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A09432 A godly and learned exposition of Christs Sermon in the Mount: preached in Cambridge by that reuerend and iudicious diuine M. William Perkins. Published at the request of his exequutors by Th. Pierson preacher of Gods word. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table: one, of speciall points here handled; the other, of choise places of Scripture here quoted Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1608 (1608) STC 19722; ESTC S113661 587,505 584

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sinnefull conception al which our Sauiour Christ was free from for at the very time when hee bare our sinnes hee was in himselfe more holy then all men and all Angels Fourthly it is said that if Christs righteousnesse bee made ours then wee are made Sauiours Answer It followeth not for Christs merits and righteousnesse are conuaied and applied vnto men not as they are in Christs person in whom they are sufficient to saue ten thousand worlds but as they serue to saue and iustifie that particular person onely to whom they are imputed so that this remaines an vndoubted truth that that righteousnesse which brings saluation is Christs righteousnesse onely Here some may say How is Christs righteousnesse made ours and wee assured of it Answ. It is made ours by sauing faith which the holy Ghost creates in the heart and soule as an hand whereby wee may laie hold on Christ and applie his righteousnesse vnto our selues as hee is offered vnto vs in the promises of the Gospel Some obiect that if Christs righteousnesse be made ours by our beleeuing it to bee ours then if a man beleeue his neighbours house to be his it is his also and so for any other thing Answer There is not the like reason in these things for it is a meere fancie and imagination for a man to beleeue his neighbours house to be his hauing no ground for it besides his owne conceit but when a man beleeueth Christs righteousnesse to be his he hath Gods commandement and promise for his warrant and assurance that it shall be imputed vnto him and withall that faith so grounded maketh Christs righteousnesse as truely his as any thing a man hath is his owne beeing giuen him of another Now this sauing faith laying hold on Christs righteousnesse for mans iustification is neuer seuered from sanctification by the spirit with the fruits thereof whereby the old man beeing mortified and the new man in Christ renued according to his image in knowledge righteousnesse and true holinesse the whole person is turned vnto God and made carefull to please him both in thought word and deede and hereby doe wee receiue assurance of our iustification for true sanctification is the earnest of the spirit of adoption in our hearts whereby we are sealed vnto the day of our redemption Doth that righteousnesse whereby we must be iustified and saued in the day of our Lord come from Christ onely and not from our selues then we see what iust cause we haue to humble our selues and to acknowledge our great vnrighteousnesse and want of all goodnesse in our selues and when wee can doe this vnfainedly wee haue gone one steppe in the way to true happinesse Secondly we also must hereby learne to esteeme all things as drosse and dongue with the Apostle in respect of Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse for he it is that brings vs to heauen and therefore wee must honour him aboue all and value his righteousnesse as that most pretious iewel which when a man hath found hee will sell all that he hath to get and keepe it Matth. 13. 46. Thirdly we must hunger and thirst after Christ and his righteousnesse for it is the fountaine of all blessednes and without it we are most miserable yea though wee had all the world beside yet without it wee loose our saluation Now what will it profit a man to winne all the world if he loose his soule Fourthly seeing Christs righteousnesse is made ours by faith we made assured of it by sanctification of heart and life wee must labour for true faith whereby our hearts may bee inwardly renued we must not content our selues with an outward holinesse for that will neuer bring a man to heauen but our endeauour must be for inward holinesse whereby we shal be preferred with God aboue all the Pharises in the world and get assurance of eternall happinesse And this faith wee must shewe forth in all holy exercises as when we heare the word wee must lend the inward eare of the heart with the bodily eare and when we fall downe to praier we must bowe the knees of our hearts and in fasting from meate wee must abstaine from sinne yea in all things wee must be carefull to serue God in spirit and truth for which cause wee must pray with Dauid Lord renue a right spirit within me that so feeling Christ to liue in vs by grace wee may bee assured that Christs righteousnesse shall bring vs vnto glorie Verse 21. Ye haue heard that it was said of olde Thou shalt not kill for whosoeuer killeth shall be culpable of iudgement Our Sauiour Christ hauing laid downe his Preface doth here begin his interpretation of the Law beeing indeed the onely true doctour of his Church and herein especially hee doth meddle with the second Table beginning first of all with the sixt Commandement touching Murther In the handling whereof hee obserueth this order First hee setteth downe the false interpretation of this law by the Scribes and Pharises in this verse Secondly hee sheweth the true meaning of it v. 22. And lastly hee propoundeth rules of concord and agreement betweene those that be at variance verses 23 24 25 26. For the first The Exposition Ye haue heard that is you Iewes which now heare mee whether Scribes Pharises or others you haue heard that it hath beene said of old that is by your auncient Teachers the old Scribes and Pharises who haue expounded this law vnto you and that this phrase must be vnderstood of the ancient Iewish Teachers may plainely appeare because in the next verse hee opposeth his owne teaching thereunto and would haue these his hearers that before had learned a false interpretation of this law from their old Teachers now to learne of him the true exposition thereof The Law is this Thou shalt not kill The exposition of the ancient Iewish Teachers was this for whosoeuer killeth shall be culpable of iudgement that is whosoeuer laieth violent handes on another to take away his life for they knew no other murther neither did they extend this commandement to forbid any sin but actual murther shall be culpable of iudgement that is shall be held guiltie of murther both in the courts of men and also before the iudgement seate of God where hee shall receiue the deserued punishment thereof This was the interpretation of the Iewes Here first obserue that Antiquitie is no infallible marke of true doctrine for this exposition of this commandement was ancient received from ancient Teachers and yet Christ the doctour of truth reiecteth it as false and corrupt and therefore the argument which the Papists vse for the stablishing of their religion drawn from Antiquitie is of no effect Secondly by these words of Christ ye haue heard it hath beene said of olde wee may easily gather after what manner the Scribes and Pharises expounded the law namely they left the Scriptures and followed
him in word or deede and he hath knowledge thereof and iust cause thereupon to complaine Leaue there thy gift before the Altar Still he alludeth to the manner of the Iewes worshippe who when they went to sacrifice to the Lord brought their sheepe or bullocke vnto the vtter court or as some thinke tied it to the hornes of the altar in token that they presented it vnto the Lord now if at that very instant they did remember that they had any way offended their brother then were they to leaue their gift there not quite omiting this dutie but onely suspending or deferring it for a while and goe seeke to be reconciled to their brother whome they had wronged Question How could this departure be warrantable seeing the Iewes had a law that when the seruice of God was once begun none might depart no not the Prince himselfe till it was ended Ans. This Rule must be vnderstood of departure out of the vtter court of the Temple whither the people brought their sacrifice soone after they had presented it before it was begunne to be offered for till the Priests had begunne Gods seruice it was lawfull for the people to depart especially vpon this occasion Question II. But what if the partie offending cannot possibly come to his brother whome he hath wronged by reason of his absence in some farre countrey his close imprisonment or such like Ans. He must testifie his endeauour to be reconciled vnto him and if the act it selfe be necessarily hindred by Gods prouidence God will accept the will for the deede if there be a willing minde for this is Christs meaning that we should doe our vtmost endeauour to be reconciled vnto our brethren whome we haue wronged shewing such care thereof that we preferre the same before the outward actiōs of Gods worship not presuming to worship God till we be reconciled to our brethren Here we haue a notable Rule for the maintaining of loue and charitie among men namely brotherly reconciliation In the giuing whereof Christ still continues his exposition of the sixt commandement for hauing condemned murther and the prouocations thereunto in the former verse here he commandeth the contrarie vertue of brotherly loue and the meanes to vphold the same to wit Reconciliation for offences giuen Out of this Rule in generall we may obserue first a Third direction to the right expounding and vnderstanding of Gods commandements namely where any vice is forbidden there the contrarie vertue is commanded and on the contrarie where any vertue is commaunded there the contrarie vice is forbidden This Rule must be obserued as a priuiledge of the law of God aboue all humane lawes for mens lawes are satisfied by abstaining from the vice forbidden though the contrarie vertue be not practised as he satisfies mans law forbidding Murther that abstaines from the actuall crime though he loue not his brother But he transgresseth the law of God that performeth not the contrarie vertue though he abstaine from the vice forbidden for though a man abstaine from killing yet if he doe not loue his brother hee is guiltie of the breach of this sixt commandement which serues to confute the error of our ignorant people who because they abstaine from Murther Adulterie and other outward sinnes doe perswade themselues that they keepe the law and that God will therefore be mercifull vnto them But they must know that though they should abstaine from the vices forbidden yet they stand culpable of Iudgement for want of doing the contrarie vertues for it is not sufficient to abstaine from euill but we must doe good and therefore Iohn Baptist saith Euery tree that bringeth not forth good fruite is hewen downe and cast into the fire and the sentence of damnation shall bee denounced against the Reprobates for their omission of doing good I was an hungrie and ye gaue me no meate c. Secondly by this Rule of Reconciliation it appeareth that the performance of any outward seruice vnto God is displeasing vnto him if it be separated from the loue of our brethren Isay 1. 11 12. What haue I to doe with the multitude of your sacrifices saith the Lord and so hee proceedeth reiecting in particular all the seruice of the Iewes because they liued in enuie debate and oppression Their hands were full of blood Isay 58. 5 6. The Lord doth there reprehend the Iewes fasting from meates because they did not withall abstaine from strife and oppression adding withall that refraining from crueltie and doing workes of mercie is the fast which hee requires which serues to ouerthrowe the naturall conceit of men who thinke that the whole worshippe of God standeth in the duties of the first Table This was indeede the conceit and practise of the Pharises whereupon they taught the people that if they gaue oblations to the Church though they releeued not their poore parents yet God was well pleased with them And the like is the practise of the Church of Rome who in cases of transgression through want of brotherly loue doe not appoint this Reconciliation but Auricular confession and Canonicall satisfaction as matters well pleasing vnto Almightie God yea such is the conceit of our common people that if they be present at diuine seruice if they heare the word preached and receiue the Sacrac●aments at ordinarie times then they haue done good seruice and he will respect them though in their ciuill conuersation they be at enmitie with their brethren or liue in such like sinnes But we must learne that God is serued not onely in the duties of the first Table but of the second also and that God abhortes the duties of pietie in such persons as make no conscience of the practise of loue and mercie Ierem. 7. 9 10. Will you steale murther comm●t adulterie c. and yet come and stand before me in this house wherein my name is called and say we are deliuered though we haue done all thes●●b●ominations as if he should say neuer thinke it and therefore if 〈◊〉 desi●e true comfort in our seruing of God let vs make conscience to ioyne therewith the practise of mercie towards our brethren Thirdly here also we may learne how to behaue our selues before we come to the Lords Table if we call to minde euen when we be in the Church that we haue any way offended our brother we must first goe and reconcile our selues vnto him and then come to the Lords Table we must not abstaine vpon the remembrance of our wrong doing for so we adde sinne vnto sinne refusing spirituall societie with God because we will retaine enmitie towards our brother but seeking speedily reconciliation we must returne to receiue the Lords Sacrament Which flatly condemnes the common practise of many who abstaine from the Lords Supper because they will not seeke to be reconciled to their brethren This argues an heart full stu●● with pride and malice which preferres it owne lust before the will of
wisdome did take occasion to glorifie God but here is meant the abuse of the sight that is the idle looking or curious looking of men vpon women or women vpon men Now idle looking is when one looketh without iust cause as when a man looketh with intent to lust Thus did the sonnes of God behold the daughters of men Genesis 6. 2. by whose looking came lust and for lust came the flood so Potisers wife first lift vp her eies vpon Ioseph and then lusted after him and Dina Iacobs daughter went out to see the daughters of the countrie and to bee seene againe and so when Shechem saw her hee lusted after her and rauished her so the Prophet Dauid liuing in peace and securitie cast his eie idlie and curiously vpon ' Bathsheba as shee was washing her selfe whereupon he lusted after her and so committed both Adulterie and murther This idle and curious looking Saint Peter calleth an adulterous eie both because it is the beginner of lust and the increaser thereof But this sinne is little regarded and made a small matter with many who can bee content to come with Christian eares into the assemblies and yet will bring with them idle and curious yea adulterous eies but such persons which so abuse their sight to the dishonour of God must know that they are adulterers before God howsoeuer they may perswade themselues that grace enters into their hearts by hearing yet vndoubtedly by their idle and curious eies Sathan enters into their soule and keepes out Gods word whereby the soule should be renued Wee therefore must here bee admonished to take heed how wee vse the sight of our eies especially when wee are in the assemblies of the Saints and holy exercises and to preuent this euill it were to bee wished that men and women would sort themselues and not bee mingled in the congregation vnlesse it were the husband with his owne wife Againe if the idle and curious eie be the beginning of adulterie then wee must learne with care to gouerne our eies as the seruants of God haue done ' Dauid praied the Lord to keepe his eies from regarding vanitie and Iob because hee would auoid vnchast thoughts made a couenant with his eies not to looke on a maide Now as looking to lust is here forbidden so by proportion are all other like occasions vnto adulterie as first reading of vnchast and wanton books of loue matters and vsing light and wanton talke Many are giuen to these kinds of delights but they must know that herein they sinne grieuously for they haue not onely a wanton eie but a lasciuious tongue also Secondly the acting of all such Plaies and Comedies the matter whereof is the representation of the light behauiour of men women for therein are idle and curious lookes set forth to the eie which ought not to be beeing here condemned Thirdly the wearing of vaine and light attire whereby others are prouoked to cast their eies vpon them vnto lust for if the light and wanton eie bee condemned then that which causeth it is much more condemned This ought to bee regarded for light and forraine attire is a secret profession of an vnchaste heart Fourthly mixt dauncing of men and women in time and measure for therein is more occasion and prouocation vnto lust then by the bare beholding of each other with the eie Fiftly euill companie so are the wordes of the Apostle Paul out of an Heathen Poet Euill conuersings corrupt good manners which may well include that vnseemely conuersing of men with women not warranted either by the generall or particular calling Sixtly the pampering of the bodie with daintie meates or strong drinkes this was the sinne of Sodome and it is much more an occasion of lust then the bare sight of the eie Seauenthly Idlenesse and lazinesse in not imploying the bodie in some honest calling for thereby also is lust incited And thus much of the meaning of this commandement forbidding all occasions to adulterie vnder a lustfull eie Now considering that a man is guiltie of adulterie that vseth the occasions thereof hereby we may see that we cannot excuse our selues from the breach of this law for though we be cleane from the bodily outward facte yet who can say My heart is cleane who is free from the occasions thereof as from a wanton eie vaine apparell wanton speech intemperance and the rest all which makes vs culpable of this sinne and therefore wee must laie our hands vpon our mouthes and condemne our selues of guilt before God we must humble our selues acknowledging our sinnes and breaches of this commandement and lastly we must take heede of all occasions that may mooue or incite vs vnto lust or wantonnesse The second point which our Sauiour Christ propoundeth in the interpretation of this law is this that the lust of the heart though it neuer come into acte is Adulterie now that we may know what our Sauiour Christ meaneth by lust sundrie points are to be handled First how lust can bee a sinne considering it is onely a hidden desire of the heart Secondly how lust can bee a sinne of the seauenth commandement seeing it is forbidden in the tenth and thirdly how great a sinne lust is For the first that lust is a sinne is thus prooued Gods Law requireth obedience of the whole man both in soule and bodie and in euery part facultie and power thereof Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart with all thy soule and with all thy strength and that obedience which commeth not from the whole man is sinnefull Now when a man conceiueth vnchast thoughts in his heart then his soule and mind his affections haue not done their dutie vnto God and so he sinneth in lusting Yet this doctrine was neuer receiued of all but some haue still excepted against it and their principall reasons are two 1. They say lust is a naturall inclination desire and appetite which was in Adam before his fall and so cannot be a sinne Ans. Lust or appetite in the heart is not simply a sinne for so it is a naturall desire which was in our first parents in their integritie but to lust after that which God forbiddeth that is the sinne as for a man to lust after a woman or a woman after a man not beeing man and wife which we see here Christ condemneth 2. They say God blesseth adulterers and fornicators in their lust with the issue of seed in child-bearing as well as man and wife in lawful mariage and therefore it cannot be a sinne Ans. In adulterie two things may be considered the vnlawfull lust of the heart and the acte of generation now when God giues issue to adulterers and fornicators it is no approbation of their sinnefull lust but onely a common blessing of naturall generation which is his owne ordinance by creation for howsoeuer God approoues
the Lawe is immutable and eternall and therefore I came not to destroy it First here obserue that the Law of God is made perpetuall and vnchangeable If any man aske how this can be seeing the Apostle faith The Lawe is changed Answer The Law is threefold Ceremoniall Iudiciall and Morall as hath beene said now that place is principally to be vnderstood of the Ceremoniall law which indeede is abrogated in regard of the obseruation of it in Gods worship but in the scope and substance of it which is Christ crucified with his benefits whom it shadowed out it remaineth still and is now more plaine then euer it was As for the Iudiciall law though it be abrogated vnto vs so farre forth as it was peculiar to the Iewes yet as it agrees with common equitie and serues directly to establish the precepts of the Morall lawe it is perpetuall If it be said that Christ changed the Morall law in changing the Sabbath day from the seauenth day to the eight I answer Christ did so indeed by his Apostles but that is no change of the substance but of the ceremonie of the Sabbath for the substance of that law is the inioyning of a seauenth daies rest vnto the Lord. Now though the seauenth day from the creation be not kept yet a seauenth day is kept still If it be further said that the Law it selfe is abrogated for that euery one that breaketh the Lawe is not accursed according to the sentence thereof Deut. 27. 26. Answer Wee must knowe that the Law is but one part of Gods word and the Gospel another reuealing another part of Gods will besides that which the Lawe made knowne for it addes a qualification to the Law moderating the rigour thereof after this manner Hee is accursed saith the Law that faileth in any commandement except saith the Gospel he bee reconciled againe in Christ and in him haue the pardon of his transgressions And yet the Morall law remaines for euer a rule of obedience to euery childe of God though he be not bound to bring the same obedience for his iustification before God Againe this propertie of the Law in beeing vnchangeable and for euer to be kept sheweth that no creature may dispense with the Law of God Mens lawes may be abrogated and changed but Gods Law euen in the least parts thereof must stand for euer till it be accomplished to the full but if it might be dispensed with then not onely iots and titles thereof but whole lawes might bee abrogated This shewes the blasphemous impietie of the Popes of Rome who in their Canons be authorized to dispense with the lawes of God yea in the last Councell of Trent hee is priuiledged to dispense with some of the lawes of Consanguinitie against nature flatly forbidden in the word of God which is most horrible rebellion and a great disgrace vnto God Thirdly from this propertie of the Law we may obserue that it is not likely that any whole booke of Canonicall Scripture is lost for not one sentence of the Law shall passe till all be fulfilled much lesse then can whole bookes perish Sundrie men do thinke that whole bookes be loste but that opinion cals into question the fidelitie of the Church and Gods own prouidence in preseruing his word neither can it stand wel with this text that saith no title thereof shal faile Those that seeme to be lost were either humane writings as bookes of lawes and Chronicles such as our books of statutes or Chronicles be or books of philosophie such as Salomon writ or else some of them are in the Canonicall Scripture for the bookes of Samuel and the Kings were written by diuers Prophets and therfore we may more safely hold that no part of holy Scripture is lost neither shall euer faile For howsoeuer after the last iudgement the vse of the word written shall cease yet the substance thereof shall remaine in mens hearts and be kept for euer Fourthly this immutabilitie of the Law containes a matter of great terrour woe vnto al impenitent sinners for howsoeuer they may flatter themselues with a presumption of Gods mercie yet the curse of Law which is against them shall stand for euer and therefore while they goe on in sinne they haue iust cause to houle and crie for Gods iustice in that his Law is inuiolable neither will gold or siluer pacifie Gods wrath for though a man by his power and wealth were able to ouerturne heauen and earth yet that would not helpe him though heauen and earth be brought to nothing yet euery part of Gods Law must stand for euer and be fulfilled And therefore whosoeuer doe lie in any finne must in time repent humble themselues forsake their sins and betake themselues vnto Christ that he may fulfill the Law for them or else the cuise thereof shall certainly be fulfilled in them and they shall there lie howling vnder it eternally where is nothing but weeping and gnashing of teeth Fiftly this immutabilitie of the Law and so proportionably of euery part of Gods word as it prooueth the Scriptures to be the word of God so it is a most excellent ground of comfort for all Gods seruants to stablish their hearts in the assurance of all his promises A Christian heart is subiect to receiue many doubtinges of the truth of Gods promises especially in the time of triall and temptation but this must be remembred for euer that the whole word of God is immutable though mans promises may faile and their lawes be abrogated yet no iot or part of Gods word shall passe vnfulfilled and therefore they must constantly waite for the accomplishment thereof for in due time it shall be fulfilled Sixtly we are hereby taught to put on patience in afflictiōs for they come by the speciall appointment of our God who saith in his word That through many afflictions we must enter into the kingdome of heauen now euery part of Gods word must be accomplished and therefore Christ bade Peter to put vp his sword when he would haue rescued his apprehension for saith he I could pray to my Father and hee would send more then twelue legions of Angels to helpe me but how then should the Scriptures be fulfilled which say It must be so Matth. 26. 52 53 54. Seauenthly our Sauiour Christ in this propertie of immutabilitie giueth vnto the whole Law and vnto euery sillable and letter thereof his proper force vertue and sense so as there is nothing in it not so much as one letter vaine or idle for euery commandement reueales the perfect iustice of God and euery letter serues to expresse the same comaundement And herein the Law of God differeth from mens lawes for in them bee many vaine and idle words yea oftentimes whole sentences but in the law of God it is not so Prou. 8. 8. All the words of my mouth are righteous there is no
the interpretation of their ancient Teachers But here Christ checketh and reprooueth this manner of teaching and therefore the like cannot be warrantable among vs at this day whereby we see that kind of teaching reprooued wherein euery point is stuffed out with the testimonies of Fathers Schoolemen and humane writers And here also is discouered a wicked and daungerous practise of the Papists who referre all deciding of controuersies and interpretation of hard places of Scripture to the Church and to the Fathers If we say that Fathers oft dissent and the Church may erre then they send vs to the Popes breast But if this course were safe then the Iewish teachers might haue had a good defence against this charge of Christ for they had both Church and Fathers on their side and the high Priest that was then in place Indeede the Fathers must be reuerenced as lights of the Church in their time and their testimonies duly regarded wherein they agree with the written word but for the confirmation of the truth in mans conscience and for the edifying of the soule in the graces of the spirit the word of God hath the onely stroake by it alone Gods children are begotten and borne anew to a liuely hope and by it alone they are fed and nourished in the faith yea by it alone they are confirmed and stablished in the truth Thirdly in these Iewish Teachers forbidding nothing as a breach of this law but the outward sinne of murther and on the contrarie approouing of those as keepers of this law that kept their hands from this Actuall crime of blood and by consequent worthie of life euerlasting behold a plaine picture of euery naturall man for is not this the common opinion that vnlesse a man kill an other he breakes not this commandement and so for the rest if he abstaine from the outward actuall grosse sinnes of stealing adulterie and false witnes bearing then he keepes those commandements though his heart be neuer so full fraught with enuie malice lust couetousnes falshood c. But let vs obserue Christs reproofe of such erronious interpretations of Gods law as a meanes to schoole our hearts from such vaine conceits vers 22. But I say vnto you whosoeuer shall be angrie with his brother vnaduisedly shall be culpable of iudgement and whosoeuer saith vnto his brother Raca shall be worthie to be punished by the Councell and whosoeuer shall say foole shall be worthie to be punished by hell fire Here our Sauiour Christ propounds the true interpretation of this Commandement But I say vnto you that is whatsoeuer you haue heard the Scribes or Pharisies teach you from themselues or from their fathers it is nothing let them not deceiue you for I that am the Law-giuer and Doctor of my Church and therefore best know the meaning of mine owne law I say otherwise vnto you whosoeuer is angrie with his brother c. Here Christ laies downe three kinds of murther and three degrees of punishments for the same The first degree of murther is Anger not anger simply but rash and indiser●et anger towards a brother and by Brother he meaneth first one Iew with an other to whome Christ spake secondly one neighbour with an other whether Iew or Gentile for by creation we are all brethren hauing one father which is God as Adam is called the sonne of God Luk. 3. 38. The second degree of murther is calling his brother Raca Some expound this word Raca an idle or emptie braine others an euill man others take it to signifie a loathsome man one to be spit at as we by spitting vse to shew our contempt but these interpretations cannot so fitly stand for then the third degree of murther and this second should be one and the same for to call a man emptie braine euill or loathsome and to call him foole are equall in degree Now Christs intent is to set downe distinct degrees of murther as is euident by the distinct degrees of punishment adioined thereunto A more fit exposition is this that Raca hath no perfect signification but is onely an interiection of indignation whereby a man doth not slaunder or reuile his brother but onely in gesture shew the contempt and anger of his heart against him as when in English we say fie tush or such like which words are not open raylings but onely outward signes of the inward anger and contempt concealed in the heart so that the meaning is this He that is angrie with his brother and expresseth this his anger either in gesture or countenance by frowning lookes gnashing of teeth or by imperfect speech as tush fie pish or such like he is guiltie of murther The third degree of murther is whē a man doth shew his anger against his brother by open raylings and reproachfull names expressed in these words whosoeuer shall call his brother foole And all these three degrees are beyond the interpretation of the Iewish Teachers who onely condemned actuall killing by this commandement Now to these seuerall kinds of murther Christ addeth distinct degrees of punishment The first is to be culpable of iudgement for vnaduised anger The second to be worthie to be punished of a Councell for outward signes of this anger The third is to be worthie of hell fire for reproachfull names or raylings And here we must vnderstand that Christ speaketh not properly in setting downe these degrees of punishment but figuratiuely alluding to the custome of punishing offenders vsed among the Iewes for they had three courts The first was held by three men for meane matters and other cases of small importance The second was held by three and twentie men wherein were determined matters of great importance that could not be decided in the first court as matters of life and death and it was kept in the cheife cities of the land The third court was held at Ierusalem onely called the court of the Seauentie-two from which none might appeale to any other In it were all weightie and great causes determined and this court is here called a Councell Now Christ alluding hereto saith to this effect Look● as among you Iewes there are different courts and some matters are adiudged in your courts of iudgement and others in the Councell at Ierusalem so God also he hath his Iudgement and his councell those that are rashly angrie shall vndergoe Gods iudgement and he that makes knowne his anger by speech or countenance shall be punished more grieuously and vndergoe a deeper iudgement as it were by the Lords councell but he that shall by open reuilings and raylings shew forth his malice against his brother as by calling him foole or such like he shall be worthie the most grie●●us iudgement and torment of hell fire alluding to the highest degree of torment among the Iewes which was burning for before their Gouernment was taken from them by Herod the Iewes vsed these foure kinds of punishments hanging beheading
must be opened namely what is Adulterie here forbidden Adulterie properly is the breach of wedlocke by such parties some one whereof at the least is either maried or espoused I call it the breach of wedlocke to note the propertie of this sinne which is not in any other sinne vnlesse it be of this kinde though the sinne bee farre more grieuous Idolatrie is a more hainous sinn● then Adulterie beeing a breach both of the first and second commaundement of the first Table and yet it comes short of Adulterie in this qualitie of breaking wedlocke for wedlocke may bee kept of those which are Idolaters Secondly I say betweene any parties if one bee maried meaning the husband as well as the wife to confute the opinion of some Iewes and by some lawes also maintained that the man hath a priuiledge aboue the woman so as hee breaketh not wedlocke when he goeth in to another woman besides his wife which is false for though he haue a prerogatiue ouer his wife in beeing her head yet hee hath no priuiledge to free him from matrimoniall fidelitie but is as much bound to keepe himselfe vnto his wife as she is to keepe her selfe to him The preheminence of superioritie cannot free the husband frō the bond of mariage the husband is bound to the wife as much as the wife is to the husband and shee hath power ouer his bodie as much as he hath ouer hers 1. Cor. 7. 4. Thirdly I say or espoused because Adulterie is not onely committed by such parties whereof one or both be fully maried but also by them whereof one is single and the other contracted onely and therefore is the same punishment alotted to both for contract in right is mariage Thus wee see the sinne here directly forbidden according to the letter of the Law Now though the Lord vnder this one includes all the sinnes of the same kind as we shall anone perceiue yet the Pharises tooke this litterall signification for the whole meaning and taught that the sinne here forbidden was bodily adulterie onely and so made the adulterie of the heart to be no adulterie which exposition Christ here confutes First here obserue the fraud and cunning of these Pharises they would seeme faithfull interpreters of the Law in that they keep themselues so close to the words that they will not passe one iot beyond the litterall sense but yet in the meane time they omit the full meaning and true vse of this Law The like hath beene the practise of heretiks in all ages as the Arrians who denied that Christ was God stucke fast to these words of Scripture the father is greater then I and to such like And the Papists to vphold their breaden God by transubstantiation will needes keepe tke litterall sense of these words of Christ This is my bodie whereby they ouerturne the nature of that sacrament And the like might be shewed by sundrie examples in all ages whereby we are taught not to stand vpon the proprietie of the words of Scripture onely but to labour to haue the true spirituall sense ioyned with them Secondly here obserue how grieuous a sinne Adulterie is in that Christ by name doth expresly forbid it among all the sinnes of this kind yea the very Pharises doe euery where condemne it for though they would easily dispense with disobedience to Parents yet the woman taken in Adulterie must be put to death Iohn 8. 4 5. The greatnes of this sinne might be shewed by many arguments for if he be worse thou an infidel that careth not for his familie then farre worse is the Adulterer for he destroyeth his familie Salomon we know maketh Adulterie worse then theft and yet theft is a notorious sinne greatly hated and seuerely punished of all nations Againe Adulterie destroyeth the Seminarie of the Church which is a godly seed in the familie and it breaketh the couenant betweene the parties and God it robs another of the pretious ornament of chastitie which is a gift of the holy Ghost it dishonoureth their bodies and maketh them the temples of the diuell and the Adulterer maketh his familie a Stewes for as Dauid dealt with Vrias so his owne sonne Absalon dealt with him and lastly it bringeth Gods vengeance vpon the posteritie and therefore Iob calleth it a fir● which shall deuoure vnto destruction yea the greatnesse of Gods punishment vpon Adulterers partly in this life and principally after death may plainely shew the greatnesse of this sinne for this and other sinnes God in his wrath ouerthrewe Admah and Zebomi Sodome and Gomorrah with five and brimston●● from heauen and the place where they stood it made a poole of poysoning water vnto this day And although the Lord doe not shew such extraordinary reuenge against sinne yet his wrath is a consuming fire against whole families townes and kingdomes for this sinne though Dauid repented of his Adulterie yet for that very sinne the sword must not depart from his house for euer And for the life to come Adulterers and wh●rem●ngers God will Iudge Againe neither fornicators nor adulterers c. shall inherit the kingdome of God they may indeed repent and so bee saued but then they cease to be adulterers Now if Adulterie be so grieuous a sinne worser then theft c. then we must wish that in all places it were as seuerely punished as theft is so would families be reformed and become good Seminaries both for Church and common wealth Secondly the grieuousnesse of Gods wrath against this sinne must admonish euery one to beware thereof for it brings the besome of destruction to sweepe all away both in Church and common wealth Verse 28. But I say vnto you that whosoeuer looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adulterie with her alreadie in his heart Here our Sauiour Christ laies down the true sense of this commandement and as we see hee speaketh as the Law-giuer and Prophet of his Church who hath absolute power to giue lawes and to expound the same But I say vnto you The Pharises said there was no adultery but that which was outward and bodily but Christ plainely confuteth that and saith he that looketh on a woman to lust after her that is either in looking on her lusteth or by looking lusteth after her that is desireth to increase his lust he hath committed adulterie with her alreadie in his heart Here then our Sauiour Christ setteth down two things touching the interpretation of this law First the occasion of adulterie which is looking to lust Secondly that the ●ust of the heart that is the motion and inward inclination of the heart vnto this sinne is adulterie before God though it neuer come into action For the occasion To looke vpon a woman is not sinne but may bee done lawfully yea thereby a man or woman may glorifie God as the Queene of Sheba by beholding Salomons person and hearing his
one flesh The truth of this may appeare by the Lords owne complaint against his people to whom he speaketh as to a wife that had forsaken her husband without a cause on his behalfe Isay 50. 1. Where saith he is that bill of your mothers diuorcement wherby I sent her away As if he should say I gaue her no bill but her departure and separation from mee is by her owne sinnes which phrase sheweth what was the custome of the Iewes in this case II. Point The straitnesse of this law appeares in this that the man onely was permitted to giue this bill vnto his wife but the wife might not giue it to her husband for Moses saith Whosoeuer shall put away his wife neither is there any place in Scripture to prooue that the wife had this libertie so to deale with her husband If it bee asked whether the wife in a iust cause as for adulterie had not the like libertie I answer If we respect Gods institution touching mariage the right of diuorce is equall to them both for in regard of the bond of mariage they are equally bound one to another Here indeed this libertie is permitted onely to the man by this politicke law not that he had more right but to preuent the euill of the hardnesse of his heart who taking displeasure at his wife would rather spill her blood then continue with her If it be alleadged that a man is the womans head I answer that is for regiment and direction in her place but not in regard of breaking the bond of mariage whereby he is bound to his wife as well as she to him as the Apostle teacheth 1. Cor. 7. 4. III. Point The force and effect of this law was this It made the Bill of diuorcement for any cause giuen to be tolerable before men mariage after such a diuorce lawfull and warrantable in the Courts of men Deut. 24. 4. But yet in the court of conscience before God the diuorcement it selfe and second mariages made thereupon were both vnlawfull for God hateth this separation Mal. 2. 15. And whether partie soeuer marieth another vpon this diuorce commits adulterie Matth. 19. 9. This must be remembred for the true vnderstanding of this law of Moses the first words whereof are a permission to this effect If a man do conceiue such a dislike against his wife as that he wil not abide with her but will needes put her away then he may but yet so as hee giue her a bill of diuorce which doth not acquit him before God but before men onely Hauing thus shewed the true meaning of this law it remaineth now to see what the Pharises taught touching diuorce Their doctrine was this that hee which gaue a bill of diuorcement vnto his wife for any light occasion was thereby acquitted from her before God and thereupon might marie another without the guilt of adulterie and also that another man might lawfully marrie her that was thus diuorced That this was their meaning may appeare by the contrarie answer of our Sauiour Christ wherein he crosseth and confuteth this their interpretation in the words following Verse 32. But I say vnto you whosoeuer shall put away his wife except it be for fornication causeth her to commit adulterie and whosoeuer shall marrie her that is diuorced committeth adulterie Here Christ answereth not to Moses law but to the corrupt interpretation of the Scribes and Pharises whereby they depraued that law By fornication Christ meaneth not euery sinne of that kinde but onely the sinne of adulterie or that which is greater in that kind namely incest Adulterie is a sinne that is committed by two parties one whereof is either maried or espowsed as hath beene shewed before Causeth her to commit adulterie That is giueth her occasion to marie againe and so to commit adulterie because their first bond remaineth stil and he that marieth her that is diuorced that is for any small cause not for adulterie he also commits adulterie Here then two points are set downe First that he who puts away his wife for any light cause causeth her to commit adulterie Secondly hee that marieth her that is diuorced committeth adulterie Yet vnto both these Christ putteth an exception in the case of adulterie The Papists and some others would restraine the exception to the first part of the sentence and make it a negation to this effect He that puts away his wife beeing no fornicator c. But the truth is that the exception belongs to the whole answer of our Sauiour Christ denying diuorce saue onely for adulterie and permitting no mariage after diuorcement saue onely where the diuorce is for adulterie First whereas our Sauiour Christ opposeth vnto this politicke law of Moses concerning diuorce the law of nature touching mariage Ge. 2. 24. He giueth vs an excellent distinction between all politicke laws and the law of nature which is the morall law for that is a law of eternall equitie commaunding good and forbidding euill simply without respect of man but politicke lawes are tempered according to the cōditions of men and though they doe not approoue yet sometimes they permit euill for the auoyding of greater mischiefe yea they tolerate that which before God and in conscience is condemned This point must teach vs not to content our selues with performing obedience to the politicke lawes of men for the lawes of men may tolerate that which Gods law doth condemne so the law of this Land in practise tolerates vsurie but vsurers must not hereupon thinke that all is safe well with them and that they sinne not in taking ten in the hundred because the law of the land permits it for our law tolerates that for the preuenting of greater vsurie when as the law of God doth vtterly condemne the same Againe our laws are open for men to goe to law at the first vpon euery light occasion without seeking former means of agreement but yet such men as doe so are guiltie of sinne before God notwithstanding their libertie by our politike lawes Some politike lawes also tolerate contracts of mariage made without consent of parents yet such children sin against the law of God for herein God requires childrens subiection to their parents and gouernours And the like might be shewed in many other points so that it is no sufficient iustification of our actions to say the lawes of men allow vs so to doe Secondly hence we may learne that a man cannot lawfully and with good conscience put away his wife except it be for adulterie the text is cleare both heare and also Math. 19. 7. which confuteth the ciuill laws of some countries the popish constitutions that allow other causes of diuorce besides adulterie Here they obiect sundrie things in their defence against this doctrine As 1. the saying of Christ Whosoeuer forsaketh Father or Mother wife c. shall receiue much reward Math● 19. 29. Here say they is diuorce for
the performing of the thing hee sweareth to doe Secondly it bindes a man vnto God for he that sweareth inuocates God as a witnesse and a Iudge of the truth of his assertion and hee stands bound vnto God till the thing sworne vnto bee performed if it bee lawfull and possible And herein the Pharises are good Teachers and from this their collection we learne sundry points First that if a man take an oath though hee were constrained thereto by feare yet it must bee kept if it bee of things lawfull and possible because in an oath a man stands bound vnto the Lord as if a man sweare vnto a Thiefe for the sauing of his life that hee will bring him some money or other bootie of his owne goods this he is to performe because the losse is but priuate but if hee were sworne further not to detect the Thiefe that were a bond of iniquitie tending to the hurt of the common wealth and therefore such an oath a man ought not to take and if he doe so sweare yet he must not keepe it but repent of his rash oath Secondly if a man be brought to sweare by error beeing ouertaken by another yet if it were of things lawfull within his power it must bee kept so did Iosuah to the Gibeonites and the breach thereof by Saul was grieuously punished as we shewed before Thirdly if a man sweare vnto a lawfull promise and it fall out that the keeping of his oath procure him great temporall losses yet the oath must be kept because therein hee is bound vnto God This Dauid noteth for a propertie of him that must rest in Gods holy mountaine to keepe his promise whereto he is bound by an oath though it turne to his owne hindrance Psal. 15. 4. Fourthly here wee may see that the doctrine and practise of the Church of Rome is wicked and damnable They teach that the Bishop of Rome by the power of the Keyes may free a man in conscience from the bond of a lawefull oath Indeede if the bond were onely betweene man and man it were something but beeing betweene God man he that will dispense therwith must be aboue or at least equall to God himselfe The Pharisies doctrine was farre better who taught that mens oathes must be performed vnto God without dispensing therewith And therefore our English Priests who before haue sworne to the Supremacie of this state and now are reconciled to the Pope are statly periured persons and so to be held But howsoeuer the Pharisies make this one good collection yet they erre grossely in their further meaning and expounding of this law for when as God forbiddeth a man to forsweare himselfe hence they gather first that it was lawfull to sweare ordinarily in common talke euen by the name of God so that they sware truly and did not forsweare themselues that this was their meaning will appeare in Christs answer Secondly hence they gathered that the law spake nothing of indirect oathes for they made two kinds of oathes direct by the name of God and indirect by the creatures And as they held that a man might sweare directly by the name of God without sinne in common talke so they taught that swearing indirectly by the creatures as by heauen by the temple the head Altar and such like was nothing neither the breaking thereof was any periurie as Math. 23. 16. And like vnto these Iewes are Popish teachers who hold that men m 〈…〉 are not onely by the name of God but by holy things as by the ●●●●de the Masse Saints and Angels if they be not abused vers 34. But I say vnto you sweare not at all neither by heauen for it is the throne of God c. Here Christ confuteth the false interpretation of the Iewish Teachers And his answer is propounded first generally sweare not at all then particularly in the words following to the 38. verse The wordes of his generall answer are somewhat hard and peruerted by many therefore that we may come to the true sense thereof two points are to be considered First what it is to sweare then how farre forth Christ forbiddeth swearing For the first we shall best conceiue of an oath by the parts thereof In an oath be two things Confession and Imprecation Confession is threefold though for outward forme the words of an oath be few 1. A man confesseth that that which he sweareth is true in his conscience 2. that God is a witnesse not onely of the outward action and speech but also of his particular conscience and 3. that God is an omnipotent Iudge of all and of him that sweareth able to iustifie him if he sweare truly or otherwise to condemne him eternally if he sweare falsly Imprecation the second thing in an oath is a prayer to God for two things First that God would be a witnesse with him that sweareth to testifie that he sweareth truly and according to his conscience so Paul did Rom. 9. 1. I speake the truth in Christ I lie not my conscienc● bearing me witnesse in the holy Ghost Secondly a man praies that God would become a Iudge to curse him with eternall wrath if he swore falsely so 2. Cor. 1. 23. I call God for a record vnto my soule and the forme of swearing in old time was the vsing of this imprecation God doe so to me and more also if I doe not thus and thus 2. king 6. 31. We see what it is to sweare Now we come to shew how farre forth Christ forbiddeth swearing in these words Sweare not at all The Anabaptists gather hence that all swearing is forbidden and so did some Heretikes in the primitiue Church yea and some of the auncient Fathers that otherwaies deserued well of the Church thought that the Lord in the olde Testament did onely permit swearing as he did some other things that were euill which he approoued not and that now Christ did quite take away the same But this opinion is false and erronious for swearing is commanded as a part of Gods worship now if Christ should here forbid it he should be against himselfe condemning that which himselfe approoued Againe the Apostle Paul vsed it as is plaine to be seene in the most of his Epistles and Heb. 6. 16. An oath for confirmation is called the ordinance of God for the ending of all strife Others as the Papists say that Christ here sets down a counsell of perfection not forbidding all swearing but rather wishing that men could so liue in faith loue and truth that there should be no vse of an oath But this can not be true for Christs wordes are not perswasiue but prohibitorie expressely forbidding swearing And yet we must know that Christs meaning is not here to forbid all swearing simply but all swearing after the Iewish manner and custome that is in common talke and communication as is plaine in the
in sinne and feeles it not wee therefore must labour to feele in our selues this spirituall bondage vnder sinne and when we feele it we must bewaile it and so shew some life of grace to be in vs. This Paul did Rom. 7. 24. O. wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Looke as the prisoner feeles his bolts and fetters so sensibly should we feele the chaine of sinne wherewith our soules are kept in bondage and till we feele it and bewaile it the kingdome of Christ doth not come vnto vs wee must therefore euery day crie vnto Christ our Lord that he would shew himselfe to be our Redeemer by breaking the fetters of sinne wherewith our soules are kept in bondage and giuing vs that free spirit which may fully erect his blessed kingdome in our hearts for where the spirit is there is libertie 2. Cor. 3. 17. Secondly wee must bewaile the sinnes of all the world in the transgression of Gods law whereby God is dishonoured and his kingdome hindered and the kingdome of darkenesse furthered 2. Pet. 2. 7 8. Iust Lot vexed his righteous soule with the vncleane conuersation of the wicked of his time 1. King 19. 10. When Elias saw the children of Israel forsake Gods couenant breake downe his altars and slay his Prophets with the sword then he became very zealous for the Lord of hosts Psal. 119. 136. Mine eies saith Dauid gush out with riuers of water because they keepe not thy Law Vers. 139. My zeale hath euen consumed me because mine enemies haue forgotten thy law Mark 3. 5. Christ mourned for the hardnesse of the hearts of the people and Luke 19. 41 42. Hee wept ouer Ierusalem for that they knew not the day of their visitation Now looke how these were affected with the raigning sinnes of their times so must we also mourne for their sinnes that raigne among vs as Atheisine and profanenesse contempt of Gods word blasphemie sabbaoth breaking oppression crueltie and pride all good subiects are grieued much when they see forraine enemies displaie among them banners of victorie how much more then ought the godly to grieue when they see impietie practised with an high hand which is as it were a flagge of defiance in the kingdome of Christ and a speciall ensigne of Satans triumphing in the increase of his kingdome of darkenes When the deuil sees one that hath liued in sinne but cast a looke toward the kingdome of Christ hee rageth greatly and labours by all meanes to turne him backe and when we see those that haue made profession of religion returne againe to the lusts of their former ignorance O it should grieue our soules and cause vs to pray thy kingdome come Doe we perceiue the Turke or Pope or any instrument of Satan either by subtiltie or tyrannie to hinder the Gospel preached which is the scepter of Christs kingdome and the aime of God whereby hee puls men from the kingdome of darkenesse O then we should mourne Or doe we see the want of Gods ordinance in preaching sacraments and discipline which serue for the furtherance of Christs kingdome or the Lords people committed to ignorant or idle Ministers to scandalous teachers either for life or doctrine In all these we haue cause of mourning and they should stirre vp our hearts to crie vnto the Lord Thy kingdome come Use 2. Graces to be desired As we must mourne for the wants and hinderances of Christs kingdome so we must hereby learne to haue our hearts inflamed with spirituall desires after all helpes and furtherances vnto Gods kingdome both in our selues and others as First for the preaching of the Gospel and all other diuine ordinances whereby Gods kingdome is erected and maintained our hearts desire to God must be that these may bee set vp and continued where they are wanting and that God may blesse them where they are vouchsafed Secondly that God would enlighten the eies of our minds that we may see the wonders of his Law as Dauid did that so the Lords ordinance may be blessed vnto vs. Thirdly that we may be wholly subiect vnto Christ and that of conscience not onely in our outward behauiour but in minde and heart in will in all our affections wee must make sure this holy desire bee in vs indeede and therfore must denie our selues and subiect our selues wholly vnto God as a willing people to serue him and none but him and then we may be sure his kingdome is come vnto vs. Fourthly we must desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ in the kingdome of glorie for this end that we may make an ende of sinning and become more obedient subiects vnto Christ yea wholly ruled by him though for the good of others we must be content to liue Fiftly that Christ would come in iudgement when all things shall be subdued vnto God and all his obedient subiects shall be fully glorified This wee may desire in heart though we must leaue the time to Gods good pleasure still waiting for it by faith in his promise Sixtly that God would inlarge his sanctuarie here on earth gather his elect more and more and still defend and maintaine his Church in euery place in the world when these desires affect our soules then doe wee truely say Thy kingdome come 3. Use. Duties to be practised Whatsoeuer we aske in praier that must we endeauour after in life and conuersation else we mocke God saying well and doing nothing First therefore as we say Thy kingdome come so must we seeke to meet it striue to enter into it for this end God giues vs time to liue in this world that here we might enter the gate of grace and wait for the fruition of glorie and therefore we must diligently frequent the suburbs of this heauenly Ierusalem euen the preaching of the word and therein labour both for true humiliation and conuersion or else wee cannot enter into this kingdome Math. 18. 3. Iohn 3. 5. First we must haue the pride of our hearts pulled downe and become as little children beeing humbled in our selues through the knowledge of our sinnes and the feeling of that miserie which is due vnto vs for them yea wee must confesse them vnto God and crie vnto him for mercie and by this meanes lay aside this burden which hinders our entrance into the gate of grace Secondly we must bee conuerted and changed by the renuing of our mindes our hearts must cleaue vnto God and we must carry therein a resolute purpose not to sinne when these things be in vs we enter into Gods kingdome but till we endeauour after them in some truth we say in vaine Thy kingdome come Secondly wee must bee carefull to bring forth the fruites of Gods kingdome for therefore doth he send it among men and for want hereof doth he take it from them Matth. 21. 43. Now these fruits are Righteousnesse peace
of a minister serues to build vp Christs kingdome to beate downe the kingdome of sinne and to feede the soules of men with the foode of euerlasting life It will be said this course is good among the common people but this is not the learning which is required in the handling of the word in the schooles of the Prophets I answer It is the greatest learning that can be in a minister to be able thus to diuide the word of God aright it goes beyond the gift of tongues and of miracles 1. Cor. 24. 1 2. I de●●● not but that it is a part of learning vsed of the learned to take a text of Scripture and to make a scholasticall discourse vpon the same But yet the worke of a Prophet stands rather in expounding Scripture by Scripture and in diuiding the same aright giuing thereout wholesome doctrine for the edifying of the people of God that heare In former times when the studie of Scripture was neglected men betooke themselues to expound the writings of men and so prophesie was banished and all sound knowledge in the truth of God and hence arose diuersitie of opinions and multitudes of foolish questions And so will it be with vs if prophesie faile for to leaue the right handling of Scripture is the way to bring in all errour and barbarisme in religion VI. Euery minister of the Gospel is hereby taught that he ought to be answerable to his calling walking worthie of the same for a good minister is knowen by his good fruites and therefore he must be faithfull in performing all those duties which his calling doth binde him vnto The titles and calling of a minister be high and excellent but yet they will not commend any man for good vnles he bring forth the friuts of a minister in the faithfull discharge of his ministeriall duties Lastly hence we must learne not to take offence though the minister failes in his life and conuersation yea though there be contentions in the ministerie about matters of Doctrine for these are not the friuts of the ministerie which is Gods ordinance but of sinnefull men who bewray their imperfections in this holy calling Thus much of the Rule Now followes the proofe and explication thereof by a comparison drawen from nature in these wordes vers 16. Doe men gather grapes of thornes or figges of thistles vers 17. So euery good tree bringeth forth good fruit a corrupt tree bringeth forth euill fruit vers 18. A good tree cannot c. The comparison standeth thus As a tree is knowen of euery one by his fruit so is a Prophet by his teaching More particularly As a good tree brings forth good fruit and cannot bring forth euill fruit and as an euill tree brings forth euill fruit and cannot bring forth good fruit euen so a true Prophet teacheth wholsome doctrine and cannot teach false doctrine and a false prophet teacheth false doctrine and cannot teach true doctrine Touching this similitude first obserue in generall from the ground of this comparison that our Sauiour Christ here makes two kind of trees a good tree and an euill tree by an euill tree meaning that which in regard of any fruit is as a rotten tree as is the briar the thorne and thistle for though they liue and growe yet they are void of good fruit and so are called euill Now here it may well be demaunded whence this difference of trees doth come for all were good by creation Gen. 1. 31. God saw all that he had made and lo● it was very good Answ. Whether thornes or thistles were created of God I will not now dispute it is not certen that they were but now it is playne there remaines this difference among plants some are good some are bad the goodnesse that is in some comes from Gods blessing but the badnesse and barrennesse of others comes from the curse of God vpon the earth and vpon all creatures for the sinne of our first parents as we may see Gen. 3. 17. 18. The earth is cursed for thy sake thornes also and thistles shall it bring forth vnto thee And by this we may see the grieuousnes of our mother sinne it hath made the earth barren and cursed and many a goodly plant to become fruitles and vnprofible and therefore when we behold these things in the world we must take occasion hereof to consider our owne sinne and blame our selues and not the creatures for they were cursed for our sakes Now more particularly This comparison is here specially applied vnto Prophets but if we compare this place with S. Luke Chap. 6. 44. and 45. we shall see the holy Ghost their restraineth not this saying to Prophets alone but inlargeth the same vnto other men saying a good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things and an euill man out of the euill treasure of his heart bringeth forth euill Now by comparing these together we may see that this comparison reacheth both vnto Prophets and to all other men from whence we may gather these instructions I. What we are to conceiue and thinke of a man that is not regenerate we are all by nature branches of the wild oliue and therefore as a thorne cannot bring forth a grape nor a thistle figges no more can a man vnregenerate bring forth a good worke And this we may more plainely conceiue if we consider a little the workes of man they may all be reduced to three heads some are euill as works forbidden of God some are things indifferent beeing neither forbidden nor commannded and some are good workes as outward duties of the morall law Now for euill works they cannot possible be good in any man For works indifferent as eating drinking buying selling c. they are sinnes not in themselues but in him that vseth them beeing out of Christ and for the outward duties of the morall law as euill iustice liberalitie and such like they are good workes in themselues because God requireth them but yet in the vnregenerate they are sinnes To the pure all things are pure but to them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing is nothing pure Tit. 1. 15. and Without faith it is vnpossible to please God Hebr. 11. 6. It wil be said that liberalitie chastitie c. be the good gifts of God Ans. That is true and they be good workes as they are giuen and commaunded of God but as they are receiued and vsed of the naturall man they are sinnes for he failes from the right vse of those actions both for the beginning of them for they proceed not in him from a pure heart a good conscience and faith vnfaigned and also in the ende he doth them not for the glorie of God simply but withall he aimes at his owne praise and reputation or some such sinister respect The vse of this Doctrine is this I. it teacheth vs to consider and acknowledge the greatnes of our originall sinne Our
and matters of faith necessarie to saluation is so plaine that it may be vnderstood of the simplest ●ls Christ would neuer haue sent the Iewes to the Scriptures for the certen knowledge of the M●ssias Which notably discouers the fraudulent dealing of the Romish teachers who in matters of controuersie in religion send vs for resolution to the Church calling it the stay and pillar whereto we must leane in all doubts of doctrines The church I graunt is to be reuerenced but yet we must not build our faith vpon the doctrine of men Our Sauiour Christ sent the Iewes vnto the Scriptures and hereby the Bereans tried Pauls doctrine and are commended And indeede though men be neuer so vnlearned yet if they come in humilitie to search the Scripture and in obedience vnto God praying for knowledge they may be able by Gods word to discerne of false teachers vers 21. Not euery one that saith vnto me Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heauen but he that doth my fathers will which is in heauen From this verse to the 24. is conteined another portion of Christs sermon beeing the seauenth part of this chapter wherein he intreateth of the state of those that professe his holy name in his Church here on earth And his maine scope drift herein is to shew that men must not content themselues to professe religion outwardly but there-with they must ioyne true godlines and sincere obedience This point is as wayghtie and of as great importance as any of the former respecting the maine point of m●ns saluation and it conteineth two parts A maine conclusion in this verse And a proofe and explanation of one part thereof ver 22. 23. The conclusion it selfe hath two parts 1. that some men professing the name of Christ shall not be saued which part is afterward explaned and confirmed the 2. part is this that some professors of religion shal be saued which is not onely propounded but the parties also are plainely described The first part is a most fearfull sentence against many that liue in the Church that notwithstanding their profession of the name of Christ yet they shall neuer be saued And this is most true beeing spoken by him that hath the power of life and of death who is also the God of truth that cannot lie saying Not euery one that saith Lord Lord that is that professeth God to be his God shall enter into the kingdome of heauen There be two kinde of professors in the Church of God that shall neuer be saued the first are grosse hypocrites which professe Christ with their mouth and yet in heart and life they renounce him of this sort is first the common Atheist who onely for fea●e of the magistrates lawes professeth religion secondly the Epicure that is such a one who beares Christs name for fashions sake and yet his bellie and pleasure is his God thirdly the worldling who spends the strength of bodie and mind and all he hath on the world for earthly things Now none of all these if they thus liue and die can be saued The second sort are more close hypocrites which professe the name of Christ in some truth and haue in them some good gifts of God by reason whereof both before men and in their owne conceite they are reputed members of the Church and yet for all this they are indeed but hypocrites which shall neuer be saued And that we may somewhat discerne of them I will note the gifts which they may haue whereby they may come to professe Christ truly they may be reduced to fiue heads The first is the spirit of bondage to feare Rom. 8. 15. This is a certaine gift of God whereby a man doth discerne the right meaning and iudiciall vse of the law in himselfe concerning sinne and the punishment thereof for though a man by nature know something of the law yet he knowes not all nor the right vse thereof now by reason of this knowledge he sees himselfe in bondage and in regarde thereof doeth feare from whence may proceede many good things as griefe for sinne confession and humiliation for the same and praier for pardon Thus wicked Pharaoh confessed the righteousnesse of God and that he and his people had sinned Exod. 9. 27. And so did Ahab at the heauie message of God by Eliah 1. King 2. 27. he rent his clothes and put sackecloath vpon him and fasted and lay in sacke-cloath So Iudas when he sawe that Christ was condemned he repented of his fact beeing g●ieued for it and ashamed to looke any man in the face and also confessed the same before God and men Matth. 27. 3 4. A second gift which a close hypocrite may haue is faith as had Simon Magus for he beleeued and was baptized Act. 8. 13. neither was it a false and dissembling faith altogether but in some sort a true though not a sauing faith for he beleeued and yet was in the gall of bitternesse So Ioh. 2. 23. it is saide certaine beleeued in Christ but he durst not commit himselfe vnto them And that we be not deceiued herein we must know that this faith of an hypocrite hath in it three things knowledge of the truth approbation thereof with assent vnto it and a kinde of perswasion that Christ is his redeemer Of the second degree of this faith we haue example 2. Pet. 2. 18. where some are said to be beguiled with wantonnesse through fleshly lusts who had cleane escaped from them that be wrapt in ●rror that is in idolatrie And of the third degree we haue example in the same chap. vers 1. where some false prophets are said to denie Christ that bought them because for a time they professed themselues to be redeemed and were also perswaded in a generall sort that he had bought them yet herein they failed that they did not truly apprehend the merit of Christ and applie it effectually vnto themselues The third gift of a close hypocrite is a taste of Gods fauour Hebr. 6. 6. it is saide of some that fall quite away That they were inlightned by Gods spirit and had a taste of the good word of God and of the powers of the world to come though they were neuer ●ed nor filled therewith The fourth gift is good affections good I say not in them but in their kinde and so farre forth as we can iudge they haue ioy in the good things of God Luk. 8. 13. They that are on the stones are they which when they haue heard receiue the word with ioy They haue zeale for Gods glorie as had Iehu 2. king 11. 15. and yet he departed not from the sinnes of his forefathers v. 32. Thirdly they haue reuerence to Gods Ministers as Herod to Iohn Baptist Mark 6. 20. Herod knowing Iohn to be a iust and holy man feared and reuerenced him The fifth gift is an outward reformation of life the stonie ground
Stephen giueth the reason hereof namely their hard hearts whereby they resisted the holy Ghost in the ministerie of the word for which God left them to themselues so as they ran headlong to this height of impiety to persecute Gods deerest seruants The like we may see in these our daies some that haue beene professors after long hearing breake forth into open Atheisme calling this into question whether there be a God and among others there is also to be seene as vile crueltie and oppression in their particular dealings and as abhominable filthinesse as is to be found among the heathen or Idolaters all which and many other enormous sinnes proceed from this that though men professe religion yet they denie subiection to the Gospel preached so as it is not in them a Word of power for which cause God in his iustice giues them vp to hardnes of heart to commit sinne without remorse And therefore if wee would escape the fearefull iudgement of a reprobate sense let vs labour with feare trembling to become obedient to the word which we heare for if we doe not glorifie God in the meanes wherein he offers grace and mercie God will bee sure to glorifie himselfe in our deserued confusion Vers. 13. Ye are the salt of the earth but if the salt haue lost his sauour c. In this verse and the rest to the 16. Christ propoundeth the second branch of his sermon touching the office of the Apostles and in them of all Ministers wherein his intent is to mooue them to diligence in preaching the will of God to all people The Coherence of this part with the former standeth thus Christ had shewed before in diuers precepts that many are blessed whervpon some might aske how they should attaine to this happines and to those graces of the Spirit which make them fit for that estate Christ here answers that the preaching of the Gospel is the principall meanes to worke in their hearts those graces to which true happines is promised And because it is an excellent priuiledge to bring men to this estate therfore he exciteth his disciples to diligence in this Ministerie by two Reasons drawne from the properties of this worke propounded in two similitudes The first is taken from salt in these words ye are the salt of the earth amplified in the words following to the ende of the verse The second is drawne from light ver 14. 15. For the first yee are the salt of the earth yee that is you whom I haue called to be Apostles and set apart for the worke of the Ministry are salt not properly but by resemblance yet not in regard of their persons but of their ministerie because hereby they were to season men for God and to make them sauourie both in heart and life Of the earth not of Iudea only but of the whole world as may appeare by their commission Math. 28. 19. Goe therefore and teach all Nations From this description both Ministers and people may learne their dutie First for Ministers by this title of salt heare giuen vnto them Christ would teach them first how they ought to dispence the word of God both Lawe and Gospell namely so as they labour therein to expresse the properties of salt whereto Christ alludeth in his Title Now the properties of salt applied to rawe flesh or fresh wounds are principally three First it will bite and fret being of nature hot and drie Secondly it makes meats sauourie vnto our taste Thirdly it preserueth meates from putrifaction by drawing out of them superfluous moistnesse The Apostles therefore and other Ministers being salt must not onely in generall deliuer the word of God vnto the people but withall applie the same particularly vnto mens hearts consciences as salt is applied vnto meat And that for three endes first the Law must be applied to rippe vp mens hearts to make them see their sinns it must fret and bite them by the curse thereof to cause them to renounce themselues and to crie with the Iewes Men and brethren what shall we doe Secondly the Gospel must be preached that men feeling their corruption like rottennes in their soules may by the blessing of the spirit be thereby seasoned with grace and so reconciled vnto God and made sauourie in his sight This is the end of the Ministrie 2. Cor. 5. 20. We are Embassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you through vs we pray you in Christs steed that you be reconciled vnto God Thirdly both the Law and the Gospel must bee continually dispensed that thereby sinne and corruption may be daiely mortified and consumed both in heart and life euen as superfluous humours are dried vp by salt And this is the right dispensing of Gods word for euery discourse vpon a text of Scripture is not preaching but he that so expoundeth and applyeth the word that his ministerie may be salt vnto his hearers he it is that preacheth the word indeede Secondly Christ calling his Disciples salt teacheth them and all ministers that they themselues ought first to be seasoned by the word for how can they fitly season others by applying this salt vnto their consciences who neuer felt the biting of it vpon their owne He that is vnseasoned himselfe may speake Gods word which God may blesse to the good of others but yet in respect of himselfe it is a riddle which can not be vnderstood Thirdly this Title giueth good direction to euery Minister for his manner of preaching for if the word of God alone be that sauory salt wherewith mans heart is seasoned for the Lord then it ought to be dispensed purely and sincerely without the mixture of humane inuentions This was Pauls care my word my preaching saith he stood not in the entising speach of mans wisedome but in plaine evidence of the spirit and of power that your faith should not be in the wisedome of men but in the power of God Experience teacheth vs that salt by mixture with other things looseth of his sauour and so is it with the word In deede there is a place for Arts and tongues and humane learning with euery dispenser of the word wherein he may vse them with great commendation to witte in his priuate preparation but not in the publique dispensation whereby he seasoneth mens hearts vnto God that the word of God alone must doe for to it alone belongs the promise of the spirit Isay. 59. 21. And therefore he must vse great discretion in this ministerie and labour so to speake that the spirit may take delight to accompanie the same Fourthly this Titile teacheth all Gods Ministers by patience to possesse their soules when the wicked doe fret and fume against them for their ministerie for this is a testimonie that their ministrcie is salt and bites their corrupt consciences as it ought to doe therefore they are to goe on with chearefulnes endeauouring more and more to season their hearers
obedience to God now vnlesse God appoint them the doing of them cannot be any obedience to his will Thirdly will-worship whereby men thrust vpon God their owne inuentions for his seruice is euery where condemned and of like nature be all those actions wherein men of themselues doe fasten goodnesse without the will and appointment of God This point must bee remembred because the Church of Rome doth teach the contratie That a man may doe good workes not required or appointed by God but the former Reasons shew this to be false and the arguments which they bring for their opinion are nothing but abuse of Scripture as in these fewe may plamely appeare First they say the Iewes had free-will offerings which were not commanded in the word and yet were acceptable vnto God and so do many now adaies many good workes acceptable to God though not commanded Answ. Their free-wil offerings were ordained of God and therefore were acceptable they were onely free in regard in the time of offering them but for the manner how and the places where they must be offered both these were appointed of God Againe they say Phinees slewe Zimr● and Cosbie with Gods approbation though hee was no Magistrate and therefore workes not commanded of God may be acceptable vnto him Ans. Though Phinees had not any outward commandement yet he had that which was answerable thereto to wit an extraordinary instinct by the spirit wherby he was carried to doe that fact which was as much as if God had giuen him an expresse commandement And so we may say of the Ministerie of sundry auncient Prophets who by extraordinarie instinct were mooued thereunto and vpon this ground did Elijah slaie Baals Prophets Thirdly Maries fact say they in powring a boxe of costly ointment on the head of our Sauiour Christ was a good worke and yet there was no commandment for it in Gods word Answer Maries fact was a worke of confession whereby she testified her saith in Christ and so was generally commanded though not in particular Againe she was carried thereto by a speciall instinct of the spirit for she did it to burie him as Christ himselfe testisieth because his buriall was so speedy after his death in regard of the approaching of the sabboth that they could not embalme him as the manner of the Iewes was now euery instinct of Gods spirit in the conscience of the doer hath the force of a particular commandement Fourthly the spirit of God say they mooues euery man to any good worke that is to be done and therefore men need not a particular commandement for euery worke for those that are carried by the spirit cannot but doe well Answer True it is the spirit mooueth men to good works freely but yet this motion of the spirit is in and by the word of God and at this day those instincts which are besides the word are mens owne fancies or illusions of the diuell Many other reasons they alleadge to this purpose for the Iustifying their vowes of Chastitie of regular obedience pilgrimages trentals and such like but they are like to these and notwithstanding them all the truth is this that for substance a good worke is such a one as is ordayned appointed commanded by God And here by the way we may obserue that they are farre deceiued who so much commend the times of Poperie for good workes for the truth is that all their oblations to Images to Monasteries and to Churches for Masses Pardons and such like were no good workes but onely in their owne opinion for God commanded them not Now it is the Lords reuealed will that must giue the goodnes to mans worke Mich. 6. 8. he hath shewed thee O man what is good and what the Lord requireth of thee Next I adde Done of a regenerate person The Author of a good worke is not euery one in the world but that man or woman that is a member of Christ borne a new by the holy Ghost so Christ here saith Let your light c. restraining his speech to the persons of his disciples True it is that among Turkes and Infidels many a ciuill man will doe workes of mercie of ciuill iustice and liberalitie and will abstaine from outward sinnes and liue orderly now these and such like though in themselues they be good workes so farre forth as they are required by the law of nature or commaunded by Gods word yet in an infidel or an vnregenerate person they are sins for first they proceed from an heart which is corrupt with originall sinne and with vnbeleefe for the heart is the fountaine of all actions and also they are practised by the members of the bodie which are weapons of vnrighteousnesse and therefore must needs be like vnto water springing from a corrupt fountaine and running through a filthy channell Secondly these workes are not done for Gods glorie and the good of men Thirdly they are not done in obedience to God according to the Rule of goodnesse the will and word of God and therefore cannot be good workes And this must teach euery one that would doe good to labour for regeneration by the holy Ghost that so his person may be good then shall his workes of obedience be good in Gods sight for such as the tree is such will be the fruit An euill tree cannot bring forth good fruite nor a good tree euill fruite Matth. 7. 18. Wee must therefore labour to be engraffed into Christ for without him we can doe no good thing but beeing pa●takers of his grace we shall abound with the fruits of rightcousnesse which are by Iesus Christ vnto the praise and glorie of God Phil. 1. 11. Thirdly I adde that good workes must be done in faith for saith is the cause of euery good worke and without faith it is impossible to do any good worke Now in the doing of a good worke there is a twofold faith required First a generall faith whereby a man is perswaded that God requires of him the doing of that worke which he takes in hand as when a man giueth almes hee must be perswaded it is Gods will he should giue almes and so for other good workes for what soeuer is not of faith is sinne that is whatsoeuer proceedeth not from this perswasion in the conscience that it is Gods will that such a thing should be done or should not be done is sinne for he that doubteth of the thing he doth sinneth therein though the thing done be good in it selfe Secondly herein is required Iustifying faith whereby a man is perswaded in his conscience of his owne reconciliation with God in Christ of this it is said Heb. 11. 6. Without faith it is impossible to please God This Iustifying faith hath a double vse in the causing of a good worke First it giues the beginning to a good worke for by iustifying faith Christ with his merits is apprehended and applied
hold them necessarie as causes of our saluation and iustification but this we haue confuted heretofore Secondly of some Protestants who hold them necessarie though not as principall causes for they say we are only iustified and saued by Christ yet as conseruant causes of our saluation but the truth is they are no causes of saluation neither efficient principall nor conseruant nor yet materiall formall or finall as hath else-where beene shewed The third opinion is the truth that good workes are necessarie not as causes of saluation or iustification but as inseparable consequents of sauing faith in Christ whereby we are iustified and saued or as a way is necessarie to the going to a place The dignity of good workes is expressed in this that they are called good now they are good only in part not perfectly as I shew thus Such as the tree is such is the friute but euery one regenerate is partly spirit and partly flesh that is in part regenerate and in part naturall and corrupt this is true of his minde will and affections which are the fountaine of all his actions and therefore the workes that proceed thence must needes bee answerable that is in part corrupt as they come from nature and yet good in part as they come from grace Quest. But how can God approoue of them if they be euill Ans. We must consider good workes two waies First in themselues as they are compared with the law and the rigour thereof and so they are sins because they answer not to that perfection which the law requireth for there bee two degrees of sinnes Rebellions which are actions flatly against the lawe and Defects when a man doth those things that the lawe commandeth but yet faileth in the manner of doing and so are mans very best workes sinnes Secondly consider good workes as done by a person regenerate and reconciled to God in Christ and so God accepts of them for in Christ the wants thereof are couered But here wee must take heed of the Romish doctrine which teacheth that good workes are so farre forth good that there is no sinne in them their reasons are many to prooue this point but they haue beene heretofore confuted First they say good workes haue God for their Author and therefore are perfectly good Answ. This were true if he alone were the author of them but man is another author thereof from whom they take their imperfection They say againe that here they are called good but if they had any sinne in them they should be called euill for euery sinne is perfectly euill Ans. Where sinne is vnremitted it is perfectly euill but when it is pardoned in our Sauiour Christ it is as though it were not Thirdly they obiect that if good workes be sinnefull then they must not bee done and hereupon they say that by our doctrine men are bound to abstaine from all good workes Answer That which is euill must not be done so farre forth as it is euill now good workes are not simply and absolutely euill they are good in themselues and in vs in part comming from grace and therefore they must be done because God requires them at our hands and for the imperfection of them wee must pray for pardon in our Sauiour Christ. And here by the way we may iustly taxe the prowd doctrine of the Papists who teach that men may bee iustified by good workes when as the best workes of any man in this life are tainted with sinne and are farre vnanswerable to that perfection which the law requireth wee must be of a farre other minde namely that for our best workes God may iustly condemne vs because wee haue not done them as we ought therefore Christ bids vs say of our selues that when we haue done all that we can we are vnprofitable seruants The vse of good workes is here set downe by our Sauiour Christ to glorifie God this is not the whole ende of good workes and therfore I will propound the same more fully out of other places of Scripture for Christ here onely propoundeth that ende of good workes which concerned his intended purpose The vse and ende of good workes is three-fold either concerning God our selues or our brethren As good workes concerne God they haue three vses First they serue as meanes whereby wee giue vnto God testimonie of our homage and obedience vnto his commaundements for by creation preseruation and redemption he is our Lord and our God and so prescribeth lawes for vs to keepe in which regard wee owe homage vnto him which that wee may shewe forth and testifie wee must walke in good workes as hee in his word hath commaunded vs. Secondly they serue to bee tokens of our thankefulnesse vnto God for our creation redemption and manifold preseruations both in soule and bodie Thankefulnesse indeede is shewed in word but yet true thankefulnesse stands in obedience and our obedience is shewed by doing good workes And therefore the Apostle Paul exhorts vs to giue vp our bodies as holy and acceptable sacrifices vnto God Rom. 12. 1. Thirdly they serue to make vs followers of God we are commaunded to be holy as he is holy 1. Pet. 1. 15. and to put in practise the duties of loue one towards another as the Lord loued vs and therefore we must walke in the duties of the Morall law that therein we may imitate God 1. Ioh. 3. 3. He which hath this hope purgeth himselfe as he is pure Secondly the vse of good workes in regard of our selues is fourefold especially First they serue to bee outward testimonies of the truth of our faith and profession proouing that the grace of our hearts is not in hypocrisie but in truth and sinceritie And for this cause Abraham is said to haue beene iustified by workes because his workes did testifie that his faith was true and sincere for where the fire of grace is there it cannot but burne and where the water of life is it cannot but slowe and send out the streames thereof in good workes Secondly they serue to be signes and pledges of our election iustification sanctification and of our future glorification as wee knowe a tree to liue by the fruite and budde which it bringeth forth so by keeping a continuall course in good workes a man is knowne to bee in Christ and to haue true title to all his benefits and therefore when the Apostle willeth men to giue all diligence to make their calling and election sure he propoundeth certaine vertues wherein they ought to walke as beeing the most euident tokens of election that we haue in this life Thirdly they serue to make vs answerable to our holy calling for euery one that professeth the Gospel is called to be a mēber of Christ and a new creature whose dutie is to bring forth good workes Eph. 4. 1 2. Walke worthy of the vocation wherevnto you are called with all humblenesse of
equitie it concerneth all people in all times and places What the Morall lawe is I will describe in three points First It is that part of Gods word concerning righteousnesse and godlinesse which was written in Adams minde by the gift of creation and the remnants of it be in euery man by the light of nature in regard whereof it bindes all men Secondly it commaundeth perfect obedience both inward in thought and affection and outward in speech and action Thirdly it bindeth to the curse and punishment euery one that faileth in the least dutie thereof though but once and that in thought onely Galatians 3. 10. Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all things that are written in the law to doe them The summe of the Morall law is propounded in the Decalogue or tenne Commandements which many can repeat but fewe doe vnderstand That wee may further conceiue aright the Morall lawe wee must make a difference betweene it and the Gospel for the Gospel is that part of the word which promiseth righteousnesse and life euerlasting to all that beleeue in Christ the difference betweene them stands especially in fiue things First the Law is naturall and was in mans nature before the fall but the Gospel is spirituall reuealed after the fall in the couenant of grace Secondly the Law sets forth Gods iustice in rigour without mercy but the Gospel sets out iustice and mercie vnited in Christ. Thirdly the Law requireth a perfect righteousnesse within vs but the Gospel reuealeth our acceptance with God by imputed righteousnesse Fourthly the Law threatneth iudgement without mercy and therefore is called the ministerie of condemnation and of death but the Gospel shewes mercie to mans sinne in and by Christ if we repent and beleeue Lastly the law promiseth life to the worker and doer of it Doe this and thou shalt liue but the Gospel offereth saluation to him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly not considering faith as a worke but as an instrument apprehending Christ by whom we are made righteous The Church of Rome in a manner confound the Law and the Gospell sauing that the Gospel which is the new Law reuealeth Christ more clearely then Moses Law did which they call the old Law But this is a wicked opinion which ouerturnes all religion beeing the cause of many grosse points in poperie which could not stand if they would acknowledge a true distinction betweene the Law and the Gospel They say for their defence that the precepts of both are the same for substance that both require righteousnesse both promise life and threaten death both commaund faith repentance and obedience and therefore they are the same Answer First the laws and precepts of the Law and Gospel are not the same for Adam in his innocencie knew the Law but hee knewe nothing then of beleeuing in Christ and though both require righteousnesse promise life and threaten death yet the manner is farre different as before was noted So likewise they differ in the commaunding of faith for the Gospel commandeth faith not as a worke done as the Law doth but as an instrument laying hold on Christ. Againe the Law commaundes faith generally as to beleeue in God and to beleeue his word to be true but besides this the Gospel requires a particular faith in Christ the Redeemer whom the Law neuer knewe Thirdly the Law commandeth not repentance for the knowledge of the Law was in Adams heart when hee needed no repentance true repentance therefore is a sauing grace wrought and commanded onely by the Gospel And fourthly for obedience though it bee commaunded both by the Law and the Gospel yet not in the same manner The Law commaundeth obedience euery way perfect both in parts and in degrees and alloweth none other but the Gospel commaundeth and in Christ approoueth imperfect obedience that is an indeauour in all things to obey and please God if it be without hypocrisie Againe the Law commandeth obedience as a worke to bee done for the obtaining of saluation but the Gospel requires obedience onely to testifie our faith and thankefulnesse vnto God The Church of Rome therefore erreth grosly in cōfounding the Law and the Gospel which indeed are farre differing so we must beleeue if we would come into hold the right way that leadeth vnto life Now whereas Christ saith Thinke not that I came to destroy the Law by Law he meaneth principally the Morall law and in the second place the Ceremoniall law also Next obserue the opposition that Christ maketh betweene the Law and the Prophets thereby signifying vnto vs that by the Law hee meaneth that part of Gods word concerning Righteousnesse and Iustice which Moses penned by Gods commaundement and by the Prophets hee meaneth that part of Gods word which is contained in the writings of all the Prophets in the old Testament after Moses which bookes of the Prophets contained in them either an interpretation of Moses Lawe or predictions of the state of the Church in the newe Testament Againe by destroying the Law we must not vnderstand a breach of the Law such as is made by mans sin but such a dissolution as taketh from it all vertue and power whereby it is a Law and so to destroy the Prophets is to put an ende vnto them so as they should nothing auaile either to the interpretation of the Law or to the foretelling of the state of Gods Church vnder the Gospel But to fulfill them Christ fulfilleth the Law three waies by his doctrine in his person and in men By his doctrine he fulfilleth the Law two waies both by restoring vnto it his proper meaning and true vse as we shall see afterward where he correcteth the corrupt interpretations thereof by the Pharises as also by reuealing the right way wherby the Law may be fulfilled Secondly in his person he fulfilleth the Lawe two waies First by becomming accursed to the Lawe in suffering death vpon the crosse for vs. Secondly by performing perfect obedience vnto the Law doing all that the Law required for the loue of God or of his neighbour in which respect he was said to haue beene vnder the Law Thirdly Christ fulfilled the Law in men Men bee of two sorts Elect and Reprobates In the Elect he fulfilleth the Lawe two waies First by creating faith in their hearts whereby they laie hold on Christ who for them fulfilled it Secondly by giuing them his owne spirit which maketh them indeauour to fulfill the Law which in Christ is accepted for perfect obedience in this life and in the life to come is perfect indeede In vnbeleeuers Christ fulfilleth the Law when he executeth the curse of the Law vpon them for that is a part of the Law and the execution and enduring of the curse is a fulfilling of the Lawe And thus doth Christ fulfill the Law so that the
by Christs comming and therfore repent and amend and Math. 11. 12. from the time of Iohn hitherto the kingdome of heauen suffereth violence So then the meaning of this first conclusion is this Whosoeuer breaketh one of these least commandements of the Moral law which afterward I shall expound and teacheth men so to doe he shall be contemned and not counted worthie to bee a member of the Church of God in the new Testament In this conclusion in the practise of the Iewes Christ setteth forth two notable corruptions of an hollow heart towards God The first to set little by the commandements of God esteeming no more of them nay lesse then of mens lawes and traditions but Saint Iames saith he that breaketh one commandement bee it neuer so little is guiltie of all though hee make shewe of keeping all so likewise hee that maketh light and base account of one commandement contemneth all though he seeme to honour the rest neuer so much Though Herod heard Iohn gladly and obeied his doctrine in many things and so seemed to make some account of some commandements yet because he would needs liue in incest against the seauēth commandement he did in effect contemne and breake them all so at this day there are many who professe religion and giue testimonie thereof by hearing the word and receiuing the sacraments and herevpon they would be counted louers of Gods lawe yet in the course of their liues and in their particular callings they will not sticke to oppresse the poore and to deale vniustly for their aduantage to prophane the Sabbath for a little profit or pleasure and to sweare and curse when they are a little prouoked Now howsoeuer such persons may make a glorious shew of profession outwardly yet by these and such like particular actions they shew plainly that they haue but Pharisaicall hearts which indeed make little or no account of Gods commandements Let vs therfore euery one looke into our waies and search in our owne hearts whether this corruption be in vs or no and if it be let vs repent and forsake it and labour to become like Dauid who had respect vnto all Gods commandements and so shall we not be despised in the Church of God The second corruption of an hollow heart noted likewise of Christ in these Iewes is to place the ceremonies rites and traditions of men aboue the commandements of the Morall law Herewith he doth expresly charge the Iewish teachers Matth. 15. 3. Why doe ye transgresse the commandements of God by your traditions And this is also the practise of the Church of Rome at this day they account eating flesh in Lent and on their fasting daies a deadly sinne yet they will dispense with threasons murthers of Christian Princes they allow of Stues they permit and pardon Sodomie and yet vtterly forbid mariage in some estate which the holy Ghost calleth honourable among all men In these and many moe they preferre their owne traditions before the most holy commandements of God yea many ignorant persons among vs are tainted with this corruption for be not some feast daies appointed by the Church as Christs natiuitie all Saints and such like obserued by them with greater conscience and reuerence then the Lords owne Sabbath Though the memorie of Christs natiuitie may be celebrated yet the Lords day should haue the speciall honour Now for the reforming of this corruption we must labour to haue the same minde that was in Dauid who grew into admiration with Gods commandements and thereupon invred himselfe to the obseruation of them We must therefore labour to haue an high estimation of the lawes of God and this will be a notable meanes to drawe vs to a reuerend feare and obedience towards to the same one cause why men do not so highly aduance the law of God as they ought is because they doe not sufficiently waigh the dignitie thereof In euery commandement therefore we must first deepely consider the waight thereof then labour to vnderstand it aright thirdly learne to admire the wisdome and iustice of God therein and lastly endeauour to yeeld loyaltie and obedience thereunto Secondly in this Rule our Sauiour Christ puts a difference between a false Prophet and a true The false Prophet breakes the commandements of God in his owne person and also by his doctrine teacheth others to doe the like But the true Prophet and seruant of God in the Ministerie endeauoureth the aduancement of Gods glorie as well by integritie of life as by soundnesse of doctrine Thirdly in the punishment of a false Prophet here set downe wee haue good direction for our iudgement touching the present Church of Rome namely that shee is not worthie to be esteemed a part of Christs Church on earth by the sentence of our Sauiour Christ because shee breakes Gods commaundements and teacheth men so for whereas the second commandement forbiddeth the worshipping of Images yea and the making of Images to resemble God the Church of Rome doth not onely allow the contrarie against this commandement but teacheth others so to doe saying that it is lawful to resemble the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost in Images either painted or carued and to worshippe them therein yea and to worshippe the very Images of Christ and of Saints as also the Saints themselues with religious worship Againe they plainely breake the tenth commandement which forbiddeth the first motions vnto sinne with delight though without cōsent of wil by teaching that concupiscence after baptisme is no sinne And as they deale with the commandements so deale they with the Prophets who giue testimonie vnto Christ for first they destroy his manhood by their forged transubstantiation secondly they ouerturne his kingly office by making the Pope the head of the Church and giuing him power to make lawes to binde the conscience Thirdly they ouerturne the Priesthood by their massing Priesthood wherein they daily offer vp an vnbloodie sacrifice for the sinnes of the quicke and the dead Fourthly they rob him of his propheticall office in giuing liberty to the Pope to make new Laws to expound the Scriptures as supreame iudge these things they teach therefore that Church is not worthy to be counted a member of Christs Church But seeing God in great mercie hath vouchsafed vs this fauour in this land that we should receiue and embrace his holy word to publish and teach the same and so esteemeth vs worthie to be accounted a member of his Church wee are therefore to reioyce in this mercie and to praise God vnfainedly for this vnspeakable blessing and to shewe forth our thankefulnesse not onely by teaching and receiuing the truth of his word but also by yeelding obedience in all things thereunto yea our earnest and daily prayer must be because it is so great a blessing to be counted worthie of his kingdome that
and strict exposition of the Law according to the traditions of the Fathers and they were most holy outwardly and of chiefe account among the Iewes and therefore the Apostle Paul saith that after the most strict sect of their religion he liued a Pharis●● that he was a Pharise the sonne of a Pharise Yet besides these there were another sect called Herodiās who as some think were courtiers which held taught that Herod was the Messias And thus we see what the Scribes and Pharises were whome Christ here ioyneth together for amplification sake vnderstanding thereby such teachers among the Iewes Priests and Levites as liued after the most strait custome of the Pharisies for the Pharisies were by office Scribes as we may plainely see by comparing together Ioh. 1. 19. with v. 24. where the Priests and Leuites who were Scribes as we haue shewed are called Pharisies II. Point What was that righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharisies which is here so debased as beeing vnable to bring a man to heauen By the tenour of Scripture it will appeare that it was an externall righteousnes onely standing in the outward obseruation of the law for they were carefull to abstaine from actuall grosse sinnes as whoredome theft murther idolatrie and such like and they were very forward in fasting praying and giuing of almes openly and in keeping the traditions and ceremonies of the Elders and in all things to carrie themselues in shew conformable to the law but the inward righteousnes of the heart they nothing regarded thinking that perfect righteousnes consisted in outward obedience by that they looked to be saued as it is said Rom. 10. 2. neglecting vtterly the righteousnes of God In these Scribes and Pharisies we may obserue what is the naturall perswasion of man touching righteousnes to wit that an outward righteousnes will serue the turne and therefore euery man naturally contents himselfe therewith and hence it is that men will bring their bodies vsually to the place of Gods worship to pray to heare the word and receiue the Sacraments but few haue care to bring their hearts with them that they may inwardly worship God in spirit and truth so likewise many are content to rest from their ordinarie labours on the Sabbath day but few are carefull to consecrate their rest vnto God men be carefull to abstaine from actuall murther but few make conscience of malice hatred reuiling and quarelling many hate theft that yet will not sticke to robbe their neighbours of their good name by vile reports many are ashamed to robbe openly that make no bones to deceiue by false weights and measures by glosses and such like and yet all these will blesse themselues with their outward righteousnes and think all is well not doubting but they shall be saued by it though they haue no more but this is Pharisaicall pride and folly for all such outward righteousnes is here condemned as vnable to saue the soule Againe here wee may see the palpable and grosse opinion of all worldly men euen of those who cōmonly are called honest men if they be told of their sinnes of the danger of dānation except they repent their answer is they are no theeues no murtherers no grosse sinners and therefore they hope God will saue them for they liue orderly and doe no man wrong but let all such take heede lest they deceiue their owne soules for this ciuill honestis was the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises which could neither bring them nor any other into the kingdome of heauen as Christ the God of truth saith expresly in this place To giue almes to fast to praie and to deale vprightly with men be very good things but yet wee must labour for more then these if euer wee meane to come to heauen wee must get another righteousnesse of the heart renouncing vtterly our owne righteousnesse in the matter of Iustification and condemne our selues for our best actions that so we may be fit to receiue that true righteousnesse which will commend vs vnto God III. Point What is that true righteousnesse which will bring a man to heauen Answ. It is the righteousnesse of Christ 1. Cor. 1. 30. for Christ is made vnto vs of God wisedome righteousnesse yea hee was made sinne for vs that wee might be made the righteousnesse of God in him This is that righteousnesse which exceedes the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises and whereby a sinner doth stand iust before God for when as by Adams fall wee all became guiltie of sinne and thereby subiect to the curse of God and to eternall condemnation from which we could neuer haue deliuered our selues then it pleased Christ to come from the bosome of his father and to become our suretie and Sauiour who in his life became obedient to the law for vs and in and by death vpon the crosse suffered whatsoeuer was due vnto our sinnes which obedience and satisfaction beeing made by him that was both God and man was alone all-sufficient both to free vs from the curse of the law and also to iustifie vs before God and this righteousnesse of Christ is that which exceeds the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises and is able to bring a man to heauen Yet further for our Iustification Christs righteousnesse hath three parts the puritie of his humane nature the integritie and obedience of his life and the merit of his sufferings vpon the crosse and all this must be ours to answer for our corrupt nature and sinnefull life deseruing a cursed death Here some make question how Christs righteousnesse can be ours and how one mans righteousnes can saue so many thousands Answ. Christs righteousnes is not the righteousnes of a meere man for then it could saue but one at the most but it is the righteousnesse of that person who is both God and man and therfore is an infinit righteousnes of merit sufficient to saue a thousand worlds But some here say If Christs righteousnesse bee ours then we are as righteouse as Christ Answ. The same righteousnesse that is in Christ is ours but not in the same manner or measure for Christ hath it by merit and action of himselfe we haue it onely by mercie and imputation it is in Christ as a roote and fountaine in vs by reception and application like the light in the Moone and in the Starres which is not in them originally but receiued from the Sunne the fountaine thereof Thirdly it is said If we by Christs righteousnesse be iustified and made the sonnes of God then is Christ by our sinnes made vniust and so the childe of the diuell Answer We may safely say that Christ was made a sinner by our sinnes not actually but by imputation now hence it will not follow that hee should bee the childe of the diuell for that commeth by the acte and habite of sinning after
stoning and burning Further the words translated hell fire are properly the fire of Gehenna for there was a place neere to the suburbs of Ierusalem called Gehenna which is a compound Hebrew word signifying the valley of Hinnon wherein was a place called Tophet Ier. 7. 31. where the idolatrous Iewes following the horrible superstition of the Nations about them vsed to burne their children vnto Molech for which fact the place became so odious to the godly that to aggrauate the heinousnes of this crime they vsed this name to signifie and betoken the place of torment appointed for the reprobate whereupon in Christs time Gehenna and the fire of hell were in signification all one Now in this valley the Iewes vsed to burne their malefactours and vnto this kinde of iudgement Christ alludeth meaning not simply hell fire the torments of the damned but a more grieuous and greater kind of punishment then the former because it was a higher degree of sinne so that Christs meaning is this Howsoeuer your Scribes and Pharisies teach you that there is no murther but actuall killing and that it onely deserues condemnation yet I which am the law-giuer say vnto you that as you haue diuers punishments in seuerall courts for diuers offences as hanging stoning and burning so God he hath diuers degrees of punishments for the seuerall breaches of this commandement he that is rashly angrie is worthie of iudgement and he that giues out any shew of his anger in gesture shall be punished more grieuously but he that shewes forth his anger by rayling and reuiling shall endure the most grieuous punishment of all First whereas Christ here maketh degrees of punishments for diuers sinnes the Papists hereon would build their distinction of sinnes into veniall and mortall Veniall sinnes say they are light sinnes as badde thoughts vaine speeches and such like which doe not deserue damnation but some temporall punishment onely such as were alotted to ciuill courts among the Iewes for here say they Christ onely makes open rayling reuiling of our brother such an heinous sinne as deserues hell fire But this distinction cannot here be grounded for Christ doth not appropriate condemnation to this tearme of hell fire but he hath reference thereto in euery phrase that here imports a punishment as to be culpable of iudgement for vnaduised anger is to deserue condemnation in hell fire and to be punished by a Councell for testifying anger by outward signes is to deserue condemnation but yet in a deeper degree And to be worthie to be punished with the fire of Gehennah for open rayling is to deserue condemnation also but yet in a deeper measure then the former for as among the Iewes by the sentence of their Courts some offences were punished by beheading or hanging greater offences by stoning and the greatest by burning all which punishments differed in degree and yet euery one was death so before God lesser sinnes deserue lesser condemnation in hell fire and greater sinnes deeper damnation and yet euery sinne deserues damnation for the wages of sinne be it neuer so little is death Rom. 6. 23. so that Christ here makes degrees of punishments according to the degrees of sinne yet so as euery sinne is mortall deseruing dānation none venial in it self Secondly we may here obserue two excellent Rules for the expoūding of the Morall law First that vnder one sinne named in a commandement are forbidden all sinnes of the same kind with all the causes thereof for Christ in expounding this sixt commandement doth not onely condemne Actuall murther but euen Rash anger in the heart and all signes thereof in countenance and gesture with all rayling and reuiling speeches as breaches of this commandement and the like he obserueth in those which follow II. Rule To the breach of euery commandement there is annexed a curse albeit it be not expressed for Christ here fetting downe the breaches of this sixt commandement threatneth condemnation to the least breach thereof saying he that is vnaduisedly angrie with his brother shall be culpable of iudgement Is it not then a wonder to see how ignorant people doe vse the commandements for prayers when as indeede if they could perceiue it they are Gods thunderbolts to throw their soules to hell for euery sinne they commit Thirdly Christ condemning vnaduised anger as a breach of this law giueth vs to vnderstand that aduised anger is not vnlawfull and true it is that all anger is not sinnefull for Christ was ofttlines angrie with the ●ewes and the Apostle bids vs to be angrie but sinne n●t If any here a●ke how we may discerne godly anger from that which is euill and vnaduised I answer two waies first by the beginning of it for good anger proceedeth from the loue of him with whome we are angrie now loue is the fulfilling of the law and therefore anger proceeding from loue and guided thereby cannot be a breach thereof but euill anger proceedeth from selfe-loue from dislike or hatred of the partie with whome we are angrie Secondly we may discerne it by the ende Good anger is for Gods glorie against sinne because God thereby is dishonoured and for our brothers good but euill anger wants these ends and intendeth priuate respects It is quickly mooued it continueth long and also carieth with it a desire of reuenge Fourthly seeing vnaduised anger with the signe thereof is a breach of this law deseruing death hereby we are admonished to beware of this headstrong affection of anger and betime to restraine and bridle the same it hath a bad beginning and an euill ende and thereby we become murtherers Now that we may ouerrule it so as it preuaile not against vs first we must lay to our hearts this commandement of God forbidding rash anger as a barre to stoppe it Secondly we must remember how louingly and mercifully God deales with vs euery day in forbearing and forgiuing vs and therefore we ought to be like minded towards our brethren Eph. 4. 31 32. The second branch of sinne here condemned is to say vnto our brother Raca whereby we may see that euery gesture expressing rash anger and despite of heart towards another is murther before God as casting downe the countenance towards him this God reprooued in Cain Gen. 4. 6. frowning nodding the head or shaking it in contempt as the Iewes did to Christ Matth. 27. 39. also contemptuous laughter and deriding hence Isma●ls ●eering at Isaac is called persecution Gal. 5. 29. and the like may be said of all signes of contempt in words as fie tush pish and to thou a man in disdaine for otherwise a superiour may thou his inferiour so also when ● man contemptuo●sly takes a thing in snuffe though he say nothing but flings away with an heart rising against his brother All these and such like tokens of contempt and disdaine are here condemned for murther
vndoubtedly is our miserable and wofull case in our selues And there is no way to escape this curse but onely this we must humble our selues before God and confesse against our selues the murther of our hearts declared in our gesture speech and behauiour then we must labour to be grieued for these sinnes for which ende we must applie vnto our selues Gods fearefull iudgements due vnto vs for them Thirdly we must earnestly sue vnto God for mercie and pardon as for life and death like as poore prisoners doe when the sentence of death is to be pronounced against them yea we must crie with sighs and grones that cannot be expressed and giue the Lord no rest till he send into our consciences the comfortable message of mercie and pardon by his good spirit This done we must labour in our callings for the time to come to procure and further the welfare and safetie of our brethren as well as our owne we must not seeke our selues but the common good eschewing those things that may grieue our brethren and doing those that may be good and comfortable vnto them that so by new obedience we may shew forth thankefulnes for Gods mercie and fauour towards vs. Hitherto we haue hādled the three degrees of murther which Christ condemneth by this law beyond the doctrine of the Iewish teachers Besides these there is a fourth degree here condemned which is actuall killing This Christ doth not here name because he taketh it for graunted euen by the doctrine of the Scribes and Pharisies Now because it is the main sinne of this cōmandement therfore here it is to be handled which we wil doe thus first we wil shew when killing is murther and when it is not and then handle the kinds thereof For the first Killing is not alwaies murther for sometime a man hath power giuen of God to kill and it is no sinne now God giues a man power to kill three waies I. by the written word thus Princes and Gouerners and vnder them executioners are allowed to kill malefactours that deserue death and thus souldiers are warranted to kill their enemies in a lawfull warre II. by an extraordinarie Commandement and so Abraham might lawfully haue killed his sonne if the Angel of the Lord had not staied his hand III. by an extraordinarie instinct which is answerable to a speciall commandement and so Phinees slue Zimri and Cosbie without guilt of murther But killing is murther when men of their own wills without warrant from God slay others and this sinne is plainely and directly forbidden in this commandement II. Point The kindes of killing be two either voluntarie or casuall Uoluntarie killing is when a man killeth of purpose and intent and this sinne is so hainous that it defileth the land where the blood is shedde till it be purged by the blood of him that shedde it And this purpose to kill is twofold either with deliberation and fore-desire of reuenge as when a man hath caried a grudge in his heart long before or without deliberation when a man without all former malice is suddenly caried by furie and anger to slay his brother and this second kinde of killing is distinguished from that which is vpon deliberation by the name of manslaughter and also fauoured by the lawes of some Countries because it is not done of set purpose but through sudden anger before the blood be cold but Gods law maketh both of them murther and admitteth no recompense for the life of the murtherer nay beside it adiudgeth the murtherer to eternall death both in soule and bodie To this voluntarie murther we must referre those that giue commandement counsell or helpe vnto the murtherer for he that commandeth is the principall Agent and the murtherer is his instrument Againe it is voluntarie murther to strike an other though with purpose onely to wound if death follow thereon And that also which is committed by a drunken man for his will is free though sense and reason be blinded Casuall killing commonly called chance medlie is when a man killeth an other hauing no purpose to doe him hurt The presumptions of casuall killing be these First if a man kill an other hauing no ill will or anger towardes him nor to any other for his sake neither is mooued thereto by couetousnes or any affection Secondly if he be doing the lawfull duties of his particular calling Thirdly if he be well occupied doing some lawfull worke beside his calling And lastly if he be doing a thing which he ordinarily practiseth keeping his vsuall place and time And albeit this kind of killing if it be meerely casuall is no sinne yet the partie committing it in old time was bound to come to his answer thereby to purge and cleare himselfe from suspition of murther as also to auoide the hatred and daunger of the friends of the partie killed and lastly to keepe and maintaine the hatred of murther among Gods people Now this sixt commandement is not to be vnderstood of casuall but of voluntarie killing And this also must be obserued that Christ giueth the name of murther to all the occasions thereof that he might breede in our hearts an hatred of them all as of murther it selfe verse 23. If thou then bring thy gift to the Altar and remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee 24. Leaue there thy gift before the Altar goe thy waies first be reconciled to thy brother then come and offer thy gift Here Christ propounds a Rule of concord by seeking reconciliation with them whome we haue wronged and it depends vpon the former verse as a consequent and conclusion drawne therefrom as may appeare by the first wordes If then or therefore as if he had said If rash anger and the testification thereof either in gesture or reuiling speech be murther and deserue condemnation then we are with all diligence to seeke to be reconciled to our brethren whensoeuer any breach of loue is made betweene vs and them The Exposition If thou bring thy gift to the Altar Here Christ alludeth to the Iewes manner of worshippe vnder the law which was to offer in the Temple sacrifices vnto God both of propitiation and thanksgiuing And though Christ here onely name this one kind of ceremoniall worshippe yet vnder this he comprehendeth all manner of true outward worshippe whether Legall or Euangelicall as if he should say If thou come to worship God any way either by offering sacrifices or by praying vnto God by hearing his word or receiuing the Sacraments and remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee that is that thou hast any way wronged and offended thy brother this appeareth to be the true meaning by the like wordes of Marke If thou hast ought against thy brother meaning for iniurie done vnto thee by him forgiue him and therefore our brother hath something against vs when we haue wronged or offended
God for God commands that the sunne goe not downe vpon our wrath and it is his ordinance we should receiue the Sacrament to shew forth Christs death when it is administred by the Church against both which he offendeth that abstaineth because he is at variance with his brother for Christ wil not haue the gift that is brought to be taken away but there left a while till reconciliation be made Fourthly in this Rule of Reconciliation we may see there be degrees in the duties of Gods worship all are not equall but some more and some lesse necessarie The first and highest degree of holy worship is prescribed in the first Commandement as to loue seare and to reioyce in God aboue all and to beleeue in him and all his promises The second degree of holy duties is to loue our neighbour as our selues to seeke peace and reconciliation with them whome we haue wronged or offended Thus much doth Christ here import in preferring the practise hereof before the offering of sacrifice The third degree consists in the outward ceremoniall duties of Gods worship commanded in the first Table as the outward actions of Gods worship and the outward solemnitie of the Sabbath for these giue place to the workes of loue and charitie commanded in the second Table and therefore Christ saith first be reconciled and then offer thy g●●t Now by this distinction of holy duties we haue a good direction for our behauiour that seeing the loue of God and of our brethren are the two highest degrees of good workes therefore we are aboue all things to seeke after them and to preferre the doing of them before the outward worship of God for that we see commeth in the last place But the practise of men i● otherwise generally they are more forward in outward ceremonies then in the maine duties of the loue of God and of their brethren like to the Pharisies who passed ouer ●udgement and the feare of God and were very strict in tything mint and ●ue but this is a preposterous course and cleane contratie to this precept of our Sauiour Christ. Thus much of this Rule in generall Now I come to more particular obseruati●us out of the words I ●aue thy gift at the Altar Here Christ approou●●h of this worship of God among the le●●es by offering sacrifices from whence it followeth that sacrificing a● the Al●ar and by proportion other ceremoniall worship was not abrogated either at Christs birth or baptisme for here Christ alloweth of them and therefore they ceased onely at his death when vpon the crosse he said It is finished then he put out the hand writing of ordinances that was against vs. Thy gift that is thy sacrifice whereof the Iewes had two kindes Propit●ator●e and Gra●●lator●e or of thanksgiuing and they are here called gifts because in sacrificing the people gaue some thing vnto God in which respect a sacrifice differeth from a Sacrament wherein God giues some thing vnto vs. Now the sacrifices of the law wherein men gaue something vnto God signified two things first that Christ should giue himselfe vnto his Father for our sinnes secondly that we should wholly giue our selues vnto God both in soule and bodie to serue him and therefore God saith Prov. 2● 26. My sonne giue me thy heart Rom. 6. 13. Giue your members 〈◊〉 we ●pons of righteousnes vnto God as they that are aliue from dead work●● Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that you g●ue vp your bodies a liuing sacrifice holy and acceptable vnto God this we ought to doe in token of thankefulnes for Gods endlesse mercies and this we then doe First when we acknowledge our selues not to be our owne but Gods in Christ Secondly when we consecrate and dedicate our selues to the seruice of God that both in heart and life we may shew our selues thankfull for our creation preseruation Redemption especially But lamentable is the case with men in this behalfe in stead of giuing themselues to God men bequeath themselues to the deuill and become his slaues and vassals they make their hearts his dwelling place by malicious wicked and lustfull thoughts they consecrate the faculties of their soules with all the parts of their bodies vnto him in the practise of sinne this ought not to be seeing Christ gaue himselfe for vs let vs giue our selues wholly vnto him And there remembrest that is doest call to minde that thy brother hath ought against thee c. By this Christ teacheth vs that whensoeuer we come to doe any seruice vnto God we ought first of all to enter into our owne hearts and there to search and trie our owne estate in respect of offences giuen to God or man whereof we haue not repented that so before we come to Gods solemne worship we may be reconciled both to God and to our brethren The want of this brings many a curse vpon mens soules euen in the meanes wherein they thinke to receiue Gods blessing and therefore we must looke to the practise of this dutie that we doe it speedily and from our hearts This we had neede to looke vnto in respect of God whome we daily offend for if he haue ought against vs and yet we stand out against him by impenitencie who can saue vs from his wrath Let vs thinke on Elies speech If one man sinne against an other the Iudge shall iudge it but if a man sinne against the Lord who will pleade for him verse 25. Agree with thine Aduersarie quickly whiles thou art in the way with him least thine aduersarie deliuer thee to the Iudge and the Iudge deliuer thee to the Seria●t and thou be cast into prison 26. Verely I say vnto thee thou shalt not come out thence till thou hast pated the vttermost farthing Our Sauiour still goeth on with his former Rule of concord and Reconciliation Now because the meaning of the words is controuersall it shall not be amisse somewhat to discusse the diuers expositions that are made hereof The Papists say that by Aduersarie is meant God commanding men in his law and by way is meant the space of time in this life by Iudge they vnderstand Christ by Serieant Gods Angels by prison hell and because in hell there be many places therefore here by prison they vnderstand purgatorie and by the vttermost farthing veniall sinnes as if this were the meaning Agree with God whiles thou art in this life betweene this and the day of Iudgement least thou come before Christ and he cause his Angels to cast thee into Purgatorie and there thou remaine till thou haue satisfied for thy least veniall sinnes This exposition they stand vpon the more because hereupon they would build their doctrine of Purgatorie But this cannot be the true meaning of this place for the reasons following First these words depend vpon the former and are a continuance of the rule of Reconciliation
to beare it 1. Cor. 6. 7. Paul doth sharply rebuke the Corinthians for going to law about trifles Why rather saith hee suffer you not wrong why sustaine you not harme And this by Gods grace a man shall doe if first he duely equally consider his owne deserts both of like iniuries from men and of eternall damnation from God himselfe whom he continually offendeth Secondly if he haue an eie to the prouidence of God in that thing wherein he is wronged which disposeth all things for the good of his children Fourthly for the maintenance of peace wee must yeeld of our owne right so did Abraham vnto Lot though hee were aboue him both in yeares and authoritie bidding him choose where hee would dwell whether on the right hand or on the left and our Sauiour Christ though he were free beeing of the Kings stocke yet for the auoyding of offence paid tribute for himselfe and Peter And obseruing these things with good conscience we shall by Gods grace maintaine Christian concord Secondly Christ commanding speedie agreement condemneth that wilfulnesse and stubbornnesse of men whereby rather then they will submit themselues and yeeld a little of their right they will carrie euery trifling matter before the Magistrate This is a common fault among vs in these daies of peace for euery tri●lie is made a law matter which ought not to be among Christians it plainely argueth great want of loue and small regard to this commandement of our Sauiour Christ. I speake not this to condemne the lawful vse of the law but to reprooue the bad practise of carnall men who make lawing the meanes of their priuate reuenge and sometime of flat iniustice against their brethren whom they doe not affect Thirdly Christ here also noteth out the hardnesse and crueltie of mens hearts who will neuer let a man goe if once they get him in the lurch such cruell wretches are they that take the forfeitures of leases bonds and obligations and such for the most part are our common vsurers but all these must know that they are void of loue and grace whereby they should maintaine this concorde which Christ requires Fourthly by this circumstance of time Agree quickly Christ would teach vs to keepe our hearts cleare from grudging and heart-burning euen then when wee haue occasion of suite or controuersie with others for this rancor of heart will cause further debate and contention like to an angrie humour in the veines which sets the whole body in burning fits Fiftly if wee must vse speed in seeking agreement with men whom wee haue offended before we come to the trial of a mortall Iudge then much more must we giue all diligence to be reconciled vnto God for our daiely sinnes whereby we offend him and that with all speed euen in this life before we come to his tribunall seate for howsoeuer in the courts of men wee may goe vpon sureties yet at the barre of Gods Iudgement none can answer for vs. If we be not before hand reconciled to God in Christ this vndoubtedly will be the issue wee shall bee cast into vtter darkenesse and there remaine till we haue fully satisfied the Iustice of God which will neuer be Let all estates degrees think on this and especially the yonger sort who deceiue themselues by deferring repentance when as indeed they as wel as others are euery day going forward to the barre of Gods iudgement Sixtly as in seeking Reconciliation so in doing euery good worke that concernes Gods glorie in the good of others we must vse all conuenient speed while we haue time wee must doe what good we can vnto all for death and the last iudgement come suddainly Say not to thy neighbour saith Salomon goe and come againe to morrow if thou hast it now And againe Eccles. 9. 10. Whatsoeuer thy hand shall find to doe doe it with all thy power This is Iobs defence that he restrained not the poore of their desire nor caused the widowes eies to faile and his practise must be our president for the more good we doe the more grace we haue and the liker we be to our heauenly father Thus much of the Precept The Reason followeth Least thine aduersarie deliuer thee to the Iudge c. which is thus much in effect If thou shew extremitie thou shalt finde extremitie shewed vnto thee againe euen by the Magistrate They that deale stifly and rigorously shall bee rewarded in their kinde God in his iust iudgement will haue men measured vnto as they measure vnto others Matth. 7. 2. 6. Mark 4. 24. Here then we are taught to deale in equitie and moderation with all men in the priuate affaires of our callings euen as we would haue them to deale with vs and then God will cause others to deale well with vs but if we deale ill with others God will reward vs in the same kinde This point all Vsurers Ingrossers Trades-men c. should well obserue who thinke they may doe with their owne what they wil but we must knowe wee are but Stewards and our account will bee exact Secondly here wee see Christ alloweth of the Magistrate and his Iudgement seate 2. Of his proceeding against the guiltie in deliuering him to the Officer 3. Of the office of the Sergeant 4. Of casting guiltic persons into prison 5. Of suing at the law when right cannot be gotten by any other lawfull meanes but law must not bee the first course we take in seeking our right we must rather suffer some wrong seeke to end the matter by friends vse law as Physitions vse poisons when gentle physicke will not serue the turne then in case of extremitie they doe minister stronger physicke yea sometime poison it selfe so when we cannot otherwise procure our peace and right then we may lawfully take the benefit of the law Verse 27. Yée haue heard that it hath beene said of olde time Thou shalt not commit Adulterie Here our Sauiour Christ goeth about to restore the seauenth commandement touching Adulterie to his true sense and meaning and so to his proper and right vse by purging it from the false and erroneous interpretation of the Iewes for which ende he first laies down the false interpretation of the Scribes and Pharises verse 27. and then adioyneth the true sense thereof verse 28. especially yet so as he continueth the same in the verses following For the first before the interpretation of the Iewes Teachers hee prefixeth this Preface Yee haue heard that it hath bin said of olde time or of the ancient Teachers the meaning and vse whereof wee haue before shewed verse 21. Then after follow the wordes of the seauenth commandement Thou shalt not commit Adulterie which are the proper words of the H. Ghost yet here must not they be takē in that sense which the Scribes and Pharises gaue vnto them for the better conceiuing whereof this one thing especially
propounding it by way of answer to a secret obiection which might be framed by occasion of his former exposition of this seauenth commandement for hauing condemned the Adulterie of the heart declared by the eie some man might say What shall wee doe with our eies if an vnchaste looke bee so dangerous Our Sauiour Christ answers If thy right eie cause thee to offend plucke it out Which words must not be taken litterally in their proper sense for this is a Rule in the expounding of Scripture that when the litterall sense is against any commandement of the law thē the words must not be taken properly Now these words in their proper sense do command a breach of the sixt commandement which bindeth euery man to preserue his owne and his neighbours life and so no man can without sinne pull out his eie or cut off his hand By eie then we are to vnderstand First the eie of the bodie yet not that onely but any other thing that is deere and pretious vnto vs as our eie euen our right eie is If it cause thee to offend that is cause thee to sinne to faile in the way of obedience vnto Gods commandements Plucke it out cast it frō thee these words are a loftie kind of speech called Hyperbole whereby thus much is signified Restraine gouerne it most carefully though it be to thine owne great paine losse and hinderance For better it is for thee that one of thy members perish then that thy whole bodie should be cast into hell These words containe a Reason of the former exhortation to this effect It is better for thee to want the benefit and vse of things most pretious and deere vnto thee in this life and so to be saued then by hauing and vsing them to perish for euer So that the true meaning of this place is this as if our Sauiour Christ had said Goe through the whole course of thy life and take a viewe of all thy waies and therein see what thing is an occasion of sinne vnto thee that take heed of and auoyde though the vse thereof be most deere vnto thee for it is better that thou shouldest want the vse thereof and so bee saued then by it to perish eternally in hell fire Also if thy right hand make thee to offend cut it off for it is better for thee Here the same exhortation and Reason is againe repeated which we must not thinke to bee a thing needlesse and friuolous for such Repetitions in Scripture haue speciall vse to signifie that the things so deliuered bee of speciall importance worthie all carefull obseruation and obedience Now by right hand here is meant any thing that is most profitable vnto vs what euer it bee if it cause vs to sinne against God it must bee auoyded and left off most carefully By this Exhortation of our Sauiour Christ wee are taught to carrie a strict watch ouer all our senses and ouer all the parts of our bodies especially the eie and hands that they become not vnto vs occasions of sinning against God and for the gouernment of the eies there bee two speciall Rules First wee must vse our sight that is open and shut our eies in obedience vnto God Salomon giuing Rules for the well ordering of the tongue sight and foote saith thus of the eie Let thine eie behold the right and thy eie liddes direct the way before thee which wordes seeme to carrie this sense That wee should order our sight according to the straite Rule of Gods word for that is the way wherein wee ought to walke Now the necessitie of obseruing this Rule may appeare by sundrie examples Eues looking vpon the forbidden fruite with desire to eate thereof against Gods commaundement was the doore and entrance of that sinne into her heart was not Cham accursed for looking vpon his Fathers nakednesse was not Lots wife turned into a pillar of salt for looking backe towards Sodome Fiftie thousand threescore and ten men of Bethshemish were slaine for looking into the Arke of the Lord against his reuealed will by all which it is plaine that we ought to vse our sight in obedience to God for which end it wil be good before we looke on any thing to consider whether the same will be for Gods glorie the good of our selues of our brethren if it be we may vse our sight if not we may not vse it Secondly we must make our eies not the weapons of any sinne but the instruments of Gods worship and seruice This we shall doe if we imploy them thus 1. In beholding Gods creatures in heauen and earth that in them wee may see Gods glorie wisedome mercie power and prouidence and thereby take occasion to magnifie the name of God 2. In beholding Gods iudgements very wishly and narrowly that therein we may see his iustice and wrath against sinne and so bee humbled in our selues and terrified from sinne 3. In beholding of the Elements of Gods Sacraments especially the bread and wine in the Lords supper which be visible words wherein we may see our Sauiour Christ as it were crucified before our eies 4. In vsing them as instruments of Inuocation by lifting them vp to heauen to testifie the lifting vp of our hearts vnto God This vse of the eies nature teacheth vs for whereas other creatures haue but foure muscles in their eies wherby their eies are turned round about man onely aboue them all hath a fift muscle whereby his eie is turned vpward towards heanen And this which is said for the well ordering of our eies must bee obserued in the rest of the senses and in all other partes of the bodie they must all be imployed and set a worke in obedience to God and continually obserued that they become not the weapons of sinne but the instruments of his glorie Secondly this Exhortation of Christ must teach vs to auoyde all the occasions of euery sinne though it bee with great losse vnto our selues in the things of this life This is the chiefe point that our Sauiour Christ aimeth at in this place and therfore it ought with speciall regard to be learned and remembred Mans nature is like vnto drie wood or towe which will burne so soone as fire is put vnto it giue a man the least occasion of any sinne and hee is as readie to commit it as drie wood is to burne though thereby hee doe as much as in him lieth to cast away his owne soule for euer Looke therefore as Mariners on the Seas haue constant and continuall care to auoyd both rocks and sands whereby they may suffer shipwracke so must wee most warily auoyde the occasions of euery sinne A most worthie example hereof we haue in Moses who was brought vp in Pharaohs Court till hee was fourtie yeares old where he enioyed all earthly pleasures and honours that his heart
could wish and so might haue continued if he would for hee was the adopted sonne of Pharaohs daughter but yet Moses left them all and chose rather to suffer affliction with the people of God in Goshen then to enioy all the pleasures of Egypt And this he did because they were but the pleasures of sinne which hee could not enioy vnlesse hee would forsake the true feare and worship of God and all good conscience his example we ought to follow Now that we may auoid all the occasions of sinne and so put in practise this wholesome precept of our Sauiour Christ I wil here intreat of the occasions of sinne and shew withall how they may be auoyded By occasion of sinne I meane any thing that either of it selfe or by mans abuse becomes offensiue and prouoketh vnto sinne In this large acceptance an occasion of sinne extendeth it selfe not onely to such things as are euill but euen to things good and commendable in themselues which by mans abuse cause transgression against God Occasions of sinne are two-fold either giuen or taken An occasion giuen is that thing either word or action that is euill in it selfe the speaking or doing whereof stirres a man effectually to sinne Occasions giuen are two-fold either of one man vnto another or of man vnto himselfe The occasions whereby one man may prouoke another to sinne are many I will reduce them vnto sixe heads The first is badde counsell whereby one man perswadeth another vnto sinne This is a great cause of much euill in the world thus came the fall of our first parents for Sathan perswaded Eue and Eue her husband thus came the crucifying of the Lord of life for the high ' Priests and Rulers perswaded the people to aske Barrabas and to destroy Iesus Hence commeth seeking vnto wisards one friend perswades another for their outward good as they thinke yea from this bad counsel comes the common neglect of all good duties in Gods worship The second is consent or approbation of sinne and it is two-folde secret or open Secret approbation and consent is when men see sinne committed and are not grieued thereat for this cause the Apostle Paul checketh the Corinthians that they were not sorrowfull but rather puffed vp at the facte of the incestuous man whereby they did in some sort hearten him in his sinnes this is a great occasion of sinne in our daies The Prophet Dauid was of another minde his eies gushed out riuers of teares because men brake Gods lawes Open approbation of sinne is when men doe openly countenance sinners and lewd persons which make profession of badde practises this is a great occasion of many horrible impieties hereby the hands of the wicked are strengthened in their wickednesse as the Lord complaineth and this is the sinne of this age for who is so badde that hath not some patrone of his euill and some backe friend to sooth him in his sinne which makes sinne shameles and sinners impudent But all Gods children must follow Elisha who in great feruencie of spirit told Iehoram to his face though he were a king that if it had not b●ene for the preseuce of good King Iehosaphat he would not haue looked towards him nor seene him the Lord himselfe will not take the wicked by the hand neither can he endure that his children should helpe the wicked or loue them that hate the Lord. The third occasion giuen is prouocation vnto sinne when either by word or deed men excite or drawe on others to some euill as vnto anger reuenge hatred to drunkennesse or such like and this is a common fault of those that delight in drunken fellowship The fourth occasion is neglect of good duties vnto our brethren as of exhortation admonition instruction or rebuke Ioshua 7. Achan stole the execrable thing for himselfe alone yet all the people are charged with that fault and punished for it the cause was their neglect to keepe one another from that sinne according as God commanded thē chap. 6. 18. This is a great occasion of impietie among vs if neighbour would admonish neighbour and one brother an other sinne would not be so rife as it is But this dutie is not onely neglected of priuate men one to another but of publike persons who are more bound vnto it The Magistrate is negligent in punishing and the Minister in reproouing sinne and the master of the family carelesse in reforming those that are vnder him which causeth sinne to abound The fift occasion giuen is euill Example in the practise of any sinne whatsoener which may be knowne this is most dangerous like vnto wild fire that inflameth all places whereon it lighteth The truth hereof appeares among vs for let any one man or woman take vp a new fashion in attire and presently the same is generally receiued let a man inuent or sing a leud song and presently it is learned of all euen of little children that can scarse speake whence also comes it that crawling infants should sweare roundly and frame themselues to all impietie when they cannot speake readily but from the bad example of their Elders with whome they are brought vp Now among all men their bad example is most dangerous who make the greater profession of Religion They are like false lights vpon the shoare which lead the shippesvpon the sands And therefore such as shew any care or forwardnes in holy practises of religion must haue speciall watch ouer all their waies that if it be possible they may be blamelesse both in word and deede for all men haue an eye at them and the wicked would gladly spie holes in their coate The last occasion giuen is the priuate slandering of Gods Ministers and the disgracing of their Ministerie this is an offence as generall as the rest and it causeth many to contemne the meanes of their saluation When men meete together their common talke is of the Ministers and of their doctrine not to be edified by mutuall conference but onely to disgrace their persons and to make their ministerie contemptible but they little know what mischiefe this causeth and therefore it ought to be auoided These are occasions of sinning giuen by one man to another for the auoiding whereof which is the plucking out of the eye and cutting off the hand here commanded this Rule must be obserued We must hate and eschew the occasions of sinne as deadly poison and esteeme those persons that giue them vnto vs in that regard as ill as the deuill Thus Christ dealt with Peter his owne disciple when he went about to hinder him from doing his Fathers will in suffering for our sinnes saying Come behinde me Satan considering him in that action as if he had beene the deuill himselfe for we must know that the deuill comes not openly vnto men but cunningly conuaies himselfe in these
want thereof ought not to keepe the godly from this Sacrament for another mans euill conscience cannot defile thy good conscience another mans sinne cannot hurt thee vnlesse thou doe some way communicate with him therein Christ was more carefull in his dutie then euer man was and yet hee communicated with the wicked Iewes Scribes and Pharises in the seruice of God vnder the Law The fourth head from whence offence is taken is the state of the wicked principally in regard of their prosperitie Hence some holy ones suspect their owne estate and religion as either not good or not regarded of God This befell Dauid Psal. 37. when hee sawe the prosperitie of the wicked and their increase in riches with peace and ease hee said Certainly I haue clensed mine heart in vaine ●nd washed my hands in innocencie Hence also Ieremie reasons with God why the way of the wicked should prosper and they bee in wealth that transgresse rebelliously Hence vndoubtedly at this day many call into question the good prouidence of God Now the way to cut off this offence is to enter into the sanctuarie of God as Dauid did that is to come to the assemblies of Gods people where the word is preached for there a man shall see the manifold reasons why God will haue his owne people afflicted also the fearefull end of the pleasures of the wicked namely a fitting of them to further destruction Againe from this same ground doe many rich men take offence for hauing the world at will they blesse themselues with this perswasion that God loues them and thereupon take occasion to condemne all religion and to goe on in the pursuite of worldly profits and delights And this is one maine cause why among the rich we haue so few good and sound Professors because that from a false ground of outward things they perswade themselues of Gods loue fauour But to cut off this offence we must remember that mans case is the more fearefull when he wants all crosses for God chasteneth euery child whom he receiueth Heb. 12. 6. it is a marke of Gods child to be in affliction if he profit thereby the stalled oxe commeth sooner to the slaughter then the oxe that is vnder the yoke and the sheepe that goeth in fat pasture commeth sooner to the shambles then that which goeth on the bare commons so oftentimes God fatteth the wicked with the blessings of this life as hee did the rich glutton that he may more iustly condemne them in the world to come Lastly we must remember what Salomon saith No man knoweth loue or hatred of all that is before him that is of all outward things all things fall alike vnto all both good and bad therfore no man must so blesse himselfe with his outward estate that he be drawne to esteeme of religion as a thing needlesse or superfluous Verse 31. It hath beene said also whosoeuer shal put away his wife let him giue her a Bill of diuorcement 32. But I say vnto you whosoeuer shall put away his wife except it be for fornication causeth her to commit adulterie and whosoeuer shall marie her that is diuorced committeth adulterie Our Sauiour Christ proceeding further to restore the seauenth commaundement to his perfection doth here confute a false interpretation of a Politicke law of Moses giuen by the Scribes and Pharises For this ende first he laies downe the wordes of Moses politicke law but yet so as containing in them the false interpretation of the Iewish teachers ver 31. then hee opposeth the truth of God against their false interpretation and maintaineth the first institution of mariage v. 32. For the first Moses politicke law was That hee which put away his wife should giue her a Bill of diuorce This law the Iewish Teachers did falsly interpret for the better perceiuing wherof these three points are to be handled touching Moses politicke law 1. what kinde of law it was 2. the straitnesse of that law 3. what effect and force it had For the first the law is set downe Deut. 24. 1. when a man marieth a wife and she finde no fauour in his eies because he hath espied some filthinesse in her then let him write her a bill of diuorce and put it in her hand and send her out of his house This law was not morall but ciuill or politicke for the good ordering of the common wealth Now among their particular lawes some were laws of toleration and permission which were such as did not approoue of the euill which they concerned but did onely tolerate and permit that euill which could not be auoided for the preuenting of a greater euil which otherwise would fall out As when the sea hath made ● breach into the land if it cannot possibly be stopped the best course is to make it as narrow as may bee Such was the law concerning vsurie Deut. 23. 20. permitting the Iewes to exercise it vpon a stranger but not towards a brother and the like was the law touching polygamie Deut. 21. 15. If a man had two wiues the one hated the other loued and they both haue borne him children if the first borne be the sonne of the hated though shee were maried to him the latter yet her seed was legitimate and her sonne had the right of the first borne In both which lawes were tolerated that which God condemned onely for the preuenting of a greater euill Vnder this sort comes our law of vsurie for taking tenne in the hundred not approuing but permitting so much for the auoyding of greater vsurie Vnto this kind the Papists would reduce their law of permitting Stewes for the preuenting of greater sinnes but that law can haue no title to such permission for a law of permission is to diminish that euill which by man cannot possibly be cut off altogether now that sinne which they would preuent by their Stewes might be cut off among them if they would giue allowance to Gods owne ordinance of lawfull mariage vnto all sorts and sexes So likewise this law of Moses for diuorce was a law of permission not approouing of the giuing a bill of diuorce for euery light cause but tolerating of it for the preuenting of greater mischeife euen of murther for the nature of the Iewes was this if a man once tooke dislike to his wife he would neuer be at rest till he had shed her blood if they might not bee parted asunder Now this law of diuorce was giuen to restraine this great euill for hereby a man was tolerated to put away his wife when shee found no fauour in his eies lest hee should kill her yet so as he gaue her a bill of diuorce wherein hee must set downe the cause why hee put her away whereby also many were restrained from putting away their wiues because it was a great shame for a light occasion so highly to transgresse Gods holy institution who made them by mariage
others Ans. The partie offending breaks the bond of mariage and so sinneth grieuously against that commandement but the partie innocent marying againe after lawfull diuorce only taketh the benefit of that libertie whereto God hath set him free through the vnlawfull breaking of the bond by the partie offending Thirdly Rom. 6. 2. The woman is bound to the man while he liueth and therfore may not marrie againe after diuorcement Ans. That place must be vnderstood of the state of mariage continuing vndissolued till death but in the case of adulterie the bond of mariage is broken and therefore that hindreth not but mariage may bee after lawfull diuorce Fourthly 1. Corinth 7. 10 11. Let not the wife depart from her husband and if shee depart let her remaine vnmarried and be reconciled vnto her husband and let not the husband put away his wife Here say they is a plaine place against mariage after diuorcement Answer The Apostle speaketh of departure and putting away for other causes then adulterie as for hatred dislike c. which indeede are no sufficient causes of diuorce and therefore they that separate therupon ought not to marrie Fiftly The bond of mariage is a resemblance of the coniunction that is betweene Christ and his Church which is inseparable and eternall and therefore mariage also is inseparable Answer That resemblance stands not in euery thing but in this That as in mariage two are made one flesh so spiritually Christ and euery true member of his Church become one and that as Eue was taken out of Adams side and made flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone so the Church springeth as it were out of Christs bloode which issued from his side for else if their reason were good wee might say that mariage should be eternall in the life to come because the vnion of Christ with his Church is eternall which we know to be false for in the resurrection men mary not but are as the angels of God Sixtly If parties diuorced might mary again their children should be miuried hauing step-fathers or step-mothers in stead of their owne naturall parents Ans. This reason is not sufficient to disallow diuorce or mariage after it for by the same reason we might delude all the iudicial lawes of Moses and of all countries which impose death for sundrie crimes because thereby some children should loose their parents but Iustice must be iustice with all men though the posteritie haue hinderance by the execution thereof Quest. But what if the lawes of some countries forbid mariage after diuorcement Ans. Yet the libertie of conscience remaineth still for this beeing giuen of God cannot be taken away by men and therefore when men haue freedome from the Magistrate they may with good conscience marie againe after lawfull diuorce And yet here we must know that diuorcement or mariage after must not be done priuately by man and wife vpon their own heads but by order of law before the Magistrate according to the custome of that Church or Commonwealth whome it concernes Againe there be some particular causes which may iustly hinder mariage after diuorce as first if the parties reunite their bond againe by reconciliation for the knot broken by adulterie may be reunited by the consent of the partie innocent Secondly when the one partie is a manifest cause of the Adulterie of the other and so becomes an accessarie to the others offence for it seemes vnequall that he who hath put his hand to the committing of a sinne should reape any benefit or priuiledge by the same And therefore I say the partie innocent hath freedome in this case verse 33. Againe ye haue heard that it was said to them of olde time Thou shalt not forsweare thy selfe but shalt performe thine oathes vnto the Lord. 34. But I say vnto you sweare not at all c. Our Sauiour Christ hauing restored the seauenth commandement to his true sense and meaning doth here proceede to doe the like vnto the third commandement obseruing herein the same order that he did in the former for first he laieth downe the false interpretation of the Scribes and Pharisies giuen to this commandement concerning swearing v. 33. and then deliuereth the true doctrine of an oath v. 34. The corrupt sense giuen by the Scribes and Pharisies is propounded in the words of the holy Ghost Leuit. 19. 12. Deut. 5. 11. Thou shalt not forsweare thy selfe but shall performe thine oathes vnto the Lord which are not here taken in that true meaning wherein Moses set them downe but in the false interpretation of the Iewish teachers whereof that we may the better iudge let vs search out the true meaning of Moses law concerning an oath for which ende we must first see what periurie is then propound the kinds of periurie and lastly shew the grieuousnes of this sinne I. Point In periurie there must be two things First a man must affirme or auouch something against his owne minde his owne meaning purpose intention or perswasion When a man knowes a thing to be true and saith it is true or knoweth a thing to be false and saies it is false and swears thereto this is no periurie because his speech is answerable to that which is in his minde but when a man knowes a thing to be true and auoucheth it to be false or knowing a thing to be false auoucheth it to be true vpon his oath this is periurie because in so doing he speakes against his minde and perswasion Secondly in periurie there must be an oath it is not periurie to speake a thing that is false vnlesse he also sweare to the thing he speaketh falsly against his minde and yet euery oath maketh not direct periurie vnlesse it bee a binding oath for a man may sweare to a thing that is vnlawfull and after alter his minde and not performe his oath without the guilt of periurie as if a childe beeing vnder age doe binde himselfe by oath to marrie without his parents consent but comming to riper yeares doth better consider of the matter and subiects himselfe to his parents disposing who marrie him to another Now though he sinned in so swearing yet he is not periured because the oath was not a binding oath for a childe vnder yeares hath not power to take an oath II. Point That wee may yet better iudge of this sinne wee must knowe that there be three kindes of periurie First when a man confirmeth by oath that which he knowes or thinkes to be otherwise as when hee takes an oath that a thing is true which he knowes to bee false that a thing was thus which hee knowes was otherwise Secondly Deceitfull swearing is periurie when a man either about things past or to come sweares contrarie to the true knowledge and purpose of his owne minde Example of this wee haue in the Romish Priests who both defend in writing and practise in action this deceitfull swearing for beeing
brought before the Magistrate and made to sweare to this demaund or such like Whether they said Masse or knewe where Masse was said at such a time They answer vpon their oathes That they did not or knewe not though indeede they did which is according to their doctrine That vnto dangerous Interrogatories a man may frame a safe meaning vnto himselfe and sweare to it as in the former instance they sweare they knewe not where Masse was said meaning to reueale it to the Iudge But this is flat periurie for their oath is giuen them to answer according to the meaning of the Magistrates demaund and if a man might lawfully frame a meaning to himselfe in swearing hee might easily delude all truth and so should not an oath for confirmation be the ende of strife but the breeder thereof through surmise of false meaning in him that sweareth The third kind of periurie is The breaking of a binding oath as when a man vpon his oath promiseth to doe a thing that is lawfull and doth it not yet this is not alwaies periurie as First If God after the oath taken make the thing promised impossible to be done as if a man sweare to make another his heire of such and such lands now dwelling by the Sea side the Sea breaks out drownes all his land before he dieth Is this man periured because he performed not his promise bound with an oath no verely for God made the thing impossible Secondly if a man be bound in conscience to breake his oath Thus Dauid swearing rashly to slaie Nabal and his familie was yet staied from so doing by Abigals counsell and brake his oath and gaue God thankes for it for indeed his oath was vnlawfull beeing the bond of iniquitie and the doing of it had beene the doubling of his sinne Here it may well be demanded whether those that are sworne to the Statutes and lawes of societies and incorporations be periured if they breake the same Ans. The Statutes of incorporations bee of two sorts some are of the foundation of societies without which the incorporation cannot stand and these not beeing against the word of God cannot be broken without the guilt of periurie others are Statutes only of outward order and decencie as touching apparel gesture and such like as in some incorporations the Statutes require that euery man therein should weare the round cap hereunto many are sworne who alwaies weare it not now though I say not that they are faultlesse altogether yet they are not periured because this Statute of order binds not a man simply but either to obedience or to paie the mulct which if a man be content to paie he satisfies the Statute and benefits the societie as much as if he kept the Statute Hauing shewed what periurie is with the kinds thereof let vs see whether we be free from it After examinatiō it will appeare that mens liues are full of periurie for where is much swearing vsually there cannot but be much periurie because they that sweare in their common talke doe forget their oathes as they doe their communication But say we are cleare from periurie yet are wee in danger of Gods heauie iudgements for the breach of our vow in baptisme wherein wee promise to beleeue in God to serue him forsaking the world the flesh and the diuell now the breach of this vow is as ill as periurie for therfore may Baptisme be called a Sacrament because of the oath and vow which a Christian makes to God therein for the word Sacrament properly betokeneth the oath which a Souldier maketh to his Captaine for his fidelitie The breaking of Iosua his oath vnto the Gibeonites by Saul caused 3. years dearth and was not satisfied but with the blood of 7. of Sauls kindred And Zedekias periurie to the King of Babel was one cause of the Lords fierce wrath against Ierusalem and the Princes thereof Now shall one mans periurie cause such iudgements and shal we not thinke that among other sinnes this our periurie vnto God in breaking our vow in Baptisme bringeth vpon vs Gods heauie wrath by plague famine and vnseasonable weather Wherefore let the consideration hereof perswade vs to repentance and to a more conscionable care of performing our vow vnto God III. Point The grieuousnesse of this sinne of periurie which here the Lord forbids appeares by these three sinnes which are contained in it First the vttering or maintaining of a lie Secondly the calling on God to be a witnesse vnto a lie wherein men doe as much as in them lieth set the diuell himselfe the father of lies in the roome of God and so greatly robbe him of his honour and maiestie Thirdly in periurie a man praies for a curse vpon himselfe wishing God to bee a witnesse of his speech and a iudge to reuenge if he sweare falsly so as herein a man is his owne vtter enemie as much as in him lieth doth cast both bodie and soule to hell Quest. Seeing this sinne of periurie is so great whether may such a man be put to his oath as is certainely thought will periure himselfe if he be put to sweare I answer men that put others to sweare are either priuate persons or publike Magistrates a priuate man for his owne priuate cause may not put such a man to his oath for hee should haue greater care of Gods glorie and of the other mans soule then of his priuate gaine and therefore ought rather to depart from his temporall right then suffer his brother so to dishonour God and to hurt his owne soule But if a Magistrate bee to put such a man to his oath as is verely thought will periure himselfe he may lawfully doe it but yet he is first to aduertise the partie of the waight of an oath and of the fearefull sin of periurie and then if the order of Law and Iustice so require he may minister an oath vnto him leauing the euent to God for the execution of iustice must not staie on mans misdemeanour nor waite till they make conscience of sinne for if it did no common wealth could stand no warre could bee made Moses and the Leuites executed vengeance vpon the idolatrous Iewes without waiting for their repentance But shall performe thine oathes vnto the Lord. These words are not set downe in any of Moses bookes but are a collection from the former law of Moses gathered by the Iewish Teachers which collection though it be not expresly set downe yet is it the very sense of the Law for if a man cannot without periurie breake a lawfull binding oath then that Law which forbiddeth periurie bindeth man to performe all that he hath lawfully sworne vnto God Here then in this collection of the Iewish Teachers is set downe an excellent point touching the straitnesse of the bond of an oath In euery lawfull oath there is a double bond First it bindes one man to another for
after their fall Secondly because he commits euil and wickednesse continually without ceasing and therefore is compared to an hunger-bitten Lyon who goeth about continually seeking whom he may deuoure The most wicked man that is or euer was will sometime doe good Pharaoh humbled himselfe and confessed his sinnes to Moses and Saul desires to worship God with Samuel Herod also heard Iohn Baptist gladly and did many things according to his Ministerie but the deuil herein differs from all wicked men that he doth nothing but practise wickednesse he is alwaies murthering and neuer ceaseth to seeke mens destruction Thirdly because he practiseth sinnes of all sorts and degrees in himselfe and by his Ministers for the sinnes that be in the world be all from him either originally or by furtherance The vilest man that is doth abstaine from sinne sometime yea by nature he hateth some sinnes the proud and prodigall man cannot abide couetousnesse and the drunkard may abhorre idolatrie but the deuil continually practiseth sinnes of all sorts and therefore is iustly called the euill one Here thē we may see a reason why we are called the childrē of wrath and of the deuil by nature namely because by nature we carrie in vs about vs as liuely an image of the deuil in sin as any childe doth of his naturall father For first in our corruption we are guiltie of Adams sin in eating the forbidden fruit Secondly our nature is stained with originall sinne which is not a practise but a proneness● vnto all manner of mischiefe and wickednesse that is committed in the world Seest thou a man kill his father or mother or betray his Master as Iudas did to Christ though it may be thou abhorrest such sinnes yet doubtlesse the seed thereof is in thee yea if God in mercie did not keep vs from it our corruption would carrie vs to the blasphemie against the Spirit And thirdly frō this naturall corruption do arise innumerable euil thoughts words and deeds in the course of our liues in all which we beare the image of the deuil till God bring vs to repentance and therefore iustly may we be called the children of wrath and of the deuill by nature hauing the same corruption in vs that is in the deuil though not in the same degree and manner Hence we learne First to be ashamed and confounded in our selues yea to hang downe our heads for what cause hath hee to be puffed vp with selfe loue that is by nature in himselfe like to the deuil Secondly this teacheth vs aboue all things to labour to haue the image of God renued in vs in righteousnesse and true holinesse which was lost in Adam that so the deuils image in sinne and wickednes may bee defaced Thirdly this must cause vs to make no account of any worldly thing that pertaineth to vs but all our ioy must be in Christ hee must bee our wisedome and righteousnesse our riches and all things else because by him we are renued from the deuils likenesse to the image of God Verse 38. Ye haue heard that it hath beene said an eie for an eie and a tooth for a tooth c. Here Christ returnes to the commaundements of the second Table intending to restore the same to their proper sense and withall to confute the erroneous interpretation therof giuen by the Iewish Teachers And first he commeth to a particular Iudiciall law of Moses pertaining to the sixt commandement touching the Requitall of like for like in which as in the former he first sets downe the words of the law of Moses but yet to be vnderstood with the erroneous interpretation of the Scribes and Pharises verse 38. Then he giues the right sense of that law and withall confuteth the false interpretation of the Iewish teachers v. 39 40 41. For the first the words of Moses law here set downe An eie for an eie and a tooth for a tooth are written Exod. 21. 24. whereto as to the former Christ prefixeth this preface It hath beene said thereby giuing vs to vnderstand that he is about to lay downe the law of God in the false sense of the Iewish Teachers for the better perceiuing whereof we must obserue the true meaning of that law An eie for an eie and a tooth for a tooth wherein the Lord requireth requitall of like for like not by euery priuate man but by the publike Magistrate As if a man did put out his neighbours eie then the Magistrate should put out his ●ie and strike out his teeth that strikes out his neighbours teeth this appeares to be so because reuenge is directly forbidden to euery priuate person and plainely appropriated to the Iudge Deut. 19. 18 19 21. But the Iewish Teachers expounded this law of priuate reuenge as though God had said to euery priuate man If thy neighbour plucke out thine ●ie plucke out his againe and if hee strike out thy tooth strike thou out his tooth this is the false interpretation of the Iewes Quest. How could they so farre ouershoote themselues in so cleare a case seeing in all the bookes of Moses it is plainely referred to the Magistrate Ans. There may be two reasons giuen thereof First it is a naturall opinion that a man may reuenge himselfe in his owne cause priuately and not waite for recompence of the Magistrate and answerable hereunto there is a mightie strong desire of reuenge in euery mans heart by nature when he is iniuried now it is like that these Iewes followed their corrupt nature and headie affections in the interpretation of this law Againe the Iewish people were mightily giuen to reuenge by their naturall disposition as may appeare by the law of the Cities of Refuge and by mentioning of the Reuenger of blood which plainely imports that the Iewes would haue blood againe of him that shed blood whersoeuer they met with him Now the Iewish Teachers framed their doctrine to the common disposition and behauiour of their people and so falsified the truth of God as many times it fals out that the common practise of men makes sinne to seeme no sinne In the person of these Iewish Teachers we may see the policie of the deuil whose intent is and hath beene in all ages to ouerturne religion and to this end he endeauours to cause men to temper religion to their naturall disposition and common opinion in outward manners whereby he ouerturneth both religion and people This appeares in other points among the Iewes as well as in this case of reuenge They were a people giuen much to couetousnesse as may appeare by the law of toleration for taking vsury of strangers and by their hardnesse of heart so much reprooued by all the Prophets Now the deuill perceiuing this to be their naturall disposition makes Gods doctrine of saluation seeme to them a doctrine of earthly benefits for hee caused them to dreame of an earthly king for their Messias
the highest that agreeth vnto man beeing of life and death This reuenge is executed partly in peace and partly in warre In peace by the confiscation of goods by imprisonment banishment and if the offence deserue it by taking away of life for the good of the state publike In time of warre when as not for euery case but for the iust repelling or requiting of wrongs warre is made against the enemies of the state Now though it belong to the Magistrate only to execute publike reuenge yet euery priuate man may haue the benefit hereof may vpon iust causes vse the Magistrates helpe for his reuenge as first if his cause be waightie wherein he is wronged 2. if it be necessarie 3. if it be for his iust defence for the common good the punishment of the offender and the Magistrate in these cases may lawfully nay he must put in executiō reuenge for priuate men for without this neither church nor cōmon wealth nor any society could stand Thus we see what iust reuenge is now considering it is the ordinance of God this must admonish vs to eschewe all outward offences that we may so escape the iust reuenge of the Magistrate and also to make conscience of all sinnes that so we may auoide the vengeance of God And thus much of the generall rule Now because this generall rule might seeme to bee hard therefore Christ explaines the same in 3. particular examples wherein hee shewes how men are to behaue themselues when they are wronged The first example is in these words Whosoeuer shall smi●e thee on the right cheeke turne to him the other also vnder which are comprehended all iniuries done to mens bodies not onely by blowes words but also in the contempt of their persons signified by striking on the right cheeke for vsually men strike with the right hand which directly should light on the left cheeke and if the right cheeke be smitten it is commonly with the backe of the hand which is a blow with contempt now say a man is abused in his bodie euen by blows of contempt yet he must not reuenge himselfe but turne the other cheek also which words must not simply be vnderstood but by comparison thus rather then thou reuenge thy selfe and resist the euill one that hath stricken thee on the right cheek turne to him the other for this particular example comprehendeth in it the generall rule of not resisting euill by priuate reuenge and that it may not simply be taken may herby appeare first because Christ should then command the sufferer to giue further occasion of wrong doing to the euill man which is not his meaning againe Christ himselfe who gaue this rule did not so practise it when he was smitten by the seruant of the high Priest Ioh. 18. 22 23. First by this example Christ condemneth the common practise of chalenging the field for personall wrongs and of taking that chalenge when it is giuen as also the fighting the single combate for Christ teacheth that a man must take many wrongs before he seek to reuenge himselfe by any such course if it be saide it is a disgrace to refuse a chalenge we must know that true grace and credit standeth in yeilding obedience vnto God and not in sinning against him for the sauing of our reputation with men Secondly the common practise of fighting and quarelling is here condemned many hold it vnlawfull to giue the first blow but yet if an other strike them then they thinke they may strike againe but this Christ here condemnes and his owne example is against it for when he was smitten before the high Priest he smote not againe when Paul was smitten he onely defended himselfe in word but smote not againe And Christ checketh Peter for taking the sword to resist the officers that apprehended him in the garden indeede he permitted his Disciples to weare weapons yet not for reuenge but for their iust defense onely Thirdly Christ here condemneth their opinion that make it a matter of praise for a man that he will not turne his face from any man It is indeede the praise of the Magistrate to be couragious and not to feare the face of man But yet a priuate man be he neuer so strong ought to turne his face from the aduersarie vnlesse it be in the case of his necessarie defence for a man must suffer double or treble wrong rather then defend himselfe If any shall thinke this to be a great disgrace still he must remember that our chiefest honour consisteth in approouing our selues vnto God by obeying his wil who here commandeth vs rather to turne our backs and flie then to resist in our own reuenge Question But what if a man be assaulted either on the high way or in his house may he not then resist to saue his life and his goods Answer In such a case he may doe two things First hee may to the vttermost of his power defend himselfe and his goods for this Text speaketh not against defence but against reuenge Secondly if a man can see no way to escape either by flight or calling for helpe of the Magistrate then he is to stand so farre in his owne defence that hee is rather to kill then be killed for in this case God puts the sword into a priuate mans hand and makes him a Magistrate to execute reuenge vpon his aduersarie and thus might a man lawfully kill a thiefe in the night without the guilt of blood Exod. 22. 2. Fourthly hence obserue that no priuate man may lawfully kill a Prince though he should tyrannically destroy both Church commō wealth for this Rule must square the actions of priuate men they must rather beare double and treble wrong then by way of priuate reuenge resist the euill one The reuenge of euill Magistrates must be referred to God to whom it iustly belongeth as Dauid did 1. Sam. 26. 10. and Psal. 43. 1. Lastly in this first example of particular iniurie we may see one propertie of an euill man namely to be giuen to fighting quarrelling and contending such a one may thinke himselfe a goodly fellow but yet he that vseth his strength to ordinarie quarrelling and wrong doing to others is here made an euill one by the sentence of our Sauiour Christ and therefore such as excell in strength if they would be approoued of Christ must make conscience of quarrelling and fighting and offer violence to no man Verse 40. And if any man will sue thee at the law and take away thy coat let him haue thy cloake also Here Christ propoūds the second example of wrong done vnto mē wherein he forbids the party wronged to reuenge himselfe to wit being iniuried in his goods either priuatly or vnder colour of law for both these may here well be vnderstood By coate properly is meant the inner garment by cloake the outward but here the words are
Againe in the new Testament the Apostles ordained that in euery Church there should be Deacons that is men of wisdome and discretion who were to gather for the poore and likewise to dispose of that which was giuen according as euery man had neede in which very order of prouision for the poore the Lord forbids all wādring begging II. These wandring beggers are the shame and reproch of the people where they are suffered for it argueth want of care of good order in gouerners and want of mercie in the rich that they gather all to themselues without regard how the poore should liue III. In releeuing these wandring beggers there is this double want in the giuer he cannot tell what to giue nor how much because he knowes not the state of the partie that beggeth Now in almes deedes there ought to be a double discretion the giuer ought to know both his owne abilitie and also the necessitie of the receiuers IV. Common releeuing at mens doores makes many beggers and maintaines a wicked generation for these wandring beggers are for the most part flat Atheists regarding nothing but their bellie separating themselues from all congregations and from begging many fall to stealing or els they take such pleasure therein that they will neuer leaue it no not for a yearely rent This is knowne to be true by experience All which things duly considered must moue the Magistrates and euery other in their place to see that better order be obserued for the poore then doore-releeuing to all that come And sith good lawes are made in this behalfe men ought in conscience to see the same obserued and kept neither can any man without sinne trāsgresse the same Indeede if good order were not prouided for the poore it were better to releeue them in their wandring course then to suffer them to starue for so dealt Christ his disciples with the poore when good order failed among the Iewes they releeued them in the high waies streetes VII Point At what time must Almes be giuen Ans. Hereof the Scripture speaketh little yet this may be gathered thence First that releefe must be giuen when present occasion requireth therfore Salomon saith Say not to thy neigbour Goe and come again to morow if thou now haue it Secondly that the Sabbath day is a fit time for the giuing of releefe for the poore for the Apostle commanded the Corinthians that each one should lay aside vpon that day according as God had prospered him the weeke before that which he would giue for the poore where by the way it may be obserued that daily giuing at mens doores was not allowed by the Apostles Also touching Trades-men this may be added from this that the Apostle makes contribution for the poore a Sabbath daies worke that wheras they vse to imploy part of the Lords day both morning euening in seruing their customers for their own priuate benefite this can not be ●arranted onely this they may doe vpon the Sabbath they should sell vnto none but to such as buie of necessitie and then they may not make a priuate gaine of their sale but must turne that worke to a worke of mercie for the poore either selling without gaine if it be a poore bodie that buies or giuing the gaine of that which they sell to the rich for the releefe of the poore This indeed will hardly be obtained at trades-mens hands but yet they must know that the whole Sabbath day is the Lords wherin he wil be worshipped with delight neither ought men to doe therein their owne workes nor seeke their owne wills nor speake their owne words Isa. 58. 13. VIII Point In what manner must Almes be giuen Ans. Hereof more is to be spoken in the chapter following yet from this text these things may be obserued First that Almes-giuing must be free the giuer must neither looke for recompence at the hands of man nor thinke to merit any thing thereby at the hands of God That Popish conceit depriues a man of the true comfort of the spirit in this worke of mercy none but Christ by his obedience could euer merit at Gods hands Secondly our hearts in giuing must be touched with charitie and the bowels of compassion we must giue with cheerefulnes for without loue all that we giue is nothing 1. Cor. 13. 3. and the Lord loueth a cheerfull giuer 2. Cor. 9. 7. now if we consider the poore as our owne flesh and see Gods image in them this will mooue vs to pitie Thirdly in the person of the poore we must consider Christ Iesus and giue vnto them as we would giue vnto Christ. This will mooue vs to giue and that chearefully for in the day of iudgement Christ will make it known that he comes for releefe to the rich in the person of the poore to the mercilesse he will say In as much as ye did it not to them ye did it not to me but to the mercifull thus In as much as ye did it vnto one of the least of these my brethren ye haue done it vnto me Fourthly our almes must be giuen as a pledge of our thankefulnesse vnto God for the blessings we enioy for all we haue commeth from God and of his hand it is whatsoeuer we giue now he professeth that when men doe good and distribute to the poore he is well pleased with such sacrifices Hauing seene what this dutie of Almes-giuing is and how it must be performed we must now stirre vp our selues to put the same in practise and to mooue vs hereunto consider the reasons following I. We all desire to be counted religious now if we would be such indeede we must visit the fatherlesse and widowes we must doe good and giue almes to the poore for this is pure religion and vndefiled before God as Iames saith To come to the Church and heare the word and to receiue the Sacraments are good things but without mercie to the poore they are not regarded but hated of God Isa. 1. 13 14 15. II. If a man should offer vnto vs a peece of ground to manure and till for our owne reaping we would take it kindely and bestowe both paines and seede vpon it behold the poore are sent of God to the rich as a peece of ground to be tilled and when they giue to the poore they sowe vpon the ground now as Paul saith in this case looke as a man soweth so shall he reape we therefore must sow liberally that we may also reape liberally III. Prov. 19. 17. He that hath mercie vpon the poore lendeth vnto the Lord we would easily be mooued to lend if we had an honest man to be suretie vnto vs for returning of our owne with aduantage well the Lord offers himselfe to the rich to be suretie for the poore who then will feare to lend hauing so good a debter
man to be mercifull and to lend Psal. 112. 5. where wee see that wretched practise of many rich men condemned to the pit of hell who are so far from lending to the poore that they hoard vp their store till a time of dearth that then they may inrich thēselues by poore mens want thus they increase Gods iudgement vpon the poore and as it were grinde their faces and tread vpon them as the holy Ghost speaketh But they shall one day find that they ought to haue lent vnto the poore in their necessities yea and when the hand of God in common want lieth more heauie vpon the poore they ought then to open their hands more liberally towards them It is an vsuall common practise that when a man beginnes to decaie in his estate no man will lend him any thing ●u●● because he beginnes to decay therfore they withdrew their helpe least he should not pay them againe But this ought not to be so it s Christs commandement that the rich by lending should sustaine such a one as by reason of want is readie to fall into decay Secondly this cōmand of Christ binds the Rich not onely to lend but to lend freely without taking any increase for they must lend not looking for any againe yea Exod. 22. 25. the Lord expressely forbids to take increase of the poore where we see the common practise of Vsurers condemned to the bottome of hell who lende vnto the poore vpon bonds for increase these are they that liue on the blood and life of the poore whose sinne is euery where condemned and ought to be hated as bloodshed it selfe But the rich will say they are intreated so to doe and are greatly thanked for so lending Ans. This excuse will not serue the turne for Sauls armour bearer was a murtherer for killing his master though Saul earnestly besought him so to doe 2. Sam 1. 9. 16. Thirdly here further learne that a man must lend and yet not alwaies take againe the principall indeede he may require and receiue his owne els there should be no lending but all giuing which two are here distinct but yet when the poore that borowed is fallen in●o further pouertie the Rich must turne his lending into giuing and forgiue the principall or part thereof as their seuerall estates shal require Deut. 24. 10 11 12. A man may take a pledge for his debt of the poore but yet if the pawne be a thing necessarie to the poore mans life he must not take it or at least not retaine it till the sunne setting Fourthly some may here aske seeing Christ bids o● lend looking for nothing againe whether may a man at no time with good conscience receiue increase for his lending Ans. Lending is twofold of due or of curtesie lending of due is the loane of the rich vnto the poore when his necessitie compells him to borrow and for this a man cannot with good conscience take any increase Lending of curtesie is when one rich friend lends vnto an other this is not forbidden in the word of God but is left to a mans owne libertie and discretion neither hath it any promise of reward Now in this case of curtesie I doe not finde in Scripture that all taking of increase is simply condemned nay in some cases both the law of nature and the lawes of all countries doe allow it As first when the increase is giuen onely in way of thankefulnesse as a blessing to require in kindnes a good turne receiued for ingratitude is abhorred of all and the low of nature requires to doe good for good and all Diuines almost both Protestants and Papists doe allow this kinde of increase Secondly when a man sustaineth dammage by his lending he may receiue increase by way of satisfaction for his losse Thirdly when a man is contented to aduenture his principall in the hand of him that borroweth then also may he take increase like as a man may receiue hire for his hourse or for the vse of any other goods standing to their losse Exod. 22. 14. Thus we see what the will of God is for giuing and lending vnto the poore now hence the poore may receiue instruction First hereby all may learne that God will haue some poore among his people to receiue and borrow of the rich which may serue to perswade the poore to be contented with their meane estate esteeming it to be the best for them because God in his wisdome and prouidence hath ordained it Secondly the poore must take occasion from their outward pouertie to seeke to be rich in God through grace Iam. 2. 5. Hath not God chosen the poore of this world that they should be rich in faith Herein they may match and goe beyond the richer sort which is a matter of great ioy Iam. 1. 9. Let the brother of low degree reioyce in that he is exalted that is with God who counts them rich Revel 2. 9. Thirdly hence the poore must learne to carie themselues submissiuely towards the rich of whome they receiue great helpe and comfort by their giuing and lending Prov. 18. 23. The poore saith Salomon vttereth supplications noting their humilitie which reprooues many poore who are so proud hearted and ingratefull that they will not affoard the rich a good word but this beseemeth none much lesse those that are to liue by the rich Psal. 101. 5. Him that hath a proud looke and bigh heart I cannot suffer vers 34. Ye haue heard that it hath beene said of old thou shalt loue thy neighbour and hate thine enemie In this verse and the rest to the ende of this Chapter our Sauiour goeth about to purge the generall commandement of the second Table touching the loue of our neighbour from the corrupt interpretation of the Iewish teachers and to restore it to his true and proper meaning And as in the former so here he first laies downe their false doctrine touching this commandement v. 43 and then consutes the same v. 44 45 c. In laying downe their false interpretation he propounds the law of Moses touching brotherly loue Leuit. 19. 18. Thou shalt loue thy neighbour which must here be vnderstood in their false sense who by neighbour meant a friend as if God had said Thou shalt loue thy friend Then he adjoyneth their tradition gathered from the law of God misconceiued namely to hate a mans enemie In these Iewes we may obserue two manifest abuses of Scripture which ought not to be in any Teachers to wit misinterpretation and a false collection The word they misconstrue is Neighbour which in the olde Testament is taken two waies either strictly and more properly for a familiar friend and acquaintance in which sense it is commonly taken or more generally for any one that in any kind of societie is neare vnto vs as by consanguinitie habitation office traffique or beeing onely in
foure kinds or parts of invocation to wit I. Supplication when we intreat God to remooue some euill from vs. II. ' Prayer whereby we begge at the hands of God the gift of some good thing vnto vs and these two concerne our selues The III. is Intercession when as we intreate the Lord to graunt some good thing vnto our brethren or to remooue some euill from them The IV. is thankesgiuing whereby we giue laud thanks to God for blessings receiued either by our selues or by our brethren Now in this place Prayer is not to be taken strictly for one part of invocation but generally for the whole worship of God by invocation as it is commonly taken of vs and often vsed in Scripture one part beeing put for the whole Be not as the hypocrites that is doe not as they doe in prayer by hypocrites he vnderstandeth principally the Iewish teachers the Scribes and Pharisies for at them he aimeth in this part of his Sermon For they loue to stand and pray in the Synagogues and in the streetes We must not here conceiue that Christ condemnes altogether this gesture of standing in prayer as vnlawfull for himselfe praied standing when he raised vp Lazarus and the primitiue Church in their assemblies called Stations praied standing but he reprooueth here the abuse of this gesture in these Iewish teachers For first they vsed this gesture to a wrong ende namely thereby to get the praise of men because standing is the fittest gesture which a man can vse in praier to make him be seene of others Secondly these Scribes and Pharisies thought themselues more righteous then all other men and therefore iudged that they had no neede to humble themselues so much either in soule or bodie as the Publicans and sinners did Againe Christ here condemneth not the action of praier in these places the Synagogues and the streets for no man was euer forbidden of God to pray in any place The Patriarks were not tied to any place and vnder the law howsoeuer the Temple was the place appointed for Gods outward worship in sacrificing and such like yet euen then it was lawfull for the Iewes to pray in any place and after Christs comming Paul willeth that men pray euery where lifting vp pure hands vnto God but here is condemned this grosse fault of these Scribes and Pharisies that they minded to pray no where els but in these open and publike places which is expressed by this phrase they loue to stand and pray So that in a word this is the meaning of this verse You my hearers when you pray take heede of the hypocrisie of the Scribes and Pharisies for they regard onely the praise of men and therefore doe vse such gesture in praier and chuse such places to pray in that they may best be seene of men Where wee see he directly condemnes their hypocrisie as well in respect of the ground thereof which was the pride of their hearts not Gods grace as also in regard of the end thereof which was the praise of men not the glory of God The vse 1. Whereas Christ saith When thou praiest he taketh it for graunted that all men of yeares must pray and whereas he condemnes the false manner of prayer and sets downe the right forme and manner thereof he teacheth vs that it is a most necessarie thing for all that haue discretion to exercise themselues religiously in this dutie of prayer And because our Sauiour here vrgeth this dutie so much I will here shew the necessitie of prayer which may appeare vnto vs by sundrie reasons I. Prayer is one of the most principall parts of Gods worship for herein we acknowledge him to be the giuer of all goodnes the searcher and knower of our hearts and hereby we testifie the faith hope and confidence we haue in God And prayer is called the ●alue● of our lippes because it is a sacrifice well pleasing vnto God II. By prayer we doe obtaine and also continue and preserue vnto our selues euery good grace and blessing of God especially such as concerne eternall life for God promiseth his spirit to them that aske it by praier the first conuersion of a sinner howsoeuer it be the free gift of God yet by Gods grace moouing and inabling a man thereunto is obtained by praier and so are all the good graces following our conuersion both gotten and increased III. The true gift of prayer is a pledge of the spirit of Adoption and therefore Zacharie calls the spirit of prayer the spirit of grace And Paul saith the spirit helps our infirmities euen the spirit of our Adoption which teacheth vs to crie A●ba father IV. By prayer we haue spirituall communion and famili●●tie with God for in the preaching of the word God speakes to vs and in praier we speake to God and the more we pray the nearer and greater fellowship we haue with God which one reason if there were no more is sufficient to perswade vs of the necessitie of prayer and to mooue vs vnto diligence therein But sundrie obiections are made against the necessitie of praier 1. It is said God knows our thoughts before we praie and therefore it is needlesse to expresse them by praier vnto him Answ. We praie not to acquainte God with our suites or with our hearts as though he knew them not but to performe obedience vnto his commandement who requireth this duty at our hands Againe we praie vnto God to honour him in acknowledging him to be the knower of our hearts the giuer of all goodnes the stay of our faith and hope in whome only we put all our trust and considence Obiect 2. Whether we pray or not God will giue vs the blessings which he meanes to bestow on vs. Ans. This is ●lat Atheisine and yet we must distinguish of Gods blessings for some are common blessings which God oft giues to men without their asking because they serue to preserue nature as raine and fruitfull seasons food raiment c. Act. 14. 16. and yet euen these common blessings must be praied for Phil. 4. 6. In all things let your requests be made knowne to God and Iames saith Ye lust and haue not because ye aske not Psal. 106. 23. Moses prayer saues the people from destruction Others are speciall blessings of the Elect and these must alwaies be sought and obtained by prayer Obiect 3. God hath decreed all euents and euery thing shall so fall out as he hath appointed and therefore its needlesse to pray and oftentimes it s but the crossing of Gods will Ans. This reason is naught for as God hath decreed the euent of all things so likewise he hath appointed the meanes whereby his decree shall be effected and prayer many times is a principall meanes to bring Gods will to passe 1. King 18. 1. God shewed to Eliah that he would send raine in Israel after that long
stay his hand nor say vnto him what doest thou Gods speciall kingdome is that whereby hee ruleth his elect and chosen people working his will not onely by them as he doth in his generall kingdome by the deuils themselues but in them also by his holy spirit and it is called speciall because it is not exercised ouer all the world but onely ouer the elect whom hee hath ordained to eternall life This speciall kingdome of God is two-folde either of Grace or of Glorie The kingdome of grace is a spiritual estate wherein God makes men willingly subiect to his written word by his spirit I call the kingdome of grace a spirituall estate both because it is principally exercised in the conscience and also because this regiment in the conscience is by the spirit of God Secondly I shew wherein it consists namely in a voluntarie subiection of the whole man in soule and bodie and spirit to the will of God reuealed in the word Psalm 110. 3. Thy people shall come willingly in the day of assembling thine armie in holy beautie And this subiection stands in three things in Righteousnesse Peace and Ioy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17 18. In Righteousnes that is First in Christs righteousnesse imputed and secondly in the righteousnesse of a good conscience the ground whereof is sanctification by the spirit which Christ giues to them whom he doth iustifie In Peace that is peace of conscience towards God and peace with Gods Church yea with all creatures so farre forth as is needfull for them Now vnder peace we must comprehend loue and all duties of loue for as righteousnesse concernes the person in soule and bodie so peace respects all duties and actions of the life Righteousnesse is the root from whence springeth this peace with euery action thereof for when the heart is sanctified the life is reformed Lastly in ioy in the holy Ghost this is a fruite of both the former respecting especially the state of affliction for when a man is iustified and sanctified and hath peace towards God then ariseth in his heart a spirituall delight in God in all estates yea though great afflictions light vpon him for Gods cause yet he beareth them with inward ioy and delight knowing that the spirit of glorie of God resteth vpon him and that he shall be glorified with Christ if he suffer with Christ which things while he compareth together hee little esteemeth the afflictions of this life in respect of the glorie that shall be reuealed for the light affliction that is but for a moment causeth vnto vs a farre more excellent and eternall waight of glorie These are the branches of this spirituall subiection which whosoeuer hath is a good subiect in the kingdome of grace as the Apostle saith in the next verse he that in these things serueth Christ is acceptable vnto God and approoued of men The kingdome of glorie is the blessed estate of Gods elect in heauen whereby God in Christ becomes all things vnto them immediately 1. Cor. 15. 28. This estate of glorie is a subiection also but yet such a subiectiō as is indeed a glorious regimēt for there we raigne with Christ in whom and through whom God himselfe becomes honour peace health foode raiment and all things needfull to the perfection of felicitie Now these two beeing Gods kingdome differ thus The state of grace is the beginning and entrance to the state of glorie and the state of glorie is the perfection of the state of grace This state of glorie is the citie and the state of grace as it were the suburbs of it In this life wee liue in the kingdome of grace but the kingdome of glorie is reserued for the life to come and this speciall kingdome of God in both these estates doe we here pray for Thy kingdome This imports that there is another kingdome euen the kingdome of Satan which is a kingdome of darkenes full of all disorder and confusion through sinne which greatly hindereth annoyeth Gods kingdome of grace especially Come That is to vs men in the world and then it commeth when God doth erect establish the same in their hearts now vnto perfection it comes by 5. degrees 1. When God giues vnto men the outward meanes of saluation wherein he doth reueale his grace fauour in Christ as the Gospel preached which is therefore called the word of the kingdome Matth. 13. 19. And so Christ hauing relation to his preaching which he confirmed by miracles among the Iewes saith The kingdome of God is come vnto you Luk. 11. 20. and beeing demaunded by the Pharisies when the kingdome of God should come he tels them it was among them Luk. 17. 21. meaning that it was brought vnto them by the ministerie of Iohn Baptist of himselfe and of his Disciples although indeed it were without profit to many of them 2. When the word preached inlightens the minde so as a man knowes and vnderstands the mysterie of the Gospel which is the law of this kingdome 3. When a man is thereby regenerate and so brought into this kingdome for by regeneration we haue effectuall entrance into the state of grace wherein Christ rules in vs by his word and spirit and wee yeeld subiection vnto him 4. At the ende of this life when the bodie goeth to the earth but the soule to God that gaue it beeing translated to the ioyes of heauen in the glorie of this kingdome 5. At the last iudgement when body and soule beeing vnited againe are both made partakers of the glorie of this kingdome and this is the full and perfect cōming of it So then our request to God in this petition is to this effect O Father let thy kingdome come to vs that be pilgrimes and strangers here on earth prepare vs for it and enter vs into it that be yet without renue vs by thy spirit that we may be subiect to thy will confirme vs also in this estate that our soules after this life and both soule and bodie at the day of iudgement may be fully glorified yea Lord hasten this glorie to vs and to all thine elect The Uses 1. Wants to be bewailed The wants we are taught to bewaile in this petition either concerne our selues or others First we must lament and mourne for our owne miserable estate by nature whereby we are the seruants of sinne and so in thraldome and bondage vnder Satan sinne leads vs into bondage for he that committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne and where sinne raigneth there the deuill hath dominion And hence it comes that wee rebell so much against the kingdome of God and refuse to stoop to the scepter of his word Indeede this bondage is weakened in Gods children but none is wholly freed from it in this life as Pauls complaint declares Rom. 7. 14. The law is spirituall but I am carnall sold vnder sin The naturall man is dead
truely repented at their conuersion to bee reconciled vnto God 2. Corinth 5. 20. meaning by renuing their repentance And Dauid was the true childe of God yet beeing left vnto himselfe hee fell into two grieuous sinnes wherein he lay almost a whole yeare without repentance during all which time he had not pardon of them actually for Nathan rebuked him to bring him to repentance and vpon his confession pronounced them pardoned yea and Dauid himselfe afterward for the fuller assurance of mercie to his soule most earnestly intreated pardon hereof at the hands of Gods Psal. 51. So that this petition is most necessarie as well for actuall pardon of sinnes present as for the more ful assurance of sinnes past The meaning This petition is propounded in the forme of a comparison which naturally standeth thus As wee forgiue our debters so forgiue thou to vs our debts and it hath two parts a request for pardon and a reason thereof Our request for pardon is this Forgiue vs our debts In the word debt is a figuratiue kinde of speech taken from bargaining wherein God is resembled to the Creditour Man is the debter the Law is the bond or obligation and sinne is that debt of ours for which we stand bound to God by the law this appeares by this that in the Euangelists the word sinne and debt are vsed promiscuously as Luk. 11. 4. compared with this of Matthew and Luke 13. 4. Now sin makes vs debters vnto God not for that we owe it vnto him for we are bound by the law to yeeld the contrarie obedience but because vpon default of obedience vnto God whereto wee are bound by the law we are bound for our sins vnto punishment which is as it were a second debt Euen as a man that is bound in an obligation to another through default of performing the condition thereof is bound to paie both the principall and the forfeiture the punishment of sinne which is eternall death being that forfeiture whereto we stand bound before God for want of obedience which is as it were the principall The consideration of this resemblance for which sinne is called a debt serues to direct vs in some points of religion as first it confutes their opinion who hold that our whole iustification consists in the remission of sinnes and that the same is wrought by the shedding of Christs blood alone for we owe to God a double debt first obedience and for default thereof we stand bound to punishment these two debts are different and distinct one from an other and they must both be paid and Gods iustice satisfied either by our selues or by a furetie before we can be accepted as righteous vnto life Now we our selues can discharge neither therefore Christ our suretie must doe both and so he hath for our second debt of sinne whereby we stand bound to punishment Christ discharged by his death and passion wherein he made his soule a sacrifice for sinne and our debt of obedience in perfect loue to God and man he also paid to God in fulfilling the law for vs whereupon it is true that the righteousnes of the law is fulfilled in thē which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit But say they the Scripture euery where ascribes our whole redemption and iustification to Christs blood-shedding and to his death and passion Ans. Christs blood-shedding must be considered two waies first as a part of his passion whereby we are discharged from punishment secondly as a part of his obedience wherein he testified singular loue both to God his father and vnto mankind for in suffering he obeied and in obeying he suffered now because his bloodshedding is a part of both therefore is our whole redemption ascribed thereunto not excluding but including his actuall obedience therein it beeing a part thereof Secondly debt in this place betokening sinne as it binds vnto punishment sheweth plainly that sinne and punishment goe alwaies together and therefore the Popish doctrine is false and erroneous which parteth them asunder by making some sinnes veniall not deseruing the punishment of death which is the wages of sinne Forgiue vs This forgiuenesse here asked is a free and full discharge from sinne and the punishment thereof without any satisfaction on our part and this God doth when he is content for Christs sake not to impute sinne vnto vs but to account it as not committed and the punishment thereof as not due vnto vs beeing fully and freely contented with the all-sufficient satisfaction made by Christ in his death and passion This forgiuenesse Hezekias expressed when he saide to God Thou hast cast all our sinnes behinde thy backe and Michah saying He will subdue our iniquities and cast all our sinnes into the bottome of the sea So that our request to God is this that whereas our sinnes binde vs vnto punishment the Lord would be pleased for his Sonnes sake freely to remit all our sinnes and neuer to impute them vnto vs and to be fully contented with the suffering of Christ that the punishment of our sinnes be neuer laide vpon vs. Quest. But of what sinnes doe we here aske pardon Ans. Both of sinnes past and present for howsoeuer the child of God hath his sinnes past fully pardoned at once on Gods part vpon his true repentance yet he is not able so to receiue pardon as God giues it but must receiue it by little and little and as it were droppe by droppe this we may see in Dauid who had the pardon of his sinne pronounced by Nathan the Prophet and yet after that he penned the 51. Psalme wherein he begges mercie and forgiuenes most earnestly for that sinne which God had alreadie pardoned aiming no doubt at a more full and comfortable assurance of Gods pardon in his owne heart for this cause also in his olde age he praies for the pardon of the sinnes of his youth Psal. 25. 7. Againe here we pray for the pardon of sinnes present both that they may be actually forgiuen and also that our hearts and consciences may be setled in the assurance thereof The vses First by this petition we are taught to bewayle our carnall securitie for naturally we goe on from day to day in following the pleasures and profits of this world and neuer thinke of our debt to God by sinne till the euill day of death or distresse approach vnto vs like to desperate bankrupts that neuer regard their debt till the sergeant be vpon their backe This is that sinne which Christ foretold should raigne in the latter daies Math. 24. 39. and I appeale to the conscience in the veiw of all estates and conditions whether it be not so for though iniquitie doe abound yet no man saith what haue I done Ier. 8. 6. yea this is the sinne of many professors for the nature of man is prone to incroach vpon Gods favour But we must know that this securitie cannot stand with
this petition for here we are taught to call to mind our sinnes euery day praying for the pardon of them Secondly here we see whereon we must relie and setle our hearts in all estates in affliction temptation and death it selfe namely on the meere mercie of God in Christ by faith in his blood for the pardon of our sinnes Looke to the prayers of all the Saints of God in Scriptures and we shall finde that they made this their rocke and ankor of stay in all distresse Dan. 9. 18 19. O Lord heare and behold not for our owne righteousnesse but for thy great tender mercies deferre not for thy owne sake oh my God This we must obserue to arme vs against the damnable doctrine of the Church of Rome for they will graunt that in his first conuersion a man must relie onely on Gods mercie in Christs blood but after a man is made the childe of God he may rest vpon his owne good merits so it be in modestie and sobrietie But this is the right way to hell flat against this petition for how can wee dreame of any merit when as we must euery day aske mercie and forgiuenesse for to aske mercie and to plead merite are contraries now by our daily sinnes we adde debt to debt and so must still plead mercie and not merit euen after we are conuerted and sanctified euer praising God that hath deliuered vs from the slauish bondage of that proud Synagogue Thirdly here we see what we must doe in respect of our daily sinnes whereunto we fall we must not lie in them but renue our-estate by true humiliation and repentance Also if thou be crossed in the things of this world the way of comfort and deliuerance is to be learned here for as thou doest daily aske bread so thou must aske forgiuenesse for thy sinnes and when they are pardoned thou hast title and interest to al Gods blessings Now this daily humiliation stands in three things 1. in examination of our selues for our debt vnto God by sinne 2. in confessing our debt vnto our creditour yeilding our selues into his hands 3. in humbling our selues vnto him crauing pardon and remission earnestly for Christs sake as for life and death herein the children of God are presidents vnto vs Psal. 32. 5 6. Dauid in great distresse found no release while he held his tongue but when he humbled himselfe and confessed against himselfe then he found mercie and ease whereupon he professeth that he will be a patterne to euery godly man for their behauiour in the time of distresse Fourthly here we haue a notable remedie against desparie wherewith the deuill assaults many a child of God when through infirmitie they fall into some grieuous sinne or commit the same sinne often which greatly wounds the conscience for here Christ bids vs aske forgiuenesse of our daily sinnes whatsoeuer they be or how often so euer cōmitted And no doubt he that bids vs forgiue our brethren that sinne against vs though it were seauen times in a day if they seeke it at our hands will much more forgiue vs. This must not embolden any to sinne presumptuously for the Lord hath saide He will not be mercifull vnto that man Deut. 29. 19. but if any fall through infirmitie hereon he hath to stay himselfe from despaire Fiftly hereby we see that no man possibly can fulfill the law for the Apostles themselues were commanded to aske pardon of sinne euery day whereby it is plaine they could neuer fulfill the law and therefore much lesse can any other Sixtly that which we pray for we must in all godly manner endeauour after And therefore as we pray for pardon of sinne euery day so must we daily vse the meanes wherein God giues assurance of remission to his children as heare the word receiue the Sacraments and pray vnto God publikely and priuately endeauouring to resist all temptations and to glorifie God by newe obedience for it is grosse hypocrisie to aske the pardon of sinne and still to liue in the practise of it Lastly here we see we must pray not only for the pardon of our own sinnes but of our brethrens also Forgiue vs whereby Christ would teach vs to be carefull of the saluation of our brethren and neighbours the good estate of their soules should be deare and pretious vnto vs and if this were so happie would it be with the Church of God but alas men are so farre from care of the saluation of their neighbours that men of the same family are carelesse of one an others soules masters regard not their seruants nor parents their children indeede they will prouide for their bodies and outward state but for their soules they haue no care wherein they bewray themselues to be cruell and mercilesse hauing more care of their hogges and bruit beasts then of their children and seruants for when their hogges haue all needefull prouision their children and seruants soules shall want instruction As we also forgiue our debters These words are here propounded as a condition of the former petition and they include a reason thereof as Luk. 11. 4. Forgiue vs our sinnes FOR euen we forgiue euery man that is indebted vnto vs. And this Christ addeth for waightie causes euen to crosse the fraud and hypocrisie of our corrupt hearts who would haue forgiuenesse of God and yet would not forgiue our brethren nor yet leaue off the practise of sinne our selues But this condition imports that we must exercise mercy towards our brethren and so breake off the course of our sinnes if we looke for mercie at Gods hands Now the words here vsed are comparatiue betokening a likelihood and similitude betweene Gods forgiuing and ours which must be rightly vnderstood because our forgiuenesse is mingled with much corruption through want of mercie and therefore we must not vnderstand it of the measure of forgiuenesse nor yet of the manner simply but especially of the very act of forgiuing for thereto sometimes must similitudes be restrained as Mat. 9. 29. According to your faith be it vnto you And the force of the reason stands in the circumstance thus If we who haue but a drop of mercie doe forgiue others then doe thou who art the fountaine of mercies forgiue vs but we forgiue others therfore do thou forgiue vs. Touching our forgiuing others three questions must bee scanned I. How can any man pardon a trespasse seeing God onely forgiueth sinnes Answ. In euery trespasse which one doth to his neighbour be two things the losse and dammage whereby man is hindered in bodie goods or name and an offence against God by a practise of iniustice against his law Now as a trespasse is a damage vnto man so may a man forgiue it but as it is a sinne against God in the transgression of the morall law so God onely pardons it as when a man hath his goods stollen that dammage done to him a man may
remit but the breach of the eight commaundement therein God onely can forgiue II. Quest. How farre is a man bound to forgiue others that trespasse against him Ans. There is a threefold forgiuenes of reuenge of punishment and of iudgement Forgiuenesse of reuenge is when a man is not desirous of reuenge from an inward grudge but forbeares to render like for like to those that wrong him this is principally here meant for we must alwaies forgiue our brethren in respect of reuenge for vēgeance is mine saith the Lord and I will repaie Rom. 12. 19. Forgiuenes of punishment is the remitting of that punishment which another mans wrong-doing iustly deserues this is not alwaies to be granted especially in the case of offence which may tend to the publike hurt for then were the state of magistracy vnlawful whose office it is to punish offences The forgiuenes of iudgement is the remitting of that censure which an euill deed doth iustly deserue neither is this here meant for beeing lawfully called therevnto wee may freely censure that which is euill done III. Quest. Whether must we forgiue those that wrong vs if they will not confesse their fault nor aske vs forgiuenesse Ans. Wee must forgiue them freely in respect of reuenge Obiect But it is said If hee repent forgiue him Luk. 17. 3. therefore vnlesse hee repent wee neede not to forgiue him Answ. That place is meant of Ecclesiasticall censures that those must proceede no further after the partie offending doth repent Debters Hereby is not meant such as we count debters in the ciuill state that is such as owe vs money graine c. but any one that doth vs iniurie or wrong for no mans estate is so lowe but in some degree God hath giuen one or moe of these 4. things honour life goods or good name and he that hinders his neighbour in any of these is a debter before God and so standeth till hee make recompence to the partie and repent towards God yea further wee must know that besides the endammaging of our neighbour in these things the very omission of preseruing and furthering our neighbours life honour goods good name makes vs also debters before God These words thus vnderstood must be conceiued as a reason drawn not from the cause or like example but from the signe and pledge of Gods forgiuenesse for God hath made a promise to forgiue vs if wee forgiue our brethren their trespasses Mark 11. 25. From whence mercifull men may gather assurance of pardon with God from that inclination to compassion and readinesse which they find in their own hearts to forgiue others that wrong them for Christ teacheth them to reason thus If we be those to whom thou hast promised pardon when they aske it then Lord pardon vs but we are such for wee feele our hearts inclined to mercie therefore Lord pardon vs. So that this reason serues to mooue vs to pray to God for pardon with confidence and assurance yea further they include a profession to God of new obedience in amendment of life for vnder one dutie of mercie towards our neighbour is comprehended the whole practise of repentance and the performance of our vow made in baptisme Uses I. Marke here that asking pardon of God and testimonie of repentance goe together he that receiues the one must expresse the other for where God giues pardon there also he giues grace to repent and mercie is not granted but on condition of repentance Act. 2. 37 38. when the Iewes that were pricked in conscience at Peters sermon asked what to doe to finde mercie Peter said Amend your liues c. And therefore when he perceiued want of repentance in Simon Magus he tels him Thou art yet in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquitie though he had formerly baptized him Whereby we see First with what affection we must come to God when we pray for the pardon of our sinnes namely with humble and contrite hearts hauing a true purpose not to sinne wittingly and willingly but to obey God in all his commandements and the want of this is the cause of that small comfort in praier which many finde in themselues for the promise of pardon is not giuen where the condition of repentance is not performed Secondly this shewes the grosse and fearefull errour of the blind world who sing this song while they liue in sinne to their owne hearts God is mercifull Christ is a Sauiour but thus trusting to Gods mercie they deceiue themselues for they trust to nothing for mercie is not due where repentance is wanting nay the Lord hath said Hee will not be mercifull to that man that shall blesse himselfe in his heart saying I shal haue peace though I walke after the stubbornnesse of mine own heart c. Let vs therefore see to this that we practise repentance when wee pray for pardon and looke to the purpose of our heart against sinne when we waite for mercy to our soules We may not seuer those things which God hath ioyned but looke how heartily wee desire mercie so earnestly must we hunger after grace to repent if we truely seeke both we shall haue both but if we let slip repentance in our selues wee shall come short of mercie with the Lord. II. The ioyning of this condition implying repentance to the petition and the dependance of it on the former teacheth vs euery day to renue our repentance and to humble our selues for our sinnes seeking for a new supply of grace that so our purpose not to sinne may bee more and more confirmed in our hearts which is the infallible signe of a new creature III. Here we see wherein the practise of true repentance standeth namely in exercising mercie loue peace reconciliation and forgiuenesse for though forgiuenesse bee onely named yet vnder it all other fruits of repentance are vnderstood Indeede to heare the word to receiue the Sacrament to preach and pray be excellent workes but yet the heart of man may more easily dissemble in them then in the duties of the second table the most infallible marke of true grace is the practise of the loue of God in workes of loue and mercie to our brethren Iam. 1. 27. Pure religion and vndefiled before God is to visit the fatherlesse c. Iam. 3. 17. The wisedome that is from aboue is first pure then peaceable gentle easie to be intreated full of mercie and good fruits And hence it is that loue is called the fulfilling of the law Rom. 13. 10. IV. Christ knitting our forgiuing our brother with Gods forgiuing vs doth here affoard vnto vs a notable signe of pardon of sinne namely a readie and willing minde to forgiue our brother offending vs our inclination to mercie in suppressing the desire of reuenge when we are wronged giues assurance to our conscience that wee shall finde mercie at Gods hands whereby it is plaine that the child of
here to be freed from all assaults but that we be not wholly left vnto our selues nor forsaken of God but so preserued by his grace that we be not swallowed vp in temptation and this petition beeing according to Gods will shall be granted to him that a●ks in faith 1. Ioh. 5. 14. And hēce it is that he that is once the child of God indeed shal so remaine for euer cannot finally or totally fal away frō grace Dauids fall and Peters were great and fearefull but yet therein they were not wholly forsaken of God vnlesse it were in their own feeling for a time Obiect But Dauid by his two sinnes became guiltie of Gods wrath and so lost his right of this prerogatiue in beeing the childe of God Answ. If we consider the desert of those sinnes that vndoubtedly should haue beene his estate but yet in regard of Gods election and free grace of adoption wherein God changeth not as also in regard of the inward seedes of Gods grace in his heart he remained still the childe of God though the signes of Gods fauour were changed into the signes of his anger and displeasure Obiect But by such sinnes a man looseth the graces which formerly he had Answer The graces of God in man are of two sorts some are necessarie to saluation as faith hope and charitie without which a man cannot bee saued others be very excellent and profitable but not of like necessitie with the former as the sense feeling of Gods loue and fauour peace of conscience ioy in the holy Ghost alacritie in praier courage and boldnesse with God and these latter may bee lost but the necessarie graces cannot howsoeuer they may bee greatly weakened for so it was with Dauid by his fall hee lost for a time the feeling of Gods fauour the ioy of the spirit c. but faith hope and loue were not extinguished but sore weakened and couered as fire in the ashes 2. Vse Wants to be bewailed Here also wee are taught to mourne for the corruption of our nature whereby we are prone to yeeld vp our selues to euery temptation of sinne and Satan and be slacke and negligent in resisting we doe not watch and pray against temptations diligently nor shunne the occasions of sinne as we ought to doe nay we offer our selues into temptation and minister occasion vnto Satan and to our owne corruption to assault vs often This we shall finde to be true in our selues if we search out throughly our owne estate and therefore it should grieue our hearts when we feele the law of our members rebelling against the law of our minds and leading vs captiue into sinne 3. Use. Graces to be desired Here also wee must learne to desire of God all such graces as may helpe vs against temptation and they are many I. Spirituall heede and watchfulnesse to preuent temptations and to auoyde the occasions thereof II. Grace to pray in the time of temptation that God would lessen and moderate the violence force thereof III. That in temptation God would be so farre from withdrawing his grace from vs that he would then adde grace to grace euen new grace vnto the former IV. That in the continuance of temptation when it abideth long vpon vs God would strengthen vs to hold out V. That he would giue vs patience to beare the irkesomnesse and burthen of it VI. That in the ende of it God would giue a comfortable issue for his glorie and our owne good 4. Vse Here also we are let to see how great our weakenesse is euen when wee bee Gods children and haue true grace for wee must daiely pray that God would not lead vs into temptation whereby wee import that of our selues wee are so farre from withstanding a temptation that if God should leaue vs wee would giue vp our selues as slaues vnto the deuill Here then behold thine estate and condition whosoeuer thou art considered in thy selfe if God leaue thee thou canst not stand in any temptation but must needes fall into the bondage of Satan yea so exceeding great is our weakenesse in our selues that in temptation there doth scarce appeare any difference betweene the childe of God and a wicked one for both are subiect to the temptations of Satan nay the child of God is vsually more assaulted then the wicked when the euill motion ariseth or is suggested into the minde the wicked receiue it and delight therein so did Dauid and so doe wee all the wicked giue consent of will so doe the godly if God leaue them the wicked fall to practise sinne and so doe the godly if God keepe backe his grace from them the wicked lie in sinne and so doe the godly till the Lord by grace doe raise them vp Where then is the difference Surely the persons themselues doe differ in temptation for the wicked is carried with violence into sinne and without resistance in temptation but the godly hath some resistance in himselfe when hee giues consent to sinne the euill that hee doth hee would not doe Romans 7. 19. But the maine difference is Gods grace and mercie vouchsafed to the child of God but denied to the wicked for if wee escape temptation it is of grace and mercie if wee stand in temptation and yeeld not to euill suggestion if we denie consent of will or be kept from the practise of sinne it is all of grace and if wee bee fallen into sinne and rise againe by true repentance that also is Gods speciall grace without which vndoubtedly wee should runne on with the wicked vnto destruction Here therefore wee must learne to renounce all confidence in our selues and to walke in all humilitie before God relying wholly vpon his grace and mercie in Iesus Christ wee must make his arme our strength and his grace our shield to defend vs from temptation This was Dauids practise who in all trouble and distresse had recourse to God calling him his hope fortresse and deliuerer Psal. 91. 2 3. his secret or hiding place who preserueth him from trouble and compasseth him about with ioyfull deliuerance Psal. 32. 7. and when his enemies increased yet the Lord was his buckler his glorie and the lifter vp of his head Psal. 3. 2 3. And thus should wee rest vpon God considering that if we receiue a good thought we can hardly retaine it and when euill motions come we cannot of our selues resist them 5. Use. Hence we also learne that in temptation Satan can goe no further then God permits him hee could not touch Iobs goods his children nor his bodie till God gaue him lea●e Iob. 1. 12. and 2. 6. neither could the legion of deuils enter into the heard of swine til Christ b●de them goe wee therefore must bee patient in temptations and beare them as comming from Gods hand neither must wee feare the deuil ouermuch though he pinch our soules by his violent assaults nay though he should torment and possesse our
When our Sauiour Christ was to die vpon the crosse hee commended his soule into his fathers hands Luk. 23. 46. And none of vs haue assurance of our continuance in life but though we be well in the morning wee may be dead in the euening or aliue at night and dead in the morning and therefore we must not forget the practise of this dutie Dauid did it in the time of trouble though hee were in health Psal. 31. 5. and though we were free from perill of death yet our daiely vexations should mooue vs hereunto for who can learne any good thing without labour and paine who can doe a good worke without let or opposition If wee would repent we are either clogged with corruptions or ouerwhelmed with temptations and if wee seeke to walke in new obedience we haue the world the flesh and the deuil all endeauouring to turne vs backe to our olde course in sinne So that if we would either auoide euill or doe good or support with some comfort our daily vexations we must commend our selues and all ours into the hands of God euery day And thus much of this reason and of Christs dehortation from distrustfull care Chap. 7. Verse 1. Iudge not that you be not iudged 2. For with what iudgement ye iudge yee shall be iudged and with what measure you mete it shall be measured to you againe IN these words and so forward to the end of the fift verse is contained the sixt part of this sermon of our Sauiour Christ concerning Iudgement and it consisteth of three parts first a commandement Iudge not then certaine reasons of the commaundement in the words following to the 5. verse and thirdly a remedie of euill and rash iudgement in the 5. verse Touching the commandement Iudge not The meaning This commandement forbids not all kinde of Iudgement but must bee restrained to vnlawfull Iudgement for there be foure kinds of lawfull Iudgement two whereof be publike and two priuate Of publike the first is ciuil Iudgement belonging to the ciuill Magistrate who is to enquire into the manners of men and according to the good positiue lawes of the country to giue iudgement either in punishing offenders or rewarding them that doe well The second kinde is Ecclesiasticall belonging principally to the minister who in the publike dispensation of the word iudgeth mens manners by reproouing and condemning their sinnes whether they be thoughts words or actions In this sense the vnbeleeuer is said to be iudged when his thoughts actions are controlled by the word 1. Cor. 14. 24. and thus Noah iudged and condemned the olde world Heb. 11. 7. Of priuate lawful iudgement the first is priuate admonition whereby one man doth in Christian and louing maner reprehēd another for his sinnes and thereby iudgeth him this is also commanded in the word of God and therefore it is not here forbidden The second is iust dispraise when the grosse faults of notorious persons are reprooued and condemned for this ende alone that others may take warning thereby thus Christ iudged the Pharisies both for life and doctrine before his Disciples calling them Hypocrites that said and did not and their doctrine leauen and that most iustly and wisely that his Disciples and others might beware of them and thus he called Herod a Foxe so discouering his subtiltie for the admonition of others The thing then here forbiddē is rash iudgemēt which one man doth vniustly giue of another and the reason why wee so vnderstand this place may be drawne from the 3. verse where instance is giuen of the iudgement here forbidden in a quicke espiall and sharpe censure of small faults in others not seeing farre grosser and greater in our selues also Saint Luke setting downe this same prohibition Iudge not expounds it in the next words by condemne not which must be vnderstood of rash censure as is plaine by S. Paul Rom. 2. 1. In that thou iudgest another thou condemnest thy selfe because thou doest rashly cōdemne him of that whereof thou thy selfe art guiltie Now that wee may better know the thing forbidden first I will shew what rash iudgement is and in the second place make knowne the common practises thereof For the first Rash iudgement is when of an euill minde wee iudge amisse of others for some euill ende In this description first obserue the roote and ground of all rash iudgement to wit an euill minde whereby wee loue our selues too well and want the loue of our neighbour This wee testifie by beeing sharpe sighted to prie into the liues and behauiour of others and are blinde as beetles to see into our selues as also by giuing our selues exactly to censure other mens sayings and doings and with delight to heare their faults ripped vp but for our own courses we would not haue them called into question nor controlled Secondly here note the manner of rash iudgement which is to iudge amisse of others and this they doe which iudge of other mens persons and doings without a calling or vrgent necessitie secondly which giue out sentence of mens doings but not according to the law of charity which bindes a man to iudge and say the best of others alwaies so farre forth as may stand with good conscience and the word of God Thirdly here note the ende of rash iudgement for as it is ill grounded and guided so it aimes not at the reformation of the partie nor the detestation of sin in our selues and others but is directed to some wrong ende as first to testifie our hatred of the partie and desire of reuenge secondly to delight our selues with the faults of others thirdly to defame our neighbours and to bring them to an ill name that our names may beare away the praise without comparison and lastly that wee may seeme more holy then others by beeing much in censuring sinne in others The practise of rash iudgement consists in two things first the euill minde of man prepares matter of wrong iudgement and secondly giues sentence accordingly of the sayings and doings of men and likewise of their persons For the first the euill minde prepares matter of rash iudgement thus it sets it selfe to prie and inquire narrowly into the liues and behauiour of men and to see if it can find any matter in word or action worthy reproofe Indeede there is a vertue wherby one man doth obserue another in his waies but that is directed to a good ende namely to rectifie and reforme him in his wants and to further him when he doth well but for one man to obserue another for this ende to finde out matter of defamation and reproach is a fault directly forbidden by our Sauiour Christ in this place Secondly when matter is found the euill minde accordingly giues censure this censure is giuen first of the persons of men then of their speeches and actions Rash censure of mens persons is when a man thinkes otherwise of the
minister yea be he what he wil nay the better is his place the wors is his fault the more he is giuen to this sinne of censuring the worse he is for the lesse he sees his owne sinnes nay let him liue vnblameably before men yet he hath a heart full of pride and selfeloue and full of disdaine toward his brother And therefore let vs take heede of this sinne euen when it beginnes to creepe vpon vs. vers 5. Hypocrite first cast out the beame out of thine owne eye and then shalt thou see clearely to cast out the mote out of thy brothers eye This verse conteines a remedie against rash iudgement it depends vpon the former verses as an Answer to a secret obiection that might thence arise for whereas Christ had said Iudge not and why seest thou a mote in thy brothers eye c. some man might say belike then it is not lawfull to correct my brother by speach and by reproofe to seeke amendment of his fault To this Christ here answers that he forbids not brotherly correction and admonition but the euil corrupt and vnchristian maner of giuing admonition and correction when as men take a preposterous course in censuring and doe not beginne with themselues in the first place but with their brethren as if our Sauiour Christ had said Hypocrite thou hast greater faults then he whom thou iudgest and therefore if thou wilt take a right course in thy correction beginne with thy selfe reforme the great sinnes that be in thy selfe and then shalt thou be fitter and better able to correct and reforme thy brother So that these words containe two parts 1. the remedie of rash iudgement Hypocrite first plucke out the beame out of thine owne eye 2. the fruit hereof which is true wisdome to be able to discerne aright of our neighbours fault and also how it is to be cured in these words and then shalt thou see clearely to cast out the mote out of thy brothers eye Of these in order The remedie against rash iudgement is for a man first to beginne with himselfe reforming first his own offences which because it is here propounded by our Sauiour Christ of set purpose as a speciall remedie against this sinne I will stand a little to shew how a man may cast out the beame out of his owne eye Hereunto foure things are required I. A man must turne the eye of his mind inward and cast his cogitations towards his owne life and conscience that so he may see and know the principall sinnes of his owne heart and life To this purpose serueth the morall law which is as a glasse to let vs see our maine and principall sinnes which be the beames in our eyes here meant And for direction herein I will note out some speciall maine sinnes which be in all men naturally and which euery one must well consider of that will cast this beame out of his owne eye The first common sinne of all men is a guiltinesse in Adams first offence that is his sinne made ours by relation or imputation for his eating the forbidden fruit was no particular or priuate sinne but the sinne of mans nature and euery one sinned in Adam that was to descend of him by ordinarie generation for though we were not borne when Adam sinned yet by his sinne we stand guiltie of eternall death before God The second common sinne is a natural disposition and pronenesse to euery thing that is euill and against Gods law when occasion is offered the sinne against the holy Ghost not excepted for the same corruption and pronenesse to euill which was in them that haue committed this sinne is in all men naturally the difference stands onely in this that all doe not fall into it And this pronenesse to euil is the second head of originall sinne The third common sinne is inward Idolatrie this is a most hainous sinne and may be thus perceiued Euery man by nature takes his heart from the true God and bestowes it on some other thing now looke whereon a man bestowes his heart that thing he makes his God and by nature we loue our selues our sinnes and the world more then God and yeeld obedience to the deuill rather then to the true God The like may be said of our feare ioy delight and of our trust and confidence all which affections we set vpon the deuill the world and iniquitie yea vpon the creature forsaking the creator who is blessed for euer and he that sees not this in himselfe hath idolatrie as yet raigning in his heart The fourth sinne is Hypocrisie which naturally raigneth in all men till grace expell it This hypocrisie stands in this when men are about any good thing they are more carefull to please God in the outward action then with the seruice of the heart Againe they seeke more to please men then God And lastly they rather endeauour to performe the outward duties of the first Table then of the second This is a huge beame in euery mans eie naturally which each one ought to see in himselfe as well as the former The fift sinne is pride not outward in apparell but spirituall inward pride of the heart which stands in this that a man thinkes himselfe out of Christ to haue in him some naturall goodnesse whereby he stands in Gods fauour and hath in himselfe perfect loue and perfect faith this sinne all men will condemne and yet it cleaues fast to euery man by nature The Church of Laodicea Reuel 3. 17. said shee was rich and lacked nothing whereas indeede shee was poore and blinde and naked This inward pride poisons Gods grace in the heart it is a maine sinne and the common cause of rash iudgement The sixt sinne is that particular sinne or sinnes wherewith euery one is most assaulted for howsoeuer the corruption of nature doth infect al men alike yet euery one that is of yeares shall find himselfe more troubled with some sinnes then with others by reason that corruption is in part either remooued or restrained in him Wherefore euery one must enter into his owne heart and there search and see what be those particular sinnes which most of all preuaile against him troubling his heart and causing him to dishonour God These be his beames which keepe Gods grace out of his heart which wee must labour to finde out in our selues II. Duty After we haue some sight of these our maine sins we must in the next place labour to see them in our selues as beames to feele the waight thereof for commonly wee either see them not at all in our selues or if we doe a little perceiue them yet wee see them not in their quantitie as beames but rather like motes or strawes Now wee shall come to see these sinnes in our selues as beames in their iust quantitie first if we compare them with other mens sinnes as with Adams first sin
of our hearts which tende to hurt our brothers life chastitie goods or good name though they nouer come into practise yea though we neuer giue consent of will thereto And these are the restraints of the Law whereto we must conforme our selues if we would enter into life Now follow the restraints of the Gospel which is a part of Gods word touching remission of sinnes and saluation By nature we desire to stand vpright and righteous before God by some good thing in our selues as the rich man in the Gospel he demands of Christ What good thing shall I doe to be saued Againe it is our nature not to looke to be saued by any thing out of our selues if we haue nothing els our good meaning and good hope must saue vs but the Gospel restraines vs of these desires and enioyneth vs to renounce our selues in the matter of saluation and all that is in vs and to depend on a righteousnes out of our selues in the person of Christ which is his obedience and suffering Againe we naturally desire to enioy Gods mercie by sense and feeling but the Gospel restraines vs of this kind of assurance which comes by sense and feeling and enioynes vs to hold and keepe Gods mercie by beleeuing onely both in life and death though we haue no sense thereof at all Further the Gospel renues the law for the manner of louing for the morall law required that we should loue another as we doe our selues but the Gospel requires vs to loue one another as Christ loued vs which is a greater measure of loue then the law required For Christ loued vs more then himselfe for he gaue himselfe for vs and so ought we to loue euen our enemies And thus we see how the Gospel also restraines vs from following our owne naturall desires and inioyneth vs to walke in the narrow way to life whereto as also to the restraints of the law we must applie our selues our thoughts words and deeds so doing we walke in the straite way that leadeth vnto life but if we any way exempt our selues according to our naturall desire from any of these restraints we then walke in the broad way that leadeth to destruction II. Dutie Seeing we must be content with the straitnes of the way we learne that when God layes any crosses or afflictions vpon vs we must not repine or grudge but beare the same with patience and suffer God to breake vs of our owne wills resting contented in our selues with the will of God alone for this is grace and a sure testimonie that we walke in the strait way to life III. Dutie In the case of confession and profession of true religion when we be called thereto we must be content to forsake goods friends yea and life it self rather then by inioying them suffer our selues to be driuen out of this straite way to life my life saith Paul is not deere vnto me so that I may fulfull my course mith ioy Act. 20. 24. Lastly whosoeuer is puffed vp with the pride of his owne heart is too stately to stoope vnder the strait●●●o●e that leadeth to the way of life he therefore that would walke 〈◊〉 this straite way must cast away all pride of heart and humble himselfe for his owne sinnes making himselfe nothing in himselfe Math. 18. 3 4. Except you be conuerted and become as little children who are not proud and hawtie ye cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen But he that humbleth himselfe as this little child the same is the greatest in the kingdome of heauen The third charge giuen vs by our Sauiour Christ concerning the strait way of life is noted by S. Luke that we must striue to enter into it From whence we are taught that our principall care must be aboue all things to come into the way of life euerlasting so much the word striuing imports It is saide that when Iohn first preached the kingdome of heauen suffered violence and the violent tooke it by force that is their was such forwardnes and zeale in them that heard Iohn preach to procure to themselues the kingdome of heauen that they stroue most earnestly to get in David sware vnto the Lord and vowed a vow vnto the mightie God of Iacob that he would not enter into the tabernacle of his house nor come vpon his bedde nor suffer his eyes to sleepe till he had sound a place for Gods Arke where he with the rest of his people might come and pray vnto the Lord and receiue answer from him againe Now looke what zeale was in them that heard Iohn and what care was in David for the outward place of Gods worship the like must be in euery one of vs for the obtaining of reconciliation and life euerlasting Uses I. Hereby many that liue in the Church of God may iustly be reprooued for a number there be that though they may partake of the word and Sacraments yet are most negligent of their saluation vsing no meanes to obtaine reconciliation with God and to come by life euerlasting and this they doe professe that they will leaue all to God relying wholly on his mercie without vsing any meanes on their parts to attaine thereto But these men sinne most grieuously and are their owne deadly enemies for they ought to consider this commandement which condemneth their securitie and straitly inioynes euery one to striue to come into the strait way and to walke therein And because this dutie is so necessarie I will vse some reasons to perswade them hereto I. Consider this when the Philistims were assembled and had Samson in the middest among them to make them sport if they had knowne what he was about to doe when he leaned to the pillars of the house where they sate they would haue preassed to the doores and windowes and there haue striuen to haue got out because of the imminent daunger that was vnto their bodily liues well all those persons that are cold in their profession and careles of religion they haue the wrath of God hanging ouer their heads and while they walke thus dissolutely in the broad way their cōdemnation sleepeth not but makes post hast vpon them if they continue and goe forward in this carelsse course they shall as certenly perish in Gods wrath as the Philistims did by the hand of Samson and therefore as they desire to scape damnation so let them be carefull to cast off this damnable securitie II. Reason If an Angel from heauen should come and assure vs from God that life euerlasting did belong vnto vs oh we would count it a blessed message well looke when we turne from the broad way and walke in this straite way of life we haue as good securitie of our saluation as if an Angel from heauen should certifie vs thereof for true repentance is an infallible note of a child of God to whome belongs the kingdome of heauen The consideration
receiues the seede with ioy and brings forth some fruit but it lasteth not of such it is said Hebr. 10. 29. They tread vnder foote the sonne of God and count the blood of the Testament an vnholy thing wherewith they were sanctified that is according to their profession and perswasion And thus we see what kinde of gifts an hypocrite may haue and yet neuer be saued Vses 1. The consideration whereof must mooue vs to looke vnto our selues that we haue better things in vs then these are for here we see we may goe on to perdition carying the profession of Christ in our mouthes And the rather is this to be considered of vs because many looke to be saued who come short of Simon Magus in knowledge and of Saul Ahab and Iudas in humilitie yea and for faith farre short of the deuill himselfe who is saide to beleeue and tremble but how canst thou looke to be saued that in regard of grace commest short of those which are now condemned Secondly hence we must learne to suspect our selues and call our selues to a reckoning about our faith and obedience and we must not flatter our selues herein for these things before named will not saue vs many haue had faith in some truth for some degrees thereof and also good affections and other gifts as we haue seene who are yet for all this condemned Thirdly seeing there be two sorts of men in the Church that shal be condemned the one whereof haue many worthie gifts this must moue vs not to rest in these things but to labour and striue to haue our hearts rooted and grounded in the loue of God in Christ and to become new creatures in righteousnes and true holinesse and then shall we be as the wise virgins hauing the oyle of grace in the vessells of our hearts which will neuer be quenched till we come into the marriage chamber with our Bridegroome Christ Iesus The second part of the conclusion laid downe by our Sauiour Christ is this That some men professing the name of Christ in the Church of God shall be saued And these persons are here described vnto vs by their effect or action to wit The doing of the will of the Father And because this is an infallible note of them that shall be saued I will briefly shew what it is to doe the Fathers will The Scriptures best expound themselues Iohn 6. 40. This is the will of him that sent me that euery one that hath seene the Sonne and beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life 1. Thess. 4. 3 4 c. This is the will of God euen your sanctification and that you should abstaine from fornication and that euery one should know how to possesse his vessell in holines and honour that no man oppresse or defraud his brother c. These two places of Scripture laide together shew that the doing of the Fathers will stands in three things in faith in repentance and new obedience faith is directly expressed in the place of Iohn and repentance which is a fruite of faith as also new obedience the fruit of them both in the wordes of the Apostle Paul for by Sanctification is meant repentance and new obedience by the duties following For the first in true sauing faith there are three things required Knowledge assent and application By knowledge I meane the right conceiuing of the necessarie Doctrines of true religion especially of those which concerne Christ our Redeemer Assent is when a man knowing this doctrine doth further approoue of the same as holsome doctrine and the truth of God directing vs aright vnto saluation Application is when we conceiue in our hearts a true perswasion of Gods mercie towards vs particularly in the free pardon of all our sinnes and for the saluation of our soules example of this particular applying we haue in the Apostle Paul Gal. 2. 20. who professeth thus Now liue not I but Christ liueth in me and the life that I now liue is by faith in the sonne of God which what that is he sheweth after saying who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me and without this particular application neither knowledge nor assent can saue vs in the 6. of Iohn Christ propounds himselfe vnto vs as the bread of life and water of life now we know that foode vnlesse it be receiued will not nourish the bodie euen so vnlesse we doe by the hand of faith particularly receiue and applie Christ vnto our selues all our knowledge and assent will be as foode vneaten and vndigested It may be said that hypocrits haue knowledge assent and a perswasion of Gods fauour and therefore this is not a sure note of doing the fathers will I answer an hypocrite as Simon Magus may haue true knowledge of Gods word and giue assent thereunto in regard of both these haue true faith in some degree yea he may conceiue a perswasion of Gods mercie in the pardon of his sins though falsely in presumption vpon false grounds and insufficient Now that a man may discerne the truth of his faith and perswasion of Gods mercie from that which is in hypocrisie he is to obserue therein three things the beginning of his faith the fruites and the constancie thereof The beginning of true faith is hearing the word of God preached especially the Gospel the law going before as an occasion or preparing meanes whereby a man comes to see his sinnes and his miserie thereby and thereupon to desire reconciliation with God in the pardon of them and hearing the promises of mercie to desire faith whereby he may imbrace the same labouring against vnbeliefe This though it be not a liuely ●aith yet it is the beginning of true faith and no hypocrite hath the same soundly wrought in him The fruite of true faith is a chaunge of the whole man both in heart and life making the heart contrarie to it selfe in moderating the naturall affections and passions thereof and keeping them in compasse of true obedience and causing a man in euery estate to rest contented with the will of God as I say saith he that beleeueth shal not make hast Thirdly constancy in true faith is knowen by this when a man relyes wholly on God euen then when he feeles no tast of his mercie but hath all tokens of his displeasure Euery man will beleeue when he hath present signes and pledges of Gods louing fauour but true faith beeing the euidence of things hoped for will make a man beleeue aboue hope as Abraham did and beeing the subsisting of things not seene will cause a man to beleeue when he sees no tokens of Gods mercie and indeede he that le ts go the hold of Gods mercie when he is in distresse may assure himselfe he neuer had true faith for the iust shall liue by faith in all estate and will with Iob trust in God though he kill them The second worke wherein consisteth the doing of the Fathers will
how to correct and reforme our foolish conceite we haue of men in the world We thinke of those that haue worldly wisdome to be able to goe beyond others in the greater affaires of this life that they are the onely men deseruing best place of gouernment both in Church and common wealth But we must know that these men though they haue neuer so good heads for the things of this life yet if they faile in the knowledge of this dutie to God or in the practise thereof are here by our Sauiour Christ noted with the brand of follie The rich man in the Gospel had notable forecast for the augmenting of his wealth when his substance increased he could pull downe his barnes and make them greater but yet because he failed in the maine point of his saluation he is noted for a rich foole Luk. 12. 20. And therefore in all sorts and estates of men he is the wisest who hath grace to know and answerably to obey the will of God II. This must excite vs to a carefull endeauour after true obedience to God in all his commandements We all desire to be freed from the reproach of folly among men and we take it for a great disgrace to be counted fooles well if we would auoid this ignominie indeede let vs be willing to heare and carefull to obey the word of Christ both in thought word and deede otherwise let men iudge as they list God will account vs fooles III. Point The practise of this follie which consists in this that he builds his house vpon the sands whereby is signified another thing concerning the soule namely to build our saluation vpon insufficient foundation and that doth euery hearer of Gods word that makes not conscience of obedience for profession is as it were the erecting or rearing of an house and the not performing obedience withall is the setting of this house vpon the sands There be three sorts of men that thus build vpon the sands I. The Papist that will be iustified and saued by Christ but yet withall he must haue works of grace to concurre for the increase of his iustification and for the accomplishment of his saluation Now this is to build vpon the sands when we ioyne workes with Christ in the matter of saluation for though Christ be a sure rocke in himselfe yet if we will fortifie him by our works we fall from this rocke into perdition and our foundation is no better then sand Gal. 5. 2. Behold I Paul say vnto you that if you be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing and v. 4 Ye are fallen from Christ whosoeuer will be iustified by the law in which ●laces the Apostle labours to ouerthrow the opinion of the Galatians learned of the false Apostles which was to ioyne works with Christ in the matter of iustification Rom. 9. 32. Christ became vnto the Iewes a rocke of offence when as they would be saued by the works of the law A second sort that build vpon the sands are the common Protestants by whome I meane such as beare the name of Christians and yet rest themselues contented and satisfied with their ciuill liues thinking that because they abstaine from outward euill and grosse sinnes and doe no man wrong therefore God will hold them excused whereupon they professe religion more for obedience to the lawes of men then for conscience to God But this will not serue the turne these men though they professe Christ outwardly yet in deede they denie him for by their course though it may be they thinke not so they will needes become Sauiours and so Christs vnto themselues which thing they doe when as they stay themselues on their owne ciuill life The Scribes and Pharisies for outward actions were very godly and many of them liued vnblameably but yet Christ saith to his Disciples Math. 5. 20. Except your righteousnes exceede the righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharisies ye cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen 1. Cor. 4. 4. I know nothing by my selfe saith Paul and yet I am not thereby iustified this was a notable thing for a man to walke so vprightly in his calling that his conscience could not accuse him of any offence against God or man and yet this is nothing in the matter of Iustification because euery man therein must answer to God The third sort of those that build vpon the sand is the Protestant that is more forward in religion then the former I meane such as doe heare the word and receiue it with ioy bringing forth some good fruit thereof It had beene hard I must confesse to haue called such men foolish builders vnles Iesus Christ had reuealed them to be such and yet that these doe build on the sand it is plaine in the parable of the seede that fell on stonie ground Luke 8. 13. whereby are resembled such men as heare Gods word and receiue it with ioy and bring forth some fruit but yet in the time of temptation doe fal away for though they professed Christ yet they were not founded on him they wanted sound humilitie and true faith which want in the time of peace they could not espie Uses I. Seeing that men which heare and receiue the word of God with ioy may build on a fandie foundation we must pray to God for this one blessing that he would write his word in our hearts by the finger of his spirit as he writ the law on the tables of stone in Mount Sina for our hearts are deceitfull and will counterfeit grace till the time of triall come now God hath promised this blessing to his Church in the new Testament and therefore we must pray for it that hauing his law written in our hearts we may be the doers of it II. This must mooue vs to looke vnto the deceitfulnes of our hearts for faire shewes will not serue the turne in time of triall and our hearts be deceitfull aboue all things for when a man shall receiue the word with ioy and bring forth some fruit thereof how should he not thinke himselfe to be in a good case and yet in time of triall this will disappoint him and deceiue him Wherefore we must looke that in our profession we carie a true heart vnto God and to our selues and for this cause must see that we be throughly humbled in our selues for our sinnes that we may make God and his feare to be our chiefe treasure for which cause we must remember that we are not our owne but Gods and so must not haue the disposing of our selues but subiect our selues wholly to his will in all things and if thus we make him our treasure we shall be sure to make him our rocke also III. We must not content our selues only to know Christ to be our Sauiour and to imbrace religion in profession but we must labour further to feele in our selues the power of Christs death to mortifie sinn in vs and
z Hos. 1. 9. a Rom. 1● 18. b 1. Cor. 6. 6. c Vers. 7. d Rom. 12. 18 e 2. Chr. 19. 2 vses 1 f Epes 4. 3. Vertues preseruing peace 1. Humilitie g Pro. 15. 10. ● Meekenes Long suffering h Gen. 13. 8. 9 4. Humanitie i 2. Cor. 5. 20 k Isay 59. 16 and 63. 5. l Ier. 5. 7. and 12. 11. m Ezech. 2● 30. 31. n Gen. 18. 32 o Isay 32. 17. p Isay 54 14 q Reu. ● ● r 1. Co● 6. 1. s Heb. ● 14. The 1. vse 2 1 a 1. Cor. ●3 3. 2 b Act. 2. 13. c Act. 26. 24. d Ioh. ● 48. e Luk. 〈◊〉 15. Tertul. apol cap. 7. 16. 3 Gods church must be afdicted Luk. ● 1● The world hates Gods Church and ●hy ● 1 2 Gen. 3. 2. Caueats about flight in persecution f 1. Pet. 4. 15. Luk. 6. ●2 1 2 g Luk 6. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 h 2. Sam. 6. 14. 1● Re●●l ● Rhemis● this verse 1. 2 3 i Luk. 6. 23. k Act. 7. 51. Ministers must seeke to expresse ●he properties of salt l Act. 2. 37. m 1. Cor. 2. ● ● n Iudg. 9. 〈◊〉 Foure kinds of vnsauoury Ministers o Isay 56. 10 1 2 p 2. Tim 2. 1● 1● 3 q Ier. 23. 1● ●7 r ●zek 13. 10. 1● 4 as no● not neuer and ●●terrogations impor●●ng deniall s 2. Sa● ●4 t 〈…〉 44. ●2 13. u Matth. 24. 48 49 50. x Ioh. 5. 35. y 2. Cor. 4. 6. z 2. Cor. ● 3. 4. 1 2 3 a Isay 6. 8. Rhem●sts on this place b 1. Kin. 9 10 2. parts of a Ministers office Vse c Rom. 1● 3● 2. Cor. 1. 1● ●ph 6. 19. Colos. 4 3. 2. Thes. 3. 1. d Z●k 3. 1. e 1. Th. 2. 18. Of good workes A good worke described f Col. 2. 22 23. Deut. 12. 32. Bellarm● de Mona l. 2. c. 7 g Levit. 7. 1● Obiect 1. h Psal. 106. 30 31. Obiect ● i 1. Ki. 18. 40. k Mat. 26. 7. Obiect 3. l vers 12. Obict 4. m Mat. 12. 35. n Rom. 14. 1● o Gal. 5. 14. The vse Tollet instruct sacer lib. 6. cap. 21. Two sorts of good works 1 2 1. Tim. 4. 5. 1 Necessitie of good works Bellar. de Iustifie l. 4. c. 7. 2. The dignitie of good works Bellar. de Iustif. l. 4. ● 15 ●7 I●●●● 4. ● The vse of good works Three fold 1. Concerning God 1 2 3 r Eph. 5. 1 2. 1. Concerning our selues 1 s Iam. 2. 21. 2 t 1. Pet 2. 5 6 3 u Psal. 78 72. 4 x Rom. 3. 16. y Mat. 28. 19 z 1. Cor. 9. 22 The third part of Christs sermon The law in generall Ceremonial Iudiciall Morall Difference between the Law and the Gospel 1 2 3 4 a 2. Co ●3 7. ● b Rom. 10. 5. 5 c Rom. 4. 5. Tonens August Confes. lib. 2. cap. 6. Bellar. de Iustis l. 4. c. 3. 1 Law Gospel differ in precepts 2 3 4 Christ fulfilleth the law 3. waies 1 2 d Gal. 4. 4. 3. The Vse Vse 2. A propertie of the old Testament Concil Trid. sess 4 sect 1. Consent of Law and Gospel e Rom. 3. 3● f ver 23 24. g Rom. 10. ● h Rom. 8. ● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods law is ●perpetuall i Heb. 7. 12 k See Treatise of Cōsc cap. 2. sect 5. Of the chāge of the Sabboth day No creature may dispense with Gods lawe l 1. In Gregorian de cōcess praeb cap. proposuit in Glos. Papa dispensat contra novum vetus Testamentum m Sess. 24. Can. 3. n I. euit 1● No booke of Scripture is lost A terrour to the wicked moouing to repentance Pro. 11. 4. A comfort to the godly A ground of patience p Act 14. 2● The integritie of the Law q Ps. 19. 7. 8. Diligent stadie of the Scripture r Ioh. 5. 39. The meanes of Luthers conuersion Magistrates must be keepers of the Law s Deut. 17. 18 19. What it is to keep the law How some commandements are little Punishment of a false Prophet The meaning The corruptiōs of hypocrites respecting Gods word t Iam. 2. 10. u Psal. 119. 6 ● Corruptió x Tollet Summa Cas. Consc. l. 6. cap. 3. v Lib. de iusta abdicat Heur z Pope Six●us 4. a Calixt ● ●pud grat dist 27. Can. Presbyt Rbem ● Tim. ● sect 5. b Heb. 13. 4. Psal. 119. A ground of obedience Difference between a false prophet and a true Rome no part of Christs Church and why a Sanders treatise of the worship of images Bellar. de Imag Sanct. l. 2. c. 8. b Bellar. ib. cap. 12. c Idem de sanct beat l. ● c. 1● d Concil Trid. sess 5. Can. 5. e Bellar. de Concil author l. ● c. 15. f De Rom. Pontif. lib. 4. c. 15 16. g Rhe. Heb. ● sect 10. Cōcil Trid. sess 22. c. 1 2. c. h See the Popes robberie of Christ at large Foxe Acts Monuments ● 784. edit 1583. i Ha●d answ to Iewel art 4. diuis 19. The office of a faithfull Teacher Doe and teach A comfort to faithfull Ministers in their peoples vntowardnesse k Isay 49. ● l Isay 6. 9. 10 m 2. Cor 2. 15 16. The reward of a faithfull Minister Scope A Scribe 1. Ciuill 2. Ecclesiastlcall Pharise ● Sects 1. Essenes ● Sadduces ● Pharises n Act. 26. 5. o Act. 23. 6. Herodia●s p Luk. 11. 3● Matth. 23. 25. q Luk. 18. 11 12. Matth. 6. 2. 5. 16. r Mark 7. 3. 4. s Phil. 3. 6. Mans naturall conceit of righteousnes Ciuill honestie insufficient for the soule True righteousnesse t 2 Cor. 5. 21 Parts of Christs righteousnesse Obiect 1. Bellar. de Iustific l. 2. c. 7. Answ. Obiect 2. Answ. Obiect 3. Answ. Obiect 4. Answ. Christs righteousnesse is made ours by faith Sanctificatiō goeth with Iustification ● The vse 1 2 a Phil. 3. 8 9. 3 Matth. 16. 26. 4 Psal. 51. 10. Antiquitie no infallible marke of truth How the Pharises expounded the law i Rhem. Test. pre● sect 1● k Hart. conf with Rainol chap. 2. div 2. Mans naturall conceit of keeping the Commandemēts Exposition 1 3. degrees of murther 2 3 Courts among the Iewes 3. P. Fagius in Deut. 16. Gehenna Rhem. o● this place 2. Rules for the expounding of the Law 1 2 a Mark. ● 5. Aduised anger not vnlawfull b Eph. 4. 26. ●ow lawful anger may be discerned 1 2 Anger must be bridled How 1 2 Signes of despite are degrees of murther 1 2 c Gen. 21. 9. ● 3 4 5 Make conscience of gesture d Deut. 25. 7 8 9. Abuses of the tongue 1 e Prov. 12. 18 f Eph. 4. 31. 2 g Eph. 4. 31. 3 4 5 Reuiling tearmes forbidden Grieuous practises here forbidden 1 Vsurie 2 Hoarding vp of corne 3 Fighting 4 Soule-staruing 5 Offending The true vse of this law 1. Search our hearts 2. Iudge our selues Actuall killing When killing is allowed 1 2 a Cen. 22.