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A14185 Lectures upon the vvhole Epistle of St. Paul to the Philippians, deliuered in St. Peters Church in Oxford: by the reuerend and faithfull seruant of Christ Henry Airay ... and now published for the vse of Gods Church by C.P. ... Airay, Henry, 1560?-1616. 1618 (1618) STC 245; ESTC S100494 890,650 1,118

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baptisme one God and Father of vs all for meete it i● that so many as are ioyned together in the vnitie of these be also knit together in one minde and in one iudgment according to Christ Iesus Eph. 4.5 euen as our Apostle vrgeth this same reason to this same purpose else where Secondly because there is not a better remedie against dissensions and schismes the● to be like minded in the Lord as without which it cannot be but that there be dissensions and schismes For what was the cause of the dissensions contentions wherewith the Church of Corinth was troubled Was it not because they were not like minded in the Lord One held of Paul another of Apollos one of Cephas another of Christ one would pray and prophecie bare-headed another with his head couered and when they came vnto the Lord his Supper one was hungry and another was drunken And how can it bee but that there should bee dissensions and contentions when one likes this and another that one would haue this and another that one drawes this way and another that way In a little house yee know if the husband be of one minde and the wife of another the Parents of one minde and the children of another the master of one minde and the seruants of another and euery of them will needs follow their owne minde and fancie their owne way how troubled must needs that house be And therefore our blessed Sauiour being now ready to be offered in that holy praier for all his children praied that we might be all one euen as He and the Father were one Ioh. 17.21 that wee might all be one in the Father and in him euen that we might bee like minded in the Lord. Phil. 3.16 And in the next chapter our Apostle prescribeth it as a remedie against dissensions in the Church to proceede by one rule and to minde one thing If then we will walke as becommeth the Gospell of Christ we are not onely to bee ioyned in one faith and in hope but in all things wee are to be like minded one towards another according to Christ Iesus we are to loue and like affect and fancie will and desire the same things as they are pleasing vnto the Lord being at one with God wee are to be of one minde amongst our selues Here then our aduersaries will aske of vs if this be so necessarie a dutie how happens it that ye are not all like minded What meane the tearmes of Zuinglians Lutheranes Bez. epist 5. Caluinists amongst you How is it that amongst you some are Brownists some Baroists some Puritanes some Protestants How is it that touching ceremonies touching discipline and the like there is such difference amongst you Doth not these things plainely argue that yee are not like minded amongst yourselues For answere whereunto 1. Of them that aske vs these questions I demand of them the like are they all like minded What meane then the tearmes of Thomists Scotists Vide Par. in Iren. cap. 26. Ockamists Canonists and Diuines amongst them How is it that amongst them some are White some Blacke some Gray Friers some Franciscans some Dominicans some Iesuits some barely Priests How is it that not touching ceremonies or discipline alone but touching maine and great points of doctrine there is such difference amongst them Touching the Scriptures doth not Arius Montanus say that the bookes of the old Testament not found in the Hebrue Canon are Apocryphall and doth not Bellarmine denie it Doth not Canus say that the Hebrue text is wholy corrupt by the malice of the Iewes and doth not Bellarmine denie it Doth not Bellarmine himselfe for expounding of the Scriptures sometimes referre vs to the fathers of the Church sometimes to generall Councels sometimes to the Pope and Cardinals sometimes to the Pope himselfe It would be too long to runne through the rest of many points of doctrine where in they dissent among themselues They neede no other to note this vnto the whole world then Bellarmine himselfe who in the beginning of the discussing of euery controuersie betwixt vs and them sheweth how not onely we dissent therein from them but how they dissent amongst themselues First therefore let them plucke out the beame of their owne eye that so they may see clearely the mote which is in our eie le● them cleare the point that they are like minded amongst themselues and then let them tell vs that we are not all of one minde But how doe they shew that wee are not all of one minde If ye be say they then what meane the tearmes of Zuinglians Lutherans Caluinists amongst you But I say vnto them what doe they meane to note vs by such tearmes The memories of these men we honour and reuerence as also we doe other notable lights which haue beene in the Church and are at this day But if we be named after any other name then only the name of Christ Iesus it is through their malice not by our desire Yea but how is it say they that some amongst you are Brownists some Baroists some Puritans some Protestants that touching ceremonies and outward discipline there is such difference amongst you I answere that if there be any Brownists or Baroists amongst vs wee hold them not to be of vs and therefore their distraction from vs ought not to be obiected vnto vs. Now for our difference about ceremonies and outward discipline I wish we were all like minded in these things and it is a fault and blemish of some in our Church that we are not like minded in these things But for the substance of doctrine and grounds of religion wherein is it that we are not like minded If they could no doubt they would taxe vs in the substance as they doe in the accident and as they cannot in the substance so I wish they could not taxe vs in the accident So should the ioy of our Sion be full if we were all like minded both for the substance and for the accident and so many as loue the peace of Sion and wish her prosperitie pray also that this her ioy may be fulfilled Againe this may serue to reproue a fault too too common amongst vs. For if we be ioined together in one faith and in one hope if we agree in the substance of truth we thinke it a small matter to dissent amongest our selues about smaller matters And indeed it is the lesse matter But yet it is a thing which we ought to labour euen to be like minded in the Lord in all things Which our Apostle sufficiently sheweth when in his exhortations vnto vs to be like minded he doth not limit vs vnto these or these things but indefinitely hee would haue vs to be like minded according to Christ Iesus In matters of faith and in matters of ceremonie in matters of doctrine and in matters of discipline in matters of life and in matters of learning in matters of religion and in
matters of ciuill conuersation he would haue vs to be like minded as in the Lord it may be warranted Let vs therefore beware how we sooth vp our selues in dissenting about matters of lesse moment when we agree in matters of greater importance The more like minded we are in the Lord the more is our conuer●ation such as becommeth the Gospell of Christ Let our care ●herefo●e be that both in matters of lesse moment and likewise in matters of greater importance we may be like minded ●n the Lord as becommeth the Gospell of Christ But how may we be like minded in the Lord This our Apostle sheweth in the next words and that is 1. If we haue the same loue i. If we loue the same things in the Lord. 2. If we be of one accord i. If we agree in our wills and desires in the Lord. And 3. if we be of one iudgement i. If we agree in one truth of Christ Iesus For these the particulars are as I take it comprised vnder and meant in that generall so that i● we thus loue and agree in the Lord then are wee like minded in the Lord and our conuersation in a great part is such as becommeth the Gospell of Christ Because I haue stood long vpon the generall I shall the lesse neede to stand vpon these particulars which in effect haue beene handled in the generall Briefly therefore of these as time will giue leaue The 1. thing then which in these particulars I note is that the Apostle would haue them to haue the same loue the same I say in respect of the obiect that they should loue the same things the same Church the same Gospell the same truth euen as we say that they haue the same faith who belieue in the same Christ Hence then I obserue that if we will be like minded and walke as becommeth the Gospell of Christ the● must we loue the same things in the Lord not one one thing and another an other thing but the same things as simply the same things For we may loue the same things and yet be f●● from that loue of the same things which becommeth vs as namely if we loue the same delights of the flesh the same sins or corruptions whatsoeuer but the same things in the Lord and in the loue whereof hee is delighted and well pleased Thus it is commaunded vs euery where in the booke of God that we all loue the same God the same truth the same meanes of our saluation in Christ and generally the same things whatsoeuer they be that belong vnto our peace And the reason of it is plaine For where one loues one thing and another another thing as for example one Christ and another Antichrist when one hateth that which another loueth where euery man loues that which himselfe liketh and scarce two loue the same things what loue can there be nay what distractions must there not needes be nay what desolation are not likely to ensue In the Church of Corinth they loued not the same things but one loued this man another that ma● and what dissentions bred it in that Church In our neighbor kingdome of France they loue not the same things but one sort loue the light of the word another sort loue darkenesse better then light and what bloud hath it shedde in that kingdome Amongst our selues we loue not the same things in the Lord but one sort loue their pleasures another sort their profits another sort their promotions the fewest sort the things that they should loue and what but a iudgement likely to ensue Nay beloued here is the miserie and like to be the ruine of our Land in our Land wee loue not the same things in the Lord but we loue too many of vs that man of sinne and the poysoned cuppes of the fornications of that whore and too few of vs the simplicitie of the truth of Christ Iesus to speake plainely we loue too many of vs the Pope and his marchandize and too few of vs Christ and his truth we speake not the ●anguage of Canaan but halfe in the speach of Ashdod and halfe in the language of Canaan Hereupon it is that Pope and his adherents conceiue courage against vs to subdue vs and our Land and to make vs a prey vnto their teeth Beloued if we will not for the loue of the Lord and because the holy Ghost hath commanded vs yet for the loue of our owne liues and that we be not made a prey vnto our enemies let vs loue the same truth of Christ Iesus and generally the same things in the Lord. Let vs no longer halt betweene God and Baal Christ and Antichrist religion and superstition but with religious hearts let vs loue the same truth the same God the same things in the Lord that some may be ●ike minded according to Christ Iesus The 2. thing which in these particulars I note is that the Apostle would haue the Philippians to be of one accord i. to ●gree in their wils and desires touching euery thing that is good belong it vnto religion or vnto ciuill life and conuersa●ion Whence I obserue another necessarie dutie for vs that we be like minded and walke as becommeth the Gospell of Christ and that is that we agree in our wills and desires in the Lord that vnitie and concord amongst vs bee preserued and maintained To agree in mischiefe we are ready enough neither neede we any to moue vs thereunto For as it is in the Prophet Psal 50. If we see a theefe we consent vnto him and we are partakers with the adulterers we runne with the wicked to doe euill and we easily ioyne hands with the wicked and vngodlie But to bee of one accord in the Lord we are not so easily drawne albeit this be the agreement that the holy Ghost requireth of vs and commendeth vnto vs. Ps 133.1 Behold saith the Prophet how good and ioyfull a thing it is brethren to dwell together in vnity i. to liue together in that concord and good agreement which is acceptable to the Lord. And the more to shew the precious worth of holy agreement amongst the sonnes of God be likeneth it vnto the oyntment prescribed for Aaron which was so sweete that when Aaron was annointed therewith Ex. 30.23 the smell of it was most pleasant vnto all that were by And euen so sweete and pleasant a thing it is to see brethren to be of one accord in the Lord. This is that which is commended in the faithfull in the Acts Act. 4.32 that they were of one heart and of one soule agreeing in their mindes wills desires and affections And where this agreement in the Lord is not there the Lord is not And yet in matters wherein wee differ one from an other how hardly are we brought to bee of one accord in the Lord If we differ in matters of religion either we will not vouchsafe one to talke with an other in them
not which rather to chuse And againe such a loue he did beare towards the Philip. that weighing the great comfort which hee should haue by his death with the great profite which they should haue by his life he knew not what to chuse that which should be to his greater comfort or that which should bee to their greater profite Whence first I obserue the great loue which ought to be in the Pastor towards his people and the great desire which he ought to haue of their profite and comfort Euen in case of his greatest comfort ioyned with their losse and heauinesse it should much perplexe him what to chuse his or their present comfort and good Exo. 32.32 Ye know that of Moses where he prayed the Lord either to pardon the people that had sinned or to raze him out of the booke of life and that of Paul Rom 9.3 where hee wished himselfe to be separated from Christ for his brethren which were his kinsmen according to the flesh They both knew the one that he could not bee razed out of ahe booke of life and the other that hee could not be separated from Christ but therein they shewed abundantly how greatly they loued their people and desired their saluation Neither yet doe I here teach that the Pastor for loue of his people should in case of his saluation wish his owne vtter reiection rather then that his people should not be gained vnto Christ But this I say that euen in case of his saluation and theirs for the loue of his people hee should oftentimes bee perplexed how soone to wish his saluation by his dissolution because howsoeuer his present comfort might be gained by his present dissolution yet their saluation may bee furthered by his longer continuance in the bodie A point which doth not ouermuch perplexe many Pastors in our day for too many such there are as neither caring for their owne saluation nor for their peoples looke onely to fleece them but neuer care else what become of them Which point might be much enlarged if the place were conuenient If the pressing of it might concerne any here I beseech them in the feare of the Lord to thinke farther of it with themselues The second thing which hence I obserue is this that if we be at peace with God and keepe faith and a good conscience whatsoeuer our outward state be we haue such comfort and ioy on euery side that neither we desire to die in respect of the griefes of this life nor yet to liue in respect of any feare of death The example of our Apostle is proofe enough to this purpose He lay in prison for the defence of the gospell wherein none of the brethren assisted him but all forsooke him and many practised much against his constancie and against his life so that his outward state was very hard and such that in respect of the griefes of his life hee might haue desired death and againe in respect of the feare of death hee might haue desired life Yet euen then which way so euer he lookt to life or death such ioy and comfort hee saw in both as that neither the griefes of life made him to wish death nor the feare of death made him to wish life And where was the reason Though his case many waies were hard yet was hee at peace with God through Iesus Christ his Lord he was strong in the faith of Christ Iesus whom God set forth to be a reconciliation through faith in his bloud and he had the testimonie of a good conscience that in all simplicitie and godly purenesse he had his conuersation in the world And therefore ne●ther for the griefe of life nor for the feare of death wished he the one or the other but as either might make more for Gods glory he was indifferent vnto either Farre otherwise it is with many in our day who see no thing but matter of discontentment and discomfort both in life and in death for so it is with many of vs that if either promotion fall not vpon vs according to our desire or if crosses fall vpon vs otherwise then we desire then we grow male contented we take no ioy in our life and sometimes we hasten our owne death And againe many of vs if any way we be summoned vnto death by sicknes by the sword by the pestilence or any other way we so shrugg and shrinke for feare of death that like vnto Nabal if we surmise any danger of death by and by our hearts faint and die within vs 1 Sam. 25.37 and we become like stones No comfort or contentment a great many of vs finde either in death or in life but what through griefe of the one and feare of the other wee are often out of loue with the one and with the other And the reason is plaine for it is because we are not at peace with God nor haue the mysterie of faith in a good conscience We feele no comfort in our God through our reconciliation by Iesus Christ wee want a sound and a liuely faith whereby we should take hold of the promises of God made in Christ Iesus and a bad conscience so troubles vs that all is disquieted within vs. And therefore we finde no comfort or contentment in life or in death but discomfort and discontentment in both Will we then finde comfort and contentment in both whatsoeuer our state outwardly be Let vs labour to be at peace with God let vs trust perfectly in Christ Iesus let vs keep a good conscience in all things and this shall make both life and death comfortable vnto vs whatsoeuer our outward estate be both life and death shall be comfortable vnto vs if we haue peace with God and faith and a good conscience And let this suffice to be obserued from the doubt which the Apostle moueth where he professeth that he knowes not what to chuse life or death And why knew he not what to chuse life or death The reason hereof in the words following is said to be because on both sides there were such reasons on the one side to chuse life and on the other side to chuse death that he was in a wonderfull strait on both sides For saith hee I am greatly in doubt or I am in a wonderfull strait on both sides on the one side desiring to be loosed from the prison of this bodie or to depart out of the earthly house of this tabernacle for so the word may be taken actiuely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or passiuely and to be with Christ where he sitteth at the right hand of God which saith he is best of all viz for me neuerthelesse on the other side knowing that for me to abide in the flesh and to liue longer in the bodie is more needfull for you that yee may enioy the fruit of my ministerie The former reason concerneth himselfe and his owne good the latter concerneth the Philippians and
God is constant in his doings so that looke what he beginneth that he finisheth therefore I am perswaded that hee which hath begun this good worke c. Now it is to be noted that the Apostle saith not I am perswaded that God which hath c. but that he which hath begun wherby he implieth that the beginning of that as also indeed of euery good worke was alone from God for if it had been from any other then they should not haue vnderstood him to haue spoken of God when he said that he Againe it is to be noted that the Apostle saith not I am perswaded that you which haue begun well shall also end well but that he which hath begun c. grounding his perswasion not on their vertue and constancie but on the constant immutabilitie of God which had begun a good worke in them Now the good worke which he had begun in them was their embracing of the gospell whereby they had fellowship in the gospell with other Churches which was indeed a speciall good work and such as they that persecute them in whom God hath begun this good worke make but vaine braggs of their good works I am then saith the Apostle perswaded that he that hath begun this good worke in you of embracing the gospell will performe it .i. will confirme and stablish you in it or will finish and perfit it vntill the day of Iesus Christ when he shall come and change your vile bodies that they may bee fashioned like vnto his glorious body for albeit by the day of Christ might be ment the day wherein the faithfull die in Christ yet by the day of Christ I rather vnderstand here the day of Christ his second comming in the flesh in the last day as also it is vnderstood in the next chapter vers 16. because the Apostle speaketh not onely of them that then were at Philippi ●ut of the Church also which afterward should bee there vntill the second comming of Christ Thus much of the sense of the words The first thing then which here I note is the ground of the Apostles confidence of the Philippians perseuerance His ground is not the Philippians vertue and constancie as if now they were so well grounded stablished in the faith that they could not but hold out keep fast their good profession vnto the end but his ground is the constant immutabilitie of God who where he beginneth to worke a good worke there he maketh an end of it Whence I obserue a notable ground of the perseuerance of all Gods faithfull children in that grace wherein they stand and that is this he that hath begun a good worke in them will performe it and confirme them vnto the end To which purpose also there are many other places in the holy scripture as where it is said of Christ Iesus Ioh. 13.1 that forasmuch as he loued his owne which were in the world vnto the end he loued them Whence we take that commonly receiued saying that whom God loueth once he loueth vnto the end And againe where Christ himselfe saith Ioh. 4.14 Whosoeuer drinketh of the water that I shall giue him shall neuer be more a thirst but the water that I shall giue him shall be in him a well of water springing vp into euerlasting life Here is but once drinke and neuer thirst once sanctified by the spirit and neuer vtterly forsaken of the spirit And againe where Iohn saith 1 Ioh. 3.9 whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not namely vnto death and why because the seede of God remaineth in him the spirit of God hauing once seazed vpon him alwaies abideth in him And againe where our Sauiour saith him that commeth to mee I cast not away once come by faith Ioh. 6.37 no feare of forsaking afterward And the reason is plaine for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Rom. 11.29 He calleth vs by his gospell and giueth vs gifts and graces of his holy spirit not for our owne sakes or for any thing that he seeth or foreseeth in vs for then we might well feare a fall and a change but his gifts are giuen freely by grace according to his good pleasure So that he neuer repenteth of any grace which hee bestoweth vpon vs nor suffereth his mercies to faile from vs for euer but holdeth our soules in life and keepeth vs from the pit of destruction Wherevpon we read that as Dauid hauing had experience of Gods helpe in his deliuerance out of the paw of the Lyon and out of the paw of the Beare afterwards feared not to encounter Goliah but assured himselfe that the Lord that had deliuered him out of the paw of the Lyon 1 Sam. 17.37 and out of the paw of the Beare would also deliuer him out of the hand of that Philistim so the children of God hauing once felt the loue of God in Christ Iesus in their soules and the testimonie of the spirit witnessing vnto their spirits that they were the sonnes of God afterwards feared not the encounters of sinne or Satan but assured themselues that nothing should be able to separate them from the loue of God in Christ Iesus So wee see that our Apostle breaketh out and saith Who shall separate vs from the loue of Christ Rom. 6.35 shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednes or perill or sword Nay I am perswaded that neither death 38. nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come 39. nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall bee able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord And againe I know whom I haue beleeued and I am perswaded that he is able to keepe that which I haue committed vnto him 2 Tim. 1.12 which is my selfe against that day And thus many others of Gods children as vpon other grounds so in assurance of Gods vnchangeable resolution in his doings haue builded a full and assured perswasion of their perseuerance Now we must vnderstand that in perseuerance there be two things which ye may call the parts of it the one is a holy will and desire to perseuere in that grace wherein we stand the other is a reall continuance and continuall persisting in that grace wherein wee stand This reall continuance and continuall persisting in the grace wherein we stand is often in the best of Gods children so abated and diminished that it seemeth vtterly to bee extinguished but that holy will and desire to perseuere the Lord doth neuer suffer vtterly to faile from his children Take for example the holy prophet Dauid and the blessed Apostle Paul did not Dauid in the bitternes of his soule cry Will the Lord absent himselfe for euer Psal 77.7.8.9 88.14.15.16 and will he be no more intreated Is his mercy cleane gone for euer and is his promise come vtterly to an end for euermore Hath
howsoeuer by our owne wills we would auoide bands and troubles for the gospels sake as heauy and greeuous vnto our outward man yet as our wills are sanctified by Gods spirit and conformed vnto Gods will so they are welcome vnto vs and acknowledged by vs to be a grace of God giuen vnto his children for their good and his glory Here then is a notable comfort for all such of Gods children as suffer bands and affliction for Christ his sake and the gospels For what are their bands They are the grace of God and in suffering bands for the defence and confirmation of the Gospell they are partakers with the Saints of their grace And as here they are called the grace of God so elsewhere they are called the marks of the Lord Iesus Gal. 6.17 Now may it not be a great comfort vnto vs to beare in our bodies the marks of the Lord Iesus Yet generally wee auoide bands and affliction nay we murmure at them nay we mocke at them and hold them for simple men that will not rather turne then burne that will not rather renounce the truth then endure such sufferings for the truth But tell me should not he be iudged foolish and ignorant that should auoid the gift of any grace Should he not be thought ridiculous that should murmure or scorne to be marked with the marks of the Lord Iesus And how then shall wee thinke of him that refuseth or murmureth at bands and afflictions for Christ his sake or that maketh a mocke at them which doe suffer afflictions for Christ his sake which are the grace of God and the marks of the Lord Iesus Beloued we know not what bands and afflictions bide vs for the Gospels sake Surely for our sinnes we haue deserued to be deliuered vp into the will of our enemies that they that hate vs euen with a perfit hatred should rule ouer vs. And if it shall please the Lord herein to deale with vs according to our deseruings yet let this be our comfort that in our bands for the defence and confirmation of the Gospell we are partakers with many of the Saints of their grace and that the life of Iesus is made manifest as by most plaine tokens in our bodies 2 Cor. 4.10 when we beare about in our bodies the dying of the Lord Iesus And in the meane time let vs giue all diligence that the word of Christ may dwell in vs plenteously that the effectuall power thereof may be manifested in vs through our patient and constant suffering for Christ his sake and the Gospels if the will of the Lord be such Now followeth the Apostles earnest protestation of his loue towards the Philippians which was the third thing which I noted in this second branch of the Apostles exordium in these words For God is my record c. that so they might the rather both assure themselues that such was his perswasion of them as hath beene said and likewise the more willingly hearken vnto the things that hee wrote vnto them In the words I note a vehement protestation and the thing whereof he maketh such protestation His protestation is a calling of God to witnes that hee lieth not in this that now speaketh in these words For God is my record The thing whereof he maketh such protestation is of his hearty loue of them saying God is my record how I long after you all .i. with what a longing desire to see you I loue you all from the very heart roote 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for so the word here vsed is very significantly translated not after the flesh but in Iesus Christ of whom yee are loued and from whom this my loue proceedeth Where first I note the Apostles vehement protestation not of a vaine and idle toy but of his loue towards the Philippians not for any light or foolish matter but for their great good that they might hearken to the word of their saluation more gladly Whence I obserue that a protestation or an oath to witnes a truth when the glory of God or the good of our neighbour doth require it may lawfully be made LECTVRE VIII PHILIP 1. Ve●se 8. For God is my record how I long after you all from the very heart root in Iesus Christ 9. And this I pray that your loue may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement NOw then the first thing which here I note is the Apostles vehement protestation not concerning any triuiall and ordinarie matter but touching his sincere and feruent loue of the Philippians nor to small or no purpose but to winne their attention vnto the word of their saluation more gladly For he protesteth sweareth an oath being nothing else but a calling of God to witnesse of that wee speake for their assurance to whom wee sweare which whole definition is in this protestation hee protesteth sayeth and sweareth vnto the Philipp that he longeth after them all and greatly loueth them all from the very heart roote in Iesus Christ that so being perswaded of his loue they might giue the better heed vnto the things he wrote Whence I obserue that a protestation or an oath by God when the glory of God or the good of our neighbour doth require it may very lawfully bee made And this is proued first from the nature and definition of an oath For what is an oath It is as euen now we heard an holy and religious calling of God to witnes of the truth of that we speake for their assurance vnto whom we speake as here the Apostle for the Philippians assurance of his sincere loue of them calleth God to witnes how he longeth after them all how greatly he loueth them all from the very heart root in Iesus Christ And what herein is vnbeseeming a Christian or which may not lawfully be done Secondly it is proued from the expresse commaundement of God for thus hath God commanded saying Deut. 6 13. Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God and serue him and shalt sweare by his name In which words as to feare the Lord God and to serue him so to sweare by his name is commanded Thirdly it is proued from the end of an oath for the end of an oath is to decide debates to make an end of strifes as the Apostle sheweth saying Heb. 6.16 that an oath for confirmation is among men an end of all strife And as Moses in a plaine case sheweth saying If a man deliuer to his neighbor to keepe Asse or Oxe Exo. 22.10.11 or Sheepe or any beast and it die or be hurt or taken away by enemies and no man see it an oath of the Lord shall bee betweene them twaine that hee hath not put his hand vnto his neighbours good and the owner thereof shall take the oath and he shall not make it good And this being the end of an oath why may it not lawfully be made Fourthly it is proued from the practise
earthly Canaan was a type 2. This may teach vs to giue all diligence vnto the reading and hearing and meditating of the holy scriptures that so we may abound more and more in all knowledge and vnderstanding Very lamentable it is beloued to see and consider how many hundreths nay thousands in this cleare light of the gospell when the scriptures are or may be read and knowne of vs all yet are as ignorant in the scriptures and of the things that belong to their saluation as when they sate in the darknes of Aegypt when they could see no light of the scriptures by reason of the strange language We haue had many Ezraes that haue read in the booke of the law of God distinctly giuen the sense thereof that the rest might vnderstand many Ministers of Christ Iesus that haue read the law the gospell vnto vs euery Sabbath day in our Churches many Preachers of the Gospel that haue plainly opened the scriptures vnto vs whereby we might be made wise vnto saluation euen 40 yeares long And haue not the scriptures beene read vnto the greatest number of vs in vaine Notwithstanding so much preaching and teaching of the holy word of life are we not still ignorant and haue still neede to be taught the very beginnings of Christ the very principles of religion Haue we not many masters of Israel that thinke themselues great men like vnto Nicodemus that know not those things which the very babes in Christs schoole ought to know Haue we not many leaders of the people and masters of families vnto whose shame it may be spoken that they haue not the knowledge of God Haue we not many that if they be asked are not able to giue an account of their faith nor know truth from error religion from superstition The thing is too true and too lamentable Beloued hath not the Lord our God said vnto vs all Deut. 6.6 These words which I command thee this day shall be in thy heart and thou shalt rehearse them continually vnto thy childrem and shalt talke of them c. and shall we not hearken to his voice to doe according to all he hath commanded vs Hath not our blessed Sauiour told vs Joh. 17.3 that this is eternall life to know God to be the onely very God and him whom he hath sent Iesus Christ and shall not we labour to grow in the knowledge of God and of our Lord Iesus Christ Hath not the holy Prophet said that blessed is the man whose delight is in the law of the Lord Psal 1.2 and which meditateth therein day and night and shall wee not giue all diligence to the reading and hearing and meditating of the holy scriptures Nay let me I beseech you exhort you as that godly Father did his people Chrys Prouide you Bibles which are the medicine of your soules if you will nothing else at least get the new Testament In the Bible there yee haue the whole will of your heauenly father there yee shall see what legacies he hath bequeathed vnto you and what duties he requireth of you If the father of our bodies had bequeathed vs a great legacie by his will it would not be much needfull to wish vs get our Fathers will and to looke diligently into it to see if not what he requireth of vs yet what he bequeatheth to vs neither would wee sticke at the cost for the search of it if we knew where to haue it And shall the father of our soules leaue vs his Will and by his Will bequeath vs euerlasting life and shall we not labour to get his Will Shall a matter of ten shillings stay vs from the hauing of his Will shall not we search it and looke diligently into it Let vs beloued get the booke of Gods law into our hand and let it not depart out of our mouthes Jos 1.8 but let vs meditate therein day and night that we may obserue and doe according to all that is written therein as the Lord exhorted Iosua Let vs likewise flocke as Doues vnto the windowes vnto the places where the word is preached and when we haue heard let vs meditate and conferre of that we haue heard If the children of our bodies had gone to the schoole and in the space of seauen yeares had profited nothing what would we say vnto them or thinke of them Hardly enough no doubt And what shall we then thinke of our selues that in the space of fortie yeares are scarce yet past our A. B. C. and haue not yet attained vnto any reasonable knowledge Let vs hereafter recompence our former negligence with greater diligence and let vs slacke no holy meanes whereby we may growe into all holy knowledge Let vs labour to be rich in all knowledge and leauing the doctrine of the beginning of Christ let vs be led forward vnto perfection Let vs henceforth be no more children wauering and carried about with euerie winde of doctrine but let vs grow vp vnto a perfect man and vnto the measure of the age of the fulnesse of Christ that we may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the bredth and length and depth and height and to know the loue of Christ which passeth all knowledge that we may be filled with all fulnesse of God By reading by hearing by meditating by praying let your care bee to abound more and more in knowledge The next thing which here I note is that the Apostle prayeth for the Philippians that they may abound more and more in all iudgement in all iudgement that is in sound iudgement that hauing their wits exercised through long custome they may discerne both good and euill So that as hee would haue them to abound more and more in knowledge so farther he would haue them also to abound more and more in a sound and feeling experience of spirituall things in themselues that they might spiritually feele in their hearts and soules that which they knew out of the word Whence I obserue a further continuall care necessarie for all Christians and that is that they may abound daily more and more not in knowledge onely of Gods will out of his word but in sound iudgement also through a feeling experience in themselues of such spirituall things as they know out of the word that what they know out of the word they may feele the truth of it by experience in themselues This care our Apostle sheweth that hee had where hee saith that the thing which he esteemed was to know Christ Phil. 3.10 and the vertue of his resurrection Hee knew the doctrine of Christ his resurrection and hee knew this to be the vertue of Christ his resurrection that by it the Saints of God rise from the death of sinne vnto the life of righteousnesse But his desire farther was that he might feele in himselfe and know by his owne experience the vertue of Christ his resurrection by the death of sinne and the
Christ and that so much strife is among them 〈◊〉 as the chiefe man and maintainer of that way may either be forced to desist from preaching of Christ and so bring a shame on my selfe or else may be put to death But I know that this which they practise against me shall through your prayer and by the helpe of Gods spirit and according to my certaine expectation hope turne to my saluation euen to the saluation of my soule because of my confident constancie in the defence of the Gospell whether it bee by life or by death and to the saluation and deliuerance of my bodie out of prison so that neither shall I bee put to shame for leauing the defence of the Gospell nor put to death for standing in the defence of the Gospell This I take to be the order and meaning of these words in generall Now it wi●● be needfull that yet a little more perticularly we sift and examine the meaning of them For I know c. These words ye see containe in them a reason of something that went before Before the Apostle had said 〈◊〉 Christ be preached whether it be vnder a pretence or sincerely I therein ioy yea and will ioy Will ioy why F●● I know that this c. I know how euen by the reuelatiō of the spirit and by warrant out of the word What did he know I know saith he that this this what euen that this chaine wherewith I am bound and this practise of some brethre● in the Lord to bring me to shame by leauing the defence o● the gospell or to bring me to death if I stand in the defence of the Gospell I know saith he that this shall turne to my saluation Now what is meant by saluation all doe not agree Some thinke hee meaneth thereby his bodily deliuerance out of prison as the word is often vsed for a bodily deliuerance Act. 7.25 as where it is said of Moses That he supposed that be brethren would haue vnderstood that God by his hand would haue giuen thē deliuerance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as here it is said and ofte● elsewhere Others thinke hee meaneth the saluation of h●● soule in the day of Christ as the word is most of all vsed ●●t I thinke the Apostle may be vnderstoode to speake of ●●th whether we consider the opposition betweene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●●d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the matter of the Philippians prayer For ●●at was the affliction which they supposed to adde vnto 〈◊〉 bands Euen this that he as the chiefe by the threats 〈◊〉 Nero should be forced to leaue the defence of the gospel ●his shame and the hazard of his soule or if hee should ●●nd in the defence of the Gospell should be deliuered vn●● death Now in opposition to this he saith that whatsoe●●r they supposed hee knoweth that this euen this their ●●actise against his constancie or his life should turne to his ●●luation euen the saluation of his soule through his con●●ncie in the defence of the Gospell so that in nothing hee ●ould be ashamed c. And likewise to the saluation and ●eliuerance of his body out of prison quite otherwise then ●●ey had intended And againe the Philippians prayer no ●oubt was for both these euen that hee might abide con●●ant so that in nothing he might be ashamed and that hee ●ight be deliuered from the mouth of the Lyon And for ●hese causes I vnderstand saluation in this place both of ●oule and bodie in such sort as hath beene said I know that ●his shall turne to my saluation How by what meanes first ●hrough their prayer praying for his constancie and deli●arance Secondly By the helpe of the spirit of Iesus Christ which should be giuen vnto his seruant to helpe him euery way against all practises And thirdly Rom. 8.19 according to his fer●ent desire for so the word is translated or according to his ●arnest expectation and hope whereof he should surely not ●e deceaued I know saith hee that by these meanes this ●hall turne to my saluation How to his saluation by these meanes that is in that thus it should come to passe that in nothing pertaining to the defence of the Gospell he should bee ashamed but that with all confidence and liberty to speake in the defence thereof as alwaies so now where hee strengtheneth his hope by his experience Christ should be magnified and honoured in his body whether hee should liue by preaching the gospell or should die by sealing it with his bloud Wherevpon he signifieth his owne indifferency to either life or death and the conueniencie of his life in respect of them and then he tells them how this shall turne to his saluation in the deliuerance of his bodie out of prison And thus much for the opening of the meaning of these words in particular which as yee see is somewhat intricate and obscure Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our farther vse and instruction The first thing which I note is in the maine proposition in that the Apostle saith that he knoweth that this casting of him into prison and this practising against him being in prison shall turne to his saluation not onely of his bodie by deliuerance out of prison but of his soule because of his constancie in the defence of the Gospell Whence I obserue what fruit the godly may assure themselues shall follow vpon their sufferings and wrongs euen their saluation in the day of Christ Iesus For though the Apostle might know this some other way then now the godly can euen by the reuelation of the spirit as no doubt he did know of his deliuerance out of prison yet may the godly thus farre goe with the Apostle and say I know that my sufferings and wrongs shall turne to my saluation in the day of Christ Iesus But how shall they know this or assure themselues of this Euen because the Holy Ghost hath said Rom. 8.28 that all things worke together for the best vnto them that loue God In which place amongst many other arguments for the comfort of the godly against afflictions and troubles he vseth this drawne from the prouidence of God who so wisely ordereth and disposeth all things that eue● the crosses and afflictions of his children worke for the good of his children euen their best good their saluation Be it then tribulation persecution famine nakednes sword imprisonment or what crosse soeuer that doe presse vs we know that all things euen all crosses and calamities worke together for the best vnto them that loue God so that if we loue God we neede not shrinke at all these or any such like but certainely know that they shall turne to our salua●ion More plaine it may be to this purpose will be thought ●hat of the Apostle where he saith Rom. 8.7 2 Tim 2.12 that if we suffer with Christ we shall also be glorified with Christ and againe if
namely if Christ be vnto vs both in life and in death aduantage Secondly that the vantage whereof we are to make reckoning in our life is that Christ Iesus may bee glorified by our life And thirdly that the vantage whereof we are to make reckoning in our death is that Christ Iesus may be glorified by our death Now vpon this occasion that hee had said that hee was very indifferent vnto either life or death because Christ was vnto him both in life and in death aduantage the Apostle maketh a little digression and disputeth the poynt whether were better for him to choose life or death And first in this verse hee mooueth the doubt and answereth it in these words And whether c. Which words I know are diuersly read but the words bearing well this reading I follow it as both best opening the Apostles meaning and best sorting with that which followeth Now when hee saith Whether to liue in the flesh ye must vnderstand that to liue in the flesh and to liue after the flesh are much different For to liue after the flesh is to follow the filthie lusts of the flesh and to liue in the flesh is onely to liue in this fraile bodie The doubt then is whether to liue in the bodie were profitable for him and what to choose life or death were best for him And the answere is that he knoweth not what to choose life or death Being in his case in prison a man would haue thought this choise would not haue been hard Yet he being in prison saw such comfort in death and such ioy in life that hee knew not which rather to choose And such loue did hee beare towards the Philippians that weighing the great comfort which hee should haue by his death with the great profite which they should haue by his life he knew not what to choose Whence I obserue first the great loue which ought to bee in the Pastor towards his people and the great desire which he ought to haue of their profite and comfort Euen in case of his greatest comfort ioyned with their losse and heauines it should much perplexe him what to choose his or their present comfort Yee know that of Moses Exo. 32.32 where he prayed the Lord either to pardon his people their sinne or to raze him out of the booke of life And that of Paul Rom. 9.3 where hee wished himselfe to bee separated from Christ for his brethren which were his kinsmen according to the flesh They both knew the one that hee could not be razed out of the Booke of life and the other that hee could not bee seperated from Christ onely therein they shewed how greatly Gods glorie in the peoples good And true is that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 13.5 that Loue seekes not her owne things but the things of others Whence yet I doe not inferre that the Pastor for loue of his people should in case of his saluation wish his own vtter rection rather then that his people should not be gained vnto Christ But this I say that euen in case of his and their saluation for the loue of his people hee is to be perplexed how soone to wish his saluation by his dissolution because howsoeuer his present comfort should bee gained by his present dissolution yet their saluation should be furthered by his longer continuance in the bodie A poynt which doth not much perplexe many Pastors For too many such there are as neither caring for their own saluation nor their peoples looke onely to fleece them but neuer care what become of them A point which might be much enlarged but not so fitly in this place If the vrging of it might concerne any here I beseech them in the feare of God to thinke further of it with themselues The second thing which here I obserue is this that if we bee at peace with God and keepe faith and a good conscience whatsoeuer our outward state be we haue such comfort and ioy on euery hand that neither we desire to die in respect of the griefes of this life nor to liue in respect of any feare of death The example of our Apostle is proofe enough to this purpose He lay in prison and of the brethren none assisted him but all forsooke him and many practised much against his constancie and against his life so that his outward state was very hard and such that in respect of the griefes of his life he might haue desired death and againe in respect of the feare of death hee might haue desired life Yet euen then such ioy and comfort he found on euery side which way so euer hee lookt to life or death that hee knew not whether of them to choose And where was the reason Though his case were hard yet hee was at peace with God and had faith and a good conscience Farre otherwise it is with many in our daie who see nothing but matter of discontentment and discomfort both in life and in death If either promotion fall not vpon them according to their desire or if crosses fall vpon them otherwise then they desire then they grow male-contented they care not to liue and yet they ioy not in death Such are they that minde earthly things but minde not the things of God Let vs seeke to be at peace with God let vs trust perfectly in Christ Iesus let vs keepe a good conscience in all things and this shall make both life and death comfortable vnto vs. LECTVRE XVIII PHILIP I. Verse 21. And whether to liue in the flesh were profitable for me and what to choose I know not NOw vpon this occasion that hee had said that he was verie indifferent vnto either life or death because Christ was vnto him both in life and in death aduantage The Apostle maketh a little digression and disputeth the poynt whether were better for him to choose life or death And first in this verse hee mooueth the doubt and also answereth it in these words And whether c. And secondly hee bringeth reasons for either part first that in respect of himselfe it were better for him to choose death verse 23. Secondly that in respect of the Philippians it were better that hee chose life verse 24. So that the strait was hard whether for his owne greater good he were now to chuse death or for their greater good he were to chuse longer life The words where the doubt is moued are diuersly read but they bearing well this reading I follow it as both best opening the Apostles meaning and best sorting with that which fol●oweth The doubt is whether to liue in the flesh or in the bodie were profitable for him and what to chuse life or death but was in a wonderfull strait betweene the two Being in his case in prison a man would haue thought this choise would not haue beene hard Yet he being in prison saw such comfort in death and such ioy in life that he knew
heart holy Dauid here that vpright and iust man holy Iob here that chosen vessell to beare Christ his name before the Gentiles our holy Apostle shall haue their faults and their falls Here Abraham and Lot will bee sometimes at variance here Paul and Barnabas will sometimes not be of one accord here Paul and Peter will sometimes not be of one iudgement here we shall haue our falls we shall haue our imperfections whatsoeuer we be Only in the Citie which is aboue shall all teares be wiped from our eyes all wanes supplied all imperfections perfited all sinne cease and all enemies be vtterly destroyed only there our knowledge our iudgment our loue our peace our ioy shall be perfit How should we not long then to remoue out of the bodie and to dwell with the Lord And yet to earthly minded are we many of vs that here we could bee content to pitch our tabernacles and neuer to remoue hence euen as if we loued darknes better then light and had rather dwell in the valley of teares then in the valley of blessing where we are but strangers then at home in our owne Citie Let vs beloued remember that here the best of vs haue our blemishes and that when it is it the best with vs we are but in the way vnto that which is best of all for vs that the best reformed Church on earth is not thorowly reformed and that the most sanctified man on earth is but onely in part sanctified And let vs make this benefit hereof daily more and more to grow out of loue with this life and in loue with that life in which there shall be no more death daily more and more to weyne our selues from the vanities of Ierusalem which is on earth where many things will be done through contention and vaine-glory and to haue our conuersation in heauen where we shall all be like minded hauing the same minde and being of one accord and of one iudgement And let this suffice to be obserued in generall from the matter of the Apostles exhortation whereby ye see the state euen of the best reformed Churches and so of the most holy men and what vse is to be made of the imperfections which follow the most perfit in this life Now let vs come vnto the seuerall points whereunto the Apostle exhorteth the Philippians and in them vs. The first thing wherevnto hee exhorteth them is in generall that they be like minded or like affectioned as the same phrase is translated else where Ro. 12.16 hauing their affections likings and desires set on the same things for in this as in the generall are comprised as I take it those particulars which follow in this verse So that when he exhorteth them to be like minded it is in generall that their affections be set on the same things louing the same things according in desire of the same things and according in iudgment of the same things but all in the Lord. Whence I obserue a necessarie dutie in all Christians called to the knowledge of God by the Gospell of Christ Iesus which is that they be like minded in the Lord setting their affections likings and desires on the same things in the Lord. A duty which our Apostle prescribeth almost as oft as any other duty 1 Cor. 1.10 In the beginning of his former to the Corinthians he beseecheth them by the name of our Lord Iesus Christ that they all speake one thing and that they be knit together in one minde and in one iudgement Where yee see he beseecheth them and in them vs euen by the name of our Lord Iesus Christ to be all of one minde and because disagreeing in words engendreth dissension of minde therefore that wee may the rather be all of one minde hee beseecheth vs all to speake one thing In the end likewise of his latter to the Corinthians 2 Cor. 13.11 he commendeth this dutie vnto them saying Finally brethren fare yee well be perfect be of good comfort be of one minde as thinking this dutie so necessarie that both in the beginning and in the end and at all times they were to be put in minde of it In this place likewise yee see how roundly and deeply he adiureth and chargeth the Philippians and in them vs to be ●ike minded saying If there be any consolation in Christ c. fulfill my ioy that yee be like minded And in the last chapter saue one to the Romanes Rom. 15.5 he maketh a most earnest praier vnto God for them that they might be like minded one towards another saying Now the God of patience and consolation giue you that yee ●e like minded one towards another according to Christ Iesus that ●ee may with one minde and with one mouth praise God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ Where first the Apostle im●lieth that if they be like minded God must giue them this to ●e like minded and therefore hee praieth vnto God to giue ●hem this grace that they be like minded one towards another Secondly he noteth how he would haue both them and vs ●o bee like minded one towards another viz according to Christ Iesus to consent in that truth which hee hath taught and in that loue which hee hath commanded for otherwise if we be like minded but not according to Christ Iesus not in the Lord what great thing doe we doe Are not the Iewes like minded among themselues the Turkes amongst themselues the aduersaries of the truth amongst themselues Were not the Priests Scribes and Pharisies of one minde when they condemned the innocent bloud and the whole multitude of the Iewes when they cried all at once saying Crucifie him crucifie him away with him and deliuer vnto vs Barrabas And are not they all of one minde that cast their heads together with one consent and consult to worke wickednesse in what kinde soeuer it be And to consent and be like minded in these and the like things is it not rather a conspiracie then an vnitie We a●e not then onely to be like minded but to bee like minded in the Lord to be like minded according to Christ Iesus And lastly the Apostle sheweth to what end he would haue vs to be like minded namely that with one minde and one mouth we may praise God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ not onely with one minde but also with one mouth nor onely with one mouth but also with one minde Thi● then yee see it to be a dutie so necessarie in vs and in all Christians that wee be like minded in the Lord that the Apostle still commendeth it vnto vs beseeching vs to be like minded charging and adiuring vs to be like minded and praying vnto God that we be like minded But why is it so necessarie a dutie that we be like minded i● the Lord Many reasons might be alleaged but I will one● mention two As first because we haue one Lord one faith one
that being God hee for our ●●kes became also man how then ought wee to submit our ●elues one vnto another in all humblenesse and meeknesse of ●inde The like motiue or reason is vsed by our Sauiour Christ himselfe where he saith vnto the people that were with ●im Learne of me that I am meeke and lowly in heart Math. 11. ●0 Ioh. 13. ●5 as also ●here he washeth his Disciples feet to teach them humility and ●hen saith vnto them I haue giuen you an example that yee should ●n euen as I haue done to you What should I go forward to ●uote Scriptures to this purpose Nothing more vsuall in the ●criptures then by the example of Christ to stirre vp vnto our ●euerall duties and what ought to be more effectuall with vs ●o perswade vs when the souldier sees his Captaine fight ●here needes no further spurre to set him into the batteil Christ is our Lord and we his seruants if hee our Lord and Master haue giuen vs such an example and haue said vnto vs ●oe as ye haue me for example should there neede any further ●purre vnto vs for this duty If he haue so humbled himselfe ●or vs that being God he became also man if hee haue had ●uch compassion on vs that when wee were enemies vnto him ●e reconciled vs vnto God if he so loued vs that he laid down his life for vs how ought we to be humble and lowly minded one towards another how ought wee to haue compassion vpon our poore brethren especially in this heauy time how ●ought we to loue one another with brotherly loue Christ my brethren is our head If we be members of his bodie we must draw our life and our spirituall nourishment from him we must in all things grow vp into him which is our head Fare be it therefore from vs to disdaine our brethren to wrong them to oppresse them to contemne them to swell in pride against them Nay rather let vs vse one another with all kindnesse with all gentlenesse with all meeknesse Let vs submit our selues one vnto another let vs be like minded one toward another in Christ Iesus Himselfe exhorteth vs hereunto he hath giuen vs an ensample Let the same minde c. Thirdly I note the humilitie of Christ whose example the Apostle here exhorteth vs to follow His humilitie is here described by the Apostle first by his incarnation in that being God he vouchsafed to take flesh of the blessed Virgin and to become man like vnto vs in all things sinne only excepted secondly by the worke of our redemption in that being man he yet againe further humbled himselfe and became obedient to the death euen the most shamefull death of the Crosse In the description of Christ his incarnation are very many things most worthy our obseruation touching both the natures in Christ his God head and his Manhood I can only point at some of the heads of those obseruations which hence were to bee made and more fully handled First for the Godhead of Christ in that it is here said that hee was in the forme of God it is thereby proued that Christ was true God for in the selfe same manner and phrase of speech that here he is said to be in the forme of God in the same is it afterward said that hee tooke on him the forme of a seruant Where by the forme of a seruant the Apostle expresseth his Manhead as here by the forme of God is expressed his Godhead Neither indeed can any be in the forme of God who is not true God And as in this place he is said to be in the forme of God whereby is meant that he is God so in other places plainly and directly heads said to be God Rom. 9.5 as in the Epistle to the Romans Of when are the Fathers and of whom concerning the flesh Christ came wh● is God ouer all blessed for euer and to the Colossians In Christ dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily Coloss 29. and in the Acts Take heede c. Act. 20.28 to feed the Church of God which he hath purc●●sed with his owne bloud The phrase of speech in this place is somewhat different but it is all one as if he had thus said who ●eing God Secondly I note touching the Godhead of ●hrist that he was equall in all things vnto God the Father the Apostle plainly sheweth where it followeth that hee ●ought it no robberie to be equall with God for in that he saith thought it no robberie hee plainly sheweth that it was his ●ght and no iniurie at all vnto the Godhead for him that ●as God to be equall vnto God If then it be Christ his right ●●d no iniurie at all to the Godhead that Christ be equall vn●● God the Father then Christ as touching his Godhead is ●quall vnto God the Father howsoeuer touching his Man●ood he be inferiour to the Father And this be noted tou●●ing the diuine nature of Christ Now touching Christ his Manhood First in that it is here ●id that he made himselfe of no reputation or as the word signi●●eth that he emptied himselfe and of all brought himselfe vnto ●othing I note Christ his Manhood not forcibly to haue ●eene imposed vpon him but himselfe voluntarily to haue ●●ken on him the forme of a seruant When therefore it is said ●●at God sent his Sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh and againe ●●at God so loued the world that he gaue his only be gotten Sonne c. where God the Father is said to haue sent and to haue gi●en his Sonne and the Sonne is said to be sent and to be gi●en wee are to vnderstand the speeches thus that God the ●●ther sent his Sonne and God the Sonne was sent of the ●●ther yet God the Father and God the Sonne being not ●wo Gods but one God distinguished into two persons it is ●ghtly said that God the Father sent the Sonne and that the ●onne being one God with the Father made himselfe of no ●●putation voluntarily descending from his Maiestie to bee ●artaker of our miserie for if himselfe had not thus humbled ●imselfe who could haue imposed this base estate vpon him ●●mselfe being God blessed for euer The Angels which kept ●ot their first estate they were throwne downe lower than ●he earth euen to bee reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder ●arknesse vnto the iudgement of the great day But Christ ●hen he was equall vnto God in fulnesse of power glory ma●●estie knowledge abased himselfe and of almightie made himselfe full of infirmitie of immortall made himselfe mortall Secondly in that it is said hee tooke on him the forme of a seruant I note that Christ so became man as that hee ceased not to be God For it is not said that the Godhead was changed into the Manhood but that Christ being God tooke 〈◊〉 him the forme of a seruant so vniting the God head and Manhood in the vnitie of person
saued vs Tit. 3.5 ●e by the works of righteousnesse which we had done but accordi●g to his mercy immediatly after he speaketh thus vnto Titus 8. is I will that thou shouldest affirme that they which haue beleeued God might be carefull to shew forth good works By which pla●es it doth appeare that howsoeuer our good works are not ●e cause or the meanes of our saluation yet they are that way ●hich leadeth vnto saluation yea and that way wherein if ●e doe not walke we cannot be saued So saith our Sauiour ●imselfe Euery branch that beareth not fruit in me Joh. 15.2 the Father ta●eth away and it is cast into the fire and burnt He doth not say ●uery plant that is not planted in me albeit that likewise be ●ost true but euery branch that beareth not fruit in mee What fruit Euen the fruit of the spirit which is in all goodnes Eph. 5.9 righteousnes truth as the Apostle speaketh Euery branch ●hat beareth not such fruit in me he is taken away and cast into the fire and burnt To like purpose is that of the Apostle where he saith Heb. 12.14 Follow peace with all men and holinesses without the which no man shall see the Lord. And to the like purpose now many places might and ordinarily are by vs produced in our Sermons Here then first I beseech you learne to beware of such a traduce vs and the doctrine which wee preach as if by preaching of faith wee had banished good workes and as if wee were so farre from exhorting men to good workes in our Sermons that either we mention them not or condemne the● for such there are that are not ashamed to say that now we are afraid to handle the doctrine of good workes that we have preached saluation by faith so long that wee haue banished good workes out of the Country that either wee dare 〈◊〉 speake of good workes or if we doe yet so coldly that as good neuer a whit as so barely and coldly But beware of such for hauing their foolish hearts seduced to beleeue lies they speake euill of the way of truth which they know not and of ● whom either they will not at all heare or with such enchanted eares that they peruert whatsoeuer things are spoken vnto their owne destruction Such if they would they might heare and know that these are false suggestions wherein they slander vs and the truth which wee teach For we preach both faith and workes and in all places wee exhort all men that they abound in euery good worke But why is it that the● thus traduce vs and our doctrine Forsooth because we teach that our workes are no causes of our saluation And are wee then thus to be traduced because wee tell you the truth Wee tell you that which the Scriptures haue taught vs and wee bring with vs the euidence thereof to confirme that which we teach Wee dare not challenge any part of our saluation a● due vnto our workes because all the honour thereof belongeth vnto the Lord whose free gift it is according to his mercie But the way wherein God hath ordained vs to walke vnto saluation we say is holinesse of life without which no man shall see the Lord. This the Scriptures teach vs this we teach you beware therefore of such deceiuers as tell you otherwise Againe if good workes be the way which God hath ordai●● vs to walke in and if without holinesse of life no man ● I see the Lord then walke with God as Henoch did in ho●●esse and righeousnesse You beleeue in Christ Iesus shew ●th the fruits of your faith your workes must testifie your ●●h both vnto your selues and vnto vs for it is a vaine and ●ead faith where no fruits of holinesse of life doe follow ●ree is knowne by his fruit a good tree bringeth forth good it and a corrupt tree bringeth forth euill fruit As many ●re lead by the spirit of God they walke after the spirit and ●y bring forth the fruits of the spirit Beloued God hath ●t a time wherein to trie the faith and religion of such as hee ●h enabled to doe some good vnto his children Now hee ●●keth that wee should shew forth the fruits of faith and the ●ens of religion by shewing mercy and compassion vpon 〈◊〉 poore afflicted and distressed brethren Pure religion Iam. 1.27 and defiled before God euen the Father is this that wee visit the fa●lesse and widowes in their aduersitie and that wee keepe our ●es vnspotted of the world If therefore there be any faith if ●re be any religion if there be any bowels of compassion in ●● withdraw not your morsels from the poore nor your re●●fe from the needie According to that where withall God ●●h blessed you be it small or great bee ready to doe good ●●d to distribute laying vp for your selues a good foundation heauen Blessed is he whom the Ioines of the poore in their ●uersitie blesseth Generally this I exhort that yee studie to ●e soberly righteously and godly in this present world and glorifie God by the holinesse of your conuersation for ●ow this that whom God hath iustified forgiuing their sins ●d iniquities them also hath hee sanctified that they serue ●n in holinesse and in righteousnesse and whom hee hath ●actified them also and them only he glorifieth in the king ●●me of his Sonne As he then which hath called you is holy be yee holy in all manner of conuersation Hereby yee ●ll know that yee are the sonnes of God if yee walke as hee ●●th walked and keepe his commandements And this is a ●e witnesse that yee belong not vnto him if yee delight in righteousnesse and defile your selues with the vncleane conuersation of the wicked and vngodly Giue therefore a diligence to make you calling and election sure sure I say vnto your selues and to your owne soules by walking in such holinesse of life as God in Christ Iesus hath ordained your walke in And thus much of that holy course and race of godlinesse wherein the Apostle exhorteth vs to runne when he saith Conficite salutem c. Make an end c. What it is whereunto the Apostle in these words doth exhort vs in part we haue already heal by the way wherein hee prescribeth vs to walke The 〈◊〉 which leadeth vnto saluation being holinesse of life the Apostle exhorteth vs to walke in this way to runne in this 〈◊〉 Now it is to be obserued that the Apostle doth not only prescribe the way which leadeth vnto saluation and exhort v●●● walke and runne in that way but he exhorteth vs to runne 〈◊〉 in the same race vnto the end and fully to finish our course● doing such good workes as God hath ordained that we she●● walke in Whence wee are to learne this lesson that we 〈◊〉 not onely beginne in the spirit and grow forward like●●●● from grace vnto grace but wee must perseuere and conti●●● vnto the end
in comming to him to Rome in bringing with him that releefe which the Philippians sent vnto him and in ministring vnto him in prison such things as he wanted A seruice well called the worke of Christ because commanded by Christ and performed to the seruant of Christ for Christ his sake Againe in that the Apostle in the end of the verse saith to fulfill that seruice c. the Apostle his meaning is not thereby to note any fault in the Philippians as if they had beene any way wanting vnto him but therein he commendeth Epaphroditus his faithfull and painefull performance of that seruice which they if they had beene present with him would haue done but now could not because of their farre distance from him The whole reason is indeed drawne from the commendation of Epaphroditus His commendation is that he took such paines with him and for him that it had been like to haue cost him his life and that hee made not so much reckoning of his life as he did of discharging that trust that was reposed in him and performing that seruice which the Philippians themselues would haue done if they had beene present This I say is the commendation which the Apostle here giueth him and for this cause he willeth them to receiue him in the Lord with gladnesse Whence I gather this generall obseruation that it is a very commendable thing in the seruants of Christ not to regard their liues vnto the death but to hazard their liues for the worke of Christ which either Christ hath commanded them to doe in their place whatsoeuer or which for Christ his sake they are to performe vnto any seruant of Christ What thing more commendable or memorable in Esther Ester 3.13 then that when the Kings decree was past against the Iewes to roote out to kill and to destroy all the Iewes 5.1 both yong and old children and women in one day she put her life in present danger to deliuer her people For it was a matter of death by the law for one not called to come into the inner court vnto the King 4.11 Yet for this worke of God the deliuerance of his Church from the deuouring sword shee put her life in most eminent danger and went in into the King 16 which was not according to the law We see it likewise registred vnto the view of all posteritie touching the Apostles that their liues were not deare vnto them so that they might fulfill their course with ioy that they were ready not to be bound onely but also to die for the name of the Lord Iesus that howsoeuer they were threatned yet they would not cease to preach in the name of Christ Iesus And whiles this Epistle shall be read Epaphroditus his praise shall not die for hazarding his life for the worke of Christ in releeuing Paul his necessitie when he was in prison and ministring vnto him such things as he wanted Yea and what if we should not onely hazard our liues but giue vp our liues for any worke of Christ Haue we not a sure promise He that loseth his life for my sake saith our Sauiour shall saue it Matth. 10 39. 1 Reg. 17. If therefore Eliah or any of the poore children of God be an hungred want to satisfie their hunger though we haue but an handfull of meale in a barrell and a litle oyle in a cruse for our selues and for our familie and though we haue no more hope of sustenance but euen to die when that is spent and eaten yet let vs with that good widow of Sarepta straine and hazard our selues that they may be somewhat releeued If Paul or any godly brother in Christ bee in prison though our watchings and care and paines and trauaile with them and for them bee not without manifest danger of our health and happily of our life yet let vs with godly Epaphroditus by all these hazard our selues and our liues for their good and such things as may be needfull for them If any brother be sicke though it be with some danger let vs visit him and comfort him If for the worke of our ministerie we be so pressed that in our selues we receiue the sentence of death as our holy Apostle was often pressed yet let vs not shrinke but let vs declare vnto the people all the words of the Lord and speake of all the iudgements of his mouth In a word in whatsoeuer worke of Christ for I doe not now speake of this worke alone here mentioned but in whatsoeuer worke of Christ which he hath commanded vs in our places to doe or which being done for his sake hee accounteth as done for himselfe let vs be bold in the Lord let not our liues bee dearer vnto vs then the performance of his will but let vs hazard our liues for the worke of Christ But here the doubt may be made and the question demanded whether we are alwaies to hazard our liues for the worke of Christ whether in some worke of Christ we may not sometimes withdraw our selues from danger and prouide for our health for our liues As for example whether we may not forbeare the visiting of the sick when the sicknes is pestilentiall and contagious whether in such times we may not prouide for our health for our liues The question I know is hard and the doubt not easily answered neither will I take vpon me the decision of the doubt only I shew my opinion and willingly submit it to the iudgement of others Touching priuate men therefore I meane such as whose place and office doth not necessarily require a more publike care then of themselues of their own family they may in my iudgment spare themselues and not hazard their health or their liues but for the time withdraw themselues from the danger especially if such reasonable order be taken for the sicke as that by comming vnto them they may more endanger themselues others then doe them good My reasons are these 1. By the law of Moses we see that those that were troubled with any contagious disease as with the leprosie Leu. 13 46. they were commanded to dwell apart and to haue their habitation without the campe and in places where they came to cry I am vncleane I am vncleane Which doth plainely shew that all were not to come vnto them but both they were to giue warning vnto others and others were to take warning by them lest happily they should be infected by them if they should come vnto them Againe howsoeuer in such cases we could be content to hazard our selues and our owne liues yet may we and we ought to haue care ouer our owne houshold and ouer that charge that is committed to vs. 1 Tim. 5.8 For if there be any saith the Apostle that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold be denieth the faith and is worse then an infidell We must then prouide for
and good workes in that day that in the iudgement he might receiue reward according to them but he would not haue them to be iudged by them in that day to offer them in that day vnto Christ as a due desert of his Masters ioy to receiue his sentence for them in that day Hauing then before seene that we cannot be accounted righteous before God both by faith and by workes bo●h by the righteousnesse of Christ and by our owne righteousnes hence I obserue that our owne righteousnesse by workes is no part of that righteousnesse whereby we are accounted righteous before God For if it were how should we desire with the Apostle to be found in the day of Christ not hauing our owne righteousnesse An argument indeed impregnable yet doe those euill workers make a shew of answere hereunto Rhemenses in hunc locum They say the Apostle in this place and elsewhere calleth that a mans owne iustice which he chalengeth by the worke● of the law or nature without the grace of Christ and therefore nothing can hence be concluded against that righteousnesse which is by workes after grace But what a shift this is rather then an answere was shewed the last day For that by mans own righteousnesse he meaneth that righteousnes which man chalengeth by such workes as he spake of imediately before themselues will gran● and that he spake before as of workes done before faith and without the grace of Christ vers 7. so of all workes generally whatsoeuer vers 8. I shewed both by the generall tearme there vsed which must needes comprehend more then he had spoken of before and likewise by that he saith that he doth now at this present iudge all things to bee dung which cannot otherwise be meant then of his present iudgement touching such workes as now presently he did Againe why should not the Apostle by mans owne righteousnesse meane that whole righteousnesse which is in man by workes whensoeuer done whether before or after faith whether without or with the grace of Christ Doth that righteousnesse which is in vs by workes done after faith by grace ●ny way present vs righteous before God so that we should desire to be found hauing it to be iudged by it Shall any thing that is vncleane enter into his presence Or can any man bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse is there any man that being assisted and preuented and followed with the grace of Gods spirit doth good and sinneth not Is it not so with the best man that liues vnder the cope of heauen that if the Lord would dispute with him he could not answere him one thing of a thousand Is mans best righteousnesse better then Esay confesseth of his and the rest of the Churches is it not as filthy clouts Surely all his workes whatsoeuer done in the body of his flesh are so poluted with the contagion of the ●esh as that they are not able to endure the seuerity of Gods ●udgement but that he had neede with the Prophet Dauid to ●ift vp his voice and to pray Psa 143.2 Enter not into iudgement with thy ●eruant O Lord for in thy sight shall no man liuing be iustified Is ●hen euen that righteousnesse which is in vs by workes done by grace after faith so full of imperfections so full of vnclean●esse by reason of the contagion of our flesh as that we should desire not to be iudged by it why then should not the Apostle by mans owne righteousnesse in this place meane that righteousnesse which is in vs by workes done by grace after ●aith The circumstance of the place prouing it and nothing being able to be brought aginst it it is to bee concluded that by man● owne righteousnesse is here meant euen that righteousnesse which is by workes after grace See then that wee ●hould desi●e with the Apostle to bee found in the day of Christ not hauing our owne righteousnesse and seeing all our owne righteousnesse by any workes whatsoeuer is so full of ●mperfection and vncleanesse by reason of the contagion of our flesh as that we should desire not to be iudged by it hence I take it it is cleare that our owne righteousnes is no part of that righteousnes whereby we are accounted righteous before God This may teach vs how to desire to be found in that day hauing or not hauing our owne righteousnesse which is by our workes We are to desire to be found in that day filled with the fruites of righteousnesse and abounding in euery good worke full of holinesse towards God and righteousnes towards men because then we shall receiue the things which are donein our body according to that we haue done whether it be good or euill The wicked they that forgate God and would not walke in his waies howsoeuer they crie vnto the mountaines fall on vs and vnto the rockes couer vs and hide vs from the presence of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lambe yet shall the hand of the Lord find them out and as he shall finde them he shall iudge them he shall recompence them according to the wickednesse of their waies and they shall be turned into hell But if then we shall be found to haue hated iniquity to haue followed after peace holinesse and righteousnesse to haue had our conuersation honest c. The most righteous Iudge both of heauen and earth he will passe by our sinnes and iniquities and in his great mercy towards vs he will reward vs according to the good that we haue done not respecting the merit of our workes but because he is mercifull and keepeth promise for euer nor suffering our labour to be in vaine in the Lord. We are therefore to desire to be found in that day not without holinesse of life or good-worke● but hauing such righteousnes of our owne that in the iudgement the Lord in mercie may reward vs according to it and not according to our sinnes But we are to desire to be found in that day not hauing our owne righteousnes to be iudged by it or to receiue reward for it or according to the merit and worth of it For albeit it shal be rewarded yet shall not the reward be giuen for it and albeit the reward shall be giuen according to it yet not for the merit of the worke but onely for his promise and mercies sake who accepteth that graciously which is his and pardoneth that graciously which is amisse For all that euer we do or all that euer we suffer is not worthy of that glory which shal be shewed vnto vs. But with the Prophet Dauid we must turne our voice vnto the Lord and say euen of our best righteousnesse If thou O Lord straightly marke what is amisse euen in the best thing that we doe O Lord who shall stand The thing which I note is that the Apostle would bee found in that last and great day hauing that righteousnesse which is
him that he will haue vs to ●ake speede to come vnto him and he will inlarge our hearts ●hat we may runne the way of his commandements and so ●ome vnto him Such is the marke set at the end of our Chri●tian race not a dead marke which helpeth the runner no●hing in his race but drawing vs vnto himselfe that where he 〈◊〉 there we may be also This was the marke that the Apostle ●anne at and this is the marke that we should runne at to ●now him perfitly and the vertue of his resurrection c ●hereby we might attaine to the resurrection c. Here then we learne why it is that so few runne as they ought in the Christian race The most part of men haue an other marke that they runne at Some runne at riches some at honors some at pleasures some at ease some at skill and knowledge in the things that are done vnder the Sunne and on these things are their eyes set and their mindes wholly bent But the least summe make Christ Iesus the marke whereat they runne to know him is the thing whereon the fewest mindes are bent He is farthest out of light and farthest out of minde with the most men Not running then a● the right marke how can we but runne amisse Beloued yee see what the marke is whereat we should ayme in the whole course of our life Let the children of this world pricke at their seuerall markes as they list but let vs follow hard towards the marke Christ Iesus He is that marke whereat if we be Christians we should ayme in our whole race Let our eyes be still set and our mindes alwaies bent vpon him If wee walke towards him he will direct our goings in his paths 〈◊〉 for his owne names sake A better marke we cannot haue and another marke we ought not to haue There is no running if we runne as we ought but to him neither any running to him but by him Let vs therefore by him runne vnto him and in all things let vs still looke vnto him The race is well runne when at the races end we come to such a marke and well may we runne through cold and nakednes through stripes and imprisonments and all kinde of difficulties to come to such a marke whereunto we can no sooner come but straight we haue the prize for which we runne euen glory and immortalitie in the highest heauens Let vs therefore so runne that we may obtaine let vs runne till we come vnto the marke that we may obtaine the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus And let this suffice to be spoken touching the second qualitie of runners The third qualitie of runners whereby the Apostle makes proofe of his incessant running in his Christian race is this that runners keeping in minde the price for which they runne make haste vnto the marke for the price that they may obtaine In this also the Apostle professeth that hee matched euen the best runners in the last words when he saith that 〈◊〉 followed hard toward the marke for the price of c. In which words by the price is signified that inheritance immortall and vndefiled which is reserued in heauen for vs and it is called ●e price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus because it 〈◊〉 the glory of Gods children whereunto God from on high ●●th called vs in Christ Iesus As therefore the Apostle before ●rofessed that he ranne and lookt not backe to that which was ●ehinde and that he ranne and gaue not ouer to follow that ●hereon his eyes were alwaies set so now he professeth that ●e ranne and hastned his running for to obtaine the price of ●●ory and immortalitie in the heauens whereunto hee was ●●lled by God in Christ Iesus All sufficient proofes that the ●postle came apace as he that desired to obtaine Hence then I obserue that life euerlasting and glory in the ●eauens is the price and reward of our holy and constant run●ing in our Christian race Which our Sauiour signifieth ●hen vnto them that endure hatred persecution and contu●elies for his sake he saith Reioyce and be glad Mat. 5.12 for great is your ●●ward in heauen Our Apostle likewise sheweth the same ●here he saith Rom. 2.6 7. that God will reward euery man according to his ●orkes to them which by continuance in well-doing seeke glory ●●d honor and immortalitie eternall life Col. 3.23.24 And to the Colossians ●●so where speaking vnto seruants he saith whatsoeuer yee doe ●e it heartily as to the Lord knowing that of the Lord yee shall re●●iue the reward of the inheritance All which places and many ●ther which might be produced to the like purpose doe ●lainely shew that eternall life is the reward of our holy ●alking with God in such good workes as he hath ordeined ●●at we should walke in them A notable price to runne for ●nd a notable incouragement vnto the runner For can we ●unne for a better price then for eternall life in the heauens Or can a better reward for our incouragement in our Chri●●ian race be giuen vs than eternall life in the heauens How ●hould not this make vs to prouoke one another vnto loue ●nd good workes How should not this make vs runne the ●ace of a holy life breaking through all impediments and ●ot intermitting our course vnto the end But here we must know that though we run for this prize ●et this prize is not giuen vs for the merit of our running and ●hough this prize be the reward of our running yet doe wee not merit this reward for our running Rom. 9.16 For it is not in him th● willeth nor in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercie The Lord in mercy hath set downe this prize of our running and in the like mercie giues it vnto him that runnes out vnto the marke but not for the merit of his running This one place at this time may serue for a full proofe of this point The Apostle ranne for the prize but it was for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus He doth not say for the prize that was due vnto him albeit it was due vnto him though not for his merits sake yet for the promise sake made in mercie but he ranne for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus Which in that it was the prize of the high calling of God it is plaine that it is giuen in mercie by him that hath called vs in mercie and likewise in that it is the prize c. in Christ Iesus it is plaine that it is giuen in merc●● through Christ Iesus in whom onely we are called vnto glorie and life euerlasting It is ordained then that wee should runne for this prize for no man obtaineth it but he that runneth for it and therefore the Apostle ranne for it but it is the prize of our high calling to be the sonnes of God giuen vs
we are come like vnto good souldiers which turne not aside but march on along after the prescript rule of their Generall so let vs walke without turning aside to the right-had or to the left-hand after that one rule let vs beleeue and liue as we are directed by ●●●t one rule of his word vnder whose banner we doe fight 〈◊〉 vs so farre as we are come walke as Christ Iesus hath taught 〈◊〉 in his holy word The same phrase of speech is vsed to the ●●e purpose where it is said Gal. 6.16 as many as walke according to this ●●e i. As many as make this word of truth this Gospell of ●●rist Iesus now preached and taught vnto you the rule and ●●are of their faith life from which they will not swarue ●●turne aside to the right-hand or to the left peace shall bee ●●on them and mercy and vpon the Israell of God Let vs ●●●ceede by one rule and let vs minde one thing i. Let there bee 〈◊〉 dissentions amongst vs but let vs be knit together in one ●●nde and in one iudgement being of like affection one to●●rds another in Christ Iesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For so the phrase of speech ●●re vsed signifieth to be of one minde of one iudgement of ●●e affection one towards another so that nothing bee done ●●rough contention amongst vs as it plainely appeareth both 〈◊〉 the 2. verse of the 2. Chapter of this Epistle and by diuers ●●her places where the same phrase is vsed The summe of all ●●s if the Apostle had thus said God will in his good time ●●eale his truth vnto them that bee as yet otherwise minded ●●an I am But in the meane time till God reueale it let vs 〈◊〉 such grounds of the truth as already we agree vpon pro●●ede both in faith and in life as we are directed by that one ●●le of his word vnder whose banner we fight not turning a●●●e from it to the right-hand or to the left-hand and let vs 〈◊〉 knit together in one minde and in one iudgement so that ●●thing be done through contention among vs. This I take 〈◊〉 be the simple and plaine meaning of these words Now let 〈◊〉 see what profitable notes we may gather hence for our own ●●e and instruction The 1. thing which hence I note is touching the cause of ●issensions in the Church of God whence it is that there are ●●ch dissensions and diuisions in the Church of God whereby ●●e vnity and peace of the Church is rent a sunder and bro●en Not to search farther into the causes thereof than this ●●e scripture giueth occasion out of this Scripture I note 3. ●auses of the dissensions in the Church of God The 1. is because we doe not with patience expect and waite till God 〈◊〉 his good time reueale vnto vs that truth which as yet is hid 〈◊〉 from our eyes For such oftentimes is our inconsiderate hea●●●dinesse that if we seeme vnto our selues to apprehend this 〈◊〉 that point of doctrine through the suggestions and persuasions of this or that man by and by we aduenture the defence and maintenance thereof though I●●l haue preached though the Church of God haue beleeued otherwise We looke 〈◊〉 what it is that the Church hath receiued but what it is that 〈◊〉 haue apprehended or if we doe rather we striue to bring the Church to that which we haue apprehended than wee 〈◊〉 yeeld vnto that which the Church indeed hath receiued 〈◊〉 howsoeuer that we teach may hazard the peace and quite of the Church yet will we not stay our selues and expect●● God may farther reueale his holy truth vnto vs. And 〈◊〉 hath beene heretofore and is at this day one great cause of diuision and dissension in the Church I might instance i● diuers heresies wherewith the Church hath beene troubled and which haue in part beene caused because the auth●● thereof would not waite till God should reueale the truth vn●● them If that auncient father Tertullian had waited till God had reuealed vnto him that truth which afterward he did ●●ueale vnto him he had not beene so tainted with the errors o● the Millenaries and the Montanists as he was neither ha● troubled the Church therewith so much as hee did And i● some at this day that trouble the peace of the Church with their strange doctrine would both pray vnto the Lord for the reuelation of his truth and patiently waite till the Lord should reueale his truth vnto them we should be more free from disensions than we are The 2. cause of the dissensions in the Church of God 〈◊〉 because we do not proceede by one rule in that whereun●● we are come For such oftentimes is our vntowardlinesse that in the generall grounds of Christian religion where●● we doe agree we will be slinging out of ranke and not proceed by that one rule of his word vnder whose banner we do● fight In the primitiue Church all the Churches of Chr●●● were come vnto that that they beleeued the resurrection of the dead and that they acknowledged iustification by the ●●ghteousnesse of Christ yet then they proceeded not by one ●●le in these things but some denied the resurrection of the ●ead of which sort were Hymeneus and Philetus 2 Tim. 2.17 and some ●ught that vnto Christ there must be ioyned the workes of ●●e Law to be made righteous before God Whereupon fol●●wed then great dissensions in the Church In the reformed Churches of Christ at this day generally we are come to this ●●at we professe that predestination vnto life is not by fore●●ght of faith or workes but by the alone good pleasure of al●ightie God that the children of God cannot finally fall ●om faith or grace that the children of God may and ought 〈◊〉 assure themselues of their saluation that it is not in man to ●ue himselfe if he will that Christ hath freed vs from the of hell by suffering the paines of hell for vs. And if ●e shall not proceede by one rule in these things but one ●●ape out from another what else can follow but great dissensions in our Churches And is it not a cause of many dissensi●ns betwixt the Romish Church and vs that we doe not both ●roceede by one rule in that whereunto we are come Wee ●re come to this that we agree in the Articles of the Christian ●aith that we both beleeue in the Trinitie that wee both be●eeue one Catholique and Apostolique Church that we both ●cknowledge one Baptisme for the remission of sinnes that ●e both looke for the resurrection of the dead and the life ●f the world to come And yet what dissensions betwixt vs ●nd them euen about these thing● And why because they do not proceed by one rule of the holy word of life with vs but ●hey flie out into Traditions Councels Fathers Decretals Constitutions and Legends and keepe no order with vs in marching along after the prescript rule of our Generall Christ ●esus
distinctly read them out of that booke The third booke which is called the booke of life euen of eternall life is the euerlasting fore-knowledge of God whereby he specially and particularly knew from euerlasting who are his and by a speciall care preserueth them vnto life as certainely as if their names were registred in a booke to that purpose And of this the holy Ghost maketh often mention in holy Scripture Exod 32.32 As in Exodus where Moses saith vnto God If thou wilt not pardon their sinne I pray thee race me out of the booke which thou hast written In the Psalme where Dauid in great anguish of spirit prayeth thus against his persecuters Psal 69.28 Let them be put out of the booke of life neyther let them be written with the righteous In Esay where the Prophet saith Esay 4.3 that he that shal remaine in Ierusalem shal be called holie euen euery one that is written vnto life in Ierusalem In Ezechiel EZech. 13.9 Dan 1 2●1 where it is called the writing of the house of Israel In Daniel where it is said At that time shall thy people be deliuered euery one that shall be found written in the booke In Luke where our Sauiour bids his Disciples reioyce Luke 10.20 because their names are written in heauen In the Apocalyps where it is said He that ouercommeth Apocal. 3.5 shall be clothed in white aray and I will not put out his name out of the booke of life And againe Whosoeuer was not found written in the booke of life 20.15 was cast into the lake of fire And againe Apocal. 21.27 where it is said There shall enter into this Citie no vncleane thing neyther whosoeuer worketh abomination or lies but they which are written in the Lambes booke of life Thus ye see mention of three books attributed vnto God in the Scriptures one of prouidence another of iudgement and a third of life which here our Apostle speaketh of Secondly we are to know that no materiall booke is properly attributed vnto God as though he did write any thing in a booke but onely by a borrowed speech borrowed from the manner or them that for their better remembrance of things write them in a booke so to imply that God knowes all things and that they are alwayes had in remembrance before him as if they were in a book And therefore we defined his booke of prouidence to be his fore-knowledge of all things before euer they were whereby he knew them as wel from euerlasting as if they had bene written in a booke from euerlasting His booke of iudgement likewise we defined to be his knowledge of all our thoughts words and workes which in the last iudgement he shall present vnto euery mans conscience so clearely as if they were all read out of a booke and according to which he shall then iudge vs. And lastly the booke of life we defined to be the euerlasting fore-knowledge of God whereby he specially and particularly knew who are his and by a speciall and peculiar care preserueth them vnto life as certainly as if their names were billed in a booke and registred to be had in remembrance before him for euer So that mention of such bookes in the Scripture is not made in respect of God as if he vsed or needed to vse any booke to any purpose but for vs and for our vnderstanding that we by the manner which we see vsed amongst men may the better conceiue and know that God knew all things from euerlasting that in the last day all things shall be naked in his sight and that he knoweth all his by head so that he hath a speciall care ouer them Those things thus noted for the better vnderstanding of the phrase and manner of speech here vsed by the Apostle let vs now come a little nearer to the opening of the meaning of these words The speech of the Apostle is touching his fellow-labourers which had laboured with him in the Ministerie when the Church was first planted at Philippi Of whom he saith that their names were in the booke of life Whereby he meaneth that they were of the number of those whom God had chosen in Christ Iesus vnto euerlasting life so that their life was as surely sealed vp with God as if he had taken their particular names and written them in a book to remember them and to giue vnto them that which he had purposed from euerlasting This being the meaning it remaineth now that we see what obseruation we may gather hence for our further vse But first a doubt is to be answered touching some contradiction which may seeme to be betweene this of our Apostle here and that of the same Apostle where it is sayd that the Lord onely knoweth who are his 2. Tim. 2.19 For if the Lord alone know who are his as there it is then how doth he here say of his fellow-labourers that their names were in the booke of life so plainly setting it downe as if he knew it Whereunto I answer That albeit the Apostle in the place vnto Timothie onely say The Lord knoweth who are his Iohn 13.15 as also our Sauiour himselfe in another place saith I know whom I haue chosen yet in the truth of the thing it is true that he alone knoweth who are his and that he alone knoweth whom he hath chosen as that place in the Apocalyps makes more plaine where it is thus said Apocal. 2.17 To him that ouercommeth will I giue to eate of the Manna that is hid and will giue him a white stone and in the stone a new name written which no man knoweth sauing he that receiueth it For hereby it is signified that no person liuing knoweth who are renewed in Christ Iesus vnto righteousnes and true holines but God onely and the spirit of man which is in man Thus then we say that God alone knoweth who are his and whom he hath chosen absolutely and of himselfe so that no man can absolutely and of himselfe say of another that he is the chosen of God that his name is in the booke of life Yet may the Lord and sometimes doth he reueale vnto his children that which he alone absolutely and of himselfe knoweth as the reuelations vnto Abraham Moses and the Prophets manifestly proue And whether in that abundance of reuelations which the Lord shewed vnto our Apostle 2. Cor. 12.7 and whereof he speaketh somewhere he had likewise some reuelation touching the election of some and the reprobation of others I cannot affirme Many are of opinion that the election of some and the reprobation of others were reuealed by God vnto him And so it may be that the Lord who alone absolutely and by himselfe knew whether the names of those his fellow-laborers were written in the booke of life reuealed by his holy Spirit vnto our Apostle that their names were written in the booke of life But I rather thinke
For when we haue done all that we can Christ hath taught vs to say that we are vnprofitable seruants Luc. 17.10 yea when we haue done all things that are commanded vs. And whatsoeuer afflictions we suffer in this present life Rom. 8.18 Paul hath taught vs that they are not worthy of the glory that shall be shewed vnto vs. The merit that we can talke of for our workes Dan. 9.9 Iob. 9.20 is to say with Daniel To vs belongeth open shame and with Iob If I would iustifie my selfe by standing vpon the merit of my workes my owne mouth shall condemne me Iam. 3.2 Esa 64.6 for in many things we sinne all and all our righteousnes euen the very best of it is as filthy clouts How is saluation then a reward due vnto our workes Euen for the promise sake made vnto vs in Christ Iesus For therefore do we claime saluation as due vnto our workes euen because God hath made that promise in Christ Iesus vnto our workes But what was the cause of his promise was it our workes seene or foreseene that they would be of such desert No but of his owne free grace and mercie towards vs according to the good purpose of his will he promised it vnto vs. And therefore the Apostle saith Eph. 2 8. Tit. 3.5 By grace are ye saued through faith not of works lest any man should boast himselfe And againe Not by the workes of righteousnesse which we haue done but according to his mercie he saued vs. Thus we teach and euery where we exhort all men vnto good works and holinesse of life without which no man shall see the Lord. First then here beloued learne you to skill what manner of men they be that charge vs that we preach onely faith but either mention not or else condemne good works Ye see we tell you out of our Apostle here that they shall further your reckoning in the day of Christ Iesus And therefore we beseech you to abound in euery good worke vntill the day of Christ Iesus and know them to be of their father the diuell that say that either we mention not or condemne good works vnto our people Secondly hence learne to acknowledge and to magnifie the great mercy of our God who accepteth that for a furtherance of our reckoning which if he should deale with vs in iustice could stand for no payment for how I pray you stands it We should bring gold for payment into the Lords treasurie But we bring lead and he accepteth it for gold Our best righteousnesse is full of vnrighteousnesse yet doth he accept it What for our righteousnesse sake No for his mercies sake and imputeth vnto vs the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus Let our mouthes therefore alwaies be filled with his praises for such his louing mercies towards vs. Thirdly let this be a sufficient motiue vnto you to stirre you vp vnto charitablenesse and vnto euery good worke for seeing such is their acceptance with God that in that great account they shall further your reckoning what should stay you but that ye should labour to be fulfilled with the fruits of righteousnesse Time cuts me off that I cannot speake of these things and I shall the next time be farther occasioned to speake of them by occasion of the text LECTVRE XCIII PHILIP 4. Verse 18. Now I haue receiued all and am well filled I was euen filled after that I had receiued of Epaphroditus c. NOw I haue receiued all Hitherto we haue heard the Apostles thankfulnesse vnto the Philippians for their care for him and his commendation of them for their liberalitie towards him Now he commendeth their liberality and withall addeth a promise of recompence of reward for their liberality and so concludeth the Epistle with praise and thanksgiuing vnto the Lord. In verse 18 first he signifieth the faithfulnesse of Epaphroditus when he saith Now I haue receiued all all what to wit all that you sent by Epaphroditus For herein he giueth him this testimony that he had receiued the whole summe of him which came from them which it is like they had specified Secondly he commendeth their liberality of the quantitie of it when he saith I haue plentie and am filled For hereby he signifieth that their liberality towards him was not scanted but was such as plentifully supplied his wants such as filled his desires not that the gift which they sent him was so great and magnificent for the Churches of Macedonia were but poore 2 Cor. 8.2 but though it were but small yet such was his contentment as that he was as well satisfied and as fully as the greatest man with his greatest riches Thirdly he commendeth their liberalitie of the acceptablenesse of it vnto God when he saith An odour that smelleth sweete c. For herein by a speech borrowed from sacrifices made by fire for a sweete sauour vnto the Lord he signifieth that their liberality was as acceptable and pleasant vnto God as the sacrifice that smelleth sweete in the nostrils of the Lord. These are the principall points contained in these words and this I take to be the meaning of them Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our further vse and instruction The first thing which here I note is the faithfulnesse of Epaphroditus who kept nothing backe of all that the Philippians sent vnto the Apostle but faithfully deliuered whatsoeuer they sent vnto him Whence I obserue a notable patterne of that faithfulnesse which ought to be in al Christians to discharge that trust whatsoeuer it is that is reposed in them euen such should be their faithfulnesse as that they whom it doth concerne may safely giue them this testimonie that they haue discharged the trust that was reposed in them Such was the faithfulnesse of Samuel who when he had asked of the people of Israel Whose Oxe haue I taken 1 Sam. 12.3.4 or whose Asse haue I taken or whom haue I done wrong to or whom haue I hurt or of whose hand haue I receiued any bribe to blinde mine eyes therewith and I will restore it you They said vnto him Thou hast done vs no wrong nor hast hurt vs neither hast taken ought of any mans hand So faithfully he had walked amongst them in all things that they gaue him testimonie of his faithfulnesse before the Lord and before his Annoynted Such faithfulnesse also our blessed Sauiour figureth out vnto vs in the Parable of the seruants vnto one of whom he gaue fiue talents and vnto another two to occupie withall vntill he should returne whence he went and in the end gaue them this testimonie It is well done good seruants and faithfull Mat. 25.15.20 1 Cor. 4.2 ye haue bene faithfull in little I will make you rulers ouer much enter into your Masters ioy And the Apostle telleth vs generally that it is required of the disposers that euery man be found faithfull Be it publique or priuate things for
Onely this I say that it ought not to be preiudiciall vnto any man if at any time he say my God and my Lord. He may sometimes vse them and yet ought nor therefore either to be noted of singularitie or to be scorned or reprooued Let them consider what I say that are so readie vpon such occasions to brand men with names that they know not what they meane let vs in no sort follow their example Let vs ioyne with thē that say Our God and our Lord but let vs not scorne or reproch them that say My God or my Lord. Nay let vs know that nor we nor any can haue any greater stay or comfort then in this that the Lord is his God and his Lord. Thus much of this note by the way The second thing which here I note is what recompence of reward the Apostle promiseth vnto the Philippians for their liberalitie towards him The promise is this that as he was filled by them and all his necessities supplied by their liberalitie so God should fulfill all their necessities through his riches with glorie Whence I obserue this lesson for vs that looke what good we do vnto Gods Saints here on earth God shall recompence the same into our bosomes both with blessings in this life and likewise in that that is to come Deliuer we the poore and needie in the needeful time of trouble the recompence is Psal 41.1 Blessed is he that considereth the poore and needie the Lord shall deliuer him in the time of trouble Are we mercifull vnto the poore and do we sell them come good cheape The recompence is He that is mercifull Pro. 11.17.26 rewardeth his owne soule and blessing shall be vpon the head of him that selleth corne Do we feed the hungrie clothe the naked visite the sicke lodge the stranger go to him that is in prison The recompence is Come ye blessed of my Father Mat. 25.34 inherite ye the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world for I was an hungred c. In a word are we ready to do good to distribute and to communicate according to our abilitie The recompence is we lay vp in store for our selues a good foundation against the time to come to obtaine eternall life 1 Tim. 6.19 Mat. 10.42 Not a cup of cold water giuen vnto any in the name of a disciple shal lose his reward So mercifull and gracious and bountifull and liberall is the Lord our God as that he doth repay one good turne vnto our brethren with an hundreth blessings from himselfe and gifts of no value with an eternall weight of glorie A great mercy of our gracious God to promise or to pay such recompence of reward vnto our workes and a notable inducement to stirre vs vp vnto all workes of charitie The same motiue the Preacher also vseth where he saith Cast thy bread vpon the waters Eccl. 11.1 for after many dayes thou shalt finde it Cast thy bread vpon the waters that is breake thy bread vnto the hungrie be mercifull and liberall vnto the poore though thy almes may seeme to be cast vpon the waters though it may seeme that thou shalt neuer haue thankes or ought else for that good thou doest for so too many thinke that what they giue vnto the poore they commit vnto a dead hand that it perisheth that afterwards there is no remembrance of it yet saith he Cast thy bread vpon the waters And why he addeth a promise of mercie that shall follow vpon it for after many dayes thou shalt finde it that is thy gift shall not perish but thy God shall recompence it thee into thy bosome Thou shalt finde it in thy basket and in thy dough and in the fruite of thy body and the fruite of thy ground in the fruite of thy cattell in the increase of thy kine and in the flockes of thy sheepe or if not in these temporall blessings yet in spirituall graces or if not now for a season yet after many dayes as the husbandman receiueth the increase of his corne which when it was first sowne might seeme to haue perished or if not in this life yet certainely in the heauens when the Lord shall wipe all teares from thine eyes and crowne thee with glorie and immortalitie Here is then another kinde of reasoning then thy carnall sence and reason teacheth thee to make Thou thinkest that the way to be rich is to be sparing to hold fast Ioh. 12.25 to giue away nothing that thou canst saue But as our Sauiour saith He that loueth his life shall lose it So I say he that thus loueth his riches shall not be rich but the way to keepe and to increase riches is to bestow them on the poore Where they seeme to be lost there they shal be found where they seeme to be cast vpon the waters there they shal be laid vp in heauen where neither rust nor moath corrupt and where theeues do not breake through nor steale Why is it then that the bowells of our compassion are shut vp against the poore for in many places the poore crie and none helpeth them they faint in the streets and none succoureth them they mourne in their soules and none comforteth them they perish for want of foode and none relieueth them I perswade my selfe that it is not altogether thus amongst vs but in many places it is thus And what is the reason Verily our diffidence and distrust is the cause of all this We see not how we shall haue sufficiencie for our selues if we be bountifull vnto others we see not but we shall want our selues if thus we do supplie the wants of others and though it may be we dare not openly speake vnto the point of Gods promise of a recompence of reward vnto whatsoeuer we do vnto his poore Saints here on earth yet do we thinke with our selues that if we should relie much vpon this we might quickly bring our selues vnto the beggers staffe and then who would pitie vs Thus though the promise be made vnto vs of fulfilling all our necessities yet such is our blindnesse that we cannot see and such our distrustfulnesse that wee doubt how our necessities shall be fulfilled and therefore we hold backe and do not stretch out our hands vnto the poore and needie Our Apostle therefore to meete with this doubtfulnesse telleth vs that God that maketh this promise vnto vs is rich and he will fulfill all our necessities through his riches If a poore man make a large promise of great bountifulnesse we may well doubt how he will be able to make good his promise But if a rich man make such a promise especially being a good man and one that is wont to keepe promise who will make any doubt of the performance of his promise Now our God that vnto our workes of charitie hath made this promise to fulfill all our necessities is rich Psal 50.10.12 For all