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

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were the nailes that fastned Christ to the Crosse wee must weepe and cry as one mourneth for his onely sonne and first borne and there must be such a compunction of the spirit as to crie with the hearers of Peter Act. 2.37 What shall we doe and with Dauid Psal 6.6 to wash our bed with teares and so to mourne as if we heard the Lord summoning vs to iudgement for our sinnes are not lighter then Dauids that our sorrow should be lesse then his And when we haue attained to this to be pierced to the soule with sorrow not for any discomforts in this life but for that we haue offended God and haue exercised our selues in this not as in a pang that shall perplex vs for the time but that wee haue daily ripped and laied our hearts naked before the Lord then from hence springeth forth the third fruit amendment of our sinnes and repentance for them which standeth in two parts first in the forsaking of the old sinne secondly in inclining to the contrary vertue for the repentance of an vlurer is not restitution only but with Zaccheus Luke 19.8 to restore and to be mercifull to the poore as before he was vnmercifull for drunkards not onely to leaue the combat of their cups but to forsake that company and to obserue all kind of abstinence whereby he may be more fit for his calling and in iudgement to condemne it and in affection to abhor it both in himselfe and others so as briefly to repent is not to be as thou hast bene but to be in Christian duties that thou hast not beene For the second point which is the reason of the exhortation by the word Kingdome of heauen vnderstand the manifestation of the Messias which as a ●●ately monarch shall rule in the hearts of men such as shall bee gathered by the Gospell with a wonderfull spirituall maiesty by his word and graces first leading them by the Gospell to haue their conuersation in heauen while they liue heere whereupon gather there is a double kingdome first of administratory prouidence which is that wherby the Lord ruleth ouer all euen the diuels secondly of royall preheminence in his church which is threefold first in their beginning by imperfect sanctification when men translated drawen from the power of sin are brought to the obedience of the Lord Iesus the second confirmed by perfect sanctification in the soules of the saints already departed the third fully to be accomplished when wee shall bee crowned of the Lord both in soule and body with perfect and perpetuall glory when God shall raigne in his Sonne his Sonne in his Church and his Church triumph in them both for euer Now this spirituall maiesty of Christ setling and inthronizing himselfe in the hearts of men is far more magnificent then any earthly throne prescribing vs lawes within which we are to bound our selues for in a kingdome there are foure things requisite first a King to gouerne secondly subiects to obey thirdly lawes to keepe in awe fourthly authority to execute them Now in this kingdome of light Christ is the King the faithfull be the subiects the word of God the lawes the power of the spirit the authority to execute them so that if by our subiection to the word the little flocke of Christ be increased the workes of the diuell bee destroied the enemies of God be subuerted and sinne bee subdued in the strength thereof then 〈◊〉 being gathered into this first kingdome which consisteth in the regeneration of the spirit may assuredly waite for the expectation of the other kingdome which standeth in the perfection 〈◊〉 all glory And we may the better vnderstand this by weighing the diuersity of Kingdomes which the diuell hath these being double first on earth secondly in hell On earth the reprobate being his subiects their corrupt affections their lawes 〈◊〉 their being giuen ouer of God to follow those wicked waies being the power to execute them So as in all those places b●● they neuer so well polished to the eye which haue not suffici●●● power of the Gospell to saue them ●or which haue it notat●●● or which haue it in a counterfet manner and measure or wh●●● hauing it sincerely Mat. 7.6 doe flie like dogs to rend them in peeces th●● bring it in these is the kingdome of darknesse set vp and sauing for the elects sake which shall bee taken out of them by the manifestation of Gods grace it were but a cage of filthy birds and the Synagogue of Satan For the second which is in hell it is that wherein vnmercifull Diues now lieth Luk. 16.24 and cannot haue so much refreshing as to coole his tongue and wherein after this life the wicked and impenitent shall bee tormented with endlesse paine The consideration whereof may driue vs to the meditation of the Lords bounty that hath prepared another place for vs if we follow the counsell of Iohn Baptist to amend our liues and to reforme our waies euen such a place wherein we shall behold and enioy the beauty of his glorie for euer Further obserue though Iohn Baptist willeth them to repent and amend yet it proueth no ability or naturall inclination in a man to doe this no more then when Christ saith Mat. 11.28.29 Come vnto me and take vp my yoake it argueth no power of our selues to come for so much himselfe setteth downe in another place where hee saith No man can come vnlesse my Father drawe him But the end of this is Iohn 6.44 not that the commandement is giuen to meet with our power to performe it but as Rom. 3.20 that thereby might come the knowledge of sinne for when wee see our weakenesse that we cannot doe it and our wretchednesse that we haue done the contrary as that where we should haue repented of our sins we haue rather increased them it leads vs to seeke grace in Christ pardon for the sinne and power of his spirit to forsake it So as in the commandement know thou oughtest to doe it in the correction of the Lord know thou hast not done it in not doing it know thy condemnation in praier and faith thou knowest where to haue it in thy conuersion thou knowest where thou hast receiued it and in thy perseuerance know by whom thou doest retaine it And albeit all commandements are of three sorts first such as command our first conuersion secondly that command our obedience to the Lord after our conuersion thirdly that command our perseuerance after wee haue begun obedience yet we shall see the strength of all these commeth from the Lord. For the first Zach. 1.3 there is a commandement giuen to turne to the Lord and Ioel 2.12 this is more particularly set downe that it must be a turning with all the heart But how shall this be wrought Obserue Ephraims speech to the Lord Ier. 31.18 Conuert thou me and I shall be conuerted So Deut. 10.16 Moses commandeth that the people should circumcise the
S. Iohn to an Eagle because hee flieth aloft and beginneth with the eternall generation of the Sonne of God according to his Diuinitie It it is true indeed their beginnings are as before but their comparisons are too curious for as the finger of God directed them so did they write and such was the Lords loue to his church as not to suffer vs to be vnfurnished of any thing that might further vs in the course of our saluation but from time to time to raise vp instruments and pen-men to set downe his will that seeing the way wherein to walke we need not nor cannot pretend ignorance The whole chapter diuideth it selfe into two general parts first is set downe the lineall descent of Christ secondly the maner of his natiuitie from the eighteenth verse to the end In the first part note three members first a generall comprehension of the matter in the first verse secondly the large narration of it from the second to the seuenteenth verse thirdly the conclusion in the seuenteenth verse In the first of these obserue two parts first what matter he will intreat of secondly of whose pedegree namely of Christs the great King of immortality In that it is said the booke of the Generation it is not to be taken as a title prefixed to the whole booke but it is meant according to the Hebrew phrase that it is a Catalogue or recitall of such a stocke as our Sauiour Christ came of For the second which is the narration it is distributed into three members euery one by equall proportion hauing foureteene persons the first of the Patriarkes the second of the Kings of Dauid the third of the Captaines and inferior Gouernors which had onely some fragments left of the roiall regiment after the transportation and carying them away into Babylon Now the cause why the Euangelist diuideth them thus into three foureteenes is not onely that the number and the story might the better be borne away but principally because he is to proue that Christ came lineally from the Iewes he setteth downe the threefolde estate of the Iewes and wherunto they were subiect till Christ came who should raigne in the hearts of men shewing how at the first the Tribe of Iuda increased greatly till it was established and setled in the kingdome of Dauid then the greatest excellency thereof was in Dauids sonne Salomon and then the abatement and greatest diminution that could be which was in their cariage away into Babylon and that a Carpenter should be right heire to the Crowne sheweth the great eclipse whereunto it was fallen so as in the Patriarkes it was like the Sunne dawning in Salomon like the Sunne in his full glory and afterward like the Sunne set and gone downe leauing the right of the kingdome as in a darke place namely in Ioseph a poore Carpenter of a base trade and meane condition nothing at all respected Now further in the narration the Euangelist as we may see in the old Testament reckoneth vp some that liued before the going downe into Egypt some that were borne and died in Egypt and some that returned out of Egypt and were led as slaues into Babylon In that it is said Iudas begat Phares and Zara of Thamar obserue that our Sauior Christ did not disdaine to debase and disparage himselfe so farre as to come of the line of such as were borne of an incestuous generation that we might be rauished and astonished with his loue who refused not to come out of the family of grosse sinners that he might saue the sinfull soules of beleeuers And whereas in the blazing of Christs armes by this Herauld the Euangelist there are but foure women named euery one of them hath their seuerall blemish and reproach left behind them in the booke of God The first Thamar incestuously abused by her father in law Gen. 38.18.29 The second Rahab Iosh 2.1 by nation a Cananite as vile as to be a dogge by profession an idolater Iosh 6.17 by city of Iericho a place so cursed as that no soule should escape thence aliue in trade a victualler and in conuersation a whore yea the place she dwelt in so cursed that who so should build it vp againe should do it in the bloud of all his family and yet this woman must be put in the roiall descent of Christ The third is Ruth who came of that nation that was begot in incest and caused the children of Israel to sinne in fornication Numb 25.1 so as it is said for the Edomites the Lord esteemed them no more then as an old shooe and Moab should be but as a chamber-pot and as appeareth in her owne booke Psal 60.8 Ruth 2.3 she was poore gleaning after the reapers the eares of corne For the fourth which is Vrias wife she was the worst of all of her Salomon was borne 2. Sam. 12.24 whereby the holy Ghost doth insinuate the adultery committed before his birth and consider Salomon borne of such an infamous woman that he should be heire and yet not the eldest sonne it was meerely of Gods mercy and not of any merit and by reason of this woman Dauid not onely committed adultery to haue made a bastard to haue inherited the Crowne but to this added bloud 2. Sam. 11.4.17 the death of her husband and of many others and such a death as to die by the sword of the vncircumcised which was most reprochfull that now the holy Ghost should direct the pen of the Euangelist to draw Christs linage by name from these not to deriue him from Sara Rebecca that were excellētly famous and that Dauid the type of the Messias should be such a bloudy man may be a consolation to al bleeding christians may teach vs that though our sins be neuer so hainous in respect of the qualitie of them or neuer so many in respect of the multitude of them yet if at any time we be wearie with a full detestation of them Mat. 11.28 and a resolute purpose to amend them Christ will refresh vs and will scatter them before him euen as the dust before the winde and the greater is our condemnation if hauing so much mercie we repent not Secondly obserue in that it is said Iesse begat Dauid and Dauid Salomon wheras Dauid onely is named king being the last of the first fourteene that the estate of the Patriarkes was now changed into kings and though Iuda had some preheminence before that the kingdome fell to them yet this was the greatest glorie that it should be such a kingdome whereof the king that should be borne should be God the Son which may teach vs that the highest honor that can befal a family or a cuntry or a Christian is to haue the Lord to dwel with them for all other titles are folded vp in time that perisheth but the presence of the Lord bringeth comfort that decaieth not Howbeit we must note that as this kingdome of Iuda
they should be an astonishment and serue the king of Babel so many yeeres For the third which is the Lords mercy in their deliuerance they be the words of his owne mouth For thy sake O Israel I will not doe it for thou art filthy Ezec. 36.22 but for my owne sake I will that they may know I am able to doe it and for Dauid my seruants sake I will not vtterly put out the light of Israel Hence learne generally that there is no nation so free but the Lord may captiuate and if they decline and leaue their first loue the Lord may and will abandon them For if any people might haue presumed it was this who had the promises and a more peculiar presence of God then any nation vnder heauen yet were they vile and did stincke in his sight for abusing his kindenesse and setting at nought his Ministers Howbeit neuer were they more scorned then in these daies wherein either men make themselues deafe that they will not heare or heare but there is a noise of vanity higher and louder in their eares Heere then is the same cause of captiuity why should wee not feare the same iudgement We see it is our selues can doe vs the greatest hurt for when wee once giue our selues ouer to loosenesse of life and to distaste the word the Lord then disarmes vs both of policie and strength that euen a weake enemy may soone surprize vs. Let therefore euery man amend one albeit these times bee so mischieuous as it is to be feared lest many of vs be as willing to returne to Babylon for religion as euer were the Israelites to come foorth Secondly obserue the cursed and hard-harted disposition of the enemies of God that they thinke no torment nor cruelty too exquisite nor too sharpe for his people for Zedechia and Ahab did the King of Babel burne in the fire Ier. 29.22 and the rest were slaues to him and his sonnes 2. Chro. 36.20 With which malice the diuell hath poisoned and filled their hearts because they cannot be auenged of the Lord himselfe for euen at him doe the proud Nimrods of the world point their fingers Gen. 11.4 and against him doe they lay their siege to plucke him out of his seate for the Babylonians were more fierce to the Israelites then to any other whom they subdued onely because they were the chosen and beloued of the Lord. Lastly obserue in their deliuery the compassion of the Almighty that he will not be angry for euer and the truth of his promise that he will at the length visite his people in mercy when they thinke the clouds so thicke as they cannot be ouerblowne for now when Israel was euen rent to ragges he harboured Ier. 29.11 the thoughts of peace and not of trouble and gaue them an end of their fainting hope euen a mighty deliuerance by the hand of Cyrus king of Persia 2. Chro. 36.22 Where it is said Iechonias begat Salathiel obserue that Salathiel was not his naturall sonne but ouely succeeded him in the kingdome by legall succession as next heire for Iechonias had no sonnes but the house of Salomon ended with him as appeareth Ier. 22.30 Write this man that is Iechomas destitute of children So also Ezec. 21.26.27 the Lord speaking of Salomon I will ouerturne saith he repeating it thrice the diademe of this king and neuer shall any out of his loines weare it vntill he come whose right it is that is the Messias and I will giue it him To prooue also that Salomons line must cease and that Christ must not come of him lineally appeareth by the prophesie of Isaiah 2. King 20.18 that there should not one bee left of the house of Iehoiakim which could not be so vnlesse the line of Salomon were vtterly extinguished and for Salathiel he came of Nathan the second brother as Saint Luke setteth it downe chap. 3.31 which nothing disagreeth from this of Saint Matthew for he was but to shew the line of the Kings and not naturally of whom Christ came but whom hee should succeed in the kingdome Where note the wonderfull prouidence of God that Salomon who had so many wiues and children hath not now any left to sit vpon the throne to teach vs that Salomon was to bee punished for his many wiues so as the Lord would not haue Christ to come of him naturally but of his yonger brother Whereby all nobility may bee swallowed vp in the glory of the Lords progeny and generation that drowneth all nobility that since Salomon in all his glory wanteth naturall heires that they stand not vpon these outward shewes and dignities but seeke to continue their posterity by liuing in a cleane and holy course of life for the Lord will wash away the vnholy seede and serape out their names from vnder heauen that seeke to establish their house in filthinesse and to pollute the mariage bed Further in that Christ is said to come of Ioseph the poore Carpenter heerein are the ancient Prophecies fulfilled Esay 53.2 that Christ should come and no man regard him and that he should grow vp as a roote out of the drie ground without forme or beauty and as Esay 11.1 that the should come as a rod out of the stocke of Ishai the Yeoman 1. Sam. 16.3 whereby we obserue that when things are most desperate then the Lord recouereth them and now when the kingdome was come to a poore Carpenter then Christ was borne to teach vs that in the greatest exigents and extremities we must neuer distrust nor seeke to extricate our selues out of any sorrow the Lord hath brought vs to but still to waite vpon him for as Dauid saith Psalm 32.7 The Lord is our secret place that is he hath many priuie deliuerances wee know not of and as Psalm 4.3 will strengthen vs vpon the bed of sorrow as he did Dauid who when Saul with his armie was euen at his heeles and hee no doubt much anguished yet the Lord had his secret deliuerance for him and turned Saul on the sudden another way 1. Sam. 23.27 Euen so heere when it had beene night with the Israelites a long time and that their enimies thought they should neuer recouer their sight againe then ariseth Christ like they day-starre and restoreth the beauty of their kingdome to greater glory then before let vs therefore waite with Simeon for the saluation that shall come Now remaineth to shew the difference in the recital of Christs pedegree by Saint Matthew and that of Saint Luke chap. 3.23 and it standeth in three points first Mathew doeth descend from the first to the last from Abraham to Ioseph Luke ascendeth from the last to the first from Ioseph to Abraham Secondly Mathew was to fetch his pedegree so as he might proue him to be the Messias of the Iewes and to come directly from the feed of Abraham Luke deriueth him not onely from Abraham but from Adam that he might shew him to be
by his passion to deliuer vs from condemnation euen as in the sacrifice vnder the law the bloud of the innocent beast was shed for him that had sinned to lay before his face the punishment he had deserued Leuit. 16.15 that so worthily his throat might haue beene cut and more iustly then was the throat of the beast so we by the shedding of Christs most innocent blood are purged from the guilt of our sinne And as by the beholding onely of the Brasen Serpent lifted vp in the wildernesse Numb 21 9. as many as looked vpon it were made whole so we hauing our eies annointed with the eie-salue of the holy Ghost that wee can behold the Lord Iesus exalted on the crosse shall be freed from all the firy stings of Sathan wherewith hee had stung vs to damnation For the second whom he shall saue obserue not all but his people Therefore they deceiue themselues that thinke Christ died for all men for there are but two parts of his priesthood the first to supplicate or to pray the second to sacrifie Now it is certaine he neuer sacrificed for them for whom he neuer supplicated and Iohn 17.9 he excludes the world out of his praier therefore for the world hee neuer died but hee praied onely for beleeuers and that they might be sanctified that is set apart wholly for Gods seruice the word sanctified being a metaphor or borowed speech taken form the Temple wherein the first fruites the flesh the garments the vessels and all things else were holy so called because none might vse them to worldly purposes So as if we will be his people we must keepe our selues onely for one husband the Lord Iesus and like a iewell peerelesse as if we were peculiarly laied vp for him as S. Paul speaketh Tit. 2.14 And he that cannot assure his soule of this for him Christ neuer died for if we be Temples onely to set vp in them the idols of our affections Christ neuer dwelleth there Now euery man will assume to himselfe to bee a Christian If a woman that had two children should sweare shee were a maide or he that had the plague should say and face vs downe he were sound or one reeling in the chanell that he were sober would they not be spectacles of shame to all that saw and heard them And for an vnseemely and filthy liuer to challenge this honour to bee caried in Christs bosome and to be remembred to his Father in his praiers and to apportion part of Christs death to himselfe is as absurd as the other and this his fained repentance shall leade him but into a fained hope against the latter day which will deceiue him For such kinde of boasters bee they spoken of Prouerb 30.12 that are pure in their owne eies and yet they be not washed from their filthinesse that is that are as filthy in their soules as is his body that lieth in his owne excrement Can out of thornes come grapes or can a sinfull wretch be a sober liuer It is certaine there is no saluation without faith no faith without repentance no repentance without amendment of life nor any amendment without forsaking of sinne the conclusion whereof is that no euill liuer hath part in Christs passion but the markes of Gods vengance are yet vpon thee and thou venturest thy saluation peremptorily by deferring thy repentance for what knowest thou whether to morrow shall euer come Dally not therefore thus with God till the diuell take thee in the lurch for as Christ came to saue vs from the damnation of sin so also to free vs from the dominion of sinne and as to destroy the diuell so likewise to destroy the workes of the diuell And as none shall be saued by the law 1. Iohn 3.8 without fulfilling the law so none shall bee saued by the Gospell but such who as God hath couenanted with them to remit their sinnes so haue they couenanted with him to amend their liues It is therfore an intolerable absurdity for them that being slaues to sinne doe notwithstanding vaunt themselues to be the seruants of God and who being as prophane as Esau and haue solde their birth-right Gen. 25.33 Math. 25.26 will yet claime their birth-right when they haue no more interest then the dogges in the bread of Children MATH chap. 1. vers 22 23 24 25. verse 22 And all this was done that it might be fulfilled which is spoken of the Lord by his Prophet saying verse 23 Behold a Virgine shall be with child and shall beare a sonne and they shall call his name Emmanuel which is by interpretation God with vs. verse 24 Then Ioseph being raised from sleepe did as the Angell of the Lord had enioyned him and tooke his wife verse 25 But he knew her not till she had brought forth her first borne Sonne and he called his name Iesus THIS is the fift thing formerly pointed at that this testimony of the Prophet is alleaged for the further confirmation of Ioseph and his better incouragement in this matter that if hee should not rest in the maiesty of the Angell for the truth of the message yet that he should not thinke that strange which was recorded so long before Wherein consider first what cause the Prophet had to speake this It may be gathered out of Esay chap. 7. where the king of Iuda being cast into feare of the ouerthrow of his kingdome by the combination and ioyning together of the two armies of Syria and Israel thinking it impossible to be rescued from their strength the Prophet Esay was sent to offer him a signe in that consternation and trouble of his minde either in the depth beneath or in the height aboue that thereby he might be a certained the Lord would deliuer Ierusalem from that army the King measuring all by policy refuseth to aske any particular signe whereupon the Prophet seeing this descended to the generall signe the couenant made Gen. 3. that the seed of the woman should breake the serpents head that is not onely performe a temporary deliuerance but an euerlasting freedome from the siege of Sathan and this couenant was especially made to Abraham Now the Prophet speaketh to him by way of exprobration in this sort How canst thou O King mistrust this small matter and that the power of the Lord is not able to performe this since he hath promised to doe the other which is farre greater Hence generally learne how excellent and needfull a thing it is to be acquainted and familiar with the Scripture which is as the store-house of comfort when wee bee distressed and a guide to direct our thoughts when they bee distracted For if Ioseph had well compared the times spoken of by the Prophets and had called to minde this speech of Esay heere mentioned it might much haue staied him in his perplexed discourse with himselfe the Angell himselfe intimating so much in alleaging the prophecy and yet concealing the Prophets
sure to haue knowen the truth but it pleased the Lord he should be so besotted with this grosse feare that his wisdome was turned into foolishnesse that so the poore child might as yet escape the bloudy clawes of this cruell tyrant The people they were affraid and troubled because they had beene so long acquainted and made familiar with slauish seruitude that their hearts were euen growen hard and they were willing to sustaine this bondage so they might be quiet chusing rather to abide some tolerable seruitude then to endanger themselues further by the commutation of their state and change of their king Out of the feare of the king obserue the nature and condition of wicked and profane Princes who if the finger of God doe but come neere them and shake them in their seates they murmure and grudge and are smitten with feare as with the spirit of giddinesse for Herod feared lest hee should lose his kingdome if Christ should raigne so as it was the losse of the Crowne did so much affect him Euen so was the countenance of King Balthazar changed and his thoughts troubled when he saw the hand writing on the wall Dan. 5.6 which signified the diuision and losse of his kingdome for it is not in the power of Princes to stay their conscience from checking and accusing them nay it is as a butcher that will first flea and rifle them when their destruction draweth on Therefore let the great men of the earth beware how they spurne against the gouernement of Christ for hee is no lesse a King now then hee was then nay hee gouernes now with more maiesty then before and therefore they may not bee as Lions ouer his heritage 1. Pet. 5.3 but if they will haue their Scepters blessed in their hands they must suffer Christ to rule and themselues though Lords ouer others yet to bee but subiects vnder him In that the people were also afraid obserue the grosnesse and profanesse that was in these Iewes before these Wise-men came thither for as soone as they heard of the birth of their Messias they were presently astonished as if they had neuer heard of any such matter before and yet they knew that the Kingdome was now translated from the tribe of Iuda and that it was to bee restored they were exercised and vexed with great calamities as were their forefathers vnder Pharao Exod. 5.7 so as that might haue made them cast vp their eies to haue looked for a deliuerer The sacrifices they daily offered portending the dteah of Christ might haue put them in minde of his comming but they were so dead in sinne and licentious liuing as they dreamed of no such matter yea they sung out of the Psalmes continually in their Seruice Blessed is he that commeth in the name of the Lord Ma. 21.9 Psal 118.26 yet when he is come it appalleth and like beasts voide of vnderstanding they had rather sleepe in a knowen slauery then enioy an vnknowen liberty their religion being but common deuotion and a set kinde of seruing God without sincerity which wrought no more in their consciences but that now as if they were heathen they tremble to heare of the name of a Sauiour Which ought to teach vs to lay religion at the heart and to keepe the fire burning lest if we neglect this acceptable time of grace and shuffle off the seruice of God as a thing of course wee grow and become as senslesse and profane in our selues as these Iewes did to bee troubled with Christes comming to vs in his word preached Againe in that it is said All Ierusalem were afraid it is to bee vnderstood onely of the greatest part for some waited and expected his comming in great hope Luk. 2.28.37 as Anna Simeon and Zachary but these were but as a sparke in comparison of a mighty fire Where we learne not to fashion our selues to follow multitudes the greatest number being alwaies enemies to the Crosse of Christ Luk. 12.32 as himselfe testifieth Mine is a little flocke But such is the power of the Prince of darkenesse and such strength hath corruption in vs as they leade vs altogether from the way of holinesse and the least occasion moueth vs to bee offended at Christ howbeit let vs retire our selues into the straites of godlinesse and let pirates roue vpon the maine Sea it is the narrow path that leadeth and the smaller company that entreth into Sion For in Sodome that great citie Genes 18.32 there shall not bee found tenne righteous nor religious and the house of Noah onely excepted Genes 6.11 the whole earth was corrupt before the Lord. It cannot therefore bee safe for vs to ioyne in amitie with the sonnes of men least wee bee wrapped in the same destruction and ouercome of the same feare wee see all Hierusalem troubled with Further obserue hence that if the birth of our Sauiour Christ in this basenesse strooke such terrors into the hearts of Kings how much more shall his second comming cause the very mountaines of the earth to tremble when hee shall appeare in power accompanied with hoastes of Angels and when heauen and earth shall flie before him That therefore his presence may bring vs ioy Psal 125.1 and that we may bee as mount Sion not to be shaken let vs lay aside the leauen of the flesh and put on this our Christ by whom wee haue redemption euen the forgiuenesse of our sinnes Ephes 1.7 for faith in him shall driue out all trembling distrust whatsoeuer where his comming worketh feare there the conscience threatneth destruction else would the wicked neuer cry to the mountaines to fall on them Luke 23 30. and to the hils to couer them Obserue againe by this great perplexity that arose both in Prince and people that it was alwaies the destiny of the Gospell to bring commotion to States and alteration to Kingdomes for now besides the generall feare that fretted their hearts the whole company of Diuines are troubled to turne their bookes and to seeke out what shall become of the matter This was but a beginning of that Christ himselfe spake afterward Matthew 10.34 I came not to bring peace but a sword not that the Gospell in it selfe causeth warres but that the wrath and vengeance of God might redound vpon the faces of his enemies for it maketh peace betweene men and men and God and men that the loue of God boiling from him to vs through his grace in the word might againe issue from vs to him through our obedience to the word Yet before the Gospell can enter to take roote and worke vpon vs it causeth hatred euen to the effusion of bloud this proceeding from the malice of Satan who by the growth of the Gospell loseth his iurisdiction and from our owne corruption that loue darknesse more then light because the Gospell discouereth our sinnes as the Sunne doth the motes that otherwise lie hid And againe it is a
hee shall be hold his destruction Exod. 14.28 in the red sea How oft 〈◊〉 Saul thinke and how sore did he thirst for the life of Dauid 〈◊〉 he misseth of his purpose and slaieth himselfe 1. Sam. 31.4 〈◊〉 make way for Dauid to the kingdome And such shall be the ●●cesse of all that conspire against the Lord and his Christ to fall 〈◊〉 to the pit which themselues haue digged and to make the w●●ked a ransome for the godly For the maner of Herods death though it be silenced by the Euangelist yet the Ecclesiasticall stories make mention of it as Iosephus and Eusebius which though it command not the conscience to beleeue yet the more to magnifie the Lord it is not vnfit to consider it He had a great swelling in his legs woonderfull rottennesse in his whole flesh his breath did so stinke as he could not be accompanied with he had such a disease in his parts of shame as wormes did crawle about them he was greedie of meat hauing the appetite of a dogge not to be satisfied his whole race was accursed after him hauing eight children within an hundred yeeres there was not any of their loines lest Archilaus heere spoken of was banished to Vienna and there died a beggar Antypas that beheaded Iohn Baptist and whom Christ called Foxe Luke 13.32 was banished to Lions in France and there died a most miserable abiect Agrippa the son of Aristobulus the sonne of this Herod an insolent and proud man was eaten vp with lice most shamefully Act. 12.23 The sonne of this Agrippa that would haue put Peter to death liuing till the destruction of Ierusalem there had his end Thus did the wrath of God rest vpon the familie of this cruell persecutor of Gods Church who was blasted in himselfe and his posteritie And thus did the Lord 1. Kings 14.10 sweepe away the house of Ieroboam as a man sweepeth away dung till it bee all gone and 1. King 21.21 did cut off the posteritie of Ahab for their prouocations wherewith they had prouoked him to teach vs to feare and tremble before his face and if we will be blessed in our selues and in the fruit of our bodie to looke vnto our paths that we lay not our hands to wickednesse Note further that we are not to feare what Princes can doe vnto vs for they liue no longer then they haue some seruice to doe for Gods glorie as it is said Col. 1.16 All things are in Christ and for Christ And Saul could not Acts 9.1 breath out threatnings against the Church of God had not the Lord some speciall purpose in it either for the exercising of his Saints or the waiting for his owne repentance Neither could Pharaoh so long ●●ie his rodde vpon the Israelites were it not as S. Paul saith Rom. 9.17 that the Lord stirred him vp to shew his power in him For now when Herod had executed the children whereby God is glorified in their innocent death and his owne malice fully manifested then he dieth himselfe which may teach vs patience against the time of trouble knowing that the wicked are but as the weapons of the Lord to set an edge on our affection● which otherwise would creepe vpon the earth and make vs forget our maker whereas by this meanes we oft times cast our 〈◊〉 on our deliuerer which is in heauen Further learne that though tyrants appoint vs as sheepe to the slaughter and in the malice of their hearts doe purpose to fleece vs yet sometime the butcher wanteth his knife and the sheepe in the shambles do escape therefore we need not to be afraid of them that haue not so much power as to kill the bodie vnlesse the Lord giue vs vp into their hands as Dauid saith Psal 7.12 speaking of the wicked hee hath bent his bow and spread his net and hath conceiued mischiefe but shall bring foorth vanitie and the euill intended shall fall vpon his owne hairy scalpe For the diuell that is stronger then man yea that a●meth the malice of men cannot stretch foorth his hand vpon the goods of Iob Iob. 1.12 much lesse touch his body without the permission of the Almighty Herod shall die and Christ shall escape if not the worst that flesh and bloud can doe is but 〈◊〉 send vs with the children of Bethlem into heauen for the Lor● is our shield and we are as neare deare vnto him as the apple of his eie yea he is our secret place and vnder his shadow we can not but be safe For the second point containing the obedience of Iosep● by his example we learne not to runne before Gods promises but patiently to waite vpon them for as hee is alwaies a sure deliuerer of his people so then especially when his mouth ha●● spoken it and vpon this Ioseph relied not stirring till he was called Moses was sure to bring the people of Israel out of Egypt Exod. 3.10 yet hee must staie for it fortie yeeres as if the Lord had forgotten to what purpose hee had appointed him Noab 〈◊〉 the Lords commandement entreth into the Arke and comme●● not foorth till by the same commandement Gen. 8.16 he 〈◊〉 called foorth though by the not returning of the Doue he kn●● the waters were abated from the earth Dauid was sure to be king after Saul yet he waited so long as in his haste he said Psalm 116.11 All men are liers thinking that Samuel had abused him to tell him hee should be King which we must beware of for the cause why the Lord staieth many times is because his seruants crie not out vnto him nor presse him with importunity as Luk. 18.5 the widow did the Iudge or for that our curst heares will not come downe so as he is faine to vse the wicked as rods to chastise and humble vs. Heere also learne that as Christ commeth out of Egypt so the Lord draweth the Gospell out of the fire and giueth it some Sun-shine out of the darkest persecution yea and that as it is said Act. 12.24 in the time of the most ambitious and Lordly tyrants it shall grow and multiply exceedingly for so it hath pleased God that the hotest persecutors as was S. Paul haue embraced it and that kings haue submitted their scepters to the foolishnesse of preaching Which noteth vnto vs that the ignominy that lighteth vpon the crosse is not nor ought to be any occasion to disswade vs from it for the proceeding of Christs kingdome is aboue nature and the perswading to it is cleaue contrary to the custome of the world For saith Cyrus if a Lacedaemonian will serue mee if hee bee a foot-man I will make him an horseman if a horse-man I will giue him a Chariot if hee haue a Chariot I will giue him a Castle if a Castle a Citie and he shall receiue his gold not by tale but by waite But now in the groweth and age of a Christian it fareth otherwise for this is the condition of
grace of God the second is the matter of instruction and this is to be considered two waies first by shewing what things we are to forbeare which is twofold first vngodlinesse in respect of religion secondly worldly lusts as furtherers to prophannesse Secondly by shewing what things we must incline vnto which be three first sobrietie of life secondly to liue righteously toward men for the duties of the second table thirdly to liue religeouslie in respect of the worship of God Last in verse 13 there is propounded an effectuall meanes whereby we may be the better affected and more earnestly prouoked 〈◊〉 follow this counsell which is an expectation or hoping for of a more excellent glorie which shall be giuen at the appearing of the Lord Iesus for hardly can a man throughly mortifie himselfe vnlesse he propound to himselfe a more excellent reward in the life to come For the first that is the grace of God which is the teacher this that is so called heere may be iudged and resolued to be the Gospell or the doctrine of the Gospell by the end of the tenth verse that yee may saith the Apostle adorne the doctrine of the Gospell which is called grace by the effect it worketh in the hearts of men namely because it bringeth vs to the grace of Christ through the remission of our sinnes in his precious bloud And therefore Paul Rom. 1.16 calleth the Gospell the power of God vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth whatsoeuer he bee Iew or Grecian and Eph. 1.13 sheweth how that by trusting and beleeuing in the word of truth the Gospel of our saluation we are sealed with the holie spirit of promise And 2. Thes 2.10 the reason is giuen why men are reiected and cast from Christ because they receiue not the loue of the truth that they might be saued For as S. Peter saith 1. Pet. 4.17.18 Where shall the vngodly and the sinner appeare and what shall be the and of them that obey not the Gospell Secondly this grace of God doth perswade vs thus to liue as is heere prescribed by this token that it bringeth saluation so as obserue he doth not say simply The grace of God hath appeared and teacheth vs c. but that grace which bringeth saluation doth beseech and teach vs to reforme our liues because saluation is already purchased Euen so Christ and his forerunner Iohn Baptist Matt. 3.2 preached amendement of life for remission of sinnes because the kingdome of God was at hand that is the Gospell so called because none shall enter into that kingdome that hath not first entered into the kingdome of grace So Paul when he had folded and enwrapped all vnder sinne and had taught the points of our predestination Rom. 9.10 in the 12. chapter and 1. verse he beseecheth them by the bowels of the Lord Iesus to be renewed in their mindes and reformed in their liues And Rom. 6.12 he exhorteth them that sinne may not raigne nor haue dominion ouer them because they are called to the grace of the Gospell to bee iustified in the blood of Christ So Peter 1. Pet. 1.17 from our redemption draweth an exhortation to new life If saith he yee call God father passe your time in feare and Paul 1. Cor. 6.20 exhorteth to glorifie God in our members because we are his and not our owne being bought with a great price So as this is the most effectuall persawsion that can bee ● Cor. 7. ● because we are alreadie washed to keepe ourselues cleane Further obserue that the Gospell being brought in heere not simply perswading vs to purity cleannesse of life but as bringing saluation with it that as all benefites may perswade so there bee three sorts of benefites especially that may perswade most of which saluation is the greatest The first kind of benefite to perswade by is deliuerance from some great extremity the second is an aduancement from a base estate to some high dignity the third is a benefite that ioyneth both these together and this is most forcible How farre the first of these may preuaile Dauid sheweth 1. King 1.29 who when hee would assure Barsheba his wife that Salomon should succeed him in his kingdome to giue the best security he could he protested As the Lord liueth that hath deliuered my soule from aduersity thy sonne Salomon shall raigne after me as if he should say as hee was to bee thankfull and obedient to the Lord for these his deliuerances so he would pledge and gage this to her vpon the certainety of Salomons succession For the second sort when from a base condition a man is aduanced to some speciall preferment and how this preuaileth appeareth in Ioseph Gen. 39.8.9 who by the force of this argument beateth backe the assaults of his Ladie and Mistresse for he bearing in minde the speciall benefites of his master towards him reasoneth thus I Ioseph by my masters fauour am now the greatest in all his house being at first a bond-man there is nothing but he hath committed to my charge onely thee hath he reserued to him selfe how is it possible then I should commit such a villany to so kinde and bountifull a master making his owne aduancement as a bulwarke to driue backe the siege of his mistresse incontinency thereby euen to stoppe her mouth by appealing to her owne conscience that weighing how his master had dealt with him there could bee no excuse for him if hee should commit such a villany For the third wherein both these concurre what heart can bee so vngratefull as not to bee perswaded to yeeld obedience to him that hath performed both these If a man committing some criminall offence and when the stroke was euen ready to be giuen in that very instant of his anguished minde as for death it selfe so for so shamefull a death the King should send him a pardon and after aduance him to some honorable office therby to grace him for his former indignitie and to cleare him of his former blemish if this man should haue any suite recommended to him from his King which sute should carry with it some remembrance of his deliuerance were it possible for that man but to execute this commandement and to further this suite with great loyaltie Surely hee could not but doe it Let vs see then how farre the Gospell may preuaile with vs since it hath brought saluation which implieth and presupposeth that there was damnation before for wee were the heires of Sathan without Christ without light wrapped in the chaines of darknesse ordained not to the execution of the gibbet but to bee iudged after the passing of a few da●es in trouble and vanity to be tormented eternally with the damned from this hath the Gospell brought vs therefore when we are tempted to sinne we should say vnto our selues As the Lord liueth that hath deliuered my soule from death I will not doe it and haue this suite commended vnto thee not to wallow in the