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A09432 A godly and learned exposition of Christs Sermon in the Mount: preached in Cambridge by that reuerend and iudicious diuine M. William Perkins. Published at the request of his exequutors by Th. Pierson preacher of Gods word. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table: one, of speciall points here handled; the other, of choise places of Scripture here quoted Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1608 (1608) STC 19722; ESTC S113661 587,505 584

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propounding it by way of answer to a secret obiection which might be framed by occasion of his former exposition of this seauenth commandement for hauing condemned the Adulterie of the heart declared by the eie some man might say What shall wee doe with our eies if an vnchaste looke bee so dangerous Our Sauiour Christ answers If thy right eie cause thee to offend plucke it out Which words must not be taken litterally in their proper sense for this is a Rule in the expounding of Scripture that when the litterall sense is against any commandement of the law thē the words must not be taken properly Now these words in their proper sense do command a breach of the sixt commandement which bindeth euery man to preserue his owne and his neighbours life and so no man can without sinne pull out his eie or cut off his hand By eie then we are to vnderstand First the eie of the bodie yet not that onely but any other thing that is deere and pretious vnto vs as our eie euen our right eie is If it cause thee to offend that is cause thee to sinne to faile in the way of obedience vnto Gods commandements Plucke it out cast it frō thee these words are a loftie kind of speech called Hyperbole whereby thus much is signified Restraine gouerne it most carefully though it be to thine owne great paine losse and hinderance For better it is for thee that one of thy members perish then that thy whole bodie should be cast into hell These words containe a Reason of the former exhortation to this effect It is better for thee to want the benefit and vse of things most pretious and deere vnto thee in this life and so to be saued then by hauing and vsing them to perish for euer So that the true meaning of this place is this as if our Sauiour Christ had said Goe through the whole course of thy life and take a viewe of all thy waies and therein see what thing is an occasion of sinne vnto thee that take heed of and auoyde though the vse thereof be most deere vnto thee for it is better that thou shouldest want the vse thereof and so bee saued then by it to perish eternally in hell fire Also if thy right hand make thee to offend cut it off for it is better for thee Here the same exhortation and Reason is againe repeated which we must not thinke to bee a thing needlesse and friuolous for such Repetitions in Scripture haue speciall vse to signifie that the things so deliuered bee of speciall importance worthie all carefull obseruation and obedience Now by right hand here is meant any thing that is most profitable vnto vs what euer it bee if it cause vs to sinne against God it must bee auoyded and left off most carefully By this Exhortation of our Sauiour Christ wee are taught to carrie a strict watch ouer all our senses and ouer all the parts of our bodies especially the eie and hands that they become not vnto vs occasions of sinning against God and for the gouernment of the eies there bee two speciall Rules First wee must vse our sight that is open and shut our eies in obedience vnto God Salomon giuing Rules for the well ordering of the tongue sight and foote saith thus of the eie Let thine eie behold the right and thy eie liddes direct the way before thee which wordes seeme to carrie this sense That wee should order our sight according to the straite Rule of Gods word for that is the way wherein wee ought to walke Now the necessitie of obseruing this Rule may appeare by sundrie examples Eues looking vpon the forbidden fruite with desire to eate thereof against Gods commaundement was the doore and entrance of that sinne into her heart was not Cham accursed for looking vpon his Fathers nakednesse was not Lots wife turned into a pillar of salt for looking backe towards Sodome Fiftie thousand threescore and ten men of Bethshemish were slaine for looking into the Arke of the Lord against his reuealed will by all which it is plaine that we ought to vse our sight in obedience to God for which end it wil be good before we looke on any thing to consider whether the same will be for Gods glorie the good of our selues of our brethren if it be we may vse our sight if not we may not vse it Secondly we must make our eies not the weapons of any sinne but the instruments of Gods worship and seruice This we shall doe if we imploy them thus 1. In beholding Gods creatures in heauen and earth that in them wee may see Gods glorie wisedome mercie power and prouidence and thereby take occasion to magnifie the name of God 2. In beholding Gods iudgements very wishly and narrowly that therein we may see his iustice and wrath against sinne and so bee humbled in our selues and terrified from sinne 3. In beholding of the Elements of Gods Sacraments especially the bread and wine in the Lords supper which be visible words wherein we may see our Sauiour Christ as it were crucified before our eies 4. In vsing them as instruments of Inuocation by lifting them vp to heauen to testifie the lifting vp of our hearts vnto God This vse of the eies nature teacheth vs for whereas other creatures haue but foure muscles in their eies wherby their eies are turned round about man onely aboue them all hath a fift muscle whereby his eie is turned vpward towards heanen And this which is said for the well ordering of our eies must bee obserued in the rest of the senses and in all other partes of the bodie they must all be imployed and set a worke in obedience to God and continually obserued that they become not the weapons of sinne but the instruments of his glorie Secondly this Exhortation of Christ must teach vs to auoyde all the occasions of euery sinne though it bee with great losse vnto our selues in the things of this life This is the chiefe point that our Sauiour Christ aimeth at in this place and therfore it ought with speciall regard to be learned and remembred Mans nature is like vnto drie wood or towe which will burne so soone as fire is put vnto it giue a man the least occasion of any sinne and hee is as readie to commit it as drie wood is to burne though thereby hee doe as much as in him lieth to cast away his owne soule for euer Looke therefore as Mariners on the Seas haue constant and continuall care to auoyd both rocks and sands whereby they may suffer shipwracke so must wee most warily auoyde the occasions of euery sinne A most worthie example hereof we haue in Moses who was brought vp in Pharaohs Court till hee was fourtie yeares old where he enioyed all earthly pleasures and honours that his heart
heauen the Saints and Angels behold the vnspeakable glorie of God And from heauen doth God shew his exceeding power euen in spreading the heauens like a curtaine aboue the earth in setting therein the Sunne the moone and starres most glorious creatures in giuing particular motions vnto thē by sending raine from heauen with stormes lightnings and thunder Againe he sheweth his iustice from heauen by powring downe his iudgements thence As the flood vpon the world of the vngodly and fire and brimstone vpon Sodome and Gomorrah as the Apostle saith Rom. 1. 18. The wrath of God is reuealed from heauen against all vngodlinesse and vnrighteousnesse of men Againe Gods mercie and goodnes is daily manifested from heauen thence commeth euery good gift Iam. 1. 17. yea thence our Sauiour Christ descended for the worke of our redemption thence also the holy Ghost descended in Christs baptisme and the Fathers voice was heard from thence pointing out that lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world and thence shall Christ come againe in glorie at the last day to be glorified in his Saints all which doe magnifie vnto vs the glorie of this Throne Is the Throne of God in heauen not on earth thē must we learne to conceiue of God as of an heauenly King in the chapter following we are taught to call him our heauenly Father v. 9. and therefore when we speake or think of God or doe worship vnto him in praier or thāksgiuing we must not conceiue of him in any carnall sort but in an heauenly manner The second commandement forbidding the representation of God in any similitudes may teach vs that we must not conceiue of God after any earthly or carnall manner Indeede the Popish church approouing of the images of the Trinitie as before was shewed doe thereby teach the people to conceiue of God as of an old man sitting in heauen with a crowne vpon his head because he is called the Ancient of daies but all such carnall conceits of God are here forbidden That we may then conceiue aright of God two Rules must be remembred First we must not frame in our minds any image of God at all as that he should be like vnto man or any other creature but we must conceiue of him both in his works as our creator gouernour and preseruer and also in his properties as most wise most iust holy mercifull and such like Secondly we must conceiue that God is one in substance and three in person we must not confound the persons nor deuide the substance but conceiue of one God in three persons and three persons in one and the same godhead These two Rules beeing well obserued wil keepe our hearts from those vaine conceits of God which many frame to themselues when they thinke of him in their mindes Secondly seeing Gods throne is in heauen therefore our conuersation must be there also for where God is and his throne there ought our hearts to be Now we shall haue our conuersation in heauen by doing two things first by a continuall eleuation of our minds vnto heauen morning and euening and at all times when we haue occasion 1. Thess. 4. 17. we are commanded to pray continually and that we doe so oft as in the duties of our ordinary calling we desire in our hearts the blessing and assistance of God for the sighs and grones of the soule are praiers approoued before God we must therefore lift vp our heart to God as Dauid did Psal. 25. 1. Secondly we must set all our affections on God and on heauenly things as our loue our ioy and feare yea our care must be of comming to heauen for where can we be in a more happie place then before Gods throne in heauen where God sets out his glorie and maiestie to his creature Thirdly hence we may learne to conceiue aright of the prouidence of God for God sitting in his maiestie in heauen and beeing infinite in wisdome power and greatnes doth by a most carefull prouidence see know and gouerne all things that are done vpon the earth this is notably set forth vnto vs Psal. 11. 4. The Lords throne is in heauen his e●●● wil cōsider his eye lids wil try the children of men the words are very significant importing that God from heauen doth most narrowly see into all mens dealings and affaires which teacheth vs when we shall be in any distresse either in bodie minde goods or friends to behaue our selues in an holy manner for God sees our case and therefore first we must make our moane vnto him and humbly intreat for that grace and mercie at his hands whereof we stand in neede Dauid maketh this a ground of much comfort in affliction Psal. 102. 19 20. Out of heauen saith he did the Lord behold the earth that he might heare the mourning of the prisoner and deliuer the children of death Lastly this serueth to terrifie euery sinner for the Lord sits in heauen with a piercing eye beholding all thy doings whatsoeuer thou art and therefore when a man sinneth though he may hide the same from men yet the Lord sees him and will reprooue him and iudge him let vs therefore make conscience of all sinne and feare to not euill either by thought word or deede seeing we are euer before the Iudge that ●its vpon this throne The second particular prohibition is against swearing by the earth the reason is because it is the Lords foot-stoole The earth is the Lords footestoole not properly but by resemblance because as the footstoole is nothing in glorie to the throne no more be those glimpses of glorie which God shewes here on earth comparable to that surpassing dignitie and glorie wherein God manifests himselfe in heauen Is the earth the Lords footstoole then is he not included in heauen but is present also vpon the earth God is not in one place alone but he is euery where at one and the same time Here then we haue a plaine proofe of Gods infinite greatnesse and omnipresence in regard of his essence and godhead for Christ compares him to a king who is of that bignesse that he fils heauen with his glorie and of that height that the earth below is his footstoole according as he saith Ierem. 23. 24. I s●ll heauen and earth This point Dauid prooues at large Psal. 139. 7 8. Whither shall I goe from thy presence c. shewing plainely that there is no place wherof it can be truely said that God in essence is not there present The consideration whereof teacheth vs First to vnderstand aright that saying of Paul Act. 17. 28. In him we liue mooue and haue our beeing we are not in God as parts of God for his essence is most simple yet it is true we are in God because his essence is euery where it is in vs forth of vs and about vs and beeing in vs and about
meaning of the words is this Whereas you thinke that I came to destroy the Law and the Prophets by making them of none effect you are deceiued nay on the other side know that the ende of my manifestation in the flesh was to fulfill the law both in my doctrine and person and also in the persons of men both good and badde In this Apologie of Christ for his behauiour towards the Law obserue what malice some of the Iewes especially the Scribes and Pharises bare vnto him for Christ was the Author of the Law and yet they maliciously suspect and charge him with the abrogation therof so as he is faine to cleare himselfe in this behalfe The like hath beene the malice of wicked men in all ages against the deerest seruants of God Act. 6. 14. Stephen is accused to speake blasphemous words against the Law Act. 21. 28. Paul is charged with the same crime And such is the malice of the Papists against all Euangelicall reformed Churches because wee denie Iustification by workes therefore they condemne vs for enemies to good workes and in many other points they fasten vpon vs notes of reproach for holding the truth Yea among our selues the like malice doth appeare in those that brand their brethren with odious names because they shew forth more care then others of their dutie to God but let all Gods children beware of this Pharisaicall practise Againe obserue the Titles vnder which he comprehendeth the whole Scriptures of the olde Testament The Law and the Prophets Luke 16. 31. they are called Moses and the Prophets Luke 24. 27. Christ beganne at Moses and at all the Prophets and interpreted vnto them in all the Scriptures there Moses and the Prophets containe all the Scriptures of the old Testament Here then we may note a propertie of the bookes of the olde Testament namely that euery one of them was written either by Moses or some other of the Prophets And by this wee may knowe the Canonicall bookes of the olde Testament and distinguish them from the bookes called Apocrypha for the Apocrypha bookes were not penned by any of the Prophets who spake and writ in the Hebrew tongue the natiue language of the Iewes but by some other in the Greeke tongue which was not the language of the olde Prophets These bookes may bee regarded in sundrie respects as containing many worthie Rules touching manners in which regard wee may preferre them before other writings of men so farre forth as they are consonant with the Scripture and so the Church of God hath of long time reuerenced them but yet they are no part of the Law nor of the Prophets And therefore the Church of Rome doth notably wrong and abuse the world in stiling these Apocryphall bookes for Canonicall Scripture Thirdly Christ in this his Apologie sheweth a sweet consent betweene the Law and the Gospel They are not contrarie one to the other for Christ who is the substance of the Gospel came to fulfill the Lawe● and therefore Paul saith that by faith wee establish the Law and Hebrewes 9. 19 20. c. When Moses had giuen the Lawe vnto the people hee offered sacrifices and sprinkled the blood thereof vpon the booke and vpon the people which was a type of the shedding of Christs blood as it is there expounded which did notably signifie this consent betweene the Law and the Gospel in so much as without Christ the Law could not stand Now this consent betweene them standeth herein The Law requireth perfect obedience and threateneth death to the least breach thereof not propounding any way for the fulfilling thereof out of our selues but the Gospel directeth vs to Christ who as our suretie hath fulfilled the Lawe for vs for which cause Christ is called the ende of the Lawe for righteousnesse to euery one that beleeueth And through Christ it is that the righteousnesse of the Law is fulfilled in vs which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit Verse 18. For truely I say vnto you till heauen and earth perish one iot or one title of the Law shall not escape till all things bee fulfilled Here our Sauiour Christ propoundeth the second argument for the clearing of himselfe from their false imputation of destroying the Lawe and it is drawne from the nature of the Law which is immutable The Exposition For This sheweth the dependance of this verse vpon the former Truely I say vnto you This is a forme of speech which our Sauiour vsed when he would solemnely auouch any waightie truth and propounding this in his owne name herein he sheweth himselfe to bee the Doctour of his Church whome we must heare in all things for hee speaketh as one that cannot lie The thing hee saith is this Till heauen and earth perish one iotte or title of the Lawe shall not passe In which wordes he setteth downe the stabilitie and the vnchaungeablenesse of the Lawe and that hee might fully expresse his mind● hee borroweth a phrase from the Hebrewe Alphabet wherein Iod is the least letter One iot signifying that not so much as this little letter Iod shall passe out of the Lawe Againe by Title some thinke is meant the Hebrewe vowels but properly it signifieth a line bent crooked or the toppe of an horne so that here it properly signifieth the bending or bowing that is in the top of some Hebrew letters insinuating that not so much as the least part of a letter in the Law should passe away Now these things must not be taken properly for it hath beene and may be that in the Hebrew copies of the old Testament some letters should bee changed as may appeare by the diuers readings in sundrie copies for that may be without the losse of any sentence but Christs meaning is this That not the least parcell or sentence in the Law shall passe away making parts in the Law to be as titles in the Alphabet Till heauen and earth perish that is neuer so much this phrase insinuateth for though heauen and earth shall be changed in regard of their qualities yet the substance of them shall neuer passe to nothing and in this sense is the word Till vsed else-where 1. Sam. 15. 35. Samuell came no more to see Saul till the day of his death that is neuer Till all things be fulfilled that is till euery thing commanded in the Law bee done so as it shall no more vrge a man to any obedience which shall neuer bee for it must eternally bee fulfilled so that this phrase hath the like sense with the former importing thus much euen for euer and euer so that this is the meaning of this verse That the Law of God is vnchangeable not onely in the whole but for euery part thereof and the fulfilling thereof shall neuer haue an ende Christs reason then stands thus If the Lawe bee immutable and for obseruation eternall then I came not to destroy it but
the Lawe is immutable and eternall and therefore I came not to destroy it First here obserue that the Law of God is made perpetuall and vnchangeable If any man aske how this can be seeing the Apostle faith The Lawe is changed Answer The Law is threefold Ceremoniall Iudiciall and Morall as hath beene said now that place is principally to be vnderstood of the Ceremoniall law which indeede is abrogated in regard of the obseruation of it in Gods worship but in the scope and substance of it which is Christ crucified with his benefits whom it shadowed out it remaineth still and is now more plaine then euer it was As for the Iudiciall law though it be abrogated vnto vs so farre forth as it was peculiar to the Iewes yet as it agrees with common equitie and serues directly to establish the precepts of the Morall lawe it is perpetuall If it be said that Christ changed the Morall law in changing the Sabbath day from the seauenth day to the eight I answer Christ did so indeed by his Apostles but that is no change of the substance but of the ceremonie of the Sabbath for the substance of that law is the inioyning of a seauenth daies rest vnto the Lord. Now though the seauenth day from the creation be not kept yet a seauenth day is kept still If it be further said that the Law it selfe is abrogated for that euery one that breaketh the Lawe is not accursed according to the sentence thereof Deut. 27. 26. Answer Wee must knowe that the Law is but one part of Gods word and the Gospel another reuealing another part of Gods will besides that which the Lawe made knowne for it addes a qualification to the Law moderating the rigour thereof after this manner Hee is accursed saith the Law that faileth in any commandement except saith the Gospel he bee reconciled againe in Christ and in him haue the pardon of his transgressions And yet the Morall law remaines for euer a rule of obedience to euery childe of God though he be not bound to bring the same obedience for his iustification before God Againe this propertie of the Law in beeing vnchangeable and for euer to be kept sheweth that no creature may dispense with the Law of God Mens lawes may be abrogated and changed but Gods Law euen in the least parts thereof must stand for euer till it be accomplished to the full but if it might be dispensed with then not onely iots and titles thereof but whole lawes might bee abrogated This shewes the blasphemous impietie of the Popes of Rome who in their Canons be authorized to dispense with the lawes of God yea in the last Councell of Trent hee is priuiledged to dispense with some of the lawes of Consanguinitie against nature flatly forbidden in the word of God which is most horrible rebellion and a great disgrace vnto God Thirdly from this propertie of the Law we may obserue that it is not likely that any whole booke of Canonicall Scripture is lost for not one sentence of the Law shall passe till all be fulfilled much lesse then can whole bookes perish Sundrie men do thinke that whole bookes be loste but that opinion cals into question the fidelitie of the Church and Gods own prouidence in preseruing his word neither can it stand wel with this text that saith no title thereof shal faile Those that seeme to be lost were either humane writings as bookes of lawes and Chronicles such as our books of statutes or Chronicles be or books of philosophie such as Salomon writ or else some of them are in the Canonicall Scripture for the bookes of Samuel and the Kings were written by diuers Prophets and therfore we may more safely hold that no part of holy Scripture is lost neither shall euer faile For howsoeuer after the last iudgement the vse of the word written shall cease yet the substance thereof shall remaine in mens hearts and be kept for euer Fourthly this immutabilitie of the Law containes a matter of great terrour woe vnto al impenitent sinners for howsoeuer they may flatter themselues with a presumption of Gods mercie yet the curse of Law which is against them shall stand for euer and therefore while they goe on in sinne they haue iust cause to houle and crie for Gods iustice in that his Law is inuiolable neither will gold or siluer pacifie Gods wrath for though a man by his power and wealth were able to ouerturne heauen and earth yet that would not helpe him though heauen and earth be brought to nothing yet euery part of Gods Law must stand for euer and be fulfilled And therefore whosoeuer doe lie in any finne must in time repent humble themselues forsake their sins and betake themselues vnto Christ that he may fulfill the Law for them or else the cuise thereof shall certainly be fulfilled in them and they shall there lie howling vnder it eternally where is nothing but weeping and gnashing of teeth Fiftly this immutabilitie of the Law and so proportionably of euery part of Gods word as it prooueth the Scriptures to be the word of God so it is a most excellent ground of comfort for all Gods seruants to stablish their hearts in the assurance of all his promises A Christian heart is subiect to receiue many doubtinges of the truth of Gods promises especially in the time of triall and temptation but this must be remembred for euer that the whole word of God is immutable though mans promises may faile and their lawes be abrogated yet no iot or part of Gods word shall passe vnfulfilled and therefore they must constantly waite for the accomplishment thereof for in due time it shall be fulfilled Sixtly we are hereby taught to put on patience in afflictiōs for they come by the speciall appointment of our God who saith in his word That through many afflictions we must enter into the kingdome of heauen now euery part of Gods word must be accomplished and therefore Christ bade Peter to put vp his sword when he would haue rescued his apprehension for saith he I could pray to my Father and hee would send more then twelue legions of Angels to helpe me but how then should the Scriptures be fulfilled which say It must be so Matth. 26. 52 53 54. Seauenthly our Sauiour Christ in this propertie of immutabilitie giueth vnto the whole Law and vnto euery sillable and letter thereof his proper force vertue and sense so as there is nothing in it not so much as one letter vaine or idle for euery commandement reueales the perfect iustice of God and euery letter serues to expresse the same comaundement And herein the Law of God differeth from mens lawes for in them bee many vaine and idle words yea oftentimes whole sentences but in the law of God it is not so Prou. 8. 8. All the words of my mouth are righteous there is no
title Father properly belongs to God who is a father simply by creation giuing beeing to all things and preseruing them by his prouidence Men indeede are called fathers but that is onely secondarily because in some properties of fatherhood they resemble God Now this title is giuen to God sometime simply considered without personall relation as Deut. 32. 6. Doe ye s● reward the Lord O foolish people is not he thy father that hath bought thee Orherwhile it is giuen to the particular persons in Trinitie as first and principally to the first person who is commonly called the Father And the second person in Trinitie is sometime called Father as Isa. 9. 6. the father of Eternitie because he is the ground of our adoption whereby we become eternally the sonnes of God and therefore he is brought in thus complaining of reproach Behold I and the children which the Lord hath giuen me are as signes and wonders in Israel for the author to the Hebrewes expounds that place of Christ Heb. 2. 13. he is said to haue seede Isa. 53. 10. And the holy Ghost may proportionally be called Father because with the Father and the Sonne he giues beeing to all things But in this place by father is meant properly the first person who is first and cheifly the father of Christ and in Christ our father He is the father of Christ first by nature begetting him as he is the Sonne of his owne substance before all worlds by communicating vnto him his whole essence or Godhead Secondly he is the father of Christ a● Christ is man by the grace of personall vnion for the manhood of Christ doth wholly subsist in the Godhead of the second person and therefore Christ as he is man I say not his manhood which is a nature not a person may well be called the Sonne of God And in this relation of himselfe to the first person Christ saith My Father is greater then I Ioh. 14. 28. God the father is our father not by nature or in regard of personall vnion but by the grace of Adoption in Christ for God sent his S●●ne made of a woman that is incarnate that we might receiue the adoption of sonnes And this grace we receiue when we truly beleeue in his name Ioh. 3. 12. and Gal. 3. 26. God for Christs sake beeing content to receiue vs for his sonnes and daughters Which art in heauen God is said to be in heauen not as though he were included in the circle of the heauens for the heauens and the heauens of heauens are not able to containe him 1. king 8. 27. and indeede he is neither included nor excluded any place beeing infinite and so euery where but because his maiestie and glorie is most eminent in the highest heauens to his Saints and Angels and thence doth he manifest himselfe vnto vs in his power wisdome iustice and mercie while we are on earth for heauen is his throne and the earth his footstoole Isa 6● 1. So that the meaning of this preface is this O Lord God thou art the father of our Lord Iesus Christ and in him our most mercifull father by Adoption and grace thou art a most glorious God who dost in heauen and from heauen manifest thy glorious power and mercie thy wisdome iustice c. ● The Instructions I. This title Father here giuen to God teacheth vs to whome we must direct our prayers not to Saints or Angels or any other creatures but to God alone Reasons I. This is a perfect patterne of true praier wanting no direction for the right performance of this part of Gods worship now this directs vs onely vnto God in praier II. God onely is the author and giuer of all good things Iam. 1. 16. and therefore we must aske them of him alone III. The Lord onely who is infinite and omni potentican heare all mens praiers at all times and in all places and therefore he alone is to be praied vnto and not Saints departed as the Papists teach II. By this title we may see in what order we must direct our p●a●ers vnto God for as the word of God reuealeth God vnto vs so must we pray vnto him now the Scripture reuealeth God vnto vs to be one in essence and three in person vz. the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost whereof the Father is first the Sonne is the second the holy Ghost the third in order though no● in time o● greatues Thus and no otherwaies must we conceiue of God neither seuering the Godhead from the persons nor the persons from the Godhead And thus also must we worship him euen one God in three persons and three persons in one God And yet seeing the Father is first in order the Sonne the second and the holy Ghost the third therfore when we pray to God we must obserue this order directing our praiers to God the Father in the mediation of the Sonne by the assistance of the holy Ghost as Christ here teacheth vs to say Our father Quest. May we not direct our praiers to the So●ne or to the holy Ghost by name Ans. Yes for Stephen praied to the Sonne Act. 7. 59. Lord Iesus receiue my spirit and Christ bids hi● Disciples Goe teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost that is calling vpon the name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost Obiect But in this perfect platforme we are taught to pray to the Father alone Ans. Though the Father alone be here named yet the other two persons are not hereby excluded the Father indeede is most vsually named because he is the first in order but yet with him alwaies is implied the Sonne and the holy Ghost for as all the three persons subsist in one and the same diuine nature or Godhead and are not seuered in will in counsell or in outward actions as creation preseruation and redemption saue onely that they are distinguished in the maner of working so likewise must they be all conceiued in our minds together when we pray and none seuered out though they be not named we must pray to all though we name but one hauing in that one relation to the rest in our minde and heart And if we conceiue aright of the order of the persons in Trinitie subsisting in the vnitie of essence we may safely name in our praiers which person we will so that withall we include the rest in our minde and may also if we name all place them in such order as best fitteth our present occasion as the Apostle doth in his benediction 1 ● Cor. 13. 13. The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ● and the lo●e of God the father and the communion of the holy Ghost 〈◊〉 with you all● A●en where he placeth the second person before first because by the grace of Christ we come to be partakers of the loue of God the father III. In this title Father see the true ground
mooue vs hereunto I. from the necessitie hereof in Gods Church and children for Gods name is dishonoured ouer all the world In the great dominions of the Turke God is acknowledged but yet out of the Trinitie And the Iewes confessing God denie Christ The Papists in word confesse and acknowledge the Trinitie but yet by their Idolatrie they greatly robbe God of his glorie they robbe Christ of his offices and giue diuine worshippe vnto creatures And in the bosome of the Church are many Atheists blasphemers oppressors drunkards adulterers and voluptuous persons whose bellie is their God all which though they will professe God in word yet by their workes they denie him so that vnlesse Gods children seeke to maintaine and aduance Gods glorie it is like to be trampled and troden vnder foote II. There is great daunger to Gods children in omitting and neglecting this dutie for by calling they are brought neare vnto God now God will be glorified in all that come neare him if we doe not honour him according to our profession his hand will be vpon vs for his glorie in our confusion hence it was that God slew Nadab and Abihu the sonnes of Aaron for offering straunge fire before the Lord and he debarred Moses and Aaron out of the promised land because they glorified him not at the waters of strife This made the wrath of God to burne like fire against the house of El● for the iniquitic of his sonnes which their father saw in them and yet staied them not and so honoured them aboue the Lord. We had neede therefore to looke vnto our selues that we glorifie God in himselfe and in his workes els his hand will be vpon vs in soule or bodie goods or calling or some other way for the glorie of his iustice for God will not loose his glorie III. If wee say Halowed be thy name with our mouth and seeke not his honour in our life we bewray in our selues damnable hypocrisie and make profession of that sinne which the Lord vtterly detesteth we esteeme very basely of dissemblers among men but much more edious is this sinne in the matters of God and therefore let the practise of our liues shew the sinceritie of our hearts when we pray for the glorifying of Gods name Fourthly this petition teacheth vs that wee our selues must bee halowed and sanctified for else we cannot halow Gods name They that beare the vessels of the Lord in his sanctuarie must be clean Isay 52. 11. How much more ought they to be holy that beare the glorious name of God When Ananias doubted of going to Paul the Lord tels him he is a chosen vessel vnto me to beare my name alluding to that state of sanctification whereto the Lord had lately called him whereby hee made him a fit instrument for the glorie of his name in the ministerie of the Gospel And the same state must we labour after if we would be answerable to that we seeme to desire in this petition We must therefore labour to be new creatures changed in minde and heart for an vnholy person cannot truely desire the glorie of God but when wee once feele the grace of sanctification then will the desire of Gods glorie breed in our hearts and we shal know how worthy the Lord is to haue all glorie giuen vnto his name Fiftly if we compare this petition with the reason wherewith Christ concludes this praier wee shall see that the praise and honour of God is the beginning and end of Christs praier and so as it were the first last thing with Christ whence we learne that wee ought to bee more frequent and plentifull in thanksgiuing vnto God then in petition and request Thus we deale with those that be bountifull vnto vs on earth we giue them many thankes for one good turne and therefore should we much more abound in thanksgiuing to our heauenly father from whom we receiue euery good gift that we enioy It beseemes not the childe of God to be alwaies and onely begging as though he had nothing but withall he must be plentifull in thanks and praise for that argues he hath a taste of Gods mercie towards him this made Dauid say Praise is a comely and pleasant thing it well becommeth vpright men to be thankefull Our life of glorie shall be spent in praising God and therefore we should invre our selues thereto in this time of grace and indeed according to our thanksgiuing is our grace little praise little grace but he that abounds in thanksgiuing abounds in Gods blessings Againe heartie thanksgiuing for that we haue is an effectuall praier for more increase Lastly the place wherein this petition is set in this praier teacheth vs to seeke the glorie of God simply and absolutely before all other things This ought to be the affection of Gods child though he should receiue no blessings from God for looke what God preferres in his direction that must we alwaies prefer in all our actions though no good should follow vnto vs thereupon for this ende God giues vs time to liue in this world that wee might glorifie God in our places and callings and hee that imployeth himselfe otherwaies profaneth Gods name and transgresseth this heauenly order here set downe by Christ who is the wisdome of his father Verse 10. Thy kingdome come The Coherence Christ hauing taught vs to pray for the sanctifying of Gods name in the former petition doth in this and the rest which follow as it were expound the same by directing vs to the meanes whereby Gods name is halowed of vs for then doe we glorifie Gods name when he sets vp his kingdome in vs and we suffer him to rule in our hearts when we doe his will depend vpon his prouidence for the things of this life trust in his mercie for the pardon of our sinnes and on his power and strength against temptation Now of them all this second hath the neerest dependance vpon the former as beeing an especial meanes thereof for men ought to glorifie Gods name on earth but of themselues they cannot doe it till God rule in their hearts by his word and spirit and so set vp his kingdome in them The meaning Gods kingdome is two-fold Generall and Speciall Gods generall kingdome is his absolute power and soueraigntie whereby he ruleth all things in heauen in earth and in hell euen the deuils themselues Psal. 103. 19. The Lord hath prepared his throne in heauen his kingdome ruleth ouer all and this wee acknowledge in the ende of this praier For thine is the kingdome Now this wee pray not for because it is alwaies euery where no creature can hinder it no not all the deuils in hell for euery creature is subiect hereunto and can doe nothing but that which God either willeth or permitteth according to his will hee worketh in the armie of heauen and in the inhabitants of the earth and none can
Thirdly in Christs addressing of himselfe to speake all persons must learne to make conscience both of silence and of speech this wee shall doe if by silence we close vp our lippes till wee haue iust matter to speake of tending to the glory of God or the good of our brethren and beeing so prepared vpon fit occasion and in due time we may vtter our minde we must remember that Christ left himself an example that we should follow his steppes and also consider that of euery idle word that we shall speake we must render account vnto God If this were knowne and beleeued there would not be so many sinnes in words by cursing swearing vaine and idle speaking as there be Thus much of the Preface Now we come to the matter of this Sermon beginning at the third verse of this Chapter and so continuing to the 28. verse of the 7. Chapter And it may be diuided into 12. heads or places of doctrine The first whereof concerneth true happinesse or blessednesse from the 2. verse of this Chapter to the 13. wherin are propounded sundry rules directing men to attaine thereunto The scope of them all must bee considered which in generall is this Our Sauiour Christ had now preached two yeares among the people and thereby had wonne many to become his Disciples and among the rest his 12. Apostles to all whom hee promised happinesse and life euerlasting if they would continue in the faith and obedience of his word Now though they beleeued in him yet they still remained in the same state for outward things and became more subiect to outward miseries then before so as if they iudged of happinesse by their present outward estate they might easily suspect the truth of Christs doctrine and thinke he had deceiued them because he promised them happinesse and yet for outward things their case was farre worse then before they knewe him This our Sauiour Christ considering doth here goe about to remooue this false conceit out of their minds and for this purpose deliuereth this doctrine vnto them in the first generall head of his sermon that true happinesse before God is euer ioyned yea couered many times with the crosse in this world Whereby hee strikes at the roote of their carnall conceit who placed true happinesse in outward things and looked for outward peace and prosperitie vpon the receiuing of the Gospel As this is the scope of the doctrine following so it stands vs in hand to learne the same and to finde experience hereof in our owne hearts that true comfort and felicitie is accompanied with manifold miseries in this life Indeede carnall wisdome deemeth them happie that enioy outward peace wealth and pleasure but this conceit must be remooued and Christs doctrine embraced who ioyneth true happinesse with the crosse Secondly this serueth to teach vs patience in affliction for it is Gods will to temper happines and the crosse together now this puts life into an afflicted soule to thinke that Christ will haue his felicitie inioyed and felt in outward miserie Thus much of this head of doctrine in generall now we come to the branches thereof Vers. 3. Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of heauen Here is Christs first Rule concerning happinesse wherein obserue two points first the parties blessed the poore in spirit secondly wherein this blessednesse consists for theirs is the kingdome of heauen Before we come to these parts seuerally note in a word the forme of speech here vsed they that are ledde by humane reason will rather say blessed are the rich for theirs are the kingdoms of the world But Christ here speaks the flat contrary saying blessed are the poore for theirs is the kingdom of heauen which is infinitely better then all the kingdoms of the world whereby we may see that the wisdome of this world is foolishues with God and the ordinarie conceit of man flat opposite to the sauing doctrine taught by Christ. Blessed are the poore in spirit The word translated poore doth properly signifie a begger one that hath no outward necessaries but by gift from others but here it is more largely taken not onely betokening those that want outward riches for S. Luke opposeth these poore to the rich in this world but also those that are any way miserable wanting inward or outward comfort and such an one was Lazarus that lay begging at Dives gates What is meant by poore in spirit is plainely expounded Isa. 66. 2. where the Lord saith I will looke to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit and that trembleth at my words Christs meaning then is this that those poore are blessed who by meanes of their distresse through want of outward comforts are brought to see their sinnes and their miserie thereby so as finding no goodnesse in their hearts they despaire in themselues and flie wholly to the mercie of God in Christ for grace and comfort as Lazarus did to Diues gates for outward reliefe Seeing Christ doth thus set out the person that is truly blessed let vs see whether we be in the number of these poore ones Indeed we haue many poore among vs some that by excesse and ryot haue spent their substance and others that through idlenesse increase their want as the wandring beggars a sinnefull and disordered people who ioyne themselues to no Church but none of these can by their pouertie make iust claime to true felicitie The blessed poore are poore in spirit and this pouertie we must finde in our hearts if we would knowe our selues to be truely happie but after triall this will be found much wanting for first if men liue outwardly ciuill and keepe themselues from grosse sinnes this thought of pride takes place in their hearts that they are righteous and they perswade themselues with the young man in the Gospel that they can keepe Gods commandements Secondly let worldly wants befall men in body goods or name and they are grieued yea their soules are full of sorrow but for spiritual wants as blindnesse of minde hardnesse of heart vnbeliefe and disobedience their hearts are neuer touched Now whence comes this but from that pride of heart whereby they blesse themselues in their estate and thinke all is well with them in respect of their soules so that true it is pouertie of spirit is hard to be found We therefore must search our selues and labour to feele our spirituall wants and looke how Lazarus lay for his bodie at Diues gates so must wee lie at Gods mercie gate in Christ for our soules abandoning this pride of heart and acknowledging that there is no goodnesse in vs of our selues for the straite gate of heauen cannot receiue a swelling heart that is puffed vp with pride And to induce vs vnto this good dutie let vs consider the gratious promises made to them that be poore in spirit they are called Gods poore hee
thinketh on them though heauen be Gods throne and the earth his footstoole yet will hee looke to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit yea the Lord will dwell with him that is of a contrite and broken heart Christ came to preach the glad tidings of the Gospel to the poore yea the Lord filleth the hungrie that is the poore and hungrie soule with good things but the rich he sends emptie away Let these and many such fauours with God which they enioy prouoke vs to become poore in spirit Secondly are they blessed that be poore in spirit then here all poore and wretched persons in the world may learne to make good vse of their wants and distresses they must consider them as the hand of God vpon them and thereby be ledde to the viewe of their sinnes and by the consideration of their sinnes be brought to see their miserie in thēselues the true ground of this spirituall pouertie Now when they are once poore in spirit they are in a blessed state in the iudgement of Christ. If a man bleed dangerously at the nose the best way to saue his life is to let him blood else-where and so turne the course of the blood another way euen so when a man is oppressed with worldly calamities hee cannot finde any comfort in them for in themselues they are Gods curses yet if thereby he can bee brought to see his spirituall pouertie then of curses they become blessings vnto him and therefore when we are in any distresse wee must not onely fixe our eies vpon the outward crosse but by meanes of that labour to see the pouertie of our soules and so will the crosse lead vs to happinesse Thirdly they that abound with worldly wealth must hereby learne to become poore if they would be saued Poore I say not in goods but in soule and spirit this indeed is hard to flesh and blood for naturally euery rich man blesseth himselfe in his outward estate and perswades himselfe that God loues him because he giues him wealth but such conceits must he striue against and learne of God to reioyce in this that he is made lowe Iam 〈…〉 Fourthly on this saying of Christ that the poore are blessed the Popish teachers obseruing the word translated poore to be●oken outward pouertie goe about to builde their vowe of voluntarie pouertie whereby men renouncing their wealth and possessions of this world doe be take themselues to some Monasterie there to liue a poore and solitarie life But their voluntarie pouertie will not agree with this text son Christs poor● here pronounced blessed are such as by reason of their pouerty are miserable and wretched wanting outward comforts as we shewed o●t of Luke where Christ opposeth them to the rich who abound with all worldly delights but to vndergoe the Popish vow of voluntarie pouertie is no estate of miserie or distresse for who doe liue in greater ●ase or enioy more freedome from the crosses and vexations of this life then their begging Friers Againe if their vowed pouertie had any ground in this text then Christ should pronounce such poore blessed as made themselues poore but that he doth not for then in the next verse he should pronounce such mourners blessed as voluntarily cause themselues to mourne for that verse dependeth on this as a more full explanation of this first rule But no man will say that they that mourne without a cause are there called blessed and therefore Popish vowed pouertie hath no ground on this place And thus much of the persons II. Point Wherein the blessednes of these poore consists namely in hauing a right to the kingdome of heauen For theirs is the kingdome of heauen By kingdome of heauen for the better conceiuing of this blessednes we must vnderstand a state or condition of man whereby he is in Gods fauour and hath fellowship with God The truth of this description is euident by the tenour of the new Testament Now this estate of man is called a Kingdome because herein God rules as king and man obeies as Gods subiect for no man can be in Gods fauour nor enioy his fellowship vnlesse God be his King ruling in his heart by his word and spirit and he Gods subiect resigning himselfe to be ruled by him for this happie estate consists in Gods gracious ruling of man and mans holy subiection vnto God Indeede fewe doe see any great happines in this estate but the truth is mans whole felicity stands herein Rom. 14. 17. The kingdome of God is not meate and drinke but righteousnes peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Here the Apostle teacheth vs three things namely that when Gods spirit rules in a mans heart then first he is iustified there is righteousnes secondly he hath peace with God euen that peace of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding thirdly the ioy of the holy Ghost which is all vnspeakable comfort passing all worldly ioy whatsoeuer And these three doe notably set out the state of an happie man which will yet more plainly appeare by their contraries in Iudas who beeing a wretched sinner vnrighteously betraied his master and thereupon fell into the miserie of a guiltie accusing conscience which was the cause of his desperate death and also that his bodie burst asunder and his bowells gushed out now if an euill conscience be so fearefull then ●ow blessed an estate is the peace and ioy of a good conscience which a man then hath when God by his word and spirit ruleth in his heart Againe this estate is called the kingdome of heauen because that man in whom Christ 〈…〉 by his word and spirit is alreadie himselfe in heauen though i● bodie he be yet on earth for heauen is like a citie with two gates thorough both of which a man must passe before he obtaine the full ●oyes thereof now so soone as God by his word and spirit rules in any mans heart he is alreadie entred the 〈…〉 te of grace which is the first gate the other remaines to be passed thorough at the time of death which is the gate of glorie and then he is in full possession Doth true happines consist in this estate where Christ ruleth and man obeies then here behold the errour of all Philosophers and wise men of this world touching happines for some haue placed it in pleasure some in wealth and others in ciuill vertue and some in all these But the truth is it stands in none of these A naturall man may haue all these and yet be condemned for the ciuill vertues of the heathen were in them but glorious sinnes Our Sauiour Christ hath here reuealed more vnto vs then all the wise men of the world did euer know and hereby we haue iust occasion to magnifie the bookes of Scripture farre aboue all humane writings because they doe fully set out vnto vs the nature and estate of true felicitie which no humane
will drawe Gods iudgment vpon vs and cause the Gospel to be remooued and giuen to a nation that with profession will ioyne the power of godlinesse in heart and life What befell the sigge-tree whercon Christ sought fruite found nothing but leaues was it not accursed and how shall we thinke to escape if we be like vnto it for the earth that drinketh in the raine that falleth oft vpon it and yet bringeth forth briers and thornes is neere vnto cursing whose ende is to be burned Secondly if the pure in heart be blessed then we must labour to practise the counsell of the Prophet Wash you make you cleane and sanctifie the Lord in your hearts yea as the Apostle saith Let vs purge our selues from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit Indeed it is the worke of God to purifie the heart man of himselfe can no more doe it then the Black-moore can change his skinne but yet euery one that would feele in himselfe this worke of God must vse the meanes wherein the spirit doth purge the heart first therefore we must humble our selues vnfainedly for all the sinnes and corruptions of our life alreadie past and for the time to come growe to a resolute purpose not to finne against God in any thing which we must testifie by a godly endeauour to obey him in all things for a pure heart and a purpose to liue in any one sinne cannot stand together but this constant purpose not to sinne is a notable grace and an infallible token of a renued and sanctified heart The second point in this Rule is wherein this blessednesse doth consist namely in this that they shall see God for the vnderstanding hereof two points must be handled First how God may be seene secondly how the seeing of God is true happinesse For the first the Apostle saith no man hath seene God at any time yea further Paul calleth him King of kings whom neuer man saw neither can see We must therefore know that there is a two-fold sight in man the sight of the eie and of the minde by the sight of the eie no man can see God in his essence and substance which is most spirituall and so inuisible for the eie seeth nothing but things corporall and visible a man by his eie cannot see his owne soule and much lesse the substance of God Obiect I. But Abraham and Moses saw God for he appeared vnto them Answer They saw him not in his nature and substance but in certaine created images and similitudes wherein God for that time did testifie his presence vnto them some indeed say that though a man cannot see God in this life yet in the life to come he shall see him with his bodily eies But this opinion is not true for though the body shall then be perfectly sanctified and the eie sanctified yea glorified yet still it remaines a true body and a true eie and therefore cannot see the essence of God which is invisible to the eie of flesh Obiect II. I shall see God in my flesh saith Iob and mine eies shall behold him Answ. Hee speaketh there of God his Redeemer who is not God simply but God incarnate for the word translated Redeemer signifieth one allied vnto vs in blood now no man doubteth but God in Christ may be seene as Iohn 14. 9. hee that hath seene me hath seene my father Obiect III. 1. Cor. 13. 12. We shall see him face to face Answer God hath no face and therefore that cannot bee vnderstood literally but thereby is signified that we shal haue plentiful knowledge of God as we haue of him whom we see face to face Obiect IV. If we shall not see God with our eies then they serue to no vse in heauen Ans. God forbid for besides the glorious companie of all the Saints wee shall therewith behold our Lord Iesus Christ who redeemed vs by his blood and made vs Kings and Priests vnto our God to whom we shall sing praise and honour and glory for euermore Reu. 5. 12. The second kind of sight is of the minde which is nothing but the knowledge or vnderstanding of the minde and that is two-fold imperfect in this life and perfect in the life to come In this life the minde knowes not Gods essence or substance but onely by effects as by his word and Sacraments and by his creatures and indeede the speciall sight we haue of God in this life is by these his effects to conceiue in our mindes how God is affected to vs as that God is our Father and Christ our Redeemer and the holy Ghost our Sanctifier The perfect vision of God is reserued to the life to come where Gods elect shall see him in regard of his substance for we shall see him as he is Yet that we be not deceiued herein wee must knowe that perfect sight is two-fold simple and comprehensiue Simple perfect sight is when man sees a thing wholly as it is in it selfe and thus God is not seene by the minde of man Comprehensiue sight is when the Creature seeth God so farre forth as it is capable of his knowledge thus shall men see God in the world to come perfectly and be filled therewith though they knowe him not wholly as he is in himselfe euen as a vessell cast into the sea may be perfectly full of water though it receiue not all the water in the Sea But some will aske how shall the minde see God Ans. The manner is such as neither eie hath seene nor eare heard neither can any man tell but they onely that haue fruition of it in heauen yet certainely such it is as shall giue full contentment to euery one that doth enioy it But it shall be farre better for vs to seeke for a pure heart whereby we may be assured of this blessed sight of God then curiously to search how we shall see him for to them that be of a pure heart God will reueale himselfe perfectly to their ioy vnspeakable and glorious The second point is how this seeing of God can be true happinesse Answ. A man that hath beene blinde will count himselfe happie when he receiues his sight and hee that hath long laien in a darke dungeon will count it a blessed thing to be brought out to see the light of the sunne now if this bodily light bee so comfortable how endlesse is the ioy of that heauenly light which commeth from God himselfe The Queene of Sheba counted those seruants blessed that stood before Salomon to heare his wisdome then doubtlesse the sonnes of God must needs be happie that stand before the Lord hearing his wisdome and beholding his glorie for in his presence is fulnesse of ioy and at his right hand are pleasures for euermore Moses is renowned with all posteritie for this prerogatiue that God vouchsafed to let him see his backe parts and Christs Disciples were so
persecute you c. In handling the former verse we shewed the meaning of these words how they serue to expoūd the former Rule The point here to be obserued is this That to reuile and slaunder yea as Luke saith to hate a man for a good cause especially for religion is persecution which shewes how fearefull the common sinne of the age is whereby men reuile their brethren with base and odious tearmes because they shewe some care to please God and to adorne their profession by a godly life But thou art a persecutor whosoeuer thou art that vsest this and therefore repent and leaue it for it is a preparation to a greater sinne in this kinde and most odious in Gods sight as the punishment hereof declares Gen. 21. 9 10. with Gal. 4. 29 30. S. Luke addes a second word And when they separate you whereby is meant excōmunicatiō out of the Temple and Synagogue a punishment which Christ foretold should befall his disciples This censure was put in execution in their Synagogues for besides the administration of ciuill Iustice Ecclesiasticall matters were there handled Now marke what Christ saith Though excommunication bee mine owne ordinance yet blessed are you when men excommunicate you out of the Temple and Synagogues for my names sake where hee maketh excommunication a kinde of persecution when it is denounced against men for righteousnesse sake Here then we may learne what to thinke of the Popes Bulls whereby he excommunicates Kings and Queenes and particular Churches for denying subiection to his chaire namely that they are the diuels instruments where with Gods children are persecuted and that all such as are thus excommunicated for defending the truth of the Gospel are blessed for excommunication is not the instrument of a curse to them that suffer it for good cause Secondly hence we learne that excommunication abused against Gods word is no powerfull censure though in it selfe beeing vsed according to Gods ordinance it be a most terrible thunderbolt excluding a man in part from the Church and from the kingdome of heauen and therfore all Churches must see that this censure be not abused for the abusers of it incurre the danger of the curse and not they against whom it is vniustly pronounced Vers. 12. Reioyce and be glad for great is your reward in heauen for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you Here Christ drawes a conclusion from the former Rule for hauing said in generall that they which suffer for righteousnesse sake are blessed v. 10. and applied it in particular to his Disciples ver 11. hereupon hee infers that they must reioyce in affliction euen then or as Luke saith in that day yea they must be glad which word signifieth exceeding ioy such as we vse to expresse by outward signes in the body as skipping and dauncing such as Dauid vsed to testifie his ioy for the returne of the Arke of God to his citie This is a most worthy conclusion often vrged and commended vnto vs in Scripture Iam. 1. 2. Brethren count it exceeding great ioy when yee fall into diuers temptations Rom. 5. 3. We reioyce in tribulation knowing that tribulation bringeth forth patience and Act. 5. 41. The Disciples reioyced that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for the name of Christ. Here we learne then that Gods church and people that suffer in a good cause must reioyce and be glad This must be remembred for we ●aue bene many times in great danger of our enemies for the Gospels ●ake and it may please God to leaue vs in their hands for our manifold sinnes and great abuse of his heauenly blessings which if he doe what must be our behauiour must we be swallowed vp with sorrow and griefe no but humbling our selues for our sinnes we must remember for what we doe suffer and reioyce and be glad in that behalfe for though our outward man perish yet the inner man shall bee reuiued Now because it is a hard thing to reioyce in grieuous afflictions therefore Christ doth giue two reasons to mooue them hereunto first from the Recompense of reward after this life in these words for great is your reward in heauen This point I haue handled heretofore therfore I will here onely shewe how the Papists abuse this text to prooué the merits of mans workes of grace for hence they reason thus Where there is a reward there is merit But in heauen there is a reward for mans works of grace and therefore in this life there is merit by them To this it is answered diuers waies I will touch the heads of the principall First the word reward must not bee vnderstood properly but figuratiuely for Christs speech is borrowed from labourers who after they haue done their worke doe receiue their wages which is the reward thereof euen so after Christs disciples and seruants haue suffered afflictions for the name of Christ at the end of this life they shall receiue life euerlasting Secondly when wee read of wages and reward in Scripture wee must not dreame of any thing due by right of debt and merit but conceiue thereby that which is giuen by promise and of meere mercie like as when an earthly Father promiseth to his sonne to giue him this or that thing if hee will learne now the Fathers gift is not merited by the childe but is freely giuen the more to incite the childe to learne his booke Thirdly if we vnderstand reward properly then we must referre it not to our sufferings but to the sufferings of Christ for there is no proportion betweene our sufferings and life eternall the afflictions of this present life are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed vnto vs Rom. 8. 18. The second reason is taken from the example of the auncient Prophets for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you In this Reason Christ intendeth two things First to teach his Disciples and vs that persecu●ion for good causes is no newe or strange thing Secondly to comfort his Disciples and seruants in their sufferings for that thereby they should bee made comformable to the ancient worthy Prophets who were of old renowned among men and are now glori fied of God in heauen Hereto wee must compare the words of Luke ' spoken to the same purpose for after this manner did the Fathers to the Prophets By Fathers we must needs meane the auncient people of the Iewes for here hee speaketh to his Disciples and others that were Iewes by nation Now hence obserue a strange point to wit that the auncient Prophets who were most worthy men of God were persecuted in their time not so much by forrainers and enemies to religion as by those that were outwardly members of the Church of God and professors of religion This may seeme strange that men liuing in Gods Church should growe to this height of impietie to become persecutors of Gods Saints but Saint
shined forth to others And at this day they offend this way that will not abase themselues in their Ministerie to speake plainely to the meancapacitie of the simple yea they also put the light vnder a bushell who beeing fit for this Ministerie doe spend their daies wholly in the Vniuersities except it bee that they want a calling into the Church and haue a lawefull calling for their staie in the Vniuersities and though men haue not such meanes of calling forth as were to be wished yet they that liue in Schooles of Learning ought to shew themselues willing to become lights abroad in the Church saying with the Prophet Isaie when his lippes were touched with a cole from the Altar Here am I Lord send me In a word all persons in this calling that any way hide their gifts are here blamed for they are lights which should not be hidde From these comparisons wherein Christ sets out the open state of his Apostles to the viewe of the world the Papists do gather that the Church of God cannot be hid and therefore visibilitie must needs be the note of a true Church But we must knowe that Gods Church may sometime lie hid in regard of the word and the Ministerie thereof as it did in the daies of Elias and in the time when Poperie spread it selfe ouer these Westerne parts Neither doth this place make ought against vs for Christ here speakes of his Apostles and of their ministerie properly which could not be hid and not of euery ordinarie Minister who are not lights of all the world as the Apostles were but onely in their particular standing Secondly the Ministerie is a light yet not alwaies shining to the whole world and therefore it is added in the second similitude that it giueth light to them that are in the house that is in the Church of God And so in the darkenesse of Poperie the Ministerie of the Gospel was hidde from the world and yet it gaue some light to the hidden Church the house of God to shew them their calling and the meanes of saluation Now as these similitudes concerne the Ministers so they may well be enlarged to euery Christian in his place for in this regard the Minister is a patterne to his people and many times in Scripture others besides the Ministers are called lights 2. Sam. 21. 17. Dauid is called the light of Israel not onely for the comfort of his Regiment but also as he was a King by his vpright life he gaue light to the people wherof he was gouernour And so answerably all Superiours in their places must be lights the publike magistrate to the common wealth the master to his seruants parents to their children and euery Christian to his brother Philip. 2. 5. Shine as lights in the world in the middest of a naughtie and crooked nation This therefore is our dutie if we be Christians as we must labour to get the knowledge of Gods will into our hearts so must we cause the power thereof to shine forth in the example of a good life whereby others may be directed in the darkenesse of this world But alas here in the case of many is lamentable who thorough ignorance and disobedience be yet in darkenesse these must bee taken out of their places as darke candles and troden vnder foote and so cast into eternall darkenesse where they shall flame in woe for euermore Vers. 16. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your father which is in heaven This is the conclusion of this reason where by shining is meant ministeriall teaching whereby they make knowne Gods will vnto his people wherewith he also requireth answerable practise in a godly life as if he should say Seeing by your calling you are so conspicuous to the world therefore looke to the euidence of your Ministerie and to the holinesse of your liues that so the people may not onely heare your doctrine but also see your good workes and thereby be mooued to follow the same and so to glorifie God in heauen A most worthy conclusion wherein obserue two points touching the ministerie of the word First in what manner Ministers must teach the word Secondly the ende of all teaching For the first Gods word must first be preached that men may heare it secondly therewith must goe an vnblameable conuersation bringing forth good workes that men therein may see the will of God Here then are two parts of a ministers office Doctrine and good life and they must goe together in him that is a good Minister Hee that teacheth to write will first giue rules of writing to his schollers and then set them copies to followe and so doth euery master in his Art there is no learning of any thing vnlesse examples goe with rules Againe God will haue men to learne his will two waies by Hearing and Seeing the Minister therefore that is to teach Gods will must not onely by doctrine instruct the eare but by a godly life exemplifie his doctrine vnto the eie 1. Tim. 4. 12. Be vnto them that beleeue an example in word and in conuersation In regard of this double charge that lies on euery Minister the people for their parts must remember in all their praiers to ●raue of God that the Ministers may be enabled to teach Gods wil both in doctrine and life The Apostle Paul doth sundrie times require the Churches to whom he writ to pray for him in regard of his Ministerie Now if so worthy an Apostle had need to bee praied for much more hath euery ordinarie Minister in Gods Church And great reason it should be so for the diuell stands at Iehoshuahs right hand to resist him he hindred Paul from comming to the Thessalonians Though he maligne euery beleeuer yet he aimes especially at the Minister that he may cause him to faile if not in teaching yet at least in the exemplifying of his doctrine by a sincere and godly conuersation Now because Christ requires of euery Minister besides teaching the euidence of good workes in a godly life therefore here I will handle this point of good workes and first shewe what a good worke is secondly the differences of good workes and then obserue the necessitie the dignitie and vse of good workes I. Point A good worke is a worke commanded of God and done by a man regenerate in faith for the glorie of God in mans good First I say it is a worke commanded of God for Gods will is goodnesse it selfe and the Rule of all goodnesse in the creature and euery good thing is therfore good because it is answerable to the will of God no worke therfore can be good vnlesse it be appointed ordained and commanded of God men indeed may inuent and doe many good workes but they shall haue no goodnesse in them vnlesse they doe accord with Gods wil. Again good works must be done in
to the person of the worker and hee thereby is vnited to Christ who renueth the minde will and affections of the worker from whence the worke proceedeth and so it is as pure water comming from a clensed fountaine Secondly faith couereth the wants that be in good workes for the best worke done by man in this life hath it wants now faith apprehendeth Christ and his merits and applieth the same vnto the worker whereby his person is accepted and the imperfection of his worke couered in the sight of God and this must prouoke vs to labour for faith Lastly I adde the ende of a good worke namely Gods glory in mans good The honour of God must bee the principall ende of euery good worke now Gods honour stands in reuerence obedience and thankefulnesse so that when we doe any good worke we must doe it in reuerence vnto God in obedience vnto his commandements and in token of our thankefulnesse vnto him for his manifold mercies The good of man must herein also be respected the Apostle saith The Law is fulfilled in one word thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe how can this be seeing to loue the Lord our God is the great commandement of the Law It must therefore thus be vnderstood that the lawe of God must be practised in the loue of our neighbour and not apart by it selfe Againe the ende of a mans life and of all his actions is to serue God in seruing of man and by seruing of man to serue God as when we pray which is a good worke we must not onely respect our selues but pray for others as for the Church of God and for our brethren as well as for our selues yea and for our enemies So we must heare the word and receiue the Sacraments that thereby we may be better able to further our brethren in the way of saluation this our Sauiour doth here expresse saying that they may see your good workes and glorifie your father in heauen as if he should say Glorifie you God and also cause others to doe the same First here we may see what to iudge of the workes done by Papists It is commonly thought that they abound with good workes but it is not so their best workes are sinnes before God for they faile principally in the maine ende of well-doing which is to glorifie God in the good of men for a Papist doing a good worke according to the Rules of their religion doth it to satisfie Gods iustice for the temporall punishment of his sinnes and to merit heauen by it and so erreth quite from the right end of a good worke respecting therein his own good and nothing at all the good of others Secondly hereby wee may see for our selues how farre wee come short in our good workes for commonly wee faile in the maine ende thereof men spend their daies and strength in labour and toile but all is for themselues for their owne pleasure their owne profit and preferment without respect to the good of their brethren now all such actions wherein men seeke themselues only and not Gods glorie in the good of others be sinnefull in the doer though otherwise good in thēselues And therefore we must learne in all our actions to aime at the glorie of God in the good of men II. Point Thus we see what a good worke is now follow the differences of good workes Good workes be of two sorts First those which God in his word hath directly commanded as parts of his worshippe such are praier thanks-giuing receiuing the Sacraments hearing the word and releeuing the poore and these are the more principall kinds of good workes The second sort are actions indifferent sanctified by the word and praier and done to Gods glorie as to eate to drinke and such like for howsoeuer in themselues they bee neither good nor euill beeing things neither commanded nor forbidden and therefore in respect of the things themselues may with good conscience be either vsed or refused yet because God hath commanded the manner how they must be vsed namely by beeing sanctified by the word of God and praier and the ende thereof to wit Gods glorie therefore when they are so vsed they become good workes Vpon this difference of good workes obserue the largenesse thereof how farre they extend There be three estates ordained of God the Church the Common wealth and the Familie and for the preseruation of them there be sundrie callings required some whereof are prescribed of God and others left to bee appointed by men as all trades and such like now not onely the callings appointed by God and the duties thereof are good workes but euen all inferiour callings appointed by men for the good of these three estates and the duties thereof bee they neuer so base if they bee sanctified by praier and done to Gods glorie are good works Example A man is called to be a shepheard and doth willingly accept thereof now though the calling be but base and meane yet the workes thereof beeing done in obedience to God for the good of his Master are good workes yea as good in their kind as the best workes of the highest callings and the same may be said of all lawfull callings and the workes thereof bee they neuer so base for God iudgeth not the goodnesse of the worke by the excellencie of the matter whereabout it is occupied but by the heart of the doer This point must be learned for the Papists conceit doth sticke fast in mens hearts That there are no good workes but the building of Churches and Hospitals the mending of high waies giuing of large almes c. but we must learne that euery action of a mans lawfull calling done in obedience to God for the good of men is a good worke before God and therefore we must so walke euery one of vs in our callings that the duties thereof may be acceptable to God Againe this will hence follow that in these our daies we may as wel abound in such works as be good indeed as the Papists did in their superstitious Thus much of the differences of good workes III. Point Now more particularly in the text are further set down three points touching good workes the Necessitie the Dignitie and the Vse of good workes The necessitie of them appeareth by Christs commanding of them saying Let your light so shine c. for hereby hee bindeth all Christians after the example of his Disciples to walke in good workes If it be said that Christ hath freed vs from the law and therefore we are not bound to doe good works I answer Christ hath freed vs from the lawe in regard of the curse and rigour thereof but not as it is a rule of Christian obedience Quest. How farre forth are good workes necessarie to saluation or to vs that do them Ans. There be three opinions touching the necessitie of good workes First of the Papists who
minde meekenesse c. and Ephes. 2. 10. Ye are the workemanship of God created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath ordained that wee should walke in them Now this is a most excellent thing for a man to bee answerable to his calling When Dauid was a shepheard hee kept his fathers sheepe and liued as a shepheard but when he was called to be a King hee behaued himselfe like a King in gouerning Gods people and so euery Christian ought to doe beeing a newe creature he must walke as Gods childe and testifie his vocation by shewing forth the vertues of him that hath called him 1. Pet. 2. 9. Fourthly good workes serue to be a way in which we are to walke that so wee may receiue the mercies of God promised to his children and escape the Iudgements threatened against sinners for Gods word is full of most sweet promises vnto the obedient and of terrible threatning against rebellion and iniquitie Now a man by walking in good workes eschewes the paths of wickednesse wherein Gods iudgements light and holdes the waies of righteousnesse wherein Gods blessings are scattered Prou. 3. 17. Thirdly the ende of good workes in regard of our brethren is principally this that by our example in well doing wee may winne some vnto God and keepe others in the obedience of the truth and preuent offences whereby many are drawne backe The contagion of a badde example especially in men of superiour place is such that it wil not only cast their owne soules to hell but also draw many with them When Ieroboam the King sinned hee caused Israel to sinne 1. Kings 15. 34. And therefore wee must carefully looke to all our waies in regard of others and so liue according to Christs commandement in this place that others seeing our good workes may bee wonne to the truth and so glorifie God which is in heauen And thus wee see the endes of good workes Now considering good works be of such excellent vse we are hereby admonished to exercise our selues therein with all diligence for hereby we benefit our brethren wee helpe our selues and we glorifie God neither must any mans pouertie hinder him from this dutie for not onely almes deedes and large gifts to Churches and high waies are good workes but also the speciall duties of euery mans lawfull calling done in faith to the glorie of God and the good of men bee the calling neuer so base by the doing whereof in faith and obedience he may get sure testimonie of his election This exhortation is most needfull for so soone as men haue occasion to commit any sinne then they shake off the yoake of all obedience as there were no way of good workes to be walked in The Papists indeed make the merit of iustification and life euerlasting the ende of good workes but that hath bin sufficiently confuted heretofore Hitherto wee haue spoken of the first point in this conclusion touching the manner of teaching The second point herein contained is the end of all teaching namely to turne men vnto God and thereby to bring them to glorifie God That men may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen that is so teach that men may see your good workes and be wonne thereby to the faith so glorifie God Our Sauiour Christ his Commission giuen to his Disciples before his ascension bids them God make all nations my Disciples and Paul saith that hee became all things to all men that by all meanes hee might not onely instruct but saue some Hereby then all Ministers and all those that set themselues apart for this calling must learne to propound this vnto themselues as the maine ende of all their studies and labours namely to turne men vnto God that beeing conuerted they may glorifie God Againe the same ende of the Ministerie admonisheth all hearers so to yeelde themselues obedient to the Ministerie of the word that it may take place in their hearts to turne them vnto God that after their conuersion they may glorifie God This the people ought the ra 〈…〉 to yeeld vnto because it is the maine comfort that the Minister hath of all his labours to see his hearers conuerted and so inabled to glorifie God And to mooue them hereunto they are further to knowe that if they heare and be not thereby conuerted that so they may praise and glorifie God by their obedience then this Ministerie will bee a Bill of Inditement against them for their deeper condemnation at the last daie See Matthew 11. 21. 24. Verse 17. Thinke not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy them but to fulfill them In this verse and the rest which follow to the ende of this Chapter is contained the Third part of Christs Sermon wherein hee goes about to restore the Morall law to his true sense and meaning which was much corrupted by the Iewish teachers And to the ende the same might bee the better accepted hee makes way thereto by a notable Preface verse 17 18 19 20. Wherein hee seekes as well to preuent and to remooue the false opinion which the Iewes had conceiued of him in respect of the Law as also to procure all reuerence and loyaltie to bee shewed therevnto For the Iewish teachers seeing our Sauiour Christ condemne and neglect the traditions of the Elders and not so much to respect the ceremonies of the Law as they thought hee should did thereupon iudge him to bee a deceiuer and one that went about to ouerturne the whole law of Moses This opinion Christ confuteth by three arguments First from the ende of his comming in this verse The second from the nature of the law in the 18. verse whereupon he infers two notable conclusions to procure reuerence thereunto verse 19. And thirdly from the scope of his Ministerie verse 20. For the first The Exposition Thinke not that I am come c. This comming of Christ must bee vnderstood of the manifestation of the godhead in our nature for otherwise his godhead being euery where cannot be said to come properly and as for his manhood it had not beene in heauen To destroy the Law The Law in generall is that part of Gods word which commaunds things iust honest and godly and beeing thus conceiued it is threefold Ceremoniall Iudiciall and Morall The Ceremoniall law is that part of Gods word which prescribed to the Iewes ceremonies rites and orders to be performed in the worshippe of God this law is laid downe in the bookes of Moses especially in Leuiticus The Iudiciall law is that part of Gods word which prescribed ordinances for the gouernment of the Iewes common wealth and the ciuill punishment of offendours The Ceremoniall lawe concerned the Iewes onely the Iudiciall lawe did indeede principally concerne them but yet so farre forth as it tendeth to the establishing of the Morall law hauing in it common
lewdnesse nor frowardnesse in them yea the Law of the Lord is perfect his statutes are right and his iudgements true and righteous altogether Now the consideration of this integritie and perfection of the law and word of God must mooue vs to studie the Scriptures with great diligence so saith our Sauiour Christ Search the Scriptures that is shake and sift them as the word signifieth search narrowely till the true force and meaning of euery sentence yea of euery word and sillable nay of euery letter and iotte therein bee knowne and vnderstood conferre place with place the scope of one place with another things going before with things that come after yea compare word with word letter with letter and search it throughly This manner of studying the Scripture is most necessarie as beeing the thing indeede which preserueth and vpholdeth the Church of God and the puritie of religion for about foure or fiue hundred years agone men left off to studie the Bible after this sort and betooke themselues to the writings of men occupying their wits wholly in vaine quid●ities in Philosophie and in hid mysteries of Diuinitie by which meanes it came to passe that Poperie and Apostacie from the truth spread it selfe ouer the world for many hundred yeares together Afterward God of his meere mercie put into the hearts of some men to bee carefull searchers in the word of God by which meanes the truth appeared as light out of darkenesse Thus God stirred up Luther about the yeare of our Lord 1517. who by diligent search in the Scripture and especially by serious meditation with praier vpon these words of the Apostle Roman 3. 21. That now by the Gospel without the Law the Iustice of God is made manifest did finde that by the perfect obedience of Christ our iustification was wrought and thereupon began to maintaine and professe Iustification before God to be free through and by faith in Christ onely without helpe from the works of the law against the doctrine of the Church of Rome and so by further diligence and industrie in the Scripture the truth of God shone forth more and more Let all men but especially Students in diuinitie consider this effect of searching out the Scriptures as a spurre to diligence in this behalfe By this means also errors and heresies are auoyded and suppressed the will of God is plainly reuealed And here by the way we may see how profitable and necessarie the gift of Interpretation is It is a most excellent gift of the spirit pertaining to the Ministerie and therefore most commendable necessarie is the vse thereof in Schooles of Learning Eightly this immutabilitie ascribed to Gods law that euery part thereof shall be accomplished to the full teacheth all Princes and Magistrates not onely to be keepers of Moses law in their owne persons but also within their rule and dominions to doe their best indeauour that the same bee fulfilled and kept by others For this cause did the Lord command that the Prince of his people should haue the Law written before him in a booke to read vpon continually that hee may learne to feare God and to keepe all the words of the Law to doe them and that which is there enioyned vnto Princes belongeth also vnto all Magistrates Masters and Parents within their places and charges they must be carefull to see the whole law of God practised and obeyed both in their owne persons and of those that are vnder them Lastly by this immutabilitie ascribed to the Law wee may learne what it is to fulfill the law namely to keepe and obserue to the full euery particular thing which the law commaunds vs and vpon this wee may ground two conclusions against the Papists First that no man can come to life euerlasting by his owne righteousnesse and obedience for hee that would come to heauen by his owne righteousnesse must be able to fulfill the whole law perfectly in euery respect but since Adams fall no man could keepe the lawe in all things sauing our Sauiour Christ both God and man Secondly that our fulfilling of the law must be in the obedience of Christ for he onely was answerable to the whole law in all things and therefore if we would come to heauen we must not come in our owne righteousnesse but in his as Paul wisheth to be found of God Phil. 3. 8 9. Verse 19. Whosoeuer therefore shall breake one of these least commandements and teach men so he shall bee called least in the kingdome of heauen but whosoeuer shall obserue and teach them the same shall bee called great in the kingdome of heauen Our Sauiour Christ hauing plainely propounded in his Apologie for himselfe the stabilitie and eternitie of the whole law doth here laie downe two notable conclusions for the vpholding thereof 1. Because the Law is immutable and eternall therefore he that breaketh one of the least of the commandements and teacheth men so shall be called least in the kingdome of heauen 2. Because the Law is eternall therefore he that keepes the commandements and teacheth men so shall bee called great in the kingdome of heauen For the first by least commandement he meaneth the precepts of the Morall lawe though in the former verse by Law he vnderstood the whole law in three parts Iudiciall Morall and Ceremoniall And he calleth them litle not simply in regard of themselues as though they were so indeede for in it selfe euery commaundement of God is great and waightie but hee speaketh according to the opinion of the Iewes for the Scribes and Pharises had ordained certaine rites and ceremonies according to the tradition of their Fathers the obseruation whereof they made a greater matter of conscience then the keeping of some of Gods commandements and so esteemed them little Againe saying these least commaundements hee pointeth out what particular commaundements of the Morall law the Iewes esteemed lesse then the traditions of men namely those which afterward he expoundeth in this Chapter touching Murther Adulterie Swearing and the rest for they esteemed not all the commaundements of the law lesser then their traditions Shal be called least in the kingdome of heauen Here Christ sets downe the punishment of a false Prophet which breakes Gods commaundements teacheth men so to wit his base esteeme in the Church of God for the kingdome of God is two-fold the kindome of grace and the kingdome of glorie The kingdome of grace is the societie and companie of Gods faithfull seruantes here on earth The kingdome of glorie is the blessed estate of all the Saints in heauen Now here by kingdome of heauen he meaneth the kingdome of grace which is the militant Church on earth and so Iohn Baptist calleth it Math. 3. 2. Repent and amend for the kingdome of heauen is at hand that is the Church of the old Testament is now abolished and the Church of the new Testament is ready to take place
God would continue the truth of his will to vs and to our posteritie for euer The second Conclusion Whosoeuer shall keepe them and teach men so the same shall be called great in the kingdome of heauen that is hee shall bee honoured in the Church of God and esteemed a worthie member thereof because by this meanes he endeauoureth to keepe the law vnchangeable for euer In this conclusion two points are to be considered the office of a faithfull Teacher and his reward his office is two-fold First in his owne person hee must be a doer of Gods commandements Secondly in his publike Ministerie hee must teach men so to doe Here first obserue the order of these duties Doing must goe before Teaching This order Christ propounds and that doubtlesle on speciall grounds First because a man cannot with ioy and comfort fitly teach others before himselfe bee a doer of the thing hee teacheth for if a man teach others from the instruction of the spirit hee shall finde his owne heart inclined by the same spirit to the obedience of the word he teacheth Againe the experience of the fruite and efficacie of the word in his owne person is the best Commentarie a man can haue for the opening of it vnto others The writings of men with the knowledge of artes and tongues are excellent helpes yet if a man want the spirit of God framing his heart to beleeue and obey the word hee teacheth whereby he should become a doer of it doubtlesse the word wil seeme but a dreame or riddle vnto him neither can he fitly apply the same vnto others hauing neuer had experience of it in his owne soule This then should mooue all Ministers and such as set themselues to this calling first and chiefly to labour to become doers of the word themselues other helpes of learning are to bee fought for with all diligence to make them fit and able Ministers of so great mysteries but especially they must labour for the spirit of grace to frame their hearts to embrace and their liues to obey the word which they teach that so they may be fitted according to our Sauiour Christs direction Now this spirit is attained by knocking ut hea●●n gates by praier Luke 11. 13. and by opening the doore of our hearts when our Sauiour Christ knocketh thereat by his wo●d Reuel 3. 20. Secondly in ●aying downe this dutie our Sauiour Christ propoundeth a singular comfort to such faithfull Ministers as be grieued with the vntowardnesse of their people hee propoundeth not the conuersion of the people as a propertie of a faithfull Teacher but the doing and teaching of the will and word of God And doubtlesse a man may bee a faithful Teacher and yet not conuert many vnto God hence the Prophet complaines that hee had laboured in vaine and spent his strength in vaine nay the same Prophet is sent to blinde the eies of his people to make them dull of hearing and to harden their hearts by his Ministerie which was a heauie case but yet that saying of the Apostle Paul must be remembred that howsoeuer vnto some his Ministerie was the sauour of death yet vnto God it was alwaies the sweet sauour of Christ So that a Minister mourning truely for his people to see their hardnes of heart may comfort himselfe with this that in a good conscience hee endeauoureth to obey the word of God and to teach men so II. Point The reward of a faithfull Teacher is this hee shall bee counted great in the kingdome of heauen that is he shall be honoured and counted worthie to bee a member of Christs Church both in this life and in the life to come This must be remembred to incite all Ministers to become faithfull Teachers both in life and doctrine To get respect in Princes courts is much sought after on earth O then how should this high respect with God preuaile in our hearts to incite vs to be faithfull in this calling Verse 20. For I say vnto you except your righteousnesse exceed the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises you cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen These words are commonly taken to bee a Reason of the former verse by way of answer to a secret obiection which the Iewes might frame there-from to this effect Thou saiest whosoeuer breaketh one of these least commandements and teach men so shall be called least in the kingdome of heauen But our Teachers the Scribes and Pharises looke to haue chiefe place in the kingdome of heauen and yet if thy doctrine be true they breake Gods commandements and teach others so to doe Now here-to Christ should answer thus I say vnto you except your righteousnesse exceedes theirs ye cannot enter into the kingdom of heauen But if we marke well the words may more fitly be referred to the 17. verse as a third reason to prooue that Christ came not to destroy the Law or the Prophets but to fulfill them because he exacts at euery mans hands a more perfect and exact righteousnesse then that which the Scribes and Pharises either haue in themselues or require in others without which no man can enter into the kingdome of heauen In this verse are three points to be handled First what these Scribes and Pharises were Secondly what was their Righteousnesse and thirdly what is that true Righteousnesse whereby a man may enter into the kingdome of heauen and stand iust before God For the first a Scribe is a name of office whereof there were two sorts among the Iewes Ciuill who as Publike Notaries did register the affaires of Princes and such a one was Shimshai Ezra 4. 8. And Ecclesiasticall who were imployed in the expounding of the Scripture such a one was Ezra Ezra 7. 1 5 6. And those of whom our Sauiour Christ saith Matth. 13. 52. Euery Scribe taught vnto the kingdome of heauen is like a good housholder and Matthew 32. 2. the Scribes and Phraises sit in Moses chaire that is they are expounders of the law of Moses And such Scribes are meant in this place to wit men in Ecclesiasticall office descending from the tribe of Leuie who expounded the Law vnto the people and these were all one with the Priests and Leuites vnder the Law and therefore Ezra is called both a Scribe and Priest Nehem. 8. 1 2. The name Pharise betokeneth a sect not an office for there were three speciall sects among the Iewes The Essenes the Sadduces and Pharises The Essenes were like Popish Monkes and Friers which did separate themselues from the people vowing and dedicating themselues to liue in perpetuall sanctitie The Sadduces were a sect that did expound the law according to the letter and syllable and with-all denied the resurrection and the immortalitie of the soule as is plaine Acts 23 8. The Pharises were such as did forsake the common exposition of the Scribes and taught and framed a more exact
vs giues vs liuing beeing and moouing Secondly this teacheth vs to conceiue aright of Gods holy prouidence to wit that God in regard of his substance is in euery place giuing beeing life and moouing to all things that be liue and mooue preseruing thē killing thē at his pleasure doing whosoeuer he wil. Thirdly this consideration of Gods essentiall presence serues to kindle in our hearts that feare of God which is the ground of true obedience in all estates If God shall laie vpon vs any affliction either in body or minde friends or goods let vs then consider the essentiall presence of God laying that crosse vpon vs and it will strike into our hearts a reuerent feare of God and mooue vs to patience meeknes contentation yea it wil cause vs to hūble our selues vnder his hand for the cause why men flie not to God by humbling themselues in their afflictions is because they thinke God is farre off Again if in prosperity we consider Gods essentiall presence with vs giuing vnto vs all good things it will make vs thankefull so much we doe vnto man when we bee in his presence that hath bestowed a fauour vpō vs we readily addresse our selues to thankefulnes and shall we not doe so to God In a word this holy meditation of Gods presence will make vs to humble our selues vnto God and to rest contented with his good will and pleasure Fourthly if God in essence be present euery where then it is needelesse to make choice of places in regard of holinesse for the worshippe of God for one place is no more neare to God then an other which confutes the vanitie of Popish Pilgrimages to cheife places for religious worship and it checketh also the blind opinion of many among vs who thinke the Church is the onely place of praier and other parts of Gods worship whereupon they neuer regard to pray in their priuate houses But God is in thee and in thy house as well as in the Church and therefore thou maist lift vp pure hands vnto God in all places and must pray at home as wel as in the Church alwaies prouided that thou honour Gods ordinance in the publike assemblies Fiftly if God be euery where then we must labour to haue hearts affected with this perswasion that wheresoeuer we be God is present with vs. This lesson God taught Abraham Gen. 17. 1. Walke before me and be vpright and this Enoch had learned long before Gen. 5. 24. and therfore was reported of that he had pleased God Heb. 11. 5. now where this perswasion taketh place 〈◊〉 will strike the heart with a reuerend feare and awe towards God making a man thus to reason God is present with me how then should I doe this euill in his sight Oh that this thought did run in our minds in the time of temptation then by Gods grace we should feare to sinne and endeauour to walke before God in all holy obedience as his seruants haue done Many are shamelesse in sinning which comes from the want of this perswasion of Gods presence which should strike this feare into their hearts as we may see Gen. 20 11. Psal. 10. 3. 4. 11. and 94. 6 7. Sixtly this knowledge of Gods presence serues to quiet and strengthen their hearts that are troubled with feare of the deuill thus they must reason with themselues the Lord my God is present with me both in power and essence he can bind Satan and he will keepe those that trust in him from the snare of the hunter wherefore then should I be afraid Secondly is the earth the Lords footestoole then while we liue here vpon the earth our liues ought to be a daily practise of humiliation and repentance when good subiects come before the chaire of estate especially if the Prince be present then they bowe their bodies to testifie their loyall subiection vnto their Prince shall man doe this to man and shall not we whose dwelling is at the Lords footstoole much more humble our selues When Dauids wrath was kindled against Nabal Abigail Nabals wife beeing wiser then her husband went to meete Dauid with a present and so soone as shee saw him shee light off her asse and fell downe on her face and bowed her selfe to the ground and fell at his feete and be sought him humbly to forget the trespasse and to stay his hand from blood so likewise when Iacob met his brother Esau he bowed himselfe seauen times to mooue him to compassion towards him and his family how much more then ought we to bowe our selues before the Lord who haue ten thousand fold more deserued his wrath then Nabal did Dauids or Iacob Esaus and besides our humble walking before him at his footstoole here on earth may giue vs assurance that one day he will place vs on his throne in glorie in the heauens But if we walke proudly before him in the practise of sinne being at his footstoole let vs know that he hath feete like vnto fierie brasse burning in a furnance Revel 1. 15. vnder which he will trample all his enemies and make them his footestoole Psal. 110. 1. The third inhibition is from swearing by Ierusalem the reason is for it is the citie of the great King that is the citie of God the king of kings for God had chosen the Iewes to be his peculiar people and Ierusalem for his holy citie where he had his Temple and sacrifices for his solemne worship Now here obserue that at this time the Temple was made a denne of theeues and many of the Scribes and Iewish teachers were notable Heretikes erring against the foundation of religion yea the people were rebellious and wicked as Steuen plainly telleth them Act. 7. 51. and yet Christ here calleth Ierusalem the citie of God and so the people Gods people though they for their parts had forsaken God The reason hereof is this because neither the Iewes nor any other doe then presently cease to be the people of God when they by sinne cut off themselues from God and forsake him but then doe they cease to be Gods people when God forsakes them and cuts them off from him like as in the state of matrimonie when either man or wise commits adulterie that partie breakes the bond of mariage and as much as in him lieth cuts off himselfe from the other but yet while the partie innocent retaines matrimoniall affection towards the partie offending and giues not a Bill of diuorce they still remaine man and wife This appeares in these Iewes whome neither Christ himselfe did then forsake when they reiected him for he praied for them when they crucified him nor yet his Apostles till they saw in them manifest signes of incurable obstinacie Act. 13. 46. This point must be remēbred as seruing to rectifie our iudgements touching the state of a Church or people that haue many grieuous wants and faults
soules and shall we dispose of them after our pleasures to offend him who doth wholly support vs and that continually Secondly here note Christ saith his sunne not the sunne teaching vs that the sunne which shineth in the firmament is Gods sunne not mens God himselfe is the sole author and gouernour thereof hee continueth that beeing which it hath and the power and vertue which it sheweth forth And the same thing by proportion must be vnderstood of all other creatures both in heauen an earth the moone and starres all beasts and cattell yea and we our selues are Gods creatures and hee is our creator our Lord and gouernour Psal. 50. 12. The whole world is mine and all that is therein Now hence we must learne two things First not to abuse any creature to our lust as food raiment c. but to vse whatsoeuer we enioy to Gods glorie according to his wil. Secondly to endeauour to bee lead by the creatures which we enioy to the knowledge of our creator for they are his but alasse the practise of the world is otherwise men suffer themselues by the creatures to be drawn from God for some make their bellie their God to others riches and pleasures are their God Thirdly Christs saying of the Father that he maketh his sunne to arise on the euill and on the good doth shew vs that common bountie which God vouchsafeth to his creatures both good and bad for the rising and shining of the sunne is an excellent worke of God by which many other blessings are conuaied to the creatures For first euery thing vpon the earth receiueth heate and warmnesse from it nothing is hid from the heat thereof Psal. 19. 6. In which regard it may well be called the vniuersall fire of the whole world Secondly the sunne serueth notably for the distinction of times by daie and night weekes moneths quarters and whole yeares whereby wee know the tearme of times from the beginning and so may doe till the ende of the world in regard whereof it may well bee called the clocke of the whole world Which things considered may make vs to blush and bee confounded in our selues for that light regard we haue had of so excellent a creature whereby God conuaies so manifold blessings vpon the earth let vs therefore learne to blesse God for the sunne and to expresse our thankfulnesse by all good duties And sendeth raine on the iust and vniust Here is noted the second common blessing bestowed of God vpon the world to wit the falling of the raine vpon the ground both of good and bad Now here first obserue the forme of speech vsed by Christ saying God raineth see Deut. 11. 14. The Lord giueth raine in due season the first and latter raine This worke is attributed to God for waightie causes First to shew that the same God who ordained in the beginning that the clouds should water the earth doth by his owne power vpholde the continuance of the same blessing vnto this daie and indeede if he should not will the continuance hereof it would for euer cease to raine vpon the earth Secondly to teach vs that God disposeth of the raine that falleth restraining and enlarging it at his pleasure either for the blessing or the punishment of the place whereon it falleth and that many times without the helpe of the second causes Leuit. 26. 3 4. If yee walke in mine ordinances I will send you raine in due season and verse 19. But if you will not obey me I will make your heauen as yron and your earth as brasse Amos 4. 7. I haue with-held the raine from you and caused it to raine vpon one citie and not vpon another one peete was rained vpon and that which was not rained vpon withered Here then we learne first that wee ought to pray vnto God for his raine of blessing that is for fruitfull seasons and also to be thankfull vnto God for seasonable weather when we receiue it because hee sendeth it 2. This must teach vs to obey serue God for he hath the clouds in his hands like a spunge when he wil he presseth out the raine therof now if we obey him he wil cause it to fall vpon the earth for a blessing but if we rebell against him he will either hold it backe or powre it downe vpon vs for a curse 3. Seeing God sendeth down the raine we may gather that no man can certainly tel by the course of the heauēs the particular season of the weather day by day If the raine depended wholly vpon the celestiall bodies then should it fall alike in all places that be of like position to the heauens but that is not so for God ordereth it according to the state of the people vpon whom it falleth either for a blessing or a curse as we haue heard 4. Hence we may gather that neither witches by the help of Satan nor yet Satan himselfe can cause raine as many thinke for it is God alwaies that raineth The deuill indeede is the prince of the ayre and by Gods permission he may ioyne himselfe vnto a storme make it more terrible and hurtful as he did in the destruction of Iobs cattell children by fire from heauen by a mightie winde but yet he cannot make the matter of winde or of raine that is proper to God 5. Doth God raine vpon the earth then we may well consider why the land is so often plagued with vnseasonable raine it is no doubt for our disobedience as we haue heard Leu. 26. 19. the contempt of the word among other sins is one maine cause of this iudgement Now if we would either remoue or preuent this plague at any time we must turne vnto the Lord and repent of our sins for thereto we are called by this iudgement Amos 4. 7. And if we doe turne then wil the Lord send a gratious raine vpon our land but if we wil not turne we shal haue another raine the raine of Sodome and Gomortha for vpon the wicked God will raine snares fire and brimstone And this is certaine where God sends his iudgements for the contempt of his word and yet men doe not repent there one iudgement is but the fore-runner of a greater till they bee consumed And sith experience teacheth that after invndations of waters vsually comes plague and pestilence for the preuenting of these Iudgements let vs repent The last point to bee here obserued is this in what tearmes our Sauiour Christ expresseth who bee the friends of God and who bee his enemies His friends he calleth good and iust his enemies euill and vniust Now that we may discerne of our estate towards God in this behalfe we must see what a good and iust man is In euery such a one two things are required First true faith whereby a man laies holde on Christ for his
praiest in secret that is as though thou wert in secret intending onely to approoue thine heart vnto God in praier then thy father seeth thee he knowes thine heart and heares thy praier This is verefied by the example of Ionas who was heard praying in the Whales bellie of Daniel praying in the Lyons denne and of Moses who is said to crie vnto the Lord when as he praied onely in heart The vse of this point is manifold 1. It serueth to admonish vs that when wee pray wee must in singlenesse of heart bring our selues into Gods presence and heartily and truely put vp our requests vnto God so as we may approoue vnto him both our hearts and our prayers for there is nothing in our prayers that can be hid from God and therefore we must not content our selues with the thing done but labour so to pray that God may be well pleased with the manner thereof Secondly hereby we are taught to make conscience not only of our doings and speeches but euen of our very thoughts and that in secret places for though we may conceale the same from men yet we cannot couer them from the eies of God he is inuisible and yet all things are naked before him Thirdly this prooueth that no prayer can lawfully be made to the virgin Marie or to any other Saint departed for he alone is to bee called vpon in praier who sees in secret but God onely sees in secret neither the virgin Marie nor any other of the Saints can see in secret and therefore praier is to be made to none but to God alone The Papists answer that Saints departed see in secret though not of themselues yet by God and in God but that is false the Angels before their fall saw not their own future fal nor the fall of man The blessed Angels in heauen know not now the time and day of the last iudgement yea the Saints departed lie vnder the Altar crying how long Lord beeing ignorant of the time of their full redemption and therfore the Saints departed see not in secret The second reason drawne from Gods promised bountie is in these words shall reward thee openly that is shall repay thee for thy praier in the day of iudgement before the Saints and holy Angels as we expoūded the same words in the fourth verse This is a notable reason to induce men to pray in a true and holy manner wherein we may see the endlesse mercie of God vouchsafed to them that pray aright if any subiect put vp a supplication to his earthly Prince he takes it for a speciall fauour if the Prince vouchsafe to admit him to his presence behold here the King of Kings will not onely vouchsafe vs accesse vnto the throne of his grace when wee put vp our supplications vnto him but if we pray aright he doth hold himselfe indebted vnto vs for the same and promiseth one day to reward vs openly This far●e exceedes the loue of all creatures in heauen and earth no Prince is so kinde and gratious to his best subiects as the Lord is to all that call vpon him in spirit and truth From this place the Papists would gather that prayer is a worke that merits at Gods hand eternall life for thus they reason Where there is repaying by way of reward there is something done which meriteth but vnto prayer there is a repaying therefore it doth merit at Gods hand Answ. Reward is due to man two waies either by desert or of free gift and promise now in this place God will reward man for his prayers not for their desert but of his owne free will and grace because he hath promised so to doe That this is so may thus appeare If a Begger should aske an almes of any man it were absurd to say that the begger by asking did deserue the almes and so stands the case for the merit of our prayers thereby we beg things at Gods hands and therefore can no more merit thereby then the begger can deserue his almes by asking nay rather we may gather hence that Gods rewarding them that pray proceedes from his owne free grace alone for prayer properly is a worke of man vnto God wherein man giues nothing vnto God as the Iewes did in the sacrifices or as is done in some other spiritual sacrifices of the new Testament but onely asketh and receiueth some thing from God and therefore cannot hereby merit any thing at Gods hands And by this may all other places be expounded where reward is promised to mans worke Lastly note the phrase here vsed he shall reward thee openly that is at the last day whence I gather that till the day of iudgement no seruant of God shall fully reape the fruite and benefit of his praiers This must bee well considered of all that haue care to call vpon God vnfainedly for many times after long and earnest praier we feele little or no comfort whereby we may be brought to dislike our estate as though God had no respect vnto vs but we must know that God doth often long deferre to reward his seruants that praie vnto him not doubt but Zacharie and Elizabeth prayed for 〈◊〉 in their yonger age and yet they were not heard till they were both olde● and Dauid saith his eies failed for waiting on God when hee would accomplish his promise made vnto him this we may also see in the petitions of the Lords prayer for they be all according to his will yet the full fruition of the benefits there asked is reserued to the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ Verse 7. And when you pray vse 〈◊〉 vaine repetitions a● the heathen for they thinke to be heard for their much babling Our Sauiour Christ hauing de●lt against hypocrisie in prayer doth here come to the second vice which hee intends to reforme therein namely babling consisting in the outward forme of praier The words containe two parts ● commandement and a reason thereof The commandement When ye pray vse n● vaine repetitions a● the heathen doe where first we must know th●● Christ reproues not repetition in praier simply but needelesse repetitions only for Psal. 51. Dauid doth sundrie times repeat his requests for the pardon of sinne and for sanctification also Moses El●● and our Sauiour Christ praied fourtie da●es together and in these long praiers no doubt vsed many repetitions much lesse can we pray one day together without many repetitions Here then by vaine repetitions is meant babling that is a desire and affectation to vse and speake many words in praier and vnder this one vice are condemned all sinnes of the same kind that is all superst●ous multiplication of words in praier as the heathen that is such as were not the people of God but al●●ns from the common wealth of Israel and strangers from the couenant of promise In this commandement are condemned many abuses in the manner of
of blood God will not heare them though they make many prayers If therefore we call vpon God as on our father we must be sine to loue his children as our brethren for this commandement we haue of God that he which loueth God should loue his brother also and he is not of God that loueth not his brother 1. Ioh. 3. 10. IIII. Here we see that all true beleeuers whether high or lowe poore or rich are in an equall condition in regard of God for God is no respecter of persons and here Christ teacheth euery one to say Our father In earthly kingdomes there be differences of estates and degrees some be noble some base some rule others serue and obey but with God in Christ there is neither bond nor free c. Coloss 3. 11. The beleeuing shepheard may call God his father as well as the beleeuing King and haue as good a place in Christs kingdome Which serues notably both to encourage the poore to embrace the Gospel in sinceritie seeing their meane outward estate can nothing preiudice or hinder their high acceptance with the Lord if they be faithfull as also to admonish the rich and noble in this world not to bee puffed vp with these outwarde thinges to contemne the poore for these things giue them no title to the kingdome of God nay not many noble nor mightie after the flesh are called but God hath chosen the poore of this world that they should be rich in faith Iam. 2. 5. Which art in heauen These words shewe towardes what place we must dispose our selues in praier our father to whome we pray is in heauen and therefore thither must we direct our hearts our eyes our hands and all that is in vs. Indeede the Iewes vnder the law looked towards the Temple and in the Temple towards the mercie-seat because the Lord had there promised the manifestation of his presence and therefore Daniel turned his face towardes Ierusalem when he praied in Chaldea but now in the new Testament difference of place in respect of Gods presence is taken away and we are not tyed in praier to looke East or West North or South but men may now euery where and euery way lift vp pure hearts and hands vnto God towardes heauen thou must dispose thy heart because thy father to whome thou praiest is there and looke which way thou wilt or goe whither thou wilt heauen is not nearer nor further off Which shewes euidently two notable and grosse Popish fooleries in the matter of Gods worship the first is their going on pilgrimage from place to place to serue God the better for God whome thou must worship is in heauen in respect whereof all places are alike goe whither thou wilt thou art not nearer and stirre no foote thou art not further off Their second foolerie which is also abominable before God is to worship God in an Image at Crosses and in Crucisixes c. these they vse to put them in minde of God and of Christ but this they learne by the precepts and traditions of men and therefore it is but meere vaine and foolish worship in the sight of God Christ teacheth vs to set our hearts towardes heauen and not to po●●e on dumme Images here on earth II. Instruct. Is God in heauen then when we pray we must come before God with all reuerence feare and trembling for he is in heauen a most glorious God full of all maiestie and power Eccles. 5. 1. Be not rash with they mouth nor let thine heart be hastie to vtter a word before God why so for he is in heauen and thou art vpon earth therefore let thy words be fewe Now this reuerence must shewe it selfe first in the holy disposition of the heart and affections towardes the Lord when the minde is not caried away with by-thoughts but applyeth it selfe wholly and onely to the present seruice it hath in hand secondly in the comely gesture of the body beseeming so holy an action done to so high a maiestie Thirdly in the humble and reuerend vttering of our requests hauing before hand well considered the things we are to vtter before God But goes the case thus with men in their ordinarie praiers nothing lesse for beside the multitude that pray without vnderstanding euen the better sort in the time of praier haue their minds running vpon other matters some about their profits others about their sports or such like now is not this pharisaicall praier wherein the lippes draw neare to God but the heart is farre remooued Againe many shew no reuerence in gesture or in speach some disdaine to bow to God in prayer and others doe rush vpon God in many words without premeditation But all these sinne grieuously for howsoeuer vnreuerent praying troubles few mens consciences because it is not easily discerned beeing against the first table yet it is to be esteemed as a disgrace vnto the Almightie and beeing carelessely practised when it is once knowne it is plaine mockerie of Gods maiestie worser then mocking of father or mother and therefore we must with all carefulnes auoide it and set our hearts with all reuerence towards God in prayer III. Hence we must learne to aske of God in prayer heauenly things especially these earthly blessings may be asked so farre forth as they are helpes to further vs towardes our euerlasting inheritance in heauen to which we are called 1. Pet. 1. 3 4. But to be euer groueling in the earth is against the nature of him that hath a father in heauen IIII. Our principall care must be how to come to heauen for there our father is ordinarily a child desires to be with his father and is best pleased on his mothers lappe or in his fathers armes herein therefore we must testifie our selues to be the sonnes and daughters of God by our vnfained desire to be in heauen where our father is It is vnnaturall for a child not to be delighted with his fathers house and so it argues them to be void of grace that haue no affection towards heauen and heauenly things let vs therefore delight to pray whereby we may creepe into our fathers bosome and though our bodies be on earth yet in affection and desire let our soules mount vp to heauen here we are but pilgrimes if God be our father our hearts must be vpon our home which is heauen where our father is Now the words of this preface thus opened containe a twofold notable ground and proppe to all our praiers to wit that God is both able and willing to heare and helpe when we pray for his beeing in heauen imports that he is almightie and therefore can heare and helpe vs our God is in heauen and be doth whatsoeuer he will And beeing a father yea our father in Christ he must needes be willing and readie to graunt our requests for no father is so tenderly affected towardes his naturall
stay his hand nor say vnto him what doest thou Gods speciall kingdome is that whereby hee ruleth his elect and chosen people working his will not onely by them as he doth in his generall kingdome by the deuils themselues but in them also by his holy spirit and it is called speciall because it is not exercised ouer all the world but onely ouer the elect whom hee hath ordained to eternall life This speciall kingdome of God is two-folde either of Grace or of Glorie The kingdome of grace is a spiritual estate wherein God makes men willingly subiect to his written word by his spirit I call the kingdome of grace a spirituall estate both because it is principally exercised in the conscience and also because this regiment in the conscience is by the spirit of God Secondly I shew wherein it consists namely in a voluntarie subiection of the whole man in soule and bodie and spirit to the will of God reuealed in the word Psalm 110. 3. Thy people shall come willingly in the day of assembling thine armie in holy beautie And this subiection stands in three things in Righteousnesse Peace and Ioy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17 18. In Righteousnes that is First in Christs righteousnesse imputed and secondly in the righteousnesse of a good conscience the ground whereof is sanctification by the spirit which Christ giues to them whom he doth iustifie In Peace that is peace of conscience towards God and peace with Gods Church yea with all creatures so farre forth as is needfull for them Now vnder peace we must comprehend loue and all duties of loue for as righteousnesse concernes the person in soule and bodie so peace respects all duties and actions of the life Righteousnesse is the root from whence springeth this peace with euery action thereof for when the heart is sanctified the life is reformed Lastly in ioy in the holy Ghost this is a fruite of both the former respecting especially the state of affliction for when a man is iustified and sanctified and hath peace towards God then ariseth in his heart a spirituall delight in God in all estates yea though great afflictions light vpon him for Gods cause yet he beareth them with inward ioy and delight knowing that the spirit of glorie of God resteth vpon him and that he shall be glorified with Christ if he suffer with Christ which things while he compareth together hee little esteemeth the afflictions of this life in respect of the glorie that shall be reuealed for the light affliction that is but for a moment causeth vnto vs a farre more excellent and eternall waight of glorie These are the branches of this spirituall subiection which whosoeuer hath is a good subiect in the kingdome of grace as the Apostle saith in the next verse he that in these things serueth Christ is acceptable vnto God and approoued of men The kingdome of glorie is the blessed estate of Gods elect in heauen whereby God in Christ becomes all things vnto them immediately 1. Cor. 15. 28. This estate of glorie is a subiection also but yet such a subiectiō as is indeed a glorious regimēt for there we raigne with Christ in whom and through whom God himselfe becomes honour peace health foode raiment and all things needfull to the perfection of felicitie Now these two beeing Gods kingdome differ thus The state of grace is the beginning and entrance to the state of glorie and the state of glorie is the perfection of the state of grace This state of glorie is the citie and the state of grace as it were the suburbs of it In this life wee liue in the kingdome of grace but the kingdome of glorie is reserued for the life to come and this speciall kingdome of God in both these estates doe we here pray for Thy kingdome This imports that there is another kingdome euen the kingdome of Satan which is a kingdome of darkenes full of all disorder and confusion through sinne which greatly hindereth annoyeth Gods kingdome of grace especially Come That is to vs men in the world and then it commeth when God doth erect establish the same in their hearts now vnto perfection it comes by 5. degrees 1. When God giues vnto men the outward meanes of saluation wherein he doth reueale his grace fauour in Christ as the Gospel preached which is therefore called the word of the kingdome Matth. 13. 19. And so Christ hauing relation to his preaching which he confirmed by miracles among the Iewes saith The kingdome of God is come vnto you Luk. 11. 20. and beeing demaunded by the Pharisies when the kingdome of God should come he tels them it was among them Luk. 17. 21. meaning that it was brought vnto them by the ministerie of Iohn Baptist of himselfe and of his Disciples although indeed it were without profit to many of them 2. When the word preached inlightens the minde so as a man knowes and vnderstands the mysterie of the Gospel which is the law of this kingdome 3. When a man is thereby regenerate and so brought into this kingdome for by regeneration we haue effectuall entrance into the state of grace wherein Christ rules in vs by his word and spirit and wee yeeld subiection vnto him 4. At the ende of this life when the bodie goeth to the earth but the soule to God that gaue it beeing translated to the ioyes of heauen in the glorie of this kingdome 5. At the last iudgement when body and soule beeing vnited againe are both made partakers of the glorie of this kingdome and this is the full and perfect cōming of it So then our request to God in this petition is to this effect O Father let thy kingdome come to vs that be pilgrimes and strangers here on earth prepare vs for it and enter vs into it that be yet without renue vs by thy spirit that we may be subiect to thy will confirme vs also in this estate that our soules after this life and both soule and bodie at the day of iudgement may be fully glorified yea Lord hasten this glorie to vs and to all thine elect The Uses 1. Wants to be bewailed The wants we are taught to bewaile in this petition either concerne our selues or others First we must lament and mourne for our owne miserable estate by nature whereby we are the seruants of sinne and so in thraldome and bondage vnder Satan sinne leads vs into bondage for he that committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne and where sinne raigneth there the deuill hath dominion And hence it comes that wee rebell so much against the kingdome of God and refuse to stoop to the scepter of his word Indeede this bondage is weakened in Gods children but none is wholly freed from it in this life as Pauls complaint declares Rom. 7. 14. The law is spirituall but I am carnall sold vnder sin The naturall man is dead
and ioy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. whereof we haue spoken before all which we must labour to finde in our hearts and to expresse in our liues else this kingdome shall be taken from vs we shall neuer see the glorie of it Thirdly hence we must learne to bee contented in all estates of this life whatsoeuer the hope of the glory of this kingdome which we pray for must swallow vp all the sorrowes that earthly calamities can bring vpon vs This it was that made the Patriarks to walke contented in the state of Pilgrimes and Strangers here on earth Hebr. 11. 13 14. Yea this renues the inner man it cheeres the heart and keepes it from fainting though the outward man perish to looke after the ioyes of this kingdome which are the things not seene and therefore Christ herewith comforts his Disciples against the sorrow of afflictiō saying Feare not little flocke it is your Fathers good pleasure to giue you the kingdome Luk. 12. 32. Fourthly wee must all labour in our places and callings to bring one another into this kingdome one neighbour another one friend another Ezek. 18. 30. Returne saith the Lord to the house of Israel and cause one another to returne This the Prophet Isay noteth as a practise of the subiects of this kingdome that they shall say one to another come let vs goe vp to the mountaine of the Lord Isay 2. 3. But masters of families especially must looke to the practise of this dutie and labour to bring Gods kingdome into their families for this ende they must see to these things First that there bee no manifest or open sinne permitted in their families ridde thy house of such a person if thou canst not reforme him Psalm 101. 7. Secondly instruct thy familie in the way of the Lord that they may know to liue righteously and vprightly both before God and man Thirdly set vp and maintaine the priuate worship of God in thy familie ioyne thou with them in holy duties especially in daily calling vpon the name of God In regard of these and such like duties it is that the Scripture ascribes saluation to a familie where the master or the gouernour of the house is conuerted to the faith And for the practise hereof the holy Patriarkes are commended to all posteritie God saith of Abraham I know him that hee will command his sonnes and his houshold after him that they keepe the way of the Lord and Iacob commands his family to put away their strange gods and to clense themselues and Ioshuah prosessed publikely that he and his familie would serue the Lord. Fiftly hence wee must learne euery day to prepare our selues to die for by death our soules enter into the glorie of this kingdome which we pray may come vnto vs and therefore we must be ready to receiue it euery day that whensoeuer our King commeth vnto vs either by death or in the last iudgement wee may passe from grace to glorie And indeede wee cannot with comfort make this petition vnlesse wee bee in some measure prepared for death and that euery day Now beeing prepared wee must waite as Iob did euery day till our changing come Looke how the godly in the olde Testament looked for our Sauiour Christs first comming in the flesh so must we waite for his comming to vs either by death or iudgement neither must any thing dismay vs in this waiting no not death it selfe for the sooner we die the sooner wee may enter into glorie And here wee may take a viewe of the monstrous hypocrisie of the world for who will not say these words Thy kingdome come but yet the most men neglect to prepare themselues for entrance into this kingdome nay many contemne the word and praier which are the meanes whereby we haue admittance into the state of grace and are prepared for the kingdome of glorie Sixtly wee may here learne of our Sauiour Christ the practise of humilitie and in all things to giue all glorie to God for though this kingdome pertaine equally to him as hee is God with the father yet because he hath it from the father as he is the son therfore he will haue it wholly attributed vnto him for he teacheth vs to say Our father thy kingdome come Lastly here obserue the necessitie of this petition in respect of our outward estate for the comming of this kingdome to any estate is a speciall cause of prosperitie and happinesse vnto it for where this kingdome is Gods hand of blessing and protection is in a speciall manner here the Lord raigneth and his glorious and blessed Angels which are mightie in strength and power keepe watch and guard in that kingdome and about that people who haue the Lord for their King and God Hence it is that this our Kingdome hath so long enioyed peace and protection from many dangerous assaults because we embrace and professe the Gospel which is the scepter of Gods kingdome and if wee could doe it in sinceritie and walke worthie of the Lord our King our prosperitie should bee as the stoods and our peace as the Sunne and Moone in heauen And therefore they that loue the peace of this kingdome must embrace and obey the Gospel and pray for the happie and flourishing estate thereof for therein standes our peace Thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen The Coherence This petition dependeth on both the former thus as a meanes whereby wee doe that which wee desire in the first petition for Gods name is glorified when his will is done and as a manifestation of that which wee desire in the second petition for there wee pray that Gods kingdome may come vnto vs and hee rule in our hearts by his word and spirit now here we craue that we may doe his will and so testisie our selues to be his loyall subiects The meaning This petition is propounded in a comparison which naturally standeth thus As thy will is done in heauen so let thy will bee done in earth And it hath two parts The first respects the grace of obedience which wee pray for Thy will be done in earth The second shewes the right manner of performing it as it is in heauen For the first Thy will c. Gods will is onely one considered in it selfe as God is one yet for our vnderstanding it may be thus distinguished It is either absolute or reuealed Gods absolute will is the will of his good pleasure whereby according to his eternall counsell hee determines of all things what shall be done or what shall not be done and in what manner This absolute will extendeth ouer all creatures and ouer all their actions Ephes. 1. 11. Wee are predestinate according to the purpose of him that worketh all things after the counsell of his owne will Roman 9. 19. Who hath resisted his will Matth. 10. 26. Without this will
will may be done As first that we may haue grace to denie our selues our owne wills and affections for naturally we are herein vnlike God and like the deuill and this must euery one learne that would be Christs disciple Luke 9. v. 23. Secondly that God would incline and dispose our hearts towards his holy word that we may not onely know but obey Gods reuealed will This was Dauids vsuall request Psalm 119. 27. Make me to vnderstand the way of thy testimonies and 36. Incline my heart vnto thy testimonies For how should we doe the will of God vnlesse we know it and how shall we know it vnlesse our hearts affect the meanes of grace and of obedience Thirdly that God would hasten that time and state vnto vs wherein we shall perfectly doe the will of God that is our state of glory Fourthly that vnder euery crosse which God shall lay vpon vs wee may possesse our soules with patience so subiect our selues to Gods absolute will Thus Paul prayes in behalfe of the Colossians that God would strengthen them by the power of his might vnto all patience long suffering with ioyfulnesse Colos. 1. 12. Fiftly that God would turne the hearts of men from sinne bring them euery where to the obedience of his will 3. Use. Duties to be practised Because wee must seeke to practise that which we aske in praier therefore hereby we are also taught to endeauour our selues after these good duties First to prooue what is the good will of God and acceptable Rom. 12. 2. We must by often triall of our actions by the word of God become expert in Gods will vse in all things makes perfect and therefore in all our affaires wee must consult with God whether the things wee goe about be agreeable to his will Most men will haue an eie to the lawes of the land in their ciuill affaires as in buying and selling and why should we not bee as wife for our soules in the matters of God Doe we not dissemble with God when wee say with our tongues Thy will be done and yet in life and conuersation haue no regard to square our works thereby Secondly wee must be strict in the matter of sinne making conscience of euery euill way yea euen of the first motions vnto sinne that neuer come to consent for this petition for obedience respects not only our words and deedes but our secret thoughts for euen they must be brought to obedience to God 2. Cor. 10. 5. Thirdly we must seeke to cut off all things that hinder vs from doing Gods will wee must mortifie and crucifie the lusts of the flesh and all sinnefull motions of our corrupt hearts for these make vs rebells against God in transgressing his will This is a hard thing to doe and vnto a naturall man of himselfe altogether impossible and therefore we must vse spirituall meanes for the deedes of the flesh must bee mortified by the spirit Roman 8. 13. Now the ground of this worke is the death of our Sauiour Christ applyed by faith to our corrupt heart for the old man is crucified with him as the Apostle Paul saith that the bodie of sinne might bee destroyed that henceforth we should not serue sinne Roman 6. 6. This therefore must wee doe if we thinke our selues to haue part in Christ wee must perswade our hearts that when our Sauiour Christ was vpon the crosse in our roome and stead bearing the punishment of our sinnes then were wee in regard of the old man crucified with him the vertue and efficacie whereof wee shall vndoubtedly finde in our selues for the mortifying of sinne when we doe truely beleeue for our fellowshippe with Christ beginnes in his death and if we be dead to sinne how can the motions thereof yet liue and raigne in vs When a malefactour is put to death he ceaseth from his badde courses and so if our corruption be crucified with our Sauiour Christ it must not raigne in our hearts to bring forth the fruits of sinne Let vs therefore meditate on the death of our Sauiour Christ and apply it to our selues by faith and consider the vilenesse of our sinnes in the bitternesse of his passion and then no doubt we shall be mooued to striue against euill motions for if we be Christs we haue crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts Gal. 5. 24. Fourthly we must not liue inordinately but in that sort which God inioyneth Christians in his word euery one must haue a double calling the generall calling of a Christian common to all that liue in the Church concerning the seruice of God in righteousnesse and holinesse and a particular lawfull calling in some set state of life tending to the good of the Church cōmon wealth or familie wherin a man must glorifie God in the good of men this is to liue in order he that wanteth both or one of these liues inordinately for God would haue euery man to abide in that vocation wherein hee hath called him euery one therefore according to his gift and grace receiued of God must liue in a lawfull calling and hee that doth not so resisteth Gods will Whereby wee see that wandring beggers are not to bee suffered in Church or common wealth for they liue without any calling and so transgresse Gods will yea their course of life is here also condemned that spend their life in sports and gaming for such a life is rebellion against God who wil be glorified in workes done by vertue of our lawfull calling Fiftly it is the will of God that through manifold afflictions wee should enter into his kingdome and therefore when any crosse befalls vs walking in our lawfull callings wee must endeauour to subiect our selues patiently to the will of God therein in prosperitie we are cheerefull and thankfull but when affliction comes our nature would repine O remember we say in all estates Thy will be done and therefore in the most bitter crosses that can befall vs wee must labour to say with Iob The Lord giueth and the Lord taketh away blessed bee the name of the Lord Iob. 1. 21. So did the Prophet Dauid beeing banished his kingdome by his owne sonne 2. Sam. 15. 26. But if hee thus say Behold I haue no delight in thee beholde here I am let him doe to mee as seemeth good in his eies and Chapter 16. 10 11. when Shemei cursed him he staied Abisna● from reuenge vpon consideration of Gods will to haue it so saying Suffer him to curse for the Lord hath bidden him In earth as it is in heauen Hauing spoken of the grace of obedience desired in this petition we now come to the manner how it must bee performed to wit In earth as it is in heauen that is of vs men liuing on earth as the blessed Angels and glorified Saints doe it in heauen for the Angels that excell in strength doe Gods commandements
in obeying the voice of his word And because this exposition is generally receiued I will not stand to prooue it this onely we must remember that here wee pray not to performe obedience equall in measure and degree to the obedience of the Saints Angels in heauen but such as is like vnto it for this note of comparison here imports a likenesse and resemblance and not equalitie Now this likenesse here stands in 4. things First in cheerefulnesse willingnesse for the holy angels obey the commandement of God freely and readily without murmuring or constraint for this cause they are said to come and stand before God Iob. 1. 6. and to behold his face Matth. 18. 10. to expresse their voluntarie seruice vnto God and so should Gods children obey God as Paul speaketh of Philemons beneficence it must not be as it were of necessitie but willingly As in the case of Almes-giuing God loues a cheerefull giuer so in all obedience he likes a cheerefull doing and therefore hee saith if there be first a willing minde it is accepted according to that a man hath In this regard Peter besought the Elders to feed the flocke of God depending on them and to care for it not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a readie minde and the Apostle Paul saith If I doe it willingly I haue a reward This vertue the Prophet Dauid expressed notably Psalm 40. 6 7 8 when God as it were bored newe eares in his soule then he said L●● I come I desired to doe thy will Secondly in Prioritie for the Angels preferre to doe the will of God before all other things and therefore they are said to stand in his presence continually as it were waiting vpon his pleasure and the like affection for obedience vnto God must be in all his children This Abraham notably testifies when at Gods command he would haue killed Isaac testifying thereby that he preferred obedience vnto God before the deerest thing in the world this also wee may see in Dauid Psalm 119. 14. I haue had as great delight in the way of thy testimonies as in all riches and verse 127. I loue thy commandements aboue golde yea aboue much fine gold and in our Sauiour Christ who said when he was wearie and hungrie My meate is to doe the will of him that sent me and to finish h●● worke Iohn 4. 34. Thirdly in speede and quickenesse for the Angels doe Gods will without all delaie or slackenesse which the Scripture signifies by their wings and flying which it ascribeth vnto them and the like alacritie should Gods children shew in their obedience vnto God Psal. 119. 60. I made hast and delaied not to keepe thy commandements Fourthly in faithfulnesse the Angels doe not Gods will by halues or peace-meale but throughly and perfectly wherein soeuer God imployeth them and so should wee bee faithfull in doing Gods will endeauouring to yeeld sincere obedience not to some but to all Gods commandements which concerne vs Psalme 119. 6. I shall not bee confounded when I haue respect vnto all thy commandements 2. Kings 23. 25. King Iosias turned to the Lord with all his soule with all his heart and with all his might according to all the law of Moses an example to be followed of all Gods children that so they may be like to the blessed Angels The 1. Use. Wants to be bewailed First this patterne of Angelicall obedience here propounded for our imitation must teach vs to acknowledge and bewaile the naturall hardnesse deadnesse and vntowardnesse of our hearts in yeelding obedience vnto the will of God if wee feele not this dull and vntoward heart we may suspect our selues of the want of grace for euery gratious heart feeles it more or lesse and bewailes it vnto God and so must we doe if we say in truth Thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen Secondly wee must here also bewaile the want of sinceritie and faithfulnesse in doing Gods will our maymed and halte obedience shewes how farre we come short of this Angelical example many content themselues with the outward seruice of the bodie and neuer regard the inward worship of the heart and others haue respect to outward duties of pietie that concerne God but for vprightnes and mercy towards men they little regard this the Angels doe not 2. Use. Graces to be desired Hereby also we must learne to pray for the spirit of freedome whereby we may be deliuered from the bondage of corruption and so may the more freely and cheerefully and heartily endeauour to doe Gods will Psal. 51. 12. Restore to me the ioy of thy saluation and stablish me by thy free spirit the holy Ghost is therefore called the free spirit because it giues liberty from the bondage of sinne and makes the heart free and forward and cheerefull in Gods seruice for where the spirit of the Lord is there is libertie 2. Cor. 3. 17. 3. Vse Duties to be practised Because we must practise the good things we pray for therefore here we are taught to frame our liues to an holy Imitation of the blessed Angels Though we cannot attaine to the measure of their obedience yet we must endeauour after their manner of obedience in readinesse c. and so by following them beginne our heauen in this world This will not stand with their humour who account zeale in religion affected precisenesse but such as call God father in sinceritie must set before them the obedience of the holy Angels as a patterne for their imitation Now in them we may obscrue these things for vs to follow First they desired before Christs incarnation to looke into the mysterie of our redemption wrought by Christ 1. Pet. 1. 12. although it concerne them not as it doth vs for they neuer fell and they are established by another grace then of redemption now herein we must follow the Angels or if it were possible goe beyond them for Christ took not the Angels but the seede of Abraham his redemption concernes vs and therefore we much more must be diligent searchers out of this mysterie in the Gospel Secondly the Angels are maintainers of true religion and of the worship of God for the law was giuen by Angels Gal. 3. 19. The most of Daniels visions were shewed by an Angel and so was the reuelation vnto Iohn Reuel 1. 1. the Angels brought the Apostles out of prison to preach the Gospel sundrie times They are enemies to Idolatrie for Apoc. 19. 10. when Iohn would haue worshipped the Angel he forbad him saying See thou doe it not worship God herein also we must be followers of Angels by furthering the Gospel and true worship of God to the vttermost of our power by hindering all Idolatrie and shewing our selues enemies to all the enemies of God and of his truth Thirdly the Angels were alwaies seruiceable vnto Christ they
brought the tidings of his birth to the shepheards Luk. 2. 9 10. they ministred vnto him in his temptation Mat. 4. 11. in his Agonie Luk. 22. 43. in his resurrection Math. 28. 2. and ascension Act. 1. 10. so should we performe vnto Christ all the seruice we can Fourthly they spend their time in praising and lawding the name of God and so should we labour to haue our hearts inlarged for his glorie and our mouthes filled with his praises Fiftly they be seruiceable for our good if we be Gods children though they be farre better then we are Heb. 1. 14. They are ministring spirits sent forth to minister for their sakes which shall be heires of saluation Psal. 91. 12. They are as nurces to beare Gods children in their hands Psal. 34. 7. The Angel of the Lord pitcheth round about them that feare him And all this they doe vnto vs of loue as though it were not inioyned them So we after their example must imploy our selues in soule and bodie calling credit and all we haue for the good of men Sixtly the Angels are ioyfull when sinners are humbled and conuerted from sinne vnto God Luk. 15. 10. and they are grieued when men by sinne dishonour God And the like affections should be in vs we should mourne for all sinne in our selues and others whereby God is dishonoured and haue our hearts to leape for ioy when sinners repent and turne vnto God In the world to come we shall be like the Angels of heauen in glorie Math. 22. 30. let vs therefore here testifie this hope by beginning our heauen vpon earth in becomming like to the Angels though not in glorie yet in obedience Here lastly obserue what honour we are to giue to the Angels of heauen namely the honour of Imitation becomming like vnto them in obedience and treading in the steps of their vertues but for the honour of inuocation that is due to God alone and we must not giue it to Angels damnable therefore is the doctrine and practise of the Church of Rome who pray vnto the Angels and giue vnto them the honour of God in religious worship vers 11. Giue vs this day our daily bread The coherence Hitherto we haue handled the petitions that concerne Gods golrie now we come to the petitions that concerne our selues as the word Us doth plainly shew in these three which follow and they depend vpon the former as an explication of the manner of our obedience for there we asked grace to doe Gods will and here we pray for those blessings and mercies wherein we may expresse our obedience for we doe Gods will when we depend vpon his prouidence for the blessings of this life when we relie vpon his mercie for the pardon of our sinnes and trust in his power for strength against temptation and deliuerance from euill Now then to come particularly to this fourth petition hauing in the former craued grace to doe Gods will in our particular callings here we pray for such sufficiencie of all temporall blessings whereby we may glorifie God therein In the handling of this petition sixe points are to be considered 1. what we aske Bread 2. what bread we aske daily bread 3. whose bread ours 4. for what time this day 5. to whome to vs 6. whence we would haue it by gift from God giue vs. For the first The thing we aske is Bread But what is meant by Bread is not agreed vpon some expound it spiritually of Christs bodie and blood the foode of the soule in the word and Sacraments But the vnfitnesse of this exposition we shall see by the weakenesse of their reasons alleadged for it First they say it is not meete that in so heauenly a praier we should aske so base a thing as materiall bread of our heauenly father Ans. If God command vs to aske him bread and to depende vpon him for it wee must not iudge basely of it nowe in this chapter God commands vs to depend vpon him for foode to eate yea 1. Pet. 5. 7. we must cast all our care on him and Iacobs practise in praying for bread to eate Gen. 28. 20. and Agurs praying for a competencie in outward things Prov. 30. 8. declare plainely the lawfulnesse thereof Secondly they say we must first seeke Gods kingdome and his righteousnesse and then all these things shall be cast vpon vs v. 33. Ans. Distrustfull and distracting care is there onely forbidden but a moderate care is there allowed and therefore praier for them is vndoubtedly lawfull The second opinion touching Bread is of the Papists to wit that here we aske not onely all necessarie sustenance for the bodie but much more all spirituall foode namely the blessed Sacrament which is Christ the bread of life But neither is this so fit for first we praied for spirituall things directly in the second petition Secondly sacramentall bread cannot here be meant because it was not ordained when Christ taught his Disciples this praier Thirdly their exposition is against their owne practise for if by bread were meant Christ in the Sacrament then the people should be fed therewith euery day which they barre them frō The third opinion is that by bread is meant corporall food and blessings necessarie to temporall life onely and this I take to be the truth for these reasons which also make against the former expositions First S. Luke the best interpreter of our Sauiour Christ expounds the words of bread that serues for the day that is for euery day Luk. 11. 3. and therefore it must needes be bodily for spirituall food once truly receiued serues not for a day but for euer Ioh. 4. 14. Secondly this is a perfect platforme of praier and therefore must containe petition for temporall blessings els it were not perfect now we cannot comprehend our requests for temporall blessings vnder any other petition but this onely and therefore Christ here propoundeth them Now properly bread imports that sustenance made of graine which is fit and conuenient for mans bodily nourishment such as Melchisedek brought out to Abraham and his companie with wine for their refreshing Gen. 14. 18. and such is meant in Scripture where bread is opposed to wine or water But more generally it is taken for all kinde of foode whatsoeuer whereby life is preserued in which sense goates milke is called bread Prov. 27. 27. and the fruit of trees Ier. 11. 19. and all things that passe too and fro in trafficke Prov. 31. 14. Now in this place it must be taken in a generall sense not onely for bread but for all other necessarie foode and for raiment also with health peace libertie and all other things that are meete and needfull for the good outward estate of man of family or common wealth The vses 1. In that Christ bids vs pray for bread and not for dainties hereby he would teach vs to beware of couetousnes the common sinne
bold-hardie that they will rai●e vpon and defie the deuill and command him to be gone But without a calling thereunto we may not so doe Indeede if by Gods prouidence we be called to liue in such places necessarily then this we may doe we must not reason with the deuill but betake our selues to God by humble and earnest praier and complaine of Satans vexation making God our shelter and defence both for soule and bodie els if we presume to meddle with him without a calling from God we may iustly be foyled and abused by him as the sonnes of Sceva were because we haue no promise from the Lord to be protected from him For thine is the kingdome and the power and the glorie for euer Amen These words conteine the reason of the former sixe petitions touching which we must obserue two things in generall first that they are not a reason to mooue God whose wil is vnchāgeable but to perswade the child of God that prayeth thus that God will graunt his requests Secondly that this reason is not peculiar to the last petition but generally belonging to them all as halowed be thy name because thine is the kingdome power and glorie and so for the rest The meaning Kingdome This here imports three things in God first that he is al-sufficient of himselfe to doe all things whatsoeuer needing no helpe nor instrument beside his soueraigne will Gen. 17. 1. I am God al-sufficient Secondly that he hath a soueraigne right and title to all things in heauen and earth as a King hath to those things which belong to his territories and iurisdiction Thirdly that he hath soueraigne rule and authoritie ouer all things in heauen and earth gouerning them as he pleaseth and bringing them into an absolute subiection Further the kingdome of God is twofold The kingdome of his prouidence whereby he rules and gouernes all things in heauen and earth euen the deuill and all his angels and instruments and the kingdome of grace whereby he gouernes his Church by his word and spirit and both these are here to be vnderstood Thine The kingdome is here called Gods for two causes First to shew that God hath his kingdome of himselfe and from himselfe alone thus the kingdome of grace and of prouidence are both his Secondly to distinguish God from earthly kings for though they haue a kingdome power and glorie as Daniel tells Nebuchadnezzer yet they haue all these from God not of themselues but God hath them of himselfe alone and not from any other Now because our nature is blind in the things of God I will here propound some reasons to prooue that God hath such a soueraigne kingdome as also to shew the excellencie of it First this appeares by that excellent order which God hath set in all his workes by their creation for how fitly doe times and seasons as spring time and summer autumne and winter succeede one an other how sweetely doe the heauenly creatures the sunne moone and starres serue for the creatures here below as hearbs and plants how doe these serue for beasts and foules and all of them for the vse of man as this prooues against the Atheist that there is a God so it shewes the soueraigntie and most wise regiment of his kingdome When a man sees a great armie in good array and euery one keeping his place and standing constantly he will presently commend the wisdome and authoritie of the leader why then should we not acknowledge the power and souerangntie of the almightie in that constant station of the creatures in that sweete order which they obserue from the creation Secondly the terror accusation of a guiltie conscience doth argue euidently the absolute soueraigntie of Gods kingdom for when a man hath committed some grieuous sinne either against the law of nature or the written word of God though it be so secretly that no man know of it yet wil his conscience accuse and fright him which it would not doe vnles he were to answer for that fact to God the soueraigne Lord of al. Thirdly men of death that is such as by some notorious crime deserue death though through the ignorance or negligence of magistrats they be let to escape yet ordinarily they are ouertaken with some fearefull iudgement and one way or other meete with their desert which is a speciall worke of Gods soueraigne prouidence Fourthly the Gospel preached is as contrarie to mans corrupt nature as fire is to water and yet hath it in all ages wonne men vnto it to professe it and to loue it so as they haue been content for the Gospels sake to forsake house and lands wife children yea and life itselfe This no word of man could euer doe therfore it argues plainly that some supernatural power worketh with it which draws the heart of mā vnto it Here some may say that the Deuill hath a kingdome contrarie to Gods kingdome wherein he raigneth and therfore Gods kingdome is not absolute Ans. If we regard the malice of Satan or the practise of the wicked it may seeme Gods kingdome should not be absolute because they continually rebell against his reuealed will but consider the power of God which ouerruleth Satan and all his instruments disposing most wisely of all their works to his owne glorie the good of his Church and their own ruine and then we shall plainly see that God ruleth ouer all for howsoeuer the deuill and his angels and all other his instruments oppose themselues vnto the word of God which is the law of his kingdom of grace yet God willingly permits all such works and restraines them all at his pleasure so as that which comes to passe against Gods reuealed will is not contrarie to his absolute will Thine is the power By power is meant an abilitie in God whereby he can doe whatsoeuer he will and more then he will doe for the better conceiuing of it note these two things First that God is not onely powerfull but euen power it selfe in regard of his nature as he is goodnesse and wisdome c. Men and Angels are called powerfull as receiuing power from God but God onely is power it selfe because his nature is infinite in power as in all other properties Secondly that power and will in God are one and the same for our better conceiuing of them they may be distinguished but in themselues they differ not for Gods willing of a thing is the effecting and doing of it It is not so in vs for we will many things which we cannot doe but whatsoeuer God willeth that he doth and that which he cannot doe he cannot will The Scripture saith God cannot lie nor denie himselfe nor die c. now as he cannot doe these things so neither can he wil them for they are no workes of power but of weakenesse and frailtie and therefore is God omnipotent because he can neither doe nor will the same Thine is
fruition of euery grace and blessing we aske of God according to his will Amen verse 14. For if ye doe forgiue men their trespasses your heauenly father will also forgiue you 15. But if you doe not forgiue men their trespasses no more wil your heauenly father forgiue you your trespasses These two verses contain a reason of the fift petition concerning the forgiuenesse of our sinnes which is propounded with a limitation and condition of our forgiuing them that trespasse against vs the reason here is because in this behalfe we shall finde such measure with God as we mete out vnto our brethren For the meaning of the words three points must be discussed First whome this reason doth concerne namely priuate men for priuate trespasses it reacheth not to Magistrates and publike persons in their function who be the Ministers of God to take vengeance on them that doe euill for to such the Lord saith Thiue eye shall not spare the offender but according to the qualitie of the offence must he execute iudgement vpon offenders for the remoouing of euill And so must parents and masters deale in their families and Ministers in their publike dispensation of the word for els offences would so aboūd that there could be no liuing for Gods people in the world II. Point How doth these depend one vpon an other our forgiuing of men and Gods forgiuing vs Ans. We must not conceiue that our forgiuing men their trespasses is a cause why God forgiues vs for we are by nature dead in sinne and can not doe any good thing of our selues till we be enabled thereunto of God but our forgiuing is a signe that God hath forgiuen vs beeing indeede a fruit of our reconciliation with God for it is a signe of true repentance which is a fruit of faith whereby we apprehend the mercie of God for the pardon of our sinnes in Christ. III. Point How should our forgiuenes goe before Gods forgiuing vs for so the words seeme to import If you forgiue your heauenly father will forgiue you c. Ans. The pardon of sinne which God giues must be considered two waies first as it is giuen in heauen secondly as it is reuealed and assured to the conscience of man now the pardon of sinne in heauen alwaies goes before our forgiuing others but our assurance of pardon with God followes after our forgiuing of men for a mans sinnes may be forgiuen with God and yet he may long remaine without the assurance thereof in his owne conscience this we may see in Dauid for when Nathan said The Lord hath put away thy sinne no doubt it was forgiuen in heauen but yet his ●arnest prayer for pardon afterward 〈…〉 wes plainly that he did not vpon Nathans speech receiue the cōfortable assurance of pardon in his owne conscience This then is Christs meaning that if we forgiue men their trespasses God will assure vs in our consciences that he hath forgiuen vs otherwise if we will not forgiue God will denie vs that assurance The vse of this point is first and cheifly this we must learne to forgiue and forget all priuate wrongs and iniuries done vnto vs whether great or final without desire of reuenge The reasons to mooue vs hereto are these First it is Gods commandement here expressely inioyned which must needs bind the conscience to obedience Secondly if we will not forgiue men God will not forgiue vs this Christ inforceth by doubling the sentence now without Gods forgiuenes there 's no saluation and therefore we must be ready to forgiue as we tender our owne saluation Thirdly the frailtie of our nature is such that we our selues are subiect to offer wrong to others this is intimated in this phrase except ye forgiue men their trespasses so that euery man is prone to trespasse against others and therefore as we would be forgiuen when we trespasse so must we also forgiue men their trespasses Now for the better performing of our dutie herein these rules must be obserued I. We shall perceiue in sundrie men many wants frailties which mens laws punish not as in old men frowardnes in others hastines and in some ambition and desire of praise now these and such like we must in loue passe by without taking notice thereof Prov. 19. 11. It is the glorie of a man to passe by an offence II. Rule If men giue vs some light occasions of offence as vpbraid vs with our ignorance vnskilfulnes basenes pouertie or such like we must lightly passe them ouer preferring the bond of peace before outward reputation III. Rule Though a man doe vnto vs that which is indeede flat iniurie yet if it doe not manifestly hinder Gods glorie or too much preiudice our good estate by hurting our good name our goods or life we must cause our priuate griefe and hurt to yeild to publique peace IV. Rule If men doe vs such great wrongs as manifestly hinder Gods glorie and our good estate in life goods or name then we must vse the helpe of the magistrate and the lawfull defence of laws prouided for that ende Alwaies remembring that in seeking to right our selues we lay aside all malice hatred and desire of reuenge and with a single heart propound Gods glorie in the reformation of the partie that doth vs wrong Secondly in this reason perswading to forgiuenes we may see that pardon of sinne before God and reformation of life goe together for here by this one branch of a reformed life in brotherly forgiuenesse is vnderstood all of the same kind but where is no reformation of life there is no pardon of sinne before God Wouldest thou therefore be assured in thy conscience of Gods speciall fauour towards thee in Christ then reforme thy life by euery law of God for this will giue thee assurance from God but if thy life be vnreformed thy hope of pardon is a meere conceit of thine owne braine and therefore if thou want reformation now beginne and if thou haue begunne then hold on and doe it more and more for thy more full assurance vers 16. Moreouer when ye fast looke not sowre as the hypocrites for they disfigure their faces that they might seeme vnto men to fast Verely I say vnto you that they haue their reward Our Sauiour Christ hauing rectified the abuses in Almes-giuing and in praier doth here come to a third Christian dutie namely fasting wherein as in the former first he seeks to reforme abuses and then prescribes the true manner thereof But before we come to these particularly I will in generall handle the doctrine of fasting for the better vnderstanding of this text and exercise of this dutie And first we must know that Christ here speakes not of a ciuill fast appointed by magistrates in their dominions for ciuill respects but of a religious fast respecting the worship of God which appeares by this that he ioyneth the doctrine of
thus to approoue our hearts vnto God Thus much of the cōmandement now followeth the reason therof drawne from the promise of Gods reward to them that fast in an holy manner And thy father which seeth in secret will reward thee openly that is seeing thee intend onely to approoue thine heart and action vnto God in fasting will giue thee an open reward at the last day This text the Papists doe notably abuse to prooue 2. heretical conclusions touching fasting First that fasting in it selfe for any good ende is a part of Gods worship because it hath a promise of open reward euen life euerlasting made vnto it as before was made to praier almes-deeds and therefore must needes be of the same nature with them for things indifferent bodily exercises profit little that which hath the promise is a part of godlinesse 1. Tim. 4. 8. Answ. This promise is made to him that fasteth not to the worke and that not simply for his exercise of fasting but for his repentance conuersion and inuocation which goe with fasting and are furthered thereby But they alleadge that Annath serued God with fastings and with praier Answ. In the old testament fasting was a part of Gods worship for it was commanded to be performed the tenth day of the seauenth moneth and then also was the making and performing of vowes a part of religious worship commanded of God Now in all likelihood Annah had bound her selfe by vowe to God to that course of praier and fasting and therfore was approoued of God therein But now in the newe testament wee haue no cōmandemēt for set fasts or vowes therfore the case is not the same and so her example cannot prooue the thing for which they alleadge it indeed we haue the vow of moral obedience made in baptisme but that euery one is bound to performe that takes God for his God though he should not vow it Again a man may be said to serue God in praier and fasting as Annah did because praier is a true part of Gods worship and though fasting in it selfe be not the worship of God yet beeing ioyned with praier it is a notable furtherance thereunto and beeing so performed vpō iust occasion it is a part of his worship because he requires it The second conclusion which the Papists would gather hence is that Fasting satisfieth Gods iustice and merits remission of sinnes and life euerlasting because this promise of open reward is here made vnto it Ans. We must know that the promises of God for remission of sinnes and life euerlasting beeing grounded vpon Christ are onely made to them that be regenerate and beleeue in Christ and so they are not made to him for his works sake but for his faith whereby he is in Christ and so indeede are made vnto him for Christs sake onely in whome we grant that God of his free grace makes himselfe a debter by his promise to euery beleeuer that doth any good worke yet the debt is not due to vs for any thing we doe but due to Christ who hath merited it and in Christ due to vs. But it will be said that works are oft mentioned with Gods promises and especially faith which is a worke Ans. True but yet the reward promised is not giuen for works sake nor yet for faith but for Christs sake whose merit imputed to vs is receiued by faith which faith we testifie by workes and so according to our faith and works we receiue a reward of God but not for them as Christ said to the Centurion As thou hast beleeued so be it vnto thee Thus then must we conceiue of this promise made to fasting though in it self it be a bodily exercise yet being done in obedience to God vpon iust occasion by him that beleeueth in Christ beeing ioyned with praier and conuersion to God it is a worke of faith and shall haue a reward Now this gracious promise made to fasting in this holy maner must stirre vs vp to a loue of this exercise and to the practise of it so oft as iust occasion is giuen And vndoubtedly one speciall cause of the continuall renuing of Gods iudgements among vs is because we humble not our selues by praier and fasting vnder Gods mightie hand It were therefore to be wished in regard of the manifold iust occasions that publike fasts were more often commanded by publike authoritie and priuate fasts more conscionably vsed in euery family And thus much of the fourth part of Christs Sermon containing a reformation of abuses in Almes Praier and Fasting out of all which we must learne this one thing which Christ principally intends to wit in all holy duties to auoid hypocrisie endeauouring to doe them with that simplicitie and sinceritie of heart whereby we truely desire to haue God and not man the seer and approouer of them And so shall our workes be not only good in themselues but in vs and acceptable vnto God otherwise if we doe them in ostentation or for other sinister respects the hypocrisie of our hearts defiles our good workes and so makes them vnacceptable vnto God and vnprofitable to our selues Verse 19. La● not vp treasures for your selues vpon the earth where the moth and canker corrupt and where theeues digge through and steale 20. But lay vp treasures for your selues in heauen where neither the moth nor canker corrupteth and where theeues neither dig through nor steale Here beginneth the fift part of this excellent sermon and it continueth to the ende of this chapter wherein our Sauiour Christ intendeth to reforme his hearers of couetousnes and to worke in their hearts a moderate care desire of worldly things Now the order of this discourse is this First he laies down the substance of his perswasion and then enforceth and amplifieth the same The ground and substance of Christs perswasion consists in a double commandement the first shewes what we must not doe in respect of treasures v. 19. the second what we must doe v. 20. both which he enforceth by their seuerall reasons in the same verses as also with a reason common to them both v. 21. For the first commandement La● not vp treasures c. The meaning The word here translated ●a●e vp is more significant in the original then our english doth expresse for it imports two things First to gather together secondly to hoard or heape vp in store things gathered against the time to come so Rom. 2. 5. Thou ●eapest vp vnto thy selfe c. Treasures that is worldly wealth in abundance pretious things stored vp as siluer gold pearls c. Upon earth here Christ aimes not so much at the place as at the kind of treasures for heauenly treasures may be laid vp while we are here on earth therefore he forbids hoarding of earthly treasures For themselues that is respecting your priuate gaine benefit all respect to the good of the Church common wealth laid
treasure earthly treasures are subiect to corruption and to losse by stealth but this heauenly treasure is free from all such things for the highest heauen is not subiect to corruptiō nor to the violēce of theeues and robbers and therefore our treasure must be there Quest. Why should the highest heauens be free from that vanitie whereto all creatures els are subiect by the sinne of man Answ. The heauens aboue which we looke vpon and the earth below with all creatures in them belonged to man by the right of creation but the highest heauen is the throne of God Now when man fell he was punished not onely in his owne person but in all the creatures that belonged vnto him which by his sinne were made subiect vnto vanitie But the highest heauen was free from that curse because it did not belong to man by the right of creation but is a supernaturall gift whereto we haue right and title onely by the grace of Adoption and redemption in Christ Iesus now sith man had no right thereto by creation it was not meet that the sinne of man should make it subiect to vanitie or corruption If therfore the safetie of an enduring substance can allure our hearts to loue and like then let vs set our selues for this heauenly treasure v. 21. For where your treasure is there will your heart be also This verse containes a reason of the former commandements cōmon to them both tending to perswade vs to the obedience of them both The reason standeth thus Where your treasure is there will your hearts be also But your hearts should not be on earth but in heauen Therefore lay not vp treasures vpon earth but in heauen The exposition By treasure as we saide before must be vnderstood things pretious excellent in our estimation laid vp for time to come wherein we repose our trust and take a speciall ioy and delight By heart we must conceiue not onely the affections which are seated in the heart as loue ioy care desire and delight but the more inward powers of the soule in thought and imagination yea and the effects hereof in action as labour studie and endeauour As if he should say your treasure and your heart are ioyned together looke where that thing is wherein you trust and take chiefe delight theron will your thoughts runne your loue feare desire and care will draw vnto it and your chiefest paines studie and endeauour will be after it The vse Doe heart and treasure goe together Then here first we learne to search out and trie the state of our owne hearts for though it be a bottomlesse gulfe and deceitfull aboue all things so as none can thoroughly know it yet if we applie this sentence aright vnto our selues we shall be able to giue true iudgement of the state of our owne heart An earthly treasure and an earthly heart but heauenly treasure and an heauenly heart these cannot be seuered therefore looke whereon thou spendest thy thoughts settest thy loue thy care delight and bestowest thy wit industrie and labour and thereby iudge of the disposition of thy heart If the thing be earthly and worldly then thy heart is earthly and carnal thou maist plead that thou hearest the word receiuest the Sacraments and praiest often yet all this will not prooue thee to haue Christ Iesus for thy treasure for thine heart beeing set vpon the world there vndoubtedly thy treasure is and that prooues thy heart to be earthly and carnall And on the contrarie if thy principall thoughts thy chiefe loue ioy and delight be on Christ crucified and thy speciall care and industrie be after his merits and righteousnes then is Christ thy treasure and thine heart is heauenly Secondly hereby we may know whether we haue any portion in heauen for looke where our heart is there our portion is if our heart in thoughts desire and industrie be set on earthly things then is our portion vpon earth But if we mind heauenly things if we delight in them and labour after them then is our portion in heauen It is not the exercise of religious actions now then but the setling of the heart either on earth or heauen that shewes where our portion is Thirdly this coupling of the heart and treasure together teacheth vs not to regard this world nor temporall life in respect of heauen and life eternall nay in this regard we must despise the world and temporall life so farre forth as it may be done without ingratitude to God and without hatred of the worke of his hands and of his temporall blessings for as earthly creatures are the workemanship of God so temporall life is his good blessing giuen vs as a time wherein we are to prepare our selues for life eternall and therefore simply we may not despise it but onely in respect of life eternall Now we must shew this high respect to heauen and to life eternall aboue that we haue to this world and temporall life by heauenly meditations and by spirituall desires ioy and delight for if heauen be our treasure then must our delights be drawne from worldly things and set on heauen vers 22. The light of the bodie is the eye if thine eye be single thy whole bodie shall be light 23. But if thine eye be wicked then all thy bodie shall be darke Wherefore if the light that is in thee be darkenesse how great is that darkenesse These two verses haue sundrie expositions which we must discusse before we can see the scope and coherence of them in this place Of sundrie which I take to misse the right scope of Christ in this place I will onely touch one which is the most probable and then set downe that which I take to be the best By single eye some vnderstand a liberal minde and by the wicked eye an ●●●ious and couetous minde and so they make Christ here to speake of liberalitie and couetousnes Now it is true that the words will beare this sense for Salomon puts the good eye for the liberall and mercifull person Prov. 22. 9. He that hath the good eye he shall be blessed for he giueth of his bread vnto the poore and the euill eye for the couetous person Prov. 28. 22. A man of a wicked eye hasteth vnto riches But though the words will beare this interpretation yet it is not as I take it the proper meaning of Christ in this place for here the light of the bodie the single eye and the light that is in vs be all put for one and the same thing Now the light that is in vs is the vnderstanding and iudgement of the minde Againe the eye is here called the light of the whole bodie but the liberall minde cannot be the light of the whole bodie for all actions but for workes of mercy and bountie onely To come therefore to that which I take to be Christs true meaning The words containe in them diuers
minde ruled and directed the will and affections but now these inferiour powers rule or rather ouer-rule the minde and vtterly peruert the regiment thereof they cast a mist and a vaile ouer the eie of the minde that it can see nothing in the waies of righteousnesse and therefore as wee tender the saluation of our soules wee must renounce our owne naturall wils and corrupt desires and striue to bring them into subiection vnto the word of God Many men thinke much to be crossed of their naturall desires and delights but it is happie for the soule when God in his prouidence doth breake men of their wills for the will vnsubdued carries the whole man headlong into all disorder This must be considered of them which haue knowledge and learning for vnlesse the will and affections be ruled by the word all knowledge is made fruitlesse out of the heart saith Salomon come the issues of life if it be kept with watch and ward and ordered by Gods word otherwise hence come the issues of death when the raines of the affections are let loose after the corrupt desires of nature and therefore as we respect woe or ioy so must wee haue regard to our will and desires Thirdly if the light of nature may bee turned into darkenesse then may the illumination of the Gospel be put out turned into darkenes for the knowledge of the Gospel is not naturall and therefore not so deeply imprinted in the vnderstanding vpon the bare knowledge of it Experience sheweth this to be true in all those temporizers which begin in the spirit end in the flesh the author to the Hebrews shews 5. degrees of apostacie by which the illumination of the Gospel is turned into darkenesse Heb. 3. 12. saying Take heede lest there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeleefe c. where the first degree is consenting vnto sinne beeing deceiued with the temptation of it The second is hardnesse of heart vpon many practises of sin Thirdly the heart beeing hardened becomes vnbeleeuing and calls the truth of the Gospel into question Fourthly by vnbeleefe it becomes euill hauing a base conceit of the Gospel Fiftly this euill heart brings a man to apostacie and falling from God which is the extinguishing of the light of the Gospel We therefore to preuent this feareful estate must embrace the Gospel and practise the counsel there set down euen by looking carefully euery one to his owne heart and life and by mutuall admonition and exhortation one of another vers 13. that so the first step of this apostacie which is the deceitfulnesse of sinne take not place in vs. Fourthly seeing the light of nature may bee put out whether may not true faith and other sauing graces be quite lost Answ. There is no grace of God but considered in it selfe it may be lost for it is a creature and so is changeable for nothing is vnchangeable in it selfe but the Creatour but in regard of the promise God touching the preseruation of sauing grace vnto the ende in such as be in Christ hence it comes that faith hope and charitie cannot be lost for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance in Christ. God indeede gaue to Adam true and perfect grace whereby he might haue stoode if he would but because he decreed to permit the fall to make a way for his mercie in Christ therefore he left man in the hand of his owne counsell and so he fell from his created integritie but now in Christ God workes both the will and the deede so as he which doth truly beleeue is as mount Zion which cannot be remooued but standeth fast for euer for he is built vpon the rocke Christ Iesus and so can neuer fall the gates of hell shall not preuaile against him God giues a second grace vnto the first by vertue hereof it becomes vnchāgeable though in it selfe considered it might be lost Againe I answer thus that as the light of nature is not quite put out but onely buried in such sort as it is without vse and seemes exstinguished so the grace of faith by the practise of sinne may be hidde and couered so as it shall not appeare for a time but yet it cannot be quite put out where it is once truly wrought And thus much of the blinde eie with the fruit thereof Now to end this place wee must remember that the scope of Christ in these two verses is to shew that the euill and blind eie of man by nature whereby he is disabled to discerne rightly of things that differ is the cause why in seeking after treasure he leaueth the heauenly and seeketh earthly treasure onely And hereby we must be admonished to labour for this gift of discerning by the illumination of the spirit in the word as we shewed before that so the eie beeing single the whole body may be light that is so ordered that with peace and comfort wee may walke on in the way of life whereas otherwise we walke in darkenesse and feare no danger till we fall into it irrecouerably verse 24. No man can serue two masters for either hee shall hate the one and loue the other or else he shall leane to the one despise the other Ye cannot serue God and Mammon Here Christ meeteth with a second obiection which the carnal heart of man might frame against the former commandements verse 19 and 20. for whereas Christ had forbidden the treasuring vp of worldly riches commanded the seeking of heauenly treasure some man might flatter himselfe with this perswasion that he might well seek● both and lay vp both treasures for himselfe in earth and in heauen also To this Christ answers No that is impossible and he prooues it thus No man can serue two masters But to seeke heauenly and earthly treasures is to serue two masters to wit God and Mammon and therefore no man can seeke them both The first part of this reason is fully set down and prooued in the text by the effect of such seruice in contrarie affections and behauiour for either he shall hate the one and loue the other c. The assumption and conclusion are necessarily implied in the last words Yee cannot serue God and Mammon wherein Christ applies the former argument The Exposition No man can serue two masters This may well bee doubted of for experience shewes that by their mutuall consent one Factor may serue diuers Marchants Hereto some answer thus that it is implied the masters must be of diuers and contrarie qualities as when one saith come and doe this the other saith doe it not and then no man can serue them both and thus the words containe an holy truth But yet because no clause is expressed implying contrarietie in the masters therfore I take it the words must be taken as a common prouerb among the Iewes which Christ Iales downe for the ground of his
much more giue food and raiment for their preseruation Seeing God giues the greater we need not to doubt but he wil affoard the lesse In this reason Christ teacheth vs to make right vse of our creation namely by the consideration of it to learne confidence in Gods prouidence for all things needfull to our naturall life Iob. 10. 8. Thine hands haue made me and fashioned mee and wilt thou destroy me where Iob Perswades himselfe of preseruation because God created him 1. Pet. 4. 19. Let them that suffer according to the will of God commend their soules vnto him in wel-doing as vnto a faithfull creator because God is a faithfull creator therfore in death we must relie vpon him Experience teacheth vs that euery workeman is carefull to preserue the worke of his owne hands if it lie in his power why then should we doubt of this in our creator who is almightie Verse 26. Behold the fowles of the heauen for they sowe not neither reape nor carrie into the barnes yet your heauenly father feedeth them Are ye not much better then they These words containe Christs second reason to disswade his Disciples from distrustfull care for things needefull drawne from the consideratiō of his prouidence ouer baser creatures then they were for needfull prouision the reason standeth thus If God prouide for the foules of heauen then much more will he provide for you But God prouideth for the fowles of heauen and feedeth them therefore much more will he prouide for you The first part of this reason is here confirmed two waies First because the children of God haue meanes of prouision which the fowles of the heauen want they sowe not neither reape c. Secondly Gods children are better then fowles and therefore he will not suffer them to lacke sith he prouideth for baser things then they be both which are so sensible and familiar that they may induce any man to depend vpon Gods prouidence without distrustfull care Christ in propounding this reason bids vs Behold the creatures that is take a serious view of them looke vpon them wishly with consideration as the word signifieth whereby wee may learne that euery childe of God ought seriously to consider the works of God for that which we must doe to the fowles of heauen we must do to al the works of his hands therein labour to behold the wisdome iustice goodnes loue mercy and prouidence of God This is Salomons lesson Eccl. 7. 15. Behold the worke of God Iob. 36. 24. Remēber thou magnifie the worke of God which men behold Why did God make the creatures distinctly one after another in sixe seuerall daies and take a particular view of thē all after he had made them with approbation of their goodnesse and also sanctifie the 7. day for an holy rest both by his own example expresse cōmandement vndoubtedly among other causes this was one to teach vs to consider distinctly of al the works of his hands among other holy duties to meditate on the sabbath day on the glorious works of our creator This was Dauids practise for Psal. 19. 1. c. he resembles the heaue●s to a great booke wherein a man may read the glorie of God and in the contemplation hereof did he exercise himselfe vpon the Sabbath daies as we may see in the Psalme which he penned for the Sabbath Psal. 92. 4 5. I will reioyce in the works of thine hands O Lord how glorious are thy workes And they which are negligent in this dutie are here called to attendance by our Sauiour Christ. But what must we behold in the foules of heauen How they neither sow nor reape nor carie into barnes c. that is they vse not the meanes of prouision that man doth which shews they haue not that care which man hath Man may lawfully be carefull to vse these meanes for God ordaineth them for mans prouision but the fowles of the heauen goe not so farre to haue care of any meanes And this priuiledge of man to the meanes doth strongly enforce Christs disswasion against distrustfull care for the fowles wanting such meanes are free from that care Quest. How then are they prouided for Ans. They expect for foode at Gods hand Iob 39. 3. The birds crie vnto God wandring for lacke of meate Psal. 104. 21. The lyons ro●ring after their pray seeke their meate at God Psal. 145. 15. The eyes of all waite vpon God and he giueth them meate in due season Psal. 147. 9. He giueth to beasts their foode and to the young rauens that crie But how can vnreasonable creatures crie to God Ans. They doe not vse praier as man doe but yet they are said to crie to God and to waite on God because by a naturall instinct giuen them by creation they seeke for that foode which God ordaineth for them and are contented therewith so that by these phrases God would teach vs that they depend vpon his prouidence wholly for prouision and rest contented therewith Here then we are to obserue that the vnreasonable creatures made subiect to vanitie by the sinne of man doe come nearer to their first estate and better obserue the order of nature in their creation then man doth for they seeke for that which God prouideth for them and when they receiue it are content but man is deepely fallen from the state of his creation in regard of his depending on Gods prouidence for temporall things though he haue the vse of meanes which the fowles of heauen want yet his heart is full fraught with distrustfull care whether we respect the getting or keeping or imploying of earthly things This sheweth that man is more corrupt then other creatures and more vile and base in this behalfe then bruit beasts which should humble euery one of vs deopely vnder the serious consideration of our sinnes that haue so depraued our nature that we are more rebellious to the law of our creator and more distrustfull in his prouidence then the bruit and senslesse creatures And yet your heauenly father feedeth them In these words is couched a forcible reason whereby Christ would perswade his disciples and in them all beleeuers to depend vpon Gods prouidence without distrustfull care God saith he is your father yea your heauenly father and you are his children therefore depend vpon him for if earthly fathers will prouide and giue good things to their children much more will your heauenly In this reason also is couched a meanes and way whereby a man may come to rest vpon Gods prouidence In the word of God there be two kind of promises some of euerlasting life and saluation by Christ others of inferiour gifts and blessings concerning this life Now if we would relie on God for temporall blessings we must first labour to lay hold by faith on his spirituall and eternall promises get assurance of thine adoption in Christ and labour to know and feele
that he is thy heauenly father and then thou wilt easily depend vpon his prouidence for temporall blessings if thou be once perswaded truly that he will saue thy soule how canst thou distrust him for prouision for thy bodie If a Kings sonne know his father will make him heire he will not doubt but he will affoard him food and raiment in the meane time Feedeth them That is the foules that neither sow nor reape nor carie into barnes Here we may obserue Gods speciall and particular prouidence for in reason those creatures that make no prouision in summer should sta●ue in winter wherein the earth affoardeth not such meanes of nourishment as it doth in summer and yet experience teacheth that they are for the most part fatter and fitter for the vse of man in winter then in summer what argueth this but Gods speciall prouidence attending vpon the silly fowles of heauen and feeding them in the dead winter oh then how should any child of God distrust his prouidence will he feede birds and neglect his owne children it cannot be And yet this must not nuzzle an idle person or bolster him vp in the neglect of lawfull ordinarie meanes for his prouision for God would haue euery man to eate his owne bread deseruing his prouision by diligence in the duties of some lawfull calling for he that will not labour should not eate Howbeit we may here learne when all meanes faile without our default yet still to relie vpon Gods prouidence for he feedes the foules in the dead of winter and we are better then they Lastly is God so mercifull to the poore foules of heauen to prouide for them then must we that professe our selues to be Gods children shew our selues to be like to our heauenly father in exercising mercie towards all Gods creatures God is the Saviour of all men but especially of them that beleeue And we must be followers of God as deere children extending mercie to the poore of mankind because they be our owne flesh doe good vnto all but specially to them that be of the houshold of faith This is needefull to be vrged vpon our soules for in times of dearth men grinde the faces of the poore by hard bargaining the rich take aduantage of poore mens want and so make themselues fat by sucking the blood of the poore v. 27. Which of you by taking care is able to adde one cubit to his stature Here Christ propoundeth his third reason against distrustfull and carking care for worldly things from the vnprofitablens and vanitie of it in man The words of this reason are propounded by way of question which kind of phrase imports the affirming or denying of the thing spoken of with more vehemence And here it hath the force of a more vehement negation as if Christ had said Vndoubtedly not any of you by taking care can adde one cubit to his stature A cubit is a measure taken from a part of mans bodie beeing the length of the arme from the elbow to the end of the longest finger Now God in framing mans bodie brings it from this length in the mothers wombe by continuall increase adding cubit vnto cubit till at last it containe many cubits in stature according as he hath ordained and appointed And looke how many cubits long God hath ordained euery man to come vnto of that stature and talnesse he is and no man by all his wit skill and carefull industrie can adde one cubit vnto his stature for that is the proper worke of the creatour he that giues the bodie appoints the stature and by his prouidence brings it thereto by daily increase Now hence Christ reasons thus from the like As no man by taking care in all the meanes he can vse can augment his stature one cubit he cannot doe the the least thing this way as S. Luke noteth no more can any man by his distrustfull care better his outward estate for things needefull to this life any whit at all and therefore sith it is vaine and fruitlesse to vexe our hearts herewith we must beware of this distrustfull care From this reason we may obserue and gather sundrie instructions First that mans labour care and industrie is altogether vaine and fruitlesse without the blessing of Gods prouidence Psal. 127. 1 2. Except the Lord build the house they labour in vaine that build it except the Lord keepe the citie the keeper watcheth in vaine It is in vaine for you to rise earely c. 1. Cor. 3. 7. Neither is he that planteth any thing nor he that watereth meaning of themselues but God giueth the increase This point the Lord doth notably expresse by Haggai saying Ye haue sowen much and bring in little and he that earneth wages putteth it in a bottomlesse bagge Ye looked for much and lo it came to little and when it came home I did blow vpon it The consideration whereof must teach vs to commend all the sober care and labour of our lawfull callings to God by praier for his blessing for it is his blessing that maketh rich Prov. 10. 22. If Paul and Apollos two most worthie men could doe nothing of themselues what shall we thinke to doe and when we find Gods blessing vpon our labour then we must giue thanks Secondly hence we learne that no man can better his outward estate in the world for wealth and dignitie by all his care and diligence aboue that which God hath appointed him to come vnto for as God hath determined of mans bodily stature which no man by taking care can adde vnto or alter so hath he appointed in his decree what shall be mans estate for wealth or pouertie dignitie or disgrace which it lies not in the power of man or any creature to alter indeede the diligent vse of lawfull meanes is an argument of Gods blessing in outward things and therefore must be followed and exercised in sobrietie and godlinesse of those that waite for such blessings because ordinarily God conuaies his blessings by such meanes but yet the state of man depends not on the means but on Gods decree and pleasure Psal. 75. 6 7. To come to preforrement is neither from the East nor from the West but God is iudge he maketh high and he maketh low and Prov. 22. 2. The poore and the rich meete together and God is the maker of them both In regard whereof we must learne to depend vpon God in the sober vse of lawfull meanes and to rest contented with his blessing thereupon be it more or lesse for whatsoeuer it is it is that portion which God hath allotted vnto vs. Thirdly hereby are sundrie erronious opinions confuted and ouerthrowne As first the opinion of them who thinke that the temporall life of man may be prolonged by art aboue the period set by God in nature but then there may be addition made by art to the set period of mans stature for the will and prouidence of
God doth equally rule in them both the prolonging of mans life is no lesse an action of the Creator then the augmenting of mans stature Indeede art may help to preserue life till it come to the period in nature but further to prolong it is beyond the art and power of man for man is not lord ouer the spirit to retaine the spirit Eccles. 8. 8. God hath herein appointed his bounds which he cannot passe Iob. 14. 5. Secondly the opinion of some Magicians and witches is hereby also confuted who thinke and auouch that by enchantments they can turne their bodies into the bodies of other creatures as cats hares c. and also make their bodies to passe through a key hole or such like narrow place But this were to change nature which is more then to adde to nature which yet Christ here denies to be in the power of man and therefore it is impossible these things are the illusions of Satan whereby he bleares the eyes of such as regard his lying wonders As for that which is saide of Nebuchadnezzer that he should be turned into a beast because it is said he ate grasse like an oxe this we must know and hold that the substance of his soule was not changed neither the substance of his bodie nor the shape thereof into the shape and substance of a beast but onely the hand of God was heau●e vpon his minde striking him with bruitish frensie and madnesse whereupon his behauiour became bruitish and he liued among the beasts of the field Thirdly the opinion of the Alchemists is hereby also refuted who pretend that they can turne baser mettalls into better as brasse or lead into gold but this is to change the nature of creatures which is more then to adde thereto by augmenting their quantitie which yet Christ denies and make impossible to art in the stature of man Fourthly the opinion of the Papists for their merit of works is hereby also confuted they teach that by good workes a man may merit for himselfe a greater degree of glorie in heauen but consider if a man by all that he can doe cannot augment his bodily stature nor his outward estate in this world as we haue shewed then much lesse can he adde vnto his estate of glorie if the increase of nature be the worke of God then much more is the gift of grace and the increase of glorie as therefore he determines of the ●tature of the bodie so much more may we resolue that the state of the soule for glorie is decreed of God and man cannot adde thereunto Indeede the more we glorifie God by well-doing on earth the more is our assurance of greater glorie in heauen but yet the merit thereof is the worke of Christ alone and our fruition of it the gift of God according to the good pleasure of his owne will v. 28. And why care ye for raiment learne how the lil●es of the field doe grow they labour not neither spinne 29. Yet I say vnto you that euen Salom●n in all his glorie was not araied like one of these 30. Wherefore if God so clothe the grasse of the field which is to day and to morrow is cast into the ●ven shall he not doe much more vnto y●● O ye of little faith In these three verses Christ returneth to his former commandement against distrustfull care conteyned in the 25. verse and here vrgeth one part thereof concerning care for rayment and the other for meate and drinke in the 31. verse Now what meaneth Christ by this maner of handling this heauenly doctrine not onely to propound it and to vrge it by strong and forcible reasons but againe to repeat it and vrge it by peece-meale Surely hereby he declares himself to be the true doctor of his Church for hauing a waightie point of doctrine in hand which the nature of man in vnwilling to receiue and practise he doeth beside the propounding and confirming of it thus vrge it by peece-meale that hereby it may the better take place in our heart and be the more effectuall to b●ing forth obedience in our liues And this fidelity must euery one shew that is to teach the word of God to others not onely ministers though it be their dutie specially but also masters and parents as Deut. 6. 7. thou shalt whet them vpon thy children as the word signifies that so it may more deeply enter into the heart Thus much of the maner of prosecuting this argument Now wee come to the words And why care you for rayment This interrogation hath the force of a prohibition and so it is the same with this branch of the 25. verse care not for your bodie what you shall put on Now all care for apparell is not here forbidden for there is a lawfull godly care whereby men seeke and labour vprightly and in a sober maner for such apparell as is meete for their callings and needefull to the health and comfort of their bodies But the care here forbidden is an inordinate and immoderate care for apparell ioyned either with distrust and feare of want or els with a discontentednesse with that apparell which is meete and necessarie And this is the common sinne of this age as the sundrie bad practises of men and women about apparell proceeding from this inordinate care doe euidently declare as first the affecting of superfluitie and aboundance in apparell and the following of strange and forraine fashions so soone as they are taken vp Secondly the wearing of too costly apparell aboue their abilitie and degree as when seruants are as ●ine as their masters trades-men like gentlemen and gentles like nobles Thirdly the spending of much time in the curious trimming and attiring of the bodie which might be spent in better duties This proceeds from some dislike in Gods workmanship as though he had not done his part throughly to their bodies or they by their curiositie could make themselues better Now that Christ might remooue out of mens hearts this inordinate care he doeth here enforce his commandement by a fourth reason taken from his prouidence ouer the lilies of the field and the reason is waightie though the subiect of it be meane and simple It may be framed thus If God c●othe the lilies of the field then doubtlesse he will clothe you But God clotheth the lilies of the field Therefore much more will he clothe you This reason is fully set downe in these three verses though the parts of it be inuerted by reason of their amplifications for first Christ propounds to our consideration the subiect matter whence his reason is drawen learne how the lilies of the field doe grow Where this must be marked that Christ speakes of field-lilies which haue not the help of man as garden flowers haue Then he layes downe a proofe of his assumption that God clothes them by remoouing from them the ordinarie meanes of clothing They labour not
seeing that we may faile in the particulars of that which we know in ●enenll Againe preaching serues not only for the remoouing of ignorance and the increase of knowledge but to erect and build vp good conscience and honest liues by the in increase of faith repentance bue of God and man and of obedience and this vse the most learned and godly man that euer was may make of the publike ministerie though dispensed by one that is farre inferiour to him in knowledge and p●tie Lastly it may be demanded how this can be ●e summe of the law and the Prophets to doe as we would be done to vith men seeing we are further bound by the law to performe duties of loue and obedience to God Answ. This rule is the summe of all for our loue to God must be shewed in the practise of the duties of loue iustice and mercie towards men for God is inuisible and it please th●im to make himselfe seene in our visible neighbour requiring that our loue to himselfe should be shewed in the works of mercie iustice and goodnes towards men Men may flatter themselues and say they loue God but if it be not shewed in the loue of their neighbours they deceiue themselues there is no loue of God in them And therefore they are deceiued that thinke all is well with them when they come to Church and receiue the sacraments for religion stands not in the outward seruice of God vnles it be shewed forth in the duties of iustice loue and mercie commanded in the second table see Iames 1. vers 27. pure religion and vndesiled before God is to visit the fatherlesse and widdowes in their aduerstie and to keepe himselfe vnspotted of the world v. 13. I Entern at the strait gate for it is the wide gate and broad way that ●adeth to destruction and many there be which goe in thereat 11. Because the gate is strait and the way narrow that leadeth vnto life and few there be that finde it These two verses beeing the fifth part of this chapter containe the tenth point of Doctrine in this Sermon of our Sauiour Christ wherein he ex●●rteth his hearers and vs all effectually to an earnest care in seeki●● euerlasting life and withall admonisheth vs in the matter of Saluation not to follow the multitude because most men goe the broad ●ay to destruction The words containe two parts A commandement Enter in at the strait gate and a reason in the words following for it is the wide gate Yet for our further edification and instruction I will consider and handle fiue points which are here set downe by our Sauiour Christ I. that there be two contrarie cities or kingdoms in one of which euery man and woman must abide for euer after this life and further that these afford vnto men a contrarie estate the one life the other death destruction II. That there are two distinct waies to these two cities or kingdomes one leading to destruction the other leading vnto life III. The condition and propertie of these two waies The way of life is straite and narrow The way of destruction is broad and wide and that from the beginning to the end IV. What men doe in these waies namely that many walke in the broad way and few can find the straite and narrow way V. What men ought to doe touching these waies namely passe by the broad way and enter into and walke in the straite way which is the scope of Christs exhortation and instruction in this place Of these in order For the first These two cities are two distinct places ordained of God for the finall and eternall aboad of all mankind after this life according to that which euery man hath done in his bodie These are tearmed diuersly in Scripture one the kingdome of heauen the other vtter darknes in the chapter following vers 11 12. The one Abrahams ●osome the other hell fire Luk. 16. 23. and in the 21. and 22. Chapters of the Reuelation they are notably described the one is called the citie of God the other the burning lake and vsually the one is called heauen the other hell And as these are distinct places so they afford vnto men two distinct estates The one life the other destruction as it is said the narrow way leades to life the br●●dway to destruction By life here is meant a blessed state of man in whi●● he liues in fellowship with God and hath his heart filled with the vnbreakable loue and goodnes of God and with endles ioy from Gods im●●diate presence And this indeed is the onely true life our naturall life i●●ut a shadow thereof By perdition or destruction we are to vnderstand cursed state of man in which he is without all fellowship with God i● respect of his fauour mercie and loue and yet in bodie soule and ●nscience doth apprehend the bitternes of Gods wrath and furie for ●●●more hauing no fellowship saue onely with the deuill and his angel● and damned soules This is no life but eternall death though soule● and bodie liue together eternally Uses I. In that Christ doth here mention but two cities or plac●● to the one whereof euery man must resort after death we may gather that there is no middle place or condition betweene life and destruction A third place or state the Scripture knoweth not and therefore there is no place of purging the soules of men after this life which the Papists call Purgatorie if there had the word of God would haue reuealed it But the Papists say it is the vpper part of hell neere to the hell of the damned I answer If that were so then there is no saluation for them that are in purgatorie for there is no returning out of hell to heauen by reason of the great gulfe between them Luk. 16. 26. and they that are in any part of hell are but damned persons II. Use. If there be but two places and in them two estates onely according to that which men haue done here on earth either good or euill then we must be admonished with all care and conscience to vse all good meanes whereby we may escape the one and attaine to the other to be freed from destruction and to gaine saluation In the massacre and sacking of a citie in which some are slaine and some escape aliue euery one hath care to shift for himselfe to saue his temporall life much more then ought we to prouide for eternall life seeing at the last day wherein the whole world shal be ransacked euery one must vndergoe either saluation or destruction if we had our deseruing we should be confounded euery moment but God in mercie grants vnto vs length of dayes for this very ende that we should seeke Gods kingdome and life euerlasting and therefore this must be our principall care and studie that we may be alwaies readie whensoeuer we shal be called hence and the rather because we know
is to repent of our sinnes and this is a fruite of faith In true repentance there be two things the beginning and the nature of it The beginning of it is a godly sorrow when a man is greeued properly and directly because by his sinne he hath offended God who hath beene vnto him so louing a father in Christ. This causeth repentance vnto saluation not to be repented of 2. Cor. 7. 10. and it ariseth not so much from the feare of punishment as from the consideration of Gods mercie making a man displeased with himselfe for offending so louing a God who hath beene so gratious and bountifull vnto him in Christ. The nature of repentance stands in the change of the minde when any person laies aside the purpose of sinning and by Gods blessing and grace taketh to himselfe a new purpose neuer to sinne more This is properly to repent and if this be in truth hence will follow the change of the will of the affections and of all the actions of the life It may be said that an hypocrite may repent as Iudas did Matth. 27. 3. and therefore this is not a good note of doing Gods will Answ. Iudas did repent hee was indeed grieued for his fact wishing with all his heart that it had neuer beene done but this was nothing his sorrow was onely worldly causing death as the Appstle calleth it 2. Cor. 7. 10. arising from the horror and feare of punishment not from consideration of Gods mercy it was without true hatred of sin committed without hope of mercie or purpose to glorifie God by new obedience and so was no true repentance The third worke wherein consisteth the doing of Gods will is new obedience and it is the fruite of both the former whereby a man beeing indued with faith and repentance doth according to the measure of grace receiued indeauour himselfe to yeeld obedience to all Gods commaundements from all the powers and parts both of his soule and his bodie and this I call newe because it is a renuing of that in man whereto hee was perfectly enabled by creation But here it will bee said that many who shall neuer bee saued haue attained to reformation of life and therefore this is not a true and sufficient note of him that shall bee saued Answ. True it is many hypocrites haue reformation of life but yet they faile two waies First their reformation is onely outward not inward their thoughts wills and affections still remaine wicked and corrupt Secondly their obedience is partiall onely to some of Gods commaundements not to all so Herod he would heare Iohn gladly and doe many things but yet he would not leaue his brothers wife But true obedience which proceedeth from true faith hath these heads and branches First the partie must pro●ue what is the good will of God Rom. 12. 2. Secondly he must restraine his life from outward offences which tend to the dishonour of God and scandall of the Church 1. Thess. 5. 22. 1. Pe● 2. 11 12. Thirdly he must mortifie the inward corruptions of his owne heart Fourthly he must labour to conceiue new motions agreeable to the will of God thence bring forth and practise good duties so performing both outward and inward obedience vnto God and by these may a man discerne the truth of his obedience and thus we see what professors they be which shall be saued Uses 1. Now considering that saluation is promised to them that ●e doers of Gods will we must hereby be exhorted to become more chearefull in doing Gods will by faith repentance and new obedience and to further vs in this dutie we must vse these helpes I. We must labour for a true perswasion of Gods mercy in the pardon of our sinnes and for the saluation of our soules this beeing truly conceiued will vrge a man to true obedience whereby he may shew himselfe thankefull to God for so great a mercie II. We must consider that we are the temples of the holy Ghost which is a wonderfull dignitie to a sinfull man and in regard hereof we must stirre vp our selues so to liue that we make not sadde the spirit of God which dwelleth in vs. III. We must consider the blessings of God bestowed vpon vs both in soule and bodie one by one and this will mooue vs to loue God which loue we shall shew in keeping his commandements for this is the loue of God that we keepe his commandements 1. Ioh. 5. 3. IV. Let vs consider the threatnings of God against sinne and his iudgements vpon thē that liue in sinne for euery place is full of Gods iudgements and these will helpe to restraine our corruptions that they breake not forth into action V. We must meditate on the word of God vse feruent praier vnto God for his grace for by this meanes Dauid did notably stirre vp himselfe to faith repentance and new obedience as we may see at large in the 119. Psalme II. Use. In that many hauing faith and repentance and outward reformation of life in some degrees shall neuer be saued we must labour to goe beyond all hypocrites in these graces in faith we must not content our selues with a generall perswasion of Gods mercie but we must labour to conceiue the same to be true and sound touching the remission of our sinnes and the saluation of our soules we must looke that it haue a sound beginning good fruits and stead fast continuance And for repentance we must labour to see that our sorrow arise from the consideration of the goodnes of God whome we haue offended that it breed in vs a change of our minds in the purpose of not sinning whereto must be conformable the will and affections and the whole man And for new obedience we must be as carefull in minde will and affections as in the outward actions of our life and to doe the will of God and than in all Gods commandements III. Vse Many there be that thinke their case good because they liue a ciuill honest life without wronging others openly or wittingly which thing indeed is commendable but yet farre short of that which is required for saluation therefore they must no● trust to these broken st●●es of outward and common honestie though they be good things in their kind for many there be that shall neuer come in heauen which haue had farre more in them then these things are and therefore whatsoeuer these persons be they must not rest till they find some portion of true grace in their hearts by vertue whereof they may plainly see themselues gone beyond all hypocrits in the things that concerne saluation vers 22. Many will say vnto me in that day Lord Lord haue we not by thy Name prophesied and by thy Name cast out deuills and by thy Name done many great workes 23. And then will I professe to them I neuer knew you depart from me ye that worke iniquitie In these two verses
from the teaching of the minister for he teacheth beeing called by Christ and in stead of Christ but the master teacheth not by like vertue but onely by the right of mastership the father by vertue of fatherhood and one friend another by vertue of brotherly charitie And this sheweth the dignitie of the calling of a minister and the weight of his office no master no father or ordinarie professor hath the like Cast out deuills and done many great workes For the better vnderstanding hereof we must entreat something of the working of miracles and first we are to see what a miracle is A miracle is not only a strange worke done but such a worke as is aboue the strength of all creatures and beyond the whole power of created nature for it is done by the power of God himselfe immediately which is aboue the strength of all creatures such a worke was the staying of the sunne Iosua 10. 13. and the going backeward of the shadow of the diall 2. King 20. 11. Secondly the Lord God alone is the author of a miracle who created heauen and earth as Dauid saith Thou art great and doest wondrous things thou art God alone Psal. 86. 10. No angel nor other creature in heauen or in earth no not the manhood of Christ though exalted aboue all creatures is able to worke a miracle How then will some say doe these men plead their working of miracles Ans. Not as authors but as instruments and ministers whom the Lord vsed in the working of them for men worke miracles by beleeuing on this manner First they receiue a speciall instinct and inward motion that God will vse them as instruments in the working of a miracle if they pray vnto him and command the worke to be done vpon this instinct they beleeue that if they pray to God and command in his name it shall bee done and lastly they praie and commaund according to this instinct and so the thing they beleeued is done And thus is this speech to bee vnderstood Haue we not cast out deuils c. that is thou hast put an extraordinarie instinct into our minds that if we prayed vnto thee and commanded the deuils in thy name to depart it should be done this wee haue beleeued and accordingly practised and so haue cast out deuils done many great wonders by thy name This gift of miracles doth not now befal the Church of God all that the Church now hath for ought I see is the gift of praier ioyned with fasting which also must bee conditionall depending on Gods glorie the good of Gods Church and of the partie troubled they may not pray absolutely for this worke of casting out deuils or for the doing of such like miracles much lesse may they now giue peremptorie command for the beeing of them If it be said that Gods Church hath all needfull gifts as well now as in former times I answer it hath all gifts needfull to their saluation and therefore prayer in the Church serues now either to deliuer the partie troubled or else to procure as good a blessing as deliuerance is which is patience and repentance And thus wee see what manner of persons they be that shall say Lord Lord and make apologie for themselues at the last day and yet be damned namely some that haue beene excellent preachers of the word and some that haue had extraordinary power to cast out deuils and lastly others that haue wrought many strange cures and miracles by faith in Christs name Now whence we learne first that most excellent gifts will not auaile to the saluation of any man or woman vnlesse they haue true faith sincere repentance and new obedience whereby they doe the will of God for what an excellent gift is it to be able to teach and preach the word of God what a rare thing is it to haue heard Christ himselfe preach and to haue giuen him entertainment and yet neither of these can saue a man Christ saith here the apologie of preaching shall doe men no good and the priuiledge of eating and drinking with Christ and of hearing him teach in their streets will nothing auaile Christ wil say I neuer knew you Luk. 13. 26 27. It is likewise an excellent earthly priuiledge to be allied vnto Christ and yet Christ preserreth spirituall kindred by faith and obedience farre before it saying to one that told him his mother and his brethren stood without desiring to speake with him Who saith he is my mother and who are my brethren and pointing to his ' Disciples he said behold my mother and my brethren for whosoeuer shall doe my fathers will the same is my brother and sister and mother And with reuerence it may be truely said of the virgin Mary that howsoeuer it was a wonderfull priuiledge vnto her to be the mother of Christ Iesus yet if shee had not as well borne him in her heart by faith as shee did in her bodie shee had neuer beene saud and therefore Paul saith though wee had knowne Christ after the flesh yet henceforth knowe wee him no more but if any man bee in Christ hee is a newe creature 2. Cor. 5. 16. and in Christ neither circumcision auaileth any thing nor vncircumcision but faith which worketh by loue Gal. 5. 6. The consideration whereof must mooue vs all to labour to become new creatures and to get the graces of Gods children who are regenerate euen true faith true repentance and new obedience and not to rest in other gifts though they be most excellent Againe students that haue a great measure of knowledge and other excellent parts as memorie languages c. must learne not to be puffed vp therewith for knowledge puffeth vp 1. Cor. 8. 1. but withall to get the sauing graces before named for without a repentant and beleeuing heart all the gifts they haue wil neuer saue them nay rather they must be abased thereby for without true sauing faith all other gifts bee but as so many mil-stones to presse them deeper into the pit of destruction Secondly here note that many learned preachers who haue soundly handled the word of God for the conuersion of others shall yet themselues be condemned like to the Carpenters that built Noahs Arke and yet were drowned in the flood The consideration whereof must teach all Ministers according the counsell of the Apostle Act. 20. 28. to take heed first vnto themselues and then to their flockes so Paul bids Timothy Take heed vnto thy selfe and vnto learning continue therin for in doing this thou shalt both saue thy selfe and them that heare thee 2. Tim. 4. 16. Secondly to be followers of Paul in the practise of mortification who did beate downe his bodie and bring it into subiection least by any meanes after ●e had preached to others he himselfe should be a reprobate 2. Cor. 9. 27. Thirdly the people of God are here also taught their dutie for seeing this fearefull
miserie S●g●e of regeneration 4 A ground of contentatiō in losses God bountie a Gen. 28. 2● b Gen. 32. 10 1. Duties frō Gods boun ti● 2 3 4 5 6 A double prouidence in man 1. Godly ● Inordinate prouidence 7. Reason against distrustfull care A rule for our life The continued miserie of mans life Duties 1. 2 3 6. part of Christs s●rmon 4. kinds of lawfull iudgment 1 2 3 4 ●i●t 23 1 2 3 Math. 16. 6. Luk. 6. 37. Rash iudgement descrbed The practis● of rash iudgment Rash censure of mens persons Iob 1. 8 9 10 11. Ras● censure of mens behauiour 1. Sam. 10. 3 4 Reason● against rash iudgement 1 2 3 4 5 Duties to be obserued when we speake of others 1 2 3 4 Of suspecting euill of others Ho● to iudge of others ●ightly 1. Rule 2. Rule 3. Rule a Mat. 23. 27 b Luk. 13. ●2 c Isa. 1. 10. 2. Reasons against rash iudgement A tast of m●s naturall pride How to know and iudge rightly of our owne sinnes A maine cause of personall defamation ●ecles 7. 23 ●4 How to get a good name Psal. 34. 13. Eccles. 10. 20 Gods iustice in punishing sinners i● their kind A terror to all oppressors Amos ● 5. Matth. 24. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our word thoughts must haue good groūd Prov. 20. 18. Luk ● 18. Eccles. 5. 1. Mans cor●●pt prying 〈◊〉 the f●●●ts of others 〈…〉 in degree Bellar. de amiss grat stat p●cc l. 1. c 9. How the father 's called some sinnes veniall Rash iudgement per●erts a mans good meaning 1. Sam. 10. 3. Mans carnal securitie Eph. 5. 14. 1. Thess. 5. 3. Iudges of others should be blame●esse R●●h censurer● the vi●est persons The remedy of rash iudgment How to cast out a beame out of a mās owne eye 1 Maine sinnes common to all 2 3 Idolatrie of the heart 4 Hypocrisie 5 Pride 6 How to perceiue the gricuousnes of our sinnes 1. Rule 2. Rule 3. Rule 4. Rule How to iudge our selues Reform our waies Motiues to all the duties 1 2 3 An hypocrite A rule for brotherly correction Reforming our selues brings spiritual wisdom a 2. Chr. 33. 13. How to vnderstand Gods word How to know our adoption How to know true religion Brotherly correction commanded 1. Who must correct Exceptions in the case of correction 1 2 3 4 How euery Christian is a Pastor Heb. 10. 24. Who must be corrected Outward dignity frees none from correction Exod. 2. 14. The matter of reproofe The manner how to reprooue Heb. 10. 24. 2 1. Sam. 25. 36. 37. 3 2. Sam. 21. 1 2. c. ● Tim. 5. 1. 4 5 7. part of Christs sermon Gods word is an holy thing Rom. 3. 11. Gal. 2. 20. Vse the word holily Psal. 26. 6. The pure word alone ought to be taught Exod. 30. 32 33. Exod. 30. 32 33. a Synod Laodic ca. 59 Doctrines of Gods word are pearles How to esteeme of Gods word Prou. 3. 14. How to cosu●● our sel●●● in 〈…〉 ● Tim. 3. 9. Ministers must preserue puritie of doctrine 1. Tim. 6. 2● Dogs and swine are obstinate enemies Math. 15 2● Tit. 3 10. 11. Difference betweene dogs and swine 2 Pet. 3. 3 4. Who must iudge men to be dogs swine Where dogs and swine are to bee found How the word must Be dispensed Matth. 13. 15. Excommunication is Gods ordinance e ende of● excommunication Pius 5. pont in Bulla cōtra Elizab. Who must execute this censure How farre excommunication reacheth 1. Reason The holy things of God must be kept from contempt a 2. Thess. 3. ● b Math. 6. 9. 2. king 1● 36. 2. Reason Ministers may seeke to auoide persecutions Math. 10. 16. Ioh. 10 11. Of flight in persecution ● Part of Christs sermon a Iam. 4. 3. 4. Conditions in acceptable praier 2 3 4 2. Rule Gods promise to hear and respect the person in Christ. Zeale serueacie in praier 1. Cor. 4. 7. Causes why w● should be seruent in prayer ● Pet. 4. 18. We must be vrge●t in prayer The best are not here perfect ● Cor. 12. 4. ●ev 3. 17. God withdrawes himselfe sometime frō his children Reasons of the commādement to pray A speciall faith required in praier Rhem. on Iam. 1. sect 6. Bellarm. de iustif l. 3. c. 13 Hab. 2. 4. A moti●e to diligence in praier How God hear●th the wicked C●n. 18. Gods readinesse to heare Vse Our God the onely true God A moriue to loue God Comfort to the afflicted A prerogatiue of parents 1. Tim. 5. 8. Riotous patent reprooued Also such as neglect religious education Most vnnaturall parents A note of an euill man to seeke himselfe Euill men may do good things Gifts of the spirit twofold Luk. 11. 13. How the father giu●● the holy Ghost 〈…〉 gian vi de August ● 4 in Iulianū cap. 8. How to get grace Pro. 24. 30 31 A comfort to the weak in grace Vniuersall grace confuted Anabaptists familist● Aqui● 1. ● ● 〈◊〉 art 3. 9. part of Christs sermon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A propertie of our corrupt nature We should doe no hurt to ourneighbour How to deale in bargaining Pretences for badde dealing cut off How to get loue How to keep a good conscience The reason How to know the Scripture of the old Testament Apocrypha bookes not Canonicall Eccl. ● 6. New Testament diuine scripture The bookes of Moses the 1. Script Certaintie of Scripture How it may be knowne ● from the causes 2. From the effects 3. From the properties of Scripture 4. From miracles 5. From contraries 6. From testimonies Of Martyrs Testimony of t●e spirit Obiections against scripture answered Popish twofold Scripture Andrad orthod explic l. ● Authority of Scripture The power of Scripture in giuing iudgement a 1. Cor. ● 15 b 1. Ioh. 41. What iudge we must choose The Church an incompetent iudge c Conc. Tri sess 4. d ●ckius Enchir. loc com tit 1. d● Eccles. eius author Scripture is authenticall 3. sorts of bookes 1. Diuine ● Ecclesiasticall 3. Humane bookes ● God 's estimony alone in prea●●ing Act. 26. 〈◊〉 Vnwritten traditions not authenticall Andrad orthod explic l. 2 pag 63. Whether the authority of Christ the Prophets be equall The ignorāt abuse this ●ule 10. Part of Christs Sermon Two distinct places for mens finall aboad Mens different estat in heauen and hell No purgatorie * Bellarm. de purgat l 2. c. 6. Striue to escape hell get to heauen Two waies 1. The way of life A Christians life is twofold 1. Spirituall Fruits of spirituall life Spiritual life is seene in temptation How temporall life is lead by faith A eiuill l●●nest life not sufficient to saluation We must not liue by sense Measure not gra●● by feeling Learne to know Gods ●●ll How to liue in afflictions 1. The way of nature 2. The way of false faith Tur 〈…〉 e. Iudaisme Poperie a Concil T●id sess 6. cap.
take hold when other sinnes leaue a man which caused Christ to forewarne his Disciples hereof in this place therefore it is our dutie to labour and striue the more earnestly to be purged from this euill minde and preserued from these euill practises of rash iudgement for which ende let vs lay to our consciences the reasons following I. The practise of rash Iudgement cannot stand with Christian charitie for charitie binds a man to walke in loue and loue suspecteth not euill but thinks the best alwaies and if it be possible thinks well of all II. When thou seest a man speake or practise any euill for which thou beginnest to thinke hardly of him then consider well of thine owne selfe how thou hast both that and all other sinnes in thee if we regard the roote of sinne and therefore doe not rashly condemne him for his fact because thou thy selfe hast done the like heretofore or els in time to come maist doe the like or worse then he hath done whome thou now condemnest III. Consider that God the father hath committed all iudgement vnto his Sonne who now executeth publike iudgement by the Magistrate in the common-wealth and by the Minister in the Church and priuate iudgement of admonition and iust dispraise by them whome he calleth thereunto if therefore thou iudgest another not beeing called thereto thou thrusteth Christ out of his office and robbest him of his honour which is a grieuous sinne and cannot be vnpunished IV. Consider also that thou art vnable whatsoeuer thou art to iudge aright of other mens actions beeing ignorant of many circumstances thereof for thou knowest not with what minde or to what ende the action was done thou knowest not the cause why he did it nor the state of his person nor manner of his temptation thereto and therefore why iudgest thou rashly of him V. He that giues rash iudgement of another is worse then a theefe that steales away a mans goods for he robbes him of his good name which as Salomon saith is to be chosen aboue great riches Prov. 22. 1. Againe riches may be restored so can not a mans good name beeing once blemished in the hearts of many Againe a man may defend himselfe from a theefe but no man can shunne an other mans euill minde or his badde tongue nay the backebiter is worse then a murtherer for he killeth three at once first his owne soule in thus sinning secondly his neighbour whose name he hurteth and thirdly the hearer who receiueth this rash and iniust report and for this cause the slaunderer is numbered among those that shall not inherit the kingdome of God Psal. 15. 3. 1. Cor. 6. 10. and the Apostle chargeth Christians to account of such raylers as of persons excommunicate 1. Cor. 5. 11. Here some will say if we may not giue our opinion of others freely as we haue done what must we doe when we haue occasion to speake of them Answ. Thy cariage towards others must be according to these rules I. If thou know any good thing by the partie of whome thou speakest when thou hast occasion thinke and speake of that if thou knew euill by him also conceale it from others and if thou maist admonish the partie thereof or els tell it to those who haue authoritie to correct his faults and thus shalt thou win thy brother Some will say I doe indeed sometime censure my brother for his faults yet onely in detestation of his sinne I loue the partie neuer the worse and I onely doe it to some priuate friend that will not tell it againe Answ. But this excuse and all such like are friuolous no colour of good intent can excuse rash iudgement if thou louest him why doest thou make knowne his fault to another for loue couereth a multitude of sinnes And if thy conscience answer it will tell thee that either ill will to the partie causeth thee so to doe or selfe-loue whereby through his defamation thou thy selfe seekest to be aduanced aboue him in the thoughts of others In thy censuring therefore looke to thine heart whether malice mooue thee not thereto and take heed to the end also for if it rise from a bad ground or tend to a wrong ende the whole action is nought II. Dutie We ought to thinke as wel of euery man as possibly we can yea of our enemie of his actions for loue thinketh not evill and in the practise of loue towards our enemies we become followers of God Math. 5. 44 45. III. Dutie If thou marke thy neighbours life and behauiour doe it for this ende to withdraw him from sinne and to further him in well-doing Lastly in all thy societies and dealings with others labour either to doe them good or to receiue good from them and by this meanes thou shalt eschew the sinne of rash iudgement Here two questions may be mooued concerning rash iudgement and that necessarily because surmises will arise vpon very small occasions I. Quest. When may a man doubt or suspect euill of another Ans. In all suspicion recourse must be had to the ground thereof whether it rise of iust and sufficient cause or not A sufficient cause of suspicion is that which in the iudgement of wise men beeing well considered with all the circumstances thereof is iudged sufficient and on the other side that is insufficient which wise men well waying with the circumstances thereof doe iudge insufficient if then the cause of suspicion be thought insufficient in the iudgement of the wise and godly we must suspend our suspicion as thus suppose some euill is reported abroad of such a man as that he is a theefe an adulterer or such like yet this fame riseth onely of some one mans report which because it may proceede from an ill minde on a priuate grudge we are not to yeild thereupon to suspect ill of the partie this report may well cause vs to search further into the case and mooue vs to looke vnto our selues that we be not hurt by him But if the cause be thought sufficient in the iudgement of those that are wise and discreete then we may without offence or breach of conscience yeild to suspect and iudge euill of another II. Question How may we giue vpright iudgement of all men with whome we liue and haue to deale Answ. This is as necessarie to be knowen as the former for as we are prone to thinke ill so we are also forward in iudging rashly therefore there are three things required in the iudging of others First we must haue recourse to the cause of our iudgement for if the cause be insufficient then our iudgement is rash and vnlawfull Before the Lord brought vpon the world the confusion of languages he is saide to goe downe among them to see their fact Gen. 11. 6. before he destroied Sodom and Gomorra with fire brimstone he is saide to come downe from heauen
to see whether they had done according to the cry that was come vp to the Lord. Gen. 18. 21. whereby the Lord would teach vs that before he enter into iudgement with any man or any people he first takes good consideration of the fact which causeth his punishment Secondly we must haue authoritie and warrant by calling to giue iudgement or els some thing which is answerable thereto though the iudgement be priuate as to giue admonition or iust dispraise yet without a calling we must not doe it he that giueth iudgement must be able truly to say the Lord hath called me thus to doe The Magistrate the Minister the master and euery superiour hath authoritie to iudge those that are vnder him and for priuate men in priuate iudgement though they want this authority by calling yet if they haue that which is answerable hereto that is the affection of Christian loue so as they can say with Paul the loue of God constraineth me then they may iudge Thirdly we must alwaies haue a good ende of our iudgement as well as a good beginning that is the reformation and amendment not the defaming of our brother And these three concurring in all hard speeches they cease to be rash and vniust censures Iohn Baptist calls the Pharisies and Sadduces a generation of vipers Matth. 3. 7. our Sauiour Christ calls them hypocrites and painted tombes and Herod a foxe the Prophet Isai calls the Princes and people of Iuda and Israel Princes and people of Sodom and the Apostle Paul calls the Galatians fooles Gal. 3. 1. and the Cretians lyars euill beasts slow bellies Tit. 1. 12 13. All which are hard speeches but yet no slanders because they had all of them a calling so to doe and likewise did this on good ground and for a good ende Thus much for the commandement Now follow two reasons to induce vs to make conscience of rash iudgement The former is laide downe in these words That ye be not iudged And it may be framed thus If ye iudge ye shall be iudged of men againe with rash iudgement But ye cannot abide to be iudged of rashly and therefore iudge not The second part is vnderstood but yet necessarily collected The conclusion is the commandement it selfe Iudge not This reason doth affoard vnto vs two instructions I. It giueth vs a tast and view of our owne naturall pride and selfeloue for when we heare God dishonoured by sweating or our neighbours name defamed by slandering we are not onely not grieued but oftentimes are the cause thereof and take great delight therein especially in hearing other mens faults ripped vp to their disgrace but yet we can in no sort brooke or suffer our owne good name to be called into question if our selues be ill spoken of we are presently filled with malice and enuie and cannot be at rest till we be requited or reuenged nay though we be in a good manner admonished of our fault euen in loue and after a friendly sort yet we can very hardly brooke it though the partie admonishing make knowne vnto vs that he doth it only for our good without all purpose of disgrace vnto our persons II. Instruct. Here also our Sauiour Christ affoardeth vnto vs a notable way whereby we may come to the knowledge of our own sinnes and of the hainousnes thereof When we behold sinne in our selues we hardly iudge it to be sinne we must therefore looke vpon our owne sinnes in the person of others and learne to iudge of it in our selues as we iudge of it in others When we consider of rash iudgement in others against our selues we count it a vile and grieuous sinne yea odious and intolerable and in like sort ought we to thinke of rash iudgement in our selues towards others and so for euery other sinne in our selues we ought to iudge of it as we doe when we see it in the person of others against vs otherwise if we looke onely to our selues we shall sooth vp our selues in sinne making great sinnes little sinnes and small sinnes none at all vers 2. For with what iudgement ye iudge ye shall be iudged and with what measure you mete it shall be measured to you againe This verse containes a double confirmation of the former reason drawne from the euent The first in these words For with what iudgement ye iudge ye shall be iudged as if Christ had said If ye iudge men rashly then men againe by the appointment of God in his wisdome and prouidence shall accordingly giue rash iudgement vpon you but if ye iudge men righteously then men againe by Gods appointment and prouidence shall iudge well of you for so I take the words to be meant of mens iudgement by Gods appointment in his prouidence and not of Gods iudgement immediatly Now in this proofe first we may obserue one true and maine cause of that personal defamation which is common in the world and it is to be found in the person himselfe that is defamed he hath rashly and vniustly censured others for which God in his prouidence doth most iustly cause others to defame him againe so as men themselues doe most of all wound their owne good names and by their bad cariage toward others iustly cause their owne disgrace In regard whereof we must learne first to set a carefull watch before our mouthes to keepe the doore of our lips gouerning our tongues by the word of God for when we censure others rashly we doe procure iudgement vnto our selues Secondly to be patient vnder the rash censures and slaunders of others For we must thinke that we our selues haue heretofore done the like to others and therefore it is iustice with God to reward vs in the same kinde wherewith we haue wronged others This is Salomons counsell Giue not thine heart to all the words that men speake least thou doe heare thy seruant cursing thee for oft ●imes also thine heart knoweth that thou likewise hast cursed others Secondly in this proofe wee may also obserue the right way how to get and keepe a good name to wit by iudging others with Christian iudgement carying a charitable opinion of euery one speaking the the best of them in all companies so farforth as we can with good conscience and neuer iudging hardly of any till we be indeed lawfully called thereunto hauing a good ground for our action and doing it for a good end If thou wouldst liue long saith the Prophet and see good dayes refraine thy tongue from euill and thy lips that they speake no guile that is speake not euill of any man though thou know ill by him till thou be lawfully called thereto Thirdly from the consideration of this prouidence of God whereby he ordereth and disposeth that defamers of others shal be rewarded in their kind and that by others we may gather that God knowes euery vnaduised thought of the heart and euery rash censure