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

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men onely Some vnderstand by Thrones the Pallace of Gods Maiestie and the seate of blessed immortality and the rest of the words they interpret of Angels But the commonest opinion and most auncient is to vnderstand all the words of Angels onely But in this there is not agreement for some thinke the Apostle speakes by way of Concession as if hee should say Be it so that Angels are Thrones and Dominions c. as the Iewes and false Apostles affirme when they go about to perswade you to Angel-worship yet if that were granted Christ onely were to be worshipped because hee made all those and what excellency they haue they had it from him Others thinke that the Apostle reckoneth vp the excellent'st things in humane gouernment and giues them to Angels to shadow out their glory and consequently the glory of Christ that made them I thinke there is no hurt in their opinion that giue all these words vnto Angels Why Angels are called by these names And they are called Thrones Dominions Principalities Powers because God by them gouernes the Nations and as some thinke moues the Heauens restraines the Deuils workes Miracles foretels things to come protects the faithfull and exerciseth his iudgements vpon the world yet so as these names may be giuen to all Angels in diuers respects and vpon occasion of diuers employments Or they may be giuen to some Angels for a time and not for euer Or if it bee yeelded that those names doe distinguish the diuers sorts of Angels The Vses of the doctrine of Creation and their order yet it will not follow that wee can tell their sorts as the bold Dionysius and the Papists haue aduentured to doe Thus of the doctrine of Creation the Vses follow and they are 1 For Reproofe 2 For Consolation 3 For Instruction The doctrine of Creation cannot but bee a doctrine of great reproofe and terrour to wicked men because those goodly Creatures being Gods workemanship will plead against them and make them inexcusable in the day of CHRIST in as much as they haue not learned to know and serue God with thankefulnesse and feare that shewed his Wisedome and Power and other the inuisible things of God e Rom 1.19 in the making of all those Creaturesr. And besides from the great power of God in the Creation of themselues and other Creatures they may see that they are in a wofull case that by sinning striue with him that made them for hee hath the same power to destroy them f Esa 45.19 And further if God made all then he knowes all and so all the sinnes of the sinner and in that hee made all hee hath at his command as Lord by creation all Armies to raise them against the wicked for their subuersion Secondly the Doctrine of the Creation may comfort Gods Children many waies first it may comfort them in the faith of the worlds dissolution it is hee that created Heauen and Earth that will accomplish it that time shall be no more I meane not times of mortalitie sinne labour infirmitie g Reuel 10.6 c. Secondly it may comfort them in the successe of Christs kingdom on earth Though it be a great thing to gather men againe into couenant with God and to open the eyes of men blinde with ignorance and to deliuer the soules of men that haue long lyne in the prisons of sinne and miserie yet wee may be assured that God by the ordinances of Christ will accomplish all the great things of this spirituall kingdome because hee was able to create the Heauens and Earth And God himselfe doth remember his power in the Creation to assure his performance in our regeneration h Esa 42.5.6 Thirdly it may comfort vs in our vnion with Christ for what shall separate vs from his loue in as much as hee is vnchangeable himselfe nothing else can for they are all his Creatures and must not crosse his resolued will i Rom 8. Fourthly it must needes bee a comfort to serue such a God as hath shewed himselfe in the Creation to worke so wonderfully Blessed is hee that can reioyce in God and his seruice and is refreshed with the light of his countenance and assured of his loue k Psal 89.11.15 Fiftly the wonders of the Creation serue to shew vs how wonderfull the workes of Grace are in the working of which the Lord vseth the very tearme of creating To regenerate a man is as glorious a worke as to make a world l Ephes 2.10 4.24 2 Cor 5.17 Gal 6.15 the protection of a Christian hath in it also diuers of the wonders of the Creation The peace that comes into the hearts of Christians as the fruits of the lippes is created m Esa 57.18 a cleane heart is a rare blessing for it is created also n Psal 5.18 Sixtly it is a comfort against the force of wicked men and their wrongs the wickedst men are Gods Creatures Hee created the destroyer to destroy and the Smith that bloweth the Coales and him that bringeth forth an instrument and therefore all the weapons that are made against Gods Children cannot prosper And it is a part of the Christians inheritance to be protected against the malice of the wicked that would destroy him o Esay 54.16.17 43.1.2.3 Lastly it may comfort Gods Children in the expectation of their saluation for God hath promised as certainely as hee hath created the Heauens he will saue Israell though it should bee as hard a worke as was the spreading out of the Heauens p Esa 45.15.17.18.19 Thirdly the doctrine of the Creation should teach vs diuers duties First the admirablenesse and varietie of Gods workes should prouoke vs to contemplation How deare are thy thoughts vnto me Psal 139 17. Secondly in affliction wee should willingly commit our selues to God and trust in him though our meanes be little or vnlikely for he is a faithfull Creatour his loue to vs affords him Will to doe vs good and the creation proues his Power q 1 Pet 4.19 Esa 45.12.7.22 Thirdly the greatnesse of the workes in Creation should imprint in vs Reuerence and Feare and force vs to the duties of the adoration and worship of God Reuel 4.11 5.13 Psal 104.31 100.13 Fourthly the knowledge of the glory and greatnesse of the Creator should inflame in vs indignation against Idols and the worship of the creature Ier. 10.3 7.10.11.12.14.16 Rom. 1.25 Fiftly the remembrance of our Creator and Creation should worke in vs an abatement of our pride and iollitie and dull the edge of our fierce appetite to sinne Eccles 12 1. Sixtly the consideration of our equalitie in our Creation should keepe vs that we transgresse not against our Brethren Wee haue all one Father and one GOD hath created vs r Mal 2.10 Iob 31.14.15 Thus of the Creation The third thing in Christs relation to the Creatures is that All things are for
that voice be Thou foole this night shall thy soule be taken from thee o Luk. 12.16 And thus farre of these words as they concerne the coherence with the former words Now I consider them as they are in themselues And first of the wrath of God Iustice in God considered foure vvayes Wrath of God It is apparant that wrath in God belongs to his iustice And iustice may be considered as it flowes from God foure wayes First as he is a free Lord of all and so his decrees are iust p Ro. 9.13.14 Secondly as he is God of all and so the common workes of preseruing both good and bad are iust q 1 Tim. 4.14 Matt. 5.45 Thirdly as a father in Christ and so his excellencie the God of beleeuers and thus he is iust in performing his promises and infusing his grace and in bestowing the iustice of his sonne Fourthly as Iudge of the world and so his iustice is not only distributiue but correctiue And vnto this iustice doth wrath belong Anger is properly in God Anger in man is a perturbation or passion in his heart and therefore it hath troubled Diuines to conceiue how anger should be in the most pure happie and bountifull nature of God and the rather seeing affections are not properly in God Neither is their declaration full enough that say it is giuen to God improperly and by anthropopathie for I am of their opinion that thinke anger is properly in God First in such a manner as agrees to the nature of God that is in a manner to vs vnconceiuable Secondly in such a sense as is reuealed in Scripture Wrath diuersly interpreted The wrath of God in Scripture is taken sometimes for his iust decree and purpose to reuenge r Ioh. 3. vlt. sometimes for commination or threatning to punish So some thinke it is to be taken in those words of the Prophet Hosea I will not doe according to the fiercenesse of my wrath Å¿ Hos 11.9 that is according to my grieuous threatnings Sometimes it is taken for the effects or punishments themselues as in the Epistle to the Romans Is God vnrighteous which bringeth wrath t Rom. 3.5 it is well rendred which punisheth The wrath of God is distinguished by diuers degrees and so hath diuers names for there is wrath present and wrath to come Present wrath is the anger of God in this present life u Ioh. 3. vlt. and is either impendent or powred out Wrath impendent is the anger of God hanging ouer mens heads ready to be manifested in his iudgements and so wrath hangs in the nature of God and in the threatnings of his word and in the possibilities of the creatures Wrath powred out is the iudgement of God fallen vpon men for their sinnes by which they prouoked God and so there was great wrath vpon the people * Luk 21.23 in the destruction of Ierusalem and thus he reuealeth his wrath from heauen vpon the vnrighteousnesse of men x Rom. 1.17 Wrath to come y Matt. 3.7 Rom. 2.5 is that fearfull miserie to be declared vpon the soule of the impenitent at his death and vpon soule and body at the day of iudgement in the euerlasting perdition of both But that wee may be yet more profitably touched with the meditation of this point I propound six things concerning Gods wrath further to be considered First the fearfulnesse of it Secondly what it is that workes or brings this wrath vpon vs. Thirdly the signes to know Gods wrath Fourthly the meanes to pacifie it Fiftly the signes of wrath pacified And lastly the vses of all The fearfull greatnesse of Gods vvrath shevved For the first The fearfulnesse and greatnesse of Gods wrath or anger for sinne may appeare three wayes First by Scripture Secondly by similitude Thirdly by example That Gods anger for sinne is exceeding terrible and fearfull I will shew by one place of Scripture onely First by Scripture Nahum 1.2.3.4.5.6 and that is the first of Nahum the Prophet for he saith God is iealous and the Lord reuengeth the Lord reuengeth where the repetition shewes the certaintie of it that God will be as sure to reuenge as euer the sinner was to sinne But this is more confirmed when he saith he is the Lord of anger as if he would import that his anger is his essence as if he were all made of anger and that he is the author of all the iust anger that is in the world And if the drops of anger in great men haue such terror in it what is the maine Ocean of anger which is in God himselfe And to assure vs yet further of the terror of his wrath he addeth The Lord will take vengeance on his aduersaries which signifieth that the Lord will account of impenitent sinners as a man accounts of his worst enemies and therefore the Lord will shew his displeasure to the vttermost of their deserts and his iustice And therefore if any doe obiect that they see it otherwise Ob. Sol. for the plagues of wicked men are not so many nor so great as their sinnes he answereth that and saith that the Lord reserueth wrath for his enemies hee hath not inflicted vpon them all they shall haue there is the greatest part behinde the full vials of his furie are not yet poured out And if any should reply Ob. Sol. that they haue obserued that wicked men haue prospered long and scaped for a great while without any punishments to speake of the Prophet answereth that and saith that the Lord is slow to anger that is hee is many times long before he manifests his great displeasure but he is great in power that is hee is of singular fiercenesse and vnresistablenesse when he doth enter into iudgement he will not faile nor be hindered Ob. Sol. And if any would hope that God would change his minde that also is preuented the Prophet auouching it confidently that he will not surely cleere the wicked And this is the more certaine because of the dreadfull meanes that the Lord hath to declare his anger His way is in the whirlewinde and in the storme and the clouds are the dust of his feet The meaning is that God hath wayes to execute his iudgement wayes I say that are vnresistable for who can stay a whirlewinde and terrible like the storme plagues falling thicke and threefold like the drops of the tempest and in the meanes the Lord can runne like a Giant running fiercely and raising the dust with his feet And to this giue all the creatures witnesse He rebuketh the sea and it drieth Bashan is wasted and Carmell and the floure of Lebanon is wasted The mountaines tremble before him and the hils melt and the earth is burnt at his sight yea the world and all that dwell therein And therefore who can stand before his wrath or who can abide the fiercenesse of his wrath His wrath is poured
Gods children will still pray vnto God And looke how many promises are made in Scripture to the prayers of the Saints so many consolations are inuiolably preserued vnto them against the rage of whatsoeuer extremitie wicked men can cast vpon them this is a singular comfort Miserie breeds vnitie Wee Doct. Miserie breedeth vnitie The Apostle that in more prosperous times iarred with Peter and Barnabas can now hold peace and firme vnitie with meaner men and therefore he saith Wee not I. And thus wee see it was in the times of persecution in Queene Maries daies the Bishoppes and Pastors that could not agree when they were in their Seates and Pulpits willingly seeke agreement when they are in prison and must come to the Stake And so it many times falls out in common Iudgements as the sword and pestilence Esay 24.2 in such times the words of the Prophet are fulfilled Like People like Priests like Seruant like Master like Buyer like Seller like Borrower like Lender like Giuer like Taker to vsury Great and preuailing Iudgements take away all that vanity of conceit and swelling of pride which difference of gifts and places bred before The Lord for his mercies sake grant that at the length there may be found some remedie to cure the wound and heale the breach which proud contention hath made and continued with effects prodigious and vnheard of lest the Lord be at length prouoked to plague with more fierce and cruell Iudgements and worke vnion at least in one furnace of common calamitie the same God for his Sonnes sake worke in all that any wise loue the prosperitie of Ierusalem on all sides that they more regard the glory of God and the good of the Church then their owne greatnesse either of place or respects amongst men and that they may more seeke the truth then victorie And as for those that neither loue the truth nor peace the Lord open their eyes and conuert them or else giue them to eate of the fruite of their owne wayes Doe It is not safe to put ouer good motions Not safe to deferre good motions Note When Paul findeth fitnesse to pray and giue thankes he doth not omit the occasion In spirituall things delay is alwaies dangerous but in sinfull motions the only way many times is to deferre the execution Many sinnes are preuented by the very benefit of taking time enough to execute them Giue thankes It is good to praise before thou reproue Paul giues them to vnderstand before he comes to dispraise their vices and the corruptions crept into the Church that hee takes notice of their praise-worthy vertues hee reserues his taxation to the second Chapter and this course hee holds with them for diuers Reasons First to assure them of his loue and that he did it not of malice a thing especially Reasons 1 to be looked to in all admonitions in familie or else-where as well to praise for vertue as dispraise for vice Secondly hee holds this course to let them Reasons 2 see that he did account them as Christians though they had their infirmities It is a secret corruption in the affection of the reproued to conceiue that the Reproouer likes them not at all They are not fit to reproue others that cannot loue them for their vertues at the same time that they dispraise their faults and therefore they are farre short of holy affections that say I neuer liked him since I saw that fault by him Thirdly hee did thus that they Reasons 3 might the more hate sinne seeing it did darken their graces which else would more appeare Fourthly that they might be made thankefull themselues for their owne graces a shame that others should praise God for his Reasons 4 mercies to vs and we neuer praise God our selues Lastly it carrieth with it Reasons 5 a secret taxation of vnthankfulnesse as the cause of their fall for had they beene more thankfull for the sinceritie of the preaching of the Gospell and for the riches of the grace of Christ offered the honourable opinion of the excellencie and sufficiencie thereof to giue all sound contentment would haue preserued them from mixing the worship of God with mens traditions or admitting contrary doctrine and from dishonouring the mediation of Christ with Angell-worship Then did Popish traditions ouerflow when the Scriptures were contemned and the light of them suppressed and in generall an vnthankfull man is euer a vicious man More specially in the dutie here mentioned two things are to be considered 1. What they doe Wee giue thankes 2. To whom viz. to God euen the Father c. We giue thankes Eucharist is sometimes appropriated onely to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper but most commonly is generall to all holy thankfulnesse especially to God There is a flattering thankefulnesse to men Acts 24.3 Luke 18.11 and a Pharisaicall proud conceited thankesgiuing to God Concerning the spirituall mans thankefulnesse to God I propound three things onely in the generall briefly to be noted First Reasons to incite vs to the practise of continuall thankefulnesse to God Secondly for what things we are to be thankfull Thirdly what rules to bee obserued for the manner of performance of it There are many reasons scattered in Scripture Motiues to thankfulnesse to incite vs to Thankefulnesse first because it is a speciall part of Gods worship or one way by which we yeeld worship to God Hence 1 Cor. 14.16 that the Apostle accounts it a great losse if the people cannot say Amen when the Teacher blesseth in the spirit or giueth thankes Againe when he would exhort them to liberality hee vrgeth them with this reason that the supplying of the necessities of the Saints would cause much thankesgiuing to God d 2 Cor 9.12.13 1 Cor. 4.16.2 And in the 4. of the 2. of Corin. he sheweth that the thankesgiuing of many would breed both a plenty of grace and an abounding of much praise to God Secondly the Apostle hauing dehorted the Ephesians from Fornication and all Vncleannesse and Couetousnesse Filthinesse Iesting and foolish Talking hee addeth but rather vse giuing of Thanks e Ephes 43.4 As if hee would note that thankefulnesse for Gods Blessings and Graces duely performed would preserue them from the filth and power of these base vices Besides it is a thing that becommeth the Saints nothing better Thirdly it is a signe of three worthy things wherein it behooueth euery man to be well assured first it is a signe of a heart that hath rightly receiued Christ and is firmely rooted built and stablished in the Faith f Col. 2.6.7 Secondly if men in all things let their requests be shewed vnto God with giuings of thankes it is a signe of the peace of God euen that the peace of God that passeth all vnderstanding will preserue their hearts and mindes in Christ Iesus g Phil. 4.6.7 Thirdly it is a signe nay a very meanes of a contented mind He that
beleeue the word of God to be true or especially if they can be willing to heare Sermons c. Fiftly they regard not Gods promises to apply them nor to liue by Faith they hold both to be absurd Sixtly they want the iudgement that Diuines call the iudgement of goodnesse Lastly they doe not beleeue that application is of the nature of Faith Heard of In that their graces are heard of and by seuerall relation the fame of them is spread foure things may be obserued Obser 1 1 It is hard to haue any sauing grace but it will bee perceiued and obserued Grace will be heard of and obserued if it be true Grace and that for diuers causes First Grace cannot be without fruit externall and by their fruite yee shall know them Secondly God doth not ordinarily giue sauing Grace but it is gotten in or after some great affliction A man may get much generall knowledge and goe farre in a temporary Faith without any great paine or perplexitie but the paines of trauaile do vsually accompany the birth of any sauing Grace Neyther is there any such hearkening after a childe borne in nature as there is after an afflicted conscience now ready to bee deliuered of any eternall Grace Thirdly Grace cannot be receiued but it workes a great change and alteration Vse 3 of disposition and practise of affection and carriage it will worke an alteration generall inward and outward Now all this stirre in reforming is lyable to obseruation Fourthly the Diuell vsually lieth still whiles men please themselues with Obser 4 the effects of Historicall and Temporary Faith because they feed presumption but so soone as Iustifying Faith is got in the least measure and workes by purifying both the heart and life from beloued sinnes though it worke neuer so weakely he bestirres himselfe and his agents by carnall counsell temptations reproches slanders difficulties and a thousand deuises to make this birth painefull and if it were possible abortiue the Flesh boyles the Diuell darts fire by iniection the World hatefully pursues and wonders at the suddaine restraint and retyring if Men runne not into the same excesse of riot Iohn 16. 1 Pet. 4.4 Esay 59.15 Hee that restraineth himselfe from euill maketh himselfe a prey Lastly the Graces of God are like Lampes on a hill in a darke night and Obser 5 like shining Pearles and therefore cannot be hid Vse is first for confutation of their resolution that will serue God Vses but it must be secretly they will be sincere but they like not to doe it so as euery body may note them they will goe to heauen but for ease it must bee in a fether-bed and for closenesse it must be out of their Closets Indiscretion not the cause of the reproaches and troubles of true Christians these men meane to steale their passages and these kinde of people commonly thinke that the true cause why others are so talked of is their indiscretion and rash and needlesse thrusting out of themselues into obseruation but in the whole businesse they deceiue themselues for it is not possible to be friends with God and the World to haue God his Word People and Spirit to witnesse to vs and to haue the World to praise and applaud vs. And for Indiscretion it is a preiudice let fall by the Diuell and taken vp by carnall men without considering that reproachfull obseruation hath beene the lot of the wisest and holiest Saints that euer liued yea the portion of the Prince of the Saints Secondly it may be an especiall comfort to all the Seruants of God that finde their names encountred with strange reports and the World sodainely bent against them round about when yet many times they rather finde purposes then practises of Grace I say they may gather comforts diuersly first it is the portion of all Gods people secondly it is a signe they are now no more carnall persons for if they were of the world the World would not thus hate his owne thirdly their praises are with the Saints Iohn 7.7 and as now they taste of the cup of their affliction so they shall reape the incomparable priuiledges of their communion A Question in the second place may be propounded and that is how their Faith can be heard of seeing it is an inward Grace Quest how it can so outwardly be knowne Answ Faith in it selfe hidden and secret Ans Faith makes it selfe knowne diuers waies doth in people conuerted make it selfe knowne by certaine demonstratiue effects of it as by Confession in time of persecution when the defence of the truth in any part of it is required by constant Profession notwithstanding the scornes and disgraces of the World by Victorie ouer the World when men retire themselues and will not liue by example contemne all earthly vanities and vse the world as if they vsed it not by their loue to the word of God more then their appointed food by the reformation of their owne liues by the exercise of Faith in their callings not hasting to vse ill and vnlawfull meanes not sacrificing to their owne nets and lastly by their loue to Gods people Seeing Grace and Fame are companions wee may learne that the surest way to get a good name The surest way to get credit is to get Grace Philip 4 3. Math. 18. Psal 15.4 Psal 16.3 Prou. 19.1 is to get Grace for then their names are written in Heauen they are knowne of Angells they are imprinted in the hearts of Gods people A good man honoureth them that feare God And Dauid saith They are the onely excellent ones and all his delight is in them And of the same minde is Salomon euen of the poore Childe of God Prou. 19.1 Yea they haue a name in the very conscience of wicked men yea their very enemies which appeares in this that they spend more thoughts about them then the greatest Potentate and would gladly die their death yea a faithfull man is honoured when he seemes contemned And on the other side a wicked man is euer at the greatest in his owne eyes and is not able to conceiue that they that so much depend vpon him A sinfull person is a shamefull person and crouch to him should contemne him as certainly they doe for euery sinfull person is a shamefull and vile person Yea so soueraigne and sure a meanes is Grace for the attayning of a good name Esay 25.8 that it causeth the staines and blemishes of former infamous sinnes to be blotted out When God takes away sinne in the Soule hee will take away rebuke from the name And this God that hath the hearts of all men in his hands workes both wonderfully and secretly Who doth not honour Dauid Peter Magdalene and Paul notwithstanding their great sinnes and faults The last thing here to be inquired after is whether it be not Vaine-glory to seeke fame and estimation It is not alwaies vaine-glory to seeke fame Eccles. Math.
Doctrines out of the whole Verses The first thing in speciall is the kinde of ordinance in which the word was effectuall viz. Hearing Whereof That is of which Heauen or Hope Doctr. It is a great mercy of God to heare of Heauen before the time come it should be enioyed or lost If we heard not of Heauen till death or iudgement wee should continue still in our slumber drowned in the lust after profit or pleasures we should be so far from finishing our mortification as wee should hardly beginne to set about the washing of our owne vncleanenesse both of hands and life wee should looke vpon Grace and Holinesse with a dull and feeble eye yea it is good euen for Gods children to heare of it before they haue it both to support them in their crosses and discouragements as also to plucke vp their mindes to holy contemplation and to weane them from the loue of base things yea to inflame them to a greater desire to magnifie and glorifie the singular grace and mercy of God in these dayes of their pilgrimage Ye haue heard No man can get eternall graces Doctr. or an enduring contentment arising from the hope of a better life without the hearing of the word of God c Math 17 5. Luk 16 29 30 John 8.47 Quest But tell vs distinctly what good shall men get by hearing of Sermons Answ Many are the singular benefits come to men thereby What good comes by hearing Sermons First the holy Ghost is here giuen Acts 10.44 Secondly mens hearts are here opened Acts 16.14 Thirdly the feare of God doth here fall vpon men Acts 13.16 Fourthly the proud and stony-heart of man is here tamed melted and made to tremble Esa 66.2 Fiftly the faith of Gods Elect is here begotten Rom. 10.14 Sixtly Men are here sealed by the holy Spirit of promise Epes 1.13 Seauenthly here the Spirit speaketh to the Churches Reuel 2. Eightly Christ here comes to suppe with men a Reuel 3.10 Let men tell of their experience whether euer their hearts tasted of the refreshing of CHRIST till they deuoted themselues to the hearing of the Word Ninthly The painefull distresse of the afflicted Conscience is heere or no where cured by hearing the bones that God hath broken receiue ioy and gladnesse Psal 51.8 Tenthly what shall I say but as the Euangelicall Prophet saith If you can doe nothing else yet heare and your soules shall liue Esa 55.4 Liue I say the life of Grace yea and the life of Glory for Saluation is brought vnto vs by hearing Act. 28.18 and 4.16 Vse 1 The vse of this point is First for instruction Let him that heareth heare b Ezech 3 27. yea let all reioyce in the mercies of their God that haue tasted of this bountie of the Lord blessed are your eares in as much as you haue heard Many Prophets and righteous men haue desired to heare the things that you heare and Vse 2 haue not heard them c Math. 13.16.17 Secondly for humiliation vnder the consideration of the lamentable estate of such people as haue not the Word preached vnto them How doe the thousands euen in Israell perish through the failing or wanting of Vision Is there not almost millions of Men and Women that haue scarce heard by preaching whether there be any holy Ghost Oh the cruell torments that abide those soule-murtherers Shall I name them I wish their repentance that so they might haue a new name but because lamentable experience shewes that the vnsauory Salt seldome findes wherewith it may be salted therefore it is the dutie of all Gods people to bowe the knees of their hearts to God beseeching him to inflame the hearts of those that are in authoritie with such bowels of compassion that they would in due time purge the Church of them that so their names may no more bee heard amongst vs. Whiles men lie sicke of the spirituall Lethargy in their owne hearts they are little troubled with the distresse of others but if men would euen in Gods sight duely waigh without shifting and preiudice these propositions viz. that the hearing of the Word is the ordinarie meanes to conuert mens soules to God Rom. 10.14 1 Pet. 1.23 c. And that except men be borne againe they cannot enter into the Kingdome of God Mourne and pray Iohn 3.3 if I say these things be weighed how should our bowels turne within vs to consider the case of some hundreds of Parishes in this famous Kingdome that in the middest of this great Light in this respect yet sit in darkenesse Thirdly for the reproofe of the disorders and vitious dispositions of men in the hearing of the Word Many are the sorts of euill hearers exceeding many are the wicked humours of men by which they sinne against the Word heard the Scripture hath noted and taxed diuers corruptions in men in hearing and fearefully threatned them For the better explication of this vse I consider two things First the sorts of euill hearers Secondly their state in respect of it The sorts of euill hearers The sorts of euill hearers may be distinguished into two kindes some are openly impious and audacious some more ciuill and restrained Of the first kinde First some are so wayward nothing can please them either the Preacher is too terrible or he is too comfortable If Iohn fast hee hath a Deuill if Christ eate he is a glutton d Mat. 11.16 c. Secondly Some heare and are scandalized e Math. 15 12. Men are so wedded to their owne conceits and stuffed with preiudice that they many times wilfully study and striue to frame scandale and offence out of the words of the Teacher Thirdly Some heare and are filled with wrath and enuie and that sometimes so as they cannot restraine the signes of their rage and fretting no not in the Sermon-time f Luke 4.24 Acts 7.54 They gnash with their teeth and their harts are ready to burst for anger And this comes many times because men cannot abide wholesome Doctrine but are giuen to fables h 2 Tit. 4.3 4. Fourthly Some heare and their mouthes make iests while their hearts go after their lusts i Ezech 33 30. they heare and mocke k Acts 17.32 Fiftly Some make the auditory of Christians the studie of all manner of base filthinesse thither comes the Adulterer the Couetous the deceiuer the accuser of the Brethren c. and there they damnably frame their dogged and swinish imaginations Sixtly Some heare and if they finde any power in the Doctrine of the Preacher they enquire whether hee be not a Puritane for they haue heard so much euill of that Sect euery where that that one colour may serue to make them cautelous and better aduised then to be much troubled with his Doctrine l Acts 28 22. Seuenthly Some will heare if he speake of this world m 1 Iohn 4.5 He is an excellent Preacher that in
and to vtter nothing for certaine but the word of God From these words the beloued our fellow-seruant I obserue first that common affliction for the cause of God workes in men tendernesse of loue The Prison makes a great Apostle imbrace with singular loue a poore and meane Minister the smell of the prison and sight of the stake if such times should euer come againe would frame a better amity amongst our Church-men ambitious men might then lay downe their personall and guilefull eagernesse of hast and hate and humorous men would then bee ashamed to deuise how to inlarge the dissention by coyning new exceptions and vrging of peremptory new scruples modest and humble men on both sides that haue sought the peace of Sion would then haue double honour Secondly that hee that is faithfull is beloued beloued I say of God and Gods houshold It is an ill signe in a Minister that hee is not sound when hee findes no tokens of Gods loue in his heart nor signes of respect with Gods seruants in his life Thirdly that to be Gods Seruant is an high dignitie it is here the speciall glory of an Apostle and was acknowledged and proclaimed to be the best part of a Kings title Psal 36. the title of it Which may serue for comfort to poore Christians they can get no Wealth offices nor Honours in the world but here is their ioy they may get to bee Gods seruants which is better and more worth than all Honour Besides it condemnes the aspiring of the Cleargie yet when they haue done all they can to make themselues great men hee is a better man in Gods bookes that by faithfull seruice can winne soules to God then he that by his money or paines can only purchase many liuings and great dignities to himselfe Which is for you a faithfull Minister or Deacon Concerning the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred Minister it is expressely a Deacon and it is a title of Office Seruice or Administration giuen sometimes to Christ hee is called The Deacon of Circumcision u Rom 14.8 sometimes to Magistrates x Rom. 13.4 yea sometimes to Women y Rom. 16.1 sometimes to a speciall calling or sort of Church officers z Phil. 1.1 1 Tim. 3.8.12 sometimes to the Ministers of the Gospell both ordinary and extraordinary so Timothy is a Deacon 1 Tim. 4.6 so Iudas Acts 1.17.15 But the Doctrine I obserue is That euery faithfull Minister is Christs Deacon and this may comfort painefull Ministers for to be Christs Deacon is no base office or to be called so a title of disgrace for it is a title giuen to Christ and the greatest Magistrates And concerning them is that promise that hee that receiueth one of them in Christs name shall not be without his reward * Mar. 9.35 with 37. Besides Christ saith of them that where hee is there shall his Deacon or Seruant bee and his father will honour him though the world doe not a Iohn 12.26 Further it may refresh them that they are said to be Deacons not of the Letter but of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.6.7.8 Lastly wee may see what power these Deacons haue Math. 22. They call they perswade they are heard of the great King if they complaine and informe and they binde men hand and foote and cast them into vtter darkenesse Onely if Ministers would haue the priuiledges of Christs Deacons they must put on and practise their properties First they must become as little Children for humblenesse of minde and confidence in Gods fatherly care and prouidence and for freedome from malice b Mark 9.35.36 Secondly they must follow their Master Christ in doctrine in life and in sufferings c Iohn 12.26 Thirdly seeing they haue this Deaconship as they haue receiued mercy they should not faint but cast from them the cloakes of shame and not walke in craftinesse nor handle the word of God deceitfully but in declaration of the truth should approue themselues to euery mans conscience in the sight of God d 2 Cor 4.1.2 So as for the daily expressing of their doctrine vpon the hearts and liues of the people their people might be their Epistle e 2 Cor. 3.2.3 Thus of the 7. Verse Out of the 8. Verse I obserue diuers things First from the word declared as it is here vsed and applyed to reports I note that those things are to be reported and spoken that may giue light to the hearers A good mans report tends to cleare things in the mindes of them that heare him there should be light and a Lantherne in our words f Prou. 6.23 To this end wee should vse wisedome and truth and meekenesse when wee speake Wisedome by preparing our selues to speake Truth to report things as they are and meekenesse to auoide passion for anger is a great darkener We should also take heede of diuers sinnes in both Tables that greatly corrupt the hearers not onely in the generall but in this that they greatly darken and make muddy the vnderstanding of man As in the first Table discourses or disputes of Atheisme against the Word Religion or Ordinances of God Apologies for Idolaters or Idolatrous Religion in whole or in part the very naming of vices or Idols without disgracing or hating of them Impatiencie or murmuring against God and such like And in the second Table flattery tale-bearing false accusing rash iudgement answering of matters before they be heard are great darkeners of the vnderstanding Secondly in that Epaphras intending to complaine of them for their corruptions in opinion and worshippe doth here first declare their praises and graces of Gods Spirit It shewes that it is a worthy grace to be apt to expresse others iust praises especially when we are to speake of their faults for that will shew that we are free from enuie ostentation or disdaine and that wee seeke not our owne things that wee are not suspitious nor thinke euill nor reioyce in euill Loue in the spirit Loue is either in God or in man in God there is the personall loue of Christ the loue of the Creature the loue of man and the loue of goodnesse or good men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In man there is both the loue by which hee loues God and the loue by which hee loues man I take it here it is meant of whatsoeuer loue the Spirit worketh in man Of Loue I haue spoken at large before here onely I note briefely two things in generall First the necessitie of Loue Secondly the tryall of it both in the negatiue For the first If the true loue of God and Gods children bee not in vs wee haue not faith g Gal. 5.6 nor the Spirit of God for Loue is the fruit of the Spirit h Gal. 5.22 2. Tim. 1.7 nor the Seale of our Election i Ephes 1.4 nor a pure heart or good conscience k 1 Tim. 1.5 nor strength to holde out against errours
Obiect The faithfull themselues discerne not any such excellencie in their earthly condition Sol. Wee must distinguish of Christians Solut. some are but infants in grace and babes these may be entituled to great things and yet haue no great sense of it as the Childe in Nature hath no great discerning of the inheritance hee is borne to or his owne present condition wherein hee excels others A kingdome is neuer the worse because the infant Prince cannot discourse of the glory of it Some Christians fall away for the time into grosse sinne or error and these are in matters of grace like the drunken man or Paraliticke in nature their discerning is lost with their vprightnesse other Christians either want the meanes in the power of it or are tossed with great afflictions or are in the fit of temptation and then they haue but a darke glimpse of their felicity in Christ but the strong Christian that hath digested the assurance of Gods loue in Christ and is exercised in the word of righteousnesse sees such a glory in the Kingdome of Grace and doth acknowledge it with such vnmoueable firmenesse of heart that all the powers of either earth or hell cannot alter his iudgement in the high estimation of such a condition Vses The Vse of this Doctrine concerning Christs Kingdome is First for Consolation Gods Children should much exult and reioyce in their estates and in as much as Christ sitteth as king for euer all that are in his Temple should speake of his glory p Psal 29.10.18 and if there were nothing else for a Christian to ioy in yet let all the children of Sion reioyce in their King q Psal 149.2 Yea the thought of this that God is our King should vphold vs and fence vs against all crosses r Psal 74.12 for Christ is a hiding place for the winde and a couer for the tempest as riuers of waters in a dry place and as the shadow of a great rocke in a weary Land Å¿ Esay 32.2 And therefore let our eyes neuer grow dimme in viewing this glory or our eares grow dull in harkening to the word of this Kingdome Secondly for Reproofe and terrour vnto all wicked men that harden their hearts and refuse to returne What greater losse then to lose Christs Kingdome and what fairer seruice then to serue the Sonne of God Who would not feare thee O King of Nations t Jer 10.7 accursed is the estate of all such as subiect not their neckes to Christs yoake that refuse to let him raigne ouer them by his Word and Spirit that come not vp to doe their homage in Ierusalem euen to worshippe this King the Lord of Hoasts u Zach. 14.17 If Iesus Christ be a great King then where shall they appeare that say to the King Apostata x Iob 34.18 Euen all such I meane that dare reproach the way of Christ and deride the sinceritie of such as desire to imploy themselues in the businesse of the Kingdome c. Is hee a great King how dare wee then offer that vnto him which they durst not offer to a meane King on earth What meane the blinde and the lame in Gods house y Mal 1.13.14 how dare men so securely offer vp their blinde lip-seruice and lame deuotions It is a Kingdome that is offered why doe wee then trifle why doe they excuse What meanes these fond excuses I haue married a wife and cannot come I haue bought fiue yoake of Oxen and must goe proue them I haue bought a Farme and must goe see it I haue this pleasure and that profit and therefore cannot come Will they lose a Kingdome vpon so silly a pretence when thou needest not to lose either Wife Farme or Oxen. God doth not bid thee leaue thy Wife thy Labour thy Calling thy Liuing but onely wils thee to attend thine owne further aduancement in the season of it seeke lawfull profit but seeke Grace first Vse thy lawfull pleasures but chiefly seeke the pleasures of God euen these spirituall ioyes that are more worth then a Kingdome Thirdly for Instruction it should teach vs aboue all things to seeke our happinesse in this excellent estate vnder the gouernement of Iesus Christ Wee should in respect of the worth of it forsake our Fathers house and the immoderate desire of any earthly thing so that the King will please to delight in vs z Psal 4.5 Wee should open our hearts wider that the King of Glorie by his Word and Spirit may come in * Psal 24.10 Wee should labour for all those Graces by which an entrance is ministred into this Kingdome a 2 Pet 1.8.11 and whatsoeuer we are vncertaine of wee should make our Calling and Election sure and though we bee neuer so many waies opposed yet seeing wee fight for a Kingdome nay in a Kingdome wee should hold it alwaies a good fight b 1 Tim 6. and continue constant and vnmoueable and if Christ lead vs into his Chambers c Cant 1.3 of presence and delight vs with the sweete ioyes of his presence wee should remember such princely loue and ioy in him alwaies Let the Christian sing and make a ioyfull noyse to the rocke of his saluation and let him worshippe and bow downe let him serue with all reuerence and heare without all hardnes of heart d Psal 95.1.3 let no discontentment possesse the heart of the true Christian for to serue Christ is to raigne and all his Subiects are Kings and the worst estate of the meanest Christian is a rich Kingdome Of his Sonne Quest Quest Why is it called the Kingdome of the Sonne rather then of the Father Ans Answ Because God hath giuen all the power to the Sonne and this Kingdome is assigned ouer to him The merit of this happinesse is onely in Christ and the vertue that gathers vs into this kingdome is onely from CHRIST and no man commeth to the Father but by Christ Sonne of his loue Christ is the Sonne of Gods loue first because hee is most worthy of all others to be beloued As Iudas is the Sonne of perdition that is most worthy to be damned Secondly because hee was from euerlasting begotten of the loue of his Father hee is Gods naturall Sonne Thirdly because he is infinitely filled with the sense of his loue so they are said to be the Children of the marriage that are full of ioy in respect of the marriage Fourthly because it is hee by whom loue is deriued into others It is hee that makes all other Sonnes beloued Lastly in respect of his humane nature he is that Sonne vpon whom God hath shewed his principall loue in respect of the gifts with which that nature is admirably qualified The meditation of this that CHRIST our Sauiour is the Sonne of Gods loue is very comfortable for hee is like to speede in any thing hee requests the Father for vs and hee will be
the holy Ghost so is no mans else 2. It is assumed into personall vnion with the diuine Nature 3. It was honoured with speciall Prophesies Types and Sacrifices 4. This body was offered vp as a full expiatory Sacrifice 5. It is to be remembred to the end of the word in the Sacrament Christs body not like ours in two things Body of his flesh To note that it was a true Body like vnto ours and to distinguish it from his Sacramentall and Mysticall body In two things Christs body was not like ours and in three things it was like It was not like first in the manner of subsisting it was not independent or a person of it selfe 2. In the vicious accidents of the substance of it no sinne either could or ought to infect it Could not because originall sinne was restrained by the Holy Ghost Ought not because in it a purgation for our sinnes must be made In three things it was like ours first in substance hee tooke our whole Nature hee was the seede of the Woman of Abraham of Dauid In 3. things it was like the Sonne of man c. And hee tooke the parts of our Nature both soule and body 2. In properties and thus hee assumed both the properties of the whole Nature in that hee was finite and create And in the parts as in the soule hee assumed Vnderstanding Will Memory and in the Body Figure Quantitie and Circumscription c. 3. In infirmities for hee assumed not onely our Nature but the infirmities of Nature But wee must know that hee tooke the defects or infirmities thay call miserable not those they call damnable Thus of the Doctrine of his Nature his Sufferings follow Through death The death of Christ doth reconcile vs in as much as it ratifies the couenant and takes away the guilt of the sinnes of the former Testament and the vertue of it eats downe the power of present sinnes and destroyes the power of our naturall death Christs death differs from ours in three things Christs death differs from the death of all the Elect in three things First in that in death hee sustained not his owne person but dyes as our surety and so is a sacrifice for sinne Secondly hee was in death a whole burnt offering for as hee dyed in body so his soule was an offering for sinne in as much as hee sustained the sence of the infinite wrath of God in his Agonies Thirdly in that his death was the death of him that was the Sonne of God Hitherto of the doctrine of the Nature and sufferings of Christ the Vses follow Vses of Christs death First for Instruction The consideration of all this should teach vs 1. to value reconciliation with all the graces that flow from it according to the worth of the meanes by which they are procured If there were no other way to know the worth of Gods Fauour Knowledge Spirituall refreshings and Graces yet by the price payd for the purchase of them wee may discerne they are worth more then all the world 2. Is it not possible for vs to hate sinne vpon the consideration of so pregnant an example of the odiousnesse of it when the imputation of sinne brought the Sonne of God on his knees to his death O the soule Lethargie that hath ouergrowen vs 3. That wee may haue the profit of the Incarnation and Passion of CHRIST in his naturall body wee must bee carefull to get into his mysticall body 4. The Apostle vseth the Meditation of Christs humiliation to the death as an argument to perswade vs to Compassion Mercy Fellowship in the Spirit Vnitie Humility Clemency and meeknesse of minde Phil. 2.1 to 9. Secondly wicked men may here see what smart they are like to feele from the vnpartiall iustice of God Doth hee not spare the body the flesh the bloud the life of his owne Sonne when hee became but a surety for sinne How shall vngodly men euer enemies and neuer sonnes that themselues haue committed sinne escape when the day of wrath shall come Thirdly godly men may heere see great reason of comfort not onely by considering the great loue of Christ and the great benefits must needs flow from his death but if two things bee weighed 1. the honour done to our Nature in that in the humanity of Christ it is ioyned to the diuine Nature This makes amends for that breach that is made by the damnation of millions in our nature 2. The great certainty of Gods couenant 1 Tim. 3.16 Phil. 2.6.7 of Grace and Mercy For a mans couenant if it be once confirmed no man abrogates it or addeth or taketh from it therefore Gal. 3.9 much more Gods Couenant shall stand vnchangeable being ratified and confirmed by the death of Christ Thus of the Meanes The end followes in these words To present you holy and without spot and vnblameable in his sight And in these words is both the presentation and the sanctification of Christians to be considered To present you The originall word is very significant and diuersly accepted it signifies to restore so Acts 9.41 to assemble Acts 2.26 to make present so Acts 23.23 to make ready furnish purge or make cleane Acts 23.24 to make acceptable 1 Cor. 8 8. to make manifest 2 Tim. 2.15 to proue euidently Acts 24.13 to assist and stand too Rom. 16.2 2 Tim. 4.16 to offer by way of dedication or gift to God 2 Cor. 11.2 Luke 2.22 Col. 1.28 It is true that Christ restores vs collects vs Ephe. 5.27 Ephes 1.6 brings vs into Gods presence clenseth vs makes vs acceptable assists and defends vs and manifests vs to be holy But I take it principally in the last sence hee presents vs by dedication to God Thus Christ shall present vs wholly both at the day of iudgement a Rom. 14.10 and in the day of death when hee shall deliuer the soule to God Thus also Christ doth present vs in this life 1. When by the preaching of the Gospell hee seuers and segregates vs from the world and brings vs into Gods houshold 2. In Iustification when clothing vs with his owne righteousnesse hee becomes our Iustification 3. In new obedience and that two wayes first when hee presents our workes couered with his intercession Secondly when hee causeth vs to present our selues to GOD both by Prayer and consecration of our selues to Gods Seruice and holines of life It must bee euery mans care then to seeke his presentation from Christ and to that end by Couenant Prayer and practise deuote himselfe to a subiection to all the ordinances of Christ Thus of Presentation Sanctification followes Holy vnblameable and vnreproueable in his sight How the words are to be vnderstood At the first sight I should encline to vnderstand these words either of Iustification or our consummate holinesse at the day of iudgement but that the sway of Interpreters force me to expound them of Sanctification It is greatly to
as well as they For we haue the spirit of God in vs and the people of God round about vs. Heere also Ministers may take notice of their duties their spirits should cleaue to their people and their daily thoughts and cares should runne vpon them they should still obserue them and watch ouer them in the Lord. Ob. 2. But might some one say Is it charitie in the Apostle being thus absent to entertaine surmizes and hard thoughts of vs as if wee were falling away c. Now to this he answers that though he wrote this to exhort them and to warne them yet he did greatly reioyce to know so much as hee did of their order of life and stedfastnesse of faith Many are so diseased that they thinke if a man reprooue them or admonish them that then hee hates them altogether and likes nothing in them but the Apostle to preuent that acknowledgeth the praise of their life and faith A holy minde can reioyce in the good things of those he warneth or reprooueth Your order Order hath originall in God he is the God of order a 1 Cor. 14.33 as all disorder and confusion is of the Diuell Order is that wonderfully commends whatsoeuer it is in There is a kinde of seede of order sowen in the creatures This order in man is their eutaxie or well disposing of themselues The Apostle might commend their order generally both in relation to the common-wealth and to the Church and in their families as also in their particular conuersation That there might be order in Common-wealths Of order in the common-vvealth God hath set man in authoritie for by him Kings raigne and haue their power b Prou. 8. Rom. 13. and hath communicated a part of the honour of his owne diuine lawes to their ciuill lawes viz. That they should binde mens consciences so farre as they are not disagreeing from his word Besides hee hath recorded threatnings against the disobedient and acknowledgeth Magistrates to beare his image to be as it were Gods by representation and hee guides them by his spirit for the time many times qualifying them with gifts and guiding their mouthes in iudgement for a diuine sentence is in the mouth of a King yea hee himselfe drew a plat-forme of rules for Common-weales to giue them a taste of gouernment Now that men may attaine to this Eutaxie and good order in Common-weales they must reade the law of God and let that bee a generall guide to them and they must propound sanctitie as well as felicitie as the end of their gouernment and in calling to office they must be carefull not to set the feet where the head should be but to chuse men that feare God and hate couetousnesse and are men of courage The feare of God and courage is wonderfully wanting in all sorts of Magistrates And as for courage in respect of the people what are they the better if they haue a good man that will doe no good then if they had euill men that would doe no euill Yet in truth Magistrates whether good or euill men doe much euill by suffering euill to be vnpunished But to returne to the point Magistrates that would preserue order must giue good example themselues and mend the disorders of their one households and bring such a sympathie and loue of the people as they should both preserue their authoritie and yet remember that they rule their brethren And in their gouernment they cannot obserue order vnlesse they punish vice as well as command or prouide for vertue and wealth Besides they must take away the persons or places that are occasions of disorder and they must charge and remunerate as well as punish Finally the people out of the obligation of conscience must striue to liue in order with reuerence and feare yeelding ready obedience and furtherance to those that are placed in authority ouer them Order in the Church There is order also in the Church and thus there is order in doctrine for milke must be propounded before strong meat or with sufficient reference to the parties to be taught There is order also to be obserued in the time places and manner of celebration of Gods worship There is order also to be respected in the vse of things ecclesiastically indifferent There is order in the subordination of persons in the ministery some to rule some to teach some to exhort some to distribute There is order also to be obserued in the discipline of the Church proceeding by degrees with offenders so long as they are cureable Order in the family Neither may our families be without order order I say not only in the duties that concerne the maintenance of the familie but also in the exercises that concerne religion and the seruice of God in the familie In families there must be a care also of reformation especially that openly prophane persons only for temporall aduantage bee not retained or admitted there In the familie also there must bee a daily exercise of patience humilitie knowledge and all other Christian graces that concerne mutuall edification What should I say There is a mutuall relation in all the members of the familie one to another and the discharge of their seuerall duties one to another is charged with a daily care of order But I thinke the Apostle commends the order of holy life vnto which euery Christian is bound It is certaine we can neuer soundly proceed in godlinesse without a care of a settled frame and order of liuing Wee may not liue at a venture in religion T is not enough to doe good now or then by flashes There is an order in holy conuersation We must walke by rule d Gal. 6.16 There is an holy disposing of our waies required e Psal 50. vlt. It is required of vs that we should ponder the pathes of our feet f Pro. 4.26 Wee must order our affaires with discretion g Psal 112.5 This is called the way of prudence or vnderstanding There is a guiding of our feet vnto the wayes of peace i Luke 1.79 T is a wonderfull curse to be left to our securitie to walke in darke and vncertaine wayes and contrariwise the vision of the saluation of God is promised to such as dispose of their wayes aright k Psal 51. vlt. And to bee carefull of an orderly course of life is to keepe our soules l Pro. 19.16 and peace shall be vnto such But alas men haue corrupted their wayes and their vnderstandings are darkned and they are strangers from the life of God neither will men cease from their rebellious wayes The ciuillest men walke after the way of their owne hearts yea the most men hate those that are right in their wayes and are like Dan that would bite the heeles of such as endeuour to walke in sincerity Some hypocrites there are that will know the way of the Lord and aske of him the ordinance of iustice as
and taken prisoner Now for the remedies of this losse of stedfastnesse Remedies for the losse of stedfastnesse they must know that there is required of them a speciall humiliation note that I say a speciall humiliation For they must in priuate afflict their soules before the view of their speciall sinnes and Gods fierce wrath with strong cries and sighes vnspeakable making their moane before God They must cry vnto God out of the deepe as the Psalmist saith Besides they must shame themselues openly by making themselues vile before the people of God so did Dauid and Salomon and Paul yea they must voluntarily resigne ouer themselues vnto Gods scourging hand being so desirous to be cleansed of their sins as to bee contented God should wash them throughly though it were with many crosses And further they must bee reuenged of their owne flesh by straitning and curbing themselues in their lawfull desires and delights Thus of their speciall humiliation Now secondly they must take speciall paines to recouer their faith in God and to get pardon of their sinnes They must crie daily vnto God they must search againe and againe in the records of Gods promises especially waiting vpon the preaching of the Gospell to see when the Lord will returne and haue mercy by reuiuing of their hearts with the comforts of his presence And for this they must be wonderfull carefull of the spirit of grace to stir it vp by daily prayer and to obserue with all watchfulnesse the stirring of it resoluing with all thankfulnesse to acknowledge any measure of the reuiuing of the spirit Lastly when they are in any measure recouered they must looke to two things 1. They must forsake all appearance of euill 2. They must vse a continuall watchfulnesse and with feare and iealousie looke to their hearts euen in their best actions least Sathan beguile them and they reuolt againe and then their case of reciduation be worse then the former blessed is the man that feareth alwayes Thus of the losse of stedfastnesse especially as it is in the cureable for there is a losse of stedfastnes and the ioy of Gods saluation euen in the Elect which in this life is incureable Of this I can say little because the Scripture is in this poynt exceeding sparing and because the iudgements of God especially of this kinde are exceeding deep who can wade into them only a word or two of it This losse is incureable two wayes sometimes in the crosse or iudgement it brought vpon the offender sometimes in the vnstedfastnesse it selfe for sometimes though the Lord restore inward ioy and assurance yet hee will not remooue the outward signe of his wrath sometimes hee drawes backe the outward affliction but doth not restore the inward comfort or not in so great a measure so as some of Gods children may die without the sense of the ioy of Gods saluation till they come to heauen yea they may die in greate tērror and despaire yet the Lord may be reconciled and they may truely repent though these terrors or iudgements be not released because God many times will thereby purge the publike scandall and cleere his owne iustice Besides such spectacles doe giue warning to a carelesse world to let them know that God hath treasures of wrath for sinne if they repent not Thus of the doctrine of stedfastnesse of faith and vnstedfastnesse also now briefely for some vses of it Vses It may serue for great reproofe of the great neglect of seeking this stedfastnesse of faith We may complaine aswell of the common Protestant as of the Papists heerein for they are alike aduersaries to the assurance of faith let such as are touched with feare of God and desire to beleeue trauell more and more for attainement heereof and to this end cleaue to the sure word of the Prophets and Apostles and labour in the practse and excercise of all holy and Christians graces And for particular consideration of the troubles and losses of Gods children we may note 1. That it is a wonderfull fearfull thing to fall into Gods hands and that the promises of God yeeld no protection to a willing offender woe vnto prophane beasts if sinne make God angry towards his owne children and make them also vile before men then where shall those beasts that wallow in sinne appeare if they be iustly abased that fall once into one sinne what shall be the confusion of face and heart in those men when all the sinnes they euer committed shall be reueled before Gods Angels and men at the last day 2. They that stand haue great reason to take heede lest they fall from their stedfastnesse and bee carried away with the errour of the wicked Psal 56.9 116.7 3. We should be wonderfull thankfull if God hath kept vs from f●lling it is his singular grace to keepe the feet of his Saints VERS 6.7 As yee haue therefore receiued Christ Iesus the Lord so walke yee in him 7. Rooted and built vp in him and stablished in the faith as yee haue beene taught abounding with thankesgiuing IN these two verses the Apostle concludes the exhortation begun in the 23. verse of the former chapter 3 for whereas after all these reasons and the answer of sundry obiections they might finally haue sayd tell vs then at once what it is you would haue vs to doe the Apostle answers summarily that concerning holy life hee would haue them walke as they haue receiued the Lord Iesus Christ and concerning faith hee would haue them to bee rooted and soundly edified and established in the faith especially to abound in thankfulnesse to God for their happy estate in Christ Iesus The 6. verse containes a precept concerning holy life viz. to walke on in Christ and a rule by which that precept is to be squared and determined viz. as they haue receiued Christ Iesus the Lord. As yee haue receiued Christ Iesus the Lord c. These words may bee diuersly vrged vpon them according to the diuers sences may be conceiued of them For 1. To walke as we haue receiued Christ may beare this sence namely to frame our obedience according to the measure of the knowledge of Christ we haue receiued it shall be to vs according to what we haue to whom God hath giuen much of them hee requireth much and iudgement certainely abideth for him that hath receiued the knowledge of his masters will and doth it not if our practise bee according to the knowledge wee haue this may bee our comfort God will accept of vs and otherwise they are but in a miserable case that are barren and vnfruitfull in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ a 2 Pet. 1.9 2. Such a sense as this may be gathered viz. So liue with care of a godly life as ye neglect not to preserue the doctrine concerning Christ ye haue receiued Certainely it ought to bee the care of euery godly minde to doe his best to preserue the purity of
Rules to bee looked vnto after our calling Wouldest thou be sure not to fall away Then looke to these things 1. Be sure thou continue in the carefull vse of the meanes as the word praier conference and Sacraments else know that when once thou giuest way to a customarie hardnesse of heart in the vse of the meanes or neglect of them thou art neere either some great sinne or temptation or some great iudgment and apostacie and therefore concerning the meanes principally looke to two things 1. preserue appetite 2. practise that thou hearest without omission or delay 2. If thou discerne any spirituall weaknesse or decay or feele any combat with the flesh or the tentations of Satan be sure thou complaine betimes and resist at the first for then the grace of God will be sufficient and the weapons of our warfare mightie through God praier will easily master sinne at the first through the victorie in Iesus Christ 3. Resolue with thy selfe not to let goe thy assurance or cast away the confidence of thy hope whatsoeuer befall thee or at least Heb. 10.36 not till thou maiest see wonderfull euident reason It is a maruellous great fault to call the loue of God into question vpon euery occasion whereas men cannot glorifie God more then to liue by faith and to be vnmoueable in it God takes little delight in a soule that will withdraw it selfe vpon euery occasion by vnbeleefe Are they not strangely foolish that will weare their helmets when there is no stirre and as soone as they see an aduersarie or any blowes towards then to cast away their helmet and doe it so vsually Such are we and worse that stand bragging of our faith and hope in prosperitie and ease and when affliction and temptation comes then most childishly we cast away both faith hope and till reason and sense are satisfied we will not be perswaded 4. Set perfection before thine eyes to striue after it and to this end acquaint thy selfe with the rules of holy life Phil. 3. and consider the examples of such as haue walked therein and the wofull euents that befall the contrary minded especially thinke much of the great recompence of reward euen the price of our high calling in Iesus Christ 5. Take heed of the occasions of falling such as are spirituall pride knowne hypocrisie desire to be rich discord with the godly and vaine ianglings without discretion neglect of our particular callings and vngodly company Hitherto of pe●seuerance in life Now in the next verse hee intreateth of perseuerance in faith Vers 7. Rooted built vp in him stablished in the faith as you haue been taught IN these words is both a precept and a rule a precept to be rooted built stablished a rule as ye haue beene taught The substance of the precept is but to counsell them to increase more and more that they might be stedfast in the assurance of Gods fauour in Iesus Christ Of this stedfastnesse I haue at large intreated in the 5. verse Onely wee may here againe be instructed and informed 1. Of the necessitie and excellencie of stedfastnesse The Apostle would not thus often peale vpon it but that hee knew it to be of singular worth in the life of man and of great necessitie vnto our consolation besides it implies that people are for the most part slow-hearted herein and hardly drawne to the vnfained and diligent labour after the establishing of their faith and assurance 2. That all this stedfastnesse of assurance is not the worke of a day a great tree is not growne or rooted but successiuely a great house is not built all at once we must be euery day adding something to Gods worke that the building of grace may be in due time finished none are so established but they may grow in faith none haue such great roots but they may take root yet more many men striue hard to make their trees shew in branches and leaues I meane in outward profession in the world but alas what should this great bulke and so many branches and leaues doe vnlesse there were more roots within Yea many deare children of God mistake wonderfully they euery day carry together heapes of precepts for life but alas poore soules so great a building will not stand vnlesse they lay their foundation sure I meane that they get their faith in Christ the only sure foundation more confirmed and established As ye haue beene taught Note here the Apostles candor he doth not arrogate the glory of their establishment to himselfe but sendeth them to their Minister and teacheth them to depend vpon him to wait vpon the blessing of God vpon his labour and to acknowledge the good they haue to haue receiued by his ministerie Here diuers things may be noted 1. That the people should labour for a reuerend estimation of the doctrine they receiue from their faithfull teachers 2. That as faith commeth by hearing so doth the establishment of faith also 3. That it is wonderfull dangerous to neglect either the charge of our teachers when they vrge vs to assurance or the rules by which they guide vs out of the word of God for the attainment of it if wee would goe about it when our teachers call vpon vs the Lord would be with his ordinance to blesse it to vs wee should be afraid to delay when we are taught how to confirme our soules in faith and grace 4. The faithfull Ministers doe greatly labour to establish their hearers in the assurance of Gods fauour and the duties of holy life Abounding therein with thankesgiuing In these words the Apostle shuts vp all wherein his intent is to stirre them vp to thankfulnesse that as they did thriue in the meanes or matter of faith and holy life so they should glorifie God by all possible thankfulnesse for it as he would haue them abound in faith and holinesse so also in thankfulnesse to God This may wonderfully smite our hearts for if we obserue our wretched euill dispositions wee may finde that wee are wonderfully bent to the very habit of vnthankfulnesse and therefore it is iust with God many times that we doe no more thriue in victorie ouer our corruptions or in the power of diuers graces or in the progresse of duties because wee doe not more tenderly and constantly acknowledge the goodnesse of God we haue had experience of Oh that it were written vpon our hearts and grauen deepe in our memories that nothing becomes vs more then to abound in thankfulnesse no fairer sight then to see the Altar of the Lord couered with the calues of our lips neuer can the estate of a childe of God be such but hee hath exceeding great cause of thankfulnesse for his happinesse in Christ VERS 8. Beware lest there be any man that spoile you through philosophie and vaine deceit through the traditions of men according to the rudiments of the world and not after Christ The order of the rest
owne selues publike priuate secret open inward outward in prosperitie and aduersitie in the Church or familie or abroad in mens conuersation Alas we can discerne but a glimpse of that sinne and guiltinesse that is in vs by nature and this is the increase of their misery in all their sinnes they are dead in them Dead There is a fourefold death A fourefold death temporall corporall spirituall eternall The state of man being in misery he is dead temporally a Esay 26.19 The body of man being in the graue he is dead corporally The soule of man lying in sinne is dead spiritually And both soule and body being cast into hell are dead eternally Death to sin for sinne and in sinne The Colossians were dead spiritually there is a death to sinne and a death for sinne and a death in sinne a death to sinne and so the godly die by mortification a death for sinne and so malefactors die by execution and a death in sinne and so euery naturall man kills himselfe by enliuing his sinne What spiritual death in sin is The spirituall death in sinne is an vnutterable losse of the life of God by which the sinner is senselesse and carelesse in extremitie of misery vnto his owne euerlasting ruine if the Lord preuent it not by regeneration Now that men are in this case by nature these Scriptures proue Eph. 2.1 2. Math. 8.22 Ioh. 8.25 Rom. 8.10 Luk. 15.32 Reuel 3.2 Iud. 12. 1 Tim. 5.6 Neither let any deceiue themselues about their estate for a man may be dead in sinne and yet be aliue in the flesh yea thou maiest be a wise man in the flesh b Rom. 8.7 or a prince of this world c 1 Cor. 2 9.14 yea thou maiest haue a name that thou liuest spiritually d Reuel 3.2 and yet be starke dead Now this spirituall senselesnes is called a death because it is a priuation of spirituall life from the soule as the naturall death is from the body 2. because it tends to eternall death The vse may be fourefold 1. For information No wonder wicked men can come and goe from the word of God and not be touched alas they are dead men and so is it with them in respect of the iudgements of God alas if thou couldest rowle a mountaine vpon a dead man he would not feele so is it with a man dead in sinne and further we may heere obserue that to liue yea to die quietly is no signe of a man in a happy case for if this death in sin be not cured thousands of people may die quietly because they die senselesly they feele no more of the feare of hell or iudgement or Gods anger then if they were already dead in their bodies they would feele outward extremities I know that God many times can lay terror vpon the flesh of wicked men and make their spirits drinke in of the bitter anguish arising from the feruencie of Gods burning displeasure but I say if God let them alone vsually the most would die in a wretched senselesnes and inconsideration being neither able nor willing to entertaine the thoughts of what must presently and necessarily befall them 2. This may serue for confutation and so 1. of the Papists about their freewill How can there be this free will in a dead soule we are dead in sinne and therefore of our selues mooue not vnto life till God quicken vs by his word and spirit 2. Of the carnall Protestant that beares himselfe so strongly vpon his supposed couenant with death and hell his agreement must be disanulled nay his very securitie imports his vnauoidable destruction if it be not remooued by the power of Christ 3. For instruction art thou a man that hearest this that hast liued all thy time without remorse for thy sinnes and neuer yet entertained the care of reformation of thy life be heere warned of thy miserie let it bee enough thou hast been dead in sinne doe not lie still rotting in the graues of iniquitie but rise so soone as thou hearest the trumpet of the Gospell the voice of Christ sounding in thine eares and piercing thy heart 4. Lastly here is consolation implied vnto weake Christians If thou canst feele thy miserie and struggle in any measure of true constancie against the corruption of nature and the transgressions of thy heart and life thou art not dead there is some breath of life in thee there is motion and therefore life Thus of their actuall sinnes Their miserie in respect of originall sinne is exprest in these words And in the vncircumcision of the flesh These words be diuersly interpreted some thus In the vncircumcision of the flesh that is in the flesh which is vncircumcision that is a thing hatefull vnto God Some make these words to bee the signe of their death in sinne as if hee would say your very vncircumcision that is in your flesh which are Gentiles is a token that you are strangers from the life of God Some thus And you hath hee quickned which were dead in respect of your sinnes and carnall life which ye liue in the vncircumcision that is in your estate of Gentilisme Some make these words expresse the cause of their death in sinne Thus in the vncircumcision of the flesh that is for your fleshly vices which caused that death in sinne But I thinke with those that vnderstand by the flesh originall sinne and by the vncircumcision their miserie in respect of it implied in the allusion to the circumcision literally taken Originall sinne is called flesh Why original sinne is called flesh because the flesh is the instrument by which it is propagated 2. Because it is the subiect in which it is 3. Because it is the end it driues vs to viz. to satisfie the flesh and to seeke fleshly things This originall sinne heere called flesh is a spirituall kinde of disease gall What originall sinne is leauen and poyson which daily diffuseth it selfe throughout the whole man and still infecteth it though this bee not the whole nature of the sinne for to speake distinctly in originall sinne there are three things 1. 3. Things in originall sin The guiltinesse of Adams fact deriued vnto vs by iust imputation 2. The want of that originall iustice was in vs in the creation 3. The deprauation and corrupt disposition of our natures Our misery in respect of originall sin Here the word vncircumcision imports our miserie in respect of our very corruption of nature for it imports 1. That we are hatefull to God children of wrath 2. That we haue no portion in the heauenly Canaan 3. That wee haue no fellowship in the communion of Saints 4. That wee haue no part in the promised Messias for all these were shadowed out by the want of circumcision in the time of the Law Vses The vses follow First from hence wee may enforme our selues in diuers things as first we may see why the faire works
a quarrell to another euen as CHRIST forgaue you euen so doe yee Verse 14. And aboue all these put on Loue vvhich is the bond of perfectnesse Verse 15. And let the peace of God rule in your harts to the vvhich also yee are called in one body and be thankfull And sixtly Clemencie which stands in two things in forbearing and forgiuing Forbearing in respect of wrongs and infirmities and forgiuing freely one another And this forgiuing must be extended to euery man and it must be as Christ forgaue vs and that is though they be our inferiors though they haue done vs great wrong so as we forget aswel as forgiue But seuenthly aboue all other be sure you cloth your selues with loue for this will knit vs together perfectly and by this all the Saints and all the graces of the Saints tend vnto perfection Eightly Get the peace that peace I meane that GOD only giues and let it rule and preuaile with you and if you cannot be at peace in your life yet let it be in your hearts still how vnreasonable soeuer men be and the rather should you be carefull hereof both because you are called of GOD to it and besides you are all members of the same body Lastly adde vnto all these amiablenes and thankfulnes one to another And thus of the matter of holinesse Now I must also stirre you vp to a due respect of the meanes of holines which is the word Verse 16. Let the vvord of CHRIST dvvel in you richly in all vvisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymmes and spirituall songs singing vvith grace in your hearts to the LORD And so both the word in generall and the Psalmes in speciall For the word in generall you must remember it is the word of CHRIST both as the subiect and the cause of it and you should neuer be satisfied till you grow familiar and plentifull in it through the daily vse of it both in your hearts and houses also and that with all iudgement and discretion not seeking or vsing it coldly peruersly carnally or indiscreetly and this word you must imploy both to teach you and one another what you know not and to admonish you and other for what you doe not And in speciall be carefull of the Psalmes remembring that they also are the word of CHRIST and the rather considering the exquisite variety of sweet matter in them but in singing obserue these rules First exercise the graces of the heart according to the matter of the Psalme Secondly doe it with attention and vnderstanding Thirdly respect GODS glory in it and his holy presence Lastly be carefull of the end of all your actions Verse 17. And vvhatsoeuer yee shall doe in vvord or deede doe all in the name of the LORD IESVS giuing thanks to GOD euen the Father by him Verse 18. Wiues submit your selues to your Husbands as it is comely in the LORD Verse 19. Husbands loue your Wiues and be not bitter vnto them Verse 20. Children obey your Parents in all things for this is vvell-pleasing to the LORD Verse 21. Fathers prouoke not your children to anger lest they be discouraged Verse 22. Seruants be obedient vnto them that are your Masters according to the flesh in all things not vvith eye-seruice as men pleasers but in singlenesse of heart fearing GOD. Verse 23. And vvhatsoeuer yee do do it heartily as to the LORD not vnto men Verse 24. Knovving that of the Lord ye shall receiue the revvard of the inheritāce for ye serue the Lord Christ Verse 25. But he that doth vvrong shall receiue for the vvrong that he hath done there is no respect of persons both that all be done to the glory of GOD in CHRIST all I say both in word and deed beginning with calling on the name of CHRIST and ending with the sacrifice of thanksgiuing which must be offered vnto GOD in the mediation of CHRIST aswell as your prayers Thus I haue briefly laid before you the rules that concerne holinesse as you are Christians in the generall Now I thinke it meete to propound some duties that are more particular and I will onely instance in the familie and there I begin with Wiues whose word is be subiect an epitome of their duty and a thing GOD most stands vpon and which Women most faile in And great reason for here lieth the true comelinesse and beauty of a Wife t is not in her face and garments but in her subiection to her Husband And the rather should you be subiect because GOD hath prouided you shall not be pressed but in the LORD not in any thing against the word Now for Husbands their word is loue as that GOD most stands vpon and they most faile in And in particular I giue them warning to looke to one vice aboue many and that is that they be not bitter to their Wiues And for children their word is obedience and they must know that GOD so inioynes it that he will haue it done throughly they must obey in all things and submit their wills and desires to their Parents For this is a thing that will not only keepe and increase their Parents loue to them but it is also wondrous well-pleasing to GOD himselfe Parents also must take heed they sin not against their children not only by too much indulgence but also by prouoking them and that not onely to sin but to passion by vniust precepts or contumelies and disgraces or hard vsage or immoderate correction and that as for other reasons so lest they be discouraged either from loue of well-doing or of obeying them You that are Seruants must also with great care attend your duties your word also is obedience and the rather because your Masters haue authoritie but onely ouer your flesh not ouer your consciences but in your obedience see to it it be in all things that concerne the subiection of the outward man But let not your seruice be onely when your Masters looke on or fitted onely to please men but obey euen in the singlenesse of your hearts as in GODS presence where you should feare to displease Neither let what you do be done out of a slauish feare but from the heart with all willingnes as doing therein seruice to GOD and not to men only Knowing infallibly that if men would not reward you for your paines faithfulnes yet GOD will who will not vse you as seruants but prouide for you as sons and heires to him For in all this labor GOD accounts you as the seruants of Christ and will reward all as if all had bin done to him And contrariwise he that doth wrong be he Master or Seruant shall receiue of the LORD for the wrong that he hath done for GOD is no accepter of persons CERTAINE OF THE choisest and chiefest points handled in the third CHAPTER A Threefold resurrection fol. 2. How a man may know whether he be risen with Christ fol.
of Gods works of old stretch foorth thy hand vnto God and let thy soule desire after him if he shew thee his louing kindnesse thou hast enough hide thee with the Lord by daily and secret praier and he will teach thee his will and his spirit shall leade thee and if he see it meet he will bring thy soule out of aduersitie and execute his righteous iudgement vpon all those that haue oppressed thee T is the Lord that quickneth the dead Rom. 4. and calleth things that are not as if they were Lastly hath the Lord deliuered thee out of desperate and deadly crosses Then let the vowes of God be vpon thee and render thou his praise and confesse his name before the sonnes of men i Ps 56.12.13 Your life is hid Doct. The happinesse and spirituall felicitie of Christians is hid and that vsually from the men of the world and many times from the faithfull First the life of Christians is hid from the world Their life is hid from the men of this world First because God who is their life k Deut. 30. vlt. is hid from them Secondly because the glory of their naturall life is many times buried in the gulfe of outward trouble l 2 Cor. 6.9 Thirdly because the life of grace which is only brought to light by the Gospell m 2 Tim. 1.10 is hid from the perceiuing of the naturall man whom the God of this world hath blinded n 2 Cor. 4.4 Fourthly because the way of holy conuersation is hid from them for carnall men are all strangers from the life of God o Eph. 4.17 It is a narrow way and few there bee that finde it p Mat. 7.14 Fiftly because many of the priuiledges of a gracious life are hid from them As first the inrolling of a Christian in the booke of life q Esay 4.4 Phil. 4.3 Secondly the seale of the spirit of promise r 2 Cor. 1.22 Thirdly pardon of sinne Wicked men perhaps know the faults of Gods children but not the forgiuenesse of those faults Fourthly the power of the meanes The word is a sauour of life ſ 2 Cor. 2.14 and hath spirit and life in it t Ioh. 6. Yet it is as a treasure hid in the field or a little leauen hid in three peckes of meale u Matt. 13. Fiftly comfort in their affliction Wicked men know their afflictions but not their consolations x 2 Cor. 2.9 they seldome or neuer marke the glorious issue and how God compasseth them about with ioyfull deliuerance And generally we may burst out with the Psalmist and say How great is the goodnesse thou hast laid vp for them that trust in thee y Psal 31.19 It is great goodnesse but yet note that hee saith it is laid vp Lastly in respect of the life of glory the world knowes not Christians for it doth not yet appeare what they shall be z 1 Ioh. 3.12 Seeing this is so that the life of Christians is hid from the world as it should inferre the Apostles former exhortation so it should further teach vs not to respect nor care for the iudgement counsell censures c. of carnall men in the whole or any part of Christian life for it is hid from them and they know not of what they speake Yea the life of Christians is hid many times from themselues Nay in the second place sometimes the life of a Christian may bee hid from Christians also themselues so as they cannot discerne their owne happinesse especially in some fits of tentation and seldome or neuer doe they fully discerne in this world so much as the glory of their present estate Dauid thought he was cast out of Gods sight a Psal 31.22 Psal 77. And hee most mournfully makes his mone in the 77. Psalme as if hee were almost resolued that the Lord would not be mercifull to him Iacob cries out My way is hid from the Lord b Esay 40.27 and the people somewhat vehemently say Verily thou O God hidest they selfe O God the Sauiour of Israel c Esay 45.15 Which should comfort afflicted Christians since they may here see that it hath beene an vsuall distresse of Gods deare seruants to haue their life hid in God Vse And withall it may warne vs let him that now standeth in the refreshings of the comforts of Gods presence take heed lest he fall But especially it should quicken vs to a desire to be gone and to be in heauen that we might be past all danger But lest Christians should be discouraged he addeth two comforts First it is with Christ Christs life was hid and in what respects Secondly it is in God With Christ The life of Christ also was hid while hee liued For first the glory of his diuinitie was couered as it were with a vaile in his flesh Secondly his outward glory of his life amongst men was obscured by the many crosses he sustained for our sinnes d Esa 53.7 so as the world did not owne him and hee was without forme and despised among men Thirdly his life was hid in the graue Fourthly it was hid in respect of the horrors he felt in his soule the Lord as it were hiding his louing countenance from him for the time Fiftly his glory in heauen is hid from the world and the Saints on earth haue but a glimpse of it All this may comfort vs seeing nothing can befall vs but what hath befallen our head and if the world will not acknowledge our glory and the beautie of the profession of sinceritie it matters not it could not see the excellencie of Christ when he was on earth In God Our life is hid in God either in respect of obiect Obiectiuè Causaliter because it principally consists in the vision of God or causally as God is the first cause to beget it and still to preserue it or else with Christ in God that is with Christ who incomprehensibly rests in the bosome of the Father or lastly in God that is apud Deum in the power of God to dispose of it at his pleasure Which should comfort vs seeing none hath power ouer our life but God and teach vs to commend our spirits into his hands VERS 4. When Christ who is our life shall appeare then shall yee also appeare with him in glory THese words containe the second motiue to perswade to the meditation of heauenly things The second motiue is taken from the consideration of the appearance of Christ the glory of heauenly minded Christians at the day of Iudgement If men would consider of the certaine and glorious appearance of the Lord Iesus Christ when he shall come to take account of all the actions of all men and put an end to all the earthly felicities which man hath with so many inuentions sought and withall but thinke how vnauailable all earthly things will be
at that day either to deliuer from the terror of the iudgement or the horror of the euerlasting miserie will certainly follow if men be not more carefull to prouide for their soules before-hand by following the studie of better things but especially if men would consider the great gaine and profit that godlinesse at that day will bring and the incomparable glory that all heauenly minded Christians shall then bee exalted vnto The thought of these things daily and truly laid vnto mens hearts would much excite and stirre vp to a constant care of preparing our selues against that day and would greatly weane vs from the cares and delights in these transitorie and earthly things here below that will so little auaile the owners in the day of death and will bee of so little vse in that immortall estate vnto which after this iudgement the godly shall be translated So that these words offer two things to be intreated of First the glorious appearance of Christ Secondly the glorious appearance of the Christian in the day of Christ But before I enter vpon the particular and full discourse of those two glorious appearances some things may be briefly and generally noted 1. That the knowledge of those last things is not a curious or vnprofitable Obs 1 knowledge but contrariwise ought to be searched after as exceeding vsefull in the life of man 2. That the doctrine of the glory of Christ and Christians in that last day Obs 2 is now but little knowne or discerned and that the word appeare imports The Deuill sensualitie and guiltinesse make many men haue little minde to thinke of the day of iudgement so as the fulnesse of Christs maiestie or of the Christians glory will not appeare till the very iudgement day The better sort know but in part and the worser sort are so blinded by the deuill and besotted with sensualitie and the loue of earthly things and withall are so conscious to themselues of the euils they are guiltie of that they haue no desire to discerne or to be taught to know the doctrine of Christs comming Obs 3 3. Those words which is our life are not to be altogether passed ouer they plainly affirme that Christ is our life Christ is our life and this is an honor that the Lord challengeth to himselfe and therefore as hee would be acknowledged to be the way and the truth so also he addeth I am the life a Ioh. 14.6 and to this end he came that men in him might haue life b Joh. 10.10 And with great reason is Christ said to be our life for he formed vs at first when we were not and quickened vs when wee were dead and hath prouided a better life for vs and doth preserue vs vnto eternall life and daily renew life and power in the hearts of his people and will raise our bodies at the last day Vses The consideration hereof may both teach vs and trie vs it may teach vs as to acknowledge that wee haue receiued life from Christ so to dedicate what remaineth of our life to the honour and seruice of him that is the author and sole Lord of our liues and withall to runne vnto him for the daily preseruation and renewing of life and louelinesse in vs. And it may trie too for till we can truly say out of feeling and experience Christ is the life of our liues we shall hardly finde reason of comfortable hope in our appearance before him at the last day Who may truly say and professe that Christ is their life And they only may truly professe that Christ is their life that first can liue by the faith of Christ accounting themselues to haue enough if they may see comfort in Gods promises made in Christ and feele the ioyfull fruits of Christs fauour and presence howsoeuer it goe with them for outward things Secondly that doe continually sacrifice and deuote vnto Christ their best desires and endeuours and that with resolution to cleaue to his seruice all the dayes of their life And thirdly that can bewaile his absence or displeasure as the most bitter crosse so as they could feele and out of affection say of such times and such a condition that the true life of their life was absent or remoued from them Now I come to the appearance of Christ I haue not here to doe with the appearance of Christ as it is considered in the fore-ordination of God before the foundation of the world c 1 Pet. 1.20 Six appearances of Christ but of the accomplishment of it and so Christs appearance is of diuers kindes For first hee hath appeared vnto the whole world as the true light that made the world and lightneth euery man that commeth into the world d Ioh. 19.10 and thus he appeared in the light of nature Secondly he appeares to the whole Church consisting both of good and bad by the generall light of doctrine and Scripture but many receiue not his testimonie e Ioh. 3.31.32 Thirdly he hath appeared corporally in the dayes of his flesh once in the end of the world to put away sinne by the sacrifice of himselfe f Heb. 9.26 1 Ioh. 3.5 and to dissolue the worke of the deuill g 1 Ioh. 3.8 Then was fulfilled that great mysterie God was manifested in the flesh h 1 Tim. 3.16 Fourthly he hath and doth daily appeare in the hearts of all the faithfull by the manifestation of the spirit of grace i 1 Cor. 12.7 whereby hee doth not onely shine but also dwell in them k Eph. 3.16.17 Fiftly he hath and doth appeare in the day of death by the ministerie of his Angels to translate the blessed soules to their place of peace rest and ioy And lastly hee shall appeare in the end of the world in glorious maiestie to iudge all men and Angels and this is the appearance here mentioned Threefold iudgement The doctrine of the last iudgement hath beene alwayes vrged There is noted to be a threefold iudgement The first iudgement and that was accomplished on man and Angels at their first fall Then there is a middle iudgement and so God iudgeth the wicked and the righteous euery day And there is a last iudgement and that is this iudgement about which Christ is here said to appeare The doctrine of the last iudgement is in a manner onely to bee found in the Church They were darke and vncertaine things the Philosopher could see by the light of nature And the Lords messengers haue in all ages from the first beginning till now mightily vrged the terror of this day to awaken the secure world Henoch prophesied of it l Jud. 15. so did Moses m Deut. 32. and Dauid n Psal 50. and Salomon o Eccl. 11.9 and Daniel p Dan. 7.13 and Ioel q Joel 3. and Malachie r Mal. 4. so did Christ himselfe Å¿ Matt. 24. and Paul t
day of Christ they haue Quest 2 not now Answ Answ First they shall haue freedome from all the former bondage and vanitie Secondly they shall bee deliuered into the libertie of the sonnes of God that is they shall haue a most excellent estate when the children of God are glorified Wherein the Lord shewes his iustice in that the creature shall haue restitution for what is lost by man Ob. Ob. But shall there bee a resurrection of creatures as well as men Sol. Sol. No for this restitution shall be made in specie not in indiuiduo 1. Not to euery particular of euery kinde or sort but to the sort or kinde of all creatures and that shall be done to the creatures then found in their seuerall sorts The fourth consequent of the iudgement shall be the possession of the glory of Christians appointed by the sentence of the Iudge But of this afterwards in the end of this verse The fift consequent of iudgement shall be the deliuering vp of the kingdome to the Father and so the laying downe of Christs office for when Christ hath finally and fully subdued Sathan death and wicked men and hath fully reconciled the elect to God then will there be no word of any such gouernment in heauen as was on earth Hee shall not neede any longer to rule them either by ciuill Magistrates or by his need and discipline or by any other way which onely did agree to the times of the Churches warfare and pilgrimage but he shall neuer cease to liue and triumph with them in all perfections of happy contentment and glory Thus of the consequents of Iudgement And thus also of the doctrine of Christs last appearance The vses follow The Vses The consideration of the doctrine of the last Iudgement may serue for three principall vses First for terror Secondly for comfort Thirdly for instruction First this is iustly a wonderfull terrible doctrine to wicked men that heape vp wrath against this day of wrath and by their wilfull impenitencie prouoke this glorious Iudge How can it but be terrible when the holy Ghost giues warning that the Lord Iesus will then shew himselfe from heauen with his mighty Angels in flaming fire to render vengeance on all those that know not God and haue not obeyed the Gospell How can it bee but terrible when wicked men shall be punished with euerlasting perdition from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power How can it but be terrible when they shall feele their conscience exquisitly griping them and gnawing vpon them and when they shall see the deuils to torment them and hell to deuoure them when they shall see the world burning about them and the good Angels forcing them away and all both men and Angels applauding their Iudgement and knowing all their sinnes they must not thinke that the Iudge will deale then as he doth now Now he iudgeth them secretly euery day but it is many times insensibly or with lesser plagues but then he will most openly poure vpon them the full vials of his wrath Heere they are iudged that they may be amended but there their iudgement shall be that they may be confounded for there will be no place of repentance Deceiue not thy selfe Christ will not come the second time as he came the first hee came then to be iudged but now to iudge hee shall then be seene with terror that was before looked vpon with contempt hee shewed his patience in his first comming but now he will shew his power he appeared then in the forme of a seruant but now he will appeare in the forme of a King greater then all Kings Then hee professed not to iudge any man but now he proclaimeth hee will iudge all men It was commonly thought if any man saw God he should die alas alas how then shall these wofull wretches doe that must see him in the vnutterable fiercenes of his irefull indignation If the powers of heauen shall be shaken at his pleasure oh how shall the miserable heart of the guiltie sinner be rent into 1000. peeces with vnmedicinable sorrowes If Foelix tremble to heare tell of iudgement what will poore Foelix doe when he must feele iudgement both in the sentence and execution If the word of Christ on earth had such power as it had in the garden to strike stubborne hearted men to the earth what power thinke wee will it haue when be speakes as the Lord from heauen When Ezechiel Daniel and the Apostle Iohn and others saw but one Angell in a lesser manifestation of his glory comming as a Messenger of good tidings they fall downe and are full of singular feare if the sight of one Angell bee so terrible what will the sight of all the thousand thousands of Angels be especially when they come cloathed with all their brightnesse of glory And if good men that had good consciences were so frighted what shall become of euill men with their euill consciences And if the messengers of good tidings doe so amaze how shall the executioners of a most terrible sentence compasse them about with confusion both of face and heart If the drowning of the old world the burning of Sodome the opening of the earth to swallow vp Dathan and Abiram and such like iudgments haue so much horrour in them how then can any tongue expresse or heart now conceiue the horror of this day when all the millions of wicked men shall be deliuered vp to those eternall and remedilesse torments If it be such a shame to doe penance for one fault in one congregation where men will pray for the offender What a shame will it be when all thy faults shall be discouered before all the whole world without all hope of pittie or helpe Nor is it possible for them to escape this fearfull iudgement the Iudge will not be vnconstant nor will he take reward he will not be ouerlaid with confusion of businesses he will no way be corrupted in iudgement Not to appeare is impossible and to appeare is intolerable here will be no respect of persons nor will the Iudge care how it be taken nor will he be deceiued with colours and circumstances Hee hath tarried so long hee cannot be charged with rashnesse nor can there be a hiding of any particulars from him Euery inclination thought desire word and worke shall surely come to iudgement And lastly there can be no impediment to hinder execution But here a question may arise viz. Who are they that are in danger hereof Quest 1 I answer All impenitent sinners Answ But yet there are some kinde of sinners that are expresly named in Scripture and therefore if thou be any of that number preuent thine owne ruine by repentance or else thou shalt certainly perish I vndertake not to reckon all it shall suffice to mention some of the chiefe sinners that Christ will be sure to remember at that day The Beast and the false Prophet
and all that worship his image and renew his marke shall then bee cast aliue into the lake that burnes with fire and brimstone a Reu. 19.20 False teachers which priuily bring in damnable heresies or speake euill of the way of truth haue their condemnation long since determined and agreed vpon b 2 Pet. 2.1.2.3 All Atheists that make a mocke of religion and the comming of Christ shall haue a principall portion of the fierce furie of Christ c 2 Pet. 3.3 c. All couetous worldlings and greedie rich men shall then be in a wofull case for the very rust of their cankred gold and siluer shall witnesse against them and shall eat their flesh as it were fire d Jam. 5.13 All mercilesse men shall then haue iudgement without mercy e Jam. 2.13 All whoremongers and adulterers and all that defile the flesh God will be sure to iudge f Heb. 13.4 A fearfull looking for of iudgement and violent fire shall deuoure all those Apostataes that sinne willingly after they haue receiued and acknowledged the truth g Heb. 10.27 How sure doe yee suppose shall his punishment be that doth despight the spirit of grace by which hee was sanctified h Heb. 10.29 All those that haue troubled Gods seruants shall beare their condemnation whosoeuer they be i Gal. 5.10 O man thou art inexcusable that iudgest another man wherein thou art guiltie thy selfe for the iudgement of God must needs be in truth against such as commit such things k Rom. 2.1.2.3 Especially if men grow master-like in censuring it will increase to greater condemnation l Iam. 3.1 All goats or vnruly Christians that will not be kept within Gods fence that is will not be ruled by Gods ordinances and ministers shall be separate in that day from Gods sheepe and as a people accursed to be cast into an vnauoidable fellowship with the deuill and his angels m Mat. 25. All hypocrites that say and doe not or doe all their worke to be seene of men take Gods couenant into their mouthes and hate to be reformed how shall they escape the damnation to come n Psal 50. Mat. 6. 23. All wicked men with their scant measure and deceitfull weights and wicked ballances shall neuer be iustified in the day of the Lord o Mich. 6.10.11 What shall I say It were too long to proceed to reckon all and it is a short labour to conclude with the Apostle No wantons nor drunkards nor railers nor extortioners nor theeues nor wrathfull persons nor gluttons nor idolaters nor iesters nor filthy talkers nor fearfull persons nor liers nor any that loue lies shall be able to stand in the day of Christ but shall be shut out of the kingdome of heauen and cast into the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone And thus of the vse for terror Secondly vpon the meditation of this last iudgement diuers lessons for Vse 2 our instruction are inforced First it should restraine vncharitable iudging and censuring one of another for lesse matters especially for things indifferent Who art thou that iudgest another mans seruant he standeth or falleth to his owne master Christ is the Lord of quicke and dead And therefore why doest thou condemne thy brother or why doest thou despise thy brother for we shall all appeare before the iudgement seat of Christ Inasmuch as the Lord Iesus Christ will iudge the secrets of all hearts and giue a iust triall to the actions of all men why should wee forestall his iudgement or in doubtfull matters b 1 Cor. 4.5 arrogate to our selues this honour of Christ If wee could consider that we shall then euery one giue accounts vnto God for himselfe c Ro. 14.12.13 wee should finde worke enough to doe to looke to our owne score Let vs not therefore brethren iudge one another any more Secondly are there any matters of difference amongst vs Let the Saints iudge them and end them d 1 Cor. 6 2. God will be contented to put his cause to them at the last day for we know the Saints shall iudge the world and therefore why should we refuse their arbitration Thirdly it should order and moderate our sorrowes for our dead friends Wee should not sorrow as people without hope seeing we beleeue that all that sleepe in Iesus God will bring with him e 1 Thess 4.13.14.17.18 Wee shall meet together againe in that day and afterwards liue with the Lord together for euer And therefore wee should comfort one another with these words Fourthly this summons to iudgement giues a dreadfull warning and admonition to the world euen to all men euery where to repent Inasmuch as God hath appointed a day wherein hee will iudge the world in righteousnesse by the man whom he hath appointed whereof he hath giuen an assurance in that he raised him from the dead f Act. 17.32 woe will be vnto vs if that day come vpon vs vnawares before wee haue made our peace and humbled our selues before God and by vnfained repentance turned from all our euill wayes It is an vnsearchable compassion that God shewes when he offers vs this mercy that if we will iudge our selues we shall not be iudged of the Lord in that day g 1 Cor. 11.34 And it will on the other side excessiuely incense his wrath when hauing such grace offered wee neglect it and death and iudgement finde our sinnes both vnremitted on Gods part and vnrepented on ours Fiftly seeing all these things must be dissolued how should it fire vs and daily quicken our dead and drowsie spirits to a constant care of all possible holy conuersation and godlines h 2 Pet. 3.12 vnlesse we would discouer our selues either to be Atheists that mocke at the iudgement to come or men giuen to a spirit of slumber that in soule sleepe it out and will not consider our latter end Seeing wee are all Gods stewards let vs arme our selues as they that must then giue accounts of our stewardship And since wee haue all receiued some of Gods talents and gifts in our seuerall places let vs be carefull to approue our selues to be good seruants and faithfull such as can returne them with aduantage lest the portion of the seruant that hid his masters talents in the earth fall vpon vs. Lastly since the day of iudgement is the day of our full and finall redemption and since he shall come as a theefe in the night euen in the houre that we thinke not let vs therefore watch i Mat. 24.44 and be ready alwaies carefull and diligent sighing and groaning longing and praying k Reuel 22. hasting to and looking for l 2 Pet. 3. this glorious appearance and reuelation of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ Vse 3 Thirdly this may be a singular comfort to all mortified and penitent Christians they may lift vp their heads and reioice with ioy vnspeakable and
5. and the reasons v. 6.7 Diuision of the verse In the fifth verse there are 2. things First the proposition of mortification in these words mortifie therefore your members that are on earth Secondly a catalogue of vices to be mortified or the enumeration of certaine speciall sinnes a Christian should be carefull to keepe himselfe from viz. fornication vncleanesse c. The necessity of mortification The generall consideration of the whole exhortation to mortification should imprint this deeply in our hearts that vnlesse we doe repent of those sinnes haue been in our natures and liues and be carefull to flee from the corruptions that are in the world we shall neuer haue comfort that we are accepted with God We should bring to the particular opening of all the verses a mind resolued of the generall And to quicken vs a little the more to the respect of this doctrine and to enforce the care of parting with our sins I will briefly touch by the way some few reasons why we should bee willing to entertaine all counsell that might shew vs any course to get rid of sin First our vices are the fruits of our corrupted nature They arise not from any noble or diuine instinct but are the effects of base flesh in vs. And we should carry the thoughts of it in our minds Gal. 5.19 when wee are inclined or tempted to vice wee should say within our selues this euill proceedes not from any thing that might declare greatnesse or true spirit in a man what is passion or lust or couetousnesse but the base worke of the filthy degenerated flesh Secondly our vices are the onely things that defile vs and make vs loathsome before God and men T is not meane clothes nor a deformed body or a poore house or homely fare or any such thing that makes a man truely contemptible no no it is only sin can defile ſ Mat. 15.19 and bring that which is true contempt Thirdly the bond and forfeiture of the law or couenant of workes lieth vpon the backe of euery man that liues in sinne without repentance For the law is giuen to the lawlesse and disobedient as the Apostle shewes to vngodly and sinners to whoremongers and liers to all that liue in any sinne contrary to wholesome doctrine t 1 Tim. 1.9.10 Fourthly are not strange punishments to the workers of iniquitie is not destruction to the wicked u Ioh. 31.2.3 what portion can they haue of God from aboue and what inheritance from the almighty from an high the hearts of holy men that haue considered the fearefull terrors of God denounced in scripture against the vices of men haue euen broke within them and their bones haue shaken for the presence of the Lord and for his holy word x Ier. 23.9 Fiftly Christ will be a swift witnesse y Mal. 3.7 against all fearelesse and carelesse men that being guilty of these vices or the like z 1 Cor. 6.9 Eph. 5.6 make not speed to breake them off by repentance Lastly know yee not that the vnrighteous shall not enter into the kingdome of heauen be not deceiued for these things the wrath of God commeth vpon the children of disobedience Now I come to the words particularly Therefore This word caries this exhortation to something before If it be referred to our rising with Christ v. 1. then it notes that we can neuer haue our part in Christs resurrection till we feele the vertue of his death killing sinne in vs. If it be referred to the meditation of heauenly things then it notes that we can neuer set our affections on things that are aboue till we haue mortified our members that are on earth The corruption of our natures and liues are the cause of such disability to contemplate of or affect heauenly things And as any are more sinfull they are more vnable thereunto If the word be referred to the appearance of Christ in the former verse then it imports that mortification is of great necessity vnto our preparation to the last iudgement and will be of great request in the day of Christ Mortifie To mortifie is to kill or to apply that which will make deade The Lord workes in matters of grace God vvorkes by contraries in the iudgement of flesh and bloud by contraries Men must be poore if they would haue a kingdom a Mat. 5.3.4 men must sorrow if they would be comforted Men must serue if they would be free b Ioh. 8. And here men must die if they would liue Gods thoughts are not as mans but his waies are higher then mans waies as the heauens are higher then the earth c Esay 55.10 Which may teach vs as to liue by faith so not to trust the iudgement the world or the flesh in the things of God But the manifest doctrine from this word is this that true repentance hath in it the mortification of sinne And so it implies diuers things First that we must not let sinne alone till it die it selfe Note but we must kill sinne while it might yet liue It is no repentance to leaue sinne when it leaueth vs or to giue it ouer when we can commit it no longer Secondly that true repentance makes a great alteration in a man Thirdly that it hath in it paine and sorrow men vse not to die ordinarily without much paine and sure it is sinne hath a strong heart it is not soone killed it is one thing to sleep another thing to die Note many men with lesse a doe get sinne asleepe that it doth not so stirre in them but alas there must be more ado to get it dead by true mortification Fourthly true repentance extinguisheth the power of sinne and the vigour of it It makes it like a dead corps that neither it stirs it selfe nor will be stirred by occasions perswa●ions commandements or stroaks It is a wonderfull testimony of sound mortification when we haue gotten our old corruption to this passe and constancy in prayer and hearing and daily confession and sorrow for sin will bring it to be thus with vs especially if we striue with God and be earnest with spirituall importunity watching the way of our owne hearts to wound sinne so soone as we see it begin to stirre Yet I would not bee mistaken as if I meant that a Christian could attaine such a victory ouer sinne that it should not be in him at all nor that hee should neuer be stirred with the temptations or enticements or occasions of euill But my meaning is that in some measure and in the most sinnes a Christian doth finde it so and in euery sinne his desire and endeuour is daily to haue it so And his desire is not without some happy successe so as sinne dyeth or lyeth a dying euerie day But heere a question may arise Quest Did not the Apostle grant they were dead before and if they were dead to the world they
God and worke righteousnesse they may hold out to beare the crosse for the Lord will meet them in the vse of the meanes Esay 64.5 to the great ease and ioy of their hearts Excellently speaketh the Prophet Dauid vnto the Lord acknowledging this point when he said Thou answerest them O Lord our God thou wast a God that forgauest them though thou tookest vengeance of their inuentions a Psal 99.8 And the Prophet Micah seemeth to say that while Gods people sit in darknesse yet the Lord can be a light vnto them b Mich. 7.7.8 for their God will heare them And herein also the Lord reserueth his mercies from the wicked so as when they fall they haue no assurance of rising nor is the Lord carefull to lighten their darknesse I meane they haue no promise for it For if the Lord shew them fauour if they repent not it will make them more vnexcusable and their iudgement the heauier Thirdly it differs in the end for the end of Gods wrath on his owne seruants is their good and saluation They are iudged that they might not perish with the world c 1 Cor 11.32 And they are whipped by the Father of spirits that they may bring forth the quiet fruit of righteousnesse d Heb. 12.11 In a word Gods iudgements are as medicines to heale them But on the other side wicked men are vessels of wrath and all tends to the fitting of them to destruction The Lord comes not to them to trie but to consume not to better them but for their vvilfull impenitencie to declare his iustice vpon them All these their differences are notably exprest by the Prophet Esay in his 27. and 28. chapter for hee sheweth that the Lord is a carefull and wise husbandman and the husbandman in nature hath this discretion that he should not plow all day to sow e Esay 21.24 so is it with the Lord he doth not continue still plowing with long furrowes vpon the backes of the righteous When he hath plowed vp the fallow ground of their hearts he will not still goe ouer them to breake the clods that remaine but hauing once made himselfe a furrow he will sow and not plow And for the second the Prophet seriously expostulateth with such as should any way incline to thinke that the wicked the godly were smitten alike Hath he smitten him saith the Prophet as he smote those that smote him f Esay 27.7 As if he should aske hath the Lord plagued Israel as he plagued those that were enemies vnto Israel And then he shewes this difference that when the Lord came to visit Israel hee contended with him in measure and smote him in his bunches whereas when God smites at a wicked man Vers 8. he smites at the root and after many blowes he will continually haue him downe And for the least difference the Prophet shewes further that by this shall the iniquitie of Iacob be purged and this is all fruit to take away his sinne h vers 9. As if he would plainely affirme that God meant so to cast Israel into the furnace as nothing should be left but the drosse his purpose was therefore to afflict him that he might medicine him against his sinne And thus of the sixt verse VERS 7. In which yee also walked sometime when yee liued in them THese words containe the second reason to inforce the mortification of vice and it is taken from their owne experience as if he would say yee haue liued a long time in these corruptions and sins and therefore it is sufficient that you haue spent the time past in these lusts of the Gentiles it is high time now to abandon them besides you should remember the misery you liued in by reason of sinne and from thence learne to confirme your selues in a constant course of resisting and striuing against the occasions and beginnings of those sinnes From the coherence and the generall consideration of the whole verse diuers things may be briefly noted First Obseruations from the coherence that the knowledge and meditation of a mans misery by nature is a good medicine to kill lust and couetousnesse The Apostle like a wise Physitian vseth here the counsell hereunto as a principall part of his direction For in that he puts them in minde of it it shewes that they should minde it by themselues much more For not only it will shew that these sinnes did then abound but the very thought of such a wofull estate will beat downe kill by degrees the vitious inclinations of nature vnto such sinnes Secondly in that the Colossians can beare it to be told of their sinnes past it giues vs occasion to take notice of this for a truth that where a man hath soundly repented of any sin he can easily beare it to be touched with the remembrance of it and with lowlinesse doth endure the needfull discourse concerning it It is a notable testimonie that a man hath not truely repented of sinne when he is so impatient and vnquiet in the mention or remembrance of sinne If a man haue a wounded arme while it is vncured Simile the least touch of it makes a man start and cry out but when it is whole you may gripe it hard and yet he aileth nothing at all So it is with our consciences in matters of sinne They are but in a miserable case that rage and fret and reuile when the sinnes they haue liued in are by publike doctrine disgraced or threatned But may some one say The profit of remembring our misery by nature to what end doth the Apostle so often put them in minde of their sinfulnesse and misery past I answer he doth it for great reasons For the more men thinke of their misery by nature the more it quickneth to a sense and admiration of Gods mercy that hath drawne them out of such a wretched estate Besides it is a notable meanes to keepe a Christian humble and to make him watchfull ouer a nature that by lamentable experience hath been so prone to sinne and it serues to stir vp Christians to a more eager desire and diligence in vsing the meanes to aduantage them in knowledge and grace T is now time to redeeme the time that hath been so long lost And it will make a childe of God industrious in Gods worke seeing he hath spent so much time in the seruice of the deuill the world and the flesh And further it helps a man to some measure of patience and meeknesse and compassion in dealing with the sinnes of other men considering that he himselfe hath been vnwise disobedient seruing the lusts and diuers pleasures c. And lastly Hovv farre priuate men may meddle vvith the former sins of others as was before noted it serues to kill the daily lusts that may bud and sprout out after calling Now concerning the remembring of the sinnes of others we must know the Apostle
Plenteously The originall word notes two things 1. The measure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so it is well rendred plenteously 2. The worth of the knowledge of the word and so it is by some rendred richly In the first sense it teacheth vs that wee should labour by all meanes to abound in the knowledge and vse of the word It should be not in a scant and sparing measure or in some parts of it but we should grow from measure to measure and from knowledge to knowledge In the second sense it teacheth vs that the knowledge of the word is the Christians riches so he saith 1 Cor. 1.5 rich in all speech and knowledge Christians should account their vtterance in holy and profitable speeches and conferences and the inward notions of sauing knowledge as their best wealth so as they should neuer thinke themselues poore so long as they may haue plenty of knowledge in the vse of the meanes Thus Dauid reckons of his wealth Gods statutes more deere to him then thousands of gold and siluer o Ps 119.32 and that knowledge he can get from the word out of Gods treasury maugre the malice and power of the Deuill or euill men he accounts more worth then rich spoiles p Ps 119.162 this may appeare in the contrary in the case of the Laodiceans q Reu. 3.18 19. In all wisdome Wisdome is sometimes taken for vertue as folly is for sin but here I take it for knowledge and that not as the gaining of heauenly wisdome is the end of the entertainment of the word but as it notes the manner how we should entertaine the word Of the vvise vse and entertainment of the vvord This wise manner of entertaining the word I consider both negatiuely and affirmatiuely Negatiuely to handle the word wisely is not to handle or vse it First coldly fruitlesly or vnaptly Secondly peruersly in wresting the word to ill ends to nourish curiositie ambition or sin Thirdly carnally as the Capernaites that know no flesh of Christ but the flesh of his body nor any eating but carnall Fourthly not indiscreetly when we come abroad into company we should so professe and vse the word as that we dishonour it not by indiscretion by not heeding places times occasions c. Affirmatiuely to vse the word wisely is in the generall especially to teach our selues And to this end First to vnderstand it Secondly to seeke profitable things not curious pleasing things only Thirdly so to try all things as to keepe that which is good Good I say particularly and for our owne vse there be some things in hearing reading c. that doe exceedingly not only affect vs but are in speciall manner fitting vs now it is a speciall wisdome to keepe these things whatsoeuer else we lose Fourthly to wait vpon all the opportunities of getting profit by the word to know our seasons q Ierem. 8.7 Fifthly in cariage abroad not to be so indiscreetly open in the discouerie of our mindes and knowledge and opinions as to be catched by the fraud of any and to this end not to trust all that faine themselues to be iust men r Luk. 20.20 In all wisdome All for measure all for diuersitie of the things knowne all for sinceritie of the obseruation of the rules of wisdome in the manner of entertaining the word all wisdome that is all necessarie to saluation Thus of the explication The vses follow and those are either generall from all the words The vses generall and speciall or speciall from each of them The generall vses are for reproofe information instruction or consolation 1. For reproofe if it must be thus of all entertained how great a sinne is it to neglect or contemne the word and in as much as this is a great and common sinne it is required and requited by God with foure singular curses The first iudgment vpon the contemners of the word is that all the comforts of the word Foure iudgements vpon contemners of the vvord Esay 29.11 are vnto them as a sealed booke so as that word which is to the faithfull a well-head of all true and sound ioy vnto them is of no taste nor power they can finde some sauour in any profits and sports c. but none in the word The second iudgement is that when they doe for fashion or for feare and other ill ends come to heare the preaching of the word they are many times slaine by the word of Gods mouth and the Prophets euen mow downe scores hundreds and thousands of them so as they are pierced and galled smitten and buffeted with the terrors of the word which is only open to rebuke them and they see that threatning many times comprehends vnder it multitudes of men Ob. Obiect But this comes onely of the seueritie of the teachers that set themselues to preach damnation and to vtter terrible things Sol. Ans This was the obiection in the Prophet Micha his time and vttered by such as bare the name of Iacob to whom all the promises did belong and they were answered by the Prophet that for resoluing of their doubt they should aske two questions of their owne consciences The first was whether they thought their workes were like the workes of Iacob and the rest of the ancient Saints to whom such comforts did belong or whether such vile prophanenesse and wickednes were found in Iacob as was apparantly found in them The second question was whether they did not see that the words of God were alwaies good to such as walke vprightly In all which he shewes that it is not the vncharitable seueritie of Gods seruants Mich. 2.7 for the doctrine is good to good men but the vile prophanenes and contempt of the word in the people that made them lyable to such terrors in the word The third iudgement is that all ciuill praises in men that contemne the wisdome of God in the word are singularly vile in Gods sight Ier. 8.8.9 and he instructeth in wisdome Psal 119.155 Lastly saluation is farre from the wicked because they seeke not Gods statutes the euidence of the hope of a better life is remoued from them so as speaking from their owne sense they auouch it that no man can be sure of eternall life to himselfe and if in the generall the prophane neglect of the word be thus sought out and iudged of God then surely those persons must needs be in great danger that neuer opened their dores to the word neuer taught their children and seruants scarse euer had a Bible in their houses but especially such as shun the word as a true rocke of offence Yea many of Gods children may be iustly rebuked in this that they are so far from shewing that the word hath dwelt plenteously in them that whereas for time and the plenty and power of the meanes Heb. 5.13.12 they might haue beene teachers they haue need againe to be taught the
very principles And they shew it in that they are so inexpert and vnskilfull in the word of righteousnes The second generall vse is for information See the admirable largenesse of the word and the perfectnes aboue all other things vnder the sunne it is good for worship in the temple Psal 119.96 it is good for our affaires in the family it is of vse in prosperity and in aduersity it fits for the profit of all sorts of men at all times and in all places and so doth nothing else in the world The third generall vse is for instruction The meditation of the intertainement of the word in all these words required should teach vs to open our Churches open our houses yea our hearts and all for the word And to this end to consecrate our selues to the studie of the word in all the meanes both publike and priuate Ob. Obiect But if I should it will be in vaine I haue such an ill memory c. Sol. Psal 119.160 Ans The beginning of the word is truth and men should finde by experience the contrary to their feares if they in sinceritie sought vnto God in the word and as for ill memory we must know that a good memorie is the gift of God as well as a good heart and no man hath it naturally wicked men may haue large memories but not sanctified to containe holy things and therefore if men would seeke to God in vprightnesse of desire whatsoeuer they lost yet the iudgement or answer of God in the word preached or by reading or conference which resolueth their doubts pointeth at the meanes to redresse their corruptions c. should not be wholly forgotten The iudgements of his righteousnesse indure for euer that part of knowledge that particularly answers their desires or the experience of their want in themselues this shall be deeply imprinted in them by God so as the vertue thereof shall neuer be lost To conclude seeing the holy Ghost requires all carefull intertainement of the word we should do that vnto it that we would do for the entertaining of some great man into our houses 1. make cleane the roome of our hearts purge out hypocrisie malice c. 2. When the word is come in molest it not take heed of strange affections passions and lusts 3. Receiue it with ioy and expresse all the signes of ioy The last generall vse is for consolation vnto all such as loue the word They should encourage themselues and say with Dauid thy statutes shall be my song so long as I continue in the house of my Pilgrimage Ob. Ob. Sol. Esay 51.7 But our inward desires and delights in the word are mixed withoutward disgraces and scornes of men we are reproched slandered rebuked c. Ans Hearken vnto me ye that know righteousnesse not ye that talke of it or heare them that teach it but yee that know indeed what sinceritie meanes and ye of the people in whose hearts are my lawes as if God would wish them to looke vp and see the great reward of their well doing Ob. Ob. Sol. Ob. Sol. But they might say we are tanted and threatned and disgraced Ans Feare not the reproach of men nor be afraid of their rebukes Ob. But we see that wicked scorners scape vnpunished and are in better credit doing ill then we doing well Ans Though God doe not by sudden iudgements destroy them all at once yet hee promiseth that his curse shall secretly and insensibly eat them as the moth God doth daily iudge them though we see it not and for the faithfull Esay 51.7.8 their righteousnesse shall neuer be taken away by the reproaches of men but it will endure for euer c. Thus of the vses in generall From the particular consideration of each of the words diuers speciall vses may be made Dwell First if the word must dwell with vs it should teach vs to practise what we are here exhorted get the word into our houses let it so dwell with vs that nothing sound more in a Christian house then the word that is to liue comfortably This is to liue in the shadow of the Almightie a Psal 91.1 in the very light of Gods countenance b Psal 140. A house without the word is a very dungeon of darknesse To exercise our selues in the law it will giue our hearts rest in the daies of euill The fathers commandement and the mothers instruction would leade our children and seruants when they walke c Psal 94.12 it would watch for them when they sleepe and when they wake it would talke with them it would be a lanterne and the very way of life to them It would keepe them from the strange woman d Prou. 9.20 to 25. there would not be such filthines in many houses as now commonly appeares to be What can better preserue Iacob from confusion or his face from being pale then if he might see his children the worke of Gods hand framed and fitted by the word in regeneration and the duties of new obedience This would make religious parents to sanctifie Gods name euen to sanctifie the holy one and with singular encouragement from the God of Israel Isa 29.22.23 In you Secondly in that the people are made the subiect persons to bee exhorted hereunto it plainly confutes the opinion and practise of the Papists that either hide the word in a strange tongue or prohibit priuate men from the domesticall and daily vse of it But the Apostle doth not enuie it in the Lords people that the word should dwell plenteously in them as well as in Clergie men Plenteously 3. In that he requires the word should not only dwell with vs but for measure be plenteously there it should teach vs in practise to endeuour it but for explication of this vse I consider of two questions to answer them Quest Quest 1. What must we doe that the word might be in vs plenteously and the knowledge of it abound Ans Answ Six things are to be practised 1. Wee must walke at libertie freeing our heads from worldly cares lusts and delights e Psal 119.45 2. Wee must auoid euill company and say with Dauid Away from mee all yee wicked for I seeke Gods statutes f Ps 119.115 3. We must striue to take away the lets of the practise of what we doe know this Dauid cals the lifting vp of his hands to Gods Law g Ps 119.48 4. We must exercise our selues in the word day and night in reading hearing meditating conference propounding of doubts and comparing of places and all times by all wayes turning our selues into all formes to gaine knowledge 5. We should by praier beseech God to doe two things for vs first to giue vs the spirit of reuelation h Ephes 1.18 secondly to giue vs larger hearts i Psal 119.32 6. We must be thankfull for what knowledge we doe get by the meanes
1 Thes 2.15.16 fulfil the measure of their sins alwaies God they please not and the wrath of God is come on them to the vttermost Doctr. 2 Secondly here we may learne that spirituall aliance is the best aliance for it is a greater honour to Timothy to bee a brother Spirituall aliance then to be an Euangelist for hee might haue beene an Euangelist and yet haue gone to Hell when he had done as Iudas an Apostle did And this cannot but be exceeding comfortable seeing there is not the meanest childe of God but he may attaine to that which was Timothies greatest title Doctr. 3 Thirdly the Apostle doth intimate by the taking in of Timothies assent that the most glorious doctrine of God doth need the witnesse of men Gods doctrin needs mans witnesse such a vanity and secret sinfulnes doth lodge in mens hearts Which should teach Ministers with all good conscience and heedfulnesse to weigh well and consider throughly of their doctrine before they deliuer it Vse because there is a weakenesse too commonly found in the very deare children of God namely to receiue doctrine vpon the trust and credit of the Messenger without searching the Scriptures as they ought to doe 2 The persons saluted Thus farre of the persons saluting the persons saluted are described both by the place of their habitation at Colosse and by their spirituall estate in which he describes them by foure things they are Saints they are faithfull they are Brethren and they are in Christ Foure general obseruations Before I come to the particular handling of each of these I consider foure things in the generall First heere we see the power of the Gospell But a little before 1. The power of the Gospel if Colosse had beene searched with lights as Ierusalem was there would not haue beene found one Saint nor one faithfull man or woman in the whole Citie 2. Who be the true members of the Church 3. The Church may be true yet faulty and now behold by the preaching of the Word heere are many Saints and faithfull Brethren to be found in her Secondly wee see here who be the true members of the Church The Apostle acknowledgeth none but such as are Saints faithfull and in Christ Thirdly wee see heere that a Church may remaine a true Church notwithstanding grosse corruptions remaine in it vnreformed as heere these titles are giuen to ● C●●●ch much poysoned with humane traditions and vile corruptions in wo●●●ip Lastly it is to be obserued that the Apostle ioynes all these together 4 One grace or priuiledge cannot bee without another Carnall Protestant to note that one cannot be without the other one cannot be a Saint vnlesse he be faithfull and in Christ and so of the rest The last clause cuts off the Iewes apparantly from being Saints or true belieuers seeing they receiue not Christ and the first clause cuts off the carnall Protestant so as he cannot be a beleeuer or in Christ seeing he cares no more for sanctitie and the two middlemost cut off the Papists and all Heretikes and Schismatikes seeing they haue with insolent pride made a rent and Apostasie from the true Apostolicall Churches 2 Thes 2.4 c by aduancing themselues with their Man of sinne aboue their brethren nay aboue all that is called God Thus farre in generall the first thing particularly giuen them is that they are Saints Saints This Word is diuersely accepted in Scripture The acceptations of the word Saints Sometimes it is giuen to the Angels and so they are called Saints Deuter. 33.2 Iob. 15.15 Secondly men are said to be holy by a certaine Legall or Ceremoniall sanctitie Leuit. 11.44 And in this sence the superstitious are holy This is the holinesse and sanctitie of Papists and Popish persons which place all their holinesse in the obseruation of Rites and Traditions and superstitious Customes Thirdly all that stand members of the Church by the rule of Charitie or in respect of outward visibility and profession are called Saints and so all that couenant with GOD by offering Sacrifice Psal 50.5 are called Saints Lastly and properly it is a tearme giuen to men effectually called the children of God truely conuerted are called Saints not because they are perfectly holy without all sinne but in foure respects First Gods children are called Saints in foure respects in respect of Separation because they are elected and gathered out of the world and ioyned vnto Gods people and dedicated to holy seruices and vses thus the word is often taken Secondly in respect of vocation and therefore the Apostle 1 Cor. 1.2 When he had said they were sanctified he said by way of explication they were Saints by calling Thirdly in respect of regeneration because they are now new creatures And lastly in respect of iustification or imputation because the holinesse and sanctitie of Christ is imputed to them The sence being thus giuen the doctrine is plaine Doct. Men may bee Saints in this life that men may be Saints in this life there are Saints in Earth as well as in Heauen This is apparant also in other Scriptures as Psalm 16.3 To the Saints that are in earth And Psal 37.28 Hee forsaketh not his Saints And Psalm 132.9.16 Let thy Saints reioyce So in the Epistle to the Ephesians ch 2.20 Citizens with the Saints c. chap. 3.8 Paul calleth himselfe the least of all Saints c. chap. 4.12 For the gathering together of the Saints with many other places Vse The vse of this serues first to confute the grosse folly of the Papists that acknowledge no Saints till three things come to them first they must be Canonized by the Pope Three things needfull for popish Saints secondly they must be dead first thirdly it must be an hundred yeeres after their death This last prouiso was well added lest their treasons and most vile practises should be remembred Secondly this serues for the seuere reproofe of numbers in our owne Church that liue as if there were no sanctitie to be looked after till they come to heauen Thirdly the Scripture is not without singular comfort to the poore despised Saints Comforts for the despised Saints and se●uants of God Psal 16.3 Psal 30.4.5 I will take them in order as they lye Deuter. 7.6.7 If wee be sure wee be a holy people to the Lord then this is our comfort that God accounts of vs aboue all the people vpon the earth and no man loues his Pearles or precious Iewels so much as God loues the meanest Saint Dauid saith these are the Nobles of the earth And Psal 30.4.5 These are willed with all cheerefull thankfulnesse to laud and praise God and that before the remembrance of his holines as they before the Arke so wee before all the Tokens and Pledges of Gods loue both the Word and Sacraments and sweet witnesses of the Spirit of Adoption and all other blessings
as Testimonies of Gods fauour Obiect Oh but it seemes the Saints haue little cause of ioy or praise for they are much afflicted and that by the iudgements of God too eyther in their consciences within Solut. or in their bodies or estates or names without The Prophet answeres that the Lord endureth but a while in his anger but in his fauour is life Psal 37.28 though weeping may abide at euening yet ioy commeth in the morning And in the 37. Psalm 28. vers a charge is giuen to flye from euill and doe good in which words a Saint is desciribed by his practise Obiect Oh but what shall they get by this precisenesse Sol. They shall dwell for euer Solut. no men haue so certaine sure and durable estates as those that make conscience of their wayes hating the infection of all sinne and delighting themselues in well-doing Obiect Oh but wee see they are much maliced and hated disgraced and wronged in the world Solut. Sol. The Lord loueth iudgement if men right not their wrongs God will Psalme 7. nay it is a delight vnto the Lord to iudge the righteous and him that contemneth God euery day those spitefull aduersaries of sincerity shall neuer escape Gods hands Obiect Oh but we see not onely wicked men but God himselfe smiteth and afflicteth those that be so holy Solution Sol. Though God afflict and chastize his people as a Father his beloued Sonne yet he forsaketh not his Saints Obiect Oh but the Saints themselues are full of great doubts whether they shall perseuer Solut. or God will change Sol. It is Gods vnchangeable promise they shall be preserued for euermore Psal 85.8 Againe in the 85. Psalme though the Church be in great perplexities in respect of outward afflictions yet this comfort the Saints haue First that though Gods stroakes seeme to bee the stroakes of warre yet Gods words are the words of Peace the Word and Spirit of God are sure fountaines of rest and peace to the heart and conscience of Gods afflicted people Secondly when God smites his people hee euer hath a regard to this not to smite them so long as they should bee driuen to turne againe to folly by folly hee meaneth sinne for all sinfull courses are foolish courses The Lord by crosses intends to bring them out of sinne not to driue them in and if men finde not these priuiledges true it is because eyther they doe not hearken that is obserue and marke the Word Spirit and Workes of God or else because they are not his Saints In the 149. Psalme there is an Honour giuen to all the Saints Psal 149.5.6.7.8.9 viz. that they should with a two-edged sword execute vengeance vpon the Heathen and corrections vpon the people they should binde Kings with chaines and Nobles with fetters of iron thus should they execute vpon them the iudgement that is written So forcible and powerfull are the publike threatnings and censures of the Saints assembled in their holy ranckes as also their priuate prayers that all the swords of great Princes cannot so plague the enemies of the Church as doe the Saints by these weapons So fearefull are the corrections and iudgements which the Saints by prayers and censures may bring vpon whole troopes of wicked men as no swords or fetters in nature can be comparable to them Dan. 7.27 When Daniel had described the greatnesse and glory of the Princes Potentates and mighty States in the foure Monarchies at last hee comes to speake of a Kingdome which is the greatest vnder the whole Heauen and that is the Kingdome of the Saints of the most High So glorious is the state of the poore despised Seruants of God euen heere in this world in the Kingdome of grace Daniel 7.27 And if there bee such suing on earth to become free-men of great Cities especially to liue in the Courts of great princes how great is the felicitie of euery childe of God who is no more now a forreiner or stranger but a Cittizen with the Saints Ephes 2.20 and of the hous●●●ld of God To conclude this may be a great refreshing to euery childe of God against al the discomforts of this present transitory life that in that great and last and terrible day Christ will be glorified in them and made maruellous in the Saints 2 Thes 1.10 And last of all though the Saints be here despised and trodden vnder foot iudged and condemned by men yet the time will come 2 Cor. 6.2 when the Saints shall iudge the world Oh but some one will say all the difficulty lyeth in this Qu. Who are Saints to know who are Saints Ans To this end Ans besides the foure things generally laid downe before I will for triall alleadge two or three places of Scripture first in Deut. 33.3 Deut. 33.3 When Moses had praised the loue of God to the Iewish Nation The first signe hee specially commendeth Gods speciall care towards the Saints of that Nation whom as most deare to him hee had alwaies in his hands Psal 16.3.5.6 and giueth this signe to know them by viz. They are humbled at his feete to receiue his words Secondly Dauid hauing spoken of the excellency of the Saints on earth Dauids foure signes to proue himselfe to be one of the number he yeeldeth his reasons from foure experimentall signes First the Lord was his portion though hee had hopes or possession of great things in the earth yet Gods fauour was that hee did most prize Psal 16.5.6 and spirituall things were vnto him the fairest part of his inheritance and though he had many crosses yet the line was fallen vnto him in a faire place so long as hee could see grace in his heart and the GOD of grace to loue him freely Secondly he could as heartily praise GOD for spirituall blessings viz. Counsell Knowledge Psal 16.7 and direction out of the worde of God as wicked men could for temporall Honours Riches Pleasures and such things as they loue best Thirdly his reynes did teach him in the night Some thing can wicked men learne by the Word without but God did neuer honour any with the feelings of the Spirit of Adoption but onely the Saints Obiection Obiect Oh but might not Dauid bee deceiued in that signe by illusions c. Ans Dauid giues two reasons why hee could not first Solut. Difference between illusiōs the feelings of the Spirit of Adoption his feelings did not make him more carelesse presumptuous and sinfull as illusions doe wicked men but they taught him that is hee learned by them many worthy lessons and directions and encouragements to holy life and neuer did hee conceiue a greater hatred against his sinne then when his reynes taught him secondly he shewes that hee had them in the night that is when hee was alone and withdrawn from company and the things