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A73031 Certain godly and learned sermons, preached by that worthy seruant of Christ M. Ed. Philips in S. Sauiors in Southwarke: vpon the whole foure first chapters of Matthew, Luc. 11. vers. 24. 25. 26. Rom. 8. the whole, 1. Thess. 5. 19. Tit. 2. 11. 12. Iames 2. from the 20. to the 26. and 1. Ioh. 3. 9. 10. And were taken by the pen of H. Yeluerton of Grayes Inne Gentleman Philips, Edward.; Yelverton, Henry, Sir, 1566-1629. 1607 (1607) STC 19854; ESTC S114640 484,245 625

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when they came to their iournies end set downe by fiue circumstances First that they went when they were resolued Secondly that the starre appeareth againe and goeth before them Thirdly that it stands vpon the particular place where the babe lay Fourthly their exceeding ioy Fiftly how comming thither they find the babe in a base place yet they are not discouraged but reuerence him and giue him gifts For the first it is shewed that they went alone not one with them though this was the King specially borne for the saluation of the Iewes Wherein wee may admire their ingratitude and the impiety of the Scribes that pointed the way to others and yet vouchsafed not themselues to goe one foot to enquire after Christ Thus may Preachers be as Mercuriales statui set vp a● directors of others shewing the way to heauen and yet goe themselues to hell Perhaps they feared the cruelty of the king that if they should haue beene caried with an affection of seeing him it might haue cost them their liues or at least their honours Though it were so yet doth it not excuse their vngodlinesse to preferre the feare of a King that could but kill the body and touch the goods Mark 8.36 before the feare of the great King of the heauens that can destroy both body and soule For though the disciples and Apostles Act. 4.18 bee commanded that they should teach no more in the name of Iesus yet if the burden of the Lord be vpon them they may not but speake vers 20. the things which they haue seene and heard And though Micaia● the Prophet 1. King 22.13 doe know what message will please the King yet though he be smitten on the cheeke and cast into prison hee must deliuer the counsell of the Lord. For as Saint Paul saith Gal. 1.10 If in these things I should please me● I were not the seruant of Christ. In that none of the people accompanied these Wise-men obserue their dulnesse and Atheisme that they all stay at home and yet they kept an outward shew and deuotion in seruing God and offered sacrifices which vnlesse they knew that they praefigured the death of Christ what made they of their temple but a butchers shambles Yet by their idlenesse that they would not steppe one foot to see him is perceiued that of the Messias spiritually they knew nothing Which is likewise to be feared of vs in these daies that we onely rest our selues within the reach of the Gospell for that it hath brought vs peace which peace hath purchased for vs profit and promotion but if the state might stand in quiet though Christ were banished from vs or if we might gaine more by Diana of Ephesus Act. 19.24 then by the God of Israel it is to bee doubted Christ might lodge long enough at Bethlem before we would goe to visit him Further obserue if these Wise-men had not left Herod to his canuassing of the matter the Scribes to their speculation the people to their trades if they had respected the example of the mighty or of the learned or considered the danger that it was a matter of treason if it had so beene taken they had not had this glory and honour to haue seene the Messias but they are glad to goe alone though they would be desirous to haue company Whereby we learne that to embrace religion and to ioyne our selues with the congregation of the Saints it is good in going if wee can get company for the greater blessing fals vpon a multitude howbeit we must haue this resolution to go what danger soeuer may befall and not to stay vntill others goe for thou shalt neuer see the Lord Iesus if thou stay till all Hierusalem doe goe with thee to Bethlem These Wise-men might haue said with themselues Wherefore should we goe see him since his owne people will not as Iudas asked Christ Ioh. ● 22 Why doest thou shew thy selfe to vs and not to the world but they take no occasion of stay but are resolute to goe alone Now if these heathen men were so earnest as to admit of nothing which might hinder them from beholding Christ in the flesh how much more ought wee to bee eager to heare Christ in his word and to see him in the Sacrament The Queene of Saba shall rise vp in iudgement against vs that came so farre to heare the wisdome of Salomon 1. Kings 10.1 and yet as Christ speaketh Mat. 12.42 a greater then Salomon is heere yet are we negligent in attending the voice of God Now for the second circumstance namely that the starre went before them consider the wonderfull wisdome of God that he doeth so qualifie and moderate the trials and afflictions of his seruants that euen to the greatest temptations if they mistrust not he giueth a most blessed issue for it might haue stricken these men with a strange astonishment and driuen them into great perplexity that they being of speciall reputation in their country and comming this tedious iourney and hauing such colde entertainment both in the Kings court and of the meaner people and hauing lost their direction the starre being vanished these things might greatly haue dismaied them not to haue gone any further yet they proceeding forward in their obedience the light that was quenched was againe of the Lord reuiued and with this they were comforted greatly seeing the resolution of the Priests concurring with the dumbe message of the starre Wherein also marke that the starre guided them to the particular place where the babe lay for if they had come to Bethlem it is likely none there knew it Christ his birth being a thing not dreamt of and he being a babe vnregarded and so much the more because he comes of the house of Dauid And if they had enquired of wicked men for such a thing they would but haue scorned them or else sought to haue intrapped them if of good men they had indangered themselues by discrying it Therfore not to need any helpe the Lord from heauen pointeth out the place vnto them wherin for our further instruction learne that God in euery good purpose doth goe before vs by his grace to make vs willing Phil. 2.13 as Saint Paul speaketh and with the same grace doth follow vs and confirme vs in the first worke that we shall neuer wash our hands in vaine but that as we are by his direction come to Ierusalem to seeke after Christ so wee shall by the same direction go strait to Bethlem where we shall see him as Dauid saith Psalm 25.12 They that feare the Lord shall know how to choose the right way For their reioycing at the sight of the starre appearing againe it implieth they were strangely discomforted at the losse of it Where note that if the Lord doe at any time quench the light of his spirit in vs or change the pleasure and eclipse the ioy of his countenance if sometimes wee cannot apply to our soules the sweet
Coronation for then shall we haue not Reedes but Palmes in our hands to shew our triumph and bee crowned not with Thornes but with Glory euen the glory that Christ had from the beginning Now for life that cannot doe it for there is no temptation in this life neither excessiue pleasure nor abundant profit not magnificent state that a righteous soule will not forgoe rather then forsake the righteousnesse of C●●●● or their owne peace of conscience yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Moses ●●●●her then to lose the least light of the Lords conntenance we will refuse to be made glorious by our birth and chuse to suffer affliction with the children of God Heb. 11.24 and with Paul Phil. 3.8 to esteeme all things but as the excrement of a dog in comparison of the security and confidence we haue of the Lords loue towards vs so as we are Christs in our life also And though we doe desire to see the face and glory of the Lord yet as Saint Paul speaketh whether we be in our body at home absent Phil. 1.20 or abroad in our separation our soules still wait vpon the Lord for for this cause as Rom. 14.8.9 Christ died that whether we liue or die we might be the Lords Now for Angels Powers or Principalities by the names themselues may be vnderstood as well the good Angels as the bad wherof Paul speaketh 1. Cor. 6.3 Know ye not that we shall iudge the Angels that is the reprobate spirits for these be executioners of the Lords will though not by willing and loyall obedience as well as the other and though both these being seuerall haue in the scripture the same titles giuen them as the good are called Eph. 1.21 Powers and Principalities and so are the bad called by the same name Colos 2.15 where Christ is said to spoile and to traduce Principalities Powers to open shame and Eph. 6.12 We must fight against Principalities and Powers yet in this place by Angels are to bee taken the good and by Powers and Principalities the diuels The reason is because heere the Apostle maketh an opposition betweene contraries and also because in other places of the scripture where these same words are vsed to expresse the good Angels there is alwaies more added to their stile as Eph. 1.20 Thrones and Dominations are mentioned besides the other But it may be said will the Angels that are the messengers of God attempt any such thing as to part God and vs No it is impossible howsoeuer the Apostle speaketh excessiuely from the exultation ioy of his spirit for he reasons ab impossibili as if he should say if Angels which be the most excellent and most powerfull creatures could attempt to separate vs from the loue of God yet they could not for Christ which is the head of Angels hath ioyned vs to his Father and therefore much lesse any inferiour thing can doe it After this maner this Apostle speaketh Galat. 1.8 If an Angel from heauen should preach any other doctrine which is impossible let him be accursed So Rom. 9.3 Paul wisheth himselfe accursed to redeeme the Iewes and Moses praied to be rased out of the booke of life rather than the Israelites should perish which was not possible that the decree of God should bee frustrate But such was the vehemencie of their affection if the Lord would be intreated at their praiers And it was necessary for the Apostle heere to name Angels because they be the mightiest creatures and if they cannot part the Lord and vs much lesse can diuels for the worst they can doe is but to buffet vs whereby our infirmities shall be healed and as Christ said to Peter Satan desireth to winnow thee like wheat Mat. 22.31 but I haue praied that thy faith may not faile This also appeareth by that in the Reuelation 12.4 that the red Dragon cannot doe it though with his taile hee can draw starres from heauen that is discouer the hypocrisy of some great professors for first he waited vpon the woman as she was with child secondly in her deliuerie thirdly when the child was brought foorth to see first if he could haue destroied the Church of the Iewes and if not the Church of the Gentiles and if not the head of the Church the Lord Iesus or if not the whole bodie of the faithfull or if not some one of the faithfull but he was cast downe saith the text that is he was abased in his pride and sought to aduance and lift vp himselfe againe to heauen by destroying the woman and her seede that is by withstanding the saluation of the elect This Dragon hath especially two instruments first the great Beast that is the Romane Empire where was a name of blasphemie written in his fore-head which though it could with Eliah call fire from heauen yet could it neuer consume the faith of Gods chosen 2. King 1.10 nor euer draw one soule from Christ The second is the Romane Hierarchie raised out of the ruines of the former which though it could make the heauens brasse that it should not raine or the earth iron that it should yeeld no fruit yet could it neuer touch any that was written in the booke of the Lambe Reuel 5.3 for where hee sealeth none can open and where he openeth none can shut and as it is said in the former place They which are bought from the earth sing in great troupes a new song with the Lord Iesus For the other Neither things present that may be knowen nor things to come which may seeme to be doubtfull can make any separation of God from vs for the elect are sure the Lords grace shall assist them to the end neither height of heauen as Paul that was carried vp on high did not yet presume nor the depth of hell 2. Cor. 12.5 Ionah 2.1 as Ionas being in the belly of the Whale did not yet dispaire but had his praiers passing to heauen thorow the fishes mouth Iob. 13.15 Iob in the patiēce resolution of his spirit could say O Lord though thou kill me yet will I loue thee for hope which is the sure anchor of the soule maketh vs to enter with considēce within the lists of the Lords presence and there staieth vs for the Lord doth know vs for his owne in his beloued Sonne Hence learne that a man may be assured he shall be saued for this place is without exception Yet some say this was a speciall reuelation Paul had of his owne saluation which is most iniurious to the whole text for though he saith I am perswaded as speaking of himselfe yet in the matter of the perswasion he ioyneth all the faithfull as that nothing can separate vs speaking generally of all which is proued also by many things and speeches before as verse 23. Wee grone for the redemption of our body Did Paul onely grone And verse 35. Who shall separate vs from the loue of God Was Paul only
certainely set downe but it is probable and likely that it was not till Mary had recouered the weaknes of her child-birth Secondly heerein consider the substance of the message containing these foure things first that Ioseph must take the babe and his mother hee doth not say his wife for the Angell had before satisfied him for that matter Secondly the place whither he must goe to Egypt the worst of all other Thirdly the time he should stay there set downe indefinitely till hee was called away Fourthly a reason of this commandement expressed to releeue the weaknesse of Ioseph though the commandement it selfe had been sufficient because Herod sought to destroy the child Out of the first circumstance of the time learne that God giueth and alloweth no long time of peace and truce to his seruants whom he will make mirrors of patience but hee sendeth one trouble in the necke of another that though the life of man be but as a tale told yet the estate of a Christian soule hath many fractions and interruptions before it can passe like the weauers shuttle through the web so as the breathing time which they haue had is but to enable them to further strength for that which succedeth Heere being in this place set downe how the Lord mingled the sweetnesse of the gifts brought to this babe by the men of Persia with the bitternesse of an immediate persecution by the hand of Herod the King to teach Ioseph and in him all of vs that when we haue had honour together with the profession of the Gospell we may not flatter and perswade our selues of the continuance of this but bee armed to stand to the truth and to the acknowledgement of the Lord Iesus both in honour and dishonour For Mary as she had this comfort to see the babe her sonne honoured and worshipped of these Wisemen so had she this sorrow and discomfort mixed therewithall in the night to trusse vp her furniture and to flie Thus fared it with her sonne at another time who Mat. 21.8 comming riding on the Sabboth to Hierusalem had acclamations and cries of the people Hosanna to the Sonne of Dauid blessed be he that commeth in the name of the Lord yea had the greatest glory that euer happened to any earthly Prince to haue garments strawed in the way for him to tread on thereby the more royally to entertaine him yet after all this within fiue daies he is exclaimed on and tumultuously they crie Crucifie him crucifie him his bloud be vpon vs and our children To teach vs that neither prosperity puffe vs vp nor aduersity cast vs downe knowing that it is the Lords will and pleasure that there should be an interchangeable course of these things As Simeon prophesied Luk. 2.35 that a sword should pierce Maries soule which euen now was fulfilled being commanded to take her heeles to teach her that she should not expect any great state in this life though she was the mother of the King of glory but that euen shee should be fashioned after her owne Sonne to come to a crowne by the crosse Heere then is condemned the daintinesse of those professors that will waite no longer at the Lords table then they may be fed from his trencher and which doe loue the practise of the Gospell onely for the peace of the Gospell For Ioseph may not bee discouraged though he bee driuen to flie with the Lord of life in his armes but heereby may he be secured of safety hauing his Sauiour with him And on this may we all rest that 〈◊〉 wee bee driuen to flight for the cause of Christ our feet shall 〈◊〉 leade vs to the wings of Christ where we shall be cherished euen in Egypt a place of darknesse and disdaine to the truth 〈◊〉 God For the second circumstance which is the place wither they must flie it cannot be thought but Ioseph was distracted and wearied with sundry cogitations yea and perplexed with deepe sorrowes to see that this King of glorie must bee forced to flie from the cruelty of Herod and to such a place as was alwares an enemy to the Church of God Howbeit heerein wee may obserue how sometimes the Lord sheweth but a sparkle and portion of his power in the deliuery of his seruants though at other times hee openly sheweth himselfe for their protection in great glorie and maiesty as in the case of Eliah 2. King 1.9 when the souldiers came to him and scoffed him saying Man of God come downe presently the arme of God was made naked and fire came downe and consumed them So did the Lord deale with Elisha 2. King 6.18 who hauing discouered the secrets spoken in the King of Syriahs chamber the King in indignation sends foorth against one man hauing but Gehezi to wait on him and hoast of armed men to compasse the place where hee was and when they came thinking to haue caught him they were smitten with sudden blindnesse and Elisha in a holy zeale of Gods glory leadeth them to a city where but for him they had beene all slaine So Daniel chap. 6.7.22 he is put into the Lions denne sealed with the Kings owne signet as escape out he could not which since it is so the mouths of the Lions are shut that they cannot hurt him heere is maiesty but now Iesus his owne sonne he must flie and shall not be rescued by any immediate hand of his Father heere is a diuerse dispensation The children in the fire Dan. 3.22 though it consumed them that cast them in yet doe not their cloaths so much as smell of it and shall wee thinke that the hand of the Lord was now shortned or his power abated that hee could not haue wrought as mightily for the safety of his owne sonne God forbid Peter we see is cast into the gaole Act. 12.8 but the Angell of the Lord openeth the doore and bids him preach with confidence and ●hen hee was condemned the next day to bee executed lying ●ound with two great chaines the Angell with one blow vnloo●eth them both bringeth him through the souldiers and an iron gate flieth open to giue him passage So Paul Act. 16.26 he is deliuered by an earth-quake that shakes the prison and the gouernours are faine to intreat him to go foorth Thus can the praiers of Gods seruants obtaine the ministery of Angels to disarme the power of Sathan and to frustrate the malice of the wicked Howbeit on the other side how the Lord suffereth as it were his power to bee blasted vnder a wonderfull kind of infirmity wee haue equall examples in the Scripture We see Eliah 1. King 19.3 that before could command fire from heauen must now flie from the face of Iezabel and is driuen to such an exigent that hee cries out vnto the Lord euen to take away his life So the spies that came to see Iericho Iosh 2.4 and were sent from Ioshua the Lieutenant of God to take possession of the land of Canaan so
we learne that Princes thinke them selues abused and that disparagement is done to the state royall if men will not be executioners of their bloudy complots and euen sell their soules for the effecting of their designes Herod is mocked because the Wise-men will not relate the certainty of Christs birth that he may murder him and Saul 1. Sam. 22.17 thinketh himselfe contemned because his footmen would not slay the Priests of the Lord that had their hand with Dauid Secondly in that he tearmeth it mockery note that the wicked can father that vpon others whereof themselues are most guilty for the Wise-men they meant simply but that they were interdicted of God to returne to the court but Herod he mocked with the Lord for though hee knew that this new-borne King was to be set vp and that hee must raigne in the hearts of men yet in despight of God he though either by policy to circumuent it or by power to withstand the ordinance of the Lord scorning at the Oracles of the Prophets and complaining of cousinage when himselfe would haue cousined the almighty like vnto Fimbria of Rome who hauing dangerously wounded one the next day entred an action against the party grieued because hee had receiued but part of his blade into his bodie and not all And is it not strange when Pharaoh shall call Moses hard hearted when the Wolfe shall accuse the Lambe the Serpent saie the Doue is too subtle and Herod exclaime vpon the Wise men for mockerie when himselfe nourished so foule a vice against the highest No doubt he was wroth but not simplie because the Wise men returned not but for his owne sottishnesse that hee had not sent some man with them to haue seene what had become of the babe But thus when Princes make league and band themselues against the Lord and contribute toward the affliction of his saints hee insnareth them in their owne inuentions and infatuateth their deuises and destroieth the counsell of Achitophel Psal 18.26 2. Sam. 17.14 for as the Psalmist saith With the froward the Lord will deale frowardly For the second point which is the execution of this butchery we see to the end that if it were possible he might haue the bloud of the babe among the multitude he spareth none and the stories report in this massacre was killed his owne sonne whereupon Augustus the Emperour said in detestation of his cruelty that he had rather be Herods hogge then his heire By which we learne that the diuell possessing the heart of a tyrant makes him execute any thing tending to the maintenance of his state though the nature of man abhorre it as the effusion of bloud or though they be checked and amated by their owne hearts for Herod knew if Christ were borne he must raigne yet against his owne conscience he endeuours by counsell if he be able to deceiue or by crueltie if he be able to supplant the decree of God Thus did Pharaoh Exod. 8.4 seeke to crosse the commandement and purpose of the Lord in the deliuery of his seruants though by many immediate testimonies and wonders from heauen hee saw it as it were written on the walles that the Israelites must depart And thus did Saul seeke the life of Dauid though he was told by Samuel 1. Sam. 15.28 that the Lord the strength of Israel that could not lie had rent the kingdome from him and giuen it to his neighbour Secondly obserue hence that when one way succeedeth not to these Atheists then they straite attempt another Pharaoh at the first doth but exact further and greater labour of the Israelites but after he dealeth with the Midwiues Exod 1.15 to kill them that should be borne and after his malice breaketh foorth more fiercely into an edict or proclamation vers 22. that the male borne should be cast into the riuer So Saul confessing that he knew the Lord would establish the kingdome in the throne of Dauid yet first he sought to insnare him by his daughter 1. Sam. 18.17 Onely saith he fight thou the battels of the Lord and thou shalt haue my daughter but after his hypocrisie is discouered c. 19.1 making solemne proclamation Who haue I among all my souldiers that will do thus much for me to kill Dauid So as he that could spare Agag would pierce Dauid So Herod when he saw he was preuented of his first purpose by the not returning of the Wise men he still trauelleth with the same mischiefe and whereas before hee sought but the life of the babe onely now he is so enraged as he doubleth his crueltie and will haue the life of many innocent babes such a fire is sinne to double and increase the heate by burning and the deferring of their cursed attempts which should be as water to quench them is as oile to inflame them this being wrought by the malice of the diuell who throweth in fresh poison into our hearts that if wee bee preuented in our resolution of murdering the Lord Iesus we will be like the Dragon Reu. 12.12 to send foorth whole flouds of waters out of our mouthes to drowne and destroy his members Thirdly obserue that there is no edict or proclamation so cruell or execrable against Gods Saints which some wicked men will not execute at their Princes commandement If Iesabel would haue Naboths vineyard and cannot obtaine it without his life 1. King 21.11 she shall haue gouernors to serue her turne that will so one follow her cursed counsell When no man will fall vpon the Priests at the words of Saul 1. Sam. 22.17 then will Doeg take the sword and do it and Herod heere can no sooner mention a murder but his seruants will execute it Where further consider that if hell be prepared for the commander so is it likewise for the executioner though his act bee warranted by authority Is it in the power of the Prince to bring in a religion against God or may they doe what they will God forbid If the Prince should command mee to burne the Bible I ought not to doe it for a thing is not of God because she commands it but because it is of God therefore ought shee to command it Cambises king of Persia inflamed with incest consulteth with his Wise-men whether he may lawfully mary his sister they answer they find no such law to warrant it but they finde another law that the King of Persia is without all law And thus doe Princes counsellers feed them in their humors nodding at whatsoeuer Augustus will haue done And euen so miserable are these times that men doe wait at their Princes mouthes and performe their decrees not scanning whether they be grounded vpon the law of God which ought to bee the rule whereat Princes should leuell their commandements and by which subiects should square their obedience For it is not enough to slay Amnon 2. Sam. 13.29 at Absoloms commandement neither shall Rabshaketh excuse himselfe Esay 36.16 for railing on
the babes life verse 21 Then he rose vp and tooke the babe and his mother and came into the land of Israel verse 22 But when he heard that Archilaus did raigne in Iuda in stand of his father Herod he was afraid to goe thither yet after he was warned of God in a dreame he turned aside into the parts of Galiley verse 23 And went and dwelt in a citie called Nazareth that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Prophets which was that he should be called a Nazarite NOW followeth the returne of Iesus out of Egypt after the cruelty executed by Herod vpon the children and the iudgement of God manifested on Herod striking him with death 〈◊〉 which words there bee foure generall points to be considered first the commandement of the Lord by the message of an Angell vnto Ioseph as the foster-fathe● of this babe whereby he is aduertised to returne hauing securitie giuen him that he need not doubt namely that Herod and the rest were dead which sought the life of Christ Secondly the obedience of Ioseph turning neither to the right hand nor to the left but as he staid till hee was called so he staied not when he was called Thirdly in what feare Ioseph stood finding suc● troubles in Iudaea and into what perturbation of minde he●● cast when he heard that Archilaus raigned knowing him to be Cockatrice hatched out of a Serpents egge and how the L●sent an Angell to releeue him in this perplexity Fourthly 〈◊〉 Ioseph minding no such matter by his turning into Galile th●● is an ancient Oracle fulfilled that this babe should bee call●● Nazarit Out of the first learne the faithfulnesse of Gods pro●●● that he is a God of his word for in this is his first prom●●● complished as appeareth now by the effect that he wou●● his sonne out of Egypt and that the same Angell that br●●● the heauy tidings vnto Ioseph of his flight from Bethle●● Egypt the same Angell brings him this glad tidings of 〈◊〉 turne from thence into the land of Israel And thus m●●● consider of all the promises of God as of his couenan● Noah Genes 9.11 that the world shall no more bee dro●● his promise to Israel that they shall be his chosen for ho● euer the Lord withdrawes his fauour from his saints for a●● yet at the last he will release them and in compassion will 〈◊〉 vpon their afflictions And well may the mountaines fall the course of nature change but Gods promise shall 〈◊〉 faile 1. Thes 5.24 for as Dauid saieth Psalme 32. though their ●●lations bee many yet the Lord will deliuer them out of And though this pregnant security of returning be not expresly giuen to euery prisoner as it was heere to Ioseph yet all that feare God haue this to comfort them that hee hath giuen his word hee will make them blessed Mat. 5.4 and that as hee hath drawne them to the profession of his name so hee will neuer leaue them till hee haue brought them to the possession of his glory and that whether they die in Egypt vnder the fornace of affliction or come forth of Egypt all shall worke for their saluation And this his wisedome hath not onely disposed of the generall end which is his glory but of the meanes also how hee will bring euery one of vs to his kingdome And though it bee thorow the riuers of waters what skilleth it if wee haue the crowne at last Iob. 5.18 The same hand that woundeth shall bind vp the wound againe and the same hand that smiteth shall heale and the same God that layed vs before in the ashes shall giue vs oile to make our faces cheerfull Psal 104.15 Act. 12.8 by a warrant from heauen discharge Peter of his chains when in the eie of his enemies he stands condemned and make Ioseph returne out of that barbarous nation Egypt wherein God was so much dishonored to exercise himselfe in the seruice of God in Galile And though wee haue no certaine promise of this yet let vs be affected like Dauid who wandring 2. Sam. 15.25 through the mountaines in great di●●●esse his griefe being increased because hee was banished by his owne sonne and supplanted by the subtilty of Achitophel his ●hiefe counsellor when he saw he could not haue the Arke with ●im bids it should be caried againe into Ierusalem saying If I ●aue found fauour in Gods sight he will bring me thither againe but if hee haue no delight in me let him doe as seemeth best to ●im for either in the time of our trouble we shall be gathered to God in peace Psal 56.13 or else he will let vs see his goodnesse in the light of the liuing Now the cause why it is safe for Ioseph to returne is because Herod is dead where we learne to our comfort that tyrants shal ●ot liue euer and when they perish and fall away then is the Church deliuered and comforted for this death of his was no doubt as cheerefull to Anna and Simeon at Ierusalem as to Ioseph and Mary in Egypt and Rachel that before was brought in weeping ouer the innocent bloud of the poore children as if the graue had felt such barbarous and beastly cruelty may now be thought to breake forth into exceeding ioy that such a rakehell was taken away as Herod was that sought the life of Christ How we ought to bee affected at the fall of the wicked appeareth Psalm 52. where although Doeg had got great authority with Saul so as he boasted in his power trusted in the strength of his malice his tongue being as the sharpe razor alwaies cutting or as the coales of iuniper alwaies raising contention against the Saints yet the Lord shall destroy him and though hee thought to haue built his neast in the heauens yet shall the Lord cast him downe and the righteous saith he shall see it and reioyce the wicked being blind neuer beholding the iudgement of God and they shall laugh not in reuenge but to see God mercy in taking part with the godly And not onely the righteous shall ioy at this but as Iob. 20 26. saith The tongue of the ●●per shall slay them that is the very wicked shall curse them 〈◊〉 Princes that want religion soone slip into tyranny and want●●● conscience to moderate their desires and affection to looke vpon their subiects they will soone resemble Rehoboam 1. King● 12.10 in making the yoake heauy and correcting them 〈◊〉 Scorpions Further from hence learne that God doth often so disappoint the plots and purposes of cruell tyrants that when they intend to execute others they die first themselues and sometime Haman Ester 7.10 is hanged on his owne gallowes th●● he prepared for Mordecai Herod had thought to haue kill●● Christ but he is faine to take the paines to die himselfe If M●ses come any more into Pharaohs sight he shall surely die Ex●● 10.28 Well Moses will see his face no more but
Neither is this contrary to that God willeth not the death of a sinner for the difference is this God willeth not the confusion simply of any man as a thing wherein he delighteth but he willeth it as it is his iustice and what greater or better iustice can there be then to bee glorified in the condemnation of some that haue deserued it and he must be no more vnwillingly iust then vnwillingly mercifull Further learne that euen in this life the godly are gathered to heauen and so of the wicked that though they liue yet they are in hell So S. Iohn saith he that beleeueth is already passed to life Iohn 5.24 and Heb. 12.22 we are gathered already to the Patriarks and to the soules of iust and perfect men through hope and wee are as sure to haue that we hope for as we are of this we haue already namely the pledge of Gods spirit and Ephes 2. vs he hath gathered to the celesticall places vnder hope speaking as if it were already done though the reall gathering shal be at the latter day On the other side of the wicked it is said by the same spirit He that beleueth not is already damned the words are fearefull but it is so set downe to expresse the certainty of it not but that hee that is not beloued Ose 2.23 may be beloued and he that is not vnder mercy 1. Pet. 2.10 may obtaine mercy But looke in what state a man is in the Church in the same shall hee be after this life for whatsoeuer is bound on earth is bound in heauen and they that bee not bound heere being priuy hypocrites are notwithstanding bound in heauen and shall be so in hell also For the last which is vnquenchable fire thereby is meant the condemnation prepared for the reprobate not that wee must imagine there is any naturall fire there for first this fire can not pierce the soules of men nor the spirits of diuels and the paine must extend both to soule and body Secondly it is no more naturall fire then it is a bodily worme spoken of in the Gospell which shall gnaw the hearts and consciences of the damned Mark 9.44 Thirdly in Esay 30.33 it is said there was a great lake prepared for Kings with fire of much wood and it is absurd to thinke there is any wood there and a riuer of brimstone burning by the breath of the Lord which is not to bee intended of materiall brimstone but it is set out by such termes to expresse the vnspeakable torment of it not to be comprehended much lesse to be endured for the torment of fire and brimstone euen to flesh and bloud are strange and terrible therefore these speeches are vsed to conuey to our vnderstanding what we could not before conceiue So it is said in the Gospell that they shall bee bound hand and foot not that there be any bonds or chaines there Mat. 22.13 but the meaning only is that they are the prisoners of the Lord for euer neuer to be released but to be restrained from all libertie wherby they might in any sort be eased Againe hell fire is called Gehenna or Topheth which was a litle place where the Israelites did sacrifice their children in fire to the Diuels this being taken for the torment of the reprobate Now this torment is expressed two waies first in the extremitie of it secondly in the permanencie of it The first two waies First by that they shall feele both in soule and body secondly by that they shall lose both of them expressed 2. Thess 1.9 they shall be separated from the power of his presence and bound in chaines in euerlasting darknesse The greatnesse of this torment is expressed two waies first it shall be vniuersall in all parts and it is most fearfull in this life to be pained in euery part of the body at one time Secondly the particular torment th● euery one in hell shall feele as that Princes shall be tormented like Princes euery one according to the sinnes that he wrought in his body Mat. 10.15 as it is said in the Gospell It shall bee easier for Sodome then for them and yet they be in hell already for the damnation of Belzebub shall be the greatest and then of them that sinned against the holy Ghost and none of these shall haue so much as a drop of water to coole their toongues but they shall continually bee blaspheming of God for the which they shall continually be tormented And though this shall be great and grieuous such as they cannot yet they must abide yet shall it be a farre greater hell vnto them to thinke they haue lost heauen seeing Gods children to reioice that their persecutors be now plagued and that God is so auenged of them for their sakes For the second which is the endlesnesse of this torment it is a fire that shall neuer go out nor the flames wherof can neuer be●bated If there were but as many yeeres to endure it as there be grasse piles on earth or starres in heauen the conscience might somewhat through hope bee eased because at length it should cease but the end thereof cannot be imagined and this word neuer is fearefull Let this therefore teach vs rightly to embrace the Gospell that we may be wheate in this earthly floore of the Lord to the end we may be gathered into his heauenly garner MATH Chap. 3. vers 13 14 15 16 17. verse 13 Then cam Iesus from Galile to Iordan vnto Iohn to he baptized of him verse 14 But Iohn earnestly put him backe saying I haue neede to be baptized of thee and comest thou to me verse 15 Then Iesus answering said to him Let be now for thus it becommeth vs to fulfill all righteousnesse so hee suffered him verse 16 And Iesus when he was baptized came straite out of the water and lo the heauens were opened vnto him and Iohn saw the Spirit of God descending like a Diue and lighting on him verse 17 And lo a voice came from heauen saying This is my beloloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased NOW the Euangelist proceedeth to shew now Iohn exercised part of his Ministery euen toward the Messias himselfe and setteth downe how after Christ had liued long in Nazareth containing himselfe in Iosephs house till his heauenly father should consecrate him and call him forth to the great worke of the Ministery and of maiestie hee being now of thirty yeeres of age commeth to Iohn and requireth to be baptized in as much as he appearing in the flesh of man was to ioyne himselfe to them that confessed their sinnes Iohn by reuelation perceiuing that he was the Lord for they neuer met before this being in wise dome prouided of the Lord lest it might haue seemed a compact betweene them two to cosen the world refuseth to do it and put him backe earnestly acknowledging Christs excellency and his owne vnworthinesse In this bewraying the error of his
all graces and so truely is it sealed vnto our soules that wee eate Christ though not corporally By the word we eate the flesh of Christ continually by faith and in the Sacrament it is only more plaine that we eate it because two senses are satisfied by it the eare hearing the word and the eie seeing the bread For the third testimony There comes a voice from heau●● by the former miracles the Lord onely prouided for the witnesse of the eye but now hee prouides for the eare also Where wee learne the wonderfull wisedome and loue of God to exercise all our senses that thereby we might be brought to a certaine perswasion of these mysteries Among the Philosophers is a great question whether the sense of sight or of hearing bee better in it selfe True it is that sight in nature is more excellent as for celerity and quickenesse so for perspicuity and sharpnesse but if the doubt bee made of the profit of these two then hearing excelleth for we can see nothing but that is visible but many more things are to be heard of which thereby may be conueied to the heart to iudge of so the largenesse of hearing is greater in the profit Besides no man profiteth by sight vnlesse he vnderstand it by hearing for which cause it pleased God to apply both in the mystery of saluation that thereby we might be sure of it we neuer doubting of that we both see and heare Faith commeth by hearing Rom. 10.17 and the holy Ghost bores the care Psal 40. and leades the eye to satisfie it setting before it in Baptisme water and in the Supper bread and wine so as it is prouided that the hearing might haue the word and the eye the sacraments Now in the voice consider what it doth expresse namely th● that flesh which stood there before them was the naturall sonne of God and this he is two waies first as he is the sonne of God by nature of the eternall substance of his Father howbeit let no man thinke fleshly of the matter for hee departed with no substance nor had any manner of change secondly as he was the sonne of Mary not by nature or adoption for then there had beene a time when he was not the Sonne of God but by personall vnion the man Christ being neuer a person by it selfe vntill it was personally vnited to the Godhead so as he was borne the sonne of God not by nature for he was of the nature of his mother so Mary is said to bee the mother of God not that she brought forth God but brought foorth that man that was God and this in respect onely of the personall vnion In that it is said my welbeloued Sonne vnderstand that all lo●● comes from him that comes to vs and wee are beloued only for Christs sake as Ch●●● 〈…〉 praieth Iohn 17. I beseech thee good Father that as 〈…〉 ●●●d me so thou wilt loue them and giue them the same glory thou guest me This is God required to doe by his owne Sonne who can a●ke nothing shall be denied him With the same loue loue thou them as I am in them so are they in me And this ministreth singular consolation that when we consider Christ to be beloued we may withall remember that with the same loue the Lord loueth his natural son with the same doth he loue vs that are adopted so as when he beholds the beauty of his sonne in whose fore-head as in a golden plate are written all our names hee turneth from our filthinesse and embraceth vs as his owne sonne and the Father and sonne are all one in desire The Lord grant we may be able to comprehend it and be willing to entertaine it that this loue may constraine vs to loue him againe otherwise it brings foorth no effectuall fruit in vs. Againe since the Father tooke all delight in this Sonne Christ Iesus and that the whole Trinity was heere at his baptizing and that the father saith in another place Sonne I will glorifie thee still Iohn 12.28 let vs learne to magnifie the Lord Iesus let him bee our ioy for who is there in heauen or earth in whom wee can set our delight better then on him which thus pleaseth the father Let vs loue him that God loueth he is the only Priest to sacrifice for vs the only Aduocate to plead for vs the onely Prophet to instruct vs the only King to gouerne vs the onely shield to defend vs we shall be made rich through his grace only righteous through his obedience onely safe through his protection onely and saued through his mediation only He that glorifies the Sonne glorifies God and he that resteth vnder the wings of the Sonne shroudeth himselfe vnder the shadow of the most high then accursed be that man or that religion that holds Christ but as the chiefe Sauior and would haue other helpes ioyned to him for we must only haue Christ and wholly Christ and assure ourselues to bee ●aued onely in him our praiers to bee heard onely through him and our wounds to be healed onely by the sight of him and to what end should we ioyne others with him since all are beloued onely for him That there is a Trinity appe●● 〈…〉 ●●er in this place a● namely the fathers voice 〈…〉 ●esence in the Done and Christ manifested and 〈…〉 flesh and these bee seuerall yet but on●●e ho●●● and all and euery of them is le●●●uah It is a mystery only to be adored yet in some measure i● to be kno●en that they should be three persons yet but one God as for example take three men Paul Iames and Iohn heere be three persons and three men but it is not so in God for in things that bee created wee must consider they are onely limited therefore the same nature in Iohn is not the same natu●●● singular and in specie that is in Paul because they bee not onely two persons but diuided in quantity and that particular nature in particular that is in Iohn cannot be in Paul So for Angels take Raphael Gabriel and Michael supposing him to bee a created Angell the same particular angelicall nature that is 〈◊〉 one is not in another for they be not onely two persons of Angels but two natures not distinct but separate Now in God 〈◊〉 make a common essence which is Iehouah wherein doth cons●●● three Elohims yet are they not three Iehouahs because his nature is simple and the selfe same is in them all and the same being is in God the Father that is in the Sonne and is tota to 〈◊〉 in euery one and the same in Vnity And if wee will haue th●● Gods then must we make a substance diuided which cannot be but there is onely a distinction Angels are separate one from another and are one without another but in the Trinity it is otherwise The Sonne is in the Father the holy Ghost in the●● both and they are all one The Sunne
if wee will not be hypocrites we must arraie our selues with a contrarie garnishment casting downe as 2. Cor. 10.5 euery thing that is exalted against the knowledge of God and bringing into captiuitie euery thought to the obedience of Christ For as Satan delighteth to haue his house garnished and the fuller of sinnes thou art the fitter for him as that if the cup be full of extortion if it be faire without Mat. 23.25 he makes thee thinke thy selfe a great Scribe So also there is a furniture the Lord delights in namely sanctification and as 2. Cor. 7.1 to keep our soules clean for since Sathan 〈◊〉 needs be doing and willingly contenteth not himselfe to get the borders but hee will assay to take the arch city wee that are the children of God must keepe him occupied in some out-house or outward member at the most and aboue all striue to shut him out of the bed-chamber and from ruling in the heart bearing a religious care to follow the waies of God and to be garnished in humility to receiue the riches of the Lords graces not excepting against any thing the Lord willeth but shewing our selues reformable to all He taketh seuen other spirits worse c. As Sathan at his returne findeth the field well growen and the heart of that man fuller of sinnes than before so the fourth thing followeth namely what meanes he vseth not to be turned out againe hee bringeth seuen spirits worse than himselfe by this meanes so to rampire this his fortresse as to make it his continuall mansion Mat. 23.15 not to make him two fold worse as Proselites but seuen times worse like Diuels Wherein obserue that God in iustice is prouoked to reuenge himselfe vpon ingratitude for his graces according to the proportion of the grace that was offered so as Sathan vpon the contempt of the grace giuen shal preuaile more than before which the Lord doth as a iust reuenger of sinne for Sathan is chained that without his permission he can do nothing and the Lord is alway present vel per gratiam vel per vindictam either by grace to preuent thy sinne or by reuenge to punish it and therefore thou that hast spurned at the riches of the Lords mercy that hast thought Manna to be lothsome and syncerity in religion to be burdensome the Lord shall so punish thee that the sinnes past shall be the punishments of sinnes to come and the deserts of punishments that are to come For if wee thinke not the hearing of the word and receiuing of the Sacraments to be speciall meanes to bring in Sathan looke Luk. 13.26 and it will make vs take heed whether we come to them of conscience or of custome for Christ may teach in our streets and wee may eat and drinke in his presence and yet not know vs to bee his for it is said To him that hath profited shall more grace bee giuen but if thou hast onely heard that grace 〈…〉 hast shalt thou be spoiled of Heb. 6.7 And it fareth with the 〈◊〉 as with the raine that neuer falles vpon the ground but if maketh the earth more barren or more fruitfull so the word of God neuer returneth in vaine but euery man is made thereby either to sauour damnation or saluation 2. Cor. ● 26 as Saint Paul speaketh Euen so it is also of the Sacrament for though Christ was kinde in giuing the soppe to a traitor yet wee see Iohn 13.2 that after the soppe giuen Sathan entred into Iudas For the more familiar and the better acquainted wee are with the best of Gods graces the more shall our paine and torment bee for our prophane vse of them Secondly in that it is said Seuen spirits woorse wee must vnderstand a verie forcible seducing and great power of Sathan for heere is put a certaine number of an incertaine seuen spirits that is an infinite number of enormous sins expressed in diuers places of the Scripture as Acts 5.3 it is said Sathan had filled Ananias heart that he should lie vnto the holy Ghost and Act. 8.23 of Simon Magus that he was in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquitie and Act. 13.8 of Elymas the sorcerer such an enemie of righteousnesse as the least occasion will moue him to sinne and hauing as Eph. 4.19 their hearts past feeling haue giuen themselues to all wantonnesse and such as Reuel 22.11 being filthie will be more filthie Now if any should expostulate and question why the Lord will suffer this where hee once bestowed his graces wee answer Mat. 2. if the Lord do gather where he sowed not if he take away the talent for not vsing it to gaine by a spirituall trafficke then what shall his case bee that casteth the pearles of his graces to swine Againe as Rom. 1.20 the Lord did iustly condemne them that onely had the law written in their hearts and had no other spectacle than the booke of heauen and earth and thereby did see his power and iustice in administring these inferior things which hee had created if I say as vers 24. he gaue them vp into a reprobate sense what shall become of those that haue the booke of the Gospell and haue acknowledged the Lord and yet haue troden him vnder foot but that they be giuen vp into a triple reprobate sense since the Gentiles were cast away onely for despising him in his creatures and yet we despise him in his Christ Further in that it is said Seuen spirits woorse obserue th● there is a difference of sinnes sinners and punishments for it is said they be woorse yet the first was said to be vncleane which we note not that wee should learne to extenuate any sinne for thought idle words be but an vncleane spirit in respect of whoordome which is worse yet shalt thou be iudged for them aswell as for this In Mat. 5.22 there is a difference of sinnes and punishments set downe whosoeuer is angry with his brother vnaduisedly shall be culpable of iudgement but he that saith Raca shall be woorthy to bee punished by a Councell but who so shall say Foole shall be worthy to be punished with hell fire So as we see though some sinnes be more sharply punished than others yet the least is culpable of iudgement So Dauid Psal 1.1 pronounceth blessednesse to him that first hath not walked secondly that stands not thirdly that sits not in the sea● of the scornefull that is hath a resolute purpose to despise the spirit of grace harder shall it be for him than for the other and as the Apostle Saint Iude v. 7. harder for them than for Sodome and yet they be in hell For as all haue not the same spirit of grace in like measure so is it of the vncleane spirit which raigneth more in some than in others Withall obserue the speech of S. Paul Eph. 4.30 who after warning giuen not to grieue the spirit setteth downe how one sinne increaseth another as
Saints of God and put religion on their faces as a maske to hide the foule deformitie hypocrisie of their hearts Therfore vpon the question demanded Whether more in number shall be saued or damned Christ resolueth it Luk. 13.25 shewing that some shall haue bestowed such paines and walked so farre in the course of Christianity as euen to knocke at heauen gates and to challenge the Lord to let them in and yet he shall not know them that whatsoeuer profession they haue made in the face of the world as to come before the Lord as a p●●ple yet because they haue not liued as a people he will not acknowledge them So as true it is that none shall enioy the presence of the Almighty but they that haue their lampes burning at the houre of their death Mat. 25.10 none but they that haue their foundation setled vpon the rockes Mat. 7.25 as not to be shaken with the blast of any persecution none but they who like faithfull seruants by spirituall trafficke haue employed their talents to their Lords aduantage Luk. 19.24 none but they that are able to testifie by the fruites of the spirit that they haue the spirit But vpon demand how we shall be saued our answer is Onely by the blood of Christ as the cause and effectuall meanes thereof for heauen is giuen operantibus non operibus to workers not to works as 2. Cor. 5.10 The Lord shall giue to euery man according as he hath wrought not for that he hath wrought Heb. 13.21 none shall see God without a pure conuersation but not because of his pure conuersation for though we must be perfect in workes yet this working must bee wrought in vs by God as the Apostle there speaketh So likewise none but the obedient child shall be heire not because he is obedient but because he is heire and yet only the obedient child shall receiue the inheritance And euen as we adore and worship Iesus Christ man but not his humanity Hominem non humanitatem so holinesse of life speaking in the abstract quality doth not saue but holy men shall be saued so faith and workes in the person iustified must concurre but in the matter of iustification faith onely and alone hath the place If therefore it be demanded whether workes be necessary to iustification we answer yea as absolutely necessary in their place as faith for wee can not assure our selues of faith but by the visible fruite of workes so as they be not Concausae causes concurring and iumping together but they are Consectaria consectaries and consequents of faith Vers 14. For as many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God This is a confirmation of the reason before going on both parts for as many as mortifie the flesh by the sprit are the sonnes of God and they that doe not so are the sonnes of the diuell So the force of the argument is they that are Gods sonnes are led to mortifie the flesh and being his sons they are inheritors of heauen and this the Apostle assumeth and taketh as granted that the sons of God must needs haue eternall life Whereupon the contrary proposition is true he that liues after the flesh is not the son of God for if he were he would liue after the spirit but hee that doth not mortifie the flesh hath not the spirit therefore he is not the son of God Hereupon followeth if they be sons and not Gods they are as Christ speaketh Iohn 8.44 the children of the diuell Wherein we learne that if we be asked by what title and interest we can challenge or lay claime to heauen it is by none but by this that we are the sonnes of God and we are his sons onely by adoption and wee are adopted to it onely in the naturall heire and son of God Christ Iesus by whose blood we are iustified and sanctified by his spirit Being then adopted to this inheritance as heires we are not borne to it for adoptiō excludeth birth being not borne to it it is purchased for vs in the obedience of Christ wee must learne then to resemble Christ in being obedient to the will of God as he was and shew foorth and expresse our obedience by keeping his commandements Mat. 26.42 and keepe them by leauing of grosse sins and walking according to his will with a full purpose of our hearts to performe it alwaies excepting our infirmities and inborne weaknesse which cleaue so fast to vs as we cannot shake them off nor be deliuered of them till we ouercome all in death Hauing then no title to heauen but by inheritance nor no title to this inheritance but by Christ there is excluded all merits to deserue it and only because we are to be saued we must do well for it is giuen vs as the inheritance of children and not as any stipendary wages of a mercenary man Herupon we must wisely vnderstand that when Christ saith Mat. 25.35 Come ye blessed c. for ye haue releeued the poore c. that this releeuing of the poore and such other workes of faith and loue there mentioned are not set downe as causes of blessednesse for these speeches for and because do not alwaies inferre and bring in a cause but they are such words and particles as sometime ioine the cause with the effect and sometime the effect with the cause as when wee say it is spring time for it blossoms not that the blossoms are the cause of the spring but an effect and euidence that the spring is come So when we say he hath a soule because he breatheth and yet the soul is the cause of breath and breathing but an effect of the soule euen so when Christ saith come and receiue a kingdome for ye haue done such and such particular works of loue it is onely a knitting of the effect with the cause for God hauing preelected or chosen vs before all worlds to this saluation giueth vs this his spirit by whose power and vertue wee worke these good things And in this kinde and phrase of speech the cause is ioyned with the effect as if it should be said Come you that haue releeued the poore that haue comforted the distressed that haue sorrowed with the afflicted receiue the kingdome for it is your inheritance So as the speech of Christ hath this meaning in it You haue done good workes to testifie my kingdome to be yours come take the inheritance prepared for you in the preelection of God for you are the inheritors of heauen because of these fruites and effects which you haue shewed in comforting the aflicted members of Christ We may not take it then that heauen which is the inheritance of the saints is giuen for any desert for when we haue attained to the highest degree of mortification and haue done all that we can we are as Christ saith but vnprofitable seruants Luk. 17.10 True say the Papists vnprofitable
sense that all the sonnes of God are not yet reuealed for part are in heauen part in earth and part of them not yet borne Secondly touching the sonnes of God on earth they are not all yet reuealed in regard that the Lord calleth daily and maketh as it were a fresh addition to his church by the power of his word as he did in the Apostles time Peter by one sermon Act. 2.41 conuerting three thousand soules to Christ Thirdly they are not all yet reuealed on earth because the wicked cannot discerne them for as Christ was visible heere with vs yet was not knowen to the Scribes and Pharisees their eies through ignorance and malice being so shut as they could not see him euen so though the members of Christ are visible in themselues yet to the malitious and vngodly they are inuisible because they haue not the eies of faith to spie them out Fourthly the sonnes of God here on earth are not yet reuealed to the children of God for Elias 1. King 19.14.18 thought there had beene none left but himselfe to serue God when the Lord vnknowen to him had reserued seuen thousand that had not bowed their knees to Baal Fiftly there are many hypocrites among vs in which respect the sonnes of God on earth are not yet reuealed but at the latter day when the Angell shall come to make a separation then shall the fish be knowen from the frogges the sheepe from the goats and the sincere professor from the dissembler for then there shal be two in one bedde the one receaued the other refused who before were so linked in fellowship as it was vndiscernable that in their deaths they should haue such seuerall ends Howbeit the better sense for these words When the sonnes of God shall be reuealed is this When the sonnes of God shall be receaued vp to glory for then shall they know as they be knowen and then shall the restitution come when the sea and the graue shall yeeld vp all their dead and all the creatures receaue as it were their first robes of puritie and goodnesse wherein they were created Now vers 20. the Apostle setteth downe the reason why these insensible creatures doe thus waite for mans glorious libertie because they themselues are subiect to vanitie wherein wee are to consider two things First to what they are subiect Secondly by whom they are made subiect That the creature is subiect it is not to be stood vpon because it is granted of all men but this is no willing nor voluntarie subiection but by force and constraint for the horse must haue his rough rider or else the snaffle will not hold him in and the oxe must haue his yoke on his necke and his goad in his side or else he will not draw well and the mule as Dauid saith Psal 32.9 must haue his mouth bound with the bitte and bridle lest hee come neere thee with his heele Now that which the creature is subiect to is heere saide to be to vanitie and vers 21. to the bondage of corruption that is to a vanishing and fleeting estate and they are said to be so in three respects First in respect they haue lost their first comelinesse and order their first beautie and their first perfection in which they were created for as there is great difference betweene that gold that hath beene tried seuen times in the fire and that which is taken out of the veines of the earth mixt with other mettals betweene that sword that is newly varnished and that which hath line so long by as it is eaten through with rust betweene the shining of the sunne in his brightnesse when it is eclipsed or shineth in a gloomy day so is there as great or greater difference betwixt the heauen and earth all the host therein which then were made for the furnishing of Gods house toward the entertainment of Adam his sonne in paradise and the heauen and the earth which now are left vnto vs poisoned by the curse of God for Adams sinne with thornes and thistles barrennesse and vnholsome smels that the very corruption in the aire killeth both them vs. Secondly they are subiect to vanity in regard the wicked do enioy them and the godly oftentimes abuse them for the rust of the money which the vsurer hoordeth vp crieth in the eares of God because it is deteined by the vniust owner the gay apparell of the proud and ambitious do fret as it were themselues that they should hide the shame of them that are so shamelesse to snatch at the maiestie of God to shake his seate by their sinne the wine which is swilled in by the drunkards doth boile as it were in wrath that it was pressed out of the grape to heate their stomacks that deserue only to be inflamed by the fire of hell yea and euery morsell that falleth into the mouths of gluttons and wicked persons the Sunne that shineth on the vniust and the raine that lighteth vpon the fields of the oppressors and all creatures else that come within their fingring are grieued and doe wait with feruencie for the end of all flesh that they may no longer be forced to serue and sustaine the enemies of their maker for the sinnes of the wicked are so heauie and burdensome and their abuse of the creatures so intollerable that the earth groneth that it cannot swallow them vp as it did Korah Dathan and Abiram Numb 16.32 or otherwise bee disburdened of them though to her owne desolation as it was in the vniuersall floud Gen. 7.21 And againe if we that are sanctified vse them otherwise than they are ordained of God as that the Sunne should giue vs light to wander out of the way of holinesse that we should otherwise be clothed then as becommeth Christians or any further refreshed by recreation then to make vs the fitter for the ranging of our selues within the compasse of our callings heerein do we also make them subiect to vanitie because wee should vse the world as if we vsed it not with such moderation and comelinesse as not to snatch at any of them or to profane them for it is against the law of truce when we are at league with any either to surprise them or abuse them and wee through Christ are at league and peace with all the creatures as Iob saith Chap 5.23 Thirdly they are subiect to vanitie in regard those shal die which haue life in them and the rest shall be cleane melted and dissolued for this heauen and earth we now see shall heereafter be abolished as it is said Esay 65.17 I will create new heauens and a new earth and the former shall not be remembred nor come into mind and Psal 102.25.26 The foundation of the earth and the heauens are the works of thy hands saith Dauid to the Lord they shall perish but thou shalt endure they shall waxe old as doth a garment and Reuel 21.1 I saw saith Iohn a new
heauen and a new earth for the first heauen and the first earth were passed away which agreeth with that 2. Pet. 3.10 The heauens shall passe away with a noise and the elements shall melt with heate and the earth with the works therein shall be burnt vp and howsoeure to our dimme and vnstable sight the heauen with the furniture thereof seemeth very glorious and beautifull yet euery day they decay and diminish by little and little and are alreadie as an old worne and rotten garment readie to be cast off and folded vp by the Lord. Hauing thus seene the threefold subiection of the creatures first vnto diminution of their first estate secondly vnto profanation and pollution thirdly vnto dissolution it now followeth to speake of the second thing pointed at before namely by whom the creatures are made thus subiect and this is set downe in the end of Vers 20. Not of their owne will but by reason of him that is God which hath subdued it vnder hope that they might heerein obey the Creators commaundement who was pleased to signifie by their wauering and transitorie estate what the weight of his displeasure was for the sinne of man yet was his mercie such as he would not subdue the world euer lastinglie vnder his curse but gaue it hope that it should be restored Where learne the great seueritie of Gods iustice and vengeance for the rebellion of our first parents which bounded not it selfe within the body of man who was the sole offender but extended it selfe as a cloud ouer all the inferior works of God which were made for man as his seruants And this sheweth the offence to be very high that it drew so heinous a plague after it for we must not in our vaine and peruerse thoughts against the wisedome of God lessen the sinne of Adam as being but the eating of an apple which was a small matter since he eat so temperately as but to ●●ste of it and did neither spoile nor digge vp any of the trees of the garden making God as a hard and niggardlie master that will take so exact an account and strict reckning of his Steward for euery particular fruit committed to his charge and heereupon will dare challenge God as if his hand had beene too heauie vpon him O beware of these damnable and hellish conceits For first know thou it is the marke of a reprobate to thinke with Cain Gen. 4.13 thy punishment greater then thy offence for herein though it be but in secret doeth he secretly charge God with crueltie who as Abraham saith Gen. 18.25 being Iudge of all the world cannot but doe right Againe the libertie that Adam had to fill himselfe of all the other trees this one excepted sheweth the admirable bountie of the Lord that of all sorts of fruit he kept but one for himself as of all the daies of the weeke he hath reserued but one in a speciall sort for his own vse being herein more sparing to himself then to Adam or to vs yet do we profane that most because it is none of ours as Adam did thirst after that tree most because by speciall commaundement it was forbidden by God wherein his rebellion was much increased that could not be thankefull for the store he had but as if he should starue if he wanted this that was forbidden must set the edge of his appetite vpon this which was so forbidden threfore hath God measured foorth an euen plague of perfection equall with his sinne of presumption being punished not only in himselfe but in his whole posteritie with sorrow not only vpon his body but with anguish and horror vpon his soule also and not only with trouble and vexation in the beginning and entrance into this life being naked and not able to clothe himselfe hungrie and wanting strength to feede himselfe weake and not of power to arme himselfe but also being followed and pursued of this vexation both in the continuance and in the end of his life feeding sowerly vpon his labour and dying lothsomely if the curse were not remoued in Christ and languishinglie vpon his bed his paines heere being but the forerunners and remembrancers of weightier that are to come in the life to come Nay the Lord hath made his iustice like a hooke to runne thorough the nostrels of all his creatures they being all accursed for our sakes for as Iob saith Chap. 5.6 Misery commeth not forth of the dust neither doth affliction spring out of the earth meaning originally of it selfe but by reason of the sinne of man this being prefigured out vnto vs Leuit. 15. vnder the law for when one had the Leprosy the bed he lay on the stoole he sat on the basen he washt in was vncleane the companie he kept yea he that laid his fingers on that the leper had touched was vncleane also which setteth forth the spirituall leprosy of our soules through sinne and that all the creatures whereon man laid his hand or where on he slept yea or whereon hee lookt were polluted and defiled through his vncleanenesse so as whether wee looke aboue vs or about vs to heauen or to earth on the right hand or on the left before vs or behind vs or round about vs we can not but behold Gods great but yet his iust seueritie and vengeance for our transgression in Adam who would not exempt the poore creatures from his stroke which as we may say were in themselues harmelesse and innocent and this well weighed should make vs sigh and grone and mourne and cry for our sinnes that caused then so heauie a curse as hath euer since caused the world to weare as it were her mourning apparell the earth euen for the sinnes committed in our flesh hauing oft times her fruit ready ripened in her wombe and yet wanteth strength to be deliuered being ei●●●r blasted in the blade or not full eared for lacke of the latter raine so that if our meditations were sanctified as they ought as oft as we see a sheepe led to the slaughter so oft should we thinke and acknowledge that we haue deserued death better then the silly beast we being only in the sinne and the creature subiect to this vanitie but through our corruption And this must make vs take heed how we giue the raines to our affections which will soone ouerrunne and corrupt our religion for if God was so deeply displeased with sinne when it came alone into the world how doe wee vrge and prouoke him to wrath in these dayes that bring foorth so many new inuented sinnes that the dragon draweth not now with his taile the third part as he did Reuel 12.4 but euen all the starres of heauen after him there scarce being any sound professor to be found that either poisoneth not his religion with an opinion of indifferencie or mingleth it not with so much feare of man as he is farre short of that zeale that the Lord requireth of them that be worshippers of
but prune our fethers the more easily to flie toward our abiding citie For if neither the weight of corruption though it sorely presse vs nor the violence of affliction though it soundly beat vs can separat vs from the loue of God Iob 5.23 nor the league with his creatures nay if this masse of sin and storme of sorrow we sustaine be the most sensible motiues to draw vs vnder Christs couering and liuing heere as sinning faints though sanctified and as crucified saints though beloued we haue yet but our ioies eclipsed 2. Cor. 13 1● and that beauty of blessednesse set foorth vnto vs in a counterfet which shall clearely heereafter be discouered into what profound vanity are we falne if we wold still be hedged in and inthralled in this vale of misery and mortality and not desire to ascend on that ladder which Iacob knew to bee the gate of heauen Gen. 28.17 the skirts whereof but seene and felt of the Apostles did leaue them in such a slumber of delight as they onely vanted in the crosse of Christ Act. 4.24 which was their preseruatiue against the feare and infection of being folded vp with the wormes and their spur and preparatiue to set the houses of their harts in order before they descended to the dust Most comfortable perswasions instructions tending to this purpose shall be found dispersed and sprinkled in this treatise following into which who so shall walke for religious recreation if he cannot furnish himselfe with Iosephs store to serue Egypt and other countries Gen. 42.6 1. King 17.15 yet can be not faile of the widowes store that had to feed her selfe Eliah For from hence may be obserued that the foolishnes of the Gospell doth prescribe the best directions to a blessed end 1. Cor. 1.27 that the pouerty of a Christian doth forerun the riches which he hath in heauen that the loue of the world is an exemption from the life of God Mat. 5.3 Iames 4.4 Luk. 16.13 Iob 5.17 and that the Lords correction is but loue and on the contrary shall be discerned that the eloquence of the flesh is like the cry of the Lapwing that traineth vs furthest from that we seeke that the pompe of the earth is like a blazing starre that dreadeth the minde by presaging ruine that the temptations to pleasure are like canded wormewood that cozen the tast and kill the stomacke and that the schedule of our daies being summed vp is like a large debt set downe in golden letters These things to a moderate and mortified minde seasoned with the feare and seated in the fauour of God cannot but bee welcome though with the couetous and carnall man that hath his desires like the Mole scraping in the earth they shall fare as Christ did among the Cadarens Marke 5.17 who was intreated to depart from them when he was but comming neare them Howbeit in these desperate diseased times wherein wee are all so vniuersallie drunke with our owne conceits as we despise to be reformed by the word of grace some yoking religion with policy as if they were grapes of the same vintage some trampling downe religion with profanenesse as if she wore a weed that ouergrew the corne some disguising religion with hypocrisie as if she were a garment of diuers colors some poysoning religion with Popery as if the immortall seed of God could bee leauened with the traditions of men and few laying religion to the heart which simply embraced and sincerely followed would and ought to be the square and leuell of our liues it is good we get as many buttresses as we can to vphold the building and raise as many bulwarkes as we can to beat backe the shot that Satan shewing himselfe more sharpe witted and if it may be more spitefully minded then before in laying new kinds of allurements to surprize our faith and subuert our hope that we should not so much as grope after our life which is hid in Christ we may if it be possible with fresh and new supply of skill and cunning vnwind our selues out of his enuenimed snares and hold fast our profession which is a schole of chastisement for a time that in our peace at the last we may be partakers of the Lords holinesse Heb. 12.10 〈◊〉 ●●ue therefore presumed though vnable of my selfe to carie the least sticke to the altar and vnworthy of all others since lowest of the forme to offer either diet or direction to any that hath touched but the hemme of Christ yet being taught a receipt which carefully applied will purifie the head from profane humors strengthen the heart against vaine terrors and cleanse the conscience from that accursed guile of spirit Psal 32.2.3 whereby wee haue learned to lessen sinne I haue presumed no longer to suppresse the quintessence of his skill from whence it came but shadowed with your allowance to send it foorth not so full and hearty a medicine I confesse as it might haue beene from the immediate hand of him that made it The man ye knew and this iron and irefull age that frowneth most on them that are freest from profanenesse could not but approue him to bee zealous of the truth of God painfull in his calling faithfull in his message powerfull in his speech carefull of the flocke of Christ peaceable and blamelesse in his life and comfortable and constant in his death So as if there appeare any skarre or blemish in the worke it came by passing thorow my fingers that carried my pen too slowly and attended the voice too slightly Howbeit putting on the armour of proofe and experience of your fauors toward whom chiefly I haue set my byas that ye will be pleased to be no seuere examiners but mild perusers of these papers and that affection may somewhat mediate with your iudgements to censure not as ye see but as I meane I haue aduentured the hazard to be reproued of others vpon assured confidence to bee accepted of you And though many may happely balke the alley and not lend their eye to behold the iarres betweene the flesh and the spirit vpon opinion that my selfe haue leaped beyond my last in striuing to bring this boat to land which the owner neuer meant should see the shore yet when I considered the word of God to be like the raine Heb. 6.7 Mark 11.13 and the hearts of men like the earth that if the tree answer not her fruite her leaues will not protect her from the fire that he shall come short in his account of faith Rom. 10.14 that maketh no conscience of hearing and that if the voice of the Preacher perish in the ayre or in the eare it shall quicken againe to question with vs for our negligence I was not ashamed to humble my selfe to others view that by the mercy seene on me who haue beene thus farre led into the secrets of God Exod. 19.13 they may be likewise
that he is able by his power to disappoint the decree of God which is the nature of all Atheists to challenge absolute dominion vpon the earth thinking God to be shut vp in heauen but he that sitteth there laugheth them to scorne for Herod thought to haue had the life of the babe but the babe had his when the measure of his sinnes were fulfilled For the second generall point which is the obedience of Ioseph learne how willingly he takes vp his crosse he might haue thought himselfe a miserable man to haue maried such a wife as he might not accompanie with and the babe which was borne to be the cause of these vnseasonable troubles for these no doubt were the suggestions of flesh and bloud but he laieth aside consulting with the old man and fixeth his eie vpon God and casteth his care vpon the highest that as he had giuen the temptation so he knew he would likewise giue the issue like Abraham Gen. 22.8 who answered his sonne saying God will prouide a sacrifice and like this babe himselfe who afterward in his conflict of death Mark 14.36 though most tedious and grieuous to the flesh did yet submit himselfe to his fathers will So as the obedience of Ioseph is here commended by this that he presently dispatcheth not standing reasoning with the Angell nor waiting for the comfort of the day for cursed is he that doth the worke of the Lord negligently He knew this babe was the Lord of glory and that all the world could not murder him as yet because he had a worke to doe for the King of heauen yet seeing there is at this time no other doore of escape but flying hee is neither negligent nor carelesse but he accounteth all haste too little and in the night trusseth vp all he had whereby we may thinke he was exceeding poore and maketh no delay Where we learne that though we be sure the Lord will defend vs yet if we be in danger and the Lord hath opened a window for our deliuerance that we vse all possible dispatch Dauid was sure Saul could not surprise him because the Lord had promsed him the kingdome yet 1. Sam. 24.1 he hideth himselfe in caues and flieth frō one place to another to auoid his fury because though he had Gods oth that he should be king yet he would not tempt God by exposing himselfe to danger So Ioseph though he had the babe of life in his hands yet flies which is a matter of no distrust but of singular obedience because he is willed so to doe For the third point which is the fulfilling of the prophesie The Prophet Osea ch 11.1 after he had set downe the sinnes of the Israelites and had brought in God threatning them with his iudgements and with this iudgement as the greatest that he would distinguish the light of Israel by taking away his sonne which was their glory then hee is sent from God to comfort them againe after this sort that although they had beene rebellious whom the Lord had chosen in his couenant though they had not profited by his corrections and though it might agree with the Lords iustice to depriue them vtterly of his sonne yet forasmuch as Israel is his childe though he hath sent his sonne into Egypt that thereby they might consider their owne vnwoorthinesse yet for his meere mercy sake he will bring him forth againe and restore him vnto them Where we learne first that though we breake our couenant with God yet hee is faithfull that hath promised and will neuer breake his couenant with vs for his thoughts be not like our thoughts but he is the same for euer howbeit if the Lord do beare vs in his armes as he did Ephraim Osea 11.3 and leade vs with the bands of loue Iam. 1.17 if he take the yoke from our iawes and yet we will not acknowledge by whom wee are healed and in whom we are eased we shall wander in the desert of our owne lusts and languish as it were in torment of conscience before the Lord will vnfold the brightnesse of his Sunne and discouer the light of his countenance vnto vs. For though Christ shall be called out of Egypt at the last yet many sorrowes shall runne ouer the hearts of the Israelites before they shall see him Secondly in this prophesie obserue that there was neuer any thing shewed should come to Christ which was base but it was foretold before that when it came it might not seeme strange nor men might not be offended at it as heere is foretol● his flying into Egypt and his basenesse that no man would vouchsafe to looke vpon him was foretold by Esay chap. 53.2 So was it foretold that not many mighty or noble should be called for as S. Paul saith 1. Cor. 2.8 none of the Princes of the world haue knowen the wisedome of God to the end we may not be offended with the base professors of the Gospell but may be as S. Paul calleth them 1. Cor. 4.10 fooles for Christ his sake So was it foretold that in the latter daies there should be scarse faith found vpon the earth as S. Paul speaketh 1. Tim. 4.1 that we may not be discouraged with the profanenesse of the world but that wee may labour to bee of the number of those fooles to whom the riches of the Gospell is reuealed and in the company of those few whose lampes shall bee found burning and whose faith shall be found grounded vpon the perswasion of Gods loue in his sonne MATH chap. 2. vers 16 17 18 verse 16 Then Herod seeing that he was mocked of the Wise-men was exceeding wroth and sent foorth and slue all the male children that were in Bethlem and in all the coastes thereof from two yeeres old and vnder according to the time which he had diligently searched out of the Wise-men verse 17 Then was that fulfilled which is spoken by the Prophet Ieremias saying verse 18 In Rhama was a voice heard mourning and weeping and great howling Rachel weeping for her children and would not bee comforted because they were not NOW followeth the persecution it selfe the perswasion of the Angell being like a flash of lightning before a clap of thunder wherein the Euangelist deliuereth three generall points First by what occasion Herod was so set on fire and exasperate to beethinke himselfe of these murthers namely because hee thought himselfe abused Secondly the execution of this massacre with the circumstances first of the place it was in Bethlem and the townes adioyning to it secondly of the persons they were children of two yeeres old and vnder Thirdly the Euangelist noteth the fulfilling of a prophesie anciently foretold that this comming to passe they might know it was no small matter and withall that the sonne of God was sent not to raigne as a Monarch but to be persecuted vnto bloud For the first Herod thought himselfe mocked not that he was so but onely deemed himselfe so Where
word in the ordinance of God should goe before the seale and in this respect it is necessary yet is it a Sacrament though there be no preaching and the want of the word doth not abolish the nature of the action So we must labour that all thing that sauour of corruption may be remoued yet not to seuer our selues from the Church by reason of some abuses And heere those are confuted that will submit themselues to some commandements and not to others We thinke no man can be saued without Baptisme if hee contemne it and why doest th●● not aswell labour to haue thy child nurtured vp in faith and religion No man will come to the Sacrament without examination for if he do we account it damnable or who is he that taking the bread in the Supper would be found asleepe yet we thrust our selues into the temple to heare the Lord speake vnto vs not communing with our hearts before we come and suffering o●● selues to be caught with sleepe when we are come And whence proceedeth this but that we doe not esteeme it as righteous as ordinance of God to come to the doctrine with preparation as to the Sacrament Certaine it is many may bee saued without Bptisme but being baptized and despising preaching if hee may haue it he is sure to be damned for what is the seale vnlesse there be a graunt precedent But we are almost like vnto the Pharisees that thought it no sinne to sweare by the altar but to sweare by the oblation on the altar was an hainous matter so to sweare by the Temple it was nothing Math. 23.18 but otherwise to sweare by the gold in the Temple which is most strange since the gold is nothing vnlesse it bee sanctified by the Temple So the Word doth separate and sanctifie the water and the bread and not they the Word for it hath life without them and who taught them to distinguish thus For if we will all go to Iohn to be baptized of him so must wee also to heare him preach Let vs beware therefore how wee leape at a Gnat and swallow a Camell Ioh. 13.8 Peter would as faine be cleansed as the rest of the Apostles then must he not be so nice as to deny this mercy to himselfe to haue Christ wash his feet But as we must measure euery thing by the commandement so must we likewise esteeme them according to the dignity and order that God hath commanded for this shall bee the best fulfilling of righteousnesse And Iesus when he was baptised c. Heere the Euangelist setteth downe what followed immediatly after Christs baptising namely the ordaining of him by an heauenly Oracle to be the great Doctor of the Church There were many glorious sights and apparitions whereby was testified to Iohn and the people that this was an extraordinary man By opening the heauens must bee vnderstood that they were as it were cut asunder that thereby they might know that this man was not to be considered as in the infirmitie of man but as one come from heauen Further Iohn and the people saw with their bodily eyes the bodily shape of a doue by which was represented Sacramentally an extraordinary presence of the holy Ghost which though it be euery where and so cannot be lim●ted any where yet was it neuer so much present any where as in this place whereby was signified the perfusing and powring of all gifts and graces vpon the humane nature of the Lord Iesus And after their sight had beene thus confirmed yet was there a more excellent signe a voice from the liuing God that this man and this person that stood before them aggreuating and gathering himselfe among the company of sinners this poore man appearing but in the basenesse of this flesh was the very naturall Sonne of God begot by an incomprehensible generation in whom his soule delighted So as the summe is this There are testimonies giuen from heauen to Iohn and the people by sight and by hearing that this man that was but newly baptized was the onely and alone peace-maker of the Church The testimonies be three first the opening of the heauens secondly the descending of the doue thirdly the voice from heauen and the matter of the voice For the first vnderstand that albeit Christ had the heauens opened in part for the confirmation of his owne soule that hee was appointed to bee the great ruler of the Church who in his humanity had need of such a confirmation and that in part they were opened to giue him security to vndergoe this great office yet it was done especially for the confirming of Iohn and the people as Ioh. 12. A voice came from heauen saying I haue glorified him which came saith Christ vers 30. not for me but for your sakes So as heereby generally obserue in that the heauens are opened to authorize him to be the great Teacher that our duty is to heare him and the greater shall our condemnation be if we doe it not For though others speake by commission from God as Iohn and the Prophets yet this is true spoken of in the Hebrewes that if they went not vnpunished that despised them that spake from the earth that is being but men much lesse shall they escape that despise him who speaketh from heauen And since the Prophets Luk. 16.29 are to be heard and Iohn speaking in the authority of God much more are we to take heede that we neglect not the words of this great Teacher that speakes from heauen being God in flesh For the second testimony first may be demanded whether Iesus was destitute of this spirit before And if not why it is said now to light on him Colos 2 9. It is certaine as the Apostle teacheth that the God head dwelt bodily in his flesh and neuer any creature had so much as hee from the first moment of his conception And in that it seemes now to descend vpon him vnderstand that before hee led a priuate life and the time of his manifestation was not come at this time hee abstained from shewing any worke of his mediatorship and in this priuat course of life he had such a portion of the spirit as was meete but now when he was to exercise his office he hath his soule endued with a more excellent measure of grace Hereupon it is said Esa 61.1 The spirit of the Lord came vpon me to preach good tidings c. comming then in a speciall manner vpon him where we learne that as Christ in the lineaments and proportion of his bodie grew and increased so did he also in the graces of his soule and inward vertues as Luk. 2.52 hee increased in wisedome and in stature and in fauour both with God and men And howsoeuer hee had by right appertaining to him all grace yet it was powred downe by degrees and the greatest measure of all was at the time of his ascension The grace hee hath receiued is farre aboue
begets beames from th●● Sunne and the beames proceeds light the beames cannot be●● without the Sunne nor the light without them both So fro● the spring riseth the well head yet is not the spring without th●● well head and the streame proceeds from them both These 〈◊〉 steps and traces as it were to conceiue somwhat of this myste●● of mysteries Lastly obserue as the whole Trinity was present at C●●●● baptisme the Father to iustifie his Sonne the Spirit to sa●● him and Christ to be sanctified so are they also present 〈◊〉 baptisme God the Father to receiue vs Christ to purcha●en for vs the holy Ghost to purge our consciences yea and the heauens are open that is we are as sure to come thither as we are sure Christ is there Therefore is the whole congregation bound to stay the setting on of this seale and to see the child receiued into the church since there is such a glorious presence at it and it ought to be meditated vpon when it is applied to others MATH chap. 4. vers 1 2 3 4. c. verse 1 Then was Iesus led aside of the spirit into the wildernesse to bee tempted of the diuell verse 2 And when he had fasted forty daies and forty nights he was afterward hungry verse 3 Then came to him the Tempter and said If thou be the Sonne of God command that these stones be made bread verse 4 But he answering said It is written man shal not liue by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God verse 5 Then the diuell tooke him vp into the holy City and set him on a pinacle of the temple verse 6 And said vnto him If thou be the Sonne of God cast thy selfe downe for it is written that he will giue his Angels charge ouer thee and with their hands they shall lift thee vp lest at any time thou shouldest dash thy foot against a stone verse 7 Iesus said vnto him It is written againe Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God verse 8 Againe the diuell tooke him vp into an exceeding high mountaine and shewed him all the kingdomes of the world and the glory of them verse 9 And said vnto him All these will I giue th●● if thou wilt fall downe and worship me verse 10 Then Iesus said vnto him auoid Satan for it is written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God him only shalt thou ser●● verse 11 Then the Diuell left him and behold the Angels came and ministred vnto him NOW the Euangelist further sheweth that because the time was neare when our Sauior Christ was to enter into his office to which hee was before consecrated that it was ordained by God and the holy Ghost immediatly before that he should submit himselfe to bee exercised in a hot conflict challenging Sathan hand to hand that ouercomming in this first and great combate hee himselfe might bee consumed and others might know that he came to destroy the works of the diuell And to the end that Sathan might haue the greater power and fuller blow at him hee was led into a solitary and desert place where the diuell might be in his ruffe and to such a place wherein men possessed were specially tormented and there Christ liued among wild beasts as Marke saith chap. 1.13 that Sathan might doe his vttermost And forasmuch as Moses in the deliuery of the Law Exod. 34.28 was taken vp into a mount to God and was taken from men where hee abstained from meate fourty daies and fourty nights that the excellency of his doctrine might receiue the greater grace and might further be authorised and forasmuch as Eliah 1. King 19.8 in the restoring of the Law defaced in the idolatrous raigne of Ahab did goe in the strength of one cake and a pot of water fourty daies and fourtie nights So heere before the doctrine of the Gospell was to bee published it was meet that Christ should doe no lesse lest there might be thought some disparagement done and lesse glory to haue beene in the Gospell that the law being written but in stone and to endure but a time should bee adorned and beautified with a greater miracle then the Gospell which should bee written in the liuing stones of mens hearts Howbeit in this Christ giueth vs no example of abstinence for hee fasted because hee had no manner of stomacke all that while which was to confirme vs that hee was a man meerely supernaturall being able to forbeare without a●● appetite forty daies During which time the Diuell set vpon him and he was not free from this encounter any while but after beginning to be hungry then the diuel more furiously assaulteth him hoping to worke and preuaile somewhat vpon this occasion of his infirmity whereupon follow three seuerall temptations which in their place shall be spoken of In the words are set downe three points first Saint Mathew diligently deliuereth all such circumstances as went before his temptation secondly what these temptations were both in number and in kinde after he grew hungrie from the third to the end of the tenth verse thirdly the euent and issue of this assault that when he had repulsed the rage and driuen backe the darts of his enemy the Angels came to doe him homage as to a great and mighty conquerour For the circumstances before the combat they be fiue first is noted the time then that is immediatly after he had receiued testimony from heauen that hee was the great Doctor of the church secondly the place where this was in the wildernesse a place most for the aduantage of Sathan thirdly by what motion he was caried thither by the direction of that spirit which before descended on him fourthly to what end he went namely to be tempted fifthly the occasion Sathan tooke more specially ta assault him which was his fasting and hunger For the first when he was solemnely pronounced to bee the Sonne of God and that he was full of the holy Ghost then the diuell setteth vpon him While he liued a priuate life and kept himselfe close and within his compasse hee assaied not to assault him but when he is to execute a matter and worke of his office concerning the saluation of mankind and that this is now to bee accomplished by the preaching of the Gospell and by miracles and that the power of the diuell is to be extinguished and that he is to be cast out of mens consciences now he begins to challenge him Where learne that the same which befell to the head the members be not exempted from especially such as be ordained to bee instruments for the setting vp of the Gospell When Moses liued priuate and shewed not himselfe to the world there was no cause of quarrell but when he saw one of his brethren suffer wrong and defended him and auenged his quarrell that had the harme done to him and smote the Egyptian Act. 7.25 then they began to disgrace him and he was
the Tower of Babell should haue beene erected to them and as easie it is to pull God out of his throne as to disgrace vs further then he permits for our saluation is as sure as his owne seate and as stedfast as if our selues had beene in heauen and seene it written with Gods owne singer Yea we shall stand like mount Sion Psal 125.1 and not a feather of a bird much more not the haire of our head nor the hem of our garment shall bee touched or fall without his appointment Wherefore Sathan sinneth against the holy Ghost in labouring to seduce the faithfull whom he knoweth he cannot stirre and when he knoweth wee cannot fall finally since the Angels haue charge ouer vs and cannot but be faithful keepers of that is committed to them And heerein may we embrace the riches of the Lords mercy who when his owne prouidence might be sufficient to secure vs of our safety yet to releeue our infirmity and to support our weaknesse hath giuen vs the gard of heauen to wait vpon vs as if one that were to passe the seas should not onely haue the letters of the Prince for his safe conduct but should be guarded with his royall Nany to assure vs that doing that we doe by the warrant of his word we shall neither be persecuted nor molested but so far as he may haue glory by it and we reape comfort For the third wherein he doth falsifie the text alleaged and this he doth two waies first by wronging the words secondly by wresting the sense for the Psalm 91.11 is He hath giuen his Angels charge to keepe thee in thy waies so as the promise is made with a limitation that hee keepe him in his waies Now from the pinnacle of the temple to fall downe is not the way but hee leaueth out the demonstration of the truth thy waies that is those waies that bee prescribed as from the Temple to come downe by the staires by this meanes dealing fraudulently leauing out the principall Secondly consider the wresting of the sense for where this was spoken that Christ should depend vpon his Fathers prouidence walking in his waies hee laboureth to secure him generally of the same prouidence though he were out of the way heereby to ouerthrow him Now as hee dealt with the head so hee doth with the members for pretending Gods protection hee laboureth to bring men to destruction For predestination hee will tell a man Esau was hated and Iacob beloued before they had done either good or euill Mal. 1.3 that it is not in the willer nor in the runner neither in the affection Phil. 2.13 nor in the action which hee doth onely to make vs rest in the prouidence of Gods predestination without hauing regard to our conuersation whereas heereby we ought the more to bee induced to get as many testimonies as wee can to prooue that this election pertaineth to vs and not to waite till grace should distill by diuine influence or to make the decree of God a meanes of our security to liue as we list as that being elected we cannot perish and being appointed to be damned we cannot auoid it So for Iustification hee will suggest Wee are saued by the bloud of Christ onely and when wee haue done all we are vnprofitable seruants the more we sinne the more grace aboundeth Rom. 6.1 and God hath most glory in pardoning most offences Whereas being elected we worke well not to recompence the goodnesse of God but to shew our thankfulnesse And there is no promise where the commandement is not kept for this is to be performed on our part else God is discharged on his part for being out of our waies the diuell may take vs as vagabonds the protection of the Lord not extending to vs in this course And thus doth Sathan almost labour to peruert all the Scripture that he may finde vs straying out of our Fathers house as to suggest that the Sabbath is made for man therefore hee will labour to make vs worke on this day Mark 2.27 But let vs not giue eare to him for this leadeth out of the way So when it is said He that laboureth not for his house 2. Tim. 5.8 is worse then an infidell if hee abuse any of vs by this to couet after riches away with it for it is said in another place Couetousnesse is the root of all euill and the desire of riches is simply vnlawfull 1. Tim. 6.9 for by this he falleth into many snares It is written againe Thou shalt not tempt c. This is the second generall part namely the repulse of the temptation wherein consider two parts first that Christ answereth againe by Scripture secondly in what sense the place is alleaged For the first we may obserue and see it is no disgrace nor disparagement to the Scripture to proceed from Sathan nor any occasion to make vs leaue our hold for Christ answereth againe and striketh with the same weapon wherewith he was stricken shewing vs that it is lawfull to vse a text well against them that doe abuse a text and if Christs example be our president then wee may alleage Scripture against depraued Scripture For the Bee may gather hony on the same stalke that the spider doth poison And though a swashbuckler kill a man with his weapon yet a souldier may lawfully knit a sword to his side and though there be many piracies committed on the sea yet may the merchants trafficke or though some surfet by gluttony yet may others vse their temperate diet And if the diuell change himselfe into an Angell of light shall therefore the Angels lose their light Or shall Paul therfore deny himselfe to be a preacher of saluation because the Pythonite Act. 16.17 spake it Or because Caiphas by the spirit of the diuell Ioh. 11.50 said one should die for the sinnes of the people must we not therfore beleeue it And though Numb 22. an inchanter wished that his soule might die the death of the righteous yet is it a praier fit to be vsed of all Christians though hee sold his soule for gold For saith hee Numb 24.17 a starre shall come out of Iuda a true speech of a false spirit And heere the diuels owne mouth protesteth that Gods prouidence reacheth ouer his children which we may beleeue with comfort though it proceed from his lying lippes For the second which is the sense of the words heerein Christ doth plainely shew that hee abused the place before alleaged because he inforced the promise contrary to the commandement mandement making it absolute where it was but conditionall that the Lord would protect him if he kept him in his waies and for him to expect the promise if he went astray were meerely to tempt God so as the diuell by concealing that part did poison and adulterate the Scripture Now wee must obserue that God is tempted by man two waies first when we doubt of his power vsing
doe thy will for thy law is written in my heart And they bee such of whom Esay 50.5 saith the Lord hath opened their eares therefore they are not rebellious But otherwise it is with the hypocrites for though their eares be opened yet they are rebellious and though the word of God be in their stomackes yet like dogges they cast it vp againe and doe not shew themselues pliable to the grace of God He walketh thorow drie places This is the second part spoken of at first namely that when Satan is gone out of a man he hath a restlesse kind of desire euery place is to him as a wildernesse vnlesse he may returne whence he came for he walketh through drie places that is his operation and power being interrupted in that man all other places are as irkesome and vnpleasant Out of this generally obserue that whether Sathan be really cast out or onely so dispossessed as the power of his subtill illusion is made lesse that is whether the iudgement be onely enlightned or with the light of iudgement the affections be also changed which is the effectuall casting out it doth so prouoke Satan distemper him as he will assault that man more fiercely than he did before in his time of ignorance And if he be cast out by a true enlightning then he is more busie than with hypoc●i●● for being Sathan that is an enemy he is an enemy to God because he disthronized and threw him out of heauen and he doth therefore most oppose himselfe against Gods children because he cannot assault the person of God and yet we see how hee assaied it to God in the flesh Luk. 4.2 Againe as hee is an enemie to God so he is said to be the Prince of the world and therefore would draw all to be vnder his seepter Ioh. 16.11 and he can finde no rest in a Papist nor in an Atheist for he knoweth there is a canker alreadie growen vpon their consciences which onely must be seared by the hot iron of the Lords wrath 1. Tim. 4.2 for they are already so hardned in prophanesse and so rooted in the obstinacie of their errour that he is sure enough of them But his labour and rage is to assault professors such as haue a true knowledge of the true God and especially such as beare true affections toward God and whom hee seeth to yeeld obedience to the Gospell of Christ A liuely example and figure of this we haue in Pharaoh who while the children of Israel Exod. 5.7 continued in Egypt onely oppressed them with heauy burdens but then most fiercely and deadly pursued them when they were gone out of Egypt Euen so let euery of vs assure our selues that the further wee be from the regiment and dominion of Sathan and the more excellent seruants of God we be the more will Satan buffet vs and vexe vs. This is that Christ forewarned Peter of saying that Sathan desired to winnow him like Wheate Luk. 22.31 And why him aboue the rest of the Disciples First because he was one whom Iesus loued secondly on the confession of whose faith hee said hee would build his Church And this is the condition of all true Christians that when Sathan is effectually to be cast out and distodged it cannot be but by violence for he will not onely winnow vs that we shall feele the fanne to grate vs but euen the flaile to bruise vs. Example whereof we haue in the dumbe man in the Gospell Mark 9.18 who before Sathan would leane his fort and habitation was so tormented that he fomed raged and was euen rent in peeces so as hee is not to bee encountred with a false alarme or with one hand but in this combat betweene vs and him we must prepare our selues to great temptations and carie Iob before vs as our patterne Iob 1.7 in the subuersion of whose faith and constancie in the loue of God the diuel tooke more delight than in compassing the whole earth yet was he faithfull to the end whereby he obtained the crowne of life Further obserue hence the wisedome and policie of Sathan that his purpose is alwaies to be some where yea and hee foreseeth his future place before he will leaue his former habitation as Math. 8.32 he would not go out of the men whom hee possessed before hee had libertie to goe into the swine and would bee in them rather than no where For Sathan being by nature a destroier seeketh oftentimes by the losse of goods and substance to draw mens faith and feare from God as hee assaied in Iob chapter 1. vers 15.16.17 by his oxen taken by the Shabeans by his sheepe deuoured with fire and by his Camels led away by the Caldeans to driue him to impatiencie against God But yet because the shaking of a mans estate in substance pierceth not the soule so deepely not withdraweth not the heart so swiftly from God as the sinne and corruption seated in himselfe therefore his trauell is to keepe the cup foule within and to haue still some foule blood lurking in our veines which in time may breake forth to some distemper not but that thou must expect when thou art called to feele thy sinnes and hast withall this grace to see some comfort of Gods mercy to bee so haled and pulled betweene these two as thou shalt haue many perplexed feares many troublesome garboiles and infinit great temptations when sinne is to be cast out of thee and seeing so many difficulties thou shalt stand appalled to be restrained from the loose custome of thy former sinnes But as the siege is great which is against thee so must thy encounter and resistance be fierce against him and not done percunctorily or slowlie as the sluggard riseth in the morning Prouerb 6.10 with a little raising of his head and folding of his hands to sleepe againe thinking that if thou beest not so euill in thy life nor so malicious in thy heart against God as others that then thou art good enough and hast sufficiently profited in the schoole of Christ for thy luke-warmth in religion is lothsome to the Lord Reu. 3.14 and a strong stirrop for Sathan to get vp to thy soule againe And therefore consider and thou shalt find whether he bee truely or hypocritically cast out of thee consider whether thou feele not foule and grosse temptations to beset thee for if Sathan labor not mightily in this thou art not called for if thou be a despiser of the word or nourishest any such enormous fault as seemeth sweet to thy taste Sathan hath thee at commandement what needeth he tempt thee when thou temptest thy selfe Not that he that falleth into temptations and fulfilleth them is the best Christian but hee that hath no tubbes set in his way to stumble at and findeth euery thing plaine and easie may know he liueth in the broade way that leadeth not to heauen Math. 7.13 for hee that is most vexed and hath
houses that as wee dwell and abide in them so doth Christ by his spirit dwell and abide in vs. And 1. Cor. 6.19 Your body is the Temple of the holy Ghost which is in you which ye haue of God And 1. Cor. 3.16 ye are the Temple of God and the spirit of God dwelleth in you And 2. Cor. 6.16 Ye are the Temple of the liuing God as God hath said I will dwell among you and walke there And Iohn 14.23 If any man loue me he will keepe my word and my father will loue him and we will come vnto him and dwell with him By which places appeareth how these earthen vessels of our bodies are honoured by being the habitation of God and of Christ Ephe. 2.22 that as by the former comparison wee are said to bee in Christ by putting him on vs so by this Christ is said to bee in vs by his dwelling and abiding with vs. Out of which wee must learne first to keepe our selues vnspotted of the world because we are to entertaine so great a Prince as the Lord Iesus for if we thinke all our labour too little to cleanse beautifie that roome wherein the Kings of the earth shall sit 1. Cor. 6.20 who are taken out of the same lumpe our selues are how much more must wee striue to haue all our members kept chast and sanctified which are as it were so many seueral roomes for him who by his heauenly generation is the Sonne of God Esay 9.6 the fathers Counseller and the Prince of peace Secondly by this dwelling of Christ with vs we are assured that wee are his for no man will willingly dwell in a house whereof he is not owner especially the heire of the whole world whom the heauen of heauens is not able to contain would not set vp his throne and seat in our soules if he did not delight in vs neither could hee take any pleasure to lodge with vs if wee were not his which may be our vndoubted comfort that Christ possessing the fort and castle of our bodies it is not possible for Satan either by deceitfull policy to surprise vs or by his fiery darts to sti●●●●s or by his subtile illusions to ensnare vs or by his bitter and cruell inuasions to vanquish vs for as Ioh. 10.28 we are the sheepe of his pasture and none can plucke vs out of his hands The third comparison is in 1. Peter 2.4 where Christ and his members are resembled to a building for as a building cannot be firme and sure except it be built vpon a strong foundation no more can we stand one minute if we be not built vpon Christ and as the foundation and the rest of the worke make but one building so is it betwixt Christ and vs he being the chiefe corner stone elect and pretious we being liuely stones whereby wee are made a spirituall house vnto God by Christ Hence learne first That all our strength and sufficiency is from God for if we will be a building of our selues and lay our foundation in our owne righteousnesse a little sprinkling of persecution will wash vs away as it did Mat. 7.26 wash away the house that was so foolishly built vpon the sands but in Christ alone we liue mooue and haue our being it is he that can command the Sea to be as a pauement for Peter to walke on Matt. 14.29 who at the sight of a winde arising through weakenesse in himselfe is forced to crie Master saue me yea when as his disciples stricken with the feare and force of a storme challenged him as if he cared not though they perished Luk 8.22 Mark 4.39 he then being through their praiers awaked rebuked the windes and commanded the sea to be still and it was so Now if Peter that had such strength of faith as that the Church should be built vpon his confession and the rest of the Disciples that were so continually taught of Christ felt no power in themselues to resist the feares of the flesh without the hand of God much lesse are we able to set one foote forward toward the way of heauen or to draw one foote backward from the way to sin vnlesse wee lay the foundation on our rocke Christ Iesus who hath measured the heauens with a span holdeth the windes in his fist and hath sounded the deepes of the earth that whatsoeuer falleth on him shall be broken and whosoeuer resisteth him shall be dasht into peeces Secondly obserue that we are no further the house of God then we doe build vpon Christ and that since the foundation and the building make but one worke our praiers and all our other seruice of God must be offered vp vpon the golden altar which is Christ Reu. 8.3 ●●at as Pauls reioicing Galat. 6.14 was onely in Christ crucified so may ours be resting our selues wholly vpon him and placing our whole contentment in him for as he is the strength of the building 〈◊〉 is hee also the honour of the building wee being without him a sinfull nation and a people laden with iniquitie but through him 1. Pet. 2.9 a chosen generation an holy nation and a people set at libertie to shew foorth the vertues of him that called vs. Let vs therefore beware we daw be not our selues with vntempered mortar bringing in the stubble of mans merit or inuention to make vp this frame no not so much as to haue any corner in this house that is not the least member of our body nor the least power of the soule to leaue vpon the arme of flesh or to be supported by the wisedome of vaine man for this were to settle part of the building vpon a rocke and the rest vpon the sands which will ouerthrow all for the whole man must be built vpon Christ and he must be the corner stone to ioine both the bodie and soule the flesh and the spirit vnto God For as the gold is neuer said to be purified till all the drosse be seuered from it so is it not sufficient to haue as it were some of our affections refined and the rest to remaine drossie and polluted but if we will be wedges of gold for the Lords vse and vessels of honour for his house Christ must be in euery part of vs to ioine vs to himselfe that we may be holy euen as he is holy The fourth comparison is Ephes 1.22.23 where God is said to haue giuen Christ to bee the head to the Church which is his body In which place Christ is compared to a body that as the members are knit and vnited to the body so are all wee as members ingrafted and incorporate into the body of Christ and as the members being thus vnited are said to be part of the body so we being ioined vnto Christ are said to be Christs and as the heat and life which is in the body is dispersed and diffused into euery member euen so the life the graces which
the euerlasting curse of God for so are we all by nature in which nature of ours he representing vs became vile before his father in respect of vs. But now for the punishment of sinne vpon him that was not imaginarie but true and sensible both in soule and body so extreame as in anguish of spirit he was driuen to crie My God my God why hast thou forsaken me yea the death he endured was in it owne kind accursed as it is written Deut. 21.23 Cursed is euery one that hangeth on the tree yea looke what miseries what wants what dangers he did vndergoe and taste of from his birth to his ascension into heauen the same he suffered and slept in onely for vs which cleareth the iustice of God that a righteous man should smart for vs sinners because we are in him and he in vs which I vrge the more that we may see the great price the sonne of God paied for our redemption to stirre vs vp to a better and deeper consideration of it he being the only shepheard that euer gaue his life for his sheepe the only lambe which being vnspotted in himselfe did euer take vpon him the scabbes and vlcers of the whole flocke the onely man full of sorrowes and experience of infirmities whom the world iudged as plagued smitten of God and humbled yet was it onely for our iniquities that the chastisement of our peace might be vpon him Therfore as Esay 53.11 let him see the trauell of his soule that is the fruit of his labour and the efficacy of his death in the saluation of vs his people For the other profit it is also double as first we are made partakers of his graces secondly of the glorie for his graces And this standeth also with the iustice of God that he being in vs and we in him God must needs with him giue vs all things also Now the graces we taste of by this coniunction are twofold first by imputation which is his satisfaction for our sinnes we being starke bankerupts able to pay nothing and the benefit of his obedience we being rebellious bastards able to fulfill nothing secondly in our selues but drawen and deriued from Christ the fountaine as the change of our affections reforming of our iudgements renuing of our minds mortification a sanctified life and these graces did farre more abound in Christ then euer they did in Adam in his integrity for he was flesh made ●●t after the image of God wheras this flesh Christ had the God head dwelling in him bodily as Col. 1.18 had in all things the preheminence that we might tast of the fulnes of his graces as far as is fit And for the second much is the glory for his graces namly eternall life of this hee hath also made vs partakers ye as if he had no other errand to heauen he saith Io. 14.32 I go to prepare a place for you in my fathers house Therfore let vs not say in our hearts that is let vs not doubt but assure our selues that as Christ is ascended so shall we and it is no presumption to beleeue that the Lord for his Sonnes sake will saue thee for he hath first giuen thee his word and promise He that beleeueth and repenteth shall be saued so as if thou canst apply repentance to thy selfe thou maiest challenge him on his word and secondly thou hast his oath hee sware to Abraham that his seed through his faith should be blessed and this hath Christ sworne againe A men Amen he that beleeueth is already translated from death to life shewing the certainty of it by the maner of speech as if it were already done and if thou wilt relie vpon neither of the former he hath thirdly left thee a pawne that is his spirit to guide and conduct thee in the right way that though thy selfe connot be in heauen as yet yet thy affections may be in the bosome of Christ and that thy faith in his resurrection may assure thee of thy incorruption and thy comfort in his sitting at the right hand of God may rebound backe vpon thy owne soule in being an vndoubted testimony of thy exaltation and aduancement heereafter for where Christ is there by reason of this coniunction betweene thee and him thou must needs be also Hence ariseth a most comfortable instruction for an afflicted conscience for Sathan will lay a whole scrowle of particular sins before thee charge thee that there be many omitted wherein thou hast offended that corruption is so worne into thy bones and lieth so low at the heart as it cannot be taken forth but must needs rankle to damnation and that thy sinnes are in their number so many and in their weight so heauy as there can be no case nor satisfaction for them Thou must confesse thou art indeed in thy selfe a worme vnworthy to creepe vpon the earth but in Christ as bold and strong as a lion yea if thou canst appropriate the sufferings of Christ to thy selfe in particular as the Gosp●● propounds them generally thou maiest answer that by the ●●rity of his birth the obedience of his life and the bitternesse of his death he hath clensed thee from thy sinne wherein thou wert conceiued made vp the breach of thy rebellion and ransomed thee from the cruelty of that second death whereinto thou wert plunged by thine actuall pollution this thou knowest because thou art one with him and he with thee True indeed sathan will confesse that Christ took our flesh vpon him as himself said in the Gospell that he was come before his time to torment him but yet he will suggest that Christ being but one his satisfaction can be but for one and he will tell thee in this truely that the sinnes of all men are infinite and the wrath of God for them is infinite for which the satisfaction of Christ must bee as infinite which saith he cannot be To which answer that as by the first Adam all men are made sinners so by the second Adam which is Christ all that beleeue are made righteous and as Adam can damne all that shall be damned for all in him did eate of the forbidden fruit so Christ can saue all that shall be saued for all in him are brought againe into the Paradise of God Reu. 2.7 In Rom. 5.14 and 1. Cor. 15.22 Adam is said to be a figure of Christ wherein they agree in this that as Adam gaue as much as he had to his posterity so doth Christ proportionably giue that he hath to those that be his Adam gaue sinne and death Christ giueth life and grace And they disagree in three respects first we receaue sin from Adam by nature but we receaue not the graces of Christ and life eternall by nature but by imputation and by grace only and not by imitation for we cannot imitate Christ in euery thing secondly by Adam came only originall sinne not actuall but Christ hath satisfied for both
vs to mingle with our good thoughts euill thoughts And heerein wee must first know what we are by nature and before our conuersion namely wee are bound both hand and foote as it were with the chaines and irons of sinne that wee cannot mooue to any good and so long we are the slaues of Sathan who whips vs with our owne corruption and so hardeneth our hearts through vse and custome of sinne that we are led into the wrath of God before we see it but when the Lord doth strike vs on the sides as he did Peter and open our hearts as he did the heart of Lydia that we doe see the riches of his mercy Act. 12.7.16.14 and doe feele our irons somewhat vnloosed that is our corruption abated whereby we get some liberty to doe that is good though it be not done with that perfection that is required yet let vs assure our selues that our purpose and desire to walke with God and to doe good is accepted of him for he regardeth the heart and dispenseth with the imperfection of the outward man To which purpose Saint Paul saith Phil. 3.13.14 I forget that which is behind and endeuour to that is before and follow hard toward the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ In which obserue three things First we must know our marke at which we must 〈◊〉 that is Christ and vnto the comming of this marke wee must be absolutely resolued Secondly we must not looke behind vs not forbidding vs to look backe vnto our former estate but nothing must hinder vs from going to this worke as whoredome vsury flattery deceit idolatry and such like grosse sinnes Thirdly we must so striue as in the end we may attain this marke which is Christ and so we come thither it skilleth not whether we creepe or goe by steppes and degrees answerable to that 1. Cor. 9.24 So runne that yee obtaine that though wee haue many stops in the flesh yet if our eies bee still vpon God it sufficeth Lastly that we may be abashed at the shaking of sinne and may grow into perfect hatred and detestation of it we see heere the miserable estate of them that are subiect to the prince of the world and are at league with hell that howsoeuer their life is varnished ouer with a little temporall prosperity yet they feede themselues but for their slaughter for being out of Christ and disclaiming holinesse of life their glory shall be their shame and their end is but damnation it being impossible as Salomon saith Prouer. 12.3 for a man to be established by wickednesse If therefore thou seest his barnes full let not thy soule enuy it for in the reuenues of the wicked there is trouble because they tend to sinne and the Lord casteth away his substance If thou seest him tall and proud as the Cedar blesse thou thy selfe in thy humility for the curse of the Lord being in his house though his excellency mount vp to heauen and his head reach vp to the clouds yet shall he perish for euer like his dung his rootes shall be dried vp beneath and aboue his branch shall be cut downe If thou seest him seated and waxing old in his outward happines let it nothing trouble thee for his bones are full of the sinnes of his youth and it shall lie downe with him in the dust at length his eies shall faile and then shall his candle be put out his refuge shall perish and then fearefulnesse shall driue him to his feet If thou seest him eate and drinke and rise vp to play desire not thou to taste of his ioy for his reioicing is short and but a moment and though wickednesse be sweet in his mouth yet God shall draw 〈◊〉 out of his belly yea affliction followeth sinners and feare shall be for the workers of iniquity such a one consumeth like a r●●● thing God shall run vpon him and his arme shall be broken 〈◊〉 shall destroy him as the vine her sower grape and cast him off 〈◊〉 the oliue doth her flower for he that is not planted in Christ his branch cannot be greene but brimstone shall be scattered in 〈◊〉 habitation and his hope shal be indignation and sorrow of mi●● ROM chap. 8. vers 2. verse 2 For the law of the spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus hath freed me from the law of sinne and of death IN this verse the Apostle insisteth to proue that there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ which he doth by two arguments First because we are freed from the law and dominion of sinne Secondly because we are freed from the law and domination of death Against these t●●o the conscience opposeth two things First how are we freed from the law and power of sinne since we haue so many vncleane thoughts so many raging affections and so many vile and naughty actions that passe from vs in the course of our liues secondly how are we freed from the law and sting of death since we die daily and suffer so many afflictions and miseries in this life which are the merits and deserts of sinne These two obiections that might skare and trouble ●●e tender conscience and inward peace of a Christian he answereth to the end of this chapter In this verse to the end of the 〈◊〉 he sheweth how far we are deliuered from the law of sinne 〈◊〉 from the 19. verse to the 17. how far we are freed from the law of death which was the first punishment for sinne as appea●●th Gen. 2.17 In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die 〈◊〉 death and from the 17. verse to the end of the Chapter he ●●eweth how far we are freed from the miseries and calamities of 〈◊〉 life Now in this verse as it deuideth it selfe we are to consider two ●●●ing First how and by what meanes wee obtaine this free●●me ●●●ly by the spirit of life which is in Christ Secondly ●●things from which we are freed which be two first from the ●●●son of sin secondly from the power of death For the first we must learne to make a difference betweene the spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus and the spirit of life of Christ which is in vs the one being absolute and inherent in Christ the vertue wherof imputed vnto vs brings perefect absolution from the tyranny of sinne and bitternesse of death the other being but poured into vs through the grace of Christs spirit abiding in vs doth but qualifie and temper the heat of sinne and the violence of death which otherwise would rage ouer vs. And therefore if we speake of the spirit of life which is in vs wee may well crie out with Saint Paul Rom. 7.24 O wretched men that we be who shall deliuer vs from the body of this death But if we speake of the spirit of life which is in Christ then may wee boldly say wee are already deliuered from it That this may bee
the obedience of the law in some measure and stirre vp our affections to a delight in it Thirdly we are dead to the power of prouocation which was in the law to vrge vs to sin because our sins being taken away in the passion of Christ the law bringing vs as it were vpon the scaffold and shewing vs hell gates and heauen a farre off not able of our selues to make passage to it teacheth vs to auoid all sinnefull occasions whereby our feete might be found slipping and to lay the better hold vpon the bridge the Lord Iesus by whom the conscience is so pacified as wee are euer directed in the right way so as we are dead to it in the curse of it and aliue to it as it is the rule of our direction we are dead to it in the bondage of it and aliue to it in the obedience of it Gods spirit directing our hearts to doe that willingly which the law requireth Since then there is this necessity laid vpon vs to be dead vnto sinne for which sinne the curse of the law is due and to be liuing to newnesse of life though wee see this rich benefit of hauing the righteosnesse of the law fulfilled to bee performed by Christ onely and that for vs we must beware we fall not either into profane security or else into presumptuous hypocrisie the one thinking the fauour of God not greatly requisite the other that it is easily obtained the one running on still to sinne the other couering their nakednesse with fig-leaues which are not broad enough to couer all nor thicke enough to hide them from his eies that pierceth into the deepest darknesse for these may haue a knowledge of the law and subscribe vnto it a glimmering sight of Christ in the Gospell and reioice at it and yet not haue sinne condemned in their flesh but their flesh damned for their sinne whereas if we straitly trie our selues by the law and see our sinnes as sores runnig full of corruption and damnation to bee awaiting vpon the least sinne then is the commandement come vnto vs and then sinne being reuiued we know to what Physitian to goe and what eie salue to craue for we cannot looke into the bottome of our hearts vnlesse we looke into the bottome of the law and if we faile in this wee shall know no sinnes and so consequently no Sauiour for sinnes for God being a fearefull Iudge and a consuming fire we cannot stand before him without peace of conscience nor haue this peace without grace from Christ nor partake of this grace without acknowledgment of misery nor come to this acknowledgment without a through sight of our sinnes nor attaine to this sight without a sight of damnation due for them nor see this damnation without a triall of our selues by the commandement so as Christ hath not by his vertue abated but aduanced the power and excellency of the law in the right vse of it for which it was ordained namely to set our hearts on God and our waies in the trade of his commandements and therefore let vs by all meanes shun two extremities First a restlesse desire to performe the law so precisely as to seeke life in it which is harder for vs to doe then to remoue mountaines or to clime vp to heauen to see the seat of God Secondly rechlesse impiety to liue profanely because we cannot liue so precisely as we ought for the law is the goale wee must time at and the perfection we must striue to and though in our best workes we are vnprofitable yet must we worke lest wee be abominable Now for the second part namely for whom Christ tooke this paines to establish and fulfill the righteousnesse of the law it was for such as walke not after the flesh but after the spirit which teacheth vs to know a child of God from a reprobate the life of the one being like the darkenesse of Egypt grosse and palpable the other like the Sunne-shine cleere and comfortable And this life in the elect may be discerned by two markes First by a spirituall inuisible internall testimony secondly by a reall externall and visible The first is discouered two waies first by the spirit of adoption whereby we cry in confidence to the Lord as to a father secondly by the spirit of sanctification whereby we liue in obedience and subiection as to a Lord. The outward euidence of a Christian is likewise knowen two waies first by an outward profession secondly by walking in that profession Now lest we be deceaued in the inward signes first through pride in our selues and the policy of sathan to make vs thinke we haue them when we want them as Matth. 7.23 Many by doing great things in the name of Christ will entitle themselues to heauen which is a purchase for the elect only but he will professe he neuer knew them secondly through the secrecie of them they being knowen onely to God as 1. Cor. 2.10 The spirit searcheth all things and no man knowes the heart but he that made it therfore an inuisible faith must be discerned by visible fruits and who can tell that the powers of his soule be reformed if it breake not forth into his life for which cause the badge of a renued Christian is first a proclamation as it were whose he is and vnder whom he serues secondly a blamelesse course in conuersation the first of these is communicable to hypocrites who will seeme to carry a weapon for the Lord but with weake hands and false hearts making a flourish as if hee would defie the diuell yet secretly and couertly feeding on him and defending him in his desires and therefore he that is truely elect must be measured by his life and we must not looke into the spirit which is in him but into the fruites of the spirit which hang about him not to his inuisible faith but to his visible workes of faith not to his outward profession but to his walking according to his profession as Gal. 5.25 If we liue in the spirit wee must also walke in the spirit so as men are not to bee iudged by their tongues but by their steps and since we must iudge them this way if we see one liue inordinately sweare outragiously blaspheme mightily oppresse cruelly haunt wicked company and such like we may well say he is wicked and if he reply iudge not thou maiest answer thou maiest safely iudge the roote by the tree and the tree by the fruit a fountaine by the streames and the streames by their cleerenesse a sicke man by his weakenesse and the danger of his weakenesse by the nature of the disease and what is in the heart by that commeth out of the heart Mat. 15.19 for how could such a sea of sinnes swell ouer their bankes if thou wert stable minded those hauty lookes could neuer so transforme thy countenance if pride did not possesse thee nor thy vsury and oppression so rage and some out in thy
meant by spirit for the first what is meant by flesh Christ tels vs Iohn 3.5 in his answer to Nicodemus saying That except a man be borne againe of water and of the spirit he cannot see heauen meaning thereby that before a man be regenerate he is nothing but flesh soule and body and all for that is borne of flesh is flesh and a cleane thing cannot be drawen out of corruption so Paul 1. Cor. 15.50 saith that flesh and blood cannot inherit heauen not meaning thereby that flesh wherein we are inclosed for the very substance of it shall see God but the old man the corruption of nature which is our mother wit and wil howbeit what this flesh is is more amply set downe Gen. 6.5 where it is said in the originall that all the very mould of the deuising thoughts of a mans heart are not inclined to euill but simply euill and not euill but onely euill and not onely euill but euill in all things and not onely euill in all things but euill in all things euery day and Saint Paul Rom. 3.10 maketh a full description of a fleshly man shewing what euery one is by nature There is none righteous no not one the reason is because there is none that seeketh God and for not seeking him they are all become apostats and by this their apostasie are become vnprofitable and being thus of no value their throate is an open sepulchre and being thus enlarged like hell they vse them either to deceit in that poison is vnder their lips or else their mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse which are two contrarie sinnes their feete are swift to shed bloud and destruction and calamitie are in all their waies and the way of peace they haue not knowen and last of all they haue not the feare of God before their eies which is the true cause of that cursed brood and chaine of sinnes that hang together Now for the second what is meant by Spirit and that is a diuine heauenly inuisible and supernaturall working of the holy Ghost in the hearts of Gods children in begetting them anew into the glorious image of Christ by changing into another quality and condition all the powers of their soules and affections of the heart which is done by faith in the outward man and by peace of conscience in the inner man by reason whereof the elect are saied euen in this prison of theirs to bee spirituall From hence obserue first that the world is diuided but into two kinds of people fleshly and spirituall for there is no meane betweene them howsoeuer the enemies of God are distracted into seuerall and sundry factions some denying the power of godlinesse through porfanenesse some diuiding the power of it through opinion of merit some thinking there is no God at all and some imagining he sits idle in heauen without hauing any sterne to guide and direct the frame of the earth yet doe they all erre alike in their hearts and being all out of the way they shall finde the same reward of their worldly wisdome and their end to bee damnation now these two sorts and conditions of men are easily discerned for by their fruits you shall know them the one sauoring the flesh pots of Aegyt the other the sweetnesse of the land of Canaan the one being taken vp and possessed by the pleasures of the flesh the other striuing and laboring in the workes of the spirit the one hauing sinne as it were alwaies vnder his nose sauoring nothing else the other hauing the spirit euer in his eie to diuert his feet from the snares and pleasures of concupiscence for by this word after which is in the text is signified in the original tongue to be guided and conducted and led by the flesh which sheweth our great infidelity in not beleeuing what the holy Ghost sets downe giuing it heere in precise commandement that we should not be directed by the flesh and binding this commandement in the breach of it with a peremptory curse of damnation for being guided by it and yet as if God could not make his word good or that we could wrastle our selues from his wrath our taste our smell and all our senses are busied onely in the workes of the flesh as if we would cast away our selues willingly whereas euen in naturall reason wee should abhor it for who would be conducted by such a one as cuts the throats of al he guideth or who is he that trauelling toward the desert will picke out such a guide as should lead him to be deuoured of wild beasts or who that hath his iourney by sea will make choice of such a Pilot as hath cast away as many as he conducted or who would entertaine a knowen theefe and a waster to be the steward of his house or who would take such a husband to be the guid of her youth as spends and wasts himselfe in licentiousnesse or what Prince will admit him to bee his cheefe counsellor that is a knowen traitor to his person or such a one to be captaine ouer souldiers as is a knowen and proclaimed rebell There is none so simple nor so profane but will dislike and detest the choice of any such guides and leaders and yet he that taketh his flesh to be his captaine his arme his guide a knowen and vnreconciliable enemy to the soule shall by the conduct of his owne corruption not onely lose his body but his soule also for if the blind lead the blind both shall fall into the pit of perdition Therefore let the world loue her owne and the flesh pamper it selfe let Cain build him a citie Gen. 4.17 to hide him from the presence of the Lord let Esau follow his hunting Gen. 26.30 to satisfie his pleasure in the death of venison let Nimrod Gen. 11.4 build him a tower to get him a name vpon the earth let the rich man Luk. 12.17 heape vp his fruits till his barnes will hold no more let Diues Luk. 16 19.20 be costly in his apparrell and delicate in his fare euery day yet obserue thou but their ends and thou wilt not ioyne hands with them for Cain was branded of the Lord as a castaway Nimrod confounded for his pride Esau reiected for his profanenes the rich man snatched suddainly from his substance and Diues throwne downe to hell where he lies panting and criing for a drop of water and cannot haue it Againe in that it is said they sauour the things of the flesh obserue that all that is in a naturall and carnall man and commeth from him is but flesh that is sinne yea and the most excellent parts that are in him that is his wisdome deserueth death and is but as a worme in the shell to consume him for he wanting the spirit which is the life of the soule as the foule is the life of the body his soule his body his minde his will and his vnderstanding are but members as Paul
by the Masse that most execrable idoll and say it is sworne out of the country Can a man thinke himselfe rich that is indebted to all the world and hath nothing wherewithall to pay them And can such men that bee very beasts and without sense before God esteeme themselues vertuous and religious because they are onely highly praised of men They see not their owne estate because they haue not examined themselues according to the former rule When a man hath swept his chamber he thinkes all is cleane but when the Sunne commeth it sheweth many a mote hee could not before spie out so if the spirit would once shine into these mens consciences they should see not onely motes but most deformed and enormous sinnes in their hearts And how friuolous is it to stand vpon mans witnesse without religion which pierceth and looketh into the soule For otherwise he that thinketh himselfe in best health carieth his deaths wound in his bosome The basest gold is better then the purest led and the greatest imperfections of Gods children better then the highest vertues of the wicked and neuer shall they bee exalted that haue not before beene humbled The law is a hammer not onely to bruise the conscience but to breake it into powder which if it be not done wee shall neuer haue the spirit of adoption to seize vpon vs. The law commands but giueth no power to obey and is as if we should say to a beggar Buy such a mannor when he hath neuer a penny to helpe himselfe nor yet we giue him any money to do it euen so purchase heauen with thy works saith the law and yet knowes we are spoiled of all abilitie and doth not enable vs to doe such workes all one as if we should say to one hold vp the heauens with thy finger and yet giue him no strength to do it or as if we should say to the blind see it is comfortable and to the deafe heare it is profitable and yet giue them no meanes whereby they should doe these So the law is but a dead letter and hath but a dolefull and dreadfull sound vntill the spirit come and arme vs with power and abilitie to performe what the law requireth Lastly where it is said Luk. 15.21 Ye haue not receiued the spirit of bondage againe obserue that all that are conuerted and with the lost sonne are come home againe haue beene once brought to a terrour and fright of conscience which hath beene after a diuers measure for the Lord keepes some longer in the schoole of the law then he doth others according as hee findeth their hearts and dispositions inclinable to stoope and to be humbled or else for example sake as seemeth best to the Lord. But yet euery one of Gods chidren must come to this that is Act. 2.37 being moued and pricked in conscience to say and crie out What shal I doe to be saued I see my debt where shall I get surety I perceiue my nakednesse where shall I be couered I am fallen how shall I be recouered And being touched in their hearts if they fall not into that exclamation then as it is said of Ely his sonnes 1. Sam. 2.25 they obeyed not because the Lord would slay them so for these men to be baked in their sinnes and to see their destruction and not to shunne it and by this meanes to despaire finally is the iust iudgement of God that he may be auenged of their great hypocrisie for mercy offered and refused or set light by doubleth the punishment Euen as in this nation by the blessed preaching of the Gospell Sathan is cast out in the generall profession of the Land if now he labour to creepe in againe by hypocrisie and make vs thinke religion to rest in shewes and consist in ceremonies growing more leane and ilfauoured after we haue deuoured so many yeeres of store and plentie in preaching the word we doe erre in our hearts and do arme our enemie against vs who at his reentrance will bring seuen spirits worse then he did before Luk. 11.25 and will so fortifie his habitation with hypocrisie and other great and monstrous sinnes as there shall be more profannesse in this nation then euer there was before But ye haue receiued the spirit of adoption In this the Apostle proueth that we are the Sonnes of God because we are so adopted in the euerlasting grace of his blessed Sonne And to proue we haue this spirit he doth it by the contrary thus we are deliuered from the spirit of feare and redeemed into such a Christian liberty as we now loue God not for feare but feare him for his loue In this there are two parts to be considered first what this spirit of adoption is secondly the inseparable effect that followeth it namely an assured confidence to come boldly before the Lord euen as children before their parents to craue pardon for our sinnes For the first this spirit is the holy Ghost assuring vs by the word of grace that is the Gospell that the Lord hath auowed vs for his children in that one and best beloued Sonne of his Christ Iesus so that no extremities of this life nor sorrowes of death nor sinne it selfe shall be able to ouer whelme vs. Therefore it is said in the Scriptures that the holy Ghost setteth a seale vpon the heart of his elect Ephes 1.13 and writeth a deed in their consciences which is but a draught of that originall deed which is in heauen in the booke of the Lords gouernment And this is sealed vnto vs by the finger of the spirit to free it from the forgery of Sathan and by this euidence we make our title to the kingdome of heauen ● Cor. 5.5 Also it is called an earnest penie because as in contracts by giuing a penie in earnest the partie is obliged and bound to pay the rest so this being as it were the first fruites of the spirit the Lord doth assure vs that as verily as we haue receiued thus much in hand in this vale of misery so this shall bee a pawne and pledge vnto vs that he will giue vs the rest in the fu●●e●●● 〈◊〉 is glory vnder which assurance we rest and lie down in hope with ioy vnspeakeable And as the first fruits in the law made the whole crop holy so this sparke of the Lords grace being kindled and set on fire in vs doth embolden vs to an expectation of the full enioying of our whole Lord Christ Iesus This testimony oft times is very weake especially when Sathan doth sift and winnow vs as he did Peter Luk. 17.5 so as we had need to pray with the disciples Lord encrease our faith Yet as a prisoner in a darke dungeon seeing but the Sunne at a little grate doth know and beleeue that the Sunne shineth vpon the whole earth so though we be shackled and imprisoned in this flesh as in a dungeon that we are not able to
by the same rounds that he did If we suffer with him Not if we suffer with the world whereby vnderstand and learne that all that are afflicted shall not be saued but on the contrary none shall bee saued vnlesse they be afflicted for a man may suffer all the plagues to be deuised on the earth and yet after goe to hell to suffer more Some suffer with the world such as Peter speaketh of 1. Pet. 2.20 that are buffeted for their demerits and misdeeds on whom the Lord doth satisfie part of his iustice in this life These are poore in the ●esh but proud in the spirit for the misery they sustaine can nothing humble them vnlesse perhaps sometime they will weep for curst heart as Esau did when he lost the blessing Gen. 27.38 but they are so hardned in obstinacy as they are past fearing the heauinesse and weight of the Lords displeasure so as there is a worldly affliction that leadeth to death as well as a godly suffering that prepareth the way to life Now againe some suffer with Christ and such be they as suffer either to profit by the Lords afflictions as that they bee sent as chastisements to reclaime them from some sinne past and so they amend or else as preseruatiues against some sinne to come and so they are made more watchfull or els if we suffer for the Gospell because we will not communicate with the world Now though all afflictions ought to be esteemed iust in respect of our infirmities yet sometimes the Lord regardeth not this alone but maketh it more honorable as when we are troubled for the Gospell that we being but vile wormes and but dust and ashes should either with losse of goods which are but lent vs or with our liues which are the Lords doe the Lord of heauen some honour to maintaine his truth against such as doe maligne it that the wicked may see wee striue for a more precious reward then is set before the eies of mortall men Wee shall bee glorified with him Wee would thinke it a small honour for flesh and blood to suffer with Christ for company and to stay there therefore obserue hence by the Apostles speech that wee are not to looke and to fixe our eyes on the beginnings of affliction but to regard the end that patience may haue her full perfection Looke not vpon Lazarus begging at Diues doore but lying in Abrahams bosome Looke not to the beginning of Ioseph Luk. 16.22 who was so farre from his dreame Genes 37.9 that the Sunne and Moone should reuerence him that for two yeeres he was cast where hee could see neither Sunne nor Moone but behold him at the last made ruler ouer all Egypt 1. Sam. 24.1 Looke not vpon Dauid as there was but a step betweene him and death his life was so thirsted after nor as he was abused by Sauls flatterers 1. King 2.2.10 but behold him feated in his royall throne and dying in his bed of honour with his sonne Salomon about him Looke not vpon Christ borne basely after persecuted from Ierusalem when he came to teach encountred and resisted by the proud Pharisees a litle before his death in such an agony as an Angell from heauen was faine to comfort him Luk. 22.43 his doctrine esteemed false his life notoriously sinnefull betraied by his owne Disciple led as a sheepe to the slaughter a man without blemmish and yet as the Prophet Esay speaketh Esay 53.2 Luk. 23.26 a branch arising from a dead stocke carrying a Crosse vnder which he was so distressed as another was faine to ease him going vp to the crosse nailed hand and foote scoffed and reuiled as hee was vpon it crying as if the sea of the Lords wrath had burst foorth vpon him beholding him in this estate and there was neuer any creature so miserable at last caried as a dead man laied in a graue not only dead but three daies vnder the dominion of death so as his Apostles fled and the diuell thought all had beene quiet But afterward behold him raised vp againe ascending to the heauens Mark 16.19 Luk. 24.51 then hee became head of Angels then a dead man by a few fisher-men conquered all the world so as Emperors submitted their ●●ownes and sought their saluation in 〈◊〉 Crosse of Christ So we must looke vpon the Martyrs who died in their holinesse and were put to death for their holinesse not as hauing reeds in their hands in signe of basenesse and bolts on their feete and stripes on their backes as euill doers but as Renelat 7.9 standing before the throne and before the Lambe with palmes in their hands in token of victory arraied in white robes in signe of innocency and in long robes in signe of statelinesse for these are they saith the spirit of God that came out of tribulation and therefore he that sitteth on the throne will dwell among them We must therefore alwaies bend our thoughts and set our eies not vpon the present affliction which is tedious to the flesh but vpon the end and successe which shall bring spirituall consolation not vpon the crosse which is wearisome but vpon the crowne which is delightsome not vpon the race which is long and crooked but vpon the prize which is weighty and precious not vpon the combat which may be to the blood but vpon the conquest which shall bee certaine and glorious And if we can subdue our affections truely to this meditation all our troubles in the greatest extremity shall seeme light and we shall goe from the whip as the Apostles did with more reioycing then we had before Act. 5.41 because we may be sure our end shall be blessed for if we suffer with him we shall be glorified with him Now for the glory heere spoken of it is not comparable with the sorrow wee sustaine heere for this glory is eternall whereas afflictions are but temporall not possible to bee conceiued in heart nor vttered by speech it is in shew beautifull in sense wonderfull in weight excessiue in measure without bounds in dignity without comparison and in continuance without end ●●●●ea it is such and so great that as one torment in hell shall make a reprobate forget his wordly pleasure so the least taste ye one drop of this glory shall make the heires of God forget all their miseries and for their single and temporary afflictions heere they shall haue double and infinite ioyes in heauen ROM chap. 8. vers 18. verse 18 For I count that the afflictions of this present time are not worthy of the glorie which shall be shewed vnto vs. IN this verse the Apostle proceedeth to proue that he set downe before namely that being companions in Christ his sufferings we shall also be copartners with him in the blessed light Hee proueth it can bee no small glory wee shall partake of since it is the very same that Christ himselfe enioyeth alwaies keeping the correspondencie and
exceedeth all number and it is not possible for our thoughts to reach or to conceiue any end of it For this glory is like God the giuer of it that must be embraced for the excellency of it and thirsted after for the eternity of it Now as the Apostle heere perswadeth the necessity and yeeldeth the reason for patience in our afflictions Heb. 10.35 by the eternity of the glory which waiteth vpon vs as the iust recompence of our reward so must we learne to disswade from the pleasures of sin by the greatnesse and continuance of the sense of torment that waiteth on them And this standch in two points the first is called sensus poenae the feeling and smart of punishment which is aggrauated and made heauier in three respects first in the vniuersalitie of it that no part shall be free from torment but euery ioynt in thy body and euery power of thy soule shall be pained and vexed which is not so in this life saue onely in a fellow-feeling of one member with another for neuer any man was tormented in all the singular parts of his body at one instant Secondly in the extremity of it that as they shall be tormented in all parts at one time and that continually so one damned spirit shall be vexed more then another for as there be here degrees of sinnes so shall there be heereafter degrees of smart and punishments as Christ speaking of Hierusalem said It shall be easier for Sodme then for this citie and yet Sodome was in hell Thirdly in the necessity of it Mat. 11.23 the greatnesse of this their torment being much increased in that they shall haue no meanes to ease and lift vp or releeue themselues for they shall be bound hand and foote that they cannot stirre as we may see by the vsage of him that came to the Lords feast without his wedding garment And for the eternity of their torment Mat. 22.13 if they should suffer no more yeeres then there bee creatures on earth it were some comfort because they might espie some light of deliuerance but when there shall be no more heauens and when God shall leaue to be God and to lose his glory then the damned ghosts shall be eased The second aggrauation of their punishment is in this damno loci in the losse of heauen for it shall not so much vex them that they be tormented as that they haue lost those ioyes they see the Saints of God enioy This shall make them murmure and gnash their teeth and vpon their apprehension and conceauing of that they haue lost shall follow the remorse and sting of conscience that in their life time they despised to labour in mortification and newnesse of life for there are none damned Reuel 20.12 but their owne hearts shall tell them they are iustly damned Vers 23. And not onely the creature but we also which haue the first fruits of the spirit euen we doe sigh in our selues waiting for the adoption euen the redemption of our body c. to the 26. verse The Apostle still enlargeth the weight of glory spoken of before prouing it to be so great that the very frame of heauen and earth and all other creatures doe waite for the restitution and deliuerance of mankinde at which time they shall receiue their originall excellency Now Paul vseth an argument from the lesse to the greater that if the beasts and other insensible things which be accursed and subiect to this corruption by reason of the bondage whereinto man by his fall was inthralled and cast into do labour as it were in trauell till men be glorified and themselues for our sakes restored then how much more should wee wait for the reuelation of this glory wee that are sealed with the first fruites of the spirit and which in the Gospell may behold as it were in a glasse a great glimce and shew of this glory sigh after and wait for this great and glorious day not that wee should wish simply to be vnclothed but as the Apostle speaketh 2. Cor. 5.2.3 to be clothed vpon with our house from heauen and not so much that our selues might die as that sinne might be extinguished and our sanctification perfected Howbeit in this affection of ours there must be two things the first sighing and groning the second a patient waiting for that we hope for Where consider what that is we wait for and sigh for the Apostle heere calleth it adoption that is the accomplishment of that glory whereto wee are in Christ adopted or as himselfe expounds it the redemption of mankind euen as Dauid was King when he was anointed but he staied long for the reall possession of it and as Abraham had the land of Canaan giuen him which was performed 400. yeeres after In waiting and expecting for this redemption obserue and hold it as a principle and ground that howsoeuer the Philosophers haue dreamed of a simple immortality of the soule alone yet that we know and learne that except the body which we beare about vs be restored also the immortality of the soule is abolished otherwise it were a lame and imperfect restitution and otherwise in vaine had Iob said chap. 19.26 Though after my skinne wormes destroy this body yet shall I see God in my flesh that is body and soule at the last day which is also plainely expressed heere by the Apostle in these words Redemption of the body Further obserue hence the dulnesse blockishnesse of man that is to take example and to be taught his duty euen of the insensible creatures who in their kind by the very instinct of nature can grone for the day of mans redemption and yet man himselfe though spurred on and prouoked can hardly be drawen to that duty which may teach euery one of vs to bee more watchfull in our Christian exercises that wee may learne to know and desire to approch neere the day of our redemption lest the creatures that want the vse of reason rise vp against vs to condemne vs for they faile nothing so much in their duties as man doth Pro. 30.25 nay Salomon sendeth the sluggard to the Ant and Pismire who by his sommer-labour prouideth for a hard and stormy winter Christ will haue vs learne innocency of the Doue and wisdome and prouidence of the Serpent and the Apostle heere will not haue a Christian man short of the creatures who tra●ell in paine to bee deliuered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God and therefore much more must we sigh for this redemption of our body wherein wee our selues haue the greatest interest Further in that the Apostle saith We doe sigh in our selues we learne that it is the dutie of euery Christian to be touched at the hart and to be prickt in his conscience as generally for the wickednesse of the whole world so particularly and more narowly for his owne sinnes for these be they whereby
God is dishonored and therfore thou must not slightly wish or earnestly pray for though this be well done a change of this corruption and a restitution both of the creatures and of man their head into the state of blessednesse and incorruption but thou must euen in a corner by thy selfe breake foorth as it were into a passion of affection with sighes and grones euen such as may fill the heauens to wait after and to thirst for that day wherein God shall triumph in the fulnesse and perfection of all glory and wherein man shall stand and continue in an incomprehensible degreee of happinesse But alas we are so intangled with the baites and nets of this vaine world that our affections sway vs to a cleane contrary course thinking our feete are neuer sure enough nor haue hold enough on the earth so pleasant doe wee esteeme our habitation here that we would thinke our selues most happie though heauen were neuer our inheritance if we might alway liue heere compassed about and enuironed with these false delights Which doth too much bewray our want and defect in meditation on heauen and heauenly things and sheweth what a scantling we keepe in Christianity outwardly onely to professe it and neuer to enter into the chamber of our hearts to see whether it be furnished with such holy Christian and religious sighs and grones as set forth commend the affection of such a Christian as vpon the comparison of these short troubles with that eternall weight of glory which shall come hath already planted his heart in heauen Lastly obserue hence that it is not possible for the reprobate but it is proper and peculiar to the elect onely to lift vp their heads in hope and expectation of this redemption which is signified by the Apostle in two phrases and speeches heere vsed namely that such sigh as first haue receiued the first fruites of the spirit secondly such as wait for adoption neither of which doe euer befall the reprobate for they may spring vp and flourish for a time but they haue no roote nor take no sap from the spirit and happily they may be weary of the world Gen. 4.13 as Cain was of his punishment by they haue no anchor of any other hope vnlesse they ioy to goe to hell which ought to moue vs with all heedfulnesse to looke to our waies and to labour our ingrafting into Christ for the world passeth Heb. 1.11 and both it and wee are folded vp as a garment and to dust we must and yet out of dust we must arise And if while we be in the body wee can be burdened and sigh that mortality might bee swallowed vp of life then are we most happy and happy in that alone but if thou findest thy selfe empty of such affections that thou canst not sigh for thy redemption which sheweth thou dost not hope for thy saluation then art thou of all men the most miserable and the estate of the beasts is better then thine for they sigh for the liberty of Gods sons and they shall haue part in this blessednes and thou shalt see it and then shalt mone thy selfe thou wantest it Iob 10.18.19 for if the earth might be thy graue and thou mightest perish in the dust thou mightst yet conceiue happinesse in senslesnesse after this life ended For wee are saued by hope In this the Apostle proceedeth to proue that as it is necessary for a Christian to grone so is it also to wait for the day of redemption which hee doeth after this sort We are saued by hope that is all our saluation standeth and consisteth in hope for hope apprehendeth and laieth hold on things absent and inuisible Heb. 11.1 Ephe. 3.9 Pro. 13.12 according to that speech Our life is hid in Christ that is so hid as it will be found though as yet it be not seene now hope that is deferred must needs as Salomon saith bee the fainting of the heart and therefore for feare of this fainting the Apostle releeueth our hope with patience Where we learne that it is the duty of euery Minister to salue vp all breaches and to resolue all doubts that any way may perplex the heart and soule of a weake Christian after the example of the Apostle heere who to releeue the infirmities of the faithfull against the storme of affliction setteth before them the crowne of glory which they haue wonne in the field by their fighting And because this glory was not present but followeth the battell and when the combat is ended then commeth in victory he sheweth though this glory and reward bee not subiect to the sight yet Christians haue an affection in them which is hope that nourisheth and staieth their expectation for a time the heart in the meane time leaping and being established through hope that it will come and yet that they may not bee discouraged in their hope though this glory come not so soone as it is looked for hee giueth them the plaister of patience which shall sustaine and support their hope for he is certaine that hath promised but not to bee prescribed a time by vs but hee must take his owne time and our patience must preuent all distrust Euen so must the feeders of the flocke deale with their people in all cases of doubt and wanering in matters of faith and religion so to compasse and beset the soule with reasons and arguments as it may rest secure and haue the food of comfort ministred vnto them against all doubts and perils that may arise For such ought Ministers to be Mat. 13 52. as are able to bring foorth of their treasure both new and old cures and remedies both against the auncient wilinesse and the fresh and new subtilties and temptations of that old serpent Further obserue we must not vnderstand this speech We are saued by hope as we doe this We are saued by faith For nothing doth concurre in the matter of iustification with God aboue but faith so as the meaning and sense heere is that our saluation consists in those things that we hope for and it were better tranflated We are saued in hope than we are saued by hope Heb. 11.1 for faith is the ground and foundation of hope for what can we hope for vnlesse we beleeue it As the ground of faith is the word and promise for why should we beleeue but in respect of God his promise Faith telleth vs we beate not the aire hope biddeth vs hold on our race finish the course fight the cumbat and then expect the crowne of glory Yea faith is sustained by hope that it doe not wauer and contained by hope that it doe not hasten but waite the time and it is confirmed by hope that we may hold on the faith Mat. 15.22 Example of this we see and haue in the Canaanitish woman who suffered three denials at Christ his hands each of them doubled with seuerall reproches and yet fainted
sinne proues there is a law which law being broken bringeth death for the wages of sinne is death Rom. 6.23 The second sort is of them who though they be called by the booke of heauen and earth as the Gentiles were Rom. 1.20 who do see the eternall power of God in the creation of the world and other his works and liuing to a more vnderstanding age are euen by the light of nature without all excuse yet are they not inuited by the voice of the Gospell to rise from the dead but die in their sinnes as the Canibales Barbarians and the Iewes since their Apostasie to whom there pertaineth nothing but a fearefull expectation of iudgement Heereof followeth and is to be obserued that it is contrary to the scripture to thinke that it was the will of God from eternity that all should be saued for then it was his will likewise that all should come to the knowledge of their saluation for whom he hath ordained to the end them hath hee also ordained to the meanes whereas to the reprobate the sound of the word if they doe heare it is but as the noise of bels confusedly iarring in their eares and yet many there be that neuer heard it Why but it is said 1. Tim. 2.4 that it is the will of God all should be saued True all men not euery singular particular man but of euery singular condition of men some not all of all kinds but of all kinds some according to that speech of the Euangelist Mat. 4.23 Christ healed euery disease in Iury that is euery kind of disease not euerie particular disease Now if all men come not to the knowledge of the truth of God either it is done by the wil of God or against his will to say that it is against his will were impious and blasphemous for this were to hold that something could offer violence to the will of God and as if he might not otherwise haue purposed which must be far from a Christian heart to imagine If then this be done with his will then it followeth that his will is changeable if hee once meant to saue them for wee see some euen like dogges readie to rend them in peeces that offer them the pearle of the word whom if the Lord had purposed to saue Mat. 7.6 they should not continue persecutors of the truth as Paul saith of himselfe 1. Timoth. 1.12.13 It pleased Christ Iesus to put me in his seruice being before a blasphemer a persecuter an oppressor and I was receiued to mercy And where it is said 1. Iohn 2.2 that Christ is the reconciliation for the sinnes of the whole world it is to be vnderstood for the sinnes of all sorts and degrees of men gathered out of all the parts of the world and this Christ himselfe interpreteth Ioh. 17.9 when he said Father I pray not for the world and vndoubtedly he will neuer saue them he neuer praied for for whom he excluded from his praier them he neuer meant should haue benefit by his death nay hee had beene bound in duty to haue praied for all if all had been elected to saluation Now if it be asked why men are damned the answer is easie It is for their sinne howbeit it was purposed in the Lords vncontrolable decree that they should be damned before they euer sinned and being corrupt in themselues the Lord hardneth them either by withdrawing the meanes or the power of the meanes the first by ignorance the second by denying them vnderstanding hearts So as if it be demanded why the Lord hardned any it is because he found him corrupt in Adam if why hee damneth any it is because he found him a sinner in himselfe Whom he calleth he iustifieth that is doth absolutely pardon him all his sinne and absolutely impute vnto him all his Sonnes righteousnesse that as Christ for vs was made sinne so wee in Christ might bee made righteous so as iustification is the translation and remouing of our sinne to Christ and the translation and remouing of his righteousnesse to vs. To our sinne hee opposeth his obedience to the punishment of our sinne hee opposeth his satisfaction otherwise he had not fully acquitted vs by fulfilling the law vnlesse he had satisfied his Fathers wrath for our breach of the law in our corrupt birth For if a man could now fulfill all the law of God yet should hee not bee saued because he was borne corrupt and could not possibly satisfie for that was past and in performing the law afterward he should doe nothing but his duty But this is our comfort that the Lord seeing our weaknesse hath in his loue passed by it and seeing our thoughts to bee alwaies euill taketh no account nor reckoning of vs but were sembling the image of his Sonne the Lord reckoneth with him and striketh off our debts in setting them on his score who hath paid the Lord his full due euen to the vtmost farthing being in his birth cleane in his life holy and in his death obedient Whom he iustifieth he glorifieth In this life the Lord doth onely call vs and iustifie vs so as no man need say as Rom. 10.7 Who shall ascend into heauen for that were to bring Christ from aboue or Who shall descend into the deepe for that were to raise Christ from the dead for so much vertue and power of Christ as is needfull for vs wee taste of heere but our glorifying is reserued and followeth in the life to come hauing it heere only in spe and not in re in hope but not in hand This glorifying heere spoken of is meant not that wee shall haue at the last day of our separation when the world shutteth her doores vpon vs but of that glory wee shall receiue at the day of iudgement which is plaine and euident by that went before vers 21. namely that wee waite for the restoring of the liberty of the sonnes of God and for the freedome from the bondage of corruption Howbeit in the glorie of our separation two things are to be obserued first Reu. 2● 4● that we shall be freed from all feares and teares and shall haue sinne abolished secondly we shall enter into our Lords rest but the glory of the last day is farre greater and resteth in three things first in the resurrection and a waking of the body when it shall be made conformable to the body of Christ when it shall not liue by the soule only nor be maintained by outward and externall instruments of bread such like but it shall liue as the body of Christ liueth and be glorious like the Sunne which shall then exceed it selfe in glory Isay 65.17 2. Pet. 3.13 Secondly there shall be a new heauen and a new earth and in this new heauen shall dwell the soules of the Saints of God and all things else shall bee restored to their first maiesty Thirdly which is the greatest of all we shall then haue
to enter into the sanctuary of heauenly places that as Exod. 39.7 Aron had pretious stones in which the names of the children of Israel were written six in euery stone and twelne in his breast in euery one of them a tribe that hee might remember them to God in his praiers so Christ bearing in his breast our selues as precious stones is thereby put in minde to remember vs to his Father though our fathers hauing the veile before them were forbidden to enter into the holiest yet wee through the veile of the flesh of Christ Heb. 10.20 are permitted to come boldly to the face of the most high and holy God The second benefit is that all our praiers be sanctified and doe ascend to the seat of God through his petitions that is through his appearing before his Father they shal be heard of his Father Hereupon Paul faith Rom. 5.2 By him we haue accesse to the throne of grace to offer vp the sweet sacrifices of our selues by Christ who hath made the way for vs let vs therefore approch vnto him with confidence and this is that spoken of in the Reu. 8.3 the Saints poure forth their incense that is their praiers which is giuen to Christ hauing a golden censor that he should put a new incense vpon them vpon the golden altar which is himselfe that they might haue a gracious sauor and a sweet smell in the nostrils of his Father The third benefit of this his intercession is that which we shall neuer fully feele nor perceiue till his last praier be granted he made Ioh. 17.21 that we might be one in God and himselfe that is when we shall haue a full contemplation of the maiestie of God Lastly obserue that Christ shall make this intercession for the Saints till all his enemies be ouercome and all his children arraied in stately and royall garments and then shall his praiers cease for why should he pray any longer when his praier is granted but by this we may see that saluation of soules is no such easie matter as the world imagineth since it requireth this continuall exercise of the Sonne of God to make request for vs and if Christ in loue and compassion doe it for vs much more ought we to doe it for our selues ROM chap. 8. vers 35 36 37. verse 35 Who shall separate vs from the loue of Christ shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednesse or perill or sword verse 36 As it is written for thy sake are we killed all the day long we are counted as sheepe for the slaughter verse 37 Neuerthelesse in all these things we are more then conquerers through him that loued vs. THE Apostle vpon the heauenly and Christian security set downe in the premises inferreth and brings in a most constant and comfortable resolution vpon a stout magnanimity and spirituall courage by him conceiued that is that it is impossible any thing should make vs fall from the fauour of God which is in Christ The reason is this in those things wherein wee are more then conquerers wee cannot be remoued from Gods fauour but in these seuen things heere reckned vp tribulation c. all which are as needles in the flesh and wherein hee comprehendeth all other these being the worst wee are more then conquerers therefore neither anguish famine c. can separate vs from the loue of God As if he should say howeuer it be that men call not in question Gods loue while they liue in peace and enioy the pleasures of this life yet let vs see how far aduersitie may throw and deiect a man from this comfortable security that since Christ sits at the right hand of his father and there shal sit till all his children be fully glorified let vs take the greatest extremities that can light vpon the flesh Tribulations that is any kind of outward trouble or anguish that is such inward perplexity or distresse in soule that we are at our wits end like Lot Gen. 19.8 that must either giue forth his daughters or the Angels to the filthy Sodomites or persecution by famine that is able to breake a brazen wall it breeds such rage in the bones or nakednesse that is that wee bee so impouerished or beggered for the truths sake as we haue nothing to couer nor wherein to hide vs or the sword which is most ghastly for the quicke dispatch it will make all which ioyned together may be reckoned vp for the continuall portion of the church of God both before Christ and after 1. Pet. 4.17 for we need not suppose or imagine that this may come since it is so written Psal 44.22 that men doe nothing but offer vp the godly euery day and the wicked make no more account of them but euen as sheepe to the slaughter And since the comming of Christ the triall must be the greater as Saint Peter speaketh because the spirit is greater so as now iudgement must begin at the house of God But what is the issue and end of al this we are in these extreame calamities more then conquerers so far are we from fainting or falling and the Lord in the middest of these shall either send vs miraculous deliuerance as hee did to Daniel Da. 6.22 when he stopped the mouth of the lion that he could not hurt him or else hee will so qualifie the miseries that shall beare vpon vs with such extraordinary comfort that we would not exchange our aduersitie to ensnare our consciences with conditions in seruing of God and if the worst come that we be giuen vp to death the heauens shall bee open to receiue vs and the Angels shall be readie to carrie vs into the bosome of God Luk. 16.22 and our enemies shall stand astonished to see the courage of our christian soule so willingly embracing death in which is life and out of our bloud shall rise an hundred professors more for the bloud of Martyrs is the seed of the church when we our selues shall triumphantly ascend to the seate of the Almightie For the parts of the text they be these first the Apostle setteth downe a demaund by way of challenge and therefore implieth a person in these words Who shall c. as if he should saie I giue the challenge to the stoutest champion what euer he be whether he be the diuell that liueth in hell or his eldest sonne or all his sons that be on earth otherwise if the person that should accept this challenge were not vnderstood he should more properly haue said What shall separate vs c. Secondly he interposeth and bringeth in a testimonie out of the 44. Psalme to shew that he doth not put it by supposition that these troubles may come or may not come but that of all other the church of God is not likely but sure to sustaine them in the ineuitable necessity of Gods decree as if we that be heires of the couenant were created for nothing else Thirdly
him in spirit and in truth Now if any be so audacious and bold to aske why God was so sharp in smiting his creatures for the sinne of man Answere first with S. Paul Rom. 9.20 O man who art thou darest plead with God and call him to an account for his doings his secrets are too high for thee and his wayes past finding our Secondly if the creatures had not been punished with man and that he by his particular sin had not procured a generall curse then could not man in his weaknesse haue made any vse of the creatures in their innocencie vnlesse they had fallen with him for they had not been subiect to vanitie to haue been slaine and deuoured of men if in themselues they had not been accursed Thirdly God did not punish them in respect of themselues but in respect of vs for we know the children are punished for the reason of their parents not for any fault committed in their persons but for that the parents haue so highly transgressed the Princes lawes for by this he hath forfeited to the King what should haue descended to his children and this we thinke no hard part in an earthly Prince vnlesse it be in the case of Ahab who tooke the eschete of Naboths vineyard by a false plotted accusation of a supposed blasphemie against God and the King 1. Kings 21.13 then must we needs thinke that the King of heauen who cannot but giue righteous iudgement hath not dealt hardly in punishing and subduing the creatures to this subiection Adam hauing in his creation the rule giuen vnto him ouer them as a father hath ouer his child howbeit the Lord in this gaue no principall or set blow to them but only stroke them as it were through the sides of man that after that fall we might be punished euen oft times in the vse of them If any aske againe why God should thus proceed in making our wound the wider by punishing vs in his creatures since before the curse pronounced on them Gen. 3.15 the Lord had pardoned the guiltinesse of the sinne by the promised seed of the woman Answere This was the wisedome of the Lord in two respects first in respect of his elect secondly in respect of the reprobate for in regard of the elect they are not punishments for sinne the bloud of the womans feed hauing by vertue of Gods promise washed away the guilt of it but because there is yet a remnant of corruption there being much filth Iohn 13.10 hanging on our feet therefore they are as chastisements to increase the measure of our sanctification and the labour in purging and keeping our selues cleane by repentance and a holy life but now to the reprobate they are tokens and forerunners of Gods iustice and of the sword of vengeance which they shall feele heereafter among the damned so that when wee see the heauens made brasse aboue vs and the earth yron beneath vs the one withholding the raine the other not yeelding her fruits but suffring it to die in her wombe this is to vs but a chastisement for some passions vnsubdued or for some sinnes vnrepented of but it is a scourge and reuenge vpon the reprobate mingling his reioycing with repining and his store with grudging that the want of that he seekes may be as a fretting canker in his soule to fill vp the greater measure of his sinne verifying those speeches of Iob Chap. 8.14 His trust shall be as the house of the spider and Chap. 11.20 his hope shall be sorrow of mind For as for them that loue the Lord he vseth foure speciall remedies to make them fit for heauen first his spirit to guide them secondly his word to instruct them thirdly his chastisements to reclaime them fourthly death it selfe to end them and therefore when he correcteth vs in his creatures it is to see whether he can recouer vs as it were by the sight of another beaten before vs making them vnfruitfull that we might remember the want of our owne works mustering oft times the clouds together as if raine should fall yet staying it in the brest of the aire to put vs in mind of the hardnesse of our hearts and of the drinesse of our eyes that doe not weepe sufficientlie for our owne sinnes nor abundantly for the sinnes and abominations of the land it being as wee read Ezech. 9.4 an vndoubted marke of election set by the finger of God in the fore heads of his Saints to mourne and crie for the corruption and crueltie that is in a citie Againe we hauing formerly noted the seueritie of Gods iustice against sinne that we might auoid it so on the contrary we are to obserue his exceeding rich mercy both to the elect and to the reprobate that heereby we may be prouoked to follow him 〈◊〉 to what straites soeuer he shall cast vs his mercy to his chosen 〈◊〉 ●●eth in this that though he hath laid such a curse vpon his 〈◊〉 ●atures whereas they may lay the curse on vs as the cause and 〈◊〉 they knew their owne strength would deuour vs the Lord in ●oue to vs and in power to them hiding it from them yet doth he force them to serue vs the vse of them all being sanctified and restored to vs in Christ and we being through him made owners and possessors of them for as Adam after his fall being secluded from the tree of life was thereby excluded from all the meanes that might maintaine life so Christ hauing by our vnion with him brought vs againe into the paradise of God where that rree groweth we are thereby endowed and inriched with all the creatures both in heauen and earth these being for his sake waiters and artendants on vs yea the very little ones that be elect as Christ saith Matth. 18.10 haue their Angels in heauen to defend them and as Dauid faith Psal 34.8 The Angell of the Lord pitcheth round about them that feare him Now his mercy to the reprobate is manifested in this that hee by his especiall hand and Commandement doth binde and restraine the creatures from rebelling against them for the heauens would fall vpon the whoremonger if God by his power did not chaine them vp the Sunne that shineth would scorch and burne the Vsurer if his force were not bridled by the finger of God the waters from aboue would fall like a sea vpon the blasphemer if they were not shut in by the patience of God yea all lewd profane and wicked persons should be melted by the heat stifled by the aire swallowed by the earth deuoured by the beasts choaked by their bread and euery creature would be auenged on them for the subiection brought vpon them if God by his prouidence did not restraine them for if they might haue their own wil they would surely do it Who is it saith God Ioh. 38.8 that hath shut vp the sea with doores that her proud waues cannot passe oner but I It is the Lord Iob. 39.12