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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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according to Christs institution that the whole worship of God be purged from humane traditions and superstitions that the Church discipline be executed according to the word of God that not onely thefts murthers adulteries forceries which euen heathen kings haue rooted out of their countries be punished but also blasphemies cursings atheisme heresie drunkennes Sabbath-breaking c. In a word we yeelde vnto the soueraigne power soueraigne authoritie to driue all sorts of men Ecclesiasticall and Ciuill to all those duties religious or secular which God hath laid vpon them and according to their care herein haue they beene commended or disallowed in the Scriptures Now that Princes should not command but according vnto God the Lord hath appointed them meanes as 1. The booke of the lawe to be by them continually to iudge of all matters according to the mouth of the Lord and to frame and execute their lawes according to the same 2. The ministerie to explane and lay open and put them in mind of their dutie out of that booke For these two Magistracie and Ministerie serve one an other as the left hand the right But here Ministers must take heede that they take no more vpon them then to aduise and aduertise from the Lord seeing this is one maine difference betweene Magistracy and Ministerie that although one haue an eye to the other in that Magistracie must stablish the Ministerie and the Ministerie direct Magistracie yet neither of them may execute the other Moses and Aaron must communicate their counsels and labours but both must knowe their owne standing After them Iosuah must ioyne with Eleazer Dauid the king must take advise of Nathan and Gad the Prophets Iosiah with Huldas so long as Iehoidah the Priest liueth to direct Ioas he prooueth well but after his death he waxeth worse And Vzziah will seeke the Lord in the dayes of Zachariah the Priest but afterward degenerateth and groweth verie naught and vnlike vnto himselfe Thus as formerly we haue stablished the regall power ouer all persons Ecclesiasticall as wel as others so now haue we also ouer all causes Ecclesiasticall as well as Ciuill with this onely exception vnder Christ who must still be acknowledged the soueraigne Lord and King of his Church to rule it by his own word and lawes according to which direction while they square their gouernement as Moses did all in the temple by the patterne shewed in the mount happy are the people happie is their gouernement happie are themselues in their administration but thrice happie shall they be in their account Quest. But all this while you onely bind the Prince to the lawes of Christ in gouerning the Church doe you giue him no power to make Ecclesiasticall lawes and constitutions of his owne Answ. Yes but concerning this point I thus conceiue that Ecclesiasticall lawes are of two sorts 1. Such as prescribe both the matter and manner of the worship of God and the whole substance of Church gouernement which are all the lawes of Christ himselfe made to his hand 2. Other Ecclesiasticall lawes which remaine for the supreame power to make are of two sorts 1. Either edicts for the authorizing and commanding the excution of the former lawes for the building and repairing of the Church that it may be a louely spouse of Christ. Or 2. such constitutions as are circumstantiall and in things meerely indifferent which may varie according to the variablenes of times places and dispositions of Churches and here he hath power to make Church-lawes of his owne so as the rules of the word be not transgressed concerning things indifferent And I thinke this a truth not denied by any In performing both these latter Kings and Queenes are called nursing Fathers and nursing Mothers to the Church Now follows the second ground to be laid for the resoluing of the former point namely that seeing Kings are of power to doe what they list although not euer lawfully in regard of the lawes of God or nature yet safely in respect of his subiects who may not violently resist their persons or proceedings for who shall say vnto him what doest thou in this regard they may and sometimes doe command vnlawfull and vniust things and inflict grieuous and heauie burdens vniustly whether must obedience and subiection be yeelded them or no Ans. The conclusion is It is neuer lawfull to resist or rebell or vse any violence against a lawfull Magistrate for this were to rise vp in armes against the ordinance of God and consequently against God himselfe The Apostle Peter indeede calleth it an humane ordinance or creature but not in regard of the author as if it were deuised by man but of the ende because it is ordained of God for man as the proper subiect and for his profit as the proper ende of it And therefore though Popish Friers and factors stand within Corahs tents with poisoned daggers digging out the life-blood of Christian Princes and especially the Iesuites those cursed Shebaes which make no bones by themselues and others most treacherously to slay their kings and masters yet Dauids heart smote him when he made but a slight assault vpon the skirt of Sauls garment because he was the Lords anoynted teaching vs by his example another lesson then by violence to helpe our selues if we could doe it out of the vniust commandements and executions of those whom God hath set in eminence and authoritie aboue vs. But here we must take direction how to carie our selues towards lawfull Magistrates commanding or imposing vnlawfull things For consideration must be had whether the command bind vs to doe or to suffer and beare any vniust thing If the former enioyning vs to doe that wherof we haue not good ground to do it of faith here the supreame power of all must be obeyed and the prince only in and for the Lord for so Cesar must haue Cesars as God may haue Gods Daniel and his fellowes deliberated not to answer the King but boldly and readily professed that they would neuer worship his Image they would submit themselues to his furie but durst not to his commandement The Martyrs in Queene Maries time whose mention and memorie is honourable resisted not nor rebelled they willingly and ioyfully gaue their bodies to the flames but still professed against the idolatrous worship and doctrine established by law In Ieroboams time those which could conforme themselues to the edict of the calues were doubtles counted obedient and had the grace of the times and it went hard with others that durst not saue their labour but repayred to the Temple still but the Lord condemneth and accursed such wicked obedience and bringeth euill vpon all Israel for it No power on earth can make the conscience safe in the doing of a thing vnlawfull although in a thing indifferent conformed to the rules of the word the Princes law is a binder It is a weake speach therefore to say I do this and that
for it is euill to him that eateth with offence and Paul would neuer eate meate before he would offend Hence followeth it that we may not offend either priuate or publike persons Of priuate men some are of weake consciences and these must be borne vp and yeelded vnto for good rather then destroied by our libertie the Apostle became all things to all such persons and Christ himselfe would not quench a smoaking flaxe Some other are obstinate stiffe yea and malitious from whom we must challenge our Christian libertie If men be carping Pharisies or wilfull Papists the counsell is Let them alone nay more so pretious must our libertie so dearely purchased be vnto vs as we may not neglect it or dissemble it before such as are taught and should be stronger although they be brethren for this was Peters case for which he was iustly reprehended who withdrawing himselfe from the Gentiles to pleasure the Iewes gaue them who had beene taught the contrarie occasion to conceiue of the Gentiles as vncleane still This whole truth is confirmed by Pauls practise who would and did permit Timothie to be circumcised in regard of infirme and weake beleeuers among the Iewes Act. 16.3 but would not suffer Titus so to be Gal. 2.3 partly because he would not offend the godly and partly because he would challenge Christian libertie against those obstinate and malitious aduersaries who had almost ouerturned all the labours of the Apostle in that Church of Galatia by vrging circumcision as a thing of absolute necessitie vnto saluation Here is ministred a direct answer to that question whether recusant Papists are to be compelled to Church because it is an offence vnto them Wherto I answer 1. that this is not a case of indifferencie but necessarie that they come into the pure worship of God and therefore it must be effected either by entreatie or compulsion 2. Were it indifferent yet were they not to be festered in their error because they refuse instruction and are not weake but wilfull 3. Neither are they thus compelled to beleeue but to vse the right meanes of faith 4. Good Iosias made a couenant with the Lord and caused all his people to stand vnto it 2. Chro. 34.32 Now as we may not offend our priuate brethren so much lesse the publike Magistrate who hath power giuen him of God to limit and restraine our ouercommon vse of these things by wholesome lawes concerning things indifferent which lawes we are bound in conscience to obey for then their indifferencie ceaseth not in regard of themselues but of that law restraining them And here sundrie questions may be further demanded As 1. Whether a man may with a safe conscience eate flesh at times prohibited by the Magistrate Answ. In this one instance direction is giuen euen in all the other things of this kinde as concerning daies garments c. therefore I say that to eate or doe any other thing against a law is one thing and to doe otherwise then the law commands in these things is another the former commonly 1. hindreth the end of the law 2. contemneth the authoritie of the law maker 3. hath no iust cause in it selfe 4. careth not for the offence of others this is alwaies a sinne against God and a breach of the fifth commandement but otherwise the former cautions duly obserued I see not how it is a sinne in conscience to eate besides the law Quest. But can any Magistrate make a law to binde the conscience Answ. No but yet we must obey their wholesome lawes for conscience sake which conscience is bound not by the law of the Magistrate but by Gods law which bindeth to obedience of the Magistrates lawes in all lawfull and honest things so Paul Rom. 13.5 subiecteth not the conscience to the lawes of men but to Gods ordinance inforcing obedience to such humane lawes as ●ight not with his owne Quest. 3. But how stand we to the libertie wherein Christ hath set vs free if we suffer the Magistrate to curb vs of it Answ. Wel inough seeing the Magistrate medleth not with the libertie in conscience purchased by Christ for then we might not yeeld a whit but stand on our right but reseruing that as whole and entire as he found it he onely restraineth the ouercommon vse of that libertie for example The lawes which prohibit this or that meate beeing ciuill and made in respect of ciuill and politike order for the common good of men are externall and the obseruation of them is a ciuill obedience and in it selfe properly no worship of God vnto which the outward man is bound directly ●nd not the inward but by accident Which if we will plainely and in a word vnderstand we must consider in euery indifferent thing two things 1. a libertie to vse them 2. the vse of that libertie which two differ as much as meat set vpon the table and the eating of it The libertie is in the conscience the vse is an outward thing the former no Magistrates law medleth with nor can restraine but in the latter his law is a binder And thus we shut the doore against all Popish ecclesiasticall lawes and canons concerning fasts feasts daies garments and infinite other traditions which they vrge as things necessarie to saluation directly binding the conscience yea as meritorious and leading to a state of perfection whereas indeed they directly fight against Christian libertie yea many of them against the morall law it selfe Let them plead as they doe that to the greater authoritie more subiection is due and therefore they must be much more obeyed in their ecclesiasticall constitutions then the Magistrate in his ciuill I answer when they haue prooued their charter out of the word whereby they may make lawes which must be obeyed for conscience sake as the ciuill Magistrate may we will subscribe vnto them In the meane time we haue learned that seeing the Church hath power only to ordaine constitutions for orders sake no man is further bound to them but only so farre as he may auoid scandall of others or further the publique good intended by that constitution But what if the Magistrate giue life to ecclesiasticall constitutions of the Church whether then doe they become such lawes as bind the conscience Answ. The Magistrate giueth no greater power to the Church to make lawes then Christ hath giuen if he make his pleasure knowne that he by his power will see order kept it is the part of euery good subiect and Christian to obey him cheerefully Secondly To vse out libertie in loue we must not onely not cast back our brethren but edifie them and bring them forward in godlinesse 1. Cor. 6.12 all things must profit 1. Cor. 10.23 all things are lawfull but all things edifie not And the generall rule of all indifferent things is Let all things be done to edification and Rom. 15.1 2. Let euerie man please his neighbour to edification euen as Christ
way in writing to the Iewes but because he knew his person and name to be merueilously hated at Ierusalem and that he was growne into great contempt among the enemies of the Gospell from whom he had separated whose furie he gaue place vnto and would not excite by adding his name beeing desirous that they should entertaine the naked truth for it selfe And howsoeuer it is a vaine thing to be peremptorie in defining it to be Pauls yet is it more vaine to conclude it none of his because it wants his name for by the same reason it hauing no bodies name they might conclude it to be no bodies nay rather vpon this occasion wanting his name it is liker to be his 2. From Pauls example euery Christian man may learne to be readie to giue his name to the Gospel and like a child of wisedome by a bold profession to iustifie it vpon euery iust occasion many are too indifferent herein and loth to be knowne disciples of Christ the shame it is of many professors in such a sunneshine day as this to cast themselues with Nicodemus into the night A seruant of God This is a title which all the Apostles delight in for thus also Peter Iames Iude in the beginning of their Epistles stiled themselues which is not to be vnderstood in a generall sense as Reu. 7.3 for thus not onely they but all Christians nay more all creatures euen the worst are some way seruiceable vnto God in executing his will but it here specially respecteth that office and function to which they were set a part expressed more particularly in the next words and an Apostle Doctr. This beeing the first title whereby the Apostle would get himselfe authoritie teacheth That the very name of a seruant of God is full of honour and authoritie The Apostle comparing the glorie of Christ with the glorie of the Angels Heb. 1.14 advanceth them as farre as possibly he can that Christ his glorie beeing so much more excellent then theirs there described might be most highly exalted and yet the highest ascent of their honour which he can rise vnto is to title them ministring spirits standing about God from which seruice they are honoured with glorious names of thrones dominations powers Rulers principallities and although the Scriptures most vsually vnder this title expresse the low and humble condition of Christ who tooke on him the forme of a seruant yet also thereby the Lord would sometime signifie his great glorie as Isa. 42.1 Behold my seruant I will lea●e vpon him mine elect in whom my soule delighteth The Apostle Paul when he would prouoke himselfe to magnifie the free mercie of God toward himselfe maketh this the ground of his glorie and reioycing that God had counted him faithfull and put him in his seruice Vse 1. This serues to teach ministers their dutie that seeing the Lord hath so highly honoured them as to draw them so neere vnto himselfe as it were admitting them into his presence chamber yea vnto his councell table they are in way of thankefulnesse more straightly bound to two maine duties 1. diligence 2. thankefulnesse First diligence in wholly giuing vp themselues and strength in the dispatching of their masters businesse whose now wholly they are their eare is boared neuer to depart from him so as now they may not seeke or serue themselues but take themselues to be as the ciuill law calleth seruants 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such as sustaine no person but are become dependances and adiuncts yea indeede reasonable instruments in the hand of their master If motiues would stirre vp our diligence vnto the worke of God we want not a multitude as 1. this master hath most absolute power of life and death ouer his seruants 2. his eie is euer ouer them which prouoketh euen eie-pleasers to quicknesse 3. the fruit of diligence is the sauing of our selues and others 4. blessed shall that seruant be whom the master shall finde so doing 5. without this thou shalt become the vnprofitable seruant that shall be bound hand and foote and cast into hell the seruice is difficult as beeing an haruest an husbandrie a building a planting all which require labourers and painfull workemen it is the diligent hand that bringeth these workes to a commendable passe nay more it is a sighting with spirituall weapons against mightie and malitious enemies and requireth quicknesse and courage This busines needeth not whole armies of such souldiers as we reade of 1. Sam. 17.24 who ranne away when they sawe Goliah a farre off one poore and contemptible Dauid who is as good as his word when he saith Thy seruant will goe and fight with the Philistim v. 32. brings the businesse more happily forward then a nation of the former in whom we see the picture of the euill and slothfull seruant whose ende the Euangelist recordeth to be fearefull The second dutie is faithfulnesse It is required of euery dispenser that he be found faithfull and this faithfulnes must appeare 1. in gaining disciples not to himselfe but vnto Christ Iohn was a faithful seruant to Christ he must increase and I must decrease and Paul I seeke not yours but you but this was to present them as virgins vnto Christ. The lawe of equitie concludeth that whatsoeuer the seruant gaineth should become the masters But the world is full of vnfaithfull seruants who when they should come in their Masters name come in their owne Gehezi runnes after Naaman for talents of gold and change of raiment and saith his master sent him 2. In seeking to please and approoue himselfe vnto his master and not to other men Thus was Moses faithfull but as a seruant in all the house of God nay Christ himselfe is herein preferred Heb. 3.2 that he was faithfull to him that appointed him But wherein was this faithfulnes seene In Moses in that he did all things according to the patterne in the Mount In Christ in that his doctrine was not his but his fathers neither did he any thing of himselfe but all that his father taught him that spake he and all that he sawe the father doe that did he This same was the faithfulnesse of the Apostles also who preached onely what they had heard and seene of Christ and deliuered onely what they had receiued and this must be the faithfulnesse of vs their successors the Pastors and teachers to the ende of the world Vnto which we may bee mooued not onely in that we haue such a cloude of worthie examples but also in that we serue a good master one full of faithfulnesse readie to retribute our fidelitie with infinite advantage a farre more foreceable argument to bind vs vnto God then that of the Apostle to binde seruants to faithfull seruice of beleeuing masters And lastly because our master standeth in neede of our faithfulnes now when the most haue forsaken him I meane not onely the Clergie of Rome
himselfe and the people of his daies whome he would not suffer to rest in farre more knowledge and proper faith then this we haue in hand how vrgeth he the Colossians that hauing receiued a tast of the true knhwledge of God nay euen a kind of stedfastnesse in the faith of the Lord Iesus yet here they should not make any staie but proceed on to the full assurance of vnderstanding in all the riches of it to know the mysterie of God yea to be further rooted and built and stablished in the faith of Christ and neuer to giue ouer till they come to be compleate in him which how they can stand with that Popish position a weake eie may see The like of Peter 2. Pet. 1.12 And 2. wauerers in religion and vnsetled persons in their profession may hence be informed to iudge of themselues and their present estate We heare more then a few vttering such voices as these There is such difference of opinions among teachers that I know not what to hold or whom to beleeue but is not this openly to proclaime the want of faith which is not only assuredly perswaded of but certainely knoweth the truth of that it apprehendeth The iust man we know liueth by his faith but this is to withdraw himselfe to perdition Let not therefore such wauering minded men looke for portion in Christ whose followers and disciples can professe vnto him Master thou hast the words of eternall life and whether shall we goe And though all men forsake thee yet we will die with thee before we denie thee Our precept is that if an Angel from heauen should come and bring another doctrine so setled and stablished our mindes ought to be in the present truth we should hold him accursed But lamentable it is that Angels from heauen need not come to preuaile against the truth for let but a blinded Papist come from Rome broach his vessell and in effect affirme that all the Apostles were deceiued in their doctrine a number of Protestants may soone be turned to another Gospel the experience whereof hath brought swarmes of Iesuits and Seminaries among vs to the poysning not of a few 3. If the elect are brought to the faith by the acknowledging of the truth then after long teaching and much meanes to be still blinde and not to see the things of our peace is a most heauie iudgement of God for here is a forfeit of faith and saluation Here indeede is the voice of Christ but here are not sheepe of Christ that heare it here is the glorious light of the Gospel shining but here are none but Infidels the eyes of whose minds the God of this world hath blinded that they cannot behold it here is the annointing offering to teach all things but here are not they that haue receiued him here is spirituall meate but here are not spirituall men to feed vpon it for if any thinke himselfe spirituall let him acknowledge the things deliuered to be the commandements of the Lord which who so doth not he is stil in the snare of the deuil farre from repentance prisoner to doe his will Whence are all our plagues in the Church in the land but for want of not acknowledging the truths which haue bin clearer then the sun to our eyes and how iust is it that such as will not know the voice should know the hand of God and that whome the vocall word cannot reclaime the reall word of the Lord should ouertake Thirdly whosoeuer in truth entertaine the Doctrine of the Gospel the hearts of such are framed vnto godlines For herein this truth taketh place and preheminence aboue all other truths and writings in that it doth not only inlighten the vnderstanding but also in that it fashioneth the heart vnto that which it teacheth nay herein this doctrine farre excelleth that of the law of God which is indeed a lanterne to direct and teacheth what to doe by enforming the minde in the seuerall duties of it but giueth no power to the performance of any of them but this truth besides the shewing of the dutie conferreth strength acceptably to do it for it conuerteth the soule More plainely we reade of a twofold law but in substance the same 1. the law of God 2. the law of Christ. The former is an old commandement prescribing loue the latter a new commandement prescribing loue also The newnes of this commandement then standeth not in any new matter and substance of Doctrine but in this new manner of deliuerie and propounding in that the law commanded loue but gaue no strength to performe it it writeth it selfe onely in the fleshly tables of the heart and so in the flesh it cannot be fulfilled but in the Gospel with this commandement of loue goeth in beleeuers the giuing of Christ and the gift of faith whereby they are enabled in the performance of it whence also the Apostle Iohn calleth it both an olde doctrine namely in regard of the substance of it and a new doctrine not as latter in time but in respect of that effectuall power of renewing the soule which accompanieth it and maketh the doctrine effectuall to the beleeuer it beeing the quickning spirit which reformeth the minde informed In like manner doth our Apostle elsewhere oppose the euidence of this doctrine to the vailed knowledge of the law and ascribeth vnto it two things aboue that which the law affoardeth 1. a clearer illumination We behold as in a mirror the glorie of the Lord with open face 2. reformation of heart and life and are changed into the same image from glorie to glorie which is the end of the former enlightning vnto which the law could not lead vs which letteth vs see indeed some part of the glorie of the Lord but cannot change vs as this into that we see And as the propertie of this truth is to renew men by the knowledge of it to his image that did create vs so whosoeuer haue learned Christ as the the truth is in Christ he hath cast off the old man and is renewed in the spirit of the minde This knowledge leaueth not men in vaine speculation but leadeth forward euery Christian towards his perfection 2. Tim. 3.16 Vse 1. If this be the preheminence of the word to frame the soule to true godlinesse then is it a matter aboue the reach of all humane learning and therefore the folly of those men is hence discouered who devote and bury themselues in profane studies of what kind soeuer they be thinking therein to obtaine more wisedome then in the studie of the Scriptures But in forsaking the word of the Lord what wisedome is there and what is their gaine more then that by the iust wrath of God vpon them they are commonly turned into that they reade liuing in open profanes or else at the best are but ciuill men without religion or good
many words Act. 7.44 Heb. 8.5 As they therefore in the old Testament had their pillar of fire and cloud at the going and standing of which they must goe and stand in all their iourneys so haue we in the newe likewise a watch of the Lord to keepe namely the will of God expressed in his word which must be the beginning of euery motion and rest in the Church Vse Let the bold Papists come and say one by one I haue a vision or I haue a dreame I haue found out this or that tradition concerning prayers for the dead fasts or feasts confirmed by some diabolicall delusions let them pretend their rules of perfection standing in the obseruation of Euangelicall counsels such as concerne chastitie voluntarie pouertie c. let them obtrude to vs the Church the Church and the Church must be heard and hereby thrust vpon vs what lawes they list for the holding and keeping of life in that beast of Rome We say to all these things that if any of them stand by Apostolicall authoritie we will receiue all such traditions but if they be vnder Apostolicall power who are they or what haue we to deale with them or they with vs seeing that neither an Euangelist may take vpon him nor we take from him any impositions vnder Apostolicall authoritie Obiect They alleadge Luk. 10. He that despiseth you despiseth me Ans. So long as they speake according to their commission which is teach them to keepe all that I haue commanded you Matth. 28.28 Obiect Matth. 18. Tell the Church if he refuse to heare the Church let him be to thee as an heathen Ans. But the Church must be in their Ecclesiasticall iurisdiction tied to some certaine rule which is described in the word Ob. But Paul and Timothie deliuered some decrees ordained by the Apostles and Elders to be kept Act. 16.4 Ans. 1. They must knowe their power subiected and inferiour to this Apostolicall 2. euen the Apostles themselues gaue no decrees but such as were cōprehended in the written word as in Act. 15.29 It seemeth good to the Holy Ghost and vs to lay no other burthen but in these necessarie things wherein besides that in ordering the Church we see they had such an immediate assistance of the holy Ghost that they could not erre so also the things decreed were according to the written word As the things offered to Idols and fornication were condemned in the morall law the eating of blood forbidden to Noah before Moses and in the law partly because there was some symbol in it of the blood of Christ by which the soule is purged and partly to auoide the note of inhumanitie and crueltie And things strangled were before the Apostles times prohibited for the former reason least blood not let out should be eaten Which two latter although their nature were changed and free in themselues after Christ yet the Apostle in the time of gathering the Church of the Iewes and Gentiles because he would haue no bones of dissention cast betweene them and auoide the scandall for a time required them and forbore to abrogate them but would haue them for the time retained without all opinion of worship necessitie and much lesse of merit by all which bonds the Papists would fasten vpon vs all their humane inventions so that all their allegations are too weake to remooue vs from this hold so immooueably grounded vpon the Scriptures Vers. 6. If any be vnreprooueable the husband of one wife hauing faithfull children which are not slandred of riot neither disobedient In these words the Apostle entreth that particular direction how Titus should behaue himselfe in the house of God both in the placing of Elders and redressing abuses in all sorts of persons For the former because it is the maine either beautie or blemish of any Church either to be g●aced or dishonoured with gracious or graceles Ministers they beeing as captaines or leaders to the people in whatsoeuer waies themselues take vp therefore that Titus should not laie rash hands vpon any but after triall make choice of such men as should be found worthy euery way for that worthie worke and that he should not be deceiued in his choice Paul taketh paines to draw him a patterne and giue him a liuely picture of the man whom he meaneth And this he doth by a full description of the qualities and conditions as his lineaments the proportion of which if he can espie he hath found the man he sought and whom the Church needeth Now these qualities as they concerne either his life and conuersation or else his abilitie and fitnes for doctrine and instruction so doth the Apostle in this order prosecute them the former from this to the 9. verse the latter in the latter part of this Chapter First then for the life of him who is to be called to this office in the Church it is required 1. in generall that he be vnreprooueable and that both at home and abrode as we shall see 2. more specially for his further beautifying he must both be furnished with certaine vertues which must positiuely shine in him and these are such as concerne his priuate life and family described in their kinds and partly in this 6. verse and vrged by reasons in the 7. as also he must be freed from many particular vices which are reckoned vp and amplified by the opposition of the contrarie vertues which he must exercise vers 7.8 This is the carriage of these verses the particulars whereof shall be propounded and further prosecuted in their places First it is required in generall in the life of him that is to be set ouer a people as their pastor and teacher that he be vnreprooueable By which the Apostle meaneth nothing lesse then one that is without fault or infirmitie or sinne for there is none that liueth and sinneth not and the high priest though a speciall type of Christ and the chiefe Minister of the ancient Church of the Iewes must first offer for his owne sinnes and then for the sinnes of the people yea and Christ himselfe teaching his Disciples the chiefe Ministers of the new Testament to pray taught them to say daily Forgiue vs our trespasses neither doth the nature of the word here vsed require any such angelicall puritie but meaneth such a one as no man can iustly call into question or taint with any infamie and crime Iustly I say for otherwise it is not the priuiledge of the best to keepe them from tribunalls before which the Prophets the Apostles yea and Christ himselfe had such crimes intended against them as prooued capitall but all iniustly so is it the lot of the godly to be often blamed and condemned for that wherein they are not blameworthy and if bare calling in question did disable a Minister from the office it would quickly be brought about by the malice of the Deuil that all the most conscionable Ministers in the world should soone be
and here especially is reprooued that ordinarie vice whereby men shew themselues louers of pleasures more then of God namely when for their pleasure or recreation men omit the duties of the Sabbath yea further when men sit at plaie day and night longer then they would willingly for much mony be bound to any good thing whereby they wast their substance neglect their callings loose their good names and go vnder the names of gamesters dicers c. in the meane time who is at home to guid and order to pray and teach the family oh this is a strange voice to a gamester Thus we see how men faile in these particulars to which many more might be added whereby they draw much sinne vpon themselues in the vse of their most lawfull liberties Now therefore shall it not be amisse to adde a fewe generall rules or counsels by the obseruation of which a heart desirous to please God in all things shall be able to avoide all these wandrings and turne it selfe to the comfortable vse of all these things wherein Satan hideth so many snares As 1. Labour for a pure eie and all the bodie shall be bright and lightsome such an eie as may see Iesus Christ with his merits for till then outward things cannot but be much and great in our eyes 2. When once thou seest Christ and his merits set thy affections on nothing else loue nothing meruaile at nothing desire nothing but either Christ or for Christ nothing that is outward must be desired for it selfe neither vsed but so farre as it maketh to the chiefe marke yea and more or lesse receiued or refused as each of them are more or lesse valuable to this purpose Much lesse maist thou rest in any thing which thou canst see here belowe where thou art but a stranger for the things thou canst see are but as shadows to the things thou seest not but oughtest most to affect and sometimes they appeare to be the things they are not and vanish away with the vse and hasten vnto nothing Now what follie were it to set them vp or equall them and much more to preferre them before Christ as if they were things that could make a man happie or vnhappie whereas they are in themselues neither good nor euill but so farre as they lead vnto or from Christ. And what more proper cause can we giue why men so corrupt themselues in outward things then this that they make there a stoppe and resting place whence they should make a steppe to climbe further towards heauen 3. Iudge thy selfe and others not by abundance of outward things no not if thou couldest passe Midas or Craesus in wealth for thou art hereby but more bound laden and entangled but by thine or their portion in Christ that man hath gotten abundantly that with his content in Christ can manfully despise these outward things he wanteth nothing that wanteth not faith for what can he want who possesseth Christ in whom is all things thinke then with thy selfe Is Christ mine or I his then I shall be prouided for sufficiently for he shall not want to whom Christ hath promised that nothing shall be wanting hee cannot hunger and thirst who hath once tasted of this bread water of life he can neuer be found naked who hath put on Iesus Christ he can want no pleasure who possesseth him at whose right hand are pleasures for euermore I will therefore make Christ my foode my raiment my riches my recreation and reioyce that my lines are fallen so well as for other things if I can haue them with him and vse them for him so it is but if not all shall goe before the pearle naked Christ is wealth enough Vse 2. A second vse of this doctrine that all things are pure to the pure is to take notice what a priuiledge beleeuers haue obtained by Christ that to them all things beeing pure they may without scruple of conscience vse their libertie in any indifferent thing so it be vsed aright because that lawe of commandements which stood in ordinances is abrogated through the flesh of Christ that bondage which beleeuers were put vnder before Christs appearing lasteth now no longer seeing faith is come the impotent and beggerly rudiments are vanished and taken out of the way the hand-writing by which they subscribed to their owne guiltinesse and condemnation and that so often as they vsed the ceremonies of the lawe is fastened vnto the crosse Nay more sinne which robbed vs of all is spoyled the powers and principallities to which our sinne deliuered vs are vanquished Sathan hell death deuills and all hostilitie are gloriously led captiue and triumphed ouer that we might see our full victorie by our captaine and head of our profession who hauing thus set vs into the freedome of sonnes and thereby giuen vs prerogatiue to all the priuiledges of heauen it selfe which are constant and not fading can he grudge vs and not giue vs much more right to the creatures which are but corruptible Oh how should this vrge vs to labour for the pretious gift of faith which as a chiefe instrument sealeth vp to the soule possessing it all the former priuiledges of the Saints it bringeth with boldnes into the presence of God it reacheth Christ in whom the Father is well pleased it restoreth our right in the most common benefits euen to the ayre which we breath in it maketh prayers to bee heard the word to be profitable almes and workes of mercie to be comfortable whereas without it a curse followeth the vse of all blessings all seruices are reiected thy prayers are abhominable who turnest thy eare from hearing the lawe thy hearing and reading the word is the reading and hearing of the sentence of thy owne condemnation thou giuest almes of that which is none of thine owne all thy paines and labour is but to get thee to hel ô therfore seeing such are the prerogatiues of a beleeuer get faith into thy soule which is the onely purchase of them with great summes of money these freedoms cannot be obtained only the beleeuer is free borne Which if it be so what a wofull thing is it that so fewe prize these priuiledges as they ought so fewe care for the gift of faith offered in the preaching of the word by which alone they can become pure to the creatures and the creatures vnto them yea they pure to all things and all things vnto them by woefull experience we finde the truth of that of the Apostle all men haue not faith nay it is a gift and giuen but to a verie fewe for there are but a fewe freemen in a corporation in comparison of the rest and yet fewer benchers then freemen as the Saints are a fewe counsellers in a state as beleeuers are and yet better were it to be no man then no beleeuer And in the second place when by much labour and meanes we haue obtained these freedomes we must
saue of her husbands allowance or procure by her labour aboue that her husband enioyneth 9. That she getteth naughtily she ought to dispose it to the owners or to the poore though he should forbid her because neither she nor he hath right thereunto The Casuists adde other cases which are more questionable But the question is of such goods as are common between them whether she may dispose of them to any vse without his consent And the common answer is negatiue and sundrie reasons propounded Which as I will not conclude against so neither can I wholly assent vnto for these reasons which I propound to be further considered of 1. Whereas one cheife ground of that opinion is that the wife hath no more but vse of her husbands goods I take it she hath also a right and interest in them For marriage which maketh the person of the husband the wiues maketh his goods much more so that as she hath not vse only but right and power of his bodie so also hath she not only an vse but a right and possession in his goods Againe if she haue onely vse of them wherein is her preferment aboue the children and seruants who haue vse of them aswell as she Further the husband is bound to impart and make his wealth common with his wife as Christ imparted his heart blood vpon the Church which the Church hath a state and interest in the which interest for any to debarre the Church of were to withhold her from her right Secondly the wife is as necessarily bound by God to shew mercie as well as the husband the precept is generall to doe good forget not and to distribute She must therefore exercise her faith in the practise of good workes as well as he though her husband forbid her whom she is to obey only in the Lord what if he should command her not to heare the word praie and goe to Church or the like and the case is not vnlike seeing mercie is more acceptable then sacrifice and euery way as necessarie Obiect It will be here said that we may not doe euill to doe good withall or giue of that which is not our owne Answ. It is the question whether it be euill or no. And she giueth of that which she hath right and state in euen to dispose but in no other vse then in workes of mercie as present need requireth and that with wisedome and discretion so as she neither impouerish her husband weaken his estate nor wrong her own familie Thirdly we haue examples of godly women for to let passe the fact of Abigail that was as Mr. Calvin saith extraordinarie in that God did inwardly and specially direct her in that strait and the case was of present necessitie to saue the liues of the whole family and further her husband Nabal was not only froward but drunke all that daie and not to be consulted withall 1. Sam. 25.16.36 The examples of Ioanna the wife of Cuza and Susanna and many other godly women were not so extraordinarie who ministred to Christ of their substance to say here they had the consent of their husbands is but to insist in the question without proofe and it is most probable their husbands were not so forward especially Cuza who was Herods steward in likelihood was of Herods mind Most expressely Salomon saith of euery vertuous woman that she stretcheth out her hand to the poore Prov. 31.20 Fourthly the most learned deciders of cases among the Papists conclude and determine that the wife in this case may do that which the husband ought to do but will not as if she know much of his goods ill gotten which ought to be restored she may giue more liberally whereby so farre as she can she laboureth to heale his error and witholdeth Gods iudgement from her selfe in participating in his goods It is obiected that the vowe of the wife may not stand without her husbands consent at least implicite and therefore she may not dispose of inferiour things without it To which may be answered that this is a ruled case by expresse commandement not deniable by any as the other is not Besides it is an vnlike case seeing vowes are voluntarie and in the power or choise of the vower to vowe or not to vowe but so are not works of mercie which are commanded and necessarie duties It is alleadged that partners may doe nothing without mutuall consent But that is answered because here steppeth in a superiour power to which both of them must stoope euen a commandement of mercie and charitie to the wife as well as the husband and includeth that the wife must haue wherewithall to be charitable as well as the husband It is alleadged that her desire must be subiect vnto him he shall rule but all such allegations drawne from his headship and authoritie stand onely in indifferent and ciuill things which a mercifull and necessarie releefe is not for we say that she is in a ciuill manner subiected vnto him and to his power and may not dispose of any part of his goods at her pleasure to any ciuill vse as to giue away to her friends to spend vpon other other outward vses But yet is she not after such a seruile manner put vnder his power as that vpon no occasion whatsoeuer shee may not dispose of any part of the goods which by the right of marriage are common betweene them It is further alleadged that the Shunamite did not entertaine the Prophet but first she asked her husband I answer it is a cōmendable part for the wife to seeke her husbands consent in euerie thing but the question is where such consent cannot be had besides one thing it is to giue a mercifull releefe and an other for the wife to bring a man into the house to diet and lodge him which this woman might not doe without the consent of the husband for though there was a mercifull releefe of the Prophet of God in it yet there was more it beeing a mixt action in one part of which the husband must haue a chiefe stroake It is further alleadged that by ciuill lawes the wife may neither let nor sell nor borrow without her husband and therefore neither may she giue I answer these are ciuill actions wherein the husband as the head must giue direction but mercifully to giue an almes is a religious action besides the lawes state the wife in a great part of the husbands goods and lands and prouideth by giuing her a ioynture or her thirds that the husband may not depriue her of her right therein neither by lawe can a man sell his lands simply vnlesse the wife will giue vp her thirds which plainly stateth her in a right vnto the goods and lands aboue the seruants and children the deniall of which as I said at first is the maine ground of the former opinion Other obiections I haue met with not worth the answering therefore I will not
stand longer vpon this question leauing it to be considered further of crauing that wiues would be carefull in subiection to God and their husbands not to stretch these grounds beyond the rules and ends propounded Quest. And here commeth another question to be resolued whether the husband may beate his wife to force her vnto this subiection Ans. It seemeth no although some of reckoning be of the other opinion For 1. there is no word or example for it in Scripture 2. No man euer hated much lesse except he were mad beat his owne flesh 3. Her subiection must not be seruill but as of a member to the head Obiect But a man may let himselfe blood Sol. It is safe in his arme or foote in children or seruants but he must beware of letting the heart blood Obiect But Christ correcteth his spouse which is deare vnto him and yet reteineth his loue entire and so may the husband Ans. Christ is not the husband onely but an absolute King 2. An husband may checke and correct by admonition and reprehension but to proceed to blowes is vnwarrantable beeing such entire companions and of the same flesh yea condemned by the Fathers the ciuill lawes and the Heathen writers themselues But what if the wiues mallice be desperate and incurable Ans. Take vp thy crosse make good vse of it beare as much as possibly thou canst waite and applie God for her returne 2. Where thou canst not beare prouiding that offence by all possible good meanes be auoided and publike peace not interrupted the next remedie is the Magistrate but between husband and wife both tyrannicall rule and compulsiue obedience ought to be banished Contrarie to this free subiection is the common vice of wiues which is to be proud as Vashti not enduring the gouernment of husbands but by vncomely gestures and vnshamefast lookes and sometime by hote and bitter answers bewray the vnquietnes of their spirits when once their owne wills are crossed farre are they from that meeknes and quietnesse of spirit which Peter prescribed as the most comely attire for women who ought scarce to giue thēselues leaue to be out of quiet with others in the family in the husbands presence least he be vnquieted or any way offended That the word of God be not euill spoken of These words containe a generall reason inforcing the necessarie practise of all the former duties By the word of God is meant the doctrine of the Gospel taught receiued and professed by beleeuers in all ages which holy Gospel as it is glorious in it selfe so ought the glory honor of it to be preserued yea and aduanced in all that looke for saluation from it and therefore no Christian may become so much as an occasion of reproach vnto it And whereas the word is blasphemed either by the words or deeds of professors the second is here aimed at our Apostle concluding that then the doctrine of the Gospel is blasphemed when the life of the professor is not tuned vnto that doctrine And yet fu●ther whereas the life of a professor is vntuned vnto the doctrine two waies either by doing that which is prohibited or else by not doing that which is prescribed the latter is here especially condemned namely a life idly ledde in regard of Christian practises for the Apostle hath not so directly reprooued vices as required in women the practise of all the forenamed vertues vpon this ground least the word be euill spoken of noting vnto vs hereby th●● a Christian should be so farre freed from the power of sinne as that to be idle or negligent in the work of the Lord is too sinnefull in such a one Doctr. Profession without practise striketh not onely the person professing but the word of God it selfe which he doth professe by occasioning the prophane to blaspheme and scoffe at Gods holy religion Rom. 2.24 The name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles thorough you Reas. 1. Such is the malice of the deuill and his instruments that hating God himselfe they turne whatsoeuer they can against God and his truth which is a light discouering their darkenes Hence doe they not so much maligne the person of a poore professor who perhaps neuer made nor medled with them as the light and truth shining in him yea let God touch one of their familiars and call him out of such a poisoned companie that person is presently hated and despised for the truth which if he did not now hold out they would loue and embrace as formerly they did and consequently a professor by his error calleth not so much disgrace and malice against his owne person as against the truth for let any but a professor sinne the more would the sinners of the world loue them as their owne but if any such offend or steppe awry easily shall a man perceiue where the bile is oh say they this is a goodly profession indeede which giueth them leaue to doe this or that and exclaime as though the profession were not of God because the professors shewe themselues to be but men Secondly the Lord imputeth this sinne not so much to them who doe blaspheme the truth who are the actors of this sinne as they who are the moouers and occasioners of the same Ezech. 36.20 when they entred among the heathen they polluted my name that is the heathen diligently watched the words and behauiours of my people because they beare my name and came as it were out of my schoole but my people beeing not so carefull of my name which was called vpon thē blasphemed it iustly causing others so to do Although therfore men may conceiue that by their bare profession they endanger themselues yet indeede the dishonour returneth vpon God and his Gospel euen as Dauid might thinke that he onely sinned against Vriah Bathshebe and his owne soule yet the Lord telleth him that his sinne was yet more infectious in that he had made Gods enemies to blaspheme Thirdly what a iust disgrace is it for the profession of Christ to haue such hangbyes as whose liues speake that either they knowe not or remember not or affect not or neglect yea despise that doctrine by which they expect saluation Vse 1. Let euery professor examine his life whether it bring honour or discredit to the Gospel whether his light shine among men or whether in any thing he giue offence vnto any for there is neuer a sinne in a professor but it is hereby doubled in that he woundeth not his owne soule alone but many other Christians with himselfe yea and the Gospel of saluation No meruaile then is it that the Lord is so ielous in the sinnes of such men who come neere him and in whome he looketh to be sanctified that although he forgiue their sinne wherein they dishonour his name yet for the maintenance of his glorie he will visit it in the eyes of men with the rods of men whereof we haue a pregnant example euen
life vpon no other condition but of workes doe this and liue and these must be such as must be framed according to that perfect light and holinesse of nature in which we were created which wrappeth vs vnder the curse of sinne and infolds vs in the iustice of God without shewing any mercie at all What a yoke is it that is euer galling vs for sinne partly shewing it partly not as a cause indeede but occasionally increasing it it beeing the strength of sinne 1. Cor. 15.56 Now to be vnder grace is to be freed from all this bondage not onely from those elements and rudiments of the world but especially 1. When the yoake of personall obedience to iustification is by grace translated from beleeuers to the person of Christ our suretie so that he doing the lawe we might liue by it 2. When duties are not vrged according to our perfect estate of creation but according to the present measure of grace receiued not according to full and perfect righteousnesse but according to the sinceritie and truth of the heart although from weake and imperfect faith and loue not as meriting any thing but only as testifying the truth of our conuersion in all which the Lord of his grace accepteth the will for the deed done 3. When the most heauie curse of the Law is remooued from our weake shoulders and laid vpon the backe of Iesus Christ euen as his obedience is translated vnto vs and thus there is no condemnation to those that are in him 4. When the strength of the lawe is abated so as beleeuers may send it to Christ for performance for it cannot vexe vs as before the ministerie of grace it could which is an other law namely of faith to which we are bound the which not onely can command as the former but also giue grace and power to obey and performe in some acceptable sort the commandement And this is the doctrine of grace which we are made partakers of Vse 1. Euerie Christian ought to take vp that exhortation 2. Cor. 6.1 We beseech you that you receiue not the grace of God in vaine not that the sauing graces of faith and loue c. may be receiued and lost againe which is the Popish collection from the place which speaketh only of the doctrine of grace and faith which may be receiued in vaine and is of all such hypocrites who neuer knewe what neede they stood of this grace and therefore some receiue it into their eares not into their hearts into their profession not into their practise into their lippes and tongues but neuer into the loue ioy and other affections of their hearts Whereas could they see the glorie of this ministration they would exceede that people in their acclamation and crie grace grace vnto it Quest. But how may a man knowe whether he receiue this grace in vaine or no Answ. By these notes 1. Whosoeuer receiueth this grace in truth he receiueth together with the commandement a power which enableth him in an acceptable performance of it for howsoeuer the law is a dead letter yet the Gospel beleeued is a quickening spirit the words of it are spirit and life in conferring the spirit of life whereby the beleeuing soule is quickened in the wayes of righteousnesse The first thing then to be examined is whether the Gospel be in word or in power for if it beget onely to a forme and outward profession of pietie and religion it is receiued in vaine 2. As he receiueth a power so doth he also a will to obey the precept of the Gospel he is not now constrained so much by the bond of the law to obey God but the Sonne hauing set him free from such compulsion he becommeth a lawe vnto himselfe and of loue and a free heart if there were no law nor curse he seeketh to please God the gracious working of the spirit bendeth his heart to delight in the lawe concerning the inner man and this maketh the yoake easie and the commandement not grieuous The next thing then to be examined is whether thou serue God in the newenes of the spirit or oldnes of the letter that is by vertue of the spirit renewing the soule and so working the will and not by the compulsiue power of the lawe if thou findest not this change and work of grace in thy will which carrieth euer a readinesse with it to obey God in all his commandements thou hast receiued this grace in vaine for Gods people are a willing and free people and bring free will offrings their hearts incourage them and their spirits make them willing euen there where often power and strength faileth them 3. Whosoeuer is not stirred vp to thankfulnesse of heart and life for his free righteousnesse by the only merit of Christ neuer as yet knew what this grace meant in truth for let a man receiue but a small benefit of his freind looke how he is affected vnto it and prizeth it accordingly doth he testifie his thankfulnes to the giuer shall we be thankfull to a mortall man suppose a Prince that sheweth vs a little grace aboue others in some fauourable speach countenance or other benefit and can the Lord power all his grace into an heart which prizing it can possibly be vnthankfull and where this thankfulnesse is it will make a man in his heart to loue God to feare before him to reuerence his name and his ordinances to affect his house his children his houshold seruants and much more his tokens of speciall loue namely his graces in his owne or other mens soules In his life it will make him beware of all sinne which may prouoke so gracious a God to displeasure yea striue in the subduing of all sinne for grace will not stand with the regiment of sinne nor sinne cannot raigne in him that is vnder grace to conclude it maketh him fruitfull in all weldoing which well beseemeth the spirit which he hath receiued for can either such grace as this deserue lesse or can grace which fitteth her owne habitation frame the heart it taketh vp to lesse then the endeauour in all these The further application of these notes I will forbeare and come to the other instructions Vse 2. Is the doctrine of the Gospel a doctrine of grace then vse carefully the meanes to haue thy part in it for hereby only thou art vnyoked from the curse and tyrannie of the law from Gods consuming wrath and iustice and all the feareful fruits of his displeasure hereby only thou commest to see God in Christ accepting thy person and with thy person thy workes sparing thy weaknes euen as a man spares his sonne that serueth him entertaining willingnesse where there wanteth strength and endeauour where there is no power remitting thy own vnrighteousnesse imputing the righteousnesse of his owne sonne and beginning to frame such an image in thy soule as tendeth to a more happy conditiō then euer thou
it with them but as in a theeues lanthorne that none can know there is any light there besides themselues for feare of reproach or danger they will not be knowne what they are a doing but they mistake this light if they thinke it can be kept so close for where euer it is it is a glorious shining light and can no more abide hidde then the sunne can be couered with a bushell or put into a lanthorne 5. A last sort haue walked in the light heretofore and made good beginnings but haue thought the day too long and are growne wearie of the sunne and therefore as the people Exod. 35. at the first brought too much to the Temple but after wards sacrilegiously deuoured these holy things as the Prophet witnesseth euen so in the beginning of her late Maiesties raigne this light was accounted of followed and happily entertained but since the verie length of the day hath wearied the labourers A third Vse might here be fitly followed against those who still accuse the Scriptures of obscuritie now when the vaile is gone and the light is gloriously shining and thence frame a consequent more impious and absurd then the premisses namely that therefore they must not be medled withall of common people but onely by the Popes licentiates against whom I only affirme that they as yet neuer saw the expresse face of Christ in the Gospel and that when all vailes and shadowes continued vnremooued it was not lawfull for any Iew thus to reason And teacheth vs to denie vngodlinesse and worldly lusts This doctrine of the Gospel is a schoolemaster and full of instruction wherein it differeth not from the law for euen that also teacheth the deniall of vngodlinesse and a sober righteous and godly life Quest. What neede the Gospel then teach ouer the same thing againe Answ. Because though they teach these same things yet they differ in the manner of teaching For 1. the law can teach and command them onely but the Gospel by sanctifying and inspiring a new life into beleeuers giueth them with the commandement a power to obey it which the law could neuer do which power if it went not with the Gospel in beleeuers all the commandements of the law for performance were but in vaine and more vainely repeated in the Gospel 2. The Gospel perswadeth to bring that power into act by such an argument as the law neuer knew namely from the great price that was paid for sinne euen the blood of that immaculate lambe wherewith we are washed which to count profane or to tread it vnder our feete were horrible impietie yea much more fearefull then to transgresse that law which was confirmed with the blood of bulls and goats and yet if a man willingly transgressed against that law there was no sacrifice for that sinne And this manner of perswasion the Apostle here vseth in saying that the doctrine of grace which bringeth saluation teacheth vs. Doct. 1. In that the Gospel is a teacher note that it is a schoolmaster of manners aswell as the law So soone as any were conuerted by Christ himselfe or his Apostles they were presently called Disciples for thenceforth they depended on his or their mouthes for direction and instruction And such as giue vp their names to Christ must not looke to be lawles for they come to take a yoke vpon them and to learne of him yea they are bound to fulfill the law of Christ called Ioh. 13.34 a new commandement so that Christians must still vnder command neither would Christ by any other touchstone try the loue of a professor towards himselfe then by keeping and obeying his word Vse 1. This doctrine meeteth with that slaunder of the Popish Church whereby they accuse our doctrine of licentiousnesse and affirme that we teach that a iustified person is freed from all keeping of the law that all the law is fulfilled in beleeuing that there is no sinne but vnbeleefe and that nothing but faith is commanded in the Gospel as for other things they are indifferent not commanded nor forbidden All which with many moe to this purpose be there owne words whereby according to the auncient cunning of Satan they would bring in disgrace with simple people the truth of doctrine concerning our free and full iustification in the sight of God through faith without the workes of the law as though this doctrine were a destroier of the law Whereto we answer with the Apostle Rom. 3.31 Doe we through faith destroie the law God forbid yea we establish the law For although the regenerate be not vnder the law in regard of 1. iustification 2. accusation 3. coaction 4. condemnation yet are they vnder it in regard of direction instruction and obedience so as it is not yet destroied nay it is established by the Gospel 1. by apprehending Christs righteousnesse for the perfect obedience vnto it and fulfulling of it by our suretie 2. by our owne inchoate obedience vnto it which by meanes of the Gospel beeing a quickning spirit we are enabled vnto and by the same is also made acceptable and pleasing vnto God through his Christ. Vse 2. Many a loose Christian can well endure to heare that the doctrine of grace bringeth saluation and the brighter it shineth to this purpose the better but oh that the Apostle had staied there and not come to teach them their dutie for they are slow of heart to beleeue and dull to learne Let a man come and offer saluation and preach promises who will not pinne himselfe on such a mans sleeue but let him teach the same men their duties and the way to become partakers of these promises and they will fall off as fast or faster then they did from Christ when he asked his owne Disciples if they also would goe away But in great wisedome hath the Lord happily ioyned these two together saluation and instruction to shew that he that hath no care for the latter hath no part in the former grace bringeth saluation to none but to the schollers of Christs schoole it is then no matter to thee that grace hath appeared nor any benefit to thee that it bringeth saluation vnlesse thou be also instructed by it in the lessons following Doe thou become docible as a child for so the word implieth yea as an obedient child fashiō thy selfe and suffer thy selfe to be moulded into the obedience of it or els in vaine expectest thou saluation by this doctrine neuer dare to diuorce the things which God hath coupled Secondly out of the manner of perswasion to yeeld an obedient eare to the Gospel namely because it bringeth saluation we learne what is a notable meanes both to represse any temptation or stirring lust by which we might be ouercaried vnto euill as also a pricke and motiue to prouoke our selues forward vnto good namely to consider of Gods goodnesse towards vs and what he hath done for vs. This argument is frequent in
doe streame out nothing but such as Christ speaketh of adulteries murthers thefts couetousnesse deceit vncleannes pride the wicked eye and cursed speaches and yet charge them with such filthinesse they iustifie themselues with the Pharisie they thanke God they serue God as well as the best haue as good hearts as the best they doe as well and liue as well as the best of them all you cannot fasten on them any sence of their foule sinnes they neede no purging nor washing whereas the godly daily groane and grieue in the sence of the presence of that with them which they hate worse then death it selfe Vse 2. Hence may be noted that wheresoeuer sinne is pardoned it is also purged Rom. 8.2 There is no condemnation to them that are in Iesus Christ for the law of the spirit of life freeth them from the law of sinne and of death that is not only from the curse of the law but euen that law and power of sinne it selfe which would still hold vs in the seruice of it He shall die in his sinne that dieth not vnto his sinne not that sinne can be so dead as not remaine but if it lie not bleeding by vertue of that stroake which Christ in his death hath giuen it if the force of it be not abated and thou escaped from the rule of it Christs blood doth thee no good How excellently doth the Lord Iesus himselfe in his speach to Peter approoue this truth If I wash thee not thou hast no part in mee and no part in Christ no pardon of sinne Dare any man then dreame of his reconciliation with God that finds not holinesse daily preuayling against corruption and the endeauour of puritie in heart and life against that foule impuritie that stickes fast and cleaueth vnto both or dare any vnsanctified heart which in that it hath set it selfe vpon a resolued course in sinne is a rebell vnto God laie claime vnto any part of the death and merit of Christ when Christ hath said that vnlesse he wash the soule that partie hath no part in him No no the wedding garment and this our elder brothers garment is wouen of holines as well as righteousnes and there is no admittance to the supper of the Lambe no blessing without either Vse 3. Let both these considerations mooue vs to be euer washing and clensing our selues from our vncleannesse and neuer to be at rest till we finde our selues although not free from blacknesse yet comely as the Church confesseth of her selfe And because this is the cheife vse of this doctrine I will stand a little longer to propound in it two points 1. the meanes and notes which we must vse and by which we must discerne our selues to be washed and purged 2. the reasons or motiues to vse carefully those meanes For the former A man that meaneth to be neate and cleanly 1. hee willingly looketh himselfe in a glasse he is not angrie with the partie that setteth the glasse before him but he calleth for it that he may see what spots are about him and looketh neere that he may discerne them euen so a man that would be purged must often set the glasse of the law before him will not be angrie with him that preacheth and propoundeth the law vnto him whereby he may see his foule spotts and disorders And here is one difference betweene the cleane and vncleane one cannot endure to take notice of his filthinesse his heart will abide no gaging nor sounding the other hath a purpose to be cleanly and would haue the least filth about him discouered that it may be remooued Secondly A man that is in this way to be purged beginneth with the foulest spots first and those which are most conspicuous and commonly first remooueth those in his face Now the foulest and most noted defilement which is most conspicuous and consequently odious vnto God is an vngodly and wicked heart which as the Lord beginneth his washing withall for the first thing he doth in the conuersion of a sinner is to take away the heart of stone so he that would haue euidence of his cleannesse must beginne here and first wash the inside so the holy man Dauid although his sinnes were in the eyes of the world yet to be soundly purged of them he craueth a cleane heart and a renewed spirit And thus as he that meaneth to be cleane beginneth at his head and so washeth all downeward so the pure of heart beginne at the heart and this carrieth all other parts and members they know that of the filthinesse of the flesh and spirit the latter is more filthy and therefore they seeke first to be renewed in the spirit of their mindes and to wash their consciences from dead workes whereas those that meane neuer to be cleane beginne as it were at their feete if they can abstaine from murther adulte●ie drunkennesse and such open sinnes in the act which is apparant to euery eye they thinke all to be cleane and well because they neuer see the hardnes the pride and foulenes of their hearts but euen this conceit that they haue washed their hands in innocencie neglecting their hearts is a brand and marke of their vncleannes and impuritie Thirdly hee that will be cleane proceedeth on to the other parts of his bodie and will see that they be sutable so this grace of sanctification as it beginneth in the minde so it proceedeth to worke in all the members it is carefull that all the vessels be preserued in holinesse and honour A pure heart will not be without pure hands chast eyes an ordered tongue c. Where is to be obserued another maine difference betweene the cleane and vncleane the former endeauour to cleanse themselues from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and to grow vp vnto full holinesse but the latter can content themselues with a supposed goodnes of their hearts and yet let loose their tongues to all obsene and lewd speaches and open their eyps to all wandring and lustfull spectacles and their hearts thinke no ill but are good inough for all that but halfe an eye can discerne what impure wretches they are both within and without Fourthly such a person will proceed on to his garments and will not endure filth or spots on them euen so that soule whom Christ purgeth hateth euen the garment spotted by the flesh euen all occasions inducements and appearances of euill yea such as he cannot auoid yet he can hate Whereas the carelesse and slouenly Christian runnes into all companies into all courses and thrusts himselfe into all occasions of sinne because he is filthy he careth not to be filthy still yea and to foule and besmeare all that come in his companie Fifthly The sanctified person vseth all good meanes whereby he may become cleane and beeing so he is carefull to preserue himselfe cleane so long as he can For 1. he desireth to be euer sprinkling himselfe with the
of those deare children of God And where should the gunpowder treason haue beene laid if the blowe had beene giuen had not Satan deuised shoulders which had borne a many such malitious imputations before But notwithstanding such bug-beares whereby Satan would scare men from the sincere imbracing of the truth and entertaining of the ordināces of Christ as the greatest enemies of states and kingdoms let vs be wise hearted and bold to giue Satan the lie seeing the sincerest preachers and professors of the Gospel are so far from denial of the right of Princes as that the doctrine which they bring establisheth their power in their hands rather like the workemen of Salomon who built the Temple and built his throne too And let Protestant preachers and professors carrie this garland and tryumph against all Popish spirits that although the enemies of the truth haue narrowly in all ages sifted them to finde iniquitie in them that thereby they might iustly get the ciuill sword drawne against them yet haue they found no such thing in them Vse 3. If Christian religion confirme ciuill authoritie then the way to bring men to become subiect to superiours is to plant the Gospel and take order that it may preuaile amongst them The teaching and practise of true religion is the conseruant cause of commonwealths because it is a principall meanes to bind vnto obedience without which all politike courses fayle and are found by experience too weake It is not power it is not policie that will still subdue and keepe vnder a rebellious people without the power of the word in their consciences for till obedience be willingly yeelded vnto God it can neuer be conscionably and then not constantly yeelded vnto his Leiftenant This may be a ground of our prayer that the Lord would be pleased to put into the hearts of our gouernours that the Gospel may be throughly planted in Ireland for this is the most direct way to subdue the rebels and bring the whole countrie vnder willing and free subiection Doctr. 2. Euerie Christian must yeeld obedience and subiection vnto Magistrates and higher powers To the explaning of which point three things must be opened 1. who must must be subiect 2. wherein 3. wherefore The first of these was touched before where we affirmed that all sorts of men cleargie as well as laietie must be subiect Romish policie that they might become the absolute libertines of the world and carrie their bad matters vnder a cloud that secular eyes should not prie into them hath withdrawne the neckes of the cleargie from vnder ciuil power and will be iudged by none but their compeares which is as if a theife should be tried by a quest of cutpurses and therefore when they meete with that generall conclusion Let euery soule be subiect they beate their wittes as beeing at a stand but seeing something must be bolted out for a shewe one Pope saith that the person of the speaker is excepted in giuing such preceps whereupon it commeth to passe that Paul and Peter and consequently their successors while they call for subiection of others are themselues exempted from it a silly and weake shift as though Christ did not pay tribute for Peter as for himselfe and as though Paul pleaded not before and appealed to a ciuill iudge Act. 25.11 Another procter of theirs by euerie soule will haue meant onely animall men that is secular and worldly but spirituall men and the cleargie are still exempted as though the Popish cleargie were become and all vanished into spirits or as if where Luke saith that there were in the shippe 376. soules it must needes be concluded they were all secular and animall men among whom Paul and Luke were or as if they were all naturall and animall men in the Arke because it is said there were in all eight soules of which Noah was one who was a preacher of righteousnesse much like the poore proofe of that Iesuite who because Paul would not haue the Corinths goe to lawe vnder the vniust but vnder the Saints surely concludeth that this must be vnder the Bishops for is it not likely that that Epistle was written onely to Bishops because it was sent to the Saints yet vpon such grounds as these hath their cleargie cast off the yoake of obedience these many 100. yeares cleane against the expresse word of Scripture and the vniuersall practise of holy men yea the Sonne of God in the Scriptures Aaron the high Priest must obey Moses Ahimelech when wicked Saul sent for him to slay him obeyed him beeing summoned he came and appealed not from the vniust sentence of death so did Christ so did his Apostles and so must and ought their successors vnto the ende yet sometimes as it is seene in all tenures which are not from God men knowe not what to hold to after the Popish cleargie hath challenged their exemption and authoritie by diuine right from the word beeing pressed they forget themselues and claime it iur● humano that is from the priuiledges don●tions and exemptions of Princes and Emperors wherein besides that they should not haue suffered the Princes by departing from their right to breake Gods commandement for Princes haue not power to loose him from obedience whom God hath bound as also by flying to a priuiledge as their best and last refuge is plainly implyed what of due by the lawe of God and nature belongeth vnto Princes from them The second point is wherein and how farre we ought to obey Magistrates Answ. Euery Christian is bound to take heede to the mouth of the king in all things and so farre as he hath power to command Now because the ciuill Magistrate is alwaies bound to command in the Lord and 2. is the father of our bodies after a sort and of all our outward man hence two grounds of great moment are concluded The former is that euerie man must obey all possible commandements which are not against the lawe of nature and the lawe of God for the Magistrate in all his commandements as well as executions must be the Minister of God onely vrging that vpon his subiects which God himselfe whose place he sustaineth would vrge It is said of Cyrus that he must be Gods sheepeheard and he shall performe not his owne but all my desire The iudgement is not mans but Gods and it is the honourable style of Princes to be assistants to the ruler of the whole earth neither is this to denie any supremacie to Princes to tie them to the tables of which God hath made them the keepers but it is to ascribe vnto them such soueraigntie vnder God ouer all causes and persons Ecclesiasticall and Ciuill as that they may not depose the care of Church or Common-wealth as a thing wherein they will not be wearied but must prouide that sincere and vncorrupt doctrine be published in all their Churches that the Sacraments be duely and seasonably administred
vnwillingly or which I had rather not doe and if it be a sinne which I do it is the Princes sinne and not mine nay whatsoeuer action of thine wanteth faith is thy sinne besides although all thy externall condition is in the power of the Magistrate yet internall things as the keeping of faith and obedience and good conscience are not in his power but placed by God in the will and consent of the beleeuer to keepe or to loose Secondly but if the Princes commandement call vs to suffer any vniust thing as if he should laie tyrannicall burdens vpon bodie goods and outward estate these we must acknowledge subiected vnto him by God and therefore the ordinarie defence is prayer and patience by which the passion of vniust vexation will become iust and comfortable vnlesse for the time of the brunt of persecution we can conuey our selues from the furie according to that of Christ if they persecute you in one citie flie to another and Act. 8.1 the Saints were scattered by the persecution for by this meanes of preseruing our selues we preserue also the Church which otherwise would be destroied in vs but els we must meekly beare all vniust vexations and in such times take heed of medling with the seditious These two former grounds will become clearer by the explaning of some instances which we meet with in the Scripture and therefore it will be worth our labour breifly to inquire into some few of them And first whether Mordecay did with good conscience deny subiection yea reuerence to Haman seeing hereby he not only made light of a great man sent by the King but also of the Kings commandement who commanded Haman thus to be honoured as the reprehension of the Kings seruants noted in the text prooueth why transgressest thou the Kings commandement Answ. Mordecay was bound in conscience to obey neither of them in any thing contrarie to the word of God as this required honour was 1. Because it was more then ciuill for such the Persian Kings required as was at least mixed with that which was due to God else it is lawfull inough to fall downe on ones face before Princes 2. If it had beene but ciuill honour yet it had not beene due from Mordecay to Haman because Haman was descended from a nation which God had cursed and willed his people to hate and abhorre and neuer to seeke their peace all their daies but especially they were charged neuer to forget the inhumanitie of the Amalekites but vtterly to destroie them because they were the first that came out to warre against them after their comming out of Egypt If the honour had beene but ciuill and Mordecay of any other people then the Iewes to whom that commandement was directed and Haman of any other offspring then an Agagite that is of the offspring of the Kings of the Amalekites who were all of Agag surnamed Agags as it were the Pharaohs of Egypt and Caesars of Rome he would not haue denied this honour or if he had he had sinned The second instance is in Naboth of whom it may be enquired whether he could iustly denie Ahab his vinyard seeing the Kings hath power to take feilds and vinyards and giue them to his seruants 1. Sam. 8.14 and in outward things we must obey although to our detriment and losse Answ. Naboth iustly refused because God had forbid him so to do In Leuit. 25. the law is expresse that no Israelite might sell his feild but vpon condition of redeeming it and returning vnto it in the Iubely but Ahab did not so require it but either to purchase it out because it lay so fit for him or else to exchange it Now that this was the iust ground of his deniall appeareth in his answer God forbid that I should giue the inheritance of my Fathers vnto thee he knew well that if coppie-holders and tenants vnto men may not set let or alienate without their landlords consent much lesse might he against the expresse will and couenant of his Lord. Againe if it had bin only a losse and dammage vnto himselfe alone he would doubtles haue yeelded but no euill of sin must be chosen at all The third instance whether the people might warrantably resist Saul when he would haue put Ionathan to death seeing Saul had sworne his death and the Lord seemed by lot to designe him thereto Answ. This was a meane wherby it pleased the Lord to deliuer Ionathan at that time The deliuering of an innocent was good the question is of the meanes To which I adde that if it were by meanes of intercession and due respect and reuerence to the Kings person and place as the text seemeth to implie by their pleading for Ionathan the meanes also were good but if it were by mutinie or opposition or sedition yet this manner of the fact shall be condemned but not the fact it selfe As for the lot the Lord indeed noted thereby Ionathans fact but thereby conuicted him not of a fault for Ionathan heard not when his father charged the people with the othe the whole falt therefore rested in Sauls inconsiderate and rash othe The fourth instance is in Ioab both in not obeying one commandement of Dauid and in obeying another First whether he did well in slaying Absolon hauing such an expresse charge to spare him yea to vse him kindly Answ. Absolon iustly deserued death by the law Deut. 21.18 and iustly fell in his sinne but Ioab sinned in slaying him for although he was the generall of the warre and had power yet he forgate that he was a subiect and that in this one point his power was limited by him that gaue him his whole command Meete it was that Absolon should be punished but by Dauids consent and though Ioab thought it in policie the safest way to put him out of the way yet his father conceiued how fearefull his death would be if he should be cut off in his sinne and no doubt purposed otherwise by banishment or imprisonment to haue repressed him if he could no way haue reclaimed him But Ioab had no power ouer his life wilfully to slaie him when Dauid had excepted it and put case it was a falt to spare him it was Dauids and not his Quest. But whether did he well to obey Dauid in numbring the people beeing a thing which Moses and Ioshuah did without sinne and wherein the King was so peremptorie Ans. He sinfully obeyed Dauid euen as he did also in betraying Vri●h vpon Dauids letter he was a courtyer that conceiued himselfe to be at euery command although against his conscience as this was he knew that God had forbidden to number the poople without a speciall commandement or necessarie cause or without paying the halfe shekel appointed for euery ones redemption at euery time of numbring his speach in 1. Chro. 21.3 sheweth that it was not only against the law of God but the light of his owne
sort of men as farre deceiued as the former are secure persons who beeing baptized into the name of Christ as yet neuer came vnto him but plod on in all dirtie and sinnefull waies with many pretenses vnderpropping themselues but neuer examining duly whether they be right or no. And because the waies of this error are infinite we shall not do amisse in discrying some few of them and tracing them we shall not find them so vnfrequented but that infinite numbers of secure men and women shall be found in euery of them who all of them are still deceiued and as they were borne so they liue in errour Of these I will mention fiue sorts all in seuerall pathes but neuer one in the right 1. Are superstitious persons who take vp a voluntarie religion which hath some shew of wisedome and humblenesse of minde worship God they thinke they doe but it is vncommanded deuout they are but resist the truth as those deuout women who resisted Paul What a number of Popish minded men wander after vanitie they looke at antiquitie at consent of numbers and multitudes of men who are readie inough to betake them to their owne inuentions Hence is it that you shall ouertake hundreths that are set forward on their Pilgrimages and see thousands who are set downe or kneeling before their Idols besides numbers that are wilfull prisoners cheined in their own bands and wicked vowes of pouertie single life abstinence and such like And what ground haue they for all this they haue learned the protestation of the Iewes We will doe whatsoeuer goeth out of our owne mouth we will offer to the Queene of heauen as we haue done euen we our Fathers our Princes and our people for then we had store of all things and euery thing was cheape Nay as though the truth were impropriate vnto them they are so zealous in their way that if Peter or Paul should stand against their traditions they would thinke they did God good seruice to kill them as Christ foreprophecied a pregnant marke of a Popish and Antichristian spirit to hate and cast out the brethren for the name of Christ and yet to say Let God be glorified yet sit they downe here most securely as in a good way whereas alas all is deceit this beeing the way which is good in a mans owne eyes but the issues of it are death and the end of it is foreprophecied in the place of Ieremie alledged that the Lord will watch ouer such persons for euill and not for good and consume them with sword and famine and sundrie destructions 2. Sort are generall or Catholike Protestants of all any or no religion these content themselues with the Iewes to say the Temple the Temple the Couenant Abrahams seed c. so these finde a religion established and they loue it because it is crowned and bringeth in abundance of prosperitie with it they hate Poperie also because the lawes hate it but neuer knew nor care to know what the power and life of godlinesse euer meant to whom the Lord may say as to them Say not the Temple the Temple trust not in lying words we haue the Word Sacraments Prayer Peace c. but get the power of godlinesse if you would not beguile your owne soules Amend your waies and workes execute iudgement oppresse not the stranger fatherlesse and widowe follow not after other Gods 3. Sort are a rable of idle Protestants whose carnall hearts turne the grace of God into wantonnesse Charge his conscience with his sinnes strike him downe for his vnlawfull courses or neglect of good duties he can saue his head with the doctrine of free iustification without works or tell you that the best man sinneth seauen times a day or that we are concluded vnder sinne that God might haue mercie on all or that where sinne aboundeth grace aboundeth much more and that we are not saued by the workes of the law but O vaine man saith Iames dost thou imagine a sauing faith without repentance and works of pietie and loue dost thou professe an holy religion and by the loosenes of thy life makest that holy way of God euill spoken of did not the latter end of the former Chapter teach vs that Christ died not only to set vs free from the curse of sinne but from the courses of iniquitie that we should become zealous of goodworkes Christ saueth no other and therefore deceiue not thy selfe The fourth sort may well carrie the title of craftie Christians as also of free-will Protestants who for the present walke in a secure path and will not yet be acquainted with repentance for their sinne they thinke it fit to be knowne and practised and so they meane hereafter but in the meane time because their sinne is not vnpardonable and God calleth at all houres and they may as well afterward repenting find forgiuenesse therefore are they deafe against all our doctrine of repentance all the meanes we vse auaile not for their good but by Gods iust iudgement to their hardning blinding and further damnation and this is as fearefull as flie and as generall a deceit as any of the former What meane those many exhortations seeke the Lord while he may be found and to day if yee will heare his voice harden not your hearts and this is the acceptable time the which gratious inuitations while men haue put off how hath the seueritie of the almightie cut them off suddenly by strange deaths and this most deseruedly in that they had so long abused the time of his patience Rev. 3.21 The Lord gaue Iezabel a time to repent but she repented not and what was the issue of it Behold I will cast her into a bed of sorrow and great affliction So the Lord would haue purged the impenitent Iew but he would not be purged therefore saith the Lord Thou shalt not be purged till I haue caused my wrath to come vpon thee The fifth sort of secure persons may be called sensible Protestants who by outward things iudge themselues highly in Gods bookes and many both rich and poore tread in this path Rich men need not seeke for further ground of Gods fauour then that their hand hath found out riches and they are increased in their possessions and prospered in their labours And how can it be other seeing vengeance must pursue the wicked and if they were so they could not be prospered so long and diuersly as they are Thus Dauid obserued of wicked rich men their houses were peaceable without feare and because they are not in affliction like other men pride compasseth them as a chaine they seeke not after God nor sound and setled peace in him but little knew they the end of that fat pasture he learned at the sanctuarie that they were lifted vp aboue other as fellons on the ladder to come downe with a greater mischeife and breaknecke But more merueilous it is that corrections and afflictions should
deeds denie him but this is not that which is in our question which is of diuersitie in religion and not of infidelitie or hypocrisie where the same religion is professed the former is a barre of marriage but not the latter Obiect But then you will say that such marriages made ought to be dissolued● I answer 1. that marriage is an externall thing and properly hindereth not faith and saluation of it selfe and 2. that it is not against christianitie to keepe contracts made with Turks and heathen 3. Besides in the Apostles dayes the faithfull beeing married to an infidell he was not to put her away 1. Cor. 7.12 if she would abide with him But as M. Zanchius after he had learnedly discussed this question and propounded reasons out of the Scriptures Fathers Councels and ciuill lawe that such mariages ought to be disanulled yet doubtfully leaueth it to the iudgement of the Church so will not I be too bold in defining this great question Vers. 11. Knowing that he that is such is peruerted and sinneth beeing damned of his owne selfe Hauing in the former verse shewed both the persons to be proceeded against called heretikes and the manner of proceeding against them namely after once or twice admonition to auoid them Now in this verse our Apostle discendeth to giue some reasons of this seueritie which are two in number First he is such a one as is subuerted or turned off the foundation Secondly he wittingly and willingly spurneth against the knowne truth sparkling and shining in his conscience and therefore is remedilesse and desperatly incurable For the former By beeing peruerted or turned off the foundation is not to be meant any falling off from the foundation of Gods election which abideth so sure as that not any one of Gods elect shall euer fall away as Hymencus and Philetus did but a falling off from some fundamentall points of Christian religion held and maintained by the Church whereof this partie yet seemeth a member As for example The maine foundation aymed at in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles is to teach that Iesus Christ God and man is the alone and perfect Sauiour of his Church and whosoeuer teacheth or holdeth any doctrine tending to ouerthrowe either of his natures or anie of his offices he is truely said to be turned off that foundation Againe the maine grounds of all our religion for matter either of faith or manners are the commandements of the law and promises of the Gospel and whosoeuer either directly or by direct consequent ouerthroweth any of the commandements of God or articles of our faith he is truly said to be turned off the foundation Now this cannot euery error in religion doe For to keepe our Apostles allegorie comparing the profession of religion to the building of a great house some errors are lesser and as it were besides the foundation such as may be thought as the breaking downe of some window some greater as the breaking downe of some side of the house and yet the house standeth although much defaced But some are such as ouerturne the whole house and rase the verie foundations of all such as is the doctrine of iustification by workes which point alone putteth men quite out of their estate in Christ and shutteth them out of the kingdome of heauen Gal. 5.2.4 Whence might be obserued how needfull a thing it is for euery one to be well grounded in points of Catechisme which is a thing most dangerously neglected by the most and beeing so grounded to looke well to themselues least they be turned off from them and so depart from the holy commandements for thus the end of such would be far worse then the beginning But we will come to the latter degree of this sinne Hee sinneth beeing damned of himselfe that is he wilfully sinneth or addeth sinne to sinne not only by maintaining an errour but 1. against the light of the word shining in his conscience 2. against the wholesome admonition of his faithfull pastor yea and of the whole Church the voice of which he will not heare 3. euen against besides other convictions that of his owne conscience whereby he is resolued to take part with the wickednesse of his heart and persist an heretike in his heresie This man if he had no other iudge is iudged and condemned of himselfe and sheweth that he is damned of himselfe Obiect But there is no man so monstrous and gracelesse that will persist in error against the light of his conscience Answ. Yes and this commeth partly by the naturall impuritie of conscience which can excuse not only intentions vnwarrantable but euen sinnes committed against the law As in the young man Mar. 10.20 who boasted that he though he had liued in the breach of all had kept all the commandements from his youth and 2. partly by the increase of that corruption through a sencelesse numbednesse and vnfeelingnes which springeth from a custome of sinne and 3. especially by the iust iudgement of God who striketh them with a reprobate sence by withdrawing euen the very light of nature from those who would faine put it out or deteine it in vnrighteousnesse and by deliuering them vp to strong delusions that they might beleeue lies who would not embrace the truth in the loue of it Now he that is such a wilfull offender and knowne so to be must be auoided But it is hard will some say to know any man thus to sinne Answ. Because we speake not now of the iudgement of certaintie which is proper to God whereby he alone can iudge of the finall estate of a man but only of the iudgement of humane wisedome which is giuen to the Church who iudgeth only for the present by the present fruits it is not so hard to doe for such a man hath beene brought to conference to the tryall of the Scriptures to the analogie of faith and to the admonition of the Church by which his reasons haue bin refelled his iudgement informed his conscience conuinced himselfe forewarned of his danger but he obstinately hath refused all these good meanes and persisteth in his error Where note 1. What patience the Lord vseth in his iust proceedings euen against the worst men whom he will not haue condemned nor cast out of the Church vpon suspicions or surmises no nor presently after an open sinne is committed but their must be a time between wherein the Church must rightly informe her selfe that she may know the nature and degree of the sinne before she turne her to any censure or sentence Yea and further the sinne beeing apparant she must not reiect any till all good meanes of reclaiming haue beene in vaine vsed Which may teach vs that to heape or hasten excommunications ipso facto or as it is often before the partie can come to the knowledge or suspition of any such proceeding is to swarue from the rules of the word and those weightie
shamefull thing it were to marrie a wife in hope to beget children by another mans helpe what an equall thing it is that he who doth not his dutie in his owne person but by a deputie should also goe to heauen by a deputie but not in his owne person as merily and wittily Iodocus a famous French preacher witnessed by Espenceus From all which I may conclude this reason with the words of a Papist that seeing neither nature is the principle or ground of nonresidencie for that is contented with a little nor yet grace which is contented with lesse therefore the corruption of the heart of man is the cheefe counseller and perswader vnto it Neither is his reason to be neglected for though a man saith he dare liue a nonresident yet would he not willingly die one And as for the matter of substitution whereon the whole frame of nonresidencie is set as on a foundation he saith he seeth not why one man might not haue as well an hundreth liuings as one by this plea for he might get substitutes inough neither doth he see any reason but women might also be capable of Church liuings by this plea as well as men for they also might performe the duties by substitutes But I remit the reader to the author as also to other of our later Diuines who haue largely and learnedly handled the same argument 5. We may adde hereunto the example of the Preists vnder the law who were fixed in their courses neere the Temple and had their chambers and roomes adioyned vnto the Temple that they might waite on their offices and be readie for their seruices and there is no reason why the Ministers of the Gospel should not now as diligently waite on their office as they vnder the law vnlesse we will say that the standing Ministerie of the new Testament is not so necessarie not so certaine as that walking Ministerie of the old Let Ministers therefore see that the occasions of leauing their flockes for a time be vrgent and weightie not pretences proceeding from couetousnesse nor ambition nor any other sinister respect neither let them dare to remooue themselues no not for a while but for some occasions which are more necessarie then the attending of the flocke for howsoeuer they may shroud themselues by the protection of humane laws yet in the court of conscience only such necessary and weighty occasions wil beare plea and giue a man leaue for a time to be absent 2. As it must not be a small matter that must draw a Minister from his charge so if such weightie occasions fall out as require the gifts of some men to be otherwise employed for the time for the greater good of the Church then in his priuate charge then we see what must be our rule If Titus be remooued an Artemas or Tychicus a faithfull and furnished man must be sent in his roome that while the whole bodie is cared for no particular member be lost or neglected Where also great and noble men may be put in minde what a grieuous sinne they bring vpon themselues when they call Ministers from their charges into their houses or vnto the seas or any such employment and in the meane time neglect to prouide sufficiently for their flockes and the sinne is the greater in that they might be ordinarily better serued by such as haue no charges and why should they not rather send to the Vniuersities then to the Churches if they did not chuse to wrong them both when as yet no necessitie vrgeth or forceth them hereunto Vers. 13. Bring Zenas the expounder of the lawe and Apollos on their iourney diligently that they lacke nothing In this verse is contained the second priuate busines which is enioyned Titus commanding him that he should set forward on their iourney both Zenas set out by his profession an expounder of the law and Apollos and this he should doe 1. by accompanying them in some part of their way and 2. by prouiding that they wanted no necessarie for their long iourney being to saile from Creta in Grecia For the persons of Zenas and Apollos they were Apostolike men of notable gifts for the Ministerie The former is here said to be by profession an expounder of the law that is of Mos●s lawe as is most likely rather then the ciuill lawe but howsoeuer he was not like our lawyers he ioyned himselfe with Apollos and was a poore man and had wanted but for the churches contribution For Apollos we reade of him Act. 18.24 that he was borne at Alexandria that he was an eloquent man mightie in the Scriptures and feruent in the spirit yea so powerfull in his doctrine as that of some he was accounted not inferiour to the cheife Apostles for as some said they were Pauls so some cleaued to Apollos as other some to Cephas and therefore both of them were worthy to be respected by Titus who therefore must performe vnto them this part of Christian curtesie to lead them forth on their way Doctr. Whence note that Christianitie hindreth not but commendeth and enioyneth ciuill curtesie and all kinde of humanitie For 1. whatsoeuer pertaineth to loue and good report that must beleeuers thinke on and doe Philip. 4. Secondly the wisedome which is from aboue is gentle peaceable full of mercie and good fruits Iames. 3.17 Thirdly those many commandements that Christians should salute and greete one an other and that with an holy kisse 1. Thes. 5.26 called by Peter the kisse of loue vsuall in those East countries by which outward testimonie they declared mutuall loue and kindnesse Fourthly outward curtesie is a necessarie vertue euen for the maintaining of the bond of Christian peace yea availeth much for the nourishing and encreasing the communion of Saints and societie with Gods people Fifthly how disgracefull a thing were it for the profession of Christ that such as professe faith in the Lord Iesus should shew themselues inhumane or hoggish who should be as lambes and little children for such are they who haue entred into the kingdome of Christ as the Prophet witnesseth Let this point therefore be well thought of that as faith and loue cannot be separate so must good conscience and good manners goe together Now for this speciall branch of curtesie to bring the seruants of God and the Church on in their iourney it is from an inferiour to a superiour a dutie of honour as we see in Barzillai 2. Sam. 19.36 who would go ouer Iordan with king Dauid set him so farre on his way to Ierusalem then returne back to Gilead And of the equall to the equall it is a dutie of kindnes and towards the teacher of both and as it seemeth was verie common among beleeuers in the Apostles times Thus we read how the Elders of the Church of Ephesus accompanied Paul to the ship Act. 20.38 so the disciples whom he found at Tyrus with their wiues and children accompanied
Rom. 13 14. 2. Pet. 2.13 1. Pet. 1.13 Miserrimus est qui misero servit Eph. 4. ●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iam. 4 5· The spirit in man lusteth after enuie prooued 1. Sam. 18.9 Prou. 29.17 Gal. 5. Rom. 1. Professors must be carefull to banish all the sinnes of this suit Gen. 6.5 Rom. 5 1● Men are naturally possessed with this point of Poperie that this corruption is seated in the bodie sences and inferiour faculties of the minde onely Timely take in hand thy crooked nature Morbus languor naturae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He calleth himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How God can be so good to man seeing so many vessells are prepared to destruction Rom. 11.22 Psal. 73.1 Mich. 7. ●● 2. Cor. 2.15 Then are we saued when we are sanctified 1. Ioh. 3.2 Ioh. 3.18 Saluation considered two waies Alia est depositio pecca●i quae donatur ex parte Alia mortalitatis quae speratur None saued hereafter who are not saued here For assurance of saluation haue recourse to thy sanctification Philip. 1.6 Men conuerted are happie men though the world see it not Trie thy present happines by this touchstone Before the Lord put forth his loue in his Christ it could not be reached of man or angel 2. Tim. 1.10 Hebr. 1.3 Let the Papist goe to the nobles of the court of heauen we must goe to the Prince himself Let it be well noted against the Papists that euen works of iustice and grace are opposed vnto mercy grace and not works of nature as they would haue it Our saluation beginneth in election and not after we come to faith knowledge or good desires and works Both Augustine and Thomas vrge this place to prooue this conclusion Voluntas dei occulta esse potest non potest esse iniusta August ad Paul epist. 59. Ezek. 16.63 Dilexit non existentes imo resistentes Bern. Qui fecit te sine te non salvat te sine te August Essentiall parts of a sacrament three The Lord in baptisme not onely offereth but exhibiteth grace Concil Triden sess 7. can 8. si quis dixerit per ipsa novae legis sacramenta ex opere operato non conferri gratiam c. Grace not tied ●o the sacrament Rom. 4.10 Baptisme how the laver of regeneration Non quod dicitur sed quod creditur Aug. in Iohan. Ruccella Iudae venenum fuit non quod mala sed quia malus male accepit August Faith of Infants what 1. Cor. 7.14 Recte dicuntur ●ideles licèt nondum imbuti sunt fide Musc. in Matth. 18. Spiritum fidei Zanch. ad Eph. Semen fidei In infan●ibus qui adhuc per aetatem credere non possunt spiritus sanctus in eorum cordibus fidei vices agit Pet. Mart. in Rom. 6. Baptismus fluminis ●laminis sangui●is What baptisme serueth for in them that beleeue alreadie Limbus puerorum Durus ill● Papista lib 8. de Paradoxis Abluitur pe●catum in baptismo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 No woman a fit minister of baptisme It is against the dignitie of this ordinance to be brought into priuate houses Ambrosius de obitu Valentiniani Imperatoris ait illū gratia baptismi nō caruisse licèt non esset baptizatus quum eius desiderio flagrasset Necessitate premente adulti voto saepe voluntate solū fuere baptizat● Falling from the grace of baptis● a gro●●● error Hose 2.19 The congregation ought not to depart from baptisme Reas. Regeneration what 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 1. 2. Cor. 3.18 Rev. 22. Opus ad extra All inward grace in baptisme is from the holy Ghost Hebr. 10.4 Bellarmins instances to the contrarie refuted De Sacram. lib. 2. c. 4. 2. king 5. Ioh. 9. Coloss. 2. ●● 12. Act. 7. Vis regenerandi non aquae si●plici sed Sacramentali id est gratiae ●ei qu●● mediante verbo per aquā operaturad●●ribenda est Pola in Analys Catech Basil. 1. Ioh. 2.27 Mark 16.20 Isa. 59 21· Deut. 29.2 God in sauing reneweth men to his owne image 2. Cor. 5.17 Eph. 4.23 2. Pet. 1.4 Luk. 1.75 This necessitie is not to be cōceiued of the signe but of the thing signified Ioh. ●3 1● Notes to trie this secret worke of God in thy selfe Ioh. 3.10 2. Cor. 4.4 Rom. 9.18 Gal. 5. Syn●●doche Ioh. 15.26 Graces of gods spirit compared to waters Ier. 17.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spirit ●aid to be powred out in three respects Isa 11.9 Christ was PROMISED to the Israelites but GIVEN vnto vs. Ezek. 47. 1. Pet. 1.10 Ioh. 7.39 Our increase must be proportionable to the grace so plentifully poured out Phil. 3.8 Eph. 3.18 2. Cor. 3.18 Isa. 32.15 We haue great cause to bewaile our barrennes whereof are 3. maine causes Tantalus Isa. 55.1 ●zek 47. Ioel 3 18. Isa. 12.4 Christ our Lord the fountain of all our welfare Psal. 133.2 Ioh. 1.16 In thy want beg grace at his hands In thy supplie be thankefull vnto him Iustification what Rom. 8.33 What is meant by Grace 1. Pet. 5.10 A Romish shift auoided The righteousnes of a sinner before God is no qualitie in the beleeuer Gratia iustificās in solo deo subiective in nobis obiectivè tantum in est Exod 32.33 Rom. 5.19 Pides iustificat non absolute s●d relative scil cum obiecto non efficiendo sed afficiendo applicando Luk 7. ●● Gen. 27. ●7 Christ and saving graces are no circumstances but the substance of all religion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Haereditas est successio in vniversum ius desancti The ciuill law accounteth the heire and him that so maketh him but one the same person Eph. 1.18 Matth. 25.34 Eternal life being an inheritance must needs be most free Gal. 3.29 Voluir deus istā connexionem vt ad bona opera sequatur beatitudo non tamen vt effectus causam sed vt aliquid coniunctum cum illis ex de● constitutione Martyr in Rom. 2. Whosoeuer would haue right to life must become a sonne Set thine heart vpon this purchase Hebr. 11.8.9 Keepe well the deedes of it 1. king 21.3 Comfort to those that are heyres All truths of God must be deliuered but some more dwelt vpon Rev. 1.1.11 vers 6 7.8 Contra solem obloqui Greenam cap. 1.1 Points of contro●ersie must b● diligently heard taught Iude 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A good worke cannot come from any but a good man Opus quod qui fecerit vivet in eo non fit nisi à iustificato Aug. de spi● lit c. 29. Mark 11.24 Hebr. 4.2 Professors of the Gospel must be the first and forwardest in euery good worke Matth. 5.24 2. Pet. 1.8 1. Pet. 2.15 1. Pet. 3.2 2. Pet. 1.10 Rom. 2.9 Meanes to help forward the former dutie Philip.