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A35949 A brief exposition of the evangel of Jesus Christ according to Matthew by David Dickson ... Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. 1651 (1651) Wing D1400; ESTC R13881 307,666 370

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6. The incarnation of the Son of God is a noble Prop to Faith Thou son of David say they have mercy 7. Mercy is our only plea with God and Christ Therefore say they Have mercy on us Ver. 28. And when he was come into the house the blind men came to him and Iesus saith unto them Beleeve ye that I am able to do this they said unto him Yea Lord. Christ suffereth them to cry on till he lead them unto his lodging Doct. 1. The Lord will seem not to regard the prayer which he mindeth to grant and so will traine on the Supplicant patiently to pursue his request for no answer is given till the blind men come to his lodging and do follow him within doors 2. Whoso love to have any thing from Christ had need to have a right estimation of his power and to have their faith fixed therefore Beleeve ye saith Christ that I am able to do this 3. In things belonging to this life it is sufficient to beleeve his Power leaving the matter of his Wil to himself Therfore here it is asked only Beleeve ye that I am able And they answer Yea Lord and no more Ver. 29. Then touched he their eyes saying according to your faith be it unto you 30. And their eyes were opened and Iesus straightly charged them saying See that no man know it Our Lord toucheth their eyes and openeth them Dct. 1. Where any faith is the Lord will strengthen it as need is therefore albeit no touching was needful yet to strengthen their faith He toucheth their eyes 2. Faith shall not be frustrate Therefore saith Christ According to your faith be it unto you and their eyes were opened 3. Our Lord loved no rash applause but that his miracles should be keeped in silence a while that men might take heed to his doctrine the more resolutely and praise his work the more solidly Therefore charged he them saying See that no man know it to wit till I give you warrant Ver. 31. But they when they were departed spread abroad his fame in all that country They not taking heed to the command but consulting their own wit do contrary to the commandement therefore is their disobedience marked But they spread abroad his fame Whence we learn That the most specious pretences that can be made are not able to save a man from guiltinesse if he disobey a command Ver. 32. And as they went out behold they brought to him a dumb man possessed with a divel 33. And when the divell was cast out the dumb spake and the multitude marvelled saying It was never so seen in Israel In the healing of the dumb Learn 1. Where Satan gets possession he doth mar the right use of what a man hath of God in one thing or other in so far as he is not restrained From some he taketh the wit away as from the lunatick from some he taketh their strength and boweth down their back From some he taketh their hearing and from this man he taketh his speech He is a dumb man possessed with a divel 2. The only remedy of all sort of possession is To bring the person infested by Satan unto Christ as this man is brought unto him 3. When Satan is cast out the man is set free and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty for When the divell is cast out the dumb spake 4. Where Gods work is rightly seen the glo●y of divine and super excellent power is perceived Therefore is it that the multitudes marvelled saying It was never so seen in Israel meaning that never any such work was done Ver. 34. But the Pharisees said He casteth out the divels through the prince of the divels Satan moveth these dogs to blaspheme Christ. Doct. 1. It is a dangerous thing to oppose Christ for such will at length readily blaspheme him and will give the glory of his working rather unto the divel then unto him as here the Pharisees said He casteth out divels by the Prince of divels Ver. 35. And Iesus went about all the cities and villages teaching in their synagogues and preaching the Gospel of the kingdome and healing every sickness and every disease among the people In Christs care of the salvation of the multitude Learn 1. That diligence in teaching and preaching the Gospel is the proper way to convert and save souls which Christ himself hath appointed and practised in his own person He went about all cities and villages teaching and preaching 2. Justly is the Gospel called the Gospell of the Kingdome both of Grace and Glory seeing it is the light which sheweth the Kingdome the furnisher of weapons to fight for it It is the Scepter whereby the Subject● of the Kingdome are guided It is the rule and law for the Subjects life and it containeth the evidences of the Subjects right unto the Kingdome and being received in a mans h●●●t it b●ing●th with ●●a begun kingdome of righteousnesse peace and joy 3. The best opportunities of peoples conveening must be taken for teaching the Gospel and no pains should be spared for that purpose as men have their particular calling for Christ the Prince of Pastors went about all the cities and villages teaching in their synagogues 4. Christs mira●l●s were all of th●● profitable to men He healed si●knesses and diseases 5. There is no evil or malady of soul or body among people which our Lord is not able and willing to heal in all those that imploy him for He healed every malady and every disease in those which came unto him Ver. 36. But when he saw the multitudes he was moved with compassion on them because they fainted and were scattered abroad as sheep having no shepherd Our Lord compassionatly looketh upon the condition of the people under their ordinary teachers the Pharisees Doct. 1. Misery of Gods people is a reason to shew pity when he pleaseth and specially when they are conveened in a multitude for it is said When he saw the multitudes he was moved with compassion because they fainted 2. They are all as wandring sheep who are not gathered in unto the saving faith of Jesus Christ Therfore these multitudes not yet converted are compared to scattered sheep 3. These men are no Pastors in Christs estimation who do not teach people righteousness and salvation in Christ who are idle and unfruitfull shepherds Such as were the priests and Levites at that time Therfore the multitude here are counted as Sheep having no shepherd because their teachers did not their duty unto them in any profitable way Ver. 37. Then saith he unto his disciples The harvest truely is plenteous but the labourers are few 38. Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest that he wil send forth labourers into his harvest This his commiseration he layeth forth before his Apostles that they might be affected therewith also Doct. 1. People made willing to hear the Gospel are like a field ready to be cut down so
unto him Doct. 1. The Lord knoweth the intentions of his honest servants and sets a price on their good deeds therby therfore saith he She did it for my buriall 2. Our Lord knew that the gospell should be preached through the world c what was to be preached also for Where this gospel shal be preached saith be this shall be told c. 3. True faith seeth afar off for this woman seeth life in death believeth the Lord Jesus to be the true Saviour worthy of all honour in his death as well as in his life believeth that he should not see corruption believeth that his death should be a sweet smelling sacrifice to God and the savour of life unto his people for She did it saith Christ for my buriall 4. The memorial of the just shall not go to the grave with them but their good deeds shal be had in everlasting remembrance In this woman we have assurance of it for This shall be preached for a memorial of her saith he 5. Whosoever do any thing for Christ shall never have cause to rew Christ accounts more of it then it is all worthy for She hath wrought a good work on me saith Christ before and now This shall be told of her for a memoriall Ver. 14. Then one of the twelve called Iudas Iscariot went unto the chief Priests 15. And said unto them What will you give me and I wil deliver him unto you and they covenanted with him for thirty pieces of silver 16. And from that time he sought opportunity to betray him Iudas minding to have gain some way seeketh opportunity first to sel then to betray Christ. Doct. 1. When a wicked man is ingaged to do an evill turne he never taketh rest till he act it as is here seen in Judas from that time he sought opportunity to betray Christ. 2. When men have an evil turne in their heart and want opportunity only they shall not want occasion long as Judas minding to sell Christ doth seek and find fit Merchants the chief Priests 3. God will suffer wicked men to follow their designes even against himselfe when he seeth it fit for his own glory as here he wil not hinder a Judas to go to the high priests 4. He that is greedy of gain will sel his Soul and Heaven and Christ for money as Judas here doth 5. He that is not Christs friend in truth will soon turn Traitour as Iudas here doth 6. Hypocrites wil be found in best societies for here a Traitour is one of the twelve 7. The wicked shall bear their own blame and the society shall be free as here Judas is named alone 8. Secret enemies and open will easily agree together and own one another as here Judas and the high Priests make a short bargain 9. He tha●●ell●th Christ knoweth not his worth for Wh● wil● you gi●e me saith the seller 10. He that will sin and sell Christ will do it upon a naughty condition ere he want all Thirty pieces of silver or what may be had will make the bargain ●all Ver. 17. Now the first day of the Feast of unleavened bread the disciples came to Iesus saying unto him Where wilt thou that we prepare for thee to eat the passeover The doctrine of the covenant of grace being delivered by our Lord and confirmed abundantly by miracles the institution of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper followeth for sealing up of this covenant unto the believer and to this intent mention is made of Christs last eating of the Sacrament of the Passover unto which was subjoyned the institution celebration of the Sacramental Supper for the clearing of some circumstances whereof and of the duty of preparation for right receiving of it that which is here spoken of the Passeover doth give light Doct. 1. It is commendable to remember Gods Ordinances in due time and to prepare for them as here The first day of the Feast the Disciples came and make ready for it 2. Our Lord made himself so poor that he had not a house of his own albeit he was Owner of all the earth as Where wilt thou that we prepare doth import 3. Our Lord subjected himself unto the Law and did keep exactly both the Moral and ceremoniall Law that he might deliver us from the yoke of the one and from the cursefor breaking of the other He kept the Passover 4. The terms of Sacramental speech were wel understood by Christs disciples as to put the thing signified for the sign namely by this phrase To cat the Passeover they mean to ●at the Lamb the Sacramental memorial of the Angels passing over of the houses of the Israelites in Egypt Ver. 18. And be said Go into the city to such a man and say unto him The Master saith My time is at hand I will keep the Passoever at thy house with my Disciples 19. And the Disciples did as Iesus had appointed them and they made ready the Passeover Christ directeth them to a friends house a worthy man for so holy a service Doct. 1. The Lord wil not want friends whersoever he is here in Jerusalem he hath friends as he had also in Bethany Go into the city to such a man saith he 1. He hath such commandement of the spirits of men as he can bow their will to do what service he pleaseth for he is sure to make such a man obey 3. Christ hath taken on him to be our Teacher and to him only the dignity of Master is due therefore he calleth himself the Master 4. It is of his own free choise that our Lord doth imploy any man more th●n another for Go to such a man and say importeth this 5. The more near our time to depart this life doth draw the more carefull should we be to have all things done by us which should be● done therefore saith he My time is at hand I will keep the Passeover 6. It is the part of true Disciples to follow Christs direction in all things and being clear in the command to go about the obedience of it for The Disciples did as Iesus appointed Ver. 20. Now when the even was come he sate down with the twelve For clearing of the history of the Lords Supper which was instituted at the close of the Passeover we have here set down the circumstances of eating of the Passeover as time place and persons whereby we have ground to conceive that Iudas was present at the Sacrament of the Passeover he being one of the twelve for first seeing there is no question made that as Iudas was imployed in the Apostleship with the rest so he was admitted also with the rest unto the fellowship of all Worship and Divine Ordinances and was present at so many former feasts of the Passeover as Christ did keep with his Disciples there can be no inconvenience to suppose him present at the Passeover at this time also Secondly seeing whatsoever is said by Historiographers concerning a
Now the Lord discovereth Herods plot and disappointeth him Doct. 1. Wicked men may keep their design against Christ close from the knowledg of men but cannot hide their counsell from God he perceiveth Herods mind perfectly 2. The Lord is watching over the just and will not suffer their honest simplicity to be so far abused by the enemy as ignorantly to betray Christ into his enemies hands therefore he forewarnes these wise men that they should not trust Herod nor to go toward him any more but return home another way 3. Such as beleeve in Christ the longer they follow him the more confirmations of faith they find as here beside all the former God giveth this revelation also unto these wise men and their life also for a prey from the rage of Herod Vers. 13. And when they were departed behold the angel of the Lord appeareath to Ioseph in a dream saying Arise and take the yong child and his mother and flee into Egypt and be thou there untill I bring thee word for Herod will seek the young child to destroy him The wise men are gone now Christ is sent away also Doct. 1. Our Lord was persecuted so soon as he was known in the world he is sought to be slain who came to save men for Herod doth seek to destroy him 2. He who is the ancient of dayes the everlasting Father according to his God-head is called a young child according to his man-head as Isai. 9.6 did foretell for Herod shall seek the young child 3. The Lord will have ordinary means used when they may be had He will save Christ by flight and will do no miracle needlessely therfore Go flee into Egypt saith the Angel 4. It is safe to wait for the Lord in all things and to attend his providence Be thou there till I bring thee word saith the Angel to Joseph Vers. 14. When he arose he took the young child and his Mother by night and departed into Egypt Joseph obeyeth speedily Doct. 1. When our direction is clear our obedience should be speedy and without delay as Joseph being warned ariseth by night and makes for his journey 2. When Christ is known he will be more dear then any thing else for as the child is first in Josephs commission verse 12. to take care for him so in his obedience here the child is before the Mother for it is said He took the child and his mother 3. Any place if God send us there if Christ be in our company is good even Egypt for Ioseph departed into Egypt being sent thither Vers. 15. And was there untill the death of Herod that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying Out of Egypt have I called my son That we may see how the prophesie is fulfilled the meaning of the words of Hosea is in effect as if it had been said O church of Israel when thou was in thy infancy I so loved thee that I brought thee out of Egypt as my adopted Son and in thee I called out of Egypt my only begotten Son who as the promised seed of Abraham was in thy loynes and as in thy bondage in Egypt I intended to fore-shadow and signifie the sufferings of my Son and his fleeing out of Canaan into Egypt so also in the calling of thee my adopted Son out of Egypt I intended to fore-shadow and signifie the calling of my only begotten Son out of Egypt that he should perfect the work of redemption in the midst of the land promised unto thee yet notwithstanding of all this thou hast been unthankfull unto me Thus Christs going down to Egypt and bringing back out of it is a fulfilling of the Prophesie and withall this sheweth unto us that in all the Lords work about Israel be had a speciall eye upon the promised seed upon the Messiah who was to come out of that people fore-shadowing somthing of him or accomplishing somthing foresignified of him Therefore it should not seem strange unto us that the Evangelists do apply sundry such speeches of the old Prophets unto Christ who was mainly aimed at and born witnesse unto in the Law and Prophets Ver. 16. Then Herod when he saw that he was mocked of the wise men was exceeding wrath and sent forth and slew all the children that were in Beth-lehem and in all the coasts thereof from two years old and under according to the time which he had diligently enquired of the wise men Now Herod finding himself disappointed bewrayeth his cruell design against Christ. Doct. 1. God turneth the wisdome of his enemies into folly Now Herod did find himself mocked 2. Wicked heads do take it hardly if every instrument whom they imploy and abuse do not serve their base designes for Herod is wroth with the wise men as if they had mocked him 3. Enemies of Christ when fraud doth fail them do fall to open rage now Herod sends forth to slay Christ if he can find him 4. Satan and his instruments do labour to overthrow such as are likest unto Christ if they cannot overtake himself Therefore Herod causeth to slay all the young children in Beth-lehem who were nearest in age unto Christ. 5. Wicked men do not reverence Gods providence in disappointing their wicked purposes but are incensed the more to do mischiefe as Herods course doth shew here Vers. 17. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Ieremiah the Prophet saying 18. In Rama was there a voyce heard lamentation and weeping and great mourning Rachel weeping for her children and would not be comforted because they are not The Evangelist applieth to this passage of Gods providence the words of the Prophet Ier. 31.15 Who doth foretell that as the captivity of the ten tribes had once made the state of Israel as it were their mo●her to morne so should the calamity of Israel make that st●●e to mourn again for the murther of so many children in and about Beth-lehem and yet this comfortlesse sorrow should be swallowed up by the consolations of Christ come into the world as may be seen Ier. 31. comparing vers 15 16. with 10 11 18 22. in the last of these verses the incarnation of the Messiah is pointed at expressly Now this prophesie is here accomplished Rachel indeed here mourneth and no consolation can be sufficient to asswage this sorrow except that consolation only which cometh by the Gospel and by the incarnation of the Son of God Doct. 1. It is a good way for making use of Gods providence to compare events with the predictions of Gods word and to mark where we see accomplishment answerable that we may say with the Evangelist Thus is it fulfilled what the Lord hath spoken 2. The troubles of the Lords people are foreseen and weighed in a ballance and comfort is prapared for them for the weeping of Rachel is foretold of the Lord before it come and consolation is prepared for it in Christ as the place in Ieremiah
Son of man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his life a ransome for many Our Lord doth clear his Doctrine by his own example shewing them how he humbled himselfe for the publick good Doct. 1. The example of our Lords humiliation of himselfe serveth to curb all ambition in his Ministers and if it prevaile not shall bear witness against them for Even the Son of Man saith he came not to be ministred unto 2. Christ in his first coming came not to take up an earthly dominion or a stately preheminence as his Disciples imagined but came in the shape and state of a servant and behaved himself so as he was ready for the good of his Disciples to wash their feet for he came not to reign in a worldly manner but to serve in the externall Ministery of the Gospell He came saith he to minister 3. Ministers should not onely quit prelacy for the good of the Church but their life also if need bet for Christ out of the Love to mens Salvation not onely emptied himselfe of Stately Dominion but also emptied himselfe of Liberty and Life And gave himselfe a ransom for many Ver. 29. And as they departed from Iericho a great multitude followed him 30. And behold two blind men sitting by the way side when they heard that Iesus passed by cryed out saying have mercy on us O Lord thou son of David Among these that countenance Christ and follow him from Jericho two are marked Doct. 1. Of all the multitude of Christs followers these are the most remarkable persons who give unto Christ most imployment and draw most vertue by faith out of him therefore above all These two blind men are specially here noted 2. It is wisdom to seek of God the greatest things whatsoever else we need for these men are not so curious for Alms of Mony albeit they were Beggers as to have the benefit of the Mediators mercy Have mercy on us say they 3. Whosoever crave any benefit by Christ must be cleare in this point that Christ is the promised Messiah for Son of David is their great argument 4. We must beleeve his power and love as God incarnate able and willing to save us for so do they saying O Lord thou Son of David Ver. 31. And the multitude rebuked them because they should hold their peace but they cryed the more saying Have mercy on us O Lord thou Son of David From the discouragement off●red unto them Learne 1. It is no new thing that such as in appearance are following Christ do hinder these who are following him in ea●●est for The multitude rebuked these poor men and will have them to hold their peace 2. But it is wisdom for such as beleeve in Christ the more they are opposed the more to seek him and to take no answer from any but from himselfe for so doth these blind men who do not forsake their petition till it be granted Ver. 32. And Iesus stood stil and called them and said What wil ye that I shal do unto you 33. They say unto him Lord that our eyes may be opened 34. So Iesus had compassion on them and touched their eyes and immediately their eyes received sight and they followed him Christ heareth them and falleth in conference with them Doct. 1. Christ taketh notice of such suppliants as the multitude doth despise He standeth still to hear these blind mens suit 2. Where there is Faith and Sincerity the Lord will draw it forth to open view for his owne glory and the good of the Believer therfore He asketh what they would have that it might be known that they did not seek money but the fruit of his divine power 3. When misery is laid forth in faith before Christ he meeteth it with compassion as here in these blind men for he is a compassionate high priest 4. It is easie for Christ to do every greatest work as here to open the eyes of the blind and to give sight to them for He touched their eyes and they immediately received sight 5. It is reason that what gift we get of Christ we imploy it for his honour for Their eyes received sight and they followed him CHAP. XXI Christ rideth to Jerusalem to vers 12. Casteth out the buyers and sellers out of the temple to ve 18. Curseth the fig tree vers 22. Defendeth his own authority against the Pharisees challenge ver 28. And in two parables setteth down their sin and Gods judgement in rejecting of them Ver. 1. ANd when they drew nigh unto Ierusalem and were come to Bethpage unto the mount of Olives then sent Iesus two disciples 2. Saying unto them Go into the villages over against you and straightway ye shall find an asse tyed and a colt with her loose them and bring them unto me 3. And if any man say ought unto you ye shall say The Lord hath need of them and straightway he will send them IN this Christ's last voyage to Jerusalem Observe 1. That Christ being resolved to lay down his life the more near he draweth to his suffering the more doth he reveal himself to be the promised Messiah in whom the promises were accomplished Therfore he wil now go riding into Ierusalem 2. Again lest the nature of his kingdom should be mistaken he wil give evidence in his poverty that his kingdome is not of this world Therfore he will borrow an asse to ride on 3. He hath right to whatsoever he liketh to make use of as he sheweth in commanding the disciples To loose the asse and her colt and to bring them to him 4. His knowledge doth reach to the observation of the meanest things and doth take notice of Asses and their colts and their bindings and loosings 5. Whatsoever impediment can occur to any of his servants in their course of obedience unto him he doth foresee it and doth provide for the removing therof as here If any say ought unto you c. 6. He knoweth the master of the Asse will be within and what he wil say and foretelleth how he shall dispose of his will and move him without any more to let them go for the hearts of kings and country-men are in his hand and thus he letteth his disciples see a glimpse of his God head saying Straightway he send them 7. Albeit he be Lord of all yet will he make use of what his friends have with their own consent so that they may be reasonable servants with good will bestowing what he calleth for Therfore saith he Straightway he will send them 8. He is not ashamed to professe himselfe Lord and Master and yet to be so far emptied as to have need of the service of an Asse Say saith he the Lord hath need of them Ver. 4. All this was done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Prophet saying 5. Tell ye the daughter of Sion Behold thy king cometh unto thee meek and sitting upon an
false prophets that they shall not always be deceived Ver. 25. Behold I have told you before The Lord commandeth to make use of the warning Doct. 1. The Lords forewarning of the danger from false prophets should stirre up all to be the more watchfull and it shall make men inexcusable if they shall be seduced for Behold I have told you before saith he 2. The doctrine of election doth not give warrant unto security but should be made use of for diligence and watchfulness therfore saith he Behold I have told you for God hath decreed as to save the Elect so to save them by his own means 3. This forewarning sheweth that albeit the elect shal not bealtogether and without recovery deceived yet they may be so farr mistaken as it had been good they had watched much sin and misery may befal a man by not watching albeit at length he may be brought forth of it for Behold I have told you before maketh the Lord free of what ill unwatchfulnesse may let in Ver. 26. Wherefore if they shall say unto you Behold he is in the desert go not forth behold he is in the secret chambers believe it not As before ver 23. So here again Christ bids them beware to believe his bodily locall presence in the earth after his Ascension untill the day of judgment Doct. 1. Such a Christ as is not the Son of Abraham the Son of David such a one as is not described to us in the scriptures is not to be looked upon nor believed nor esteemed of such a Christ as is said to be locally present in the earth after Christs Ascension a man should not go unto nor believe any speech of such a Christ as shal be said to be in his body in the desert or in a chamber or in a box or in a wafer-cake Lo here lo there or such like as the Papists have their Christ Beleeve it not saith Christ himself Ver. 27. For as the lightning cometh out of the east and shineth even unto the west so shall also the coming of the Son of man be He giveth a reason why such imaginations of his being on the earth in his body is not to be believed Doct. after Christ's Ascension no other bodily presence of Christ or coming into the World is to be beleeved save his second coming in glory which shall be on a sudden when men are not looking for it● and in such evidence of glory that all the World from the East to the West shall be made witnesses of it for As the lightning so shall the coming of the Son of man be saith Christ. Ver. 28. For wheresoever the carcasse is there will the eagles be gathered together He meeteth with an objection if he come in the East or in the West how shal those Elect persons come unto him who shal be so farr removed from that place as is the VVest from the East he answereth and teacheth that as the eagles from all quarters are shortly gathered unto the place where the carcass is so shall all the Elect be swiftly gathered together to the place where Christ shall shew his bodily presence at his second coming to judgment Doct. We need not trouble our selves about the swift dispatch of the last judgement how or in what place of the World the convocation of the Elect shall be this is sufficient We shall meet with Christ where he shall be for Where the carcass is there will the Eagles be gathered together Ver. 29. Immediately after the tribulation of those dayes shall the sun be darkened and the moon shall not give her light and the starrs shall fall from heaven and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken For further satisfaction of his Disciples Our Lord giveth six signes of his second coming Doct. 1. All the time before the second coming of our Lord whatsoever comforts may be mixed shal be dayes of tribulation and not so free of the miseries of this life as some do dream for here he telleth us the second coming of our Lord shal be immediatly after the tribulation of these days are ended and brought toward a period 2. When all the Churches Exercises all her Tribulations and warfare are accomplished then shall the comforter Jesus Christ come to give full refreshment immediately 3. Yet shall his coming be in a terrible manner to the world with such an alteration made upon the creatures being now all of them to be changed from the estate of vanity whereunto they are subject that Sun Moon and Stars obscured by the glory of Christ shall no more be able to give comfort unto men not to shew forth their glory as before but shall cease from their service and lose their power expressed here by Darkning not giving light falling from heaven and shaking of heaven as a tree that casteth her fruit for so must it be ere they be made new this is the first signe of his coming Ver. 30. And then shall appear the signe of the Son of man in heaven and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn and they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory The second signe or evidence of Christ's coming i● the glorious shining of Christ's Person approaching called the signe of the Son of Man because as the light of the Sun approaching is a signe of the present appearing or rising of the Sun so shall the shining glory of Christ's approaching which is more bright than the Sun Acts 26.13 14. be a signe of his present appearing what other signe of the Son of Man beside this may be we leave it till the time come of his revealing of it Doct. 1. Christ shall be seen visible Judge of quick and dead at the last day in his humane nature 〈◊〉 The signe of the Son of Man bodily descending shall appear in heaven The third signe of Christ's coming is the mourning of all people it being now manifest that the day of judgement is come the penitent shal fall on mourning and lamenting the●● sins with a godly sorrow that they may be fitted for the promised consolation of wiping all tears from the● eyes and the wicked shall fall on weeping for the misery co●ing on them presently by the sentence of their Judge Doct. 1. Such as have mocked at the day of judgement and s●offed at piety and rejected or abused the Gospel of Jesus Christ shall then mourn a great mourning All the tribes of the earth shall mourn The fourth signe of his coming is the manifestation of his bodily down-coming in the clouds with power and great glory Doct. Howsoever Christ's first coming was in much infirmity because he was to suffer for us yet his second coming being to judgment and to reward all according to their works as here i● said Shall be with power and glory Ver. 31. And he shall send his Angels with a great sound of a trumpet and they shall gather
the Kingdome of Heaven ●hich is above and they who do not prepare themselves ●o not watch for his coming shall be excluded from Christ ● his coming From this Parable in so far as it tendeth ●●●o this scope Learn 1. Christ and his Church may well be compared to the Bridegroom and the Bride and the spiri●all communion between them to Marriage mutually pro●ised in espousals in this life and to be solemnized and complea●ed at the coming of our Lord. 2. As in the Parable ●o in the visible Church all do professe themselves devoted ●nto Jesus Christ the Bridegroom and to be desirous of communion with him in Heaven and possibly may attain to a ●amelesse conversation and appear Virgine-like all waiting for the coming of our Lord in their own and others estimation 3. As among the Virgines in the Parable so in the visible Church all are not wise Christians but some wise and really such as they professe themselves to be others are counterfeit Christians and foolish 4. As among the Vir●ines in the Parable so in the visible Church onely these are wise who with the outward Lamps of open profession labour to be furnished inwardly with the saving graces of the holy Spirit namely Faith working by love and repentance mortifying their sinfull lusts that in newnesse of life they may glorifie God But whoso are destitute of inward grace in their heart they are foolish for the Lamps of their outward profession without oyle do serve to no purpose when matters come to a triall 5. As in the Parable the Bridegroom cometh when they are not aware So will Christ come unto Judgment in a day and hour that men know not 6. As in the Parable the wise are admitted and the foolish excluded So they who are inwardly renewed and indued with the saving graces of the holy Spirit shall be taken up to heaven and they who are destitute of the oyle of the holy Spirit void of true faith and of the renewing vertue of Gods Grace shall be excluded 7. As in the parable the wise could not help the foolish nor the foolish hurt the wise So the society of the hypocrites with the godly in the visible church shall not be prejudiciall to the sound christians in the day of Gods judgment not yet the society of the godly avail the hypocrites among whom they have lived but every man shall be judged according to that which is within him 8. As in the parable the self-conceit of the Virgins ver 11 12. helped not them so the opinion which unrenewed persons within the visible church have of their interest in Christ their vain confidence and foolish hopes grounded upon the outward profession and their formal practises of externall duties will not avail them before the Lord at that day 9. To be watchfull now and to examine well our own case and to see that we be sure of the inward anointing of the holy Spirit whereby we are made indeed holy is the only way to be certain of our salvation when Christ cometh to judgement for this use Christ commandeth us to make of the parable saying Watch therfore Ver. 14. For the Kingdom of heaven is as a man travelling into a far country who called his own servants and delivered unto them his goods 15. And unto one he gave five talents to another two and to another one to every man according to his seuerall ability and straitway took his journ●y 16. Th●● he that had received the five talents 〈◊〉 and traded with the same and made them other 〈◊〉 ●●lents 17. And likewise he that had received two he also gained other two 18. But he that had received one went and digged in the earth and hid his lords mony 19. After a long time the Lord of those servants cometh and reckoneth with them 20. And so he that had received five talents came and brought other five talents saying Lord thou delivered ●● unto me five talents behold I have gained besides them five talents more 21. His lord said unto him Well done thou good and ●●full servant thou hast been faithfull over a few things I will make thee ruler over many things enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. 22. He also that had received two talents came and said Lord thou deliveredst me two talents behold I have gained two other talents beside them 23. His lord said unto him Well done good and faithful servant thou hast been faithful over a few things I wil make thee ruler over many things enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. 24. Then he which had received the one talent came and said Lord I knew thee that thou art an hard man reaping where thou hast not sowen and gathering where thou hast not stra●ed 25. And I was afraid and went and hid thy talent in the earth 〈◊〉 there thou hast that is thine 26. His Lord answered and said unto him thou wicked and slothful servant thou knewest that I reap where I sowed not and gather where I have not strawed 27. Thou oughtest therefore to have put my mony to the exchangers and then at my coming I should have received mine own with usury 28. Take therefore the talent from him and give it unto him which hath ten talents 29. For unto every one that hath shal be given and he shal have abundance bu● from him that hath not shal be taken away even that which he hath 30. And cast ye the unprofitable servant into utter darknes there shal be weeping and gnashing of teeth Another parable tending to put all men on work and in speciall the Ministers of the Gospel for setting forth the glory of Christ and of his Kingdome among men according to every man's ability and calling under the similitude of a master giving to his servants mony to trade withall for his use Doct. 1. As the man in the parable travelling into a far country disposed of his affaires and ordered all matters till his return So hath our Lord Jesus given exact order in his Word to all men and specially to his Ministers how his house shall be governed and how every man should serve him till his second coming again 2. As the master in the parable giveth not the same number of talents to each servant So the Lord So the Lord giveth not a like measure of gifts to every one but to some more to some lesse as his heavenly Wisdom thinketh expedient 3. As in the parable some made use of their talents some not So in the visible church some imploy the gifts they have according to their calling to the edifying of others and promoving of the Kingdome of Christ othersome do misregard the Kingdome of Christ and care not how it go with Christs matters if their own particular go right and therefore they make no conscience to promove Christs Kingdome in their vocation as their duty set down in his word doth require 4. As the master in the parable reckoned with his servants
cited giveth evidence Vers. 19. But when Herod was dead behold an Angel of the Lord appeareth in a dream to Ioseph in Egypt 20. Saying Arise and take the young child and his mother and go into the land of Israel for they are dead which sought the yong childes life Now Joseph is called back from Egypt Doct. 1. The Lord doth remember his owne in trouble to comfort them in due season for so soon as Herod dieth the Angel carrieth news 2. The death of Persecutors is the delivery of the persecuted therefore saith the Angel Arise for he is dead that sought the Childes life Vers. 21. And he arose and took the the young child and his mother and came into the land of Israel 22. But when he heard that Archelaus did reign in Iudea in the room of his father Herod he was affraid to go thither notwithstanding being warned of God in a dream he turned aside into the parts of Galilee Joseph is affraid of Archelaus and is delivered of his fear Doct. 1. No wonder the Children of wicked parents be suspected till their regeneration appear therefore Joseph is affraid of Archelaus Herods Son that he shall be father-like or father-worse 2. When God will comfort a man he removeth one doubt as well as another as this fear is removed by another revelation from heaven 3. The Lords warrant and clear direction doth quiet the mind Therefore Ioseph being warned by the Angel turned aside into Galilee Vers. 23. And he came and dwelt in a city called Nazareth that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophets He shal be called a Nazarene In Christs abode at Nazareth The Evangelist observeth Gods providence intending therby that he should be called a Nazarite that is one separate from sinners Sundry types of Christ did foresignifie and promise that he should be called indeed a Nazarite or one separate for Joseph is called the Nazarite of his brethren or one separate from his brethren Gen. 29.26 first in regard of the measure of love which his Father bare unto him next he is separate from his brethren in regard they sold him unto the Gentiles and thirdly he is separate in Gods providence from his brethren that he might prepare a place for them and preserve the life of his owne people in Joseph was Christ sore-shadowed and promised to be such a Nazarite separate in all these respects Again in the typicall law of the Nazarite Numb 6. it is foresignified that Christ should be separate from sinners and dedicate unto holinesse dead unto the pomp and pleasure of this world that he should be the ornament and flower of Religion and the true pattern of piety to all the Israel of God Moreover in the type of Samson it is foresignified Iudg. 13.15 That Christ should from his birth be a Nazarite unto God who by his power and sufferings should overcome his enemies and bring delivery to Israel Now Christ his dwelling at Nazareth and his being called a Nazarene from his dwelling was a fit mean to call to mens minde the perfections of the Nazarite in him and to make them see the accomplishment of the foresaid prophesies in him And therefore doth the Evangelist mark the providence of God in directing his dwelling to be in this little town Nazareth whereby occasion might be given to all men to observe and perceive in Christ the fulfilling of the prophecies which foretold that he should be really a Nazarite Doct. Whensoever we hear him called Iesus of Nazareth let us remember that he is that true Nazarite that promised pleasant Plant that Holy One of Israel separate from sinners the true Deliverer of Israel from their enemies who hath broken the bars of death and hell and by his death hath overcome the divell and accomplished everything which in the types were foreshadowed of him CHAP. III. The Evangelist passeth over our Saviours life in private and i●ts down how John the Baptist by his Ministry as the forerunner of our Lord doth prepare the way for the receiving of him to vers 13. How Christ by him is baptized and how Christ is magnified from heaven in his entry into his publike office Vers. 1. IN those dayes came Iohn the Baptist preaching in the wildernesse of Iudea WHile Christ is dwelling at Nazareth in Galilee at the time appointed of God John Baptist is sent forth to preach in the wildernesse of Judea that is in the Mure lands and Hilly countrey of Judea John is called the Baptist because he was the first that did baptize her●by distinguishing him from John the Apostle Doct. 1. God hath set times wherein he will have every thing which was foretold to come to passe therefore it is said In those dayes to wit of which Isaiah did speak chap. 40 3. while Christ is dwelling at Nazareth this appointed work is done 2. How basely soever the world count of preaching yet is it the onely ordinary way to prepare souls for receiving of Christ Therefore it is said Iohn came preaching 3. It is in Gods choice to send the preachers of the Gospel to what place he will for John is sent to preach in the wildernesse of Judea and not in Jerusalem Vers. 2. And saying Repent ye for the kingdome of heaven is at hand The summe of Johns preaching was to move men to repent because the kingdome of Gods grace offered in the Gospel was now ready to receive the penitent Doct. 1. The Gospel finds men mad and out of their wits in an evill way when it is sent unto them they are men who must return to their wits as the originall of the word repent importeth 2. The end of the preaching of the gospel is to perswade men unto repentance for repent is Johns main scope 3. The grace of God offered in the gospel is in effect the Kingdome of heaven for it opens the way unto it and entreth the man not only in the right but also in the begun possession of the Kingdome of heaven 4. There can be no greater allurement to move a man to change his evill course and turn unto God then the offer made unto the penitent of the Kingdome of grace and glory through Christ for this is the motive which John useth saying Repent for the Kingdome of heaven is near 5. Both ability and exercise of repenting is brought about by the preaching and power of the gospel for to beget both John is sent to preach this doctrine saying Repent for the Kingdom of God is at hand Vers. 3. For this is he that was spoken of by the prophet Esaias saying The voyce of one crying in the wilderness Prepare ye the way of the Lord make his paths straight Johns calling and authority to preach is described to be from heaven according to the prophesie past of him Isay 40.3 Doct. 1. The calling and authority of a preacher is chiefly to be looked unto that he take not this honour to himselfe but be called therto
gotten and because their manner of preaching and holy conversation should direct men how to exercise their faith on Jesus Christ and how to draw vertue from him for their consolation and sanctification therefore it is said Ye are the light of the world 2. Except God erect a ministry among men and indue his servants with gifts and graces and make them faithfull to doe their duty the world shall lie in the darknesse of ignorance and error of sin and misery going on to perdition and except Ministers endeavour to have the World illuminate by holding forth the true knowledg of Christ they cannot be free of the worlds perishing nor answerable to this their duty for to them it is said Ye are the light of the world 3. He tels them of the dignity of their calling and duty therein by another similitude teaching us that as a city set on a hill cannot be hid being set there to the intent it might be seen afar off so Ministers of the Gospel for the eminency of their calling and the necessity of their duty cannot be nor may be hid but must shew forth that light to the world and they cannot choose but have their doctrine and diligence in their calling their manner of life and conversation and whole carriage better and worse laid open to the view and observation of all men for they are compared here to a city set on a hill which cannot be hid Vers. 15. Neither do men light a candle and put it under a bushel but on a candlestick and it giveth light unto all that are in the house By another similitude he presseth the Apostles and in them all his Ministers to propagate the Gospel Doct. 1. As men do not light a candle that they may make it uselesse by hiding it under a covert but use to hold it forth that all the house may see it and have the benefit of the light thereof So God doth not give unto any man a gift to understand the mysteries of the gospel and to utter the same with a calling so high and honourable as to preach his name that they should keep close their gift within their brest or within their own doores but that they should communicate their gifts in an orderly way to all the church or House of God and therefore as they would be answerable to Gods designe they must study to illuminate the World and the church by holding forth of the Doct●ine of Christ for if Men do not light a candle but that it may give light to the whole house far lesse must they think that God doth light a candle but for the use of his House Vers. 16. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in heaven From the former Doctrine of the duties of the Apostles our LORD draweth an exhortation to them and all Ministers of the Gospel according to the rule Mark 13.37 What I say unto you I say unto all whom you represent teaching that what light of Knowledge or Faith in God or Love to God or to men they have they should bring it forth for the benefit of men in their Doctrine and life by the faithfull discharge of their Ministry and holy conversation therefore saith he Let your light shine c. 2. They should so wisely and sincerely behave themselves in all things that they may be approven to the consciences of all men for it is said Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works that is may perceive may be convinced and forced to acknowledge that ye so teach and so do as the Lords faithfull servants and children should do 3. By the holy conversation of Christians God shall be glorified known beleeved in loved and praised Therefore it is said that men may glorifie your heavenly Father 4. Christians by their holy life shall be justified of men as the true children of God for saith Christ So do that men may glorifie your Father which is in Heaven 5. A good work is onely that which is done 1. By a child of God 2. In obedience to God his Fathers command 3. For the good of men and 4. For the glory of God For it is said Let your light shine that your Father may be glorified by men who see your good works or profitable and commendable works Vers. 17. Think not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy but to fulfill Here our Lord vindicateth himself from the calumny of Antinomianism or opposing the Law and the Prophets Doct. 1. No wonder the sincere Preachers of the gospel be slandered as if they were adversaries to the Law for even Christ himself was traduced in his time as guilty of this fault as he sheweth in his Apologie saying Think not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets The ground of the mistake was because our Lord set at nought the glosses which the corrupt Doctors of the time did put upon the Scripture and taught men the way of justification by grace without the works of the Law therefore men traduced him as an enemy to the Law and to the Prophets for clearing himself he bringeth five reasons The first is I am so far from intention to destroy the Law and Prophets that by the contrary I intend to fulfill them saith he therefore the calumny uttered or conceived of me as if I intended the contrary is false Doct. 2 Christ is a true friend to the Law his doctrine and the course prescribed by him to his Church by all means doth procure the obedience of the Law and the fulfilling of the prophesies for he saith I am not come to destroy them but to fulfill them Now Christ is said to be come to fulfill the Law and Prophets because what they prophesied of him he doth accomplish what they aimed at he hath brought and is in bringing to passe what way of righteousness and salvation they set down he doth make good for what is in the Law and Prophets to be fulfilled by predictions of what Christ should do and suffer set down partly in plain partly in figurative types and ceremonies or commands of holy Duties backed by Promises to the Obedient and Threatnings against the disobedient with their examples all these Christ came to fulfill most exactly first by accomplishing in his own person all predictions of his perfect obedience even unto the death whether set down in plain termes or foresignified of him under types and figures of the ceremonial Law next by using all means that men should give obedience to the morall Law and by blessing effectually these means and making men really to give obedience to the Law And thirdly by making good all the promises to his subjects and executing all his threatnings against his enemies and so he saith justly I came not to destroy but to fulfil the Law and Prophets Ver. 18. For
calling him Our Father in behalf of all the children on earth for whom and with whom we do pray From the first Petition we are taught that every true Disciple of Christ must have the glorifying of God for his chiefest desire for first and above all must he seek that Gods Name may be hallowed 2. That God must be hallowed as he maketh himself known by his word for it is his Name or Himself as he is named and manifested by his word and ordinances and works and providence which is to be hallowed 3. That he himself must be the procurer of his own glory among men for therfore pray we Hallowed be thy name Ver. 10. Thy Kingdom come thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven From the second petition we are taught that beside the generall Kingdome and government of all things which is alwayes fully in vigour there is a speciall Kingdome of grace wherein God is revealed and acknowledged to be King and Lord over his Saints this Christ cals Thy Kingdom as a peculiar wherein he specially delights 2. That this Kingdom of grace is so come already as it shall be still coming more and more so long as Christs Disciples shall have need to pray that is till the fulness of glory in the second coming of Christ shall be revealed Then shall the Kingdom prayed for fully come 3. That God is he who doth promove bring on and perfect this kingdome Therefore must we say Thy Kingdome come 4. That od will have all his Disciples drawing at his royall and triumphing chariot by their prayers and saying Thy kingdom come From the third Petition we learn 1. That albeit God dwelleth in heaven and doth all his intended will yet men do not obey as they should his commanded wil. Therefore there is need in this respect still to pray Thy will be done 2. That the Saints must renounce obedience to their own will and to Satans will and to the will of men and must submit themselves absolutely to Gods will revealed by word or work saying Not mine but thy will be done 3. That it must be divine power which shall change mens hearts and frame them to the obedience of his will and to this end do we request him to subdue mens wils to his own saying Thy will be done 4. That God hath no work of sanctification to work upon any man but upon these only who are on the earth for they that are in heaven are perfected and else-where there is none whose will the Lord doth sanctifie Therefore do we pray only Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven 5. Albeit we do not attain unto perfection of Holiness in this life yet we must aim at it long and pray for it for our Lord teacheth us to pray That the will of God may be done i● earth as it is in heaven Ver. 11. Give us this day our daily bread From the fourth petition we learn 1. That whatsoever we make use of for our subsistence comprised here under bread must be sanctified unto us by prayer and God must be acknowledged in every meanest matter which concerns our bodily sustentation even to the least morsell of Daily Bread 2. That we live not mainly by bread but by Gods word and his powerfull blessing imported in Giving of bread 3. That how lawfully soever and deservedly at mens hands we get our bread yet in regard Gof od we deserve nothing but must have all of free bounty must beg of him daily to give us our daily bread 4. That we should not be anxious for to morrow nor for great allowance in the world sufficient for the day is the care of it self and we must be content to crave and to receive This day our daily bread 5. That as we pray not for the dead but onely with and for such as have need of Daily bread and are living on earth with us so should we be sensible of their necessities and pray for them as for ourselves saying Give us our bread Vers. 12. And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debters From the fifth Petition learn 1. That none of Christs Disciples are so fully sanctified in this life but sin will be found in them and that there is a necessity lying on us to acknowledg our sins 2. That every day in many things we● offend all and must confesse not only sin but sins 3. That howsoever we have right unto remission of sins in Christ Jesus yet we must seek to apply that our right unto our daily faults and beg the use of our right for applying of forgiveness 4. That our sins deserve due punishment even death which is a naturall merit of sin which doth oblige us unto the penalty for therefore sins here are called Debts 5. That the sin being forgiven the vindictive punishment is forgiven also for to the same sense are we directed to say Forgive us our debt and forgive us our sins Where-through it cometh to passe that there is no remission of sin and retaining of vindictive punishment but both the guilt and this sort of punishment are forgiven and taken away together 6. Wrongs done by others unto us do oblige the doers of injury to repair the wrong and so do make them not only debters unto God but also unto us therefore doth our Lord call such as have done wrong unto us Our debters 7. Though publick respects may move us to seek reparations of wrongs in the way of justice yet not only must we renounce private revenge of wrong done unto us but also forgive the same especially when the offender calleth for it at our hand for Christ presupposeth that he who seeks forgiveness of God doth also give forgiveness to men 8. It is an argument to perswade us of forgivenesse from God of our wrongs when we forgive men their wrongs done against us for Christ will have him who saith forgive us our trespasses to say also As we forgave these that trespasse against us Vers. 13. And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evill For thine is the kingdome and the power and the glory for ever Amen From the sixth petition learn 1. That when our sins are forgiven us we are in perill to be overcome of new again by the tempter Satan of which our weaknesse and Satans power craft and malice we should be so sensible as in fear to be insnared we should pray not to be led in Satans temptations 2. Because we have so oft yeelded unto Satans temptation and of our self we are so prone to be tempted and to be overcome of our own concupiscence that God justly may give us over unto Satans temptation Therefore it is necessary that we should request God not To lead us in his justice into temptation 3. If God for our tryall and further humiliation shall suffer us to be tempted we may with confidence pray and expect that we shall be delivered from that ill
are to be keeped and injoyed in heaven where all things are incorruptible and permanent and such as cannot be taken from us by fraud or violence where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt therefore seek not these things that are earthly but these things that are heavenly The fourth reason is a mans treasure takes his heart after it therefore covet not earthly things but heavenly that your hearts might be set on Heaven and not on earth for Where your treasure is there will your hearts be also Vers. 22. The light of the bodie is the eye If therfore thine eye be single thy whole body shall be full of light 23. But if thine eye be evil thy whole body shall be full of darnesse if therefore the light that is in thee be darknesse how great is that darknesse The fifth reason In generall termes tending to this much If your mind intend to treasure up heavenly things the whole course of your life will be lightsome holy and heavenly but if ye intend to treasure up earthly things then the whole course of your life will be earthly darke and unspeakably sinfull Therefore set not your selves to treasure up earthly things but heavenly rather This is imported in a similitude thus As the eye by its light is the directer of the whole body so the intention of a mans minde or heart by its light is the directer of the whole course and actions of a mans life In the similitude are holden forth to us these truths 1. That no lesse care should be had to have our judgement and intention sanctified then to have the eye of our body clear for as the eye is the light of the body so is the minde the heart and intention the light of a mans life 2. As when the eye of the body is clear the whole body is illuminate and well directed what to do So when the intention of the mind and heart which is the eye of the soul is single and set upon the heavenly treasure then the whole body of a mans conversation shall be well ordered and full of light to direct him in the way how to get the heavenly Treasure 3. As when the eye of the body is corrupt and ill disposed the whole body walketh in darknesse without direction So when the intention of a mans heart is not singly set on the heavenly Treasure but is evill and set on the things of the earth then the whole body of a mans course and actions is ful of darknesse that is of ignorance and miscarriage of sin and misery When the intention of a man which he setteth up as a mark to shoot at and useth as a light to direct him what means hee shall use is darknesse that is erroneous and sinful then unspeakable great is the darknesse errour and sinfulnesse of that mans course for If the light that is in thee be darknesse saith Christ how great is that darknesse 5. This general sentence may serve to loose a doubt about the lawfulnesse of making provision for a mans family and laying up for his children Thus if a mans intention be spirituall and singly set on God for the obtaining of a spirituall Treasure then shall his course be full of light and well directed how to do duty to his family and children but if under pretence of this lawfull care he shall make an idol of riches intending onely to abound in wealth to seek and lay up his treasure on earth then shall all that he doth in a lawfull calling be sinfull unto him his course shall be darknesse Vers. 24. No man can serve two masters for either he will hate the one and love the other or else he will hold to the one and despise the other Ye cannot serve God and Mammon A sixth reason under similitude of serving two masters No man can serve God and Mammon or worldly riches more then a man can serve two opposite masters Therefore beware to set your selves to lay up treasures in the earth but rather seek God and lay up your treasure in him To serve God is to give up a mans minde heart and whole man to know and do what God requires without care what shall be the consequences To serve Mammon is to give up a mans minde heart and indeavour to sinde out and follow all the wayes he can to increase riches whatsoever may come of it Hence learn 1. That the man who takes God to be his Master must do nothing but as God allows him neither in the matter of pleasure nor of profit nor of preferment nor in any other thing for This is to serve God as his Master 2. If the care or love of riches or any other thing draw away the minde or heart of a man from the love of God or from his obedience a man becometh the servant of Mammon or of that lust whereunto hee so gives obedience 3. Albeit men conceive they can well serve God and their lusts also yet it is impossible so to do for No man can serve two masters opposite such as is GOD and whatsoever thing doth come in competition with him for Ye cannot serve God and Mammon 4. That thing is a mans Master which the man being put to the tryall loveth most holdeth most unto and preferreth in competition If a man will rather offend God then lose riches pleasures or preferment when he must do the one then is the man not the servant of God but the servant of the other thing beside God for He loveth that other and holdeth unto it and preferreth it to God Verse 25. Therefore I say unto you Take no thought for your life what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink nor yet for your body what ye shall put on is not the life more then meat and the body then rayment A seventh reason disswading from coverousnesse drawn forth by consequence from the sixth reason It is not lawful to be anxious about things necessary as food or rayment therefore far lesse is it lawfull to be covetous of earthly treasure or of needlesse riches Hence learn 1. That albeit using of lawfull callings and ordinary means for food and rayment may stand with Gods service and his approbation yet taking thought for them or being anxious about the successe is unlawful and here forbidden as a mark of covetousness and too much affecting of the creature and of distrust in God for Take no thought for your life saith he This distrustful anxiety for food and rayment in time to come which is a branch of covetousness covered with the appearance of necessity our Lord refutes by eight reasons The first is God who hath given life which is more then food will take care to provide food for maintenance of life so long as he hath appointed life to continue and God who hath framed the body which is more worth then the rayment will also provide for a garment therefore anxious care for food and rayment is unlawfull which
Scriptures is first to make men disciples to Christ and then righteous in their conversation for This is the law and the prophets Ver. 13. Enter ye in at the strait gate for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction and many there be which go in thereat 14. Because strait is the gate and narrow is the way which leadeth unto life and few there be that find it The fourth head of doctrine concerning the difficulty of the way to heaven Doct. 1. Every man is travelling in the course of his life either unto life or to destruction there is not a third way beside the strait and wide gate 2. The gate which leadeth unto life is strait and the way narrow and full of difficulties to our corrupt nature but the way which leadeth unto destruction is broad and the gate wide without impediments a way not crossing mens corrupt lusts 3. Because of the easiness of the way to hell many go in thereat nothing fearing the issue but for the difficulty of the way to heaven few do find it few do walk in it 4. Christs Disciples having this straight-way revealed to them in the word should chuse rather to go along to life then go with the multitude unto destruction for Enter in at the straight gate saith our Lord for wide is the other Ver. 15. Beware of false prophets which come to you in sheeps clothing but inwardly they are ravening wolves 16. Ye shall know them by their fruits Do men gather grapes of thornes or figs of thistles The fifth head concerning false Prophets or false Teachers which either preach false doctrine or true doctrine in a corrupt manner and for wrong ends by whom the Lords people are in no small danger to be led away from the power of godlinesse unto the dead course of a powerlesse formality 2 Tim. 3.5 Of such Christ bids us beware saying Beware of false Prophets the reasons are three which yeeld so many doctrines The 1. They will ●ain themselves to be true Christians that they might find room amongst the sheep of Christ Therefore beware of them for They come to you saith he in sheeps cloathing 2. Inwardly and in effect such Teachers are not for saving but for destroying of soules for Inwardly they are ravening wolves 3. They cannot so lurk but ye may discern them by their false doctrine or corrupt handling of the truth or by their gracelesse conversation and their earthly wayes and ends Ye shall know them by their fruits saith he Therefore beware of them Ver. 17. Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evill fruit 18. A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit 19. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewen down and cast into the fire 20. Wherfore by their fruits ye shall know them He cleareth and confirmeth this third reason by a similitude from trees teaching us that as men gather not good fruits from Thorn and Thistles but good trees bear good fruit and cannot bear ill fruit as their kindly and ordinary birth and ill trees bear ill fruit and cannot bear good fruit as their kindly birth so true and false Teachers are to be known by their fruits Doct. 1. The Lord sealeth the honesty of faithful Teachers with a holy life and doth plague false Teachers with the out-breaking of their rottennesse 2 As destruction abideth the tree that beareth not good fruit and much more that which beareth ill fruit so destruction abideth the false Teacher for Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewen down Ver. 21. Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of heaven but he that doth the will of my Father which is in heaven The sixth and last head of Christs Sermon concerning the necessity of beleeving and obeying of his doctrine and putting it uprightly in practise which our Lord doth presse by three reasons The first is Not every one that esteemeth himself to be Christs servant and doth confesse him to be his Lord shall be saved but the man onely who putteth in practice Gods will Therefore it is necessary that faith and obedience of Christs doctrine be carefully practised Doct. 1. A man may professe himself a Christian and seem to be zealous in avowing Christ to be his Lord and yet be disobedient to the doctrine For Christs word doth import this that some may call him Lord Lord who do not his Fathers will 2. Professors of christianity without the practice of sound faith and repentance shall be excluded out of heaven for the sentence is cleer Not every one that saith to me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of heaven 3. Such as study to obey Gods will revealed in the Gospel that is to beleeve in the Son of God and to testifie their faith by a holy conversation shal be surely saved for He that doth the will of my Father which is in heaven shall enter into the Kingdome of heaven now the will of God revealed in the word is that he whom the law condemneth should flee to Christ Jesus by faith and study to bring forth the fruits of newnesse of life Ver. 22. Many wil say to me in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy name and in thy name have cast out divels and in thy name done many wonderfull work 23. And then wil I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye that work iniquity The second reason to this meaning Many conceive now that this plea of being Prophets and workers of miracles in my Name will be sufficient for their salvation in the day of judgment who then at that day will finde themselves disappointed of their hopes because they have not been workers of righteousnesse therefore reall obedience of my Doctrine is necessary Doctr. 1. There is a day of judgment appointed for all men when Christ shall sit as Judge for it is said Many shall come to me at that day and I shall say i.e. Give the Sentence 2. Many doe build hopes of heaven upon great gifts and imployments in the Ministry given to them with some successe who shall be rejected of Christ for Many will say to mee Have I not prophesied unto whom I will say Depart from me 3. All men had need to beware lest they deceive themselves in the matter of their own salvation when they hear that Preachers and Prophets and workers of miracles deceive themselves and may be destitute of saving faith and sound repentance which they do preach to others for it is said Many will say to me in that day We have prophesied 4. Such as Christ shall reject at the last day were never endued with saving grace or accounted by him for true B●leevers for Christ saith I will professe to them I never knew you that is I never approved you for any of my true
me ye that labour 4. Albeit a soul find nothing whereby to commend it selfe to Christ but a fruitlesse life and loathfom burthen of sin nothing but that which yeeldeth restlesse unquietnesse yet without exception of any person all such may come unto him for relief none of those who acknowledg their inability to help themselves are secluded There is no Bar to put back a soule from Christ which desires to come unto him which desires to beleeve in him and to have communion with him for he saith Come unto me all yee 5. Albeit there be no bar put to hinder any man from coming to Christ yet none wil come until they be sensible of a burden whereof they cannot be freed by any other meanes Therfore he speaketh expresly to such saying Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden not excluding luke-warm Laodiceans or any other who desire to be made sensible of sin who desire to repent who desire to beleeve in God and to fear God 6. Seeing all things are delivered unto Christ and all that have need are commanded to come to him it is a miserable and damnable folly to seek any thing belonging to righteousnesse and eternall life except in Christ Jesus only for he telleth us All things are delivered unto me and saith Come unto me 7. God can sanctifie the love of our selves so far as to make it a motive and allurement to draw us unto him for such as are unquiet about the condition of their soul or are burdened with any trouble which they are not able to bear have a promise of relief if they shall come unto him who can shew them the true cause of their trouble and the right outgate also for I will give you rest saith he Now rest is opposed to labour and burthens and so importeth ful relief from al the sin and misery which can trouble any man Ver. 29. Take my yoke upon you and learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart and ye shall find rest unto your soules The next exhortation teacheth us 1. To stay with Christ under his discipline after we are come unto him and so to joyn the study of obedience with faith the duties of faith and obedience must not be severed for he joyneth Come to me and take on my yoke 2. Albeit Christs commands be our true liberty yet in respect of the untowardnesse of our nature the tye of doing all holy duties belonging to sanctification of bearing the Lords chastisements and suffering persecution is a yoke wherein we have need to be bound Therfore saith he Take on my yoke 3. It is necessary that we willingly submit our selves to this yoke and burden how contrary soever it seem to our nature for Take ye up my yoke doth the word in the Originall bear or Lift it as it were upon your shoulders 4. When we have consented to submit to Christs yoke we have need as Disciples daily to learn how to bear it Therefore he commandeth saying Learn of me 5. As unto the right bearing of the yoke of Christ the vertues of humility and meekness are necessary so are they to be learned and had onely from Christ blessing unto us not onely his Doctrine but also his example for it is said Learn of me that I am meek and lowly now no command given unto him of the Father was grievous no suffering made him grudg no paines made him shrinke from his duty or to faint his plaints of his enemies and his answers unto them were full of meeknesse he stood not to abase himself for the Fathers glory and mens good and it is he who must give us grace to do so also 6. True rest unto the conscience is to be found in Christs satisfaction given to justice for us true peace in his service for he saith Come to me and ye shall find rest 7. It is sufficient in this life that we find rest to our souls albeit our bodies be troubled Therfore it is said Ye shall find rest to your souls No more is promised Ver. 30. For my yoke is easie and my burden is light Another motive to take on his yoke is My yoke is easie Hence learn 1. That albeit Christs Discipline and manner of exercising of his followers be a yoke and burden to our corrupt nature yet it is an easie yoke and a light burden to a soul seeking liberation from sin and seeking salvation through Christ Therefore saith he My yoke is easie c. Now it is called an easie yoke in comparison of the covenant of works wherein men want the help of a Mediator and are bound to do all in their own naturall strength but we have Christ to help us who worketh all our works in us and for us 2. It is an easie yoke in comparison of sin which maketh a man draw and bear his own ditty unto condemnation 3. Christs yoke is easie because albeit the ten commands renewed and repeated in the Gospel do require no lesse perfection to be aymed at in sincerity of obedience then under the covenant of works yet the cords to bind on the yoke are not terrour but love and that little which is done in faith and upright obedience is well accepted and much joy and peace much courage and comfort is bestowed on such as uprightly ayme and endeavour to obey the commands of God in Christ thus saith he My yoke is easie and my burden is light CHAP. XII There are three controversies between CHRIST and the Pharisees The first is about his Disciples their plucking of ears of corn to ver 10. The next about the healing of the withered arme of a lame man to ver 22. The third about the casting out of a divel to ver 46. After which we have his estimation of his carnall and spirituall kindred Ver. 1. AT that time Iesus went on the Sabbath day through the corn and his Disciples were an hungred and began to pluck the ears of corn and to eat IN the first controversie learn first That our Lord took much pains in going from place to place about what the Father had given him to do for even on the Sabbath he went from place to place Through the corn field 2. The work of the Ministry and attending on the Lord somtimes may be so urgent as his servants wil forget to provide their meat for here His Disciples were an hungred 3. God may put his chosen children to straits in this world and suffer them now and then to taste of want for his Disciples must for hunger at a time Pluck the ears of corn and eat them for bread Ver. 2. But when the Pharisees saw it they said unto him behold thy Disciples do that which is not lawful to do upon the Sabbath-day The Pharisees fish a fault where there was none and quarrell with Christ for his Disciples Doct. 1. It is no new thing to see men who are otherwise learned and are in account for their
Messiah by the resurrection from the dead and by his victory over the persecutions of his adversaries and this is another way of having the signe of the Prophet Ionah signes of both these sorts are proper to mis-beleevers Verse 41. The men of Niniveh shall rise in judgement with this generation and shall condemn it because they repented at the preaching of Ionas and behold a greater then Ionas is bere Christ after refusing to gi●e them a signe or to work any miracle at their pleasure certifieth them that they shall be condemned for their mis-belief by two witnesses The first witnesse is The men of Niniveh who repented at the preaching of Jonas whether this repentance was better then the repentance of Achab it skilleth not to dispute because presuppose it was no more then was in a naturall man upon the historicall beleeving of temporall judgement coming upon them like unto Achabs repentance yet it was more then these hard-hearted people did who were obstinate unbelievers and were neither moved with the preaching of mercy nor judgment Doct. 1. Any sort of repentance presuppose it be only temporary is better then obstinate unbelief and no sort of repentance for Ninivehs humiliation is better then the Jews hard-hearted carriage 2. There is more fruit of one Sermon to be expected from Pagans then of many Sermons from the abusers of Ordinances of Religion for Niniveh repenteth at one Sermon Judea repenteth not after hearing many 3. The sin of the Mis-beleever and his judgment is the greater by so much as the means of beleeving have been more frequently applyed and Christ hath shown himselfe more in the use of means for therefore was the condemnation of the Jewes unbeliefe the greater because Christ who was greater then Ionas was not beleeved after long preaching and miracles wrought Verse 42. The Queen of the South shall rise up in the judgement with this generation and shall condemne it for she came from the uttermost parts of the earth to heare the wisedome of Solomon and behold a greater then Solomon is here Another witness is the Queen of the South Doct. The Example of such as have taken paines to get knowledge or obtain any vertue whose names are recorded in Scripture must either be made use of unto imitation of their faith and diligence or else their example will serve to agredge sins unto deeper judgement for the Queen of the South shall rise in judgement against those that regard not the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Verse 43. When the unclean spirit is gone out of a man be walketh through dry places seeking rest and findeth none 44. Then he saith I will return into my house from whence I came out and when he is come he findeth it empty swept and garnished 45. Then goeth he and taketh with himself seven other spirits more wicked then himself and they enter in and dwel there and the last state of that man is worse then the first Even so shal it be also unto this generation The last answer serveth to shew them their own miserable condition and that by a parable of a supposed case of Satans being cast out of a man in respect of one sort of possession and coming back unto a worse and more dangerous sort of possession The scope of the parable●s to shew that this people by the●r refusing to receive the grace of God and to beleeve in Christ were in a seven-fold worse condition then if the Gospel had never been preached unto them for Christ by his doctrine had made them see the onely true way of right●ousnesse and eternall life and so in regard of the refutation of their former errour and removing the ignorance wherin they did formerly lye Satan was in some sort cast out but in respect of their not receiving Jesus Christ and his grace to dwel in their hearts by faith the divel had gotten a seven-fold stronger possession of them now then before From this parable we may learn 1. That Satan is an unclean spirit for so here is he called 2. He may be cast out of a man in some sort and yet the man be not renewed As for example He may be cast out of a bodily possession and the man remain unrenewed He may be cast out in regard of a mans outward polluted life as he was cast out of these who after abjuration of their ungodly life at their baptisme did returne again to their former filthinesse 2 Pet. 2. He may be cast out of a mans mind by refutation of his former errours and illumination of him by sound doctrine and yet the man may remain unrenewed such as was the casting of Satan out of this evil and adulterous generation 3. In case a man be not taken up by the spirit of grace in whatsoever other respect Satan is cast out of him he shall be more deeply possessed by him then before Verse 46. While be yet talked to the people behold his mother and his brethren stood without desiring to speake with him 47. Then one said unto him Behold thy mother and thy brethren stand without desiring to speak with thee Concerning the coming of Christs friends and kins folks unto him whatsoever was their errand their pretence is to speak with him but untimously do they call for conference while he is about another work Hence learn that Christ is indeed very man having kindly consanguinity with other men and naturall relations unto them grounded upon the verity of his humane nature for he hath Mother and brethren or Cousin germans Persons neare in blood unto him who are called in Scripture Brethren 2. The Virgin Mother was not so free of sin but she might and did fall in escapes as here in joining with the friends at least in an untimous troubling of Christs Sermon to say no more and preferring her own conference with him unto his fathers service which conference might have been delayed untill his teaching of the people had been ended and a more eminent work which was now in hand perfected Ver. 48. But he answered and said unto him that told him Who is my Mother and who are my brethren 49. And he stretched forth his hand toward his disciples and said Behold my mother and my brethren 50. For whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is in heaven the same is my brother and sister and mother From Christs answer learn 1. That respect unto kindred and friends must not be prejudiciall to any higher service of God for when Christs mother and friends called to speak with him while he is teaching he asked Who is my mother 2. Whosoever believeth in Christ and endeavours to do Gods will giveth reall demonstration of saving faith and may be assured of Christs love and estimation no lesse then if all the relations of Brother and Mother and Sister in one●vere put upon him for Whosoever shall do the will of my Father the same saith Christ is my Brother and Sister and Mother CHAP. XIII
seemed to have of common gifts means of salvation shall be taken from them so as they shall not reap eternall life thereby Ver. 13. Therefore speak I to them in Parables because they seeing see not and hearing they hear not neither do they understand From this ground that this multitude was reprobate our Lord giveth a reason of his speaking to them in parables Doct. 1. Some do see with their natural eyes Gods Works and wonders and do hear his Word also outwardly who do not by the spiritual eye of Faith perceive or take up the Lord's glory shining therin for Some in seeing see not in hearing hear not 2. Concerning such as God hath reprobate he will dispose so of the meanes of salvation toward them as they shall profit nothing by them unto salvation therefore saith he I speak to them in parables Ver. 14. And in them is fulfilled the prophesie of Esaias which saith By hearing ye shal hear and shal not understand and seeing ye shall see and shall not perceive Left they should have thought this an hard saying Christ sheweth that Isaias threatned the like against the wicked in his time and did prophesie of the righteous judgment of God in this sort to come upon the reprobate in Christ's time Hence learn 1. That the prime reason of the with-holding of saving grace from such as do perish is in Gods decree of reprobation for of the reprobate it may be said Though the Lords works be outwardly and in a common manner seen by them and his Word do sound among them and be outwardly or in a common manner heard by them yet this shall be without profit to them or use making of by them for Such hearing they hear and perceive not 2. When Gods judgment pronounced in Scripture hath taken hold of one fleece of wicked persons in one age it goeth on to be executed upon others after them of that same sort for the words of Isaiah spoken to the people in his own time are to be fulfilled even upon the wicked in Christs time some hundred years after Isaiah's prophesie and the same words are fulfilled in our time and shall take hold of the wicked in time to come Ver. 15. For this peoples heart is waxed grosse and their eares are dul of hearing and their eyes they have closed lest at any time they should see with their eyes and hear with their ears and should understand with their heart and should be converted and I should heal them The Lord sheweth the righteousness of God in execution of this decree of reprobation by this that there is in them a voluntary induration of heart going before the juridial induration inflicted upon them Hence learn 1. That beside the natural seneslesnesse of things spiritual and the natural ignorance and unbelief of the Gospel there is an affected voluntary blindnesse of mind and hardness of heart which men draw on by custome of sinning this is it he saith Their eyes have they closed 2. Where unto natural blindnesse and hardnesse of heart men superadde a wilfull blindnesse and hardnesse of heart it is justice with God to give them over to a judiciall blindnesse of mind and hardnesse of heart as the comparison of this place with that of Isaiah cha 6. giveth ground for here their voluntary blindness is set down They have closed their eyes there the judicial blindnesse and hardness is set down Shut their eyes make their heart fat 3. This plague is proper to the reprobat who God wil not save to whom God hath resolved to give no saving grace Lest he should heal them 4. whosoever get grace to turn fro their sins to repent to beleeve in Jesus Christ are not given over to a reprobate sense shal surely be saved For while he saith He wil not grant them grace to hear and understand that is to believe repent least they should be healed he importeth that if they did believe and repent they behoved undoubtedly to be healed the exercise of Faith and Repentance being infallibly marks of saving grace Ver. 16. B●● blessed are your eyes for they see and your eares for they hear 17 For verily I say unto you that many Prophets and righteous men have desired to see those things which ye see and have not seen them to hear those things which ye hear have not heard them By shewing the reprobation of this People Christ commendeth the estate of his Disciples Doct. 1. Such as have received grace to perceive salvation offered in Jesus Christ and to lay hold theron are truly blessed for Blessed are your eyes saith Christ for they see 2. The miserable condition of the reprobate and such as are given over to misbelief doth commend the blessed estate and condition of such as get grace to believe being compared therwith this is imported in But blessed are your eyes 3. The estate of the church after the manifestation of the Messiah in the flesh is more blessed than the condition of the church before Christ in respect of the grace of the Gospel now more cleerly proponed without shadows and figures and in this happiness the Apostles who conversed with Christ bodily justly have the first place Many Prophets and righteous men have desired to see what you see and have not seen them 4. Such as get a saving sight of Christ do earnestly desire to see more of him for Prophets and righteous men who beleeved in Christ to come ardently desired to see him in the flesh Ver. 18. Hear ye therefore the Parable of the Sower In the exposition of the Parable learn The Lord will teach his own the meaning of his Word so as they may be edified therby and what they do not understand at one time he will cause them to understand at another for Hear ye saith he to his disciples the parable of the sower Ver. 19. When any one heareth the word of the Kingdome and understandeth it not then cometh the wicked one and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart this is be which received seed by the way side From the exposition of the seed sown by the way side learn 1. That the Gospel is the word of the kingdome of Heaven and other words in comparison are to smal effect but this word sheweth the way and giveth right unto the Kingdome giveth earnest and a beginning of the Kingdome of Heaven therefore it is called The word of the kingdome 2. Satan is busie waiting on where the word is preached to marr the hearing or understanding and believing of it for When one heareth that wicked one cometh 3. Where men understand not the Gospel preached and are not made sensible by the preaching of it of their own sinfulnesse and danger on the one hand and of the grace of God offered in Christ to relieve them on the other hand the word is lost unto them for The wicked one catcheth away that which was sown Ver. 20. But he that
is made a spectacle to his foes Ver. 12. And his disciples came and took up his body and buried it and went and told Iesus From the history of Johns buriall Learn 1. That the faithful must not be ashamed at the suffering of the Saints but testifie their respect to the living and to the dead for Iohns disciples came and buried Iohns body 2. When Pastors are cut off men must resort to the chiefe shepherd so much the more at the Disciples of John came to Christ and told him of Iohns death Verse 13. When Iesus heard of it he departed thence by ship into a desert place apart and when the people had heard thereof they followed him one foot out of the Cities 14. And Iesus went forth and saw a great multitude and was moved with compassion toward them and he healed their 〈◊〉 From the history of Christs departure Learn 1. That Jesus hath reason to depart from the place where any of his servants are slain and others of them are in danger for When he heard this he departed 2. Such as have need of Christ wil find him out and follow after him refusing no travel nor pains to seek him for The people follow him to a desert place 3. Christ is compassionate toward such as seek him and of such as seek he will put none away the needy and sick find health from him for here it is said He was moved with compassion and healed the sick which followed him Ver. 15. And when it was evening his disciples came to him saying This is a desert place and the time is now past send the multitude away that they may go into the villages and buy themselves victuals 16. But Iesus said unto them They need not depart give them to eat 17. And they say unto him We have here but five loaves and two fishes 18. He said Bring them hither to me 19. And he commanded the multitude to sit down on the grasse took the five loaves and the two fishes and looking up to heaven he blessed and brake and gave the loaves to his disciples and the disciples to the multitude 20. And they did all eat and were filled and they tooke up of the fragments that remained twelve baskets full 21. And they that had eaten were about five thousand men beside women and children Here is the miracle of the loaves occasioned by the Disciples care to have the multitude dismissed timously Doct. 1. It is wisdom to have regard unto peoples infirmity and what they may endure in attendance of divine worship as The Disciples here have a care of the peoples want of food 2. If God cal for extraordinary attendance he wil furnish ability and provide for the bodies of such as prefer the feeding of their soules to the refreshing of their bodies providing they tempt not God herein by neglecting wilfully ordinary means Therefore Jesus saith They need not depart give ye them to eat 3. Where God giveth a call to his servants to feed people they must look to himself for ability and not be discouraged for the little furniture which they conceive they have for here the Disciples have no more but five loaves and two fishes and Christ contenteth himself with them Bring them to me saith he 4. It is good in an ordinary call unto any work to look to ordinary means as the disciples here not apprehending as yet any more then the ordinary do make objection that they have but five loaves and two fishes 5. The Lord will have our weaknesse for his work to beseen to the end his power may the more appear as here the paucity of loaves and fishes must first be seen ere he work the work 6. In working of miracles our Lord did so dispose of all circumstances as might most profit the people and glorifie the Father in whose name and power as being one with the Father he did the work as here He ordereth the people in their places looketh to Heaven and powerfully blesseth their provision that there might be bread and fish enough by his divine operation 7. Christs Ministers shall lose nothing in distributing their gifts unto the feeding of his people for the Disciples after more then five thousand have eaten of their few loaves do take up twelve baskets full a great deal more then they had laid down Ver. 22. And straightway Iesus constrained his disciples to get into a ship and to go before him unto the other side while he sent the multitudes away 23. And when he had sent the multitudes away he went up into a mountain apart to pray and when the evening was come he was there alone 24. But the ship was now in the midst of the sea tossed with waves for the wind was contrary Another miracle tending to shew that as Christ is Lord of the earth and lives of the creatures therein so he is Lord also of the sea and winds wherein he exerciseth his Disciples with a plece of trouble to make them profit in the knowledg of his spirituall Kingdom The reasons of this short dispatch and constraining of the disciples to go to sea without his bodily presence may be seen in Ioh. 6. and Mark 6. Here it is sufficient to learn 1. That we should be sure of an urgent calling before we undertake a hazardous voyage for Iesus constrained his disciples to go into a ship 2. Christ wil not have men diverted from their places and callings under pretence of waiting on him nor to expect to live by miraculous means but to attend upon the ordinary blessing of each mans vocation and therfore he sendeth the multitude away 3. Christ albeit the Son of God yet because he had taken on our nature and the office of Mediator therein upon all occasions of retyring he prayeth and intercedeth with God for his people He went and prayed apart 4. When the Godly are in trouble and under trials the Mediator is praying for their upholding when the disciples go to sea Christ goeth to the Mount to pray 5. Christs Disciples must be in trouble and hazards when others are at ease as here it fareth with these Disciples 6. Albeit men have Christs warrant for their voyage yet are they not exempted from trouble danger therein for here is an instance 7. Men may have fair wheather in the beginning of a work and danger and trouble may be kept back till they be so far ingaged as it is more safe for them to go forward then to return so fareth it here with the Disciples for The storm ariseth when they are in the midst of the sea Ver. 25. And in the fourth watch of the night Iesus went unto them walking on the sea 26. And when the Disciples saw him walking on the sea they were troubled saying it is a spirit and they cryed out for fear 27. But straightway Iesus spake unto them saying Be of good cheer it is I be not afraid Christ doth not stay all night from them
instructed about the person and office of Christ he foretelleth his suffering death and resurrection to acquaint them with the crosse and so to prevent their stumbling at his sufferings Hence learn 1. Our Lord was not ignorant what he was to suffer ere it came nor ignorant of the out-gate appointed for him how he should be killed and raised again 2. Whoso would look rightly on Christs sufferings must also look unto his out-gate and victory over the same he must look on his raising as well as his killing for he telleth them He must be killed and raised the third day Verse 22. Then Peter tooke him and began to rebuke him saying Be it far from thee Lord this shall not be unto thee Peter out of his carnall wisdom rashly forbiddeth Christ to suffer himself to be so used H●nce learn 1. That if the crosse be looked unto without looking to the Appointer of it the use end and outgate of it men will never consent that either they or such as they love should bear it therefore saith Peter Far it be from thee Lord. 2. Naturall wit is very confident and presumptuous to judge of Gods matters for Peter leaning unto it dare take upon him to rebuke Christ. 3. Yea if a man lean unto and follow his own naturall wit and affection he may be led to oppose God and the worke of his own Salvation for This shall not be unto thee Lord saith Peter Ver. 23. But he turned and said unto Peter Get thee behind ●e Satan thou art an offence unto me for thou savourest not the thing● that be of God but those that be of man In Christs reproof given to Peter learn 1. Our Lord so loved to work out our redemption that he could not endure to be any way hindred therefore saith he Get thee behind me 2. What Satan cannot do immediately he will assay to do it by instruments Christ findeth him out here saying Get thee behinde me Satan 3. Naturally a man savoureth not thing● spirituall neither knoweth them nor loveth them if they be told him Therefore saith he Thou savourest not the things of Go● 4. We should in temptations beware of Satan as our pany whoever be the instrument and the more impudently we be tempted unto sin wo should the more stoutly and peremptorily resist it as Christ did saying Get thee behinde me Satan 5. After a man hath been much lifted up in consolation be may readily miscarry and fall in some offence as Peters case is here compared with ver 16.6 A man may be a stumbling block unto others albeit he do not intend it for to Peter it is said Thou art an offence 7. Apparent good counsell from a carnall friend may readily carry some temptation in the bosome of it as Peters counsell here doth and sin will serve Satans tur●● where ever he find it whether in the godly or wicked for Peters corruption here is Satans instrument fit enough for the time Ver. 24. Then said Iesus unto his disciples If any man will come after me let him deny himselfe and take up his crosse and follow me Hereupon our Lord takes occasion to teach all his followers a necessity of bearing the cross Hence learn 1. That Christ ●o●● that he was to be crucified and resolved to suffer the shame full death of the crosse before it came Therefore calls he his servants suffering fo him by the name of the Crosse that he mig●● teach them not to be ashamed of his manner of death when i● should come 2. Christs followers must resolve to be disclaimed of him as one of his followers except they will resolve to be●● his crosse Therefore saith he If any man will follow me L●● him take up his Crosse. 3. Love to a man● own life estimation of his wit and worth in a word a mans own self is a bundle of all sort of idols which we must either renounce and be content to have them mortified or else we cannot follow Christ therefore saith he Let him deny himself This self-denyall the Lord hath appointed to be helped forward by a crosse which God will not leave to our choice but will fit it for every man and lay it before him or upon him and wil have every man humbly to stoop and submit and take it on and bear it out constantly so long as the Lord thinks fit to let ●●ly for Let him saith he deny himself and take up his crosse 5. This crosse must not make a man forsake to follow Christ but rather the man under the crosse must draw the more ne●r unto Christ and follow him that he may be helped to bear his cross and so attain to self-denyall more and more therefore he saith Take up and follow me 6. As the crosse doth force a man to deny himself for it faileth not to take from him and to lay upon him what he would not so self-denyall boweth the back to take up and bear the crosse kindly therefore said he Let him deny himself and take up his crosse Ver. 25. For whosoever will save his life shall lose it and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall finde it The reasons to move us so to do are seven The first reason is the eschewing of the crosse to save your life is the very way to lose your life therefore resolve to bear the crosse for Whosoever will save his life saith he shall lose it A second reason to resolve to lose thy life for my sake is the way to keep it therefore resolve to bear the crosse Hence learn 1. That the love of this temporall life maketh men deny Christ therefore is it that Christ will have a man resolving about this life 2. Whosoever will save his life by denying Christ is a great fool for he loseth that eternally which he seeketh by eschewing of Christs crosse to save for a time for Whosoever will save his life saith he shall lose it 3. To lay our reckoning to lose life and al rather then deny Christ or any point of his truth is our greatest wisdom He who maketh least account of his life and of all things belonging thereto in comparison of serving and confessing Christ is a wise man for he gaineth for ever in effect that which he hazards temporally for Christ for Whosoever saith he will lose his life for my sake shall finde it Ver. 26. For what is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul A third reason is He that refuseth to bear my crosse in hope to gain thereby shall be disappointed for he shall lose his own soul and so can gain nothing though he seem to gain a world therefore resolve to bear my crosse Doct. 1. When the cause of Christ cannot be maintained without the crosse be born and hope is offered of worldly gain also if a man shall fall off from Christs cause it is a sore
together his elect from the four windes from one end of heaven to the other The fifth signe There shall be a great sound of a trumpet as it were summoning all to compear before the Tribunall of Christ unto judgement which teacheth us That the Day of Judgement shall be no lesse terrible th●n the Day of Promulgation of the Law upon Mount Sinai as for other reasons so for this that as there was an audible Trumpet which sounded at the giving out of the Law so 〈◊〉 there be an audible Sound of a Trumpet at the Day of judging Men for transgressing the Law The sixth signe or evidence of Christ's coming is That the Elect being raised from death or in stead of death changed from this mortall life unto the estate of Immortality the Angels shall be set on work to gather them from all the quarters of the earth whence the winds do blow or from the utmost pa●e● of the earth where the sight of the Heavens have an end Doct. Albet the Elect be now fat scattered one from another in sundry respects yet then shall they all meet together not one shal be in lacking for the Angels shall gather Christ's Elect in unto him from one end of heaven unto another Ver. 32. Now learn a parable of the fig-tree● When 〈◊〉 branch is ●et tender and putteth forth leaves ye know that Summer is high 33. So likewise ye when ye shall see all t●●●e things know was it is near even at the doors 34. Verily I say unto you this generation shall not passe will all these things be fulfilled 35. Heaven and earth shall passe away but my words shall not passe away After he hath given the signes of the destruction of Jerusalem and of his own second coming he confirmed them in the certainty of the coming of both and draweth all this doctrine to good use and first he certifie●h them of the destruction of the Temple under the parable of a fig-tree that when the fig-tree beginneth to bud Summer is near So when they should see the Jews d●ting on false Christs heark●●ing to false prophets persecuting the preachers of the Gospel growing tumultuous and seditious under hopes of a bodily liberation from the yoke of the Romans rumours of wars arising Armies coming in upon Judea then let them perswade themselves saith he When these signs should appear judgment was at the door upon that Nation and that both these signes and the destruction of Jerusalem with the Temple should all come to passe in the dayes of them that were then living vers 33 34 and he forbiddeth them to doubt hereof because his words were more firm then heaven or earth vers 35. And so much for the destruction of the Temple and the signes and time therof Doct. 1. When we see some part of the truth of God come to passe in our sight it should help us to beleeve and expect the fulfilling of the rest as When we see the trees bud we know that Summer is near 2. It is hard to our misbeleeving hearts to give that credit to Christs words whereof they are worthy but by so much more is our Lords love to us and care of us to be praised and admired that he by so many meanes goeth about to confirm and perswade us therfore saith he Verily I say unto you c. 3. Whatsoever Christ doth say shal be or shal not be his word is more firm then the Fabrick of heaven and earth for these shal be altered but the Lords word is solid and endureth for ever Heaven and earth shal pass rather saith he c. Ver. 36. But of that day and hour knoweth no man no not the Angels in heaven but my Father only Concerning the precise time of his second coming he saith that neither man nor Angel knoweth but only the Father wherby he doth not exclude the rest of the persons of the God-head but only the creatures Doct. 1. The peremptory time of the day of judgement ●nd keepeth it to himself secret and will not have it particularly known and therefore it should not be narrowly pryed into for Of this day and hour knoweth no man c. 2. All things are not revealed neither to the Angels nor to men but so much at may edifie the Church and as concerneth us to know for My Father only knoweth saith he Ver. 37. But as the dayes of Noah were so shall also the coming of the Son of man be 38. For as in the dayes that were before the flood they were eating and drinking marrying and giving in marriage untill the day that Noah entred into the Ark. 39. And knew not untill the flood came and tooke them all away so also shall the coming of the Son of man be Our Lord draweth this doctrine unto use to stir us up unto watchfulness and to this end he setteth before us seven motives the first motive is There is no small hazard in case men be sound secure and not watching when Christ cometh therefore watchfulnesse is necessary Doct. 1. It is safer to make ready for the day of judgment and to watch lest we be surprised then to be curious to know the particular time of it for As the dayes of Noah were c. 2. As the old world did not beleeve judgement coming albeit forewarned by Noah that it was coming so fares ●● with the world and will be so with the multitude of the world till the day of judgment for As in the dayes of Noah 3. When men beleeve not things concerning the day of judgement and another life no wonder they be given over unto and drowned in the matters of this life for They were eating c. that is This and the like was al their care 4. Whatsoever truth men do not beleeve when it is told them that they do not rightly know though they conceive the meaning of the word told them for it is said They knew not 5. Who so beleeve not judgment when it is threatned shall feele judgement and be taken away with it when it cometh for The flood came and tooke them all away Ver. 40. Then shall two be in the field the one shall be taken and the other left 41. Two women shal be grinding at the mil the one shal be taken and the other left This second motive of watchfulnesse teaching that at the day of judgement they who have lived in near fellowship shal be shed one from another as for example they who had been joyned in one work Some in the field some in the mi● 2. The meanest degree of people shall be taken notice of Even women labourers in the field grinding at the mill 3. Judgement shall passe exceeding exactly to take one and leave another to pull up one to meet Christ in the clouds and leave another to be punished with the damned Therefore watchfulnesse is necessary Ver. 42. Watch therefore for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come The third motive teaching
the world Ver. 35. For I was an hungred and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink I was a stranger and ye took me in 36. Naked and ye clothed me I was sick and ye visited me I was in prison and ye came unto me The manner of judging of those who are of the visible Church where mainly intended as the sentence of Absolution and the sentence of Condemnation describing the parties do impo●t ● for this concerneth us most who are members of the visible Kirk to take heed unto and to make use of it In these words our Lord doth prove the Elect to be blessed and destinate unto the inheritance of Heaven by the evidence of the fruits of their faith toward himselfe Doct. 1. The judgment of Jesus Christ shall be pronounced upon men to whom the Gospel hath come acording to the evidence of their affection towards him and 〈◊〉 works specially as they stand in relation to Christ shall be then brought forth to bear witnesse whether they have been believers or not whether blessed of the Father or not for he saith here Ye fed me ●lad me 2. The godly having their sins forgiven them in this World there shall be no mention made then of what ill was done by them and repented of but only of what good they did as here Ye clad me fed me visited me doth shew 3. Christ is so nearly conjoyned with his faithfull servants the Ministers of the Gospel and with every faithfull person that in all their afflictions he accounteth himself afflicted and hung●y thirsty sick and in prison when any of his own are in that condition for I was an hungred c. saith he 4 Love to Christ's people especially manifested in reall ●eeds of charity are true marks of faith in Christ and of election unto eternal life as here appeareth 5. Even A visit performed unto any for Christ's cause shall be taken notice o● and rewarded by Christ for Ye visited me is reckoned up among other effects of love Ver. 37. Then shall the righteous answer him saying Lord whe● saw we thee an hungred and fed thee or thirsty and gave thee drink 38. When saw we thee a stranger and took thee in or naked and clothed thee 39. Or when saw we thee sick or in prison and came unto thee This forme of speech is used by Christ to shew us that the righteous and such as are justified by faith shal wonder at their works which they in their life time justly esteemed little of and had no confidence in should be so much taken notice of and rewarded so as at the last day they shall perceive as also they shall wonder that Christ findeth himselfe so much concerned in the works of love discharged to his children for his sake this wondering is imported and expressed in this interrogation When saw we thee an hungred c. Ver. 40. And the King shall answer and say unto them Verily I say unto you in as much as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren ye have done it unto me In Christ's answer learn 1. That whosoever have believed in the Messiah from the beginning of the World are accounted of by him as Brethren and sisters and he will not be ashamed to point them forth and avow them his brethren yea he shall not be ashamed to call the least of them his brethren and to esteem of the least courtesie done or kindnesse shewn to the least of them as if it had been done to himselfe 2. Howsoever we can hardly believe this yet he will have us assured of the truth hereof for to assure us Verily it is so saith he Ver. 41. Then shall he say also unto them upon the left hand Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels After the absolution of the Faithfull the wicked shall receive the sentence of condemnation Doct. 1. Such as were never brought unto the sense of the curse deserved for their sins and made to flie unto Christ Jesus to be delivered from the curse shall finde the curse of God cleave fast to them in the last day then shall they be called Ye cursed 2. Such as did not in their life time seek communion with God in Christ shall be separate and chased out of his sight with a fearfull Depart ye 3. There is not part to go unto save hell for them whom Christ as Judge at the day of judgment commandeth to depart Therefore saith he Depart ye into everlasting fire 4. The pain of hell is most horrible for in respect of extremity of pain it is called Fire and for the indurance it is without Ending Therefore saith he Depart ye into everlasting Fire 5. Satan the prince of unclean spirits and all the apostate angels with him and all the wicked of the world who have served Satan by their ill deeds shall be tormented together for it shall be said to them Depart ye into the fire prepared for the divel and his angels 6. No question is to be made of the execution and manner of their torment for it is ready prepared Depart ye into the fire prepared saith he that is Into the fore-devised most extream pain that can be imagined for tormenting of spirits or bodies Ver. 42. For I was an hungred and ye gave me no meat I was thirsty and ye gave me no drink 43. I was a stranger and ye took me not in naked and ye clothed me not sick and in prison and ye visited me not In the reason of their condemnation Learn 1. That the unrepented ill deeds of the wicked and namely their mis-regarding of the Messiah Christ in his Person and Members shall prove the pretence to be just for You did not so and so to me saith he 2. The omission of good deeds will serve sufficiently for a ditty against the wicked for Ye fed me not clothed me not c. 3. The common fault of all the wicked shall be found want of love to Christ and his members for because they did not cherish such as did believe in Christ it shall be said to them Ye did it not to me and here it appeareth that all his processe concerneth them especially to whom the Gospel cometh for unto them to whom the Gospel never came this cannot be said and therefore we have not to search any further of the day of judgement then what doth concern our selves and what we may make use of Ver. 44. Then shall they also answer him saying Lord when saw we thee and hungred or athirst or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison and did not minister unto thee 45. Then shall be answer them saying Verily I say unto you in as much as ye did it not to one of the least of these ye did it not to m● 46. And these shall go away into everlasting punishment but the righteous into life eternall In the answer which
the old church and new to be one in him and the Sacraments of both to have himself for their signification for the Sacrament began as They were eating that is sitting s●ill at table and the Supper not closed 2. For the nature of the action it is required there be a Table prepared and Elements ready to be made use of For the first Supper which is our patern was celebrated at the same Table whereat the Passeover was celebrated wherupon there were yet remaining Elements for eating for this much is imported in As they were eating 3. It is requisite also that the Minister of the Gospel and his stock so many of them as may communicate together at one Table at once be assembled together and joyntly set down together for celebration of this holy Feast for so was it in the patern As they were eating they that is Christ as minister and his disciples as the flock 4. The fittest posture of the Communicants in the action of this holy Feasting is social sitting together at the Lords Table for this was the behaviour of the first communicants the Lord began to give the Sacrament As they were eating that is as they yet continued sitting together socially at the Table materials fo● eating not being removed da●ing which time men are said to be eating 5. The Elements of this holy Feast are only bread and wine for Christ took bread and 〈◊〉 cup. 6. The part of the Minister is to take the Elements and by the word of Institution and Prayer to sanctifie separate and appoint them for this holy and sacramental use so much of them and in so far as they shall be imployed by the communicants for Christ blessed the bread blessed the cup and gave tha●●s to the Father 7. The part of the Minister also is to break the bread and give it unto the community of the Communicants with a command unto them in common or in the plural number to take the bread and eat it for Christ brake the bread and gave it to his disciples saying Take ye eat ye 8. It is the part of the Minister to expo●e and declare with authority in the Lords Name what this Bread thus blessed thus broken thus given and taken doth signifie exhibit and seal up by Christs appointment unto the beleeving communicant to wit that This bread is Christs body which speech is not to be understood physically nor miraculously but judicially that is to say in the sense that civil judgement maketh the instruments of security of any thing to be called by the name of it and holden in law for it and therfore as the instrumental elements wherby men are infeoff'd in any house or land or rent being orderly given and taken are by the appointment of mens law the very house or land or rent really and truly in law made sure to the receiver for all lawfull and profitable effects before the Barre of civil Justice so this bread thus given and thus taken is by the institution and appointment of divine Ordinance in a judicial sense the very body of Christ suffering judicially and truly or really in divine Law made sure to the receiver for all profitable effects before the Bar of divine Justice and as the instrumental Elements of seising a man in a house or land or rent such as are for example cause a piece of earth or a stone or a staffe or a penny orderly given and taken do signifie exhibit and confirme in law a mans right and title unto such a house or land or rent more strongly then if a man did take the house or land physically in his armes if it were possible So this bread by Divine Ordinance doth signifie exhibit and and confirme the Beleevers right and title unto Christs body as suffering for the beleevers redemption more certainly and surely then if Christs body suffering were physically imbraced by him in his armes if it were possible and therefore as the instrumental elements of civill inseoffment in the termes of humane ordinance and institution are rightly called by the name of the lands disponed so the Sacramentall element of bread is rightly called Christs body disponed in the termes of Divine Ordinance and institution which appointeth hereby right to be given unto us unto Christs body as suffering for our redemption 9. To assure us of ful satisfaction and compleat furniture for eternall life Christ our Lord hath not only taken bread in the Sacrament but also hath instituted a cup that is both meat and drink for certifying us that we shall have compleat nourishment in him commanding the community of the Beleevers or communicants in the plurall number to drink therof for He also took the cup and gave thanks and gave it to them saying Drink ye al of it 10. As it is necessary that the people receive the sacramental bread with the exposition and declaration in the Lords Name of what it giveth them right unto by Divine Institution so it is also necessary that the people receive all of them the Sacramentall Cup with declaration of what it giveth them right unto by Christ's Ordinance for this cup or wine in the cup is my blood saith the Lord to wit Appointed of me judicially to make you truely or really sure of your right unto my death and the blood shed and unto all benefits bought thereof 11. There is a Covenant of Redemption past between the Father and Mediatour Christ wherein Christ was bound to lay down his life by the shedding of his blood to purchase to the Redeemed remission of sins This is impo●ted in the words of The blood of the Covenant for the remission of sins shewing that the Son had before promised to pour out his blood for purchasing remission and the Father had granted remission upon this condition 12. Christ did make his Testament before his death and left remission of sins in legacy to his redeemed people namely to believing Communicants This is imported in the words of a Testament for remission of sins 13. Christ did make his Testament two wayes one in typicall promises under the Law before he came in the flesh and so also in types and figures he died as it were and was the Lamb slain from the beginning of the World Again He made his Testament after his Incarnation in plain and clear terms after which he fulfilled the types of his death and actually laid down his life for his Redeemed People This is imported in the words New Testament is my blood shed Presupposing an Old Testament in the blood of typicall lambs and other sacrifices 14. Conforme to this two-fold manner of making of a Testament there was also a two-fold manner of making of a Covenant of Grace between God and the Church in her head Christ one called An Old Covenant before he came of typicall promises painfull and chargeable rites and harder conditions to the externall Beholder another after his Incarnation called A New Covenant of better promises and
more comfortable conditions because now the dimnesse of the shadow is removed the yoke of the ceremonies is broken and the substance of the covenant is more clearly seen and this is imported in the word of new Covenant for the word in the original which signifieth Testament signifieth also Covenant and is indifferently used for either for the Testament and Covenant is much of the same articles to and with the same persons 15. The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is a seal of ●he new covenant of Righteousnesse● and eternal life by faith in Jesus Christ the Redeemer this is imported in the words This cup is my bloud of the new covenant that is It is the seal of the new covenant wherby I make you sure ●ight unto my bloud shed for remission of sins 16. By the new covenant of righteousness and life through faith in Christ sealed in the Sacrament the believe● getteth right unto the covenant of redemption made between God and Christ to the behove of the redeemed this is imported in the words of Testament or covenant of bloud shed to satisfie the Father for many for the remis●ion of sins Ver. 29. But I say unto you I wil not drink henceforth of this fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new with you in my Fathers kingdom That our Lord may put upon his disciples the impressio● of his death shortly to follow and so both ●ngraft the doctrine of the Sacrament more deeply in them and prepare them the better for his death he sheweth them that this was the last draught of wine he was to take in a Sacramental way with them and that the time was coming when he and his discipl●s should in Heaven together he partakers of the joy and comfort signified by this Sacramental wine which he calleth The drinking of it new or in the newnesse of the Spirit and not in the oldnesse of the letter for the extern●l Sacrament and Sacramental Elements are at the last to be abolished as old But ●he joy and Life and Honour signified by the Sacramental Participation of them shal never be abolished shal never wax old but shall be fresh and new for ever Doc. 1. Our Lord beside all other relations which he hath to the Sacrament as the Institutor thereof the End therof the Thing signified therby the Minister in the first celebration thereof is also ● Fellow-bangu●ter and communi●●● with us in his own ●ay for he did drink of the Sacramental wine as it signified communion of life and joy with us in Heaven I wil not drink henceforth of the fruit of the Vine until I drink it new with you c. 2. Whatsoever change it put upon the wine in the Sacrament by instituting that it should signifie and seal up spiritual life and joy yet alter the sanctifying of it and in the time of drinking of it by the communic●nts it ●emaineth Wine in the own natural properties without being 〈◊〉 ●tia● for I wil not saith he drink of the fruit of the Vine henceforth 3. The drinking of the Sacramental wine is a sign and pledge of our spirituall and new communion in life and joy in the Kingdome of Heaven for Christ expoundeth it saying Untill the Day that I shal drink it new with you in the Kingdom of my Father 4. Christ will not be content to be without his disciples in Heaven for I wil drink it new with you in the kingdom of my Father saith he Ver. 30. And when they had sung an hymn they went out into the mount of Olives This is the close of the whole action Doc. 1. It is fit that God be glorified in the Assembly of the church by singing of Psalms and in particular when the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is celebrate for They did sing a hymn 2. How sad hours soever the Lord send unto us it is our part alwayes to sing his praises for the disciples albeit they all knew that our Lord was presently to suffer yet They did sing unto God an hymn Ver. 31. Then saith Iesus unto them All ye shal be offended because of me this night for it is written I wil smite the shepherd and the sheep of the flock shal be scattered abroad 32. But after I am risen again I will go before you into Galilee Christ foretelleth his disciples of their stumbling at his sufferings and denying of him that night according as was foretold Zach. 13.7 and that he would rise again from death and would gather them unto him and meet them in Galilee whether they were to fly yea and that he should be there before them Doc. 1. The afflictions for the Gospel may be such as the stoutest disciples may stumble at them and fall at a time for All ye shal be offended because of me saith he 2. The visibility of the church is not such but that possibly open profession of the Gospel and open communion of Saints may be interrupted by persecution for it is written I wil smite the Shepherd and the Sheep of the flock shal be scattered abroad 3. Christ shall be victorious over the power of persecuters and after a scattering he will gather unto himself again the upright in heart He giveth ground to us for so much saying After I am risen again I wil go before you into Galilee Ver. 33. Peter answered and said unto him Though all men shall be offended because of thee yet will I never be offended 34. Iesus said unto him Verily I say unto thee that this night before the cock crow thou shalt deny me thrice 35. Peter said unto him Though I should dy with thee yet wil I not deny thee likewise also said all the disciples Honest Peter cannot believe such weakness at least in him self and therfore albeit forwarned the second time he speaketh stou●ly and so do the rest of the disciples also Doct. 1. Unexpert christians can hardly believe themselves to be so weak and sinful as the Lordsword sheweth them to be but so much the more as they have an honest purpose to stand they have fleshly confidence in their own strength and do assure themselves that they shal stand in all assays howsoever others fal beside them Therfore is it that Peter saith Though all men should be offended yet not I although I should dy I wil not deny thee and so also do the rest say 2. He that trusteth most to his own strength is nearest unto the most fearful fal Therfore it is said to Peter Ere the cock crow thou shalt deny me thrice Ver. 36. Then cometh Iesus with them unto a place called Gethsemane and saith unto the disciples Sit ye here while I go and pray yonder Our Lordslast sufferings may be for memories cause distinguished by the places wherin He suffered First In the Garden on moun● Olives to ver 57. and next in C●iphas hall to the end of this chapter Our Lord taketh his eleven trusty Disciples with him into the Garden
the governour said Why What evill hath he done But they cried out the more saying Let him be crucified The people choose Barrabbas and refuse Christ by their rulers perswasion Doct. 1. Wicked men have a greater hatred against Christ then against the most vitious amongst them as here they ask Barrabbas to be saved and seek that Christ may be destroyed 2. Wo to the people when their leaders are corrupt for then shall they be tempted by wicked counsel and wo unto them yet more if they follow their wicked directions for so might they be led with these cursed Jewes to preserve Barrabbas and destroy Christ. 3. Halfe friendship lake warme affection toward Christ wily-working for him so as men who are Christs adversaries may be pleased also may well shew the righteousnesse of Christs cause but cannot deliver him or his servants from suffering nor exempt the cold-rise friend from sin therfore either must a man be a right down friend plain and frank for Christ or nothing Pilates wiles striving to save Christ and to please the people also do not serve the turn but do rather ensnare him and inrage Christ's adversaries the more for They cryed out the more Let him be crucified Ver. 24. When Pilate saw that he could prevail nothing but that rather a tumult was made he took water and washed his hands before the multitude saying I am innocent of the blood of this just person see ye to it Pilat overcome with the temptation of pleasing the People first absolveth Christ and then yeildeth him over to the fury of his adversaries and will have them only to be guilty of his death Doct. 1. He that is not resolute to resist sin upon all hazards will yeild to it at last as Pilat doth here 2. Ignorant men are easily deceived counting themselvs free of such sins as men or inconveniencies from men do presse them unto as Pilat is here for because the people made a tumult he washeth his hands and saith I am innocent of the blood of this just person 3. Whatsoever be the fault of instruments in a wicked deed the prime authours and instigatours have the chief guiltinesse therefore not without ground saith Pilate to the Jews See you to it Ver. 25. Then answered all the people and said His blood be on us and on our children The mad people deluded by their leaders take on them the guilt without fear Doct. The stupidity of a misled conscience is fearfull when it is most deep in guiltinesse it dare defie Gods Justice in the opinion it hath of its owne innocency as here the people answer ●ilate His blood be upon us wherein their mouth doth pronounce their own doom and Wrath is from that time come on them unto this day Ver. 26. Then released he Barrabbas unto them and when he had scourged Iesus he delivered him to be crucified Thus is Jesus absolved from all guiltinesse in himselfe and declared in the face of his Accusers to be a just person and yet is he dealt with as a guilty man scourged and delivered to be crucified wherein we must look up unto the dispensation of a higher Judge who had the sins of the whole Elect in a Roll to charge upon him and now to exact of him above what he had already suffered yet more satisfaction to justice for the full Redemption of his people that so they may behold him as he is to wit the eternall and only begotten Son of God in his humane Nature suffering according to the paction of Redemption past between him and the Father all that Justice could crave for the expiation of our sins and purchase of righteousnesse and life eternall unto us and to this end we must take along with us in all Christ's sufferings 1. The consideration of the worthinesse of the person who is surety suffering for us that he is the Lord God Almighty filling the whole Earth with his Glory the Redeemer and holy One of Israel personally united with our Nature now upon him while he standeth before Pontius Pilate Secondly The consideration of the fearfull and horrible deservings of sin in us which calleth for our everlasting torments with the curse of God upon us Thirdly the consideration of the strictnesse of Divine Justice which will have sin punished condignly and will neither quit the sinner without a ransome nor the Redeemer without full satisfaction and punishment equivalent to the principall Debters deservings Fourthly the consideration of the wonderfull grace of God who is content to take satisfaction unto justice for the sins of men from one man in the name of all those for whom he offereth to satisfie Fifthly the consideration of the unspeakable love of God who giveth his own eternall Son to be the man who shall pay for the rest of the adopted children Sixthly the consideration of the meeknesse and patience of our dear Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ who loved us and gave himselfe for us even to the cursed Death of the crosse yea to be made a curse for us that we might obtain the blessing of righteousnesse and eternall life through him if these considerations go along with us we shall see our selves worthy for ever of the shame and torment which our Lord endured for a short time and we shall see Christ in his deepest humiliation shining gloriously in our eyes our faith shall find food and our sins shall find poison in the sufferings of our Redeemer Doct. 1. Such as think they cannot stand except by the good will of Princes or People whensoever they are put to declare themselves whether they love Christ or the World better will certainly choose to please Princes or People whatsoever may become of Christ as here the People will have Barabbas set free and Christ executed to please their Rulers and Pilate will both release Barabbas and scourge Christ to give unto the People satisfaction 2. It is no wonder that Christ's Servants find hard measure of men at the Bar of Justice for no fault is found in Christ And yet he is scourged and delivered to his Adversaries to be crucified 3. Christ's Servants should resolve after lesser sufferings to endure yet more and at last to suffer death for Christ after suffering of many things is scourged and then delivered to be crucified 4. Our sins deserve to be punished with extremity of pain and torment and with extremity of shame and disgrace for our Redeemer behoved to be scourged and crucified also Ver. 27. Then the Souldiers of the Governour took Iesus into the common Hall and gathered unto him the whole Band of souldiers 28. And they stripped him and put on him a Scarlet Robe 29. And when they had platted a Crown of Thorns they put it upon his Head and a Reed in his right hand and they bowed the knee before him and mocked him saying Hail King of the Iews 30. And they spit upon him and took a Reed and smote him on the Head 31. And after
they had mocked him they took the Robe from off him and put his own Raiment on him and led him away to crucifie him While the crosse is making ready the Souldiers fall on Christ and abuse him despitefully Doct. 1. When Governours and great men are against Christ no wonder to see their Servants against him also and to go about to please their Masters by wronging of Christ's members for here The Souldiers of the Governour gathered together to take their sport in abusing Christ himself 2. As the Doctrine of Christ's God-head is counted Blasphemy by the corrupt Church-rulers Chap. 26.65 So is Christ's by gracelesse States-men and Servants of civill Rulers the Souldiers of the civill Governour here do make a laughing-stock of Christ the King of the Jews offering him a Souldiers coat for a Robe a Reed for a Scepter Thorns for a Crown a mocking Beck for Reverence spitting on his Face for a Kisse of love and subjection and smiting on the head of loyalty and service but so behoved our pride and vain glory to be punished and explate 3. The malice of Christs enemies will not be satiate with lesse then bloud for when they have mocked Christ and shamefully used him They led him away to be crucified Ver. 32. And as they came out they found a man of Cyrene Simon by name him they compelled to bear his Crosse. Our Lord was so exercised in the Garden through agony of Spirit so tossed all the night with the Souldiers so agitate and vexed before the judgment seat of Caiphas and Pilat so sore spent by scourging by buffeting by piercing his Head with Thorns that now there remained not so much natural strength in his body as to bear the tree of the crosse through the way unto the place of execution therefore they finding one Simon of Cyrene by the way coming from his work in the field they compel him to bear Christs crosse Doc. 1. It was not by any humane strength that Christ did bear the weight of the curse of God due to our sins for as his body so also his naturall strength of body was like another mans and here he who upon the tree of the crosse bare our sins which are of more weight then all the mountaines and the sand of the Sea hath not so much naturall strength as to bear that tree unto the place of execution for Simon a fresh man must bear it after him 2. The death of the crosse was so shameful so abhorred and so cursed a death that none of all the multitude which followed him would touch the crosse but Simon must be compelled to bear it Ver. 33. And when they were come into a place called Golgotha that is to say a place of a skul Followeth that which our Lord did suffer in Golgotha or Calvary to which place the skuls or bones of malefactors executed there to be seen apparently did give the name ● filthy place without the Town ●s was fore-signified by the offering of these beasts which we●e burnt without the camp Doc. Our sins deserve that punishment should be poured in upon us by the conduit of every sense that as we have abused all our senses unto sin so we in every one of them should be tormented for beside wearines and much pain the place of Christs execution is Golgotha where the sight of dead mens bones forme●ly executed as malefactours and the scent of their rotten reliques might offend both his sight and smel Ver. 34. They gave him vineger to drink mingled with gal and when he had tasted therof he would not drink A further degree of suffering is his thi●st which he could have willingly quenched with wate● but they gave Him vineger and gal to drink no wonder he was thirsty being now spent with his bloudy swear and Agony in the Garden being tossed and toiled all night scourged and beaten and burdened with the crosse and such like other exe●●ises Doct. 1. For our abuse of meat and drink and to the end that liberty might be purchased unto us to eat and drink the Sweet with Gods blessing Christ our Lord is put to thirst and not so much as a cup of cold water is furnished unto him but in stead of the common favour of some refreshful drink usually granted even to Malefactors the Father out of justice and his Enemies out of malice Give unto him to drink of vineger mixed with gall 2. Our Lord how great soever his pain was was so patient in his suffering that he would not hasten his owne death by such a drink therefore Having tasted thereof he would not drinke thereby also teaching us that no paine nor misery should make us so impatient as to do any thing which may shorten our life Ver. 35. And they crucified him and parted his garments casting lots that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Prophet They parted my Garments among them and upon my vesture did they cast lots Our Lords Enemies go on to fulfil their malice mean-time they do nothing but what was agreed upon in the counsel of God and was foretold in the Scripture Doct. 1. No other death could satisfie mens cruel malice or Gods justice or was fit to deliver us from the curse of the Law due to us except the cursed death of the crosse therefore they crucified him 2. Though the death of the crosse had in it shame abundant above all other sorts of death yet for satisfaction of justice for expiation of our abuse of apparell and for purchasing unto us not only liberty wi●h Gods blessing to put on comely raiment each man according to his place but also to cover our sinfull nakednesse with righteousnesse and glory our Lord was stript naked and his garments parted in his sight 3. It is necessary in looking upon our Lords suffe●ings that we keep our eye upon the determinate counsell of God and upon the Prophesies and Types foretelling the sufferings of the Messiah that we may be kept from stumbling at the crosse of our Lord for this was done that what was typified in thespoliation of Davids goods might be literally fulfilled in Christ They parted my garments among them Ver. 36. And sitting down they watched him there It was necessary that Jesus being nailed on the crosse should lay down his life and that we should be certified of the compleat payment of our ransome therefore malice on mens part and divine justice and Wisdome on Gods part do provide for a guard to secure the crosse and to be witnesses of the certainty of our Lords suffering Doct. God so disposeth of matters that when his Enemies are doing their worst against him they are doing most for him contrary to their minde therefore it is marked that They who crucified Christ sate down and watched him there Ver. 37. And set up over his head his accusation written THIS IS IESUS THE KING OF THE IEWS It was ordinary to put the cause of mens crucifying over their head upon
for him neither from God nor Man Doct. 1. Satan by what means he can doth drive hard to have men despairing when they are in extremity as here speaking by his instruments he tempteth Christ. 2. Till Christ had ended the worke of redemption all sort of vexations did run together and by course upon him for now unto all the former exercises in body and soul he must hear his prayer unto the father wrested and mocked he must see himself insulted over as a man smitten and plagued of God and as forsaken of God and man Let us see say they if Elias will come to him Ver. 50. Iesus when he had cried again with a loud voice yeilded up the ghost In this close of Christ his suffering learn 1. That the Son of God according to his man-hood verily died and his soul was separate from his body for He yeilded up the ghost 2. He died not by constraint but willingly for of his own accord He yeelded up his Spirit 3. In dying he was conquerour over death for before death could come at him as a weakling which cannot live any longer Christ being so strong as To cry with a loud voice sets upon death and yeeldeth up the ghost Ver. 51. And behold the vail of the temple was rent in twain from the top to the bottome and the earth did quake and the rocks rent Our Lord being dead as man letteth forth the glory of his God-head more then before in four wonders The first wonder is The vail of the temple or the mid-wal of partition which divided between the Sanctuary and the body of the temple was rent in twain from the top to the bottom wherein Christ gave all men to understand 1. That his death was the fulfilling and the accomplishment of all the Levitical rites and figures of the temple and of all the ceremonies annexed unto it and that now they were to be esteemed as rent and to be done away 2. That now by the Gospel sealed up in his death the way unto heaven was made plain and open 3. That the partition wall between Jew and Gentiles to wit The ceremonial Law which divided them asunder was rent and no more to stand in force The second wonder is The earth did quake wherby the Lord gave men to understand 1. That as he is Lord of heaven which had given testimony unto him by hiding its glory when he is suffering shame so also he is Lord of the earth which now doth tremble before her Lord. 2. That he was to shake the heavens and the Earth by the gospel of his sufferings and of the redemption purchased unto sinners by his sufferings The third wonder is The rocks rent to shew the power of Jesus who could subdue the greatest difficulties and overcome the hardnesse of whatsoever obstinate hearts upon whom he pleaseth to shew his power Ver. 52. And the graves were opened and many bodies of the Saints which slept arose 53. And came out of their graves after his Resurrection and went into the holy city and appeared unto many The fourth wonder is The opening of the graves and the resurrection of many deceased Saints after Christ's resurrection which was done 1. To shew that Christ died and was buried not to remain under the great power of death and the grave but to quicken the dead and to raise them out of their graves and that he neither died nor rose for his own particular but that he might redeem his own from death and give unto them resurrection and life 2. To let us understand that he is the Saviour of all those that believed in him before his Incarnation and were deceased who were to be saved by the Messiah no lesse then of those who believed since and that the former are partakers of the fruit of his death and resurrection no lesse then the later 3. The death of the godly is only a sleep of the body till the morning of the Resurrection come for it is said The bodies of the Saints which slept 4. Resurrection and the rest of the effects of Christ's death and resurrection are benefits only unto the Saints therefore only the bodies of the Saints arose 5. Albeit the great Harvest of Christ's death and resurrection is not to be expected till the day of judgement yet the first fruits of that Harvest are abundantly manifested In that many of the bodies of the Saints arose 6. The resurrection of the Saints dependeth upon the resurrection of Christ who is their Head for He is the first born from the dead The rest who arose unto an immortall life came out of their graves after his resurrection 7. The wonders which our Lord did worke were all able to abide the light and wanted not sufficient witnesses for among the rest these Saints which were raised out of their graves came into Ierusalem and appeared unto many 8. Such as did not believe in Jesus and did not belong unto his election were not worthy to be called to be witnesses of the blessing following upon his death and resurrection it is sufficient that these Saints raised from death did appear to many for they which believe in any measure shall have confirmation abundant that they may believe still more unto them that have it shall be given others are worthy to be despised 9. Albeit a visible Church be very corrupt yet so long as there is a number of true believers in it so long as it hath not gotten a bill of divorcement from God it is to be esteemed of honourably as a Church belonging unto Christ Therefore is Jerusalem here called The holy City Ver. 54. Now when the Centurion and they that were with him watching Iesus saw the earthquake and those things that were done they feared greatly saying Truely this was the Son of God These wonders wanted not their effects for the Captain of the Guard and the Souldiers which were with him were convinced by these wonders that truely Christ was the Son of God Doct. 1. The Lords works as well as his word do the errand for which they are sent for when the wonders were seen the Souldiers were afraid and confessed the Deity of Jesus Christ saying Truly this was the Son of God 2. Profane Souldiers are more easily gained unto Christ then misbelieving Rabbies for we hear thus much of the one but nothing of the other that they were any whit moved 3. Christ's love is such that when sinners are doing him all the dishonour they can he will reveale himselfe unto them and overcome them with free love for here is a Centurion and other Souldiers with him turned Subjects to him and confessours of his Name even when he is hanging dead on the crosse life springeth forth of him to open the eyes of these Souldiers to see his God-head and giveth them courage to confesse it in his deepest humiliation Ver 55. And many women were there beholding afar off which followed Iesus from Galilee ministring unto him