Selected quad for the lemma: heaven_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heaven_n day_n father_n son_n 5,343 5 5.0027 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 23 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

2 Thess 1. and Peter u 2 Pet. 3. and Iohn * Reuel and Iude x Iud. 6. Neither is the assurance of the Iudgement to come warranted by the words of Gods seruants onely but the Lord hath left many works of his owne as pledges that he will once at length for all iudge the whole world for sinne The drowning of the old world the burning of Sodome the destruction of Ierusalem y Matt. 24. were assured fore-tokens that the Lord would not put vp the infinite iniquities of the world but will most seuerely punish for sinne The pleading of the conscience z Rom. 2.15.16 foretels a iudgement to come The sentence of death pronounced in Paradise and renewed with such terror on Sinay did euidently assure that God meant to call men to an account The lesser iudgements in this life are but fore-types of that last and greatest iudgement to come And lastly the dragging of men out of the world by death is nothing else but an Alarum to Iudgement Yet as there is a necessary vse of the knowledge of this dreadfull and glorious doctrine so there is a restraint to be laid vpon vs. Be vvise to sobrietie This is one of the things wherein we must be wise to sobrietie a Rom 12.3 We must represse the itching of our eares and be content to be ignorant of what is not reuealed this is a doctrine to be inquired into more for vse of life then to feed the curiositie of contemplation Concerning the Iudgement to come if any aske Who shall iudge Who shall iudge I answer that in respect of authoritie the whole Trinitie shall iudge but in respect of the execution of that authoritie Christ onely shall iudge and that as man b Act. 17 31. It is true that the Apostles and the Saints are said to iudge the tribes of Israel and the world but they only iudge as assessors that is they shall sit as it were on the bench with our Sauiour Christ when he iudgeth And if any aske in the second place Whom Christ shall iudge I answer Who shall be iudged he shall iudge the euill Angels for they are reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darknesse vnto the iudgement of the great day Hee shall iudge also the man of sinne c Iud. 6. 2 Pet. 2.4 euen the great Antichrist that hath made such hauocke in the Church and seduced the nations with the wine of his fornications euen him shall he consume with the brightnesse of his comming d 2 Thess 2.8 He shall iudge also all reprobates men women and children of all ages nations and conditions for though he shall not know them e Matt. 7.22 25.12 in respect of approbation yet he shall iudge them and make them vnderstand he knew their transgressions Further he shall iudge the very elect though it shall be with a different iudgement for we must all appeare before the tribunall seat of Christ that euery one may receiue the things which are done in his body f 2 Cor. 5.10 Lastly in some sense it may be said he shall iudge the whole world for the heauens and the earth that now are are kept by the word of God and reserued vnto fire against the day of condemnation and of the destruction of vngodly men g 2 Pet. 3. And the Apostle Paul saith that the feruent desire of the creature made subiect to vanitie by man waiteth for this reuelation of the sonnes of God at the last iudgement for they are subdued vnder hope and shall at that day by the sentence of Christ be deliuered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God h Rom 8.19.20.21 Where shall it be Thirdly if any aske where this iudgement shall bee I answer that seeing the Lord hath not determined it it is curious to enquire and more curious to assigne the very place as some haue that wrote it should be in the valley of Iehoshaphat or as others would haue it on Mount Sion whence he ascended This wee know it shall be neere the earth in the clouds of heauen 1 Thess 4.17 where Christs throne shall be set and further then this we need not enquire There haue beene also many opinions about the time when it should bee When shall the day of Iudgement be Some thought that as the world was six dayes in creating and then the Sabboth of rest came so the world should last 6000. yeeres reckoning a 1000. yeeres as one day and then should come the eternall Sabboth Others distribute the times thus 2000. yeeres before the Law 2000. yeeres vnder the Law and 2000. yeeres after the Law and then comes the iudgement Others thought the world would last after Christ so long as it was to the floud from the creation and that was as they say 1656. yeeres Others thought it should be as long to the iudgement after Christ as it was from Moses to Christ and that should be 1582. yeeres This experience hath proued false Other say Christ liued 33. yeeres and the world should continue for 33. Iubilies after Christ What can be said of all or the most of these opinions and such like but euen this that they are the blinde fancies of men For is there not a plaine restraint laid vpon men in this question when the Lord Iesus said It is not for you to know the times and seasons which the Father hath put in his owne power i Act. 1.7 And of that day and houre knoweth no man no not the Angels of heauen but my Father only k Matt. 24.36 Mark 13.32 And the Euangelist S. Marke addeth that the sonne of man himselfe knoweth not the day and houre Hovv it is that the sonne is said to be ignorant of the day of ●●●gement Not that simply Christ is ignorant of the time of the last iudgement but he was said not to know because hee kept it from our knowledge Or else he knew it not as he was man or rather in his estate of humiliation and in his humane nature he did not precisely know it But that hinders not but that in his estate of exaltation as he is now in heauen and hath all power and iudgement committed vnto him he may doth fully vnderstand it But letting these things passe the principall things for vs to be informed in as concerning the day of iudgement and this last appearance of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ are these three first the signes of his comming Secondly how or the forme of the iudgement it selfe when he doth come And lastly the vse we should in the meane while make of the doctrine of the last iudgement The signes of the day of iudgement For our better remembrance the signes of Christs comming to iudgement may be briefly reduced into this Catalogue Some signes goe before and are fulfilled before he appeare Some signes are conioyned with his
if they charge not many things Why these are the last words of Christ the night before his death euen this one thing hee doth especially charge vpon vs Namely while we abide in this flesh and are hated of this world and want those glorious refreshings would come by the presence of Christ to vnite our serues in a holy bond of peace and loue to be kept and strengthned by mutuall indeauors in the performance of all the duties of holy affection Iohn 16.12 that till Christ shall gather vs vnto the glory that he hath with the Father The third Motiue may be taken from the benefites that may be gotten by loue and these are diuers First there is much comfort in loue the Lord doth vsually and graciously water the society conferences From profit Philip. 2.1 prayers and other duties performed mutually by the Saints with the deaws of many sweet and glorious refreshings by which they are daily excited inflamed and incouraged to a holy contentation in godlinesse Secondly Loue is the fulfilling of the Law not onely all the duties belonging to humane societies of which he there intreates are comprehended vnder loue as by that great band that tyeth all estates and degrees but also Rom. 13.10 How Loue is the fulfilling of the Law is the fulfilling of the Law by effect in that first it causeth astinence from doing euill to our neighbour Secondly it causeth men to make conscience of fulfilling the Law and that which is there generally spoken if it be applied to the loue of the Saints may haue his speciall truth in this that there is nothing in outward things doth more fire the heart of a man to the loue of and labour after a godly life then a daily louing societie with Gods children in whom we see godlinesse euen in an experimentall knowledge not layd before vs in precept but described vnto vs in practise with the rewards and fruits of it Yea loue may be said to be the filling vp of the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the word seemeth to import in this that it clotheth the duties of the Law with the glory of a due manner and seateth them vpon their due subiects with the vnwearied labours of constant well-doing Thirdly the due performance and daily exercise of the mutuall duties of loue would be a great testimonie and witnesse vnto vs for the satisfying of our consciences in the knowledge of such great things as otherwise are exceeding hard to be knowne as first it is not euery bodies case to haue the Spirit of grace or when they haue it to discerne it yet by this loue it may be discerned for it is one of the inseparable fruits of the spirit Secondly Galat. 5.22 many men follow not Christ at all and among the followers of Christ a great number are not true Disciples Iohn 13.14 Now by loue may all men know that we are Christs disciples Iohn 3. Thirdly the winde bloweth where it listeth And that which is borne of the flesh is flesh and therefore great Masters in Israell and Teachers of other men may be ignorant of regeneration 1 Iohn 4.7 yet thereby may wee know that we are borne of God and doe rightly know God if we loue one another Job 23.8.9 Fourthly if wee would seeke God to finde him behold If wee go to the East hee is not there if to the West yet wee cannot perceiue him if to the North where he worketh yet wee cannot see him he will hide himselfe in the South and we cannot behold him 1 Iohn 4.12 How much more is the way of God in the heart of man vnsearchable And yet though no man hath seene God at any time if we loue one another God dwelleth in vs. Fiftly the election of man before time is like a bottomlesse gulfe and the making of man blamelesse and holy in heauen is a dreadfull mysterie and yet those two glorious branches whereof th one sprowts foorth euen beyond time and thother reacheth vp to heauen nay into heauen are both fastned vpon this stocke of loue in respect of one way and manner of comming to know them Ephes 4.1.4 1 Iohn 3.14 To conclude Saluation it selfe euen our owne saluation is knowne by the loue to the brethren as is cleare 1. Iohn 3.14 and in diuers other places of that Epistle Zeph. 1.14 Lastly the day of the Lord is a terrible day a day of trouble and heauines the strong hearted man shall then crie bitterly then the heauens being on fire shall bee dissolued and passe away with a noyse 2 Pet. 3.10.11 1 Thessal 4.16 and the elements shall melt with heate the Lord himselfe shall descend from heauen with a showt and with the voice of the Archangells and with the trumpet of God then shall all the kindreds of the earth mourne and they shall see the Son of man come in the cloudes of heauen with power and great glory Math 14.3 And who shall be able to stand in that great and fearefull day euen all such as haue finished their course in the loue of God and his children 1 Iohn 4.17 as certainely as we now finde loue in our hearts so surely shall we haue boldnesse in the day of iudgement The fourth Motiue may be taken from the miserable state of such as finde not in themselues the loue of Gods children From the miserie of such as loue not Gods children 1 Iohn 2. 3. First it is a palpable signe they abide still in darknesse and vnder the bondage of the first death and in danger of the second death Secondly a man can neuer enter into the kingdome of Heauen without it for euery man can say a murtherer shall not be saued so continuing Now it is certaine God hates a man that loues not his children aswell as hee doth murtherers 1 Iohn 3.15 he that loueth not his brother is a man-slayer and wee know that no man-slayer can inherit eternall life Ephes 3.17 Thirdly till we loue Gods children we can neuer know what the length breadth and depth of the loue of God and Christ is to vs. God shewes not his loue to vs till we shew our loue to the Saints Lastly for want of loue in the heart and the duties of loue in conuersation the mysticall body of Christ is exceedingly hindered from growing both in the beauty and glory which otherwise would be found in the Church of Christ Ephes 4.16 Lastly to incite vs yet more to the exercise of loue I propound three places of Scripture more The first place is Ephes 4.12 to 17. where may be obserued 4. things gotten by a holy vnion with the members of Christ and Christian societie and affection Ephes 4. It furthers our gathering into the body It is an exceeding great helpe in the beginning of our effectuall vocation Secondly it furthers our edification in the building and fits vs for our roome
the Lord hath saued vs by so wonderfull saluation in Christ and in that our Sauiour was true God as well as man as being the second person in Trinitie Why our Sauiour vvas the second person in the Trinitie and no other therefore we should wholly rest vpon him and not distract our thoughts or faith or seruices with either philosophie or traditions or ceremonies as supposing that our saluation should be any wayes furthered by those Now in that the holy Ghost is so carefull to teach the diuinitie of Christ wee should also learne to be affected with the wisdome of God that hath designed the second person in Trinitie to be our mediator Thinke of it often and weigh with your selfe the glory of Gods wisdome herein who is fitter to restore the world then he that made it a Joh. 1.1 Col. 1.15 Incarnation is a mission now it was not fit he should be sent by another that was not of another as the Father was not It is wonderfull sutable that the naturall sonne should make sonnes by adoption b Ioh. 1.12 Who fitter to restore the image of the Father lost in vs then hee that was the eternall image of the Father c Col. 1.15 Heb. 1.3 Who was fitter to breake open the fountaine of Gods loue then hee that was the sonne of his loue d Col. 1.13 The personall word became the enunciatiue word to declare vnto vs his Fathers nature and will he that is the middle person in the Trinitie is fittest to be the middle man or mediatour betweene God and man Is our Sauiour God then then he is eternall e Reuel 1.7 omnipresent f Matt. 28.21 omniscient g Reuel 2.23 and omnipotent h Phil. 3.21 The consideration of the diuinitie of Christ may and ought wonderfully to comfort vs against the greatnesse of our sinnes and Gods wrath remembring that the Lord Iehouah is he that is our righteousnesse i Jerem. 23.6 Matth. 1.21 and iustification from all our sinnes as also against the greatnesse of the enemies and aduersaries of our soules and the truth or true grace of Christ in vs. Our Sauiour is the mightie God k Esay 9.6.7 and therefore can and will easily subdue all our enemies vnder our feet besides hereby we are assured of the supply of all our wants seeing he that hath all the fulnesse of God in him hath vndertaken to fill all things in the Church l Ephes 1. vlt. And as this may comfort so it should instruct why should we not come willingly at the time of assemblie m Psal 110.3 seeing we serue the God of heauen and haue all our seruice done in the name of the Sonne of God and presented by his mediation to the Father And further shall wee not account vnbeleefe to be a monstrous sinne considering how little cause wee haue to feare or doubt But especially shall we not learne humilitie of him that being in the forme of God humbled himselfe for our sakes to take vpon him the forme of a man and to be subiect to the very death n Psal 2. Matt. 11.29 Lastly shall wee not learne hence the hatefulnesse of sinne and the odious filth of it Wee may commit sinne but God must remit it and become a sufficient propitiation for sinne Corporally How the diuine nature can be in the humane Quest How can the whole diuine nature be said to be in the humane seeing the one is infinite the other finite Answ 1. It is no more then to affirme that the humane nature is vnited to the diuine in the fulnesse of it Or 2. That it is incorporate or made flesh incarnate or hath a body ioyned to it Or else 3. Let it be granted of the inhabitation in the flesh of Christ yet it followeth not that therefore it is there included For it is so in the flesh whole that without the flesh it is euery where For the diuinitie is not only immense that it can be euery where but also most simple that it can be and be euery where whole as the soule in the body and the light is in the Sunne and yet not included there yet truly and whole there Quest But since this text plainly affirmes that Christ had a body and so by Synecdoche a true humane nature it may be here enquired whether his humane nature was like ours and the rather since the Godhead did dwell in him bodily How Christ was like vs how vnlike Answ That this may be cleerely resolued wee must know that what is said in this verse notwithstanding Christ in his humane nature was like vnto vs. But for euidence I shew briefly in what he was like and then in what he was not like He was like 1. in that he tooke a true body not fantasticall 2. He tooke a true humane body and not a celestiall body and he was endued with a reasonable soule 3. Hee had the essentiall faculties of both 4. He had the very infirmities of our nature I meane such as were not sinfull Now Christ was vnlike vs in body in soule in both In body 1. In his conception there was a difference for we are of Adam and by Adam but he was of Adam and not by Adam for he was not begotten but made and so originall sinne was auoided and some thinke his very body had all the parts at the first conception formed 2. His body was not corruptible it saw no corruption In soule he differed two waies 1. In that it was without sinne 2. In that it was indued with gifts aboue men and Angels In both there was difference For 1. They subsisted from the beginning in the diuine nature and did not make a person of themselues 2. They are admitted vnto the grace of adoration so as now Christ-man is worshipped though not properly as he is man Thus of the natures of Christ the vnion of them followes in a double consideration 1. Of the manner in the word dwell 2. Of the measure in all fulnesse Dwell There are two kindes of vnions in Christ 1. Of the soule and body 2. Of both those with the person of the word the latter is here meant There are 2. questions about vnion in Theologie Distinctions of vnions that are wonderfull full of difficultie 1. The vnion of three persons in one nature 2. The vnion of two natures in one person This latter is in Christ he is begotten as God created in respect of his soule and borne in respect of his body There are diuers vnions 1. Substantiall in the Trinitie 2. Naturall in soule and body 3. Carnall in man and wife 4. Mysticall in Christ and the Church 5. Personall in Christ for in him as soule and body are one man so God and man are one Christ It is much easier to tell how this vnion in Christ is not then to tell how it is Negatiuely thus Things are vnited three waies Some things
appearing The signes going before are more remote or more neere The more remote signes are these First the vniuersall preaching of the Gospell to all nations Gentiles as well as Iewes Before the end come saith our Sauiour This Gospell of the kingdome shall be preached throughout the whole world for a witnesse to all nations l Matt. 24.14 Secondly most cruell persecution Euen such tribulation as was not from the beginning of the world m Matt. 24.9.10.21.29 Thirdly a generall falling away or apostasie of the Churches in Antichrist n 2 The. 2.2.3 Fourthly warres and rumors of warres famine pestilence and earth-quakes in diuers places Fiftly false Prophets and false Christs which shall deceiue many o Matt. 24.11.24 The signes more neere are First the preaching againe of the euerlasting Gospell p Reuel 14.6 Secondly the detection and fall of Antichrist and the spirituall Babell q Reuel 14.8 Thirdly the calling of the Iewes after the fulnesse of the Gentiles is come in r Ro. 11 25.26 Fourthly coldnesse and securitie in the world as in the dayes of Noah ſ Matt. 24.37 Fiftly the shaking of the powers of heauen the darkening of the Sunne and Moone and the falling of the starres c. t Mark 13.14 The signes conioyned are especially two First the wailing of all the kindreds of the earth Secondly the signe of the sonne of man u Matt. 24.30 Which what it shall be I cannot describe And thus wee are come to the very time and execution of the iudgement And therein consider The forme of the iudgment The preparation of the Iudge first the preparation secondly the iudgement it selfe thirdly the consequents of the iudgement The preparation is two-fold First of the Iudge secondly of the iudged Vnto the preparation of the Iudge may bee referred these things First his commission or that singular power giuen him of the Father to execute iudgement vpon all the world x J●h 5.22 Matt. 24.30 and this shall be then made manifest to all men Secondly the cloathing of the humane nature with a most peculiar and vnsearchable maiestie and glory most liuely expressing and resembling the forme and brightnesse of the Father y Mat. 16. v●t Thirdly the attendance of thousand thousands of holy Angels in the perfections of their splendor z Dan. 7.10 Matt 25.31 Reuel 20.11 Fourthly the choice of a place in the clouds of heauen where he will sit Fiftly the erecting of a most glorious white throne which what it shall be who can vtter yet without question it shall visibly then appeare And thus of the preparation of the Iudge The iudged shall be prepared foure wayes First by citation Secondly The preparation of the iudged First by citation by resurrection Thirdly by collection Fourthly by separation First they shall be cited to appeare The world is three times cited First by the Prophets and Fathers before Christ Secondly by the Apostles and Ministers of the Gospell since Christ And the last summons is this here meant which shall be performed by a shout from heauen and the voice of the last trumpe and this shall be the voice of Christ the Archangell of God and ministred by Angels For that it shall be Christ voice is plaine The dead shall heare his voice as hee saith in Iohn a Ioh. 5.28 And the Lord himselfe shall descend from heauen with a shout with the voice of the Archangell and with the trumpe of God b 1 Thes 4.16 That the ministerie of Angels shall be vsed is manifest by the Euangelist S. Matthew who reporteth Christs words thus And he shall send his Angels with a great sound of a trumpet c Matt. 24.31 Secondly by resurrection Secondly vpon this voice shall a resurrection follow which may be two wayes considered First euery man in his owne body whether hee hath done good or euill shall reuiue and rise vp out of the graue or other places of the earth or sea or aire d Reuel 20.13 without any losse of any part that so euery man may in his very body receiue what hee hath done whether good or euill Secondly e 2 Cor. 5.13 the liuing shall be all changed in a moment in the twinckling of an eye at the last trumpet f 1 Cor. 15.52 And this change shall be in stead of death and a kinde of resurrection Not a change of substance but of qualities Our corruptible shall put on incorruption Thirdly then shall the Angels gather and collect and bring into one place g 1 Cor. 15.53 Thirdly by collection from the foure windes of heauen that is from all the foure parts of the world all that are quicke or dead now raised or changed elect h Matt. 24.31 or reprobate i Matt. 25.32 and such is their power that they will be able to driue in the mightiest wickedest vnwillingest yea though they were neuer so many millions of them Lastly when they are thus brought together Fourthly by separation there shall be made a separation for the sheepe Gods elect shall all be put on Christs right hand and the reprobate or goats shall be compelled to his left hand k Matt. 25.32 And thus of the preparation The iudgement it selfe followeth In the iudgement it selfe I consider three things First The iudgement it selfe by what law man shall be tried and iudged Secondly by what euidence Thirdly what the sentence shall be For the first the Gentiles shall be iudged by the law of nature First by vvhat lavv man shall be tried The vnbeleeuing Christians in the visible Church shall be iudged by the word or Law writ or preached to them according to that of the Apostle They that haue sinned without the law shall perish without the law and they that haue sinned vnder the law shall be iudged by the law l Rom. 2.12 And our Sauiour saith He that refuseth mee and receiueth not my words hath one that iudgeth him the word that I haue spoken it shall iudge him in the last day m Ioh. 12.48 And the faithfull shall be iudged by the Gospell euen by all those comforts and promises contained in or belonging to the couenant of grace applied to them in this life and must fully then be confirmed and accomplished For the sentence at the last day shall bee but a more manifest declaration of that iudgement the Lord in this life most an end by his word hath past vpon man Secondly by vvhat eu●d●nce man ●●●lb● iudged For the second the euidence shall be giuen in principally by the opening of three bookes The one is the booke of conscience and the other the booke of life n ●euel 20.12 and the third the booke of Gods remembrance o M●● 3.16 The booke of conscience p 〈◊〉 20 12. is that word which is kept within euery man of all sorts of actions And that conscience may at that
c. 1 Pet. 2.19.20 Ob. 6. But my Master is not only a froward man but a wicked man and an enemie of Christ Sol. Yet thou must honour and obey him willingly 1 Tim. 6.1.2 Ob. 7. But I am an hired seruant not a bought seruant Sol. Indeed Masters haue not that power ouer them they haue ouer bondslaues but yet all seruants are here bound to obey heartily Ob. 8. But vnmeet things are required Sol. Discerne things that differ but yet obey in all things All thi● reproues grudging and slow and stubborne seruants Whatsoeuer yee doe Not only faire easie cleanly and best sort of workes are to be done willingly but all or any kinde of labour whatsoeuer though neuer so base or vile As to the Lord and not to men Doct. Seruants in obeying their Masters serue the Lord. The vse is both for instruction of seruants and for comfort For instruction they must serue their Masters as they would serue the Lord with all faithfulnesse diligence willingnesse prouidence conscience c. For comfort and encouragement also is this doctrine and that three wayes First here is a limitation they must doe no seruice to men that is against the Lord. Secondly art thou a seruant care not for it thou art Christs freeman Thirdly let not the basenesse of thy worke discourage thee for in seruing thy master thou seruest God as well as if thou wert preaching or praying c. When the Apostle saith not vnto men wee must vnderstand not principally or only Thus of the exhortations The reasons follow VERS 24. Knowing that of the Lord yee shall receiue the reward of the inheritance for yee serue the Lord Christ IN this verse seruants are perswaded to obedience by a reason taken from the retribution or reward of their seruice and the matter of the verse is comprehended in this Syllogisme What faithfull men soeuer serue Christ and doe their dutie to him faithfully and cheerefully shall receiue of Christ the reward of inheritance But you Christian seruants when you performe your obsequious obedience to your Masters serue the Lord Christ Ergo you shall haue the reward of the inheritance Knowing Doct. Seruants may and ought to know and be assured of their owne saluation Vse is for confutation of Papists and vnsound men that denie certaintie of saluation for if seruants that haue not the greatest wits or knowledge that are imploied about small businesses that haue not so much libertie nor learning as other men c. yet may be assured not by coniecture or hope but by certaine knowledge by most vndoubted faith then what colour of reason can there be why other Christians the Lords people should be denied this knowledge and therefore in the second place it should teach vs to make our calling and election sure Reward Doct. The workes euen of seruants shall be rewarded Vse is for the comfort of seruants and for reproofe of the vnbeleefe that is many times in Gods children doubting of Gods acceptation of their praier and holy endeuours Shall the base and secular workes of mens seruants bee rewarded and the great workes of pietie in Gods seruice not be regarded Of the Lord. God will be pay-master vnto seruants and in that they are turned ouer to God for paiment it implies that the most masters are carelesse and vnmercifull and this they are not only in with-holding conuenient food and raiment but in sending their seruants after long time of wearie labour out of their families emptie and without meanes to liue in the world Reward of inheritance Two things are here affirmed of heauen First it is a reward and so free Secondly it is an inheritance and so sure There are foure vses may be made of this Doctrine 1. Wee should much loue esteeme and desire heauen it is the reward of God Princes giue great gifts but Gods least gift must needs be glorious 2. Wee should learne to be liberall as God is liberall giue freely giue largely 3. Here is a plaine confutation of the merit of heauen for heauen is an inheritance now the sonne doth not inherit the fathers lands hee hath not his lands in measure according to his deserts for most an end the land is purchased before the sonne be borne much lesse can we merit heauen and the rather because we cannot alleadge so much as this we came out of the loynes of the father seeing we are children but by adoption For yee serue the Lord Christ Doct. Christ is the chiefe Lord and therefore masters should be well aduised how they vse their seruants for they are Christs seruants and seruants should be carefull how they obey their masters for they must account to this Steward Thus of the first maine reason VERS 25. But he that doth wrong shall receiue for the wrong that he hath done and there is no respect of persons SOme take this twentie fiue verse to be a conclusion of the whole Doctrine before concerning Familie-duties as if hee would signifie that he would not haue this doctrine of houshold gouernment more contemned then the doctrine of piety or righteousnesse for whatsoeuer wife husband childe father or seruant shall doe wrong in the neglect or breach of these commandements for the familie shall bee sure to receiue for the wrong hee doth at Gods hand without respect of persons Some vnderstand the verse as a threatning to seruants if they doe any way wrong their masters But the commonnest interpretation is meetest viz. to vnderstand it as a reason taken from the certaine vengeance of God against all masters that wrong their seruants and so is the second maine reason to vrge their obedience In the verse I likewise obserue 7. Doctrines 1. Masters must account to God for all the wrong they doe to their seruants in word or deed 2. All Masters shall be punished of God that doe wrong if they repent not though they were otherwise neuer so great yea though they were neuer so good or righteous men for if good men wrong their seruants God will requite it and chasten them for that as well as for other sinnes 3. The soueraigntie of disposing an exact full and finall vengeance belongs to God only men administer only a part or drop of it 4. God will rise vp in the defence of the poorest and meanest Christians to right their wrongs 5. Seruants may not right their owne wrongs and returne words for words or blowes for blowes but commit that to God 6. Seruants must bee subiect not onely to the curteous and iust but to the froward and iniurious masters Lastly God is no respecter of persons or faces hee cares no more for the master then for the man all are one in Christ Iesus there is neither bond nor free Iew nor Grecian rich nor poore but Christ is all in all things as is before declared Verse 11. Thus of the duties of Seruants Thus also of the Doctrine of the third CHAPTER THE LOGICALL ANALYSIS OF the fourth Chapter THE first
the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ remembring you earnestly and constantly in our daily Prayers being exceedingly fired and inflamed since we heard by continuall and true report of your precious Faith by which you haue with firmenesse and stedfastnesse of assurance laide hold vpon IESVS CHRIST for life and righteousnesse and the rather because wee likewise heard of your holy affection to such as haue separated themselues from the prophanenesse of the world to the seruice of God especially considering that you haue not the glorious Faith of Christ in respect of persons but loue all the Saints as well as any And as a People not destitute of any sauing Grace Verse 5. For the hopes sake which is laid vp for you in heauen whereof ye haue heard before by the word of truth which is the Gospell wee reioyce to heare of that liuely hope by which you haue laid hold on the Promise of eternall glory which God the Father hath prepared and laide vp in Heauen And the more are we confirmed in this resolution constantly to praise GOD for these excellent Graces because they are not sodaine Fancies or presumptuous Conceits raised out of the Forge of your owne braine or conceiued for some corrupt or carnall ends but were indeede begotten in you by the mighty working of the most sweet Doctrine of Reconciliation proued in it selfe and by effect to be a Word of Truth euen that word of the LORD long foretolde now truely reuealed and accomplished also begetting the true forme of pietie in you with constancie and true vprightnesse both of heart and life Verse 6. Which is come vnto you euen ●s it is vnto all the world and ●s fruitful as it is also among you from the day that yee heard and truely knew the grace of God This is the word of Reconciliation which is come vnto you as by incredible power and swiftnesse it is now to the greatest part of the world euen to people of all sorts and Nations causing them to shew the soundnesse of their Conuersion by the daily fruits of amendment of life and this increaseth continually in all places as it doth and hath done with you since the very first day that you truely heard and effectually beleeued this rich Doctrine of the grace of GOD. Verse 7. As yee also learned of Epaphras our deare fellow seruant which is for you a faithfull Minister of Christ And this very Doctrine which you haue heard of Epaphras is the selfe same diuine truth that is gone all abroad the world of Epaphras I say whom wee all reuerence as our deare fellow-Seruant being assured that he is for your best good a faithfull and most humble Minister of Iesus Christ Verse 8. Who hath also declared vnto vs your loue which yee haue by the Spirit Verse 9. For this cause wee also since the day wee heard of it cease not to pray for you and to desire that yee might be fulfilled with knowledge of his will in all wisedome and spirituall vnderstanding Verse 10. That yee might walke worthy of the Lord please him in all things being fruitfull in all good workes and increasing in the knowledge of God Hee hath with great contentment boasted of you in reporting to vs your spirituall and heauenly affection to God and godlinesse and one towards another and for the same cause since the first time we heard of your praises in the Gospell wee haue beene importunate without ceasing praying for you and beseeching God to increase in you and make compleate your knowledge of his reuealed will not only for contemplation but for practise also with a gracious experience of the working of the Spirit That yee might carry your selues in a holy eminency of godly conuersation striuing to proportion your Obedience in a greater degree then ordinary as might become the great measure of Gods Mercies of all sorts towards you expressing a liuely kinde of pleasingnesse both in carriage towards God and man being refreshed with the sweetnes of acceptation in your seruices and that you might extend your carefulnesse to beare fruit not in one kinde or some few but in all kindes and sorts of good workes daily increasing in a holy acquaintance with the sacred nature of God which is both the effect and cause of all comfortable progresse in holy life Verse 11. Strengthened with all might through his glorious power vnto all patience and long-suffering with ioyfulnes That so growing vp to a ripe age in CHRIST in the sanctification both of soule and body and spirit in all the Graces and Duties of CHRIST and Christian life through the assistance of the glorious power of GOD in the vse of all meanes and helpes appointed of God yee might accomplish your most holy profession with singular comfort and contentment being able cheerefully and with all patience and Long-suffering to beare the Crosses Tentations Infirmities Persecutions and whatsoeuer Wrongs or Indignities might befall you waiting for the Promise of GOD being neuer weary of well-doing And as wee haue thought good thus to let you vnderstand our loue towards you and our reioycing for the prosperity of your soules Verse 12. Giuing thankes vnto the Father which hath made vs me●te to bee partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light so wee thought good to write vnto you both to put you in minde of the most holy doctrine of CHRIST as also to exhort and beseech you to be constant in the Faith and hope you haue receiued without listening to the entising speeches of false Teachers which as wicked Seducers would beguile your soules of that high prise of your most holy Calling What thankes can we euer sufficiently giue vnto GOD the Father of CHRIST and Christians that of his meere Grace and free Loue hath by a holy Calling made vs in his account meete to haue a Lot in that heauenly Canaan in that sweet and eternall fellowship with the spirits of the iust not onely reuealed vnto vs in this light of the Gospell but to be inioyed by vs in the light of Heauen And hath also already deliuered vs from that wofull estate Vers 13. Who hath deliuered vs from the power of darkenesse and hath translated vs into the Kingdome of his deare Sonne in which the darkenesse of Gentilisme and Sinne and Ignorance and Aduersitie and Death and Damnation had power ouer vs hath translated vs into the Kingdome of Iesus Christ the Son of his loue inrolling our names among the liuing and accounting vs as Subiects of this Kingdome of Grace and Heyres euen Coheyres with Christ of the glory to be reuealed And howsoeuer our Sanctification be as yet vnperfect Verse 14. In whom wee haue redemption through his bloud that is the forgiuenes of sinnes yet are we not onely bought with a price but effectually and truely redeemed and in some sort fully too for in our Iustification we are perfectly reconciled and all our sins absolutely forgiuen
all those things that cause Hope And that we may get and increase our Hope wee must labour for First true Grace 1. Thes 2.16 Secondly sauing Knowledge Psal 9.10 and 78.7 Thirdly Experience Rom. 5.4 Fourthly Patience and comfort of the Scriptures Rom. 15.4 Fiftly the ioyes of the holy Ghost and peace of Conscience in beleeuing Rom. 15.13 Sixtly aboue all and for all these the Spirit of Reuelation Ephes 1.18 Seauenthly the often meditation of Gods Promises Thus of Hope as it is considered in relation to Faith and Loue. Which is laide vp for you in Heauen In these words Hope is described in the obiect of it Laid vp viz by God in his secret Coffers as a most worthy Iewell this Metaphore giues occasion to obserue three Doctrines Doctr. 1 First that Grace and Glory are a mans best treasures and therefore wee should labour for them more then any thing else and if we haue a comfortable euidence of them to be contented though we want other things Doctr. 2 Secondly that Hope is no common Grace in that amongst many faire vertues which are common to wicked men hee locketh vp this Grace of Hope as a speciall Iewell hee intends to keepe onely for his owne Children Doctr. 3 Thirdly that the euidence and grace of Gods Children be in Gods keeping and laid vp safe in heauen and therefore cannot be lost and besides when they die there is of theirs in heauen before they come Heauen Here I obserue two things Doct. There is a Heauen First that there is a Heauen for the Saints after this life the Doctrine of Heauen is onely proper to Religion Nature hath but a darke glimpse of immortalitie or any being after this life and is full of stronger Obiections then Answeres and as any are more lewd in life they are more sencelesse of immortalitie But concerning the estate of the blessed in heauen Nature is wholy ignorant Vses yea the doctrine hereof is so diuine that Religion it selfe doth not fully purtray it out in this world to any yet as any are more holy it is more discerned The consideration of heauen may vrge vs to many duties in generall if euer wee would haue heauen when wee die wee must get holinesse both imputed or infused while wee liue h Math. 5.16 2 Pet. 1.7 Math. 7.21 1 Pet. 2.11.14 Psal 15. Wee must bee sure wee be of Gods Familie i Ephes 3.16 and that we are borne againe k John 3.5 Luke 13 5. In particular we should therefore acquaint our selues with the Lawes and Mysteries of Gods kingdome l Mat. 13.11 52. and if we may come by the meanes to be effectually instructed in the way to Heauen we should account of this Pearle and rather then loose it sell all we haue to buy it m Mat. 13.44 45. And wee should aboue all things labour for the meate that perisheth not but endures to euerlasting life n Iohn 6.27 in as much as in the Ministerie of the word is many times found the Keyes that open vnto vs the Kingdome of heauen o Mat. 16.19 Rom. 10.6 And in as much as riches may prooue a singular hinderance we should take warning and see to it that they do not intangle vs p Mat. 19.23 And because in Heauen are our treasures we should set our affections there q Math. 6.20 Col. 3 1. and prepare for our change and departure r 2. Cor. 5.1.2 1 Thes 1.10 Giuing allowance to no sinne no not the least Å¿ Mat. 5.10 19 constantly professing and confessing Christ before men that he may not denie vs in that day t Mat. 10.32.33 5.10 Yea where God meanes to bestow heauen he bestowes heauenly qualities on men in this life they are poore in spirit u Math. 5.3 they are eager after heauen and the things thereof x Mat 11.12 they are like Children void of earthly carking and distressefull cares y Mat. 18.2 they are mercifull z Mat. 25.34.36 they loue their enemies * Math. 5.44 Secondly the meditation of Heauen serues for reproofe not only of Atheists that would deny it or Papists that claime so great glory for their base merits but also of the most Protestants for are not the most such as can discerne the face of the Skie and yet haue no discerning of the season to get Grace and Heauen to say nothing of those that by their grosse and horrible sinnes haue forfeited ouer and ouer the claime of any interest in the kingdome of heauen liuing in daily blasphemies whoredoms drunkennesses c. Yea doe not the better sort giue Heauen faire words and yet haue their excuses why they will not come to Gods Feasts when hee inuites them Luk. 14.17 And thus while men blesse themselues Gods curses vsually deuoure them Lastly it is a Doctrine of wonderfull comfort to Gods Children a Heb. 12.23 Luk. 11.20 Note neither is this the peculiar aduancement of some principall Saints as Abraham Dauid b Math. 8.11 13.31 c. neither should the miseries of this life before we come to heauen trouble vs seeing there is no comparison betweene the troubles of this life and the glory of the world to come where there shall be no sinne sorrow labour weakenesse disgrace feare death where we shall enioy the sweet presence of God Christ Angels and iust men with vnspeakeable Ioyes perfect holinesse exquisite knowledge and a totall righteousnesse and all this for euer Secondly from hence also doth plainely arise this second Doctrine viz. Doctr. 2 that the hope of Christians is in another world there is their stay and comfort When they seeke by Faith the comforts of Gods fauours and by Loue separate themselues to the communion with Gods Children they finde presently such a rent from the world and all sorts of carnall men assaulting so their rest that a little experience learnes them the knowledge of this truth that in this world and from the men of this world and the things thereof Rom. 8.24.25 they must looke for no peace or contentment The Vse is first for Instruction to teach vs therefore to vse the world as if wee vsed it not and so to care for earthly things and persons as to resolue Vse 1 that Heauen is our portion and there onely must wee prouide to find some rest and contentment yea Heb. 11.13 therefore as strangers and Pilgrimes we should seeke and prouide for our abiding Citie Secondly this Doctrine giues occasion to answere that imputation that Vse 2 is cast vpon many professors viz. that forwardnesse in Religion makes them mindlesse of their businesse and much hearing of Sermons makes them carelesse of their callings Men may here hence informe themselues that howsoeuer Religion ties men to honest cares and daily diligence to prouide for their families else the very Scripture brands such Professors to bee worse then Infidels that make Religion a maske for
body infinite and it remaine a body still 5. Sometimes by the condition and qualities of the Creature as Be it vnto thee according to thy Faith 6. By impossibilitie I say by that which is simply impossible for there are many things vnpossible in respect of vs which are not onely possible but easie to God And therefore the common-people reason foolishly God can saue mee therefore hee will doe it and the Papists as wilfully Christ can be present in the Sacrament therefore hee will For besides that they will neuer prooue his body can be in all places at one time truely and locally present remayning a true body they also reason but absurdly till they finde his will to be there in their manner What the glory of God is The Glory of God is taken somtimes for the signe of his presence Exod. 16.10 for the meanes of his worship 1 Sam. 4.22 for praise and honour 2 Chron. 29.11 But here it is taken for the excellencie of God aboue all creatures as it may be reuealed Wherin God excels the creature God is more excellent then all Creatures in Trinitie of Persons in one essence in perfection of Nature in infinitenesse of being in eternitie in puritie and singlenesse in immutabilitie of Nature Will and Qualities in vnderstanding in prescience which absolutely falleth to no creature in the Idea of Vertue and in omnipotencie By reason of mans fall and custome in sinne Gods glory is much darkned so as now man of himselfe cannot so conceiue of the wonderfull excellencie of his Creator Gods Glory is reuealed vnto man 1. By his Workes a Psal 104.31 How many wayes Gods glory is reuealed especially his dreadfull and great workes b Esay 24 16. 2. By the Signes of his presence c Exod. 16.10 3. By the meanes of his worship d 1 Sam. 4.22 Psal 89.7 4. By the Confession of guilty persons e Iosh 7. 1 Sam. 6.5 Mal. 2.2 5. By the Prayses of his seruants and therefore to giue glory is translated to giue thankes f Luk. 17.18 6. By Christ who is the Lord of glory g 2 Cor. 2.8 the King of glory h Psal 24. he maketh the Glory of God as it were visible in his flesh 7. By Man k 1 Cor. 11.7 8. By the Spirit of Reuelation l Ephes 1.17 9. By the Gospell m 1 Tim. 1.11 Who see Gods glory But if you aske who of all men see Gods glory I answer onely the Saints in the brightnes of it n Psal 89.7 Esay 26.10.11 to wit such as haue the Gospell shining in their hearts o 2 Cor. 4.3 c. Esay 61.1 2 3. c. such as acknowledging Gods threatnings turne vnto him by true repentance p Ier. 13.16 such as lead an holy and innocent life q Psal 138.5 c. Esay 58.7.8 9. such as haue a true and liuely Faith r Iohn 11 40. Esay 46.12.13 Foure reasons why the power of God is said to be the power of his glory About falling from grace perseuerance Proofes that Gods elect cannot fall away This doctrine doth not tend to securitie Thus of the words apart Iohn 1.14 Power of his Glory There are foure Reasons why the Power of God should bee said to bee the Power of his Glory or glorious 1. Because it will neuer leaue strengthening till it bring to Glory 2. Because the power of all the meanes of saluation is from heauen and therefore a glorious power 3. Because Gods Glory sets his Power aworke in as much as by promise it lyes ingaged to his people 4. It is a glorious Power because of the persons and things that are vsed in Gods worke as God himselfe the Sonne of God the Spirit of God ordinances that are of God and men specially consecrated by God Doctrines First the perseuerance of Gods children is most certaine so long as there is Power in God or Glory they cannot fall away by losing their happinesse This point hath abundant and apparant confirmation out of the old Testament in these places Psalm 145.10.13.14 Esay 42.3 Ezech. 36.24 25 26 27. Ierem. 32 40. Hos 2.19 Out of the Gospels Matth. 16.18 and 24.25 Iohn 4.14 and 5.24 and 6.39 and 10.28 29. and 13.1 Out of the Epistles also Rom. 6.8 9 10 11. and 8.30 and 11.29 Ephes 4.12.17 Phil. 1.6 2 Tim. 2.19 Hebr. 7.16 1 Ioh. 2.19 and 3.9 1 Pet. 1.5.13.18.20.23 Secondly there is little reason of presumption in this Doctrine for as Power will preserue so Glory will reuenge if such as are in couenant with God returne to sinne woe vnto them Gods Glory will not beare it and he hath many wayes to scourge them for by their sinnes they may bring vpon themselues crosses of all sorts Å¿ Psal 89.22 Esay 30.20 Zach. 13.7 8 9. Mich. 7.9.18 terrors of Conscience t Psal 51. losse of many gifts and want of sense of all grace Gods presence and the ioyes of his promises and Saluation u Psal 51. Cant. 3. Church censures x 1 Cor. 5. the want of many blessings y Ier. 5.24 25. sore trauell and terrours vpon their returne againe z Psal 51. Motiues to Patience terrible buffets both of the Word and Spirit c. And therefore we should worke out our saluation with feare and trembling It is a fearefull thing to fall into Gods angry and scourging hand Hitherto of the Obiect Parts Ends and Causes of Knowledge the Effects follow which in the end of the Verse are noted to be three viz. Patience Long-suffering and Ioyfulnesse Patience This is a vertue that well becomes a Christian and a blessed fruit of the tree of life much to be desired of man though it may seeme troublesome to the flesh to endure crosses and afflictions yet if all things be considered it is a vertue of great praise God himselfe is magnified of Men and Angels for his patience and forbearance a Rom. 2.4 It is the admirable glory of the Sonne of God that in the great worke of his Father about the gathering of the Churches in the middest of the oppositions of the world and euill Angels hee should not cry nor lift vp nor cause his voyce to be heard and yet hold out without failing or discouragement b Esay 42.2.4 yea as the Captaine of our saluation hee was made perfect by suffering c Heb 2.10 This is the praise of the Saints which they may remember with comfort that they haue endured many and great fights of afflictions d Heb 10.32 The Souldier cannot please his Captaine vnlesse hee endure hardnesse nor hee that striueth for Masteries be crowned vnlesse hee toyle in the Combat nor the Husbandman reape vnlesse hee patiently endure the labour of sowing and waite till haruest e 2 Tim 2.3.5.6 All that will liue godly must suffer f 2 Tim 3.12 the holy exercise of Christian
Balaam seemes a friend to Israell but hee is so farre from inheriting with them that hee is destroyed by them the sword of the Lord rootes him out this will bee the portion of all Hypocrites i Iosh 13.12 And wee should labour for a particular warrant in the knowledge of our owne portion this would incourage vs against all difficulties Caleb dares fight with the Anakins if Ioshua giue him Hebron k Iosh 14.6.11 c. and feeble and complayning Ephraim shall ouercome and inlarge himselfe if Ioshua particularly incourage him l Iosh 17. And as no Cananites ought to bee left in the Lot of Israell so no wicked workers should be suffered to remaine in the assembly of the Saints to be prickes and goades in the sides of the righteous And as they that haue their inheritance allowed them already must not rest but fight till their brethren haue rest m Josh 1.12 so they that haue comfort in their owne conuersion must strengthen their brethren And if any haue too little roome the way is not to murmure and doubt but to fight it out for more so must Dan n Iosh 19.14 so should weake Christians not giue way to discontentment but striue in the spirituall Combat till more grace and roome for the inlarging of the heart be gotten Lastly as seauen Tribes are iustly taxed and censured by Ioshua for their negligence and sloath in not seeking speedily to possesse the Land God had offered them o Iosh 18.2 so may the most of vs bee iustly rebuked for grieuous securitie about the heauenly Canaan Many rest in the probabilities and hope of a title nay the most rest satisfied in such a condition as is without title and without hope vnlesse they amend yea the better sort diuers of them haue but a title and therefore it iustly falleth out that these are buffetted by Christ as they were disgraced by Ioshua and as they must stand to the curtesie of the viewers of the Land for the report of the goodnesse of their part so must these secure Christians stand to the curtesie of their Teachers for how much knowledge and comfort they shall thinke meete to impart vnto them concerning their inheritance in heauen and heauenly things Partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light The happinesse of the faithfull is an inheritance illustrated here first by the persons that must enioy it it is not common to all but appropriated to Saints secondly by the qualitie of it it is in light Christ is the great heyre of all things p Heb 1.1 Psal 2. the Christian is coheyre with Christ It is a doctrine that hath much comfort in it a Christian holds by the fayrest tenure and firmest and surest too for though his life be changeable and his dayes on earth must haue an end yet his inheritance endures for euer and whiles hee liues God will know him all his dayes for no worse a man then his owne heyre q Psal 37.17.18 And the consideration of the inheritance of the Saints should teach vs diuers things first to pray that God would remember vs with the fauour of his people and visite vs with his saluation and that then hee would open our eyes to see the glory of such an inheritance r Psal 106.3.4 Ephes 1.18 Secondly to honour the righteous and not despise poore Christians seeing God hath made them his heyres and rich in faith Å¿ Iames 2.5 Thirdly to endeauour with all care to walke worthy of such honour as to be made Gods heyres And lastly to be willing to suffer any thing in this world for Christ seeing in the world to come wee must raigne with him as coheyres t Rom 8.17.18 Of the Saints Onely Saints inherit and therefore be sure thou be a Saint be sure thou be more then flesh and bloud u 1 Cor 15.50 be sure thou lye in none of the sinnes God hath threatned with the losse of this inheritance x Ephes 5.5 1 Cor 6.9 Gal 5.21 bee sure of the imputation of the righteousnesse of Christ y Rom 4.13.14 Tit. 3.7 bee sure thou haue in thee the spirit of the Sonne z Gal. 4.7 Ephes 1.14 bee sure to commit thy selfe to the word of grace * Acts 20.32 In light The Christians inheritance is said to be held in light in sixe respects First because hee now obtaines it in the times of the Gospell which times in comparison with the times of the old Testament are called times of light the light of the Iewes being spread abroad among the Gentiles and exceedingly enlarged by the rising of the Sunne of righteousnesse Secondly A three-fold light in man because this inheritance can neuer be assured without the light of knowledge In the vnderstanding of man there is a three-folde light of knowledge Naturall Euangelicall and Celestiall the Naturall light is the light of Reason the Euangelicall light is the light of Faith and the Celestiall light is the light of Heauen Before we can see our inheritance in the light of Heauen wee must first see it in the light of Faith and as for the light of Reason it will do no good for any euidence in this tenure Thirdly because this inheritance is held with true ioy on earth and perfect ioy in heauen and Ioy is expressed by the word light in many places in Scripture Fourthly in respect of the admirable communion that a Christian hath with God and Christ who is light of light that true light Iohn 8.12 Fiftly because of the certainety of this inheritance it is said to bee held in light It is worthy the noting that Catharinus a Papist writing vpon this place thus vnderstands the meaning of Light and is much offended with those that pleade for vncertaintie of assurance Sixtly in light that is in Heauen and the light of Heauen in an excellent light both for the perfection of it and the continuance of it It is a perfect light for there shall be on Gods part a cleare reuelation and on mans part a cleare vision and for continuance that light shall neuer be ouercome of darkenesse nay it shall neuer admit any mixture of obscuritie in as much as Heauen is a Citie that needes not the Sunne nor Moone to shine in it for the glory of God doth lighten it and the Lambe is the light thereof Reuel 21.23 In the meane while till God translate vs to this light of heauen let vs labour to settle our heartes in the light of Faith and certaintie and glad our hearts with the light of the Spirit and ioy choosing rather to die then to forsake the face and presence of God the fountaine of all true light both in earth and heauen Verse 13. Who hath deliuered vs from the power of Darkenesse and translated vs into the Kingdome of his deare Sonne IN this Verse our redemption is considered more particularly for as it is by inchoation in
as their end as their Creator and as the first borne The first begotten of euery Creature Two things are here to be considered of Christ 1. that he is Gods Son by generation 2. that he is the first begotten For the first God hath Sonnes by Nature and by Grace Christ is borne as Man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and begotten as God Things are begotten three waies 1. Metaphorically onely by comparison or in some respects 2. Corporally 3. Spiritually some things doe beget without themselues as bodies doe but this is more ignobly and basely some things beget within themselues as doth the Spirit or soule more perfectly But the most perfect and vnutterable glorious generation is the begetting of the Son of God by God The way of God in eternity who can finde out and his generation who can tell His waies are not as our waies yet a glimpse of this great work we may reach to two waies 1 By way of Negation as they say in Schooles 2 By way of Comparison First by denying that vnto God which hath imperfection in it In the generation of the Creatures we may see something into the generation of the Sonne of God There are eight things in the generation of the Creatures which are not in this begetting of the naturall Sonne of God 1. The Creatures beget in time because themselues are first begotten but this is not in God Christ is of the Father but not after the Father there is here a prioritie in order but not in time 2. The Creatures beget by affection this is imperfection but God begetteth by Nature 3. The Creature begets without himselfe so as Sons are diuers and diuided from the Father because they are finite 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are of like nature to our Fathers but not the same nature but it is not so in God for Christ is not diuided from the Father as he is the naturall Sonne of God 4. The generation in the Creature is not without corruption or diminution of the nature of the Begetter but here God the Father begetteth without corruption or diminution by a way diuine inenarrable and incomprehensible 5. Our Children are lesse then their Parents but Christ is as well Coequall as Coeternall 6. The Creature communicates but a part of his substance but God communicates the whole 7. The father and sonne among the creatures are two in number one in Specie onely but in God it is not so for the Son of God is another but not another thing he is another viz. in Person but not another thing in Essence Lastly Alius but not aliud the creature begets mortal creatures propagates but a being for a time but God begets a Sonne immortall by nature such a one as can neuer die in the nature so begotten Secondly this generation is shadowed out by some comparison with creatures the riuer and the spring are two yet not diuided so is the Sun and the Beames of it the Sauor the Oyntment are together and yet the Oyntment is not corrupted but the principall comparison is in the minde the word the Minde begets the Word naturally without passion or corruption within it selfe so as the Word begotten remaines in the Minde the Word afterwards clothed with a voyce goeth into the eares of men and yet ceaseth not to be still in the Minde This in many things as you may see is like to the generation of Christ by the Father But all these are but shadowes the glory of the thing it selfe cannot be expressed by any words of man or angels The consideration of this Doctrine should inflame vs to the loue of such a Sonne who being as hee was coequall and coeternall with the Father yet was pleased to delight himselfe in Gods earth which is man Prou. 8.22.31.32 And wee should for euer hearken and attend to the words of this wisedome of God who teacheth vs the secrets of the very bosome of his Father And seeing this is the Sonne of whom GOD hath spoken to the dreadfull astonishment and wonder of Heauen and Earth woe vnto them that sinne against the Sonne and prouoke him to anger How shall they bee broken to pieces like an earthen Vessell But blessed are all they that with all feare and trembling Psal 2.5.7.9.11.12 and with all reuerence and affection subiect themselues to the Scepter of his Kingdome and trust in the loue of the Father through the merits of the Sonne Thus of the consideration of Christ as he is begotten of God it is here added that he is first begotten First begotten Christ is the Sonne of God t Iohn 1.14 Hee is the onely begotten Son of God u Iohn 1.18 hee is the naturall Sonne of God x Rom 3.8 Primogenitus and here is tearmed the first begotten Sonne of God Hee is first begotten as God two waies 1. in Time hee was before all other things Of this afterwards 2. in Dignitie he is the foundation of all that respect by which others are made Sonnes hee is first begotten as Man not in time but in dignitie and operation first in respect of the miraculousnesse and wonderfulnesse of his birth and conception so are none other borne secondly in respect of his Resurrection in which God did as it were beget him againe thus he is afterwards said to be the first borne of the dead thirdly in respect of preheminence as hee hath the right of the first borne being made heyre of all things The Vse is diuers First let all the Angells of God worship him Secondly Heb 1.6 it should kindle in our hearts godly sorrow for our sinnes If we can mourne for the death of our first borne how should we be pierced to remember Zach 12.12 that our sinnes haue pierced Gods first borne Thirdly we should neuer thinke it strange to suffer in this world Rom 8.29 seeing God spared not his owne first borne Lastly it may be a great comfort to Christians and that two wayes first because they shall be accepted with God in and for Christ who is the first borne and hath receiued a blessing for all the rest secondly because in Christ they themselues are accounted as Gods first borne in comparison of other men God will vse them as his first borne Exod. 4.22 Heb. 12.23 Psal 89. ●7 By this Gods Children are made higher then the Kings of the earth Psalm 89.27 and therefore woe shall bee to them that wrong Gods first borne Exod. 4.22 And therefore also euery Christian should so esteeme his birth-right as by no meanes with prophane Esau for any lust profit or pleasure to sell it Heb. 12.16 Verse 16. For in him were all things created that are in Heauen and that are in Earth visible or inuisible whether they be Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers All things were created for him and by him IN this Verse foure things are to be
him For him In diuers respects first as it is hee onely All things are for Christ in diuers respects in whom the Father is well pleased and so the loue of God to the World is for his sake Secondly as all the Creatures doe serue to point out the Sonne as well as the Father and that because they shew Christ as the wisedome of the Father And be sides their changes and corruptions doe cry for the libertie of the sonnes of God in Christ and further they are all at commaund for the propagation and preseruing of the kingdome of Christ Thirdly as he is heyre of all thingss they are for him that is for his glory so as hee is not onely the Efficient but the finall cause of all things The Carpenter makes his House perhaps fot one more honourable then himselfe but not so Christ in making this great House the World The consideration of this point that all things are for Christ should teach vs diuers things First wee should lesse dote vpon the world and the things thereof Vses in as much as these things were principally made for Christ and not for vs. And secondly wee should vse all these things as helpes to lead vs to CHRIST Thirdly in the vse of the Creatures wee should be carefull to expresse the glory of Christ by giuing thankes by magnifying his Wisedome Power Goodnesse c. and by distributing them according to his appointment as to the poore and to the maintenance of the worship of God for seeing they are his and for him wee should despose of them as hee requires Lastly it should keepe vs from the vse of all ill meanes for seeing it is for Christ wee should not lye deceiue vse false weights runne to Witches or take any other vngodly course for hee needes not our lye nor desires to bee helped by any sinnefull course The fourth thing which Christ is commended for is his Eternitie Hee was before all things Eoure things in the immensitie of Christs diuine nature The Immensitie of Christs Diuine Nature hath foure things in it First infinitenesse in respect of it selfe Secondly incomprehensiblenesse in respect of our sense and vnderstanding Thirdly incircumscriptiblenesse in respect of place Fourthly Eternitie in comparison of time That Christ is eternall these places proue Prou. 8.22 c. Mich. 5.2.4 c. Reuel 1.8.11 and 21.6 and 22.13 The Eternity of Christ may be thus defined it is a pleasant and at once perfect possession of endlesse life The Eternity of Christ described and explained And hereby may the eternitie of Christ appeare to differ from the eternity of all other things The Heauens haue an endlesnesse of Essence but they want life The Diuels haue an endlesse not onely being but life but it is not a pleasant life The Saints in Heauen haue a pleasant life till the day of Iudgement but they haue not whole possession The Angels in Heauen haue a whole possession but it is not at once but successiuely both in reuelation and ioy I say it is whole in them because their whole Nature or Essence is possessed of pleasant and endlesse life And lastly Christs eternitie differs from all eternitie of all the Creatures because no creature hath the former things absolutely perfect that is such a possession of endlesse life as vnto which nothing is wanting for they want many of the perfections that are in Christ though they bee perfect in their owne kinde Seeing Christ was before all things wee should preferre him before all things wee should acknowledge his Title as heyre of all things as the eldest among all things wee should willingly heare him speake and honour his words wee should trust in him and liue by faith c. And in him all things consists That is hee vpholds rules and gouernes all things by his prouidence and this is the fift thing by which our Redeemer is described in relation to the World That prouidence is giuen to the Son as well as Creation these places proue Heb. 1.2.3 Prou. 8.15 Iohn 5.12 Christ is not like the Carpenter that makes his house and then leaues it or like the Shipwright How al things consist in Christ Conseruando Prescribendo Mouendo Ordinando Disponendo that frames his Ship but neuer after guides it All things are said to consist in him in respect of Conseruation in that he keepes all things in their being in respect of Precept in that from him are prescribed the Lawes by which Nature Policie and Religion are gouerned in respect of Operation in that all things moue in him in respect of Ordination in that hee appointeth all things to their end in respect of Disposition of the meanes to the end and lastly as the vniuersall cause of Nature and naturall instincts in all Creatures by which they further their owne preseruation Obiect But we see the meanes by which all things are wrought and preserued as by their causes Sol. The meanes notwithstanding all things consist in Christ first because Christ vseth not the meanes necessarilie secondly hee ordaines the meanes as well as the end thirdly the meanes is many times euill in matter or forme yet the worke is made good by Christ fourthly he is not tied to the meanes but he can worke either with without or against the meanes fiftly all meanes hath his efficacie from Christ But the words would be particularly weighed As Christ is God al things consist in him foure wayes In him All things consist in Christ both in generall as hee is God and in speciall as he is Redeemer Foure waies all things consist in or by CHRIST as hee is God first in respect of Vbiquitie hee comprehends all things and is comprehended of nothing The Nations are but a droppe of his Bucket and time it selfe is but a drop of his Eternitie secondly in respect of power in his power this whole frame stirreth thirdly in respect of Omniscience and Wisedome for all is within his knowledge and receiueth order from his Wisedome fourthly in respect of decree for the world to be made did from euerlasting hang in the fore knowledge and pre-ordination of Christ As Christ is Redeemer all things consist in him three wayes first And as he is Redeemer three waies because he is that attonement which kept the world from being dissolued for Adams sinne secondly because the respect of him and his Church is that that keepes vp the world to this day if his body were once compleat the world would not stand one houre thirdly because the promise made to man concerning his prosperity in the vse of all Creatures are made in Christ All things Euen all things which are or are done in Earth or Heauen Act 17.25 things visible or inuisible which haue either being life sense or reason past present or to come aduersitie as well as prosperitie c. Consist This word notes foure things Order Continuance Cooperation The word Consist notes foure things
Sathan who now may bite the heele but cannot touch the head And from hence we must learne if we would euer get by participation and influence any grace from Christ we must by Faith and effectuall calling get into Christ Thirdly in that hee saith this Fulnesse dwells in Christ it notes the continuance of it the personall Vnion shall neuer bee dissolued and therefore the habituall graces of Christ shall neuer bee abolished And these Graces had neede continue in him for in him rests the calling of the Elect not yet gathered and the perseuerance of the Saints Vses The Riuers must needes be empty if the fountaine be dry This is comfortable wee may now beseech him to helpe our vnbeleefe as well as the man in Gospell Wee may finde ioy and victory in CHRIST crucified as well as Paul his Grace will still bee sufficient for vs. There dwells in him still fulnesse of wisedome to keepe vs from errour fulnesse of Grace to keepe vs from Apostacie fulnesse of Ioy to keepe vs from Despayre fulnesse of power to preserue vs against all euill men and euill Angels onely refuse not knowledge when hee offers the meanes wincke not when the Sunne shines Shut not the doore when hee knockes fight when hee giues thee Weapons and cast not away thy confidence and let no man take thy Crowne Hitherto of the plenitude in the Head Verse 20. And by him to reconcile all things to himselfe and to set at peace through the blood of his Crosse both the things on Earth and the things in Heauen IN these words the Redeemer is described as a Head by influence the Apostle shewes vs the good comes from Christ as our Mediator and the summe of all is that hee reconciles vs to God In this Verse there are eight things to be noted First why or the moouing cause and that is It pleased him for that must bee supplyed out of the former Verse as the Copulatiue And sheweth Secondly by whom or the Instrument By him Thirdly what to reconcile Fourthly whom in generall All things Fiftly to whom or to what end viz. To himselfe Sixtly the effect making peace Seuenthly the meanes of merit By the bloud of his Crosse Eightly what in particular viz. things on earth and things in Heauen Reconciliation is our first step to happinesse The principall poynt in the whole Verse to bee obserued is that man hath then attayned the cheefe good when his soule is reconciled to GOD this is the summe of all that which Christ hath procured for his Church Blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. Others may bee more rich then they but none more happy for heereby man is ioyned to the fountaine of all good and not onely hath interest in his fauour but reapeth vnspeakeable benefits by communion with his Attributes Word Workes Holinesse and Glory Our reconciliation with God giues vs a title to a better happinesse then euer Adam had it estates vs in the possession of eternity and frees vs from immortall woe Vses All this should encourage with all care and constancy to seeke Gods fauour and forsake our sinnes that we may be reconciled whatsoeuer it cost sparing no labour or teares till wee se the face of God with ioy a Ier. 50.5 This shewes also the wofull estate of such men as are left to themselues and haue this peace and reconciliation hid from their eyes And of all Iudgements it should most greeue vs to be separate from God If to bee reconciled bee our greatest happinesse to misse the comforts of Gods presence and loue cannot but be an extreame affliction And to this end wee should beseech God to deliuer vs from a blinde or stony heart or a sleepy conscience or impure affections for these if they raigne in vs hinder the vision of God And. This carrieth vs to it pleased the Father in the former Verse Our reconciliation is founded in Gods good pleasure Whence wee may note that our reconciliation stands with the euerlasting good pleasure of Gods will and therefore it followes 1. That our reconciliation cannot bee hindered or altered 2. That it ariseth from no sudden motion in GOD but is anciently decreed 3. That wee are not reconciled for our merit for it was decreed before we had done good or euill 4. That the reasons of the reiection of some and the gathering of others in time are iust though not alwayes exprest because there is no decree without Gods counsell 5. That if euer wee would haue the comfort of our Election wee must make sure our Reconciliation wee can neuer know Gods eternall loue to vs till wee finde the experience of his fauour in our Reconciliation the Prisoner knowes not what fauour is in the Kings breast till his Pardon comes By him Doct. Christ is the instrument of our Reconciliation Christ is the meanes of our reconciliation the first Adam tooke God from vs the second Adam restored God to vs. Man would needes become God and therefore lost God from vs God out of his loue becomes man and restores vs againe to God The world is now restored by the same wisdome it was first made Gods Image is restored in vs by him that is the eternall Image of the Father The middle Person in the Trinity is the Mediator betweene God and Man the naturall Sonne makes men Sonnes by Adoption it is Christ that both can and ought to reconcile vs. He could not doe it if hee were not God he ought not to doe it if he were not man b 1 Tim. 2.5 Rom. 3.25 1 Cor. 1.3 1 Iohn 2.1 1 Cor. 3.11 Acts 4.13 This Doctrine yeeldes vs matter of admiration of the loue of Christ Vses if we consider what either hee was or what wee were The Lord in the forme of a Seruant procures the saluation of the Seruant hee that was the beginning of Gods workes repaires him that at best was the last of them God descended from heauen to earth that man might ascend from earth to heauen God is made the Sonne of man that man might be made the Sonne of God hee that was rich became poore to make vs rich the immortall became mortall to make vs immortall Hee is a Physician to vs sicke a Redeemer to vs sold a Way to vs wandering and Life to vs dead Secondly this should teach vs in all suits to God to seeke to Christ the Sonne of God it is he must offer vp our Prayers procure our Pardon and make our Peace yea it is hee and none other Thirdly wee should seeke the testimony of Iesus as well as his Ransome if hee witnesse to our Reconciliation wee neede neuer doubt of it if hee giue no witnesse wee can haue no assurance The Testimony of Iesus is giuen partly by the Promises of the Word hee putting spirit and life into them for our particular comfort and partly by the witnesse of the Spirit of Adoption in the vnutterable feelings and
a speciall Law of God made accursed Vses of Christs crosse The consideration of this that Christ suffered on the Crosse should teach vs both Humiliation and humility we should bee pricked in our hearts to thinke of it that our sinnes caused him so to bee pierced i Zach. 12.12 and wee should put on all humblenesse of minde when wee see him that was equall to God abasing himselfe for vs in the forme of a Seruant to dye on a tree k Phil. 2.8 c. yea the more basenesse hee suffered the more wee should glory and reioyce in his sufferings nothing should glad our hearts more then CHRIST and him crucified l Gal. 6.14 Further Christ dyed on the Crosse to breake downe the partition wall and to slay Hatred m Ephes 2.16 1. Cor. 1.13 And shall Enmitie and Discord liue when Christ is de●d Shall hee be nayled and shall not our vile affections bee nayled downe with him Besides it should bee our care to see to it that the Crosse of CHRIST be not made of none effect n 1 Cor. 1.18 which is when by Faith it is not applied when the Doctrine of Christ is not GODS power in our soules when our Flesh is not crucified with the Lusts of it o Gal. 5.24 and when wee take not vp our Crosse to follow Christ p Math. 10.38 And lastly when wee are so bewitched that wee cannot obey the truth By him By him repeated for foure reasons This is repeated in the Originall though the Translation expresse it not for foure Reasons first to shew how hardly men are drawn to ascribe from their hearts their happinesse vnto Christ Secondly to shew the necessitie of it It is not possible to be saued but by the imputed righteousnesse of CHRIST Thirdly to shew that all things in Christs action and Passion were meritorious least men should superstitiously dote or dreame vpon his Bloud or the word of the Crosse or the signe of it or the like There is no merit in Bloud but as it was in him Fourthly to conclude the worshippe of Angels which abuse beganne then to grow among the Colossians Both the things vpon earth This All things by a distribution is againe repeated to medicine the doubtfulnesse of Gods Children which question it whether Christs merits extend vnto them as also to inflame vs to an admiration of the vertue of his death by considering how farre it extends On Earth Note here two things First that eternall life is begunne in this life wee should neuer see Gods face in Heauen if wee taste not of his fauour on Earth And if this must be begun on earth why doe men deferre so great a worke as their reconciliation as if it belong to heauen rather then to be done on earth yea this taxeth the slownesse of heart and discontentment of Gods Children This knowledge ioy affection c. is the same thou must haue in heauen And wee should learne hence to liue on earth like the Citizens of Heauen Citizens will not liue so rudely as the Country Swaines much more oddes ought there to be betweene Sarazens and Hagarens if I may so say much difference betweene them that dwell in SION and those that haue no portion but in SINAY Gods Children are the Sonnes of the Free-woman and Citizens wicked men are the Children of the Bond-woman and Forrainers and strangers from the Common-wealth of Israell Secondly where hee saith vpon the Earth and yet in Heauen I might note the vncertainetie of our abode on earth wee haue nothing to possesse but the outside of the earth which is ready to shake vs off daily All things in Heauen For the meaning of these words wee know Whether Angels be reconciled in Christ or no. that there are in Heauen both Angels and Saints And it may bee questioned whether Angels be reconciled in Christ or no. Though Angels sinned not yet Angels haue gain'd by Christ a more perfect adhering to God and establishing in their standing encrease of knowledge and of Ioy r Luke 15.10 yea q Ephes 3.9 the Angels are reconciled by Christ thus that is they are made friends with vs with whom they were at enmitie yet I thinke this is not meant here but the Saints onely are intended because it seemes he entreateth here of Christ not onely as head for so hee is head of Angells but as Mediator betweene parties fallen out Whence wee may note two things first that the very Saints now in hea●en once needed the merits of Christ none come there but were first reconciled which may be a comfort to the afflicted spirits of mourning and drooping Christians if they consider that the greatest Saints did neede remission of sins as well as they And besides it pounds to pieces merit of workes inasmuch as these Saints came not into heauen but by the merits of Christ Secondly wee may learne that Christ merited not onely our persons but our grace and glory Verse 21. And you hath hee now also reconciled that were in times past strangers and enemies because your mindes were set in euill works HItherto of the description of the Redeemer as hee stands in relation to the whole Church In these two Verses hee is described by relation in particular to the Church of the Colossians In this description consider two things First the miserie the Colossians were in without Christ Secondly the remedie in Christ Their miserie is both propounded and expounded It is propounded to stand in two things viz. Alienation and enmitie It is expounded in two things viz. that they were thus miserable first in their Mindes secondly in their Workes the remedie followes in the next Verse Before I come to consider of their miserie there are certaine wordes of Coherence to be weighed viz. And you hath hee now also reconciled where obserue first the word of Connexion And secondly the benefit repeated reconciled Thirdly the person whom you Fourthly the time when hath now Fifty the person who Hee Six things obserued from the coherence From the generall consideration of the matter contained in this Verse and the next with the Coherence six things may be obserued First that CHRIST is a true Head to euery particular Church Secondly that then is any people happy and not before when the Gospell gathers their soules to God Thirdly they cannot be miserable that cease to be strangers and enemies to God whatsoeuer their outward estate be Fourthly Doctrine must be applied For the humiliation of Gods Seruants so to Dauid For the conuincing of the wicked so to Ahab For the triall and detection of the temporary Faith so to Herod For the hardening of the reprobates and their reiection and cutting downe by the Sword of Gods seruants and for the speciall consolations and directions of Gods Seruants And therefore Ministers should imploy themselues in application and to that end should study for power of matter as well as forme of words
discerne the benefit of the Couenant of grace in freeing them from the curse and rigour of the Law The ignorance of this one point hath and doth couer the faces and hearts of millions of Gods Seruants with a perplexed confusion and feare without cause Sixtly many professors liue in much vnrest for want of discerning things that differ and the right vse of Christian liberty Seauenthly there is a kinde of luke-warmenesse in practise after hearing which is in many scourged with the withholding of this rich grace of spirituall stedfastnesse I say luke-warmenesse in practise for it may bee obserued that many heare with great affection and continue to be stirring in expressing their liking of the Word and yet are exceedingly negligent in the conscionable and daily practise of such rules as in the ministerie of the Word they seeme to receiue with admiration and great liking Eightly this comes by reason of the want of patience and a meeke spirit some Christians are froward passionate transported with violent affections either of anger or worldly griefe and these seldome or neuer gaine any long rest or continuall contentment troubled affections greatly hinder setlednesse euen in the best things To conclude many professors reuolt to the world and giue themselues to an vniustifiable liberty in following either their profits or their pleasures And therefore no maruell though Grace and true Religion thriue so slowly in them when they eate vp their hearts and liues with these cares and delights of life Hitherto of Faith Now of Hope Be not moued away from the hope of the Gospell whereof yee haue heard Though by Faith wee are interressed in Gods fauour and our soules garnished on earth with diuers graces as the fruits of Faith and our liues protected with caelestiall priuiledges yet the glory of our kingdome is neither of this world nor in this world Hope must guide vs to future things as well as Faith to present and therefore the Apostle Peter doth with great reason teach vs to blesse God for begetting vs againe to a liuely hope n 1 Pet. 1.3 our whole happinesse may be branched out into these two parts First what wee haue already on earth and secondly what wee looke to haue hereafter in Heauen The one Faith procures the other Hope assures Now in that wee haue not all our happinesse here but hope for it elsewhere it should teach vs diuers things First wee should effectually pray vnto GOD to giue such sound wisedome and reuelation by his word and spirit that wee may indeede know this hope of our calling o Eph 1.18 Secondly in all troubles wee should bee the more patient seeing wee holde our full and finall deliuerance when wee shall feele no more troubles or crosses by Hope Perfect saluation is had here onely by Hope p Rom 8. Thirdly when our friends go out of the world such as were deare vnto vs in the bonds of grace we should not mourne immoderately for them for that were to proclaime our want of knowledge or want of sense and feeling in the thoughts of the happinesse of another world q 1 Thes 4.13 Yea fourthly seeing the greatest part of our happinesse is yet to come wee should learne to place our ioyes in the contemplation of Heauen according to the Apostles direction who biddeth vs reioyce in Hope r Rom 12.12 And lastly wee should prepare for death and wait when the time of our changing should come that wee might enioy the glorious libertie of the Sonnes of God Not moued away Doct. It is not enough to haue hope but wee must get to be vnmoueable in it for as the Authour to the Hebrewes shewes wee should be diligent to get and haue a Plerophorie or full assurance of Hope to the end Å¿ Heb 6 11. Wee must holde fast the confidence and reioycing of hope t Heb 3.6 This is our sure and stedfast Anchor to which wee should in all stormes haue our refuge to holde fast by it u Heb. 6 18 19 The Vse is two-fold first it may reproue that vnsetlednesse Note and discontentment is found in men in the times of their affliction when euery crosse can moue them away from their confidence We would think him a strange man that in time of peace would walke vp and downe with a Helmet on him and when hee were to go into any battell or fray in the middest of the fight when it was at the hottest would take his Helmet and throw it off him And yet so strange are we In prosperitie wee out-bragge all men with our hope in God and our strong confidence but when the Diuell or the World beginne to deale their blowes and to molest vs with sharpest assaults then we grow heartlesse or impatient and throw away our hope when wee haue most neede of it Secondly it should teach vs to labour after this vnmoueablenesse of hope which that it may the better be done two things are to be looked to 1. that our hope be a true hope 2. that we vse the meanes to make this hope vnmoueable And for the first wee must consider three things First what hope is not true hope Secondly what persons haue no hope Thirdly what are the effects or properties of true hope Some things of many in each of these shall be instanced in First there is a hope of which men shall one day bee ashamed such is What hope is not true hope mens hope in their riches x Psal 52.7 in the arme of flesh y Ier 17 5. in oppression vanitie and sinne z Psal 62.10 in the instruments of deliuerance as the Bow or Sword c * Psal 44 6. in the deceitfull conceits of their owne braines a Esa 28 15. or in their ciuilitie of life This is to trust in Moses b Joh 5 45. Who haue not true hope All these and other such like hopes are egregiously vaine Secondly there are many sorts of men in the world concerning whom it is plaine in Scriptures they haue not hope For in the generall there is no hope in any vnregenerate man c 1 Pet 1 3. Ephes 2 12. and in particular it is cleere there is no true hope First in the ignorant Psalm 9.10 Secondly in prophane men that make no conscience of sinne Psalm 115.11 Thirdly in the presumptuous that blesse their hearts against the curses of the Law Deuter. 29.19 Fourthly in the Hypocrite for though hee haue wouen to himselfe out of the bowels of his poisonous breast a faire webbe of hope yet it shall be as the house of the Spider one swope of Gods Beesome shall easily lay him and his hope in the dust of miserie d Iob. 8.13 Lastly it is not in workers of iniquitie that make a Trade of sinne and euery day plodde about mischiefe Thirdly true hope is most stirring in affliction and then it shewes it selfe by foure things Which are the effects or
in this work beares the Image of Christ and in him Christ riseth before our eyes not onely because the Lord Iesus doth in this gracious worke giue vs a daily and fresh remembrance of his resurrection by renewing such fruits of it but also because he imprinteth a secret kinde of heauenly mindednesse the Christian in some weake measure liuing as Christ did in the interim betweene his resurrection and ascension waiting alwayes for his exaltation into heauen Now the consideration of this worke is heere vsed by the Apostle to perswade vnto the meditation of heauenly things and that fitly for if wee bee risen as Christ was then we must bee minded as hee was now wee know that after hee was risen againe hee was not encumbred with this world nor did he conuerse with the men of this world but liued with the Lord as it were immediately in a heauenly manner waiting for Heauen so should a Christian doe he should euery day bee striuing to get vp his heart by faith and prayer and meditation and voluntary abnegation by all meanes begging and seeking the vertue of Christs resurrection that being enabled to forsake the world and the vnnecessary society with worldly men he might haue his heart and conuersation in heauen euery day waiting when the time of his changing should come Quest How may a man know whether he be risen with Christ Ans Hovv a man may knovv vvhether he be risen vvith Christ Who are not risen vvith Christ This question may bee resolued both negatiuely and affirmatiuely For first they are not risen with Christ that are in bondage to traditions as the coherence with the latter end of the former chapter shewes nor they that are drowned and made sencelesse with the cares of this life or the pleasures of voluptuous liuing i Luk. 21.34 nor they that confirming themselues in a dead presumptuous common hope plead the abounding of Gods grace to auouch their continuance in sinne k Rom. 6.1.4.5 1 Pet. 1.3 For the Apostle in the Epistle to the Romans vseth a reason taken from our conformity to the resurrection of Christ to confute this vicious and prophane plea of carelesse men Further they that worship the Beast the great Antichrist of Rome and receiue his marke vpon their foreheads or their hands are reckoned among the dead men that haue not their part in this first resurrection l Reu. 20.4.5.6 Also the Prophet Esay seemes to say that such men as will not see Gods high hand of Iudgement nor will learne to doe vprightly in the land of vprightnesse nor can bee allured to godlinesse though mercy be shewed them are to bee accounted among the dead men that shall not liue m Esa 26.9.10.14 Lastly they are not risen with Christ that doe not beleeue in Christ n Joh. 11.25 Now for the affirmatiue They may haue comfort in the first resurrection that haue felt a diuine power in the voyce of Christ quickning their hearts with effectuall desire and endeauour to rise out of the graues of sinne o Ioh. 5.25 and to stand vp from the world of the dead p Eph. 5.14 2. That are constantly affected with an holy estimation of the knowledge of Christ crucified and risen againe an effectuall knowledge I meane valuing the meanes and signes of it aboue all earthly things q Phil. 3.9.10 3. That finde their hearts changed from the cares and delights of this life to a constant desire of the second comming of Christ to translate them to the presence of glory in heauen 4. That shew a daily care to walke in newnesse of life yeelding their members as weapons of righteousnesse striuing to crucifie the olde man and destroy the body of sinne as they that are aliue vnto God r Rom. 6.4 5.6.13 2. Againe in that the Apostle saith if yee bee risen againe with Christ seeke those things that are aboue wee may note that it is as hard a thing to get vp the heart of men to the study of heauenly things as to lift vp a massie corps out of the graue and to inspire it with the desire of life As easie to reuiue a dead man as persvvade a carnall man there is neede of the spirit and power of Iesus to doe it And therefore wee should not wonder to see naturall men so heartlesse nor should we attribute it to any inefficacy in the meanes if carnall men bee not perswaded for a man may long perswade a dead man to rise before he will get vp and it should touch vs with all thankfulnesse to acknowledge Gods mercy if he haue giuen vs a minde to heauenly things to desire them and delight in them Thirdly in that he saith if yee bee risen speaking not onely conditionally but doubtfully it imports that one should bee exceeding carefull to search and trie whether they haue their part as yet in this first resurrection and withall implyes that many a man may seeme to himselfe and others to bee deliuered from the kingdome of darknesse and yet lie buried still in the graues of sinne Seeke th●se things which are aboue Heere the Apostle enters vpon the proposition of the first maine exhortation or rule of new life Now before I bring in the Apostle vrging this duty imagine with thy selfe how farre the Christian thus now to bee instructed for order of life hath already proceeded by faith for before a man can bee truely capable of direction of life there bee diuers things requisite in the preparations of faith The preparations of faith before a man can be capable of directions of life And these things are necessarily to be presupposed 1. That faith hath plucked him out of the world of sinners or dead men so that hee is already withdrawen from the society of the wicked 2. It hath shewed him Gods fauour and ioyned him to Christ 3. It hath shewed him in some measure such things in the Kingdome of Christ as his naturall eare neuer heard nor his naturall eye neuer saw nor his naturall heart neuer conceiued ſ 1 Cor. 2.9 4. It hath ioyned him to the liuing Saints so as he now with great desire delight conuerseth with them 5. It hath made him to suffer in the flesh for his sins and withall hath refreshed his spirit and cured him of his distrustfull and solitary sorrowes 6. It hath garnished his soule with new budding graces and opened for him a fountaine and spring of grace within him euen in his bowels t Ioh. 7.38.39 7. It hath raised in him a true and constant desire of new obedience of life with a secret resolution not to depart from any thing the Lord shall command all the dayes of his life Now presupposing the Christian to bee thus farre proceeded the Apostle comes in and to beginne his institutions of manners hee first chargeth him with this rule Doct. Seeke those that are aboue teaching vs that the first maine thing to be
it should continually draw vp our thoughts to thinke of heauen whither so louing and so glorious a Sauiour is gone before Yea it should doe vs good to looke vp towards these visible heauens remembring that one day we shall be carried to that blessed place of rest and holy ioyes that is aboue them euen to the heauen of heauens to raigne with Christ for euermore And thus of the proposition VERS 2. Set your affections on things which are aboue and not on things which are on the earth THe exhortation in the former verse propounded is in this verse illustrated and expounded first by repetition seconly by the contrary The repetition is in these words Set your affections on things which are aboue The contrarie from which he doth dehort is in these words and not on things which are on earth Repetitions in Scripture are not without their vse The vse of repetitions in Scripture For thereby the holy Ghost vsually imports our slownesse and dulnesse of capacity in conceiuing and backwardnesse in practise and besides thereby enforceth both the necessity and the excellency of the matter so repeated And surely all three may be applyed to this repetition For the contemplation and desire after heauenly things is a most gracious ornament to a religious life and without some measure of holy affections it is vnpossible to get rid of the power of sinne or to practise with any successe or acceptation the duty of a renued life and if in any thing we are backward or wanting or decaying or languishing it is in this rule here giuen by the Apostle Set your affections The originall word varieth in signification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sometimes it is rendred to studie and it is out of question our dutie to study and contemplate of heauenly things Sometimes it signifieth to trie by tasting and it is sure that if carnall people had but once tasted of the sweetnesse of godlinesse and religious duties they would not so securely neglect the prouision for eternity but especially they would see that they haue spoken euill of what they knew not Sometimes it is translated to bee wise about a thing and certainely a Christian should bee wise in the matters of his religion and profession and shew it by forecast and diligence to compasse what may bee gotten of this true treasure and by serpentine discretion in the manner and circumstances of welldoing and by staydnesse in a Christian course voyd of passion rash zeale and fickle inconstancie growing more and more skilfull and cunning in the soundnesse of knowledge how with more power and spirituall aduantage to practise euery dutie or exercise euery grace Sometimes it signifieth to sauour of a thing and it is true that all the carriage and dealings of Christians should sauour of the things aboue but I take it as it is heere rendred Set your affections and so it manifestly teacheth vs that wee Vses 1 must get not mindes or thoughts onely but sound affections to heauenly things which may both serue for reproofe and comfort for reproofe I say both of the loathsome lukewarmensse of the most k Reu. 3.19 and of the dangerous Vses 2 losse of first loue in the better sort l Reuel 2. For comfort for it is certaine if thou canst finde thy heart vpright in affections and constant desire after heauenly things Three benefits of tender affections thou mayst bee assured of three things 1. That God will accept thy will for the deed He will beare with many wants and weaknesses where hee sees a man or woman come to his seruice with hearts desirous to doe their best and tenderly affected 2. That thou art not in danger of falling away for Apostasie neuer discouers it selfe to hurt vs or endanger vs till it hath stollen away our hearts and the care of affections in holy duties 3. That to that thou hast Matth. 13. more is and shall bee giuen as thy affections grow and continue so doth true knowledge grace and godlinesse grow also And thus of the repetition And not on the things that are on earth from the coherence and generall consideration of these words three things may be obserued Obs 1 1. That a man cannot both at once seeke and affect earth and heauen for they are heere disioyned and opposed Matth. 6. a man cannot serue God and mammon the loue of the world is the enmitie of God but this is thus to bee vnderstood Lam. 4.4 if the world be sought in the first place and with cheefe affection and care Obs 2 2. Nay more this dehortation implies that it is hard for a man to deale with the world but a mans affection will too much runne after it it is hard to bee much employed about profits and recreations but a man shall loue them too much Note Not that it is simply vnlawfull to vse the world but that wee should be very iealous of our selues to watch our owne hearts that our affections be not set on the world Obs 3 3. To be crucified vnto the world able to neglect and contemne the glory and pleasure of it is a notable signe that one is risen with Christ Thus in generall Three sorts of things on earth The things on earth The things on earth heere meant by the Apostle are either traditions mentioned in the former Chapter or worldly things in themselues lawfull or the workes of the flesh simply in themselues vnlawfull Traditions are for three reasons called things on earth Traditions and mans inuentions which the Apostle hath before taxed may well bee called things on earth 1. Because they spring from the earth and earthly minded men they were neuer inspired from God nor deuised by heauenly minded men 2. Because they hinder them that are deuoted to them from looking vp or attaining any insight in things that are aboue 3. Because these by effect make men more earthly and sensuall but of these in the former chapter The workes of the flesh and the corruptions of life to bee auoyded and not affected are the third sort of things on earth but of that also afterwards in the second part of the generall duties especially in the fifth verse So that the second sort of things on earth remaineth to bee more largely considered those are profits honours pleasures friends health and long life There be eight reasons to perswade not to affect earthly things Eight generall reasons to disswade from affecting things on earth The first may bee taken from the condition of man on earth For wee are heere but pilgrims and strangers m Heb. 11.13 and therefore being but in a strange place to what purpose should wee trouble our selues with more then what will serue our present need and the rather knowing that when wee come into our owne countrey these things will serue vs for no vse Besides our present lot lyeth not in those things but the Kingdome of God and righteousnesse is
day giue in fuller euidence it is certaine that after the resurrection it shall be almost infinitely extended by the power of God to expresse this last testimony both in the good and in the euill The booke of life is Gods sacred and eternall record of all those persons that were fore ordained into life of all ages and nations The booke of remembrance will exactly expresse without all failing or mistaking all the inclinations thoughts affections words and deeds with all circumstances or occasions and whatsoeuer else may illustrate either the goodnesse of good men or the transgression of the wicked What the sentence vvill containe For the third The sentence will bee vpon either the godly or the wicked The sentence vpon the godly will containe first the opening of Gods eternall counsell and his vnsearchable loue wherein he hath resolued and begunne to declare his will to blesse euery one of the Elect q Matt. 25.34 Secondly a manifestation of all the righteousnes desired thought vpon spoken or done by the godly r 2 Cor. 5.10 and that with such feruency of affection in Christ that he will see and remember nothing but goodnesse in good men Å¿ Matt 5.34 to 41. Thirdly a finall and generall absoluing and redeeming of them from the guilt and power of all sinne from the beginning of the world t 1 Cor. 1.30 in Adam or themselues So as there shall neuer be either sinne in them or accusation of sinne against them Fourthly ordination to glory by appointing euery one of them to inherit the kingdome prepared for them before the foundation of the world Contrariwise the sentence of the wicked shall containe first a declaration of Gods eternall and iust hatred of them u Matt. 25.41 Secondly a full manifestation and ripping vp before all men and Angels of all their sinnes both of nature and action both against God or men or their owne bodies and soules secret and open of what kinde soeuer x Rom. 2.15 Thirdly a most terrible denunciation of Gods eternall curse and horrible ordination to those eternall torments prepared for them 2 Cor. 5.10 together with the deuill and his Angels Hitherto of the iudgement it selfe The consequents of the iudgement follow and they are fiue first the firing of the world that is the dissolution of the world by a wonderfull fire that shall inclose all so as the world shall not appeare till it be renewed againe and come out of that fire as out of a fornace for as the Apostle Peter saith The heauens being on fire shall passe away and be dissolued with a noise and the elements shall melt with heat and the earth with the works thereof shall be burnt vp y 2 Pet. 3.10.12 And there shall be then new heauens and new earth that is as it were a new refined And the Apostle Iohn saith the heauens and the earth shall flie away from the face of him that sitteth on the throne z Reuel 20.11 21.1 The second consequent shall be the chasing of the wicked to hell execution being speedily and fearefully done vpon them with all horror and haste by the Angells Rom. 8.19 to 23. The third shall be the libertie of the creatures I meane the rest of the creatures besides men and Angels But because this is a point somewhat obscure I will Quest 1 endeauour in a few words to resolue a doubt or two Que. First how are the creatures now in bondage that they shall need then any liberty Ans Answ They are in bondage in diuers respects The creatures in bondage in seuen respects For first they are fraile and corruptible and so in bondage to corruption Secondly they are subiect to confusions and inconstancy as may appeare by the almost infinit mutations in the ayre earth seas fire Thirdly they are now forced to serue wicked men The sunne shines vpon the vniust as well as the iust The heauen makes fruitfull with her shewers and influence the field of the wicked as well as the iust The earth is driuen to feed and to receiue into her bosome the vngodly as well as the godly and this is a bondage Fourthly the visible creatures are Gods greate booke to proclaime the inuisible things of God now they stand alwaies ready and reading too and men will not learne by them And so these good masters lose all their labour and this is a bondage to bee tied to teach such as will not learne Fiftly the creature is made not only the instrument but many times the subiect of mans punishment for his sinnes As the earth is made iron and the heauens brasse for mans sake and this is a great bondage Sixtly the creature intends immortalitie which while it failes of in the dying or expiring of the particulars of euery sort it would supply for the preseruation at least of the kindes by a perenniall substitution of new particulars in euery kinde and yet loseth all this labour because all things must be dissolued and must be restored by another way knowne to God and not now to nature But especially the creatures may be said to be in bondage because since the fall the more illustrious instincts and vigors of the most of the creatures are darkned decaied dulled and distempered in them Oh but might some one say Ob. how can this bondage be ascribed vnto the heauens Sol. Sol. The heauens are not so perfect but they may admit enlargement of their excellencie Besides they serue now promiscuously to the vse of bad as well as good neither are the very heauens without their feeblenesse and the manifest effects of fainting old age And therefore by a prosopopoeia they may be said to groane together with the rest of the creatures vnder the common burden and vanitie vnto which they are subdued It is obserued that since the dayes of Ptolomy the Sunne runnes neerer the earth by 9976. Germane miles and therefore the heauens haue not kept their first perfection Ob. Ob. But how can this vanitie or bondage bee in any sense ascribed to the Angels Sol. Sol. There is no necessitie to include the Angels in the number of the groaning creatures and yet it will bee easie to shew that they sustaine a kinde of bondage for they are now made to serue earthly things men haue their Angels to attend on them And it is thought they haue a kinde of regencie or presidencie either ouer nations or in mouing the orbes of heauen Besides they are put to inflict punishments on wicked men as on Sodome Further they performe seruice sometimes not attaining their owne ends And lastly comparatiuely at least their felicitie in the creation was not so absolute as it shall be in Christ for if his comming adde not vnto them a more excellent condition of nature yet out of all question it addes a fuller measure both of knowledge and ioy Qu. 2. But what shall the creatures haue in the
day of Christ they haue Quest 2 not now Answ Answ First they shall haue freedome from all the former bondage and vanitie Secondly they shall bee deliuered into the libertie of the sonnes of God that is they shall haue a most excellent estate when the children of God are glorified Wherein the Lord shewes his iustice in that the creature shall haue restitution for what is lost by man Ob. Ob. But shall there bee a resurrection of creatures as well as men Sol. Sol. No for this restitution shall be made in specie not in indiuiduo 1. Not to euery particular of euery kinde or sort but to the sort or kinde of all creatures and that shall be done to the creatures then found in their seuerall sorts The fourth consequent of the iudgement shall be the possession of the glory of Christians appointed by the sentence of the Iudge But of this afterwards in the end of this verse The fift consequent of iudgement shall be the deliuering vp of the kingdome to the Father and so the laying downe of Christs office for when Christ hath finally and fully subdued Sathan death and wicked men and hath fully reconciled the elect to God then will there be no word of any such gouernment in heauen as was on earth Hee shall not neede any longer to rule them either by ciuill Magistrates or by his need and discipline or by any other way which onely did agree to the times of the Churches warfare and pilgrimage but he shall neuer cease to liue and triumph with them in all perfections of happy contentment and glory Thus of the consequents of Iudgement And thus also of the doctrine of Christs last appearance The vses follow The Vses The consideration of the doctrine of the last Iudgement may serue for three principall vses First for terror Secondly for comfort Thirdly for instruction First this is iustly a wonderfull terrible doctrine to wicked men that heape vp wrath against this day of wrath and by their wilfull impenitencie prouoke this glorious Iudge How can it but be terrible when the holy Ghost giues warning that the Lord Iesus will then shew himselfe from heauen with his mighty Angels in flaming fire to render vengeance on all those that know not God and haue not obeyed the Gospell How can it bee but terrible when wicked men shall be punished with euerlasting perdition from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power How can it but be terrible when they shall feele their conscience exquisitly griping them and gnawing vpon them and when they shall see the deuils to torment them and hell to deuoure them when they shall see the world burning about them and the good Angels forcing them away and all both men and Angels applauding their Iudgement and knowing all their sinnes they must not thinke that the Iudge will deale then as he doth now Now he iudgeth them secretly euery day but it is many times insensibly or with lesser plagues but then he will most openly poure vpon them the full vials of his wrath Heere they are iudged that they may be amended but there their iudgement shall be that they may be confounded for there will be no place of repentance Deceiue not thy selfe Christ will not come the second time as he came the first hee came then to be iudged but now to iudge hee shall then be seene with terror that was before looked vpon with contempt hee shewed his patience in his first comming but now he will shew his power he appeared then in the forme of a seruant but now he will appeare in the forme of a King greater then all Kings Then hee professed not to iudge any man but now he proclaimeth hee will iudge all men It was commonly thought if any man saw God he should die alas alas how then shall these wofull wretches doe that must see him in the vnutterable fiercenes of his irefull indignation If the powers of heauen shall be shaken at his pleasure oh how shall the miserable heart of the guiltie sinner be rent into 1000. peeces with vnmedicinable sorrowes If Foelix tremble to heare tell of iudgement what will poore Foelix doe when he must feele iudgement both in the sentence and execution If the word of Christ on earth had such power as it had in the garden to strike stubborne hearted men to the earth what power thinke wee will it haue when be speakes as the Lord from heauen When Ezechiel Daniel and the Apostle Iohn and others saw but one Angell in a lesser manifestation of his glory comming as a Messenger of good tidings they fall downe and are full of singular feare if the sight of one Angell bee so terrible what will the sight of all the thousand thousands of Angels be especially when they come cloathed with all their brightnesse of glory And if good men that had good consciences were so frighted what shall become of euill men with their euill consciences And if the messengers of good tidings doe so amaze how shall the executioners of a most terrible sentence compasse them about with confusion both of face and heart If the drowning of the old world the burning of Sodome the opening of the earth to swallow vp Dathan and Abiram and such like iudgments haue so much horrour in them how then can any tongue expresse or heart now conceiue the horror of this day when all the millions of wicked men shall be deliuered vp to those eternall and remedilesse torments If it be such a shame to doe penance for one fault in one congregation where men will pray for the offender What a shame will it be when all thy faults shall be discouered before all the whole world without all hope of pittie or helpe Nor is it possible for them to escape this fearfull iudgement the Iudge will not be vnconstant nor will he take reward he will not be ouerlaid with confusion of businesses he will no way be corrupted in iudgement Not to appeare is impossible and to appeare is intolerable here will be no respect of persons nor will the Iudge care how it be taken nor will he be deceiued with colours and circumstances Hee hath tarried so long hee cannot be charged with rashnesse nor can there be a hiding of any particulars from him Euery inclination thought desire word and worke shall surely come to iudgement And lastly there can be no impediment to hinder execution But here a question may arise viz. Who are they that are in danger hereof Quest 1 I answer All impenitent sinners Answ But yet there are some kinde of sinners that are expresly named in Scripture and therefore if thou be any of that number preuent thine owne ruine by repentance or else thou shalt certainly perish I vndertake not to reckon all it shall suffice to mention some of the chiefe sinners that Christ will be sure to remember at that day The Beast and the false Prophet
and all that worship his image and renew his marke shall then bee cast aliue into the lake that burnes with fire and brimstone a Reu. 19.20 False teachers which priuily bring in damnable heresies or speake euill of the way of truth haue their condemnation long since determined and agreed vpon b 2 Pet. 2.1.2.3 All Atheists that make a mocke of religion and the comming of Christ shall haue a principall portion of the fierce furie of Christ c 2 Pet. 3.3 c. All couetous worldlings and greedie rich men shall then be in a wofull case for the very rust of their cankred gold and siluer shall witnesse against them and shall eat their flesh as it were fire d Jam. 5.13 All mercilesse men shall then haue iudgement without mercy e Jam. 2.13 All whoremongers and adulterers and all that defile the flesh God will be sure to iudge f Heb. 13.4 A fearfull looking for of iudgement and violent fire shall deuoure all those Apostataes that sinne willingly after they haue receiued and acknowledged the truth g Heb. 10.27 How sure doe yee suppose shall his punishment be that doth despight the spirit of grace by which hee was sanctified h Heb. 10.29 All those that haue troubled Gods seruants shall beare their condemnation whosoeuer they be i Gal. 5.10 O man thou art inexcusable that iudgest another man wherein thou art guiltie thy selfe for the iudgement of God must needs be in truth against such as commit such things k Rom. 2.1.2.3 Especially if men grow master-like in censuring it will increase to greater condemnation l Iam. 3.1 All goats or vnruly Christians that will not be kept within Gods fence that is will not be ruled by Gods ordinances and ministers shall be separate in that day from Gods sheepe and as a people accursed to be cast into an vnauoidable fellowship with the deuill and his angels m Mat. 25. All hypocrites that say and doe not or doe all their worke to be seene of men take Gods couenant into their mouthes and hate to be reformed how shall they escape the damnation to come n Psal 50. Mat. 6. 23. All wicked men with their scant measure and deceitfull weights and wicked ballances shall neuer be iustified in the day of the Lord o Mich. 6.10.11 What shall I say It were too long to proceed to reckon all and it is a short labour to conclude with the Apostle No wantons nor drunkards nor railers nor extortioners nor theeues nor wrathfull persons nor gluttons nor idolaters nor iesters nor filthy talkers nor fearfull persons nor liers nor any that loue lies shall be able to stand in the day of Christ but shall be shut out of the kingdome of heauen and cast into the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone And thus of the vse for terror Secondly vpon the meditation of this last iudgement diuers lessons for Vse 2 our instruction are inforced First it should restraine vncharitable iudging and censuring one of another for lesse matters especially for things indifferent Who art thou that iudgest another mans seruant he standeth or falleth to his owne master Christ is the Lord of quicke and dead And therefore why doest thou condemne thy brother or why doest thou despise thy brother for we shall all appeare before the iudgement seat of Christ Inasmuch as the Lord Iesus Christ will iudge the secrets of all hearts and giue a iust triall to the actions of all men why should wee forestall his iudgement or in doubtfull matters b 1 Cor. 4.5 arrogate to our selues this honour of Christ If wee could consider that we shall then euery one giue accounts vnto God for himselfe c Ro. 14.12.13 wee should finde worke enough to doe to looke to our owne score Let vs not therefore brethren iudge one another any more Secondly are there any matters of difference amongst vs Let the Saints iudge them and end them d 1 Cor. 6 2. God will be contented to put his cause to them at the last day for we know the Saints shall iudge the world and therefore why should we refuse their arbitration Thirdly it should order and moderate our sorrowes for our dead friends Wee should not sorrow as people without hope seeing we beleeue that all that sleepe in Iesus God will bring with him e 1 Thess 4.13.14.17.18 Wee shall meet together againe in that day and afterwards liue with the Lord together for euer And therefore wee should comfort one another with these words Fourthly this summons to iudgement giues a dreadfull warning and admonition to the world euen to all men euery where to repent Inasmuch as God hath appointed a day wherein hee will iudge the world in righteousnesse by the man whom he hath appointed whereof he hath giuen an assurance in that he raised him from the dead f Act. 17.32 woe will be vnto vs if that day come vpon vs vnawares before wee haue made our peace and humbled our selues before God and by vnfained repentance turned from all our euill wayes It is an vnsearchable compassion that God shewes when he offers vs this mercy that if we will iudge our selues we shall not be iudged of the Lord in that day g 1 Cor. 11.34 And it will on the other side excessiuely incense his wrath when hauing such grace offered wee neglect it and death and iudgement finde our sinnes both vnremitted on Gods part and vnrepented on ours Fiftly seeing all these things must be dissolued how should it fire vs and daily quicken our dead and drowsie spirits to a constant care of all possible holy conuersation and godlines h 2 Pet. 3.12 vnlesse we would discouer our selues either to be Atheists that mocke at the iudgement to come or men giuen to a spirit of slumber that in soule sleepe it out and will not consider our latter end Seeing wee are all Gods stewards let vs arme our selues as they that must then giue accounts of our stewardship And since wee haue all receiued some of Gods talents and gifts in our seuerall places let vs be carefull to approue our selues to be good seruants and faithfull such as can returne them with aduantage lest the portion of the seruant that hid his masters talents in the earth fall vpon vs. Lastly since the day of iudgement is the day of our full and finall redemption and since he shall come as a theefe in the night euen in the houre that we thinke not let vs therefore watch i Mat. 24.44 and be ready alwaies carefull and diligent sighing and groaning longing and praying k Reuel 22. hasting to and looking for l 2 Pet. 3. this glorious appearance and reuelation of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ Vse 3 Thirdly this may be a singular comfort to all mortified and penitent Christians they may lift vp their heads and reioice with ioy vnspeakable and
glorious for the Lord shall then come to be glorified in his Saints and made maruellous in all them that beleeue m 2 The. 1.10 Ob. Ob. But the terror of the day may amaze a Christian Sol. Sol. There is no sparke of terror in this doctrine to a godly minde For what should he feare if he either consider the fauour of the Iudge or the manner of the iudgement For the Iudge is he that hath beene all this while their aduocate n 1 Ioh. 2.1 to plead their suits by making intercession for them And therefore when he comes to sit in iudgement he cannot goe against his owne pleading He is their brother and carries a most brotherly affection and will hee condemne his owne brethren He is their head and hath performed all the offices of a head vnto them and can hee then faile them when they haue most need of him nay it is he that hath beene iudged for vs on earth and will hee iudge against vs in heauen What shall I say He died for vs to shew his vndoubted loue euen that he might redeeme vs as a peculiar people to God and will hee faile vs in the last act when he should once for all accomplish his redemption for vs Besides he hath already promised to acquit vs in that day and it hath beene often confirmed both in the word and the Sacraments and praier he hath left many pledges of his loue with vs and therefore it were shamefull vnbeleefe to doubt his terror What though he be terrible to wicked men yet by iudging in seueritie he hath not nor cannot lose the goodnesse of his owne mercy what should wee feare him iudging in his power when wee haue felt saluation in his name Besides the maner of the iudgement shall be in all righteousnesse and mercy Thou shalt not be wronged by false witnesses nor shalt thou be iudged by common fame or outward appearance the Iudge will not be transported with passion or spleene nor will hee condemne thee to satisfie the people and besides there shall bee nothing remembred but what good thou hast sought or done and not the least goodnesse but it shall be found to thy honour and praise at that day And if it were such a fauour to a base subiect if the King should take notice of him to loue him and should in an open Parliament before all the Lords and Commons make a long speech in the particular praises of such a subiect what shall it be when the Lord Iesus in a greater assembly then euer was since the world stood shal particularly declare Gods euerlasting loue to thee and recite the praises with his owne mouth of all that hath beene good in thy thoughts affections words or workes throughout all thy life or in thy death especially if thou adde the singular glory he will then adiudge thee to by an irreuocable sentence And so wee come to the second appearance viz. the appearance of Christians in glory Then shall yee also appeare with him in glory The glory that shall then be conferred vpon Christians may be considered either in their bodies or in their soules or both The glory of Christians first in their bodies The glory of their bodies after the resurrection is threefold for first they shall be immortall that is in such a condition as they can neuer die againe or returne to dust for this mortall then shall put on immortalitie o 1 Cor. 15.53 Secondly they shall be incorruptible that is not only free from putrefaction but also from all weaknesse both of infirmitie and deformitie for though it be sowne in weaknesse yet it shall be raised in power though it be sowne in dishonour and corruption yet it shall be raised in honour and incorruption p 1 Cor. 15.42.43 Thirdly they shall be spirituall not that our bodies shall vanish into ghosts or spirits but because they shall be at that day so admirably glorified and perfected that by the mighty working of Gods spirit they shall bee as able to liue without sleepe meat mariage or the like as now the Angels in heauen are and besides they shall be so admirably light and agill and swift that they shall be able to goe abroad with vnconceiueable speed in the aire or heauens as now they can goe surely on the earth q 1 Cor. 15.44 The glory vpon the soule shall bee the wonderfull perfection of Gods image in all the faculties of it Then shall we know the secrets of heauen and earth And then shall our memories will and affections be after an vnexpresseable manner made conformable vnto God The glory vpon both soule and body shall be those riuers of ioyes and pleasures for euermore And thus shall the man be glorified that feareth the Lord. The consideration of this glory may serue for diuers vses First let vs all pray vnto God vpon the knees of our hearts from day to day that as hee is the father of glory so he would giue vnto vs the spirit of reuelation that the eies of our vnderstanding might be inlightned to know in some comfortable measure and that we might be able with more life and affection to meditate of the exceeding riches of this glory r Eph. 1.17.18 and inheritance to come Our hearts are naturally herein exceeding both dull and blinde maruellous vnable with delight and constancie to thinke of these eternall felicities and this comes to passe by the spirituall working of Satan and the deceitfulnesse of sinne and too much imployment and care about earthly things But a Christian that hath so high a calling and hopes for such a glorious end should not allow himselfe in that deadnesse of heart but as he gaineth sense by praier in other gifts of grace so should he striue with importunitie and constancie wrastling with God without intermission so as no day should passe him but he would remember this suit vnto God till he could get some comfortable abilitie to meditate of this excelling estate of endlesse glory Secondly this should make vs to be patient in tribulation Å¿ Rom. 5.2.3.4 and without murmuring or grieuing to endure hardnesse t 2 Tim. 2.3 and temptations in this world for they are but for a season u 1 Pet. 1.6 though they be neuer so manifold or great and the afflictions of this present life are not worthy of the glory to bee reuealed x Rom. 8.18 Though wee might be dismaied while we looke vpon our crosses and reproaches and manifold trials yet if the Lord let vs haue accesse vnto this grace y Rom. 5.2 to be able soundly to thinke of the glory to come wee may stand with confidence vnapalled and with vnutterable ioy looke vp to the glory wee shall shortly enioy when the triall of our faith being more pretious then the gold that perisheth shall be found vnto honour and praise through the reuelation of Iesus Christ z 1 Pet. 1.7 Yea
what were it to lose not some of our credits or our goods but euen our liues seeing wee are sure to finde them againe with more then a hundred fold aduantage Mat. 16.24 vlt. at the time when Christ shall come in the glory of his Father to giue vnto all men according to their deeds Besides wee must know that there is no talking of sitting at Christs hand in glory till we haue asked our selues this question whether wee can drinke of the cup he dranke of and be baptized with the baptisme he is baptized with a Mark 10 ●7 c. And then if we can suffer with him we shall raigne with him b 2 Tim. 2.12 and shall be glad and reioice with exceeding ioy when his glory shall appeare And in the meane while the spirit of glory and of God resteth on you c 1 Pet. 4.13.14 Thirdly seeing Christ will receiue Christians into such glory it should teach vs to receiue one another d Rom. 15.7 into both our hearts and houses Why shouldst thou be ashamed or thinke it much with all loue and bountie and bowels of affection to entertaine and welcome the heires of such eternall glory Oh if thou couldst but now see but for a moment how Christ doth vse the soules of the righteous in heauen or will vse both body and soule at the last day thou wouldst for euer honour them whom Christ doth so glorifie and make them now thy only companions whom thou shouldest see to be appointed to liue in such felicitie for euer Fourthly the thought of this glory should win vs to a care to be such as may be capable of it Qu. What must we doe that we may haue comfort that wee are the men shall partake of this glory and speede well in the day of Iesus Christ What vvee must doe that vvee may be assured of the glory of heauen A. First Euery one that would haue this hope must purge himselfe as Christ is pure e 1 Ioh. 3.3 we must be much in the duties of mortification For no vncleaue person can enter into the kingdome of glory And vncleane wee are all till we be washed in the bloud of Christ by iustification and bathed in teares of true repentance by mortification It hath beene obserued before that if we would not haue the Lord to iudge vs we must iudge our selues f 1 Cor. 11.34 And if we would not haue Christ to take vnto him words against our soules we must take vnto vs words g Hos 14.3 against our sinnes to confesse and bewaile them in secret Secondly we must labour for the assurance of faith T is faith that is the euidence of the things not seene h Heb. 11.1 T is faith that shall be found to honour and praise in the reuelation of Iesus Christ i 1 Pet. 1 7. It is faith to which the promise of eternall life is made k Ioh. 3.18 Thirdly wee should labour to get vnto our selues the benefit of a powerfull preaching ministerie for thereby our hearts may be wonderfully stirred vp to see the glory of sincerity on earth and it will open a wide doore to behold as in a mirror the glory to come with an open face changing vs into the same image from glory to glory by the spirit of God I say not that this is of absolute necessity as the former are but it is of wonderfull expediency Fourthly we must be circumspect and watchful in speciall manner attending to our owne hearts that wee be not at any time oppressed with the cares of this life or voluptuous liuing l Luk. 21.34.36 if euer wee would be able to stand in the day of iudgement and escape the fearefull things that are to come especially we must looke to our selues in these things least that day come vpon vs at vnawares Fifthly Doe we looke for the mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ into eternall life then we must as the Apostle Iude sheweth edifie our selues in our most holy faith praying in the holy Ghost and keepe our selues in the loue of God m Iud. 20.21 we must be afraid of whatsoeuer may estrange the Lord from vs or any way darken the sense of his loue For we may be assured if we haue his fauour and walke before him in the sense of it we shall haue glory when wee die Likewise praying in the holy Ghost with constancie and frequency doth maruellously enrich a Christian both with the first fruits of glory euen glorious ioy on earth with the assurance of fulnesse of glory in heauen Sixthly the Apostle Iohn seemes to say if loue be perfect in vs wee shall haue boldnesse in the day of iudgement n 1 Ioh. 4.17 As if he would import that to be inwardly affectionately acquainted with Christians on earth is a notable meanes to procure vs gracious entertainment with Christ in heauen especially if we perfect our loue and grow to some Christian ripenesse in the practise of the duties of loue in a profitable fellowship in the Gospell It is good discretion to grow as great as we can with Christians that so wee may winne the fauour of Christ Lastly the Apostle Paul shewes in the second to the Romanes that they that seeke glory and honour and immortalitie and euerlasting life must be patient in well doing For they shall be rewarded according to their workes And to euery man that doth good shall be honour and glory and power to the Iew first and also to the Graecian o Rom. 2.6.7.10 For all that haue any tydings of saluation in the Gospell or looke for that blessed hope and appearing of that glory of the mightie God must liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world p Tit. 2.11.12.13 Without holinesse no man shall see God q Heb. 12.14 And therefore we should be abundant in the worke of the Lord forasmuch as we know that our labour shall not be in vaine in the Lord r 1 Cor. 15. vlt. And thus farre of the glorious appearance both of Christ and Christians And thus also of the first rule of life namely the meditation of heauenly things VERS 5. Mortifie therefore your members which are on earth fornication vncleanesse the inordinate affection euill concupiscence and couetousnesse which is idolatrie THese words with those that follow to the tenth verse The diuision of this part of the Chapter containe the second principall rule of holy life and that is the mortification of euill These euills to be mortified are of two sorts for either they are vices that concerne our selues most or else they are iniuries that concerne the hurt of other also Of the mortification of vices he intreats v. 5.6.7 of the mortification of iniuries he entreats v. 8.9 In the first part viz. the exhortation to the mortifying of vices I consider first the matter about which he deales and the reasons The matter is in verse
thoughts and desires of a man Secondly carnall confidence when man placeth his felicity and chiefest stay and trust in the things he either possesseth or hopeth for I adde yet vaine because let the couetous person bestow neuer so much care or attaine to neuer so much successe of his cares yet as Salomon saith He that loueth siluer shall not be satisfied with siluer and he that loueth riches shall be without the fruit thereof k Eccles 5.9 And after all his trauell his riches may perish whiles he lookes on or if they were more sure to continue yet he shall not continue with them himselfe For as he came forth of his mothers belly he shall returne naked to goe as he came 14. and shall beare nothing away of his labour which he hath caused to passe by his hand 15. In all points as he came so shall he goe and then what profit hath he that he hath trauelled for the wind The obiect of this care and desire is earthly things for if it were a couetousnesse or desire of the best things or spirituall gifts that were both commended and commanded l 1 Cor. 14.1 These words for his owne priuate good note the end of the couetous mans care For if all this care for earthly things were for Gods glory or the good of the Church it might be allowed And I say for his good because that he propounds to himselfe though many times when hee hath gotten much together the Lord will not let him haue the vse of it Note the best thing in the description is the effect of couetousnesse The effects of couetousnesse and that is the singular detriment of the soule which may appeare diuersly For first couetousnesse doth infatuate and besot the minde of man that it cannot vnderstand The Prophet Esay saith of those dumbe greedie dogs that they could not vnderstand and he giueth the reason For saith he they all looke to their owne way euery one for his aduantage and for his owne purpose and profit m Esay 56.11.12 And Salomon seems to say that if couetousnesse be in the heart of a Prince it will make him destitute of vnderstanding n Prou. 28.16 And it is certaine marke it worldly minded persons are the most dull and incapable persons in spirituall things almost of all other sorts of men For though they would get a little vnderstanding while they are hearing yet the cares of life presently choakes all Secondly couetousnesse pierceth the soule through with many a sorrow o 1 Tim. 6.10 The couetous person is seldome or neuer free from one notable vexation or other His heart is troubled and he will trouble his house also as Salomon saith he that is greedie of gaine troubleth his owne house p Prou. 15.27 All is continually in a tumult of haste and hurrie what with labour and what with passion and contention the couetous man and his household neuer liue at hearts ease and rest Thirdly couetousnesse and the desire to be rich bring into the soule a wonderfull number of temptations and noisome lusts enough to damne him if he had no other sinnes q 1 Tim. 6.9 Fourthly it is here added that couetousnesse is idolatrie it makes a man an idolater Mammon is the idoll and the worldling is the Priest that sacrificeth to Mammon Now the couetous man serues his mammon with a two-fold worship for with inward worship he loues desires delights in and trusts in his wealth and for his outward seruice he spends all his time vpon his idoll either in gathering or keeping or increasing or honoring it Lastly what should I number particulars Couetousnesse why the Apostle saith it is the root of all euils For there is almost no kinde of sinne but the sap of couetousnesse will nourish it If the Lord had but the ripping vp of the heart and life of a couetous person and would describe his vices before vs oh what swarme of all sorts of euils could the Lord finde out Well let vs be assured of this generall that howsoeuer couetous persons may colour matters yet indeed they are wonderfull vicious persons Neither are their sinnes the fewer or lesser because they discerne them not for the dust of earthly profits hath put out their eyes they cannot see nor discerne as was before shewed Q. But who is couetous For all men while they crie out against the sinne denie that they are couetous T is rare to finde any couetous person that will confesse that he is couetous And therefore for answer hereunto it will not be amisse out of the word of God to shew the signes of a couetous man The signes of a couetous man The first signe of a couetous man is the desire to haue the Sabboth ouer that hee might be at his worldly affaires A couetous man thinkes all the time set apart for Gods seruice exceeding tedious and long and hee hath a great inward boiling of desire to haue such times and imployments past The Sabboth is wonderfull burdensome to a worldly minde especially if he be restrained from worldly imploiments The Prophet Amos bringeth in the couetous men of his time saying thus in the discontentment of their hearts When will the new Moone be gone that wee may sell corne and the Sabboth that wee may set forth wheat Prou 28.16 1 Thess 4.6 The second signe of couetousnesse is oppression and fraud When men to compasse gaine care not how they vex and racke the poore or such as liue vnder them or in buying or selling out of greedinesse of gaine circumuent and pill and defraud others by customary lying or false weights measures or ballances or any other fraudulent course this is an euill couetousnesse Vsury also that is a desire to increase riches by interest is a palpable signe of couetousnesse especially in these times when the sinne of vsury is so vniuersally condemned for if men were not besotted with the loue of riches they would not dare to liue in such a damned sinne But I thinke all men easily know that Vsurers are couetous and therefore I need not proue it The third signe of couetousnesse is greedy and distracting care I meane such a care as deuoures a mans thoughts that euery day will keepe possession in a mans soule and run in his minde continually both sleeping and waking plodding and carking cares And this may be discerned by comparing these cares with our care for eternall things When we haue more care for this world then for heauen we need goe no further but resolue vpon it couetousnes hath deceiued vs. Neither doe I meane that they only are couetous that immoderately disquiet themselues with continuall cares for getting of treasures and the superfluities of abundance for it is sure that couetousnesse may bee in vs in a high degree though our cares be but about things that are necessary as about the things we must eat or put on as the comparing of the
of Gods ordinances filling more and more by the influence of Christ till it come to be brim-full Hence we may see cause to be greatly humbled because our workes are not full before God Now if any shall thinke this doctrine of fulnesse to bee a doctrine of discouragement he may note these things for remoouall of that obiection 1. That it is a kingdome men labour about and therefore should not think much if much be required of them 2. We may fill spiritually though we do not discerne it 3. God requires not fulnesse at first but by degrees 4. That the Lord hath in many Scriptures promised to help vs against all tentations and impediments whether arising from our owne weakenesse or from without vs. In all the will of God Caietan a Papist makes a stop at all and reads it in euery thing by the will of God and deliuers the sense thus That ye may be consummate in respect of your selues and full in respect of others in euery spirituall thing by the will of God that is not by your owne merits note that but by the grace of Gods will But I thinke it should be read as ordinarily it is read and so I obserue that we should take counsell for the informing of our faith and reforming and perfecting of our liues at the will of God Which serues for great reproofe of the course of the most men who are aduised and guided either by carnall reason or by the lusts and wils of their carnall friends or the lusts and tentations of Satan himselfe l 1 Pet 4.2 Ioh. 8.44 or the inclination of their owne flesh how are worlds of men swayed by these or some of these almost in all matters of religion if reformation and the practise of the sinceritie of the Gospell may not get the consent of their owne carnall reason or of such and such friends c. then it must neuer be gone about But contrariwise we should learne to sticke to Gods will in all things yea we should pray earnestly that we might neuer be beaten from this Anchor hold but that in all estates in prosperitie and aduersitie in life and death we might constantly exalt the glory of Gods will to yeeld it for euer our acknowledgement of soueraignty ouer vs m Psal 40.8.10 Secondly note here that wee must respect all Gods will and thus wee are tyed to respect all the will of God both in respect of knowledge in respect of practise for we should labour to be made rich in all things in all kinde of vtterance and in all knowledge n 1 Cor. 1.5 we should be expert in the word of righteousnesse accustoming our selues continually to exercise our wits about discerning of good or euill out of the word o Heb. 5. vlt. in practise we must haue respect to euery commandement of God and as Dauid did we must labour to doe all Gods will and not bee like Saul or Herod This may serue first for confutation of the Papists that will not allow the will of God to be the onely rule though they grant it to be a perfect rule But let vs detest that subtle distinction and in the simplicitie that is in Christ Iesus acknowledge that there is a will of God for euery opinion and worke of euery man of God sufficient to make him perfect in all knowledge and euery good worke p 2 Tim. 3.16 Againe if this doctrine were soundly vrged thorough euerie commandement it would ransack the hearts of carnal men and then manifestly let them see The arraignment of the ciuill honest man the vanitie of their false and wilde presumption of ciuilitie and Gods liking of them and their honest meanings It is true they dare not say with their tongues there is no God but is there not such talke in their hearts or could they not wish there were no God * Psal 14.1 They worship not Sunne Moone nor Stars but is there in them that warmth of loue to the true God that they can loue him with all their hearts and all their soules q Deut. 6.5 where is that liuely knowledge of God r Io. 17.3 where is that trembling feare of God Å¿ Hab. 3.16 where is that glorying in God t Jer. 9.24 where is that cleauing vnto God u Act. 11.23 doe these men euery day commit their waies and their workes vnto God * Psal 37.5 Pro. 16.3 These men vse to wonder at Hereticks but what formes of God do they conceiue in their heads euery day They will not blaspheme God to his face it is true but will they not murmure from day to day at the worke of his hands x 1 Cor. 10.10 They place no diuinitie in the signes of heauen but will they not feare them neither yet this is condemned as well as the other y Ier. 10.2 It is true popish Images are gone out of their sight in the Churches but are the pictures of the Trinitie gone out of their houses They thinke indeed it is too bad neuer to come to Church or to giue God no worship but do they make conscience of cold seruice of God or luke-warmnes z Reuel 3.15 and continued hypocrisie For may it not be truly said of them their hearts almost neuer come to Church a Esa 29.13 sure their soules will be indited in the day of Christ and conuicted too for obstinate Recusants witchcraft coniuring and charming is naught they say but is going to witches and coniurers and charmers naught too in their opinion b Leuit. 20.6 Esay 8.19.20 To forsweare a mans selfe they hold it somewhat vile if it may be discerned but what conscience make they of swearing in their common talke especially by petty othes and that which is not good c Math. 5.34.37 They dare not curse God but they dare curse the creatures of God by the name or iustice of God they dare not talke directly against God but they dare vse Gods titles without reuerence d Deut. 28.58 They say they know all comes from Gods blessing but doe they daily seeke the sanctification of their callings and the creatures by the word and prayer e 1 Tim. 4.4 Wee all say the Sabbath must be sanctified but who makes it his delight we condemne labour on the Sabbath but where are those Nehemiahs that will restraine this monstrous abuse in the Citie of hyring labourers on the Sabbath Though for many Sabbaths one after another they trauell hither many hundreds of all sorts from all parts round abount and fill the streets almost with tumults on the Lords day from the morning till neere the euening yet none seekes the reformation of this matchlesse abuse or if any would restraine it how are they opposed The Lord giue repentance to those that haue sinned this way and lay not the toleration of this damned abuse to their charge Men say at length it is naught to