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A17384 A commentary: or, sermons vpon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter vvherein method, sense, doctrine, and vse, is, with great variety of matter, profitably handled; and sundry heads of diuinity largely discussed. By Nicholas Byfield, late preacher of God's Word at Isle-worth in Middlesex. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653. 1623 (1623) STC 4211; ESTC S107078 497,216 958

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must beseech the Lord to quicken them Psal. 119.37 and to inlarge their hearts verse 32. especially to giue them vnderstanding verse 34. and to open their eies to see the wonderfull things of his law verse 18. Thirdly they must chuse an effectuall Ministery to liue vnder it such as is executed with power and demonstration to the conscience 2. Cor. 4.2 Fourthly they must remember the Sabbath day and that they doo when they empty their heads and hearts of all cares of life which might choak the word diligently dooing their owne works on the six daies and finishing them that they may bee free for the Lords work on the seuenth day The cares of life choke the word Matthew 13. Fiftly they must conuerse much if it be possible with affectionate Christians For as iron sharpneth iron so doth the exemplary affection of the tender-hearted whet-on the dull spirits of others Sixtly they must purge often They must bee frequent in the duties of humiliation by solemn fasting and praier and sound confession striuing when they feel fulnesse to growe vpon them to disburden their hearts and to quicken their spirits more forcibly to the loue of Gods name and word Quest. But what must such doo as haue gotten some affections to the word that they neyther lose them nor be vnprofitable in them Ans. They must look to diuerse things First they must hate vain thoughts take heed of those secret vanities of imagination and that delightfull contemplation of euill in the minde Psalm 119.113 Secondly they must try all things and keep that which is good They must hear with judgement and make speciall account of such parcels of doctrine as do most fit their particular needs labouring by all means that such truths run not out 1. Thes. 5.21 Thirdly they must take heed of itching eares For where mens desires are still carried after new men they are in great danger of fulnesse or of declining and which is worse of being carried about with diuerse doctrines and at length to be a prey to deceitfull mockers Fourthly they must preserue by all means the fear and trembling at Gods presence and humiliation of minde For so long as wee can dread the presence of God in his ordinances we are in no danger of losing our loue to the word Psalm 119.120 Lastly in Esay 55.1.2.3 wee may note diuerse things that GOD requires in such as haue the same thirst 1. They must come to means 2. They must buy and bargain with God by praier and vows 3. They must eat that is they must apply it to themselues 4. They must bee instructed against merit in themselues and bring faith to beleeue success though they deserue it not they must buy without money 5. They must harken diligently 6. They must eat that which is good that is they must apply effectually that doctrine they feel to haue life in it 7. Their soules must delight in fatnes that is they must be specially thankfull and cheerfull when God doth enliue his promises and sweeten his words to their tastes 8. They must after all this incline their ear and come to God They must make conscience to striue against dulnes and distractions and seek God in his word still or els their affections may decay and then if they doe this they shall liue and enioy the sure mercies of Dauid by a perpetuall couenant Question But what shall such godly persons as are afflicted with melancholy do in this case of affections Answer They must attend these things First they must be perswaded to see the disease in the body which extends the oppression of it to the very affections Secondly they must remember times that are past and iudge of their estate by what it was before Thirdly they may be infallibly assured that they are in a right way because they desire to liue vprightly and to forsake the corruptions that are in the world Fourthly they must know that it is a greater glory in faith to beleeue now when they feele not then to beleeue when the hart abounded with ioy Fiftly They may iudge of their affection to the word by their preparation before they com and by their only liking of such as loue the word and by their constant frequenting of it and by their sorrow for their dulnes and vnprofitablenes Hitherto of the duty to which hee exhorteth The motiues follow and they are fowre First ye are new borne babes Secondly the word is sincere milk Thirdly ye may thereby growe Fourthly ye haue tasted the sweetnes of the bounty of God in his word already The first reason tels what they are The second what the word is The third what they shall be The fourth what the word hath been As new borne babes These words are taken in diuers senses For properly they signify infants while they are tender and vnweaned from the breast Sometimes they signify vnable men and such as haue no fitnes for their callings so Isai. 3.4 Sometimes they signify such as be weake in faith and in the gifts of the spirit whether they be newly regenerated or lying in sinne 1. Cor. 3.1 Heb. 5.13 and so it is taken heer And so the words are a reason to induce them to an affectionate desire after the word Inasmuch as they are so weak they can no better liue without the word then the child in nature can liue without milk Diuers things may be from hence noted First that grace is wrought in Christians by degrees Christ is reuealed in vs by foure degrees First as a child or little babe new formed and borne Secondly as a yong man in more strength and vigour and comeliness and actiueness Thirdly as a father or old man settled with long experience these three are in this life and mentioned 1. Ioh. 2.14 Now the fourth is when Christ shall appear in vs as the Antient of daies like God himself in a maruelous glorious resemblance of the holiness and properties of God And this shall bee in another world The vse should bee both for thankfulnes if Christ bee formed in vs to any degree and to incite our industry in all the meanes appointed of God seeing wee receiue gifts by degrees and not all at once Secondly that true grace may stand with many weaknesses A childe doth truly liue and yet it is very ignorant infirm weyward fit for little or no imploiment such may Christians be for a time such were the very disciples of Christ for a time such were the Corinthians 1. Cor. 3.1 and the Hebrewes Heb. 5.13 The vse should bee to restraine censuring of others because of their infirmities to haue no grace at all Whereas we should rather bear with them and beleeue all things Rom. 15.2 1. Cor. 13.5 And besides those that are distressed in minde should comfort them selues with this they may bee full of weaknesses and very vnprofitable and yet haue the true life of Christ in them Thirdly that the most
come This would put all other proiects frō the world or the Diuell or the flesh because there can bee nothing in any degree comparable vnto the vnsearchable riches is to be had by Christ. Oh the preferment of a true Christian if he had studied the premises soundly If we could effectually think vpon the fauour of God the pardon of all sinnes the inhabitation of the H. Ghost the gifts of the Spirit and all other sorts of spiritual blessings if there were nothing else to bee had by Christ what can be equal in value to that immortall inheritance reserued for vs in heauen Thirdly we should much thinke of the dignity of the person of Christ of whom it is true that when God brought out his first begotten Sonne hee said Let all the Angels of heauen worship him As also of his transcendent preferment to be carried vp to heauen and there sit at the right hand of the Maiesty on high a King of all Kings euen such a King as all the Kings of the earth must cast downe their Crownes at his feet It is vnspeakeable stupidity that keepes vs from being fired with these things Fourthly we should often contemplate of our interest in Christ and the assurance that he is of God giuen to vs All things are ours because Christ is ours as the Apostle Paul speakes Question But how should we shew that wee do account Christ as deare and precious Answere I answere by diuers things First By longing for his comming againe to vs mourning for our owne absence from him Then wee did indeed soundly shew our loue to Christ when we did feel our hearts affectionately moued with a vehement desire after him It is a dull loue of Christ that can bee content with his absence Secondly while we are heer in this world we may shew the high account wee make of Christ by ioying in him that is by taking comfort in the means of his presence or in the thoughts of his loue to vs when wee can preferre our entertainment in the House of Christ aboue our greatest ioyes on earth Thirdly when in our conuersation we can be contented to shun all the baits of the world and Satan and in respect of Christ contemn all those sensuall pleasures profits or honours that intice vs to make shipwrack of faith and a good conscience Then wee loue Christ indeed when our credits friends riches yea life it self is not dear vnto vs for Christs sake and the Gospell Fourthly when wee can renounce our owne righteousnes and praises and seek onely to bee found clothed with his righteousnes Fiftly we signifie our respect of Christ by the very respect we shew to the members of Christ. He loues Christ with all his heart that loues and entertains Christians as the only excellent people of the world Hitherto of that part of the testimony which concerns Christ the other part that concernes Christians follows He that beleeueth on him shall not be confounded In which words the happinesse of the Christian which beleeueth in Christ is expressed There are many points of doctrine may bee obserued out of these words as First in generall it is faith that makes the difference among men before God men are iudged of before GOD by their faith or vnbelief GOD to finde out a worthy man doth not ask what money or land or birth or offices he hath but what faith he hath Gal. 5.6 Hee is rich and happy that beleeueth and he is miserable that beleeueth not whatsoeuer his outward estate be Which should cause vs more soundly to inform our selues and not to bee lifted vp in our selues for any outward things nor to be deiected if our faith prosper and it should be a great comfort to poor Christians in all their wants if the LORD haue made them rich in faith He is a great rich man that hath a strong faith And therefore also wee should learn to iudge of men not according to the flesh or these outward things but euer acknowledge more honour to a faithfull Christian than to any rich wicked man And it is a great signe of our owne vprightnes of heart when we can iudge of Christians as GOD iudgeth and without dissimulation account them the onely excellent Ones Secondly in particular we may heer obserue the necessity of faith in respect both of the fauour of God and the merits of Christ we cannot please God though we bee in Sion without beleeuing Heb. 11.6 and without faith wee see heer we are not built vpon the foundation and so haue no part as yet in Christ. And therefore we should euery one be throughly awakened to examine our selues whether we haue this precious faith or no 2. Cor. 13.5 and to keep our owne soules with so much attendance heerupon as to be sure the Tempter deceiue vs not in our faith 1. Thes. 3.4 And heer especially take heed that thou dash not thy soule vpon the rock either of ignorance or presumption of ignorance as many doo that to this day knowe not what a true faith is of presumption as many doo that entertain without all ground from Gods promises a hope to be saued which they call a strong faith in Christ and yet liue in their sinnes without repentance and heer neuer taste of the sweetnes of spirituall things nor shew the affections of godlinesse in God's seruice Thirdly note that he saith He that beleeueth indefinitely meaning any of what nature or condition or state of life soeuer And therefore when this Text is quoted Rom. 10.11 and 9.33 he saith in stead of He that Whosoeuer beleeueth which sheweth vs plainly that in matter of faith God is no accepter of persons No man can say hee is exempted A poor man a Gentile a Barbarian an vnlearned man a seruant c. may beleeue as well as the rich learned free c. There is no exception against any calling of life or any sex Faith will make any one a childe of GOD and a member of Christ. The seuerall sorts of men are all one in Christ Iesus Gal. 3.26 28. This is the large extent of God's loue to the world that whosoeuer beleeueth should be saued Iohn 3.16 Mark 16. The proclamation is to all that are athirst they may be possest of those treasures of gold without money Esay 55. Which should much embolden vs to go vnto God with a true heart in the assurance of faith Heb. 10.22 And withall it should cause vs to cast out of our hearts all the wauerings and doubts of vnbelief arising from our owne condition in vnworthinesse Fourthly wee may hence note that faith in Christ was euer required in all sorts of men It was required of them in the Prophet Esay's time and it is still heer required in the Apostles time Thus Paul Heb. 11. shewes that faith was the character of the Godly in all Ages before the Floud and after the Floud before the Law and after the Law and he proues it by an
induction of particulars in their seuerall ranks Which again should both serue to take down carelesnesse seeing neuer man could please GOD without faith and withall it should much perswade vs to get and preserue faith seeing wee haue such a cloud of witnesses and that euery godly man in euery Age of the world did prouide himself of faith whatsoeuer he wanted Fiftly obserue heer the nature of true faith To beleeue God in any thing hee saith will not saue vs if we beleeue not in Christ. The obiect of faith is Christ for though we beleeue other things yet either they are not things that directly concern saluation or else they are founded vpon Christ nor is it enough to beleeue Christ or to beleeue that he is sent of God but we must beleeue in him that is out of sound iudgement wee must with all our hearts imbrace the happy newes of saluation by Christ and relie vpon him and his merits onely for our owne particular saluation The very comparison heer imported shewes vs the nature of faith Christ is like the foundation of a house now to beleeue in Christ is to fasten our selues in our confidence vpon Christ as the stone lieth vpon the foundation To beleeue in Christ is to lie vpon Christ vnmoueably and not flee out of the Building And it is to be noted heer that the apostle addes these words in him to the Text in Esay of purpose to explain the Prophets meaning and to shew what kinde of beleeuing the Prophet intended Therfore it is apparant that Pagans cannot bee saued because they beleeue neither God nor Christ no Iewes and Turks because they beleeue God but not Christ nor the common Protestant because he onely saith he beleeueth but doth not beleeue indeed nor the Papist because hee beleeues not in Christ nor placeth his confidence in him alone but in his owne works or in Saints or Angels or in Popes pardons and indulgences Sixtly note heere the circumstance of time by which he describeth a true faith He doth not say He that shall beleeue or He that hath beleeued but He that doth beleeue which is to shew vs both what wee should doe with our faith and what in some measure is done by euery beleeuer for we should not beleeue at one time onely but at al times we should euery day liue by our faith Gal. 2.21 Christ liueth in vs by faith and so long as we goe about without faith we make Christ to be in vs as it were without life To spend one day without faith is to bury Christ as it were for so long Now the life of Christ must be considered of vs two waies namely as it is in it selfe and as it is in our sence For this latter it is true when we imploy not our faith we let Christ dye in vs in respect of sence But for the first way it is certaine a Christian doth alwaies beleeue after the life of faith is once conceiued in him There is no time in which it can be truly said Now he beleeueth not Therefore doth the Apostle heere say He that beleeueth It is true that in some particular points or promises a Christian may faile through vnbeliefe but not in the maine point or promise of saluation by Christ. It is true also that a Christian may oftentimes and vsually want the feeling of his faith and goe without the ioies of the Holy Ghost but yet he wanteth not faith yea a Christian may violently obiect against beleeuing and thinke hee hath not faith by the temptation of Sathan and the rebellion of that part of him that is vnregenerate and yet God can dispell al these cloudes and in the very dunghill of his vnbeleefe and sinfulnes can finde out his owne part of faith In plaine tearms there is no time after conuersion but if a Christian were throughly sifted and put to it he would be found resolued in that point to rest vpon the couenant of grace for all happines by Christ alone I say at all times in that part of him that is regenerate Christ can dye in no man and if faith could dye then should Christ also die in vs seeing he liueth in vs by faith A man may be without faith in the iudgement of the world in his owne iudgement but neuer is without faith in the iudgement of God A man may want this or that faith but not faith simply as that faith Luke 18. to rely vpon God without failing and to call vpon him with continuall perseuerance as resolued that God will helpe vs in that particular It is true If the Sonne of man come to search amongst men he shall scarcely finde that faith vpon earth but yet a true faith in the generall hee will finde in the breast of euery godly man and woman Peters faith did not faile when hee denyed his master For Chist had prayed that his faith should not faile and was heard in that he prayed Shall not be confounded The Prophet Isaiah hath it thus He that beleeueth shall not make haste it may be vnderstood either as a precept Let him not make hast or as a promise He shal not make haste Men make haste two waies either in their behauiour when they runne headlong vpon the duties they are to doe or when through impatience they will not tarrie Gods leasure for their helpe and deliuerance but fall to vse vnlawfull meanes and take that which comes next them without consideration of the lawfulnesse of it Now the beleeuer must auoide both these and God wil in some measure sanctifie and guide the beleeuer thereunto The Apostle Paul Rom. 9.33 10.11 And the Apostle Peter in this place following the Greeke translation read it He that beleeueth shall not be ashamed as in the Romans or confounded as heere They swarue not from the meaning of the Prophet For by this tearme is auouched That the Godly that beleeue shall neuer haue cause to repent themselues or to fly from God to vse ill meanes The holy Ghost then in this place is pleased to assure the beleeuer that he shall not be confounded To be confounded signifies sometimes to be reproached so Psal. 14.6 The wicked are said to confound the counsell of the godly that is they reproached it Sometimes it signifies to be daunted or dismayed Sometimes to bee disappointed or broken in their purposes as Esay 19.9 10. Sometimes to bee extremely shamed and so it is rendred Rom. 10.11 Sometimes to bee put to a Non plus as Acts. 9.22 Sometimes to be driuen into amazement or wonder Acts 2.6 Sometimes to bee brought into such a straite as one hath neither hope nor help 2. Cor. 4.8 9. Lastly it signifieth to perish vtterly or to bee vndon or damned for euer and so con●usion shall come to all that hate Sion or serue grauen Images It is true that sometimes to be confounded is taken in the good sence and signifies either the affection of wonder as before
3.9 Especially wee should rest vpon this stone when we haue any great suite to God and haue occasion to continue to hold vp our hands in praier and so wee shall prosper as it was with Moses Ex. 17.12 Lastly it should be the singular ioy of our harts when wee see the corner stone cast downe and God begin to build in any place the work of godlines and religion Wee haue more cause to reioice for that spirituall worke then the Iewes had to shout when the corner stone of the Temple was brought out to bee laid for a foundation of the building Zachar. 4.7 10. Thirdly the third thing said of Christ is that hee was disallowed of men Disallowed of men This is added of purpose to preuent scandall which might arise from the consideration of the meane intertainment the Christian Religion found in the world The point is plaine that Christ was disallowed of men and this is euident in the stone The greatest part of the world regarded him not The Gentiles knew him not and the Iewes receiued him not Though three things in Christ were admirable his doctrine his life his miracles yet the Iewes beleeued not in him He came vnto his owne and his owne receiued him not Nay they reuiled him called him Samaritane and said he had a Diuel They preferred a murtherer before him and their wise men euen the Princes of this world crucified the Lord of life glory This as it was storied by the Euangelists so it was foretold by the Prophets Isaiah 53. and 49.8 and so we see hee is still of almost the whole world The Pagans yet know him not The Iewes yet renounce him The Turk receiueth him but as a Prophet The Papists receiue him but in part and wicked men denie him by their liues Vses The first impression this should make in our hearts is admiration and astonishment This should be maruelous in our eies that men refuse the Son of God miserable men their Sauiour captiues their Redeemer and poore men such vnspeakeable riches as is offred in Christ and that almost all mankind should bee guilty of this sin so as in comparison he should be Elect onely of God Secondly since this was foreseene foretold wee should bee confirmed against scandall and like neuer a whit the worse of Christ or religion for the scornes and neglects of the world Thirdly since the world disallowes Christ we may hence gather what account we shold make of the world and the men of the world we haue reason to separate from them that are separated from Christ and not to loue them that loue not the Lord Iesus 1. Cor. 16.22 Fourthly we may hence see how little reason wee haue to take the counsels and iudgements of carnall men though our friends and neuer so wise in naturall or ciuill wisdome Their counsels were against Christ they disallow Christ and all Christian courses Fiftly why are we troubled for the reproches of men and why doe wee feare their reuilings Shall we heare that Christ was disallowed and shall wee be so vexed because wee are despised Nay rather let vs resolue to despise the shame of the world and to follow the author of our faith euen in this crosse also Sixtly we may be hence informed that indiscretion or sinne is not alwaies the cause of contempt For Christ is disallowed and yet was without all spot of indiscretion or guile Seuenthly and chiefly we should look euery one to our selues that wee be not of the number of those that disallow Christ. For Christ is still disallowed of men and if any ask Question Who are they that in these daies be guilty of disallowing of Christ Answer I answer Both wicked men and godly men too Wicked men disallow him and so doe diuers sorts of them as First Hereticks that deny his diuinity or humanity or his sufficiency or authority or his comming as did those mockers mentioned 2. Pet. 3. Secondly Schismaticks that diuide him and rend his body mysticall 1. Cor. 1.10 Thirdly Pharises and merit-mongers that by going about to establish their owne righteousnes deny the righteousnes of Iesus Christ Rom. 10.4 Fourthly Apostataes that falling from the fellowship they had with Christ would crucify him againe Heb. 6.2 Pet. 2. Fiftly Epicures and prophane persons that will sell Christ for a messe of pottage with Esau and loue their pleasure more then Christ Heb. 12.16 2. Tim. 3. Sixtly Papists who therefore hold not the head because they bring in the worship of Saints and Angels Col 2.19 Seuenthly Whoremongers and fornicators who giue the members of Christ vnto a harlot 1. Cor. 6.15 16. Eightthly Reuilers that speak euill of the good way of Christ and reproach godly Christians especially such as despise the Ministers of Christ. For hee that despiseth them despiseth Christ himselfe Math. 10. Ninthly Hypocrites that professe Christ in their words but deny him in their workes Tenthly the fearfull that in time of trouble dare not confesse him before men Mat. 10. Eleuenthly All wicked men Because they neglect their reconciliation with God in Christ and will not beleeue in him nor repent of their sinnes All that will not bee reconciled when God sendes the word of reconciliation vnto them Esay 52.11 Secondly godly men sinne against Christ and are guilty of disallowing him 1. When they neglect the establishing of their hearts in the assurance of faith 2. When they faint and wax weary of praier and trusting in God in the time of distresse Luke 18.1 8. 3. When our harts wax cold within vs and are no inflamed with feruent affections after Christ We neglect him when we do not highly esteem him aboue all earthly treasures Phil. 3.9 The fourth thing affirmed of CHRIST is that hee is chosen of GOD. Chosen of God This is one thing wee must carefully knowe and effectually beleeue concerning Christ namely that he is chosen of God This was conscionably beleeued concerning him as appears Esay 42.1 and 43.10 and 49.2 Mat. 12.18 Now Christ may be said to be chosen of God in diuers respects First as hee was from all eternity appointed and ordained of God to bee the Mediator and Redeemer of all mankinde 1. Pet. 1.20 Secondly as he was called peculiarly of GOD from the womb by a speciall sanctification vnto his office Esay 49.1 Thirdly as hee was by solemn rites inaugurated vnto the immediate execution of his office as by baptism and the voice from heauen c. Mat. 3. Fourthly as hee was approued of God and declared mightily to bee the Sonne of God and the Sauiour of the world by the glory done to him of God notwithstanding the scorns and oppositions of the world Esay 49.7 The vse may be both for Information and Instruction For hence we may bee informed concerning diuers things First that Gods work shall prosper notwithstanding all the scorns or oppositions of men God's choice is not hindred but Christ is separated and sanctified and appointed to
deuote our selues vnto godlinesse that thereby we may proue what this good and acceptable will of God is Let vs try Gods acceptation and wee shall certainly finde it shall go well with the iust Rom. 12.1 2. Yea wee should from hence gather much encouragement to imploy our selues in piety and mercy It is enough if God accept of vs. Quest. But what should we doo that we may be sure our sacrifices be accepted of God How shall we knowe when God doth accept our seruice in any holy duty Ans. That a mans conscience may be soundly established in this point of God's acceptation we must look to three things First that the person be sanctified None but Priests must approach to offer sacrifice to God They that are in the flesh cannot please GOD Rom. 8.8 The sonnes of Leui must bee purified and refined as the siluer is refined before their offring will bee pleasing Mal. 3.3 4. When the Lord reiected with so much disdain the sacrifices of the Iewes hee shewes what they should haue done to please him they should haue washed themselues by true repentance and put away the euill of their works Esay 1.11 16. Onely the works of the penitent cannot bee accepted if the person be not in fauour the works are hated For they are sanctified by the holy Ghost Rom. 15.16 Secondly that the manner of performing our seruice bee right there are diuers things in the manner are hatefull and diuers things pleasing The things specially hatefull are first beloued sinnes secondly hypocrisie thirdly malice and fourthly luke-warmnesse The sacrifice is lothsome if it be blinde or lame or blemished that is if men bring to Gods seruice the loue of any foule sinne the seruice is lothsome Malach. 1. So if mens hearts be carried away with continuall distractions that seruice is lost this is To come neer to God with our lips when our harts are farre from him Hypocrisie is leauen as beloued sin is hony both forbidden Again when a man comes to God's work and hath not forgiuen his brother hee keeps the Feast with some leauen his Passeouer is defiled nor can his own sinnes be forgiuen because he forgiues not Mat. 6. 1. Cor. 5.8 Finally luke-warmnesse is like a vomit to God when wee are neither hot nor cold They are lothed like the Laodiceans Reuel 3. There are other things wonderfull pleasing to God as First when a man doth whatsoeuer he doth in the Name of Christ this is the Altar that sanctifieth the gift and the sacrifices are heer acceptable through Iesus Christ Heb. 13.15 Col. 3.17 Secondly when our works are soundly powdered with salt that is when we soundly confess our owne vnworthinesse and giue all glory to God in Iesus Christ. Thirdly when wee loue mercy and piety accounting it our delight to doo God's will and thinking our selues greatly honoured to bee admitted to doo this seruice Mic. 6.8 2. Cor. 8.5 Fourthly when we can bring faith that is a heart well perswaded of God so as wee can beleeue all good of him and his mercy Without faith no man can please God Heb. 11.6 and God takes no delight in him that withdraweth himself through vnbelief Heb. 10.36 37. Fiftly when it is our euery-daies work Sacrifice will please God if it be continuall Hebrewes 13.15 Thus of the second thing Thirdly wee may knowe that our sacrifice is accepted if the Lord burn it to ashes with fire from heauen Thus God did put a difference between the sacrifice of Cain and Abel by some visible signe and though wee may not limit God and expect he should answer vs by visible signes yet God hath not left vs without testimony of his fauour For by his word of promise and by his Spirit bearing witnes to our spirits hath hee manifested euen from heauen his acceptation and in particular when the beleeuer stands before the Lord with his sacrifice duely offered when the Lord doth ●uddenly fill his heart with the cloud of his presence or warm his soule with the ioyes of the holy Ghost what is this but the signe of his acceptation Question What if we be accepted in our seruice of God what great thing is that to vs Answ. When God accepts thine offrings thou maist be assured of three things First that all thy sins bee forgiuen thee God hath purged away thine iniquity he hath receiued an atonement in Iesus Christ Psal 65.2 3. Secondly God is exceedingly delighted in them Thy sacrifice is a sweet smell vnto God he reioyceth ouer thee with ioy Phil. 4.18 Thirdly it is a pledge vnto thee that God wil supply all thy necessities out of the riches of his glory in Iesus Christ our Sauiour Phil. 4.19 Verse 6. Wherfore also it is contained in the Scripture Behold I put in Sion a chief corner-stone elect and precious and hee that beleeueth therein shall not be ashamed HItherto of the proposition of the exhortation The confirmation follows where the Apostle giues reasons why wee should make our recourse to Christ to seek holinesse of life from him and the reasons are two The first is taken from the testimony of God verses 6 7 8. The other is taken from the consideration of the excellent priuiledges of Christians vnto which they are brought by Christ verses 9 10. The testimony of God is both cited verse 6. and expounded verses 7 8. In the testimony of God obserue first where it is to be found viz. In Scripture secondly how it is there It is contained there thirdly what is testified Now the matter testified concerns either the giuing of Christ for the good of the Church or the safety of the Christian that by faith receiueth Christ. The giuing of Christ is exprest in these words Behold I lay in Sion a chief corner stone elect precious the safety and happinesse of the Christian that receiueth Christ in these words And hee that beleeues in him shall not be confounded First of the place where this testimony is found viz. in the Scripture By the Scripture is vsually meant all the Books of the old and new Testament written after an extraordinary manner by inspiration of the holy Ghost But heer he means it of the Books of the old Testament but yet so as the word doth agree to all the Books of both Testaments Now this very word giues vs occasion to consider of the nature of these Books and of their vse and of their excellency and of their harmony These Books are called Scripture because they contain in writing the whole will of God necessary to be knowne of vs they are the Treasures of all truth The doctrine which was before deliuered by tradition for 2000 yeers was afterwards written down and explained in these Books so as nothing needfull was left out or omitted Secondly this word imports the excellency of the Bible aboue all other bookes because it is called Scripture as if no other writings were worthy to be mentioned in comparison of these The Scripture exceedes
is not the life of man That is apparant in scripture when a difference is put betwene the soule and life as what soule shall be blessed in life So 2 Sam. 11.11 By thy life and the life of thy soule The soule then is a substance of it self put within vs by God distinct from the body this may bee euidently proued First God after hee had made the body is said to breath into it the breath of liues to note that his soule was a substance distinct of it selfe Secondly because it can subsist without the body as is apparant in the soule of Abraham Lazarus and Diues Luke 16. And of the soule of the thiefe on the crosse it is said This day thou shalt bee with mee in Paradise Thirdly God is said to haue formed the Spirit in the midst of man so it is a substance of it selfe Note hee saith in him not of him Fourthly those words of Dauid Christ proue it Into thy hands I commit my spirit the body being committed to the earth there remained a substance deliuered to God Fiftly that place of Ecclesiastes Chapter 12. is most plaine The body returnes to dust and the Spirit to God that gaue it Therefore there is in man a Spirit which returnes to GOD. Sixtly Paul desires to be dissolued and to bee with Christ so there was a substance which should enioy the presence of Christ Phil. 1.23 The second thing to bee proued is that the soule is incorporeal It is ioyned to the body but it is no body it informeth the matter of man which is his body but it is without matter it self It is immateriall It is wholy a spiritual substance It is not a bodily substance no not a most subtil or pure body but altogether incorporeall This is a high doctrine and shewes the soule to bee an admirable kind of substance Now that the soule is void of matter and is no bodily substance may bee plainely proued though not easily explicated First it is expresly said to be a Spirit now Spirits are not flesh and bones or any like bodily substance Psa. 31.6 Eccle. 12.7 and Zach. 12.1 It is reckned one of the wonders of Gods creation that hee made in man a spirit Secondly the soule is after the Image of God and hath imprinted vpon it the similitude of the goodnes wisdome and holines of God Now it were not like God if it were a body nor were it capeable of such habits which can bee stamped vpon meere naturall or bodily things Thirdly the soule performeth those actions which depend not vpon the body and are done without bodily instruments for it vnderstandeth and willeth Fourthly if the soule were a body then it must be corpus animatum or inanimatum but to say it is without life is sense-lesse because it enlyues and animates the body and to say it is animatum enlyued it self it must then bee so by some other body All which the same questions will bee asked and so run into an infinite The third thing is that the soule is inuisible this shewes the transcendencie of the nature of it and experience in all men proues this for who euer saw a soule Ob. The soule of Diues in hell saw the soule of Abraham and Lazarus and Iohn saw the soules of those that suffred for the testimony of Iesus Reu. 20.4 Sol. These soules were seen by the eies of vnderstanding not by the bodily eies The fourth thing to bee prooued is that the soule is immortall it cannot die when it is once kindled it will neuer go out or be extinct as the Sadduces wickedly imagined and some Atheists still think the contrary This is a point necessary to bee knowne as for the truth it self so for the vse of it in our liues for to doubt of immortality makes vs miserable and to beleeue the soules are mortall makes men Epicures Let vs eat and drink for to morrow wee shall die But to bee fully assured of an estate after life makes a man carefull to auoid sinne lest his soule liue for euer miserably and to serue God that hee may liue for euer happily Now things may be said to be immortall two waies either absolutely and in their owne nature and so God onely is immortall or else they are so by the wil and pleasure of God and not by their owne nature and so the soules of men and so the Angels are immortall There haue been two sorts of men that haue denied the immortality of the soule The one were the Sadduces among the Iewes who held that in death the soule of man is vtterly extinct as the soule of a beast The other were certain Arabians of whom Eusebius and S. Augustine make mention who said that the soule died with the body and so remained dead till the day of Iudgement and then they reuiued with the resurrection of the body Now against the first fort may bee produced many reasons as also euident Scriptures The reasons are such as these 1. The prouidence and iustice of God prooueth the immortality of the soule For heer in this life good men haue not all their happinesse and euill men liue in prosperity so there must be another life where iustice must be done 2. Religion confirms this for to what end were Religion and seruing of God if the soule died like the soule of the beast seeing in this life the most godly are outwardly in great misery many times For if Paul say If the dead rise not then of all men are wee most miserable it will hold much more strange if the soule liue not at all after death 3. The wisdome of God proues it for else man were not in better case than the beast yea in some cases worse For man from his infancy to his death is liable to many diseases subiect to cares and griefs which the beast is free from yea this addes to man's miserie that hee knowes hee must die which the beast doth not Now shall man that was counted like God bee thought to haue no better end than the beast that did exalt himself so much in the glory of his beginning 4. The conscience of malefactors prooues this who fear a iudgement after this life and an estate of misery 5. The nature of the soule proues it for it is simple and void of all contrariety and accidents and causes of corruption or putrefaction and is besides the Image of GOD. Now no mortall thing can bee the image of that which is immortall These reasons make it exceeding probable But I am of their mindes that think it may be beleeued by faith but not be proued by reason The Scripture therefore only makes this point cleer such as these First our Sauiour proues it out of the Word of God saying I am the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob c. Secondly it is most plain Mat. 10.28 Thirdly eternall life is euery where promised to them that beleeue Fourthly such places
as intreat of the resurrection last Iudgement and the glory of heauen proue it Now for the other sort that confesse the life of the Soule after the last Iudgement but deny that the Soule liues after death till then there are diuers Scriptures against their opinion As First the former Scriptures The Soule cannot be killed at all Math. 10. And God was presently the God of Abraham as then liuing and for eternal life it is not said He shal haue but He hath eternall life that beleeueth Secondly Christ said to the theefe This day thou shalt be with me in Paradise not at the last day Thirdly Rom. 8.38 Death cannot separate vs from God in Christ as it would if the Soule were dead or a-sleepe and did not enioy God Fourthly the dead that die in the Lord are forthwith blessed Reuel 14.14 Fiftly the soules of Abraham and Lazarus were in ioy and aliue after death so was the soule of Diues in hell Sixtly Iohn saw vnder the Altar the soules of them that were slaine for the testimony of Iesus and they cried with a loud voice O Lord how long c. Reuel 6. Seuenthly the soules of the wicked die not but are kept in prison and are now in prison too 1. Pet. 3.19 Before I leaue this point of the immortalitie of the soule it is profitable briefly to answere certaine obiections which may bee brought out of some words in the Scriptures as Ob. 1. The Soule that sinneth shall die Ezeth 18. Therfore it seems the soule is mortall or at least for sin it must die and the rather because it was threatned in Paradise That day that thou eatest therof thou shalt die the death Sol. The Scriptures euidently shewe that since the fall and sinne yet the Soule doth not die as the places before alleaged proue But the answere is that this death threatned or inflicted is not the destruction of the being of the Soule but the depriuing of it of the grace and fauour and presence of God Ob. 2. Eccles. 3. It is said that there is one end of the man and of the beast As dieth the one so dieth the other Sol. These are not the words of Salomon but of the Epicure who is here as in other places of that booke brought in declaring his minde of things For Salomon himselfe concludeth euidently that the Soule returneth vnto God that gaue it as in the last Chapter The other obiections are the obiections of the dreamers that is of such as imagine that the Soule lieth a-sleepe till the day of Iudgement and perceiues nothing and is without operation which is to say it is dead seeing life is nothing else but the continuall motion and action of the Soule Ob. 1. It is said that man when he dies that he sleepeth as Christ said that Lazarus He sleepeth and Stephen slept in the Lord Iohn 11. Act ●7 Sol. Other Scriptures adde another word viz. in the graue or in the dust Iob 7.21 and Psalme 78. sleeping in their graues but it is euident that the Soule cannot sleepe in the graue but the body onely And Stephen deliuered his Spirit to Christ. Ob. 2. Paul saith that if the body rise not we are of all men most miserable That it seemes canno● be true if the Soule enioy blessednesse without the body Sol. The immortalitie of the Soule and the resurrection of the body are conioyned For the Soule without the body can be for euer because it is the forme of the body though God for the time do by his power and grace prouide for the Soule in glory yet it is not at full happinesse till it be ioyned to the body againe For without the body it hath no vse of vegetation or sences but onely of reason But for the Argument of the Apostle it holds good of that part of man which is in question which is the body of man For the bodies of Godly men are more miserable then other men kept vnder and exposed to many restraints and paines eyther by mortification or persecution which the bodies of wicked men are not exposed vnto Ob. 3. It is said of the spirit of Princes that it returneth to his Earth and in the day of death his thoughts perish So the Soule thinkes of nothing after death till the day of iudgement Sol. The place is corruptly alleaged two waies One in the Words the other in the Sence for the text doth not say That his Spirit returneth to his earth but thus his Spirit returneth viz. out of his body to God and he not it returneth to the earth viz. in respect of his body for the other these words his thoughts perish must not be vnderstood of his vnderstanding after death but of his proiects while hee liued For men are exhorted not to trust in Princes For they may die and then all their promises and proiects will bee of no vse and come to nothing Obiect 4. It is said that the dead cannot praise God Psal. 88. and 1 13. and 30. Sol. That the soules of the godly in heauen doe praise God is manifest Reuel 5.11 13.14 and 19.1 Now the Scriptures cannot bee contrary one to another and therefore the places in the Psalmes must not bee taken simply but onely in some respect The dead doe praise God but not as the li●ing did in their liues their praises cannot prouoke other men to beleeue in God or serue him as in this life they might Thus of the immortality of the soule The next thing to bee inquired after is about the originall of the soule and about this point in seueral ages diuers men haue breathed diuers and strange conceits erring because they knew not or regarded not the Scriptures First some conceiued so highly of the soule as to think it was no creature but vncreated and eternall without beginning but this must needes bee false 1. Because then the soule should bee God and infinite too For God onely is vncreated 2. Because then the soule had vnderstanding and thoughts and willed from eternity whereas till it was in our bodies it did not work and to imagine it should bee as a dead lump all that while is monstrously absurd Secondly others haue conceiued that when men die their soules goe into the bodies of other men that be borne and so our soules heeretofore were the soules of some men that bee dead This was the opinion of diuers of the Philosophers and it is apparant that diuers of the Iewes were infected with it for about Christ they said some that hee was Elias some that he was Ieremias and some one of the Prophets and some Iohn Baptist. Now they saw that his body was not theirs and therefore they thought that his soule was the soule of some of them Now this opinion cannot bee true 1. Because no Scripture giues any notice of it For in that place the conceit of the Iewes is told with dislike 2. Because the soules that were deliuered out of the miseries
the laying of the foundation of the earth Now it is euident that those two things hee did of himself of nothing without any means Lastly that place in Hebr. 12.9 is most cleer The words are these Wee haue had the fathers of our flesh which chastised vs and we reuerenced them how much more should wee bee subiect to the Father of our spirits and liue Where is a manifest antithesis between the flesh and the Spirit and the fathers of our flesh and God the Father of our spirit wee had our flesh from our parents and our spirit from God I might adde the reason taken from the manner of giuing of the soule of Christ for he was made in all things like to vs sin onely excepted Now it is euident that Christ's soule was not begot by carnall propagation and therefore it was created of God Obiect Now against this is strongly obiected that if the soule be created immediately of God then it is created either pure or sinfull if pure then how is it that the soule is guilty of originall sinne if impure then how can it be auoided but that God must be the Author of sin Answer This reason draue diuerse of the Fathers in the time of Hierome especially the Western Fathers to beleeue that the soule was propagated from the parents and Saint Augustine is doubtfull which opinion to take to the inconueniences of each opinion seemed so great But other Diuines answer this obiection in this manner First that the soule is created of God pure but ioined to a body conceiued in sinne which is no iniustice in God because hee deliuers the soule but into such an estate as man had cast himself into by his owne wilfull sinne bringing this corruption not onely vpon himself but vpon all his posterity who fell in him Hee by agreement with GOD being as the common sort of mankinde was with him to stand or fall in that generall respect Nor may it be doubted but that the body may work vpon the soule as we see by experience when the body is full of cholerick humours it inclines the soule to anger and so when the body is burdened with melancholy humours it euidently makes sadnes euen in the very minde c. Another answer may be this God creates the soule pure but yet that soule is guilty of owing though not of dooing debendi though not agendi it is charged with the debt of Adam as children may be charged with their fathers debts Now this is one part of originall sinne As for the other of corrupt inclination it is to answer modestly if we say we vnderstand not being assured of two things The one that God is the Father of spirits and the other that all men are infected with sinne from the womb Both are to bee beleeued though in this life we cannot explicate it and what hurt is it if wee bee ignorant how sinne entred into our natures seeing it concerns vs to knowe it is there and to learn how to get our natures recouered Obiection 2. Other liuing creatures beget the like to themselues both in body and in soule too and therefore by this doctrine men should bee more vnable and vnperfect than any liuing creature For if hee doo begette but onely the body he doth not beget one in specie like to himself Answer Though GOD create the soule yet it followes not but that it may bee truely said that man begets a man and that hee is not more vnperfect in generation than any other creature for First the Virgin Mary did bear Christ man in her womb and Christ man is said to bee of the seed of the Virgin and yet his soule was created of God as hath been shewed before Secondly though there bee some dissimilitude in the generation of man and of a beast yet it doth not follow that man is more vnperfect As for instance The beast begettes his young and brings him forth strong couered with a hide able to feed himselfe presently full of leaping and other actions But man brings foorth an Infant weak crying naked vnable to feede it selfe What is man therefore more vnperfect No. For the perfection of generation doth not consist of these things or in these things For heere man excels all other liuing creatures in the world in generation because hee is Gods instrument for the begetting of a body fit to be vnited to such a soule God also doth heereby commend the generation of man and dignify it that hee is pleased so to work in mans generation as he doth not in any other creature vouchsafing to giue vnto mans generation such an admirable soule to his body For therefore was the creation of the first man more excellent then the creation of other creatures because God hauing framed his body of the dust of the earth did infuse such a soule into him Obiect It is a peeuish obiection that some make thus If God create the soule in all men then when any is born of Adulterie God should cooperate with the adulterer and so be either the Author or the approuer of the sin that will giue the soule to such a wicked generation Solut. Some answer thus that God is not the author or approuer because out of euill he onely workes good for his owne glory Others answer That God onely cooperates with the action not with the sinne of the action or the euill of the action or the euill which is in the will of the agents But the best answer is theirs that answer by a similitude thus The earth hath receiued her nature and vigour from God to nourish and bring foorth the seed that is cast into it without difference whether the seed bee lawfully taken out of the barne or stolne by fraud The stolne graine doth not cease to growe in the earth nor is it to bee expected that nature should cast out such seed and yet the earth doth not iustifie the action of him that stole the grain so is it with God that works according to the grounds of nature and his owne decree and prouidence He is not to be blamed for the euill of the action when he works according to the rules of nature and will glorifie himselfe by raising a frame of good out of that which by men was ill done Obiect 4. Wee see that children resemble the vertues or vices of their parents and therefore as from the bodies of their parents they receiue a likenes to them in body so is it that from their soules they receiue this similitude of their vertues or vices Solut. Experience shewes that this is not alwaies true For many children haue no resemblance in them of their parents qualities Secondly where this is true it is not because their soules are deriued from the soules of their parents but they haue it from the bodies of their parents For the soule after suffers from the sympathy with the body as by reason of certaine humours in the bodies of parents that incite
all patience instruct men and call vpon them and perswade them to saue their soules Doct. 7. Wee may yet further from hence obserue that before calling the very Elect of GOD may bee as bad as any other as heer till God visited those elect Gentiles they were railers as well as others so were the former sinnes mentioned 1. Cor. 6.9 found in the very Elect as the eleuenth verse sheweth This appears by the example of Manasses Marie Magdalene Paul and the thief on the Crosse see further Tit. 3.3 And the reasons may bee easily assigned for first the very Elect before calling haue the same corruption of nature that other men haue and so all haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God so as there is not one of them doth good no not one Secondly they haue the same occasions to sinne from the Deuill and the world Thirdly and were their natures somewhat better then other mens yet they would haue beene leauened as they were a part of the lump of infected mankinde This may both inform vs teach vs in diuers things It may inform vs in three things viz. about our election and our iustification and about the Gospell as the means of our vocatiō For election this point proues it must bee free seeing there was no goodness in the very elect more then in the reprobate in the estate of nature And for Iustification the Apostle Paul vseth the consideration of this doctrine in the third Chapter to the Romans to prooue it cannot be by workes And for the Gospell wee may here see the mighty power of it it may well bee called the Arme of the Lord and his power to saluation that can thus mightily and suddenly change men And it should teach vs also diuers things as it concernes either our selues or other men or God 1. For our selues it should teach vs to walke both more humbly all our daies seeing wee haue beene vile as well as others and also more watchfully seeing wee carry about vs a nature that hath beene so rebellious against God and besides wee should resist the beginnings of sinne in vs as hauing knowne by experience whither sinne will lead vs if wee giue way to it and dally with it 2 For others not yet called it should teach vs both compassion of their miserie it hauing beene our owne case and a care to shewe all meekness to all men in wayting for their conuersion and patience in bearing their wrongs 3 For God how can wee euer sufficiently loue him that hath shewed such loue to vs euen when wee were his enemies Yea wicked men that are smitten with terrors for the hainousnesse of their sinnes should hence confirme themselues against despaire seeing they may hence learne that as great offendors as they haue beene conuerted and saued 2. Tim. 1.15 There is one thing that from hence men must take heede that they doe not learne that is that they abuse not these examples to confirme themselues in sinne for there is matter to daunt them and fright them from this presumption For first not all that haue liued licentiously but some few onely haue beene saued the rest perished in their owne wickednesse Secondly of those that were saued none were saued without amendment of life and regeneration and therfore so long as thou liuest in thy sinne so long their example fits thee not Doct. 8. The last Doctrine that may from hence be made is in particular concerning the sinne of speaking euill of the godly and the point is That Gods gracious visitation doth cure that disease exactly Hee will neuer raile any more that is truly gathered vnto God in his day of visitation It is possible Christians may speake euill one of another in particular and it is lamentable when they doe so but that is vpon supposall of particular faults in those of whom they speake euill But that a man should speake euill of godly men in generall because they are godly with desire he might finde them euill doers is a vice not found in such as are truly called And therefore let such as are guilty of that sinne of speaking euill of good Christians because they follow goodnesse know That their day of visitation is not yet come Verse 13. Submit your selues to euery ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether to the King as superior FRom the 13 Verse of the first Chapter to the 9 Verse of the third Chapter is contained matter of exhortation and the exhortation is either generall or speciall The generall exhortation concernes all Christians and hath beene set downe from the 13 Verse of the first Chapter to the end of the 11 Verse of this second Chapter Now those words and those that follow to the 9 Verse of the next Chapter containe speciall exhortations which concerne some Christians onely namely subiects seruants wiues and husbands Of the duty of subiects he entreats from Verse 13 to Verse 18 Of the duty of seruants from Verse 18 to the end of this Chapter of the duty of wiues in the seuen first Verses of the third Chapter and of the duty of husbands in the eightth Verse of that Chapter So that the Apostle hauing taught all Christians before how to behaue themselues in their generall calling hee now vndertakes to teach some sorts of Christians in particular how to order themselues in their particular callings and so hee teacheth them in some things that concern the Politickes and in some things that concerne the Oeconomickes Vnto order in a Common wealth belongs the duty of Subiects and vnto houshold gouernment belongs the duty of Seruants Wiues and Husbands From the coherence and the generall consideration of the whole exhortation diuers things may be noted before I breake open the particulars of the Text. 1 The Word of God must be the warrant of all the actions of our life it not onely giues order about the businesses of Religion but it prescribes matter of obedience in all our conuersation it tells vs what to doe in our houses and in the Common wealth as well as what to doe at Church which shewes vs the perfection of the Scripture Theologie is the Mistresse of all Sciences it perfects the sound knowledge of the Ethicks Politickes or Oeconomickes and it should teach therefore in our callings whether generall or particular to seeke warrant from the Word which warrant we may finde either expressed particularly or else implied in generall directions and withall we should take heed that wee make not more sinnes in any estate of life then are made in Scripture and so not affright or disquiet our selues with vaine fears that way 2 The Apostle would haue Christians in a speciall manner careful that they offend not the lawes of the Princes of this world this appeares in that hee enioynes them the duties of Subiects first and in that they doe teach them the duty of submission both in this and other Scriptures with great force and
submission and to that end they should bee at the paines to studie this Doctrine and withall pray to God to direct them and keepe them in his feare and obedience herein and besides they should be sure that they meddle not with the changers or with the seditious Pro. 24.22 Yourselues These words may note either the manner of our submission or the matter the manner thus Submit your selues that is yeeld obedience vncompelled doe it of your selues stay not till you be forced to doe it and so the Apostle should therby import that our submission euen to men should be performed willingly and so wee should willingly and cheerefully obey their laws honor and defend their persons pray for them to God yeeld them tribute yea wee should without murmuring submit our selues to their punishments yea cheerfully beare their iniuries and so it remoues grudging and force from our submission But I rather vnderstand the words to note the matter to bee submitted that is our selues not our goods only for tribute or custom but our persons also must be at the Princes seruice our very bodies must be submitted both to doe the labour that belongs to the bearing of any office for the publike good and to the enduring of any punishment by the lawes to bee inflicted vpon the bodie and to the imploying of the body and life in defence of the true Religion and of the Kings person law and desire in warre or otherwise This is manifest by the frequent warres in the old Testament both required and performed nor may any say that Christians in the new Testament are not charged in the businesse of warre for First it was Christ's main intendment to forme a spirituall Kingdome to God hee left the state of earthly kingdomes to the condition they were in before Secondly when the Apostles doo in the generall require the submission of Christians to their Magistrates without exception of their obedience in war or otherwise it is manifest that they leaue them to the lawes of nature and the Laws of God before Thirdly euen in the new Testament this is implied by Baptist's answer to the souldiers Luke 3.14 and the praises of those worthy warriours Heb. 11.33 34. In which place also is a manifest proof for subiection euen in our bodies to the Sentences of Magistrates whether iust or vniust And the Magistrate's sword Rom. 13.4 is not onely a sword of iustice vpon malefactors in his owne Land but of reuenge on the enemies of God or the Church or Common-wealth abroad And for that Saying of our Sauiour to Peter Hee that taketh the sword shal perish with the sword Ma. 26.52 it is spoken of him to whom of the Lord it is not deliuered that is of him that hath not authority from God as Magistrates haue to command others to take the sword and it was spoken to Peter a Pastor of soules Put vp again thy sword into his place That materiall sword was not for him to vse Thirdly note that it is indefinitely propounded Your selues that all of all sorts no man can be exempted from subiection to Princes Christians must obey as well as Pagans strangers as well as home-born while they are within their gates All the doubt is whether Church-men are to bee subiect to secular Princes The Papists deny it but we affirm it and haue reason so to doo First because the precept is general without exception Secondly because the Apostle saith Rom. 13.1 that Euery soule must be subiect and therefore if Church-men haue soules they must be subiect to the higher Powers Thirdly because Princes haue executed their authority ouer Church-men whereof wee haue manifest examples in the Word as Dauid appointed the orders and offices of the Leuites Salomon put down Abiathar from the Priest-hood Iosiah burned the very bones of the Priests vpon their Altars and also purged the Temple and restored the Passeouer Christ himself was subiect to the authority of Princes he gaue tribute and appeared at their Tribunall Paul was subiect and appeared before the Magistrates and vsed their power when he appeald to Caesar 2. Thes. 2. ●ourthly there is manifest reason for it for if Church-men bee citizens or members of the Common-wealth then they must be subiect to the Rulers Lawes of the Common-wealth Fiftly the doctrine of the purest times since the Apostles is agreeable heerunto for Chrysostome vpon the 13 to the Romans auouches it that Priests Monks yea Apostles Euangelists and Prophets must be subiect to secular Powers And Bernard reasons out of that place thus If euery soule must be subiect then yours also that are Church-men who hath excepted you from this All If any man go about to except you hee goes about to deceiue you And Pope Gregory acknowledgeth the Emperour Maurice as Lord of him and the Clergy They obiect that the ecclesiasticall gouernment is greater than the secular iure diuino and therefore Church-men ought not to be subiect because the Superiour ought not to be subiect to the Inferiour Ans. The ecclesiasticall gouernment is superiour to the secular gouernment and it is inferiour to it it is superiour in respect of the rule ouer themselues in the things of the Kingdome of heauen by means appointed of Christ viz. the Word and Sacraments c but it is inferiour in respect of ciuill subiection in the obedience or submission that concerns body and goods The Prince must bee subiect to the Church in matters of faith and godlinesse and the Church subiect to the Prince in matters of this life and ciuill subiection How far Princes haue power in cases ecclesiasticall will be shewed afterwards They obiect that diuers Councels doo except the Clergy from the Barre and Tribunall of Princes and diuers Popes haue discharged the Clergy of such subiection Ans. Councels Popes cannot decree against the Word of God besides they iudge and determine in their owne case for what were the Popes or Councels but Clergy-men Moreouer the Popes assumed a power to themselues which was neuer giuen them for they were so farre off from hauing power to free their Clergy that they had no power to free themselues 2. Thes. 2.7 They obiect again and say that it is absurd the sheep should rule and iudge the shepheard Princes are but sheep and Priests are the shepheards Answer Magistrates are not sheep in all things but in spirituall things in matters of faith and so Ministers are shepheards to feed their soules but in ciuill things the Magistrate is the shepheard and the Clergy-men sheep because citizens or subiects But they say that Clergy-men are freed by priuiledge from the Emperors and by the Lawes of the Empire Ans. If that be so then their priuiledge is Iure humano not diuino Secondly they plead a false priuiledge for in things in question they were neuer priuiledged that is in matter of obedience to the Law or in matter of punishment in things criminall Thirdly if it were so then they are
serue God or to bee so religious Mal. 3.14 15. Ios. 24.14 Fiftly they that make no conscience of secret sinnes or hypocrisy in God's worship these feare not God because they set not the Lord alwaies before them nor feare to omit or do such things as the world cannot take notice of Sixtly they that meddle with the seditious or changers how forward soeuer they seeme in religion yet such as are set to bee so inclinable to bee led by changers haue not the true feare of God in them Prou. 24.21 Seuenthly they that liue in any knowne sinne and make no conscience to depart from iniquity Prou. 3.7 and 14.2 Such are they that are mentioned in the Catalogue Mal. 3.5 sorcerers adulterers c. especially the men that bless themselues in their hearts when they are guilty of hatefull sinnes Psal. 26.1 2 4. On the other side such as truely feare God may bee knowne by these signes First they make conscience to obey God in their liues and keepe his ordinances Deut. 6.2 They shew that they feare him by seruing of him Secondly they doe beleeue God and his seruants speaking to them in his name This was a signe the Israelites feared God because they beleeued God and his seruant Moses Exod. 14.31 Thirdly they that truely feare God do depart frō euil dare not liue or allow themselues in any knowne sinne whether it bee sinne in opinion or in life In opinion they that feare God will giue him glory though it be to change for the opinions not onely they but all the world haue held Reuel 14.7 And so in practice he that truly feares God ●ates all sin in some measure It is a ●oule signe one doth not feare God when hee will not forsake his errours or faults though he be conuinced of them Fourthly they that make a conscience of it to obey God in all soundnes of practice in their conve●sation and so not onely in worshipping him with reuerence Psal. 5.8 but in striuing to doe all the good duties God requires Psal. 5.8 and that this signe may be applied effectually wee may try ourselues by our obedience to God whether our feare of him bee right or no. First if we obey in secret and dare not leaue vndone such things as no man can charge vs withall and doe withall striue against and resist the very hypocrisie of the heart and stand in feare of God's offence for the euils are found in our very thoughts this will proue vs to feare God soundly in truth and vprightnesse of heart Iosh. 24.14 Col. 3.22 When we set the Lord alwaies before vs and with desire to approue our selues to him it is an excellent signe Secondly When wee heare the Word of God and are told what to auoide or doe wee are then tried whether we feare God soundly or no For if we dare not delay but make Conscience of it to practise God's will as fast as wee know it it is a good signe but otherwise it is a foule signe that many Christians that make a fayre shewe are not sound because they are not afraid to liue in the sinnes God reproues by his Word nor to leaue still vnperformed the Precepts Counsels and directions are giuen them from day to day The Religion of many that seeme to bee of the better sort is a meere formality as this very signe proues Psal. 86.11 Isaiah 50.10 Thirdly a great guesse may be had at mens feare of God by their care and Conscience they make of their obedience in their particular calling A man may haue comfort that his feare of God and profession of Religion is right if hee hate idlenesse lying couetousnesse deceit frowardnesse and vniust dealing in his calling For though to deale iustly with all men be no infallible signe of the true feare of God yet it is a probable one and where it is not there can be no true feare of God Thus Magistrates must proue that they feare God 2. Chron 19.27 Exod. 18.21 and thus euery man in his place yea if women would haue the reputation to be such as feare God they must let their workes prayse them If they be idle froward vndutifull busie-bodies and carelesse of their domesticall duties what feare of God can bee in them Fourthly it will be manifest that our obedience flowes from the true feare of God if we will obey against our profit or ease or credit or our owne carnall reasons or affections Hereby the Lord said he knew that Abraham feared him because he spared not his owne sonne c. Gen. 22.12 And thus of the feare of God The last part of the charge concernes our loyalty to the King Honour the King The Apostle intends in these words but briefely to vrge the practice of their duty vrged in the exhortation Verse 13. saue that the tearmes haue something in them of explication of that doctrine and something for confirmation For we must honour the King 1. In our hearts 2. In our words 3. In our workes First we must honor him in our hearts and shew it two waies 1. We must not curse the King no not in secret no not in our thoughts We must not entertayne impatient and vile thoughts of the King but from our hearts esteeme him for his greatnesse authority and gifts 2. When the King commands any thing that seemes to others or to vs harsh inconuenient or doubtfull we must honour the King by interpreting his Laws in the best sence If loue must not thinke euill but hope all things of all sorts of men then much more of Kings It were greatly to bee longed for that this note might enter into the brests of some men they would then bee afraid to charge so much euill of the Kings ordinances not onely when they might finde a fairer sence but oftentimes expresly against the intent and meaning of the ordinance Secondly wee must honour the King in our words three waies 1. By reuerent speeches to them and of them 2. By a thankfull acknowledgement of the good is in them and wee receiue by them 3. By praying to God with all manner of praier for them 1. Tim. 2.1 Thirdly we must honour them in our works 1. By paying their tributes and customes 2. By submitting and yeelding to their ordinances preferring the obedience to their ordinances before the censures or contrary opinions of what men soeuer and this is the maine thing intended verse the 13. of this Chapter And therefore I will omit the larger handling of this point in this place Verse 18. Seruants bee subiect to your Masters with all feare not onely to the good and gentle but also to the froward HItherto of the duties of subiects and so of the exhortation as it is politicall and concernes the Common-wealth Now the Apostle proceeds to giue directions oeconomicall that concerne the family or houshould gouernment Before I consider of the particular exhortations something would be said in generall concerning a family A
teach seruants especially two things the one is humility they should run a race fitted to their condition they should conquer pride and aspiring remembring that God hath abased them The other is they should keep themselues in their places and callings and not shake off the yoake by running away c. seeing God hath taken them bound to serue But the former is most proper to this place seeing they are but seruants they should be content with such diet apparell labour vsage as is conuenient to their condition Fourthly it may serue for great humiliation to such seruants as are wicked men These are of three sorts some of them are brought to this condition by their owne wickednes of life some of them are wicked seruants too as well as wicked men some are tolerable and sometimes profitable seruants though euill men all are in ill case For this is but the beginning of euill to them if they repent not For if they liue in their sinnes as they serue men now they shall serue diuels hereafter and so their bondage shall be inuested vpon them without end Quest. But seeing many godly men and women may bee seruants how may a godly Christian comfort himselfe in this estate of abasement Ans. Though it bee an outward misery to be a seruant yet there are many consolations to sweeten the bitternes of this abasement First because extremities of bondage are remoued from seruants with vs for the most part so as their seruice is but for a time and voluntary too to hire themselues to whom they will and Masters haue not power of their liues Secondly because their calling is acknowledged for a lawfull calling by God Thirdly because God hath bound Masters by his Word to vse them wel the Lawes of Princes prouide punishments for vnreasonable Masters Fourthly because Christ hath redeemed them from the spirituall bondage of seruing the Law and the diuell and Gods Iustice so as he is Christs free-man Fiftly because though his body bee subiect yet his soule is free and not subiect to any mortall creature Sixtly because their Masters are their brethren in Religion Seuenthly because God hath prouided by his vnchangeable Law that one day in seuen they shall rest from their labour Eightthly because before God there is neither bond nor free but all are one in Christ Gal. 3.28 Col. 31.11 Ninthly because all the benefits by Religion whether inward or outward belong to seruants as well as Masters 1. Cor. 12.13 Tenthly because the very work that seruants doe in their particular calling is accepted of God as obedience to him as well as the performing of the duties of Religion God accepts their daily labor as well as he doth praying hearing the Word receiuing the Sacraments reading the Scriptures fasting or the like Eph. 6.6 Eleuenthly because they are freed in that condition from many cares seeing they haue now nothing to doe in effect but to obey in what is appointed them which is a great ease to a minde that desires to see what he hath to doe to please God seeing now onely one thing is necessary which is to obey in what he is commanded and directed Twelfthly because he shall not onely haue wages from men but from God also Ephes. 6.8 Lastly because there shall be no seruants in heauen but in Gods Kingdom they are as free as their Masters and therefore should not thinke much of a little hardnesse or harshnesse in this life Thus of the originall of seruants Secondly we may hence note that seruants are bound by God himselfe in his Word vnto their subiection The Word of God doth belong to the calling of Seruants as well as to any other calling God hath included them within the doctrine of Scripture as well as any other men partly to shew that they haue right to the Scriptures as well as others and partly to shewe that the power of binding seruants is from God and God hath taken it vpon him by his Word to teach Seruants as well as other men and that for two reasons The one is because Seruants belong to the Kingdome of Christ and his Church as well as other Christians and therefore must be taught as well as they Secondly the other is because vsually Masters are negligent in teaching them and therefore God prouides that by his Word they shall be taught Men haue some care in teaching their children but little of their seruants and therefore God to shew that he is no respecter of persons giues order to his Ministers to see them instructed The Vse may be diuers Vses First Masters must learne from hence their duty For when they see that God takes care to teach their seruants they should not bee so proud or carelesse as to neglect their instruction Yea it shewes also that if they would haue them taught or reproued or incouraged they must doe it with God's Word and with their owne yea it also shewes the folly and wickednesse of diuers Masters that cannot abide their seruants should heare Sermons or much reade the Scriptures when they doe not only wickedly in restrayning their seruants from the meanes of their Saluation or comfort but doe foolishly also hinder them of that meanes which should especially make them good seruants Secondly Seruants may hereby bee instructed or informed and taught Informed that though neyther Master nor Minister will teach them yet they are not excused because they are bound to learne from Gods Word their duties And taught from hence they must bee to doe their duties to their Masters not for feare or reward but for Conscience sake because God hath bound them to his subiection Thirdly Ministers should learne and from hence be awakened to take notice of their charge both to Catechize in speciall and to teach seruants in generall as well as other their hearers If it be a part of the Commission of great Apostles to instruct seruants as well as other Christians then what accounts can they giue to God if it be found that they haue had no care of instructing the seruants of their parishes and charges Doct. 3. Thirdly the indefinite propounding of the word Seruants shewes that all sorts of seruants are equally bound to subiection hired seruants are as strictly bound as bond seruants The seruants of Princes are not free from the duty of seruants more then other seruants and so likewise poore mens seruants must be subiect and obedient to their Masters with as much reuerence and fear as seruants to great men Old seruants are tied to as much duty as such as come new to serue Religious seruants are bound to as much subiection and obedience as Pagans or rather their bond is the stronger because Religion should rather make them better seruants and so there is no difference of sexes men seruants are bound as well as women seruants neither doth birth office gifts or meanes priuiledge any seruant from the strictnesse of the bond of subiection Be subiect The duty then required
Conscience is such an Arbiter betweene God and vs that sometimes it speakes for God against vs and sometimes for vs to God But that wee may bee more distinctly informed about Conscience I therefore come to the second point which is to consider what Conscience can doe or how it is imployed in vs and Conscience is imployed both for GOD and for man which work I will consider first apart and then ioyntly For God then Conscience works diuersely and hath many offices vnder God and for God for it is Gods speciall spy set in the hart of man to watch him and his Intelligencer Notary to set down what man hath done It is God's hand-writing the Law of God written in our hearts or rather worketh by the help of that body of the Law written by the finger of God vpon the Tables of mens hearts It is a co-witnes with God Rom 9.1 It is also Gods Lieutenant and a great Commander placed within vs that seuerely requires homage and seruice to be done to God and especially diuerts man from ill directing him in the carefull manner of seruing of God For God will not accept any seruice that Conscience doth not order 2. Tim. 1.3 It is a taster for GOD in point of doctrine of Religion For all doctrines must bee brought to the Conscience to bee tried whether they bee of God or no 2. Cor. 4.2 And finally it makes a man endure griefe and suffer wrong for God and his glory as this Text imports For man Conscience is many waies imployed as first it is imployed in viewing and surueying the things of man especially the hidden things of man and heer the power of Conscience is wonderfull For other creatures may see the things without them but haue no power to see the things within them onely man hee hath a knowledge reflexed The eye of a man too can see other things but without a glasse it cannot see it self But now Conscience can discern it self and the whole actions of man and so it differs from Science or the knowledge of the minde for to knowe other things is science but to knowe our selues is Conscience The soule then by Conscience knowes it self it views the thoughts memory affections of the soule and can tell what we think desire loue feare hate c. Secondly in matters of Religion Conscience is specially imployed for instance both in the Word and the Sacraments For the Word the mystery of faith euen all the grounds of Religion they are laid vp and are in the keeping of Conscience 1. Tim. 3.9 And in Baptisme whereas God makes a couenant with vs and likewise requires a restipulation or promise on our part Conscience is heerin imployed and without Conscience God will do nothing in the businesse It was the forme in the Primitiue Times that the party which was to bee baptized was to bee examined before God whether hee did beleeue the question was Credis Doost thou beleeue And he was to answer Credo I doo beleeue Now this answer God would not take vnlesse the conscience would say that hee did beleeue as he said this is the answer A good conscience is mentioned 1. Pet. 3.21 Again a good conscience serues in all the offices of our life or affairs euen in all things to be a witnes if we do that which conscience thinks well to comfort vs and if we doo that which conscience thinks ill to discourage vs Rom. 2.15 and 9.1 Yea conscience is the guide of our liues We are heer pilgrims and strangers farre from our home and in iourney continually now GOD hath set consciences in vs to bee our guides that in all things we are to doo we may be directed and encouraged by conscience taking the direction and warrant of conscience as a speciall ground of our actions so as to do contrary to what conscience bids vs is a sinne for it doth not onely witnes about what is past but it directs vs about what is to come as now to be done But the principall work of Conscience whether we respect God or man is To keep Court in the heart of man There is in man Forum Conscientiae a Court of Conscience a secret Tribunall is set vp in the heart of man and therein sits Conscience and arraigneth accuseth bringeth witnesse sentenceth and doth execution Now concerning the iudgement of Conscience keeping an Assise in the heart of man two things are to be considered First the law by which Conscience iudgeth secondly the manner of the proceeding in iudgement For the first Conscience iudgeth of the actions of men by vertue of certain principles as I said before which it findeth in the vnderstanding gathered either from the Law of Nature or from experience of God's prouidence or from the Scriptures Now the manner how it proceeds in iudgement is in form of reasoning as I said before for in the minde the Conscience findes as it were a Book of Law written which is in the keeping of the faculty they call it in schools Synteresis from hence the Conscience takes the ground of reasoning and from the memory it takes euidence of the fact or state of the man that is arraigned and then by it self it iudiciously concludes and passeth Sentence and so it proceeds whether it condemn or absolue In the Iudgement of condemnation it proceeds thus First it cites or calls for the soule to be tried then it accuseth in this form out of the body of the law kept in the minde it takes the conclusion it means to work vpon and then vseth the memory to testifie of the fact as for instance Euery murderer is an offender thou art a murderer therefore thou art proued to bee an offender Then comes the Sentence in the same order Hee that commits murder without repentance shall be damned thou committest murder without repentance and therefore art a damned creature So likewise it proceeds in absoluing For euidence it proceeds thus He that hath such and such marks as godly sorrow the loue or fear of God c. hee is a childe of God but thou hast these marks therfore thou art a childe of God and then it goeth to Sentence Hee that is the childe of God shall bee saued but thou art prooued to bee the childe of God therefore thou shalt be saued Nor doth it rest in the Sentence but immediately doth it selfe begin the execution for laying hould vpon the guilty person it presently buffets him and terrifies him and pricks him at the very heart and gnawes him many times with vnspeakeable torments and tortures And so contrariwise in the Sentence of absolution it proceeds with comfort settleth and quieteth the hart of the Absolued and many times makes it able with ioy to stand vndanted against all the powers of hell and the world of which more afterwards when I come to intreat of the sorts of Conscience Obserue by the way the difference between the Court of Conscience within vs and mens Courts of
Iustice without vs. For in mens Courts they proceed secundum allegata probata according to allegation and proofs but God hath appointed another Iudgement in the heart of man there God iudgeth not according to allegation and proofes but according to Conscience and hath associated to euery man a notary of his owne and a witnesse of his owne which hee produceth out of his very bosome so as man shall be made to confesse what hee hath done though all the world excuse him and shall haue comfortable testimony in himselfe though all the world beside accuse him The glory of the power of Conscience appears by the third point and that is the prerogatiues properties of Conscience in a man for 1. It keeps Court in the heart of a man without limitation of time it will call a man to answer and hear Iudgement at any time it is not limited to any terms nor can the Sentence be delaied it hath power to examine testifie and giue Sentence at any time of the yeer at pleasure nor will it admit any appeal to any creature 2. It is subiect properly onely to God no earthly Prince can command the Conscience of a man as will more appeare afterwards 3. It keeps continuall residence in the heart of man it is alwaies with him at home abroad it obserueth and watcheth him in all places in the Church at his table in his bed day and night it neuer leaues him 4. God hath subiected man to the obedience of Conscience if it command erroneously if it be in things indifferent as in the case of meats and daies in the Apostles time if the Conscience doubted or forbade the vse of them which yet in themselues might be vsed the man was bound to follow his Conscience though the Conscience erred and so sinned in doubting or forbidding Rom. 14.14 23. 5. Yea so much honour doth God giue vnto the Conscience that he suffers his owne most holy Spirit to bring-in euidence in the Court of conscience for so we reade that the Spirit of Adoption doth beare witnes before our spirits that is before the Conscience that wee are the sonnes of God Rom. 8.15 6. It is a great prerogatiue that GOD hath granted Immortality vnto Conscience Conscience neuer dies no not when we die Euery mans Conscience shall bee found a lier at the day of Iudgement and in so great request with Christ as that dreadful Iudgement shall be guided according to the euidence and verdict of Conscience Rom. 2.15 16. For the fourth point Conscience is not all of a sort in all men some haue good Consciences and some haue ill Consciences and both these kindes of Consciences must be considered of Conscience considered as good comes to be so either by creation or by renouation By creation Adam had his Conscience good but by the first sinne Conscience became euill in him and all his posterity so as all men naturally haue euill Consciences and no men haue their consciences good but as they are renued The difference between a good Conscience by creation and renouation is this that by creation Conscience was perfectly good from the first moment it was infused till the Fall and did discouer it self by excusing and comforting alwaies for Adam's Conscience till his Fall could accuse him of nothing But by renouation Conscience is good for the time of this life but imperfectly and increaseth in good men by degrees and so because man is renued but in part it is a part of the goodnes of the Conscience to accuse for sinne especially if it be presumptuous after Calling as well as to excuse from faults while the man keeps his vprightnes That a good Conscience should onely excuse is true in this world onely of Conscience as it was good by creation Now concerning the goodnes or badnesse of Conscience these seuen things are to bee considered of First that all mens Consciences by nature are euill Secondly the difference of euill in mens Consciences Thirdly the signes of an euill Conscience Fourthly the hurt of an euill Conscience Fiftly the meanes how euill Consciences may bee made good Sixtly the signes of a good Conscience Seuenthly the great happines of the man that hath a good Conscience For the first that all mens Consciences are by nature euill is manifest because all haue sinned in Adam and lost their originall righteousnes in all the faculties of the soule and so euery man in his naturall condition is in euery point vncleane and to the impure all things are impure euen their Consciences are polluted saith the Apostle Titus 1.15 For the second euill is not in the same degree in all mens Consciences but after a different manner in diuers men for First in most men we see that Conscience is so feeble and works so little that it seemes to be but a small spark or like a bubble which riseth now and then and presently vanisheth Now the reason why Conscience stirs so little in the most men is not to bee taken from the nature of Conscience for that can work all works mentioned before but from diuers things in man For first Adams sin as it depriued all mens Consciences of originall righteousnes which was the life of the Conscience so it brought such a deprauation and euill disease vpon the Conscience that it was neuer healed nor cured in the naturall man to this day but the weaknes arising from the infection holds him downe still Secondly the generall ignorance and darknes which is in the world is one great cause why Conscience lieth so miserably weak and neglected For it cannot work for want of light For in the minde it findes onely a few naturall principles or some generall truthes of religiō which are altogether insufficient to direct in the particular occasions of mens liues Thirdly besides the Law of nature is corrupted in man and so those principles are very muddy and vncertaine and the generals of Religion are poysoned with secret Obiections gathered from the controuersies of so many false religions Fourthly further it is manifest that the cares and pleasures of life oppress conscience in many in them Conscience stirs not not because it cannot stir but because there is no leasure to heare what it saith men are so violently carried to the pleasures and busines of this world As a man that runs in a race many times runs with such violence that hee cannot heare what is said vnto him by some that he passeth by though it were counsell that might direct him in the right way of the race So is it with men that haste to be rich Conscience often calls to them to take heed of going out of the way by deceit or lying or oppression or the like But they pursue riches so violently that they cannot heare the voice of Conscience And so is it with the voluptuous person and with the most men that liue in any habituall gainfull sinne Fiftly yea this weaknes comes vpon
Christ. 320 Inferiours why first charged 715 Inoffensiuenesse 329 Inuentions of men how to bee obeyed how not See Magistrates 587 Iudgements how far extended 249 Iudgements spiritual the worst 251 K Kindred spirituall the best 290 Kings earthly and spirituall difference betwixt them 295 Kings meant by Saint Peter 604 Originall of Kings 606 Excellency of Kings 609 Supremacy of Kings 612 L Lawes of land not to be transgressed 561 Lawes of land to be studied 562 Learned men oft oppose the Word 238 Liberty of Christians 670 Liberty abused 680 Liuelinesse spirituall 143 Liuing spiritually how happy 852 Light acceptation thereof 354 Light of godly maruelous 358 Lost sheepe who be 893 How they that as sheepe may bee lost 896 Loue to the Godly 329 Saints onely loued of God 402 How that Loue prescribed 404 Lusts to bee auoided 406 Diffrence of lusts in the godly 408 Helps to auoid lust 409 Lusts how fleshly 413 How lusts hurt the soule 416 How victory ouer lusts 469 When ouercome of lusts 470 M Madnesse spirituall 654 Magistrates our dutie to them to be learned 561 Submit to Magistrates why 566 All to be subiect to magistrates 571 How Magistrates an ordinance of men 575 Magistrates distinguished 578 Magistrates in what to be obeied 581 In what not to be obeied ibid. Magistrates power in matters ecclesiasticall 582 Obedience to Magistrates for the Lords sake 600 Magistrates of God 615 Magistrates to encourage godly men 629 When not fit to complaine to Magistrates 824 When redresse may be sought of Magistrates 825 Masters their originall 732 Signes of good Masters 736 Malice signes of it 6 Remedies against it 10 Maliciousnes 680 Meditation rules for it 219 Meekenesse 323 Melancholy rules about it 64 Mercy in man 327 Men not vnder mercy 380 Why many obtain not mercy 388 4. Properties of Gods mercy 390 6. Effects of Gods mercy 394 Helpes to obtaine mercy 399 Ministers must apply the word 220 Mortification signes of it 849 N The godly nation 311 O Obedience see Magistrates Obstinacy of sinners 478 Offence see scandal 255 Offence by outward shewes 332 P Patience 327 Motiues to patience 822 The peculiar people of God 314 Wicked no people 366 Who are not Gods people 369 Gods people 3. waies 371 Gods people excell all other 372 Gods people onely beloued ones 402 The phantasy 452 The work of it in sleepe 454 Priests how the godly are Priests 155 What vses to bee made therof ibid. Priesthood of Christians 300 Praise of men how to bee sought 623 The best need praise 624 For what praise due 626 Helps to get praise from men 628 R The faculty of reason 457 Refusing Christ. 242 Remembrance of misery past profitable 345 Repentāce put off dangerous 548 Repentāce conformable to Christs death in many things 849 Reprobation 851 Reports when not to bee receiued 494 Reproaches see euill speaking 37 Helps to beare reproaches 493 Reproaches to bee auoided 646 Reuiling 818 Roiall estate of godly 293 Righteous life the best life 854 Righteous mens signes 857 Righteousnes distinguished 860 Righteousnes reiected why 862 Helps vnto Righteousnes 864 Defects of Righteousnes 868 S Sacrifices for Christians 161 Lawes for offering those sacrifices 165 Scandal defined and distinguished 255 How wicked take scandall at Christ. 257 Wherein not to regard scandall of wicked 261 How guilty of giuing scandal 262 Rules to preuent scandall 263 How scandal taken at word 273 Rules about giuing or taking scandall at ceremonies 595 Seruing God 686 Who serue not God 689 Prerogatiues of Gods seruāts 690 Seruants of men 718 Seruitude how it came in 719 Seruants comfort 723 Seruants subiection 727 Helps to seruants to obey 728 How seruants shew a feare to God 734 Scripture why Word so called 176 Wherein it exceeds other writings 176 Sense by the soule 449 Of the fiue senses 449 Sight and hearing the best senses 450 The inward sense 452 Sheep in allusion to men 888 Signes of lost sheepe 893 How they that are as sheep may be lost 896 Shame spirituall 209 Sicknes of soule see diseases 873 Sin against holy Ghost 106 Sin done many waies 809 Who aliue to sin 140 Sincere Word see Word 74 Sion spirituall 187 Society how made happy 713 Societies diuers kinds of thē 606 Soule diuers acceptation of it 418 Description of the Soule ibid. What it is not 420 The soule is a substance 421 The soule is immortall 423 The originall of the soule 429 It comes by generation 431 The soule created of God 434 Soule and body how vnited 441 The soules faculties 446 The soules working motion 455 Why the soule was made 460 War against the soule 463 Speaking euill 37 Motiues against it 39 How to keepe men from speaking euill of vs. 45 Saints euer euill spoken of 486 The causes why it is so 487 Reasons against euill speaking 489 Euill speaking when odious 491 Stone how Christ a stone 120 How the godly are stones 141 Why liuely stones 143 Godly strangers and pilgrims 410 Submission see Magistrates 566 Suffering for Christ marks of it 284 Sufferings of Christ. 796 787 T Tabernacle how Christ one 149 How godly a tabernacle 150 Taste of Word see Word 100 V Vaine glory 783 Vegetation by the soule 447 Vertue of God what it is 317 Nine vertues of Christ to bee shewed forth 321 Vertues in vs vertues in Christ. 334 Vnbeleeuers are disobedient 231 Visitation attributed to God 534 How God visits 535 Time of Gods visitation 540 Signes of being visited in mercy 541 Glorious effects thereof 552 W War lawfull 570. Will of God 631 ●●ds will a strong motiue 630 Well doing see Doing well 5 Things to profit by the Word 3 Hinderances of the Word 5 Desire of the Word 50 How desire of the Word discerned 53 Impediments to the desire of the Word 56 Meanes to get true desire of the Word 61 How to preserue a true desire of the Word 62 How wicked men may desire the Word 72 The Word resembled to milk 73 How the Word is sincere 74 The Word sweetned with Gods goodnes 96 How the sweetenes of the Word is tasted 101 Difference betwixt godly and wicked in tasting the Word 102 Why many haue no taste of the Word 109 Word of God our Warrant 559 How Gods word is Gods wil. 634 World contempt thereof 326 Worthy walking 340.378 Works note of Religion 496 Works iustifie before men 497 Works wherein good 498 Rules for good works 501 Kinds of good works 505 How works cōfort the Saints 508 For what ends good works 509 How works may bee lost 511 What works may bee shewed 513 What may not be shewed 514 FINIS The coherence The Analysis of th● first part of this chapter 5. Things to be auoided if we would profit by the word Generall obseruations The benefit of brief catalogues of sins or duties or graces How many waies the sinnes heer-mentioned do hinder the word Of Malice Acceptation of the word Signes of malice Reasons
will not be despised 1. Tim. 4.12 2. The Diuell that god of this world doth mightily labour in this point to keepe men from affecting the Gospell If he cannot hinder men from hearing then his next worke is by all possible indeuours to blinde their minds and marre their tastes that they may not perceiue nor regard the glorious things of God in Christ 2. Cor. 4.4 3. Euill company is a wonderfull impediment it causeth perpetually hardnes of hart and carelesnes it keepes the hearts of the wicked men in a continuall habituall deadnes and the best men seldome light into prophane company but they get some degree of dulnes and deadnes of affections by it Pro. 9.6 Psa. 119.115 4. God himselfe being prouoked by mans extreame wilfulnes in sinning giues them ouer to a spirit of slumber and curseth their very blessings yea restraineth sometimes the very gifts of his seruants that so he may execute his iudgements vpon a rebellious people The Lord hideth his statutes from them and with-holding his spirit keeps back the life of the word in their harts Esay 6.10 yea many times to scourge the vnthankfulnes and vnprofitablenes of his own people he doth for a time hide his testimonies from them Psal. 119.19 Thus much of the lets without vs. The internall lets must be considered First In the wicked Secondly In the godly The cause of this hartlesnes and want of affection in the wicked is First their ignorance they know not either the word or the worth of the word or their own need of it Secondly their prophaneness irreligiousnes They liue without God or without Christ in the world they make no conscience of their waies They forget their later end they minde not the good of their soules but only earthly things they neuer tasted of the bountifulnes of the Lord but were altogether corrupt and strangers from the life of God only greedy in sinning Thirdly Atheisme There is in the harts of all wicked men in some degree abominable conceits concerning God and his word They either doubt whether the scriptures be the true word of god or els they are strongly carried to resolue ther is no profit in the knowledge of gods waies or in seruing the almighty Iob. 21.14 Malac. 3.15 Fourthly Cares of life The loue of the profits or pleasures of this life choak the word and the power of it as is apparant by these places Math. 13. Luke 14. Psal. 119 36 37 c. Fiftly In some either whoredome or wine for these two sinns together or either of them take away mens harts they are voide of all due consideration and of all affection to gods word They are senseless creatures Hosh. 4. Thus of the cheef letts in the wicked The lets of affection in the godly are diuers First Sometimes it is their worldliness their too much minding and plodding about the things of this life or their excessiue burthening of their heads about their calling They haue too much to doe or they haue too much care care I say that is distrustfull and carking care Psal. 119.36 Secondly Sometimes it is want of comfortable felowshippe in the Gospell Affection that is alone is seldome constant in the same degree There is much quickning and comfort and incitation in a constant and tender and profitable society with such as loue the word Psalm 119. verse 63. Thirdly sometimes it is some secret sinne that gets too much dominion ouer them As affection may stand with meer frailties and infirmities So on the other side if any sinne once get head and men yeeld to it and agree to obey it their affections to the word presently dy within them Psal. 119.133 yea if this sinne bee but in the thoughts and bee yeelded to and delighted in and that constantly they seek the pleasure of contemplatiue wickednes and do not resist it by praying against it euen vain thoughts may dead the affections and poison them Psal. 119.113 Fourthly sometimes it is neglect of mortification The soule will gather aboundance of humors as well the body and therefore Christians should not go too long especially if they feele a kinde of fulnesse to growe vpon them but take a purge that is seriously and secretly set time apart to humble themselues before God purging out their most secretest corruptions with all harty confession before God Fiftly sometimes it is want of practice or want of an orderly disposing of their waies in godlinesse If they rest onely in hearing their affections cannot last long sincere and besides the most Christians burden their owne harts for very want of order and that they go not distinctly about the works of godlinesse but rake together a great heap of doctrine which they knowe not what to doo withall Psal. 50. vlt. Sixtly sometimes again it is occasioned by inordinate feeding when Christians begin to affect nouelties and seek to themselues a heap of teachers they scape not long without fulnesse and the fits of loathing 2. Tim. 4.3 Seuenthly sometimes very idleness is the hindrance The want of a particular calling to imploy themselues in the six daies breeds a general kinde of wearinesse and satiety which extends the heart of it not onely to the times of priuate duties in the working daies but to the very Sabbath also They cannot work at Gods work with any great delight that had no more minde to their owne work Eightthly sometimes it is neglect of preparation and praier before we come to the word Ninthly sometimes it is a violent kinde of ignorance and vnbeleef when a Christian knowes not his right to the word and wil not be perswaded of the fatherly loue and presence of God in his ordinance If Preachers must say I haue beleeued therefore I will speak so must Hearers say I haue beleeued therefore I will hear They should knowe that they are welcome to Christ and may eat and drink Cant. 5.1 and that their heritage lieth in the word Psal. 119. Tenthly sometimes it is a very disease in the body as melancholy or some other which doth so oppresse the heart that it doth not take delight in any thing But of this more in the next Vse Lastly any of the sinnes mentioned in the former verse will hinder affection Malice Hypocrisie or Enuy or any of the rest Vse 3. The third vse may bee for instruction to teach vs to striue for affection to the word and to prouide to order our selues so as wee bee not wanting in the direction of the Apostle and so two sorts are to be taught that is such as want appetite and such as haue it that they may keep it aright Quest. What must such doo as finde either want of appetite or decay of it Ans. Such as would get sound affections to the word must doo six things First they must refrain their feet from euery euill way It is impossible to get sound affections without sound reformation of life Psalm 119. Secondly they must pray for it they