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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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giuen vp Rom. 1.24 to serue their owne lusts that profited not by that one light of nature whereby they were constrained to acknowledge a superiour power that made that excellent frame of heauen and earth If the Pharisees were thus sharpely charged and reprooued for not amending their liues at these few sermons of one Iohn Baptist much more may wee feare lest wee be swallowed vp of present destruction that haue had so many sounds of the Lords trumpets and yet haue not retired from our owne waies that after so much dressing and pruning and lopping haue brought foorth nothing but briers that haue deuoured so many full yeares of peace and yeeres of preaching and plentie and yet continue leane and ilfauoured in the course of our liues for now at the time of the Gospel as we see heere beginneth iudgement Secondly learne how faithfully Iohn executed and performed his ministery which stood in two parts as was foretold by Malachy chap. 4. to preach mercie and iudgement both which he performed in this one sermon Heere the Iesuits take occasion to say that we should dehort men from euill for feare of hell and exhort them to doe well in hope of heauen We say with Paul who is our patterne and forerunner that we haue weapons for all those that shall despaire after the obedience of Gods Saints fulfilled but we preach not onely to worke well in hope of heauen for as we are seruants we deserue nothing but as children wee are receiued to an inheritance bought for vs before we were so we striue not that men should keepe themselues from sin onely for feare of hell for the Lord will neuer account of such a soule as will doe nothing but for feare of the whip for hee loueth a free giuer and hateth constrained subiection and it is not the horror of damnation but the commemoration of the Lords mercie shewed toward vs in giuing his owne Sonne to so ignominious a death to ransome vs from that curse wee had incurred This is that containes vs within the bounds of obedience for if the heart bloud of the Lord Iesus will not make thy heart to relent and thy hands to tremble to put them forth to wickednesse then art thou in a desperate case Shall the feare of the gibber or the ghastly shew of death make one that was a traitor and now pardoned and aduanced vnto high place by the meere mercie of his Soueraigne shall this make him afraid to commit treason againe and nothing else nay the grace of his Prince shall rest alwaies before his eies and shall most forcibly perswade him to perseuere in his loialtie For this is the most effectuall of all others to mooue vs in the bowels of the mercies of Christ to keepe our selues cleane and washed because wee are already purified in his bloud and not for feare of falling into the pit againe Thirdly note that if any man will escape and auoide damnation he must of necessitie liue wel for he must be a tree bringing foorth good fruit Where first consider what is good fruit which is implied in the text it cannot bee good except the tree be good as Christ saith If the casting out of a diuell be a good worke why am not I a good man Matt. 12.28 Ioh. 7.21 So as first the person must be accepted before the worke be accepted and no person can please without faith that purifieth the heart and there is no such heart where religion dependeth not vpon the true worship of the law of God and by consequent there is no good faith where the heart is not cleansed by the spirit of God Since then a man must first be good before he can doe good it is impossible that anie man erronious in religion should produce a good worke Externall righteousnesse and the morall vertues of the Papists is a vizard that bleares manie mens eies and wee say that they are honest as well may we say it of them that hanged vp the Lord Iesus thinking he had spoken blasphemie because being but a poore wretch to see to he challenged himselfe to be the Sonne of God and in this doing they thought they had done God an excellent peece of seruice And for Paul before his conuersion who could except against his life nay as he testifieth of himselfe Philip. 3. ● hee walked according to all the ordinances the law prescribed yet after hee was called he accounted all his morall righteousnesse but as the excrement of a dogge And if religion do not distinguish betweene men the heathen shall condemne both vs and them who by the meere instinct of nature liued in the hatred of grosse sinnes and walked soberly without exception and yet are they already damned For first we must be good by grace and being adopted into Christ then we doe good and of all the trees of the forest as Ezec. 15.3 there is none but is better then the vine if it beare not grapes for the oake is good for timber and euerie tree may serue for some good vse but the farments of the vine if it be not clustered is fit for nothing but for the fire The Papists are good as okes to build monasteries and to set vp houses and places of religion but an vnfaithfull and vnfruitfull Protestant and Professor is good for nothing being but a rotten bough or branch of a fruitlesse and barren vine but to be burned So that to iudge a worke to be good it must bee good both quo ad fontem quo ad finem proceeding from an honest heart and driuing to a right end the glory of God to whom I owe honor Further to come to the true knowledge of good fruit let vs know what bad fruit is which is double first sinnes in substance such as are contrarie to the expresse commandement of God as adulterie is absolutely a sinne in Dauid as wel as in any other secondly sinnes by circumstance as giuing of almes Matt. 23.5 onely when the trumpet sounds to be seene of men or to come into the sanctuarie with a purpose to pray and presently to returne to his vomit againe for the Lord abhorreth what himselfe commandeth Esay 66. if it be not do●● with that heart he commandeth The sacrifice of a sheepe is 〈◊〉 his sight as the bloud of a man not that he hateth the action but the hypocrisie in the action which staineth the whole a Hagg. 2.13 if an vncleane person touch the holy flesh the flesh it selfe is vncleane but holie flesh maketh not other flesh holy which was not so before Further obserue where it is said Euery tree that bringeth 〈◊〉 foorth good fruit shall be hewne downe that it is not enough not to doe euill but it is damnable not to do good for he doth not say the tree that brings foorth no fruit but that brings not forth good fruit For it is not enough for Zacheus Luk. 19 after his conuersion to be no poller or robber of
Act. 22.13 was suddenly called to preach and Amos from his sheephooke Amos 7.15 to prophesie let vs know that the Lord that called them had power to giue them gifts in a moment for he hath the fulnesse of the holy Ghost to dispose at his pleasure but men that want this power must trie the gifts first and the Church must allow of none vnlesse they be perswaded he be such a one that if Christ were on the earth he would giue his consent Thirdly learne by the word Fishermen that the ministery is no easie nor idle but a laborious office wherein they must alwaies be either casting their nets or mending their nets or sorting the fish trauelling sore both night and day As Peter could answer Christ Luk. 5.5 We haue trauelled sore all night and caught nothing so as they that thinke much to take this paines are not fit for this calling For the fourth which is their obedience it sheweth that it was more than the voice of a man that thus wrought vpon their conscience for he secretly and inuisibly spake vnto their hearts by his spirit and he might as easily haue drawen Caiaphas as Cephas if it had beene his pleasure for he mollifieth the soule on the sudden and can open the doores of death with the least breath of his mouth Secondly learne that no affection or delight ought to make vs to forsake or driue vs from following Christ in our calling These men we see left their father whom they loued and their nets by which they liued and 1. King 19.19 Elizeus left his oxen and made haste after Eliah had cast his mantle on him And Mat. 8.21 one whom Christ called would but haue done his duty to haue buried his father and was not permitted Howbeit heere men must beware of two extremities first that they frame not excuses but willingly leaue their nets when they are called Secondly that they leaue them not till they be called and leaue into the Ministery of themselues being as fit for it as a blind man to be a painter For the last point which is the effect that came of Christs teaching it is said The multitude followed him where learne that when the Gospell is fresh and greene and first flourisheth men are very greedy to taste of it but if it continue long among them euen Manna proueth horsebread and men are soone weary of it For so it fell out with this people against whom Mat. 11.23 Christ denounceth a fearefull iudgement for their vnbeliefe making them worse than Tyrus and Sydon which were before condemned Whereby we may see how dangerous it is to grow cold in our first loue of the truth and to suspect them that in a preposterous zeale will seeme to run after Christ bragging with the yoong man in the Gospell that they haue kept the commandements and yet know not the least point of charity how to distribute to the poore LVKE 11. vers 24 25 26. verse 24 When the vncleane spirit is gone out of a man hee walketh through dry places seeking rest and when he findeth none he saith I will returne to my house whence I came out verse 25 And when he commeth he s●●deth it swept and garnished verse 26 Then goeth he and taketh seuen other spirits worse than himselfe and they enter in and dwell there so the last state of that man is worse than the first IN this text there bee fiue points to bee obserued first what is meant by the going out of the spirit secondly his behauiour after his departure namely that there is a restlesse desire in Sathan to reenter into his former habitation thirdly the fit opportunities hee obserueth for the regaining of his possession there be two set downe in this place hee staieth till he finds it swept and garnished and a third is expressed Mat. 12.44 he findeth it empty that is deuoid of all cares quiet and swept of the grace of God and yet notably garnished with hypocrisie fourthly the vehement inuasion he maketh at his re-entry that hee will so garrison and lay such munition about the house as he will neuer be dispossessed againe for he bringeth seuen spirits worse than himselfe the Lord doth so darken the hart of that man that was for a while enlightned fiftly the lamentable and damnable estate of such a man his end is worse than his beginning For the first how Sathan is said to be cast out wee must vnderstand so cast out as he still continueth in for if he were once vtterly dispossessed then could he neuer returne againe And this kind of casting out heere meant is matched with diuers other places of the Scripture as Heb. 6.5 It is impossible that they which haue tasted of the good word of God if they fall away should be renued againe And Heb. 10.25 If wee sinne willingly after we haue receiued the knowledge of truth there remaines no more satisfaction or sacrifice for sinne and 2. Pet. 2.21 It had beene better neuer to haue knowen the way of truth than after they haue knowen it to turne from it If a man then may know the truth and yet forsake it bee enlightned and yet fall away be sanctified and yet crucifie Christ againe by the same reason may Sathan be cast out of a man and yet continue in that man For when these tearmes be thus vsed either of casting out Sathan or of letting in the truth and yet by the sequel of the words vsed by the spirit we see the ruine of such men set downe wee must neuer take it for any effectuall working of the spirit of God but onely of the greatnesse of the Lords mercy offered them in the outward meanes of their saluation namely in the word and Sacraments to cast out Sathan according as it is said Luk. 10.11 The kingdome of God was come neere them but not at them or as Luk. 17.21 Christ speaking to the Pharisies saith The kingdome of God is within you as if he should haue said Ye looke about for a Messias as if hee were absent but he is euen among you and in the middest of you though not by spirituall operation So that obserue hence that as often as we partake of any of the Lords graces it is to cast out Sathan and to root out his kingdome in vs though we receiue it not with that effect it should haue and therfore though that for a time Sathan seemeth to haue lost his dominion in vs yet by the vnright receiuing of Gods blessings and the vnreuerent vsing of them he doth still continue in vs. Againe so far Sathan may be said to be cast out of a man and yet he a reprobate as the spirit may be said to bee quenched in a man and yet he a Christian and that the comfort of a Christian may be much abated and sore eclipsed if we will not beleeue it Dauid may wel perswade vs Psal 32.4 who found such leannesse and emptinesse of grace in him as if
take● from mercy And 1. Cor. 6.15 Your bodies are the temples 〈◊〉 the holy Ghost and yee are bought with a price therefore doe not prostitute them to vncleannesse but let the loue of God constraine vs to loue him againe Yet may wee not heereupon imagine that we make the law of God of no effect through faith nay as S. Paul saith Rom. 3.31 by this we rather establish the Law and that two waies first in the absolute obedience of Christ inherent in himselfe and imputed vnto vs secondly by the spirit of sanctification abiding in vs for the same righteousnesse the law commands the very same doth faith apprehend for we doe challenge the promise of God to saue vs by this that Christ in our person hath absolutely performed it so as there is no difference in respect of the substance but only in the maner of conueiance wherby we apply it vnto our soules So doth the Gospel command the same works that the law exacteth though there be a threefold difference between them for first the law commands works to gaine saluation by them the Gospell because saluation is already gained by the bloud of Christ for as S. Paul saith 1. Cor. 6 2● we are bought with a price therefore we are debtors secondly the law giueth no power to worke that it commandeth for Moses that was the giuer of it could not frame his owne heart to do it therfore it is called a dead letter written in stones 2. Cor. 3 6● which prefigured the harts of men but the Gospel in the elect neuer cōmandeth but first giueth grace and power to performe as the Lord neuer pardoneth any mans sin but he first writeth his law in his heart as S. Iohn saith 1. Ioh. 3.8 God sent his son to destroy the works of the diuel in vs and this is the argument of S. Paul Rom. 6.14 Let not saith he sin raigne in your mortal bodies that is haue dominion ouer you for yee are not vnder the law but vnder grace that giueth power to amend Thirdly the law commands works absolutely and admits of no repentance but the Gospel neuer excludes repentance the father euer waiting for the returne of his lost son so as it is true no whoremonger shal be saued continuing such a one but alwaies vnderstand repentance comming between staieth the iudgement for though our sins be of a purple or skarlet die yet if we turne to God the bloud of Christ hath this vertue 1. Ioh. 5.6 that it can make them white as snow so as the summe of al this is bloud water Ioh. 13.8 must go together faith in Iesus and the spirit of the Lord Iesus remission of sins and reformation of life must neuer be disioined Now for that the Papists say the expectation of a reward would make vs worke that in vaine should the worke be if there were no merit Wee answer that if a man freely shall gratifie his bondman with libertie and he shall after preserue his masters life by this hee hath not deserued his freedome for if he had remained still bond he had beene bound to haue done it and all hee can doe after is not to recompence his freedome but to testifie his thankfulnesse So whatsoeuer we can do or deserue we are bound to it by a double bond first of our creation secondly and much more by our redemption and after our saluation promised and purchased to doe well is nothing but dutie for we were bound to doe it before we were saued So as this is the order of exhortation in the Scripture All that haue hope 2. Cor. 7.1 must cleanse themselues not to clense themselues that they may hope but they haue hope therfore they must doe it Mat. 25.34 And not because we releeue the poore therefore wee shall be saued but because in mercy a kingdome is prepared for vs therfore as members of one bodie we releeue the poore And Abraham did not therefore offer vp his sonne that he might be iustified Gen. 22.8 but because he was iustified before Gen. 15.6 therefore he thought nothing too deare to gratifie the Lord with though it were with the sonne of the promise So heere we doe not therefore repent that the kingdome of heauen may come but wee must amend our liues and change our minds because the Messias is already come that will saue our soules Againe obserue he saith it is at hand noting a neere manifestation of him which was more then any of the Prophets could say whereupon Christ saith that there was neuer any Prophet so great as Iohn Baptist Mat. 11.11 yet the least in the kingdome of heauen is greater then he not comparing their persons for there were diuers of the Prophets as excellently qualified as Iohn nor that a Minister of the Gospell now should be greater then hee but that the ministery of Iohn was plainer then that of the Prophets they but foretelling indefinitely that Christ should come Iohn pointing at him with his finger that he was now comming and the ministery now being more excellent then Iohns because he preached but of the Messias at hand wheras we haue seene the fingers of this hand Christ to haue come with power to haue died with triumph and to haue ascended with glorie therefore let him that hath an eare heare and hee that hath hope let him arise for the kingdome is now come not at hand Iohn 14.12 Againe note the excellent Harmonie betweene Iohn the fore-runner and Christ the after-commer for Matt. 4.17 Christ vseth the very same words to perswade to amendement of life because the kingdome of heauen is at hand Which sheweth the agreement ought to be among Ministers and how wee may discerne whether they be of God or no for then as they all worke vpon one foundation so shall they all speake by one spirit and the voice of the herbinger agree with Christ and Christ with him pressing no other doctrine then that Iohn preached before For the fourth circumstance which is the warrant whereby Iohn was authorized to preach wee note that all callings in the Church of God must bee warranted expresly in the booke of God For if any were to bee exempted it was this of Iohns being extraordinarie but he is enforced to prooue it as if hee should say Though I am not Christ nor Elias in person howbeit in power of spirit I am yet looke in Esay 40.3 my authoritie recorded for the place of a Minister is not like the power of the Magistrate which though it be Gods ordinance in generall yet is it not in particular as that there should be this or that Magistrate as an Emperour Duke Chancellor and such like for this is humane and God hath giuen man this freedome by the remnant and portion of reason abiding in him to deuise what may be safest for the state And these offices as they be by man erected so may they be by him abolished But
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
them that be halfe dead through cold euen so the holy Ghost not onely warmeth him that is benummed in his soule but quickeneth him that is starke dead in pleasures and other corruptions of the world and doth kindle in him a holy zeale to the Lords truth and raiseth him vp to the hope of eternall life being before though hee seemed to liue through the dulnesse and obstupefaction of his flesh drouping or rather dead in sinne Fourthly fire giueth light to them that before sat in darknesse and sheweth them the way how to walke so the holy Gost doth enlighten our iudgments and vnderstandings that we may be able to discerne and desire to thirst after that acceptable will of the Lord vnto saluation Secondly consider since the holy Ghost cannot be quenched but where he is how the Apostle writing to the whole Church of Thessalonica assumeth and taketh it as granted that they all had this spirit and this ought to be the generall iudgement of all men so long as a people conforme themselues to the outward obedience and sound of the Gospell to presume and hope the best of all For no doubt many in this Church were accompted Saints which were detestable hypocrites yet in respect of this mingling of the seede and tares together the Apostle medleth not with them leauing that to the last iudgement but signeth them all with this excellent badge of hauing the spirit for so ought it to be vnlesse their sinnes be enormous and notorious and that they sinne and offend with so high a hand as that they refuse the censure of the Church and to be thereby reformed for then they are vtterly to bee cut off and separate from the rest of the Saints And this intermingling of hypocrites and the elect together in the visible church maketh that oftentimes the Apostle in a generall stile disswadeth and dehorteth all from that which can be verified in the wicked onely as when he saith Heb. 3.12 Take heed none of you be so vnfaithfull as to fall from the grace of the liuing God which is true onely in the hypocrite and so doth hee sometimes generally exhort to that which is true onely in the elect as when he saith to the Philippians Worke fourth your saluation with feare and trembling Phil. 2.12 for all the Ministers of God must know that there will alwaies be one Iudas among the Disciples Mat. 26.22 whom Christ onely could discouer but for them that cannot see the heart they must offer the cup of grace to all for the tares cannot be seuered from the wheat till that great day of separation come when then the Lord by his Angels shall cut vs all downe and shall binde the tares in bundles by themselues to be cast from the Lords floore into perpetuall tormenting flaming fire Againe learne since the spirit must not be quenched that it followeth of necessity euery one of Gods children must haue it and think it so far from shame as they must esteeme it to be their onely victory and crowne that they do enioy it For first by this spirit there is made a distinction and differnce betweene vs and the reprobate and it is like the bloud Exod. 12.22 that was stricken vpon the doore tops which shall make the Lord to passe ouer vs and not to suffer the destroier to come neare vs when he goeth to smite the Egyptians and as Paul saith 2. Cor. 13.5 The spirit of God is in vs all except we be reprobates Secondly from this spirit we receiue direction whereby to guide the steps and actions of our life that we snarle not at the Ministers like dogs nor runne after the world like Demas 2. Tim. 4.10 Thirdly in this spirit we reape such comfort as all the lightsome pleasures of this life are but as shadowes and all the burdensome profit of this life of no value in respect of that ioy wee take to be transformed into the image of the sonne of God wherby the slanderous speeches and impious and sacrilegious scurrility of some is notably condemned who in scorne and derision doe call such as are fearefull to offend and doe tremble and quake at the name of sinne men of the spirit Puritanes precise and such like they themselues shrinking vp sinne in a narrow scantling as if none offended but they that lie in the goale But what is he that hauing a waspe about him will stay till he be stung and not auoide it at the first buzzing What is he when he hath roome inough that will ride vpon the edge of a pit and venture his falling Nay 1. Thes 5.22 it must be the wisedome of the Saints of God to flie as far from sinne as can be and as the Apostle saith to shun all apparence of euill and we must not be fraighted from the rule of conscience nor from walking in a strait course of religion by any such prophane and vngodly mouthes which carry the poison of Aspes vpon their tongues and the gall of bitternesse within their hearts and let them know that in this state wherein they stand they are as surelie the diuels as the diuell is not Gods for in whomsoeuer this spirit of God dwelleth not and worketh not that man shall assuredly be damned Now this exhortation not to quench the spirit is very weighty for by this the Apostle teacheth insinuateth of the feareful declinations of some that haue begun in the spirit and haue ended in the flesh that haee saluted Christ in the market place and yet neuer entertained him in their houses For that the spirit may be quenched Mat. 25.3 Mark 4.4 is proued by the fiue virgines that had their lamps but wanted oile and by the parable of the foure sorts of graine whereof only one shall be saued for therby is manifest that the Gospell may be receiued with ioy yea it may take root to grow vp to a stalke and from a stalke to a blade yea from a blade to an eare and yet shall neuer ripen but when it is gone so farre shall either be burned vp by the heat of persecution or choked by the thornes of this life and shall neuer come to perfection Againe that parable which carieth with it a reall truth of the spirit which being cast out of a man walketh in dry places for so much is Sathan cast out as wee are enlightned in our iudgements Luk. 11.24 but when he returnes he finds it more garnished then before that is after he hath once refused and troden vnder foote that light of knowledge which he had hee is possessed with such darknesse as hee is wholly left a prey for Sathan It is also proued that the spirit may be quenched by plaine places of Scripture as that of Ezechiel 18.24 the man that liueth in righteousnesse a long time after falling away shall bee iudged in his vnrighteousnesse and 2. Peter 2.22 the dogge is returned to his vomire and the sow that was washed
wel-head or to bee good without God for where there is no zeale there is no faith where no faith no conscience where no conscience no loue and shewing our loue not for conscience we may for our charitie go to the diuel for a man must first be good before he can doe good and good he cannot be without God 1. Sam. 6.17 The workes such a man doth may bee perhaps like the Emeraulds of the Philistims varnished ouer with gold that is make a faire shew in the sight of men but if they proceed no further that is to haue the testimonie of the spirit that they bee wrought by his hand they are most abominable before the face of God Wilt thou set a face as if thou wroughtest well because thou wilt not take the penaltie of an obligation and yet thou wilt prosecute a matter against a preacher for a superstitious ceremonious beggerly element What good worke is this to speake well of all men and yet at euerie word to wound to bloud to heart the holy one of Israel What is it not to hurt thy neighbour to be a friend to thy friend and yet to be an enemie to the friend of God What great worke is it not to beate false witnesse and yet priuily to suggest against him thou darest not reproue to his face So as vnlesse our doing of good arise from religion wee may easily straine at a gnat and swallow a Camel heare Iohn Baptist gladly for a time Mat. 6.20 and chop off his head afterward as Herod did Matth. 14.10 Now as for moralists and such as transforme themselues according to the times they are as Iude 13. tearmeth them the raging waues of the sea foaming out their owne ●●me as the wind serueth and like the wandring starres of the ●●●ament vnconstant and vnsteddy void of faith for sides must be firma non ambulatoria we must haue a standing not a walking faith and as without faith they cannot please God so except they please God they shall not be saued She tooke them and sent them away Where learne it is not enough for vs not to hurt a man that professeth religion but wee must doe him good euen as this harlot wrought not enough in receiuing the spies and then to haue left them to their owne hazard but as in obedience she did receiue them so in faith she must safely send them away Yea we are bound by praier by purse by person by credit by countenance to releeue them not onely to thinke well of them and to like them so farre must we be from vexing them For if Obadiah 1. King 18.4 had onely hid the Prophets of God and had not fed them it bad beene but halfe a good worke Heereupon is it that in the last day in the sentence of the reprobate shall neuer be mentioned what euill they haue done as that they haue bitten by this vsury or polluted their bodies by that whoredome but there shall be recited onely the good they did not as Mat. 25.41 for not clothing the naked for not visiting the sicke for not releeuing the poore brethren for Rahab must not onely conceale and hide the spies but shee must send them away safe And if the sentence of iudgement drawne in this forme cannot affect vs let vs further know that though euill is the absence of good yet good is not the absence of euill for Rahabs worke is but lame if she doe but harbour them and if she doe not finish it by letting them foorth it shall neuer bee registred as a worke of faith For looke Iudg. 5.23 Cursed be Meroz that came not to helpe the Lord against be mighty not because he did persecute the Lord or did him any hurt but because he helped him not And wee see Rahab vpon this least knowledge of God ●entred her life to saue them Besides we shall read in the Gospell that the greatest torment of the glutton is Luk. 16.25 that he gaue La●aru● no water not that hee was an extortioner or that hee spurned the poore man from his doore By all which examples we are taught that where religion is opp●●sted by all meanes and in all things we can to releeue the Gospell for the good we haue omitted and the euill we haue committed shall come to iudgement Lastly marke the words Rahab the harlot which reprochfull speech must not bee referred to the present state of her conuersion but to her former conuersation as if hee should say Rahab that once had beene a whore for none truly conuerted can remaine in their former sinne but if hee doe after his conuersion fall into some grosse sinne as Dauid did in killing Vriah 2. Sam. 11.17 the Lord will scourge him as hee did Dauid And to bee raised vp of the Lord after such a relapse must not bee by slubbering vp our repentance but we must so be humbled as to feele drinesse in our bones with griefe as Dauid did Psal 32.4 And we shall neuer receiue comfort vntill wee haue soundly and seriously repented Whereupon we gather that the Lord regardeth not what sinnes we haue committed before our regeneration so that after our conuersion we walke worthy of our calling for many that were whores and wicked were conuerted As Luk. 7.37 she that washed Iesus feete with the teares of her eyes and heart and wiped them with the haire of her head had beene a whore but wee read not that after that she was any more so So Zaccheus Luk 19.5 was an extortioner before Christ called him from the tree but we reade not that he euer tooke peny vsury after And Mat. 20.20 such bee inuited to the supper as bee patched and lame to expresse our spirituall beggery but after we are come thither wee must haue the wedding garment of a good conscience For Saul was a persecutor of the Church before hee was called Act. 9.2 but wee nerer reade that he was so after his conuersion For if we continue in a sinne looke what followeth euen in this life 1. Cor. 5.11 If any that is a professor be a whore-monger eate not with him that is forbeare thy priuate familiarity with him so then being conuerted wee must shew our repentance from those sinnes wherein before we were fallen as the repentance from vsury is liberality the repentance from pride is bumility from whoredome chastity for repentance is the leauing of thy sinne and the cleauing to the contrary vertue and it is no repentance to leaue thy sinne when it must or hath left thee as vpon thy death bed to re●e●● thee of thy vsurie when thou canst take no more or in thy age to repent thee of thy lecherie when thou canst satisfie it no more but to repent from thy sinne is as 1. Peter 4.1 to suffer in the flesh to suffer in the flesh is to cease from sinne and to cease from sinne is not onely to leaue thy sinne but to spend the rest of thy time