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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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with this You say an hopefull Christian abstains from all sin how comes it then to passe that so many teach otherwise To this St. John answers Let no man deceive you Here is 1. A loving compellation Little children which comprehends babes young men and old men 2. The exhortation a warning against deceivers 3. Two doctrins clean contrary unto them 1. He that doth righteousnesse it righteous as God is 2. He that commits sin is of the Devill Which he proves 1. From the practice of the Devill 2. From the contrary end of Christs coming 3. From the conrary practice of those that are born of God Doct. It is the duty of all sorts of good people to take heed they be not deceived in judging who be righteous men The question was who were righteous The false Teachers said A man may be righteous and yet live in sin Be not deceived saith St. John Phil. 3.2 We must as much beware of conterfeit righteousnesse as of dogs they are not so apt to bite men as these to do the Church hurt Reas 1. From the easinesse of being deceived by the pretences of righteous men in all ages Gal. 2 4. Under the mask of righteous men may walk men unrighteous 2. From the necessity that lies upon our selves to have communion and fellowship with them Psal 16.3 Gal. 6.10 doing good offices to them 1 John 4. Yea we are commanded to walk in their steps Phil. 3.17 3. From the danger of walking with unrighteous men Prov. 17.15 4.14 15. This we may easily do unlesse we know them Vse 1. To reprove such as think all they live amongst are righteous wherefore was this exhortation how should a man be deceived if all were righteous Numb 16.2 3. 2. To teach us all to pray to God that we may grow up in a spirit of discerning There is an inflinct in the servants of God whereby they are able to relish the spirits one of another A dog will sent out his way with more dexterity then all men can reason it out A man can open the whole Law but when he comes to discerning he knowes not who is righteous and who not 2. Grow we righteous our selves and to a great measure so shall we the better discern of others A woman that hath conceived she will the more easily discern of another So when thou feelest the work of righteousnesse in thine owne heart how shalt thou comfort thy self that thou ar● righteous because thou lovest Gods children How shall I know who is righteous A righteous man is known by his righteous wayes St. John speaks not here what makes a man righteous but what declares him to be righteous The Jesuites grant this 7.18 19.21 If a tree bring forth grapes it is a vine if figs a fig-tree What is it to do righteousnesse The contrary to what it is to commit sin He doth righteousnesse That walks in Gods commandements when his judgement and heart is for it 2. When Gods laws are his rule of righteousnesse 3. Whose end is righteousnesse Hallowed be thy name 4. When we doe unrighteousnesse it is a burthen and grief and we recover our selves Obj. But righeteousnesse doth not consist in the bulke of the work but in the heart and an hypocrite may have as fair an outside as a true righteous man Answ True But God hath given a spirit of discerning to a Christian that he shall discern the main sway of a mans heart 1. If thy affections worke as well as the outward man Psal 51.6 his griefs cares desires see with what affection they come off 1 Chr. 29.9.17 He saw such joy when they came to offer as if they would have offered more if they had had it 2. See whether they they come off with some facility forced things are not naturall John 4.34 3. Consider the evennesse and constancy of a mans way Violent things will not last unlesse there be a continuall supply sent Hos 6.4 If when we have done good workes we kisse our hands and sacrifice to our owne nets this is unrighteousnesse Obj. In times of religion Gods ends and ours may be levell how then shall we know a righteous man Answ Observe when those ends part which will be at one time or other When two men walk together a dog follows them you know not whose it is but let them part then the dog will follow his Master So it is here Vse 3. To avoid the Doctrin of the Papists of justification by works He saith not that good works make a man good but we may know a man is righteous by his righteousnesse lest they should run away with this that the habit of righteousnesse make us righteous We answer imperfect righteousnesse cannot make us perfecly righteous Isa 64.6 1 Cor. 13.8 to 12. This which you say will neither hold in covenant of works nor covenant of grace In the covenant of works not the habits of grace but works of righteousnesse do justifie And in the covenant of grace we are justified by faith without the works of the Law Now a signe of tryall of our owne righteousnesse and others is when in ordinary course we give God and man his due when we go about good duties in Gods name and for his glory Obj. It may be I do it for the stopping of conscience and that I may be well thought of Answ So may you do and yet be sincere I may please men and my own conscience What if you please men will you not still stick to God If you do good duties freely constantly and humbly though you do them to satisfie your conscience to please men yet are you righteous So may you judge of other men It is not enough to do good duties but to see with what affection they do them if they cleave to God though for their own ends they are righteous 1 JOHN 3.8 He that committeth sin is of the Devill for the Devill sinneth from the beginning for this purpose the Son of God was manifested that he might destpoy the works of the Devill AGainst the wicked principles of false Teachers the Apostle arms them wi●h these two principles of Christian religion 1. Who doth righteosnesse is righteous 2. Who doth commit sin is of the Devill He that makes sin his work makes himself the childe of the Devill So in the Originall Q. What is it to commit to work sin Answ Jam. 3.2 In many things we sin all Yet a man is said to sin whose ordinary course is not sin but a righteous and good way 1. When a man makes his course a trade of sin 2. He allows himself in sin justifies and excuseth himself doth not hate his sin nor himself for it In proper sense a man is said to commit sin 1. When he imagineth deviseth plotteth sin as a Poet his fictions 2. Acts it 1. By travelling in birth as a woman with child 2. By bringing it forth in due time Psal 7.14 He that doth not righteousnesse is
3. Bloud is most mentioned because it is an evident Testimony of death because in bloud is life 2 because it accomplished all the legall types Heb. 9.22 Quest 2. Why is it called the blood of Jesus Christ his Son Ans Because that Christ that shed his bloud was the Son of God and that added efficacy to it Heb. 10.4 not the bloud of sinfull man Heb. 2.26 27. it must be therefore the bloud of an infinite power Acts 20.28 Quest 3. How is this blovd said to cleanse Ans 1 As it Justifies 2 As it Sanctifies 1. As it Justifies us by his bloud are we cleansed Rom. 5.9 Ephes 1.7 we are justified by it because it frees us from the guilt and punishment of sin 1 From the guilt of Sinne guilt is that whereby we are liable to the Curse 2 It frees us from the punishment of sin so that now there is no condemnation to us Rom. 8.1 Rom. 4. ult 1 Pet. 2.24 2. We are cleansed from Sin by a sactifying power in the death of Christ that is it whereby our Consciences being sprinkled we are freed from the stain and lust of sin Heb. 10.29 and are endued with supernaturall grace so that we are afraid to commit any sin Q. What is meant by all Sin A. That is from original and actual sins from sins of Omission and Commission it cleanseth us from the sins of our Birth and of our Life of Youth and of riper years Rom. 5.9 now we could not be justified if any sin were unpardoned Heb. 9.14 if it be a dead work or sin of Omission our Conscience is purged from it for if the bloud of Bulls and Goats cleansed from all sins of the flesh much more the bloud of Christ from all sin no sin but we are cleansed from by Christs bloud except the sin against the Holy Ghost Heb. 10.26 because v. 29. they tread under foot the bloud of the Covenant For the proof of this point see Rom. 8.1 2. Rom. 6.6 Reas 1. From the wonderfull efficacy of Christs bloud in respect of the Divinity of his Person the reason why it is so effectuall is because it is the bloud of the Son of God Heb. 9.14 Reas 2. Because he stood in our Persons on the Crosse through the acceptation of God God accepted him as a Surety for us Heb. 7.22 Isa 5. ult 1 Pet. 2.24 therefore it is as much as if we had done it in our own persons John 10.11 He had no need to shed his Blood for himselfe for he had never sinned Vse 1. To reprove the Papists who teach that the Masse being celebrated for the dead and living justifies from sin but if the bloud of Christ cleanse us from all sin there is no need of the Masse to cleanse us from any sin and they teach that the Masse is an unbloudy Sacrifice now it must be a bloudy Sacrifice that must cleanse Heb. 10.10 14. but if it be often offered it doth not exceed the Sacrifices of the Law Heb. 10.1 to 5. Vse 2. To refute the Popish Purgatory if Christs bloud cleanse us from all sin what need a Purgatory to expiate any sin This is a Blasphemy against Christs bloud Q. Do not Temptation and Affliction and Word and Sacraments and Faith and other Graces purge us from sin and purifie us It is said of Afflictions Heb. 12.11 A. It is true there are many means to purge us from sin but no efficacy in any of them except by virtue of Christs Blood therefore those in Hell have no benefit because Christs bloud reacheth not thither so that if any be bettered by Afflictions or Word or Sacraments it is from the virtue of Christs bloud and if Christs bloud be sprinkled on Purgatory we will not reject it Vse 3. Of refutation of the opinion of many godly Divines that hold we are purified from the sinne of our Birth by the purity of Christs Birth from Sinnes of Omission by his active obedience from Sinnes of Commission by his passive obedience but we must know there is thus much in the purity of his Birth in his Obedience in his Passion that it makes us fit to be cleansed but yet we must hold the Bloud of Christ cleanseth us from all sin that brings this fitnesse to perfection A Lamb defiled in the old Law was never accepted though it were slain for a Sacrifice and if it had been without spot and blemish yet if it had not been slain it would not have been accepted neither so had not Christ been a Lambe spotlesse and undefiled his death would not have cleansed us from our sins and though he were spotlesse and undefiled yet he must be slain or else we could not be cleansed neither the purity of Christs Nature doth not cleanse us from sin but we must take all joyntly together all his active obedience was passive and all his passive obedience was active Gal. 4.4 5. that he was obedient to the Law was part of his Passion and by the obedience of Christ to the death we are cleansed from all sin Vse 4. To refute some that say we are justified by faith as it is a work in us they say we are justified not by the works of the Law but by faith Rom. 11.5 6. but if we be justified by faith as it is a work in us how doth the bloud of Christ cleanse us from sin but it is faith as it lays hold on the bloud of Christ Vse 5. For comfort to all such as walk in the light let them not be discomforted you will say your hearts are full of impatience and coveteousness and uncleannesse these are great sins indeed but the bloud of Christ cleanseth from all sin there is no number nor measure limited Object He cleanseth not all men how shall I know whether my sinnes be cleansed A. Why do you walk in the light as God is in the light if you do then his Bloud cleanseth you from all sin therefore if a man would have comfort he must consider whether he live in any sin voluntarily and walk in darknesse if he doe he hath no part in Christs Bloud but if there be no sin but he is willing to avoyd it no duty but he desires to perform it and amend all it is a signe he walks in light if you see what is amisse and labour to mend it then you walk in the light and then assure your selves the bloud of Christ will cleanse you from all your sins Vse 6. For instruction if Christs bloud cleanseth from all sin then no sin is venial is that sin venial that cannot be cleansed but by Christs bloud Vse 7. To shew us the reason why the bloud of Christ is called precious 1 Pet. 1.19 it is more precious than the bloud of Bulls and Goats c. so all silver and gold in the world cannot remit one sin or save one soul from Hell Psal 49.6 7 8. Heb. 12.24 Vse 8. To teach Christians notwithstanding all
the Saving Truths of God are comprehended 1 In Repentance for Sin 2 Some lead on to Faith for pardon 3 Some lead to Mortification of Sin 4 Some tend to Sanctification from Sin to be accomplished in due time now if a man be without sin to what purpose are all such exhortations to Repentance To what purpose are all Scriptures tending to faith in Christ To what purpose are such as tend to Mortification or Sanctification so that he that denies sin to be in him he not onely sins against God and makes him a Lyar but he doth also Heretically erre in overthrowing all saving Truth the Doctrine of Repentance of Mortification of Faith of Sanctification all these are over-thrown If a man apprehend or professe perfection in himselfe it is impossible a man should have any truth of Grace believing he hath no need of Repentance or Faith in Christ or Mortification or Sanctification this is a terrible point St. John may well be called Boanerges a son of Thunder for these are thundering speeches he that saith he hath no sin is a Lyar against himselfe against God a Blasphemer an Heretick Vse 1. To confute perfect obedience to the Law as the Papists hold that Justification is by Works were there no other Errours but this it is Blasphemous Atheisticall and Hereticall and overturns the foundation of Religion for what is the foundation of Religion but the Doctrine of Repentance and Faith and if any be justified by Works he hath neither need of Repentance or Faith if righteousnesse be by the Law then Christ dyed in vain and his bloud is of no effect Gal. 5.14 therefore that opinion is vain that Popish Religion and ours may be reconciled let St. John put in his judgement he tells you that he that saith he hath no sin that he hath fulfilled the Law and is justified by Works there is no truth no saving truth in that Religion that teacheth so therefore it is impossible he should have any saving Religion in him that holds Justification by Works that holds Merits he makes God a Lyar and his Word is not in him For 1 God then should send his Son in vain Gal. 2.19 20. 2 Christ himselfe should be in vain and should lye for he teacheth us to pray Forgive us our debts now if we have none Christ lyes in saying so 3 The Holy Ghost should be a Lyar when he was sent to convince us of sin and there is none in us he should lye unto us 2 It shews the wickednesse of their Opinion who say the Virgin Mary had no sin if she had said so her selfe she had been a Lyar and no truth had been in her 3 It reproves the Catharists of old Vse 2. It shews us a necessity of taking up daily such a perswasion as this that this day we sin this day we have need of Christ and need of Faith we must daily take up this perswasion or else we have no saving truth in our hearts and if every day we be possest with a perswasion that we are subject to sin not onely Venial but Mortall that we have need of Christ of Repentance of Faith and that we can never say This is the day wherein I have not sinned if we be thus possest it will lead us on to all that saving Knowledge of God and of the Word as may keep our hearts alwayes in an holy frame such a man will be ready to think I have need to renew my Repentance to day I have need to lay hold upon Christ I have need of Mortification therefore the Apostle would have us take up a daily continuall perswasion of this that we are sinners therefore we are daily to consider with our selves wherein we have failed and to renew our Repentance and to look up to God for pardon of such and such sins and for sanctification otherwise we shall weaken our grace and Divine truth daily if we daily take not up such a perswasion we shall begin to sit loose from the saving truths of Gods Word and the power of it in our hearts not but that many Christians may sit loose from this truth yet so far as we neglect this so far we dishonour God and weaken our grace Vse 3. It will serve to teach us that whosoever walks in the sence of his own sinfulnesse is possest of it and conscious of it such glorifie Gods Truth and magnifie the power of his Word in their hearts God hath said it and we witnesse it in our hearts we bear witnesse that Christ was not sent in vain that the Holy Gost was not sent in vain Mat. 21.31 Publicans and Harlots enter into the Kingdome of God before you Why because Publicans and Harlots were sensible of their sinfulness and so would soon be convinced of their sinfull estate and so acknowledge their need of Repentance of Faith of Mortification and Sanctification whereas the Pharisees that thought themselves just they were not sensible of their sinfull estate and so saw not the need of Repentance c. Vse 4. And because St. John writes this Epistle that their joy might be full that the joy of a Christian may be always like the Moon in the Full never in the Wain and Eclipse as any Christian therefore desires such fulnesse of joy let him be daily sensible of his sin what is the reason that many Christians faile in thir confidence and fall into doubts concerning their estate I would ask you whether you have walked in a sence of your sinfulnesse daily If not no wonder though your joy be over clouded and Eclipsed Saint John would have us strongly perswaded of this If we say we have no sin we make God a Lyar c. therefore if any Christian can go all the day without any sence or remorse for sin his heart startles him not if it be thus no wonder though his joy be eclipsed On the contrary if you go on continually in a sensible apprehension of your sinfulnesse and so renew your Repentance and Faith and Mortification this will make you still to cleanse your selves daily and so you would keep your joy renewed daily We never had cause to complain of our estate but it was by reason of hardnesse of heart and how come our hearts to be hardned sin gets within us and we perceive it not and so we are hardned by it and then our joy is overclouded Heb. 12.13 14. Heb. 3.13 therefore if we would keep our hearts from hardnesse let us labour to spy out our sins and be humbled for them daily and so you will keep a soft heart and a soft heart is commonly peaceable 1 JOHN 2.1 2. My little Children these things write I unto you that ye sin not And if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours onely but also for the sins of the whole world VPon the former points delivered might arise an
Spirit dwelling in you and that argues acquaintance with him Psal 19 11. in keeping of them there is great reward greater than any gold or silver a man may keep that and yet want a quiet Conscience but a man that keeps Gods Commandments shall not want peace of Conscience Psal 119.72 thousands of gold and silver will not keep a mans heart warm and comfortable but the keeping of Gods Commandments will and be it that you be about your calling no businesse of your calling will hinder your peace no Commandment of God hinders your Peace indeed if you go about things without warrant from a Commandment be it in the World in your callings if you look at your profit and pleasure c. and not at Gods Commandment to set you a work you lose your Peace and you will want your Peace in that dayes conversation but if you go about things in vertue of a Commandment never fear your calling will never hinder your Peace keep the Commandment and keep your Peace we hinder our Peace often because we go about businesses without an eye to the Commandment and so it is not acceptable to God he finds no savour of rest in it and therefore no wonder if we lose our Peace but if any work though never so mean be done in obedience to Gods Commandments we shall keep and maintain our Peace 1 JOHN 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandments is a lyar and the truth is not in him IT is St. Johns usual course to propound the Truth Affirmatively and Negatively Vers 3. Affirmatively Vers 4. Negatively Vers 5. he amplifies the keeping of Christs Commandment by a double benefit 1 In him that doth so is the Love of God perfect 2 Hereby we know that we are in him From whence Verse 6. he passes this conclusion of conforming our lives to the life of Christ Verse 4 He that saith he knows him c. To say is either in Heart in Word or in outward Carriage He that saith I know him he speaks not of an active understanding of him but of an affectionate hearty knowledge Knowledge is either speculative or operative infused or acquired Historical or Experimental all come to one but this Knowledge here meant is acquaintance so then he that saith he hath acquaintance with God and keeps not his Commandments that is as his Way his Treasure his Ornaments his Eye his Life 1 He is a Lyer that is he not only speaks false but he knows he speaks falsly for that is the difference between an untruth and a lye 2 There is no truth in him not one true grace not one true act of Repentance Faith c. Doct. Opinion or profession of the Knowledge of Christ without keeping of his Commandments is an undoubted signe that he is a lyar and the best Grace on him is counterfeit he hath no true Grace in him To say in the heart is opinion to say in the tongue or carriage is profession and if he do thus he is a lyar the truth is not in him Tit. 1.15 16. they professe they know God but in their works they deny him ssch a one is abominable disobedient and to every good work reprobate that is he goes about it untowardly is unskilful in it hath no sincerity and his work is rejected of God as reprobate counterfeit silver Q How is such a man a lyar and no truth in him A man may be a lyar sometimes and yet have some truth in him but this man hath no truth in him but 1 He speaks falsly 2 Against Conscience 3 No truth is in him A. 1 He speaks falsly which appeareth from the Efficacy of all true knowledge of Christ which brings forth obedience if a man knows Christ he loves him and affects him and obeyes him Mat. 7.22 23. all saving Knowledge stirs us up to obedience to God to righteousnesse to man if a man be a Son of Beliac such a man knows not God those that obey him not never knew him 1 Chron. 29.9 Know thou the God of thy Father and serve him they that never served God never knew him Joh. 14.21 if any man love me he will keep my Commandments and further no man knows God but he hath known the depth and danger of sin he hath known his enstrangement and absence from God if a man know not himself he knows not God 2 After that he hath known sin he comes to know Christ and his mediation such a man is sensible of his former misery and knows the excellencie of Christ he hath been so bitten with sin that he looks at it as the most hainous fight and the keeping of Gods Commandments he looks at it as the sweetest thing in the World 2 Cor. 6.14 Gods Commandments are not grievous to him such Knowledge springs from experience of our former misery therefore they that never come to this never knew Christ 2 Why is such a man a lyar that saith he knows God and keeps not his Commandments 1 From the conviction of the Testimony of that light which shines in his heart Joh. 16 9. there is a Spirit of conviction in all those that live in the Church for others do not contend that they know Christ but those that thus professe are convinced of their sins of their unbelief and disobedience and of the wickednesse of their hearts and lives Obj. Are there not many that live carnally and wickedly and yet are not convinced of their sins It is true there are such but then living in such a course they do not trespass against their Consciences they think they keep the Law and so think well of themselves and they are at peace and secure He that walks thus civilly and conformably yet such a mans Conscience is at uncertainty about his Estate he is convinced that he wants something but he cannot tell what it is till he be throughly convinced by Gods Spirit thus it was Mark 10.19 Matth. 19.18 19 20. the young man told Christ all these have I kept from my youth what lack I yet his Conscience guided him to feel that he wanted something though he had kept the Law in the outward letter yet he saw he wanted something and his Conscience was not at rest so that such a man as saith he knows Christ and keeps not his Commandments speaks against the conviction of his Conscience and therefore is a lyar I speak not of such Christians who want Peace because they do not keep Gods Commandments but of such who when they have Peace think they keep his Commandments 3 Why is there no truth of grace in such a man as saith thus Reas From the necessary conjunction of all graces with obedience no true grace of God but is either the cause of obedience it breeds it or else is a companion of obedience or else an effect of obedience it sprang from obedience Faith worketh by love Gal. 5.6 and love is the fullfilling of the Law Rom.
Spirit moves us Labour we to carry our selves not as idle hearers but as faithfull doers labour we to see our spots and deformities and strive to purge them labour we to practise new duties as they are renewed to us 1 JOHN 3.4 Whoso committeth sin transgresseth the Law IN the words and in the following to verse 7. he useth four motives to stir up to self-cleansing The 1. is from the danger of committing sin proved from the proper definition of sin Sin is the transgression of the Law 2. From the end of Christs coming and that was to take away sin 3. From the pattern of Christ who was without sin 4. From the practice of such as have any fellowship by union with Christ Whosoever abideth in Christ sinneth not Set out by the contrary He that committeth sin he hath neither seen Christ nor known him Doct. It is and ought to be a sufficient motive to every hopeful christian to abstain from sin because it is the transgression of the Law Numb 14.41 Why will ye goe up why will ye transgresse the Law The Rechabites were commended because they kept their fathers commandement And he hereby convinceth the Jewes of rebellion that the Sons of mortall men should make more conscience of obeying their dead fathers then his people of his Laws Dan. 9.11 Neh. 9.34 35. Rom. 2.22 23 24. Jam. 2.9 Reas 1 From the Law-giver he looks at every sin as an abrogation of his ordinances Deut. 27. ult He that walks in his Law confirmeth it sets his seal to it They who breake it would make it of no force This is one act of high rebellion against God 2 Sam. 12.7 8. 2 From the wrath and displeasure God pronounceth against every transgressor Jer. 7.19 44.4 3. God takes it as a dishonour to the power and efficacy of his word Jer. 5.22 23. God looks at it as a more boysterous and unruly passage in a man to break the bounds of his Law then for the Sea to breake its bounds 4. From the delight God takes in the keeping and keepers of his Law 1 Sam. 15.22 He more delights in obedience then in the cattle of an hundred hills Prov. 23.26 My Son give me thy heart That is more acceptable then all the Sacrifices Transgression is as rebellion and the sin of witchcraft Reas 2. Feom the Law it self 1 It 's holy just and good and therefore it is abominable to transgresse it For this is a sin against Holinessc Justice and Goodnesse 2. From the vigour and efficacy of this Law offering life to the obedient Psal 19.11 1 Tim. 4.8 Psal 119.16 death to the disobedient Gal. 3.10 Isa 59.1 2. 2 Chron. 16.11 Vse 1. To reprove such as are afraid to breake mens Laws for feare of penalty and are sensible of such dangers but are not afraid to violate and breake the holy and righteous Lawes of God This argues a most rebellious and revolting heart Such are not hopefull christians 2. To teach and exhort us to make conscience of all our wayes and to take heed to our paths lest we transgresse the Law and sin against God Prov. 28.9 If we turn away our ears from hearing Gods Law even our prayers are abominable The consideration of this should keep us from secret petty sins For though man seeth not yet God seeth and will punish 2 Sam. 12.11 12. If we think to get honour profit or pleasure by sin we deceive our selves Is it not as grievous a thing to have our soule wounded by our darling childe as our mortall enemy It is all one to be stabbed to the heart with a pen knife and with a sword Every sin wounds and rents our hearts Abstain we from all sin even the least sin is the transgression of the Law 3. This refutes such as think the Law is not given to the regenerate The Apostle here encourageth hopefull christians not to transgresse the Law Obj. But we are not under the Law but under grace Answ He means we are not under the covenant of works but of Grace Psal 119.105 Obj. As Christs passive obedience freeth from the curse so his active obedience freeth from the commanding power of the Law Answ 1. Christ hath done this and therefore those that are in Christ fear not death by their disobedience nor look for life by their obedience but we look at the Law as a rule of obedience that we may walke according to God and shew that we live by endeavouring to keep his commandements Take heed of Satans slights that would make the Gospel a Supersedeas to the Law in certain things pray not preach not but when the Spirit moveth Thus you shall set up a Spirit of delusion For sin is a transgression of the Law This is a perfect definition of sin transgression is the genus the Law the difference By Law in Scripture without addition is meant the Law of the ten commandements Jam. 4 11 12. 2.10 11. Obj. 1. What if a man sin against the Law of nature is not that a sin Answ Ir is in effect and substance the same Rom. 2.15 Though the Law of nature was more dimly and darkly known Moses law was but a new draught of the Law of nature in innocency Heathen Law-givers Philosophers and Poets have expressed the effect of all the commandements save the tenth Rom. 2 14.15 Obj. 2. Was it not a sin to transgresse the Ceremoniall and Judiciall Law Answ To the Jewes it was The ceremoniall Law was but an examplification of the second Commandement and the Judiciall Law doth but explain the second Table The Judiciall in regard of the equity is included in the morall Law the Ceremoniall stood in force till Christ dyed Obj. 3 Is it not a sin to transgresse the Gospel and is not unbeliefe a sin Joh. 16.9 Is not new obedience required in the Gospel Joh. 14.21 Ezek. 36.27 What say you to the commandements of the Gospel that we should walke as Christ walked Answ The commandements of the Gospel are all of them reduceable under the commandements of the Law God commanding perfect conformity and obedience to his whole will not only revealed but to be revealed If God command David to bring in musick into the Temple 2 Chron. 29.25 though Moses speake nothing of it yet this was expressed to heare and obey God in all things Deut. 18.18 God commanded to hearken to Christ Moses improperly and hiddenly delivered the substance of the Gospel partly in the ceremonial Law partly in the Sacrament of circumcision and the passover Christ was veyled under them Rom. 10.5.6 7 8. with Deut. 30.12 The word of faith spoken of by Moses Gal. 3.24 Transgression is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 want of Law and absence of it when a man speaks and doth without Law what we doe against it or beside the Law it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reas Taken from the end for which God gives the Law to be the means of perfection 2 Tim. 3.16 17.
way his treasure his eye his life this is not grievous to him every Office be it never so bad it seems easie because he loves Christ dearly as Jacobs seven years service for Rachel seemed but a little space because he loved her Gen. 29.20 if there be such mutual love it is a certain sign of acquaintance 2 This keeping of his Commandments is a sign of our abiding in Christ and so of our acquaintance with him Joh. 15.1 Hos 14.8 upon me is thy fruit found otherwise we are barren it is Christ that puts forth any fruit in us Ezek. 36.27 how comes it to passe a man keeps Gods Laws and Judgements but because he hath his Spirit within him he keeps us and then we keep his Commandments Vse 1 To refute that Popish Error that a man may keep the Commandments perfectly without sin 2 That though he can thus keep them yet he cannot be sure of his Salvation But this is contradictory hereby we know that we know him if we keep his Commandments so that it is either certain they keep not his Commandments or if they do they may be certain of their fellowship with Christ and so of Salvation by him 2 It refutes them in this in that they say we are wont to discourage men from good works we say indeed none can be justified by the works of the Law but we do not discourage them from good works for we say thus if men keep Gods Commandments which is to perform good works hereby we say we may come to know that we know Christ we say more not only a perfect keeping but a sincere keeping of them though imperfectly with respect and care though this doth not justifie us yet we say it doth justifie the truth of our Estate and that is no small matter we challenge them for discouraging of men from good works for they will not grant that hereby we know that we know him but still leave a man in doubt but we grant much comfort from good works for though they do not justifie us yet hereby we know that we are justified Vse 2 To confute the Arrians this shews a certain ground of the divinity of Christ because by keeping his Commandments we may come to know him now this would not hold if he had not the same authority to command with God himself Iam. 4.12 there is but one Law-giver therefore if Christ be our Law-giver he is one God with the Father his Commandments are of like benefit and use with the Fathers Commandments Vse 3 Shews the cause why many men do not know that they know Christ none can know Christ but such as keep his Commandments 1 Therefore such cannot know Christ that do not know his Commandments for if they do not know them how can they keep them Gods ways are too hard to be found in the night in Ignorance or Darknesse 2 Though a man do know them yet if he divide them some he will keep and some he will not keep if he do thus he cannot come to know that he knows Christ because he doth not keep his Commandments there are some Commandments he doth not keep if you take liberty to break the Sabbath and will not keep it though you know it is Gods Commandment it is impossible you should come to a saving Knowledge of your Estate in Christ if you be content to live in the least known sin if you do not as gladly root out any sin as you would pull a moat out of your eye you cannot know Christ or come to know that you know him 3 There are others that know Christ and yet do not know that they know him why because thy do not keep his Commandments as their way do not look at them as their Treasure as their Ornaments do not keep them as the Apple of their Eye but swallow many moats this doth very much hinder their souls many would do much for Religion but would not have it come to life then no wonder if we see not our Estates if moats be in our Eyes we cannot see as otherwise we might so if sin lye on our souls no wonder if we be so blinded that we cannot see our Estate in Christ nor know that we know him Vse 4 It shews a ready way to peace of conscience would we have our consciences pacified Why labour to know that we know Christ and that will pacifie the conscience when we come to know that wee are acquainted with Christ this being peace of conscience but how shall we know that Why keep the Commandments of Christ as our Way as our Treasure as the Apple of our Eye as our Life then we may know that we know him that we have Fellowship with him and then our consciences will be at quiet both in life and death if we keep the Commandments as our way and if wee bee out of the way it troubles us if wee keep it as our Treasure and if we loose any it grieves us when we grieve for the losse of it as for the losse of our Ornaments if we cannot suffer any sin to be in our souls but it afflicts us then our consciences will be at peace if we keep the Commandements carelesly we keep the peace of our consciences loosely as we keep the Commandements so we keep the comforts of our souls it may be we walke in Gods wayes but not so closely and charily as we should this hinders our own peace it was a speech of Jonah when he was now in a good temper and dissembled not Jonah 2.8 they that follow lying vanities forsake their own mercies they that follow lying vanities any comfort of the World if there be any way any Treasure any Ornament any life that we prize above the Commandements of God these are lying vanities deluding things and then we forsake our own mercies that is the portion of mercy which God hath appointed us and he spake it by wofull experience he clave to his credit a lying vanity and thought he would prevent his discredit but God found him out and he found it by experience that they that stick to any pleasure more than God they forsake their own mercies he might have had mercy if he had been obedient but now he saw no hope of mercy in this world at least therefore it may teach us to take heed of trusting to any deluding vanity Vse 5. Of consolation to constant keepers of Gods Commandements sometimes a man may keep them and yet be in feare and doubts of his Estate why goe on in that way still keep them as your Way your Tresaure and Apple of your Eye your life that is the way to comfort be it known unto you if you doe thus that you doe know Christ for did you not love God you would never go on in a constant course of keeping his Commandments and you could not love him except he loved you first and you could not keep his Commandments but by his
they are in darknesse when they are in darknesse much more may we know we are in light when we are in light of the two it is the easier now he that is in the state of darknesse knows it Ephes 5.13 Gal. 5.19 the works of the flesh are manifest 4 He saith those things which are in a man essentially he knows they are in him now Graces are essential in a regenerate man that is the essence of them is there therefore he may know that Repentance and Faith c. is there if they be there what is in a man is known to be in him if he have a judgment he knows he hath it if he hath a will he knows he wills so if a man hath Graces in him he may know that he hath them as a Woman with child doth know that she is with child Gal. 4.1 and takes it not upon others report but upon her own sure Knowledge so if Christ be conceived in us the stirring motions of Gods Graces be in us we may know it thus Aquinas confutes himself Vse 2 Refutation of an unjust complaint they do make against us they say that we discourage men from good works this complaint is unjust for though we do not say they justifie us yet thereby we know that we are justified and that is no small encouragement my good works do not justifie me but yet they justifie my justification nay further we say to them that they discourage men from good works who say when a man hath done what he can and fullfilled the whole law yet he cannot certainly know that he is in Christ and so what profit will it be for a man to take pains and do much and suffer much and yet knows not whether God loves him or not but we on the contrary say if a man walk in a constant course of obedience to Gods Commandments he may thereby know that he is in Christ and this must needs be an encouragement to good works Vse 3 For tryal 1 Whether we keep Gods Commandments 2 Whether we be in Christ or no. 1 Wouldest thou know whether thou keepest Gods Commandments as thou shouldest dost thou keep them as thy Way as thy Treasure c. if thou dost I declare to thee thou art in Christ and thou either dost or shalt know Christ And if thou wouldest know whether thou be in Christ why thou maist know it if thou keep Gods Commandments Vse 4 Of Consolation to every such soul as keeps Gods Commandments there is a double benefit to such 1 Thou art in Christ 2 Thou knowest thou art in Christ and this is fullnesse of joy for if thou be in Christ thou hast no condemnation belonging to thee Rom 8.1 and thou maist also know it how ill then do they deal with their own souls who know they are in Christ and yet every discouragement puts them off from comfort it is a shame that Christians that have such a priviledge as to be in Christ and know it should be so discouraged therefore those that would keep a continual festival unto Christ let them get into Christ and learn to know that they are in Christ and this may be a comfort unto them against all discouragements Doct. It is the duty of all such as professe Fellowship with Christ to walk as Christ walked or the profession of Fellowship with Christ ought to be joyned with imitation of Christ Q. What is it to walk as Christ walked A. Christ hath walked in some wayes as God in some wayes as Meadiator God and man and in some wayes as man 1 Then he wrought some works as God he fasted forty dayes and forty nights he fed five thousand with five loaves and two fishes he walked on the water c. God never calls us to imitate him in these works but he calls learn of me for I am meek and lowly Q. 2. Doth he call us to walk in those ways which he walked in as Mediator A. He doth not call us to walk in the same kind but in resemblance to them as hee dyed for us and rose again so in resemblance hee calls us to dye unto sin and to rise again to the life of Grace so to dye to the World as he dyed to nature and to rise to newnesse of life as he arose from the dead Rom. 6.16 2 As he was a King Priest and Prophet unto God so he would have us Kings to over-rule our temptations to rule over our families to rule over our Tongues to rule over our Hearts he hath called us likewise to be Priests to offer up sacrifices of prayer and praise and alms and to offer up our bodies and souls an acceptable sacrifice unto him Hos 14.3 Heb. 13.16 17. Rom. 12.1 2. and to be as Prophets to teach our Children and Servants and Families and instruct them Act. 2.17 3 Some works he wrought as man and so he was either a Minister of Circumcision or as a Servant of God a good man and in these we are to imitate him 1 As a Minister so Ministers should follow him 1 In undertaking his Calling from him as he did his from God he saw Gods call he was sent by his Father so we should see his call otherwise to undertake it without a call from him is the way to bring a curse upon our selves 2 In his Calling he performed his Ministry with all Faithfulnesse he did bring in the stray heal the sick instruct the Ignorant c. Ezek. 34.16 and his inward care was that they might have life and have it more abundantly Joh. 10.10 11. so should Ministers dispence the word of life strive to beget the life of Grace in the hearts of their people to help the weak comfort the distressed inform the Ignorant c. 2 As a private Christian a good man we must imitate him in his doing and suffering 1 For the matter of his doing it was alwayes Gods command Joh. 14. ult 2 The manner of his doing 1 It was in obedience to Gods command Joh. 5.30 2 He did it with chearfullnesse it was his meat and drink to do Gods will 3 The end of his work was Gods Glory Joh. 17.4 1 So for his suffcrings 1 They were all in Innocency 1 Pet. 2.21 2 With much patience 2 Pet. 2.23 3 He suffered with much profit he learned obedience by his temptations and sufferings Heb. 5.8 he profited by his Agony by his despising by his buffettings by his crucifying and in these things we should labour to imitate and follow him Q. Why should we be like him A. 1 From Gods predestination Rom. 8.29 he hath decreed that we should be like him 2 From the near Fellowship we have with him it is meet the Members should be conformable to the Head the Branch to the Root Vse 1 An evident conviction of that Popish Doctrin of the merit of works and satisfaction and super-errogation if so bee when we have done all that we can and walked as Christ
13.14 3 To establish them in knowledge received and to confirm them 4 To stir them up to practise those things they knew and remembred and were established in 2 Pet. 1.12 13. 5 Moses gives the reason Deut. 17.19 20. he would have the King to read the book of the Law that he might learn to fear God and keep his Commandements c. 6 That by this means their joy might be full when they thus understood and remembred and practised it would increase their joy which was the end of St. Johns writing this Epistle Vse 1. To refute the Papists who with-hold these writings from the Common-people to what end did they write them if little children might not read them Fathers Young-men Babes St. John wrote to all and would have all read them Vse 2. To stir us up to constant reading of the Scripture daily how often why the greatest man in the Kingdome must read them once a day at the least Deut. 17.19 it will help our knowledge our memories establish us stir us up to practise help us to fear God to grow in joy and fulnesse of consolation what an help was it to the Bereans that they read daily it wonderfully helped their faith and comfort therefore many of them believed and were confirmed in Grace what if we be in a Journey or Sick what then why in this case we must mediate in the Law of God Psal 1.2 I write unto you because your sins are forgiven Doct. All the children of God have their sins forgiven them Acts 10.43 Ephes 1.7 sometimes remission of sin is called the covering of sin Psalm 32.1 2. if sin be forgiven it is covered it is not imputed unto us Sometimes it is called the throwing of them into the bottome of the Sea Micha 7.18 19. God when he forgives iniquity and sin drowns them as deep out of sight as things in the bottom of the Sea Sometimes it is called a changing of them Isa 1.18 Come let us reason together though your sins were as scarlet they shall be as white as snow they are quite changed though they were deep scarlet sins yet they shall be made as white as snow Sometimes it is called a washing away of sin Psal 51.8 Sprinkle me with Hysop it is an allusion to the Bloud in the Law sprinkled with Hysop so when we are sprinkled with Christs bloud our sins are washed away Sometimes it is called a blotting out of sin as a thick Cloud have I blotted out your sins Isa 44.22 As when the Sun appears in its brightnesse the Cloud is suddainly vanished and cleared so our sins when they are forgiven Isa 43.25 Jer. 31.34 I will remember your sins no more Jer. 50.20 when God pardons sin he doth so utterly blot it out and it so vanisheth that it is no more to be found there is no such thing extant Q. How comes it that when your sins are forgiven they are so througly purged Reas Because all are washed away in Christ our sins are imputed to him and his righteousnesse is imputed to us Isa 53.5 2 Cor. 5. ult our sins are his and his righteousnesse ours Vse 1. To reprove the Popish opinion who teach That the sins of the godly though they be forgiven yet they are not utterly forgiven but with reservation of a Temporall punishment partly here and partly in purgatory but it is a false Doctrin for if he cover them if he wash them away if he throw them into the bottom of the Sea if he blot them out as a thick Cloud if he remember them no more they are throughly forgiven without any reservation of punishment Vse 2. It reproves their Doctrin that say The afflictions of Gods children are punishments for sin but we must know if sins be not accounted ours punishments are of another nature if sins be changed then punishments also all the sins of Gods Children are not accounted as sins but diseases of the soul and so all the afflictions of Gods servants are not as punishments but as medicines and purges to root out distempers Dan. 11.35 so that now afflictions doe not come out of Gods justice in way of revenge but in mercy in way of cure 3 It confutes purgatory If God pardon sins so as he remembers them no more then what need of purgatory to punish the reliques of sin in Gods Children Vse 4. It may teach all that desire to have their sins forgiven to be of Child-like dispositions free from ambition and malice and revenge to frame themselves to humility and innocency and meeknesse and simplicity and contentment and resting on promises and hopes if it be thus with us God will forgive us our sins what is the reason why we doubt of Remission but because we faile in this condition 5 It may comfort all Gods Children they have this white stone that is Absolution for sin and in that a new name written that is Adoption and if we be of a meek humble innocent simple frame of heart we have this comfort Vse 6. Of exhortation and 1. If God hath thus freely forgiven us let it teach us freely to forgive others and it is an argument of our own remission Mat. 6.11 12. 2 It must stirre us up to be carefull that we offend God no more if God when he pardons our sins remembers them no more let us be carefull not to offend him any more 1 Joh. 5.18 As a woman when her cloaths are washed very white she would be loath that they should be spotted or mired so after God hath made us white like snow let us take heed of polluting our Consciences any more it is a good argument our consciences are pure when we are afraid to spot them 3 It must teach us to walke fruitfully and be aboundant in Gods service Luke 7.47 Lastly It must teach us to be exceedingly thankfull to God that hath thus forgiven us Psal 103. Doct. God forgives the iniquity of his Saints for his name sake Isa 43.25 For his own sake he blots out our sins 1 For his own glory that his name may be magnified and feared Psal 130.4 Psal 103.1 2 3. 2 For the honour of Christ he doth it that he may be honoured through Christ Ephes 1.6 7. 3 For his own sake that is without any desert of ours yea sometimes without any desire of ours Isa 43 22 23 24 25. Thou hast not called upon me nor offered sacrifices unto me c. yet I even I am he that for mine own names sake putteth away thine iniquities and will remember thy sins no more Vse 1. To teach us to be aboundantly the more thankfull to God to feare him the more to serve him the more to honour and praise him the more that for his own sake hath blotted out our iniquities if we had run further into a mans debt than we were ever able to get out and he freely forgave it we would be loath to offend him we would honour him and be ready to
of the Covenant of Grace Gen. 17.7 8. therefore capable of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4.11 so that we see little children may know God as their Father Q. How soon doe children come to be capable of this grace to know God as their Father 1. They are capable of the habits and gifts of grace from their first Conception Luke 1.15 he was sanctified from his Mothers womb and the reason is as soon as capable of sin capable of grace 2. They are capable of the acts of grace as soon as they are capable of the use of reason yea Grace is subject to work more silently than Reason though there be no act of grace but it is from reason yea they are capable of exercising grace and reason with it sooner then we discern it even as soon as they can discern their Naturall Father so soon may they discern God to be their Father you see Children sooner than they can well use reason they content themselves much with looking on the light and Looking glasses and other toyes so these little Children something they have in their hearts which pleaseth them though they know not what it is and as you can still a Childe sometimes by some gesture so can God refresh the spirit of a Childe by some silent consolation which pleaseth the Childe though it cannot exp●esse it but so soon as they begin to know their Naturall Parents so soon they begin to know God their Father nay no object so easily known as God seeing he infuseth some light into all especially to know that there is a God and if the Holy Ghost strike in they may discern that he is their Father Q. But how doe these expresse their knowledge of God to be their Father A. 1. They expresse it in their silent thoughts in some inward comfort which they cannot well expresse but something they feel which chears their spirits 2. In their affections they will shew you some love of God joy in God fear of God 1. Love of God so that they are not averse or froward to good duties but listen to them though they know not the meaning and have some delight in them and some fear of God that tell them of God and his Judgements they will be broken off from evill courses and they will be well pleased in God and delight in his way and fear him these things may be found in a Childe I call them Children till they be grown up to young men and as a Child soon discovers that he knows his Parents by smiling on them by crying after them and joying in them so they will shew you their knowledge of God by delighting in him longing after him and fearing his name Vse 1. To reprove the sinfull vanity that is in that Proverb A young Saint and an old Devil for if St. John acknowledge it as a great matter I write unto you Babes because you know the Father then surely it is no ill presage of their future miscarriage because they begin to have the knowledge of God no it is a sign that in old age they will know him that was from the beginning nay rather on the contrary if he be a young Devill it is likely he will prove worse a young Devill an old Belzebub but a young Saint an old Angel you doe not use to think that it will make a vessell fusty if you season it well at the fi st so if a Childe be well seasoned at the first he will keep a good savour to his old age a straight twig makes a straight tree so if a Childe be well set and straight in Childe-hood he will grow more strong and compact when he is elder Our Saviour was much moved when they forbad little Children to be brought unto him and when the chiefe Priests and the Scribes took it ill that the Children cryed out after Christ Hosannah thou Son of David he told them it was written Out of the mouthes of babes and sucklings hast thou perfected praise Mat. 21.15 therefore let not such a Proverb passe if they prove old Devills they were never young Saints but young Hypocrites it may be 2 It refutes an error of the Papists that think it a point of presumption to say that a man knows his state in grace why St. John writes it to all sorts to old men to young men to Babes that they know their Father If it were extraordinary it would not be so common and this indeed may justly discourage us from Religion that woman that holds it impossible that her Childe should know his Father is a Strumpet so that Church that holds her children cannot know their Father is an Harlot because they worship so many gods they know not of what seed they be for if they were begotten of the Seed of the Word hereby we might conclude we know that we know him because we keep his Word neither let them put it off and say We have a conjecturall knowledge but not a certain knowledge for when we say we know such a thing we doe not say we think it Opinion breeds conjecture but Knowledge breeds certainty Contingentium est opinio necessariorum certorum est scientia whether it be à causis or effectis But say they This Doctrin breeds presumption I answer No Doctrine makes us more circumspect than to know that God is our Father and if we grow secure God will shew he is a Father as well to correct as to shew indulgence Vse 3. To confute the Anabaptists that exclude Infants from Original sin and so from capability of Grace and so from Baptism therefore they rebaptise men because say they till then they are neither capable of Sin nor Grace how doth David then say that he was conceived in sin how is it here said of Babes that they know their Father and why were infants Circumcised under the Law the eighth day if they did but as well know God as some of these little Children they would not hold such an opinion so contrary to Scripture 4. It reproves elder people if they doe not know God to be their Father if even Babes may know God to be their Father if they know him so soon why doe we neglect it St. John writes it as an ornament to Children that they know their Father and it may shame elder people if Children in this point go beyond them Heb. 5.12 5. It may teach little Children that God looks at it as their duty to know God their Father you have known your Naturall Fathers thus long and why should you not know God the Father of Eternity you might hereby honour God and confute elder men you have entred into Covenant therefore fly not back you have received the Seals of the Covenant therefore give up your selves unto God and labour to know him to be your Father 6. For Parents and Governours of Children if little Children may know God their Father then learn them to know him to be their
Father and the Church their Mother fill their heads with knowledge of God learn them to love God and rejoyce in him and delight in his ways in some measure Motives hereunto 1. In respect of God First From Gods command Eph. 6.4 Deut. 6.7 take all good occasions dull them not a little and often will bring them on the water falling drop by drop hollows a Flint so by dropping now and then a little you will learn them the knowledge of God 2. From Gods acknowledgement of it and his Promise to reveal himselfe to such Parents Gen. 18.19 Secondly In respect of Children they are capable either to scoff as the Children that mockt Elisha 2 Kings 1. or to cry Hosannah Matth. 21.15 though they be not so easily brought on to that which is good yet they are not so corrupt then as when they are grown up to more years 3. In respect of Parents it is an irrecompensible injury you offer to your Children if you have begot them into the World sinfull and wicked as we are by nature and doe not seek by all means to redresse this evill they will cry out against you for Judgement therefore that they may not curse you at the last day let it be your care to bring them up in the knowledge and fear of the Lord. What course may we take thus to redresse young Infants 1. Teach them the Principles of Religion their Baptism that will teach them they are unclean by Nature and that they are cleansed by the Bloud of Christ they were Baptized into the name of God the Father Son and Holy Ghost therefore learn them to know God the Father God the Son and God the Holy Ghost and that will make them think of it when they see others baptized Prov. 22.6 Train up a Childe in his way wherein he should walk and he will keep it to the end nurture him or initiate him in the trade of his way in the original it is in the mouth of his way that is at the beginning of his way set him right at the first in his way and he will keep to the end if a Travellor be set right in his way at first it will help him the better to keep his way all his Journey so set a Childe in a good way learn him to cease from evill and to doe well and he will the better keep that way in his age as David teacheth Psal 34.11 to 15. 2. Learn them to read the Scriptures and be conversant therein 1 Tim. 1.4 5. 2 Tim. 3.15 reading brings much benefit to little Children 3. Bring them to Church and help them to remember something and tell them the meaning of it and take a little in good part and encourage them and that will make them delight in it 4. Give them a good example let them learn no wickednesse no disorder or miscarriage from you 1 Chro. 29.9 Know the Lord God of thy Fathers c. know him and serve him as I have served him 5. God hath sanctified seasonable and wise correction to Children Prov. 29.15 Prov. 22.15 it is a means to give wisdome which is the fear of the Lord and drive away folly and more to deliver his soul from Hell but if you use correction without instruction it is b●utish Prov. 6.23 therefore instruct them also and withall use Prayer and still wait on God for a blessing 1 JOHN 2.14 I have written unto you Fathers because you have known him which is from the beginning I have written unto you young men because you are strong and the Word of God abideth in you and ye have overcome the wicked one VErse Sixth the Apostle had exhorted all Christians to walk as Christ had walked and he amplifies this duty from the antiquity of it v 7. and from the newnesse of it v. 8. and then he instanceth in one speciall duty of loving one another v. 9 10 11. and v. 12. lays down a Motive because their sins were forgiven them and then v. 13. he distributes those to whom he writes into three sorts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now in this fourteenth verse he repeats the same words almost some think it a fault of the Copy it being a vaine tautology but this is not likely Sometimes repetitions in Scriptures imply certainty but I think this is not here intended chiefly but I think the Apostle being to presse them to another duty v. 15. namely Not to love the world he makes this a ground to urge them to it Why doth he not reckon Babes too here why because they were not so easily carried away with the world but he writes to old men and young men who seeing they knew God and had overcome the wicked one they should not love the world but to little children he writes v. 18. to beware of seducements of false Doctrins Doct. The saving knowledge of him that is from the beginning of the Ancient of dayes or of Jesus Christ is able to wean even old men from the love of the world To know Christ and his worth and our need of him is a sufficient motive to wean old men from the world Two things there were which made wise ancient cautelous men not to embrace Christ and his Gospel 1. The antiquity of the Heathenish Religion Jesus Christ seemed a new God but of two or three and thirty years hated of all men and Crucified now to commend such a God to them against their ancient Doctrin and that all must subject themselves to him seemed strange 2. The Authority of Heathen Emperours that gain-said it Now to remove these impediments the Apostle layes down this as a means Love not the world implying that it was love of the world that made them to embrace that ancient Religion and reject Christ therefore he writes unto them Love not the world and that they might doe this he tells them that they knew him that was from the beginning the Ancient of dayes and all other Religions are but novelties Vse It shews a preservative against deluding our souls against embracing false Religion either from grounds of antiquity or authority if old men follow it yet it is no good ground for St. John writes to them Love not the world which you may be kept from if you know him that was from the beginning and if the Authority and Laws of man should go that way yet if you rightly know Christ and him that was from the beginning you will be kept off from the love of the world and then no worldly things will keep you from embracing Christ and his Gospel I have written to you young men because you are strong and the Word of God dwelleth in you and you have overcome the wicked one Here are two Causes of their Victory over the wicked one that is their strength and the abiding of the Word in them For the first Doct. Spirituall strength in Young men it is a grace highly acknowledged of Gods servants Prov. 20.29
accompanying of their preaching of the Gospel with mighty signes and wonders but we never read that God accompanied any of their writings with miracles their writings laid upon any disease healed none but their presence healed many and did many wonders Heb. 2.2 3 4. 1 Cor. 5.22 tongues are not for them that beleeve but them that believe not that is the miracle of speaking with divers tongues is not for them that beleeve but for them that beleeve not therefore we never read in any History that their writings did work any miracle and so he never intended that they should convert Obj. What then is their writings in vain seeing they are of no use to convince A. No there are singular uses of their Writings 1 Sometimes to put men in remembrance of what they have heard Rom. 15.14 2 Pet. 1.15 2 That they may be established in the truth and confirmed in the knowledge thereof 2 Cor. 13.1 Phil. 3.1 To write the same things to me it is not grievous but for you it is safe 3 To stir them up to the exercise of such truth as they knew but were slack in performing thereof sometimes in liberality slack sometimes in dispencing of the Ordinances 2 Pet. 2.13 1 John 1.4 2 John 8. Revel 2.4 5. to stir them up to their first Love to stir them up to take heed of false Doctrin 4 To informe them in some particular truth which they were ignorant of some were afraid that the Day of the Lord was so nigh that they neglected their particular Calling 2 Thes 2. so some were ignorant of the Resurrection so he tells Timothy how to behave himselfe 1. Tim. 3.15 so he informs the Corinthians how Husbands ought to carry themselves towards their Wives in case of desertion or present persecution Vse 1. It shewes a reason of that little good which hath been done among the Papists by any Writings that have been writ in defence of the truth they have been means of much good to them that have known the truth but amongst Millions of Papists it is hard to know whether any have been converted to the true Religion after such evidet demonstration and conviction the reason is because Writings do not profit them that know not the truth but such as know the truth for else why did not Saint John write to Cerinthus or other Heretiques in that time but he tells them I write to you because you know the truth had he writ to Cerinthus or Menander his labour would have been lost not but that it hath done much good not only to them that have known the truth but those that have not known the truth it hath stirred them up to like the truth better and some to seek out the truth in other Writings but never to convert them to the truth God hath many times blessed sudden speeches to convert some that have come to hear the truth but it hath never been so effectual to them that have only read it in writings for God never sanctified the Apostles Writings to the conversion of the unbeleeving Gentiles Obj. Why then do not our Divines spare their labour in writing A. Though they do not prosper to conversion yet to establishment of many in the truth and to stirre them up to stick closer to the truth Vse 2. You may hence see the reason why such as read the Word of God diligently it may be once or more every day yet notwithstanding not being accompanied with the preaching of the Gospel few or none such as are converted and brougt to the true knowledge of the truth but such people are fit to be led into Popery or Heresie no wonder for God never blessed the Apostles Writings while they were living to the conversion of unbeleevers therefore we see the necessity of preaching to every Congregation or else the body of the pleace will sit in darknesse and shadow of death therefore it is a false Assertion of those that say Reading and Preaching are of like efficacy for it is certain had the Apostles Writings been as effectual to conversion as their presence in preaching they would have wrot most to such Churches as were most remote 2 Chron. 15.3 a long time they were without a God and without a Teaching Priest implying they that are without a Teaching Priest are without God 1 King 13.33 the reason because he set up base fellows that wanted both learning and grace and so only read but they had not a Teaching Priest and therefore lived without God Obj. But you will say what can be more said of pagans 2 And what then will you judge that all such as live under dumb Ministers are cast a-wayes A. Whether do you think it greater charity to tell them that they may be without a Teaching Minister or to tell them that without a Teaching Minister they live without God and without the Law we know that many that live in such places go abroad and light on good Sermons and to Christ is found where he was not sought and then they either remove themselves or go many miles to hear the Word abroad and God often blesseth private conference and helps to do much good Neh. 8.12 but men that go home from bare reading their hearts go home as dead as their Minister was dumb so that you shall finde many people as ignorant as Pagans and Turks V 3. It may serve for direction to such as God hath given a gift of writing unto to know where their Writings may be of most use if you writ to some thinking to convert them it will be labour in vain but to writ to them that know the truth may be of much use to informe them to reprove them to stir them up and so you may write with comfort to them Vse 4. May serve to encourage all Christians to be frequent in reading to what purpose did the Apostles write if others read not it is good to be reading put more fuel to fire and it grows hotter so let people read after they have heard and it will be very profitable therefore we see the great abuse of the Papists that deny the reading of the Scriptures in a Vulgar Tongue Let us therefore be stirred up not to forbear the reading of the Scriptures though you do know the truth Deut. 17.19 if Kings might not be excused much lesse private men Doct. 2. Such as have received from Christ the anoyntment of the Spirit they know the truth You that have received the Unction of the Holy one I write to you not because you know not the truth but because you know it 1 Tim. 4.3 where he puts Beleevers and knowers together now Beleevers are anoynted with the Spirit of faith John 8.31 32. so much sincerity of truth so much Discipleship the stronger faith the stronger knowledge of the truth the weaker our faith the weaker our knowledge For Explication Q. 1. What is the truth A. The truth might be taken for the Lord Jesus Christ and
out the other either lies or the truth will be banished Vse 4. It may refute an Errour of some that say As Anabaptisme sprang from Luther and Libertinisme from Calvin so Separation from Puritanism but this cannot be for no lye is of the truth therefore these could not spring from any truth of Luther or Calvin or Puritanism Doct. Such as have received the unction of the Spirit they know no Errour no false Doctrin is of the truth They know it not only think so but know it and they know it 1 From the contrariety that they see betwixt that unction of the Spirit which they have received and that Doctrin the Spirit of God in them teaches them to be humble 2 Pet. 2.18 but the spirit of these false Doctors is ambitious they speak great swelling words this suites not with the Spirit of God to look at their own ends at their bellies at their gain 2 It is contrary to their experience a true Christian knows that the Doctrin of Antichrist is contrary to that experience he hath found if they come to speak of Free Will his owne heart tells him he was fain to be drawn out of himselfe he found that he could very hardly be puld out of his Naturall estate so that a Christian heart knowes this is contrary to the truth Let another say we are justified by works you cannnot perswade a Christian to that for he knwows his best righteousnesse is defiled Isa 64.6 and when he hath done what he can he is but an unprofitable servant when they tell him there is merit and satisfaction in his Works yea supererrogation no Christian but he knows this to be a lye and that he deserves wrath for his best performances he knowes he is no way able to satisfie Gods Justice or Gods Law but only Christ satisfies for him When they shall come to a poor soul and bid him confesse his sins and tell him they have power to absolve him from his sins he knows it will not quiet his soul tell a Christian that going on Pilgrimages and scourging himselfe will satisfie for his soul he knows that is false tell a Christian he may fall away finally he knowes that is a lye 2 Tim. 1.12 1 Thes 5.24 3. They know the truth because they have received it from a Messenger of truth 4 They know the truth by the effects by the peace and grace they finde from the truth and on the contrary no Antichristian Doctrin ever brought peace to their souls and there is no truth where no peace is where you cannot finde peace of Conscience that Religion hath no saving truth in it if they finde not the fruit of peace they know it is not of the truth 2 Another fruit of the true Religion is it brings liberty and freedome of spirit to come to God from Sathan from his Lusts from the World John 8.32 therefore if Religion do not make us free to come to God and free from the World and our own Lusts surely that Religion is not of the truth 2 Pet. 2.19 he speaks of these false Teachers that they promise liberty themselves being servants of sin Vse 1 May serve to reprove all such as are at an uncertainty in their Religion they know not which Religion to take they say they finde Reasons on both sides so probable and there are some on both sides so corrupt that they know not which to take why if it be so you have not received the unction of the Spirit for there is not the least of these little Children which have received this unction but hee knows the truth and that no Lye is of the truth Vse 2 For you that have took up your Religion and the true Religion but do you know your Religion to be the truth and that it is no Lye why they hope it is true because the King and State follow it but do you know it to be true and do you know every contrary Doctrin to be a Lye if you do not you do not know what you should Psal 119.30 I have chosen the truth he doth not say the State hath chosen it or orhers have chosen it and therefore I will follow it too No but I have chosen it let others chuse what they will let every Christian know that he hath chosen the truth and that no 〈…〉 Vse 3. It may teach all to grow up in discerning the truth and that will discover all falshood as suppose you should have some come to you and tell you you frequent the ordinances and perform good duties only in the Letter but you ought to doe nothing but when the Spirit moves you but let a Christian examine if this be not a lye and contrary to the truth and to that experience I finde for we ought to pray continually so if one come and tell you you ought not to read the Scriptures your own spirit tells you you have as much need of the Word as a Childe of his daily Milk therefore let Christians learn to discerne of the Spirit of Truth and Errour 1 JOHN 2.22 Who is a Lyer but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ he is Antichrist that denieth the Father and the Son THe Apostle vers 10 21 22. propounds some means to help them against false Teachers 1 By something in themselves that Unction in them 2 By the grosnesse and falsenesse of their Doctrin which is called a Lye and the Teachers Lyers who is a Lyer if they be not These false Teachers in this verse are 1 described by an adjunct of lying and that so grosly that if they be not Lyers there are none in the Worid it is as grosse a Lye as any so that these Lyers may stand in comparison with any 2 Their lye is set out by their Doctrin who is a lyer but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ 3 He expresses it by their name and nature he is the Antichrist and their Doctrin is to deny the Father and the Son for if they deny the Son deny they then the Father Doct. Antichrists Teachers are as gross Lyers as who are the worst Who is a Lyer if not these let none be accounted Lyers if not they they are as great Lyers as any equal to the worst these words come home and no wonder Christ called James and John Sons of Thunder for they speake plainly and boldly Two things make a man a grosse Lyer equal to the worst 1 The perniciousnesse of his Lye 2 The evidence of it 1 The perniciousnesse of it It is a pernicious Lye to speake against the Government of an house or Family or good of others but no lye so pernicious as Popish Lyes none doe so much harm as the Lyes of Antichristian Teachers they lye not only against their own souls but also to the hurt of others 1 Pet. 3.2 3. they shall bring in damnable Heresies such Doctrins that if men live and dye in them they shall be damned and many
consolation to all such as lose any thing by keeping the Apostles Doctrin whether they lose goods or friends or life or liberty here is a comfort that over-ballances all discomforts Two things chiefly discourage a Christian he may either loose fellowship with the Church and be excommunicate or else he may lose his naturall life here is comfort against both these what though you be excommunicated from society with the Church you shall yet notwithstanding keep fellowship with the Father and the Son Joh. 9.34 the blind man gave such a strong Testimony to Christ that the Pharisees cast him out that is excommunicated him well when Christ heard that he was cast out he found him out and so though this poor man was cast out of the Church by a clavis errans wrong excommunication yet he had fellowship with Christ what if a Christian be cast out why here his comfort a man is no sooner shut out from Fellowship with the Church but he is sent to Christ this poor man Christ came and instructed him though he were cut short from instruction in the publick ordinances yet Christ instructed him and he never spake more powerfully and effectually so that he gave him Faith to beleeve and Grace to worship him so that though a man in a good cause should be cast out from the society of the Church yet he shall find more near communion with Christ 2 A man by professing Christ may be delivered up to the powers and so may lose his life why this is the promise even eternall life he may lose a temporary life but he shall gain an eternall life Doct. Primary Antiquity is a certain note of divine and Apostolique verity Prime Antiquity because he saith here it was from the beginning and he appeals to the Doctrin that was delivered from the beginning of his time that is from the first promulgation of the Gospel If that which you have heard from the beginning abide in you c. So that Prime Antiquity that which the Apostles first taught is a note of the truth Jerm 6.16 enquire for the old way that is the good way Jerm 18.15 he complains that they strayed from the ancient wayes and were run into by-wayes and he complains of it as if thereby they had forgot God therefore when St. John would describe the Gospel he calls it an everlasting Gospel Rev. 14.6 and contrarily when God would confute the people for leaving him he convinces them of novelty Deut. 13.7 they followed other new Gods But why is Prime Antiquity the note of divine and Apostolique verity 1 Because Antiquity is the image of God and every truth is an image of God whilst Satan stood in the truth he had the image of God when a Doctrin reacheth the truth it comes to the image of the ancient of dayes it is the same truth now that was from the beginning of the world 2 From the speciall care God takes to plant and water the Church with pure Doctrin Satan is up early to do mischiefe but God is up before him to do good as soon as God made a World he made a Church and gave them truth though Satan was a Lyar from the beginning yet God taught him truth before he was a Lyar the good seed is first sown and then comes the envious man and sows tares 3 From the nature of all errors they are abberrations from the way of truth What are errors but deviations from the first way therefore there was some way of truth before when our Saviour would tax the error about divorce he saith from the beginning it was not so Vse 1 May serve to be a signe of tryall between the Popish and Protestant Religions they boast much of Antiquity that they can fetch it from the Apostles times why but yet if they fetch it from the prime Antiquity from the times of the Apostles we will not yield it them for John himselfe would not fetch his Antiquity from the latter part of his dayes but from the first promulgation of the Gospel Matth. 5. our Saviour saith it hath been said of old and yet was not truth that is prime Antiquity that comes from the ancient of dayes from the first Institution vetustas consuetudinis est vetustas erroris Ignatius said my Antiquity is Christ Error may come as soon as the truth is sown but yet it hath not prime Antiquity for Satan was a Lyar from the bginning and yet that will not serve to prove that a lye is the truth it is a false Antiquity that comes not from the ancient of dayes for our Religion if we cannot fetch it from the Apostles first Doctrin and from the Prophets and Apostles of old we will renounce it but when we can bring for all our Doctrin the seal of the Prophets and Apostles we have a sure note of the truth we preach no truth but what Christ and his Apostles taught our Antiquity stands not on Monuments or writings though all records were burnt our faith depends not on them but on the prime Institution Vse 2 It confutes the Common cavill against Professors they accuse them of new fanglednesse they say none of your Fathers or Ancestors walkt in this way why it is the way of Christ and his Apostles sin is a new way a new strange thing 1 JOHN 2.25 And this is the Promise he hath promised us even eternall life THis eternall life is said to be promised Doct. Eternall life is given by promise Gal. 3.18 Heirs of eternall life are called Heirs of Promise Heb. 6.17 because they are Heirs of that Promise was made to Abraham Rom. 4.13 14. Reas 1 From the grant of eternall life to Christ and through him to us Gal. 3.16 that therefore eternall life might be by Christ it is needful it should be by promise 2 Cor. 1.20 Reas 2. That it might procure those two great benefits first Honour to God secondly peace to his Children had we pleaded it by the Law we had pleaded it of debt but God provided that what grace should come should be free and therefore by Promise 2 From hence follows peace of Conscience had we been under the Law every failing would make us doubt and therefore that our hearts might be setled he hath given it us of Promise Rom. 6 16. Vse 1 A strong refutation of Popish merits by the works of the Law and that in their own persons why then it is not of grace nor promise that is the true reason why they deny certainty of Salvation because they hold it from the works of the Law therefore there is no peace of conscience in their Relion if it be of the works of the Law then not of grace if not of grace then not of promise if not of Promise then not of Christ for if they be bound to obey the whole Law they are in doubt to break it if they keep it yet they know not whether they shall persevere to the end and so
no peace it is as impossible for a man to attain Salvation by Works as to be his own Saviour Vse 2 Hence learn the way of attaining peace of Conscience and assurance of Salvation why claim it by promise and it is sure to thee what makes thee doubt of thy Salvation why thou seest this Corruption and that Rebellion and thou seest the want of this and that Grace and therefore thou art in doubt why thou shouldest claim Salvation by promise thou wouldest have thy Works more perfect why that which makes us doubt is a secret cleaving to the Works of the Law but we must not so much look at what we do as what we beleeve what we work as what Christ hath wrought for us therefore take heed of sticking to any Works of the Law and as you desire to maintaine peace of Conscience and to dye peaceably claim Salvation by promise there is no more required of you than to lay hold on Christ he doth not look for perfection of faith but truth of faith be thy faith never so weak if true it gives thee Christ and he gives thee the Promise and that gives thee eternall life Q. But how shall I know whether I have this faith A. If God hath given thee an heart ot distrust self as gifts and parts of Nature and Education and to be humbled and look after Christ if thou prizest Christ and desirest him above all blessings this is true faith if thy faith hath emptyed thee of thy selfe to go out to Christ as thy Portion as the most sweet and comfortable thing I say thou hast that faith that conveys Christ to thee and Christ the Promise and the Promise eternal life say not therefore as some do I thank God I never doubted of Salvation neither have I cause I have alwayes lived honestly c. if thou fetchest thy perswasion from the Works of the Law then not from Jesus Christ nor the Promise therefore do as Paul touching the Law saith he I was unblameable and yet I count all these as dross and dung to win Christ Phil. 3. therefore distrust all these go out out of your selves and lay hold on Christ Vse 3 May teach us to magnifie the grace of God that hath thus devised a way for our Salvation he hath therefore given it us of grace that it might be sure 1 JOHN 2.26 These things have I written unto you concerning them that deceieve you TO help young Children to beware of Antichrist the Apostle had given them some instructions and some means now in this Verse to the end he rehearseth the two special means he had prescribed 1 Was his Writings vers 26. 2 Their Unction vers 27. therefore vers 28. he exhorts them to abide in Christ First In vers 26. we have set out 1 Saint Johns writing to these Babes and the Argument of it 2 A descripition of false Teachers Seducers 3 A description of their Act and Work 1 Their Sin is a seduction and deceiving of men 2 The vigour of it 3 He passeth them by calling them Seducers without naming their persons Doct. There is good use to be made of the Scripture against false Teachers even of those that want not the unction of the Spirit These things I have written unto you you that have received the Spirituall Unction otherwise Saint Johns writing had been in vain and their reading if there had not been use of them 2 Cor. 11.13 he informes the Corinthians of false Teachers Gal. 5.12 Phil. 3.2 Col. 2.8 all these shew that the Spirit thought it meet to instruct even Christiaas against false Teachers Obj. If this annoynting teach all things what need the Scripture be written is it not to give light to the Sun A. No there is a double use of the Scriptures 1 For the confirmation of the witnesse of our own Conscience a Christian mans heart witnesseth against false Doctrin but when the Holy Ghost not only witnesseth in our hearts but in his Word too In the mouth of two or three Witnesses every truth is established 2 Cor. 13.1 2 There is use of them to help our own spirits what though my spirit rise up against such false Teachers yet I might be deceived therefore that I might discern the truth of my own spirit I must try it by the Word a good man may know what spirit he is of Luke 9. 55. in some things therefore that we may discern the truth of our own spirits we must try them by the Word the Word and the Spirit of God in Conscience are like to Tallies they answer one another in every line Vse 1 May teach us to discover the corruption of their spirits who say after they have once received the spirit of regeneration which is indeed but common illumination they need not the Scriptures therefore they neglect reading of them as Enthusiasts and Annabaptists that will neither read nor pray but when the Spirit moves them and to this purpose they abuse a notable place 2 Pet. 1.16 they say we do well to attend to the Scripture till the day dawn and the day-star arise in our hearts but afterwards there is no further use thereof but untill is not alwayes a word of restraint but ye do well to do it before and to do it after as when it is said Michol had no Childe till the day of her death it implies not that then she had any but that she never had any so that it is a vain collection to reason after this manner 1 Tim. 4. Give diligence to reading and exhortation till I come would he have him leave off when he came No but he would rather have him alwayes continue so doing so that place rather exhorts them to attend to the Scripture after the day dawn in their hearts rather than restrains from it 2 The Scripture there opposeth not the Law and the Gospel but he would have them now attend especially to the Gospel 3 This word untill is not limitted to the attending to the Prophets but to the words day dawn meaning their hearts are a dark place until the day dawn and the day-star arise in their hearts therefore such men as these are not of Saints Johns spirit who exhorts those to whom he wrote to attend to his Writings as an help against false Teachers Vse 2. It may exhort us in these seducing days to be diligent and frequent in reading the Scriptures because they are written to help us against Seducers if a Friend should write to us beware of such Cheaters we would give heed to what he wrote and observe his Counsells why we have letters sent from farre even from heaven to warn us of Seducers and our friend sets down their Notes and Marks and means to avoyd them therefore let us be perusing them and observe what they direct us to Doct. 2 The Children of God are to look at false Teachers as Deceivers 2 Joh. 7. 2 Cor. 11.13 Rom. 16.17 18. Q. What is meant
in the throne of a mans heart Conscience is our companion God much more Psal 139. Reas 2. God is our witnesse therefore when we speak soberly we call God to witnesse He is a Judge Heb. 10.3 an Executioner and therefore if Conscience sees cause to condemn us God much more if Conscience see cause to acquit us God much more Psal 139.2 3. Vse 1. A signe of our present estate and what God will doe concerning us if we live and die thus What saith thy Conscience if thy heart assure thee thou lovest thy Brother 2 Cor. 1.12 That thou savourest not sin that thete is no good duty but thou wouldst doe thou hast been humbled for thy sins Conscience hath been an Executioner and yet hath come with pardon sealed to thee with the broad seal of Heaven If thou seest one spark of sincerity in thee God sees more Obj. May not a mans conscience be deceived Rom. 3.17 Luke 18.9 to 14 May not a man say I have no guilty conscience Answ Conscience sometimes bears false witnesse Tit. 1.15 16. If a man have a defiled conscience it will deal falsly A mans conscience through ignorance and partiality doth bring a false verdict As it is many times with a Jury ignorance of law and false evidence makes them bring a false verdict but then send them back again and shew them better evidence and the law c. So Conscience doth oft-times bring a false verdict but its thorough ignorance of the Law of God or partiality Doth thy conscience speak bitter things Consider what the grounds are If such as doe argue thee dead in trespasses and sins then know that God doth call thee from heaven to repentance If it tell thee thou art an hypocrite consider what grounds it hath Conscience may be muzled by ignorance and partiality the Devill puts false glasses before our eyes 2. A ground of serious humiliation to every mans heart whose conscience upon due examination doth accuse him 3. To teach every Christian which hath found that he hath passed from death to life to be afraid to commit any sin And comfort thy soul if Conscience do acquit thee then will God much more 4. Labour we always to be doing some good for we have a companion that hears and sees all and a register that notes every good word or work The Apostle in stead of telling us If our hearts condemn us God will condemn us much more He gives a reason of it describing God 1 From his greatnesse 2 Knowledge Doct. God is better acquainted with our hearts and wayes then our selves Psal 19.12 He means sins not onely secret and hidden from others but from our selves Psal 139.12 Thou Lord knowest my thoughts afar off they are ever before thee 2 Kings 8.11 12 13. Reas 1. From Gods omnisciency his all-sufficient knowledge Heb. 4.13 They are anatomized before him as if every vein and sinew were laid open he divides between the marrow and the bone John 21.12 Rom. 15.11 Job 26.6 Though hell and destruction be both covered yet before the Lord they be both open Whether Hell be in the waters or on the earth they cover not from God Hell and destruction are before the Lord how much more the hearts of the children of men 2. From the creation God made our hearts gave us power to affect think purpose He knoweth what is in us Job 38.36 If God give understanding to the heart he knows much more what is in the heart Psal 33.13 God hath fashioned our hearts therefore he knows them Psal 99 10. 3. From the providence of God We have our motion in God A Mill moves from the Miller because he hath caused it so to doe but the motion of the Mill is not in the Miller it can move without him We move in God as a supportant conservant cause as a Mill moved by the breath of the winde so we by the breath of the Lord as there is not a turning in the Mill but from the winde so not a turning of our hearts without him Our hearts are in the hands of the Lord Prov. 21.1 4. From the unsearchable depth of the deceitfulnesse of mans heart Jer. 17.9 10. Prov. 3.17 Our hearts make us believe we are rich and have need of nothing when indeed we are wretched and miserable poor blinde and naked Prov. 30.2 3. Sometimes that we are more foolish than any man and have not the understanding of a man while we walk in a sinfull way they make us believe we are in Gods favour Luke 18.9 When we are in a good estate and God would have us walk chearfully in him our hearts will cast a thousand discouragements upon us we cannot pray or profit by the Word of God or doe any good duty our hearts will few pillows under our elbowes that so we may sleep quietly but when we go to try our hearts by the Word of God then they will fall out with us indeed 2 Sam. 15. the beginning Vse 1. Take heed of all secret sins Not onely such as may be hid from men but of such roots of sin as are hid from thy selfe yet cannot be hid from God Take heed of such sins as are so subtle that thou knowest not whether they be sins or no sins which our own soules know not of If a man would be kept from presumptuous sins he must cleanse the inward and hidden frame of his heart Q. How shall we cleanse our hearts A. 1. Pray to God with David Psal 19. to cleanse us from such sins which we know not We have confessed such sins as we know by our selves and those which the world knows by us but we must make a new reckoning for such sins as we know not 2. Not to trust our own hearts but the Word of God Psal 119.9 The Word of God saith there are such sins in every age therefore we must pray to God to help us against them 3. Keep our hearts with all diligence observe every winding and turning and take heed of occasions that provoke our hearts any way to sin Prov. 4.23 2. This shews the impossibility of their good estates that look to be justified by habits and works It is the happinesse of Gods servants in that they look not to be justified by the perfection of their hearts 3. Ground of tryall If we finde that our hearts doe not condemn us let us trust our hearts no farther then we prove them by the rule of Gods Word If God hath helped you to look up to Christ for the pardon of your sins and you now sit loose from sin it is an argument that your sins are pardoned because we could not else hate sin Psal 119.6 But on the contrary if we finde our hearts condemning us our hearts are full of selfe-love Parents are full of partiality as that they can scarce see any evill in their children If they see cause of death in them much more God the righteous Judge If they see cause of
know he abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us In the second place we come to speak of the means whereby we may discern that God dwels in us and that is by the Spirit which he bath given us Doct. That the Spirit of God bestowed on us is an evident signe of Jesus Christ dwelling in u. He doth not say we believe though this be a great word for faith is the evidence of things not seen but he saith we know it now scire is rem per causam cognoscere What is that Spirit that being bestowed on us is an evidence of Christs dwelling in us Did not the Spirit of the Lord come upon Saul and he prophesied 1 Sam. 10. Yet it is not said that Christ abode in him for ch 16. verse 14. it is said that the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul and an evill Spirit from the Lord troubled him Answ There be sundry degrees of Gods Spirit which may be given to a man and yet be no evidence of Gods dwelling in him or he in God 1. There is a Spirit of illumination whereby a man may prophesie as Saul did But a man may have this Spirit of God and yet fall away so as to sin against the holy Ghost Heb. 6.4 5 6. 2. A Spirit of administration of Church or Common-wealth 1 Sam. 11.6 3. A Spirit of power to do many wonders Matth. 7.22 23. And yet Christ acknowledgeth that he never knew them they did never abide in Christ nor he in them 4. There is a Spirit of renewall of many affections which may befall any man 1. A Spirit of Zeal as in Jehu Come and see my zeal for the Lord 2 Kings 10.15 16. and yet he took no heed to walk in the Law of the Lord verse 31 32. 2. Of Joy in Herod Mark 6.20 3. Humility in Ahab 1 King 21.29 4. Fear in Felix Act. 24.25 What is then the Spirit whereby we know that we keep Gods commandements and have fellowship with him Answ It is the Spirit of life which is in Jesus which frees us from the law of sin and death Rom. 8.2 This is the Spirit of adoption vers 15. of grace and supplication Zac. 12.10 What doth this differ from the former for they were the Spirit of God Answ It exceeds in this Because the former Spirits of God did rest only upon the outwards of a man as his Tongue Memory Affection but this bids defiance unto all the enemies of his salvation the Heart and Will which are the Castle wherein Christ abides are given up to Christ Pro. 23.26 God requires the heart if we give the heart to God we give all Prov. 4.23 Life springs not from good affections nor good actions but from the heart Q. What doth this Spirit more in my heart then did the other How shall I know that the holy Ghost hath gotten possession of my heart Answ If the Spirit of God hath taken possession of your hearts it lifts up your hearts for to prize the Lord Jesus above all other things in the world it makes thee willing to do and suffer Gods will with patience it will cause you to resigne your selves and your desires to the Lord Jesus now all your affections and whole heart is for the Lord. If Paul now sin he doth that which he would not Rom. 7.16 17. Having given us this Spirit we dwell in Christ and he in us 1 John 4.13 Because by this Spirit we keep his commandements If we keep his commandements it shall go well with us and with our children after us for ever Deut. 5.29 Reas From the free covenant of grace by which he hath promised everlasting fellowship to those that keep his commandements Jer. 32 40. Isa 55.2 3. Obj. This may make us believe but not to know as we believe Vnity in Trinity and Trinity in Vnity but we cannot know it But you say here We do not only believe but know Answ There is a difference between faith and knowledge For a man may believe a thing is true because he doth not doubt of the authority of it but yet we do not know all truths that are spoken though we believe them for stnowledge is of a certain conclusion we know this to be so partly by faith partly by sense and reason for though faith believe things before we know them it being the evidence of things not seen and so a man may believe that God is gracious before we know it yet when faith hath laid hold on the promises it sets reason on work This Spirit of God works in us an evidence of our abode in Christ for 1. this Spirit of God works peace of conscience Phil. 4.7 which passeth all understanding though it doth not always abide yet it keeps garrison always it bears witnesse to a man that Christ is in him and he in Christ 2. It works a change in all Christians it changeth them from the power of Satan to the power of God Gal. 5.19 20 21. And though the peace of conscience and consolation of the Spirit abide not always yet the Spirit of regeneration and sanctification doth always abide and doth change the whole man 2 Cor. 5.17 Before a carnal and fleshly Spirit but now the Spirit of glory and grace rests upon us which makes us relish Christian communion and Christian society This Spirit doth alwayes abide and so we know that Christ abides Rom. 8.9 Obj. I may think there is a through change but yet it may be it 's only of the outward man Answ Consider how it changeth thy heart Is thy heart with God and wholly for God Dost thou long for peace with God Wouldst thou not forgoe it if thou hadst it for all the world Is the Word of God more precious to thee then thine appointed food No profit pleasure or preferment shall hinder thee from following of Christ When a man hath horrour of conscience he would give his life for peace but then a man doth not affect God so much as his own peace Thus Cain Gen. 4. When Saul had a spirit full of trouble then David must play a fit of musick When wicked mens hearts are at rest then they never regard God but then they close with the world and sensuall lusts But when the Sun of righteousnesse doth arise in a mans heart he will scatter abroad all those distempers of spirit that hang about him and frame his heart to an holy care of keeping Gods commandements Vse 1. To reprove a Popish opinion that no man can know whether Christ abide in him or no. But why doth St. John then say Hereby we know and he speaks to old men young men and babes to try themselves These men condemn the whole generation of the just Such a woman as cannot tell her child who is his Father is a strumpet and so is the Church of Rome 2. It reproves others that think it impossible Some think it not worth the knowing others think it
when the Lo●● 〈…〉 shall come to be admi●● 〈…〉 you and glorified in all his 〈…〉 so 〈◊〉 perfect love so much 〈…〉 if your hearts be 〈…〉 and your love unsound all 〈◊〉 at 〈…〉 from the halting of your love W●●● made Dav●● afraid 〈…〉 pit but that his 〈◊〉 was com● on he 〈…〉 Vrian 〈◊〉 Bathshebah Vse 4 〈…〉 loving hearted Christians that 〈◊〉 sincerely towards 〈…〉 brethren who thou walkest up and 〈◊〉 with a spirit of 〈…〉 as other call Death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the most 〈…〉 all 〈…〉 thou shalt 〈◊〉 at it with confi●●●● when others 〈…〉 be lifted up ● John 4.17 latter part Because as he is so are we in this world IN these words 〈…〉 whom love is perfect such ●●y have boldnesse in 〈…〉 argument 〈…〉 who 〈◊〉 in this world 〈…〉 Doct. Such 〈…〉 this world at God himselfe For proof Eph. 〈…〉 1. Be kind one to another 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be usefull and 〈◊〉 one the another ready to doe 〈◊〉 ●ood tender●●●● 〈…〉 you any wrongs and 〈…〉 them it their miseries 〈…〉 1. Be 〈◊〉 follower of Go● 〈◊〉 dear 〈◊〉 they that walk in 〈…〉 Christ himselfe did 〈…〉 sons 〈…〉 giving 〈…〉 and giving liber●● to 〈…〉 is God in this world all his path 〈…〉 and truth in his love 〈…〉 in 〈◊〉 love 〈…〉 God in this world When Adam stood 〈…〉 be loved 〈…〉 and 〈◊〉 he fell he would not let him lie but in his love he sent his Son to redeem him so let men walk lovingly towards 〈…〉 love to thee decay yet stretch out 〈…〉 〈…〉 righteousnesse that is ●●●●est in the 〈…〉 ●ercy wisdome goodnesse all pro●●●● from love in his love he 〈…〉 his love he preserves us in his love he 〈…〉 his love he 〈…〉 13.10 Love is the fulfilling of the 〈…〉 if it fulfill the law then if 〈…〉 falls all the righteousnesse 〈…〉 to God 〈…〉 Vse This is a notable 〈…〉 grow up in the grace of love If a man would know how in a 〈…〉 of performance he may be as God himselfe is why this is the 〈…〉 he who is perpect in love is in this world 〈◊〉 God himselfe is Many 〈…〉 the duties 〈…〉 ●●●●gion hard and 〈◊〉 but to a loving 〈◊〉 all is 〈◊〉 let there be but love in the 〈…〉 to God and 〈◊〉 will come off easily 〈◊〉 many loving 〈…〉 god in resemblances Magistrates are called gods in 〈…〉 they bear the Image of his Soveraignty old men bear the Image 〈…〉 Eternity learned men of his Co●●●isciency but a man may have all these Images of God and yet perish The Divells are spirits of power and wisdome and yet bound in chains of darknesse but a poor Christian that walks in the spirit of love he is in this world as God himselfe is he goes beyond all other resemblances and they that are such may have boldnesse in the day of judgement which is more them either wisdome or wealth for honour can afford a man 〈◊〉 have all them and yet tremble at the tho●●●ts of death If you observe 〈…〉 she 〈◊〉 men in the world busie the 〈…〉 about some of those perfections to be perfect in wisdome lear●●● or ●●nours and these things they labour hard after why go 〈…〉 as hand after love strive to be as eminent in love and 〈◊〉 shalt get 〈…〉 purchase then they can get by 〈…〉 endeavours all their contents 〈…〉 them boldnesse against the day of judgments great men and learned 〈…〉 slept in the grave and have 〈…〉 nothing in the morning 〈◊〉 they 〈…〉 but a loving Christian what 〈…〉 in the dust 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 when he awakes shall be satisfied with the Image of God But if 〈…〉 are blest with Magistracy wisdome rich learning if you likewise bound with a spirit of love you and more like Go● 〈…〉 Christian that wants those other resemblances a rich 〈◊〉 and a loving Christian how much doe they set out the similitude and fulnesse of God himselfe God is royall and loving God is wise and loving withall he is Almighty and loving withall it s his love onely that doth good to us his Majesty Power and Eternity would be a terrour to us it s his love whereby he doth us good therefore to all endowments adde what good doe riches and honours and knowledge except thou have love withall Doct. They that are in this world us God himslfe is they may have boldnesse to the day of judgement Mat. 18.33 to the end The which shews that suppose a man should live in this world with a confidence that all his sins are forgiven him and in the mean time he grows straight hearted and bitter to his brethren why ●●on his sick bed or some other tryall the Lord takes him by the throat and exacts the whole debt of his sins at his hands or if before he have had good assurance of the pardon of his sins yet he shall finde such horrour and anguish that he believe 〈◊〉 his sins still lie on the score If we want love we cannot have boldnesse 〈…〉 judgement Christ had so furnished his Disciples with love that thereby they abounded in much service to him and his and these being men of love they should not be afraid of Christs coming but then he bids them lift up their heads with comfort Luke 21.28 What is this boldnesse 1. Boldnesse is that which mortifies fear and shame which two things are contrary to boldnesse if a man be fearfull what boldnesse is there but this boldnesse makes a man look at death and judgement without fear 2. Boldnesse removes shames 1 John 2.28 when he shall appear we may have boldnesse and not be ashamed a man therefore that is like God in this world is neither afraid nor ashamed in the day of judgement Reas 1. Because that which might be matter of fear is removed for that which makes a man afraid at that day is because he is not like God God is of pure eyes and they are altogether unclean and then indeed Christ will command such to depart from him the workers of love a worker of mercy and righteousnesse and so God accepts of him 2. This spirit of love cloathes us with those duties and works which God most recompenseth at that day God will then crown men with glory not because they are wiser and richer then others but because they saw me hungry and gave me meat naked and cloathed me c. Mercy rejoyceth against judgement God will there be abundantly mercifull to recompence every work and office of mercy 3. There is no cause of shame for where there is a resemblance of God there is cause of joy God acknowledgeth his own Image and will perfect it at that day for love ceaseth not a man may have learning and riches and honours and be ashamed at that day but if we be cloathed with love we shall never be ashamed Vse Labour therefore above all graces to cloath yourselves with love a loving Christian is a couragious Christian
with the Saints so long we keep a constant fellowship with God himselfe but let a man faile in his love to his brethren he falls off from God and so runs into grievous Apostacy against God to the spighting of the holy ghost therefore as you would put honour on God and maintain his Spirit in you so take heed you neglect not brotherly love if we neglect this we are in rhe way to total Apostacy Reas 4. From the delight God takes that all his servants should wear his livery and be known to be his Disciples now if God had only left us to faith in Christ to calling on his Name all this might have been and yet we never been known what we were but because God would have it known thar there is a generation of men calling upon his name and serving him in truth he would never have them come abroad without this cognizance to their brethren and by this mark all men should know ye are my Disciples if you love one another Joh. 13.35 therefore if a man throws away brotherly love he throws away the profession of Christianity he is no Christian therefore offer not to say thou lovest God or love thy brother also Vse 3 To teach us that the love of our brethren is not a conceit of perfection or supererogation but it s a duty of necessity straightly lying upon all men that if they love God they must love their brethren also never say you have a God in heaven whom you love if you neglect love to your Brethren we think we may love our brother as long as he loves us but if he comes betwixt us and our profit we fall off from him Why if you love them that love you what singular thing doe you Matth. 5.45 Turks and Pagans will doe so much but you must know you are bound to love your brethren by vertue of a Commandement if thou thinkest thou art bound to love God by vertue of his Commandement by vertue of the same Commandement thou art bound to love thy brother also Object I but my Brother is changed Answ It may be so but yet Gods commandement is not changed indeed we are to carry the expressions of our love according to divers occasions it 's one thing to comfort another thing to reprove yet both acts of love besides there is no Commandement of God but the transgression of it brings a curse with it Deut. 27. ult If therefore I love not my brother I fall under a curse and so under seperation from Gods presence for that is properly a curse and so then we cannot so wrong our Brother as we wrong God and our own souls as soon as Cain hated his Brother and slew him he went out from the presence of God and dwelt in the Land of Nod a land of agitation wandring prayers and wandring performances does an hatefull soul put up When David had once wronged Vriah what poor work made he He then makes nothing of the destruction of a worthy subject that had before time been scrupulous of cutting an enemies skirt whereas è contra no man that expresseth hearty love to his brother prayes for them doth them good but he shall find as he closeth with his brother God will close with him as he lifts up a cheerful countenance upon his Brother so will God on him so that he shall plainly find that in keeping this great Commandement is great reward Vse 2. To teach us to love God so much the more that hath such care that no man withdraw his love from us but he will be as ready to sit loos from them as they sit loose from thee why what marvellous love is this that God should take it so ill that any should offer injury to thee so that he will not endure that the greatest Monarch should evill intreat thee how should this shame us that we should sit so loose from God and slight him and wrong him that is so carefull that none should wrong us 1 JOHN Chap. V. Vers 1. Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God and every one that loveth him that begat loveth him also that is begotten of him THese words contain a third argument to confirm a truth delivered Chap. 4. vers 20. which was That the profession of the love of God without the love of our Brethren is but hypocrisie In this verse the argument is drawn from the nearnesse of our Brother to that God whom we profess to love He is as near as the begotten is to him that begat him and the argument stands thus if our Brother be begotten of God then we cannot love him that begat but we must love him also that is begotten but our brother is born of God which he proves by his faith Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God In this verse observe these two parts 1 The safe and comfortable estate of every believer He is born of God 2 The necessity that lies upon such as love God To love the Brethren also Here therefore is a double universall proposition 2 Concerning Faith 2 Concerning Love The former universall proposition is That whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God Doct. 1. Faith in Christ Jesus is a certain and universall worke of Regeneration Quest What is it to believe on Christ Do not the Devills believe and tremble 1 To believe that Jesus is Christ is to be perswade that God hath anoynted him to be King Priest and Prophet of his Church as a Priest to sacrifice himself for us as a Prophet to direct us and reveale his will to us as a King to govern and to rule us 2 Believing is not only an act of the understanding for the Devills believe that Christ is the Messias that is that he is Priest King and Prophet of his Church therefore in this believing there is more then a meer perswasion namely 1 A particular application to mine own heart that he is a Priest King and Prophet to me And 2 Where this faith is it works such a frame of heart in me that I trust on him alone for my salvation and out of him I look for none in his bloud I look to be pardoned in his Propheticall office I look to be guided and I look to him as a King to subdue my rebellious heart this kind of Faith is a certain mark of Regeneration 1 From the removal of all other causes for a man to looke up to him as the Christ the anoynted of God this is above the reach of flesh and bloud and this kinde of faith makes a man blessed Mat. 16.16 17. The hand of faith is a work of Gods Spirit for take the state of nature it reaches no further then this Flesh and bloud looks to satisfie by the works of the Law and this was the stumbling block of the Jewes they sought righteousnesse by the Law Rom. 9.3 this is naturall ever since Adam for
your faith live dayly by faith and you shall not want life Vse 7. Of consolation to every soul that hath Christ If thou hast Christ thou hast life and shalt have it more abundantly he that findeth him findeth life and they that seek not Christ seek death 1 JOHN 5.13 These things have I written unto you that believe on the Name of the Son of God that ye may know that ye have eternal life and that you may believe on the Name of the Son of God WE are now come to the beginning of the conclusion of this whole Epistle wherein he sets down the persons to whom he writes These things have I written to you to you that believe 2 The end wherefore he writes these things to these the end is twofold 1 That ye may know that ye have eternal life 2 That ye may believe on the Name of the Son of God which he amplifies in the verses following These words afford three Notes Doct. 1. This Epistle of John was written and delivered to believers only This is evident not onely in the Text but sundry other places of the Epistle cap. 1.4 He wrote it to such as by reading this Epistle might attain to full joy This is evident likewise by recounting the several sorts of persons to whom he wrote cap. 1.12 13 14. Which were of three sorts Babes Young men and Fathers yet all believers so cap. 4.4 Ye are of God little children His second Epistle was written to the elect Lady and the third Epistle to his beloved Gaius vers 1 2. All his writings were directed to believers so were all the Epistles of the rest of the Apostles directed to believers to Saints to the chosen of God to their brethren as will appear in all their first greetings when our Saviour himself wrote he wrote to such in whom he acknowledged many special graces yea even in the worst of them in the Church of Sardis he acknowledged that she had a few names Now this gives us just occasion to enquire Why they were written to believers 2 Why to them only To Believers 1. In regard of the special help and benefit their writings afford the Church the benefits of their writing to the Church were 1 Teaching 2 Thess 2.2 2 Putting them in remembrance 2 Pet. 1.22 23. 3 Stirring them up to practice what they knew 2 Pet. 1.2 3. 4 To humble the spirits of them that were puft up 2 Cor. 7 8. 5 That they might be strengthned in their faith 1 John 5.13 6 That their hearts might be filled with joy 1 John 1.4 which was effected Acts 15.31 7 These writings have bin the foundation of the faith of all Christians to the end of the world because they have afforded matter of all the preaching of the Ministers for by them the men of God are fully furnished and made perfect to every good work 2 Tim. 4.16 17. 2 He writes to believers only the reason is taken from the little use or profit that unbelievers will make of these writings till they be brought on to believe which is so little that not one of the Apostles directs any of their writings to them but only for the believers sake amongst them it 's with the Apostles writings as with prophesies and not miracles Prophesies are not for them that believe not but for them that believe Miracles are not for them that believe but for them that believe not not but that Miracles may confirm believers but believers should chiefly attend to Prophesies Take a company of unbelievers it 's little good they get by reading their writings for no good is done without faith now faith comes not by reading but by hearing had God ordained that reading should be effectual to the conversion of men he would have confirmed it by Miracles as he did the preaching of the Apostles Again had their writings been sanctified for the conversion of men they would have sent them abroad to the most remo●e places of the world where they were never likely to come but we see they did not but rather took pains themselves to goe about the world Rom. 10.15 16 17 18. Object Sometimes God hath blessed the reading of the law to the conversion of men Deut. 31 10 11 12 13. He blessed it not only to them that knew the law before but to their little ones that knew nothing and why then should not the reading of the Gospel be as effectual now seeing of the two it 's fuller of power Answ You shall not read that God blessed the ordinary reading of the law to this end but the reading there spoken of Deut. 31. was a solemn reading of the law at the years of solemn release which was but once in seaven years and the reason of it was because that year of release was an acceptable year and typed out our redemption by Christ for in one of those years of release Christ was put to death therefore to denote that God could give an extraordinary blessing to the reading of the law even to little children and shew that those that are released by Christ they shall read with understanding and profit this solemne reading every seaventh year was instituted and blessed 2 He doth not speak of bare reading but of expounding and applying it likewise which ordinarily accompanyed their reading● of the law for so we read expressely that they did at that very feast Neh. 7. ult cap. 8.4 to 9. Ezra stood up and read and then gave the sense whereat they were so much affected that they all wept abundantly Vse 1. May shew us the reason why so many good books written by learned godly men have so little prevailed to bring on any of the Papists few or none converted by any of our writings and no wonder for the writings of the Apostles themselves were not sanctified to this end it 's true writings have ever been useful to the convincing of some to the establishment of others to the satisfaction of others but none have prevailed to the conversion of any Vse 2. The like may be said of our reading Ministers look at all the good that hath been done in such Congregations where they have only readings you shall find them as ignorant of Christ and empty of grace as if they had never heard of such things You will say this is an uncharitable saying But I would know whether is more uncharitablenesse to flatter you in your woeful condition to your destruction or to tell you of your danger 2 Chron. 15.2 3. Now for a long time Israel had been without the true God and without a teaching Priest it cannot be conceived but that they had the law read in their Synagogues for the very Judicial law of Moses was the form of the Government which they could not be ignorant in but yet they are said to be without God because they had not a Priest to teach Object Acts 15.21 For Moses of old time hath in every City them that
people so they cast the imputation of ignorance upon God as if God had been mistaken when he sent his Word that believers might believe and they think that reading the Word would make them hereticks Vse 3. For you that do believe be frequent in reading the Word for to you it was written that you might believe Meditate there on day and night The blessed will finde a time to meditate on Gods Word every day and every night and this you shall ●●●le very effectuall to the increase of your faith The King himselfe whose employments were greatest the Lord ●aid a charge on him to read in the Book of the Law all the dayes of his life Deut. 17.14 And much more is every private man bound to it If these God hath sanctified to help us in our belief then as ever you would believe ●e diligent in hearing reading conferring examining and meditating on the Word all these are notable means to increase and inlarge our saith therefore if thou ●e wanting in faith consider whether thou hast not been wanting in this practise take away the Word and take away the fuel of your faith And for you that believe not though this Scripture was not so much written for you yet because hearing is the only way of faith 〈◊〉 10.17 be diligent in hearing the Word preached Prov. 8 3●●5 Blessed it be that heareth ●● for whose findeth me findeth life And when you have heard be careful to search and ●●amine whether the things preached be agreeable to Gods Word By this means many that believed not before have been taught to believe and be careful to conferre on the Word The Lord hath sanctified the Word preached and the Word examined and the Word confer●ed aboue to the begetting of faith and the Word read to the increasing of faith ●herefore be ste●u●● in these and withall joyn hearty prayer to God 1 Tim. 4.4 ● that he would open thine eyes and cause thee to understand and bow thine heart to imbrace every truth that so every ordinance may be effectual to thee to the 〈…〉 and increasing of faith in thee 1 JOHN 5.14 15. And this is the confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us And if we know that he hear us whatsoever we ask we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him VErs 18. he had shewed a double soone of his writing th● atte● 〈◊〉 that they might believe on the Name of the Son of God This he exhorts Christians to vers 14 15 16. by three arguments 1 From the confidence such may have of the hearing of their petitions verse 1●4 2 From the certain knowledge such may have that their prayers are granted 3 From the prevalency of our prayers with God that as we shall be assured of the granting of our petitions so we shall thereby obtain life for our Brother that both not sinned a sin unto death Doct. A prayer that is made well never speeds ill Or thus A prayer made according to Gods will God will grant according to our will Notable is that incouragement Christ gave to the Woman Matth. 15. ●6 O 〈◊〉 I great is thy faith Be it unto thee even as thou wilt As if God would let such into his privy treasury and grant them what they would For explication Q What is it to pray according to Gods will These two things it holds forth at the first view 1. When we pray for such things as are agreeable to Gods will viz. his revealed will we should ask nothing but what he commands us In the Lords prayer Christ tels us what he would have us pray for for those things we have warrant to pray 2. What ever we ask we ought to ask with submission of our wills to Gods will So did Christ himselfe Matth. 26.39 Not as I will but as thou wilt But for further inlargement 1. A man is said to pray according to Gods will partly as his will is exprest in his word and partly as his will is revealed in our hearts For the will of God exprest in his Word 1. God requires that we should ask for nothing but what he commands us to doe and therefore had need to pray for whatever duty God requires of us that we are to pray for So did David Psal 119.4 5. 2. Whatsoever we pray for God commands us to ask it in the Name of Jesus Christ Joh. 16.22 23 24. To ask in the Name of Christ requires two graces of us Humility and Faith Humility of spirit in prayer is exprest in four acts 1. We acknowledge our selves lesse then the least of Gods mercies Gen. 32.10 So that if God should grant him nothing he would justifie God 2. Another act of Humility is to pray in sense of our insufficiency to think a good thought much more to pray according to Gods will 2 Cor. 3.8 Rom. 8.26 3. A man prayes in Humility when he doth not desire God to satisfie any of his sinfull lusts but that Gods will may be done Matth. 26. vers 39. 4. To pray in Humility is to make mention of no mediation in our prayers but onely of Christ Col. 2.18 They made a shew of Humility as not being so bold as to have immediate accesse to God therefore put up their prayers through the mediation of some Angell but to goe lower then God allows is but pride of heart 2. To pray in the Name of Christ is to pray in Faith Which is exprest in four acts 1. Faith directs us to put up our prayers onely to him on whom we believe Rom. 10.14 But we believe only in God therefore neither Saints nor Angels nor the Mother of Christ the Virgin Mary are to be prayed to but we are to pray to our Father onely Gal. 4.5 6. Rom. 8.15 2. Faith makes us come with some child like confidence to God as our Father 1. By Faith we come to God as our heavenly Father in Christ and well affected to Christ as loving us himselfe Joh. 16.36 2. We come to him as a Father Almighty full of goodnesse readyer to give then we to ask 3. A third act of faith is for a man to come truly cleaving unto Christ not standing in demurre whether we had best leave our lusts or no whether we had best become altogether Christians or no. This wavering cannot stand with faith for it 's such a wavering as whereby he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a double-hearted man an heart for God and an heart for the world sometimes for God sometimes for his own lusts Let not this man think he shall receive any thing Jam. 1.6 7 8. 4. A fourth act of faith is to believe that what we have asked according to Gods will he will certainly grant Matth. 11.24 So far as you have asked with submission to his will so far will he grant according to your wills and though he deferre yet make account your prayers are heard