Selected quad for the lemma: love_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
love_n bad_a good_a love_v 2,589 5 6.5921 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

There are 36 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

peculiar to mankind which he loueth better then all the workes of his hands besides as creating him in his owne image and giuing him Lordship ouer the rest of the creatures and hence he delighteth in the title and stileth himselfe from his loue to man and not from his loue to the Angels or any other creature And yet this loue of God must be brought a little lower if we would settle it on his right obiect for it is not generall nor absolute but respectiue and hauing reference vnto Christ as the verse implieth in whom it freeth from the miserie mentioned in the former verse and accepteth vnto that especiall mercie mentioned in the next In a word here is a greater and more glorious loue then was seene in the creation and preseruation of all things in the world here is a loue electing redeeming regenerating and glorifying miserable men a loue aduancing our humane nature in his sonne who tooke not the seed of Angels but of Abraham a loue which hateth worldly Esaus in comparison of his Iacob whom he calleth out of the world not by the outward sound of the Gospel only but by the effectuall call of his spirit in their hearts whom he loueth not as creatures but new creatures liker vnto himselfe then all the other by a restored and renewed image and for whom he hath reserued more loue in heauen when they shall become yet liker vnto him in all holines in the holy of holyes Quest. But how can such loue of man be ascribed vnto God seeing that so many vessels are prepared to destruction and so many millions are hated before they haue euer done good or euil and secondly of those that are dearest vnto him many yea the most are so afflicted and distressed that they scarce see any good day can this stand with such a bountifull loue Answ. First the goodnes of God must stand with his wisedom which affoardeth not the same degree of goodnes to euerie one it is not against the goodnes of a potter to make ignoble vessels to dishonour as well as to honour seeing the former haue also their good vses How could the goodnesse of a father appeare if he should set vp hogs and dogs at his table as well as his children as the Lord is good so he is wise to be so good to each in their degree as may make for his owne honour and advantage 2. This goodnes and loue of God must stand with his iustice also as well as his mercie Hence the Apostle would haue vs to cast our eye on two things at once in God when we would be satisfied in this point The goodnesse and the seueritie of God for this goodnesse cannot suffer euill and sinne in the impenitent vnreuenged it cannot suffer the good and bad to be alwaies mingled together no more then the good husbandmen can alwaies suffer the wheat and chaffe on the same floore 3. This loue and goodnesse is more seene and shining in sauing one soule by his Christ then his seueritie in the deserued death of al the vngodly the former beeing meere mercie the latter due desert Secondly he correcteth indeede his children often sharpely but the ground is good euen this loue and goodnes 2. the manner and measure is good with rods of men and not aboue their strength 3. the ende is good to drawe them nearer vnto himselfe Doth a father loose his loue when he correcteth his sonne whom he tenderly loueth was Christ hated when he was on the crosse or in the graue so when the adopted sonnes are conformed to the naturall they are not lesse but more loued in that they are not suffered to runne with the world that so they may not be condemned with the world Vse 1. This goodnesse of God is a singular consolation to such as are his It will not suffer them to want any good thing that is good for them but it will most certenly and seasonably communicate it it hath giuen the sonne and how can it but with him giue all things remission of sinnes peace of conscience wealth length of dayes grace and glorie Is the fountaine in thy fathers grounds then maist thou looke to drinke to sacietie of euery good thing shall any good thing be wanting to him that feareth the Lord no surely for his goodnes is entailed vnto them by promise by oath yea by season and possession But looke well to the purity of thy heart seeing God is good especially to the pure of heart Secondly we are taught hence sundrie dutyes 1. In the want of any good thing in confidence affiance of our hearts to flie to this fountaine of goodnes it is a liuing fountaine that knoweth not the yeares of drought here faithfully aske it hopefully expect it and in longer delaies or denials onely know it is a wise loue of a father who neither giueth his child hurtfull things nor yet any store of good things till he know how to vse them 2. In the receiuing or enioying of any good thing the praise and glory must be returned to this wel head which is the sea from which all the riuers of goodnesse flowe and to which they ought to refl●we as euery fauour then commeth from the Father of lights so let it lead vs vnto him againe 3. To admire and speake often of this goodnesse of our God and say with the Church who is a God like vnto thee for he not onely is pleased to take away iniquitie and passe by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage but to walke friendly and familiarly with men not onely the worthies of the former world such as Enoch who walked with God Moses with whome he talked face to face as a man with his friend Abraham with whom he imparted his secret counsels Iacob with whom he wrastled familiarly but euen vnto our selues whome he hath pleased not onely to admit vnto eternall saluation in his sonne but hath in the meane time reuealed vnto vs his secret thoughts sent out his spirit to accompanie comfort quicken raise and enlighten vs and his word to rule and direct vs and in the ministerie of it euen striueth with vs that he may leaue vs a blessing behind him It was his great familiaritie that he should shewe Moses the land of Canaan before his death but he hath shewed vs a farre off that euerlasting rest and receptacle of all the Israel of God And Paul himselfe was not more beholding to this goodnesse when he was taken vp into the third heauen then we are in hauing so many high mysteries reuealed vnto vs and so many great things put into our hands by faith and hope which we cannot vtter with our tongues nor yet with our hearts conceiue and shall our hearts be barren in the meditation and our mouthes mute and dumbe at such a goodnes as this is 4. To imitate this goodnesse of God whose nature and image we must put on daily we must grow
from the Apostles mouth that for the same all good men approoued him and wished him all good proceedings And hence we may note 1. what is the vse of this most auncient and approoued custome of saluting one another by writing namely to signifie a louing remembrance of the partie saluted with an earnest desire of their good and welfare for that is a common affection to all salutations to signifie such a desire And yet there is great difference betweene one salutation and an other which riseth from the difference of the persons saluting Whereof some are meerely ciuill men without all religion and these could not reach to wish their friends the best blessings although they wished them the best they could reach as the ordinarie formes both of the Greekes and Latines testifie Others haue more in them then humanitie in that they apprehend the higher graces of God in his Christ reuealed in the Gospel and hauing their owne parts therein they most freely feelingly in their salutations wish their friends to partake with them first in such graces as may accompanie their saluation and then in all that outward prosperitie that shall make for their good and these are the salutations of the Apostles and of good Christians they be no court holy water nor salutare libenter from teeth outward but heartie and vnfained testimonies of loue much making for the encrease of mutuall loue yea and the strengthening of the bond of the communion of Saints Now if this be the vse of salutations we may see how grossely the Papists are besotted in martyring that I may vse Luthers word the Angels salutation to Marie For 1. whereas a salutation is a ciuil thing they haue turned this into a deuout praier 2. not to Marie whome the words concerned alone but vnto God at whose hands the repeating of it meriteth pardon of many sinnes 3. whereas salutation is to be done to a partie present among vs this saluteth one absent 4. whereas it was the angels dutie to carrie this message once to Marie they thrust euerie man and woman into the Angels office to carrie the same message euerie moment as if it were a thing not alreadie accomplished 5. what further good can they wish to Marie now in heauen But they haue despised the wisedome of God and what wisedom can be in them 2. Note what a great incouragement and comfort it is for the godly to haue the hearts the commendations the good words and wishes of them that fea●e God it is an excellent support against the disgraces of the times and reproaches of vngodly men when Gods people reach vnto a man the right hand of fellowship little neede he care for the causles curses and reproaches of the wicked that hath the blessing of the Saints with him although therefore we haue another rule to walke by then the iudgement of men and in doing our dutie we may say with the Apostle I care not for the iudgement of any man yet it will be good for a man to conceiue how he is esteemed of the best to whom ordinarily God giueth a spirit of discerning that if it be possible with a good conscience he may ioyne a good name which is not onely sweete as a pretious oyntment but will supple and asswage such wounds and stroakes as the ●●icked will be still inflicting Neither can these two things be easily disioyned the approouing of the heart vnto God and of the wayes vnto Gods people 3. Note from the Apostles example what a good office it is to be a peace-maker and to knit the members of the bodie of Christ close together this argueth men to be endued with that wisedome which is from aboue the properties whereof are to be pure peaceable full of mercie and good fruits especially the Ministers of God must account it a part of their office not onely to reconcile man to God but euen man to man And let euerie man conceiue and remember that our Lord Iesus maketh it one of the pathes and rules of true happinesse when he saith blessed are the peacemakers 4. Note how the Saints of God ought to embrace one another and especially such as are of the best desert in the Church for their labours and gifts euen as the Saints with Paul did Titus many of whom doubtlesse had neuer seene his face but had heard of his faithfulnesse euen such should be our loue to the godly as we should affect them that are absent as well as present and wherein we can testifie that affection to those whom we haue heard well although by face we neuer knew them Greete them that loue vs in the faith Quest. May we not salute any but beleeuers Answ. There is a common salutation which is due from euery man to euery man and that is a ciuill curtesie and kind of honour which is to be shewed to all men our Sauiour Christ commanded his Disciples whensoeuer they entred into an house they should salute the same Matth. 10.12 and gaue them a forme of salutation which they must vse whether the sonne of peace were there or no saying peace be to this house Yea if men be our enemies and will not vouchsafe to salute vs againe yet we must not omit this branch of courteous behauiour towards them Matth. 5.47 If yee be freindly to your brethren only what singular thing doe yee doe not euen the Publicans the same The word tra●slated be freindly is the same with this here signifieth such freindship as was in those countries testified by salutations and embracings which euen the worst could well inough performe to their freinds but Christ sheweth that we must doe more we must not expect to see whether we be saluted first but kindly salute our enemies although we be not saluted againe And the reason is because it was counted a signe of hatred not to salute a man 2. Sam. 13.22 Absolon said neither good nor bad to his brother for Absolon hated Amnon Whereas Christians on the contrarie must thinke on such things as may preuent offence procure loue and winne if it may be euen estran●ed affections But yet howsoeuer this salutation is generally due from equall to equall yet there are some excepted cases in the Scripture 1. such a one as lyeth in some open sinne and hateth to be reformed not yeelding to godly counsell out of the word a superiour here may forbeare to speake to such a one by way of correction but so as he must haue care that he aime at the fault and not at the person and make it so known to the person that he testifieth not the hatred of his person but of his sinne Thus Dauid banished Absolon from the court for killing Amnon 2. There are open enemies of God and of his truth of his Church who haue sold themselues to maligne it such sworne enemies wee may not thus embrace 2. Ioh. 10. If any man bring not this doctrine
2. More specially by grace of those who are adopted and renewed by grace and thus God is properly our father in heauen and no man is to be called father in earth Secondly when God is personally called father then it is to be taken for the first person and this title is giuen principally to the first person in Trinitie 1. because he is the Father of the second person the word by nature and by eternall generation 2. because he is Father to Christ in respect of his manhood not as to other men by nature or grace of adoption but by personall vnion the humane nature subsisting in the person of the word 3. because from both these followeth that by Adoption he becommeth the father of all the elect beeing members and making vp the bodie of Christ. And this is the respect wherein God is tearmed Father in this place both because it hath relation to the second person here nominated as also because in prayer we must repaire to God the Father in Christ our head and Mediator And our Lord Iesus Christ Christ is Lord in himselfe as God and Lord ouer all blessed for euer both in that he giueth essence and susteining to all things as also possesseth all things and ruleth euen the most powerfull and glorious of all creatures and is called Lord of the Angels much more ouer the Deuils themselues Againe he is our Lord 1. as Mediatour we beeing his inheritance giuen him of his Father 2. as a Redeemer purchasing vs beeing captiues and thralls to Satan 3. as a head of his Church quickning and gouerning the whole bodie of it whether militant or triumphant 4. in regard of his power and dominion for to him all power is committed in heauen and in earth who hath put all things vnder his feete in him we hold all things as in capite and to him we owe all homage and subiection in all obedience both actiue and passiue Quest. But how can Christ be a Lord seeing he is euery where called a seruant Ans. Christ considered in the office of Mediatourship is after a speciall manner a seruant of his Father and so his Father calleth him for my seruant Dauids sake and Behold my seruant because he faithfully serued him in the worke of redemption in that he was made man came into the world fulfilled the law prayed vnto his Father and was made obedient euen to the death yet all the while of his seruice he remained a Lord in himselfe and by his seruice became the Lord of his Church redeemed ones in a speciall manner Our Sauiour There is no other name giuen but this Obiect The Father and the holy Ghost saue also Answ. Although all outward workes of the Trinitie which make for our comfort and saluation are vndeuided as beeing one and coworking yet in performing them we must obserue an order among them the Father is the fountaine from whom the Sonne for whom as a meritorious cause the holy Ghost by whom we communicate of all blessings so all three saue but the Father by sending the Sonne the Sonne by paying the ransome the holy Ghost by applying it so all create redeeme sanctifie yet obseruing this order and manner of working when the workes are more personally attributed vnto them creation is ascribed to the Father not excluding the sonne and holy Ghost redemption to the Sonne and sanctification to the holy Ghost Which order is rather here to be obserued because our Apostle expresseth it in his prayer for these graces when he craueth them both from the Father and the Sonne not excluding the holy Ghost whereby we are taught how to direct our suits also namely that the Father by the Spirit through his Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ would enrich vs with grace and the fruits of it Obiect But there are other sauiours as Ioshua and other Iudges and Kings yea Prophets and Ministers are called sauiours Ans. 1. These all were men and as men saued But of Christ it is said Behold our God he shall saue vs. 2. Some of them as Iudges were typicall sauiours sauing 1. the bodies 2. of one people the Iewes 3. from temporall death and oppression but Christ saueth the bodies and soules of all beleeuing Iewes and Gentiles from hell and condemnation 3. Others as Prophets and Ministers are onely ministeriall and instrumentall sauiours not properly onely for sundrie causes the worke of the efficient is ascribed to the instrument whom the Lord vseth in publishing this saluation but Christ alone saueth by meriting and paying the price and bringing home to the heart this redemption Obiect But we haue yet sinne in vs and therefore are not saued from it Answ. We are saued euen for the present from the wrath and poyson of it in part for euer from the damnation of it so as the strength of it is gone This is the meaning of this salutation which beeing a prayer sheweth vs both of what kinde our salutations ought to be in which we would testifie our loue to whom we write namely to wish them the best blessings as also in what manner not sending formall salutations without feeling abstracting curtesie from conscience but they must proceede from a religious and reuerent affection of the heart for euery prayer ought to come from the heart and as hauing God himselfe a witnes of the truth of the spirit in such wishes as Rom. 1.9 and Phil. 1.8.9 Now the principall lessons in this prayer are two 1. That the free and euerlasting grace of God in Christ is the foundation of all blessings spirituall and temporall 2. Peace is the fruite of the grace and mercie of God Doctr. 1. The grace of God is the whole sufficiencie of his people the first middle and last cause of euery good thing conuaied vnto them or issuing from them not once did the Lord enforce this point vpon his owne people teaching them by things temporall their spirituall estate and condition Deut. 7.7 The Lord set his loue vpon you and chose you not because you were moe in number for you were the fewest but because he loued you cap. 9.4.6 Say not in thine heart because of my righteousnes the Lord hath giuen me this good land for thou art a stiffnecked people and were they not yet further off from meriting and procuring to themselues spirituall blessings and that heauenly Canaan and euerlasting rest prepared for the people of God and if we consider our condition before this grace be reueiled and shine vpon vs are not we in our blood when the Lord first couereth vs with his skirts and no eie but his pitieth vs he calleth vs with Adam out of our thickets when we runne from him and are hiding our selues then finding vs when we would not be found Vse 1. To confute the Popish doctrine which depresseth this grace of God and endureth not that the castle of a mans saluation should be altogether founded without
the poore members of Christ amongst our selues If a stranger who is cast out of house and home for the profession of Christ ought to be releeued much more our owne suffering in good causes whether bonds or imprisonment losse of liuing banishment or whatsoeuer they suffer if for keeping good conscience And the like is to be said of our aged feeble and impotent poore who haue beene in many places of the Land pittilessely neglected and despised so farre as notwithstanding the wholesome lawes prouided in that behalfe some of them haue beene suffered to pine and die in the streets for want of harbor and releefe The Lord lay not this sinne among other vnto our charge Now when we call rich men to reserue some portion of their wealth to such godly vses oh no they will cast their bread on no such waters and they finde no abilitie to doe any thing this way this were to weaken their estate and to straine themselues so as they should not be able to hold out Which no doubt were the reasonings of the Corinths whom the Apostle that he might stirre them vp to beneficence and liberalitie towards the Saints wisheth them to consider what Christ had done for them he strained himselfe and was content when he was rich to become poore for them Christ weakned another manner of estate for vs then any man can for him he left all his glorie for vs but how few will leaue their shame their trash their couetous and voluptuous lusts for him and to such as aske where they should haue to hold out if they should be so readie to distribute he answereth in the 9. chapter following the same argument that the Lord findeth seed to the sower and he maketh men rich to all liberalitie vers 10 11. Others obiect and say but such a one hath offended me or I know this or that by him or he deserueth no such thing at my hands Answ. But take heed this be not a churlish Nabals answer to Dauids iust request spoken out of partiall couetousnes rather then as the truth of the thing is Againe let the person be what he will looke thou on Gods image in him this offends thee not iniuries thee not is not vndeseruing of thy loue and the fruite of it and if thou giue not to the man giue to manhood in him and consider that he may be a partner in the grace of life with thee Reasons 1. Hereby thou art like God he sparseth abrode he vnweariably giueth good to good and bad straine thy selfe so thou expresse this vertue of his 2. What thou giuest to Christian men thou giuest to Christ himselfe If Christ were on earth againe doubtles rich men would send to know his wants and store him with presents Now we haue not himselfe with vs but the poore we shall alwaies haue to shew our affection to Christ in who hath said in that yee doe it to one of these little ones that beleeue in me yee haue done it vnto me 3. An hard man had rather lend to one that is able to repay him then giue to such an one as is not If thou wilt not giue any thing to Christ by giuing to the poore lend vnto him and he will become thy pay-master 4. Because many would giue vnto others but for feare of wanting themselues marke the promise of blessing Prou. 11.25 The liberall person shall haue plentie and he that watereth shall haue raine and vers 24. There is that scattereth and is more encreased on the contrarie he that spareth more then right commeth to pouertie and he that turneth his eare from the crie of the poore himselfe shall crie and not be heard and iudgement mercilesse belongeth vnto him that sheweth no mercie I would to God all this would bring on our rich men who will doe nothing for the honour of God but halfe the way that the Macedonians were come vnto who bestowed to the vse of the poore Saints to their abillitie yea euen beyond their abillitie but till men learne to giue themselues first to the Lord and then to his Ministers as they did it will neuer be done that is till they giue vp themselues to obey God teaching them such duties in the mouthes of his Ministers A lover of goodnesse Hauing exhorted to the doctrine of beneficence and liberallitie to the poore Saints Now the Apostle perswadeth vnto the ground from whence that must rise for otherwise it will prooue rather a shadow or carkase of a vertue then a vertue or true grace it selfe which perhapps may profit another but not ones selfe This ground is true Christian loue of which the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 13.3 If I giue all my goods away to the poore and want loue it profiteth me nothing and therefore I thinke it is rather to be read a louer of good men seeing the word in the originall beareth well either reading True it is that these two are neuer to be abstracted one from another for good men are to be loued for their goodnes and whosoeuer loueth goodnes loueth good men as he that hateth good men hateth goodnes it selfe yet of these two the context seemeth to fauour and carie vs to the latter For as the Apostle would haue the Minister harberous so would he haue his house an harbour not for idle and voluptuous much lesse vitious persons but for good men and besides there is another word more fit to expresse the former sence as Beza obserueth By good men are vnderstood those vnto whom the Lord hath imparted and communicated his goodnes not generall goodnes which he extendeth ouer all his creatures but his speciall grace in Christ whereby he embraceth a small number in comparison of the whole masse of mankind whom of the children of wrath he chuseth to the adoption of sonnes on whom he stampeth his owne image and so maketh them both louely to himselfe and worthy to be loued of vs also Now for the better vnderstanding of the precept two questions are to be resolued 1. Whether good men only are to be loued and not euill Answ. As God is good vnto all Psal. 145.9 but especially to Israel and those of a pure heart Psal. 73.1 yea as he loued vs when we were enemies but much more now beeing reconciled by the death of the Sonne so is the commandement directed vnto vs to loue and doe good vnto all but especially to the houshold of faith Gal. 6. Besides this word seemeth to eye such an inward affection as draweth into the fellowship companie and conuersation of another in whom for some goodnes appearing it delighteth and vnto whom it would still draw some degrees nearer Whence thus we may fasten the dutie more surely vpon our selues I am indeed bound to loue all men in respect of Gods image humanitie and common nature and the common law of nature seeing I my selfe were I neuer so bad would be loued of all yea and in regard
and that according to Gods owne heart he hauing for this purpose receiued his calling gifts and approbation of God 2. Otherwise he peruerteth the whole course of his life and calling and is no better then those false Apostles who turning themselues from sound teaching to vnfruitfull discourses called vaine iangling are said to roue and erre from the right aime like vnskilfull darters or shooters Now what a fearefull thing is it for a man to wander all his life long from that station and seruice in which the Lord hath set him Quest. But how shall any Minister attaine this end of his calling Answ. Hereunto two things are required 1. abilitie 2. affection both which prouoke diligence and faithfull abillitie 1. of learning 2. of iudgement For the former he must be able to feed with wholesome doctrine We will not put forth our children to nurses whose brests want milke vnlesse we would starue them so the Lord neuer committeth his children to drie nurses though often in iudgement he leaue and permit them vnto spirituall famine Seeing therefore the Preists lips should preserue knowledge and the Pastors breasts should be like Iosephs granaries stored with all prouision against the time of famine let all idle and idoll Ministers that thrust themselues in for Pastors and can onely feed themselues consider of their danger betimes least too late repentance cause them to know what it is to starue the Lords people and murther so many soules the meanest of which the whole world cannot counteruaile For the latter he must be of able iudgement and wisedome to know the nature and constitution of his people the state of his flock whether they be of weake or strong stomaks and so whether they need milke or stronger meate 2. He must be able like a skilfull cooke to know how to season the food he deliuereth he is not presently fit to be a cooke that can put on a white apron or conforme in a ceremonie but as he must be a man of skill in his qualitie so must he be a man of a good tast and haue experience of that he prepareth for others wisely deliuering points not onely profitable for the persons present but things also proper to the present occasions and be fitting occurrences 3. He must not onely know when his prouision is well seasoned but also when it is seasonable like a good steward who altereth the dyet of the house according as the seuerall seasons seuerally furnish the market for as euery one must haue his portion so must he haue it in due season a word in time to him that is wearie is a fruit of a learned tongue and to feed the impenitent with iudgement is wisedome seeing an humble soule is broken with threatning a secure heart is h●rdned with promises But to the further furnishment of the Minister the second thing must be added namely the affection of loue Which must looke three wayes at once 1. to God 2. to man 3. to the truth The glorie of God must be prized aboue all things which will make him speake onely for God and he that speaketh onely for God cannot but be wholesomely conuersant in his word Ioh. 7.18 For loue of Gods glorie effecteth two things both concurring to wholesome doctrine 1. conceiuement of humane wisedome 2. demonstration of the spirit 1. Cor. 2.4 that is a secret power and authoritie of the spirit going with his word enlightning with his owne other mens vnderstandings and heating by his owne other mens affections this made a graue Diuine of ours say that euery true Minister hath after a sort a fierie tongue giuen him Secondly this affection of loue must be extended to his people Paul loued his countrimen and this stirred vp his heartie desire that Israel might be saued The mother seeing her child in danger is carefull out of her loue to prouide any cordiall or restoratiue that may be gotten to doe it good the prosperitie of the child is the ioy of the mother so the profit of the people is the Pastors crowne of reioysing 2. Cor. 3.1 Thirdly vnto the truth it selfe he must affect to know nothing and this will cause him to affect to deliuer nothing but Christ and him crucified this sincere milke of the word maketh Gods children to thriue and prosper whereas the vnwholesome milke mingled with error or puddle water of mens deuises bringeth sickenesse diseases and consumption into their soules Vse Let all Ministers who haue a care of profiting their people and so furthering their owne account acquaint them with this wholesome doctrine fetched out of the pure fountaines of the Scriptures and rightly deuide it vnto them as workemen that need not be ashamed Alas what vanitie is it out of opinion of wit or reading to seeke out strange speculations among the starres to search out genealogies peregrees to dote about fables to set himselfe to tie hard knots onely to vntie them againe as the dogge leaueth soft meat to gnaw vpon bones to mingle the word with the leauen of traditions what a dangerous thing is it to heale the hurt of Gods people with sweete words or to handle the word either deceitfully or deliuer it phantastically with vnseemely and rude or affected words of humane wisedome eloquence all this may puffe vp the soules of men for a time as though they were wholesomely fed but indeed Paul sheweth the proper worke of them that they breed diseases and ingender strife rather then godly edifying and when the fire commeth that shall trie euery mans worke his worke shall burne let him scape if he can who though he teach no false doctrine yet if he build haie and chaff vpon the foundation for he hath not stood in Gods counsell read the curse denounced against false Pastors Ier. 23. Secondly hearers are hence taught sundrie duties As 1. to desire only this wholesome food that their soules may be well liking laying aside their itching eares which hunt after nouelties for the Ministerie is not appointed to beate the eare as musicke but to sinke into the soule as the food and medicine of it by becomming the meanes and rule of life In populous places are running auditories in which the most gape for painted phrases prettie wittie sentences out of some Sage or other or some sentence of Scripture which yet they least care for but it must be turkist and mishapen out of his natiue simplicitie like cattell forsaking the greene pastures to broose vpon leaues and boughes These nice hearers are like the daintie gentelwomen of our times who scorning standing dishes on their tables which are the wholesome fit and strengthning nourishment set them at the low end of the table and themselues onely glorying in their art and cookerie feed vpon forced dishes and cookt conceits though the ground in comparison be not better then a bootshanke as we vse to say and the sauce trebling the cost of the meat it selfe How good a sauce
For how absurd will it seeme to reason with the word to call the hungrie blessed to account the rich vnhappie to esteeme corrections loue the Iulians of the world would scoffe at such paradoxes who as the Prophet speaketh walke by the sparkles of their owne fire but the life of faith is when the heart giueth vp the whole man vnto Gods leading when his wisedome is become thy direction and his word the men of thy counsell And for the latter thou must doe three things First set thy selfe often in his sight and himselfe alwaies at thy right hand let thy heart religiously thinke vpon him and his presence let thy tongue reuerently speake of him and his goodnes Secondly whatsoeuer thou doest whether thou eatest or drinkest and much more performest the duties of thy calling to which these are but seruants doe all to his glorie beeing about any thing aske thy selfe what glorie will redound to God by this speach or by this action Thirdly by euery euent make this vse to gather still into his fellowship by euery blessing gather encrease of faith loue and confidence in him by euery crosse adde vnto thy feare reuerence watchfulnesse by euery speciall prouidence obserue his admirable wisedome truth and goodnesse and thus by euery thing growe vp in him these are worthy fruits of pietie The third rule is to keepe the set times of Gods worship both publicke and priuate for this is the pale and preseruatiue of pietie which whosoeuer hath he will vse Gods meanes to preserue it A godly heart reuerenceth and reioyceth in all holy things the word Sacraments sabbaths and striueth to make his house a little Church and he that makes little or no conscience of the sabbath and family duties let him pretend what he will is an vngodly person without all religion 4. Be carefull to attend the waies of thine owne heart both how it subiecteth it selfe to the will of God written whether it be desirous to receiue the law at his mouth whether it tremble at the word as also how it subiecteth it selfe to the will of God done whether in prosperitie it lift vp it selfe to be something besides or without God and whether in correction it be silent vnto God because he hath done it Attend it how readie or heauie it is to lift it selfe vp in prayer for wants in praise for supplies whether it pray alwaies or in all things giue thankes Watch ouer it in thy seruices that it start not away and leaue thy worship liueles without spirit without truth know that God is a spirit and will be serued of thee if aright as he was of Paul in thy spirit and looke well to this matter for Iudas can follow and reuerence Christ and yet his heart going after couetousnesse be practising to betraie him and Herod can pretend to worship when he intends to kill Watch it further in the motions to sinne whether it be zealous and resolute against it and whether it sticke fast and with full purpose vnto the Lord whether it feare the least offence of God or can swallow smaller sinnes whether it bridle the tongue from idle talke and smaller oathes vaile the eyes from wanton lookes or whether it can easily digest such things which are no small departures from God when occasion is offered and know that such is thine heart as it is found in temptation Lastly watch it in the motions of the spirit how it entertaineth them how stirring it is in the causes of God as when occasion is offered of promoting Gods glorie in his pure worship or in the establishing of a conscionable ministrie how it entertaineth such good motions offered how it entertaineth Gods counsells rebukes and exhortations in the ministerie a cleare case it is that those that neglect such motions and much more resist them are yet in their sinnes and are no better then impious and vngodly persons 5. In the loue of men ioyne the loue of God for charitie abstracted from pietie is a counterfeit and this thou shalt doe when thou louest man in and for God because of Gods image and of his commandement so as if thou seest godlinesse grow in any man thy loue groweth with him and if grace decaie as he estrangeth himselfe from God so thou for his good becommest more strange vnto him For although by vertue of Gods commandement we must loue all and do good vnto all yet we must reserue a speciall loue to the image of God renued and especially affect such as are of the houshold of faith Vse If these be the practises of pietie which cannot be attained but by these rules then shall many a one who take themselues to haue taken out this last lesson be found non-proficients and such as whom grace neuer taught any such thing as godlinesse And to omit to speake of wicked Esaus and Ismaels scoffers of such as walke in these straite waies of God tossers of reproaches against them so farre from that inward and pure worship of the heart in spirit and truth as they are open despisers of the outward ordinances of the word and sacraments who are furthest from repentance and verie seldome reclaimed yea so monstrous and black are these filthie dogges and swine as they are not more condemned of others then of themselues for most part We will leaue to wash such bricks and come first to our common people whose extreame and secure ignorance loads them with such a burthen of impietie as it is impossible for them euer to stand vnder it when Christ shall appeare and yet they thinke to get to heauen nimbly inough For this whole practise of pietie is placed in that which they call a good meaning and a good hope but replie and tell them that grace is not contented with good meaning but teacheth to liue godly and so bringeth pietie into the life they answer that they could neuer make any shewes as many men can but yet they hope they may haue as good hearts as the best to god-ward Wherevnto if you demand how that roote can be so good which sendeth out such sower fruite or that fountaine sweete which sendeth out such bitter water for in these good hearts ignorance raigneth and the goodnes of their hearts openly neglecteth the word Sacraments c. the means of saluation and preseruatiues of pietie they can answer that they keepe their Church and doe as the most doe and if they receiue not the sacrament it is because they are not reconciled to some that haue offended them vnder which pretence they can refuse that comfort for many yeares together and carrie ye● the matter further with them and tell them your good heart sendeth out wicked oathes bitter curses and fearefull imprecations then they sweare either nothing but the truth or by nothing but that which is good or if they did happe to sweare or curse much they were vrged vnto it And for the sabboath adde that whereas a good heart maketh it a
as an other Some there are that seeme very religious can come to Church go in the count and companie of Christians and religious persons but verie vnmercifull ouergrowne with couetousnesse and in priuate for a pennie aduantage discharge all religion till Church time againe Others are mercifull inough but carelesse of religion altogether some are iust in their dealings but vncleane or intemperate others are temperate but vniust lyars swearers and no fidelitie in them The Apostle Iames meeteth with all these teaching vs 1. that pure religion standeth not onely in harmelesnes and keeping ones selfe vnspotted but in visiting the fatherles and widow that is the frequent practise of workes of mercie and charitie many say if I were rich I would do thus and thus but art thou a Christian art thou religious then though thou beest poore thou art mercifull Paul commended the Macedonians that beeing but poore yet they were rich in liberalitie toward the Saints 2. in cap. 2.10 that he that offendeth in one point of the law is guiltie of all and he that saith thou shalt not commit adulterie saith also thou shalt not kill now if thou dost no adulterie yet if thou killest thou art a transgressor of the law Vse 3. If a Christian must employ himselfe in euery good work then must men so cast and contriue their courses that neither duties of pietie hinder the duties of their calling nor these stand in the way of the other And he that hath the heart of the wise to know time and iudgement forecasteth both wisely and knoweth one of these to be subordinate but not opposite vnto the other Hence must Christians forecast and remember the Sabboath before hand and so order and husband their times and seasons that there may be place and time and oportunitie for euery good worke in the week-day and especially for the best workes whether publike exercises of religion or priuate prayers and exercises in the family Which wise managing of affaires because men are wanting in therefore sometimes the Sabboath must be encroched vpon and Gods seruice iustled out for some carnall matters other times weeks exercises are neglected because this inconuenience or losse in the calling was not seasonably and prudently preuented the priuate seruice of God also in the family must now and then be laid downe for a time or turne because some other domestical distraction hath deuoured the time allotted for it Let no man then seperate those duties which the Lord hath coupled if thou beest readie to the duties of thy particular calling forget not the duties of the generall if thou wouldst be seruiceable to men forget not in the meane time thy seruice of God If thou canst be diligent to prouide for thy selfe and thy family set sometime apart to looke out to enquire into and releeue the necessities of Gods children family abroad But woe to such knots of companionship tied fast by the deuil to sporting gaming or other vngodly lusts that neither the duties of their calling on the weekeday nor religious exercises on the Sabboath can obtaine them Doctr. 2. That euery Christian ought to keepe in himselfe a fitnes and readinesse to euery good worke is plaine in the Scriptures For 1. in duties of pietie we are enioyned not only to come to the house of God but to take heede to our feete and to wash our hands in innocencie before we compasse the Altar and first to sanctifie our selues before God and reconcile our selues to men and then bring our gift If we preach we must doe it readily and of a readie minde for then we haue reward If you heare you must be swift to heare and readie to heare rather then offer the sacrifice of fooles 2. In performance of duties of loue and mercie vnto men we are called to readinesse in distributing 1. Tim. 6.18 and mindfulnesse to distribute Heb. 13.16 3. In priuate duties when God giueth vs peace and opportunitie we must serue him with cheerefulnesse and good hearts Deut. 28.47 4. In priuate iniuries we must be ready to receiue yea to offer reconciliation and to forgiue which is another good worke and so in the rest Reasons 1. We herein become like vnto God whose nature is to accommodate himselfe to our good whose readinesse to giue bountifully and forgiue freely is hereby shadowed 2. Hereby we also bewtifie and as it were guild our duties when they come off without delaies without grudging murmuring or heauinesse but as from men inu●ed to weldoing 3. Hereby we may laie hold of Christian consolation in that this readie and willing mind is accepted where often power of doing good is wanting and indeed the regenerate often want power and abilitie vnto good but to want will and desire is dangerous Vse Whosoeuer would finde this grace in himselfe must trie it by the companions of it As 1. there must be a good heart cheerefully and willingly disposed vnto and in the doing of good 2. Thess. 2.17 The Lord must first mooue and perswade the heart for so the word signifieth as well as to comfort and then establish his to euery good word and worke Hence are we exhorted to do euery thing heartily as to the Lord. The Lord would haue none to offer any thing to the building of the tabernacle but whose heart incouraged him and whose spirit made him willing If thou findest not thine heart accompanying thy duties but thou doest thy religious duties for necessitie law fashion or for some sinister end and thy duties of loue with a straite heart or an euill eye thinking any thing bestowed too good or too much thou hast slaine thy action before the birth it was neuer quickned it hath no life no● soule God who loueth only a cheerefull giuer will not endure it 2. He that is continually readie to euery good worke cannot but be abundant in good workes the phrase little differing from that 1. Tim. 5.10 The widow that hath beene continually giuen to euery good worke for else this readinesse could not be other then an idle preparation Dost thou continue in prayer in all things giue thankes hast thou bin diligent in trayning vp thy family in Gods feare hast thou with Onesephorus often refreshed the Saints doth the loynes of many blesse thee and the blessing of the poore and widow returne vpon thee shew me the ●oats and garments thou hast made shew me the knowledge and feare of God in thy family expresse the faith thou professest by such fruits of faith as these are and then hast thou profited in this precept els thou as yet commest short of it 3. In such a partie will be a forgoing and departure with things of price yea the best thing he hath will not be too deare to purchase that dutie which he seeth God requiring at his hands which if it be wanting because many good works are costly a man cannot be ready to euery good worke Now to apply the
become a pillow for securitie in many which are Gods spurres in the ●●anke of the godly to pricke them vp and rouse them from their drowsinesse and yet many determine hence and conclude without further ground the Lords loue towards them because of long and durable afflictions of which they could neuer come to make good vse nor take any profit by them whom God loueth say they he chasteneth and we are iudged of the Lord that we should not be condemned of the world and when they are exceedingly crossed in the world and indeed cursed in their counsell and attempts they thanke God they haue their punishment here in this life so secure themselues from all future paines But this is but a guile and stratageme of Satan to cast his poyson into the Lords cup and bane and destroie men with that which might be a speciall meane of their good euen a speciall prouocation to make them seeke reconciliation with God in Iesus Christ which many men who will not much murmur at affliction but generally can confesse it a fruit of their sinne little thinke of the affliction it selfe is a token of loue inough alreadie though no amendment accompanie it nor any sorrow for sinne feare of offending or diligence in good duties follow it Thus by all these meanes securitie eateth vp the soules of infinite professed Christians who are all miserably deluded and not yet gotten out of their naturall corrupted estate but for the present are the children of wrath The fourth and last sort of men who are deceiued and wander out of the good way are some that seeme to themselues and others to be very good Christians at least none of the worst and yet many of them little better then some of the former And these are of two sorts some are deceiued in regard of their sinnes others in regard of their graces or vertues Of the former sort There be some who because they are not carried to such sinnes as they see others they conclude presently that they are in the right way to heauen whereas there may be a worke of the word and spirit forcible against many sinnes where there is no sauing grace in the soule Hence is it that many 1. before sinne are vexed at it and affraid of it and are loth to be too bold with it but hating the punishment more then the sinne they goe through stitch at length as Herod against Iohn and Pilate against Christ. Others can auoide sinne as swearing drinking vncleannesse c. but haue a false finger that hath laid hold vpon some one or moe which shall bee dearer then to forgoe for naught so as all sinnes shall not be left nay they will in some cases be very commendable euen aboue good Christians in repressing corruptions and yet not bee clensed from their filthinesse Thus Haman could a long time refraine himselfe from Mordecay 2. After sinne many moe can deceiue themselues with a counterfeit repentance whereby they can feele it crie out vpon it and confesse it vvith griefe d●●sembling Saul cursed Cain treacherous Iudas and hard hearted Pharaoh 〈◊〉 doe thus much and yet this is all the repentance of many vvho think that hereby they haue receiued a sound cure Hence haue vve many that after their sinne vvith a Lord haue mercie or saying ouer of a prayer vvith a forced sigh dravve a skinne ouer their consciences and for the time there is peace And others vvho haue spent their vvhole liues in oppression and grinding the faces of the poore euery pennie of vvhose vvealth is vvorse gotten then other if about the time of their death they giue a little trifle to the poore or be liberall for a sermon or set apart some small thing to some good vses they rest herein as a sufficient acquittance from all their vnrighteousnesse vvhereas they neuer thinke of ●●tisfaction and restoring againe that they haue robbed according to the ●avv of repentance Let such punish themselues pray fast giue almes and yet the Lord vvill neuer a vvhit regard for here are no bands of vvicnednes loosed Others by some short humiliation in a seruile kinde of flatterie of God proceeding of slauish feare and selfe-loue vvill come and confesse their sinne and promise they vvill no more so transgresse but yet they dissemble with their double hearts for how many haue we knowne whose extorted righteousnesse hath been as the morning dew In their sicknes and distresse they haue humbled themselues but with the Iewes for corne and wine they haue howled and cried vpon their beds but they returned not to the most high they affected deliuerance not repentance nor further fawned vpon God then to get out of his hands By these wordly sorrowes infinite men deceiue themselues and rest in them as sufficient repentance The latter sort are they that deceiue themselues in turning their eyes from their sins to some vertues or graces which they find in their soules Hence haue we men that can be diligent in hearing the word and that gladly with Herod and thinke that enough to dispence with their holding of their Herodias some sweet sinne or other Others can reioyce and be affected as we haue knowne soft hearted Protestants that could melt at sermons into teares with great affection and yet haue made little conscience of their wayes but not mortifying the deeds of the flesh haue yeelded to their lusts the raines in all libertie Others can receiue the word talke of it yeeld a seemely obedience vnto it any man would say they were surely good Christians yet as bad ground they giue it not depth enough they giue it the vnderstanding and some affection but the will and the whole ioy is not carried vnto it If they talke of it it is but as such as onely haue tasted it with their tongues as cookes do their seruices but they haue not filled their bellie with it as they for whom it is prepared Their sightly obedience is like Herods who did many things because Iohn was a good man In a word they can be reuerent liberall to Ministers kind to professors forward in good motions can lend their hands or purses to helpe the godly out of trouble yet in all these commendable duties are like a deceitfull bow which being cast crooked let the eye aime neuer so right at the marke it casteth it quite besides all the way euen so all these proceeding frō deepe hypocrisie done not purely but sinister respects furthering them deceiue the soule keepe it farre from the happinesse of it I graunt that in a good heart naturall hypocrisie will be mingling it selfe in the bringing forth of such fruites but yet it swayes not the heart it is resisted and mastered so as the maine sway of a good heart is sincere choosing good things and doing them purely for God and themselues but thus it is not in the former Vse 1. All this so large a doctrine sheweth what a number of men and women
grounds or 4. laden with lusts and then the spirit will not sowe among thornes And thus all the meanes of saluation enioyed out of their holy vse are turned to greater condemnation Who art thou then that contentest thy selfe to come to Church to heare to pray to reade keepest the Sabbaths professest the Gospel to haue the countenance of religious persons whereas in the meane time thou wantest the inward master the spirit of supplication the power of the Gospel All is wrong with thee thou hast embraced a shadow for the substance and found a● it were the cloathes of Christ but the bodie is risen and gone Begge at the hands of God therefore in all thy duties publike and priuate the presence of the spirit who alone can worke thy heart wait for Gods teaching for this is the way to become vvise to saluation Doctr. 2. God in sauing vs from our miserie reneweth vs vnto his own image of righteousnes and holines for he saueth vs by giuing vs vnto his sonne and if any be in Christ he must become a new creature which new creature is called the new man which after God is created and which must be renewed on vs in knowledge after the image of him that ereated him Colos. 3.9 The Apostle Peter teacheth vs that great and precious promises namely of life and saluation are made vnto vs. But how come we to ●nioye them the next words shew by beeing made partakers of the diuine nature and flying corruptions which are in the world through lust This diuine nature is nothing else but the renewing of vs vnto the image of God by which beeing freed from the corruption of the world we become of earthly and fleshly heauenly and diuine like vnto our Father practising those heauenly qualities which God by his spirit createth in vs such as are the hatred of sinne loue of pietie the contempt of the world and the breathing after life eternall by all which we seeme and after a sort put on his nature and image The same truth haue we confirmed by Zachariah in his song where he maketh this part of Gods image standing in righteousnes holines a fruit of our redemption and iustification Vse 1. This doctrine letteth vs see the absolute necessitie of our renewing without which there can be no saluation Ioh. 3.5 Except a man be borne againe of water and the spirit he cannot be saued And the reason is because by it as by an inward meane the Lord setteth vs into the state of saluation That washing of the Disciples feete was not only an example of humilitie but a symbole and representation of this washing away of sinnes in this our renewing by the blood of Christ and therefore Christ saith vnto Peter If I wash thee not thou hast no part in mee And indeed who can haue part in Christ that will not part from his foule sinnes that he may be cleane which if it be true how farre doe men delude themselues who thinke they can walke with Christ and haue part in him and yet haue neither hand nor foote head nor heart washed from guile Euery Simon Magus will thinke to haue part in this businesse as well as Simon Peter and yet inwardly nourish a bitter gall of iniquitie But let no man henceforth deceiue himselfe for the sinner that will not be washed hath no part in the kingdome of God and of Christ. 2. It affoardeth a triall whether a man be in the way of saluation or no hee that is a new creature is in the way of life Obiect But this is a secret worke of the spirit and how can we know it Answ. First thou must be borne againe to which is required that God become thy Father in Christ the Church thy mother the word the immortall seed of which thou art begotten there must be a conception wherein Christ must be formed in thee a birth wherein by the helpe of Ministers as midwiues thou must be brought into this spirituall world a desire of the sincere milke of the word drawne out of the two Testaments the brests of the mother and after a desire of stronger meat to grow stronger by Now thou art borne vnto God but what a parable is this to many euen old men Masters and Teachers and Rulers in Israel who know no natiuitie but one of Adam and Eue no progenie of God and his Church know no parents but such as beget earthly children vnto naturall life base borne sonnes of the earth not knowing any heauenly Father neither principall nor ministeriall begetting them to any heauenly life of grace or glorie Secondly after this birth all old things must passe away and euery thing must become new he that is washed is all cleane And therefore there must be 1. a new light in the minde and vnderstanding conceiuing the things of the spirit of God For as the further blinding of men is a note and brand of a reprobate so is it a note of one begotten to God to be renewed in knowledge Col. 3.9 Secondly there must be a newe qualitie in the will readie to heare the voice of Christ in all things and obey it The Scripture noteth it a marke of an vngodly wretch to be further obdurate and hardened but he that is borne of God heareth his words Ioh. 8.47 he carrieth a flexible heart vnto the word and 1. Ioh. 2.29 he that doth righteously is borne of him Thirdly there must be a new conuersation manifesting the workes and fruits of the spirit a life lead in the practise of raigning sinne and making shewe of the works of the flesh is a note of him that is lead by the flesh but he that is borne of God sinneth not 1. Ioh. 3.9 he hath sinne in him but not raigning Rom. 6.4 he doth sinne also but 1. it is not he but the sinne in him 2. it is against his heart and intention 3. he lyeth no● in his sinne but his course is according to the commandement and a walking after the spirit Fourthly There must be new affections as the loue of God hatred of all sinne especially in himselfe loue of good men of pietie of puritie of the light the whole first Epistle of Iohn bea●eth vpon this point for it is a note of one in darkenesse to hate the light to hate the brethren c. men thinke it a sound plea when they ouershoote themselues in affections speaches or actions to say they are flesh and blood and they must hate and speake their minds c. but if thou beest no more then flesh and blood thou shalt neuer come in heauen Christians are of the blood and flesh and bone of Christ and therefore must subiect themselues in all things to be ruled by his spirit Fiftly there must be meanes vsed to preserue all these as namely the spirit of prayer and supplication Zach. 12.10 a child new borne into the world crieth presently and that which doth
not is still borne or a dead child and vnder this I comprehend a cheerefulnesse to all the parts of the publike and priuate worshippe of God whereas the Prophet maketh it a note of a wicked man that he calleth not vpon God that is he casteth off the whole worship of God Wouldst thou then finde thy selfe to be a newe creature finde this change that the clouds of darkenes and ignorance are remooued that thou hast an heart of flesh that thou findest an abatement of thy sinnes and lusts that thou hast heauenly motions that thou vsest meanes carefully of thy spirituall life that thou growest by the nourishment of the word Sacraments prayer reading conference and other exercises of godlines and repentance this is the way of life which thou hast happily found thou art now much nearer saluation then when thou first beleeued Vers. 6. Which he shed on vs abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour To come to the right meaning of this verse we must explane fowre things 1. the gift bestowed which that is the spirit as the former words import 2. the person bestowing him he that is God the Father 3. the measure of the gift 1. powred out 2. plentifully or shed on vs abundantly 4. the person meriting this gift that is Iesus Christ described here to be our Sauiour through Iesus Christ our Sauiour First the gift is the spirit or holy Ghost Quest. How can the spirit be bestowed Answ. In the spirit two things must be considered 1. his essence and person 2. his gifts and effects The former cannot be conferred for neither can his essence or person be concluded in the whole frame of heauen and earth and much lesse in the narrow corners of mans heart he beeing an infinite God equall with the father and the sonne But the latter may for so 1. Cor. 12.11 the Apostle speaking of sundrie operations and gifts ●aith all these things worketh the same spirit and this phrase must be vnderstood by an other Act. 2.17 where Peter alleadging the place out of Ioel 1.28 I will powre out my spirit thus explaineth it I will powre out of my spirit that is the sauing gifts and graces of my spirit such as here the renewing of the spirit by iustification and sanctification of which we shall heare m●re in the next ve●se The second thing is the person bestowing the holy Ghost he that is the Father as ver 4. who as he is the fountaine of the deitie so of all good actions and operations Ioh. 14.26 But when the comforter shall come whom the Father shall send Obiect But Christ saith that he will send the spirit from the Father Ans. This maketh no difference in the thing the spirit proceedeth first from the father as the first in the Trinitie and from the Sonne as from the second in order in the Trinitie and he onely expresseth this order when he saith whome I will send from the Father for when the Father sendeth the holy Ghost it is by the Sonne in whom all our good is deriued but not as by an instrument but as from a principall efficient with the Father onely the second in order from the Father Thirdly the measure of the gift is noted 1. In that he is said to shed or powre him out he saith not he gaue or communicated or dropped or showred but powred him out which noteth the liberallitie and plentie of the thing conferred namely of the graces of the spirit called by the name of the Spirit himselfe that we might conceiue of the bountifulnesse of our God who seemeth rather to communicate the verie fountaine it selfe of grace then the streames and riuers of it In which Metaphor note by the way that the graces of the spirit are here compared to waters which most properly are powred out and that not vnfitly For 1. as water washeth the filthinesse of the bodie so these graces as the pure waters of sanctification wash and cleanse the soule from the corruption and sinne of it Ezek. 36.25 I will powre cleane water 2. water hath a naturall qualitie to extinguish heat and quench the thirst of man and beast so onely these waters bring with them refreshing against the hotte wrath of God which otherwise would prooue a consuming fire for he that drinketh of this water shall neuer thirst more that is he shall neuer wish that grace sooner whereof he shall not drinke to sacietie 3. water softeneth the earth and maketh it fruitfull so these graces of the spirit mollifie the heart so fitteth it vnto all good works which are the fruits of the spirit without which we should be as the heath in the wildernes and as a parched land which seeth not when any good commeth But the second word whereby this immeasurable grace bestowed is signified is the aduerb abundantly or if we wil goe nearer the original richly and so when the Apostle writ this Epistle the spirit was indeed abundantly powred out and that in three respects First in regard of the diuerse kinds of gifts then powred out as 1. The common gifts of the spirit which all good and bad partake in were in greater abundāce thē euer before bestowed such as the gifts of illumination outward calling profession of the truth common generall faith 2. The more especiall gifts of sanctification the which our text most aimeth at as of faith regeneration loue hope c. for so the Apostle seemeth to restraine the graces he speaketh of saying on vs who are renewed by the holy ghost As both the prophet Ioel and Peter speaking the same thing seeme to doe the one mentioning my seruants my handmaids the other speaking of such as inuocate and call vpon the name of the lord and to this purpose we might shew what a number were daily conuerted and how in those dayes the kingdome of God was taken by force 3. More extraordinarie and miraculous gifts which were more proper to those times and in great abundance distributed are here included as the gifts of tongues of healing diseases casting out deuils porphesying command of death after a sort to take and leaue mens bodies and sundrie such other very frequent then aboue all times before or since Secōdly these gifts were plentifully powred out in regard of the persons people vpon whom they were conferred not now vpon some few Iews or handfull of people as before Christs ascension but vpon all flesh saith Ioel 2.28 vpon euerie nation vnder heauen saith Peter Now both Iew and Gentile bond and free circumcision vncircumcision all respect and acceptation of persons remooued haue equall part and promise in these graces Thirdly in regard of the meanes in which the spirit now conueled these graces that is the word Sacraments and ministerie of the new Testament which farre exceeded in glorie all that ministerie that euer was before it For in former time they sawe in their ministerie things a farre off in types shadowes clouds but
First in regard of God good workes haue their necessarie vses As 1. that his name may be glorified by the professors of it for it tends greatly to his praise when in such workes as himselfe hath commanded his children testifie their obedience and thankefulnesse 2. that his Gospel may be beautified and adorned of which see cap. 2.10 3. that himselfe may be pleased and delighted as men with sweete smels with such sweete smelling sacrifices as these be Heb. 13.16 Philip. 4.18 these are the myrrhe and the spice which Christ gathereth when he commeth into his garden Cant. 5.1 Secondly in respect of our neighbour these good workes of mercie and beneficence haue their excellent and necessarie vses for euerie Christian is a fruitfull branch of that vine whereby both God and man is cheared And whereas our neighbour is either vnconuerted or converted they want not their speciall vse in regard of them both First for the vnconuerted they are either elect or reprobate If they be elect they may hence be prepared to their conuersion and woone euen without the word to the liking of the word and profession which they see so holy so charitable and so plentifull in good works Thus saith the Apostle that vnbeleeuing husbands may without the word be wonne by the godly conversation of their wiues and the same Apostle exhorteth the scattered and conuerted Iewes to haue their conuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which now did speake euill of them as euill doers might by their good workes be prouoked to glorifie God in the day of their visitation But if they be wicked and belong not to God yet by the godly liues of professors they shall be 1. restrained that they cannot so boldly rush into and tumble in their sinnes as they would no more then Herodias could quietly enioy her sinne so long as Iohn Baptist was aliue Mark 6.19 2. they shall haue their mouthes stopt and put to silence when they would gladly open them wide against the truth and the professors of it And this is the will of God that by weldoing we put to silence the ignorance of foolish men 3. they shall be convinced and condemned in their consciences and so prepared for the iudgement of God and thus the Queene of the South condemned the Iewes and Noah by building the Arke condemned the old world Heb. 11.7 Secondly If the neighbour be conuerted he is either weake and then he is hereby confirmed strengthed and brought on or else he is strong and then he is further prouoked yea his heart is gladded and further knit to such a one as in whom he seeth such sparkles of Gods image to shine And thus was Titus his inward affection more aboundant toward the Corinths when he remembred the obedience of them all so was Pauls also by the faith and grace of the Philippians 1.5 Thirdly in regard of our selues they haue many necessarie and profitable vses As 1. to make our election sure to our selues 2. Pet. 1.10 2. we may by them discerne the soundnesse of our owne graces as sauing knowledge will be operatiue liuely faith will be working effectuall loue will be an hand giuing out sound hope will be purging Christian thankfulnesse wil appeare in good works which are called sacrifices of thanksgiuing true charitie and mercifulnesse will go beyond that mouth-mercie of which Iames speaketh for else all is vnsound whosoeuer saith he loueth God and keepeth not his commandements is a lyar 1. Ioh. 2.3 for that loue of God or men is vnsound which is in tongue word but not indeed and truth as witnesseth the Apostle 1. Ioh. 3.18 3. by these fruits other men also may discerne the soundnes of our faith and graces for although good workes cannot iustifie the person before God yet they must iustifie the faith of the person before men and therefore Iames saith shewe me thy faith by thy workes and of Abel is said that he obtained witnes that he was righteous in that he offred a better sacrifice then Cain Heb. 11.4 4. They doe our selues good both in this life and in the life to come 1. In this life they profit vs in our outward estate and inward They bring blessing to our outward estate for God hath promised that he that watereth shal haue raine and that the mercifull man shall not want yea they drawe vpon vs not onely the blessing of God but of men also who blesse the mercifull man by many prayers which Iob made no small account of when in the depth of his distresse hereby he comforted him selfe that the blessing of the poore came vpon him Thus Onesiphorus his mercie towards Paul beeing at Rome in trouble brought the feruent prayers of so great an Apostle vpon himselfe and his house 2. Tim. 1.18 Besides this they doe our names good and helpe to purchase a good report which is better then a pretious oyntment Abraham by his workes was commended that he was iust Iam. 2.21 and of the good and mercifull man it is said that his name shall not be put out As for our inward estate they make that farre more thriuing for euerie grace is strengthened by the execrcise of it as no talent was vsed but to encrease for as prayer is increased by praying and knowledge by instructing so is loue by almes and mercie by distributing without which exercise all would rust and become as a sword kept in the scabbard till the heart become like the sluggards field ouergrowne with thornes and briars but most vnreadie to any good worke 2. In the life to come they are profitable for they procure a mercifull reward and beeing a sowing to the spirit we shall reape of them in the haruest life euerlasting yea and more they procure a proportionable measure of glorie for according to the measure of faith and grace in the worke the recompence may well be thought to be a cuppe of cold water shall not loose the reward but yet he that soweth more liberally shall more liberally reape And as in hell are degrees of torments for some shall be beaten with more stripes some with fewer and it shall be easier with some then other and yet both condemned so is it probably held that in heauen shall be degrees of glorie for some shall shine as the firmament some as the starres in which is greater light yea one starre differeth from another in glorie and this according to the gayning of talents for he that gaineth fiue talents shall rule ouer fiue cities and he shall rule ouer tenne cities that hath gayned tenne talents Not that the gayning of the talents meriteth any such recompence no more then a cup of cold water giuen to a disciple in the name of a disciple or a mite cast into the treasurie neither of which shall loose their reward but because faithfull is he which hath promised Vse 1. This doctrine meeteth with that slanderous
of Christ and the expressing of his vertues Whence it is that the Apostle praysing God for the faith and loue of the Colossians presently pointeth to the naturall mother of these vertues of whom they both are bred and fed for the hopes sake that is the glory hoped for which is laid vp for you in heauē And the same Apostle exhorting the Philippians not to minde earthly things but to trafficke as the citizens of heauen noteth this the most effectuall reason because from heauen they looked for a Sauiour who would change their vile bodie and make it like his owne glorious bodie Vse 1. Ministers must take heede of earthly mindednes not seeking theirs but them who are committed vnto their trust not onely hereby to auoyde offence but also that they may feelingly speake of such points as concerne the forsaking of the world in affection a point most difficult to learne from the most sanctified teacher Which course if a minister take not long may he looke for an haruest yea euen till his eyes faile but he shall neuer see his seede againe he hath sowne to the winde and what can he looke to reape but earthlinesse or atheisme amongst his people For mens minds will be working and setling themselues vpon some pleasurable and profitable obiect if not vpon that which is truely good yet at least vpon that which is apparantly good and their hearts can neuer be taken off things belowe but remaine wordlings still vnlesse we shewe them better treasures elsewhere and that in such feeling manner as they may thinke we speake in earnest And againe if they without this doctrine be suffered like the Sadduces to include all their hopes desires in this life no other fruits can be expected but open Atheisme and contempt of God Vse 2. People must conceiue that now in the ministerie they are called to the beginnings of the heauenly life For we may not thinke that the Lord meaneth onely to manifest his loue hereafter in heauen to beleeuing soules but as loue desireth present communication and vnion with the thing loued so the Lord entreth into present league with such as he striketh his euerlasting couenant withal neuer marrieth himselfe into any soule in that indissoluble wedlocke with whom he contracteth not himselfe euen here vpon earth And seeing the Gospel in the ministerie of it is the Lords loue letter euery one in the hearing of these glad tidings must say to his soule this is the suite and offer of God vnto mee calling me in this sermon to nearer fellowship with himselfe oh vnthankfull wretch if I refuse his loue if I still cleaue vnto earthly affections and earthly conuersation on whom so much labour is spent that I might bee called out of the world Vse 3. Hence may euery hearer make a triall of his profiting vnder the ministerie looke how much thou findest thy heart lifted vp towards heauen and heauenly things how much thy earthly cogitations are abated how much thou findest saluation neerer then when thou first beleeued so much hast thou profited by the word and no more The which checketh many of our hearers who are euerie whit as worldly as earthly minded as they were at their first receiuing of the Gospel and some professors that haue much earthlinesse bound vp in their bosomes the following of their owne ploughs causeth them often contentedly to pluck their hands from the plough of the Lord. And because it is common with men to thinke they haue attained inough in Christianity when they haue gotten a little knowledge and may now make holiday and go no further it is meete that all of vs should bring our hearts to some certaine triall and touch whereby we may haue assurance that the word hath framed them to this temper of which we speake and that we may doe as by many other so especially by these three notes 1. Whereas all earthly reioysings are condemned as wherein men easily loose their hearts and whereby death is made distastfull and vnwelcome examine whether thou reioysest in God in his word and graces as in thy chiefest ioy and aduantage 2. Seeing in all our earthly employments we may not while we vse the world become worldlings whether by all earthly things we be drawne to the loue of heauenly for although God hath appointed but one Sabboth in seauen daies yet to a Christian euery day is sanctified to be a rest from all the deeds of the flesh wherein he is to walke with his God and shew forth the religious keeping of his heart and good conscience in euery action of his whole life so making euery action of his particular calling a part of Christian obedience and dutie vnto God 3. Seeing a well ordered heart hath nothing in earth in comparison of God search thy soule whether it findeth more sweetnes in the seruice of thy Lord then in his outward benefits as there is great reason seeing these must leaue thee or be left of thee before or at the day of death when accounts must also be made both for the getting keeping and expending of them at which time those who with most greedie appetites haue sought them and purchased them shall find them farre from counteruailing that good which they forfeited for them By these notes gage thy heart sound the depth of it and thou shalt doubtles finde such deceit as shall occasion thee to cleaue to that ordinance which he that framed it at the first hath in his wisedome appointed for the further reformation of it Doct. 2. The second instruction out of the words is That true faith neuer goeth alone but as a Queene is attended with many other graces as knowledge loue feare of God among which hope here mentioned not only adorneth and beautifieth but strengtheneth and fortifieth the beleeuer and as an helmet of saluation causeth the Christian souldier to hold out in repentance and obedience Hence it is that our Apostle speaketh not of the faith of the elect but he mentioneth as an inseparable handmaid the hope of life eternall so doth the Apostle Iohn We are now the sonnes of God here is faith making vs the the borne of God and we know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him there is hope and whosoeuer hath this hope purgeth himselfe as he is pure there is the strengthening of the beleeuer in obedience Notable for this purpose is that place in Rom. 5.1 2. c. where the whole traine of graces attending and following faith are fully and excellently described Now this hope is a gift of God whereby the Saints patiently and firmely expect good things to come alreadie beleeued especially their resurrection and life eternall prouoking them in the meane time to all dutie In which description diuerse things are to be considered First the originall of it It is a gift of God and obtained by prayer as faith also is whence the Apostle praieth that
lambe slaine from the beginning of the world both 1. in regard of Gods counsell and 2. of the promise to Adam and 3. of the efficacie of his death the sauing power of which was the same to all beleeuers yesterday to day and for euer and thus euen Abraham saw his day If to the Gospel which is a peculiar doctrine concerning Christ it is called an eternall Gospel not that it was eternally preached for it was a mysterie kept secret since the world began Rom. 16.25 but 1. because it proceedeth frō the eternall counsell of God 2. it containeth the word● of eternall life and 3. it remaineth for all eternitie Finally if to our effectuall vocation by this word yea and our whole saluation he gaue vs of grace and purpose saluation and effectuall vocation before the world began that is in his counsell and decree Vse 1. Hence we see that the Popish doctrine of iustification by workes was preuented euen before the world began For if God laid all the degrees of our blessednesse vp in himselfe before the world much more before we were in the world who seeth not that all our saluation is freely comming vnto vs both in the promise and execution or accomplishment of it not according to our workes but according to the good pleasure of his will If it be here alleadged that God in electing vs foresaw our faith and workes and therefore elected vs. The answer is that that is vnsound seeing faith in Christ is a fruit and effect of election not going before but following after it Whence Paul saith that God had mercie on him not because he foresawe that he would be faithfull but that he might be faithfull And we are elected before the foundation of the world that we should be holy and without blame If yet it be said that God might as well foresee the faith and works of his elect as their saluation I answer he did foresee them as meanes and wayes which himselfe prepared for them to walke in to their saluation and so did decree them but the decree in regard of the beginnings and motiues to election cannot be otherwise then free and absolute if that of the Apostle be true that we are iustified freely by his grace And if God cannot elect men to life except he foresee that they will vse their free-will well as the Pelagian or that they will become faithfull and righteous necessarily must this decree of God which is the first and eternall principle of all things depend vpon some other externall beginning out of himselfe contrarie to that of the Apostle who saith that he predestinated vs to bee adopted through Iesus Christ in himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Beza well obserueth that is finding no cause neither present nor to come out of himselfe of this his most iust counsell and decree Besides saluation beeing but one and one way vnto it and Gods decree but one how should by the former doctrine any infants be saued in whom the Lord could not foresee either faith or workes So that as the former doctrine called vpon vs to giue God the honour of his truth so doth this to giue him the glorie of mercie in that it is his good pleasure euen before all times to giue his a kingdome freely to which purpose he giueth faith freely works of faith freely the end of faith which is the perseuerance of it vnto saluation freely and in a word as the decree before all times so grace and glorie in due time most freely Vse 2. Did God thus freely loue vs when we were not much more will he now beeing reconciled vnto him by the death of his sonne If while we were yet sinners and enemies he set his loue vpon vs much more now beeing iustified and friends will he saue vs from wrath Thou maist be sometimes frowned vpon yea buffeted and vnder the roddes of God to the breaking of thy heart but yet all these proceeding from this loue are farre from breaking it off to thee who hast euer tasted how good the Lord hath beene to thy soule Well maist thou cheare vp thy heart and say why art thou cast downe my soule what is it that can separate thee from this loue which hath two excellent properties namely to bee free without desert and constant without end nay trust in God rather yea repaire with the boldnes of a child to thy father that loueth thee neuer the lesse because he correcteth thee and strengthen thy prayers herein that his loue will not suffer thee to want things meete for thee Vse 3. What an hainous sinne were it to requite such a free loue with hatred repaying euil for good which consideration alone should make vs smite our hearts be ashamed of our vnthankfull sinnes it is a note of one who hath tasted of this goodnesse to be grieued for his sinne in this respect that it displeaseth one who hath bin such a good God vnto him Vse 4. Let vs expresse this vertue of God towards our brethren not so much waighing their deserts no mote then God doth ours but be readie to repay good for euill loue for hatred blessing for cursing knowing 1. that it is the grace of a dutie of loue or mercie when it is free 2. that the heathen can doe one good turne for another 3. that hereby we shall be sonnes of our heauenly father who suffereth his raine to fall and sunne to shine vpon the iust and vniust doth good for euill yea ouercommeth euill with good Secondly as God laid not the foundation of the world so soone as the foundation of our saluation but prepared a remedie before the maladie it is our parts not onely to magnifie this grace in him but to imitate it by labouring to couer the faults of our brethren when they are committed and not as the manner of many is to amplifie euery circumstance of offences done whereas we should make the best of the worst euen in the worst the meekenesse of spirit must euer temper our zeale against their sinne and prepare couers and cures as fast as they breede offences but especially if in good men and professors of the Gospel a weakenesse breake out woe to that man who with open mouth is readie by that occasion to disgrace not them onely but the whole profession by reason of them v. 3. But hath made his word manifest in due time by preaching Hauing seene how the maine promise of life eternall hath beene made by the God of truth we are now to consider this truth of God further in the accomplishing of that in due time which he promised before all times And then was that promise accomplished when the word was made manifest which manifestation is amplified 1. by the circumstance of time in due time 2. by the meanes of this manifestation that is by preaching For the meaning of
peaceably with him Vse 2. This neere relation worketh speciall affection betweene the Minister and people conuerted by him I say not there ought to be but there is also a speciall affection of loue betweene them The Minister loueth him that is begotten by him as if he were his naturall sonne and the issue of his bodie nay euen aboue him seeing it is a more ardent and lasting loue which is grounded in grace then that in nature the loue of women is not comparable vnto it The people haue such in singular estimation for their workes sake The Galatians tasting the sweetnes of the Gospel did receiue Paul as an Angel of God yea as Christ himselfe and would haue plucked out their eyes that is departed from their dearest things to haue done him good The Iaylor beeing conuerted was as readie to wash the wounds of the Apostles as euer he was before to inflict them Lydia constraineth them to tarry with her and all this because they see they owe them which Paul challenged of Philemon not onely their seruice but euen their owne selues vnto them Let Ministers feele this fatherly yea this motherly affection Gal. 4.19 towards their people and like tender mothers reioyce when they prosper and thriue in grace mourne when they are sicke but when they are like to die be readie to die for them and with them such a tender mother was Paul that wished himselfe rather accursed then his countrimen should be cast away We haue many teachers euery where but few such fathers too many Ministers resemble the mother of the dead child who care not what become of the liuing one whom the true Salomon shall in the end discouer to be no naturall mothers of his children And iustly may we call for childlike affections at this day in our hearers especially seeing a number challenge the Church for their mother but deale with their fathers as Simeon and Leui dealt with their father Iacob so farre as they can making them to stink among their inhabitants or like another cursed brood with Cham seeke to discouer their fathers nakednes well may we wish such to become children in malitiousnesse and seriously to consider of this truth which informeth vs that whosoeuer they be that finde not that those Ministers feete are become beautifull who perhaps before were strangers in their hearts whosoeuer for their workes sake receiue them not into the inward closet of their soules whosoeuer in their departure mourne not after them as King Ioash after Eliah my father my father such may be allowed to make question of their conuersion as he may of his legitimation who could neuer come to know who was his father for were the Gospel powerfull in a people a most proper fruit of it would be the conuerting of the hearts of fathers vnto children and of children vnto their fathers Now if any be desirous to carrie themselues towards their Ministers as children toward their parents they must performe vnto them these duties 1. They must giue them double honour 1. Tim. 5.17 reuerencing their persons their places 2. They must partake in all their goods as the Leuites in the law did yea if neede be lay downe their necks for their sakes Rom. 16.4 in way of thankfulnes 3. No accusations must be receiued against them vnder two or three witnesses a dutifull child will not heare much lesse beleeue euill reports of his father 4. In doubtfull cases of conscience resort vnto them for counsell as children to their father 5. Obey them in all godly precepts endure their seueritie be guided by their godly directions as those who haue the ouersight of soules committed vnto them euen as the child ingeniously imitateth and obeyeth his father Doctr. 2. Faith is one and the same in all the elect and is therefore called the common faith Eph. 4.5 there is one faith which is true whether we vnderstand it of the doctrine of saluation which in Athanasius his confession is called the Catholike faith of all Christians because it is a doctrine receiued and beleeued by the Catholike Church or if we take it for the gift of faith whereby we beleeue to iustification Which grace is but one and common to all the elect notwithstanding there be diuerse measures and degrees of it peculiar to some Hence the Apostle Peter calleth it the like pretious faith 1. in respect of the kind of it beeing a iustifying faith by which all that beleeue haue power to be the sonnes of God Ioh. 1.12 Gal. 3.26 2. of the obiect of it which is one Christ the same yesterday and to day and for euer who dwelleth in the hearts of euery beleeuer Eph. 3.17 whom although the fathers of former ages beheld him to come and the latter ages alreadie come yet both reioyce in seeing his day with the same eie of faith the difference is that one seeth it somewhat more cleerely then the other 3. of the same ende of it which is saluation common to all beleeuers called therefore by Iude 3. the common salvation Vse 1. To confute such as foolishly imagine and teach that there may be as many faiths and waies to saluation as there be nations and peoples that the Iewes must be saued by the law of Moses the Gentiles by the law of nature Christians by the Gospel and euery man by the religion he professeth to prooue which vanitie they alleadge Habac. 2. The iust shall liue by his owne faith But we that haue learned that there is but one Christ one way to heauen and one common faith euidently perceiue that euery man cannot be saued in his owne way except some can come to the father and not by the sonne The Apostle Peter hauing learned the doctrine of faith from Christs owne mouth writing to the dispersed Iewes calleth that his faith the same pretious faith with that of the Gentiles teaching thereby that the faith is but one and that published in the Gospel whereby both Iew and Gentile can be saued As for that place of the Prophet the scope of it is onely to vrge the special application of that one and onely true sauing faith which euery man is to labour for that he may liue by it and further is no ground for such fancies Vse 2. This doctrine affordeth vs another way to saluation then the Popish Church and guids manifest vnto vs. For 1. here is no mention of common workes out of the Churches treasurie the Apostle reacheth that the common treasurie of the Church is the common faith which excludeth all merit seeing to beleeue is not to merit but to apprehend not another mans but Christs merits yea the Scripture it selfe speaketh cautelously in this matter least euen our faith it selfe should come in the schoale to be poised with the grace of God when it speaketh so often that we are iustified by faith and of faith and through faith but neuer for faith
but no commandement hath a speciall promise annexed but the fifth and therefore the Lord looketh it should more especially be respected 4. the taking vp of this dutie will be a way and meanes to wipe away the future teares and griefe of their parents in their own ruine yea a foundation and ground of the glorie of their father and the ioy of their mother and besides a seede of the obedience of their owne children to themselues if in time to come God shall vouchsafe them any for it is iust with God that lewd children who haue bin the rottennes of their parents bones should themselues be plagued with rebellious and lewd children 5. Looke vpon examples Salomon bowed to his mother though he was a king and aboue her in the throne yet he set her at his right hand nay the true Salomon Christ himselfe is said to be obedient to his parents notable was the obedience of Isaac even to the knife in the hand of his father and a liuely type of Christ who was obedient to his heauenly father and that vnto the death Whereas on the contrarie disobedient children neuer escaped vnpunished as in the examples of Cham Absolom Reuben Ophni Phineas Abimelech and many others as we might plentifully explane And looke what dutie the Lord requireth to naturall Parents the like also is due to those who are in stead of fathers and mothers as stepfathers tutors masters Ruth loued Naomi her mother in lawe and claue vnto her as vnto her owne mother the sonnes of the Prophets obeyed their masters as their owne fathers Elisha spake of Eliah my father my father 2. Kin. 2.12 this lesson if it were so heedefully regarded as it might would be of speciall vse in this place aboue all other in the land besides wherein so many youth miscarrie euen for this because they cast off the yoke and willingly knowe no dutie nor subiection to superiours tutors and those who are in stead of parents vnto them The second point here to be noted is that the cause of lewdnes of sons is for the most part the indulgence or other want of gouernement in the parents for this the Apostle implyeth when he measureth the fitnesse of the fathers gouernement by the carriage of the children for can fathers let their reine loose to libertie and licentiousnes and the sonnes feeling the reine in their neckes not runne riot at their pleasure and fling out and kicke like a colt in a fat pasture knowing neither owner nor feeder and doe not many fathers deserue to haue their eies plucked out by their children who for want of gouernement cause their childrens eies to be picked but by the rauens of the valley some neuer had the feare of God themselues and cannot teach their children the wayes of God nay many hate Gods feare in themselues and in their children and in all Gods children whence by a secret iudgement of God it is that as they taught them no dutie towards their heauenly father so they denie all dutie not seldome to their earthly pa●ents Others may not displease their children and so either are fond and loose their authoritie not chastening thē while there is hope or else they pamper them as men do the beasts they would feed vp and not seasonably breake them or else by mild reproofes they rather cocker and beare them in their sinnes then correct them as Eli did or else if they be but crept out of childishnesse oh then they are past the rod Parents must haue their children counted men when they are but boyes and neuer so fit for the schoole and discipline by all which meanes they bring in the ende mischiefe on their children and shame vpon themselues this indulgence in Dauid was the ouerthrowe almost of all his children but especially noted in the fall of Adoniah his father would not displease him from his childhood to say what hast thou done Yea but parents say what would you haue vs doe they be but young and youth must haue a time and we may not euer be dulling them with correction their owne rodde will beate them well enough in time and soone ripe will be soone rotten To whom I say I would haue you to consider the state of your children and the great measure of follie that is bound vp in their hearts which the rod of correction only can driue out 2. To knowe that if children get head while they are so they are likely to hold it when they are stronger note the speach of Salomon Euen a child maketh himselfe knowne in his works whether his worke be good and pure that is you may reade and gesse in a child how his course is likely to prooue afterwards we reade of good children that became good men seldome or neuer of wicked children altered it is not more commonly then wickedly said young Saints old deuils but truer it is that seldome doe young deuills become old Saints 3. That it is the note of a fleshly minde in thee to loue nothing but thine owne flesh in thy children and to carrie no loue to their soules nay it is not loue but hatred which spareth the rodde or call it loue if thou wilt it is a cruell loue cruell I say 1. to thy child 2. to thy selfe 1. to him because thou neglecting his timely correction the Lord either causeth him to fall into the hand of the Magistrate the father of the countrie or else takes him into his owne hand to controll or else cut off whereas thy rodde might haue giuen him wisdome and thy timely rebuke might haue deliuered his soule from hell that is his life from the graue 2. to thy selfe for we seldome read but that the darling child was the sorrowe and shame to the parents according to that of the wise man a child let alone to himselfe shameth his mother and God hath most crossed his children in their children best beloued to teach them to loue all of them in good measure Neither in all this would I haue parents to prouoke or exasperate their children as Saul did Ionathan 1. both by an vniust commandement to deliuer his friend and an innocent to death as 2. by an vndeserued reproach calling him the sonne of an harlot and 3. by a furious action of casting his dart at him to slay him which made Ionathan rise and leaue him Neither yet doe I here exact the forfeyt of euery offence in the child as neither the Lord doth of his children knowing that the child is the fathers owne bowells and that the parent after a sort suffreth with the child and sometimes God himselfe threatneth and forbeareth and warneth his owne children as Exod. 32.34 But yet this precept enioyneth parents so seasonably to breake their childrens corrupt desires as that they be farre from disobedience to God or themselues and therefore that is a worthy precept of Salomon to euery parent read according to the best translation
are two especially 1. the deniall of a mans selfe with a daily invring ones selfe to the crucifying of his affections and lusts Paul beat downe his bodie as with clubs and kept it vnder Prooue masteries with thy selfe arme thy selfe against thy selfe make warre without truce vpon thy selfe it is a warre without bloodshed hurting none no not thy selfe but profitable to worke thy peace with God with thy selfe with others remember Salomons speach He that ruleth his minde is better then he that ouercommeth a citie 2. Prayer for neither this nor any vertue groweth in our owne grounds neither good nature nor freedome of will can make this supplie but we must haue recourse to the father of lights our selues are but our owne burdens of so miserable molde as we need no other enemies then our selues to depriue our selues of our good if the Lord befreind vs not whom we must wrastle withall by our praiers and if we would preuaile vnto our prayers we must sometimes ioyne the exercise of fasting which after a sort doubleth our forces both in strengthning our praiers as also by disposing vs to the receiuing of these graces And now to end this large treatise it wil be asked But what if any Minister be scandalous in any of the forenamed vices or defectiue in the vertues mentioned Ans. 1. If he be not answerable to these Canons it is plaine by the Apostle that he is not to be called 2. If he be called and after prooue vicious he must be delt withall as an Elder 1. no accusation must be receiued vnder two witnesses at least 1. Tim. 5.19 2. when he is accused of a knowne and scandalous vice all possible meanes must be vsed to reclaime him As 1. by open reproofe vers 20. 2. sometimes by translation of him to such a place as where are lesse meanes of that sinne as one giuen to drunkennes or contention from a drunken and quarellous people 3. sometime by a temporall deposition from his office if there be hope hereby to doe him good 4. after sufficient admonition censures and trial by a perpetuall deposition from his place yea and further if he still prooue incorrigible by proceeding to excommunicate him and cast him from the societie of the Church And the rather 1. Because Ministers are set ouer a people to edifie and not destroie them 2. Because the actions of Ministers haue a secret power not to lead onely but euen compell men to the like especially if they be lewd and wicked 3. Weaker and meaner men for manifest vices not repented of must be proceeded against to excommunication much more the Minister whose scandalous life is infinitly more dangerous and hurtfull 4. Such proceeding against notorious insufficient and scandalous wretches who neuer came in nor are kept in by the Apostles canons would doe good for example Vers. 9. Holding fast the faithfull word according to doctrine that he also may be able to exhort with wholesome doctrine and improoue them that say against it Hauing followed the Apostles meaning and method in describing the fitnes of him who is to be chosen into the Ministerie who for the innocencie of his life ought to be free from manifold vices and corruptions which are plentifull in the world and for the integritie of his conuersation seeing whatsoeuer he doth is exemplarie ought to shine with m●nifold graces and vertues as we haue heard Now we come to the second branch of the Ministers fitnes which standeth in his abillitie to discharge his high calling and place vnto which is required such ●kill and cunning in the grounds and points of Christian religion as that he may be able to hold fast maintaine and iustifie against all challengers that truth and doctrine which is agreeable to the faithfull word that so whensoeuer any blast of heresie tyrannie false doctrine or flatterie shall rise against him yet he may hold fast that faithfull word which is therefore a sure ground of sound doctrine and thence instruct and edifie the consciences of his hearers in all necessarie doctrine Whereby it shall come to passe that he keeping himselfe constantly to this truth shall be fitted fruitfully to turne himselfe to any dutie of his calling that let him be to deale with either of those kinds of hearers whether such as are obedient and teachable he shall build them further and make them sound Christians by exhortation out of wholesome doctrine or else such as are stubborne and opposite contradictors of the truth these he shall convince and with manifest reason put to silence And thus in regard of both Gods name shall be glorified true wisedome shall be iustified Gods kingdome shall be enlarged and amplified and Satans kingdome shall be destroied and damnified This is the scope of the verse which containeth two parts 1. The dutie enioyned euery Minister to hold fast the faithfull word according to doctrine 2. the end including a sound reason of it in the rest of the verse That hee may be able c. For the meaning of the former part Holding fast the word properly signifieth such an holding as men vse when some other man hath laid hold on that which they will not part withall euen an holding with all their strength and force not such an holding as a man careth not whether he hold or no for then the thing holden would of it selfe slip out of a mans hand but an holding against a contrarie hold which vseth to be the stronger and firmer inforcing thus much that the Minister must lay hold with both hands surely apprehending the truth in the vnderstanding of his soule as also in the affections of his heart in either of which if he faile he holdeth not fast seeing neither can a man loue that which he knoweth not nor hold that he loueth not But what must he hold so fast The word which is not tropically as in many other places to be conceiued but properly In which proper acceptation it signifieth all that heauenly doctrine which is deliuered to the Church in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles which we call the holy Scriptures Now this word the Apostle doth not nakedly mention but adorneth it 1. by a notable adiunct the faithfull word 2. from the porper ende of it according to doctrine which is fitted for the instruction and edification of the Church in all ages which we will further expound as we come vnto them Doctr. 1. That the word of God is a faithfull word and infallible 1. If we looke to the author he is holy and true Rev. 3.7 and vers 14. These things saith Amen the faithfull and true witnes euen God who cannot lie as vers 2. of this chapter 2. The instruments were led by the immediate direction and assistance of the holy Ghost 2. Pet. 1.21 beeing of themselues either rude and illitered men as Amos an heardman Peter and Iohn fishers Matthew a toldegatherer so as the great clarkes of those daies were driuen
minde is put for all the faculties of it especially the vnderstanding reason and iudgement all which are deluded and deceiued by these vain teachers Quest. How did these false teachers deceiue mens minds Ans. Foure waies 1. by suppressing the truth for by their vaine iangling and speaking liker Poets Philosophers historians then Prophets Apostles or any successors of theirs they made a cleanly conuaiance of the light from the people and withholding the truth and light they led them from Christ from the right knowledge of the Scriptures from sound godlinesse and religion in iudgement and practise and so they remained as darke in their vnderstanding as erronious in their iudgements as froward in their affections and as wicked in their liues as euer before Secondly by flatterie for they would not deale directly against the sinnes of the age as godly Ministers doe but deceitfully that they might not displease herein imitating Satan himselfe who was wont of olde to answer in riddles as he answered Craesus that if he would transport himselfe ouer the riuer Halys he should ouerthrowe a most mightie kingdome namely his owne But Micha will not deceiue nor flatter with Ahab although it stand vpon his life Thirdly by letting men see their estate in false glasses so as they neuer see the truth of it for people taught by fables and nouelties think and are borne in hand that they are in heauens high way their soules are brought on sleepe and comming from such froathie discourses they sit downe and please themselues in that they haue done their task required especially if they can bring home a iest or some wittie sentence when perhaps they scarce heard a word of Christ of their iustification of their mortification or of their glorie 4. By placing religion in bodily exercises not in matters of spirit and truth Colos. 2.20 thus did the Pharisies in their times the Papists in these and whosoeuer more vrge the decrees of men more then the commaundements of God Quest. But whose mindes are deceiued Answ. First their owne and then others for they are blind leaders of the blind deceiuing and beeing deceiued and although here our Apostle expresseth not here who they be that are deceiued yet elsewhere he doth as Rom. 16.18 they deceiue the hearts of the simple and 2. Tim. 3.6 they lead captiue simple women and 2. Pet. 2.14 they beguile vnstable soules whence we see that ignorant inconstant and vnsetled soules which hand ouer head receiue any doctrine without examination or triall whose simplicitie disableth them to iudge betweene truth and falshood and whose leuitie makes them like shaken reeds these are the carkases on which such vultures do seaze Hence 1. note three notable properties of errour 1. it neuer loueth solitarinesse but is a spreading leauen shrowding it selfe in multitudes and compassing sea and land to procure patrons and Proselytes Example we haue in the Iesuites the arch deceiuers of minds and impostors of the world 2. It taketh the highest holds of men euen the mind vnderstanding and iudgement that the eie once beeing put out and the light turned into darknes it might cary men headlong remorslesly to all cursed practises which necessarily resemble as they proceed from the former 3. It ouerturneth all Gods order ordinances for whereas the scope of the teachers calling is to enlighten mens minds perswade their consciences rectifie their hearts so as they might growe vp in the sauing knowledge of God in Christ and the liuely sense of their owne saluation in a word whereas they are to set and containe men in the right way error in their minds causeth them to drawe men out of the right path as this word properly signifieth 2. Note what is the best fence against false teachers and an hedge against seducers namely 1. knowledge 2. loue of the truth The former armeth simple soules by letting them see the difference betweene the right hand and left without the which the minde cannot be good But the latter is the surest pace of truth and that is the loue of it for no matter it is that men know professe and can talke of the truth if their soules cleaue not vnto it for euen vpon those that receiue the truth shall God send strong delusions to beleeue lyes if they receiue it not in the loue of it Quest. But what is this doctrine to vs we all professe the truth and loue it from our hearts and therefore we hope we are fenced from deceiuers or beeing deceiued Answ. But let vs consider 1. That these are the last times which the Apostles prophecied of euen perilous times wherein many deceiuers should creepe into the Church and many should giue heed to the spirits of error 2. That these deceiuers of mindes were such as liued in the bosome of the Church among such as professed Christ and his religion 3. That they lurked secretly and that the Christians of that time could hardly of themselues descrie them and therefore the Apostle is glad to helpe them and wisheth them carefully to preuent them and therefore there may be priuie impostors among vs. 4. That we hauing set doores open for them we shal not want deceiuers for whatsoeuer many men say most men loue not the truth sincerely delt withall nay they desire to be deceiued while they hate with a deadly hatred such Michaes as would let them see their estate and helpe them out And is it not Gods manner of iust proceeding when men desire preachers that will preach of wine and strong drinke to send them such teachers as they desire that he that is ignorant and filthie may be ignorant and filthie still Those then that care not for the truth shall haue teachers which shall be Gods executioners to lead them into error that as by the great Antichrist the Lord reuenged and plagued the contempt of the light in the world so also in particular Churches and places by false teachers and pettie Antichrists If men will not abide wholesome doctrine but haue itching eares they shall haue an heape of teachers after their owne lusts to turne their eares fr●m the truth and delude them with fables Let Ahab once hate Micha the Lord presently consulteth who shall deceiue him and if this question once proceede out of Gods mouth the deuill is present and so forward in the execution of Gods vengeance as he shall preuaile against 400. false Prophets at a clappe before he shall not fall by them This truth is as a finger in the bile and beeing rubbed will perhaps make Zidkiah take his fist from Michaes face and say when went the spirit from me to thee yet ceaseth it not to be the truth of God concerning our selues who so long as we giue heede to the spirit of error cannot want deceiuers Let men therefore professing themselues members of the Church looke vnto themselues and labour to knowe the truth to affect it to stand vnto it if they would be fenced
heauen but a few meane men and those perhappes more nice then wise what becomes then of so many great and learned men wiser we hope then all they Thus while Paul speaketh the words of truth and sobernes he is counted a mad man Act. 26.15 Men are wiser then to bec●●e fooles that they may be wise it will not sinke with them that Christ can come out of Galily Ioh. 7.41 And thus by Gods iudgement vpon the infidelitie of men themselues can lay blocks inough in the way to stumble at the truth and desperatly breake the necks of their soules vpon that verie rock which was laid for the rising and saluation of the righteous 3. At how many hands doth the truth go away reproched yea hated and persecuted Gods graces are derided Gods children scoffed and mocked by those who are borne after the flesh Gal. 4.29 And why doth Caine hate and kill his brother because his deedes were good and his owne euill And why are Christians yea Christ himselfe mocked euen for this confidence in his God Psalm 22.8 But here euery man blesseth himselfe and God forbid that men that professe Christ or that we who are ordinarie hearers of his word should be iustly ranked in this number Yet euen of vs how few are there whom the truth hath set free from lusts and seruice of some sinne or other Many of vs indeed haue gone farre in the contemplation of this truth but our minds and soules are no more altered and changed then if we had read or heard some humane Histories affecting vs for the time but leauing vs where they found vs at first How few of vs are sanctified by this truth and daily proceed on to encrease in sanctification by meane of it which that it is the scope of it Christs petition teacheth Ioh. 17.17 Nay how many of our hearers detaine this truth in vnrighteousnesse that is while they heare learne and can remember much of it yet in their courses are as vaine and vngodly as euer before Which plainely argueth a forsaking of the truth vpon the plaine feild making such persons more liable to moe and more fearefull strokes of God who receiuing the truth into their eares vnderstandings and iudgements but turne away their affections from it yea turne from it in their practise in that they hate to be reformed by it And if we haue not in great part turned away from the truth where is our former courage and resolution for it may not the Lord iustly complaine of vs as he did once of his owne people they haue no courage for the truth Many of vs durst better haue beene seene in Christian exercises then now we dare we could better beare a rebuke for our profession then now we can we did more take to heart the dammage of the truth then now we do we did take more paines for it we could be at more cost for it we could be more zealous against the enemies of it then now we are or can be Alas our dasterdlines and timiditie that faint before daies of triall nay in daies not only of peace but of protection and encouragements in the truth what can we promise of our selues if we were called either to die with or denie Christ Oh therefore let vs call back our selues out of our ruines and ●●call our former daies 〈◊〉 with them our former workes as such as meane to partake in that honourable commendation of the Angel of the Church of Thyatira whose workes were more at the last then at the first Now that we may the better be preserued from beeing turned from the truth some rules are to be deliuered and practised 1. Entertaine it not for outward respects neither for the laws of the land nor the encouragement it hath c. as very many do but for the loue of it selfe for that we affect we easily turne not from it no nor are driuen from it and if we loue it for outward respects as those outward respects change so will our affections For example if we loue it for the prosperitie of it times of persecutions will make vs fall off with Demas If we hold it because we would hold our temporalties the losse of it will be light in comparison of losse of goods dignities countrie world libertie and life the least of these will the heart fasten vpon although with the losse of the truth and with it of saluation also 2. Practise so much of it as thou knowest and the more thou practisest the more thou knowest and the more thou knowest thus the more thou louest and the surer dost thou bind it vpon thy selfe and this is the surest hold Ioh. 7.17 when as in religion faith and good conscience are ioyned together for such as thy conscience is such shalt thou be found in religion without which heare euery houre a sermon read ouer the Bible as often as he did who gloried that he had read the text and glosse also fourteene times ouer all this knowledge will not lift thee vp to heauen 3. Call no ground of this diuine truth into question suspect not that which thou canst not reach but accuse thine owne weakenes and ignorance our first parents yeelding at the first onset of Satan to call into question the truth of God were turned away from all that image of God which stood in truth and holines 4. Beware of indifferencie in Gods matters many thinke it good wisedome and pollicie to be on the yeelding hand and as waxe fit to take all formes and the print of any religion but the truth is that such persons as are not rooted and stablished in the truth when windes and stormes arise or the euill day approach they shall not be able to stand but as they haue beene long tottering so their fall shall be great Vers. 15. Vnto the pure all things are pure but vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing nothing is pure but euen their minds and consciences are defiled The connexion of these words with the former is not easie to be seene vnlesse we conceiue the words preceding in that proper sense which we haue giuen of them and then this verse will affoard a reason of the former For the Apostle hauing called these Cretians from attending to Iewish ●ables and commandements of men that is such fabulous doctrines as still would keep life in the ceremoniall differences of daies and meates persons and garments seeing now all that partition wall was broken downe he draweth a reason from that libertie which now is obtained for Christians vnto whom now nothing was common or vnclean but might be purely vsed of them who haue their hearts purifyed in obeying the truth And this reasons is enlarged by opposing the contrarie in a similitude of the like To the impure nothing is pure not onely outward things but their chiefe and eminent inward parts are defiled whether we consider the theoricall part that is the minde and vnderstanding so as they can
is serued vp in cleane dishes but when their consciences are cleansed and purified by faith which will manifest it selfe in such fruits of loue and mercie as he speaketh of The third rule of sobrietie is diuersly infringed As 1. when men beare themselues vpon their wealth yea so farre as because men esteeme of them and aduance and loue them because they are rich to thinke that God doth so whereas the rich and poore meete God made them both he accepteth not the person of the rich nor contemneth the person of the poore and of the two the broken soule is the delight of his eye Why should then the gazing vpon any of these outward things dazle or perish any mans eye seeing we ought to looke vpon our selues and others as God looketh 2. When men wast them in pride prodigalitie gaming vncleanenes or any other vnchristian course for they are not Lords of them but stewards which must be called to a reckoning which when we come to make vp what comfort will it be to giue in as many can doe no other so much weekely spent at the tauerne so much at cards and dice so much in the bowling close or alley so much in some one ruff more then needed so much perhaps in compassing my filthy lust and euery of these draw deepe and when the Lord shall aske yea but how much vpon the poore vpon the Ministerie vpon godly vses oh here thou wast able to doe nothing at all Oh wretched man looke to the matter betime thy selfe would take no such bills of thy seruants but thou wouldst turne them away and canst thou look for any other but that the Lord should turne thee out of his doores 3. When God calleth to forsake all or part yet neither in disposition nor indeed a man doth so he that possesseth must be as if he possessed not Christs Disciple must forgoe all the young man if he will follow Christ must sell all that is be readie if God call him thereto for beeing indifferent things we must in getting keeping and parting from them shew and carie our selues indifferently learning with Paul in all things to be content if God supplie necessaries asking no more for howsoeuer a Christian may vse abundāce lawfully if God giue it yet such must his contentment be with his present estate that he may not ask more then necessaries both because there is an expresse commandement against it 2. Tim. 6.8 as also because it is a fruit of infidelitie and 3. though they be Gods blessings yet are they not simply blessings that is such as are alwaies so in themselues vnto vs for then we could not aske too many or too much but in themselues at the best they are but indifferent and to vs they may become as well thornes snares as well as helps and furtherances which may preuaile to reduce our minds to sobrietie in the wishing and fruition of them The fourth sort of things indifferent are recreations in which the first rule is broke 1. when men sport themselues with things not warranted or forbidden in the word As seeing all recreations ought to be of indifferent things no man ought to recreate himselfe ● either with holy things or 2. with vnholy and sinnefull things For the former 〈◊〉 the word of God in the Scriptures is holy as God himselfe is and therefore it is a fearefull sinne to iest in the phrases of Scriptures and so to take the name of God in vaine 2. The iudgements of God are no fit matters to sport our selues withall whether in man or beast When we see a naturall foole plaie the foole or madde men in their frantike fits this defect in them is a fearefull fruit of sinne a matter of mourning and not of laughter they that keepe fooles onely to solace themselues by their follie haue no warrant so to doe of all the pleasures lawfull or vnlawfull that Salomon tried his heart withall we read of no such it is no lawfull recreation but for other better ends it is fit such poore creatures should be kept And for that most generall iudgement of God the enmitie of the creatures the principall vse we ought to make thereof is the acknowledging of that fearefull brand of mans sinne deeply imprinted in the poore creatures the serious consideration whereof duly applied must needes rather breake then delight a mans heart Yet euen of this enmitie and pursuit of some kinds of the creatures there may be another lawfull vse by way of recreation delight and exercise as especially in hunting hauking and such like disports vsed with moderation and without needlesse tormenting of silly beasts But none that hath either Christianitie or naturall affections can take delight in the cruell murthering or painfull tormenting of any dumb creature Alas sinnefull man hast thou not brought euill enough vpon the innocent creature without such reioycing and triumphing ouer that bondage which thy impietie hath imposed vpon those creatures which in their kind obey and serue the Creator farre better then thou God setteth his good creature before thee that in it thou mightest behold his loue mercie prouidence and power towards thee and not that thou shouldest shew crueltie and hard-heartednes vnto it A note of a good man is to be mercifull to his beast but this practise is one of the cruell mercies of the wicked how can such recreation stand with the feare of God how is such reioysing mingled with trembling Secondly Neither may we plaie with sin for that is no indifferent thing neither As when we see a man giuen ouer to drunkennes this spectacle is indeed no matter of laughter or merriment but of sorrow lamentation that Gods image should be so foully defaced Neither must the feare of God euer be laid aside especially in our recreations wherein we are so soone ouertaken Salomon maketh it a note of a foole that is a wicked man to make a pastime of sinne and againe he casteth firebrands arrowes and deadly things and saith am I not in sport The second rule of loue is neglected 1. when any of our recreations tend to the hurt of man as to purchase thereby his mony to his impouerishment or hinderance as many winne more in short time then they could in much longer time earne in their honest calling 2. When by our recreations we loose our patience meeknesse and loue and rage and scorne and quarrell with them that therein crosse vs nay with the sacred name of God himselfe or with the vaine name of lucke or fortune as gamesters are neuer so zealous in Gods matters as in their own gaine Thirdly they are not vsed in sobrietie 1. when men make a calling of their recreation and haue no other or no such hold to maintaine them 2. when men so powre out their hearts to pleasure as that they hinder better duties in the calling publicke or priuate for recreations should fit vs to duties
in word of our selues wherein the generall practise of men is not so answerable For 1. who doth not professe of himselfe that he loueth God with all his heart and it were pitie else that he should liue and yet indeed the most desire no communion nor fellowship with him in his word and sacraments nor in their owne prayers thinke not of him speake not of him but in others the most measure their loue by their priuate gaine so long they loue him as they gaine by him like the Scribe that would follow Christ euery where till he heard that Christ had not where to hide his head then we heare no more of him Matth. 8. 2. We all professe euen by our comming to the word as the people to Moses speake thou to vs from God and we will doe whatsoeuer the Lord commandeth vs by thee and so professe subiection to Christ as to our Lord but with the Scribes many of vs say and doe not or like the younger brother who said to his father he would goe worke in the vineyard but did not And many of vs may fitly heare that sharp rebuke of Christ Why call yee me Master why professe you your selues Christians and doe not the things that I speake doe any seruants so deale with their master and not be turned out of doores 3. Who professeth not that he serueth God and he hopeth acceptable inough he commeth to Church he heareth what is said he receiueth the Sacraments and prayeth with the congregation But follow this man home doth he and his house serue the Lord doth he read instruct pray there hath he a little Church in his house oh no he hopeth God will beare with him he is not booklearned or he hath a calling he can find no time nor ability for such matters now haue we found the man we sought for no practise of pietie at home none abroad no substance of religion at home it is but a shadow abroad 4. Lastly we all wil boldly say with Peter we will neuer denie Christ no we will die with him rather and yet we will part from nothing for him we will not leaue our lusts for him much lesse our liues and as we will doe nothing for him so we will suffer as little scarse a word of reproach for his sake much lesse a blow least of all the stroke of death and consequently seeing we cannot denie our selues for him we cannot but denie him whatsoeuer we boldly vtter to the contrarie Thus might we examine euerie particular through the commandements and in euerie branch of them discouer in our selues such manifest fruits of hypocrisie as these be in which regard let vs challenge our deceitfull hearts and sift them well and we cannot but finde seaven abhominations in them euery one making vs more odious to God then other Obiect But I hope I am no such man I cannot by these notes discerne my selfe to be an hypocrite Answ. Yet maist thou be one and receiue thy portion with them For there be two sorts of hypocrites 1. such as knowe themselues so to be they knowe they dissemble in the things they speake and doe such were the Pharisies who did all things to be seene of men these haue a cloud of witnesses against them for besides God their owne words shall be their iudges their workes shall accuse them and their hearts and consciences shall be as a thousand witnesses against thē 2. others knowe not themselues to be hypocrites but thinke themselues sound enough as that Pharisie Luk. 18. who thanked God that he was not as other men and Simon Magus Act. 8. who beleeued Phillips words was baptized wondred at the things done by the Apostles and yet had no part nor portion in them because his heart was not right with God and yet he thought that he had And so is it with many who think that because their consciences sleepe or are brawned with some raigning sinne that they are sound when they shall one day finde the Lord greater then their consciences with whom such righteousnes as exceedeth not the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisies will not goe for paiment It behooueth vs then to take vp the Apostles counsell Take heed brethren least there be at any time in any of you an euill heart of vnbeleefe causing you to depart while yee seeme to approach vnto him from the liuing God and on the contrarie to labour to expresse the power of godlinesse daily that in the last of our daies we may reape the sweete fruite of it when we shall be glad that we haue had no part with hypocrites Thus by Gods blessing are we come to the ende of the first Chapter to him be praise for euer Amen CHAP. II. BVt speake thou the things which become wholesome doctrine 2 That the elder men be sober honest discreete sound in the faith in loue and in patience THe Apostle hauing described the dutie of a faithfull Pastor in the former Chapter and exhibited a vewe of such as the Lord calleth and approoueth who must be men both of singular integritie for their life and of skilfulnesse and abilitie to teach he now applyeth all that spech to Titus exhorteth him to the exercise of his talents receiued to his masters best advantage And first he generally instructeth him what himselfe must teach namly wholesome doctrine And secondly how he should particularly apply himselfe and his doctrine to all sorts of men who are distinguished 1. by the sexe men and women 2. by the age old and young 3. by their condition some beeing masters and some seruants the meanest of which must not be contemned but euerie man and woman of what age and calling soeuer they be although their condition be neuer so seruile must haue their portion in this wholesome doctrine from the 2. to the 11. v. Thirdly he followeth some notable reasons why this holy and wholesome doctrine must be taught and learned spoken and heard from the 11. verse to the ende of this Chapter First for Titus his owne dutie it is laid downe by way of opposition and knit to the former matter and Chapter by the coniunction But teach thou As if he had said although the false teachers whom I haue described dote vpon dreames and feede their hearers with fancyes and doctrines of men to the corrupting and poisoning of soules and turning men away from the truth thou must be vtterly vnlike them in thy preaching they speake pleasing things but thou must speake profitable they by despising the simplicitie of the Gospel fall not onely into dangerous errors which they broach but into loose and idle discourses which bring diseases vpon the soule But thou on the contrarie must plainly and familiarly discouer vnto all estates of men and women their estates and duties that thereby they may be brought to soundnes they cannot but speake and teach as they are but let them trifle as they will and liue as they list thou
were hunger now to such persons and stomaks who in their fulnesse despise an honie combe This Athenian hearing is the cause of Athenian preaching and the diseases running vpon such hearers sheweth the curse of God on them who with contempt of the Mannah from heauen wish the onyons garlicke and flesh of Egypt these things they haue vpon their desire and with them more then they desire for they rot euen between their teeth 2. To receiue this wholesome doctrine as for the bodie we receiue wholsome food whatsoeuer it be or from whomsoeuer let it be bitter sometimes or seeme too salt yet if it be wholesome hunger findeth it sauourie no man but will striue to receiue a bitter potion to restore his bodie out of any weaknesse to soundnes and yet who is it that will suffer an wholsome reproofe to the recouerie of soundnes to the soule and others stand so much vpon toothsomnes of their meate and must know their cookes so well that before they can be resolued in these two the plausiblenesse of the doctrine and the friendlines of the person their soules are well ●ie starued to death Hence is it that we heare so many complaints oh saith one he seeketh not the good will of his hearers nor casteth to please them he is of a tarte and bitter spirit he seeketh to wound and gall but he healeth nor suppleth not But what preacheth he whether any errors or the pure doctrine of God No say they we cannot except against his doctrine True for they neuer trouble themselues so farre as to examine it by the word or themselues by it But then say I is it the word of God thou hearest and the truth by thy owne confession why dost thou then not tremble at that word seeing euery word of God is good pure wholsome though it cannot be denied but that some part of it is more seasonable at one time then at another Others alleadge oh he is no scholler in comparison but a plaine man and a nouice to such and such But can none but the greatest clarkes deliuer wholesome doctrine or was plaine preaching for Saint Paul alone and such as he surely the world is greatly altered since his time it cannot skill of his preaching who beeing the greatest scholler of all the Apostles was the most fearefull to make the least shew of it Well he is truely learned that hath learned Christ and can teach him to another although the voice be still and humble yet may the Lord passe by in it whē as he is not in all the boistrous sermons of proud men Others can receiue no doctrine from such a one as hath expressed humanitie in some weaknes or want or is not altogether to their owne liking nor of their owne size Some cannot abide to heare the so called Puritane others are as farre wide on the other hand they can get no good nor will stirre out of their doores to heare him that can buckle himselfe to the times thus some hold to Paul some to Apollos some to Cephas but none to Christ. Here is examination of the persons of men but not of the doctrine of God which by both may be wholsomely and truely taught or if either of them should erre haue we exemption from hearing them are we not rather to trie the spirits and try all things that we may hold our selues to that which is good We deceiue our selues while we looke to be taught by Angels or Saints Gods ordinance is that we should be taught by men subiect to the same infirmities with vs weake men and sinnefull men must vnder God raise vs to strength of grace that our faith may not be ascribed to men or meanes but that the mightie power of God might appeare in mans infirmitie But in one word to remooue all the pretended causes of not receiuing the wholsome word turne thine eye inward and thou shalt see the fault in thy selfe for as if a man abstaine meale after meale from meate and he doth not nor cannot be perswaded to eate wholesome meate it is plaine hee is a sicke man his stomake is gone if hee hold on he is hastening to death so it is with him who refuseth the wholesome foode of his soule some sore deadly disease hath seased vpon him If this food seeme tart or bitter it is not corrupted but thy tast thy spirituall ague causeth thee to deeme honie bitter If thou loathest that meate which thou hast sometime liked the meate is the same but thou art not the same if thou art wearie of the doctrine of mortification which sometimes thou affectedst suspect thy selfe the case is with thee as with some children who for noueltie were willing to go to schoole but beeing held hard some growe wearie of their Master and would exchange him with another but no cooke could make this doctrine rellish thy tast till it with thy selfe be altered 3. Hearers must hold wholesome doctrine when they haue receiued it 2. Tim. 3.14 continue in the things thou hast receiued buy the truth but sell it not and bind it fast vpon their hearts And good reason for if the meate be neuer so wholesome if the stomacke of the soule keepe it not but it slippe the memorie and is not by meditation digested the soule is as surely diseased as is the bodie when no sustenance will stay to strengthen it Many complaine that they heare many good things but yet they stay not with them but are soone forgotten hence may begin to conceiue that the meate was faultie either not inough but rawe or too cold or otherwise but let them knowe assuredly that the fault was in their owne cold stomacks which wanted zeale and loue to the truth to warme them for we easily forget not the things we loue or else some sinne like the predominance of a bad humor hath ouercharged them which must be purged by renewing repentance which beeing done wisedome requireth that men doe for their soules as they doe for their bodies in which if the meate stay not till it be digested or because although it be digested it staieth not neither howsoeuer a man returneh to his meate againe euen so repaire thou vnto thy ordinarie meales againe heare preparedly and thou shalt at least renewe thy strength againe and if thou findest thy stomacke weake still looke as men of weake stomacks before meat prepare them with some warme thing and after close them vp againe with some preserue or other so must thou with prayer and reading prepare and warme thy affection before and close vp thy stomacke with prayer and meditation after by the former the spirit is obtained which bringeth things to the remembrance by the latter things are held as a mans owne being as strong vinegar to the nose to hold that in which otherwise would be presently cast vp againe 4. Hearers must so desire receiue and hold this wholesome foode as they may growe by it shewing by their
eye of flesh thou canst not but doubt of the truth of the promises at least to thy selfe in whom so little good appeareth but open the eye of thy faith which at length seeth clearely the saluation of God chaseth away clouds of doubts and distrust and giueth glorie vnto God As he therefore that would deeme the orbe of the sunne to be greater then the earth must deny his sence and yeeld to reason so must the beleeuer renounce both sence and reason and liue by his faith Fourthly the fruits of a sound faith are 1. Inward and these are all the parts of renewed holines in the soule which cannot but accompany it 2. Pet. 1.5.6 Ioyne with faith vertue c. for it worketh a through change in the whole man by purifying the heart inspiring a new spirituall life raysing from dead workes and causing to grow vp in holines and in the feare of God It is as the heat in the bodie the fountaine of life and heate and as the roote of a tree affording life sappe and quickning of grace to all the the parts of obedience without which it is impossible to please God in any thing 2. Outward such as are the true loue of God and man For as it maketh vs the sonnes of God so it causeth vs to carie our selues as children desirous to please our Father in all things to performe vnto him all the parts of his worship publike and priuate to loue his word to confesse his truth though with the losse of our liues to thinke of him to speake of him to delight in his presence and fellowship and giue vp our selues wholly to obey him in his commandements and corrections Againe it maketh vs to loue Gods image in our brethren and out of this loue issueth a desire and endeauour to helpe them heauenward and care to performe all other offices of loue towards their outward man their persons their liues their goods their names c. These are the blessed fruits of that faith which is vnfained 1. Tim. 1.5 which worketh by loue Gal. 5.6 And thus haue we shewed the first point wherein the nature of sound faith standeth The second point is why soundnes of faith is required rather of old men beeing a grace which euery one young aswell as old must striue vnto Answ. 1. Because they haue had the vse of the word longer and therefore their profit should be answerable to their meanes neither is this assurance and soundnes of faith attained at the first but ariseth vpon a grounded knowledge which for most part is not to be found in the younger sort Secondly old men which ought to be auncients in profession and so haue more experience of Gods waies and working should shew forth the power of faith vnto others and therein become as cleare patternes and presidents vnto them and therefore whereas a lesser measure may be accepted in the younger yet for these to yeeld to doubting to wauer in the truth to be corrupt in iudgement to sticke in extremitie or faint in affliction is a greater sinne and more hatefull vnto God who more seuerely correcteth it in old men who should be leaders vnto others yea although they be deare otherwise vnto him Moses himselfe if by doubting he shall dishonour God shall be barred the good land for it Thirdly their age and experience in all meetings must haue the honour and place of speach when the younger sort must either sit silent or with Elihu speake in their turne when they haue done of them the younger expect solution of doubts and difficulties counsell in cases of conscience and wise aduise out of their experience Now if they should be tainted with false opinions and dotages or shake as ●eeds in the doctrine of faith and truth they cannot but become hurtfull and vnprofitable vnto such whose eyes are vpon them when they see them as inconstant in the faith and as subiect to wauer and reele as thēselues who in comparison are but newly planted 4. Their bodies outward man waxeth weak and beginneth to faile and therefore they had more need labour for strength and soundnes in the inner man which is a reason not to be neglected as presently we shall see Vse All these reasons are direct against such as plead that their years comming on them they cannot conceiue nor learne nor remember nor profit in religion as they are vrged in the ministerie their sences inward and outward serue them not their vigour and quicknes is gone but it is good for them to consider the hand of God vpon Zacharie Luk. 1. 18. for making his age a meanes to weaken his faith though in a farre more difficult case Doth not our Apostle here vrge it as a cheife argument that because they are old therefore they must the rather be furnished with grace of knowledge memorie zeale faith loue and patience and shall it goe for a good plea that because they are old therefore they shall be excused if they cannot attaine vnto these nor greatly force after them what a shame was it for Nicodemus beeing an auncient and Ruler in Israel to be ignorant in the point of regeneration and therefore Christ reprooued him Ioh. 3. And that was the sinne of the Hebrews when as for their time they ought to haue bin teachers they were to seek in the principles of religion and were babes needing milke such is the sinne of babish old men olde in yeares children in vnderstanding The third point is the lesson which hence we are to learne namely that euerie man must labour to recompence the decaie of nature with increase of grace the weakenes of the bodie with soundnesse of minde the failing of the outward man with the fortifying of the inward The wiseman wisheth timly to prepare against the inconueniences of old age with the remembrance of God in the youth how much more should olde men in the midst of their ruines and decaies by this meanes repaire and fortifie themselues And the counsell is generall that if the outward man perish care must be had that the inward be daily renewed Reas. 1. It is made a note of a true member of the Church to be more fresh flourishing and fruitfull in his age when other men languish decay and are daily enfeebled these trees of righteousnesse receiue new vigour and strength not to flourish onely but to be more fruitfull then euer And whereas amongst men those that see olde and decrepite age for want of naturall heate and moisture shriule and die away yet euen these same beeing true members of the Church hauing once the life of the Sonne of God breathed into their soules are neuer afterwards destitute of radicall heate and moysture but renew their age as the eagle and with their daies their strength For Christ is that Sunne of righteousnesse who once rising vpon a soule is so farre from setting againe that he is still rising euen vnto the perfect day of it
be performed in the first neither ought any creature to be loued so farre as it is an enemie and hatefull to God the creator Psal. 139. I hate the wicked that is so farre as wicked namly their practises not their persons Secondly it must be sound in the order which will appeare in two rules 1. it must be in the greatest measure where is most grace and shew it selfe most friendly and louing to them that loue and are the friends of God It must doe good vnto all but especially the houshold of faith The Apostle commending the loue of the Ephesians which for the soundnes of it he sawe was praise worthie he hence approoueth it that it was towards all Saints and hence the Apostle Iohn gathereth a note that we are translated from death to life if we loue the brethren And herein we haue God himselfe going before vs in example who respected the poore widowe of Sarepta aboue all Israel Now we shall descend fitly to this dutie by these staires 1. by louing God simply for himselfe 2. Christ as man the beloued of God the head of his Church 3. the Church it selfe the bodie of Christ receiuing of his fulnes grace for grace and 4. the particular members must rise vp higher in our affections as the Lord hath highlier honoured them with grace and more expressely renewed his image vpon them The second rule for the right order of sound loue is that it must beginne at home but may not there determine the rule of the loue of our neighbour Christ hath made the loue of our selues and as we are to prouide for our owne good first and that according to the wisedome which the word teacheth first seeking the kingdome the pearle the treasure for our soules and then these outward things for our outward man euen so are we to deriue this loue in this manner vnto the soules and bodies of others according as they are nearer vs or further off in the degrees of grace and nature And here respect must be had 1. to those of our own house as to whom we are tyed either by the bond of marriage who beeing one with vs haue right to the same affection wherewith we loue our selues or of neere blood as parents children or of dutie as seruants he that careth not for these is worse then an infidel and hath denied the faith 2. He that careth for none but these is little better for if loue bee sound within it will be working outwardly As 1. to such as are tyed by any bond of blood or alliance euen without the family 2. to such as are in a perpetuall contract of friendship with vs as was betweene Dauid and Ionathan 2. Sam. 18.1 and Christ had one who aboue the rest was called the disciple whom Iesus loued 3. it must proceed on to strangers as men and as those that may be heires of the same grace of life with vs yea to the poore as well as to the rich Iam. 2.8 9. nay more to our enemies Matth. 5.44 Loue your enemies these are the degrees of sound loue Thirdly this loue must be sound in the seate of it and that must be the heart Rom. 12.9 Let loue be without dissimulation it must not be hypocritall from the teeth outward or fawning but loue must come from a pure heart 1. Ioh. 3.18 Let vs not loue in word and tongue but in deede and truth Fourthly it must be sound in the worke or action of it 1. in preuenting the euill of the brethren not suffering men to sinne 2. in procuring their good The Apostle would haue experience of the naturalnesse of the loue of the Corinths in their bountie and liberalitie towards the Saints in want For if any haue this worlds good and shutteth his compassion from his brothers neede how dwelleth the loue of God in him Fiftly it must be sound in the durance and lasting of it Prou. 17.17 A friend loueth at all times and here trie the soundnesse by these notes 1. If in a milde and iust reprehension it breaketh not off 2. If it hold in aduersitie a brother is made for aduersitie see Act. 11.29 3. If it hold then when iniurie is offered and occasions of breaking off by vnkindnesse or hard measure 1. Cor. 13.5 Loue is not prouoked to anger but suffereth all things In these two latter it resembleth Gods loue which is both constant and closest to a man in the day of his trouble neither taketh it the forfeit of our daily prouocations Vse By all this triall both olde and young may see how farre they are from soundnesse in this grace contenting themselues euen with a shadowe of it for the most of mens loue is grounded either vpon receite or hope of benefit or vpon flesh and fleshly respects and is not begunne in nor for God nor knit by the spirit of God the least part of it is set vpon the Saints that are vpon earth excelling in vertue it generally determineth it selfe in selfe louing and selfe seeking not seeking the things of others as well as their owne or not seeking and louing the soules of men as well as their bodies or respecting persons and not embracing the poore as well as the rich or not blessing their enemies as well as their friends the most loue of men is a lip-loue a semblance a counterfeit and fruitlesse loue diuorsed from inward heartie affection or else a vanishing and flitting loue flinching in aduersitie when most neede is and readie vpon the least occasion to be ouercome with euill and changed into bitter hatred this crazie loue euerie where argueth a riuen and crackt faith such counterfeit loue is the daughter of counterfeit faith and vnsoundnes of loue is a sure token of vnsoundnes of faith and halting in religion In patience This third ornament of Christian old age is fitly by the spirit of God added to the two former as the preseruatiue of both most requisite vnto all Christians For seeing this vertue is nothing else but a willing and constant suffering of hard and painefull things for Christianitie and honesties sake and further that affliction followeth the faithfull who studie to testifie their loue of God in the loue of man euen as the shadow followeth the bodie necessarily must he that would hold out in Christianitie get this grace to beare off such calamities as follow vpon the keeping of faith and good conscience 2. No man can haue either of the former that wanteth this for these three vertues are like the three graces which goe hand in hand the former leading the latter and this last laying hold on both the former so as if any man would trie the soundnes of the former he cannot better do it then by the sequele of the latter the soundnes of faith discouereth it selfe in the soundnes of loue and the soundnes of loue in a sound patience for as sound faith is louing so sound loue
vnto them to be instituted in all discipline and instruction whence the whole information of youth and that generall education which they receiue from Masters or Tutors is by the best humane writer vpon that argument expressed by this same word Secondly he taketh occasion hence to enter into more particular description of such vertues as should cause the faces of the younger women to shine and these be seauen in number 1. Loue of their husbands 2. Loue of their children 3. Temperance 4. Chastitie 5. Home keeping 6. Goodnesse 7. Subiection or obedience vnto their husbands Thirdly he enforceth the necessary practise of all these duties by a disparate argument namely the reproach and blasphemy which otherwise in defect of them will redound vnto the word of God of which three points we are to speake in order Out of the first of which we learne Doctr. What must be the fruit of the elder womens carriage and speach namely the making of the younger wise in the generall wisedome of godlines and honestie Euery practise and euery speach of theirs ought to be either a precept or example of wholsome instruction Prov. 31.6 The vertuous woman openeth her mouth in wisedome the fruit of her lips yeeldeth instruction and her life is a shining lampe which doctrine as it is cleare both here and elsewhere in the Scriptures so is it of exceeding profitable vse 1. To older women to teach them warines in all their words and behauiours and looke to their carriage both abroad and at home as well within their owne houses as the house of God whose eyes are euery where beholding the good and the badde euen in the denne with Daniel and the dungeon with Ioseph that they may walke wisely euen in the midst of their houses so setting themselues coppies of religious conuersation to those ouer whom they are set fasting praying reading instructing in priuate in which priuate duties they shall meete perhappes with much more comfort although publike duties be more powerfull that in all common actions also of life they may bring them to this touch whether they will instruct others in wisedome or no. By which triall if vnpartiall not a few shall find their behauiours and speaches fitted to traine the younger sort to prattle and plaie the busie bodies to scoffe to quip raile heartburne their betters to instruct them to become as bold in behauiour as souldiers to court it like curtezans and at the best to fill their heads with old fables and follies which corrupt minds and breed to more vngodlines whereas they ought in these yeares to account all that time of their life lost wherein the younger sort gathereth not some vertue or good from them And although this lesson especially be directed to elder women yet is it profitably to be extended vnto all Christians of what sex or age soeuer euery of whom ought to sanctifie their speaches and actions by the word and by prayer if euer they would attaine this high point of Christianitie of becomming shining lights and promoters of the glorie and kingdome of God aswell in others as in themselues not speaking or performing any thing vnwarrantably rashly or carelesly or without this aime and end set as a white before their eye namely the edifying of themselues and others 1. Cor. 10.31 2. Whereas it is commonly but inconsideratly thought to be only a ministeriall dutie to make men and women wise vnto saluation we see hence the contrarie that it belongeth not only to other men but euen to women also but with this difference and reseruation that the Mininistry and Ministers are appointed the ordinarie principall and publike meanes of begetting and preseruing men and women vnto God but this more priuate and common instruction is appointed for the encrease and strengthning in that grace giuen Againe the Minister like a good Master builder is to laie the foundation and the rest of the people are like labourers bring filling to the worke and house of God and may not depart from his precepts and directions and therefore Iude exhorteth the Saints to edifie one another in their most holy faith Let not women therefore be ashamed thus to labour with the Ministers in the Gospel no more then those holy women which laboured with Paul nay rather because it is a good note that their names are written in the booke of life let them be incouraged vnto this holy precedencie and testification of Christianitie in euery word action and behauiour neither let them make daintie fearing that in these corrupted daies none will be hastie to follow their right ordered steppes for seeing this is the ordinance of God appointed to this end and vse it shall prosper to the same purpose in such as whom the Lord hath any delight in to build them vp further when they shall heare the gracious speaches of their lippes and see the grace of their liues and as for others let them at their perill neglect their owne duties yet shall it not be without vse in them also as not without comfort to their owne soules in the day of the Lord. That they loue their husbands Now our Apostle teacheth younger women how they should carie themselues in their familes and propoundeth many marriage vertues which ought to discouer themselues in all women called vnto that estate and in younger women are speciall ornaments whose loue modestie chastitie humilitie and subiection should be as the vailes of their heads and as the chaine and garland of their necks The first of these is loue challenging rightly the first place because it is the leader of all the rest and the cheifest of them easily drawing the other after This loue must be set vpon two obiects 1. their husbands 2. their children for this is such an affection as is to be set vpon their owne proprieties and not any besides Obiect But this may seeme a needelesse precept for is it not naturall for women to loue their husbands and children or can a woman ●ate her owne flesh can the members but loue the head or can any monster of women so farre loose naturall instinct as to forget the fruit of her wombe Salomon commanding the child to be diuided knew out of his wisedome that nature could not but worke and bewray it selfe in one of the parties Answ. Many by Gods iust iudgement and their owne corruption are become without naturall affection whome this precept taketh hold vpon 2. The best nature of all if it be not extinguished as in the former yet is greatly corrupted and can produce nothing pleasing to God and therefore hath the Lord bound women to this affection of loue by a surer and straighter bond then that of corrupted nature hauing by his owne commandement laid it vpon them as a calling to walke in that the performance of it might be an obedience of faith and not a worke of naturall instinct a dutie of conscience as well as of affection 3. Though
the ground of this affection be nature which can teach a woman to loue her husband children yet nature cannot teach either the right manner or measure of this loue this is left to be ordered by the word Nature can loue naturally that is fleshly and corruptly but not holily Nature either commeth short or exceedeth the due measure of loue from whence are kindled the sparkles and flames of suspitions ielousies betweene husband and wife and much miscarriage betweene parents and children when parents in the educating of children separate faith and loue both which the Apostle requireth 1. Tim. 2.15 But the word both ruleth manageth and raungeth this affection in such confines as cause it to be euerie way louely as alwaies to be lasting For the former of these that a woman should loue her husband yea embrace him with such a loue as surpasseth all other euen to the forgetting of her owne people her fathers house yea her owne selfe in comparison of him besides the commandement of God there is great reason 1. The commandement is often repeated in the booke of God and is enlarged and inforced in Ep. 5.22.24 where the wife is commanded to loue embrace her husband as the Church doth Christ himselfe how is that look in the Canticles through all which holy song the church neuer speaketh of Christ but breaketh into the expressing of her most feruent loue neuer mentioneth him without the titles bewraying her most entire and inward loue calling him her loue her welbeloued him whom her soule loued him who was more then other welbeloueds the chiefe of tenne thousand him who could not be out of her sight but she was sicke of loue after him here is a glasse set before all women and a direction how to esteeme of their husbands 2. The reasons are sundrie I will onely note three First because of that straight vnion betweene them they beeing no more two but one and one in diuerse regards 1. In respect of the womans originall the Lord consulting to build vp Adam a fit helpe to ioyne in marriage with him did not thinke good in his wisedome to frame her of any matter diuerse from Adam himselfe but tooke a part of himselfe to make her of not of his head as if she should be a superiour nor of his feet as to become an vnderling not of his hand as to be a meere seruant but of one of his ribbes to lay her againe in his owne bosome hereby signifying to Adam that his wife was no other then a peice of himselfe and that he was to embrace her as a branch springing from himselfe and shee him as her roote and stocke receiuing vnder God her originall life and beeing it selfe from him 2. They two are one in all lawe of God and man God making the match in heauen and finishing it betweene them by men on earth pronounceth that they are no more twaine but one flesh and humane lawes account them but one person Now shall God and all other men account them but one and shall themselues by beeing diuided in affection remaine two 3. They are one by their mutuall consent nay deliberate choise and election and by the consent of such as it belonged to weight and obserue whether God gaue the one to the other and also by their publike promise and couenant before God and his congregation and therefore ought to preserue this bond of vnitie and be farre from forsaking the couenant of their God 4. One actually by comming into one family one manner of liuing for bed and board participating in welfare or woe but especially by becomming one bodie and one flesh as Moses speaketh 5. One by propagation both of them through Gods blessing affoarding one common matter for the bringing of children which are the principall pawnes of their loue From all which I conclude the first reason that if euerie man loue humanitie in euery man if one countriman can loue another although otherwise strangers if neighbour can loue neighbour because he is so if kindred can affect their kindred although further off how should such a bond as this which herein passeth all the other that it onely can make two one in person and not onely one in affection as the other be preserued inuiolable on both parts for their mutuall comfort and this is the verie reason of the spirit of God Mal. 2.15 God made but one and why not because he wanted spirit to haue inspired a world of wiues for Adam but because he respected an holy seede inferring the same conclusion which is as strong in the one sexe as the other wherefore let no man transgresse against the wife of his youth Secondly this affection of loue is due to the husband from the wife as he is the head and foundation of the family and vpholder of it and consequently in speciall sort the vaile of her eyes her protector and couer from all those who would offer her wrong and as he spreads his wing ouer her so she hath betaken her selfe to be called by his name she partaketh of all his honour and aduancement of his gaines and income and could not raise her selfe but as a vine creepe disgracefully as on the ground were she no● by him propped and suported in all which regards and many moe it is as little as he can expect or she performe in way of thankefulnesse to embrace him with such tendernesse of loue and inward affection as neuer findeth it selfe sufficiently satisfied with requitalls Thirdly the loue of the husband is a notable preseruatiue of Gods worship in the family without which praiers must needs be interrupted as also of her owne peace and comfort of her life of his and her chastitie and purenes of bodie and of spirit It is noted of Isaac that he loued Rebeccah dearely and this was a speciall preseruatiue that he fell not to polygamie or concubines as the most of the Patriarks did and on the contrarie the want of loue to ones proper companion whether man or woman is the first breach of the couenant and bringeth into the bosome of some stranger to the ruine of the whole family In a word let this affection be wanting all other duties will either be not performed or els for fashion or for a while but not constantly Vse 1. To reprooue many women who thinke it enough that they looke well to their houshold affaires and so become good huswiues although they take litle more delight in their husbands then in other men against whom they can soone breake into sullennesse anger and wrath and shewe such distemper as if they were borne in some angrie houre whereas they ought to possesse inwardly an honest and proper delight in them and outwardly shewe and expresse it that the husband may requite their loue with loue proportionable backe againe 2. Whereas many which loue their husbands doe it sinnefully and immeasurably it is meete to lay vp
kin to the gowte for the one is of rich men the other of rich women neither of the poore ones for most part yet it is most kindly in the mother most prosperous to the babe and the refusall of it very preiudiciall to both besides if nature in euery bruit beast cannot crie lowd inough in some mothers eares grace in the presidents of the godliest women we euer heard of calleth for it Sarah hauing a promise of a sonne said who would haue thought that euer Sarah should haue giuen sucke it was taken for granted in those daies that she that bare a child should also giue it sucke and so did Sarah although her age might iustly haue required dispensation Who was nurse to Samuel but his owne mother and when the Lord would chuse a nurse for Moses the greatest Prophet that euer was whom did he deliuer him vnto rather then his owne mother Who did giue sucke vnto Christ but his owne mother looke whose wombe bare him her pappes gaue him sucke And what kind of women were they whom the Apostle would chuse into office in the church but such as among other notes of diligence honestie and grace had giuen sucke to their owne children 1. Tim. 5.10 Let women consider seriously not onely how vnnaturall but how vngodly a practise it is without iust ground on idle pretenses to depart from the steppes of these holy women thrusting forth their children sometimes to such as by whose negligence they are brought short home and sometimes which is worse to such who ought neither to giue milke nor yet liue by the law of God I meane such as by dishonestie haue filled their breasts but to whomsoeuer they come short of that loue which euen the bruite creatures cary to their young Secondly seeing the vnreasonable creatures can and doe performe this office of loue there must needs be more required in the loue of mothers toward their children the second dutie therefore of motherly loue is by instruction to frame them vp to godlines and this two waies 1. By deliuering them precepts of pietie so soone as they can conceiue them that if it were possible they might sucke in with the milke principles of grace and godlinesse Salomon wisheth the parent to teach a child while he is a child in the trade of his way and least mothers should turne off this dutie to the father as beeing his we reade of a bundle of instructions collected together which Salomons mother taught him Prov. 31.1 That it is a fruite of loue in parents see Prov. 4.3.4 and the recompence of Eunica her timely teaching of Timothie her sonne appeareth in the commendations which Paul giueth of him euery where 2. By becomming examples to them of godlinesse and pietie carefull what speach gesture behauiour passe from them in the presence of their children which if it be sober and religious it fashioneth their behauiour accordingly or if otherwise it soone and suddenly corrupteth them as we see the loosenes of many parents fearefully reuenged and visibly vpon their children Thirdly the third office of true motherly loue is seasonable and mercifull correction Prou. 13.24 wherein two extreames are to be auoided 1. too much indulgence for that is a cruell loue in the euent a child let alone to himselfe saith Salomon maketh his mother ashamed and maketh the father smart often as Hely and bringeth himselfe to ruine it is noted a cause of Adoniahs ruine and fall that his father would not displease him from his childhood that this is a fruite of parentlike loue see Leuit. 19.17 thou shalt not hate him to let sinne be vpon him and Prou. 13.24 he that spareth the rodde hateth his child but he that loueth him chasteneth him betime 2. Take heede of crueltie and too much seueritie which may prouoke their children both Parents must beware of abusing their authoritie either to vniust commands or by vnseemely reproaches and contumelies or else by vniust and immoderate stripes by all which meanes children whom louing meanes might perhaps haue reclaimed are both exasperated and alienated from the Parent and hardened also and made desperate in bad courses The fruite appeare●h in good Ionathan whom Saul euerie way prouoked 1. none must bring his deare and innocent friend Dauid to be slaine but he there was a most vniust commandement 2. he vniustly reuiled him calling him the sonne of an whoore 3. he wanted of his will that he slewe him not for he threwe his speare at him and then the text saith that he arose and went his way Fourthly the last dutie is heartie and daily prayer for their childrens prosperitie Iob sanctified his sonnes daily a dutie euinced by the commendable custome of childrens daily crauing the Parents prayer Vse Let women learne thus to loue their children and thus to loue al their children for the precept is indefinite excluding no one child from any one of these duties which meeteth with the practise of some women who loue not their children in iudgement but in affection which sometime is carried to the eldest sometime to the youngest with neglect of all the rest some one must be made the wanton and darling some other so rigorously intreated that they seldome see a cleare and vncloudy looke towards them some one shall haue a double portion and be so set vp as that all his brethrens sheaues shal not fal downe onely but be blasted before his sheaue this is not to loue children religiously as Iob did who offered sacrifice according to the number of them all and therefore let religious men and women shunne this corrupt ●ffection least it be with them as it was with the Patriarks who were neuer more grieuously crossed in any thing then in their darling children Discreete or temperate A vertue before required both in the Minister cap. 1.8 and in elder men cap. 2.2 and now in younger women beeing a grace requisite for all estates ages sexes and conditions of life requiring that the raines of affections be subiected vnto reason and moderated by iudgement not suffering a thought to be entertained and setled in the minde which is not first warranted in the word without which if the raines be slacked but a little the minde is suddenly vanquished taken and lead captiue of manifold lusts This grace then is the watchman and moderator of the mind keeping and guarding it from pleasures altogether vnlawfull and in lawful curbing and cutting off excesse and abuse It watcheth also ouer the affections of the heart and actions of the life resisting all light behauiour all childish carriage all vnquiet and troublesome passions such as are suspitions ielousies which are the fewels and firebrands of much mischeife and the distempers of flashing anger rage vniust vexation It suffereth not vndutifulnes to the husband vnnaturalnes towards the children vnmercifulnes towards seruants vntowardnes in her owne duties vnthankefull medling with other folkes affaires It is a procurer
by the name of confidence and hope to shew that one maine scope of it is to raise the heart hereunto Heb. 3.6 If we hold fast the confidence and reioysing of the hope that is the doctrine of the Gospel whereby these are dispensed and confirmed then are we the house of God Thirdly the Apostle sometime speaketh as if the whole worke of euery dispenser of the Gospel were no other or greater then to quiet the heart in this expectation and that in his owne example and the rest of the Apostles 1. Thess. 1.10 Yee know what entring we had and how we turned you from idols vnto God and to looke for his Sonne from heauen no sooner were they turned to God but they waited for his sonne and that all the gifts of Ministrie are bestowed to worke in beleeuers this expectation we haue an expresse place 1. Cor. 1.7 Ye are not destitute of any gift wayting c. And lastly it addeth to the euidence of this truth that the faithfull are hereby marked as by their propertie euen such as with good seruants expect their Masters comming Matth. 24.45 such as looke for him Heb. 9.28 such as loue his appearing 2. Tim. 4.8 such as beeing wise virgins and louing spouses prepare themselues euery needfull thing for the bridgromes comming and such as beeing strangers and pilgrims vpon the earth haue their eyes still towards their country who while they liue in earth yet trafficke and haue their conuersation in heauen from whence they looke for a Sauiour Vse 1. Here is another triall to see whether we haue receiued this grace of the Gospell in truth or in appearance only If in truth then is the tast of the loue of Christ so sweet vnto vs as that we cannot but long after our fill of him in his appearing the sonnes of the Church begotten by the Gospel cannot but waite for the adoption of sonnes the Church is sicke of loue after him whom her soule loueth the common voice of the spouse is Amen vnto the promise of Christs comming Rev. 22.21 the bride saith Come and doubleth her desire and ardencie saying Amen Amen so as they are none of Christs spouses that say not come Neuer thinke then that thy heart is right affected vntill thou find in it this desire and breathing after Christ thy life for this is a speciall note of discerning betweene the godly and the wicked the one hath the spirit which saith come the other shake at the mention of this comming the one longeth till these shadowes flie away and that day breake on them the other can no more desire his comming then the guiltie fellon can the comming and presence of the iudge But that no man may be deceiued in this triall examination must be more particularly made whether this wayting be such as the Scripture prescribeth lest by mistaking it men faile of that comfort they leane vnto in their most need Be sure then that thy wayting be sound and true 1. in the ground of it 2. in the qualities 3. in the sound fruits and effects of it The ground of this expectation must be the free promise of God for all our future welfare applied by faith vnto our owne hearts the which promise of God being most certaine and our faith also as certenly laying hold thereon giueth such a certaintie to our hope as the Scripture boldly speaketh it can neuer make vs ashamed yea and ascribeth a full assurance vnto it Heb. 6.11 and calleth it the sure and stedfast aucre of the soule vers 19. This ground distinguisheth our Christian hope from those iogling perswasions of the Papists which they call hope for aske them concerning their hope what it is they tell vs that it is a perswasion arising partly from the grace of God and partly from our owne preceding merits But vrge them and say mee thinke there should be no great comfort nor setlednesse to leane vpon a vertue founded vpon merit they will tell you that indeede no man can be sure of his saluation for that were too much presumption but doe well and hope well hope well and haue well But against them we affirme that Christian hope buildeth certaintie vpon speciall faith neither of which they can abide to heare of without speciall reuelation and that by this reason Looke what was the ground of Abrahams hope the same must be the ground of the hope of all beleeuers but the free promise of God applied by faith in speciall was the ground of Abrahams hope and wayting Rom. 4.20.21 Hee doubted not but was strengthened in faith beeing fully assured that he which had promised was able to doe it There is no difficultie here but that Abraham had a speciall word for speciall faith to be grounded which say they we want But I answer that in the Scripture we haue in substance a particular word in that God who hath giuen the promise hath also giuen a commandement to euery beleeuer to apply it in speciall to himselfe 1. Ioh. 3.23 and this is equiualent to a particular word Obiect But it is presumption to hope without merits Ans. It is indeed presumption to hope for them they beeing so farre inferiour to the thing hoped for Againe it is faith and not presumption to hope for saluation in and for the merits of Christ though not for our own So much of the ground the qualities follow Secondly the qualities whereby the soundnesse of this Christian expectation is discerned are fowre 1. It must climbe aboue all humane sence and reason for it is no wayting with carnall eyes but with the eies of faith which the Apostle defineth to be the existence of things not seene and sight extinguisheth hope which is of future good things nay more it must hope often the cleane contrarie to that which it seeth as Abraham was said to hope aboue hope when he saw nothing in himselfe in Sarah in the whole course of nature but things which would haue dashed his hopes euen so here while within our selues we can behold little besides our sinnes and infirmities while without our selues we haue Esau hating vs in his heart and Ismael persecuting vs with the tongue while in this life we are compassed with miseries in the ende of this life with death after this life with the graue and corruption of it all which seeme to ecclipse our hopes and cut them short yet now is the time that our hope must be working and looking at things within the vaile that as a strong staffe it may vphold vs in a godly course 2. The second sound qualitie of this hopefull expectation is that it must be patient for what we hope we expect with patience Rom. 8.25 and so necessarie is patience vnto hope that the Apostle calleth this waiting by the name of patience it selfe 2. Thess. 3.5 The Lord guide your hearts to the wayting for of Christ that is to endure in waiting for Christ.
And we haue neede of patience to enioy the promises Abraham himselfe enioyed not the promise till he had waited patiently Heb. 6.15 we shall deceiue our selues if we looke to be wrapt into heauen as Enoch and Elias were seeing the promises of life goe with exception of the crosse which will trie our patience We knowe there is a time promised we may neither prescribe it nor if we beleeue make hast but as the husbandman patiently expecteth the fruites of the earth much more should we possesse our soules in patience to reape our fruites and haruest in heauen The third qualitie is a sighing and longing after the thing hoped for the heart that waiteth for such things hath both a griefe for the absence and a groaning desire after the presence and possession of them Rom. 8.23 We sigh in our selues waiting for the adoption euen the redemption of our bodie To this purpose saith Salomon that hope deferred paineth the heart Thus should we be sicke of loue and neuer finde our selues well and at ease in any thing below neuer thinke our selues happie in things present which are indeed but prison-ioyes in comparison of the ioyes of heauen but as crazed persons be euer complaining and wishing Oh who shall deliuer mee from this bodie of death Now who seeth not that this qualitie includeth an earnest loue of Iesus Christ whome we therefore waite for because wee loue him whence the Apostle Paul fitly knitteth these two together 2. Thess. 3.5 The Lord guide your hearts to the loue of God and the waiting for of Christ concluding thence that we cannot waite on the Lord Iesus Christ vnlesse we first loue him The fourth qualitie is a reioycing in that our hopes shal certenly come Rom. 5.2 we reioyce vnder the hope of the glorie of God that is that we shall partake one day of his glorie Excellent is that place in 1. Pet. 1.8 whome we haue not seene and yet we loue him and beleeue in him and reioyce with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious receiuing the ende of faith which is saluation And surely if Abraham the father of our faith reioyced to see the day of Christs humilitie so farre off euen 2000. yeares how ought we his beleeuing children reioyce to see the day of his and our own glorie approaching so neere that now is euen the last minute of the last houre how should we reioyce in that the time of refreshing and restoaring all things is come and if we be spouses of this bridegroome wee cannot but as we are exhorted reioyce in that the marriage of the lambe is come and the day of our owne coronation with an incorruptible crowne of glorie The third thing to trie the soundnesse of this expectation is by the effects of it and these be fowre 1. It purifieth and purgeth the heart and life whosoeuer hath this hope purgeth himselfe for he that waiteth for Christ wayteth for this ende to be like him and therefore conformeth himselfe daily vnto his similitude and becommeth pure as he is pure the which puritie howsoeuer it bee esteemed of in the world whosoeuer profiteth not in he cannot hope nor waite for Christ. If a man after the tearme of a fewe yeares hope for a large reuenue he cannot nor will not in the meane time take the way to cut off all his hopes but rather make wayes for the accomplishment and preuent whatsoeuer would come betweene him and them It is true that the blood of Christ purgeth vs from all sinne by satisfying for it and meritting the spirit of sanctification for beleeuers but yet we must purge our selues by manifesting that we receiue not this grace in vaine nor neglect the meanes wherein we are to testifie our thankefulnesse which is by striuing against iniquitie The Scripture noteth him to be an euill seruant that saith he wayteth for his masters comming and yet he beateth his fellowe seruants and sitteth downe with drunkards such hopes as these ende in vaine perswasion when presumption and vngrounded confidence confoundeth the person that giueth them harbor Dost thou hope then to be like Christ when he appeareth thou must then resemble him in this life beeing in thy measure pure holy innocent meeke louing and obedient professe hope without this conformitie vnto Christ it is but a pretence all is vnsound and deceitfull 2. It not onely freeth from sinne but frameth to obedience both cherefull and constant whereof we haue a pregnant example in Christ himselfe whom we are commanded to looke at for imitation who for the ioy that was set before him endured the crosse and despised the shame So also are the Saints in their measure looking to the ioy before them invincible both in labours and sufferings hope worketh the will it setteth the hands and holdeth them to worke it putteth a difference betweene the workes of Christians and ciuill men they attempt Christian duties that their master may finde them well doing and hold out also in well doing but these vndertake sightly duties but in some by-respect or other and wanting this hope are off and on especially in difficulties they giue vp all whereas the Christian who hath the recompence of reward in his eye can esteeme with Moses the rebuke of Christ great riches 3. This hope taketh off our fierie edge and heat of affections from the world and setteth them aboue it fixeth the eie vpon things within the vaile the glory of which dimme and obscure all the glorie of the world it causeth refusall of the pleasures of sinne for a season it maketh treasures of Egypt seeme small yea vile in a mans eie comparatiuely the expectation of this resurrection maketh the mocks and contempts of the world to be contemned yea sentences of death nay executions lightly esteemed of this hope hath carried martyrs through fires feares lyons dens teeth and a thousand kinds of death through all which they hastened to the fruition of the thing hoped for in which onely they looked for securitie and contentment 4. It beeing the daughter of faith waeeth not wearie but still vseth the best meanes for the obtaining the thing hoped It is importunate with God by prayer for the comming of Christ and as Iacob wrastleth with God when it hath nothing but it selfe to sustaine faith yea and preuaileth with the Cananitish woman after many repulses they that haue this hope pray for all the meanes which hasten this comming for the free passage of the Gospel the peace of Ierusalem the puritie of do-doctrine which themselues loue and beleeue and propagate vnto others by word and example that so farre as lyeth in them the number may be euerie way accomplished And further they greiue and sorrowe when any of these are hindered when the state of the ministerie and ministers is destitute and distressed when the light and life of professors is obscured and darkened when errors are broached maintained and receiued for these are things comming betweene them and their hopes and
not to pa●●y and talke with him but presently make resistance for by such degrees iniquitie comes into his chaire delay to talke with sinne by reason of our inclination breeds a certaine delight in it delight begets desire desire worketh indeauour indeauour produceth the act the act ingendreth and is quickly iterated and multiplied multiplication is the mother to a benummed conscience a brawned conscience begets defence of sinne defence riseth to boasting or gloriation in it and thus is sinne brought into the chayre of estate and the quishon is damnation Now sinne is proclaimed crowned and accepted of and hath all loyaltie performed vnto him Doctr. 2. Secondly out of the words we learne what a wonderfull freedome we haue obtained by Christ. By nature we are wrapped in the guilt of sinne subiected to the stipend of sinne subdued vnder the curse of the law and lie right vnder the whole wrath and displeasure of God Our sinne proclaimed vs rebels to God through heauen and earth banished vs out of our owne countrie set hell gates open against vs and gaue vs into the hands of Satan as an hangman to execute Gods sentence of eternall death passed against vs yea further hopelesse we were in this wofull condition for Gods displeasure was so kindled against vs as men and Angels could not reconcile him the law was so transgressed as all men and Angels could neuer satisfie nor make vp the breach the sentence was so seuere as all men and angels could neuer haue stood vnder it the execution so certaine as the verie gibbet was euer standing in our sight in the horrors of soule and terrors of accusing consciences and we seemed to walk and be left in the midst of tenne thousand deaths Now when no meanes was left to pacifie God offended to satisfie the law transgressed to reuoke the sentence denounced the Sonne of the eternall Father must come from the bosome and glorie of his Father and become obedient both to the performing of the whole will of his Father as also to the ignominious death of the crosse that so becomming a curse for vs as that execrable kind of death betokened we might haue God well pleased with vs as he is with him we might present him his law perfectly fulfilled not in our persons but in his for vs we might plead the payment of all our debts both the principall and forfeiture by this our suretie and so might sue out our full discharge from all former claimes and sentences because the vttermost farthing is fully paid and discharged Vse 1. If Christ hath freed and redeemed vs from all iniquitie then hath he made no partiall redemption he satisfieth not for the fault and leaue vs to satisfie for the punishment neither redeemeth vs from the eternall punishment but giueth vs leaue to satisfie for the temporall But if Christ haue redeemed vs from all iniquitie if he said on the crosse It is finished that is the whole worke of mans redemption is consummate and perfect if at one time he made one perfect expiation and therby brought in an euerlasting redemption here is artillerie and gunshot against all Poperie downe goe all other satisfactions for sinne in this life downe goe all satisfactions after this life in purgatorie downe goeth their doctrine of all other merits saue this of Christ downe goeth all that supplie of the foolish virgins lamps with the oyle of good workes of superrogation out of the Churches treasurie and with these the Dagon of the masse and the whole Diana their worship and religion must downe also Did not I forgiue thee all saith the parable and we were sold for nought but redeemed without mony saith the Prophet What can the Papist say now for his mony-masses pardons indulgences and such trash obtruded vpon the world seeing the text is so expresse we are redeemed without mony Obiect But Dauid had his sinne forgiuen 2. Sam. 12.13 The Lord hath put away thy sinne And yet because he had made the enemies of God to blaspheame the child must surely die ver 14. and this was the temporall punishment and what are the suffrings of Gods people in this life and in the end of this life at their death but punishments for sinne Ans. The text sheweth plainely that both the sinne and the punishment was forgiuen for so those words shew thou shalt not die death beeing the iust wages of sinne yet the child must die not to make any satisfaction for the sinne but the text shewes another end that the enemies might cease to blaspheame when they should see the Lord no patron or fauorer of sinne but rather iustly offended with it And as for the afflictions which befall Gods children for sinne and lie often very heauily vpon them none of them satisfie or can satisfie any part of the iustice of God for sinne past but are fatherly corrections preuenting sinnes to come many waies seruing for their owne good and the warning of others least they should conceiue him a God bolstring sinne in those that are dearest vnto him but no way as a satisfaction to God for thus only the passion of Christ is a satisfactorie redemption from sinne And the like may be said of death which is left to the godly to conflict withall although they haue obtained full remission of sinnes but this is not as a punishment of sinne to them to whome Christ hath altred the nature and visage of death but now it is only an exercise of their faith hope and pietie yea a verie passage vnto eternall life 2. This consideration must stirre vs vp to a loue of our Lord Iesus who hath discharged vs of such a debt and ransomed vs from such an vnvtterable thraldome How would we affect such a one as would pay a trifling debt if it were but tenne or twentie pound if our selues for insufficiencie were cast in prison we could neuer forget such loue Consider now how great those debts of thine were how weake and small thine abilitie was to satisfie if thou hadst had the power of all men and angels how ruinous and rufull thy case was euery way thus the more loue will appeare to be due vnto Christ and the more thy sinne if thou returne not loue for loue 3. It must worke in vs a detestation and watchfulnes against all sinne which bringeth such vassaladge vpon vs for shall Christ take vpon him our debts that we like desperate prodigalls should doe nothing but augment them shall he ransome vs and giue vs perfect freedome that we with the vnthankefull Israelites should runne backe againe to our former bondage shall we with Salomons foole make but a mocke of sinne which cost Christ so deare to expiate he neuer knewe what this greatest benefit of Christ euer meant that can take his pleasure in the course of any one sinne Christ hauing restored the blind man his sight bad him goe and sinne no more and to the
Kings and especially for good men as the shepheard for the sheep and not principally for the wolues Besides the supposition is nought for though they be iust yet they are so but in part and therefore sometimes they follow their priuate affections and do wrong and need the law to vrge them to do right For the third although beleeuers be vnder the protection of God who suffreth not an hayre to fall from their heads without his prouidence yet may we not strip his prouidence from the meanes which serue it of which this is a speciall one And for the fourth true it is that loue couereth all things but by couering must be meant 1. A fauourable construction of all things which in right reason may be well con●●ered for a man may not put out his eyes and affection may not so ouermaster sence as to call manifest darknes by the name of light 2. A passing by smaller infirmities and priuate offences as one that would not take knowledge of them 3. Such a couering as may cure also for loue is wise and herein most louing when in taking notice of an iniurie it turneth it selfe to the discipline of the partie sometimes by louing admonition in all lenitie and sometimes by mercifull seueritie in sharper reprehension yea and if that take no place in proceeding further to discouer the sores to skilfull surgions according to the quality of the offence to the bench either of the church or commonwealth and this is no impreachment vnto loue as we see in God himselfe who chasteneth vnto amendment whom he loueth Againe Christians may not returne euill for euill but rather beare two blowes then giue one and suffer a double iniurie then offer one but yet this hindreth not but that a Christ●an may lawfully defend himselfe although he may not offend and hurt another for we may not thinke our selues so straitly bound to the letter as the right sence of such precepts for euen Christ himselfe hauing a blow on one cheeke turned not the other but was readier and would haue done it before he would haue returned the wrong as he might Lastly Christians may not reuenge But reuenge is twofold either lawfull or vnlawfull This latter is priuate reuenge done by a mans selfe or by the help of the Magistrate when a man seeketh to right his wrong with the hatred and wreckling himselfe vpon the person or any other sinister end and this must be farre from a Christian. But there is a publike reuenge put in the hands of the Magistrate who is the Minister of God to take vengeance on the euill doers and this may be prosecuted in a good manner and for a good end without hatred of the partie offending yea and executed according to the constant orders laws of the countrie agreeable to Gods word and this execution is nothing else but the manifestation of Gods vengeance and righteous sentence Vse 2. This doctrine further meeteth with all those common slanders raised by Satan and his instruments against Christ and his kingdom and ordinances by which the deuill hath most powerfully preuailed against the Church in all ages namely by perswading ciuill gouernours that Christs kingdome is the greatest enemie to their states and kingdomes and such an enchocher as will at length vnlesse it be warily preuented pull downe their greatnesse This imputation hath the father of lyes euer laid before the eyes of great ones to alienate the minds of Princes and people from the same for the euidence of which how hath hee made it goe for currant that whereas all errors are easily tolerated and countenanced onely true religion and the professors of it haue been the causes of all stirres and tumults as though the doctrine and teachers of the Gospel of peace carried nothing else but fire and swords where they goe By what other meanes did Haman incense king Ahashuerosh against the Iewes but by telling him of a dispersed people dwelling apart from others hauing lawes which yet were Gods owne different from all other people and they would not obey the kings laws and therefore it was not for the kings profit to let them liue By what other meanes did the Chaldean courtyers incense Nebuchadnezzar against the three companions of Daniel but by imitating their contempt of him and his edict These men haue not regarded thy commandement nor will serue thy gods nor worship thy image which thou hast set vp By what other means did Rehum and Shimshai and their companions hinder the building of the temple then by writing vnto Artashast that if the Iewes had once fortified themselues within walls they would be rebellious as of old and would pay neither toll tribute nor custome and that they wrote thus much because they would not see the kings dishonour In the new Testament how haue Christians standing out for the lawes of Christ against Antichrist beene alwaies charged that they were the onely subuerters of the place where they liued and the direct contradictors of the decrees of the Caesars vnder whom they liued How often was Paul accused by the Stoicks in Athens by Demetrius by Tertullus that he was a pestilent fellowe a moouer of sedition among all the Iewes thorough the world and a sect-master And it is no meruell if the members and ministers of Christ be thus dealt with in the world seeing the head himselfe was not onely accused and condemned but executed for that he was an enemie to Caesar and a moouer of sedition Our eyes haue seene and read and our eares haue heard how Popish spirits haue euer beene readie to charge the Protestants in seuerall countryes to haue attempted to wrest the sword out of the Princes hand Harding chargeth Luther to haue animated Thomas Munzer the rebels preacher in Thuringia wheras Luther plainly calleth him the preacher of Sathan so the Rhemists call M. Calvin one of the principall rebels of his time and affirme the Protestants consistories the shoppes of rebellion This hath euer beene the cunning of Sathan to preuent the accusation of others in the things wherein himselfe is most guiltie for those that knowe Popish doctrine can easily discouer it to be none of Christs nor his Apostles because it wresteth all Princes authoritie out of their hands and mooueth their subiects to rebellion and such as knowe the state of Rome and Rhemes knowe where the shoppes stand in which all conspiracies and rebellions haue beene and are daily forged and then where would they lay them but vpon Protestants who hence shewe themselues taught by Christ because if Satan himselfe should come to accuse yet could he not say truely that euer any such thing was found in their hands Did not Charles the ninth of Fraunce giue out that the most bloodie massacre that euer the sunne sawe was done for the conspiracie of the Protestants against him and the kingdome whereas it was onely a Popish and perfidious plot long before laid against the liues
vrge the multitude of reasons which to this purpose offer thēselues I will onely name those two which are couched in the verse 1. Because that we professe that we were such in times past but now are begotten vnto God which were it not a forceable reason the Apostle would not so often beat vpon it as Col. 3.8 But now put away all these things wrath anger maliciousnes cursed speaking wherein yee walked once when ye liued in them and if we would prooue our selues a newe lumpe we must purge out the old sowering and swelling leauen of malitiousnesse 1. Cor. 5.8 So the Apostle Iames 1.18 of his owne good will he begate vs wherefore lay away all filthinesse and superfluitie of maliciousnesse and Pet. 1.2.2 laying aside all guile envie malitiousnesse as newe borne babes desire c. If euer thou wouldst haue euidence of thy conuersion thou must put on as the elect of God these bowels of mercie to Gods people and loue to Gods image in whomsoeuer for how else wouldst thou be knowne to be a disciple 2. These hatefull sinnes make vs iustly odious 1. to God Prou. 14.32 The wicked is cast away for his malice both roote and fruit 2. to man in that they wage battell against Christian loue which is the preseruatiue of all societie Thus haue we been somewhat large in discouering the nakednesse of our corrupt nature by which not onely our cheife but all our holds are taken and we turned naked into the curse of God Now how fewe returne backe to the pit whence they are digged how fewe acknowledge and bewaile this mother sinne which is the roote of all sinnes and layeth vs open to all inundations both of sinne and the curses due thereunto for so the Lord mentioneth it as the cause of the f●ood because hence sprung all those actuall sinnes which were the next causes of it I knowe not how those Popish positions haue preuailed in the practise of most men who are yet of an other iudgement who call this naturall corruption lesse then all sinnes yea then any veniall sinne yea indeed not properly sinne but a propensitie to it as tinder not as fire not deseruing death of it selfe yea too many Christians liue as though it were not in them at all as though they had drunke that Popish dregge that originall sinne is not in the regenerate any sinne at all But mistake not our Apostle he saith not we were thus or thus as though any were quite escaped from this corrupt condition but it is a most fearefull sinne pressing down and hanging fast on the best subiecting them in it selfe to the wrath of God still vrging them to bring them backe if it were possible into deepe condemnation such a corruption as is contrarie to all the commandements bred in the bone lurking close in the soule hardly seene hardly resisted neuer abolished in the best while they carrie this house of clay This is the cause why so few perceiue this estate of theirs that so few see the necessitie of beeing renewed in the spirit of their minds and that so few seeke in true humilitie to be shrowded vnder the righteousnesse of the Lord Iesus But if euer thou wouldst be raised labour to see and bewayle the poyson of thy nature the more thou seest it the lesse it is and the more thou art sanctified the more weakenes thou findest yea little else but death and darkenes in thy soule There is as great difference betweene two sorts of men as betweene fire and water The former haue alwaies found a good disposition in themselues they haue grace at will they neuer doubted of Gods loue they haue euer loued and serued God without let yet these pitifull deluded creatures liue no otherwise then the very Stoiks who followed nature for their guid and neuer find fault with their estate Another sort of men such as Saint Paul can cry out of themselues as miserable men ouermatched with a bodie of sinne and death they pray for a free spirit and then when first the Lord hath enlarged them and loosed their bolts they can promise to runne the way of his commandements These would doe good but they cannot they would not doe euill but they do it which of these two now are more Puritanes Againe in their falls and slippes they differ no lesse The former if he sinne he layeth it vpon something without himselfe as the sight of some obiect and beholding of some Bathsebah some Achans wedge or his inward sences call to his minde some iniurie vanitie or some such occasion or other which had he escaped all had bin well thus he will lay his sinne any where but on himselfe The other know and acknowledge that they are led away by their owne concupiscence and that their sences obiects and occasions are but seruants to their corruption Dauid beeing checked for one sinne goeth to this roote Psal. 51.5 and such as he vpon euery occasion can set vpon this sinne as the most dangerous enemie of their saluation If they find ignorance in themselues they presently haue recourse to this darknesse of mind which naturally hath depriued it selfe of the knowledge of God If they come short of doing any good as they would or doe it not so well they can blame this inbred euill which is present with them when they finde themselues heauie to that which the vnderstanding rightly conceiueth they can grone vnder the rebellion of their will which is renewed but in part only when they goe halting and fall downe sometimes in their course here they can espie their owne counsells casting them downe when they see a conquest to will and effect that which is good they can returne the honour to the author and glorie in him who hath wrought both the will and the deed yet so as they forget not the combate and molestation of this their familiar foe who continually eateth drinketh and sleepeth in his bosome watching Dalilah-like to deliuer him to his destruction Lastly let euery one learne timely to take in hand this crooked nature before he be accustomed to euill for else as hardly as a blackmoore changeth his skin shalt thou become changed when wicked nature and worse custome haue both barred thy repentance and bound thy sinnes faster vpon thee And because much of this folly is bound vp in the hearts of children and seruants let masters and fathers seeke seasonably to driue it out fathers especially because they helped their children into it must by Christian instruction godly example and the rodde of correction labour to helpe them out and thus do their best to make their children a part of a mends Zuinglius calleth this corruption the disease of nature And herein it fitly resembleth the diseases of the bodie the which the longer they continue the more incurable they are and if they be let go too long they bring certaine death and therefore let parents and masters many of whom are
cannot hinder the gathering of the saints he will doe what he can to hinder their building vp that so the Lord may come short of a great part of his glorie and his people cut short of a great part of their comfort 3. how naked people lie without vision to all errors and dangers and how easily the sheepe are scattered when the Pastor is smitten or remooued Vse 1. This doctrine especially directeth it selfe against that fearefull sinne of nonresidencie or ordinarie absence of the Pastor from his people Against which not onely this example but other reasons drawne out of the Scripture are verie expresse As 1. the authoritie of Gods commandement Act. 20.28 binding all Pastors carefully to attend vnto the flockes of which the holy Ghost hath made them ouerseers and this not at the quarter or halfe yeare day to gather in the profits and to feede themselues but to feede the flocke the Church of God which Christ hath purchased with his blood I would know whether this precept requireth the personall presence of the Pastor or no If any man say that he is as good as present in his sufficient substitute I answer that the most do not prouide so sufficiently but some rakeshame of men some Ieroboams Priest of the basest of the people that cannot tell otherwise what to doe with himselfe But if they did the text is not satisfied which requireth his owne attendance neither inioyneth a Pastor to see his people fed but to feede them I would further here demaund whether that commandement giuen to Archippus belong not to all the Pastors of the new Testament Take heed to the ministerie that thou hast receiued in the Lord that thou fulfill it which if it doe as no forhead can denie it then with what face can any man take a ministerie vpon him that an other may fulfill it The like commandement is giuen by Salomon be diligent to knowe the sta●e of thy flocke and take heed to thy heards which not obscurely implyeth the presence of the Pastor who must not onely teach but teach aptly and apply not onely true but fit doctrine according to the state and condition of his people 2. The excellencie of the obiect tieth the Pastor to more then ordinarie attendance his calling is to watch ouer mens soules were it but to watch ouer mens bodies or goods it were no lesse then capitall for any man to leaue his station at his owne pleasure wherein his captaine hath set him and how then can this vnfaithfulnesse in them who are set in the Lords watch towers but be by so much the more perillous then the other by how much the soule is more pretious then the bodie and the losse of the soule infinitely surpassing the losse of the bodie 3. The straitnes of the account that is to be made for the people cannot but binde him that hath any conscience left in him to ordinarie residence and attendance in his owne person Hence the Apostle to the Hebrews saith they watch ouer mens soules as they that must giue account And the Apostle Peter wisheth them so to feed the flocke depending vpon them that when the cheife sheepeheard shall appeare they may giue vp their accounts with ioy Now with what ioy can he giue vp his accounts who with the hireling hath left his people to the wolfe who neuer knew their estate who neuer came but as a stranger among them neuer or seldome knowne by voyce vnto them yea scarce knowne by face to many of them That which will die let it die Zachar. 11.9 he is none of his brothers keeper Slender is that account which that Captaine can make to his Prince who hauing receiued his paie to guid and traine such a number of Souldiers leaueth them in the plaine feild to the spoile and violence of the enemie or at the best setteth a base fellow ouer them fitter to guide cattell then to traine men vp to such seruices such another account must needs here be giuen vp but neither of them will goe for payment 4. The loue of Christ were it present would constraine men to feed his sheepe Peter saith Christ louest thou mee feede my sheepe Were there loue to the flocke it would not suffer them to runne into ruines nor to fall away from their zeale faith vertue neither should the Pastors absence open the doore to wolues and deceiuers to Preists and Iesuits who in such places haue free scope to poyson and destroie Were faith present to rule the heart it would extinguish the drought of the world and would be working by loue towards Christ and his people accounting obedience to God aboue thousands of gold and siluer If true contentation were there such an appearance of euill would be auoided as couetousnesse is which is a filthy vice wheresoeuer but especially in a Minister who is as the eye in the bodie wherein such a blemish or rather such a beame is not more perspicuous then scandalous and yet is the roote as of all euill so of this ordinarie nonresidencie If true humilitie were present it would not suffer the impostume of pride to grow vpon a man by multiplying of liuings which experience teacheth to be like a collection of many bad humors into one member which make it to swell aboue the iust proportion of the other members If fidelitie tooke place he would be diligent to till the Lords feild as he hath promised he would as a faithfull steward be prouiding necessaries not for his own but for Gods family as a good Physitian he would be ministring to the sicke and diseased soules he would be binding vp the broken spirits he would be seeking and sauing that which is lost yea he would goe before the sheepe of Christ and lead them in and out for all this he hath promised before God and his people and vndertaken it in his owne person If equitie and iustice ruled him he could not suffer the people who sow carnall things vnto him not to reape spirituall from him he could not take so much wages of God and doe him so little worke for it he could not receiue his pay and flie from the battaile he could not so greedily eat the milke of the flocke and giue them little or no food he could not so wrongfully keepe backe the hire of the labourers who reape the Lords feilds neither could he liue of that altar which he doth not serue 1. Cor. 9.13 Lastly if right reason ruled him he would easily discerne what an vnnaturall and monstrous thing it were that either sundrie bodies and congregations should haue but one eye or else that this eye should be ordinarily and for most part many miles distant from the bodie Right reason would also shew him how impossible a thing it is for one shepheard to keepe more flocks then one how vnreasonable a thing it is for any man to performe seruice in one place and take wages in another What a
bid him not God speede and 2. King 3.14 Elisha telleth Iehoram an idolatrous king that had it not beene for the good king Iehosaphat he would not haue looked vpon him nor seene him And yet this hindreth nothing but that we must salute our owne priuate enemies though we may not the open enemies of God 3. If any haue sinned the sinne vnto death we may not pray for them therfore not salute them 1. Ioh. 5.16 This is the former kind of salutatiō but not that which the Apostle speaketh of in the text but the latter which is a more inward and entire affection betweene such as are of the houshold of faith who are straitlye● knit together then by the bonds of humanitie and ciuill conuersation for besides these they are tyed by the bond of the spirit of faith of a most holy profession and are brethren not in the flesh but in the faith yea heires of the selfe same inheritance in glorie These are said to loue one another in the faith If they therefore be to be kindly saluted which hate vs much more they which loue vs and if they which loue vs in the flesh much more they which loue vs in the faith and that with a most heartie and large affection Hence note 1. that religion bindeth man to man in the straitest bond for 1. the spirit is the tye● of it and hence is it called the vnitie of the spirit in the bond of peace and indeede it must be a wonderfull bond that can reconcile such deadly enemies as men are before they come into the kingdome of Christ Isa. 11.6 2. Gods image wheresoeuer it is is exceeding beautifull and a great binder especially where renewed and repaired which beeing once espied let the outward condition be what it can be a religious heart seeth sufficient matter of loue and will knit the soule vnto the soule of such a one 3. It addeth strength and firmenesse to all other bonds of nature affinitie desert c. and maketh them more naturall What a true friend was Ionathan to Dauid because he saw that God was with him his soule claue vnto him though the kingdome was to be rent from him for it yet could he not rent his heart from Dauid If Ioseph had not had more then nature he could not but haue reuenged such infinite wrongs vpon his brethren whereas the grace of his heart made him say It was not you my brethren but God sent me before you Consider also of the example beyond all imitation of our Lord Iesus Christ who gaue himselfe to the death for vs when we were yet his enemies 4. This loue must needes be most lasting for beeing loue in the truth for the truthes sake it shall continue so long as the truth doth but the truth abideth with vs and shall abide with vs for euer· and this is the cause that whereas the loue of nature dieth with it and the loue of wicked men dieth with their persons this loue liueth in death yea when goeth to heauen with a man and getteth strength and perfection then faith ceaseth and hope vanisheth away Vse 1. Whence we are taught most familiarly to embrace them that loue vs in the faith and to make most account of their loue Many loue in the face many in the flesh many in nature onely the loue of Christians is a fruit of faith a worke of the spirit and ●herefore a surer bond then they all Well knew the Apostle that none was in comparison worth hauing but this he calleth for no other he careth for no other he mentioneth no other 2. Such as set into any societie with others if he would haue it comfortable vnto him let him strengthen all other naturall or ciuill bonds by this bond of religion let him labour to begin his loue in the faith or if he haue begunne elsewhere alreadie let him reforme the same hereby if he looke for any sound comfort in his estate for this is the cause that men often haue so little returne of loue from their wiues so little obedience from their children so little dutie from their seruants so slender respect from their equalls because they begin their loue and duties at a wrong ende and haue for other respects affected those with whome they liue but the least if at all for grace and religion which of all is the soundest most profitable and most comfortable Quest. But how may I knowe whether I loue an other in the faith o● no Answ. By these notes 1. If thou loue him because he is a member of Christ for this loue must be a fruit of faith and knitteth him that hath it to the members as faith doth to the head 2. If thou loue his soule first and will not suffer sinne vpon it 3. If thou spyest and dost reuerence the image of God in him and louest him that is begotten because of him that begat and preferrest the grace of his heart aboue all other outward parts and respects 4. If thou aboue all other things wish him yea if it be in thy power helpe him to a further part in the better part which shall neuer be taken from him 5. If the more thou seest grace to growe in him the more entire thy loue groweth towards him 3. This point sheweth their fearefull condition that make religion the verie cause of their hatred and malice against the godly an apparant marke of the deuill is stamped vpon them who for this cause compasseth the earth that if it were possible he might chase the image of God from off the face of it Secondly in that the Apostle saluteth such as loued them in the faith we may note what a mighty power the Gospel carrieth with it where the Lord will haue it effectuall These Cretians had beene a vile people and of most bruitish behauiour as we haue at large heard in the first Chapter but now there were amongst them such as loued Paul and such as claue vnto him in the faith the Gospel had tamed and subdued them had turned them out of their sauage and cruell natures had made them tractable and docible and of euill beasts had reduced them to Christian affection and conversation but of this we haue spoken before Grace be with you all Amen This is Pauls ordinarie farwell written with his own hand in all his Epistles whereas the Epistles themselues were written out by some of his Scribes And it is added 1. as the marke of his owne Epistle that he might preuent counterfeit writings for well knew he how neerely it concerned the Church to cleaue vnto those writings which were indited by the holy Ghost inspiring the Prophets and and Apostles and not to haue any other bastard writings obtruded vpon her in which practise the deuill was restlesse euen in those times 2. As a testimonie of singular affection and good will which can be by no better meanes expressed then by frequent and earnest prayers and
and therefore necessarily supplieth it with moysture and heate of grace And the promise is that those that waite vpon the Lord shall renew their strength they shall lift vp their wings as the Eagles they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not waxe fainte Secondly The comfort of old age dependeth hereupon the tedious and diseased daies of which whosoeuer would comfortably passe they must prouide themselues of this supplie For who is it that can say he hath pleasure in those daies when for the darknes and miserie of them the sunne and the moone and the starres seeme to fall from heauen vnto whom Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse hath not risen and vnto whose heart that bright morning starre hath not discouered his brightnes the least beame and glims of whose sauing grace farre surpasseth the sunne in his strength What comfort can be to him whose strong men that keepe the house that is whose armes tremble for weaknes and whose thighs bow themselues as too weake to beare the weight of the bodie vnlesse the Lords arme and right hand become his strength and as a staffe to leane vpon as he was to Dauid 2. Sam. 22.19 What ioy remaineth vnto him whose age hath worne away most of his senses that now hath his eyes dim as Isaaks that with Barzillai he cannot discerne between good and bad he hath no tast in that he eateth and drinketh he cannot heare any more the voice of singing men and women vnlesse he hath attained the eyes of faith to see God in Christ and so with Simeon he can behold his saluation vnlesse he find rellish and tast in the bread of life vnlesse he can heare the sweet note of Gods spirit consenting with his owne that he is Gods child together with that sweet harmony of a good conscience kept before God and men in all things which is heauenly musick vpon earth In a word what solace or reioysing can be to him who hath one foote in the graue that seeth death so neere him daily threatning him and no way to escape him vnlesse herein also the spirit sustaine his infirmitie by assuring him that Christ is his life who hath bereaued that serpent of his sting poyson and venome so as he shall doe him no more harme then helpe him towards his happines Thirdly why should not we thus prouide against that rainie day and furnish our selues against the euill of it seeing the heathen were by nature taught to prouide for themselues such props of their age as they thought would most bestead them both for their vtilitie and delight there is no man that finding his eyes decaying needeth to be vrged to prouide spectacles nor he whose loynes faile him to prepare him a staffe to leane vpon and much more should grace teach euery Christian that when with Dauid through age or otherwise he findeth his flesh fayling him and his heart also then to make the Lord his hope and his portion for euer Fourthly the recompence of this dutie is beyond all our thoughts seeing the blindnes of the bodie is made vp by the vision of the Lord Iesus and God the father appeased in him bodily weakenesse supplyed by spirituall strength corporal death abated yea exchanged with heauenly life all which not onely quell the feare of death approaching but euen whet the desire of it For if Simeon seeing Christ in his armes praieth for his peaceable departure If Moses seeing the land of Canaan from the toppe of mount Nebo could willingly submit himselfe to die If the three famous Patriarchs who neuer sawe the promises accomplished to their owne persons but a farre off promised to their posterities could willingly die in faith how much more shall they be able to wish their desolation who by the eye of the faith shall behold that heauenly Canaan and that celestiall Ierusalem of which the other were but darke shadowes Vse This doctrine cries shame vpon many old men that are as weake or weaker in soule then they be in bodie farre more blind more staggering euery way more sensles more dead they perceiue their faces and eyes looke drooping to the earth and yet their spirits neuer a whit more lifted vp vnto heauen they see the world forsaking them as not able to cherish them any longer and yet cannot they be drawne to forsake the world they cannot but behold the earth casting them off it and making a way fot the next age their posteritie and yet they cast care away and neuer prouide themselues of a continued citie The eie of their bodie seeth how they are growne into yeares and striken in age but the eye of their mindes see not the gray haires here and there vpon them no more then Eprhaims did Euerie man can see and say they are come euen to the period of their dayes and yet no man can say they are come to the beginnings of any true grace Thus although multitude of yeares should teach wisedome vnderstanding faith application yet may young Elihu truely obiect to the reproach not of a fewe that olde age is not alwaies wise Further vrging of this point although carried further in the deliuerie I purposely omit The Lord graunt all of vs whome it concerneth to learne thus much as is said In loue This second vertue beseeming the elder sort not onely as olde men but auncient Christians is brotherly loue which casteth eie vnto all the duties of the second table as faith principally to the duties of the former and most fitly ioined with faith as being the inseparable companion of it and such a marke as freeth it from imputation of deadnesse or vnsoundnesse Which vertue is inioyned euerie Christian olde or young both because it is the newe commandement of Christ as also a note of a Christian and true disciple of Christ Ioh. 13.35 and is besides the bond of vpright dealing in humane societie without which men were little better then wolues or wilde beasts But it is here rather commended to elder men who in this vertue as in the former and following graces must be more at the last then at the first and in whome this grace of loue must be proportionable vnto their faith for this may not be an infant if the former be of riper age but according to the proportion and growth of faith must loue abound And it must be obserued that our Apostle requireth not the vertue simply or in remisse degree or small measure but soundnesse in loue in such a degree and measure as that age seemeth of it selfe to call for Now if we would knowe wherein the soundnesse of loue consisteth it is then sound when it hath soundnesse 1. in the ground 2. order 3. seate 4. worke 5. durance of it First the true ground of all the loue of the creature is the loue of the Creator all the loue of man must issue from the loue of God and all duties of the second table must
slew his Master wicked Iesabel could obserue the ruine of such treacherous conspirators Our owne Chronicles are full of rare examples of Gods iudgements our eyes haue seene not a few vpon such The strange discouerie of Percies conspiracie may not be forgotten nor let that wickednes and the iust vengeance of God vpon the actors neuer be put out from vnder heauen Neither is this only an humane obseruation but an infallible extract and conclusion out of the word Prov. 24.21 My son feare God and the King and meddle not with the seditious for their destruction shall rise suddenly and who knoweth the ruine of them To these reasons might be added that it is the brand of Libertines and carnall Gospellers to despise gouernment and speake euill of maiesties and dignities c. Vse 1. Popish religion is a flat enemie to the lawe of God and nature the professor of which must before he be the Popes darling sweare flat contrarie to this subiection euery yeare and almost day giues experience of this truth Besides their doctrine is full of trayterous positions and their bookes which they daily send in amongst vs are stuffed with poisoned invectiues to bring our Princes and nobles into contempt pitie it is so many of them are so openly suffered to the offence of the good and the casting further backe of those that be bad It is not my dutie to speake or write what Lipsius in his posthumus epistles hath foolishly bolted out against the Lords anoynted ouer vs but this I say the booke is too much set by and if a Papists tongue can staine or slaunder I affirme there are fewe of our nobles whom Costerus hath not lately maliciously slandered the practise among them I acknowledge common but the thing among vs to be lamented is that both that and other such bookes are so common 2. This subiection is the rather to be vrged vpon all because the deuill seeketh by all his cunning and power to weaken this ordinance and bring it into contempt which is euident in that men dare not take such libertie of speach aginst the supreame and highest yet how ordinarie is it for men to waigh themselues and their worthinesse with those that are sent from the highest yea and s●icke not to make odious comparisons with them that lay his office aside he is as good and better then he but the deuill hath nowe the hold he would haue for while the eie is vpon the person and not vpon the place steppeth in this equalitie and this equalitie shaketh off subiection before he come to such tearmes of defiance Others breake out into speeches beseeming the authors euen Chore and his companie rather then any Christian Ye take too much vpon you Moses and Aaron whensoeuer the magistrate administreth not according to their minds and let the Magistrate when he will set himselfe to reforme the congregation as Moses did this corruption of mens hearts will not long lie hid which beeing so great and Satans malice no lesse Ministers must the rather be much and often in this doctrine as Titus was here commanded Readie to euerie good worke That they speake euill of no man that they be no fighters but soft shewing all meekenesse vnto all men Now we come with the Apostle vnto the second sort of those generall duties which are required of euerie Christian and these be the mutuall duties one towards another the which we may best conceiue in this order 1. generally propounded in these words readie to euerie good work which I knowe some restraine vnto the cheerefull performing of the Magistrats lawfull commands to the confirming of which sense perhaps that needles copulatiue and is inserted into our English not found in the Greeke text But the precept is entire of it selfe and seuerall from the other before and as I take it both parallel vnto that generall phrase cap. 2.14 zealous of good workes and contrarie to that cap. 1.16 reprobate to euerie good worke Secondly more specially both 1. by remoouall of the lets of concord and loue which are two 1. euill speaking 2. fighting or quarelling 2. by entertaining such vertues as are the nurses and cherishers of Christian concord amongst men of which the Apostle nameth two of the principall The former is Christian equitie which carieth the minde equally and indifferently freeing it from passion and perturbation that it may conceiue the best of persons and actions The latter is Christian lenitie gentlenes or meekenesse which euen in taking notice of the faults and vices of others couereth so farre as is good for the partie and also in the spirit of loue and meekenesse cureth and seeketh to restore such an offender And as the two former vices were prohibited in regard of all men so these two vertues are not so nakedly propounded but that their obiects also are by the Apostle noted in the last words where the Apostle saith that we must be equall and mild not only to those in authoritie who may else returne our frowardnes with vntolerable displeasure nor onely to our friends and familiars or such as by the bond of nature or seruice may claime such dealing from vs neither onely to Gods friends and beleeuers but to all men indefinitely euen those to whome out of the bond of Christianitie we are nothing bound those who in themselues deserue no such thing but the contrarie at our hands in a word those who are not onely our enemies but Gods after a sort beeing as yet without and not brought vnto the faith which last words may not slightly be ouerpassed because they lay a notable ground and make way vnto the verses following For this first generall exhortation the scope is that euery Christian ought to keepe with him a propensitie and disposition to euerie good worke whether it concerne God or himselfe or others for the Apostle hauing called vs to giue God Gods and Caesars to Caesar that the body of Christ might be without rent as his coate was without seame and that there might be a sweet harmonie and concent in the Christian commonwealth he now calleth to the practise of a common principle and lawe in nature namely to giue euerie man that right which God hath giuen him and Christians are not onely debters vnto Magistrates but to the meanest and weakest to whom the common bond of nature and humanitie hath knit vs so as no man can say of any man I owe him nothing The like practise of our Apostle we may elsewhere obserue as Rom. 13. where hauing in many verses required subiection and tribute due vnto Princes in the 7. and 8. verses to shut vp his exhortation withall he wisheth to giue to euerie man his due tribute to whome tribute custome to whome custome feare to whom feare honour to whom honour but loue to all men owe nothing to any man but loue which is such a desperate debt as a man can neuer discharge himselfe of The like doth
the Apostle Peter who combineth all these duties in one short verse but a little inverting the order Feare God honour the King loue brotherly fellowship This precept in hand chargeth vpon euerie Christian these two maine duties First that he must make account with himselfe that everie Christian dutie belongeth vnto him euen euerie good worke to which the Lord giueth him calling and abilitie Secondly that he must keepe himselfe in a fitnesse and readinesse thereunto Doctr. 1. The former is cleared by the testimonie and other obseruations out of the Scripture The lawe curseth him that continueth not in all things the Gospel also in generall requireth the obseruation of all things Teach them to obserue all things which I haue commanded you which precept was giuen when Christ had on the crosse fulfilled all righteousnesse in the persons of his members As for the speciall precepts of the Gospel they are many Philip. 4.8 Whatsoeuer things are true honest iust pure pertaining to loue of good report if there be any vertue or any praise thinke on these things The Apostle was not content that the Corinths should abound in euery grace else and be wanting in one but exhorteth that as they abounded in euerie thing in faith in word in knowledge in diligence in loue so they would striue to abound in this grace also namely of mercifulnesse to the distressed Saints The same Apostle to the Thessalonians knewe what he prayed when he wished that they were stablished to euerie good word and worke 2. This standeth with those special commendations which the Apostles haue giuen of sundry of the Saints to stirre vp others vnto their imitation When Paul would be large in commending the Church of the Romanes he affirmeth they were full of goodnesse so of Dorcas we read that she was full of good workes and almes and mention is made of the coats and garments which shee had made for the Saints 3. As the holy Ghost in Scripture approoueth and commendeth the presence of any true grace for the encouragement of it so also taketh he notice of that which is yet wanting to prouoke to the purchase of it Many of the good kings of Iudah were highly commended yet something or other they fayled in either the high places were not wholly taken downe or some league or othe● was made with the enemies against Gods commandement or some heauines or forgetfulnesse ouertooke them that of fewe of them it could be said they went through-stitch with euerie good worke The spirit likewise in the new Testament speaking to the Churches taketh knowledge of many good things in the Angels of them I knowe thy loue thy faith thy patience thy zeale and thy workes c. but fewe of them escaped without that exception neuerthelesse I haue somewhat or a fewe things against thee either the first loue was fallen from or Balaams doctrine maintained or Iesabels fornications suffered c. but according to the truth of their condition the spirit is plaine with them this thou hast and this thou hast no● implying it to be matter of iust reproofe before God to be wanting in any good worke which hee hath giuen calling and meanes vnto 4. The nature of grace giueth light and euidence vnto this truth the which disposeth the will and powers of the soule equally vnto one good thing as well as vnto an other for regeneration includeth in it the seeds of all vertues and reneweth and changeth the whole nature which hath in it the seede of all sinne and vice and when the Scripture would note the soundnesse of grace hence it doth it that it both hath respect to all the commandements and hateth all the wayes of falshood Vse 1. This doctrine first teacheth vs to learne the rule of euery good worke legall or euangelicall The former are not only such as are commonly knowne and expressed in the words of the decalogue but such also as therein are included and implied these must be sought out for else ignorance of the law excuseth not from fault Content not thy selfe that thou canst say the commandements nor if thou canst say that thou hast kept the whole letter of the law from thy youth but studie the whole Scripture which is an exposition and large commentarie of those tenne words heare it read it diligently meditate vpon it apply it to thy heart and life else knowest thou not how to beginne any good work Learne further the speciall good workes required by the Gospel such as are faith in Christ repentance of sin past amendment of life for time to come And cursed be all that Popish doctrine which would hide this light vnder a bushell whereby alone the Christian can discerne what is a good worke and how himselfe may do it well Vse 2. If euery good worke belong to euery Christian then may not men post ouer the matter to the Minister the common conceit is that the clergie should be holy hospitable and so qualified as we haue heard in the first Chapter but for common men and vnlearned it will be acceptable inough if they be almost Christians that is as good as neuer a whit whereas the Lord bindeth vpon euery Christian of what condition soeuer the practise of euery good worke which is offered him within the compasse of his calling either generall or particular For example If a Christian be called into publike place as of Magistracie he may not conceiue that the building of the Church the discountenancing of sinne the encouragement of the godly belongeth only to the Minister but he must set hand to these workes he must establish and countenance the Ministrie he must be the foreman in all good exercises he must be rich in workes of mercie and of iustice the patron of the poore the sheild of the oppressed but especially a patterne of pietie he must be a man fearing God yea he and his house must serue the Lord. If thou remainest a priuate man the same care lyeth vpon thee in thy proportion thou must procure the wealth of Ierusalem at least by thy prayers for the peace of the Church for able Ministers for the free passage of the Gosspel and if God further enable thee thou must releeue such as stand for the truth of God and puritie of his worship Thou must doe all the good thou canst to others in preseruing life feeding the hungrie clothing the naked visiting the prisoners and so become rich in the works of mercie Thou must also be diligent in duties at home in reforming thy family teaching them praying with them examining how they profit and thriue in grace and walking religiously and conscionably in euery good worke of thy personall calling Here is a course which goeth farre beyond harmelesnsse and good meanings and good words which Iames saw to be the religion of many in his time this is soundnes in christianity when a man can thus turne himselfe as well to one good action