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A08402 The sinne against the Holy Ghost discouered and other Christian doctrines deliuered: in twelue sermons vpon part of the tenth chapter of the epistle to the Hebrewes. By Sebastian Benefield ... Benefield, Sebastian, 1559-1630. 1615 (1615) STC 1872; ESTC S101615 138,488 190

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from Christ but firmly continue in that calling and profession which they haue once vndertaken If there be any which haue not a true feeling and touch of this the Apostles most louing invitation to be constant in the faith of Christ they are altogether dead in their sinnes But they which liue by the power of God with Christ are wonderfully affected when they heare such punishments denounced And no maruaile For here we be taught by plaine expresse words that God will certainely most severely be revenged of those who doe willingly sinne after they haue receaued the knowledge of the truth He that shall willingly sinne after the knowledge of the truth he that shall wilfully cast away the grace which he hath receaved he that shal depart from the death and blood of Christ not by any particular sin but by a totall renoūcing of the faith to him there remaines no more sacrifice for sinnes but a fearefull looking for of iudgment and violent fire which shall devoure the adversaries These things are plainly deliuered in the 26 and 27 verses 26 If wee sinne willingly after that wee haue receaved the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinnes 27 But a fearefull looking for of iudgement and violent fire which shall devoure the adversaries The proposition is in it selfe so certaine and perspicuous that the gates of Hell shall neuer prevaile against the truth therof But because we are dull and slow of heart to beleeue all things which the most holy witnesses of Christ haue spoken therfore the Apostle doth here apply himselfe for our good and doth strengthen and proue the foresaid truth with a double argument The first whereof is drawen from a comparison with smaller matters The second from Gods owne words Both the arguments are very fit and apposite one to refute the Iewes the other to excite and stirre vs all vp The first argument is expressed vers 28 29. wherein that spirit of truth which the world cannot receaue doth assure the faithfull that all they shall certainely die which despise MOSES law and so the same spirit doth as it were lead vs by the hand to a serious and earnest meditation of that most bitter punishment wherewith all those questionlesse shall bee tortured which tread vnder foot the Sonne of God What could be spokē more plainely what more forcibly Hee that despiseth Moses law dyeth without mercy vnder two or three witnesses v. 28. Of how much sorer punishment suppose yee shall he be worthy which treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God counteth the blood of the Testament as an vnholy thing wherewith he was sanctified and doth despite the spirit of grace v. 29. We haue the second argument vers 30. and it is grounded vpon two testimonies which are recorded Deut. 32. The first vers 35. Vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompense saith the LORD The second ver 36. The LORD shall iudge his people The strength of these testimonies is nothing weakned by that which goes before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wee knowe him that hath said we knowe God is not as man that he should lie wee knowe he is alwaies like himselfe wee knowe hee doth never repent of those things which he hath said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We knowe him that hath said it vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompense saith the Lord and againe the Lord shall iudge his people The proofe of this doctrine the Apostle doth elegantly conclude vers 31. It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God By which men being warned of the fearefull severitie of Gods iudgement may learne so to apply themselues that they never fall from Christ It is a fearefull thing But to whom To the faithful No. Holy David when by Gods commandement the Prophet Gad offered him the choise of three evills I am saith he 2. Sam. 24.14 in a wonderfull streight let vs fall now into the hand of the LORD for his mercies are great So then to them which liue by faith it is not a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of God On whom then falleth this feare Truely vpon all the wicked and vnbeleeuers but especially vpon Apostataes those which fall from Christ forsake the true religion and betray the Gospell But yet these liue Liue yea liue to bee olde are lustie and strong Peace is in their habitations neither hath God laid his scourge vpon them they toyle not themselues as others doe Psal 73.5 neither are they plagued like other men They gird thēselues with pride as with a chaine and cloath themselues with crueltie as with a garment Harken now and be learned Psal 73.8 yee that set your face against Heaven Hence yee may learne that our God is a living God that God it is who with his yron rod wil breake the stifnecked Psal 2.9 like a potters vessell that this is the God beside whom there is no other that it is he alone who both can and will destroy the wicked man both soule and body in hell fire It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Greeke Epigrammatist saith Insuave est quicquid nimium est nam dicitur olim Mel quoque si immodica est copia bilis erit Too much of any thing is vnpleasant distastfull neither is it good to eate too much hony Prov. 25.27 because it turneth into choler Therefore I will endeavour Beloued in our Saviour Iesus Christ to speake so and such things which shal not be distastfull vnto you I will not repeate those things which I haue heretofore spoken of the Proposition and of the first argument by which the proposition is confirmed I wil briefly declare the force of the second argument which is conteined in the 30. verse Wee knowe him that hath said Vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompense saith the LORD And againe The LORD shall iudge his people In which verse I thinke three things especially worthy our observation The first that God is true in all his promises and sayings Which I gather out of these words VVee knowe him that hath said The second that God will revenge himselfe not only of those iniuries which are done to himselfe but of those also which his people suffer This the words imply that immediatly follow Vengeance belongeth vnto me I wil recompense saith the LORD The third that God will most severely and sharply punish his owne people This is contained in the last words The LORD shall iudge his people From the first of these I wil beginne my intended discourse and therewith conclude It is a common saying in the Schoolmen Deum non tantùm verum esse sed ipsam esse veritatem that God is not only true but truth it selfe Truth in himselfe in his workes and in his words God is truth in himselfe both because he is most truely that which he seeth and knoweth himselfe to
hence is our hope it may be our vaine hope that it shall be as well with vs for all our sinnes as it was with Noah Lot David Peter many other the strongest pillars of the Lords Temple for their many downefalls Here I endeavoured as I could to imprint in our hearts the wholesome doctrine contrary to these three misconceits and withall because it was thereby manifest that Gods chosen children doe sin also willingly I tooke occasion to put some difference betweene them so sinning and the sinfull reprobates and for that purpose I thē remembred you of two evident truthes in Christian Religion 1 The Saints of God may fall grievously dangerously 2 They cannot fall finally in the end not vtterly at any time Touching the third circumstance wherein were obserued the name the nature and the obiect of this sinne we haue heard that this sinne is commonly called the sinne against the holy Ghost not because it is against the Godhead of the holy Ghost for the same God is also Father and Sonne the Godhead of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost is all one their glory is equall their Maiestie is coeternall nor because it is against the person of the Holy Ghost for that is no greater then the person of the Father and of the Sonne the whole three persons are coeternall together and coequall but because it is against the goodnesse of the holy Ghost against the goodnes that is against those good graces of the holy Spirit bestowed vpon vs for the setting forth of the praises of the Lord. For whosoever shall despise those good graces and turne them to the contempt of Gods Maiestie and tread them vnder foot and account them prophane and purposely and wilfully and maliciously cary them away to all wantonnesse he crucifieth againe vnto himselfe the Sonne of God he despites the spirit of grace he sinnes against the holy Ghost Whereby it is plaine that the nature of this sinne is such as we find it to be described Heb. 6.1 2. where the Apostle mentioning repentance from dead workes faith towards God the doctrine of baptisme of laying on of hands of resurrection from the dead and of eternall iudgement and in the same place calling all these the doctrine of the beginning of Christ speaketh vers ● of an apostacie of a falling away from all these points even from the very foundation and first beginning of Christian faith giving vs thereby to vnderstand that they who are holden in this transgression and haue sinned this sinne haue forsaken all the principles of Christian religion haue lost their former light haue departed from their first vnderstanding From the name and nature of this sinne thus considered wee came to seeke the obiect of it and found the malice of this sin to be directed against the very Maiestie of God himselfe and against his Christ directly to respect the first table of the morall law to be not a particular slipping aside but a generall apostacie a generall falling away from God and that totally Here I came to the first reason vsed by our Apostle to disswade vs from committing so vile a sinne contained in these words there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne Out of which words because Novatus hath made a collection void of comfort namely that if a man sinne after he is once baptised to him there remaineth no hope of pardon for his sins first I applied my selfe to establish comfort in our hearts by setting downe the contrary doctrine and secondly I came to the consideration of the truth of that which these words doe naturally afford did proue vnto you that the sinne against the holy Ghost is not at any time nor can ever be forgiven There remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne Hauing thus repeated vnto you the summe of that which heretofore I haue delivered I come now to the second reason in my second generall part to speake of this fearefull looking for of iudgement and violent fire which shall devoure the adversaries The doctrine grounded vpon the first reason of our Apostle in this place might haue sufficed to make all that loue God to looke to their steps that they fall not away by committing so grievous a sinne But there is a generation of men monstrously mishapen in the powers of the soule who like the Kings and Princes of the earth i Psalm 2.2 banding themselues and taking counsaile together against the Lord and against his annointed are ready to breake the cords of religion asunder and to cast her yoke from them and to say with those in Tully lib. 1. de natura Deorum Totam de dijs immortalibus opinionem fictam esse ab hominibus sapientibus reip causâ vt quos ratio non posset eos ad officium religio duceret iudging the service of God to be a meere devise of man for the better governement of the common wealth wherein inferiours since they will not be ruled by reason must bee ordered by religion Tell such of Scriptures you may as wel vrge them with Lucians narrations of repentance they cast it behinde them of faith they regard it not of baptisme they hold it of no greater price then the washing of their hands of the resurrection this feeds them with many a merry conceit they thinke pleasantly with themselues what maner of bodies they shall haue at that day of what proportion their bodies shall bee whether their nayles and haire shall rise againe I only note them as I passe by the way whom were they vsed for their deserts the preacher should k Levit 13.44 pronounce and the Prince proclaime the foulest leapers that ever yet sore ranne vpon well worthy to bee excluded the host and to haue their l Levit. 13.46 Num. 5.2 2. Kin. 15.5 habitation alone and more then so to be exiled the land to be expelled from nature it selfe which so vnnaturally they striue to bring to naught For though the Lord God of hosts by his Ministers and servants doe call them vnto weeping and mourning to baldnesse and girding with sackcloath as he called the Iewes Esai 22.12 Yet behold with them is ioy gladnes slaying Oxen and killing Sheepe eating flesh and drinking wine for say they to morrow we shall die Now if our Apostle to disswade such men from sinning willingly should vse this as a reason because there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne what would it advantage them being fully perswaded that the dead are not raised vp that in death there is no difference betweene them the vilest worme that ever they could tread vpon Therefore to meete with these mē also our Apostle bringeth a second reason able at some time or other to affright the hardest heart that ever yet Atheisme had infected telling them that for them which sinne willingly though there remaineth no more sacrifice which they regard not yet there remaineth something which shall touch them neere even a fearefull looking
of his Bishopricke lurked after that foure yeares in a monastery neere vnto Antiochia was thence by the Emperours commandment sent an exile to the vttermost borders of Egypt and Africa I need not I say bee long in telling you of all this the thing I note is his ende In this his banishment when he was full of yeares that some memorable example as in Corah Dathan Abiram of his so great and so impious blaspheming against Christ might remaine vnto posteritie it pleased God in iustice that first wormes should eate and consume his tongue and then that the earth should open her mouth swallow him vp 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Even so let all thine enimies perish O LORD Now followeth the third marke by which men holden in that vnpardonable sinne the sinne against the holy Ghost may be made knowne to the world in these words And doth despite the Spirit of Grace The Holy Ghost is here called the Spirit of Grace ab effectu by reason of that it worketh in vs. By it we receaue grace offered in Christ Iesus It enlightneth our minds by faith it sealeth to our hearts the adoption of God it regenerateth vs into newnesse of life it engrafteth vs into the body of Christ in a word by it Christ with all his blessings benefits is made ours Now if a man that is made partaker of this holy Ghost shall greedily wilfully and purposely make the good graces of God within him to be fruitlesse who shall plead for him Surely no man For he it is that is here noted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 iniuriously cōtumeliously to vse impudently to abuse and to despite the Spirit of Grace Here may the faithfull well be put in mind of their owne estates to consider whether they be not in perill of falling away from God since it is a truth not to bee gainesaid that the very faithfull doe oftentimes diminish and lessen the good graces of God within them I doubt not should you be called to witnesse but that every one of you taught by your owne experience would beare record to this truth If not that exhortation of St Paule made vnto the Ephesians and that his other vnto the Thessalonians doe strongly confirme it In the bowels of compassion he coūselleth the a Ephes 4.30 EPHESIANS not to grieue the Spirit and the THESSALONIANS not to b 1 Thess 5.19 quench the spirit Well knewe the blessed Apostle that the Holy Spirit vseth to be grieued and the fire thereof to be quenched whensoever wee put away from within vs the care of Gods word not regarding the sanctified motions of our hearts the sanctified words of our lips the sanctified actions of our hands but entertaining the contra●y corrupt thoughts evill words wicked actions Now if there be no man that can truely say Ever hitherto my thoughts haue beene pure my wordes vndefiled my deeds iust let this truth stand without contradiction The faithfull doe oftentimes dimin●sh lessen the good graces of God within them And therefore as I said they may here well bee put in minde of their owne estates to consider whether they bee not in perill of falling away from God A consideration beloued in the Lord if wee are chosen out of the world if in CHRIST wee are annointed and sealed if our building be of God not made with hands but eternall in the Heavens a consideration I say that must needes make vs doe our best in working out our salvation in attaining vnto faith in dying vnto sinne in liuing vnto newnesse of life For when wee see that men sanctified with the blood of CHRIST may not only tread vnder foot the Sonne of God despise him nor onely account the blood of Christ to bee common blood and prophane as it were the blood of any other man but also despite the Spirit of Grace and vse it with all iniurie and contumely will not our hearts burne within vs What are we but men sanctified with the blood of CHRIST Let vs then in all humblenesse of mind walk as it becommeth men so sanctified and never giue eare to such deceauers as would therefore perswade vs to liue without all care in this world because if wee are of the faithfull it is impossible we should fall away Touching the elect I grant it to bee very true that though they may fall grievously and dangerously yet they cannot fall finally in the end nor vtterly at any time though they may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes 4.30 grieue the Spirit yea though they may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Thess 5.19 quench the Spirit for a time yet can they not like the sinners whose markes I haue now in some measure opened 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they cannot doe contumely vnto nor can despite the Spirit For by it are they sealed vnto the day of redemption What of all this what if they that are once written in the booke of life can never be razed out thereof What if they that are once in the state of grace shall be in the same for ever Shall we that are written in the booke of life and doe stand by grace therefore not care how we commit sinne God forbid This truth namely that not one of the faithfull shall perish may bee a comfort to vs that haue already sinned but surely no encouragement to them that will sinne hereafter But grace aboundeth aboue sinne Very true Yet if we therefore sinne that grace may abound accursed are we And how shal we that are dead to sinne yet liue therein St Paul holds this for an impossibilitie Rom. 6. Knowe yee not saith he that all wee that haue beene baptized into Iesus Christ haue beene baptized into his death Why then are wee buried by baptisme into his death that as he was raised from the dead so we also should walk in newnesse of life Are wee not forbidden to doe evill even then when we are assured good may come thereof How then dare wee make the mercies of God a defence for our sinnes But there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus Rom. 8.1 though they fall seaven times a day Neither is there Rom 8.4 For they being in CHRIST doe walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit But may not wee repent hereafter though now we liue in sinne Thou foole how knowest thou that this night Luk. 12.20 they will not fetch away thy soule from thee What now remaineth but that we all take al possible heed lest at any time there be in any of vs an evill heart vnfaithfull to depart away from the living God And since wee are sanctified with the blood of the Testament beseech wee Almightie God that he would perfect his good worke begun in vs and never suffer vs through the deceaueablenesse of sinne to be so farre seduced as to tread vnder foot his eternall Sonne to account his blood common or to despite the spirit of Grace SERMO
blasphemers of the holy Spirit who doe not onely fulfill the full measure of those Pagans sinnes but contemne also the Graces given vnto them the knowledge whereto they haue beene called and that good Spirit whereof the Pagans were never made partakers Now looke we backe for a while to those markes wherewith they are noted against whom our Apostle in this place denounceth If they bee duely considered they will moue our hearts to wisdome One is they haue beene once lightned that is they haue been endued with the knowledge of God and that not onely by the heavens though they b Psal 19 ● declare Gods glory nor only by the firmament though that sheweth his handy worke nor onely by other his creatures though in them also his eternall power godhead appeareth and shineth for of this light all nations are made partakers but they haue beene lightned also with his holy word This hath beene a c Ps 119 105. lanterne to their feet and a light vnto their paths When they found it they did greedily tast of it and it was vnto them the ioy and reioycing of their hearts And can we think that any thus lightned are neere vnto cursing Yea the d Heb. 6.7 Scripture telleth vs that they may so fall away as that it shall be impossible for them to be renued againe by repentance Heb. 6.6 Indeed the earth which drinketh in the raine that commeth oft vpon it and bringeth forth hearbes meet for them by whom it is dressed shal receaue a blessing of God but that earth which beareth thornes and briers is reproued is neere vnto cursing the end thereof is to bee burned Presume wee not then beloved in the Lord. Whosoever 1. Cor. 10.12 thinkes he standeth may fal O! worke we out our salvatiō with feare trembling An other marke of theirs is they haue tasted of the heavenly gift This heavenly gift is eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord Rom. 6.23 It is that great salvatiō that is in Christ Iesus so called by Christ himselfe speaking to the woman of Samaria Iohn 4.10 This gift they haue not only knowne but haue also tasted of it Would you know what taste this is One expounds it thus Suppose a banquet provided wherein are many sweet pleasant and dainty meates At this banquet the bidden guests must be set downe they see the meats they taste thē they eate them they disgest them they are nourished strengthened by them The vnbidden guests it is not so with them They indeed may see the meates yea more then so happyly they may be permitted to handle them and taste of them to feele how good they are but eate or feed of thē they may not Apply this and in the vnbidden guests tasting of those dainety meates you shall perceiue this taste of the heavenly gift resembled They haue tasted of the heavenly gift that is they haue gladly sometime receaved it and reioyced in it like Herode who did gladly heare Iohn Baptist preaching Mark 6.20 like the second kinde of naughty ground that ioyfully receaved the seed Mat. 13.20 Herod may willingly heare the preaching of the word and yet be accursed the naughty ground receiving the seed with ioy in the end may be burned Many may haue a taste of eternall life of that great salvation which is in Christ Iesus and yet may finally fall away Presume wee not then beloved in the Lord. Whosoever thinkes he standeth may fall O! worke we out our salvation with feare and trembling Their third marke is they haue beene made partakers of the holy Ghost that is many graces of the spirit of God haue beene given vnto them They may repent like Iudas Mat. 27.3 confesse their sinnes like Pharaoh Exod. 10.16 loue God as Saule did 1. Sam. 10.9 They may desire to be like Gods children in happinesse as Balaam desired when he said O let my soule die the death of the righteous let my last end be like his Num. 23.10 They may shew liking to Gods Ministers reverence them and feare to displease them as Simon Magus did who at Philips preaching beleeved wondred at his miracles and kept cōpany with him Act. 8.13 They may be zealous in the profession of the gospell as the Galatians were who receaved Paule as an Angell and if possible would haue plucked out their eies to haue done him good Gal. 4.16 Thus may they be qualified yea much better then thus and yet may finally fall awaie Presume we not thē beloved in the Lord. Whosoever thinkes he standeth may fall O! worke we out our salvation with feare and trembling Their last marke for I omit the rest as being all reducible to these fowre their last marke is They haue receaved the knowledge of the truth that is they haue caused their f Ezech. 3.3 bellies to eate and haue filled their bowels with that sweet roule as sweet as any hony in their mouthes they haue receaved the word of God in their hearts in such abundance as that they are become preachers of the word for they haue g Heb. 6.5 tasted of the good word of God and of the power of the world to come they haue tasted it indeed but only haue they tasted it Here let me once more remember you of the resemblance of tasting You know that Cookes which are busied in preparing of banquets haue commonly as much feeling and seeing of the meates as any other and yet there is none that eateth lesse of it then they their stomackes are so cloyed with the smell taste thereof so is it here it may come to passe that the preacher which dresseth and provideth the spirituall food may eate least of it himselfe so labouring to saue others himselfe may proue a reprobate It hath beene thought that some of them which built the Arke were not saved in the Arke but certaine it is not only thought so certaine it is that diverse spirituall builders of Christs Church shall not be saved with the Church They may by vs be takē for Gods sheepe because they are kept in the same pastures and folded in the same fold with vs they may by vs be taken for Gods sheepe though indeed they be very Goates There is a day to come wherein the h 2. Pet. 3.10 heavens shal passe away with a noise and the elements shall melt with heate the earth with the workes that are therein shall be burnt vp then may Demas alleage for himselfe his old and once-true religion and Iudas for himselfe his Apostleship and many others for themselues their prophecying in Christs name but al in vaine For that iust Iudge will professe vnto them i Mat. 7.23 Luk. 13.27 I never knew you depart from me yee workers of iniquity Presume wee not then beloved in the Lord. Whosoever thinkes he standeth may fall O! worke we out our salvation with feare and trembling Having thus considered their markes finding that they haue
shall we doe For defence of their opinion they suppose the Scriptures to be very pregnāt alleaging these words of my text If we sin willingly after that we haue receaved the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinnes as also those other words Heb. 6.4 It is impossible that they which were once lightened haue tasted of the heavenly gift and were made partakers of the holy Ghost and haue tasted of the good word of God of the power of the world to come it is impossible for such if they fall away to be renued by repētāce Out of both which places their cōceit is framed they affirme that a man in baptisme is washed from all his filthinesse and cleansed from all his sinnes but if he shall fall afterwardes that then there remaineth no more sacrifice for his sinne that then he cannot possibly be renewed by repentance so vnpardonable do they iudge a relapse into sinne The fathers of the Westerne Church miscōceiving these two cited places as in the one vnderstanding by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but an ordinary falling in the other by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sinning only in generall whether of ignorance infirmity or otherwise misconceiving I say these two places yet vnwilling to subscribe to so foule an heresie haue reiected this Epistle as vnfit to proue any principle in religion haue accoūted it as not Canonicall But we need not vse any such shift to answere the argumēt of the Catharists That spirit of truth which was lōg since promised to come and to lead vs into all truth is already come hath given sufficient witnesse to the vnresistable authoritie of this Scripture withall hath taught vs that these places must be vnderstood of that sinne which is to death of that sin wherein men of desperate malice against Christ vniversally and wholy fall away from religion For the holy Ghost saith not if they fall but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if they fall away and in the same Heb. 6.6 it is added they crucifie againe vnto themselues the sonne of God make a mocke of him and Heb. 10.29 it is said that they trāple vnder foot the Sonne of God that they count the bloud of the Testament an vnholy thing that they despite the spirit of grace in the 26. verse the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated with vs willingly imports some what more as if to sinne willingly were to sinne because a man will sinne and that is to sinne wilfully These places then thus vnderstood proue I graunt an impossibility of pardon but it is to such as commit that sinne which is to death and fall away from their first light to such as crucifie againe vnto themselues the sonne of God and make a mocke of him and trample him vnder foot to such as count the bloud of the Testament an vnholy thing and despite the spirit of grace to such as sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only because they will sinne purposely wilfully and maliciously to such I graunt these places proue an impossibility of pardon but that a man sinning ignorantly or of infirmity should be past hope of forgiuenes these places proue not and therefore make nothing at all for defence of the Catharistes opinion They presse vs yet for the further establishment of their cōceit with old Elies words 1. Sam. 2.25 If one man sinne against another the iudge shal iudge it but if a man sin against the LORD who wil plead for him Who will plead for him that is say they no mā shal plead for him For God is iust wil take vengance vpō him that sinneth against him NO mā shal plead for him S Ambrose l. 1. de poenitentiâ c. 8. much disliketh this their exposition and there sheweth by other like speeches in the Scripture that these words are not necessarily to force that meaning which they would haue Ps 15.1 David saith LORD who shal dwel in thy tabernacle who shall rest in thy holy mountaine Quaeritur quis non excluditur the question is who shall dwell in the Lords tabernacle Every one is not excluded from so dwelling for in the words following it is answered He that walketh vprightly and worketh righteousnes speaketh the truth in his heart hee shal never be moved he shal dwell in the tabernacle of the Lord he shall rest vpon his holy mountaine Psal 24.3 the same Psalmist hath likewise said who shall ascend into the moūtaine of the LORD and who shall stand in his holy place And here also Quaeritur QVIS non exeluditur the question is who shall ascend into the mountaine of the LORD Every one is not excluded from so ascending For the verses following are a sufficient answer He that hath innocent hands a pure heart that hath not lift vp his minde to vanity nor sworne deceitfully even he shall receaue a blessing from the LORD and righteousnes from the God of his salvation he shal ascend into the mountaine of the LORD and stand in his holy place Luk. 12.42 the LORD hath said who is a faithfull steward and wise whom the master shall make ruler over his houshold to giue them their portion of meate in season and here a-againe Quaeritur QVIS non excluditur The questiō is who shall be a faithful steward Every one is not excluded from so being For that which followeth importeth as much Blessed is that servant saith the LORD whom his master when he commeth shall finde so doing Other like places are cited by this Christian Bishop to the same purpose after all which hee giueth his iudgement vpon the words of old Ely alleaged by the Novatians for confirmation of their opinion The words as you heard are these If one man sinne against another the Iudge shal iudge it but if a man sin against the LORD who will plead for him The vulgar translation hath Quis orabit pro eo If a man sin against the Lord who will pray for him Quis orabit pro eo that is saith S. Ambrose Singularis vitae aliquis debet orare pro eo qui peccavit in Dominum Some man of exceeding integritie must pray for him that hath sinned against the LORD His reason is added Quia quo maior est culpa eo maiora sunt quaerenda suffragia because the greater the sinne is so much the more worthy must the person be that by prayer shall obtaine pardon for such sinne I leaue this Fathers exposition and shew you a more naturall that is this If one man sinne against another the Iudge shall iudge it that is if one man doe iniury and wrong vnto another there may be a composition and an agreement made betweene them either in Ecclesiasticall or civill policie but if a man sinne against the LORD who will plead for him that is if a man sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only because he will sinne if he sinne elatâ manu Num. 15.30 with a high hand not only
presumptuously secretly but openly perversely contēptuously malitiously neither fearing nor regarding God nor man exscindendo exscinditor anima illa it is the Lords irrevocable sentēce Num. 15.31 that persō shal vtterly be cut of that soule shall die the death Behold saith the Lord to Samuel 1. Samuel 3.11 I will doe a thing in Israel whereof whosoever shall heare his two eares shall tingle I will raise vp against Elie all things which I haue spoken concerning his house when I begin I will also m●k● a●●nd I haue told him that I will iudge his house for ever for the iniquitie which he knoweth because his sonnes ran into a slander and he staid them not Now therefore I haue sworne vnto the house of Elie that the wickednesse of Elies house shall not bee purg●d with sacrifice nor offring for ever I haue sworne saith the LORD vnto the house of Elie c. which words are a sufficient evidence to shew what sinne it was that Elie did meane even that sinne which shall not be purged with sacrifice nor offering for ever And therefore wee may bee bold to grant that those words of Elie doe proue an impossibilitie of pardon but it is to such as doe sinne Elatâ manu with an high hand only because they will sinne openly perversly contemptuously malitiously to such I say wee may bee bold to grant that these words doe proue an impossibilitie of pardon but that a mā sinning ignorantly or of infirmitie should haue no hope of forgiuenesse they proue not and therefore make nothing at all for defence of the Catharists opinion I will not stand to refute other their reasons vsed by them for the further confirmation of their opinion S. Ambrose to whom I referre you hath very cōfortably discoursed against them Lib. 1. de poenitentiâ and the thirteene first chapters of that booke and so hath S. Cyprian in that his tract written to Novatianus the Hereticke My endeavour shall bee to proue a doctrine contrary to theirs I may comprise it in this proposition They which stand by grace may fall and yet be pardoned Which proposition devides it selfe into two parts severally to be confirmed 1. the chosen of God for they only stand by grace ma● fall 2. notwithstanding their falls they may find pardon The former namely that the chosen of God may fall I shall not need much to proue since the truth thereof is sufficiently witnessed by each mans conscience to his owne heart Yet lest happily some one or more through the abundance of knowledge given from aboue shall thinke better of themselues thē meete is I will bee bold to remember them of S. Paules estate who 2. Cor. 12.7 speaketh thus of himselfe Least I should bee exalted out of measure through the abundance of revelations there was given vnto me a sharpe pointed stake in the flesh the messenger of Satan to buffet me Because I should not bee exalted out of measure there was given mee saith hee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sharp stake fastned in my flesh the messenger of Satan to buffet me because I should not be exalted out of measure meaning hereby that how glorious a vessell soever he seemed to be in the eyes of men yet in him there was a rebellion of the flesh against the spirit If such were blessed Paules estate what may the best liver that now is professe of himself Surely as much that there is in him also a rebellion of the flesh against the spirit that hee hath had many falls yea such falls as his very remembrāces of them are like so many kniues in his eies so many thornes in his sides so many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even sharpe pointed posts driven into his flesh to vexe him as long as he shall liue in this world And if thus it fareth with the best what shall become of the more evill sort Surely * See my third Lecture vpon Amos 1. p. 3● there is no man iust in the earth that doth good sinneth not saith the preacher Ch. 7.22 And Prov. 20.9 So●omon hath this question who can say I haue purged my heart I am cleane from my sinne O saith Eliphaz vnto Iob. chap. 15.14 What is man that he should be cleane and he that is borne of a woman that he should be iust Behold saith he God hath found no stedfastnesse in his Saints yea the heavens are not clean in his sight how much more is man abominable and filthie which drinketh iniquitie like water whose desire to sinne is such as a thirstie mans desire is to drink He is altogether sinful Sinfull in his conception sinfull in his birth sinfull in the whole course of his life in every deed in every word in every thought wholy sinfull I will not be too forward in the discovery of the nakednes of Gods chosen children descended from the loynes of Adā and therefore will not trouble you with the relation of a Gen. 9.21 Noahs drunkennesse of b 2. Sam 12.9 Davids murther of c Gen 18.15 Sarahs lye of d Gen. 27.3 Rebeccaes perswading her sonne Iacob to beguile his owne father of the theft of e Philem. 11. Onesimus and of the severall falls of many other as stout champions as ever fought the Lords battle Touching them I only say as David said in a different case 2. Sam. 1.19 O noble Israel how are the mightie overthrowne The point I am to proue will be cleere enough if we wil consider in what sort the elect of God may fall First therefore The child of God by his own neglect may diminish and lessen the good graces of God within him The consideration whereof moued S. Paule in the bowels of compassion to exhort the Thessalonians 1. Thess 5.19 not to quench the spirit and the Ephesians Eph. 4.30 not to grieue the holy spirit of God For he well knewe that the holy spirit vseth to be grieved and the fire thereof to be quenched whensoever we put away from within vs the care of Gods word not regarding the sanctified motions of our hearts the sanctified words of our lips the sāctified actions of our handes but entertaining the contrary corrupt thoughts evill speaking wicked actions Thus may the child of God be affected and grieue that good spirit whereby he is sealed vnto the day of redemption and quench it too yet not vtterly but diminish and lessen the good graces thereof and that in such a measure as that he may be like a man in a trance who both by his own sense and also by the iudgement of the Physition is taken for dead Thus haue David Peter other the strongest pillers in the Lords temple beene shaken 2 The childe of God after he hath repented for some sinne may fall againe into the same sinne This is a lamentable estate Yet it may befall a true Christian Ioh. 5.14 when Christ had healed the man that had beene sicke 38. yeares he said vnto him Behold thou art
teeth of wild beasts hot glowing fornaces caldrons of boyling oyle fiery brasē bulls powning to death in morters rouling in barrels of nayles roasting vpon spits boring with augers parting the nayles from the fingers ends with needles nipping the flesh with pincers renting asunder the ioynts with wild horses can we I say thinke of these and the like most mercilesse and pitilesse torments and not be moved Could we Our hearts certainely should be harder then the hardest yron Yet behold my text leadeth you to the sight of farre more grievous torments in regard of which all those foresaid agonies and as many besides as ever haue wrested or may wring the spirit of man are only shadowes and counterfeits It sheweth you though there be never so many already in the bowels of Hell to empty her storehouses and to part her punishments among them yet hath shee in store an vnmeasurable portion to bestow vpon her children that now liue or are yet vnborne such a portion as may not be refused a patrimonie of howling weeping and gnashing a patrimonie of darknesse blacknesse and obscuritie a patrimonie of fire brimstone and the wrath of God There shall they be tormented before the Holy Angels and before the lambe and shall bee a gazing stocke vnto the blessed Saints who shall not pitie them but reioyce to see their cōfusion And the c Rev. 14.11 smoake of this their torment ascends for evermore giving them rest neither day nor night and it continueth for a time and times and no time even when time shall bee no more Rev. 10 6. When time shall bee no more yet then continueth their torment and that in such a measure as no eye hath ever seene the like no eare hath ever heard the like no tongue hath ever vttered the like no heart hath beene is or shall bee ever able to conceaue the like And this I hope may suffice for the explication of my text Now that we doe not like sleepy Adders passe our times in a dreame let vs awake our selues Why should wee bee that ground by the d Mat. 13.4 highway side or that e Vers 5. stony or that f Vers 7. bushie ground The good g Vers 8. ground it is that receaues the seed beares brings forth fruit Since we haue brought our eares to heare the word let vs keepe our hearts here also It is not meete our hearts should be like many of your waiting men who thinke their dutie fully done if they wait vpon their Masters to and from the Church though they heare not one word of the sermon themselues But so they shal never learne Christ Nor we if when we present our bodies in this and the like places wee send our hearts vpon other businesses to attend our private affaires Let vs therfore lay these things whereof we haue heard to our hearts and be assured they will be for our profit The consideration of the terror of the Iudge of Hell fire and of the torments there to bee endured may moue vs to thinke with our selues how neere that day of iudgement is and therevpon to provide our selues against the comming of the Iudge Touching this point if the day of iudgement were at hand sixteene ages since as the Crier in the wildernesse proclaimed Mat. 3.2 as the Disciples taught according to their charge Mat. 10.7 and as Christ himselfe preached Mat. 4.17 if in those daies the end of the world were come as S. Paule saith 1. Cor. 10.11 if then was the last time as S. Iohn tels vs 1. Iohn 2.18 if at that time the end of all things drew neere as S. Peter affirmeth 1. Pet. 4.7 Can we religiously thinke that yet this day of the LORD is farre of In the time of the Apostles there were two heresies concerning this second comming of Christ the one refuted by S. Peter the other by S. Paule S. Peter 2 Pet. 3.3 wisheth vs to vnderstand that in the last daies which then were come there shall be mockers walking after their own lusts and saying where is the promise of his comming For since the fathers dyed all things continue alike from the beginning of the creation Miserable men to bee perswaded that the day of the LORD shall never come because it is deferred But such iesting scoffing and mocking at that fearefull day vsed heretofore and hitherto practised by the whole progenie of vnbeleevers may be vnto vs a good argument that this iudgement shall speedely be hastned For so saith the Holy Ghost by the Apostle 1. Thess 5.3 when they shall say PEACE and SAFETIE then shall come vpon them suddaine destruction St Peter in his answere to such deceavers saith first that the LORD differeth not very long to come to iudgement For saith he verse 8. one day with him is as a thousand yeares and a thousand yeares as one day alluding to the words in Moses prayer Psal 90 4. A thousand yeares in thy sight are as yesterday when it is past and as a watch of the night as if he should haue said were it possible for a man to liue a thousand yeares yet those thousand yeares are assoone passed over in respect of God as one day only is in respect of a so-long-living man Yea those thousand yeares are but as a watch of the night that is they are of very short continuance For the old Iewes divided the night into foure watches and appointed to every watch three houres as may appeare by the conference of these places Mat. 14.25 Luk. 12.38 Exod. 14.24 The words then suffering this expos●tion that a thousand yeares in respect of the Lord are but as a watch of the night but of three houres doe plainely shew that Peter meant not to speake any thing distinctly of a thousand yeares but of a long time so his meaning is that innumerable yeares are but as a short time with God He might as well and truely haue said two thousand eight or ten thousand years with God are but as one day And this is his first answere to such as aske where is the promise of his comming His second answere is verse 9. when he saith The LORD is not slacke concerning his promise as some men count slacknes but is patient towardes vs and would haue no man to perish but that all should come to repentance Where it being manifest that the LORD differreth his comming only for our good to giue vs time to turne vnto him is it meete we should mocke at the slacknesse of his comming You see the first Heresie refuted The second is quite opposite to this set abroach by certain false teachers who taught the Thessalonians that the daie of the LORD was so nigh as that it should happen within their age Where by the way note the exceeding subtilty of Sathan slyly leading vs into one of the extreams to make vs belieue either that the day of the Lord shall never come or else that it shall come within such a
time In this ranke of false teachers may be placed they who haue held opinion that the day of iudgement shal be about sixe thousand yeares after the beginning of the world as also they who abusing the places in Daniel and in the Revelation doe say that the end of the world shall be three yeares a halfe after the revealing of Antichrist But St Paule answering these false teachers of Thessalonica answereth all of the like opinion and therefore 2. Thess 2.2 to ●nstruct them against the assaults of such teachers he bids thē beleeue it for a certainety that the day of the Lord is not at hād and he giues a reason of his perswasion verse 3. For saith he that day shall not come except there come a departing first that man of sinne even the sonne of perdition be disclosed But how is it that St Paule saith the day of the LORD is not at hand When it is evident by Heb. 9.26 that Christ appeared in the end of the world to put away sinne by sacrificing himselfe And by Iam. 5.8 that the comming of the Lord is at hand and by the authorities before alleaged of Iohn Baptist of the Disciples of the Apostles yea of Christ himselfe that the kingdome of God is at hand that the ends of the world are come that the last time is come that the end of all things is at hand This being so how is it that St Paule saith the day of the Lord is not at hand Calvin saith that the answere here is easie namely that in respect of God the day of iudgement is at hand but as for vs wee must continually looke for it Beza Rollocke giue an other exposition which I take to be more naturall In those many places wherein it is avouched that the day of the Lord is at hand they obserue the word vsed in the originall to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Appropinquat signifying that the day of the Lord may be this day as well as to morrow and to morrow as well as the next day many a day hereafter as well as now and this in generall only But in this place of St Paule where he saith the day of the Lord is not at hand they note the word in the originall to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instat and to signifie not only generally a time drawing nere but also precisely a limited and certaine time as such an houre such a day such a weeke such a month such an yeare such an age And in this sense St Pauls saying is very true 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non instat the day of the Lord is not at hand not so at hand as that we may be able to say it shal be this houre this day this week this month this yeare this age And this is no other doctrine then Christes owne Mark 13.32 for there he saith Of that day and houre knoweth no man no not the Angels which are in Heaven neither the Sonne himselfe Thus we see it is certaine that the day of the Lord that the day of iudgement is at hand but in what precise age or time it will happen we see it is vncertaine The Lord himselfe tels vs Act. 1.7 It is not for vs to know the times and seasons And why should we be desirous to haue eares to heare where God hath no tongue to speake It may suffice vs to be so well warned as to know that this day is at hand For if we duely cōsider this point it will make vs take heed to our speeches and by no meanes to say with the evill servant Matth. 24.48 Our master deferres his comming let vs eate and drinke and beate our fellowes but rather to betake our selues to the performance of the good servants duety verse 42. even to watch For the day of the Lord commeth h 1. Thes 5.2.3 as a thiefe in the night and as travaile commeth vpon a womā with childe even so commeth the day of the Lord. Watch wee therefore For we know not what houre our master will come But when he commeth if he shall finde vs doing good and dealing faithfully happy shall we be we shall partake the blessings of the i Deut. 27.12 sixe vpon the mount Gerizzim we shall not need to feare the cursing of the other k Vers 13. sixe vpon mount Ebal Wee shall not be afraid of the l Exod. 20.18 thundring and lightning of Sinai nor of fire to the middest of Heaven nor of mists nor of clouds nor of m Rev. 9.2 smoake ascending like the smoake of a fornace nor of the lowdest sound of a n Exod 20.18 Heb. 12.18 trumpet for all our pleasures shall bee in Sion But when he commeth if he shal finde vs doing wickedly cursed shall we be we shall be sure to possesse o Esai 61 3. mourning for ioye ashes for beauty the spirit of heavinesse for the oile of gladnes a rent in steed of a girdle whatsoever shall become of our garments assured we are our heartes shall be torne a sunder Watch we therefore for we know not what houre our master commeth And let me conclude with Saint Peters exhortation Be we p 2 Pet. 3.14 diligent that when he commeth we may be found of him in peace without spot and blamelesse THE FIFTH SERMON HEBR. 10. VER 28 29 30 31. 28 He that despiseth Moses law dyeth without mercy vnder two or three witnesses 29 Of how much sorer punishment suppose yee shall he be worthy which treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God and coūteth the blood of the Testament as an vnholy thing wherewith he was sanctified and doth despite the Spirit of grace 30 For we know him that hath said vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompense saith the LORD And againe the LORD shall iudge his people 31 It is a fearfull thing to fall into the hands of the living God N the former verses I haue heretofore shewed how that the author of this Epistle vseth an effectuall perswasion for our constant continuing and persevering in the faith which the Hebrewes had and wee haue in Christ Iesus or a disswasion a dehortation from our backslidings fallings away from the same faith In the wordes themselues ious meditations two things r what it is from which we are disswa willingly after that we haue receaved the ● ● our hearts the reasons brought by our vs from so sinning which in these words 1 Because if thus we sinne wee shall never be able by any sacrifice to make an atonement betweene vs and God revenging vs There remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne 2 Because if thus we sinne we must looke for no other thē eternall destruction specified vers 27. by two things Iudgement and Fire For if we sinne willingly after wee haue receaved c. Of these points and many other circumstances by occasion of those words observed I haue already spoken The principall argument of the whole place
against vs because for this our sinne Gehazies leprosie as yet hath not brokē out vpon vs because for other our sinnes done in darknes the rod of God hath not yet smitten vs we slatter our selues perswade our selues that all is well we set our mouthes against Heaven and our tongues doe walke even through the earth we imagine with those wicked ones Ps 73.11 Ps 94.7 that God will not behold our iniquities or if he doe that he will not much regard to punish vs for them Wee set vp Idols within our breasts against lum we forsake his Testimonies we follow the voice and perswasion of our owne devises So bold we carrie our selues vpō our cunning slie close secret kind of sinning But all in vaine if so it seeme good vnto the Lord. For he hath meanes enough to discover bring to light that which we thinke most secret and hidden He can make the fieldes to haue eies to see our deedes the woods to haue eares to heare our counsels the wals of our bed chambers to haue mouthes to witnesse against vs our friends to fall out with vs and the men of our secrecie to bewray our wickednesse He can vse vs our selue● as instruments against our selues even our own mouthes to testify against vs for he can make vs either vnawares to disclose our faults or in our sleepe by dreams to make thē known or in our s●●●nesse to raue of them or in some phrensey to vomit them out or in the torment of our consciences to confesse them all And if he should not deale with vs thus or thus yet knowe we that there is a time to come spoken of by St Paule 1. Cor. 4.5 wherein the Lord shal come to lighten things that are hid in darknes to make the counsels of the heart manifest And this he will be sure to doe because in presence he beholdeth whatsover is done in the darkest places and is privy to all the devises of our hearts I will not stay your eares with commemoration of many notable places of Holy Scripture set downe by the holy Spirit to amplifie Gods illimited presence In the 139. Psalme wonderfull are the testimonies brought there by the Prophet for this purpose O LORD thou hast tryed me and knowne me thou knowest my sitting and my rising c. as it followeth in the Psalme See Lect. 10. vpon Amos 1. p. 115. Lect. 14. p. 159. Thus I gather the summe of it there is no corner in Hel no mansiō in Heavē no caue in the top of Carmel no fishes belly in the bottome of Sea no darke dungeon in the land of captivity nor the clowdes of the day nor the darknesse of the night nor a secret friend nor a more secret conscience nor any like evasion that can hide vs that can hide any our actions frō the presence of the LORD Our sitting our rising our down lying the thoughts of our hearts the wordes of our mouthes the waies of our feete yea our reines our bones our mothers wombes wherein in our first informity we were wonderfully lodged they are all throughly knowne vnto him If therefore secretly taking bribes for fellowes for schollers places and the like if SECRETLY liuing in fornication adultery and vncleanesse if secretly stealing if secretly any way sinning wee purpose to avoid the presence of Almightie God I must thē needs say with Ieremie ch 10.14 Doubtlesse every man is a beast by his owne knowledge Thus farre haue I beene guided by my first position Every one is bound to subiect himselfe to honest and iust politique lawes and that for conscience sake For he that despiseth Moses law dieth without mercy The second remaineth It is a breach of charitie to conceaue ill of any for any private report For he that despiseth Moses law dieth not but at the mouth of two or three witnesses Of this second in the next Now beseech wee Almightie God by whose great mercies we haue receaued the knowledge of the truth that by the same his mercies he would giue vs grace to continue liue and die therein that he would guid vs in all ou waies make vs obedient to higher powers according to his will cleanse our hearts renue our spirits and free vs from all desire of doing wickedly that so at the last day we may be presented spotlesse without blame before him that sitteth vpon the throne Even so be it Lord Iesus THE SIXT SERMON HEBR. 10. VER 28 29. 28 He that despiseth Moses law dyeth without mercy vnder two or three witnesses 29 Of how much sorer punishment suppose yee shall he be worthy which treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God and coūteth the blood of the Testament as an vnholy thing wherewith he was sanctified and doth despite the Spirit of grace THe second position groūded vpon the 28. verse which was It is a breach of the rule of charity to conceaue ill of any for any private report is nowe to bee handled I will briefly runne it over that so at this time also wee may haue some tast of that which followeth in the 29. verse It is a breach of the rule of charity c. To speake much of charity what it is what obiects what ends it hath before such as abound in knowledge I holde it needlesse If your practise hath beene according to your knowledge it may truely boldly be said vnto you as Christ said vnto the Scribe that had answered discreetly Mark 12.34 You are not farre from the kingdome of God For declaration of the point I am to proue let vs consider somewhat touching the rule of charity which vseth by vs to be broken as oft as we conceiue ill of others whether our superiors or equals or inferiours for any private reportes Christian Charitie hath three branches The first 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our loue of God and Christ The rule for this part is laid before vs Deut. 6.5 Thou shalt loue the Lord thiy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy might In wich words is noted together with the vnitie of the divine essence the trinitie of the persons and therefore the commandement is that as one God is so the three persons are to be loved Diliges Iehovam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt loue the LORD thy God one God and three persons not with part of thine heart nor with part of thy soule nor with part of thy might but with all of all both heart soule and might The reason why God is thus to be loued is put before ver 4. Heare O Israel the LORD our God is LORD only The meaning is there is but one God and therefore thy heart thy soule thy might thy loue may not be distracted they may not bee divided All thy heart all thy soule all thy might must ioyntly bee employed to loue the LORD thy God In this place of Deuteronomy our charge is but general yet necessary to
That is not with a feigned loue not with a cold loue not with a temporarie loue not in word only Therefore must thy loue towardes thy neighbour be vnfeigned it must be fervēt it must be enduring it must be effectuall A fift condition is required that our loue be holy and pure for we must loue our selues and so our neighbours in God for God and to Gods glory Such are the branches of Christian Charity such the rules to measure them Christ reduceth thē to two heads to a great commaundement and another like vnto it on which he saith the whole law the Prophets do depēd Mat. 22.40 Mat. 7.12 he putteth downe but one head and calleth that one the Law the Prophets Whatsoever yee would that men should do vnto you even so doe yee to them for this is the law the Prophets In like manner St Paule hath said He that loveth another hath fulfilled the law Rom. 13.8 verse 10. Loue is the fulfilling of the law And Gal. 5.14 All the law is fulfilled in one word which is this Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe In those places where our Saviour and the Apostle doe ascribe to our loue of others the fulfilling of the law they meane nothing else but the fulfilling of the second table of the law in this one branch cōteining two members of my division 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Brotherly loue and loue of our neighbours And so Christ in the place before cited Matth. 22.40 making of the whole law but two parts loue of God and loue of our neighbours excludeth not my third part 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that brotherly loue whereof you heard but includeth it in his latter Let this then stand for trueth Christian charity hath three branches loue of God loue of our brethren in the Lord and loue of our neighbours The rule for the first is you shall loue the Lord your God with all your hearts with all your soules with all your might For the second you shall loue one another as Christ hath loved you For the third you shall loue your neighbours as your selues And thinke not that you liue according to the first rule if you faile in keeping either the second or the third Lincked they are together and that so that vnlesse you obserue all you keepe neither you cannot loue God and hate your neighbour neither can you loue your neighbour but you must loue God too Every stepping aside every transgressiō of the law is a blemish to your loue And therefore for my position your charity shall be much obscured if for private reports you conceaue ill of anie The reason is because so doing you commit sinne and are rebuked of the law as transgressours You commit sinne I say so you breake the rule of Charity if you conceaue ill of any for any private reports There cannot be a greater poyson See my second Sermon on Iames p. 83. there cannot be a deadlier bane of friendship and amity betwixt man and man then to loue to heare what bitter sharpe tongues shal seeke to speake Soone creepes it into your eares that will never out againe whilest the breath is in your bodies You may know it by this If any one be misreported to you to be spotted with adultery bribery theft or any like grievous offence though happily you can be content not to credit all because all is not sufficiently proved vnto you yet something remaines to the blot of your brother yet stickes the scarre of suspition still Something you will beleeue for the reporters sake whom you will take to be a very honest man Well though Ziba be long since dead and rotten who did wrongfully sclaunder Mephiboscheth his Lord vnto the King 2. Sam 16.3 yet may we be assured that a great measure of Zibaes spirit now at this time dwelleth in the hearts of the sonnes of men and so shall dwell even vntill the day of the Lords appearing Solon A wise lawmaker being asked why he appointed no punishment for such a one as should kill his parēts made this answer that he thought no mā so barbarous as to doe such a deed Without doubt if a law bee made against any actions vvordes or thoughts it was first in the lawgivers conceit that there would be hearts to harbour such thoughts lips to vtter such words hands to worke such actions There is one lawgiver which is able to saue and to destroy from him out of the Highest Heavens a law is given vnto vs to be of force as long as we shall walke vpon this earth it is conveyed vnto vs by the hand of Moses Levit. 19.16 where thus it is written Thou shalt not walke about with tales among thy brethren The very making of this law is an evident argument that the Lord knew that there would be no want of such in the world of such I say as should walke about with tales among their brethrē Such there were in the time when Ezechiel prophecied for chap. 22.9 Ierusalem is reproved because in her were tale-cariers men that caried tales vp and downe to shed blood And the strife that hitherto hath beene now is and here after is like to be in all places in Church in Common wealth in societies in families proveth that no age is voide of such whisperers You need not to doubt of the proofe It is Solomons Prov. 26.20 Without wood fire is quenched and without a tale-bearer strife ceaseth If there be not a new supply made of wood the fire will goe out so if there be not some that wil cary tales betweene man and man strife will die quickly For as wood is the matter of fire so a tale-carier fostereth strife The like hath Solomon spoken of scorners Prov. 22.10 and sure it may well be for commonly a scorner is a tale-carier also To such as by their private reports in your eares that are any way in governement shall depresse and disgrace their brethren in hope to lift vp advāce themselues I haue not much to say Only I will pray them to ioine togither the first and third verses of the 15. Psalme I hope it will not be their lost labour If I may doe it for them thus I doe it He that sclaundereth with his tongue shall not dwell in the tabernacle of the Lord he shall not rest in Gods holy mountaine As for you dearely beloved in the Lord whose heads it hath pleased God to advance aboue your brethren either in Church or common wealth or lesser societies or private families let me bee bold to put you in minde of a daunger very neere you in respect of such busie-bodies which will not let your eares take rest You haue already heard there is no want of them The daunger I speake of is descryed by the wisest amōg the sonnes of men He Prov. 18.8 tels you that the words of a tale-bearer are as flatterings and
the despisers of Christs Gospell He also must abide death without mercy but it is the death of both body and soule for as it is vers 27. which I haue already explicated hee must fearefully looke for iudgement and violent fire therewith to bee devoured Of the despiser of Moses law I haue already spoken Touching the despiser of Christ and his Gospell thus I say It is not necessarie that hee should bee altogether vnlike to you that loue Christ he may liue with you in the same Church hee may professe with you the same religion hee may seeme to you as good a Christian as your selues For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the blood of the Testament is he sanctified Yet doth my Text discerne such a one from him that loues Christ by three his attributes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he treads and tramples vnderfoote the Sonne of God 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he accounteth the blood of the Testament a vulgar a common an vnholy a prophane thing 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee despiteth the spirit of grace The doctrines which this place affordeth vs are two 1 Because the reprobates not all of them but such as are deepest in Gods displeasure such as doe sinne against the holy Ghost are in this place said to be sanctified with the blood of the Testament we are to consider how farre a man may being so sanctified go in the profession of the Gospell yet be a reprobate 2 Because the adversaries of our doctrine whereby wee defend the perseverance of Gods Saints in their faith doe out of this place make a strong argument as they take it for their purpose wee are to consider whether a Sonne of God sanctified with the blood of the Covenant may fall away To enter a due discourse of these doctrines or particularly to examine the wordes from which these notes doe arise it would cary me beyond the time limited and I had rather bee too short then to hurt your patience Only heare one word of exhortation Is it not a fearefull condition that a man sanctified with the blood of the Testament should tread vnder foot the Son of God that a man liuing as wee liue and prosessing as wee professe should fall away wholy from Christ Christianitie Yes beloued in the Lord very feareful is the condition of such a one and if we haue not browes of brasse necks of iron and hearts of flint our very hearing of it must needes in some sort cast vs downe if we haue any feeling of Gods spirit within vs it will make vs vse all diligence in working our salvation in attaining vnto faith in dying vnto sinne in living vnto newnesse of life We haue beene admonished in the Philippians to runne forward in that race of righteousnesse wherein through Iesus Christ God hath freely placed vs that being conducted by his Spirit to walke in good workes wee may make our vocation sure My beloued saith S. Paule as you haue alwaies obeyed so make an end of your owne salvation with feare and trembling Philip. 2 12. And so beloued in the Lord let vs also make an ende of our salvation with feare and trembling Some of vs do gladly preach the word we willingly declare good tidings and publish salvation saying vnto you your God reigneth Esai 52.7 yet hereby are we not iustified our evill ensample may make the name of God to be blasphemed among the people Rom. 2.24 if wee beate not downe our bodies and bring them into subiection it may be that after we haue preached to others our selues may prooue castavvaies It is Saint Paules iudgement 1. Cor. 9.27 By Christs name we may prophecy we may cast out Devils we may doe many great workes yet hereby are we not iustified it may be Christ at his comming will professe vnto vs I never knew you depart from me yee workers of iniquity Mat. 7.22 We haue hitherto beene fed delicately and brought vp in scarlet Lament 4.5 shall we now perish in the streets shall we now embrace the dunge O let vs not go backeward or stand still but make wee an end of our salvation with feare and trembling We all cause our bellies to eate and fill our bowels with that sweet roule Ezech. 3.3 as sweet as any hony in our mouthes wee willingly heare the word and with ioy receiue it into our hearts Yet are we not hereby iustified no more then Balaam was who desired to be like Gods children in happynesse when he said O let my soule die the death of the righteous and let my last end be like his Num. 23.10 Remember the Galatians they receaved St Paule for his ministeries sake as an An●ell of God yea as Christ Iesus and if it had beene possible would haue plucked out their owne eies and haue given them to him to haue done him good So zealous were they in professing the doctrine which Paule preached Yet false Prophets turned them backwardes to begin againe the Iewish ceremonies they turned againe to impotent and beggarly rudiments wherevnto at the first they were in bōdage in steed of going forward toward Christ they turned backward from him Galat. 4 9. Having hitherto had our heades of gold Dan. 2.32.33 shall we now that we may be like Nabuchad-nezzars image put on feete of clay O let vs not go backwarde or stand still but make wee an end of our salvation with feare and trembling We all beleeue Christ and the word preached by his Ministers Yet are we not hereby iustified Many of Christs disciples went backe and walked no more with him Ioh. 6.66 Simon Magus beleeved at Philips preaching and was baptized wondred at his miracles kept company with him yet afterward was it found that his heart was not right before God Act. 8.21 The Devils also they beleeue and tremble saith St Iames chap. 2.19 Now having begun in the Spirit shall we end in the flesh Galat. 3.3 O let vs not go back ward or stand still but make we an end of our salvation with feare and trembling We all doe dayly before the Lord confesse our sinnes yet are we not hereby iustified For so happy had Pharaoh been for he said I haue sinned against the LORD God Exod. 10.16 so blessed had Saule been for he also said I haue sinned 1. Sam. 15.30 so well had it beene with Iudas for neither was he behinde them in saying I haue sinned Mat. 27.3 Well Pharaoh Saule Iudas through vnbeleefe are fallen and you stand by faith yet bee not high minded but feare So St Paule counsailed the Romanes ch 11.20 Be not high minded I say but feare And take heed it come not vnto you according to the proverbe the dogge is returned to his vomit and the sow that was washed 2. Pet. 2.22 to her wallowing in the mire Since you haue gladly preached the word willingly heard it and carefully beleeved it hold you on in so good a course doe your
fire wherewith they must bee devoured Which being so it followeth that the places now alleaged must be vnderstood of that generall sanctity by which mē may be said to be sanctified iustified cleansed washed and the like though not truely nor before God yet in the face of the Church before men as it were sacramentally so must we expound this clause of my text where we see that hee that treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God may bee said to bee sanctified with the blood of the covenant And so he may be sanctified but how The meaning is he may be sanctified not truely nor before God but in the face of the Church and before men Hitherto haue I endeavoured to make plaine the first mark by which back-sliders frō the truth are in my text noted namely that they are sanctified with the blood of the covenant The question arising hence may out of that which already is delivered easily be answe●ed The question is How farre forth a man may be sanctified with the blood of the Covenant and yet be a reprobate I answer thus in generall To be sanctified only in the face of the Church and before men doth not exempt a man from being a reprobate Or thus may the question be proposed How farre a man may goe in the profession of the Gospell and yet be a reprobate I answere thus in generall So cary thy selfe outwardly in the profession of the Gospell that no exception may bee taken against thee let thy life be such as that the Sons of God which liue with thee in the bosome of the same Church can iudge no otherwise of thee then of a rightfull heire to eternall happinesse be it that they thinke of thee much better then of themselues yet will not all this exempt thee from being a reprobate What thou art inwardly and in the sight of God God alone knoweth he alone is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and sees and knowes thy heart Since thou hast giuen thy name to Christ and hast had the washing of the new birth the Church in charitie must iudge of thee as of one truely grafted into Christ and truely regenerate but I say what thou art inwardly and in the sight of God God knoweth examine thou thy selfe More particularly I answer thus As I said before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a figure and according to the custome of the Scriptures all that are in the Church though they all be not of the Church and truely holy are notwithstanding called holy and are said to be sanctified with the blood of Christ Now of such as are said to be sanctified when indeed they are not sāctified there are two sorts Some there are that haue Christ much in their mouthes but nothing at all in their hearts or vnderstanding They knowe him not yet as they see others doe so doe they with others they worship and confesse him Much like them of whom our Saviour said to the woman of Samaria Ioh. 4.22 Yee worship that which yee know not And because this confession of Christ in such as are borne anew of water and of the Spirit is an outward testimonie of an inward new birth hence it commeth to passe that such mere talkers of Christ if their liues be not exceeding wicked may be said to be regenerate iustified sanctified These goe not beyond one step in the profession of the Gospell Others there are which possesse Christ not only in their mouthes but also in their vnderstanding These of all reprobates goe farthest in the profession of the Gospell So farre they goe as that it is impossible for man to discerne betweene them and Christs sheepe though they bee but goats betweene them and true Christians though they bee but hypocrites For they are kept in the same pastures and solded in the same fold with vs and doe so behaue themselues in obedience to the word and discipline of the Church as that by vs they must needs be taken for true members of Christ And because this their knowledge of Christ is in the elect the beginning of regeneratiō hence it cōmeth to passe that these men though indeed they are not borne a newe may yet be said to be regenerate iustified sanctified Thus we see how farre a reprobate may goe in Christianitie The elect out-goes him by one degree for he receaues Christ not onely into his mouth or vnderstanding but into his heart also he receaues the word not only into his mouth to talke of it or into his vnderstanding to knowe it but into his open and enlarged heart to embrace it And so is he sanctified in mouth in mind in heart and being so sanctified he chearefully runnes forward in that race of righteousnesse wherein through Iesus Christ GOD hath freely placed him that being conducted by his Spirit to walke in good workes hee may make his calling and election sure Now to consider that a man sanctified with the blood of the Testament may account that blood vnholy and prophane may trample vnder foot the sonne of God and may despite the Spirit of Grace will not this moue our hearts to wisdome To cōsider that men living as we liue and professing as wee professe may vtterly and finally fall away from Christ and Christianity will not this in some measure cast vs downe Happily browes of brasse necks of yron and hearts of flint will here proclaime their stubbornesse But dearely beloued in the Lord if we are chosen out of the world if in Christ wee are annointed and sealed if our building be of God not made with hands but eternall in the heavens the consideration of these things whereof wee haue heard will remember vs that it is now time wee should arise from sleepe yea it will cause vs to vse all diligence in working our salvation in attaining vnto faith in dying vnto sinne in living vnto newnesse of life Wee see how farre reprobats may goe in the profession of the Gospell If we goe no farther but sit downe and rest with them yea if we be wearie before we haue gone so farre as they if we come short of them in the duties of religion can wee in reason looke to be rewarded better then they Shall Herod feare reverence Iohn Baptist and heare him gladly and yet be damned shall we nor feare nor reverence Gods Ministers not heare thē willingly and yet be saued Shall Pharaoh Saule and Iudas confesse their sinnes and yet be damned and shall we hide our sinnes and yet be saued Shall the wicked confesse Christ with their mouthes and knowe him in their vnderstanding and yet be dāned and shal we vse our mouthes only to sweare to blaspheme to lye to speake evill of others keepe our vnderstanding like a faire and cleane table booke without all godly knowledge and yet be saued Surely the ground that beares bryers and thornes is reproued is neere vnto cursing and in the end must be burned so
they doe not what they would but what they hate and would not doe that even that they doe though they delight in the law of God concerning the inner man that yet there is a law in their members that leads them captiue vnto sinne Notwithstanding the truth of all this although the faithfull can finde no meanes to performe that which is good the law of sinne working death in them and causing them dayly in a sort to sinne against their consciences yet because in minde they serue the law of God and sinne not in contempt of God they may not be said to tread vnder foot the Sonne of God As for the reprobate when they sinne against their consciences they doe it in the highest degree they doe it most properly most perfectly most fully I speake not this of all the reprobate I am perswaded that as there haue beene many which never heard so there are many which heare not and there shall bee many which shall never heare the preaching of the Gospell no not so much as the name of Christ St Paule told the Lycaonians Act. 14.16 how that God in former times suffered all the Gentils to walke in their own waies As much in effect he told the Ephesians chap. 2.12 that before their calling they were aliens from the common wealth of Israel strangers from the Covenants of promise without hope without Christ without God in the world MOSES and the Prophets are plentifull in shewing this that in former times the Covenant was peculiar to the Iewes Among the rest DAVID saith Psalm 76.1 2. that in Iewry God is knowne his name is great in Israel that his tabernacle is at Salem and his dwelling in Sion The like he hath Psal 147.19 God sheweth his word vnto Iacob his statutes and ordinances vnto Israel But in this latter place he addeth moreover God hath not dealt so with any nation neither haue the heathen knowledge of his lawes Hence I say I am perswaded that as there haue beene many which never heard so there are many which heare not and there shal be many which shall never heare the preaching of the Gospel no not so much as the name of Christ But such reprobats here I meane not I name them only that liue within the bosome of the Church Them I name to whom God hath abundantly granted the outward meanes of salvation as the word prayer sacraments and discipline them I name to whom God giueth many worthy properties of faith as to acknowledge the divine truth in the Law and Gospell to assent vnto it with ioy of heart to heare speake it outwardly for a time to professe it them I name on whom God bestoweth no small measure of repentance as to see their sinnes to be sory sor them to confesse them to resolue for a time to sinne no more These are the reprobats I name to be such as doe sinne in the highest degree against their consciences For albeit many notable things are spoken of them in the sanctified writings of the blessed Prophets and Apostles albeit they are clad in a faire robe in shew like to that of Adam Adams robe of integritie of holinesse and of the grace of God wherewith before his fall hee was invested albeit the vesture they haue put on be as seemely to the eye as was that vesture of needle worke wrought with diverse colours wherewith the Queene was clothed yet because they are not as the Queenes daughter was all glorious within those notable things spoken of them that faire robe covering them that goodly vesture put on them can availe or advantage them nothing at all If their hearts which are open and naked vnto God could be seene with the eyes of slesh then would they appeare even to vs as they are very like the hearts of those Iewes Act. 13.45 who because they saw the graces of God magnified by Pauls preaching at Antioche were full of envy and railed at and gainsaid all that Paul had spokē then would they appeare evē to vs as they are very like the hearts of those Pharisees Marke 3.30 who of set purpose disdainefully spitefully and malitiously turned the light into darknesse when they saw that Christ by the power of God made the blind and dumb that was possessed with a divell both to speake and see for they said hee hath an vncleane spirit then would they appeare even to vs as they are very like the heart of the sorcerer Elymas Act. 13.10 who a child of the divell an enimie of all righteousnesse full of subtiltie full of mischiefe withstood the preaching of the word and sought to turne away Sergius Paulus from the faith Such men as these harbouring within them hearts of such quality hearts made fat haue also eares and eies suteable to their hearts eares made heavy and eies shut vp they see not they heare not they vnderstand not If you talke with them of the Holy Scriptures happyly they will graunt them to be a well devised story and that 's all Tell them of their Baptisme they count it no better then the washing of their hands of the Lords Supper they preferre their owne farre before it of the Resurrection you make them then conceited as to think what maner of bodies they shall haue at that day of what proportiō and stature their bodies shall be and the like and for your labour and good advisement they will hold you to be as the Epicures and Stoicks did Paule Act. 17.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is as our English text reades it bablers or if you would rather the marginall reading triflers or rascals These men were they vsed for their deserts the preacher should pronounce and the Magistrate proclaime for the foulest leapers that possible may be well worthy shall I say to be excluded the hoast and to haue their habitation alone or which is more to haue no accesse either to court or country to bee exiled altogether their natiue soile which ever yet gaue thē nourishment No all this were too little but well worthy I say to be expelled from nature it selfe which so vnnaturally they striue to bring to naught See here The Lord sends a flaming fire if possible to awake them from their sleepe in sinne he sends his Ministers to call them vnto weeping and mourning to baldnesse and girding with sackcloath as once he did vnto the Iewes Esai 22.12 But hath this fire though mightily flaming stirred them from their sleep Or haue they yeelded obedience to the calling of God Behold it followeth in that text with them is ioy and gladnesse slaying oxen and killing sheepe eating flesh and drinking wine eating and drinking for to morrow say they we shall die they say to morrow we shall die In the meane time that is to day while it is called to day they sinne like Elyes sonnes 1. Sam. 3.14 such a sinne which God hath sworne shall not bee purged with sacrifice nor offering for ever they sinne with a
against him from all eternitie To like purpose is it vsed by St Paul Rom. 1.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the anger and wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against al vngodlinesse and vnrighteousnesse of men The meaning is plaine By Gods iudgements wrought vpon vs the sonnes of men its evident that his everlasting decree is against all iniquitie Againe the anger or wrath of God betokeneth his menacings or threatnings Examples hereof are frequent David praieth Psal 6.1 O LORD rebuke me not in thine anger neither chastize me in thy wrath as if he had praied O LORD let not thy vengeance overtake my sinnes according as thou hast threatned Ionas asketh chap. 3.9 Who can tell whether God will turne and repent turne away from the fierenesse of his wrath that we perish not as if he had asked who knoweth whether God may bee intreated not to doe accordingly as hee hath threatned The LORD himselfe promiseth Hos 11.9 I will not execute the fiercenesse of my wrath against Ephraim as if he had promised I being a God and not man the holy one in the middest of thee hauing my heart turned within mee and my repentings rouled together I even I will not doe accordingly as I haue threatned I will not hold you with more examples in so plaine a matter Last of all the anger of God is put for the effects of his anger for punishment and revenge To such as despise the riches of Gods boūtifulnesse patience and long sufferance Paule saith Rom. 2.5 After thine hardnesse and heart that cannot repent thou heapest vnto thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath Thou heapest vnto thy selfe wrath that is thou layest vp as treasure for thy selfe punishment against the day of the declaration of Gods iust iudgmēt To the Pharisees Sadducees which came to the baptisme of Iohn Iohn said Matth. 3.7 O generation of Vipers who hath forwarned you to flee from the anger to come frō the anger that is from the punishments hanging over your heads because of Gods anger One example more in soe great variety and no more To the childrē of disobedience it is warranted by Paule Ephes 5.6 that the anger of God shall come vpō them The anger of God that is his vengeance the effectes of his anger shall assuredly light vpon the children of disobedience such as excuse themselues and set light by the menacies and iudgments of their God We see now that Gods eternall decree is to be avenged on the wicked that he threatneth as much in his holy word and dayly practiseth the same by punishing of sinners what remaineth but that we acknowledge confesse with feare humblenesse that vengeance truly properly belongeth vnto God and that he shall surely recompense The consideration hereof may moue our hearts to wisdome It may moue vs to beware of those crying sinnes vsually cōmitted against the first table that we provoke not Gods vengeance against vs by Idolatrie in worshipping the creature aboue the Creator blessed for ever by tempting God in making tryall wh●ther his word be true or not by murmuring against him in laying iniustice to his charge quod bonis male sit malis benè for afflicting the godly when the wicked liue at ease by rebellion contumacie in taking counsell together against the LORD and against his Christ by blasphemie in doing despite to the spirite of Grace It may moue vs also to beware of those other sinnes crying sinnes too vsually committed against the second table that we provoke not Gods vengeance against vs by dishonoring our parents and such as God hath put in place of government aboue vs by greiuing our children and such as are by vs to be governed by oppressing the fatherlesse and the poore by giuing our selues over vnto filthy lusts For the Holy one that is in the middest of vs the LORD of Heauen and earth whose sayings must come to passe he hath said Vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompense I might here take iust occasion in many words to dehorte you from private revenge the sinne that eates and consumes vs in Colleges But dictum sapienti You are wise and touching this sore which much molesteth vs you will cōmune with your owne hearts in your chambers Only I beseech you attend vnto the words of the Apostle Rom. 12.18 19. Giue me leaue to vse them as mine owne Dearely beloued if it be possible as much as in you lieth haue peace with al men Avenge not your selues but giue place vnto wrath for it is written Vengeance belongeth vnto mee I will recompen●● saith the LORD Gracious Father let thy word abide plentifully among vs in all wisdome make vs walke worthy the same as it becommeth the sonnes of so high a God Giue vs thy grace good Lord that thy word in vs may multiply as seed sowne in good ground and we may ever vse it to the edifying of our consciences to the comfort of our soules and to the kindling of good motions within vs through Iesus Christ our Lord. THE ELEVENTH SERMON HEBR. 10. VER 30. 30 For we know him that hath said Vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompense saith the LORD And againe The LORD shall iudge his people NOw are we to cōsider of the last branch of this verse these wordes The LORD shall iudge his people Wherin wee may note 1 Who shall iudge 2 Who shall be iudged 3 The kind of iudgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 IEHOVAH shall iudge his people So sings Moses in Deut 32. calling him that shall iudge by the name IEHOVAH the a See my third Lecture vpon Amos 1. p. 25. honorablest name belōging to the great God of Heauē Much might be spoken of it would I apply my selfe to the curiositie of Cabalists Rabbins I might say of it that it is nomē b Zanch. de Nat Dei Lib. 1. c 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so reputed by superstitious Iewes a name not to bee pronounced not to be taken within polluted lipps In which regard when reading the Scriptures they meet with this name either they passe it over with silence making obeisance with their bodies in token of reverence or else for it they read Elohim or Adonai directed by the points it hath and when writing any place of Scripture they are to expresse this name they meddle not with the proper letters and characters of the word but they expresse it sometimes by points 3. or 4. disposed in some order agreeable to their fancies sometimes by 3. Iods and one Camets vnder them all included within a circle I might say of it that it is nomen Tetragrammaton a name in Hebrew but of 4. letters of 4. letters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as they say for that the name of God in all tongues and languages generally consisteth of 4. letters and those foure letters in Hebrew are al letters of rest whereout they gather a mysterie that the rest repose and tranquillitie of all
Good men are so overlaid with miseries that their words are even swallowed vp but the wicked are in such prosperitie that b Vers 7. their eyes stand out for fatnesse Good men are even cast downe into desolation but the wicked haue more thē heart can wish c Cicer. de nat ●●or l●b 3. DIOG●NES the Cynicke in his time seeing one Harpalus a notable thiefe liuing a long time happily was bold to say Harpalum contra Deos testimonium dicere quod in illâ fortunâ tam diu viveret Wicked Harpalus liuing long in prosperitie was some argument to Diogenes that God respected not mans affaires The like experience hath shaken even the very Saints of God It made Iob to say chapter 24.12 MEN cry out of the the citie and the soules of the slaine cry out yet God doth not charge them with folly It made Ieremie to expostulate with the LORD chap. 12.1 O Lord let me talke with thee of thy iudgments wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper why are all they in wealth that rebelliously transgresse It makes the Godly to whome ●●al 73 10. waters of a full cup are wrung out many times to take into their mouthes that passionate complaint Psal 73.11 How doth God knowe it is there knowledge in the most high Loe these are the wicked yet prosper they alway and increase in riches Certainely wee haue cleansed our hearts in vaine and in vaine haue we washed our hands in innocencie for dayly haue we beene punished and chastened every morning From this experience grewe that disputation among the heathens whether God regardeth men and their businesses T●LAMON pu●s downe the state of it in one verse Tully cites it lib. 3. de nat Deor. NAM si curent benè bonis sit malè malis quod nunc abest Doubtles if God had any care of men their actions good men should be in good estate and wicked men in worse But now we haue experience of the contrarie Improbis optimè bonis malè est wicked men haue their hearts ease but good mē are in miserie TELAMON was no fitt man to make any construction of Gods proceedings We in Christianity for the thing do know it to be true Wicked Diues hath the world at will whilest poore Lazarus is hunger bitten full of soares and miserable every way The cōstruction we make of it is grounded vpon diverse texts of holy Scripture Giue me leaue for mine owne comfort and the comfort of the rest of you that are any way afflicted to repeate for this purpose two or three sentences well knowne vnto you It 's written 1. Pet. 4.17 Iudgement beginneth at the house of God It 's writen 1. Cor. 11.32 When we are iudged we are chastned of the Lord because wee should not bee condemned with the world It 's written 2. Tim. 3.12 All that will liue godly in Christ IESVS shall suffer persecution This being so that the wicked flourish and the Godly are kept vnder it remaineth of necessitie that there must be a second comming of Christ a last iudgement when the Godly shall receiue fulnesse of ioy and glory the vngodly fulnesse of woe and miserie Now for the removall of the scruple which I entended I must explicate the places which it troubleth To that place Ioh. 5.24 I say that by iudgement is meant the iudgement of Cōdemnation The beleeuer shall not come into iudgement the iudgement of Condemnation for already he is passed from death to life already he hath everlasting life non re sed spe non fruitione sed fide We are already passed from death to life spe non re for we are saued by hope as saith the Apostle Rom. 8.24 We haue already life everlasting fide non fruitione for wee walke by faith and not by sight as the same Apostle speaketh 2 Cor. 5 7. The truth is as long as this flesh encombreth vs wee cannot fully possesse eternall life yet in this flesh wee haue a tast feeling of it For in this flesh wee knowe God to bee the only very God and whom he hath sent IESVS Christ and this is life eternall It 's Christ's assertion Iohn 17.3 Whereto may be added that 1. Cor. 13.9 We knowe in part and prophecy in part And that Coloss 1.13 God hath translated vs into the kingdome of his deare sonne And that 1. Ioh. 3.14 Wee knowe that we are translated from death to life Thus already are wee passed from death to life by an assured hope already we haue everlasting life by a liuely faith and therefore shall wee never come into iudgement the iudgement of Condemnation But there is a iudgement of Absolution then to be executed when the Lord himselfe shall descend frō Heaven with a shout 1 Thess 4.16 and with the voice of the Archangell and with the trumpet of God At that great day the dead in Christ shall rise first then we which liue and remaine shall with thē bee caught vp in the clouds to meet the LORD in the aire at whose right hand wee shall bee set to receiue to the eternall ioy of our hearts that happy sentence Come yee blessed of my Father inherit the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world To that other place Ioh. 3.18 I say that the vnbeleeuer is cōdemned already in effect and substance 3. waies In the counsell of God in the word of God and in his owne conscience Hee is condemned in Gods counsell and purpose before ever he commeth into the world as Esau was Rom. 9.11 Hee is condemned in the word of God wherein sentence is already passed against him Ioh. 1.9 for that light being come into the world hee yet loveth darknesse rather then light He is condemned in his owne conscience the torment whereof like a worme ever gnaweth him and never suffereth him to be at rest So many waies are the vnbeleeuers already condemned already that is in this world their condemnation is begunne but the manifestation finishing of it shall be hereafter and therefore the meaning of the place is this they that beleeue not are already iudged in part but the full manifestation thereof shall bee at the day of wrath Then shall they see the Sonne of man comming in the cloudes of Heaven with power great glory at whose left hand they must be set to receiue to their eternall horror that irrevocable sentence Depart from me yee cursed into everlasting fire which is prepared for the Divell and his Angels The scruple now remoued hath remembred vs of two of Gods iudgements his iudgement of Condemnatiō for the wicked and his iudgement of Absolution for his chosen Neither of them is meant in the present clause of my Text for which I point at two other iudgements of God familiar vnto him when he dealeth with his owne people The one I call his iudgement of Protection the other his iudgement of Correction His iudgement of Protection is meant
of this attribute of God The profitable labours of the excellently learned Zanchius are not wanting to this point Wherefore to touch it but in a glance let it please you to be remembred you whose liues are but a c Iob. 8 9. shadow doe hold your liues only at the good pleasure of your maker that hee your maker the maker of Heaven and earth God eternal is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by an excellencie and most properly said to liue Both the Testaments giue witnesse to this truth In both hee is often called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the liuing God Our forefathers did oftē swear As the LORD liueth It was a protestation much vsed by God himselfe As I liue You may hence conclude that God is life it selfe liueth of himselfe and is the sole fountaine of all life in all things living besides himselfe Giue mee leaue to hold you yet with two or three wordes You see it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God and you see to whom it is fearefull to all the wicked but especially to such as fall away from the knowne truth How much then is the condition of many in this our daye to be deplored I meane the conditiō of such against whom there hath beene much complaint made out of this place and the like for their going out from among vs if not bodily yet in heart and affection to adore that Romish Idol For the sinne of Apostacie there is no sacrifice that can make satisfaction iudgement and fire must be it's portion Wherefore leauing all backsliders revolters or fallers away from the holy religion which you professe to the secret iudgements of Almightie God suffer your selues to be put in mind of your owne estate You knowe there was a time when a cloud of blood did overshadow this land but God in his good time dispersed it Then our most gracious * QVEEN● ELIZABETH This Sermon was preached Dec. 1602. Soveraigne succeeded in the throne finding this our country to bee but bricke shee turned it into Marble finding it in the sands she set it vpon a rocke and the rocke was CHRIST finding it a land of images ignorances corruptions vanities lies shee hath hitherto preserued it a land possest of the truth and seasoned with the Gospell of Christ That so it be preserued still good Lord if it be thy will let the happy line of her life continue even as long as Sunne and Moone O thinke vpon the comfortable blessings wherewith you are blessed vnder her I remember you not of your peace yet that is such as your fathers never presumed to hope for The freedome of the Gospell is the thing I remember you of Your consciences haue hitherto beene at libertie will you now suffer them to bee enthralled to mens traditions Your zeale hath hitherto beene rectified by knowledge can you now be content to haue the eye of your knowledge put out the preaching of the Gospell hindred and blind zeale fostered in your bosomes Your religion hath hitherto beene reformed by Gods ordinances shall it now bee deformed by those impotent and beggarly rudiments wherevnto your grandfathers were in bondage Why should your last estate be worse then your first 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is the conclusion to each of those Epistles writtē to the seaven Churches in the Revelation He that overcōmeth not he that draweth his sword nor he that fighteth the battels of the Lord nor he that spendeth his bloo● much lesse he that fainteth that flyeth that sleepeth that standeth or sitteth still but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that overcommeth shall never be hurt of the second death Be yee therefore of good courage and faint not your cause is Gods cause your quarell Gods quarell your enimies Gods enimies Doe yee as you haue your gracious Queene for an example Shee is the formost in this fight and hath given the first blow the first blow a great blow powerfull I hope to the ●ooting out from among vs every Popish Priest and Iesuite It shall haue the better successe if you in your places will second it and multiply strength vpon it the Magistrate by his temporall sword and the Minister by the sword of his mouth which is the word of God Gird vp your selues with strength and rush into the battel Set together vpon the common enimy Why should there bee strife or contentions betweene your selues Are yee not brethren You shall finde enough to doe with the common enimy evē to the spēding of your best strength They are growne to such boldnesse that they will not easily be quelled Parsons * Colleton●s Defence p. 241. statizing or marchandizing of the Crowne diademe of England is so notoriously known that even Pasquine in Rome speakes of it Their Arch-Priest BLACKWELL if the secular Priests doe guesse aright was he bashful when he put it in print that Cardinall Allen and Father Parsons as Moses and Iosua iam diu proculdubio occupassent promissionis terram had long since out of doubt possessed this Realme of England had not the disobedience of some secular Priests their most displeasing murmuring hindred it Wanted the Iesuits boldnes when they thus * Preface to the Iesuites Catechisme threatned the secular Pri●sts in England The INFANTA of Spaine shal be your Queene and that sooner then you looke for You see their boldnes how they blush not to divulge and publish their impious plots practises and designementes against the Lords annointed It is the more neede then that our forces should be vnited Let vs ioine heart and hand togither in Gods holy cause against that wicked race borne to the ruine and desolation of states and kingdomes Let vs practise the word and be instant in season and out of season if possibly to restore to Christ the seduced by Antichrist to gather vp the spirituall stones of Gods house already fallen and to giue strēgth to such as are falling that so having fought this good fight finished our courses and kept our faith we may at the time of our departing receiue the crowne of righteousnesse which is laid vp for vs and not for vs only but for all thē also that loue the appearing of the Lord. Est Deo gratia The Table containing the particulers of this booke AMbrose 30 Ammi 158 The Anger of God three●fold 149 Anthropomorphitae 173 Aphthartodocites 166 Atheists 50 Audiani 173 B. BAlaam 5 Of sinning after Baptisme 28 50 The beleeuer shall not come into iudgement 159. 161. he h●th alredy eternall li●e 161 The blasphemie against the holy Ghost 19 Boldnesse 15 Wee must loue our Brethren 81 Bribes take not 74 Bribes taken in secret 77 The Blood of the covenant 96 C. CAtharists 29. 30 The rule of Charity 80. 89 Christian Charitie hath three branches 81. 85. The bond of Charity 70 The Child of God may diminish the graces of God in him 34. He may fall into his old sins 34 He
shall they die they shall be in fire vnquenchable yet shall see nothing for the darknesse so palpable everlastingly shall they burne yet not cōsume You may read of the wine of giddinesse Psalme 60.3 of a strange kinde of worme Esa 66.24 of the winepresse of Gods wrath Revelat. 14.10 of fire and brimstone Ezech. 38.22 All these if worse may be many more worse then these are for so many torments assuredly allotted them Their cup is a cup of the deadliest wine that ever yet was tasted even the wine of Gods wrath wherwith they shall be filled for evermore their worme is a worme that never leaveth gnawing They shall bee tormented before the holy Angels and the lambe in fire and in brimstone not such as fell vpon Sodome and Gomorah for so might they haue some hope at length to bee dissolved into heaps of ashes or clouds of pitch but in fire and brimstone ascending from a mine without bottome burning in the lake of death giving them no rest either day or night The smoke of this their torment ascends for evermore and is appointed to continue for a time and times no time even when time shal be no more Rev. 10.6 When time shall be no more yet then shall their torment continue that in such a measure as no eye hath ever seene the like no eare hath ever heard the like no tongue hath ever vttered the like no heart hath beene is or shall bee able ever to conceaue the like Having thus pointed at their punishment let vs now consider the degrees by which they haue ascended to that fulnesse of their iniquitie as also how far our selues haue troden in their steps The degrees are these 1 They are deceaved by some sinne 2 By the same sinne their hearts come to be hardned 3 This hardnesse of heart by continuance breedeth in the wickednesse and perversitie 4 There followeth incredulitie and vnbeleefe 5 After their vnbeleefe they fall to a generall apostacie necessarily and that immediatly Necessarily and immediatly they fall away from faith in Christ These are the degrees first deceit by sin then hardnesse of heart arising from deceit the heart being hardned it becommeth wicked and perverse this wickednes and perversitie of heart causeth incredulitie vnbeleefe whereby is wrought that highest step generall apostacie and falling away from God The two first steps haue beene are vsually trodden in by vs namely deceit by some sinne and hardnesse of heart by the same That old Prophet 1. King 13.11 entised a younger Prophet contrary to the commandment of God to * 1. Kin. 13.18 turne home with him and to eate and drinke but at the last he cursed him for his labour and his curse tooke effect for as hee returned hee was slaine by a * Vers 24. lyon in the way Not much vnlike is Satans dealing with vs. He entiseth vs to sinne from which wee are by the Lords commandment to fly as from a serpent wee haue yeelded vnto him and haue sinned but hee hath cursed vs for out labour only as yet we haue not met with any lion in the way Notwithstanding sinned we haue and that not once only for Satan hath deceaued vs still and wee haue yeelded still vnto him still haue we sinned And are not our hearts now hardned with sinning Yes very much hardned I grant it may be our cheekes wil bee red to talke of Christ as theirs were who went to * Luk. 24.13 Emaus and we will blush apace to seeme so holy but the Blackmore wil blush faster then we when fearefully fowly we sinne against the Lord. Be there any sinne that delighteth vs more then other wee will take part with Naaman * 2. King 5.18 let God be mercifull vnto vs if he will we will not leaue it we will wallow in it ioy in it liue in it grow old in it Doe wee not bath this matter of earth and wormes meat wherewith we are clogged in all pleasure and ease as if there were neither corruption to rot it nor Heaven to receaue it nor Hell to burne it Behold the progresse sinne hath made in vs first there was titillatio delectationis in corde then followed consensio then factum then consuetudo First Satan slily crept into our hearts there he moued a tickling delight which so well pleased vs that by and by we gaue consent thereto and to shew that our cōsent was not in vaine we were not long before we brought it into fact not long I say before wee did that wicked deed whereto we were incited and done it we haue and that not once or twise only but many times now it is become a custome And yet doe we securely sleepe See wee not the danger we are in Surely the next step we make after we are accustomed by hardnes of heart to yeeld vnto the deceit of sinne except God giue vs grace to returne can be no other then into a wicked and perverse heart and then will follow incredulitie vnbeleefe wherevpon immediatly and necessarily must ensue the highest degree even generall apostacie falling away from God In which case at this time I say no more vnto you then the Apostle said vnto the Hebrewes chap. 3.12 13. Take heed my brethren lest at any time there be in any of you an evill heart vnfaithfull to depart away from the living God Exhort one another dayly while it is called to day lest any of you bee hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne THE THIRD SERMON HEBR. 10. VER 26. 26 There remaineth no more sacrifice for sinnes WE are now come to the first reason vsed by our Apostle to disswade vs from cōmitting so vile a sin as is the sin against the holy Ghost There remaineth no more sacrifice for sinnes Here let vs first consider how true it is which Novatus hath collected out of these words namely that whosoever sinneth after he is baptised his sinne is not possibly pardonable Secondly let vs examine that which these words do naturally afford that is that the Sinne against the holy Ghost is not at any time nor can ever be forgiven Of both these at this time To spend the time in delivering whence and what Novatus and his followers were This 〈◊〉 was preached Ianu. 4. 1598. and at what time they first sprang vp I hold it needlesse for that it would but little advātage the vnderstanding of the younger and the rest already know it better then my selfe The cōsideratiō of this doctrine may be materiall for vs all For if it be true that they which sinne after Baptisme once receaved be it either of ignorance or of infirmity cā haue no hope of pardon for their sinne are not we who hitherto haue learned the contrary of all men most miserable Haue we not iust cause with those men of Israel Act. 2.37 to be pricked in our hearts and to cry out as they did Men and brethren what