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

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shined forth to others And at this day they offend this way that will not abase themselues in their Ministerie to speake plainely to the meancapacitie of the simple yea they also put the light vnder a bushell who beeing fit for this Ministerie doe spend their daies wholly in the Vniuersities except it bee that they want a calling into the Church and haue a lawefull calling for their staie in the Vniuersities and though men haue not such meanes of calling forth as were to be wished yet they that liue in Schooles of Learning ought to shew themselues willing to become lights abroad in the Church saying with the Prophet Isaie when his lippes were touched with a cole from the Altar Here am I Lord send me In a word all persons in this calling that any way hide their gifts are here blamed for they are lights which should not be hidde From these comparisons wherein Christ sets out the open state of his Apostles to the viewe of the world the Papists do gather that the Church of God cannot be hid and therefore visibilitie must needs be the note of a true Church But we must knowe that Gods Church may sometime lie hid in regard of the word and the Ministerie thereof as it did in the daies of Elias and in the time when Poperie spread it selfe ouer these Westerne parts Neither doth this place make ought against vs for Christ here speakes of his Apostles and of their ministerie properly which could not be hid and not of euery ordinarie Minister who are not lights of all the world as the Apostles were but onely in their particular standing Secondly the Ministerie is a light yet not alwaies shining to the whole world and therefore it is added in the second similitude that it giueth light to them that are in the house that is in the Church of God And so in the darkenesse of Poperie the Ministerie of the Gospel was hidde from the world and yet it gaue some light to the hidden Church the house of God to shew them their calling and the meanes of saluation Now as these similitudes concerne the Ministers so they may well be enlarged to euery Christian in his place for in this regard the Minister is a patterne to his people and many times in Scripture others besides the Ministers are called lights 2. Sam. 21. 17. Dauid is called the light of Israel not onely for the comfort of his Regiment but also as he was a King by his vpright life he gaue light to the people wherof he was gouernour And so answerably all Superiours in their places must be lights the publike magistrate to the common wealth the master to his seruants parents to their children and euery Christian to his brother Philip. 2. 5. Shine as lights in the world in the middest of a naughtie and crooked nation This therefore is our dutie if we be Christians as we must labour to get the knowledge of Gods will into our hearts so must we cause the power thereof to shine forth in the example of a good life whereby others may be directed in the darkenesse of this world But alas here in the case of many is lamentable who thorough ignorance and disobedience be yet in darkenesse these must bee taken out of their places as darke candles and troden vnder foote and so cast into eternall darkenesse where they shall flame in woe for euermore Vers. 16. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your father which is in heaven This is the conclusion of this reason where by shining is meant ministeriall teaching whereby they make knowne Gods will vnto his people wherewith he also requireth answerable practise in a godly life as if he should say Seeing by your calling you are so conspicuous to the world therefore looke to the euidence of your Ministerie and to the holinesse of your liues that so the people may not onely heare your doctrine but also see your good workes and thereby be mooued to follow the same and so to glorifie God in heauen A most worthy conclusion wherein obserue two points touching the ministerie of the word First in what manner Ministers must teach the word Secondly the ende of all teaching For the first Gods word must first be preached that men may heare it secondly therewith must goe an vnblameable conuersation bringing forth good workes that men therein may see the will of God Here then are two parts of a ministers office Doctrine and good life and they must goe together in him that is a good Minister Hee that teacheth to write will first giue rules of writing to his schollers and then set them copies to followe and so doth euery master in his Art there is no learning of any thing vnlesse examples goe with rules Againe God will haue men to learne his will two waies by Hearing and Seeing the Minister therefore that is to teach Gods will must not onely by doctrine instruct the eare but by a godly life exemplifie his doctrine vnto the eie 1. Tim. 4. 12. Be vnto them that beleeue an example in word and in conuersation In regard of this double charge that lies on euery Minister the people for their parts must remember in all their praiers to ●raue of God that the Ministers may be enabled to teach Gods wil both in doctrine and life The Apostle Paul doth sundrie times require the Churches to whom he writ to pray for him in regard of his Ministerie Now if so worthy an Apostle had need to bee praied for much more hath euery ordinarie Minister in Gods Church And great reason it should be so for the diuell stands at Iehoshuahs right hand to resist him he hindred Paul from comming to the Thessalonians Though he maligne euery beleeuer yet he aimes especially at the Minister that he may cause him to faile if not in teaching yet at least in the exemplifying of his doctrine by a sincere and godly conuersation Now because Christ requires of euery Minister besides teaching the euidence of good workes in a godly life therefore here I will handle this point of good workes and first shewe what a good worke is secondly the differences of good workes and then obserue the necessitie the dignitie and vse of good workes I. Point A good worke is a worke commanded of God and done by a man regenerate in faith for the glorie of God in mans good First I say it is a worke commanded of God for Gods will is goodnesse it selfe and the Rule of all goodnesse in the creature and euery good thing is therfore good because it is answerable to the will of God no worke therfore can be good vnlesse it be appointed ordained and commanded of God men indeed may inuent and doe many good workes but they shall haue no goodnesse in them vnlesse they doe accord with Gods wil. Again good works must be done in
of Gods predestination whereby we teach that God hath decreed the condemnation of some This doctrine many doe renounce as a doctrine of crueltie and thereupon frame vnto themselues priuate opinions which will not stand with the word of God The way to auoyde this occasion of offence is this First to graunt vnto God himselfe so much in this case as we will yeeld to mortal man in the like Among our selues we allow of this libertie one to another that a man may kill a flie or a worme and for his lawfull vse and pleasure kill sheepe oxen and other creatures and yet be a mercifull man shall we not then allow vnto God that he may glorifie his name in the iust and deserued condemnation and destruction of his creature This is lesse then we grant to men for a worme is something vnto man but a man is nothing in respect of God Againe among our selues in some things we giue libertie one to another to doe as we will and yet thinke the action iust and lawfull much more then ought we to giue freedom of will vnto God in all his actions without conceit of crueltie in any one of his workes for all his workes are done in equitie Secondly it must be remembred that we teach not that God doth simply ordaine some men to hell fire but touching reprobation our doctrine is this that God hath decreed and purposed to glorifie his name in the due and deserued condemnation of some for in ●an● reprobation God hath two actions First he decrees to passe by some men without shewing his eternall mercie vnto them and onely to declare his iustice vpon them then after hee decrees when they are by themselues fallen into sinne to inflict vpon them deserued condemnation for the same The vnlearned also from this doctrine of Predestination take occasion of most fearefull falling for thus they reason If I be predestinate to saluation I am sure to be saued let me doe what I will and if I bee predestinated to condemnation I am sure to be condemned though I liue neuer so godly for Gods decree changeth not and therefore I will liue as I list Thus doe desperate persons imbolden themselues to sinne and to cast away their soules The way to cut off this offence is this they must remember that in Gods decree the ende and the meanes that bring men to that ende goe alwaies together and therefore that such as are ordained to saluation are ordained to the means thereof namely to vocation iustification sanctification Rom. 8. 30. The end and the means in Gods decree must neuer be seuered Now righteousnes and holines in Christ is the means whereby God hath decreed to bring men to saluation and therefore they sinne grieuously that vpon the immutabilitie of Gods decree take occasion to liue profanely Hezekias is sicke vnto death yet God promiseth to adde vnto his daies fifteene yeares now if Hezekias had consulted with these men they would haue told him thus be of good cheare O King neither eate nor drinke nor vse any thing to cure thy sore or to preserue life for thou shalt certenly liue fifteene yeares God hath saide it and it must be done but Hezekias taketh no such course nay he vseth the meanes both to cure his sore and to preserue his life And so did Paul for his owne and others preseruation keepe the mariners in the shippe who were the meanes vpon the sea to bring them safe to land though God had giuen vnto him all that sailed with him The second speciall doctrine of the Church whereat some take occasion of offence is concerning the fall of Adam for we teach that God in some sort decreed his fall whereupon some obiect that we make God the author of sinne considering his decree is vnchangeable Now to preuent this offence two Rules must be remembred I. that Gods will may be distinguished It is either generall or speciall Gods generall will is that whereby he willeth that sinne shall be by his iust permission But Gods speciall will is the approouing will of God whereby he taking pleasure in any thing will haue the same done and brought to passe Now we say not that God willed Adams fall by his approouing will but onely by his permitting will because it was good in regard of God that man should fall II. We must remember that Gods decree went before Adams fall onely as an antecedent not as a cause thereof for the vnchaungeable decree and will of God takes not away the libertie of mans will or of the second causes but onely inclineth and ordereth the same as the first and highest cause of all The Third speciall doctrine of the Church whereat offence is taken is this That man of himselfe can doe no good but all goodnes and grace in man come from God Hence our common people take occasion of loosenesse of life for tell them that they must repent and beleeue if they will be saued their answer is that they doe it so well as God will giue them grace all goodnes say they must come from God yea the wiser sort amongst vs will not sticke to lay the fault of their loose life on God who giues them no more grace But for the auoyding of this occasion of offence we must know that when we are not able to doe our duties as we ought and to pray to repent and beleeue as God requireth the fault is in our selues and not in God for we were created righteous in Adam and in him had power and grace to haue done whatsoeuer God required at our hands but Adam lost this power through his owne default and we in him lost it also and therefore our inabilitie commeth from our selues Againe we must consider that God giues grace indeede yet not miraculously in Ale-houses and Tavernes but then when men vse the meanes to come by grace and doe that which by nature they are able that is come and heare the word attentiuely endeauouring to beleeue and to obey the same for though the good vsage of the gifts of nature cannot merit any grace yet ordinarily we may obserue that in the vse of meanes is grace receiued Act. 2. 41. At one sermon there were conuerted three thousand soules among the rebellious Iewes Act. 16. 14. Lidias heart was opened in hearing Paul preach and ordinarily men are conuerted in the meanes for faith commeth by hearing the Gospel preached Rom. 10. 17. The last point of doctrine from whence many take occasion of offence is the doctrine of Iustification by faith alone without workes Hence the Papists condemne our Church as an enemie to all good workes and many hereby take occasion of a leud life because good works must not iustifie them before God Now to cut off this offence we must hold and know that good works and faith are disioyned in the worke of our Iustification before God but they are
worke there must be a two-fold faith Iustifying faith and a generall faith Iustifying faith whereby the person doing the worke must be reconciled to God and stand before God a true member of Christ for of this it is said without faith it it is impossible to please God And Christ saith every brāch that beareth not friute in me the father taketh a way and without me yee can doe nothing where it is plaine that whosoeuer would doe a worke acceptable to God must first be in Christ and the reason is euident for first the person working must be acceptable to God before his worke can be approoued but no mans person is approoued of God before he be in Christ and therefore iustifying faith whereby we are vnited vnto Christ is cheifely necessarie By generall faith I meane that whereby a man beleeues that the worke he doth is pleasing vnto God Hereof Paul saith Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne A worke may be good in it selfe and yet sinnefull in the doer if he want this generall faith Now vnto this are two things required first a word of God commanding the worke and prescribing the manner of doing it secondly a promise of blessing vpon the doing of it for euery good work hath his promise both of the things of this life and of a better these things must be knowne and beleeued vpon these grounds we must pray giue Almes and doe euery good worke and so shall they be approoued of God Now by this double faith required in euery good worke we see how those that are bound to practise good works as euery one is more or lesse ought to labour to be acquainted with the word of God that they may doe their works in faith for els though the worke be good it may be sinne in them because it is not of faith which is the miserable state of ignorant persons who through want of faith cannot doe good workes in a good manner The second thing required in the doing of a good worke is loue loue I say ioyned with faith for faith worketh by loue Gal. 5. 9. indeed faith doth some things of it selfe as apprehend receiue and applie Christ and his righteousnes to the beleeuer which is the proper worke of faith But other things it doth by the helpe of an other and so faith bringeth forth the workes of mercie and performeth the duties of the first and second table not properly by it selfe but by the helpe of loue and therefore here I say that in euery good worke is required that loue whereby faith worketh Now the kinds of loue required in wel-doing are two first the loue of God in Christ for as we know God in Christ so must we loue him secondly the loue of our bretheren yea of our enimies for howsoeuer in our vnderstanding these two may be distinguished yet in practise they must neuer be seuered but must alwaies goe hand in hand to mooue vs to doe the workes of mercie and all the duties of our calling as Paul saith of himselfe and the rest of the Apostles The loue of God constraineth vs to preach the Gospel 2. Cor. 5. 14. The third thing required in doing a good worke well is humilitie whereby a man esteemeth himselfe to be but a voluntarie and reasoable instrument of God therein This vertue will make a man giue the honour of the worke to the principall Agent that is to God himselfe who worketh in vs both to will and to doe of his good pleasure The fourth thing required in wel-doing is simplicitie or singlenes of heart whereby a man in doing a good worke intendeth simply and directly to honour and please God without all by-respects to his owne praise or the pleasing of men This is a speciall vertue directing a man to the right ende in euery good worke which is the obedience and honour of God in mans good This vertue was in Paul who in simplicitie and godly purenesse had his conuersation in the world thus he preached the Gospel and so ought we to doe euery good worke Now that this sinceritie may shew it selfe we must take heede of a speciall vice which is contrarie vnto it namely the guile of the spirit mentioned Psal. 32. 2. which maketh a man intend and propound false ends and by-regards in doing good workes as his owne praise and delight or to please men thereby And that we may auoid this spirituall guile we are to know that it may and doth vsually preuaile with men in foure cases I. when those doe practise vertue in whome God onely restraines the contrarie vice thus ciuill honest men that haue no religion may practise iustice temperance mercie and other morall vertues because they are not inclined to iniustice intemperance and the contrarie vices but these actions in them are no good works before God because they proceede not from sanctified hearts sincerely intending to obey glorifie God hereby II. When men doe good works for feare of diuine iustice and the penalties of mens laws and such for the most part is the repentance of the sicke I graunt indeede that some doe truly repent in this estate but commonly such repentance is vnsound and proceedeth not from a single heart but from feare whereby being vnder Gods hand they seek to auoid his iudgement Such also are the outward duties of religion performed by our common Protestants who come to Church and receiue the Sacraments chiefly for custome sake and to auoide the daunger of mens lawes III. When men doe good works for the honour praise of men This is a dangerous thing vpon this ground a man may preach the word vse prayer and professe the Gospel yea and be zealous for Gods glorie as I●h● was and hence it comes that many fall away to loosenes of life from a strict profession of religion because they receiued not the truth in simplicitie of heart with purpose onely to obey please God but rather to get the praise of men IV. When men doe good works from some corruption of heart preuailing in them as whē a man is both proud and couetous yet more proud then couetous couetousnes bids him not to giue to the poore but yet pride desiring the praise of men preuailing in him causeth him to giue to the poore And so when couetousnes preuailes in a proud man it will cause him to abstaine from riot proud apparell which yet his pride would perswade him vnto In all these cases spirituall guile corrupts the worke that otherwise is good in it selfe and therefore we must haue a watchfull eye vnto singlenes of heart in our well-doing and to the rest of the vertues before named that so we may be able to say with good conscience that our works are such as God approoueth vers 4. That thine Almes may be secret and thy father that seeth in secret he will reward thee openly Here is the reason
not when Christ will call vs hence Luk. 12. 40. Be ye also prepared therefore for the sonne of man will come at an houre when ye thinke not II. Point As there be two diuers estates in two distinct places so there be two seuer all waies that lead thereunto the one the way of life verse 14. the other the way to destruction vers 13. First I will speake of the way of life and thereby shall we see what the way of destruction is in which regard it stands vs all in hand to know what is the way of life Now none hath better noted it out vnto vs then the Prophet Habaccuk chap. 2. v. 4. in these words But the iust shall liue by faith in which place he foretells the afflictions of the Iewes by the Chaldeans whereupon the Iewes might say whereby then shall we stay our selues he answers by faith The iust man liues that is leadeth his life by faith Some giue this meaning to the Prophet The iust by faith shall haue life euerlasting but the Apostle expoundeth it otherwise Gal. 3. 11. So then to walke in the way of life is to lead our liues by faith in Christ as Heb. 10. 39. Here two points must be considered I. what faith that is by which men must liue in this world namely true iustifying faith the very same by which they are to be saued in the day of the Lord. I liue by faith saith Paul in the sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me Gal. 2. 20. where he doth notably expound this text shewing that faith in Christ our redeemer is that faith whereby we must lead our liues in this world for they which will be saued by their faith must first liue by their faith he that beleeues well liues well and that faith will neuer saue the soule that cannot guide and order the life many men thinke it is sufficient to saluation to beleeue the promise of life but faith hath a further worke in them that it saueth for it also causeth them to liue thereby Now a man liues by faith when he rests himselfe on God and suffers himselfe wholly to be lead and guided by Gods written word Example hereof we haue in Abraham Heb. 11. 8. who by faith for sooke his owne countrey and at Gods cōmandement went be knew not whither More particularly a Christian mans life is twofold spirituall and temporall both which he must liue in this world for heauenly life beginnes before we die and both these kinds of life must be preserued by faith The spirituall life of a Christian is that whereby he hath true fellowshippe with God this beginnes in this life and it stands in reconciliation with God wherein a man is accepted to the right of eternall life This reconciliation is life and it is held by faith and faith onely in Gods word and promise in Christ alone is it that makes vs lay ●old of receiue and keepe this our reconcillation We must giue God this honour to beleeue his promise of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting in Christ and vpon our faith God vouchsafeth vnto vs remission of sinnes and life euerlasting Here some may aske whether euery thing that we beleeue be made ours as riches honour and such like Ans. No but onely that which God promiseth in the Euangelical couenant of life euerlasting vpon our faith Here also some will say If this be all I am well for I beleeue Gods promise But herein many deceiue themselues beleeuing the promise falsly True faith is this men must seeke the pardon of their sinnes and in seeking beleeue it but they that beleeue without vsing the meanes deceiue themselues seeing God hath ioyned his promise to the meanes We offend God daily and therefore must daily re●ue our repentance and by faith beleeue the pardon of our daily sinnes Further this spirituall life hath his fruits It is no dead life for he that hath remission of sinnes liues in Christ and this life shewes it selfe in the fruits of good workes as mercie loue goodnes and in euery good worke we must liue by faith for to the doing of any good worke there is a double faith required first a generall faith whereby we are perswaded that the worke is allowed and required of God secondly a speciall faith whereby we are perswaded that the particular worke done is accepted of God In the acceptation of the worker God first accepteth the person in Christ and then the worke in and for the person Yea we are mooued to euery good worke by faith for it brings to minde Gods loue mercie and goodnes to vs and so mooueth vs to performe the like duties of loue and mercie towards our brethren Thirdly spirituall life shewes it selfe in resisting and enduring temptations for euery child of God hath many and gricuous assaults so as the righteous shall scarce be saued and in all and euery one of these we must liue by faith and thereby relie on Christ not on our selues Example hereof we haue in Christ vpon the crosse who euen then when he felt the wr●th of God vpon him and his indignation against him did yet crie vnto him as to his God My God my God and Iob in grieuous temptation and affliction said vnto the Lord Loe though he slay me yet will I trust in him Iob 13. 15. and so must we euen then lay hold on Gods mercie when we feele no comfort in our selues so did Dauid when he felt no comfort yet he did cleaue to God in his meditation Psal. 77. 7 8. 10 11. In disputations in schooles it is a fault to sticke alwaies to the conclusion yet in this combate with Satan it is no fault but a good practise of true faith Temporall life stands in the practise of some particular calling and some men be of one calling some of another and euery one hath or ought to haue some one lawfull calling or other wherein to leade his temporall life Now the workes of a mans particular calling they must be practised by faith euen the duties of the bas●st calling that is as of the shepheard And that a man may doe the duties of his calling in faith he must first haue a grounded conscience that his worke is allowed of God and accordingly he must doe his worke Againe euery man in his calling must haue a care of his owne life and of those that belong vnto him to prouide for them things necessarie as meate drinke and cloathing and this care must be ruled by faith that is a man must vse the lawfull meanes to get these things and yet so as he leaue the issue and euent vnto Gods blessing we may prouide for necessaries but we must goe no further but vse the lawfull ordinarie meanes and sanctifie them by prayer leauing the blessing vnto God Cast thy workes on God saith Salomon Prou. 16. 3. and S. Peter bids vs cast all our care on
to the person of the worker and hee thereby is vnited to Christ who renueth the minde will and affections of the worker from whence the worke proceedeth and so it is as pure water comming from a clensed fountaine Secondly faith couereth the wants that be in good workes for the best worke done by man in this life hath it wants now faith apprehendeth Christ and his merits and applieth the same vnto the worker whereby his person is accepted and the imperfection of his worke couered in the sight of God and this must prouoke vs to labour for faith Lastly I adde the ende of a good worke namely Gods glory in mans good The honour of God must bee the principall ende of euery good worke now Gods honour stands in reuerence obedience and thankefulnesse so that when we doe any good worke we must doe it in reuerence vnto God in obedience vnto his commandements and in token of our thankefulnesse vnto him for his manifold mercies The good of man must herein also be respected the Apostle saith The Law is fulfilled in one word thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe how can this be seeing to loue the Lord our God is the great commandement of the Law It must therefore thus be vnderstood that the lawe of God must be practised in the loue of our neighbour and not apart by it selfe Againe the ende of a mans life and of all his actions is to serue God in seruing of man and by seruing of man to serue God as when we pray which is a good worke we must not onely respect our selues but pray for others as for the Church of God and for our brethren as well as for our selues yea and for our enemies So we must heare the word and receiue the Sacraments that thereby we may be better able to further our brethren in the way of saluation this our Sauiour doth here expresse saying that they may see your good workes and glorifie your father in heauen as if he should say Glorifie you God and also cause others to doe the same First here we may see what to iudge of the workes done by Papists It is commonly thought that they abound with good workes but it is not so their best workes are sinnes before God for they faile principally in the maine ende of well-doing which is to glorifie God in the good of men for a Papist doing a good worke according to the Rules of their religion doth it to satisfie Gods iustice for the temporall punishment of his sinnes and to merit heauen by it and so erreth quite from the right end of a good worke respecting therein his own good and nothing at all the good of others Secondly hereby wee may see for our selues how farre wee come short in our good workes for commonly wee faile in the maine ende thereof men spend their daies and strength in labour and toile but all is for themselues for their owne pleasure their owne profit and preferment without respect to the good of their brethren now all such actions wherein men seeke themselues only and not Gods glorie in the good of others be sinnefull in the doer though otherwise good in thēselues And therefore we must learne in all our actions to aime at the glorie of God in the good of men II. Point Thus we see what a good worke is now follow the differences of good workes Good workes be of two sorts First those which God in his word hath directly commanded as parts of his worshippe such are praier thanks-giuing receiuing the Sacraments hearing the word and releeuing the poore and these are the more principall kinds of good workes The second sort are actions indifferent sanctified by the word and praier and done to Gods glorie as to eate to drinke and such like for howsoeuer in themselues they bee neither good nor euill beeing things neither commanded nor forbidden and therefore in respect of the things themselues may with good conscience be either vsed or refused yet because God hath commanded the manner how they must be vsed namely by beeing sanctified by the word of God and praier and the ende thereof to wit Gods glorie therefore when they are so vsed they become good workes Vpon this difference of good workes obserue the largenesse thereof how farre they extend There be three estates ordained of God the Church the Common wealth and the Familie and for the preseruation of them there be sundrie callings required some whereof are prescribed of God and others left to bee appointed by men as all trades and such like now not onely the callings appointed by God and the duties thereof are good workes but euen all inferiour callings appointed by men for the good of these three estates and the duties thereof bee they neuer so base if they bee sanctified by praier and done to Gods glorie are good works Example A man is called to be a shepheard and doth willingly accept thereof now though the calling be but base and meane yet the workes thereof beeing done in obedience to God for the good of his Master are good workes yea as good in their kind as the best workes of the highest callings and the same may be said of all lawfull callings and the workes thereof bee they neuer so base for God iudgeth not the goodnesse of the worke by the excellencie of the matter whereabout it is occupied but by the heart of the doer This point must be learned for the Papists conceit doth sticke fast in mens hearts That there are no good workes but the building of Churches and Hospitals the mending of high waies giuing of large almes c. but we must learne that euery action of a mans lawfull calling done in obedience to God for the good of men is a good worke before God and therefore we must so walke euery one of vs in our callings that the duties thereof may be acceptable to God Againe this will hence follow that in these our daies we may as wel abound in such works as be good indeed as the Papists did in their superstitious Thus much of the differences of good workes III. Point Now more particularly in the text are further set down three points touching good workes the Necessitie the Dignitie and the Vse of good workes The necessitie of them appeareth by Christs commanding of them saying Let your light so shine c. for hereby hee bindeth all Christians after the example of his Disciples to walke in good workes If it be said that Christ hath freed vs from the law and therefore we are not bound to doe good works I answer Christ hath freed vs from the lawe in regard of the curse and rigour thereof but not as it is a rule of Christian obedience Quest. How farre forth are good workes necessarie to saluation or to vs that do them Ans. There be three opinions touching the necessitie of good workes First of the Papists who
hold them necessarie as causes of our saluation and iustification but this we haue confuted heretofore Secondly of some Protestants who hold them necessarie though not as principall causes for they say we are only iustified and saued by Christ yet as conseruant causes of our saluation but the truth is they are no causes of saluation neither efficient principall nor conseruant nor yet materiall formall or finall as hath else-where beene shewed The third opinion is the truth that good workes are necessarie not as causes of saluation or iustification but as inseparable consequents of sauing faith in Christ whereby we are iustified and saued or as a way is necessarie to the going to a place The dignity of good workes is expressed in this that they are called good now they are good only in part not perfectly as I shew thus Such as the tree is such is the friute but euery one regenerate is partly spirit and partly flesh that is in part regenerate and in part naturall and corrupt this is true of his minde will and affections which are the fountaine of all his actions and therefore the workes that proceed thence must needes bee answerable that is in part corrupt as they come from nature and yet good in part as they come from grace Quest. But how can God approoue of them if they be euill Ans. We must consider good workes two waies First in themselues as they are compared with the law and the rigour thereof and so they are sins because they answer not to that perfection which the law requireth for there bee two degrees of sinnes Rebellions which are actions flatly against the lawe and Defects when a man doth those things that the lawe commandeth but yet faileth in the manner of doing and so are mans very best workes sinnes Secondly consider good workes as done by a person regenerate and reconciled to God in Christ and so God accepts of them for in Christ the wants thereof are couered But here wee must take heed of the Romish doctrine which teacheth that good workes are so farre forth good that there is no sinne in them their reasons are many to prooue this point but they haue beene heretofore confuted First they say good workes haue God for their Author and therefore are perfectly good Answ. This were true if he alone were the author of them but man is another author thereof from whom they take their imperfection They say againe that here they are called good but if they had any sinne in them they should be called euill for euery sinne is perfectly euill Ans. Where sinne is vnremitted it is perfectly euill but when it is pardoned in our Sauiour Christ it is as though it were not Thirdly they obiect that if good workes be sinnefull then they must not bee done and hereupon they say that by our doctrine men are bound to abstaine from all good workes Answer That which is euill must not be done so farre forth as it is euill now good workes are not simply and absolutely euill they are good in themselues and in vs in part comming from grace and therefore they must be done because God requires them at our hands and for the imperfection of them wee must pray for pardon in our Sauiour Christ. And here by the way we may iustly taxe the prowd doctrine of the Papists who teach that men may bee iustified by good workes when as the best workes of any man in this life are tainted with sinne and are farre vnanswerable to that perfection which the law requireth wee must be of a farre other minde namely that for our best workes God may iustly condemne vs because wee haue not done them as we ought therefore Christ bids vs say of our selues that when we haue done all that we can we are vnprofitable seruants The vse of good workes is here set downe by our Sauiour Christ to glorifie God this is not the whole ende of good workes and therfore I will propound the same more fully out of other places of Scripture for Christ here onely propoundeth that ende of good workes which concerned his intended purpose The vse and ende of good workes is three-fold either concerning God our selues or our brethren As good workes concerne God they haue three vses First they serue as meanes whereby wee giue vnto God testimonie of our homage and obedience vnto his commaundements for by creation preseruation and redemption he is our Lord and our God and so prescribeth lawes for vs to keepe in which regard wee owe homage vnto him which that wee may shewe forth and testifie wee must walke in good workes as hee in his word hath commaunded vs. Secondly they serue to bee tokens of our thankefulnesse vnto God for our creation redemption and manifold preseruations both in soule and bodie Thankefulnesse indeede is shewed in word but yet true thankefulnesse stands in obedience and our obedience is shewed by doing good workes And therefore the Apostle Paul exhorts vs to giue vp our bodies as holy and acceptable sacrifices vnto God Rom. 12. 1. Thirdly they serue to make vs followers of God we are commaunded to be holy as he is holy 1. Pet. 1. 15. and to put in practise the duties of loue one towards another as the Lord loued vs and therefore we must walke in the duties of the Morall law that therein we may imitate God 1. Ioh. 3. 3. He which hath this hope purgeth himselfe as he is pure Secondly the vse of good workes in regard of our selues is fourefold especially First they serue to bee outward testimonies of the truth of our faith and profession proouing that the grace of our hearts is not in hypocrisie but in truth and sinceritie And for this cause Abraham is said to haue beene iustified by workes because his workes did testifie that his faith was true and sincere for where the fire of grace is there it cannot but burne and where the water of life is it cannot but slowe and send out the streames thereof in good workes Secondly they serue to be signes and pledges of our election iustification sanctification and of our future glorification as wee knowe a tree to liue by the fruite and budde which it bringeth forth so by keeping a continuall course in good workes a man is knowne to bee in Christ and to haue true title to all his benefits and therefore when the Apostle willeth men to giue all diligence to make their calling and election sure he propoundeth certaine vertues wherein they ought to walke as beeing the most euident tokens of election that we haue in this life Thirdly they serue to make vs answerable to our holy calling for euery one that professeth the Gospel is called to be a mēber of Christ and a new creature whose dutie is to bring forth good workes Eph. 4. 1 2. Walke worthy of the vocation wherevnto you are called with all humblenesse of
minde meekenesse c. and Ephes. 2. 10. Ye are the workemanship of God created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath ordained that wee should walke in them Now this is a most excellent thing for a man to bee answerable to his calling When Dauid was a shepheard hee kept his fathers sheepe and liued as a shepheard but when he was called to be a King hee behaued himselfe like a King in gouerning Gods people and so euery Christian ought to doe beeing a newe creature he must walke as Gods childe and testifie his vocation by shewing forth the vertues of him that hath called him 1. Pet. 2. 9. Fourthly good workes serue to be a way in which we are to walke that so wee may receiue the mercies of God promised to his children and escape the Iudgements threatened against sinners for Gods word is full of most sweet promises vnto the obedient and of terrible threatning against rebellion and iniquitie Now a man by walking in good workes eschewes the paths of wickednesse wherein Gods iudgements light and holdes the waies of righteousnesse wherein Gods blessings are scattered Prou. 3. 17. Thirdly the ende of good workes in regard of our brethren is principally this that by our example in well doing wee may winne some vnto God and keepe others in the obedience of the truth and preuent offences whereby many are drawne backe The contagion of a badde example especially in men of superiour place is such that it wil not only cast their owne soules to hell but also draw many with them When Ieroboam the King sinned hee caused Israel to sinne 1. Kings 15. 34. And therefore wee must carefully looke to all our waies in regard of others and so liue according to Christs commandement in this place that others seeing our good workes may bee wonne to the truth and so glorifie God which is in heauen And thus wee see the endes of good workes Now considering good works be of such excellent vse we are hereby admonished to exercise our selues therein with all diligence for hereby we benefit our brethren wee helpe our selues and we glorifie God neither must any mans pouertie hinder him from this dutie for not onely almes deedes and large gifts to Churches and high waies are good workes but also the speciall duties of euery mans lawfull calling done in faith to the glorie of God and the good of men bee the calling neuer so base by the doing whereof in faith and obedience he may get sure testimonie of his election This exhortation is most needfull for so soone as men haue occasion to commit any sinne then they shake off the yoake of all obedience as there were no way of good workes to be walked in The Papists indeed make the merit of iustification and life euerlasting the ende of good workes but that hath bin sufficiently confuted heretofore Hitherto wee haue spoken of the first point in this conclusion touching the manner of teaching The second point herein contained is the end of all teaching namely to turne men vnto God and thereby to bring them to glorifie God That men may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen that is so teach that men may see your good workes and be wonne thereby to the faith so glorifie God Our Sauiour Christ his Commission giuen to his Disciples before his ascension bids them God make all nations my Disciples and Paul saith that hee became all things to all men that by all meanes hee might not onely instruct but saue some Hereby then all Ministers and all those that set themselues apart for this calling must learne to propound this vnto themselues as the maine ende of all their studies and labours namely to turne men vnto God that beeing conuerted they may glorifie God Againe the same ende of the Ministerie admonisheth all hearers so to yeelde themselues obedient to the Ministerie of the word that it may take place in their hearts to turne them vnto God that after their conuersion they may glorifie God This the people ought the ra 〈…〉 to yeeld vnto because it is the maine comfort that the Minister hath of all his labours to see his hearers conuerted and so inabled to glorifie God And to mooue them hereunto they are further to knowe that if they heare and be not thereby conuerted that so they may praise and glorifie God by their obedience then this Ministerie will bee a Bill of Inditement against them for their deeper condemnation at the last daie See Matthew 11. 21. 24. Verse 17. Thinke not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy them but to fulfill them In this verse and the rest which follow to the ende of this Chapter is contained the Third part of Christs Sermon wherein hee goes about to restore the Morall law to his true sense and meaning which was much corrupted by the Iewish teachers And to the ende the same might bee the better accepted hee makes way thereto by a notable Preface verse 17 18 19 20. Wherein hee seekes as well to preuent and to remooue the false opinion which the Iewes had conceiued of him in respect of the Law as also to procure all reuerence and loyaltie to bee shewed therevnto For the Iewish teachers seeing our Sauiour Christ condemne and neglect the traditions of the Elders and not so much to respect the ceremonies of the Law as they thought hee should did thereupon iudge him to bee a deceiuer and one that went about to ouerturne the whole law of Moses This opinion Christ confuteth by three arguments First from the ende of his comming in this verse The second from the nature of the law in the 18. verse whereupon he infers two notable conclusions to procure reuerence thereunto verse 19. And thirdly from the scope of his Ministerie verse 20. For the first The Exposition Thinke not that I am come c. This comming of Christ must bee vnderstood of the manifestation of the godhead in our nature for otherwise his godhead being euery where cannot be said to come properly and as for his manhood it had not beene in heauen To destroy the Law The Law in generall is that part of Gods word which commaunds things iust honest and godly and beeing thus conceiued it is threefold Ceremoniall Iudiciall and Morall The Ceremoniall law is that part of Gods word which prescribed to the Iewes ceremonies rites and orders to be performed in the worshippe of God this law is laid downe in the bookes of Moses especially in Leuiticus The Iudiciall law is that part of Gods word which prescribed ordinances for the gouernment of the Iewes common wealth and the ciuill punishment of offendours The Ceremoniall lawe concerned the Iewes onely the Iudiciall lawe did indeede principally concerne them but yet so farre forth as it tendeth to the establishing of the Morall law hauing in it common
equitie it concerneth all people in all times and places What the Morall lawe is I will describe in three points First It is that part of Gods word concerning righteousnesse and godlinesse which was written in Adams minde by the gift of creation and the remnants of it be in euery man by the light of nature in regard whereof it bindes all men Secondly it commaundeth perfect obedience both inward in thought and affection and outward in speech and action Thirdly it bindeth to the curse and punishment euery one that faileth in the least dutie thereof though but once and that in thought onely Galatians 3. 10. Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all things that are written in the law to doe them The summe of the Morall law is propounded in the Decalogue or tenne Commandements which many can repeat but fewe doe vnderstand That wee may further conceiue aright the Morall lawe wee must make a difference betweene it and the Gospel for the Gospel is that part of the word which promiseth righteousnesse and life euerlasting to all that beleeue in Christ the difference betweene them stands especially in fiue things First the Law is naturall and was in mans nature before the fall but the Gospel is spirituall reuealed after the fall in the couenant of grace Secondly the Law sets forth Gods iustice in rigour without mercy but the Gospel sets out iustice and mercie vnited in Christ. Thirdly the Law requireth a perfect righteousnesse within vs but the Gospel reuealeth our acceptance with God by imputed righteousnesse Fourthly the Law threatneth iudgement without mercy and therefore is called the ministerie of condemnation and of death but the Gospel shewes mercie to mans sinne in and by Christ if we repent and beleeue Lastly the law promiseth life to the worker and doer of it Doe this and thou shalt liue but the Gospel offereth saluation to him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly not considering faith as a worke but as an instrument apprehending Christ by whom we are made righteous The Church of Rome in a manner confound the Law and the Gospell sauing that the Gospel which is the new Law reuealeth Christ more clearely then Moses Law did which they call the old Law But this is a wicked opinion which ouerturnes all religion beeing the cause of many grosse points in poperie which could not stand if they would acknowledge a true distinction betweene the Law and the Gospel They say for their defence that the precepts of both are the same for substance that both require righteousnesse both promise life and threaten death both commaund faith repentance and obedience and therefore they are the same Answer First the laws and precepts of the Law and Gospel are not the same for Adam in his innocencie knew the Law but hee knewe nothing then of beleeuing in Christ and though both require righteousnesse promise life and threaten death yet the manner is farre different as before was noted So likewise they differ in the commaunding of faith for the Gospel commandeth faith not as a worke done as the Law doth but as an instrument laying hold on Christ. Againe the Law commaundes faith generally as to beleeue in God and to beleeue his word to be true but besides this the Gospel requires a particular faith in Christ the Redeemer whom the Law neuer knewe Thirdly the Law commandeth not repentance for the knowledge of the Law was in Adams heart when hee needed no repentance true repentance therefore is a sauing grace wrought and commanded onely by the Gospel And fourthly for obedience though it bee commaunded both by the Law and the Gospel yet not in the same manner The Law commaundeth obedience euery way perfect both in parts and in degrees and alloweth none other but the Gospel commaundeth and in Christ approoueth imperfect obedience that is an indeauour in all things to obey and please God if it be without hypocrisie Againe the Law commandeth obedience as a worke to bee done for the obtaining of saluation but the Gospel requires obedience onely to testifie our faith and thankefulnesse vnto God The Church of Rome therefore erreth grosly in cōfounding the Law and the Gospel which indeed are farre differing so we must beleeue if we would come into hold the right way that leadeth vnto life Now whereas Christ saith Thinke not that I came to destroy the Law by Law he meaneth principally the Morall law and in the second place the Ceremoniall law also Next obserue the opposition that Christ maketh betweene the Law and the Prophets thereby signifying vnto vs that by the Law hee meaneth that part of Gods word concerning Righteousnesse and Iustice which Moses penned by Gods commaundement and by the Prophets hee meaneth that part of Gods word which is contained in the writings of all the Prophets in the old Testament after Moses which bookes of the Prophets contained in them either an interpretation of Moses Lawe or predictions of the state of the Church in the newe Testament Againe by destroying the Law we must not vnderstand a breach of the Law such as is made by mans sin but such a dissolution as taketh from it all vertue and power whereby it is a Law and so to destroy the Prophets is to put an ende vnto them so as they should nothing auaile either to the interpretation of the Law or to the foretelling of the state of Gods Church vnder the Gospel But to fulfill them Christ fulfilleth the Law three waies by his doctrine in his person and in men By his doctrine he fulfilleth the Law two waies both by restoring vnto it his proper meaning and true vse as we shall see afterward where he correcteth the corrupt interpretations thereof by the Pharises as also by reuealing the right way wherby the Law may be fulfilled Secondly in his person he fulfilleth the Lawe two waies First by becomming accursed to the Lawe in suffering death vpon the crosse for vs. Secondly by performing perfect obedience vnto the Law doing all that the Law required for the loue of God or of his neighbour in which respect he was said to haue beene vnder the Law Thirdly Christ fulfilled the Law in men Men bee of two sorts Elect and Reprobates In the Elect he fulfilleth the Lawe two waies First by creating faith in their hearts whereby they laie hold on Christ who for them fulfilled it Secondly by giuing them his owne spirit which maketh them indeauour to fulfill the Law which in Christ is accepted for perfect obedience in this life and in the life to come is perfect indeede In vnbeleeuers Christ fulfilleth the Law when he executeth the curse of the Law vpon them for that is a part of the Law and the execution and enduring of the curse is a fulfilling of the Lawe And thus doth Christ fulfill the Law so that the
God why hast thou forsaken me The second branch of circumspection in Almes giuing here commanded respects the ende thereof We must not giue Almes to be seene of men that is to get praise and fame among men This caueat Christ giues for waightie cause for the corruption of mans nature through the instigation of the deuill causeth euery one almost to doe all good works for wrong endes why doe many men toyle themselues so much in their ordinarie callings is it not partly for honour partly for pleasure partly for profit and doe not the most men propound this ende to themselues herein to maintaine their families But though this be a good and commendable thing yet neither that nor the rest are the right ends for which man should labour and trauell the right ende of all is the glorie of God in mans good or the good of man in Gods glorie now when our good workes proceede from an humble heart which syncerely intends the glorie of God in mans good then is the worke pleasing vnto God Other endes or beginnings doe prophane mens labours and therefore Christ giueth this caueat to looke both to the beginning and the ende of our Almes deedes Thus much of the commandement the reason of it is this Or els ye haue no reward of your father which is in heauen so the words are ye haue no reward and they are very significant importing thus much If you doe your good workes from an humble heart for Gods glorie in mans good then you haue a reward laide vp for you in heauen which though it appeares not presently yet it is as sure as if you had it alreadie in possession but if you doe not so you haue no reward laide vp for you by your heauenly father From this reason in general we may gather that he which hath grace to doe if it be but one good worke as to giue Almes vpon a good ground and for a good ende shall neuer perish but shall receiue eternall life which may be a notable motiue to prouoke euery man to doe good works as also it prooues that the child of God can neuer perish or finally fall away for nothing is lost that is laide vp with God More particularly first obserue that the word reward is not takē properly but by resemblance thus like as a labourer after he hath done his worke receiueth his wages so the child of God hauing don that which God commandeth him receiueth a reward Secondly it it is said of your father to signifie that this reward is not merited but is the free gift of a father vnto his children Lastly Christ saith your Father speaking to all his hearers among whom was Iudas whom els-where he calls a deuill and others whom he knew to be none of Gods children yet beeing here a preacher and Minister of Circumcision as the Apostle speaketh ●e leaueth the secret iudgement vnto God following the iudgement of hope and charitie taketh all his hearers to be the children of God which is a notable president to all Gods Ministers for Christ here preaching of loue practiseth it and so ought his seruants doe This also condemneth the practise of those that vpon a litle falling out will not stick to call others damned wretches or reprobates there is no charitie in such censures for loue alwaies hopeth the best 1. Cor. 13. v. 2. Therfore when thou giuest thine almes thou shalt not make a trūpet to be blowen before thee as the hypocrites doe in the Synagogues in the streets to be praised of men Verely I say vnto you they haue their reward Here Christ propoundeth by way of prohibition a particular exāple of the corrupt maner of Almes-giuing proceeding frō pride of heart ambition borowed frō the practise of the Scribes Pharisies withal he annexeth in the ende of the verse an effectuall reason to mooue men to circumspection about the ground and ende of their Almes deedes The Expos. The original is this Thou shalt not blow a trumpet before thee so that our trāslation doth also expoūd the words of Christ according to the cōmon rule of Diuines that words of fact are oftentimes put for words of speech which being well obserued will cleare many places frō false interpretation Exo. 13. 2. God saith to Moses sanctifie vnto me all the first borne to Iosua Make thee sharp kniues and circumcise the sonnes of Israel that is command them to be sanctified and circumcised Ier. 1. 10. I haue set thee ouer nations and kingdomes saith God to Ieremie to plucke vp to roote out to destroy and throw downe to build and to plant that is to preach and by preaching to pronounce that I the Lord will doe these things Ioh. 4. 1. Christ is saide to baptise that is as the next verse imports he commanded his Disciples to baptise and Act. 10. 15. God is said to purifie things that is he pronounceth things to be pure As hypocrites doe in the Synagogue The word hypocrite betokeneth one that takes vpon him to represent the person of an other as players doe who sometime represent mightie Kings otherwhiles poore beggers and to them it properly belongeth Now by resemblance it is applied to any that outwardly faigne themselues to haue that goodnes and holines which they haue not for hypocrisie is nothing el● but a shew of that goodnes outwardly which indeede is not in the heart Now in this instance is included a second reason of the former commaundement touching the manner of Almes-giuing seruing to make all Christs hearers circumspect both for the ground and ende of their good workes and the reason stands thus That which hypocrites doe you must not doe but they doe their Almes to be praised of men as is plaine in this example and therefore you are not to giue almes to be seene and praised of men Out of this example we may learne these Instructions First that it is the propertie of an hypocrite to doe good workes for false endes as to be seene of men and to be praised of men for indeed an hypocrite in his heart makes choise not of God but of men to be the Iudges and approouers of his good workes And this is grosse hypocrisie because hereby the honour due to God is taken from him and giuen to men for God ought to be the Iudge and approouer of all our actions Now as Christ laies this sinne vpon the Scribes and Pharises so ought euery one of vs to lay it on ourselues considering our selues as we are by nature out of Christ for so we make not God but men the Iudges and approouers of our actions this will hereby appeare euidently for when we doe a good thing and yet thereby incurre the dispraise of men are we not more grieued thereat then when by sinne we offend God himselfe which could not be but that our hearts doe more respect the censure of men then of the
whereby Christ enforceth the former commandement and it hath two parts the first is drawne from a speciall propertie in God to see in secret the second is frō his bounty in rewarding openly For the first the words are thus in the originall and thy father which is a seer in secret for the word there vsed signifieth a discerning seer whereby Christ would teach vs that God sees and beholds things that no man can see euen the secret thoughts and desires of mans heart Hence we must learne three things I. to examine our selues strictly not onely of our grosse open sinnes which all the world may see but also of our most inward and hidden corruptions and when we cannot see them yet we must suspect our selues of our secret wants for though men know them not no nor we our selues yet God the secret seer beholdeth them II. Neuer to hide our sinnes within our selues but freely to lay them open before God to our owne shame yea to confesse our vnknowne sinnes we must not like Adam sew fig-leaues together to couer our nakednes or flie from God thinking to hide our selues from his sight for he discerneth in secret III. To be carefull not only to doe good works but also to doe them in an holy manner frō good groūds and to a right end for God seeth secrets and will not be shifted off with false shewes Dauid saith I haue kept thy precepts and thy testimonies because all my waies are before thee And the rather must we be mooued hereunto because God knowing what is in mans heart doth oftētimes prooue men with temptations that he may discouer the guile of their hearts therfore that we may escape the iudgements of God due vnto hypocrisie we must labour to doe all good duties in singlenes of heart The second reason drawne frō Gods bountie vnto thē that in singlenes of heart doe good works is in these words he will reward thee openly wherin he preuenteth this obiectiō which some of his hearers might make against his former precept If I may not do good works to be seen of men then shall I loose my labour Christ answereth Not so for God the father will reward thee openly if thou doe goods from a single heart onely respecting the praise and honour of God in mans good If it be asked how this can stand with that saying of Christ Ioh. 5. 21. that the father iudgeth no man but hath committed all iudgement vnto the sonne I answer that in regard of deliberation of authoritie consent the last iudgement shal be executed by the whole Trinitie but yet in regard of immediate execution the father iudgeth not but Christ onely for he alone giueth the sentence both of absolution and condemnation This second reason teacheth vs sundrie things concerning praise First that God himselfe is the sole author of true praise Paul saith he which praiseth himselfe is not allowed but he whome the Lord praiseth where he compareth the world to a Theater wherein men are Actors and men and Angels be spectators but God alone is the Iudge who giueth praise and good name to euery one that deserueth it not onely in this life but in the world to come in regard whereof we must endeauour our selues so to doe all our good works that God himselfe may approoue thereof to seeke the praise of men is a fond thing seeing that not man but God is the author of true praise yea this must teach vs not to depend vpon man for praise and commendation for the good things we do but vpon God himselfe from whom all true praise commeth Secondly that God as he is a father is the sole author of true praise for Christ saith your father will reward you Now God is our father onely in Christ and therefore our vnion with Christ is the ground of all true praise He is a true Israelite saith Paul which is one within and the circumcision is of the heart in the spirit not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God This then discouereth the errour of the world in seeking after praise and reputation for some seeke it in the comlines of their bodie some in apparell and some in learning c. but all these are wrong meanes the right way to get true praise is to be in Christ to haue an humble and sanctified heart set purposely to keepe Gods commandement Psal. 119. 22. Dauid praied God to remooue from him shame and contempt because he kept Gods testimoneis as though the keeping of Gods commandements had beene the onely meanes to auoyd contempt and to procure true praise and fame Thirdly that the life to come is the onely time of true praise for Christ here saith he shall reward thee openly that is in the last day 1. Corin. 4. 5. When the Lord shall come then shall euery one haue praise of God This must teach vs not to care for the contempt of the world which followeth our profession so that our conuersation bee godly but to rest patiently contented because it is the lot and portion of Gods children and our sins deserues greater reproach alwaies remembring that the time of our praise is yet to come Yea hence we must learne not to aime at our owne praise in the things of this life but wholly to seeke the glorie of God in all things for if we seeke his glorie now the time will come when he will glorifie vs. Fourthly that the praise that God shall giue his children in the ende of the world shall be op●n and manifest before all men and all angels both good bad when they shall stand to be iudged by Iesus Christ this is true praise which shall neuer haue ende whereunto the praise of men is not comparable we count highly of applause and reputation with earthly princes and all men honour him whom the Prince commends how much more then shall they be aduanced whom God himselfe shall vouchsafe to praise and commend vers ● And when thou pra●●st be not as the hypocrites for they loue to stand and pray in the Synagogues and in the corners of the streetes because they would be seene of men verely I say vnto you they haue their reward In this verse and the rest to the fourteenth Christ intreateth of the dutie of prayer wherein he dealeth as in the former point touching Almes-giuing for first he forbids a twofold vice in prayer hypocrisie and babling and then teacheth the contrarie vertues and the right practise of praier The vice of hypocrisie in prayer is forbidden in this fift verse and the contrarie vertue inioyned in the next The Exposition When thou prayest To pray properly is to intreate of God the gift of some good thing concerning our selues and in this sense it is onely one part of that holy worship of God which is called Invocation for 1. Tim. 2. 1. the Apostle maketh
bewayled I. Here we are to call to minde our wants and to humble our soules for those sinnes whereby we haue hindred Gods glorie or prophaned his name And these especially are foure I. Pride of heart a vile affection whereby we seeke our owne praise and glorie and not Gods This is naturall and so the more hardly discerned but while it is nouri●hed Gods glorie is neglected and therefore when we desire to glorifie Gods name we must acknowledge and bewaile this inward corruption II. Want of zeale coldnesse of heart towards God This is an inward corruption which debaseth the Lord in our hearts and takes away that high esteeme of God which ought to be in vs. This causeth vs to omit to glorifie God and to defend the causes of God and the honour of his name when wicked men disgrace and reproch the same he that hath any insight into his owne estate may perceiue this in himselfe now it mightily hinders the glorie of God and therefore we must vnfainedly bewaile it in our own hearts III. Hardnesse of heart whereby we are hindred from the true knowledge of God in his word and from discerning his wisdome power iustice mercie c. in his works though we haue them before our eyes hence it comes that ei●●er we neglect the word and passe by the workes of God without consideration or if we vse them yet it is without glorie to God or profit to our soules Mark 6. 5. Christs owne disciples considered not the matter of the loaues because their hearts were hardened they discerned not or at least remembred not the power of God in that miracle though themselues were instruments about it and they might perceiue the foode to increase in their hands IV. Prophanenesse and impietie in life for God is glorified when we bring forth the fruits of grace Ioh. 15. 8. and our good workes cause others to glorifie God Math. 5. 16. And therefore our prophane life is a reproach vnto the Lord and causeth others to dishonour and blaspheme his name Rom. 2. 24. Now this prophannesse appeareth either in mens speach by blaspheming the name of God abusing his tides attributes his word his creatures or any worke of his prouidence or in their conuersation when they dispose the whole course of their liues to wrong ends seeking themselues and not Gods glorie These are the speciall sinnes against Gods glorie which we are to see and to bewaile in our owne hearts if we see them not in our selues our case is the worse and we must suspect our selues the mor● if we porceiue them in vs we must be humbled for them yea ashamed and confounded in our owne hearts thinking euill of our selues by reason hereof and then shall we be able to say with some truth of heart O Lord halowed be thy name And indeede till we be inwardly humbled for these corruptions in some measure the heart can neuer speake these words as a sonne and daughter of God ought to doe 2. Use. Graces to be desired Secondly this petition teacheth vs earnestly to desire of God those spirituall graces whereby we may glorifie his name in our selues and others The graces enabling vs hereto are these especially I. The true knowledge of God as he hath reuealed himselfe in his word and in the workes of his power and prouidence for he that knowes not God cannot possibly glorifie his name II. To sanctifie God in our hearts by louing fearing and tru●ting in him aboue all This makes greatly for his glorie when wee depende vpon him in soule and bodie for all good things III. The calves of our lips which is a sacrifice of praise to God for all his mercies Psal. 50. 23. He that offereth praise shall glorifie me IV. To see Gods hand in all his workes how mightie wise iust and gratious the Lord is V. To reuerence the workes of God for his iustice mercie power c. appearing in them VI. To vse all his creatures reuerently sanctifying the same vnto our selues by the word and praier These graces we must hunger after and labour to haue a liuely feeling of in our owne hearts and so shall we sanctifie Gods name and honour him in all his workes And hereby we shall know our selues to be the sonnes and daughters of God we may indeede belong to God in his secret counsell but without these sanctified affections and holy actions we are not effectually called and so indeede not actually become Gods children 3. Vse Duties to be practised Thirdly whatsoeuer we aske of God in prayer we must vnfainedly endeauour to practise in our liues as therefore wee pray that Gods name may be halowed so wee must be carefull to sanctifie the same in our conuersation For this ende we must haue regard to three things I. That our liues be vnblameable not tainted with any sinne that as Paul said of earthly seruants They must count their masters worthie all honour that the name of God be not euill spoken of so the same may be verified in euery one of vs towards the Lord our master in heauen Away therefore with all Idolatrie blasphemous oathes and cursed speaking with Sabbath breaking and all other sinnes against the second table for a prophane life brings great reproach vpon the name of God which men professe II. We must propound the right ende of our life euery day in our calling and conuersation to wit Gods honour and glorie and not our owne praise wealth pleasure or dignitie III. When God offers occasion by any worke of his prouidence we must endeauour therein to glorifie and magnifie God example say God sendes a gricuous dearth and famine of bread among vs or the plague of pestilence as he hath done sundrie times then must we striue herein to glorifie and praise Gods name first by labouring to see the hand of God smitiag vs for our sinnes secondly by reuerencing the worke of God esteeming it as his hand vpon vs thirdly by humbling our selues vnto God and renuing our repentance for our sinnes that haue brought Gods iudgements vpon vs. Thus should we glorifie God in his Iudgements but alas such is our blindnesse and securitie that though Gods hand be vpon vs yet few lay it to heart where is he that saith What haue I done nay though God himselfe call vnto weeping and mourning And to girding with sacke cloath as the Prophet speaketh yet behold ioy and gladnesse eating and drinking so as Gods name is dishonoured in his iudgements So when Gods blessings are vpon vs we should glorifie his name by labouring to see his hand of mercie and esteeming of them reuerently with praise and thanksgiuing to God that is the giuer but herein also men dishonour God by poaring vpon the meanes praising their owne witte and industrie and so sacrifice to their nets as the Prophet saith Now because this dutie is of great waight and importance I will adde some speciall reasons to
and pleasant to vs till we finde this precious treasure hid therein II. Dutie Hauing found this treasure we must highly prize and value it euen aboue all that we haue or can get nay more worth then all the world besides So did the man in the parable Matth. 13. 44. esteeme the treasure hid in the field aboue all his goods And Paul so esteemed of Christ crucified that he counted all things losse for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ and iudged them as dung that he might winne Christ. This high esteeme of Christ is needfull if euer we meane to lay him vp for our treasure and then haue we made good progresse in this heauenly purchase when we truely value Christ in our hearts at so high a rate and therefore we must endeauour our selues hereunto and labour so to frame our whole conuersation in speaches and in action that they may testifie at how high a rate we value Christ. And because the word of God reueales Christ Iesus vnto vs in which regard it is called a treasure therefore it also must be highly valued euen aboue all carthly things Thus Dauid did Psal. 119. 72. The Law of thy mouth is better vnto me then thousands of gold and siluer verse 127. I loue thy Commandements aboue gold yea aboue much fiue gold hereof wisdome saith my fruite is better then gold euen then much fine gold and my reuenues better then ●ine siluer It were happie for vs if wee did thus value the word of God Many hold there is but one truth and so that be knowne it is no matter whence it is learned whether out of Gods word or the writings of men but they are sarre deceiued for the Scriptures of God onely are that truth which is according to godlinesse and they alone discouer vnto vs this heauenly treasure and therefore they must haue the preheminence in our hearts and be esteemed farre aboue all the writings of men which if we would doe we should feele that power and comfort of the word in our hearts which naturally we lacke III. Dutie Hauing found out and rightly valued this true treasure we must seeke to get it for our selues and make it our owne so did the man in the parable Matth. 13. 44. when he had found the treasure hid in the field and so Christ here commandeth lay vp treasures for your selues Now that we may get this treasure to our selues we must conscionably vse such meanes as God hath appointed for this purpose to wit I. heare the word of God preached with all reuerence care and diligence labouring to mixe it with faith in our hearts II. receiue the Sacraments with all reuerence and due preparation III. pray to God in faith earnestly and constantly for the pardon of our sinnes and the fiuition of this treasure The reason hereof is plaine for the word and Sacraments are as it were the Lords two hands wherewith he reacheth out this heauenly treasure and all spirituall blessings vnto vs and our faith is the hand of our soule wherewith we receiue them now by our praiers we testifie this faith and sanctifie vnto our selues the two former meanes IV. Dutie Hauing gotten this treasure we must labour to make it sure vnto our selues And to this purpose we must follow Pauls counsell and charge to rich men 1. Tim. 6. 17 18 19. Charge the rich men in this world that they be not high minded neither trust in vncerten riches but in the liuing God that they doe good and be rich in good workes laying vp in store for themselues a good foundation against the time to come that they may obtaine eternall life where marke how by trusting in God and by liberalitie and bountie we are exhorted to lay a good foundation What will some say must we be saued by our Almes-deedes and good works Ans. Not so for the ground of our saluation is Gods election and loue in Christ which he himselfe hath laid vp in heauen for vs. But the foundation which wee must lay vp for our selues is in our owne consciences for our assurance in Gods foundation and this we lay by our good works of loue mercie and iustice all which be fruits of faith and beeing done in faith and with singlenes of heart to Gods glorie they are sure testimonies of our portion in the true treasure Iesus Christ for hereby we know we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren 1. Ioh. 3. 14. V. Dutie Hauing got this treasure sure to our selues we must vse it as a treasure Hereunto three duties are required I. we must haue our conuersation in heauen for there Christ our treasure is and where our ●reasure is there will our hearts be and if our hearts be on Christ in desire in ioy and delight it cannot be but our liues will be holy and heauenly though our bodies be here on earth but let vs beware that our affections be not set on things below for then is not Christ our treasure at all II. We must turne our earthly goods into heauenly treasures This we doe by imploying them in works of mercie for he that giues vnto the poore lends vnto the Lord Prou. 19. 17. so that the mercifull man hath the Lord for his debter for the Lord sends the poore mā as his messenger vnto the rich to borrow of him such things as the poore man lacketh and the Lords returne of paiment is in heauenly blessings and therefore Christ himselfe as it were explaning this point bids sell that ye haue and giue almes make you bagges which waxe not old a treasure that cannot faile in heauen where no theefe commeth neither moth corrupteth This then is the Lords owne direction for this happie exchange of earthly goods for heauenly treasures then which who can wish a better increase III. We must rather part with all that we haue then with Christ Iesus friends goods countrey libertie nay our owne life and deerest hearts blood must all goe for this treasures sake so doth the good purchasser part with all he hath for to ●●ie the field in which this treasure is Matth. 13. 44. but if we will rather part with Christ then with some or with all of these then wee vse not Christ as the true treasure Thus we see how Christ becomes our treasure let vs therefore make conscience to practise these fiue duties so long as we liue for when Christ becomes our treasure marke what will follow we shall finde in our hearts such sweet content therein that neither prosperitie shall lift vs vp too high nor aduersitie cast vs downe too low nothing shall daunt vs while we haue this treasure sure no kind of death no not the day of iudgement Thus much of the commandement now followeth the particular reason thereof where neither moth nor canker corrupteth c. This reason is drawen from the vnchangeable certentie and safetie of this
treasure earthly treasures are subiect to corruption and to losse by stealth but this heauenly treasure is free from all such things for the highest heauen is not subiect to corruptiō nor to the violēce of theeues and robbers and therefore our treasure must be there Quest. Why should the highest heauens be free from that vanitie whereto all creatures els are subiect by the sinne of man Answ. The heauens aboue which we looke vpon and the earth below with all creatures in them belonged to man by the right of creation but the highest heauen is the throne of God Now when man fell he was punished not onely in his owne person but in all the creatures that belonged vnto him which by his sinne were made subiect vnto vanitie But the highest heauen was free from that curse because it did not belong to man by the right of creation but is a supernaturall gift whereto we haue right and title onely by the grace of Adoption and redemption in Christ Iesus now sith man had no right thereto by creation it was not meet that the sinne of man should make it subiect to vanitie or corruption If therfore the safetie of an enduring substance can allure our hearts to loue and like then let vs set our selues for this heauenly treasure v. 21. For where your treasure is there will your heart be also This verse containes a reason of the former commandements cōmon to them both tending to perswade vs to the obedience of them both The reason standeth thus Where your treasure is there will your hearts be also But your hearts should not be on earth but in heauen Therefore lay not vp treasures vpon earth but in heauen The exposition By treasure as we saide before must be vnderstood things pretious excellent in our estimation laid vp for time to come wherein we repose our trust and take a speciall ioy and delight By heart we must conceiue not onely the affections which are seated in the heart as loue ioy care desire and delight but the more inward powers of the soule in thought and imagination yea and the effects hereof in action as labour studie and endeauour As if he should say your treasure and your heart are ioyned together looke where that thing is wherein you trust and take chiefe delight theron will your thoughts runne your loue feare desire and care will draw vnto it and your chiefest paines studie and endeauour will be after it The vse Doe heart and treasure goe together Then here first we learne to search out and trie the state of our owne hearts for though it be a bottomlesse gulfe and deceitfull aboue all things so as none can thoroughly know it yet if we applie this sentence aright vnto our selues we shall be able to giue true iudgement of the state of our owne heart An earthly treasure and an earthly heart but heauenly treasure and an heauenly heart these cannot be seuered therefore looke whereon thou spendest thy thoughts settest thy loue thy care delight and bestowest thy wit industrie and labour and thereby iudge of the disposition of thy heart If the thing be earthly and worldly then thy heart is earthly and carnal thou maist plead that thou hearest the word receiuest the Sacraments and praiest often yet all this will not prooue thee to haue Christ Iesus for thy treasure for thine heart beeing set vpon the world there vndoubtedly thy treasure is and that prooues thy heart to be earthly and carnall And on the contrarie if thy principall thoughts thy chiefe loue ioy and delight be on Christ crucified and thy speciall care and industrie be after his merits and righteousnes then is Christ thy treasure and thine heart is heauenly Secondly hereby we may know whether we haue any portion in heauen for looke where our heart is there our portion is if our heart in thoughts desire and industrie be set on earthly things then is our portion vpon earth But if we mind heauenly things if we delight in them and labour after them then is our portion in heauen It is not the exercise of religious actions now then but the setling of the heart either on earth or heauen that shewes where our portion is Thirdly this coupling of the heart and treasure together teacheth vs not to regard this world nor temporall life in respect of heauen and life eternall nay in this regard we must despise the world and temporall life so farre forth as it may be done without ingratitude to God and without hatred of the worke of his hands and of his temporall blessings for as earthly creatures are the workemanship of God so temporall life is his good blessing giuen vs as a time wherein we are to prepare our selues for life eternall and therefore simply we may not despise it but onely in respect of life eternall Now we must shew this high respect to heauen and to life eternall aboue that we haue to this world and temporall life by heauenly meditations and by spirituall desires ioy and delight for if heauen be our treasure then must our delights be drawne from worldly things and set on heauen vers 22. The light of the bodie is the eye if thine eye be single thy whole bodie shall be light 23. But if thine eye be wicked then all thy bodie shall be darke Wherefore if the light that is in thee be darkenesse how great is that darkenesse These two verses haue sundrie expositions which we must discusse before we can see the scope and coherence of them in this place Of sundrie which I take to misse the right scope of Christ in this place I will onely touch one which is the most probable and then set downe that which I take to be the best By single eye some vnderstand a liberal minde and by the wicked eye an ●●●ious and couetous minde and so they make Christ here to speake of liberalitie and couetousnes Now it is true that the words will beare this sense for Salomon puts the good eye for the liberall and mercifull person Prov. 22. 9. He that hath the good eye he shall be blessed for he giueth of his bread vnto the poore and the euill eye for the couetous person Prov. 28. 22. A man of a wicked eye hasteth vnto riches But though the words will beare this interpretation yet it is not as I take it the proper meaning of Christ in this place for here the light of the bodie the single eye and the light that is in vs be all put for one and the same thing Now the light that is in vs is the vnderstanding and iudgement of the minde Againe the eye is here called the light of the whole bodie but the liberall minde cannot be the light of the whole bodie for all actions but for workes of mercy and bountie onely To come therefore to that which I take to be Christs true meaning The words containe in them diuers
vocation adoption and iustification these and such like he can perceiue in himselfe more or lesse V. In a word hereby he can discerne the true treasure from worldly hereby he knowes the 〈◊〉 of heauenly things aboue earthly These things the naturall 〈◊〉 cannot doe but the spirituall man discerneth all things 1. Cor. 2. 15. looke whatsoeuer befalls him therein hee can see the hand of God working for his good therein he can discerne Gods wisedome power and prouidence in all which we may perceiue the most excellent vse of this heauenly wisdome The second action of this heauenly wisdome is to iudge determine and giue sentence of things what is to be done what is not to be done what is good and what is euill in practise and behauiour And here this one thing must bee remembred that the principall point of this wisdome is to determine of true happines whereto the whole life of man ought to be directed which happinesse is the loue and fauour of God in Christ. Herein Dauid shews his heauenly wisdome farre different from the wisdome of the world Psal. 4. 6. Many say who wil shew vs any good there is the worldlings happinesse But Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs there is true happinesse so Paul comming among the wisest of the Gentiles professeth that he esteemed to knowe nothing but Christ and him crucified 1. Cor. 2. 2. for whose excellent knowledge sake he thought all things to be losse Phil. 3. 8. And the same should be our wisedome for though a man had all humane learning and policie yet if he faile in this rightly to determine of true happines all his wisdō would prooue foolishnesse for the wisdome of this world is foolishnesse with God and therefore if any man seeme to be wise in this world let him be a foole that he may be wise that is a foole to the world in esteeming the knowledge of Christ crucified onely true wisdome and the fauour of God in him true happines that so he may be wise indeed in the sight of God Another chiefe part o● this heauenly wisdome is a spiritual and godly prouidence whereby we forecast by all meanes how to compasse and come by true happinesse● herein the power of heauenly wisdome is shewed And without this though otherwise a man discerne the right yet his knowledge and wisdome is imperfect and vnprofitable And thus we see the actions of this heauenly wisdome whereby we may describe it thus It is a gift of Gods spirit to them that are in Christ whereby they are enabled to discerne of things that differ and to iudge and determine what is that true happinesse whereto the life of man ought to tend and withall to forecast and prouide by what good meanes it may be compassed And he whose minde is endued herewith in some true measure hath the single eye Now the fruit of this single eye is to make the whole bodie light that is to bring the whole life into good order guiding it in the paths of righteousnes and making 〈◊〉 abound in good works Prov. 8. 19 20. My fruit saith wisdome is ●●●ter then fine gold I cause to walke in the way of righteousnes and in the m●ds of the paths of iudgement Prov. 1● 23. The wise heart guideth the mouth wisely and addeth doctrine vnto his lips The vse 1. Considering the mind indued with this wisdome is thus commended we must hereby learne to labour for it in a speciall maner beside this commendation of it by our Sauiour Christ which should be a spurre to prouoke vs to this dutie the singular commoditie that iedounds hereby to soule and bodie must mooue vs to affect it Now that we may the better obtaine this heauenly wisdome we must be carefull of these two things especially First to get the feare of God into our hearts which is the beginning of this heauenly wisdome Psal. 111. 10. Now this feare of God is a reuerend awe of the heart towards God whereby a man is fearefull to offend and carefull to please God in all things And this we shall get if we receiue the word of God with reuerence and applie it to our owne soules when we heare it trembling thereat when it toucheth our consciences and humbly submitting our selues vnto it without raging or repining saying as Hezekiah did to the Prophets reproofe The word of the Lord is good Secondly we must wholly close vp our eyes the eyes of our minde I meane and suffer our selues in all things to be ouerruled and ordered by the written word of God This was Dauids practise he gaue himselfe to continuall meditation in the word of God he made it a lanterne to his feete and a light vnto his pathes And hereby he became wiser then his enemies and got more vnderstanding then all his teachers Wouldest thou then be truly wise become a foole to the world leane not to thine owne wisdome but make Gods word thy whole direction Secondly hereby we are taught to walke wisely in our whole conuersation that so it may appeare we haue this single eye hereto Paul oft exhorteth vs. And thus we walk when we prac●●se euery action of our life in wisdome according to these foure rules which are to be obserued in euery good action I. The thing we doe must be iust II. The means of effecting it must also be iust III. We must keepe our selues therein within the compasse and limits of our calling IV. We must doe the thing with an honest vpright and single heart And that we may worke wisely according to these foure rules we must euer haue the word of God to tell vs what is iust what meanes be iust what be the precincts of our calling and when we worke with an vpright and single heart so doing our workes shall be in wisdome and we shall haue the approbation and praise of God Thirdly seeing this single eye of spirituall wisdome makes our life to shine with righteousnesse we must learne to season our naturall wit with this spirituall wisdome Naturall wisdome is a commendable gift of God but without this spirituall wisdome it is foolishnesse in the things of God yea very corrupt in naturall actions and therefore we must ioyne therewith this heauenly wisdome which may season it and make it holy and so shall the vse of it tend to Gods glorie It is the miserie of this age that men of excellent parts for naturall wisdome haue no regard to season the same with spirituall wisdome hereby come many aberrations in matters of great importance for it is iustice with God to curse their proceedings that despising the heauenly leane altog●ther to their owne wisdome Fourthly seeing spirituall prouidence in forecasting how to compasse true happinesse is a speciall part of true heauenly wisdome we must become carefull practitioners hereof in our liues that so we may attaine to true happinesse
though he be neuer so great a monarke in the world while hee is out of Gods kingdom wanting righteousnes and regeneration by Iesus Christ. Secondly this also must perswade euery one of vs to put in practise the former instruction endeauouring aboue all things to get Gods kingdome for our selues for till we haue part herein wee can haue no sound comfort in the vse of Gods creatures which necessarily serue to our temporall life This reason alone if there were no more should spurre vs on to all diligence in this dutie what shame and griefe is it to eate our bread in the sight of God as theeues and vsurpers doe in the sight of men and therefore let vs giue no rest vnto our soules till wee attaine to some good assurance in this blessed estate The way wee must remember is by true conuersion and regeneration and wee shall discerne our selues to bee regenerate by these fruits of the spirit in vs to wit I. A true touch of conscience for our sinnes both originall and actuall II. A godly sorrowe and griefe of heart for offending and displeasing God by our transgressions III. An earnest desire or true spirituall hunger and thirst after Christ and his righteousnes testified by our constant and diligent vse of those meanes the word prayer and sacraments wherein God giues grace and assurance of mercie IV. An vnfained turning vnto God from all sinne by newe obedience hauing a constant purpose of heart not to sin and a godly endeauour in life to please God in all things These are the markes of the newe creature who hath true title to Gods kingdome which we must labour to find in our selues for our comfort in the vse of Gods creatures and if we finde them in vs our title is good not only to his creatures but to his kingdome notwithstanding our owne vnworthinesse by our former iniquities IV. In this that temporall blessings are dependants on Gods kingdome we must learne contentation and patience in all temporal losses whatsoeuer though we loose friends goods lands libertie reputatiō or life it selfe yet we must not be ouerwhelmed with sorrow or griefe for if we be Gods children and retaine his fauour the kingdom of heauen remaines sure vnto vs while a mans stocke remaines though some appurtenances bee taken from him he counts himselfe well enough and so must we in all worldly losses while our title is good to Gods kingdome Herewith our Sauiour Christ comforts his Disciples Luk. 12. 32. Feare not little flocke for it is your fathers pleasure to giue you the kingdome Now if God giue vs that with his fauour in Christ wee may be sure he would giue vs all temporall blessings if hee saw them to bee good for vs for if he haue giuen vs Christ how shall he not with him giue vs all things also Thirdly this promise of Christ to giue his kingdome to them that seeke it and beside to cast all temporall blessings vnto them if they seeke his kingdome principally doth notably commend vnto vs the bountiful goodnes of God for here we see he giues to his children more thē they aske or seeke And this bountie of God Paul expresseth as a ground of our praising God Eph. 3. 20. To him therefore that is able to doe exceeding abundantly aboue all that we can aske or thinke according to the power that worketh in vs be praise in the Church by Iesus Christ where we must obserue that hee speakes of Gods abilitie to be bountifull as brought into actiō in his children so as he is not only able but willing hereunto and hereof we haue daily experience in the blessings of God which we doe enioy for when we pray for spirituall graces God giues them vnto vs and many temporal blessings also This Dauid confesseth Psal. 21. 3. Thou diddest preuent me with liberall blessings and Salomon found it to be true who asking only a wise vnderstading heart receiued therupō riches honour besides his wisedom 1. Ki. 3. 13. And so did Iacob who asking only Gods protectiō with meat to eat clothes to put on though he went out but with a staffe yet returned with two bands Now the consideration of this bountie of God must teach vs these duties First to beware of all sinne whereby we doe offend and displease our God who is so gratious and bountifull vnto vs if our outward estate did depend vpon others we would then be careful so to carrie our selues towards them as that we would not willingly giue them any offence or cause of dislike how much more ought we then to seeke the continuance of Gods fauour towards vs by all good behauiour seeing on him depends our whole estate both temporall and eternall Secondly to trust God with our liues health bodies and all wee haue for foode raiment and protection in the sober vse of lawfull meanes for he is a bountifull God Thirdly to seeke for helpe and succour from God in all distresse and want for hee is bountifull hee giueth to all men liberally and reproacheth no man Iam. 1. 5. and therefore wee must be readie and forward to call vpon him and to make our moane vnto him Fourthly to loue so bountifull a God yea to enforce our hearts to all duties of loue towards him Salomon saith Euery man is a friend to him that giueth gifts Pro. 19. 6. but none is to bee compared to God for the riches of bountie therefore our loue to him should abound Fiftly to be thankefull vnto God for all the good things we enioy for whatsoeuer we haue comes from his bountie and therefore we must say with Dauid What shall I giue vnto the Lord for all his blessings are vpon me Psal. 116. 12 13. In a word we must labour continually in heart life to walke worthy of the Lord to please him in al things beeing fruitfull in all good works as the Apostle saith Colos. 1. 10. Verse 34. Care not for the morrow for the morrow shall care for it selfe the day hath enough with his owne griefe Here Christ the third time repeats his commaundement against distrustful care propoūded first in the 25. verse In which often repetition hee intends to make vs more carefull and diligent both to learne and practise the same And hereto hee also addeth a seauenth reason to enforce and further our obedience drawne from the daily griefe trouble which accompanies euery daie of our life The Exposition Care not for the morrow that is for the time to come This may seeme a strange commandement tending to patronage sloth negligence but wee must know that there is a double care for the time to come I. A godly lawfull care II. A distrustfull and inordinate care The godly care is that whereby a man prouides for in the time present such things as are needfull in the time to come cannot then be prouided this lawfull care wee
amendment there is no hope And that these are here to be vnderstood appeares by these reasons I. From the text it selfe which describeth them by this that treading the words of instruction vnder foote they doe turne againe and all-to-rend the Teachers thereof that is they do persecute them both by word and deed in all reproachfull speeches cruell actions II. Reason In the word of God we shall find that Christ and his Apostles preached to dogs for such are all men by nature The Scribes and Pharisies a generation of Vypers came to Iohns baptisme vnrepelled though not vnreprooued Matth. 3. 6 7. and Christ himselfe telleth the woman of Canaan that it was not lawfull to giue the childrens bread to dogs that is to the Gentiles and yet he sent his disciples to preach to all nations the woman her selfe by reason of her faith was receiued to mercie made partaker of the crums that fel from the childrens table Againe our Sauiour Christ preached to the Scribes and Pharisies euen then when hee wept ouer Ierusalem for their impenitencie yea this is a truth that because men are naturally dogs and swine therefore they must haue the word of God preached vnto them to purifie and sanctifie them vnlesse they be obstinate and irrepentant enemies to the word of whom is no hope of recouerie III. Reason These obstinate enemies here are called dogs and swine by allusion to vncleane beasts vnder the law of which sort were dogs swine which were prohibited the Iews to be eaten or offered in sacrifice to God Christ therfore here by allusion to that ceremony means such persons as are excluded from the holy things of the Lord and haue no right or interest into the Lords word or sacraments such as both in heart and life be vncleane as hogs and dogs will not be purified IV. Reason Paul chargeth Titus that after once or twice admonitiō he should reiect an heretike knowing that such a one is peruerted and sinneth beeing damned of his own selfe that is sinneth wilfully obstinately and in so sinning condemneth himselfe in his own heart conscience and such are meant by dogs and swine in this place Now the difference of these two may be this By dogs are meant obstinate enemies that malitiously reuile the ministerie of the word the doctrine of God and the messengers thereof such a dog was Alexander the Copper-smith 2. Tim. 4. 14. such were many of the Iews become soone after Christs ascension who reuiled the Apostle Paul and Barnabas and blasphemed the doctrine which they taught Act. 13. 45. and of this sort are all conuicted obstinate heretlks By swine are meant obstinate enemies that doe contemne the word of God either because they will not admit reformation of life by it such as Ahab and Her●d were or because they scorne mock at the word of God as they do of whom Peter speaks that mocke at the promises of Christs secōd cōming The second point touching these persons is who must giue iudgem●● of any man or any people to be dogs and swine we must know that it is not in the power and libertie of any priuate man to giue iudgement of another that he is a dogge or a swine but it is a publike dutie belonging to the ministers and gouernours of the Church to giue iudgement in this case Matth. 18. 17. Before a man must be reputed as a Publicane and as an heathen the censure of the Church must passe vpon his behauiour and from the iudgement of the Church must priuate men hold other as Publicanes and Heathen Indeede our Sauiour Christ and his Apostles gaue this iudgement of men particularly and peremptorily as Paul of Alexander the Copper-smith but wee must vnderstand what authoritie and what spirit Christ and his Apostles had which because we haue not we cannot giue such iudgement vpon men Further here we are to know that iudgement vpon others is two-fold Iudgement of certaintie or iudgement of humane wisedom The iudgement of certaintie touching any mans state belongs onely to God to them to whom God reuealeth the same The iudgement of humane wisedome is when the Church of God in the feare of God giue iudgement as truely and as neerely as they can who is a dogge and who is a swine and this only is the iudgement of the Church which also is conditionall as namely till they repent because they know not the times that God hath appointed for the conuersion of sinners And by this wee are taught to comprimit our iudgement of any man in regard of his finall estate though he be an vnrepentant sinner refusing instruction for most hainous sinners haue bin conuerted The third point where these dogges and swine are to be found It is not in the power of any ordinarie minister or other man to determine of any one that he is a dogge or a swine for in such do finall impenitencie and wilfull obstinacie concurre which wee are not able to say certainely are come vpon any man or woman while they liue among vs yet this may be said with good conscience that there is in many a fearfull declination to the properties of dogs and swine euen in this age of ours for many will heare the word receiue the sacraments professe that they hope to be saued by Christ yet they will raile on his ministers speake against their ministery yea the times are now wherein many in open speech wil not sticke to reuile and condemne those that haue bin the most excellent instruments of Gods mercie in his Church among many I will name one M● Ioh. Calum that worthy instrument of the Gospel is in the mouthes of many students condemned as an erroneous person teaching false dangerous doctrine Yea many there be that come to the Lords table yet will not brooke reformation of life they wil not be drawn from their drunkennes ignorance adulterie couetousnesse A third sort there are that take occasion from Gods word to liue in their sinnes and to maintaine their wicked liues as frō the doctrine of Gods eternall predestination because the Scripture teacheth that Gods decree therein is vnchāgeable therfore some say they will liue as they list others because the word saith we are to be saued by faith alone therefore they refuse to walke in good workes others looke to be saued by Gods mercy alone and therefore they will not labour either for knowledge or faith as they ought to doe some hearing the doctrine of the deniall of our selues doe say the word of God is too straite a doctrine barring men from laughter mirth other recreations and therefore they will none of Gods word now though we cannot call these mens dogs because wee know not what they may be hereafter yet we may truely say thefe be practises of dogs and swine And thus wee see what is meant by holy things by pearles
Lordship and vnder your Honourable protection to the houshold of faith And because I doubt not of your diligence in the faithful and frequent perusall of it I wil turne my perswasions towards you this way into praier to the Almightie for you that by the edifying of your faith and other graces of God herein you may more and more abound in the fruits of righteousnesse inioying here much true honour with long and happie daies in the peace of our Syon and the prosperitie of your familie and in the ende eternall life through Iesus Christ. Your Honours to commaund THOMAS PIERSON Maie 1608. A GODLY AND LEARNED EXPOSITION OF CHRISTS Sermon in the MOUNT Math. 5. 1. And when he saw the multitude he went vp into a Mountaine And when he was set his Disciples came to him 2. And he opened his mouth and taught them saying c. IN this Chapter and the next is contained Christs Sermon in the Mount preached to his Disciples and others that were conuerted vnto him among the multitude Hereof I haue chosen to intreate because it is a most diuine and learned Sermon and may not vnfitly be called the Key of the whole Bible for here Christ openeth the summe of the Old and New Testament Before we come to the parts of this Sermon three generall points are to be scanned for the clearing of the doctrine following First the Time when this Sermon was preached to wit in the second yeare of CHRISTS ministerie vpon this occasion when Christ had wrought a miracle in cu●ing the man with the withered hand vpon the Sabbath day the Scribes and Pharisies went about to kill him whereupon he departed from among them and went into a Mount where he spent the whole night in prayer And when it was day he chose the twelue Apostles which done he came downe into a plaine place neare to the Mount where he wrought many miracles but because the people thronged about him to touch him for there went vertue out of him which cured them therefore he withdrew himselfe out of the throng into the Mountaine againe and there preached this Sermon vnto his Disciples soone after their election no doubt for this ende to teach them his will and also to frame and instruct them so as they might become profitable teachers vnto others II. Point The scope and drift of this large Sermon namely to teach his Disciples with all that beleeue in him to lead a godly an holy and blessed life Although this be euident in the text yet the Popish Teachers haue depraued this ende and scope saying that Christ herein propoundeth a new Law farre more perfect then the Law of Moses also deliuereth new diuine counsell to his Disciples which was not giuen in the Law or in the Prophets But they erre and are deceiued for Christs intent is to cleare the true meaning of Moses and the Prophets which was corrupted by the false glosse of the Iewish teachers and not to adde any new Law or counsell thereunto as afterward will plainly appeare Againe there cannot be giuen vnto man a more perfect rule then Moses Law the summe and scope whereof is To loue God with all the heart with all the soule and with all the strength then which there cannot be greater perfection in a creature We therefore vpon the consideration of this worthie ende must labour to shew the greater care and conscience to learne and doe the things propounded in this Sermon III. Point Whether is this Sermon the same with that which is set downe by S. Luke Chap. 16. v. 20. This question is necessarie for if they be the same Sermon then will the one giue great light vnto the other Men indeede differ in iudgement touching this point some say they are diuers Sermons others say they are one and the same and that opinion is most likely For first they haue one beginning and one matter the same order of preaching and the same conclusion as the comparing of them together will plainely declare Secondly this Sermon recorded by them both was made vpon the election of Christs twelue Apostles a little after the curing of the man with the withered hand This is plaine in S. Luke and may well be gathered from the doctrine of this Sermon recorded by Matthew wherein Christ instructeth his Apostles particularly in their office and calling which he would not haue done if he had not formerly called them thereunto If it be said that S. Matthew recordeth their election afterward in the 10. Chap. Ans. In the writings of the Euangelists there be certaine Anticipations that is some things are set downe after which were done before and some things are set downe before which were done after as might easily be prooued by sundrie examples and in the point in hand is euident for the election of the Apostles is set downe by S. Matthew in his tenth Chap. vpon occasion of his recording their commission to preach so that this circumstance of the Apostles election doth notably prooue these Sermons to be one S. Matthew setting downe the same more largely and Luke more briefly Their Reasons who hold them to be two distinct Sermons are of no moment They say that the Sermon recorded by S. Luke was made on the plaine this of Matthew in the Mountaine that of Luke was made by Christ standing this of Matthew as he sate downe Answ. But Luke saith not that it was made by Christ in a plaine or standing onely this he saith that Christ comming from the Mountaine stoode in a plaine place and there wrought certaine miracles and then preached now all this might be done and yet Christ might preach this Sermon in the Mount sitting as S. Matthew saith for the order of this storie is this Christ beeing maligned of the Iewes went into a Mount and there praied after long praier he chose the twelue Apostles and then came downe into a plaine and wrought Miracles but by reason of the throng which pressed about him to touch him he went into the Mountaine againe and there preached this Sermon to his Apostles and others that followed him Thus much in generall Now we come to the Sermon it selfe which containeth three parts A Preface the Matter of the Sermon and the Conclusion The Preface or preparation is contained in the two first verses of this Chapter wherein are set downe diuers circumstances pertaining to the Sermon As first and principally the Author of it to wit IESVS CHRIST the Redeemer and Mediatour of mankinde who in the making of this Sermon must be considered two waies euen as he is a Prophet first as the Minister of Circumcision for the truth of God as the Apostle speaketh whereby thus much is signified that Iesus Christ as he was man borne among the Iewes was vnto them a Prophet and Minister in his owne person and with his owne mouth was to teach them the will of his Father which thing
the testimonie of the spirit touching their reconciliation with God in Christ and some fruits of sanctification whereby the old man is mortified and the new man renued in them but principally at the ende of this life when they shall be fully iustified and sanctified and haue Gods image perfectly renued in them Vers. 7. Blessed are the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercie This verse containeth the fift Rule or precept of our Sauiour Christ touching true happines in which obserue two points first who be blessed secondly wherein this blessednes consisteth For the first the parties blessed be the mercifull And that we may the better know them I will speake something of this vertue first shewing what mercie is then what be the cheife duties thereof First Mercie is an holy compassion of heart whereby a man is mooued to helpe an other in his miserie First I call it a compassion of heart because it makes one man to put on the person of an other and to be grieued for the miseries of an other as if they were his owne and therfore it is called the bowells of compassion because when a mans heart is touched therewith his very liuer and entralls doe stirre in his bodie and are rouled within him as the Prophet speaketh and he is affected as though the bowells of him that is in miserie were in his bodie Secondly I call it an Holy compassion to distinguish it from foolish pitie whereby a man doth vnlawfully tender him that is in deserued miserie such was Ahabs mercie to Benhadad and Sauls in sparing Agag whereas the expresse commandement of God was to the contrarie but such mercie and compassion as God approoueth is a fruit of his spirit and a vertue commended and commanded in the word of God Thirdly this vertue of mercie stirreth and mooueth the heart to helpe an other that is in miserie for helpe in miserie is a notable fruit of true compassion neither can thes be seuered for in the compassion of the heart and in the acte of reliefe stands true mercie and therefore Iohn saith He that seeth his brother in neede and shutteth vp his compassion from him how dwelleth the loue of God in him whereby also we may see that no worke of mercie is shewed to any man in miserie but that which commeth from compassion and thus we see what mercy is Secondly the duties of mercie are answerable to mans miserie Now mans miserie is either in his soule or in his bodie The greatest miseries of man are in his soule as ignorance impenitencie and trouble of conscience mans bodily miseries are sicknes thirst nakednesse c. and to these the works of mercie are answerable Some therefore concerne the soule and some the bodie Mercie towards the soule is when a man is carefull for the saluation of an other vsing meanes to bring a man from spirituall darknes vnto light from the power of Satan vnto God from the state of sinne and the daunger of hell fire to the state of grace in true faith and repentance and so to life eternall And looke how farre the soule is more excellent then the bodie so farre doth this worke exceede any worke of mercy that concernes the bodie Mercie towards the body is called Almes or Releefe whereby a mans outward necessitie for foode raiment or such like is supplied that this is a worke of mercie is manifest Isay 58. 10. where the Releeuing of the hungrie is the powring out of the soule vnto-him and Saint Iohn maketh the not releeuing of our brother in neede to bee the shutting of the doore of compassion from him Now by this which hath beene said concerning mercie and the workes thereof wee may see who is a mercifull man namely such a one as hath his heart touched with compassion towards the miserie of another and thereby is mooued to helpe and releeue him in soule and bodie according to his estate and such a man is blessed by the testimonie of Christ himselfe howsoeuer in the world he may be despised First here we haue to consider what a number of miserable and cursed persons doe liue euen in the bosome of Gods Church for if this Rule of Christ be true then vnmercifull men are accursed Now such are common among vs The Richer sort which abound in outward blessings thinke themselues happie but if they be vnmercifull they are wretched and such are all those that for the maintenance of their outward po●●pe and brauerie spoile the poore that liue vnder them by inclosing of commons racking of rents vnreasonable fines c. or for the satisfying of their vaine pleasure and delight bestowe more vpon hawkes and hounds then on the poore Such a wretched person also is the Corne-monger who hath his barnes full and his garners full and yet suffereth the poore to want bread waiting still for a deerer time Such also are our common vsurers ingrossers and fore-stallers of needefull commodities whatsoeuer all these seeke themselues and haue no mercie on them that are in miserie yea such likewise are those householders who spend their time and wealth in some disordered course as whoring gaming drinking or such like and so neglect their family these denie the faith and are worse then Iewes and Turkes nay then many bruit beasts for they are mercifull towards their owne It were an easie thing thus to shewe through all estates the great multitude of miserable persons for now the common prouerb is become the common practise Euery man for himselfe and God for vs all Secondly seeing the mercifull man is blessed wee must learne to put on tender mercie or the bowels of compassion towards those that bee in miserie And to mooue vs hereunto let vs marke these things First the state of the mercifull is here pronounced blessed of Christ. Secondly mercie is a gift of the spirit and the grace of Gods elect which alwaies accompanieth the happie estate of those that be in Christ for the power of grace doth change their carnall nature Isay 11. 6. 7. Thirdly hereby we become like vnto God our heauenly Father who is the father of merci●● Fourthly hereby we are made instruments of Gods mercie to them that be in miserie for God conuaies his blessings vnto his poore creatures ordinarily by meanes We count it an high honour to be the Kings Almner oh then how great is this dignitie to be Almner to the God of heauen to disperse his goodnesse and mercies among the children of men and hereto wee are aduanced if wee helpe the poore that bee in miserie Fiftly the exercise of mercie commendeth our Religion not onely before men but vnto God for pure Religion and vndefiled before God is this to visit the fatherlesse and widdowes in their distresse and God will haue mercie and not sacrifice therefore the Apostle bids to doe good and to distribute forget not for
whereof Hatred is the roote and the rest are the branches Thirdly Christ laies downe the cause for which this persecution shall be inflicted namely for my sake or as S. Luke saith for the sonne of mans sake which expoundeth this phrase for Righteousnes sake v. 10. to wit for professing beleeuing and maintaining the doctrine of the Gospel taught by Christ touching remission of sinnes and life euerlasting to them that beleeue The vses in generall We see that Christ vrgeth this Rule of blessednes more largely then the former this he doth for speciall cause first hereby he would teach his Disciples and vs in them that it is the will of God his Church in this world should be vnder the crosse in such affliction and persecution as their blood shall be sought for the maintenance of the faith And this hee will haue to bee the state of his Church for speciall causes First that the members thereof by their afflictions may be acquainted with their owne wants and infirmities which they would not much regard if they were freed from the crosse Secondly that by affliction they may be kept from many grieuous sinnes into which they would fall if they liued in peace Thirdly that others seeing the correction of the Church for sinne might learne thereby to hate and auoide sinne and lastly that the Church might glorifie God in a constant and couragious maintenance of his truth vnto death for euen in persecution is Gods truth preserued against the reason of mans wisdome patient suffering for the truth beeing faithfull witnes-bearing thereunto Secondly Christ had newely called the Twelue out of all his Disciples to be Apostles whereupon they might thinke that they should be aduanced to some outward honour ease and peace but Christ hereby calles them from that conceit puts them in mind of affliction which should befall them in time to come that when it came they might the better indure it And thus he prepares all churches to suffer affliction yea and we our selues must hereby learne in time of peace to prepare our selues against the day of triall because his will is that whosoeuer would liue godly in Christ Iesus must suffer affliction Thirdly hereby Christ intends to lay a ground of comfort to his disciples in their persecution by a plaine and ful declaration of their happines that suffer for righteousnes sake in that they haue sure title to the kingdome of heauen out of which estate no sound comfort can be had And this same must we lay vp in store against the time to come for we liue now in peace by Gods mercie but we know not how long it will continue we haue beene threatened and dangerously assaulted by our enemies many a time beside the rodde of God shaken with his owne hand against vs and wee may not thinke our peace will last alwaies but seeing our sinnes increase we may be sure our ioy and peace will one day bee turned into sorrow and therefore it will be good to haue this Rule engrauen in our hearts that they are blessed which suffer for righteousnesse sake If therefore tribulation come for the defence of the Gospel we must haue recourse to this promise of blessednesse and that will be our comfort More particularly In the words of this Rule Blessed are they c. Christ would let vs see that deadly hatred which the world beares vnto Gods Church for so much the word persecute importeth The reasons of this hatred may be these First the Church of God in the ministerie of the Gospel seekes the ruine of the diuels kingdome who is the Prince of the world the diuell therefore rageth and inflames the hearts of his instruments with malice against Gods Church that they may persecute and quite destroy it if it were possible Secondly Gods Church is a peculiar people seuered from the world in profession doctrine and conuersation and therefore the world hates them Ioh. 15. 19. And this very point may serue to stay our hearts when we shall bee persecuted for the profession and embracing of the Gospel of Christ for the world doth hate Gods Church and will doe to the end there must be enmitie betweene the seed of the serpent and the seede of the woman as then he that was borne of the flesh persecuted him that was borne after the spirit so is it now Gal. 4. 29. Secondly obserue that this hatred of the world is not onely against the members of Gods Church but euen against Christs holy religion so Christ saith for my sake or for my Religions sake This is to be marked as a most excellent argument to perswade our consciences that the Gospel of Christ which we professe is the true and blessed doctrine of God because the wicked world doth alwaies hate it yea it hateth vs also for the Gospels sake now if it were a doctrine of men it would fit their natures well and they would loue it for the world doth loue his owne Ioh. 15. 19. Thirdly if they be blessed that suffer persecution then how may any man lawfully flie in persecution Answer A man may flie in persecution with good conscience these two things obserued first that he be not hindred by his particular calling secondly that he hath libertie offered by Gods prouidence to escape the hands of his enemies The intent of this verse is not to forbid flight but to comfort such as are in persecution and cannot escape for the word signifieth such persecution as is by pursuite and oppression which cannot be auoided Lastly seeing they are blessed that suffer for righteousnes sake Whether are they alwaies cursed that suffer deseruedly for an euill cause for the contrarie reason is in contraries Ans. They are alwaies accursed saue in one case to wit vnlesse they repent for their vnrighteousnes for which they are afflicted but by true repentance they become blessed The thiefe vpon the crosse had liued in theft and was therfore attached condemned and crucified and so he suffered for vnrighteousnesse but yet hee was saued because hee repented and beleeued in Christ. It is added for righteousnesse sake In this clause we are taught a speciall lesson namely that when God shall lay vpon vs any affliction or persecution as imprisonment banishment losse of goods or of life it selfe we must alwaies looke that the cause be good and then suffer willingly This is a necessarie Rule for we must suffer affliction either publikely or priuately if we will liue godly in Christ Iesus Now it is not the punishment but the cause that makes a Martyr and to this purpose Peter saith Let none of you suffer as a Murtherer a Thiefe or a busie-body but if any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but glorifie God in this behalfe and therefore we must be sure the cause be good yea this we must looke vnto in our particular priuate crosses Verse 11. Blessed are ye when men reuile you and
persecute you c. In handling the former verse we shewed the meaning of these words how they serue to expoūd the former Rule The point here to be obserued is this That to reuile and slaunder yea as Luke saith to hate a man for a good cause especially for religion is persecution which shewes how fearefull the common sinne of the age is whereby men reuile their brethren with base and odious tearmes because they shewe some care to please God and to adorne their profession by a godly life But thou art a persecutor whosoeuer thou art that vsest this and therefore repent and leaue it for it is a preparation to a greater sinne in this kinde and most odious in Gods sight as the punishment hereof declares Gen. 21. 9 10. with Gal. 4. 29 30. S. Luke addes a second word And when they separate you whereby is meant excōmunicatiō out of the Temple and Synagogue a punishment which Christ foretold should befall his disciples This censure was put in execution in their Synagogues for besides the administration of ciuill Iustice Ecclesiasticall matters were there handled Now marke what Christ saith Though excommunication bee mine owne ordinance yet blessed are you when men excommunicate you out of the Temple and Synagogues for my names sake where hee maketh excommunication a kinde of persecution when it is denounced against men for righteousnesse sake Here then we may learne what to thinke of the Popes Bulls whereby he excommunicates Kings and Queenes and particular Churches for denying subiection to his chaire namely that they are the diuels instruments where with Gods children are persecuted and that all such as are thus excommunicated for defending the truth of the Gospel are blessed for excommunication is not the instrument of a curse to them that suffer it for good cause Secondly hence we learne that excommunication abused against Gods word is no powerfull censure though in it selfe beeing vsed according to Gods ordinance it be a most terrible thunderbolt excluding a man in part from the Church and from the kingdome of heauen and therfore all Churches must see that this censure be not abused for the abusers of it incurre the danger of the curse and not they against whom it is vniustly pronounced Vers. 12. Reioyce and be glad for great is your reward in heauen for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you Here Christ drawes a conclusion from the former Rule for hauing said in generall that they which suffer for righteousnesse sake are blessed v. 10. and applied it in particular to his Disciples ver 11. hereupon hee infers that they must reioyce in affliction euen then or as Luke saith in that day yea they must be glad which word signifieth exceeding ioy such as we vse to expresse by outward signes in the body as skipping and dauncing such as Dauid vsed to testifie his ioy for the returne of the Arke of God to his citie This is a most worthy conclusion often vrged and commended vnto vs in Scripture Iam. 1. 2. Brethren count it exceeding great ioy when yee fall into diuers temptations Rom. 5. 3. We reioyce in tribulation knowing that tribulation bringeth forth patience and Act. 5. 41. The Disciples reioyced that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for the name of Christ. Here we learne then that Gods church and people that suffer in a good cause must reioyce and be glad This must be remembred for we ●aue bene many times in great danger of our enemies for the Gospels ●ake and it may please God to leaue vs in their hands for our manifold sinnes and great abuse of his heauenly blessings which if he doe what must be our behauiour must we be swallowed vp with sorrow and griefe no but humbling our selues for our sinnes we must remember for what we doe suffer and reioyce and be glad in that behalfe for though our outward man perish yet the inner man shall bee reuiued Now because it is a hard thing to reioyce in grieuous afflictions therefore Christ doth giue two reasons to mooue them hereunto first from the Recompense of reward after this life in these words for great is your reward in heauen This point I haue handled heretofore therfore I will here onely shewe how the Papists abuse this text to prooué the merits of mans workes of grace for hence they reason thus Where there is a reward there is merit But in heauen there is a reward for mans works of grace and therefore in this life there is merit by them To this it is answered diuers waies I will touch the heads of the principall First the word reward must not bee vnderstood properly but figuratiuely for Christs speech is borrowed from labourers who after they haue done their worke doe receiue their wages which is the reward thereof euen so after Christs disciples and seruants haue suffered afflictions for the name of Christ at the end of this life they shall receiue life euerlasting Secondly when wee read of wages and reward in Scripture wee must not dreame of any thing due by right of debt and merit but conceiue thereby that which is giuen by promise and of meere mercie like as when an earthly Father promiseth to his sonne to giue him this or that thing if hee will learne now the Fathers gift is not merited by the childe but is freely giuen the more to incite the childe to learne his booke Thirdly if we vnderstand reward properly then we must referre it not to our sufferings but to the sufferings of Christ for there is no proportion betweene our sufferings and life eternall the afflictions of this present life are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed vnto vs Rom. 8. 18. The second reason is taken from the example of the auncient Prophets for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you In this Reason Christ intendeth two things First to teach his Disciples and vs that persecu●ion for good causes is no newe or strange thing Secondly to comfort his Disciples and seruants in their sufferings for that thereby they should bee made comformable to the ancient worthy Prophets who were of old renowned among men and are now glori fied of God in heauen Hereto wee must compare the words of Luke ' spoken to the same purpose for after this manner did the Fathers to the Prophets By Fathers we must needs meane the auncient people of the Iewes for here hee speaketh to his Disciples and others that were Iewes by nation Now hence obserue a strange point to wit that the auncient Prophets who were most worthy men of God were persecuted in their time not so much by forrainers and enemies to religion as by those that were outwardly members of the Church of God and professors of religion This may seeme strange that men liuing in Gods Church should growe to this height of impietie to become persecutors of Gods Saints but Saint
herewith Secondly the people of God that heare his word may learne good instruction from this Title first hereby euery one may see what he is by nature namely like vnto flesh subiect to corruption nay as vnsauory flesh and stinking cation in the nostrels of God for els what needed this salt This therefore must mooue vs to lay aside all pride of heart whereby we thinke highly of our selues yea we must become base and lowly in our owne eies in regard of the vnsauourie tast of our naturall corruption else we shall neuer feele the seasoning vertue of Gods holy Ministerie Secondly euery one must hereby learne to suffer the word of reproofe whereby his heart and conscience may be ripped vp and his sores of sinne discouered when we haue a cut or a wound in our flesh we can be content to put salt vpon it to drie vp the noysome humours that otherwise would corrupt now can we endure the smart of salt for the health of our bodies and shall we not much more suffer the word of God to rip vp our sinnes and to mortifie the same for the saluation of our soules Thirdly euery one must giue all diligence to bee seasoned throughout with this heauenly salt that the thoughts of his heart the words of his mouth and the actions of his life may be all sauourie and acceptable vnto God in Christ yea in his conuersation with men hee must labour to shewe the power of this seasoning Coloss. 4. 6. Let your speech be gratious alwaies and powdred with salt that is seasoned by the word that it may sauour of grace to those that heare vs. If we liue vnder the Ministerie of the word and be not seasoned therewith our case is dangerous for therein it is of the nature of salt which causeth barrennesse where it seasoneth not as we may see in the practise of Abimelech who sowed salt in Shechem to make the groūd barren and the place despised But if the salt haue lost his sauour wherewith shall it be salted it is thenceforth good for nothing but to bee cast out and troden vnder the foote of men Here Christ amplifieth the former reason whereby hee mooued his Apostles to sidelitie and diligence in their Ministerie by the danger of the contrarie infidelitie which is as vnsauourie salt incurable and vnprofitable and so subiect to a fearefull curse and therefore saith Christ you had neede to bee faithfull in seasoning the world by your Ministerie In this amplification we may obserue foure points First the ordinarie sinne that doth accompanie the calling of the Ministerie Secondly the danger of this sin Thirdly the vnprofitablenes of such a Ministerie Fourthly the iudgement of God due vnto it I. Point As other callings haue their seuerall faults so hath the calling of a Minister noted in these words If the salt haue lost his sauour c. Salt is said to become vnsauourie when it looseth that vertue and acrimonie which it hath in seasoning that flesh on which it is cast Now Ministers are as vnsauourie salt when they become vnprofitable in their Ministerie and either doe not or cannot dispense Gods word for the seasoning of mens soules that they may be acceptable to God and reconciled vnto him in Christ. In this calling there bee especially foure kinds of vnsauourie salt First the blind watch-men that haue no knowledge and dumb dogges that cannot barke that is such as either cannot or if they can will not dispense Gods word for the saluation of mens soules Secondly Hereticall Teachers who preach false and damnable doctrine such as doth not season but poison and destroie the soule such were the false Prophets among the Iewes who enticed to Idolatrie Deut. 30. 1 2. and the false Apostles and Heretiks in the Primitiue Church whose words did fret as a canker and destroyed the faith of many And such are the Romish teachers at this day and the Iesuits and Seminaries among vs who though they be qualified with many good gifts of learning yet by mingling the word of God with their owne inuentions and humane traditions they rase the foundation they become vnsauourie salt and hereticall Teachers And here by the way who cannot but wonder that students in Diuinitie should so much affect the Postils and Comments of Friers and Popish writers as they doe doubtlesse it argueth that the word of God hath not seasoned their hearts for where such vnsauourie salt hath relish the wholesome doctrine of Gods word hath neuer seasoned Thirdly they are vnsauourie salt who teach true doctrine but yet misapplie the same Many such were in the Church of the Iewes in the daies of Ieremie and Ezekiel who much complaine of sowing pillowes vnder the elbowes of the wicked by preaching peace vnto them when they should haue called to repentance by the discouerie of their sinnes and the denunciation of Gods iudgements as also for making sad the hearts of those whom God hath not made sadde And such are those at this day who haue sinooth tongues in respect of sinne and yet are full of bitter inuectiues against the better sort By this meanes the word of God looseth his acrimonie and sharpnesse whereby the wicked should be awaked out of their slumber of securitie and the godly further seasoned and made more acceptable vnto God Fourthly they are vnsauourie salt who though they teach the truth and generally applie it well doe yet lead vngodly and scandalous liues for an offensiue and vnsauourie conuersation in the Teacher doth hinder the seasoning vertue of the word of his Ministerie in the hearts of the people and his doctrine cannot so much edifie as his course of life destroyeth because naturall men regard not so much what is said as what is done This beeing so all Gods Ministers and those also that destinate themselues to this calling must haue speciall care so to bee qualified for this worke and so to preach the word of God that it may be sauourie in the hearts and consciences of them that heare it This is a matter of great importance as well in respect of the Minister as of the people and thus shall it appeare that they are not onely no vnsauourie salt but euen such as doe season others II. Point The danger of this sinne in beeing vnsauourie salt that is vnfaithfull in the Ministerie is very great noted in these words wherewith shall it be salted Some referre this salting to the earth as if Christ had said wherewith shall the earth be salted but it doth more truely belong to the salt it selfe as Mark. 9. 5. Salt is good but if the salt be vnsauourie wherewith shall it that is the salt it selfe be seasoned Againe the interrogation wherewith imports a vehement deniall as if Christ should say If salt once loose his naturall propertie of saltnesse it can neuer be recouered now vnfaithfull and vnprofitable Ministers are vnsauourie salt and therefore their danger is exceeding great
simple manner for herein is that true that God hath chosen such things as to the world are foolish weake vile and despised to confound and bring to nought the wise and mightie things of the world and hereby also it is made euident that the faith of Gods elect doth not consist in the wisdome of men but in the power of God againe the preaching of the Gospel with the wisedome of words makes the crosse of Christ of none effect let no man therefore deceiue himselfe for the foolishnes of God is wiser then men and the weaknes of God stronger then men Againe he that doth exercise himselfe in the word of God either priuately or publiquely must labour thereby to see his owne sinnes and Gods heauie iudgement due vnto him for them and so will he beginne to reuerence Gods word as the onely meanes of true comfort The woman of Samaria at the first beganne to cauill with Christ when shee heard him talke of the water of life but so soone as he discouered her sinne to her conscience telling her shee had had fiue husbands and he whome shee now had was not her husband then shee left off to cauill and honoured him by beleeuing his word and causing others to come and to beleeue in him The Iewes made light of the giuing of the holy Ghost vnto the Apostles at the first but when Peter had pricked their hearts they sought vnto the word and receiued it with gladnes so the Iayler though ouer night he dealt vnkindly with the Apostles putting their feete in the stockes in the dungeon yet beeing stricken with a feare by the opening of the prison doores he then fell downe before them trembling and asked what he might doe to be saued Secondly others take occasion of offence from the contents of the Bible as when they read of the Miracles wrought by the Prophets by Christ and his Apostles they say the like may be done by Magicke and so blasphemously doe father vpon the Scripture that most wicked practise of sorcerie like to the malicious Iewes who said of Christ that he cast out deuills by the power of Beelzebub Luk. 11. 15. Others denie the Historie of Moses to be true by reason of Noahs Arke which they say as it is described for quantitie could not containe a couple of euery kind of creatures with prouision and fodder for them for a whole years space of this opinion was Appelles an auncient heretike in the primitiue Church and many vpon these occasions haue become Atheists denying the truth of Gods word to their damnation To these I answer first for the Miracles that no creature men or Angels is able to doe such works as are recorded in Scripture to be done by the power of God Ioh. 9. Christ opened the eyes of one that was borne blind The deuill by his skill and man by Arte can doe much in curing blindnes caused by wounds and diseases but no power of nature nor of magick no not all the power of all Angels is sufficient to procure sight to one that was borne blind that must be done by a power creating which is in no creature Againe as Histories record the deuill is able to enter into a dead bodie and cause it to mooue and can speake in it but to raise vp one to life that had beene dead foure daies as Christ did Lazarus is a worke that all the deuills in hell nay all the Angels in heauen are not able to doe And for Appelles the heretike who tooke occasion from Noahs Arke to condemne the bookes of Moses the answer made to him in the Primitiue Church may serue the turne to wit that it was in quantitie sufficient to containe couples of all kindes of creatures and prouision for them for a whole yeares space for to omit the height and breadth of it it was three hundred cubits long and euery cubit according to the auncient measure contained nine foote which in all came to the length of halfe a mile and more Againe others say that though euery cubit had beene but one foote and an halfe long as our cubits are yet hauing three lofts it was of sufficient bignesse to containe all kinds of creatures by couples and prouision for them for a yeares space But yet put the case that we could not tell how an Arke should be made great enough to containe couples of all kinds of creatures and prouision for them should we thereupon take occasion to condemne the bookes of God that record the same and the thing it selfe God forbidde nay rather we must hereby learne to acknowledge and confesse our owne blindnesse and the shallow reach of our vnderstanding and so admire the wonderfull worke of God The way to cut off this occasion of offence taken from the Scripture is first to obserue that howsoeuer nothing is more repugnant to our nature then the word of God yet the same word of God hath more preuailed with many mens hearts to winne the same vnto it then any thing in the world besides could euer doe Humane writings are farre more plausible to naturall men then the holy Scriptures of God for the wisdome of God in Scripture is esteemed foolishnesse to mans naturall reason and yet who did euer cleaue so fast to the writings of men as Gods children haue done to the word of God for the testimonie whereof they haue beene and are content to liue and die This thing argueth plainely that there is in Scripture a diuine power for if it had beene from man and against his nature as it is man would haue contemned it Secondly this must be considered that the penmen of holy Scriptures both the Prophets and Apostles haue recorded their owne faults in penning of it which plainely argueth that they were penned by holy men of God according to the direction of the holy Ghost and are not the inuentions of politique heads to keepe men in awe for then the Authors and penmen thereof would rather haue concealed their owne faults then haue published the same in their owne workes to their discredit Lastly consider the subiect and matter of the whole Bible to wit Iesus Christ who therein hath professed himselfe to be the Sonne of God now if Christ had not beene very God and yet should haue taken that honour vnto him then the like iudgements would haue befallen him that befell others for the like offence for none euer tooke that honour vnto them who were not grieuously punished As was Adam in Paradise for seeking to be like vnto God and Herod for receiuing and applying to himselfe the blasphemous praise of the people crying The voice of God and not of man but howsoeuer most fearefull iudgements befell Gods enemies that thus sought to robbe him of his honour yet Christs ende was glorious and blessed which may mooue vs to thinke highly of Scripture as of the word
conioyned in the whole course of our liues and conuersation both before God and man No worke in man but faith is required to his Iustification though in God there be respect to his owne free mercie and to Christs merits but in our liues faith and works must goe hand in hand together Now that these may thus be well distinguished I shew it plainely In the fire is both heate and light yet in the warming of the bodie the heate hath force onely and not light though to many other vses it serue necessarily euen so in a child of God are required both faith and workes but to iustifie him faith onely is required though works be necessarie thorough his whole life for they iustifie vs before men and winne vnto vs a testimonie of our iustification before God not onely in our owne hearts but from the Lord Iam. 2. 21. and therfore we must not content our selues with a faith in speculation voide of workes but within the compasse of our callings doe what good we can for Gods glorie and the comfort of our brethren The Third head from whence offences are taken is the state of the Church first in regard of the wants that be in the Church and namely in this our Church Hence sundrie men take occasion to condemne our Church as no Church our Sacraments as no sacraments our Ministers as no Ministers and our people as no Christians and therefore doe seperate themselues from our Church as beeing no true members of the Church of God To preuent this occasion of sinning three Rules must be obserued first that to beleeue and confesse the doctrine of saluation taught and deliuered by the Prophets and Apostles is an infallible and inseparable note of a true Church of God for Gods Church is nothing els but a companie of Gods people called by the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles vnto the state of saluation This doctrine is the seede of regeneration whereby men are begotten vnto Christ and it is that s●ncere milke whereby they are fedde and nourished vnto eternall life Now I say that this our Church of England through Gods mercie doth maintaine beleeue and professe this doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles for the proofe hereof let him that doubteth haue recourse to our English confession and to a booke intituled the Articles of Religion established in the Church of England in which are set downe the foundations of Christian Religion allowed and held by all Euangelicall Churches And further to shew that this our profession is not in hypocrisie but in truth this our Church is readie to maintaine and confirme the same doctrine by the shedding of their blood against all foes wha●soeuer and this thing indeede hath beene the onely cause of all our disse●tions with the Church of Rome whereupon wee see there is iust cause our Church should be reputed the true Church of God and a good member of his Catholike Church Secondly obserue the practise of Christ and his Apostles towardes the Church of the Iewes which in their time without all doubt was exceedingly corrupt for the office and place of the high Priest was bought and sold and through ambition and couetousnes became annuall y●a there were two high Priests together at one time all which were against Gods ordinance Againe the Scribes and Pharisies which were the Doctors of that Church erred in some fundamentall points of doctrine teaching Iustification by workes and withall they greatly corrupted the law of God both by their doct●ine and traditions and the Temple became a denne of theeues and yet for all this Christ did not separa●e from that Church neither taught his Disciples so to doe but was present at their sacrifices and assemblies and kept his Passeouer with them and so did his Apostles till they saw them of obstinacie and malitiousnes refuse the grace of God off●red vnto them in the ministerie of the Gospel Now their example must teach vs that so long as our Church holdeth Christ wee must esteeme it to be the Church of God and not for some wants thereof depart from it Thirdly all the reformed Churches in Europe doe with one con●ent honour our Church as a true Church of Christ now their iudgement is not slightly to be regarded but to be preferred farre before the rash opinions of priuate men for the Church hath a gift of discerning in waightie ma●ters shee can iudge of bookes of Scripture which be authenticall which not shee can iudge of spirits and of doctrines and therefore also can iudge what companie of men is a true Church and what is not and this their iudgement also must confirme vs in this truth that this our Church is a true member of Gods Catholik church Now whereas some alleadge the wants of our Church to make it no Church I answer though I will not excuse any default in it wherein i● is wanting to that which Gods word requireth but rather desire that the righteousnes thereof may breake forth as the light and saluation thereof as a burning lampe yet this may be saide in behalfe of our Church that the wants thereof are not such as doe anyway rase the foundation of religion or of Gods holy worshippe and so can not make it to cease to be a true Church and therefore none ought to separate from it for such wants and yet this hindereth not but that Gods seruants may in a godly manner desire the Reformation of things that be amisse for a good Church may be bettered and we ought to striue after perfection The Second offence taken from he Church is from the d●uersitie of opinions that be therein for hence many reason thus learned men be of so many opinions that we know not what to follow and therefore we will be of no religion till the truth be established by some generall Councell and all agree in one For the auoiding of this offence we must know that though men dis●er in sundrie opinions in the true Church of God yet they all agree in the Articles of faith and in the foundation of Gods worship their difference is in matters beside the foundation and therefore it must hinder none from receiuing and embracing true religion Againe it is Gods will that there should be diuersities of opinions yea scismes and heresies in his Church that men might be prooued whether they hold the truth in synce●itie or not as we may see 2. Cor. 11. 19. Deut. 13. 1 2. Now in this ●ase Ieremias direction must be obserued Stand in the parting of the wa●es saith hee and inquire for the olde and auncient way ● that is the doctrine of the Prophets what God willeth and commandeth by them and by his Apostles and that we must follow with all good conscience This Christ intended whē he bade the Iewes to search the Scriptures which testified of him and this we must sanctifie by earnest praier as Cornelius did Act. 10. 1
commandement though it binde alwaies yet not to all times as this of Christ for giuing almes it binds not all men but onely those that are inabled to giue nor yet the rich to all times but then onely when iust occasion of giuing is offered and the same may be said of euery affirmatiue commandement as of keeping an holy rest vnto the Lord it bindes a man for euer but not at all times onely for the seauenth day and such like Yet further to lay open this commandement touching Almes we will herein handle eight points I. who is to giue II. what is to be giuen III. to whome we must giue IV. in what order V. how much VI. in what place VII at what time VIII in what manner we must giue For the first the person that is to giue is not euery one but such as God hath set apart for this dutie for Matth. 25. 42 43. some are there made to receiue as the hungrie thirstie naked sicke c. and others are made fit to giue clothing foode comfort and such like And S. Iohn telleth vs who is made fit to giue namely he that hath the goods of this world not onely he that hath abundance but euen he that hath but a small portion of worldly goods and therefore the theefe that stole for want is forbidden to steale and commanded to labour that he may haue to giue to him that wanteth and the poore widow is commended of Christ that of her penurie gaue to the treasurie but two mites Now in a giuer there must be two things first a right vnto the goods he giueth for a man may not giue that which is not his owne secondly a present full proprietie in the things he giueth vnlesse it be in the case of necessitie and by this are children and seruants excluded from giuing vnlesse they haue some things of their owne or doe it by command Quest. Whether may the wife giue releefe vnto the poore without her husbands consent An auncient answer is this that many wiues in giuing are Abigails in regard of their husbands who are like vnto Nabal and therefore may giue and yet some other auncient Diuines adde this that the wife cannot giue where all consent of her husband is wanting because both shee and all her possessions belong vnto him principally yet here we are to know that there is a double consent of the husband expressed in open words whereupon there is no question but the wife may lawfully giue and secret which is threefold first when the husband doth not dissent secondly when he giues consent generally as when he allows her to giue but names not any particular thirdly when the wife hath a probable coniecture and presumption that if her husband doe know he would allow of her giuing And in these cases of secret consent the wife may also giue but if shee haue not his consent any of these waies shee may not lawfully giue vnlesse in these cases 1. that shee hath something priuate of her owne either by exception before or by graunt after mariage 2. that her giuing serues to preserue the life or good estate of her husband and family as Abigails did when shee gaue to Dauid 3. that the necessitie of the receiuer requires present releefe for extreame necessitie dispenseth with proprietie II. Point What is to be giuen namely Almes Here two questions are to be skanned I. what is almes II. whereof almes are to be raised For the first Almes is a free gift tending to preserue the temporall life of our neighbour first I call it a gift vnderstanding it largely because forgiuing to them that are not able to pay is an almes deede Secondly I say free to distinguish it from subsidies to Princes and Tenthes-giuing for the stipende of the Minister and such like These are gifts but not free gifts for the people receiue protection from the Magistrate for their subsidies and instruction from the Minister for their Tenthes Thirdly I say the ende of Almes is to preserue temporall life to distinguish it from spirituall gifts which concerne the soule the Papists make all workes of mercie whether they concerne the bodie or soule to be almes but almes properly are gifts that tende to preserue this naturall temporall life II. Question Whereof are almes to be raised Ans. First of our owne goods for a man ought not to giue that which is an other mans and therefore those that owe more then they are worth cannot giue almes but are rather fit to receiue for all that they haue in right and conscience belongs to some others Secondly our Almes must be of our first fruits things holesome and good and such as are fit for the person releeued They must not be the refuse of our goods which we know not else what to doe with Nehem. 8. 10. Part of the fatte and of the sweete must be sent to them for whome none is prouided Thirdly Almes must be of goods lawfully gotten for euill gotten goods must be restored either to the owner if he be knowne or to some of his kinred or to the Magistrate which shewes that the Vsurer ought rather to restore then to giue almes of his gaine for vsurie Fourthly our Almes must be giuen of our owne with difference and discretion euery mans goods for the most part may be distinguished into foure degrees first some are necessarie to preserue life without which a man and his family cannot liue secondly some are necessary to a mans estate as those goods by which a man putteth in practise the duties of his calling such are bookes vnto the Student and tooles vnto the trades man a third sort are such as are requisite for the decencie of a mans estate and such are those that make a man walke in his calling with comfort ●ase profit and delight the fourth sort of goods are superfluous that is all that portion which a man may want and yet haue things necessarie for this life and estate and for the decencie thereof these two last degrees are in Scripture called abundance And answerably there are two degrees of pouertie the first is common want w●en a man can liue without receiuing Almes but yet very hardly the second is extreame want when a man withoat releefe cannot possibly maintaine life now in common want we must giue of our abundance that is both of our superfluitie as also of our riches that serue for decencie Luk. 3. 11. He which hath two coates let him part with him that hath none now he that hath two coates is not he that hath a coate and a cloake for so had Paul and yet retained them both lawfully for his vse but Christs meaning is that he which hath things necessarie and besides some thing ouer seruing for decencie and superfluitie must giue thereof to him that lacketh And in extreame necessitie he must giue
so common among vs but we are to know that there is no such vertue in any words it is onely faith in the heart that makes Gods word effectuall for our good Words of themselues can doe no more but signifie and that they doe not of themselues but by the pleasure of men and therefore we are to renounce the vse of all spells and charmes for be the words neuer so good they are but the deuills watch word and the ceremonies vsed therewithall are his sacraments to cause him to worke wonders We therefore must learne by the word of God to conceiue better of God then nature can teach vs as of an heauenly inuisible God gouerning all creatures by his prouidence and not perswaded by mans reason but working all things according to the counsell of his owne will vers 8. Be ye not like them therefore for your father knoweth whereof you haue neede before you aske In this verse our Sauiour Christ repeateth the former cōmandement touching prayer made after the manner of the heathen and withall annexeth a second reason to enforce the same The commandement is repeated from the former reason in these words Be ye not like them therefore as if he should say considering that the heathen in their praiers looke to be heard for the multitude of their words therefore ye must not pray in that manner which they doe This repetition of the commandement serues to imprint the same more deepely in the hearts of his hearers to cause them and so vs in them to be more carefull to auoid needlesse repetitions in praier Now hauing handled this commandement in the former verse I will here onely obserue this point of doctrine touching the distinction of people before the death of Christ for here Christ saith vnto the Iewes Be ye not like them that is like the Gentiles where he putteth a plaine difference betweene the Iewes and all the Nations of the world besides And therefore when he first sent his Disciples to preach he forbad them the way of the Gentiles and the cities of Samaria commanding them to goe to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel And this distinction was not onely in Christs time but had beene from the beginning for the space of 4000. yeares In the first age of the world there were the sonnes of God and the daughters of men after the ●●ood the children of the flesh and the children of the promise And vnder the law a people of God and no people This distinction stood in two things 1. In regard of the grace of adoption and of the speciall fauour of God for in this Text Christ saith the Iewes had God for their Father which the Gentiles had not for they were strangers from the couenants of promise Ephes. 2. 12. 2. In regard of Gods true worship for concerning praier a speciall part thereof Christ here saith to the Iewes Ye shall not bee like the Gentiles If any shall here thinke that this preferment of the Iewes before the Gentiles in regard of Gods speciall mercie came from this that God foresaw something in them which was not in the Gentiles let them heare what Moses saith to the Iewes The Lord did not set his loue vpon you nor choose you for your multitude but because the Lord loued you would keepe the oath which he sware to your fathers From this ground of doctrine touching the distinction of people in regard of Gods speciall mercie follow three waightie points to bee knowne and beleeued First that the promise of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting in the Messias is not 〈…〉 ll to all but indefinite to many of all sorts kindes and estates for if the promise perta●●ed to all then there could be no distinction of man and man of people and people in regard of mercie and therefore the opinion of vniuersall grace is false and errneous Secondly that though Christ died for all for so the Scripture saith yet he ●●●●d hot alike effectually for all for if Redemption by Christ had beene 〈…〉 then had mercie belonged alike to all which is against the Text and therefore the opinion of vniuersall redemption is also a forg●●●● of mans braine Thirdly that God calls not all men effectually to saluation by Christ for then should euery one haue God to bee his Father in Christ and the Iewe had no priuiledge before the Gentile in regard of mercie and the grace of adoption but here we see that God ●o● many hundreds of yeares was the Father of the Iewe and not of the Gentile ●n regard of grace and adoption And by this doctrine we may cleare that place of the Apostle Saint Paul 1 Tim. 2. 4. where he saith God would haue all to bee saued for he meaneth hot a●● men in all times but in this last age of the world after the ascension of Christ when as the partition wall was broken downe and the distinction betweene Iewe and Gentile taken away in regard of mercie and the grace of adoption For your Father knoweth whereof yee haue neede before yee aske of him These words are a second reason against the heathenish manner of praier to this effect It is needlesse for you to vse vaine repetitions in your praiers because God knowes your wants before you pray and therefore fewe words well ordered are sufficient The exposition Your Father knoweth This knowledge of God is not a bare notice taken of our wants but such a knowledge as doth withall include a speciall care to make supply vnto them for this is a rule in the expounding of Scripture that wordes of knowledge are oftentimes put for words of affection as Psalm 1. 6. The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous but the way of the vngodly shall perish where the opposition of knowledge to destruction sheweth plainly that by knowledge there is meant the Lords due regard and respect vnto the waies of the godly which is a point full of all comfort to the children of God and for the clearing of it three questions are to bee scanned which may well be mooued out of this Text. 1. Question If God know our wants before we pray why then should we pray at all Ans Wee pray not to informe God of the things we want as though he knew them not but for other causes as 1. To stirre vp our hearts to seeke vnto Gods presence and fauour 2. To exercise our faith in the meditation of Gods promises 3. To ease our woeful hearts by powring them out vnto the Lord. 4. To testifie our obedience vnto Gods commandements and our trust in his prouidence for the receiuing of euery good thing we desire 2. Question If God know our wants and haue care to make supply thereof why then doth God oft-times delay to graunt the prayers of his seruants Answ. God deferreth to graunt the request of his children for many respects tending to their
of that boldnes wherewith Gods children come before God in praier namely their interest in the couenant of grace in Christ in whome God becomes their father The Scripture mentioneth two couenants one of workes which saith Doe this and thou shalt liue the other of Grace concerning reconciliation by the Messias through faith for it saith Beleeue in the Lord Iesus and thou shalt be saued Now the couenant of workes thorough the corruption of our flesh driues vs from God and throwes vs to hell but the couenant of grace shewes our reconciliation to God in Christ for God was in Christ and reconciled the world vnto himselfe not imputing the●●●i●●●s vnto them for which the first couenant would haue condemned them And when we truly beleeue in Christ we performe the condition of this couenant and so through faith in him haue peace with God yea boldnesse and entrance with confidence And therefore when we come to God in praier we must ground vpon this couenant in Christ and so shall we goe boldly to the throne of grace bring faith in Christ then is God thy father and so thou shalt be welcome ● hence it was that the Prophets and holy men vnder the Law doe so often intreate the Lord in their prayers to remember his couenant made with Abraham Isaac and Iacob which was the couenant of grace as the Apostle sheweth Gal. 3. and Rom. 4. IV. In this tytle Father we are taught how to dispose our selues towards God when we pray vnto him namely as children towards their father for our whole behauiour both outward and inward And this stands especially in foure things I. in due reuerence both of heart and gesture like as gracious children come before their awful parents II. in true humilltie from our hearts renouncing our owne meritts and our owne wills and relying wholly on Christs righteousnes and on the will of God in him III. in true contrition and sorrow of heart for our owne sinnes whereby we haue offended God who hath beene so gratious mercifull a Father vnto vs in Christ IV. in a sound purpose of heart to breake off the course of all sinne and to walke before God in new obedience to all his commandements This is such behauiour as bese●neth Gods children in praier and hereunto must we labour to conforme our selues when we come before God or els we shew our selues not children but rebells and traytors beware therfore of all vnreuerend behauiour in praier beware of pride of hardnes and wickednes of heart as hauing the least purpose to liue in sinne for as Dauid saith If I regard wickednes in my heart God will not heare my praier but saith he I will wash my hands in innocincie and so will I compasse thine altar with a contrite and broken heart Psal. 51. 17. disclayming his owne righteousnes v. 1. and Psal. 115. 1. and in all reuerence of behauiour Psal. 95. 9. Thus much of the title Father Now let vs see how we must applie it to our selues in praier Our Father that is my father in Christ and not mine onely but the father of all that truly beleeue in him Hence we learne sundrie instructions I. That when we pray we must applie to our selues all the promises of God in Christ touching righteousnes and life euerlasting for he that makes them is our father and therefore they belong to vs that be his children These promises are many and excellent And that they must be applied to our selues in praier is graunted on all parts but how there is the controuersie The Papists say we must applie them to our selues by hope we say by faith which is the ground of things hoped for laying hold on them for our selues particularly as Thomas did on Christ My God and my Lord which I prooue thus Whatsoeuer we aske in praier we must beleeue that God will graunt it for his sonnes sake but this we cannot doe vnlesse we beleeue that God is our father in Christ and Christ our redeemer and therefore we must first by faith lay hold vpon the maine promise of righteousnes and life euerlasting in Christ which is the ground of all other blessings we receiue from God Oh will some say this is hard to doe Ans. Yet we must doe our endeauour herein and striue against doubting vsing the means whereby we may come to that measure of grace to say with Paul I liue now by faith in the sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for mee doing this in sinceritie God accept the will for the deede euen our desire and endeauour to applie Christ and his benefits for application it selfe And if we continue in this vse of meanes he that hath begunne in vs this good desire will finish it in the fruition of grace and full assurance II. This teacheth vs when we pray to be mindfull of Gods whole militant Church and people for we must say Our father Indeede it is not vnlawfull to applie this title in praier to our selues particularly for God saith of euery one that truly beleeueth Thou shalt call me my father Ier. 3. 19. and so did Christ his Apostles applie to themselues this title in their praiers But yet Christ would haue vs alwaies to pray for our brethren beeing assured from this his direction that they likewise pray for vs. This was Dauids vsuall practise no doubt for when he praied most earnestly for the pardon of his owne personall sinnes he then forgets not Zion but praies the Lord to doe well vnto it and to build the wals of Ierusalem Now if in euery praier we make we must haue respect to the Church of God then vndoubtedly in the course of our liues we must imploy our selues to seeke the good of others especially of Gods Church for our conuersation must expresse the truth of our deuotion Euery one will say this is the Ministers dutie which is most true but yet it is not his onely for as in the naturall bodie euery member imployes it selfe for the good of the whole bodie so must it be in the mysticall bodie of Christ for the meanest Christian hath some gift of the spirit and the manifestation of the spirit wheresoeuer it is is giuen to profit withall The common saying is Euery man for himselfe and God for vs all but this is a gracelesse saying flat against the communion of Saints wherein euery one seekes an others good III. Hence we learne how we must come affected towards our brethren when we pray to God namely louingly and peaceably as to children of the same father when we come to the Lords Table we make conscience of loue and amitie with all men and so should we doe in praier for therein we bring a spirituall sacrifice vnto God and therefore we must be reconciled to our brethren when we offer it for when mens hearts be full of malice or their hands full
sonne as the Lord our God is towardes all his children in Christ Psal. 103. 13. As a father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion on all that call vpon him Luk. 11. 13. If you that be euill can giue good things to your children much more shall your heauenly father giue the holy Ghost to them that aske him and hence it is that Christ saith Whatsoeuer you aske the Father in my name he will giue it you Ioh. 16. 23. Of these two must euery one be perswaded that praies aright euery one will graunt that God is able to heare and helpe but of his willingnesse thereunto none can be assured but he that is the child of God who knoweth God to be his father Yet here must none deceiue himselfe to thinke that whatsoeuer he askes on his owne head God will graunt it for if we aske amisse we shall not receiue and therefore we must carefully marke and obserue the direction of Gods word both for the things we aske and for our manner of asking Halowed be thy name Thus much of the preface here begin the petitions which are sixe in number whereof the three first concerne God the three latter concerne our selues Againe of those which concerne God the first concernes Gods glorie it selfe the other two the meanes whereby Gods glorie is manifested and inlarged among men for Gods name is the● glorified among men when his kingdome doth come and his will is done Now this petition for the glorifying of Gods name is rightly set in the first place for Gods glorie is the absolute end of all things Prov. 16. 4. The Lord made all things for his owne sake yea euen the wicked for the day of euill and therefore it must be preferred before all things before life it selfe yea before saluation which is life eternall Ioh. 12. 27 28. our Sauiour Christ preferres the glorie of his fathers name before his owne life And Paul preferres it afore his owne saluation for he professeth that for Gods glorie in the saluation of the Iewes he could wish himselfe separate from Christ Rom. 9. 3. In this petition as in the rest we are to obserue this order first shew the meaning of the words then propound the vses I. The meaning Name The word ascribed to God is here taken generally first for God himselfe as Psal. 20. 1. The name of the God of Iacob defend thee that is the God of Iacob defend thee Rom. 10. 13. Whosoeuer shal cal vpon the name of the Lord shal be saued i. vpon the Lord. Secondly it here betokens any thing whereby God may be knowne as men are by their names and thus it comprehends ● his diuine attributes as Iustice mercie power wisdome c. II. his word the holy scriptures which reveale to mē the true knowledge of God III. Gods Iudgements publike or priuate for thereby he makes knowne his presence his power and iustice IV. his workes and creatures for all these beare a stampe of Gods name and in them may the inuisible things of God be seene Rom. 1. 20. Halowed or sanctified To halow Gods name is to glorifie Gods name as Ioh. 12. 28. and this we doe when we giue vnto him the highest honour that may be the highest I say because there are two kinds of honour First the honour of religion when we giue our hearts to God louing him fearing him trusting and delighting in him aboue all which we testifie by all outward adoration prescribed in Gods word this is the highest honour of all Secondly there is the honour of societie which passeth betweene man and man in common wealths and it consisteth in the acknowledgement of preheminence and superioritie in another either by word or gesture ciuilly thus Subiects honour Princes and Magistrates and inferiours their superiours This is due to the creature the former to the Creator onely and that is the honour wee here pray for That we may yet the better vnderstand the meaning of this petitiō we must know that Gods name is halowed or sanctified of vs 2. waies either in God himselfe or in his works In himselfe by 3. actions 1. whē we conceiue of God in our mindes and acknowledge him as he hath reuealed himselfe in his word to wit creator gouernour of al things most holy most wise iust mercifull c. 2. When we sanctifie the Lord in our hearts that is when we loue him aboue all feare him aboue al put our trust in him in him in all estates 3. When we praise and laud the name of God for his goodnes yea though we should neuer taste of his special fauour yet for his generall mercie iustice and most wise prouidence we ought to extoll the Lord with our mouthes Gods name is halowed or sanctified in his creatures by three speciall actions 1. When we acknowledge the wisdome of God his powerfull hand in euery creature 2. When we haue a reuerend estimation of the creatures and vse them in Christian sobrietie in regard of the stampe of Gods power and wisedome which appeareth in them 3. When wee sanctifie our moderate vse of them by the word and praier as God requireth 1. Tim. 4. 5. See the practise hereof in the word of God which is his owne solemne ordinance whereby he makes himselfe knowne vnto his Church Therein we sanctifie and halow Gods name I. when we acknowledge the wisdome mercie power of God in it II. when we haue a reuerend estimation of the word in regard of the glorious Image of God which appeareth in it III. when we vse it in a sanctified and holy manner comming vnto it reuerently with prepared hearts hungring after the graces of God which are wrought thereby and giuing our selues in heart and life to be framed and ruled thereby And thus we sanctifie God in afflictions for they are his worke when we labour to see the hand of God therein in iustice mercie and great wisdome chastening vs when we haue a reuerend regard to the hand of God appearing in them and labour to be humbled thereby for the increase of our repentance and the exercise of our faith and patience Thus then in this petition we desire in minde in heart and life to glorifie God both in himselfe and in his works and the meaning of it may be thus expressed O Lord open our eyes that we may know thee aright and may discerne thy power wisdome iustice and mercy and inlarge our hearts that we may sanctifie thee in our hearts by making thee our feare loue ioy and confidence and open our lippes that we may blesse thee for thine infinite goodnesse yea O Lord open our eyes that we may see thee in thy work● and strike our hearts with reuerence of thy name appearing in them and graunt that when we vse any one of them we may honour thee in our sober and sanctified vse thereof The vses I. Wants to be
of God a sparrow cannot fall to the ground And this absolute will of God is hidden from vs till God reueale it by the euent Gods reuealed will is the sacred doctrine of God in his word whereby he signifieth vnto man so farre as concernes his happinesse and saluation what he ought to doe or what he ought not to doe This is not Gods absolute will but rather an effect thereof concerning man reuealing vnto him not what he simply and absolutely willeth to bee done for that must needes be done but what is pleasing or displeasing vnto him done by man and what he will haue man to doe or not to doe if he desire to come to life and would not be condemned And this reuealed will comprehendeth both the Law and the Gospel with all their commandements prohibitions threatenings exhortations promises such like whereto the Apostle hath relation when he saith Proue what is the good will of God and acceptable Rom. 12. 2. Now this distinction of Gods wil being according to the Scripture hath his vse in this place for when we say Thy will be done wee meane not the absolute but the reuealed will of God Reasons I. The absolute will of God is alwaies done cannot be resisted My counsel shal stand saith the Lord and I will doe whatsoeuer I will and againe Who hath resisted his will that is his absolute will for his reuealed will is generally transgressed by men and men doe that which seemeth good in their owne eies notwithstanding God reueale his will to the contrarie II. A man may sometime dissent from the absolute will of God without sinning so be it he still submit himselfe to the will of God resting therein when it is reuealed Thus Abraham praied for the safetie of Sodome yet submissiuely which God willed and decreed to destroy and Dauid prayed for the life of his childe which God would haue to die and our Sauiour Christ prayed for the remooual of that cuppe which God had absolutely decreed he should drinke of yet submitting his will vnto his fathers And Paul according to his Apostolike function desired to preach the Gospel in Bythin●a but the spirit suffered him not which sheweth plainely it was not the will of God that he should preach there and yet he desired it religiously without sinne as did the rest before mentioned And as in will so in affection a man may dissent from Gods absolute will without sinne Christ as the sonne of God knew his Fathers will concerning the destruction of Ierusalem and yet he wept for it in a tender compassion ouer their miserie to come and so the brethren at Cesarea wept and lamented for Pauls going to Ierusalem though Agabus prophesied that God would haue it so neither must this seeme strange vnto vs for two things may remaine both good and yet differ one from the other so may mans created will differ from Gods absolute and vncreated will and yet both remaine good Hauing found that this petition must bee vnderstood of the reuealed will of God wee now come to search out the speciall branches of Gods reuealed will which wee shall finde in seuerall places of the holy Scripture The first is the conuersion of a sinner Ezekiel 33. 11. As I liue saith the Lord I will not the death of a sinner but that the wicked turne from his way and liue The second is that wee denie our selues and relie wholly on our Sauiour Christ Iesus for life and saluation Iohn 6. 40. This is the will of God that hee that seeth the sonne and beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life and I will raise him vp at the last day The third is our sanctification in soule and bodie and spirit 1. Thess. 4. 3. This is the will of God euen your sanctification The fourth is that euery one that liues in the church of God beside his generall calling of a Christian should haue a particular calling to liue in wherein he must seeke the glorie of God in the good of others 1. Cor. 7. 20. Let euery man abide in the same vocation wherein he is called and therein walke with God v. 24. The fi●t part of Gods will is to subiect our selues vnto the hand of God in all crosses and afflictions whatsoeuer when the brethren at Cesarea saw Pauls resolution to goe to Ierusalem notwithstanding the bonds that there remained for him they said as it were expounding this petition the wil of the Lord be done Act. 21. 14. Be done According to the Scripture there bee two degrees of doing Gods will the first is prescribed in the Gospel to wit a sincere endeauour and strife according to all the power of grace that God hath giuen vs to doe the will of God and this especially is here meant The second is commanded in the Law and it is a fulfilling of Gods will doing that which God commandeth in that manner of perfection which he commandeth but this is not attained vnto in this life and therefore our desire of God in this petition is that he would giue vs grace sincerely to endeauour to doe his whole will here on earth and to hasten that time and state vnto vs wherein we shall doe it perfectly as the Law requires 1. Vse Wants to be bewailed both in our selues and others I. This petition teacheth vs to bewaile our naturall disposition whereby we are prone to rebell against the will of God beeing wholly bent to disobedience in doing that which is euill II. We must bewaile our naturall hypocrisie euen that which remaineth in vs after grace receiued for though we may say these words yet we can not possibly haue our hearts affected with such a perfect desire after obedience to Gods will as we ought to haue III. Though we haue neuer so much grace yet here we must lament and bewaile our want of obedience in all good duties for though we giue our selues to doe good things yet the best of vs all faile in the manner of doing them as in hearing the word in receiuing the Sacraments and praier so as we must be humbled for our wants and confesse that we are vnprofitable seruants when we haue done all that is commanded vs Luk. 17. 10. Secondly we must bewaile the sinnes of others whereby they disobey the will of God and so rebell against him hereby God is dishonoured and therfore in zeale of Gods glorie and loue to our brethren we must be grieued when others sinne Thus was Dauid affected Psal. 119. 136. and Paul 2. Cor. 12. 21. I feare least when I come vnto you my God abase me among you and I shall bewaile many of them that haue sinned alreadie 2. Use. Graces to be desired As we must bewaile the wants that hinder the doing of Gods will in our selues and others so we must stirre vp our hearts vnto heauenly desires after those graces whereby Gods
will may be done As first that we may haue grace to denie our selues our owne wills and affections for naturally we are herein vnlike God and like the deuill and this must euery one learne that would be Christs disciple Luke 9. v. 23. Secondly that God would incline and dispose our hearts towards his holy word that we may not onely know but obey Gods reuealed will This was Dauids vsuall request Psalm 119. 27. Make me to vnderstand the way of thy testimonies and 36. Incline my heart vnto thy testimonies For how should we doe the will of God vnlesse we know it and how shall we know it vnlesse our hearts affect the meanes of grace and of obedience Thirdly that God would hasten that time and state vnto vs wherein we shall perfectly doe the will of God that is our state of glory Fourthly that vnder euery crosse which God shall lay vpon vs wee may possesse our soules with patience so subiect our selues to Gods absolute will Thus Paul prayes in behalfe of the Colossians that God would strengthen them by the power of his might vnto all patience long suffering with ioyfulnesse Colos. 1. 12. Fiftly that God would turne the hearts of men from sinne bring them euery where to the obedience of his will 3. Use. Duties to be practised Because wee must seeke to practise that which we aske in praier therefore hereby we are also taught to endeauour our selues after these good duties First to prooue what is the good will of God and acceptable Rom. 12. 2. We must by often triall of our actions by the word of God become expert in Gods will vse in all things makes perfect and therefore in all our affaires wee must consult with God whether the things wee goe about be agreeable to his will Most men will haue an eie to the lawes of the land in their ciuill affaires as in buying and selling and why should we not bee as wife for our soules in the matters of God Doe we not dissemble with God when wee say with our tongues Thy will be done and yet in life and conuersation haue no regard to square our works thereby Secondly wee must be strict in the matter of sinne making conscience of euery euill way yea euen of the first motions vnto sinne that neuer come to consent for this petition for obedience respects not only our words and deedes but our secret thoughts for euen they must be brought to obedience to God 2. Cor. 10. 5. Thirdly we must seeke to cut off all things that hinder vs from doing Gods will wee must mortifie and crucifie the lusts of the flesh and all sinnefull motions of our corrupt hearts for these make vs rebells against God in transgressing his will This is a hard thing to doe and vnto a naturall man of himselfe altogether impossible and therefore we must vse spirituall meanes for the deedes of the flesh must bee mortified by the spirit Roman 8. 13. Now the ground of this worke is the death of our Sauiour Christ applyed by faith to our corrupt heart for the old man is crucified with him as the Apostle Paul saith that the bodie of sinne might bee destroyed that henceforth we should not serue sinne Roman 6. 6. This therefore must wee doe if we thinke our selues to haue part in Christ wee must perswade our hearts that when our Sauiour Christ was vpon the crosse in our roome and stead bearing the punishment of our sinnes then were wee in regard of the old man crucified with him the vertue and efficacie whereof wee shall vndoubtedly finde in our selues for the mortifying of sinne when we doe truely beleeue for our fellowshippe with Christ beginnes in his death and if we be dead to sinne how can the motions thereof yet liue and raigne in vs When a malefactour is put to death he ceaseth from his badde courses and so if our corruption be crucified with our Sauiour Christ it must not raigne in our hearts to bring forth the fruits of sinne Let vs therefore meditate on the death of our Sauiour Christ and apply it to our selues by faith and consider the vilenesse of our sinnes in the bitternesse of his passion and then no doubt we shall be mooued to striue against euill motions for if we be Christs we haue crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts Gal. 5. 24. Fourthly we must not liue inordinately but in that sort which God inioyneth Christians in his word euery one must haue a double calling the generall calling of a Christian common to all that liue in the Church concerning the seruice of God in righteousnesse and holinesse and a particular lawfull calling in some set state of life tending to the good of the Church cōmon wealth or familie wherin a man must glorifie God in the good of men this is to liue in order he that wanteth both or one of these liues inordinately for God would haue euery man to abide in that vocation wherein hee hath called him euery one therefore according to his gift and grace receiued of God must liue in a lawfull calling and hee that doth not so resisteth Gods will Whereby wee see that wandring beggers are not to bee suffered in Church or common wealth for they liue without any calling and so transgresse Gods will yea their course of life is here also condemned that spend their life in sports and gaming for such a life is rebellion against God who wil be glorified in workes done by vertue of our lawfull calling Fiftly it is the will of God that through manifold afflictions wee should enter into his kingdome and therefore when any crosse befalls vs walking in our lawfull callings wee must endeauour to subiect our selues patiently to the will of God therein in prosperitie we are cheerefull and thankfull but when affliction comes our nature would repine O remember we say in all estates Thy will be done and therefore in the most bitter crosses that can befall vs wee must labour to say with Iob The Lord giueth and the Lord taketh away blessed bee the name of the Lord Iob. 1. 21. So did the Prophet Dauid beeing banished his kingdome by his owne sonne 2. Sam. 15. 26. But if hee thus say Behold I haue no delight in thee beholde here I am let him doe to mee as seemeth good in his eies and Chapter 16. 10 11. when Shemei cursed him he staied Abisna● from reuenge vpon consideration of Gods will to haue it so saying Suffer him to curse for the Lord hath bidden him In earth as it is in heauen Hauing spoken of the grace of obedience desired in this petition we now come to the manner how it must bee performed to wit In earth as it is in heauen that is of vs men liuing on earth as the blessed Angels and glorified Saints doe it in heauen for the Angels that excell in strength doe Gods commandements
of God and true religion for Gods sake Secondly wee must not onely know and beleeue that Christ died for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification but we must labour to feele the power and efficacie of his death killing sinne in vs and the vertue of his resurrection raysing vs vp to newnes of life he that hath only a shew of religion may make profession of faith in Christs death and resurrection but herein stands the power when we be made conformable vnto his death in regard of the death of sinne and know the vertue of his resurrection by our holy endeauour in new obedience and do frame our selues to his example in all such things wherein he left himselfe a patterne vnto vs. Thirdly we must not content our selues to knowe and professe that God is mercifull but withall we must take obseruation of his louing fauour towards vs particularly adding one obseruation to another that so our hearts may be rooted and grounded in the loue of God A man may make profession of Gods grace and mercie from a meere generall conceit apprehen●ion of it in his brain● but herein stands the power and p●●h of true religion when a man by obseruation and experience in himselfe knowes the loue of God in Christ toward● him And thus is ●aith and ●●ue religion held and maintained To haue a good conscience which is the second du●●e in this Christian fight is to preserue and keepe o●● conscience so as it may excuse vs and not accuse vs vnto God in respect of liuing in any 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 euer there may be infirmities in vs to this ende we must obserue these rules First we must haue a double calling the generall calling of a Christian wherein we must serue God and a particular calling according to our place and gifts wherein we must exercise our selues for the good of men These two must not be seuered so as either be wanting but he that would keepe a good conscience must practise his generall calling in doing the duties of his particular calling it is an easie thing to professe Christianitie in the Church and many a man doth so that keepes no good conscience in his priuate calling at home but this is the euidence of a good conscience when a man shewes himselfe a Christian in his calling at home and conuersation among his brethren Secondly we must alwaies be exercised in doing some good dutie either of our generall or particular calling or in some commendable furtherance thereunto for idlenesse is the deuills pillow whereon men either plot and deuise some euill or are lulled asleepe in securitie but diligence in our calling is our way wherein we haue promise of protection by Gods Angels from the deuil Psal. 91. 11. but if we be out of our calling we lie open to the hurt of the enemie when Peter without warrant from his calling generall or particular would needes goe warme himselfe in Caiphas hall what fell out vpon a small assault by a silly maide he denied Christ in most fearefull manner Ioh. 18. 25 26. Thirdly in euery estate of life we must labour to see a speciall prouidence of God therein to rest contented be it better or be it worse It is an ●asie thing to see and acknowledge Gods mercie in health peace and plentie and to rest contented therewith but if we would haue peace toward God in our owne hearts we must labour to quiet our selues with his disposing hand in the day of trouble sicknes or any other distresse of life or death Fourthly whatsoeuer we would doe when we die that we must now begin and continue doing it euery day while we liue to wit repent of our daily ●innes and leaue them desire earnestly to be reconciled to God in Christ and steadfastly to beleeue all his gracious promises he that hath these graces shall die in peace and therefore if we would liue in peace of conscience we must labour for them euery day Fiftly in all our societies and conuersings with men we must be carefull either to doe good vnto them or to receiue good from them for where neither of these is there Satan shewes his presence and therfore we must shunne such companie as giue themselues to plot or practise some iniquitie for euill conuersings corrupt good manners Sixtly we must lead our liues not after our owne fancie but according to the rule of Gods word we must liue by faith and not by ●ight when we see no signes of Gods fauour but rather of his anger and indignation yet then must we trust in him and relie vpon his mercie this is against reason yet a worke of faith which is the euidence of things which are not seene Heb. 11. 1. 2. Vse If we pray God to deliuer vs from euill then we must beware of all satanicall practises as meanes of help in any distresse this is grosse hypocrisie to pray against the euills of Satan and to giue our selues to the practise of them herein many offend for the Papists say this praier but yet their religion in many things is a grosse practise of magick and sorcerie for first the consecration of their host in the masse is playne coniuration and so are their exorcismes in halowing salt bread and water their casting out of deuills by certaine words by the signe of the crosse the application of reliques and such like nay come to our selues what is more common among vs then to vse charmes and Amuletts to seeke to witches and sorcerers when any strange affliction doth befall vs And the setting of a figure though it be not grosse magick yet therein is a close and priuie worke of the deuill his hand is deepe therein and the Church in former times hath condemned it for witchcraft for charmes characters and amulets be but the deuills watchword and sacraments to set him a working what though the words vsed be good yet therein is Satans deeper policie who turnes himselfe into an Angel of light vnder fayre shewes working the greater mischeife But what horrible impietie is this that when God giues vs occasion to come vnto him we leaue him and runne for helpe to his professed enemies 3. Vse This branch of the petition serueth to direct vs what to doe in this case say that a dwelling house or some other place is by Gods permission haunted and abused by some euill spirite whether may a man lawfully frequent or abide in such a place Answ. By this petition is plaine he may not for here wee pray to be deliuered from euill and therefore we may not voluntarily thurst our selues into such a place as is haunted by the deuill would we come within the compasse of the lyons paw or within the chaine of a mad dog or of an hunger-bitten beare why then should we rashly thrust our selues into the danger of the deuill who like a roaring lyon seekes continually whome he may deuoure Many ignorant people are so
power of his gratious regiment in that affliction and not suffer Satan or our owne corruptions to raigne in vs. 3. That we may obey God therein as well as in any other estate of peace or ●ase 4. That we may see his prouidence therein and be patient relying also vpon the same hand of God for our deliuerance 5. That our sinnes may not turne it into a curse but that we hauing the pardon of our sinnes may make good vse thereof for our humiliation and reformation 6. That we may not in that our weaknesse be assaulted of Satan aboue our strength but that God would deliuer vs from all temptations U. In the howre of death we may most comfortably commend our selues to God following these petitions praying first that we may glorifie God in sicknesse and death as wel as in life health 2. That God would now shew the comfortable worke and regiment of his word and spirit in our hearts euen aboue all that we haue felt in the time of our health 3. That we may as readily and cheerefully obey God dying as liuing 4. That God would giue his blessing vpon all meanes we shall vse for our comfort or recouerie making vs contented with his prouidence euen in death it selfe 5. That we may be truly humbled for our sinnes and hauing comfortable assurance of mercie and pardon may with ioy render vp our soules into the hands of God in the moment of death 6. That seeing Satan is most busie and malitious in our greatest weaknesse it would please the Lord to magnifie his mercie in strengthening our soules against all the assaults of sinne and Satan Thus we see how in all estates of life and death we may haue sweete and comfortable recourse to God following these petitions we must therefore labour to know and vnderstand this heauenly praier that so we may vse it on all occasions to the glorie of our God and the comfort of our soules we cannot giue more euident testimonie of the grace of Adoption then by the sincere exercise of the gift of praier when we can come with boldnesse into the presence of our heauenly father and therefore we must giue our selues to the serious and often imitation of this heauenly patterne and not content our selues to say ouer the words but from a feeling heart powre out our soules before God according to the meaning of this praier in all estates 2. Vse These petitions may serue for a notable direction according to which we may frame our whole liues for what we aske of God in praier that must we endeauour to practise in our liues and therefore according to our requests in these petitions must we spend our time in a godly endeauour after these sixe things 1. our cheife care and endeauour must be euery day to bring some glorie to God 2. We must euery day yeild vp our selues in soules and bodies vnto God submitting our s●●●es in all things vnto his godly regiment 3. We must endeauour to doe his will in all things euery day making conscience of all sin whereby we rebell against him 4. We must applie our selues faithfully to our callings yet so as we still depend vpon Gods prouidence for a blessing in euery thing we take in hand 5. We must humble our selues euery day before God in regard of our daily offences still confessing our sinnes and crauing pardon for them at the hands of God 6. We must daily flie to God for helpe and succour in our spirituall combate with sinne and Satan striuing manfully against our owne corrupt nature against the world and the deuill 3. Vse This praier of Christ ministers most heauenly comfort to euery child of God by certifying him of his Adoption for out of euery petition he may gather a speciall note thereof As 1. an earnest and heartie desire in all things to further the glorie of God 2. A care and readinesse to resigne our selues in subiection to God to be ruled by his word and spirit in thought word and deede 3. A sincere endeauour to doe his will in all things with cheerefulnesse making conscience of euery thing we know to be euill this is an infallible note of the child of God 4. Vpright walking in a mans lawfull calling and yet still by faith to relie vpon Gods prouidence beeing well pleased with Gods sending whatsoeuer it is 5. Euery day to hūble a mans selfe before God for his offences seeking his fauour in Christ vnfainedly so daily renuing his faith repentance 6. A continuall combate betweene the flesh and the spirit corruption haling drawing one way grace resisting the same drawing another way where this striuing resistance is in mind and heart there is the spirit for els all would goe full-sway with corruptiō Hereby then make search in thy selfe for these graces of God if thou find thē in thee comfort thy selfe in assurance of thine adoption though thou canst not find thē all yet if there be an vnfained desire after them when thou puttest vp these requests vnto God comfort thy selfe for thou art the child of God for without the spirit of praier which is the spirit of adoption we cannot cal God father nor say halowed be thy name from a true heart vnfainedly desiring Gods glorie 4. Use. Out of these petitions we may obserue the plaine marks of a carnall man as 1. to neglect the glorie of God and to seeke his owne praise glorie 2. To follow the sway of his owne corruptions suffering them to be his guide to neglect to yeeld subiection and obedience to the word of God 3. To make no conscience of sinne if it fit his humour so his own will be satisfied he cares not for the doing of Gods will 4. Not to rest on Gods prouidence for the things of this life but wholly to relie vpon the meanes if they faile his heart is downe his hope is gone 5. To goe on in sinne without remorse or humbling himselfe vnto God this impenitence is a plaine marke of a carnall man 6. To runne headlong into temptation without feare or feeling so as he finds no occasion to pray for deliuerance from sinne he that hath any of these sixe things raigning in him is a carnall man therfore trie thy selfe if thou finde them in thee turne vnto God by true repentance And look what we haue said of praier according to the patterne of the former petitions may also be said of thanksgiuing after the example of these words For thine is the kingdome the power and the glory We haue shewed the vse of thē before so accordingly in al Gods blessings and works of his prouidence for which we must giue thanks we must first labour to see therein the soueraignty power of God then we must ascribe the same to God with all glorie praise thanksgiuing And not onely giue assent but with 〈…〉 ce of heart wait for the
countenance in respect of thy heart and conscience For they disfigure their faces c. This also may seeme not blame-worthie for Gods children haue in their fasts diuers waies disfigured their faces and beene approoued Ezra pluckt off the haire of his head and of his beard and Ioshuah and the Israelites fell to the ground vpon their face and put dust vpon their heads which could not but disfigure their faces Answ. The Pharisies are blamed for disfiguring their faces in diuers respects and that iustly for first this was the chiefe and onely thing they looked to in their fasts euen the outward shewe thereof which God hateth Againe the word translated disfigure signifieth the very abolishing of their fauour and visage which is farre more then the auncient Iewes euer vsed to doe they indeed humbled their bodies and testified their sorrow which God approoued but they sought not to deforme their naturall complexion they pined not themselues to make their faces pale that so men might the better take notice of their much fasting as these Pharisies did and such were they in Pauls time who spared not their bodies Colos. 2. 23. Thus much for the meaning The words thus explaned containe two parts a commandement a reason thereof The commandement forbiddeth ●ained mourning in fasting Looke not as the hypocrites as if he should say The hypocritical Scribes and Pharisies when they fast make an outward shewe of contrition and sorrow when as indeed their hearts are no whit humbled but you shall not doe so The reason of the former prohibition is drawne from the practise of hypocrites which is set out by the ende and fruite thereof their practise is to disfigure their faces therein is all their sorrow their end is ostentation that they might be seene vnto men to fast And the fruit is answerable verely I say vnto you they haue their reward that is reputation and praise of men Thus then we see that Christ cōdemnes not religious fasting nor godly sorrow therein no nor yet the seemely signes of godly sorrow but onely hypocriticall fasting when men haue mournfull lookes without humble and contrite hearts The Vses 1. Here obserue the practise of these Scribes and Pharisies in Christs time they did not only fast often as twice a weeke but they were carefull in obseruing all outward rytes and signes pertaining to a religious fast yet as in the two former duties of Almes-deeds Praier so in this the principal thing is wanting that is truth sincerity of heart for their sowre looks came not frō sorrowful hearts they were whole and righteous in their own conceit and so needed not the Phisition Christ Iesus nor amendment of life Now in them we may see a true patterne of the propertie of naturall men in matters of religion they more busie thēselues about the outward worke then inward truth they content themselues with outward rytes and ceremonies and little regard the true worship of the heart See this in Ahab who humbled himselfe outwardly in great measure for feare of punishment but hee contented himselfe therewith and neuer came to true humiliation of heart in sorrow for sinne for he continued still in his old sinnes and the Israelites both in the wildernesse and in the land of Canaan when God afflicted them would humble themselues and seeke his fauour but yet not in constant sinceritie and truth for as Dauid saith They flattered him with their mouth for their heart was not vpright with him they performed the outward ceremonies and so drew neere to God with their lips but their heart was farre from him And thus it goeth generally with naturall men the whole religion of the Papists stands in outward ceremoniall actions partly Iewish and partly heathenish and when they haue obserued them they looke no further And so it fareth with many among vs that professe true religion for the ignorant sort which are very many euery where content themselues with the outward actions of religion as comming to Church hearing the word read and sometime preached and receiuing the Sacrament once or twice a yere and when the worke is done though without vnderstanding yet all is well they thinke God is serued wel enough Yea many that haue knowledge doe yet rest in the outward actions of religion for doe not some esteeme the conscionable endeauour of morall obedience to be but precisenesse and so though they beare some shew of religion yet they reproach the power of it in others And another sort doe onely so farre forth maintaine and professe religion as it standeth with the good of their outward estate and their peaceable fruition of wealth honour and delights and so make a policie of religion and pietie But let all these take heed vnto their soules and betime repent for these practises make them hypocrites in religion whose end will be damnation and therefore bring thy heart to God with thy outward worship and content not thy selfe with the shew of godlinesse but get the power of it and shew it in thy conuersation and embrace religion for it selfe and not for the world Secondly is the Pharisies fasting condemned of Christ because they rested in the outward worke and did it in ostentation for the praise of men then doubtlesse Popish fasting is abhominable because it aboundeth with more abuses for I. In their religious fasts they allow one meale so it be not flesh and besides that drinking of any kind of wines or drinkes taking of electuaries and strong waters conserues and such like at any time of the day which is a mock-fast and nothing else II. They make distinction of meates necessarie to a fast and that not for ciuill endes as Magistrates may doe or for temperance sake as priuate men may doe but for conscience sake which is a doctrine of deuils as the Apostle saith III. They binde men in conscience to many set daies of fasting and make the omission thereof a deadly sinne wherein they take away our Christian libertie for there was no want of care in our Sauiour Christ to appoint all good meanes for the mortifying of the flesh and yet he prescribed no set fasts in the new Testament IV. They make fasting meritorious teaching that a man therby may satisfie Gods iustice whereby they doe blasphemously der●gate from the al-sufficiencie of Christs obedience and passion Now ●ith they haue thus defaced religious fasting let vs learne by Christs command not to fast as the Papists doe Thirdly Christ saying to his Disciples when ye fast takes it for granted that sometimes they fasted and so ought to doe here he blames the Pharisies not for fasting simply but for their hypocrisie therein whereby wee see that Christ requires of all the godly that when iust occasion is offered they should fast either publikely or in priuate And if Christ blame the Pharisies for their bad manner of
thus to approoue our hearts vnto God Thus much of the cōmandement now followeth the reason therof drawne from the promise of Gods reward to them that fast in an holy manner And thy father which seeth in secret will reward thee openly that is seeing thee intend onely to approoue thine heart and action vnto God in fasting will giue thee an open reward at the last day This text the Papists doe notably abuse to prooue 2. heretical conclusions touching fasting First that fasting in it selfe for any good ende is a part of Gods worship because it hath a promise of open reward euen life euerlasting made vnto it as before was made to praier almes-deeds and therefore must needes be of the same nature with them for things indifferent bodily exercises profit little that which hath the promise is a part of godlinesse 1. Tim. 4. 8. Answ. This promise is made to him that fasteth not to the worke and that not simply for his exercise of fasting but for his repentance conuersion and inuocation which goe with fasting and are furthered thereby But they alleadge that Annath serued God with fastings and with praier Answ. In the old testament fasting was a part of Gods worship for it was commanded to be performed the tenth day of the seauenth moneth and then also was the making and performing of vowes a part of religious worship commanded of God Now in all likelihood Annah had bound her selfe by vowe to God to that course of praier and fasting and therfore was approoued of God therein But now in the newe testament wee haue no cōmandemēt for set fasts or vowes therfore the case is not the same and so her example cannot prooue the thing for which they alleadge it indeed we haue the vow of moral obedience made in baptisme but that euery one is bound to performe that takes God for his God though he should not vow it Again a man may be said to serue God in praier and fasting as Annah did because praier is a true part of Gods worship and though fasting in it selfe be not the worship of God yet beeing ioyned with praier it is a notable furtherance thereunto and beeing so performed vpō iust occasion it is a part of his worship because he requires it The second conclusion which the Papists would gather hence is that Fasting satisfieth Gods iustice and merits remission of sinnes and life euerlasting because this promise of open reward is here made vnto it Ans. We must know that the promises of God for remission of sinnes and life euerlasting beeing grounded vpon Christ are onely made to them that be regenerate and beleeue in Christ and so they are not made to him for his works sake but for his faith whereby he is in Christ and so indeede are made vnto him for Christs sake onely in whome we grant that God of his free grace makes himselfe a debter by his promise to euery beleeuer that doth any good worke yet the debt is not due to vs for any thing we doe but due to Christ who hath merited it and in Christ due to vs. But it will be said that works are oft mentioned with Gods promises and especially faith which is a worke Ans. True but yet the reward promised is not giuen for works sake nor yet for faith but for Christs sake whose merit imputed to vs is receiued by faith which faith we testifie by workes and so according to our faith and works we receiue a reward of God but not for them as Christ said to the Centurion As thou hast beleeued so be it vnto thee Thus then must we conceiue of this promise made to fasting though in it self it be a bodily exercise yet being done in obedience to God vpon iust occasion by him that beleeueth in Christ beeing ioyned with praier and conuersion to God it is a worke of faith and shall haue a reward Now this gracious promise made to fasting in this holy maner must stirre vs vp to a loue of this exercise and to the practise of it so oft as iust occasion is giuen And vndoubtedly one speciall cause of the continuall renuing of Gods iudgements among vs is because we humble not our selues by praier and fasting vnder Gods mightie hand It were therefore to be wished in regard of the manifold iust occasions that publike fasts were more often commanded by publike authoritie and priuate fasts more conscionably vsed in euery family And thus much of the fourth part of Christs Sermon containing a reformation of abuses in Almes Praier and Fasting out of all which we must learne this one thing which Christ principally intends to wit in all holy duties to auoid hypocrisie endeauouring to doe them with that simplicitie and sinceritie of heart whereby we truely desire to haue God and not man the seer and approouer of them And so shall our workes be not only good in themselues but in vs and acceptable vnto God otherwise if we doe them in ostentation or for other sinister respects the hypocrisie of our hearts defiles our good workes and so makes them vnacceptable vnto God and vnprofitable to our selues Verse 19. La● not vp treasures for your selues vpon the earth where the moth and canker corrupt and where theeues digge through and steale 20. But lay vp treasures for your selues in heauen where neither the moth nor canker corrupteth and where theeues neither dig through nor steale Here beginneth the fift part of this excellent sermon and it continueth to the ende of this chapter wherein our Sauiour Christ intendeth to reforme his hearers of couetousnes and to worke in their hearts a moderate care desire of worldly things Now the order of this discourse is this First he laies down the substance of his perswasion and then enforceth and amplifieth the same The ground and substance of Christs perswasion consists in a double commandement the first shewes what we must not doe in respect of treasures v. 19. the second what we must doe v. 20. both which he enforceth by their seuerall reasons in the same verses as also with a reason common to them both v. 21. For the first commandement La● not vp treasures c. The meaning The word here translated ●a●e vp is more significant in the original then our english doth expresse for it imports two things First to gather together secondly to hoard or heape vp in store things gathered against the time to come so Rom. 2. 5. Thou ●eapest vp vnto thy selfe c. Treasures that is worldly wealth in abundance pretious things stored vp as siluer gold pearls c. Upon earth here Christ aimes not so much at the place as at the kind of treasures for heauenly treasures may be laid vp while we are here on earth therefore he forbids hoarding of earthly treasures For themselues that is respecting your priuate gaine benefit all respect to the good of the Church common wealth laid
redeemer God and man and of remission of sinne and life euerlasting by him The inferiour promises are of temporall blessings as food raiment health peace liberty c. these depend vpon the main promise of Christ so farforth as they are for our good for in Christ all the promises of God whether they concerne life eternall or this temporall life are yea and amen that is sure and certaine to Gods children And hence it is that when by true faith a man laies holde on the maine promise of God in Christ he doth withall apprehend the promises of God for temporall blessings the heart that saith by faith God will pardon my sinne and saue my soule will say also by the same faith God will giue me food and raiment and all things sufficient for this life Thus Abraham by the same faith whereby he was iustified beleeued Gods promise that hee should haue a sonne in his olde age and Noah beleeued Gods promise of his preseruation in the Arke by the same faith whereby he was made heire of righteousnesse This point must be obserued and the order remembred wherein faith laies hold vpon the promises First it apprehends mercie in Christ and then prouidence for this life Now hence we learne that as we looke to be saued by our faith after death so wee must liue by faith in this world if wee relie vpon his mercie for our soules we must depend vpon his prouidence for our bodies how this is done we shall see afterward for how should we cast our selues vpon Gods mercie for the kingdome of heauen if wee cannot depend vpon his prouidence for food and raiment Lastly hereby we may trie our faith what it is true or ●ained weake or strong for this Christ here tells vs that the more we are distracted with worldly cares the lesse is our beleefe in God for distrustfull care comes from vnbeleefe in Gods prouidence and the lesse we trust in God for temporall things the lesse doe we beleeue eternall mercies for the same faith laies hold on both but if we can truly depend vpon God for temporall blessings in the sober vse of lawfull meanes then we shall relie vpon his mercie for the saluation of our soules This triall is not made in prosperitie for when God sends aboundance euery one will trust in him but when want comes then is the triall of thy faith if then thou ●el●e on God though meanes faile thy faith is strong but if thy heart be oppressed with sorrow and feare and thou make no conscience of vnlawfull meanes so it may supplie thy want then suspect thy selfe thy faith is weake or none at all for the iust shall liue by faith in all estates vers 31. Therefore take no thought saying What shall we eate or what shall we drinke or wherewith shall we be cloathed Here Christ againe repeateth his commandement against distrustfull care giuen in the 25. verse The reasons of his repetition be these First to set an edge vpon the commandement that so it may more sharply and deepely enter into their hearts as we said before Secondly to further his disciples in this practise of faith for by this often repetition he giues them occasion to meditate and thinke vpon the dutie the oftner whereby their faith must needes be much confirmed for this we must know for our direction to get and strengthen true faith in our hearts that a man is not a meere patient in the receiuing and strengthening of this grace it comes not from God to vs as visions did to the Prophets in a dreame in the night or as the print of the seale is set into the waxe but God workes it in the vse of ordinarie meanes And therefore if we would haue faith wrought or increased in vs we must doe that which by nature we may doe to wit heare the word preached and read we must meditate therein and labour so to vrge the promises of God vpon our owne hearts yea we must doe what we can to stirre vp in our hearts a desire to beleeue and to striue against doubting and distrust and therefore must giue our selues to praier with sighs and groanes to God for the working of his spirit in our hearts Now touching this cōmandement against distrustfull care we handled it in the 25. v. shewing how farre our care must goe for things needfull and where it must stay It must extend it selfe to the diligent vse of lawfull ordinarie meanes to procure things needefull and there stay giuing place to faith to waite vpon Gods prouidence for the blessing of our endeauours The distrustfull care which perplexeth the heart about the successe of our lawfull labours is that which Christ forbids and it is that euil sicknesse which infects most mens soules as they may easily discerne by obseruing these things What it is that oft breakes their sleepe in the night what comes first into their thoughts when they awake and what their mindes runne● most vpon all the day long and whereabout they can take greatest paines with most delight and least wearinesse If it be for the things of this world then distrustfull care infects their soules which we must striue against and learne to liue by faith Here onely obs●●●e how Christ describes this vnlawfull care by the effects of it in distrustfull persons bringing them in saying What shall we eate what shall we drinke or wherewith shall we be cloathed And thus indeede they vse to complaine especially when they haue great charges and slender meanes or els doe sustaine any great losses then how shall we liue what shall we doe and such like speeches of distrust which Christ here iustly reprooues because they blame God for his dealing towards them as though he had no care of them or would not prouide things needefull for them We therefore must here learne to shut our mouthes against distrustfull thoughts and beware we murmure not nor complaine of his dealing towards vs. When Aarons two sonnes Nadab and Abihu were both slaine for offering straunge fire Moses tells him it was the Lords doing who would be glorified in all that come neere him then the text saith Aaron held his peace And Dauid notably testifieth his contentation in Gods prouidence Psal. 39. 2. I held my peace and said nothing yea v. 9. I should haue beene dumb and not haue opened my mouth because thou Lord diddest it Excellent is that saying of the Lord Isa. 30. 15. In rest and quietnesse shall y● be saued in quietnesse and confidence shall be your strength meaning that by patience and contentation a man shewes strong confidence in God so that though Gods dealing seeme neuer so hard we must beware of impatient words and murmuring thoughts endeauouring to say with Eli It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth good in his eyes and with Iob Though he kill me yet will I trust in him v. 32. For after all these things seeke
condition of man in this life whereby in Christ he enioyes the fauour of God and hath right to euerlasting life This very estate of man is in Scripture called the kingdome of God and the kingdome of heauen because whosoeuer is in this estate hath sure right and interest to Gods glorie in heauen and God here rules in him as a king ruleth in his kingdome The kingdome of God is onely one and yet it hath two degrees the first in grace and the second in glorie The kingdome of grace is that spirituall regiment which God exerciseth in man or in his Church by his word and spirit in this life and it is the first step or entrance into Gods heauenly kingdome The kingdome of glorie is the full fruition of immediate fellowship with the blessed Trinitie by meanes of Iesus Christ in the highest heauens after this life Now both these degrees are here vnderstood by the kingdom of God The second thing to be thus sought for is his righteousnesse that is the righteousnesse of God and not as some translate it the righteousnesse thereof that is of Gods kingdome for the wordes will not beare that translation And the seeking of Gods righteousnesse is here added for speciall cause to let vs see by way of explication when we haue obtained for our selues the kingdome of God for Gods kingdome standes in righteousnesse and then doth God rule in man when hee makes him partaker of his righteousnesse Now by righteousnesse of God wee must here vnderstand the obedience which Christ our mediatour performed for vs in fulfilling the law and in his sufferings This is the very ground-worke and foundation of Gods kingdome among men hereof Paul speaketh oft Rom. 1. 17. For by it that is the Gospel the righteousnesse of God is reuealed from faith to faith and Rom. 3. 21 22. Now is the righteousnesse of God made manifest c. and 2. Cor. 5. 21. God made him to be sinne for vs which knew no sinne that wee might be made the righteousnesse of God in him And it is so called for diuers respects First because it is freely giuen vs of God to be our righteousnesse in his sight and man cannot attaine vnto it of himselfe by any worke of nature or of grace without the gift of God Secondly because God will accept this obedience of Christ at the day of iudgement for his elect as satisfying his iustice and the rigour of the law which no righteousnes of man can doe Thirdly because it is the righteousnesse of that person who is God for Christ is both God and man and though he obeyed the law and suffered death as he was man yet that obedience was performed by that person who was also God Adams righteousnesse by creation was in himselfe but he lost it by his fall but our righteousnes is in Christ out of vs and therefore he is said to be made righteousnesse vnto vs of God But how should we get this righteousnesse seeing it is in Christ Answ. It is made ours by imputation for when wee truely repent of our sinnes and beleeue in Christ God accepts the obedience of Christ for vs as if wee had perfectly satisfied his iustice and done his will in our own persons Now with this imputed righteousnesse wee must vnderstand and ioyne the fruite hereof in vs which is sanctification or renued holinesse whereby we are enabled to walke before God in new obedience bringing forth the fruits of righteousnesse for these two are neuer seuered whom God iustifies by the righteousnesse of Christ them he sanctifies by his spirit The full meaning then of Christs commandement here is this First seeke c. that is aboue all things in this world let your principall care bee to procure vnto your selues the kingdome of God that is that state of grace whereby you may enioy Gods fauour in Christ being iustified by his obedience and sanctified by his spirit whereby you walke in good workes The vse First by this commandement of Christ to seeke Gods kingdome we may gather that by nature we are all out of Gods kingdome destitute of the grace and fauour of God and indeed vnder the power of Satan and in his kingdome of darkenesse This the holy Ghost shews in calling Satan the god of this world 2. Cor. 4. 4. and the prince of this world Ioh. 12. 31. because all the world naturally are vassals vnto him yeelding him homage in the workes of sinne and therefore is he called the prince that ruleth in the aire that workes in the children of disobedience And this naturall miserie is iustly come vpon vs for seeing we refuse to yeeld subiection vnto God in his kingdome are we not worthily left to the power of Satan to bee made his slaues and drudges Now that men liue naturally out of Christs kingdome may appeare by the course of their liues for howsoeuer most men can bee contented to beare the badge of Christ in outward profession hearing the word and receiuing the sacraments yet in heart and life they doe homage to the deuill for they pull their neckes from the yoake of Christ and runne with greedinesse to the workes of sinne they account a strict endeauour after morall obedience to be curiositie and precisenesse and when they be dehorted from vnlawfull gaine and vaine pleasures they wil not heare not consent whereby in effect they say to God with wicked men in Iob Depart from vs we desire not the knowledge of thy waies and with the wicked citizens wee will not haue this man to raigne ouer vs. Secondly here Christ would teach vs that our principall care aboue all other things must be to win for our selues the kingdome of God I shall not need to prooue this to be our dutie seeing it is the onely thing which Christ here intends to commend vnto vs and that by expresse command But some will aske how we shall win and get for our selues the kingdome of God Answ. We must doe three thinges for the obtaining of it First we must come to the place where this kingdome is to be found Secondly we must then enter into it Thirdly we must waite for the full possession of it For the first This kingdome is not to be found in all places but there onely where God doth manifest and reueale the same to the sonnes of men and that is in the assemblies of the Saints where the publike ministerie of reconciliation is dispensed for there God holds out his scepter and offers himselfe to bee a Lord and king vnto men and therefore Dauid calls this ministerie of the word the rod or scepter of Gods power Psal. 110. 2. and in the parable of the sower Matth. 13. 19. the Gospel preached is called the word of the kingdome because hereby God reueales this kingdome vnto men and translates them into it Colos. 1. 13. And for the same cause in the parable of the
field Mat. 13. 24. is the same ministerie of the Gospel called expressely the kingdome of God And therefore when the Church demaunds of Christ where shee shall finde him he bids her follow the steps of the flockes to the tents of the Shepheards Cant. 1. 7. that is the assemblies of the Saints to the preaching of Gods ministers and therefore if euer wee looke to get this kingdom we must diligently frequent the ministerie of the word labour to profit by it because hereby God doth not only reueale but cōuaie his kingdome vnto men Secondly when we haue found this kingdome we must seeke to enter into it for it is not enough to be where it is or to haue it among vs for so the Pharisies had in the time of Christ Luk. 11. 20. Now we cannot enter in of our selues without the speciall worke of Gods holy spirit so saith our Sauiour Christ Matth. 18. 3. Except ye be conuerted and become as little children ye cannot enter into the kingdom of God where two things are required in him that would enter into this kingdome To become as little children and to be conuerted Wee become as little children in humilitie meekenesse and freedome from pride disdaine for we know the child of a Prince will without disdaine associate himselfe in play with a poore mans childe and so we in conscience of our owne sinnes must be humbled in our selues and made base in our own eyes laying aside our naturall pride and selfe-loue and disdaine of others for a heart swelling with pride and selfe-loue cannot enter into the straite gate of this kingdome Againe wee must be conuerted and regenerate by the spirit of God for except a man be borne againe of water and of the spirit he cannot see the kingdome of God This conuersion is not a change of the substance of the soule or of the bodie or of the faculties or parts thereof but onely of their euill qualities and actions whereby the Image of Satan in sinne and corruption is abolished the image of God renued for knowledge righteousnesse and true holinesse both in heart and life When this worke of regeneration is truely begun in vs then doe we enter into Gods kingdome euen in this life for herein the ignorant deceiue themselues that think we enter not before the time of death Thirdly wee must waite for the fruition and full possession of it this we cannot get before the day of death and therefore wee must endeauour all our life long after our conuersion to keepe faith and a good conscience walking in righteousnesse and true holinesse before God in the practise of loue vprightnesse and mercie towards our brethren When the question is who shall dwell in Gods tabernacle and rest in his holy mountaine that is remaine a true member of Gods Church for euer Psal. 51. 1 the answer is vers 2. He that walketh vprightly worketh righteousnesse Hereby we testifie our selues to be alreadie entred for Gods kingdom stands in righteousnesse Rom. 14. 17. And thus haue Gods children done that haue waited for this kingdome Matth. 25. 4. The wise virgins tooke o●le in their vessels to light their lamps when the bridegroome came And Ioseph of Arimathea that noble counseller who waited for the kingdome of God was a good man and a iust Luk. 23. 50 51. Thus we see the way to get this kingdome for our selues now the necessitie of our endeauour in these duties with all care and diligence appears by this that out of this estate for true interest to this kingdom is nothing indeed but woefull miserie vnder the curse of God and the power of Satan in the kingdome of darkenesse but in the fruition of this kingdome is true happinesse here is righteousnesse peace and ioy in the ●oly Ghost yea ioy vnspeakeable and glorious for the things that eie hath not seene eare hath not heard neither euer entred into the heart of man to thinke hath God prepared for them that loue him and they are all to be had in this his kingdome Wherefore as we desire to escape the woe and miseri● of the deuils kingdome and to bee partakers of the ioyes of heauen so let vs looke vnto the performance of the former duties shewing herein the resolution of the wise marchant that parted with all hee had to get that pearle of price Matth. 13. 46. This kingdome of God is here set out vnto vs like a citie with suburbs and two gates the suburbs of this citie are those assemblies where the word of God is truely preached and dispensed and hereinto come not onely the elect and godly but hypocrites and reprobates The first gate is the true state of grace whereinto the elect of God alone doe enter by regeneration in which estate they continue in this life going on from one degree of grace vnto a greater with endeauour in all things to keepe faith and good conscience both towards God and men and so waite to enter the gate of glorie which is set open vnto them and they enter in at the howre of death And therfore let vs not deceiue our own soules as the foolish virgins did with their burning lamps and content our selues that we come to Church and liue ciuilly though these be good things yet an hypocrite may goe thus farre all this while wee are but in the suburbs of this kingdome but if euer we looke for the glorie of heauen we must in this life enter the gate of grace by regeneration and become new creatures Thus much of the commaundement The reason to enforce it is a gracious and bountifull promise And all these things shall bee ministred vnto you The words are very significant in the originall for the phraso which Christ vseth is borrowed from bargainers to this effect as those who sell come or other things by measure or waight vse to giue some ouer-plus to better the bargaine on the buyers part euen so the Lord promiseth to those that seeke his kingdome and righteousnesse beside the fruition thereof to giue or cast vnto them as the word imports food and raiment and all things needfull to this life Qu●st How is this true seeing we read that Gods children haue beene many times destitute of things necessary as Paul was oft in hunger and thirst in fastings in colde and nakednesse 2. Cor. 11. 27. and many whom the world was not worthy of were destitute afflicted tormēted wandring vp and downe in sheepe skinnes and goate skinnes Heb. 11. 37. Answer Christs promise in this place and all other made of temporall blessings must be vnderstood with the exception of the crosse that is they shall haue such and such blessings vnlesse it please God by the want thereof to correct them for some sinnes or to exercise their faith in the triall of their patience The vse First by this promise of Christ we haue the most excellent direction of him
God 1. Peter 5. 7. Lastly euery calling hath his crosses no life is so quiet that it wanteth all vexations Now when crosses come vpon any man in his calling then must he beare the same by faith he must rest on Gods word and quiet his mind with the good will and pleasure of God He that beleeues saith the Prophet shall not make hast Isay 28. 16. that is he shall not be caried headlong with a desire to satisfie his owne pleasure and appetite either in seeking to be freed from euill or to enioy some blessing but shall content himselfe with the good pleasure of God And thus we see what it is to liue by saith which is the right way to life eternall Uses I. This sheweth that a great number are farre wide which thinke that if they liue vprightly among men then all is well this honest life is euer commendable among men but it is not sufficient to saluation It is but a worke of nature for a man by naturall reason may leade a ciuill vpright life as many haue done among the heathen but the life that must bring a man to heauen must be lead by faith and therefore they that would walke the way to life must walke by faith not by reason onely II. This also sheweth that they are deceiued which liue by sense measuring Gods loue and hatred by outward blessings and crosses and therefore when God takes away the meanes they will no longer trust on him but we count it a point of dishonestie not to trust our honest friend without a pawne much more then is it a dishonour to God when we will not relie vpon him without outward pledges of his fauour and therefore we must relie on God when all meanes faile for no man knoweth loue or hatred by all that is before him Eccles. 9. 1. III. Many that professe religion are deceiued that measure their grace and goodnes in religion by feeling in their owne hearts but we must not relie thereon for true faith may be in the heart without inward sense againe the deuill may put false comforts many times into a mans heart the bad man receiues the word with ioy Luk. 8. 13. looke to thy faith by Christs word and thereby iudge thy selfe and rest not in thine inward feeling IIII. This teacheth vs to acquaint our selues with all the commandements of God that be in the Bible and with all the promises that concerne the pardon of sinnes and life euerlasting for without this knowledge there can be no faith and therefore we must abandon all ignorance of these things and instruct our selues and those that belong vnto vs in the word of God that they and we may liue by faith V. These are happie dayes of peace and of many temporall blessings wherein we now liue but we must not liue alwayes in this peace God hath begun to set his iudgements among vs and if we doe not repent we must looke for further and more grieuous iudgements as the losse of his word and a sword vpon our selues our friends children what if these dayes come how must we then liue namely by faith in the word and promise of God lay holde on this and though thou loose friends goods and thine owne temporall life yet holde fast thy spirituall life by faith cleaue vnto Christ and then in the middest of swords and weapons of death thou shalt walke the way to eternall life And thus much of the way of life The second way is the way to destruction which is called the way of sinners and of the vngodly Psal. 1. 1. 6. This way hath many pathes which tend all to one end and meete in the same period and they may all be reduced to these three heades I. the way of nature II. the way of false faith III. the way of faith and nature ioyned both together The way of nature is when men liue onely by the light of nature of this S. Paul speaks Act. 14. 16. God suffered all the Gentiles to walk in their owne wayes wherein they were voide of God in Christ and so not vnder mercie The way of false faith is some thing more then the way of nature but yet it leadeth to destruction because their faith is false and profession vaine and this is the way of false religion whereof there be these three maine and principall at this day to which all other may be referred The religion of the Turkes of the Iewes and of the Papists The Turkes in their religion acknowledge Christ for a great Prophet but not to be God neither doe they looke for any saluation by him The Iewes in their religion acknowledge but one God yet out of Christ they acknowledge not his incarnation past but expect it yet to come they waite for an earthly kingdome they hold the old Testament onely and denie the new Now both these refusing Christ haue not the Father and so can haue no saluation in their religion The Papists acknowledge much truth formally but then againe they ouerturne it for they hold onely that generall faith which the Deuils may haue but for that speciall iustifying faith whereby a man is to beleeue his owne saluation the remission of his sinnes and his owne reconciliation with God in Christ that they renounce Againe the Christ of the Papist is no true Christ for they make him but halfe a Sauiour or not so much euen onely an instrument to make men sauiours of themselues for by his grace they doe workes properly meritorious and fully worthie of eternall life They robbe him also of his manhood saying it is euery where in his quantitie where masse is said for they haue the selfe same bodie that was crucified Also they denie his offices I. his Kingly office for they part stakes with him and giue it to the Pope in saying he hath power to make lawes which bind the conscience as Gods lawes doe II. his priesthood because euery masse Priest offers Christ anew and they make Saints intercessours especially the Virgin Marie III. his propheticall office saying the Scriptures are imperfect without tradition vncerten without the sense and meaning of the Church the originall copies are corrupted and the Church is aboue them in authoritie The third way is the way of faith and nature together this is the common way wherein most Protestants walke for we hold the right faith in word our profession and iudgement is right but yet our liues are lead according to nature And these three paths are all in the broad way to destruction And therefore as we hold true doctrine and right faith in word so let vs lead our liues accordingly and testifie the same by our workes especially in the times of dearth when God laies his hand on the poore and thereby tries the hearts of the rich III. Point The propertie of these waies The way to life
of our hearts which tende to hurt our brothers life chastitie goods or good name though they nouer come into practise yea though we neuer giue consent of will thereto And these are the restraints of the Law whereto we must conforme our selues if we would enter into life Now follow the restraints of the Gospel which is a part of Gods word touching remission of sinnes and saluation By nature we desire to stand vpright and righteous before God by some good thing in our selues as the rich man in the Gospel he demands of Christ What good thing shall I doe to be saued Againe it is our nature not to looke to be saued by any thing out of our selues if we haue nothing els our good meaning and good hope must saue vs but the Gospel restraines vs of these desires and enioyneth vs to renounce our selues in the matter of saluation and all that is in vs and to depend on a righteousnes out of our selues in the person of Christ which is his obedience and suffering Againe we naturally desire to enioy Gods mercie by sense and feeling but the Gospel restraines vs of this kind of assurance which comes by sense and feeling and enioynes vs to hold and keepe Gods mercie by beleeuing onely both in life and death though we haue no sense thereof at all Further the Gospel renues the law for the manner of louing for the morall law required that we should loue another as we doe our selues but the Gospel requires vs to loue one another as Christ loued vs which is a greater measure of loue then the law required For Christ loued vs more then himselfe for he gaue himselfe for vs and so ought we to loue euen our enemies And thus we see how the Gospel also restraines vs from following our owne naturall desires and inioyneth vs to walke in the narrow way to life whereto as also to the restraints of the law we must applie our selues our thoughts words and deeds so doing we walke in the straite way that leadeth vnto life but if we any way exempt our selues according to our naturall desire from any of these restraints we then walke in the broad way that leadeth to destruction II. Dutie Seeing we must be content with the straitnes of the way we learne that when God layes any crosses or afflictions vpon vs we must not repine or grudge but beare the same with patience and suffer God to breake vs of our owne wills resting contented in our selues with the will of God alone for this is grace and a sure testimonie that we walke in the strait way to life III. Dutie In the case of confession and profession of true religion when we be called thereto we must be content to forsake goods friends yea and life it self rather then by inioying them suffer our selues to be driuen out of this straite way to life my life saith Paul is not deere vnto me so that I may fulfull my course mith ioy Act. 20. 24. Lastly whosoeuer is puffed vp with the pride of his owne heart is too stately to stoope vnder the strait●●●o●e that leadeth to the way of life he therefore that would walke 〈◊〉 this straite way must cast away all pride of heart and humble himselfe for his owne sinnes making himselfe nothing in himselfe Math. 18. 3 4. Except you be conuerted and become as little children who are not proud and hawtie ye cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen But he that humbleth himselfe as this little child the same is the greatest in the kingdome of heauen The third charge giuen vs by our Sauiour Christ concerning the strait way of life is noted by S. Luke that we must striue to enter into it From whence we are taught that our principall care must be aboue all things to come into the way of life euerlasting so much the word striuing imports It is saide that when Iohn first preached the kingdome of heauen suffered violence and the violent tooke it by force that is their was such forwardnes and zeale in them that heard Iohn preach to procure to themselues the kingdome of heauen that they stroue most earnestly to get in David sware vnto the Lord and vowed a vow vnto the mightie God of Iacob that he would not enter into the tabernacle of his house nor come vpon his bedde nor suffer his eyes to sleepe till he had sound a place for Gods Arke where he with the rest of his people might come and pray vnto the Lord and receiue answer from him againe Now looke what zeale was in them that heard Iohn and what care was in David for the outward place of Gods worship the like must be in euery one of vs for the obtaining of reconciliation and life euerlasting Uses I. Hereby many that liue in the Church of God may iustly be reprooued for a number there be that though they may partake of the word and Sacraments yet are most negligent of their saluation vsing no meanes to obtaine reconciliation with God and to come by life euerlasting and this they doe professe that they will leaue all to God relying wholly on his mercie without vsing any meanes on their parts to attaine thereto But these men sinne most grieuously and are their owne deadly enemies for they ought to consider this commandement which condemneth their securitie and straitly inioynes euery one to striue to come into the strait way and to walke therein And because this dutie is so necessarie I will vse some reasons to perswade them hereto I. Consider this when the Philistims were assembled and had Samson in the middest among them to make them sport if they had knowne what he was about to doe when he leaned to the pillars of the house where they sate they would haue preassed to the doores and windowes and there haue striuen to haue got out because of the imminent daunger that was vnto their bodily liues well all those persons that are cold in their profession and careles of religion they haue the wrath of God hanging ouer their heads and while they walke thus dissolutely in the broad way their cōdemnation sleepeth not but makes post hast vpon them if they continue and goe forward in this carelsse course they shall as certenly perish in Gods wrath as the Philistims did by the hand of Samson and therefore as they desire to scape damnation so let them be carefull to cast off this damnable securitie II. Reason If an Angel from heauen should come and assure vs from God that life euerlasting did belong vnto vs oh we would count it a blessed message well looke when we turne from the broad way and walke in this straite way of life we haue as good securitie of our saluation as if an Angel from heauen should certifie vs thereof for true repentance is an infallible note of a child of God to whome belongs the kingdome of heauen The consideration
receiues the seede with ioy and brings forth some fruit but it lasteth not of such it is said Hebr. 10. 29. They tread vnder foote the sonne of God and count the blood of the Testament an vnholy thing wherewith they were sanctified that is according to their profession and perswasion And thus we see what kinde of gifts an hypocrite may haue and yet neuer be saued Vses 1. The consideration whereof must mooue vs to looke vnto our selues that we haue better things in vs then these are for here we see we may goe on to perdition carying the profession of Christ in our mouthes And the rather is this to be considered of vs because many looke to be saued who come short of Simon Magus in knowledge and of Saul Ahab and Iudas in humilitie yea and for faith farre short of the deuill himselfe who is saide to beleeue and tremble but how canst thou looke to be saued that in regard of grace commest short of those which are now condemned Secondly hence we must learne to suspect our selues and call our selues to a reckoning about our faith and obedience and we must not flatter our selues herein for these things before named will not saue vs many haue had faith in some truth for some degrees thereof and also good affections and other gifts as we haue seene who are yet for all this condemned Thirdly seeing there be two sorts of men in the Church that shal be condemned the one whereof haue many worthie gifts this must moue vs not to rest in these things but to labour and striue to haue our hearts rooted and grounded in the loue of God in Christ and to become new creatures in righteousnes and true holinesse and then shall we be as the wise virgins hauing the oyle of grace in the vessells of our hearts which will neuer be quenched till we come into the marriage chamber with our Bridegroome Christ Iesus The second part of the conclusion laid downe by our Sauiour Christ is this That some men professing the name of Christ in the Church of God shall be saued And these persons are here described vnto vs by their effect or action to wit The doing of the will of the Father And because this is an infallible note of them that shall be saued I will briefly shew what it is to doe the Fathers will The Scriptures best expound themselues Iohn 6. 40. This is the will of him that sent me that euery one that hath seene the Sonne and beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life 1. Thess. 4. 3 4 c. This is the will of God euen your sanctification and that you should abstaine from fornication and that euery one should know how to possesse his vessell in holines and honour that no man oppresse or defraud his brother c. These two places of Scripture laide together shew that the doing of the Fathers will stands in three things in faith in repentance and new obedience faith is directly expressed in the place of Iohn and repentance which is a fruite of faith as also new obedience the fruit of them both in the wordes of the Apostle Paul for by Sanctification is meant repentance and new obedience by the duties following For the first in true sauing faith there are three things required Knowledge assent and application By knowledge I meane the right conceiuing of the necessarie Doctrines of true religion especially of those which concerne Christ our Redeemer Assent is when a man knowing this doctrine doth further approoue of the same as holsome doctrine and the truth of God directing vs aright vnto saluation Application is when we conceiue in our hearts a true perswasion of Gods mercie towards vs particularly in the free pardon of all our sinnes and for the saluation of our soules example of this particular applying we haue in the Apostle Paul Gal. 2. 20. who professeth thus Now liue not I but Christ liueth in me and the life that I now liue is by faith in the sonne of God which what that is he sheweth after saying who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me and without this particular application neither knowledge nor assent can saue vs in the 6. of Iohn Christ propounds himselfe vnto vs as the bread of life and water of life now we know that foode vnlesse it be receiued will not nourish the bodie euen so vnlesse we doe by the hand of faith particularly receiue and applie Christ vnto our selues all our knowledge and assent will be as foode vneaten and vndigested It may be said that hypocrits haue knowledge assent and a perswasion of Gods fauour and therefore this is not a sure note of doing the fathers will I answer an hypocrite as Simon Magus may haue true knowledge of Gods word and giue assent thereunto in regard of both these haue true faith in some degree yea he may conceiue a perswasion of Gods mercie in the pardon of his sins though falsely in presumption vpon false grounds and insufficient Now that a man may discerne the truth of his faith and perswasion of Gods mercie from that which is in hypocrisie he is to obserue therein three things the beginning of his faith the fruites and the constancie thereof The beginning of true faith is hearing the word of God preached especially the Gospel the law going before as an occasion or preparing meanes whereby a man comes to see his sinnes and his miserie thereby and thereupon to desire reconciliation with God in the pardon of them and hearing the promises of mercie to desire faith whereby he may imbrace the same labouring against vnbeliefe This though it be not a liuely ●aith yet it is the beginning of true faith and no hypocrite hath the same soundly wrought in him The fruite of true faith is a chaunge of the whole man both in heart and life making the heart contrarie to it selfe in moderating the naturall affections and passions thereof and keeping them in compasse of true obedience and causing a man in euery estate to rest contented with the will of God as I say saith he that beleeueth shal not make hast Thirdly constancy in true faith is knowen by this when a man relyes wholly on God euen then when he feeles no tast of his mercie but hath all tokens of his displeasure Euery man will beleeue when he hath present signes and pledges of Gods louing fauour but true faith beeing the euidence of things hoped for will make a man beleeue aboue hope as Abraham did and beeing the subsisting of things not seene will cause a man to beleeue when he sees no tokens of Gods mercie and indeede he that le ts go the hold of Gods mercie when he is in distresse may assure himselfe he neuer had true faith for the iust shall liue by faith in all estate and will with Iob trust in God though he kill them The second worke wherein consisteth the doing of the Fathers will
be fraile and subiect to fall away of themselues yet their saluation remaines fast grounded on the knowledge and election of God So the Apostle Paul comforts himselfe and the godly Rom. 8. 32 33. It is God that iustifies who shall condemne and verse 35. Who shall seuer vs from the Loue of God in Christ whereby hee loueth vs And indeede if a man haue receiued true assurance of Gods fauour though but once in all his life yet by that one signe hee may assure himselfe of his saluation vpon this ground that Gods loue is vnchangeable though euer after he liue in temptation for whom God loueth hee loueth to the end Ioh. 13. 1. Depart from me This is Christs commandement to those whom he neuer knew though they professed his name and it is a most fearefull commandement beeing all one with that Matth. 25. 41. Goe ye cursed into euerlasting fire Now hence wee may gather that the second death is properly a separation from the comfortable fellowship of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost and withall a sense and feeling of Gods wrath in that separation This appeares by the contrary for life euerlasting stands in fellowship with God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost Now here a question may be asked concerning the suffering of Christ for our doctrine is that he suffered the second death whether then was he seuered from God in his suffering Answer Christ our Sauiour on the crosse stood in our roome and stead hee bare vpon him the sinnes of his elect and for substance the whole punishment due to the same which was both the first and second death but yet concerning the suffering of the second death there remaines some difficultie Touching it therefore wee must hold this ground that our Sauiour Christ suffered the second death so farre forth as the suffering thereof might stand with the vnion of his two natures and with the holinesse and dignitie of his person and here these cau●ats must be marked I. Caueat That in his manhood he endured a very true separation from the Godhead and from his Father yet not in regard of subsisting and beeing but of sense and feeling onely and therefore hee cried My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee hauing for a time no sense of Gods fauour but onely the feeling of his wrath and displeasure II. Caueat In his passion he did indure the sorrows of the second death he did not die the second death for then hee should haue beene ouercome and vtterly separated from his father in subsisting and beeing but he suffered the second death and in suffering ouercame it as a man may be at the point of death feele the paines of the first death and yet recouer III. Caueat Christ endured the paines of the damned yet not in that manner which the damned doe for hee endured them on th● crosse they in the place of the damned Christ suffered thē for a while they endure them for euer Christ suffered the second death yet so as it preuailed not against him but the damned are ouerwhelmed of it it preuailes ouer them and causeth them to blaspheme God now their blasphemie increaseth their sinne and their sinne causeth their torments to be multiplied for euer This doctrine is sutable to the word of God and to reason for in mans reason the death of the body could not be a remedie to such persons as are condemned to a double death both of body and soule Vses 1. Seeing the second death is a separation of man from God for euer we must labour in this life to haue some true fellowship with God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost that hauing it once we may enioy the same for euer This fellowshippe we shall come vnto in the right vse of the word and Sacraments and praier for in the word and Sacraments God condescends to speak vnto vs and to deale familiarly with vs and in praier we talke with God II. Use. Note also to whome this commandement is spoken Depart from me namely to such as come neare vnto God with their lips but yet keepe their hearts farre from him in consideration whereof we must not content our selues to professe the name of Christ outwardly but we must draw neere to God with all our affections our loue ioy feare and confidence and yeild obedience to his commandements so shall we escape this fearefull commandement of finall departure from him Ye workers of iniquitie This is the reason of the commandement for the better vnderstanding whereof this question must be handled How these men that make such profession can be called workers of iniquitie many of whome vndoubtedly liued a ciuill and vnblam●able life outwardly and could not be charged with any horrible capitall sinnes Ans. There be many great sinnes for which men may be called workers of iniquitie and be as vile in the sight of God as the murtherer and adulterer though for outward life they be vnblameable as first hypocrisi● which is proper to the professors of religion when as they content themselues to hold religion outwardly but yet doe not bring their hearts nor conforme their liues to their outward profession Secondly to professe loue and worship to God and yet not to performe duties of loue and mercie vnto men for we must loue and serue God in the works of brotherly loue Thirdly to haue the heart addicted to this or that sinne or sinnes whether secret or open in regard of the world it skilleth not for this is to be a worker of iniquitie in Gods sight when the heart taketh a setled delight in any sinne And they are not so called because their iniquitie is alwaies outward and seene to the world Lastly all the sinnes of the first table especially the sinnes against the two first commandements as not to know God not to loue God or to trust in him aboue all not to worship him in heart and life together these are all works of iniquitie greater then the sinnes of the second table in their kind and in regard of these also professors are called workers of iniquitie Vses 1. Whereas Christ calleth those professors workers of iniquitie whose profession couered their sinnes frō mens sight we may note that Christ is a very ●●rict obseruer of mens waies euen of the most secret sinnes which appeare not to the world though men may be deceiued by professours in this world yet Christ cannot be deceiued but at the last day of iudgement he will finde them out what they be Many deceiue themselues with a perswasion of mercie because Christ is a Sauiour and so presume to goe on in sinne but they must knowe that Christ is also a seuere iudge who doth straitly obserue mens sins and will condemne the workers of iniquitie as well as pardon them that repent and therefore we must not ●latter our selues to liue in sin because he is a Sauiour but rather feare to sinne because