is no where faid in speciall I will give thee is most frivolous and idle for if the promise bee made to all that beleeve then when I know that I beleeve I know the promise is made to mee and besides it is false to say that the promises are onely generall See Rom. 10.9 If thou shalt confesse with thy mouth the Lord Iesus c. thou shalt bee saved Here is certaintie of faith which is nothing else but that assured confidence of our heart by which it perceiveth and doubteth not that it hath right to what is promised and this is that new name written in the white stone Apo● 2.17 by this faith God dwelleth in our hearts and suffereth none to perish saith Lombard Booke 3. Distinct 23. Secondly from the propertie of justifying faith First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is an infallible perswasion Heb. 10.22 Reason 2 Secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the substance Hebr. 11.1 Thirdly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through Christ we have boldnesse Ephes 3.12 Vpon these the Holy Ghost in Heb. 6. by an excellent metaphor compares faith to an anchor fastened in firme earth which the ship-man knowes to bee sound and constant against which no stormes can prevaile Which we have as the anchor of the soule both sure and stedfast Heb. 6.19 And Paul Rom. 8.38 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For I am perswaded that neither death nor life c. shall bee able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. And vers 16. The Spirit of God witnesseth to our spirits that we are the sons of God which Pighius and Andradius setting downe the Trent Councell as Chemnitius reciteth it contend to have beene not by faith but by revelation But I will make it appeare that Paul grounds not this assurance upon revelation but on a ground
for them then the Lord stayed him and stopt his passage by bringing in the sea to drowne him and his host Exod. 14. as hee did with Saul when he would have taken away Davids life the Lord set downe how farre hee should proceed to chase him from place to place but not to death By all which it appeares that wee make not God to bee an idle looker on which suffers every creature to doe what they will But when God gives men over to bee blinded and hardned by Sathan and suffers wicked men for a time to worke mischiefe yet sets bounds and limitts to their rage and fury and in the end wonderfully rescues his servants from trouble This surely is not to doe nothing Fifthly a reducing of the ends to the rule of justice The bringing of some good out of evill for though Sathan and wicked men propose their ends the wicked that hee may serve his pleasures the Devill that hee may destroy yet such is the goodnesse of God B●●um est mala esse vel ●ieri alioqu●● sum●●è bonus non permitte●et ca ficri Lo● hard lib. 1. distinct 46. that hee will never suffer evill to be done if it were not to bring good out of it It is good that evils be or bee done otherwise the most good God would not suffer them to bee done and such is the wisdome of God that out of worst things he can chose the best ends as for example Iosephs brethen sold him for envy but God sent him to prouide for his old father and his brethren to preserve their lives Gen. 45.5 So in the death of Christ Sathan and the Iewes intended onely his death but God turned it to the salvation of all that beleeve As poyson is in it selfe evill but the skilfull Physician by tempering it cures the sicke and workes good out of it So doth God with sinne Shimei by cursing would shew his hatred of David but God would make knowne the patience of David which was good Now these workes as they proceed from the next cause man and the Devth be evill they be evill trees which cannot bring forth good fruits But as they proceed from the supreme cause and as hee brings good out of them they are good God and Satan will both have Ierusalem destroyed But Sathan that hee might bee avenged on them God that hee might punish their rebellion Christ is delivered to death the Iewes they doe it onely in malice But God hath another end the redemption and salvation of man and therefore in Act. 4.28 Pilate and the Iewes Gentiles gathered together to doe whatsoever thy hand and Councell had determined S. Enchirid ad Laurent ca. 101. Augustine shewes how God man may will the same thing and God in willing it doth well and yet man sinnes in willing it The father of an ungratious child is sicke Vt citius perveniat ad haeredita●em pa●ris Vu●t Deus j●●s●e fil u● i● pie God will have him to die ●n his just judgement the sonne That hee may sooner come to his fathers inheritance God wills it justly the sonne wickedly Albeit God doe order Res mala non habet ●aulan essi cientem sed desi ie 〈◊〉 De 〈◊〉 ta●e Dei Lib 12. cap 7. determinate and governe sinnes that be done yet is he not properly the efficient cause of sinne It was a good saying of Augustine An evill thing hath no a cause efficient but defficient as the corruption of iudgement and the perversnesse of will and further I say that though the Papist accuseth us for making God the author of sin yet I will change my religion if I will not shew to any Romanist that will challenge me that wee of this Church teach no otherwise than the Papists themselues have written not onely out of Occam Durand and Bannes but principally out of Thomas Aquinas and Bellarmine himselfe In R●m 9. Dea ●ass gratiae lib. 2. Cap. 13. By a figure hee commands it and incites men unto it as a Huntsman sets the dog upon the Hare by letting goe the slip That God doth not onely permit the wicked to doe evill nor onely forsake the godly that the wicked may doe what they will against them But he oversees their wills he rules their wills he governs their wills nay he bowes and bends them by working invisibly in them and not only inclines the will to one evill rather than to another by permitting them to bee carried into one sinne and not into another but also positively hee bends them by inclining them to one evill and turning them from another occasionally and morally as hee speakes out of Thomas Aquinas Let them looke well into these speeches and they shall finde that wee say no more than they and if they would expound ours as candidly as their owne there would bee small or no difference Briefly then we say first in generall That God is not the author of sinne but the devill and mans corrupt will and the contrary we defie as blasphemy Secondly in particular wee beleeve that God wills nothing which is formerly sinne but hee fulfills his good wills by our evill wills as P. Lombard as hee wills that which is good Lib 1. Distinct 48. but hates it rather whence it followes that hee inspires it into no man nor creates any corruption in our wills which was not there before but forbids it absolutely within us by the light of his spirit as Rom. 2.15 without by the commandement Thou shalt heare a word behinde thee saying this is the way turne not out of it Isay 39.21 c. The first entrance of sinne into the world and the continuance of it in the world was the voluntary action of mans will God infusing no evill into him for God is not the cause why man is worse but that which God doth about and concerning sinne is contained in three actions First as the universall cause of all things hee sustaines mankinde and upholds his being yea the being motion of all his actions good and bad So that no man could either move to any action or have being himselfe if God sustained him not as Act. 17.28 whence it followes that the very positive act which the schoolemen call the subject of sinne and the materiall part of sin whereto sinne cleaveth is of God in the same sort that all other actions of the creature are this proposition doth Zanchius well illustrate A man rides upon a lame horse in this action are two things Motion and Halting the motion is of man man makes him move but his halting is of himselfe so in sinne the action or motion is of God but the deformity of man himselfe Secondly he withholds his grace as Iohn 12.39 Therefore they could not beleeve because Isay saith he hath blinded c. as being bound to no man but leaves the wicked to themselves whereupon it followes that their hearts grow hard and they cannot chose
offered by Moses and Aaron The Iewes they slue Christ and the Apostles and upon this followed the judgement Then came the floud upon the old world fire upon Sodome the sea in upon Aegvpt the spirit of slumber upon the Iewes There cannot be a greater judgement than to be strucke with a spirituall lethargie that nothing will waken to have hearts so hard that nothing can soften them to be like Epimenides in his cave or like the famous sleepers in the time of the Emperour De●ius o● like Dionysius of Heraclea c. But this will better appeare in the two particulars whereof the first is Eyes that they should not see Salvian Lib 2. The eyes of the body which are fenestrae mentis the windowes of the minde should guide from corporall and the eyes of the minde from spirituall dangers * Tria imp●●iunt occulum 1. Ten●brae viz. peccata 2. Humor concretus viz. conflu●us peco●torum 3. Cura terrenorum With the former they lookt cleere enough not a mote in them but in the eyes of their mindes there were great beames that they could not see Three things hinder the eye 1. Darknesse to wit sinnes 2. a Concrete humour to wit a concusse of sinnes 3. The care for earthly things This Christ upbraided them with I speake to them in parables because seeing doe not see c. Matth. 13.13 which was a just judgement saith Musculus a Quia cùm loquebat●r perspicùe noluerunt intell●gire in paenam jam loquitur obscurè Because they would not understand when he spake cleerely to their punishment hee now speaketh obscurely And againe in Ioh. 12.40 He hath blinded their eyes c. Will you know a point by the way When the Iewes bewrayed their blindnesse that was in the time of Christ the Prophets and Apostles as Musculus observes and hee gives this note upon it b Malum ingenium impiorum nunquā cl●riùs deprehenditur qùam ub●lux veritatis splendere incipit The ill disposition of the wicked as never more clearely discerned than where the light of the truth begins to shine As c Splendente solenoctuae vespertiliones naturae defectum ostendunt sed noctè circum circa volitant hae solae aves The Sunne shining the Owles and Bats shew the defect of their nature but these birds alone in the night fly about here and there So wicked men shew themselves most vile when the best meanes are used to doe them good when this light came into the world then did this people bewray their blindnesse when Christ preached powerfully professed himselfe to bee the Messias then did they most of all whet their malice and rage against him when hee said I am of God and would have instructed them in his divinitie then they goe about to take him Ioh. 7.30 When he taught that high mysterie I and the Father are one then they goe about to stone him Ioh. 10.31 The more light they had the more their blindnesse appeared In the night time all colours are alike the foulest fogs and fens are not discerned from the crystall streames but in the morning they are discerned Reprobate men are never so bad as when the best meanes are used to doe them good Herod never worse than when Iohn preaches against Herodias till then all is well but if hee lay a plaister to that sore off goes his head Whence make a difference betweene the good and bad at the hearing of the word The one trembles and therefore onely is fit to heare as Isay 66.5 Heare yee that tremble at my word The other rages as Zidkijah did with Michaiah 1 King 22.24 When this Sunne shines the one is mollified like wax the other hardened like clay when the Law is read the one melteth like the heart of Iosiah 2 King 22.19 the other is never harder than then like as Pharaoh the more miracles Moses wrought and the more Aaron spake from God the more hee was hardened to be short we may see here both the nature of the word that it can discover a mans blindnesse and finde out everie uncleane corner in his heart as Heb. 4.12 It is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart Secondly it is a marke to know a castaway by his hearing of the word the seeing the light makes him more blind the hearing more hard Let them take heed then that have heard so many Sermons against pride and yet studie new tricks to cover foule carkasses more than ever they did So many against neglect of the word and now absent themselves more than ever they did Against greedinesse and yet wooe and sollicite the world more than ever they did I will not say what I feare not that they are reprobates But as old Iacob said of Simeon and Levi Genes 49.6 Into their secrets let not my soule come I come a little neerer It is not Eruit illis ●culos Soto in Rom. 11. He hath pluckt out their eyes that they should not see But though hee give other eyes to to see hee gives them eyes that they should not see a greater judgement than if hee had quite taken away their eyes Qui privati sunt oculis non possunt videndo seduci For They that have no eyes cannot be seduced by seeing But the purblinde though he have eyes and see somewhat as hee in Mark. 8.24 Menlike trees is many times more wronged by seeing than if he were quite blinde for so our Saviour tels this people in Ioh. 9.41 If yee were blinde yee should not have sinne but now you see therefore your sinne remaines They had eyes to see cor●icem Legis the barke and outside of the Law sed non penetrabant oculi corum ad medullam but their eyes pierced not to the marrow thereof The points are many 1. That the word which is the best salve for some mens eyes doth take away the sight of others yet the fault is not in the word but in themselves Non crimen Phoebus noctua crimen habet The fault is not in the Sunne but in the Owle 2. When God gives a blessing as eyes to see and men abuse it and regard not God in justice deprives them of the use of it So in the Word and the Ministers which is the note of Anselmus But the note which I insist on is Observat that they saw his miracles and beleeved not The eyes of their body saw him doe those works which none could doe but God and by delegation from him as healing the sicke cleansing Lepers raising the dead yet they smoaked out the eyes of their understandings that it might not sinke into their hearts and for all that they saw they beleeved him not and therefore God in judgement casts such a mist upon their understanding that now they cannot see though they would and such a distemper is now in their eyes that the sight not onely failes but deceives them and
plea it selfe The branches are broken off that I might be grafted in It containes two members the one the disparagement of the Iew The branches are broken off the other the Gentile's proud conceit of himselfe that I might be grafted in I begin with the first They are called branches onely in respect of outward prerogatives from whence learne first That such branches as shall bee cut off are so like others that God onely can distinguish them Doct. A point manifest in that Parable Matth. 13.29 When the servant would have pluckt up the tares that were among the wheat Christ forbids him for this reason lest while you plucke up the tares you plucke up the wheat as not being able to distinguish one from another according to that of S. Augustine Deus nobis imperavit congregauonem sib reservavit separationem ill●us est s ●parare q●ines●●t errare Aug. ad virgin Faeliciam Epist 109. Quidam tenent pa●●ral s●athed●as ut Dugregem custodiant quidam ut suis honoribus servi●●t Aug. ibid. Aug. contra Petil●anum lib. 3. cap. 55. God hath required of us the congregating hath reserved the separating to himselfe hee must separate who knowes not how to erre Who can distinguish S. Iude from the Traytour Iudas or Simon Peter from Simon Magus but onely Christ Some doe sit in the pastorall chaires that they may keepe Gods flocke some that they may serve their owne preferments saith the same Father Ibid. Iudas doth preach and baptize as well as Iude as the same Father speaketh There bee branches saith Ambrose according to present righteousnesse and there be some according to the fore-knowledge of God and none can distinguish them but God there bee branches which Christ hath planted and some which hee hath not planted and till God cut off the one and leave the other none can make a difference betweene them Our first parents have two children the one within the Covenant the other not yet so like hat none can distinguish them but God In one Arke Shem Ham and Iaphet none knowes who is in or who without grace but God In one wombe Esau and Iacob which is predestinate which not none knowes but God untill the great Shepherd come none can distinguish sheepe from goats untill the reapers come none can distinguish wheat from tares untill the Master of the house come none can distinguish betweene the vessels of honour and dishonour If you aske the reason why God suffers the branches that must bee cut off to grow amongst others I answer that it is for a two-fold reason 1. Because the coldnesse of devotion in the one should by an Antiperistasis stirre up zeale in the other as the wind striving to blow out the fire encreaseth the flame 2. That the glorie of the true branches might bee more illustrious and eminent Laus tr●buenda Murenae non quod Asiam viderat s●d quod in Asia continenter vixerat Cic. Orat. pro Murena Murena is to be praised not because hee had seene Asia but because hee had lived continently in Asia saith Cicero Lots chastitie appeares more in Sodome than when hee lived in the mountaines Hence see how unsound they are who take upon them to determine Vse who is not of the Church and therefore separate themselves from us saying as Isa 65.5 Stand apart come not neere me for I am holier than thou I know not what to say of such but as Constantine said to Acesius a Novatian Bishop Erigito tibi scalam Acesi ut s●lus in coelum ●scendas S●●r Eccles H●st lib. 1. cap. 7. A tendi ● z●zaenia tri●●●u●e non attendu Set up a ladder for thy selfe O Acesius that thou alone mayst ascend up to Heaven If they leave us because we have faults by the same reason they must needs fly into Heaven for there is no place in earth for them Thou lookest to the cockle and the wheat thou regardest not When thou dividest thy selfe from hypocrites in the Church thou dividest thy selfe from the Church And in heterogene all bodies a member cur off perisheth O then forsake not the greene pastures Et membrum in h●●erog●neis ●e rit ●bs●●ssum because of the goats nor Gods house because of the vessels of dishonour nor Gods wheat because of the tares nor Gods net because of the bad fishes that are in it Rather follow the rule of S. Augustine against the letters of Petilianus a Tolera propter bonos comm●x●●onem ● alorum ne visles propter ●●alos claritatem bonor●m Aug. Contra Petil●anum lib. 3. cap. 2. Beare with the mixture of evill because of the good lest thou violate the charitie of the good because of the evill b Nee propter m●los bonos deseramus sea propter bonos malos s●sser●mus Aug. contra Parme●an●● lib. 2. cap. 8. Neither let us forsake the good because of the evill but suffer the evill because of the good 2. If no man can distinguish the good from the bad learne first not to judge of another that is ill for hee may prove good nor of him that is good in shew for hee may prove ill nor of thy selfe that thou art happie because thou hast the outward privileges of true branches but seeke for the power of godlinesse in thine owne heart to sinde those graces whereby thine election may be sealed unto thee hearing the word Vse 2 fervencie in prayer meditation of heaven hungring after righteousnesse combating against the flesh now obedience love and a joyfull expectation of Christs comming to judgement in the clouds of Heaven Secondly the branches are broken off Observ 2 Therefore no people no Nation so farre preferred above others but sinne will bring them to naught and cut them off from God That all Nations have their fals and periods is granted by all but what may be the cause of their subversion the most be ignorant The Stoicke ascribes it to destinie Plato Pythagoras Me●b●d 6. Poly●ic lib. 5. cap. 1● and Bodin to number Aristotle to an asymmetry in the body Copernicus to the motion of an imaginary encentrique Cardanus and the most part of Astrologians to starres and planets All these have groped in darknesse and being misse-lead with an Ign●● fatuus have supposed with Ixion in the fable that they had found the true Iuno when it was but a cloud of palpable darknesse for if wee consult with the oracles of God we shall there finde that sinne is the cause why God falls out with his children turnes cities into ashes makes kingdomes but ludibria fortunae the mocking stocks of fortune c. But I am loth that it should be said of mee as it was of Micaiah That man doth not prophesie to us any good There is one point more Thirdly the branches are broken off God can no sooner cast a man downe but man is ready to tread upon him Observ 3 Its Iobs case who when he was cast downe and lay upon the earth
makes much for Gods glorie Reason 1 that his judgements and secrets especially in matters of election and reprobation as also of particular events and of the times and seasons are hid and it is not fit for us to know them Acts 1.6 God doth not as Ezechias did 2 Chron. 32. shew all his riches and treasures to the Babylonish Ambassadours Secondly Reason 2 we cannot finde them out because God in his dispensation of his workes hath hidden contraries under contraries viz. contrarie ends under contrarie meanes life under death riches under povertie glorie under shame as the Apostle speakes He being rich became poore that we through his povertie might be made rich 2 Cor. 8.9 and by dying destroyed him that had the power of death Heb. 2.14 And therefore if we trouble our braines in these we shall be oppressed by the brightnesse of Gods Majestie confounded in our owne imaginations The Poets report of Prometheus the Father of Doucalion Horat. lib. 1. Od. 3. Ovid. M●●am lib. 1. Natal Comes Mytholog li. 4. cap. 6. that for prying too farre into the secrets of Iupiter the God rewarded him thus sent him a box by Pandora the wife of Epimetheus which so soone as ever he opened a thousand evils and diseases brake forth Mille morborum malorum geuera cruperunt by which they intimated the danger of prying into Gods secrets Thirdly Reason 3 they that in this have been inquisitive and curious have plunged themselves into such inextricable labyrinths and mazes that they have never been able to come out of them unto which we may adde That we have employment sufficient for our soules health to busie our mindes all the dayes of our life in searching out in musing upon in bringing into practise the lessons of Gods revealed will and word which containes whatsoever is necessarie for our salvation Wee can never in this mortalitie sound the just depth of that much lesse obey it and follow it Therefore what vanitie and folly were it to omit and leave undone that which God hath commanded and so highly concernes us and preposterously and unprofitably to dwell in the search of things impossible to be knowen and unprofitable if they were knowen Which serves first to answer all curious and unnecessarie questions Vse 1 as for example Why did God create man apt to fall Why did hee not keepe him from falling Why did God elect some and refuse others Why doth not God cause his word to be preacht at once in all places Why doth God condemne men for unbeleefe seeing no man can beleeve except God conferre faith upon him Why doth God suffer the greatest part of the world to lye buried in blindnesse and infidelitie Why doth hee at one time call moe than at another Is not God unjust and cruell to predestinate men to condemnation before they have done any evill I will not say to these as once Augustine answered him that made the question what God did ante mundum conditum before the world was made Aug. Confess lib. 11. cap. 12. That God was making hell for such idle and curious Questionists But I say with Chrysostome Ista ignorantia ipsâs●imtiâ sap●en●●or est Chrysost in Eph. 5. Hom. 19. Bern. de pugna spirituals serm 2. Cave inquirere quae non debes scire curiositas peric●losa praesumptio est damnosa p●ritia in obscuris an daces in peri●●losis praecipites facit De modo banc vivendi serm 44 That ignorance is wiser than knowledge it selfe And I say with Bernard that it is contraria omni pietati contrarie to all godlinesse Take heed thou inquirest not after those things which thou oughtest not to know curiositie is dangerous presumption damned skill it makes men wex bold in hidden points to run headlong in dangerous points Let us passe by curious questions bid adue to all vaine speculations Let us exercise our selves in searching the Scripture First to know and practise such things as concerne our faith the sanctification of our life and the salvation of our soule Vse 1 this will finde employment enough though wee were as wise as Salomon and could live as long as Methusalem did And so I come to examine what particular conclusions will come from the word And first from this that it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The riches of wisdome and knowledge True riches consists in true wisdome and in knowing of God There is one dives sibi rich to himselfe another dives Deo rich unto God Luk. 12.21 He that hath onely outward treasures is rich to himselfe but he that hath the treasures of wisdome and knowledge is rich in God But where is this rich minerall of wisdome and knowledge to be found I answer out of the Apostle Coloss 2.3 All the treasures of wisdome and knowledge are hid in Christ How then may wee come to have our part in them I answer By searching and knowing the Gospell that is the field spoken of Matth. 13.44 Disce home ubi sunt verae divitiae regnum caelorum vere divitem facit praestat Deum ipsum quo praesente quid deosse potest Learne O man where are the true riches the kingdome of heaven makes man truly rich it gives God himselfe who being present nothing can bee wanting saith Ferus A man may bee like unto Lazarus without bread like Peter without money like Iob without friend yet if hee have a costly jewell in a box hee is rich and wealthy so is hee that hath that pretious jewell of wisdome and knowledge If you desire to be enformed what riches it is to have wisdome and knowledge See Prov. 8.10 Secondly Vse 2 from these How unsearchable are his judgements and his wayes past finding out VERS 34. Vers 34 Who hath knowen the minde of the Lord or who hath beene his Counsellour 1. HIs wayes and judgements viz. the course and order which God observes in managing and disposing universall and particular things Doct. The course and order which God observes in managing and effecting his workes and purposes are not to be sought into farther than they are manifested in the word So Moses Deut. 29.29 Things secret belong unto God but things revealed to us and to our children When the Disciples moved that question Master wilt thou at this time restore the Kingdome Our Saviour answers that it is not fit for them to know the times and seasons Acts 1.6 Where the Spirit of God hath had no mouth to speake we must have no cares to heare and where hee ceaseth to direct wee must cease to enquire They are too malapart and saucie schollers who will needs know more than Gods Spirit is willing to impart Hee hath written enough to convert their soules to give wisdome unto the simple to rejoyce the heart and to give light unto the eyes Psal 19.7 8. He hath revealed enough to make them wise unto salvation to teach to reprove to correct to instruct in righteousnesse to make them