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A76798 Expositions and sermons upon the ten first chapters of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to Matthew. Written by Christopher Blackwood, preacher to a Church of Christ in the city of Dublin in Ireland. Blackwood, Christopher. 1659 (1659) Wing B3098; ESTC R207680 612,607 923

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humours do on our stomachs it cloys us and makes us loath all spiritual food 6 Converse with them that are spiritual that have tasted heavenly things when we see them contemplate Christ and his benefits the soul reasons there 's some excellent thing in Christ and his benefits and in an holy life that takes up these mens mindes 7 We know not how soon these Dainties may be taken from us let us as those at a Feast who having neglected eating at the latter end fall to afresh While the Jubilee is take out a pardon while the Physician is present get out a Medicine imitate Joseph to lay up against a Famine no man ever repented the pains he hath taken for his soul but many have lamented their neglects 8 Exercise gets stomach Exercise in prayer in bearing crosses in resisting temptations will sharpen our affections to an holy life 9 In order to hungring and thirst get a tast of the sweetness of an holy life 1 Peter 2.2 He that hath tasted any sweet thing the more he hath tasted it the more he will desire it as in learning sweet meats c. Love the best life and custome will make it sweet to you 10 Rellish holiness Where there 's a rellish of any good thing we will the more desire it If we rellish spiritual things we will hunger and thirst after them Rom 8.5 They that are after the Spirit savour the things of the Spirit 11 Consider the durableness of this Food Other meat when it is eaten the sweetness is presently gone but holiness and Christ is a Food that endures to everlasting life John 6.27 All food else is perishing even the knowledg of natural and civil things yea the speculative knowledg of divine things the truths of God are the food of the soul but unless the goodness of truths be the food of the will and affections they are but perishing food In religious discourses all ornaments besides that which quickens and strengthens is but perishing food V. 7 Blessed are the mercifull for they shall obtain mercy Two things 1 A Proposition Mercifull men are blessed 2 The Reason For they shall obtain mercy Obs Mercifull men are blessed Reas 1 Such shall finde mercy with God 2 Tim 1.16 The Lord grant mercy to the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed me the Lord grant unto him that he may finde mercy of the Lord in that day v. 18 Come ye blessed of my Father for I was hungry and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink Matth 25.34 2 From the rules of contrary Merciless men are cursed why they finde no mercy with God The glutton would not give so much as the crums to poor Lazarus Luke 16.21 hence he could not get a drop of water to cool his tongue being in torments James 2.13 He shall have judgment without mercy that hath shewed no mercy Now as merciless men are cursed so mercifull men are blessed 3 All the good things that have been done for God are promised not onely to be acknowledged Philemon 6 Every good thing in you shall be acknowledged but also promised to be rewarded Heb 6.10 God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labor of love which ye have towards his Name in that ye have ministred to the Saints and do minister Prov 11.17 The mercifull man doth good to his own soul For application let it inform us of our duties The very Heathens praised it much more the Scriptures see the compassionate Samaritan Luke 10.30 ad 38 there 's a story of a man that fell among thieves for I do not think it to be a parable but a story the Levite and Priest past by pretending it 's like either the haste of their journey or the danger of their stay lest they should be robbed but the Samaritan he takes care of him 2 Exhortation to mercifulness 1 This is the way to lay up in store a good foundation against the time to come Luke 16.9 Make you friends of the unrighteous Mammon that is of your earthly goods so called because mostly found among unrighteous persons and most accounted by them and therefore it appears they are not the true good that when you fail of your Mammon or Wealth they may receive you into everlasting Tabernacles For so the word signifies 2 Cor 5.1 that is either the Angels may receive you or that the poor whom you have helped through their daily prayers for you may be instrumental for your admission into Heaven Luke 12.33 Sell that you have and give alms Some pretend they have no money but you have money-worth mercy is such a piece of service that you must sell corn and cattle in order thereto yea the necessity of Saints may be so great that lands and all must go Acts 4.37 What is the issue you will hereby provide bags that wax not old a treasure in the Heaven that faileth not 1 Ti 6.18 Be ready to distribute willing to communicate laying up in store for themselves a good foundation against time to come As if he should say The foundation of earthly things is a sandy and uncertain foundation and therefore build not upon it but lay up works of mercy in the bellies and backs of the poor these works of mercy are compared to a foundation because as from an hidden foundation the house riseth to a great height so from these good works the degrees of a glorious life ariseth Prov 11.17 2 Such mercifull men shall finde mercy with God where the Lord meets with a common objection most men are ungratefull and ready to lift up the heel against their benefactors however such shall finde mercy with God Eccles 11.1 Cast thy Bread upon the Waters and thou shalt receive it after many days also with men they shall finde mercy God bowing their hearts to favour mercifull men Psalm 112.4 to v. 10. 3 Mercy is one of the principal things which God requires hence it 's put before Sacrifice Matth 9.13 so that Sacrifice may be dispensed with that Mercy may take place hence it 's called one of the great points of the Law Luke 11.42 4 By mercifulness to others we become like to God Luke 6.36 If we do not resemble him in this but will be cruel and harsh we may look that God will so carry himself to us Psalm 18.25 Mat 18.32 33 he that was cruel for an hundred Pence himself being forgiven ten thousand Talents was cast into Prison till he paid what was due v. 34 35 James 5 11 The Lord is pitifull and of tender mercy 5 There is no love of God in us if there be no mercy 1 John 3.17 He that shuts up Bowels of Compassion how dwells the love of God in that Man 1 John 4.20 The Apostle with love to God joyns love and mercy to men He that loves not his Brother whom he hath seen how can he love God whom he hath not seen 6 It 's the note of God's elect
cross of Christ should be made of none effect Besides the wit of man hides the power of the Word and he that receives the Word upon eloquent enticement will be drawn to leave it when he hears greater eloquence perswading thereto It 's the misery of the times that Aristotle the deluder of wits should in most Universities be heeded rather then Christ the Prophet of his Church 5 Christ came home to the Consciences of men and so Paul We commend our selves to every mans conscience as in the sight of God He speaks with authority that speaks to the conscience Know ye not the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6.9 Matth. 23.33 O generation of vipers how can ye escape the damnation of hell 6 Christ came with authority not onely as an interpreter of the Law of God but as being himself a Law-giver come from heaven John 3.11 We speak that we do know and testifie that we have seen Also v. 31 32. He that cometh from heaven is above all and what he hath seen and heard that he testifieth 7 Christ came with authority in the convincing of souls for sin It 's one great work of the Spirit of Christ Joh. 16.10 Hence Micah 3.8 I am full of power by the Spirit of the Lord and of judgement and of might to declare unto Jacob his transgression and to Israel his sin Hence he spares neither Prince Prophet or Priest v. 9 10 11 12. The Word should come as a thunder-clap to the heart of the sinner Act. 8.21 Peter to Magus I perceive thou art in the gall of bitterness and bond of iniquity ye have been the betrayers and murderers of the Son of God Acts 2.36 As Nazianzen Orat 20. said of Basil His word was like thunder his life like lightning 8 He taught with authority in preaching to the life as a picture is well drawn when it s drawn as to life so a preacher must preach as to life to preach of heaven hell death and judgement as if they were before us to preach out the wrath of God that the sinner may apprehend it as a burning fire to set forth the ugliness of sin that it may appear as black as hell to set forth the particular excellencies of Christ that the soul may say Whither is thy beloved gone that we may seek him with thee To set forth the terribleness of judgement that the sinner may be afraid to live one hour in such a condition as he would be afraid to dye in 9 In not sparing persons of the greatest quality as Herod Pilate the High Priests Lawyers Scribes and therefore Christ denounces woe upon woe upon them Woe unto you Pharisees woe unto you Scribes woe unto you Lawyers Luk. 11.42 43 44 46 47 50 51 52. Nor did he fear the faces of the Mighty Jer 1.10 17 18 19. 10 He taught with authority not onely in pressing powerful doctrine but also did move upon their hearts by the working of his Spirit that their hearts were all on fire in hearing of him Luk. 24.32 Did not our hearts burn within us while he opened to us the Scriptures So Paul 1 Cor. 2.4 11 Christ taught vvith authority because himself vvas deeply affected vvith the things vvhich he taught It is not a thundring voice nor vehement enforcements from natural strength that proves povverfulness of doctrine but it much tends to authority both in prayer and preaching that the heart of the preacher be first vvrought upon either in private betvvixt God and his soul or in publick affections in the preacher beget affections in the hearer and after an unperceiveable manner dravv them over So Christ vvhen he preached to multitudes sometimes he put on bovvels of pity Mat. 9.37 sometimes grief and vveeping Luk. 19.41 compared vvith ver 48. Joh. 11.35 38. compared vvith ver 45. 12 Christ taught vvith authority because he knevv none could charge sin upon him so shall a teacher that lives a blameless conversation and knovvs that no man can charge evil upon him he hath authority in his doctrine but if he be covetous or proud or vain he looses that authorative povver vvhich God hath given him in the hearts of hearers Titus 2.15 Rebuke with all authority let no man despise thee q. d. if thou doest any thing unvvorthy to render thy self despicable thy authority vvill be lost 13 By a vehement pressing and urging the commands upon the consciences of men vvithall denouncing threats against the ungodly as Mat. 7.26 27. Luk. 6.21 to ver 27. so should a preacher press the commands upon persons I command you in the name of the Lord Jesus that you be not proud passionate greedy after the world So John Baptist Matth. 3.8 9 10. Now the ax is laid to the root of the tree bring forth fruit else you vvill be throvvn into the fire Use See a duty in faithful preachers 1 To teach vvith authority remembring vvhose Embassadours they are Matth. 28.18 2 Cor. 5.20 2 To maintain the authority vvhich the Lord hath given unto them 2 Cor. 10.8 maintain it both by life and doctrine by preaching povverfully and living holily Hovv povverfull vvas the Apostle Paul in his preaching See Gal. 1.6 7 8 9 10. 3 To the Brethren to obey that Word that comes with authority to their consciences Heb. 13.17 Obey them that have the rule over you c. And not as the Scribes Whose teaching was either traditionary as the washing of pots and cups and hands building the tombs of Prophets making broad phylacteries but for things tending to mortification they spake not at all or very superficially or their teaching was formal When they spake of the love of God and other duties they spake of them without zeal and feeling and therefore they were not like to affect others when themselves were not first affected The Orator that moves his hearers must first be moved himself Or their teaching was hypocritical binding heavy burthens upon others they themselves not touching them with one of their fingers Or their teaching was in generals and confounded Contrarily Christ 1 For matter he teaches weighty points as concerning true blessedness and the qualifications of them that mean to attain it concerning a holy life free from scandal concerning love to enemies alms prayer fasting placing treasure in heaven 2 For manner Christ speaks with fervency and affection fire begets fire the burning affection in Christ which he had in speaking makes the hearts of his Disciples burn in hearing Luke 24.32 3 For method Christ speaks distinctly first to one point and then to another whereas they confounded what they spake Method is the mother of memory 4 Christ in his doctrine was impartial he spared none Many speak truth to the common people suffering all things not to them whom they fear will persecute them to whom especially it is to be spoken He that looks upon mens persons will be terrified with the show of titles and dignities 5 He preached
in preaching the receiver shall have the same degree of glory the Prophet had For the measure of glory hereafter will answer to our measure of love here for as in humane Laws the Receiver of a Thief and Robber and Traitour incurs the same punishment with the Thief so the receiver of a Prophet shall receive the same reward with the Prophet The Elm that upholds the Vine is respected of us as well as the Vine without which the Vine could not bring forth fruit he that tarried with the stuff and he that went down to the battel did alike share in the spoil 1 Sam. 30.24 so he that nourishes a Prophet for to preach when by reason of poverty else he could not shall receive the same reward with the Prophet according to the proportion of assistance and love wherewith he assists that Prophet And some think in like manner they that receive comfort and nourish the Martyrs of Christ shall receive the same Crown with them that suffer Martyrdom such as were companions of those who were made gazing-stocks for Christ are taken notice of Heb. 10.33 We may hence see how much God esteems his Prophets in that he promises not onely a reward but such a reward to them that receive them as of old he valued Prophets and righteous men Psalm 105.15 Touch not mine Anointed and do my Prophets no harm so doth he now not onely forbid harming them but commands to do them good with a promise of reward And he that receiveth a righteous man By this Christ means godly men Obs The Saints of God are truly and properly righteous men There is a twofold Righteousness 1 Imputative Righteousness of Justification Psalm 32.1 2. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity This consists in having Christs righteousness imputed unto us and our sins imputed unto him 2 Cor. 5.21 He was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in him Paul knew that at the day of Christ he was to be found in a righteousness or else he was undone and therefore he saith May be found in him not having mine own righteousness which is of the Law but the righteousness of Christ by faith that I may know him and the power of his Death and Resurrection c. This is one of the first Articles of the Faith wherein the Jews being ignorant did endeavour to make their own righteousness to stand The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but it was no otherwise than if we should set a dead man upon his legs who presently falls down Rom. 10.3 4. 2 There is a righteousness of sanctification or the righteousness of uprightness whereby there is a bent or inclination of soul to all the commandments of God without reserving any way of wickedness Deut. 6.25 It shall be our righteousness if we observe to do all these commandments as he hath commanded us This because it is wrought in our own persons is called inherent Job 27.5 6. Till I dy I will not remove my integrity from me my righteousness I hold fast and will not let it go Integrity consisting in an universal bent of heart to all Gods commands is here called by the name of righteousness Luke 1.6 it 's said Zachary and Elizabeth were both righteous before God But how did it appear why they walked in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless Of this Job 29.14 I put on righteousness and it cloathed me my judgment was as a robe and a diadem Godly walking or the Righteousness of Sanctification did adorn him before men as brave Apparel doth those that put it on Revel 19.8 The fine Linnen are the righteousnesses in the Plural 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Saints he means as the righteousness of him who is the Lord our Righteousness Jer. 23.6 adorns us in the sight of God and answers divine Justice Gal. 3.10 1● so doth the Righteousness of Sanctification adorn us in the sight of God Rom. 4.1.2 and of men Moses his mouth is full of wormwood the beginning of salvation is that that thou believe for that a new life ought to follow that belongs not to satisfaction but to obedience Luth. Tom. 4.198 As there is a two-fold righteousness so there is a two-fold acception of justification 1 For an absolution in judgement in opposition to condemnation Prov. 17.15 He that justifieth the wicked and he that condemneth the just even they both are alike abomination in the sight of God Matth. 12.37 By thy words thou shalt be justified and by thy words thou shalt be condemned so that by considering what condemnation is we may know what justification is Condemnation is the sentence of a righteous Judge adjudging a malefactor to death for some capital crime whereof he is found guilty in judgement Absolution is the sentence of a righteous Judge acquitting an innocent person his righteousness appearing in judgement Thus we are justified by Christs righteousness Rom. 8.33 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect or frame an inditement against them the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seeing it is God that justifieth who shall condemn It s Christ that dyed yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God As if he should say through Christ his dying and rising we are acquitted from all guilt and punishment we believing on him 2 Justification is taken for the infusion of habitual righteousness whereby there is not onely a throwing down of the reign of sin in the soul but there is also a setting up of a new frame of grace in the purpose and intentions of the heart Dan. 12.3 They that justifie many shall shine as the stars as Junius reads it they that turn many to righteousness This is nothing else but sanctification if we take the word in a grammatical sence of justus and facio Seldom is the word thus taken and when it is so taken it doth not alwayes signifie an habitual effect in the subject of that quantity or quality the epithite denotes with the driving away of the contrary as in glorifie magnifie sanctifie c. vve glorifie and sanctifie God not by making him of vile and prophane to become glorious and holy but by declaring him to be such Mary magnifies the Lord not by making him of little to become great but by declaring him to be great The Peripatetics say that by doing just and temperate things vve are made just and temperate but it s not so for being made just and temperate vve do just and temperate things Luth. Tom. 2 lat Now the justification in the Court of heaven vvhereby vve stand righteous must be a righteousness vvhereby vve stand perfect in all parts and degrees This is two-fold 1 The Righteousness of the lavv so if vve perfectly fulfill the Lavv in every point vve are saved from hell by it Rom. 10.5 Moses describeth the righteousness of the Law that the man that
Lord to remember his kindnesses he had done for the house of the Lord and the offices thereof Neh. 13.14 and for the consecration of the Sabbath he concludes Remember mee O my God concerning this also and spare me according to the multitude of thy mercy See he begs sparing from God in his best services Psal 143.2 Enter not into judgement with thy Servant The very servants of God cannot stand in judgement by their own righteousness 4 Paul after conversion desires to be found Having Christs righteousness upon him and not his own at the day of judgement Phil. 3.9 The dangers of those who seek to be righteous by their own righteousness are 1 So long as thou stablishes thy own righteousness thou wilt not submit to Christs righteousness Rom. 10.3 4. They being ignorant of Gods righteousness and going about to stablish their own righteousness have not submitted themselves to the righteousness of God In the world the Law and works are so to be urged as if there were no promise but Christians are so to be taught to live as if there were no Law Luth. By grace we are made heirs the works which follow do not make us heirs or sons but are done of heirs and sons to testifie thanksgiving and obedience Luth. in Psal 130. A person will not seek out for a Phisician till he feel himself sick Matth. 9.13 If thou puttest thy deliverance from sin and wrath upon the performance of that righteousness the Law commands as any cause thereof thou makes thine own righteousness as great an idol as can be because thou makes thy righteousness to be that which Gods righteousness onely is and as thy righteousness will speak thou wilt have peace or bitterness this is in effect to make our own righteousness our Mediator Suppose your righteousness were a fullfilling of the whole Law one point excepted that very failing makes you guilty of the breach of all the rest and when men stand guilty before God Jam. 2.10.11 shall they plead that which is guilty to finde acceptation In the business of justification no man can enough remove the Law out of his sight and behold the promise alone Luth. Tom. 4.103 Bernard and other Doctors when they are out of disputation teach Christ purely but when they go into the field of the Law they so dispute as if there were no Christ at all Luth. in Psalm 130. The best righteousness we ever performed is not able as a deserving cause to turn away the least sin or wrath or to procure the least favour from God Gen. 32.10 I am less then the least of thy mercies said Jacob onely God having promised these mercies of his free grace we are in the use of means to seek hope for and expect a conveyance of them Quest But doth not our righteousness move and melt the Lord and prevail with him to do this or that good for his people Answ No It was not Hezekiahs prayers and tears Cornelius his prayers and alms Daniel his prayer and fasting Dan. 9.17 That melted and moved God but his own son hence Daniel prayes Cause thy face to shine upon thy sanctuary which is desolate for the Lords sake vers 17. Obj. But if we get nothing by our righteousness then we had as good sit still and do nothing Answ I overthrow it onely in point of satisfaction to divine justice in point of merit If works alone be taught as it happens in the Papacy faith is lost if faith alone be taught presently carnal men dream works are not necessary without the cause of justification No man can enough commend good works Who can enough declare the profit of one good work which a Christian doth from and in faith It 's more pretious then heaven and earth therefore the whole world in this life cannot give a worthy reward for such a good work Luth. Tom. 4. fol. 109. But for righteousness as it is one with uprighness I establish it Psalm 32.11 Rejoyce in the Lord ye righteous and shout for joy all ye that are upright in heart See whom he calls righteous even them whom he calls upright Psalm 125.4 Do good to them that are good who are they even them who are upright in heart yea further God will crown the righteousness of his servants 2 Tim. 4.8 henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness and not to me onely but to them also who love his appearing yea the righteous shall shine in the Kingdom of their father Matth. 13.43 And God hath a special eye of providence over such 1 Pet. 3.12 The eyes of the Lord are over the righteous and his ear is open to their cry See Gods care of righteous Noah Gen. 6.8 9. and of Lot 2 Pet. 7.8 9. 2 Moreover we ought to look upon our performances of prayer fasting baptisme supper c. as the ordinances of God wherein the Lord hath appointed us to meet with him and wherein he will make good the things he hath promised therein Esa 64.5 Thou meetest him that rejoyceth and worketh righteousness He comes with his handfull and poures out that which his own freeness hath engaged him to do for us Good works are no other thing then thanksgiving they are not done for righteousness but for witness they please not God simply for themselves but for the person believing Luth. We do confess our sins to him but what is the ground of forgiveness not our confessions prayers or tears but his own free grace because he delights in mercy Mic. 7.19 3 It 's base selfishness when thou wilt do no righteousness but for thy own sake who if thou shouldest know before hand thy righteousness would get thee nothing wouldest sit still and do nothing quere whether such a man had not indeed as good sit still and do nothing 4 Righteousness of sanctification and uprightness is evidential in point of assurance 2 Pet. 1.6 7 8 9 10. 1 Tim. 6.17 18. 5 To testifie our thankfulness Rom. 12.1 2 Danger by establishing thy own righteousness thou unthrones Christ of the principal part of his Office which is to be the righteousness of his people Jer. 23.6 Rom. 5.17 18. By the obedience of one shall many be placed righteous It s Christs Office to place persons at his Judgement seat righteous hence some read it constituentur This mistery was shadowed Exod. 25.17 18 19. The Law or Testimony was to be put in the Ark and the Mercy-seat was to be set upon the Ark v. 21. Christ is this Propitiatory or Mercy-seat Rom 3.25 1 John 2.2 Let us not take the Law out of the Ark as our righteousness but cast our eye upon the Mercy-seat which covers the Ark and Testimony 2 Use Consolation to the Saints that though made infamous by the world God counts them righteous our Principal comfort is that Christ takes away our filthy garments and gives us the righteousness of his Son Zach. 3.4 That all accusations that Satan can put
progenitor● had that is he should convert them to the faith of Christ their fathers hoped in and looked for lest continuing obstinate to the great and terrible Day of the Lords Judgment they should perish among the rest of his Enemies to understand which the old Prophets Daniel excepted for the most part spake of the coming of Christ without distinguishing his first and second coming and applying those things which respectively concerne the state of either of them Again it appears from Matth. 17.10 the Disciples upon the Transfiguration asked Christ Why say the Scribes that Elias must first come Christ answers Elias truly shall first come and shall restore all things These words being spoken of Christ after John Baptist was beheaded imply plainly that he is to come again besides how can this restoring of all things be verified of the Ministry of John Baptist which continued but a short time and did no such thing as these words seem to imply for the restoring of all things belongs not to the first but to the second coming of Christ Acts 3 19. Repent and be converted for the blotting out of your sins that the times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord and that he may send Jesus Christ which before was preached unto you whom the Heavens must receive untill the times of the restitution of all things If the M ster come not to restore all things till then surely his Harbinger who is to prepare his way for restoring all things is not to be looked for till then Whereas Malachy saith Behold I will send you Eliah the Prophet it proves no more that it should be Eliah the This bite in person than when it is said David shall rule over you proves Christ should be David in person It 's like if it be one that comes again it should be John Baptist himself who was the Harbinger of the first coming so that as Christ had two comings so his Harbinger should have 2 We have Christ his Preaching set forth by the place which was Galilee The Word begun from Galilee Acts 10.37 Galilee was part of the Land of Canaan it was divided into two parts the higher and lower the higher was for the most part the Land of Nephtali wherein stood Capernaum the chiefest City of Galilee situate upon the bank of Jordan over against which on the other side stood Chorazin the lower Galilee contained the Tribes of Zebulon and Issachar wherein were the Cities Nazareth and Bethsaida near the Lake or Sea of Galilee and Cana. Also Mount Iabor where he was transfigured In Galilee was Christ's conversation principally when he was upon earth there it was Christ healed the Nobleman's son John 4.46 In Nazareth a City of Galilee he was conceived Luke 1.26 and brought up Matth. 2.23 there he began his Preaching in Capernaum thence it was that his Disciples were Acts 1.11 Ye men of Galilee why stand ye gazing up into Heaven Acts 2.7 When the Holy Ghost was given it 's said Are not all these that speak Galileans Jesus went about all Galilee teaching in their Synagogues and healing all manner of sickness Matth. 4.23 at Cana in Gatilee he turned Water into Wine his Transfiguration was upon Tabor a Mount of Galilee his ordinary residence was in Galilee he came into Judea as it 's thought onely at the Feast times when the whole Nation assembled at Hierusalem during which times partly during his stay there partly in his going and returning he did all in a manner that he did out of Galilee and the last Feast he came thither offered himself a Sacrifice upon the Cross And when he was risen from the Dead he appoints his Disciples to go see him in Galilee Matth. 28.10 Onely his Nativity was at Bethlem upon the occasion of the Taxing his Passion at Hierusalem and his Ascension upon Mount Olivet near to Hierusalem V. 13. And leaving Nazareth he came and dwelt in Capernaum which is upon the Sea coast in the Borders of Zebulon and Nephtali V. 14. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the Prophet saying V. 15. The People which sate in Darkness saw great Light and to them that sate in the Region of the Shadow of Death Light is sprung up We have in this History the beginning of Christ's Ministry set down 1 From the occasion of it which was Christ's hearing that John was cast into Prison 2 From the place of it which was Capernaum a City in the Coasts of Zebulon and Nephtali lying near the Sea 3 The end of his Ministry there which was twofold 1 For the fulfilling of the Prophesie of Esaias mentioned cap. 9.1 2. v. 14 15. 2 For the enlightening of People that sate in darkness v. 16. 4 The sum of his Doctrine which was Repentance v. 17. Repent for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand Leaving Nazareth John gives the Reason hereof Because a Prophet hath no honour in his own Countrey John 4.44 This was the Town where his Parents dwelt Luke 2.39 wherein he had lived thirty years Luke 4.16 Matth. 2.23 hence called Jesus the Prophet of Nazareth of Galilee Mat. 21 11. the Reason why he could have no honour there was because it was his own Countrey Many Prophets that have their gifts and graces admired in strange places are partly from meanness of Parentage and partly from childish weakness in their childhood acted partly from observation of some Infirmities in them partly from Passions to which the holiest are liable Christ onely excepted and partly from curiosity men being apt to loath Manna because of the commonness of it and partly from wantonness men having itching ears and desiring change apt to be contemned by their own People As it should be the care of a faithfull Teacher to keep up the authority of his Ministry Titus 2.15 so should it be the care of Gods People to honour the Prophets of God and to esteem them that are over them in the Lord 1 Thess 5.12 lest their Ministry become ineffectual for the Message will never be esteemed where the person is vilified Christ was exceeding contemptuous of the glory and praise of men as appears John 7.3 4. but he knew none could receive good by his Ministry that did not esteem reverently of his person which reverence and honour because he could not have it at Nazareth he goes to Capernaum Teachers should have such sanctity of life powerfulness and impartiality in Doctrine sufficiency of maintenance as may keep their persons from contempt and the People of God should count it their happiness to have such as they can reverence for the obtaining such let them spare no pains nor cost He came and dwelt in Capernaum upon the Sea-coast Capernaum did adjoyn to Jerdan where Jordan flowed into the Sea of Tiberias it was by reason of its lying on the Sea the Metropolis of Galilee and the chief Mart town here Christ and his Disciples lived the best part of three years
with a Convent or Meeting it is every Assembly of men that meet together whether for judgment or for counsel or for holy things After the word Convent or Meeting or Synagogue for they are all one came to be transferr'd and brought to those places where these Meetings were Luke 7.5 He hath loved our Nation and built us a Synagogue as the word Church in continuance of time came to be transferr'd to the place where the Church met The Christian Assembly is called by the name of Synagogue in the Greek James 2.2 For the distinction betwixt Teaching and Preaching both which Christ uses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Teaching may have respect to the opening prophetical Scriptures for the same Greek word is used by Luke when Christ opened the Prophesie of the sixty first of Esay Luke 4.15 16 17. Preaching is the gathering Doctrines and Observations from the Word with an application of them by reprehension Exhortation Instruction and Consolation Now Christ preached thus in the Synagogues partly to take advantage of a Concourse of People and partly that his Doctrine might come to the test being not preached in a corner but before judicious Hearers John 18.20 Jesus said I spake openly to the World I ever taught in the Synagogue and in the Temple whither the Jews always resort and in secret have I said nothing There was of these Synagogues almost in every great City as at Antioch Acts 15.22 at Corinth Acts 18.8 c. which Jews that traded about Merchandise and out of a zeal to gain Proselytes set up whom Heathens did not hinder there to profess their faith nor Christ disdain to go into them though some of them had been defiled by the Samaritan mixtures whose Religion was jumbled with superstitions 1 Kings 17.33 Learn we from Christ's example to seek for lost souls Ezek. 34.4 Healing all manner of sickness and all manner of disease among the people By sickness called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he means an habituated rooted disease by weakness he means want of strength weariness languishing which are the predictions of a disease This distinction is 1 Cor. 11.30 Many are weak and sick among you now Christ healed all weaknesses and sicknesses 1 To gain authority to his Doctrine not heard of before in the World 2 To fulfill Prophesies as Isai 35.5 3 That being healed in their Bodies they might seek to him for their Souls 4 To prove himself to be the Christ Matth. 11.2 when John's Disciples ask Art thou he that should come or shall we look for another Christ answers Go tell John what you see the blinde receive their sight the lame walk the Lepers are cleansed Christ could have done other Miracles as Moses did Exod. 4.4.6.9 but he chuses such Miracles as were usefull and beneficial to men the more to affect them he heals their diseases and weaknesses and this not by Plaisters and Medicines after the manner of Physicians but by the Word of his Power and all this to strengthen our weak faith V. 24. And his fame went through all Syria and they brought unto him all sick People that were taken with divers Diseases and torments and those which were possessed with Devils and those which were lunatick and that had the Palsey and he healed them We have the effects that followed his Preaching and Miracles 1 His fame went through all Syria that is the fame of his Miracles and Doctrine God makes glory and praise to accompany worthy and renowned actions as the shadow accompanies the body let us not then pursue our own glory Through all Syria Syria lies upon the Mediterranean on the West on the East bounded by Euphrates on the North bounded by Cilicia and Armenia on the South by the Desarts of Arabia and Egypt And they brought unto him all sick People That they might see his power extended to all sorts of Diseases he heals all the sick in particular he heals 1 Torments that is racking Diseases that so torment the sick as if they were upon the Rack as Malefactors are to confess their wickedness and their Confederates 2 Possessed with Devils in whom the Devil had such a power to cause them to mischieve themselves and others 3 Lunatick these were such as the Moon had an influence upon especially at the full at which time they dote or are mad The Moon hath an influence over them that have a moist and weak Brain in the new Moon and full Moon it increases and mingles the Humours to wit Phlegm and Melancholy and troubles the Brain so that some are carried to dotage others to madness others to the falling sickness and with these evils the Devil sometimes gets in and by stirring up the Humours of black and yellow choler sorely afflicts the sick so that sometimes he drives them to despair sometimes to murder themselves 4 Palseys A Palsey is a Convulsion of the Sinews that a man that hath it is not able to move And he healed them Without requiring faith of them for he had not yet shewn his power and many of them coming from far had little faith in him afterwards when he had shewen many Miracles among them he required faith of the sick 1 We may learn from these Multitudes from the necessities of our wants and weaknesses to seek after Christ 2 How great soever our Diseases be to be confident there is power enough in Christ to heal us V. 25. And there followed him great Multitudes of People from Galilee and from Decapolis and from Jerusalem and from Judea and from beyond Jordan Here is the last effect of Christ's healing to wit Multitudes followed him When Christ will let forth his power he can make Multitudes follow him Some followed him for heavenly things some to be healed of their diseases some out of curiosity some out of envy to carp at him In these times some follow Christ because of profit some for honor some from examples some for their relations sake few out of sincere love as resolving to suffer with him but as soon as Christ and his Cross come together they leave him as the stony ground Matth. 13.21 The people of God are not multitudes but a people redeemed from tongues and people nations and languages Revel 5.9 If we follow Christ because multitudes follow him we shall as easily leave him when multitudes forsake him Usually multitudes are corrupt young and old compassed Lot's house Gen. 19.4 in the old world all flesh had corrupted their ways Gen. 6. Multitudes worshipped the golden Image Nebucadnezz●r had set up From Decapolis In English from ten Cities the name of these ten Cities according to Brocard and Adricomius are Tiberias Sephet Asar Cedes Caesarea Philippi Capernaum Bethsaida Chorazin Bethsan or Scytopolis and Jotapata where Josephus was Governour fighting against the Romans and Titus From Ju●ea and from Hierusalem That is not onely from the City of Jerusalem but from the Countrey lying thereabouts And from beyond Jordan
are written in the Law concerning me and my actions and mysteries which shall not in every point be fulfilled Till all be fulfilled That is till all things that are written in the Law and the Prophets 1 Concerning me and my actions be fulfilled 2 Till all things commanded promised and threatened be fulfilled V. 19. Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least Commandments and shall teach men so he shall be called the least in the Kingdom of Heaven but whosoever shall do and teach them the same shall be called great in the Kingdom of Heaven In the words two things 1 A Threatning Whosoever shall break one of Gods Commands and teach others so he shall be called least in the Kingdom of Heaven 2 A Promise But whosoever shall do and teach them the same shall be called great in the Kingdom of Heaven Whosoever shall break one of these least Commandments The scope of this place shews that this Verse hath respect unto the Teachers Hierom refers it to the words of the Law but others of the Ancients to the Commands of the Kingdom of Heaven which are the fulfilling of the Law Therefore Christ saith not Whosoever shall break one of the least of those Commandments but of these having respect to the foregoing Commandments to which blessedness was promised and to other Commands of an holy Example c. and also to the following Commands which contain a more large explication of things which are of eternal equity Christ argues If it were lawfull for no man to break the Law much less to break the Commands of the Gospel Heb. 2.23 Every transgression and disobedience of the Law received a just recompence of reward how shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation Yea Christ saith Whosoever shall by his interpretation weaken the Law of Christ as the Pharisees did against whom Christ preached instructing his Apostles and Messengers to be Teachers of another Sect and that they are not to deprave the Commands of Christ by false Expositions as the Pharisees did The least of these Commandments That is there is not the least Command in these Sermons of Christ which any man can despise without the loss of salvation Some carry it to the Law of Nature contained in the Books of Moses which the Pharisees called small in respect of their traditions to which they gave a greater perfection than to Gods commands which is not to be despised Some think Christ hath respect to the distinction which the Pharisees gave of the Commands to wit greatest and least the greatest to be them which commanded external obedience as Thou shalt not kill c. the least which commanded the moderation of the affections as anger wrath c. These Commands are called least not because they were so but because they were so in the Pharisees opinion And shall teach men so That is or shall teach men so the Conjunction is put for a Disjunction he means whosoever shall teach these false interpretations of the Law in the Church and scatter his Errours as the Pharisees Sadduces and Herodians then did and so led persons into seducement So That is to do as himself doth who keeps not the Commands of Christ and teaches others that they are not to be kept He shall be called least in the Kingdom of God When thou art called least in the Kingdom of Heaven suspect Hell and punishment Chrysost that is he shall be nothing accounted of when the end of the World shall come He shall be called that is he shall then be pronounced so to be by the Judg by the Sentence of which Judg it shall be declared how great every man is and in what estate he shall be Neither shall he be in no place because he shall rise again and be judged but he shall be in the last place because he shall be cast into utter darkness Some by least understand no place there at the Judgment as Psalm 1.6 The wicked shall not stand in judgment Others understand the last place this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the Kingdom doth properly denote the time as Luke 14.14 Besides the Day of Judgment is called by the name of Kingdom 2 Tim. 4.1 To conclude by least he means none because none can be in the Kingdom of Heaven but those that are great they are sons heirs and so it is expounded v. 20. But whosoever shall do and teach These words though they principally look at Teachers yet are they not so to be bound to them that others should be excluded for it is the duty of all Christians not onely to go before others by example but by admonition and instruction Rom. 15.14 Col. 3.16 It 's said of Christ He began both to do and teach Whosoever shall do and teach both great and small Commandments that is whose bent of heart is for all the Commandments Teachers must not look for any Crown if they do not practise that which they teach others they are like unto High-way Marks which shew the way to others but do not go in it themselves The same shall be called great in the Kingdom of Heaven That is pronounced happy and blessed at that day Dan. 12 2. They that turn many to righteousness shall shine as the Stars for ever and ever They shall be called great Teacher and Fathe of the Disciples and Children whom he hath begotten Hence it behoves every Teacher who expects this Crown to examine whether what he teaches unto others himself do first set upon the practise thereof lest it be said Rom. 2.21 Thou that teachest another teachest thou not thy self Teachers that know and teach and do not practise they are like Uriah that carried the Letters of his own death or like the Philosophers that saw little fruit of their teaching of virtue because those things they taught others themselves did not practise To conclude this point I do by all that is said stablish the ten Commandments so far as what is contained in them is of the Law of Nature and not altered in the New Testament but compleated and for any other part of the Law of Nature which was commanded in the Old Testament I judg it to be established as also all the Evangelical Promises and Precepts of the Law are established by Christ and the Apostles Rom. 3. ult Do we then make void the Law through Faith Nay we establish the Law Tertul. de pudicitiâ we stablish the Law to wit in those things which being also now brought in by the New Testament are forbid cumulatiore praecepto by a more heaped Command for Thou shalt not commit Adultery Who so looks upon a Woman to lust after her hath already committed Adultery in his heart and for Thou shalt not kill who so shall say to his Brother Racha shall be guilty of Hell See then whether the Law of not committing Adultery be not safe to which the Law of not lusting hath come or been added In a word whatsoever is
you ask how the righteousness of one can save so many I answer even as the sin of the first Adam could condemn many Ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven That is into the state of glory because the kingdom of heaven is joyned with the word enter See Matth. 18.3 Matth. 19.23 Joh. 3.5 Acts 14.22 2 Entering into the kingdome of heaven is opposed to hell fire Mark 9.47 48. This name of the kingdome of heaven was never mentioned in the old Testament but onely wrapt up in certain signes shadowes and types And therefore this not entring into the kingdome of heaven is not meant of a Church consisting of Pastor of People as if such persons that practised external or partial righteousness were unworthy to be teachers in the Church but Christ speaks to all his disciples that they look that they have a righteousness both of doctrine and life exceeding Scribes and Pharisees Now Christ doth not show what this more abundant righteousness is because his scope was not here to teach what this righteousness is but onely to convince the Pharisees who were teachers of a false righteousness V. 21. Ye have heard that it was said by them of old time Thou shalt not kill and whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of the judgement Christ proves in speciall to the end of the Chapter that the Pharisees were falsifyers of the law and so retorts the accusation that was by the Pharisees cast upon him upon themselves because either they depraved the words of the law as concerning murder divorce and swearing c. or else coldly expounded it of the letter never looking to the obedience of the heart Ye have heard that it was said by them of old These words are refer'd to the time of Moses 1 Because the word old hath respect unto a long continued oldness Luk. 9.8 19. Act. 15.21 2 Pet. 2.5 Revel 12.9 2 Because the words that Christ recites and mentions are the same that are found in the Law sometimes without addition of any Interpretation as v. 27 31 33 38. So that Christ speaks not onely to them that had spoken to him but to the Disciples and to the multitude and to the imperfections of the Mosaical Law This Covenant of the new Testament much excels that Covenant given on Mount Sinai Gal. 4.24 Heb. 8.6 Christ was the mediator of a better Covenant which was stablished upon better promises But indeed both these interpretations are to be taken for Christ doth oppose himself to the Law of Moses as to the Scribes and supplies the imperfections and defects of them both for the Law of Moses was imperfect and therefore Christ perfected it by the Law of the Gospel Thou shalt not kill Many thought that by this Law onely murther was forbid but Christ teacheth that wrath strokes reproaches and murtherous words the fore-going of murther was forbid And whosoever killeth shall be in danger of judgement That is shall be put to death by the Civil Magistrate Exod. 21.12 14. Levit. 2.17 Numb 34.16 17 18 19.30.33 this was to be done lest the land should be defiled with bloud for though now judgement of life and death was executed by the Romans yet was their manner of judgement known to all and fresh in every mans memory Josephus saith there were seven of these Judges to which there were fourteen Assessors who were mostly of the Levites to these there were one or two supernumeraries which make up three and twenty which the Hebrews generally say was the number Now to speak a little concerning this command of killing there was a two-fold killing 1 Casual when a man meant no harm yet accidentally kil'd a man as by throwing a tyle from an house or an axes head flyes off and kills a man as he was hewing wood in this case the thing being done ignorantly there was a City of refuge Exod. 21.13 Deut. 19.5 6. Numb 35. Such a man was to remain in the City of refuge till the High Priests death and if the avenger of blood took him without that City he might kill him 2 Voluntary when persons have murtherous intentions either by sword pistol club or poyson to take away any mans life so those that hinder conception or procure abortion by potions ignorant Physicians so those who shall desire the death of their parents or friends to have their estate or the death of their husbands or wives or children because they are straitned to maintain them or out of a desire to enlarge their condition so those that shall not feed the poor in some cases when they are in danger of perishing This command is a hedge for the preservation of the life of man 1 This murther is either of the heart as wrath envy hatred c. 2 Of the tongue as to wish evil to our neighbour as to wish him dead or to give him provoking speeches 3 Of the hand This is so much more hainous by how much the person is more near related to us in consanguinity By the Cornelian Law among the Romans such were sowen in a sack and cast into the sea as being unworthy to partake of any of the Elements Nor is the inventor onely but also the shedder of blood guilty Not onely David who contrived Uriahs death but also Joab who was the shedder So not onely Ahab and Jezabel were guilty of Naboths death but also the Judges and Elders of Jezreel and the sons of Belial who witnessed against him were all murtherers 1 Kings 21.8 to verse ●5 Now that murther escapes not without punishment we see not onely in Abimelech who slaying Gideons sons had his brains beat out with a piece of a Milstone Judg. 9. But also in Zachariah the son of Jehojada whose blood was shed by Joas and by his Nobles in which same year came the Syrians with a small Army and slew all the Princes 2 Chron. 24.23 24. and the Servants of the King conspired against him and slew him v. 25. Joab that murdered Abner was put to death by Solomon and Absalom that murdered Amnon was himself slain by Joab Yea the intentional Murder of Haman was punished with the actual destruction of himself and his sons Yea the Jews that murdered Christ his Bloud is yet on them and on their children The old World before the Floud much guilty of Murder as appears Matth. 23 35. in the end the Floud sweeps them away If it be askt whether the Revenger of Bloud may transact with the Murderer for satisfaction I answer He may not Deut. 19.12 If it be asked whether Intercession may be made for a Man-slayer Answ Yes for casual Man-slaughter but not for voluntary Murder If it be askt whether the Magistrate may put any Malefactour to death Ans Yes Gen. 9.6 He that sheddeth mans bloud by man shall his bloud be shed which was a Law of Nature before the Jewish Laws As when the Chirurgion cannot provide for the safety of the whole body without
wealth or poor or as some empty of brain or wit 2 It signifies spittle or spit upon to signifie they esteemed one another no better then the spittle they spat out of their mouths 3 It signifies contemned vile despised abject and in this signification Michael Maronita in his proeme of the Syriack Grammer thinks it to be taken the Ethiopian expounds Racha thus he that shall say to his brother he poor by contempt and of torn garments shall be guilty of the counsel Shall be in danger of the counsel This consisted of 72 in this causes of high concernment were handled as Heresie False prophecy Idolatry Apostacy This Counsel sat at Hierusalem and it s supposed these seventy were set over them in remembrance of the 70 souls Jacob brought into Egypt these ruled over them sometimes and some think Pharaoh made them their taskmasters these went part of the way into the mount with Moses Exod. 24.9 After when they seemed a little to be laid aside by Jethroes counsel the Lord sets them up again Numb 11.16 Gather unto me seventy men of the elders of Israel whom thou knowest to be elders of the people and officers over them and bring them to the tabernacle of the congregation and I will take of the spirit which is upon thee and I will put it upon them If there were any thing more dark or more intricate that fell out among the Judges of cities they were to have recourse to this counsell whereof the high priest was one and I take it mostly the president therein all both inferiour Judges and private persons were commanded to obey their answer on pain of death against them that should oppose Of this there is mention made Deut. 17.16 17 18 19 20. Also Jehoshaphat confirmed them see 2 Chron. 19 8 9 10 11. In this Senate both matters of God and matters of the King and kingdome were handled and that they might be incouraged herein Jehoshaphat tells them they had Amariah a man well skilled in judgements and S●bad●ah a man well skilled in civill affairs and divers of the Levites excelling in other learning So great was their authority that of some causes the king himself did not judge Jer. 38.5 Zedekiah saith the King can do nothing against you The Hebrews note that the king came not into the Sanhedrim least his opinion should take liberty of judging from others who thought diversly from him For this see Jer. 26.16 17 18. Ezekiel mentions these 70 old men Ezek. 8.11 12. and Jazaniah was chief the Hebrews say these seventy retained their authority in Babylon and Artaxerxes established this power when they came out of the captivity Ezra 7.25 26. after when they took up armes against Antiochus the government of things was in this Senate in which Court the kingly Scepter was kept This order continued till Herod the great who slew them all as a just judgement because these Senators had neglected to bridle his boldness and power except one Sameas whom they had oft contemned admonishing such things in the room of whom Herod appointed others of his own faction After in Augustus his time the power of this Senate came to be strainted the power of life and death being taken from them and divers other counsels set up in several cities about civil affairs Yet it is mentioned in the new Testament Joh. 7.50 of these Nicodemus was one and Joseph another Acts 4.6 7. also Acts 5.21 This counsel is distinguished from the Senate or city Magistracy of Jerusalem so also Luke 22.66 Hierusalem being destroyed by Titus this Senate came to an end So that the meaning of what is spoken is there is such proportion betwixt wrath and a reproachful word and betwixt the punishment of both as there is betwixt the judgement of the three and twenty or the Synedrion or chief Council as this exceeds that so the punishment of a reproachfull word exceeds the punishment of anger But whosoever shall say Thou fool shall be guilty of hell fire Some give this interpretation you Hebrews bring persons for anger and reviling to the Council alluding to their manner of proceeding but I for the same sin threaten a greater punishment unto them even hell fire But the more common interpretation is whosoever shall say Thou fool shall be guilty of hell fire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word translated hell properly signifies the fire of Gehenna Without the City of Jerusalem there was a place called Gehenna or the Valley of the son of Hinnom wherein was a place called Tophet Jer. 7.31 32. where the Jews after the example of the Phoenicians burnt their children to Moloch timbrels and pipes making a noise lest the cry of the burnt childe should be heard Josiah polluted this place by bringing dead carkasses into it 2 Kings 23.10 compared with Jer. 7.32 It was also called Tophet which as Lapide saith signifies a Timbrel from the playing upon timbrels there It was called Ghehinnom of Ghe i.e. A Valley and Hinnom the name of a Jew It was a pleasant Valley near Jerusalem but because of this horrible burning of their children the Jews hereby signified the torment of the damned Esai 30.33 Tophet is prepared of old he hath made it deep and large the pile thereof is fire and much wood the breath of the Lord like a stream of brimstone doth kindle it As the miserable infants shut up in a brazen Idol fire being put under were broyl'd and burnt with an unspeakable torment so the wicked in the prison of hell shall be tormented with unquenchable fire Now the cause for which among others is for passionate railing and calling fool that is a wicked man who in Scripture is so called not a natural fool or under-witted but a wicked man a contemner of God Psal 14.1 The fool hath said in his heart there is no God then which there is hardlier a more grievous railing especially when it is done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without cause Yet this doth not hinder but that those who have a duty of chastising others may be sharply reproved that they may be rowsed out of their sleepiness as Christ cals his Disciples Luke 24.25 O fools and slow of heart and to the Pharisees Matth 23.17 19. Paul calls foolish Galatians Gal. 3.1 and Christ calls the Pharisees Generations of vipers Matth. 23.33 resembles them to graves and whited sepulchres v. 27. To conclude this verse for the prevention of our hearts to break out into anger and so to railing I le lay down some considerations about anger as 1 What it is A. It 's an affection whereby the bloud about the heart being heated by the apprehension of some injury offered to a mans self or friend and that in truth or in opinion the appetite is stir'd up to take revenge It s two-fold 1 Just and this is two-fold 1 created so anger was in Adam to rise up against all that should tempt him to sin knowing that in the day he
it were in the ayr waiting for Gods command to fall down like an Eagle or Hawk upon the prey They went as swift in their sins as wilde Asses or Dromedaries but as the Ass is found in her-moneths in her silthiness when she is big that she cannot run men wait for her Jer. 2.23 24. so doth the rowl of judgement wait for other sinners in particular for perjured persons The length of this rowl was 20 cubits the breadth but ten signifying that it went over all Judaea which was twice as long as broad as Hierom observes the length of it from Dan to Beersheba was 160 miles the breadth from Joppa to Bethlem was 46 miles This rowl was writ on both sides on one side of it were curses for the thief on the other side curses for the swearer Lastly this curse is said to remain in the midst of his house and shall consume it with the timber thereof and the stones thereof This was fulfill'd Matth. 23.27 28.24.1 in that there was not left one stone upon another not onely the Temple destroyed but also every private mans house Luke 19.44 so that they were laid even with the ground and not one stone left upon another This sin is condemned Hos 10.4 Levit. 19.12 Zach. 8.17 Examples of persons punish'd for false swearing are Zedekiah Ezek. 17.16 17 18 19 20. the Lord threatens for the oath that Zedekiah swore to the King of Babylon and brake that he should dye Shimei was put to death for the oath he brake which he had sworn to Solomon 1 Kings 2.42 43 44 45. For Saul his breach of the oath which Joshua and Israel had sworn to the Gibeonites seven of his sons were hanged in the dayes of David 2 Sam. 21.1 to v. 10. Famous was Gods judgement on Ladislaus King of Poland who upon the Popes Counsel and dispensation broke his oath which he had sworn to Amurath the second Acts and Mon. vol. 1. p. 968. But shalt perform to the Lord thine Oaths An oath is the affirming or denying a thing with the calling on the name of God to witness and avouch the truth of the thing affirmed denied or promised that they to whom we swear may not doubt of the truth of our words 1 Oaths are lawful 1 Because practised by God and Christ Psal 95.11 Psal 110.1 Esai 45.23 and by Saints by Jonathan and David by Paul Rom. 1.9 2 Cor. 1.23 2 Cor. 11.31 Gal. 1.20 2 Oaths are of the Law of nature Gen. 21.23 24. Abraham and Abimelech or at least Phicol his Captain swore one to another 3 The useful need thereof as to bring forth a truth Exod 22.10 11. as if a man deliver a beast to keep and it be stole then was he that had the beast to keep to purge himself by oath and the owner was to accept his oath Also that things done privily may come to light Numb 5.19 so the Priest swore the woman suspected of incontinency to finde out whether she were guilty or innocent Properties in swearing 1 Look to a right call as 1 When the Magistrate ministers an oath to answer so far as Law requires otherwise non tencor respondere I am not bound to answer 2 When the glory of God and edification of his Church requires it 2 Cor. 1.23 Rom. 1.9 3 For mutual peace and ending of controversies So Jacob and Laban swore one to another Gen. 31.53 so an oath is an end of strife Heb. 6.17 2 Look to the thing thou swears that it be lawfull not as Herod's oath to Herodias nor as the forty who swore to kill Paul Such an oath was Davids who swore to destroy all Nabals house 1 Sam. 25.22 3 Look the thing thou swears be in thine own power It 's rashness to swear a thing that is not in thine own power as to swear to live a single life c. 4 Swear in truth judgement and righteousness 1 In truth which excludes all equivocation Words are to be taken as men commonly understand them An oath is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an hedge to signifie that when a man swears he sets an hedge about himself which he may not break this excludes all swearing of things we know not and things we doubt of 2 In judgement not lightly or rashly but weighing all due circumstances Eleazar Gen. 24.3 when Abram swears him not to take a wife of the Canaanites for his son but of his kindred before Eleazar swears he proposes his exceptions viz. What if the woman will not go with me To which Abram answers If the woman be not willing to follow thee thou shalt be free from this mine oath Eccles 5.2 Be not rash with thy mouth and let not thy heart be hasty to utter any thing before God None must swear save those who have judgement to discern what an oath is 3 In righteousness That you affirm nothing against conscience neither for malice nor favour as those sons of Belial did against Naboth who swore That Naboth blasphemed God and the King 1 Kin. 21.13 This property of an oath excludes all swearing for custome as many do that are chosen into publick places and are chosen into societies who swear not because they mean to keep their oaths but because else they cannot be enfranchised 2 Reprehension of prophane swearing which is so common for this sin God hath a controversie Hos 4.1 Lands mourn Jer. 23.10 and the sinner becomes guilty Exo. 20. Obj. But if I swear not men will not believe me Answ They would sooner believe thee if thou forbarest it He that hears thee make no conscience of swearing will think thou makes no conscience of lying besides better be suspected of men then condemned of God and conscience Obj. It 's a foolish custome I have got Answ This renders thee so much more guilty that it 's thy custome if a thief or murtherer at the bar should plead that it hath been his custome to thieve and murther would not this make him more guilty Object My oaths are small as by my faith and troth Answ Consider against what a great majesty they are committed If any sin seem little let hell fire seem great To use faith and truth cannot be less then an appearance of evill Object But I swear by a good thing Answ The goodness of a good thing aggravates the offence when abused as we see in wine and beer when abused to drunkenness Object All the country use it Answ We must not follow a multitude to do evil Exod. 23.2 the sinfulness of multitudes brought the flood upon the old World and fire upon Sodome Remedies against prophane swearing 1 Beware in those cases where men are apt to swear amiss as to gratifie a friend or to be revenged of an enemy 2 Use not an oath when the matter can be otherwise determined also if thou be a judge impose not an oath when not necessary nor upon men of no credit who make no conscience of it nor in
must be honoured with puritie therefore they wrote upon the doors of their Temples Let none having a guilty conscience enter this place A bad conscience can never hope well Obj. But do not we finde wicked men in Scripture have had their praiers heard A. Yes when they have sought for temporal things Jehoahaz the son of Jehu was a wicked man 2 Kin. 13.2 yet when the nation of Israel was delivered into the hands of the Syrians Jehoahaz besought the Lord and the Lord hearkened unto him for he saw the oppression of Israel and the Lord gave Israel a Saviour v. 4 5. So Ahab seeking obtained the removing of the judgement until his sons daies 1 Kin. 21.27 28 29. So when men of all sorts are in danger by storms at sea they cry to the Lord in their trouble and he delivereth them out of their distress Psal 107.28 So prisoners that lie in irons v. 13. and sick men that draw near to death v. 18 19. If thou afflict a widow or fatherless person whether godly or ungodly I will surely hear their cry Exod. 22.22 23. Ishmael was a wicked person a persecutor yet God heard the voice of the Lad Gen. 21.17 Uzziah sought God in the daies of Zachariah and as long as he sought the Lord God made him to prosper 2 Chro. 26.5 yet was he wicked as we see 2 Chron. 25.2 compared with 2 Chron. 26.4 Besides God bestowes praying abilities upon unregenerate men therefore they may improve them the not calling upon God is charged upon wicked men as their sin therefore the performance of it is their dutie The Prophet proves the Jews to be under sin because there 's none seeks after God Psal 14.2 Also Psal 53.4 wicked men are branded that they call not upon God Psal 10.4 they are taxed for this both Pastours Jer. 10.21 and people Hos 7.7 Zeph. 1.6 and all flesh are said to come to God in prayer O thou that hearest prayer unto thee shall all flesh come Psal 65.2 An unbeliever may be underpreparing grace though he be not yet come to saving faith and in this estate he may have many good desires which God may hear To reconcile these to the former speeches know that God hears wicked men in temporal things which indeed oft is onely the cry of their cause not of their person as he is said to hear the cry of the ravens Psal 147.9 so the young Lions are said to seek their meat from God Psal 104.21 Quest But what would you have us to do with our children and servants Answ You may bid them call upon God in the general and if you speak to them to call upon God for saving grace as pardon c you must speak to them as Peter to Simon Magus Repent of this thy wickednesse and pray God if perhaps the thoughts of thy heart may be forgiven thee Act. 8.21 First he bids him repent then pray God Quest But what should we do for joyning in prayer with others Answ If the person with whom you are to eat and who is to give thanks be visibly wicked either forbear his table or declare that you desire liberty of conscience without which grant you cannot partake of his meat which doubtless was practised by the believers when they went to the unbelievers table 1 Cor. 10.27 we must not wound our consciences for good chear nor to gratifie a friend but where no such wickedness doth apppear my opinion is that charity must carry us to judge the best yet must we remember that this is onely a privative signe Positive signes of a good man being either Church Communion or some thing that is equivalent if you will follow conscience herein I know you must be content to lose some fat morsells 4 We must pray in saith 〈◊〉 faith in prayer ought to be certain of hearing but we must wait for the time when the place where the manner how and the person by whom God will work Now to pray in faith there is command Matth. 21.22 1 Faith in God How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed Rom. 10.14 And this God to be lookt on as a father Matth. 6.9 Heb. 11.6 2 Faith in the attributes of God as his omnipresence that he is every where Esa 6.31 in his omniscience that he knows all our wants and all our hearts hear thou in heaven and give to every man according to his wayes whose heart thou knowest 1 King 8.39 in his omnipotence thus Jeremy grounds his prayer thou hast made heaven and earth and there 's nothing too hard for thee Jer. 32.17.4 in his mercy Nehem. 1.4 5. in his all-sufficiency Of the object in prayer James speaks as I suppose Jam. 1.6 7. let him ask in faith nothing wavering for he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed let not that man think he shall receive any thing of the Lord. James speaks not of a partial or particular unbelief in the subject but of an universal and total unbelief in respect of the object 3 There must be faith to set before us the worthiness of the Mediator Heb. 4.15 16. and not barely his worthiness but also our union with him Joh. 15.7 8. If ye abide in me ye shall ask what you will and it shall be done unto you 4 Faith grounded on the promises Psal 119.49 50 147. remember thy word unto thy servant upon which thou hast caused me to trust To pray in faith is to go as far as the promise goes to believe that God is a father and being a father he will not keep any good thing from his child A beggar never goes from an house keepers door so long as he believes he shall have an alms no more doth a believing soul go from the throne of grace so long as he believes God will hear but if he leave off the words of prayer he doth not leave off the sute of prayer Had we a particular promise as Eliah had we were bound to believe in particular as Eliah did concerning the not raining for three years and six months And as faith looks on other promises so in particular such promises as concerns the souls present condition so Jacob Gen. 32.9 10 11 12. Thou saidest return into thy country and I will deal well with thee and thou saidest I will surely do thee good and make thy seed as the sand of the sea deliver me from the hand of my brother Esau There is scarce any case but the Scripture affords promises which speak to that very case had we wisdom to store them up as David did Psal 119. also Heb. 13.5 5 Faith grounded on former Experiments Thou art my trust from my youth leave me not in old age Psalm 71.5 9. When we thus pray in faith we have a bold access into the presence of God notwithstanding all our unworthiness and imperfections in prayer Ephes 3.12 5 Pray with fixedness of spirit When David's
nor in that which is to come therefore some sins are forgiven in the world to come Answ Mark expounds it that such a one hath never forgiveness Mark 3.29 Matthew to aggravate the sin against the holy Ghost uses a Periphrasis as if we should speak of a sick man he can sleep neither day nor night that is never or as if we should say the grace of faith can never be bought with mony neither in this life nor in the life to come that is never For that place 1 Pet. 3.18 19 20. Being put to death in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit by which also he went to preach to the spirits in prison which sometimes were disobedient when once the long suffering of God waited in the dayes of Noah therefore say some the Gospel was preached in the world to come for forgiveness there is a misunderstanding of three things in this text 1 the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which they understood the soul of Christ as by flesh his body the body they held to dye but the soul to remain alive in which soul say they he went and preached but by the flesh of Christ is meant his humanity according to this he is said to be put to death but by his spirit is meant his divinity Joh. 4.23 By the power of this spirit and divinity he was raised from the dead 2 Cor. 13.4 A second word misunderstood is this to the Spirits in prison Where the Word are is to be understood or the word being they understood were or had been which words are referred to those men that in the time of Noah were unbelievers and were then in the world now in Peters time their souls were in Hell for by the prison is meant Hell Rev. 20.7 There they are kept to the day of judgement The third word which almost deceived all was the word Going or went which they understood of his going out of the world into Hell when it was meant of his going out of Heaven into the world and speaking then by his spirit in the ministry of Noah to these rebells that were now in Hell in Saint Peters time Now that no sins are forgiven in the world to come appears 1 Because in this life onely are tenders of grace 2 Cor. 6.2 Behold now is the accepted time now is the day of salvation When the master of the house hath shut to the door of this life and ye stand without and knock and say Lord Lord Christ will say Depart from me I know you not Luk. 13.25 The gate of grace was wholly shut unto the foolish Virgins Matth. 25.11 2 The time betwixt this and death is the time for repentance patience and constancy and after death is the present receiving of the crown Rev. 2.10 Be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a crown of life The godly lamented Stephen at his death but never prayed for him Col. 1.14 9 The grievousness of that prison whereinto unpardoned sins will cast us 1 We are afraid to be cast into a stinking prison for debt yet may there be hope one way or other to get out by satisfaction or compounding or the creditours pity but none of these can befall thee if thou dyest in thy sins and be cast into that prison thou canst not come out by satisfaction because that is of force onely by Christ his satisfaction in this life Act. 13.39 40. Col. 1.13 14. nor yet by composition for thou must lye there till thou hast paid the utmost farthing Luk. 12.59 nor by the creditours mercy because after death the wicked shall have judgement without mercy Jam. 2.13 2 There will be no running away from this prison because the prisoner is bound hand and foot Matth. 22.13 Bind him hand and foot and take him away and cast him into outer darkness Kept in everlasting chains Jude 6. Psal 49. Like sheep that are driven into the fold so are they driven into Hell ver 14. Luk. 16.26 3 In other prisons we have friends come to visit us but here not onely friends 2 Thess 1.9 but also all other comforts shall be removed yea the damned shall be deprived of the presence of God If the deprivement of the sight of God by faith be so grievous how grievous will the deprivation of the beatifical sight in glory be 4 The perpetuity of it to be condemn'd to perpetual imprisonment and that in some loathsom dungeon is terrible yet death may set us free thence but from the prison of Hell there 's no getting out The worm never dyes nor the fire never goes out Mark 9.44 45 46 47 48. It s five times set down the fire that never shall be quenched which are not idle repetitions but to ascertain us of the perpetuity of the torment If the damned had hope after some millions of years to have their torments ended it were something but the burnings are everlasting Isai 33.14 Isai 30.33 the Worm everlasting Isai 66.24 the Fire everlasting Revel 20.10 the contempt everlasting Dan. 12.2 Object But by what right will God punish temporary faults with eternal punishments Answ 1. Sin is committed against an infinite Majesty and so deserves infinite punishment now because man is a finite creature and cannot suffer for it at once therefore he must suffer for it successively to all eternity 2 Because in unpardoned sinners so dying there 's a wicked habit that should they live ever they would sin ever the sinner sins in his eternity and God punishes in his eternity 3 Punishment is to be measured not by length of time the offence is in committing but by the greatness of the offence Murder and Adultery are soon committed shall the Offender be no longer punished than the offence is committing 4 As we are to look upon the perpetuity of this Prison so upon the darkness of it Jude 6. the rebellious Angels are reserved under darkness chains of darkness 2 Peter 2.4 to the wicked the mist of darkness is reserved for ever 2 Peter 2.17 Light is most comfortable but in Hell there 's fire without light 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the damned see not 10 Together with pardon come all other blessings Ezek. 36.25 26 27. I will sprinkle clean water what more the cleansing from filthiness a new heart the putting of the Spirit within us writing the Law in the heart Power over sin follows pardon of sin Rom. 7.15.8.2 yea all good things here Rom. 8.32 and glorification in Heaven hereafter Whom he justified them he gloried Rom. 8.30 11 True happiness consists in forgiveness of sins the World counts them happy that have great Estates that have the Princes ear but the Lord tells us those are happy that have sins pardoned Psalm 32.1 Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven and whose sin is covered I am covered under the shadow of the wings of Christ and live secure under the most broad heaven of
inward voice he should say thy sins are pardoned Rom. 8.16 2 Cor 1.22 Eph. 4.30 It s not enough onely to have a general foundation laid that God and Christ bare good will to all believers but the Spirit comes and saith Christ hath a special good will to me and stirrs up in me a liking to him again and a willingness to take him with the parting with every lust and enjoyment And to this there follows after we have gone on in believing a while a further sense of the Spirit which is sometimes interrupted after sealing thereof through remaining unbelief and practical weakness so far as to question our condition but in some this seal of the Spirit is so clear and strong that the soul questioneth not its estate in grace ever after conscience of unkindness to such a friend should much trouble us Now we may know this voice of the Spirit from delusion because it is given to us when the soul is humbled and melts in prayer or forsakes some dear enjoyment for God and it leaves behind it a holy self abasement in respect of our unthankfulness and our ill requiting the Lord and a lifting up the head to think upon death and judgement as dayes of redemption We see then that besides the acts of faith which is to take Christ and to cast our selves upon the mercy of God there is the fruit of faith to be assured hereof in order thereto the Spirit first gives us those graces and workings which are our evidences then helps us to feel those evidences in our selves and then raises comfort in the soul upon those discoveries Obj. But doth not the doctrine of assurance breed security loosness presumption Answ The favour of God believed breedeth love of God where there is love there is a fear of every thing that may divide betwixt the soul and God Nothing more quickens a soul to chearful obedience then the assurance of Gods love 2 Cor. 5.1 compared with ver 15. He is a graceless child that will venture to offend his father because he knows he neither will nor can disinherit him So graceless should we be if knowing of Gods love to our souls we should presume to sin against him Rom. 6.1 compared with ver 15. Shall we sin because we are under Grace God forbid 2 Those that are sure of salvation though they need not fear damnation yet may they fear to bring upon themselves wrath as sickness trouble of conscience c. Obj. But we cannot be sure of perseverance without which what is assurance Answ Yes from these promises Joh. 10.28 29. None shall pluck them out of my hands Joh. 10.28 29. and from Christ his prayer Luk. 22.31 3● God will not suffer us to be tempted above the power of grace to unsettle any habit though to the unsettlement of some act Rom. 8.38 39. 4 Use Seeing God forgives sins 1 pray for sensibleness and sight of thy sins Lam. 3.39 For daily we fall into not onely sin but sins 2 For humiliation under them 1 Cor. 11.31 4 For forgiveness of others Eph. 4.32 5 Seeing God forgives sins 1 Take notice of Gods patience that bears with our sins from day to day 2 Pet 3.9 2 Note that humane satisfactions can be of no force 3 That we should not onely have a care of our own salvation but of the salvation of our brethren in asking pardon for them if we see them sin a sin that is not unto death 1 John 5.16 4 That even righteous and justified persons stand need of being justified still Rev. 22.11 5 That our sins being called debts we may see that all sorts of punishments are owing unto us for our sins till God forgive them in Christ and the sin being forgiven the punishment also is forgiven hence that which Luke calls Sins Luke 11.4 Matthew calls Debts 6 Seeing God forgives sins and assures thereof do not you from Satans temptations misdoubt those Evidences which you have seriously examined and found to be true Suppose your Friend give you an Inheritance and good Evidences to assure you of it and a cavilling fellow shall come and tell you your Evidence is naught will you upon his prattle judg your Title nothing So the Lord hath forgiven your sins and you have good Evidences thereof will you then upon Satans cavils judg your Evidences nothing When I die I descend into Hell I am undone what shall I do no help remains besides the Word I believe in God c. We were created of the Word and it behoves us to be returned into the Word Luth. in Gen. 37. 9 If we have not this assurance we shall be in no better condition than Heathens who have no hope 1 Thess 4.13 Ephes 2.12 So Justin Martyr speaks of Socrates these words Now is the hour of going away at hand for me to death for you to a longer life but whether of us go to a better estate is unknown unto all save to God Cohort ad Graecos pag. 26. How much better spoke holy Luther The Devil in the hour of death will shew thee all thy wicked life do not despair which Satan desires but believe and say I know all my life is damnable if it should be judged but God hath commanded me to trust not in my life but in his mercy This wisdom we ought to follow in the hour of death there the flesh trembles that it must go into a new life and doubts of salvation if thou follows these thoughts thou art undone here thine eys are to be shut and say with Stephen Jesus into thine hands I commend my spirit then certainly will Jesus be present with his Angels and be the guide of the way Bernard when sometimes he was sick to death sounded no other thing than this I have lost my time because I have lived wickedly but one thing comforts me thou wilt not despise a broken and a contrite heart Also Lord Jesus thou holds the Kingdom of Heaven by a double right 1 Because thou art the Son of God 2 Because thou hast purchased it by thy Death this thou keepest for thy self by right of nativity that thou givest me not by the law of works but of grace As we forgive our Debtours This is a motive or as some call it a sign because we frankly forgive our Debtours therefore we desire God to forgive us From hence learn 1 That unless we pardon the wrongs done to us we desire Gods vengeance against our selves 2 That wrongs done by others to us make them Debtours to us which though in respect of the sin against us we are bound to forgive yet in respect of the damage we sustain in our Estates we may require satisfaction 3 It 's an evidence that God hath and will forgive us if we do freely without exercising private revenge forgive others Col. 3.13 Forgiving one another if any man have a quarrel against any as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you In nothing do we more
do all these commandments Job 27.6 My righteousness I hold fast and will not let it go That is my sanctification and uprightness but in this sence righteousness is onely an intentional conformity to the law of God and no satisfaction to divine justice Many seek the Kingdom of God but few seek the righteousness thereof but it 's said of Joseph of Arimathea he was a good man and a just and he waited for the Kingdom of God Luke 23.50 51. and Zachary and Elizabeth Luke 1.6 And all these things shall be added unto you The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies shall be added as over measure Godliness hath the promises of this life and that which is to come Mark 10.30 1 Tim. 4.8 It 's a metaphor taken from cheap things which are given in in the buying of costly things as paper and packthread are given in by Shop-keepers when we onely buy Stuffs or such commodities Psal 111.5 He hath given meat to them that fear him he will ever be mindefull of his covenant Quest But we see divers Godly persons are scanted as to outward things Answ God hath promised outward things to us but its onely when they are good for us Psal 34.11 They that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing sometimes God sees outward things in any measure not so good for us as a Physician that hath seen our water or felt our pulse takes away such and such meat from us because he sees it not good for us so doth God or as a father takes away a knife from his child because he sees he is in danger to cut his fingers therewith 2 Gods people sometimes abuse his blessings to pride prodigality and excess such children of God may justly fear to be pinched God doth not by promise bind himself to give us outward things when we shall spend them upon our lusts for so God should bind himself to unjust things but though we begg such things of him he denyes them Jam. 4.3 3 All promise of outward things is with the exception of the Cross so the cause of God standing need of witnesses and for the exercise of the faith and patience of his people sometimes precious Saints of eminent holiness have been scanted Heb. 11.37 Such of whom the world was not worthy wandred about in sheep skins and Goat skins being destitute afflicted tormented but their wants have been made up abundantly with inward comfort See Mar. 10.30 4 Unbelief as to Gods promise for outward things sometimes straitens Gods hand We are bid to pray in faith for daily bread now how can we do this unless Gods promise be certain and absolute According to the faith of men it will be unto them Gen. 3.19 In the sweat of thy brows thou shalt eat thy bread As it was a threatning and a command so was it a promise that we sweating and taking pains shall eat our bread The persons that are beggars and extream poor are wicked persons who joyn not themselves to any Church but are dissolute in life 5 Though for abuse of mercies God sometimes pinches his children yet usually he keeps them from famishing for the absoluteness of his promise in temporal things which are no less absolute then spiritual things as I judge leaving others to their light herein as we see in sundry temporal promises which are set down without any restriction Psal 1.3 Psal 37.3 Trust in the Lord and do good dwell in the land and in truth and stableness thou shalt be fed as the Margin out of the Hebrew reads it See also ver 25. Rom. 8.32 How shall he not with him give us all things also First mary Christ then have all things with him See many absolute promises Psal 84.11 No good thing will he with-hold from them that walk uprightly Prov. 28.10 The upright shall have good things in possession and see the three large promises in the New Testament this in the Text and that 1 Tim. 4.8 and that Heb. 13.5 Quest But what will you say to poor Christians will you conclude them unbelievers Ans In no wise but rather conclude they have failed in the condition in the belief of the absoluteness of temporal promises or else they have failed in their duty not working in their youth but being negligent in their callings after they have been converted or else they had an high mind and God was forced to pull them down or else they have lived out of a calling or been idle therein and as God would not have his Church to relieve them that will not work so neither will he himself relieve them 2 Thess 3.10 If any man will not work neither shall he eat Use Reprehension of those who say they trust God with their souls but dare not trust him with their bodies but they will use indirect means but why are they so confident Surely because their faith is not so assaulted as to spirituals as it is to temporals were their faith to be tryed as to the Trinity Resurrection belief of the Creation of the World a Virgins bringing forth a Son the day of judgement c. they would no less shew their unbelief of Gods Word herein then they do of his Word as to temporal things 2 Exhort To have outward things set your hearts to seek heavenly things the other then will be added when you know rightly to value spiritual blessings depend on God for temporal things So long as the ark was in Obed-Edoms house God prospered it 2 Sam. 6. Joseph was a good man and God made all that he did to prosper in his hand Gen. 39.3 The contrary practice is that of the world who first seek earthly things and think that upon their faint wishes when they are upon the bed of sickness death or other distresses heavenly things will be added unto them contrary to Solomons counsel to remember our Creator in the dayes of youth think that old age will be a fitter time and prophane Esau like preferre a messe of pottage before a birth-right and blessing V. 34. Take therefore no thought for the morrow for the morrow shall take thought for the things of it self sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof Here is another Argument to take us off from carking for the morrow that is for all future time because to morrow or future time will have cares therein It is not a part of wisdom to trouble our selves with caring for those things which must be cared over again to morrow Christ alludes to the gathering of Manna Exod. 16.20 Some out of carking would keep of the Manna until the morning and it bred worms and stank Future time or to morrow will have its trouble therefore we need not gather the cares of two dayes into one which being divided we shall more easily bear we complain of many troubles and cares which our selves create yet in forbidding care for the morrow he allows cares for the present Not as if all care for
the future were unlawful for the disciples of Antioch cared to send relief to the brethren of Jerusalem hearing of a famine Act. 11.29 And if we should not care for to morrow we should neither plow nor sow build nor plant therefore Christ forbids here 1 care that flows from unbelief and distrust Heb. 13.5 Exod. 16.20 2 That care that hinders us from seeking heavenly things Luk. 8.14 3 That care of earthly things which goes before our care for heavenly things and Gods Kingdom which we ought to seek in the first place Heb. 12.16 17. 4 An a fflicting care concerning future events which are uncertain and can neither be foreseen nor hindred and it s well for us we cannot foresee them for could we foresee all future cares our souls would be swallowed up of them Besides we know not whether we shall live till to morrow and why then should we so care for it Prov. 27.1 Boast not of to morrow for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth We know not what may be in the womb of the morning or what it will bring forth Jam 4.15 16. 5 A troubling and disquieting care Christ did not blame Martha for that she was careful to provide but that her care was so overmuch that it troubled her that she could not attend upon Christs preaching Luk. 10.41 42. Martha Martha thou art careful and troubled about many things but one thing is needful As if he should say Martha thou neglects a needful thing for a needless thing Use Let every day have its due proportion of care and prayer Lay not to morrows cares on the present day As Samuel said to Saul 1 Sam. 9.20 that he should not set his mind upon his asses that were lost when a kingdom was befallen him so let us not set our cares on transitory things when we have great things to think upon 2 Prepare for new troubles and cares every day of thy life Earthly businesses come upon us like waves of the Sea this day hath cares and to morrow brings cares and hardly will a day of thy life be free Gen. 47.9 All the dayes of Jacobs Pilgrimage are said to be evil 3 Learn that instead of immoderate thought taking to commend thy matters to God in prayer look unto him for blessing success and direction as the Marriner hath his eye upon the pole star as well as his hand upon the helme so should we acknowledge God in all our wayes and he will direct our steps Prov. 3.5 6. Psal 123.1 2 ● Unto thee lift I up mine eyes O thou that dwellest in the heavens Psal 37. Commit thy way unto the Lord how difficult soever and he will bring it to pass ver 5. Psal 90.17 Unburthen all thy cares into his bosom Jer. 10.23 The way of man is not in himself to direct his steps CHAP. VII CHrist in this Chapter proceeds in giving precepts conducing to faith and godliness V. 1 Judge not that ye be not judged This is the first precept not as if Christ did go about to take away judgements and Courts of Justice either in Church or Common-wealth which is established Matth. 18.15 16 17. Rom. 13. but he onely speaks against rash judgments Rash judgement is a determinate opinion concerning the evil of another upon insufficient grounds though the thing be true that we judge yet if the grounds upon which we judge be insufficient our judgement is rash judgement Such was that of Eli 1 Sam. 1.13 14. who judged Hanna to be drunk because her lips moved when she was praying in her heart Against this the Apostle speaks Who art thou that judgest another mans servant Rom. 14.13 also 1 Cor. 4.5 Judge nothing before the time Jam. 3.1 Be not many Masters Onely know that the reasons may be too light to perswade an ill opinion of one man that may be weighty and just concerning another And those that may be too light to a firm assent may be sufficient to stir up a suspicion whereby the minde stands in doubt and inclines to neither part Grounds to take us off from rash judgement 1 It 's contrary to that principle Matth. 7.12 To do as we would be done by 2 Every man hath right to a good name as to a good laid up in the heart of another now by censorious judgeings this is taken away and the person judged made contemptible and so made unfit for offices and benefits 3 Rash judgement takes away Gods office in that we will take upon us to judge those things which belong onely to God Rom. 14.4 1 Cor. 4.5 4 Rash judging it feeds onely our own and other mens flesh in that we raise up to our selves an over-weaning conceit of our own goodness or flatter others in a supposed goodness by speaking of other mens evils Gal. 6.4 Things that are doubtfull we ought to interpret for the better part 5 Thou canst not judge aright of other mens actions being ignorant of many circumstances concerning them for thou knowest not with what minde or to what end the action was done nor upon what temptation 6 Sometimes thou thy self hast greater faults then those thou judges yea in the same kinde wherein thou judgest he hath a mote thou hast a beam in thy eye 7 Those that are most apt to judge others usually are least inspective into themselves Our own weakness should make us slow in judging others 8 The uncertainty of our judgements We can onely look on the outside and not on the inside and sometimes persons mindes are better affected then their lives show 9 The safety of the errour on the side of charity in judging persons to be better then they are rather then worse This way is safe and the other dangerous and he is not wise that will go a dangerous way when he may go a safe 10 From the Law of like for like For with what judgement ye judge ye shall be judged and with what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you again The words are a Proverb as in other sins God gives like for like Exod. 22.22 23. 1 Sam 15.33 Esai 33.1 Judg. 1.6 7. 1 Kings 21.19 so in this 2 Sam. 16.22 It s just that others should do so to us as we have done to others 11 If we judge not others our selves shall not be judged he means it not by God as if our not judging were a mean or merit to hinder Gods judging but of men as Luke c. 6.38 neither can God be overtaken with any rash judgment to judge us as we do others But the meaning is that God will requite our charitable moderation towards others with the same moderation of others towards us This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the most part not always for though Christ judged no man rashly yet was he judged by Pilate and the Jews most unjustly Many think to purchase to themselves an opinion of innocency by darkning the reputation of others by rash judgement and suppose that
resurrection after we have slept the sleep of death 2 In sleep there is such a binding of the sences that the body seems to be liveless so that it neither moves nor regards any object that is before it nor any relation that is next unto it Quest But seeing Christ saith that the maid slept whether do the souls sleep in the bodies till the resurrection or are they annihilated till that time Answ They are not annihilated being they act intellectually and the souls being absent from the body are present with the Lord 2 Cor 5.1 2. They that dye in the Lord are pronounced blessed from henceforth the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the moment of their departure Rev. 14.13 Now all blessedness consists in action which is contrary to annihilation 2 They do not sleep if so why would Paul have desired to be dissolved and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 why doth Paul say we would not be unclothed but clothed upon that mortality might be swallowed up of life 2 Cor. 5.4 As the souls of the wicked are at present tormented so the souls of the godly are at present in bliss Jude 7. The souls of the Sodomites in Judes time were suffering the vengeance of eternal fire So the rich man Luke 16.24 saith I am tormented in this flame Not I may be or shall be but am at present Besides the souls under the Altar cry How long Lord Rev. 6.9 Therefore though Saints have not a personal blessedness before the day of judgement yet have they a blessedness of soul the receiving whereof doth not exclude ful personal blessedness at the coming of Christ but is an earnest peny thereof as we see in the thief who was admitted the same day he suffered not into an earthly paradise which by the flood was dissolved but into a Paradise of glory whereinto Paul was taken up 2 Cor. 12.2 compared with v. 4. That which ver 2. he calls the third heaven ver 4. he calls Paradise And they laughed him to scorn Being carnal and not considering the power of Christ they laughed him to scorne as thinking it absurd and impossible that Christ should restore her to life Christ rejecting them takes three Disciples to witness this miracle Luk. 8.51 for they were not worthy to see that they did not believe V. 25. But when the people were put forth he went in and took her by the hand and the maid arose Mark hath it Talitha cumi Damosel I say to thee Arise Talitha cumi Christ did not use these Syriack words to be used by way of inchantment as some have done supposing by the repetition of these and such like they could do wonders but that the power of Christs words in raising up the dead might be made manifest In that he uses the words I say to thee Mark 5.41 He puts a difference bewixt those who raised up others to life by his power as Peter did Dorcas and himself who raised this Damosel up by his own word and power q.d. I the Lord of life and death command thee who though thou art dead as to nature yet thou sleeps as to me I command thee that thou arise and stand up The learned say Cumi is a Syriack word which signifies to stand which is the posture of men in health in opposition to lying which is the posture of sick men Took her by the hand Luke adds he said Maid arise such a voice after to Lazarus Lazarus come forth The voyce was from his humane nature the power from his divinity It was the omnipotent Word of God and of the man Christ Luke adds that her Spirit came again and she arose cap. 8.55 straightway the immortal soul of man is separable from the body so Eliah stretched himself upon the child and said I pray thee O Lord let this childs soul come into him again 1 King 17.21 in death the body returns to dust and the Spirit to God who gave it Eccles 12.7 now when God permits a soul to return to its body it 's quickned and rises again as we see in Ezekiels dry bones cap. 37.7 Mark cap. 5.42 adds that her Parents were astonished with a great astonishment as such suddain sights are wont to do Luke cap. 8.56 adds He charged them that they should tell no man what was done not that he would hinder persons from believing on him through the fame thereof but to stop the rage of the Pharisees against him who were sorely provoked by his miracles 2 To teach us from his example to shun all desire of vain glory seeing he would have so great a work concealed 3 That the ruler and his wife might not be proud of this priviledge And the maid arose Mark adds Christ commanded to set meat before her cap. 5.53 to shew not onely that she was alive but also was well and in health V. 26. And the fame hereof went abroad into all that Land Lest any man should think the Miracle was feigned Christ adds The fame hereof went abroad into all that Land The whole Countrey were witnesses and doubtless praised the work as a new unheard of thing and consequently acknowledged Christ as the Messias There were three Christ raised from death this Maid the Widows so n of Naim and Lazarus V. 27. And when Jesus departed thence two blinde men followed him crying and saying Thou Son of David have mercy on us In this History three-things 1 The Petition of two blinde men set down 1 From their following Christ and crying unto him in the way v. 27. 2 From their following him to the house v. 28. 2 We have Christ his grant amplified 1 From the antecedent Question Believe ye that I am able to do this together with the blinde mens Answer They said unto him Yea Lord. 2 From the present cure v. 29. Then touched he their eys saying According to your faith be it unto you 3 From the following effect v. 30. Their eys were opened 4 From the Injunction Christ lays on them v. 30. Jesus straitly charged them saying See that no man know it 3 The unthankfulness and disobedience of the blinde men They when they were departed spread abroad his fame in all that Countrey Two blinde men These whether from the reports of his Miracles or whether from the Prophesie of the Messiah Isai 35.5 The eys of the blinde shall be opened desire Christ to restore their sight The loss of sight is a great loss 1 Sight is the largest of senses whereas the ear onely takes in sounds the smelling takes in odours but the eye takes in not onely quantities and motions but colour and figure The eye is not satisfied with seeing Eccles 1.8 2 Sight is the most comfortable sense There are many glorious objects in Heaven and Earth but little content should we have had we not sight to behold them Hence to behold the glorious objects of Heaven the eys shall be raised up so that we shall see our Redeemer
Laws set by him in the creation without taking advice of any creature I have oft endeavoured to prescribe to God certain ways which he should use in the government of his Church and other things I said ah Lord I would have it done in this order this event but God did altogether the contrary from that which I had requested then did I think but my counsel is not strange from the glory of God but will conduce much to sanctifie his name It 's well thought but doubtless God laught at this my wisedome and said Go too I know thee to be wise and learned but it was never my manner that Peter or Martin should teach lead form govern me I am not a passive God but an active Luth. Tom. 4. in Gen. fol. 56. 2 Extraordinary when God works against or besides his appointed order as in dividing the waters of the red Sea Reas 1 Because all things yea the most contingent things in the world are ordered by it as the falling of a tyle Exod 21.13 the flying of the head of the ax from the helve and killing a man Deut. 19.5 yea the ordering of a lot Prov. 16.33 2 The order of things in the world prove it 1 Natural order the motions of the heavens the Sun warms the earth the ayr moistens it the earth brings forth the grass the beasts feed on it and man feeds on them Look on the fowls God appoints them their residence Psal 104.17 18. and so doth he for other creatures Yea the fowl knows her appointed time and changes her country according to the season of the year That there 's a place appointed for the waters that they may not overflow the earth Psal 104.7 8 9. that there are springs of waters in the Valleys to give drink to the beasts of the field v. 10. that there should be an intercourse of light and darkness that the wilde beasts should get them to their dens on the day time that man may follow his work that there should be such provisions made for all the inhabitants of the world all this proves to us a providence 2 Politick order In Courts of Justice one Officer depends on another as wheels in a clock and moves not without the first wheel How many thousands are provided for in their several trades one depending upon another How hath God made the City to depend upon the Country and the Country upon the City how do all creatures move at his command as soldiers at the command of the General 3 From the reasonable actions God puts into unreasonable creatures Prov. 6.6 7 8. the Pismire having no guide over-seer nor ruler provideth her meat in the summer Jer. 8.6 7. the Stork Crane Swallow know their appointed time Who hath put wisdome in their inward parts Job 38.36 4 Should God not take care of things below it 's either because he will not or cannot or knowes them not but to affirm any of these were blasphemy 5 In his provision he makes for all creatures Psal 145.15 The eyes of all wait on thee and thou givest them food in due season thou openest thy hand and satisfiest the desire of every living thing Psal 104.28 That thou givest them they gather thou openest thy hand they are filled with good v. 30. Every Spring God renues the face of the earth Psal 147.9 He giveth to the Beast his food and to the young Ravens which cry compared vvith Job 38.41 See Job cap. 36 37 38 39. 6 In ordering the sins of men for his own glory and good of his Church The envy of Josephs brethren for the advancement of Joseph and the preservation of Jacobs posterity The treason of Bigthan and Teresh for the advancement of Mordecai Cyrus his ambition for the Churches deliverance Titus Vespasian who persecuted the Christians at Rome God orders his passion that he goes to revenge Christs death at Jerusalem Sennacheribs covetousness and pride to punish the hypocrisie of the Jews Isai 10.5 6 7. the covetousness of Judas and malice of the devil to accomplish the work of our redemption 7 In a special respect to the good of his people Besides a general providence in the world he hath a special providence for their good 1 Cor. 9.9 He is the Savior of all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the preserver of all but specially of them that believe 2 Tim. 4.9 10. 2 Chron. 16.9 The eyes of the Lord run to and fro through the whole earth to show himself strong in the behalf of those whose hearts are perfect with him Zach. 2.8 He that toucheth you toucheth the apple of mine eye 8 In snaring the wicked in the work of their own hands Psal 9.16 The Lord is known by the judgment which he executeth the wicked are snared in the work of their own hands Higgaion Selah a thing to be meditated as Hierom renders it When Nebuchad-nezzar in his boasting is bereft of his wits Herod in his pomp eaten up of Worms the Philistims in their jollity have the house fall on them Judg. 16.30 who will not say they are taken in a snare 9 In making wicked men whether they will or no to do Gods will Acts 4.28 To do whatsoever thy hand and counsel had before determined to be done As in a kennel of hounds every one of them runs according to his natural inclination yet all of them serve the purpose of the Hunter And as in an Army of men one fights for honour another for spite another for pay yet all of them fight for victory for the Prince who sent them into the field so whatsoever wickedness evil men do they do but serve Gods providence and fulfill his will God sometimes changes their will sometimes stops it by offering consideration of good or ill danger or profit so that still he makes their wills serve his decree Use 1 Acknowledg this Providence in all thy undertakings God keeps us not onely waking but sleeping when we know not that we live then he observes our dreams in opposition of that tenent that God considers nothing but himself and is onely delighted in the beholding of himself in thy appointing future businesses James 4.15 16. Go to ye that say We will go to such a City and buy and sell c. Prov. 3.6 In all thy ways acknowledg him and he shall direct thy steps So did Eleazar for his Master Abraham Gen. 24. that he might get a Wife for Isaac but yet Eleazar did not neglect the use of means he that rightly looks to Gods providence is most carefull to use means When thou findest a treasure in digging of a field when thou escapest a fall in walking on a plank was it not God who brought thee to the one and saved thee from the other 2 Not to fear men to the balking of duty seeing Gods provicence takes care of us this stayed Davids heart when at Ziglag his Souldiers were at the point of stoning him 1 Sam. 30.6 He encouraged himself in
doth these things shall live by them and live in them Gal. 3.12 Contrarily fail in one point and be under the curse Gal. 3.10 cursed is every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the law to do them A sinner is not justified unless he be condemned viz. by the Law he is not quickned unless he be slain he doth not ascend to heaven unless he descend into hell Luth. Tom. 2.57 Thus no man was ever justified save Adam in his state of innocency and Jesus Christ and the Angels By this righteousness no man living is justified Job 9.20 If I justifie myself my own mouth shall condemn me If I say I am perfect it shall also prove me perverse Also v. 30.31 If I wash my self with snow water and make my hands never so clean yet shalt thou plunge me in the ditch and my own clothes shall abhor me The meaning is if I were the purest man alive and God should call me to his tribunal I must needs condemn my self and whatsoever is near unto me would condemn me Psalm 130.3 If thou Lord shouldest be exeream to mark what is done a miss who might stand Psalm 143.2 Enter not into judgement with thy servant for in thy sight shall no flesh living be justified We are not able to fulfill one branch of any command by reason of indwelling corruption so that I appeal to the conscience of any man whether in the perfectest action that ever he did he durst stand to Gods severe trial thereof much less are we able to fulfill the whole law and therefore cannot hope for righteousness by it as the Prophet saith in another case Esa 28.20 The bed is shorter then that a man can stretch himself on it and the covering narrower then that he can wrap himself in it So say I of mans righteousness We cannot fulfill the whole law and therefore cannot hope for righteousness from it The Law requires a two-fold righteousness 1 Habitual in the inherent holiness of a mans whole person 2 Actual in the exercise of all good works enjoyned by the Law and Gospel and forbearance of the contrary evil works both in the thoughts of the heart words of the mouth and actions of the whole life so that every man in the world incurs damnation by his deeds and therefore cannot remain justified by his habits Nay he is more guilty that having an habit of inherent righteousness produces acts of unrighteousness as we see in the fallen Angels and Adam What man is there can perform these two commands to love God with all the heart and not to covet Yea look upon man in a state of regeneration we shall see weakness in his faith Mark 9.24 sinkings in his hope Psalm 43.5 Why art thou cast down O my soul Esa 64.6 The Prophet doubts not to pronounce of all our righteousnesses which were inherent in our persons compared with the righteousness of God and his law they were as filthy rags Obj. If our best performances be stained Esa 64.6 Why should we perform any good work Answ Though they be stained there is some good in them there is gold in the oar There is so much good that God pardons the ill and accepts the good a sick man must eat to strengthen nature though much of what he eats turns to putrifaction This righteousness of works cannot justify us 1 Because it s not so large as the Law of God so that he that hath the greatest measure of it hath much indwelling corruption 2 Saints ascribe all to the mercy of God in Christ Rom. 5.9 Being justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath See we are not justified by inherent holiness but by his blood Inherent righteousness is not a cause of our son-ship but onely a consequent of it Gal. 4.6 he sayes not ye are received for sons because the spirit hath stampt upon you inherent holiness but because by and in Christ ye are received for sons ye are indued with the spirit and graces thereof 3 No man in pangs of conscience and agony of death can trust to his own righteousness Psalm 130.3 4. 4 Because the law promises life upon an impossible condition Rom. 10.5 and so leaves the conscience doubtfull and trembling 2 The second righteousness whereby persons stand righteous is the righteousness of Christ which is when God declares men who are wicked and sinners by nature but by grace true believers to be freed and absolved from eternal death and to have right to eternal life for the righteousness of Christ Rom. 8.1 2 3 4. 1 Thes 5.9 When that mercifull father did see us to be opprest with the curse of the Law he sent his son into the world and cast upon him all the sins of all he means the elect saying Be thou Peter that denier Paul that persecutor David that adulterer that sinner that are the apple in Paradice that thief on the cross Luth. Tom. 4.94 Let the Law rule over the Flesh and the Promise sweetly reign in the conscience Now concerning Justification consider 1 The efficient cause 1 Generally the whole Trinity Rom. 3.30 It is one God who shall justifie the Circumcision by Faith and the Uncircumcision through Faith Rom. 4.5 To him that worketh not but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly his Faith is counted for Righteousness In particular the Father justifies us pronunciatively because we have imputative Righteousness and his Justice is thereby satisfied for a sinner is not just before God because he is justified but he is therefore justified because he is some way or other just for upon the creatures righteousness the act of God in Justification proceeds For upon the beholding of a righteousness for us the Father justifies us pronunciatively the Son justifies us meritoriously being made unto us of God righteousness 1 Cor. 1.30 Ephes 5.2 The Spirit justifies us by applying unto us Christs satisfaction 1 Cor. 6.11 Ye are justified in the Name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God 2 The material cause of our Justification was the Bloud and Death of Christ Matth. 20.28 He gave his Life a Ransom for many Luke 22.20 This Cup is the New Testament in my Bloud Acts 2.28 The whole Church is said to be purchased with the Bloud of Christ Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be the Propitiation for our sins through Faith in his Bloud When we teach we do no other thing than that we scatter and divide the virtue of Christs Bloud among the People Luth. in Gen. 49. Col. 1.14 20. In whom we have Redemption through his Bloud and having made peace by the Bloud of his Cross Also v. 22. You that were Enemies hath he reconciled in the body of his flesh through death Heb. 9.12 speaking of the Levitical Priests he saith They entered into the holy place by the bloud of goats but Christ entered into Heaven by his own bloud having obtained eternal Redemption for us yea