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A15525 A commentarie vpon the most diuine Epistle of S. Paul to the Romanes Containing for matter, the degeneration of our nature by Adams Fall; and the restauration thereof, by the grace of Christ. Together with the perfection of faith, and the imbecillity of workes, in the cause of iustification of elect sinners before God. For forme and maner of handling, it hath the coherence and method, the summe and scope, the interpretations & doctrines the reasons and vses, of most texts. All which, are set downe very familiarly and compendiously, in forme of a dialogue, betweene Tlmotheus [sic] and Silas, by Thomas Wilson, one of the six preachers in the cathedrall church of Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1614 (1614) STC 25791; ESTC S120148 882,533 1,268

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Romanes being ranged in the number of other Beleeuers howsoeuer they were Lords of the worlde In naming the Called of Christ he giueth to witte that they belonged to Christ and his grace belonged to them and teacheth how they belonged to Christ became namely by an effectuall and special calling drawing them to the faith of Christ freely and firmely DIALOGVE IIII. Verse 7. 7 To all that be at Rome beloued of God called to bee Saints Grace be with you and peace from God the father and from our Lord Iesus Christ. Tim. WHat doth this Text containe Silas The other parts of Pauls Salutation to wit persons saluted and his wish or prayer In the wish or prayer of the Apostle consider three thinges first to whom Secondly what Thirdly from whom he wisheth Concerning the persons he saluteth and wisheth good things not vniuersally to euery one Emperor Consuls Tribunes c. These were not members of the Church and would haue despised Paul his Prayer but to all ye beloued of God which beleeued in Iesus Christ. And note that his Prayer is common to all those which professed Christ were they chiefe men or priuate were they learned or vnlearned Romanes Grecians or Iewes for the Church at Rome now consisted of many Strangers and not onely of Cittizens and home-borne withall respect of person as God the giuer of these graces is free from acception of persons both to comfort the meanes onelie in that they were not passed ouer also to humble the great and mightie in that they were sorted with the needy and little ones Moreouer Pauls examples warneth all namely Ministers that they be ready according to their gifts and opportunities to pray for instruct exhort and comfort euery one vnder their charge all being alike deare to Christ and alike account must be rendred for all Tim. How be the persons Saluted set forth Silas First by their Place which be at Rome Secondly by their three Titles 1. beloued of God 2. called 3. Saints Tim. What learne we from the Place Silas That Gods grace was not tyed to Places Persons or Times but is freely giuen without respect of Country c. For they who now be at Rome are degenerated and enioy not that grace of God Tim. What be the Tules giuen to the Romanes Silas 1. beloued of God 2. Saints and 3. called Tim. What signifieth this to be beloued of God Silas Thus much not to be louers of God actiuely but passiuely to be right deare to God of great account price in his sight euen as it were his chiefe delight being loued both by praedestination and by present Iustification without any merit Tim. What doth this commend to vs Silas The great worthinesse and dignity of a true Christian that the great God sets his loue vpon him to take pleasure in him which is more then if all the Princes of the Earth should ioyne and conspire together to loue one man Secondly that they be happie Men which be Gods Children for they haue God louing and fauourable in whose fauour is life and vpon whose loue depends all felicity both earthly and heauenly they cannot be miserable whom God loueth and they cannot but be miserable whom God hateth Thirdly that the loue and free good will of God is the root of all other benefits namely calling Sanctification and Remission of sinnes are deriued from hence that God louing vs wee loued not him but he loued vs first 1 Iohn 4 10. Also God so loued the World that he gaue his Son Iohn 3 16. Fourthly this should prouoke his Children to returne dilection and loue to God of whom they are beloued Fiftly godly persons ought to be very deare vnto vs and of great reckoning sithence God our Father loues them We should loue where he loues and deale well by them whom he will honor so much 1 Iohn 5 1. Sixtly that all iniuries done to the Saints cannot but prouoke God to indignation as it would greeue vs to see any abused whom we loue Tim. What is meant by Saints Silas Such as being separated from the World are consecrated to Christ and haue his Spirit giuen them to worke holinesse in them so as Saints bee persons sanctified by the Spirit to liue holily and iustly From hence we learne two things First that such as still abide in their sinnes and wallow in the mire of a prophane life seruing diuers lusts and pleasures they are no beleeuers nor beloued of God for all Beleeuers are Saints that is they are holy persons louing and practising holinesse Secondly that they shall neuer be Saints in Heauen who first be not Saints in Earth Saints in Via inchoatiuely ere they be Saints in Patria perfectly Tim. What meaneth this that it is said they were called to be Saints Silas That by an effectuall vocation God Almighty as it were by speaking the word did make them to be such indeed and truth as they were called and named to be to wit Saints or holy and that according to his gracious good will and pleasure as was implyed in the Word Beloued to shew that our Christian vocation floweth from his mercy This is moreouer well to bee obserued that Paul hauing said of himselfe in verse 1. that he was Called to be an Apostle and now twise in verse 6. and 7. saith of the Romanes that they were The Called of Christ called to be Saints that the word Calling or Vocation is vsed in a double sense either in a more strict meaning for a Calling to a Function or Office eyther ciuill as to bee a Magistrate a Captaine c. or Ecclesiasticall immediatly as to be a Prophet an Apostle c. or mediate called by the Church as were Doctors and Pastors or else in a more large signification for calling into the common society of the Christian Church and this is eyther vnto the knowledge and profession of Christ as of Hipocrites by a generall and externall calling when the word soundeth in the eare to the enlightning of the mind and some slight or slender change of the heart or it is vnto the faith of Christ and vnto saluation through him when both mind and heart are mightily perswaded by the Spirit to obey the Caller by belieuing his promises and indeuouring to doe things commanded This is an internal and effectuall calling which Paul heere ascribeth vnto all the Romaine Christians not that there were amongst them no counterfeits and vnbeleeuers but because by Law and Iudgement of Charity we are bound to esteeme all such for truely called and Saints who outwardly professe themselues to be so and doe not by their conuersation declare and euident the contrary leauing to God the iudgement of certainty Now whereas hee writeth of these Romanes that they were called to be Saints or holy we are further to learne a difference betweene Nature and Grace that first we are by Nature vncleane and vnpure destitute of personall holinesse though not without foederall holinesse being the
might misse of glory then it should make ashamed contrary to the saying of the Apostle Secondly great and many sins cannot make hope vaine because all sinnes are forgiuen to the godly which beeleeue and repent 1 Iohn 1. 9. Thirdly the godly are taught of Christ to pray for forgiuenesse of sins and the confirming of their wils to the end Math. 6 12. And that which they aske according to the will of God is granted them Finally though mens wils in their nature bee changeable yet the hope of glory is founded vpon the vnchangeable will and counsel of God Tim. What vse and profit is to be made of this doctrine Sil. First it controlleth the opinion of the Papists which ground hope at least in part vppon merit of good workes from whence will follow continuall vn certainty and doubt of saluation for that they neuer are sure when their merits are sufficient Also their corrupt opinion wil proue vnsound by these reasons First because all hope and confidence is accursed which doth not rest vpō God Iere. 17. 10. and our good woorkes are not God therefore no hope is to be put in them Secondly such as are newly conuerted vnto Christ from some wicked life and grieuous sins they haue hope then but they 〈◊〉 no merit of woorkes going before therefore their hope cannot rest vpon their merits which be not but as for those who haue good workes and liue well they haue more cause to hope well because good workes are a good signe of good hope and some prop they are to helpe hope but they may not be hoped in or taken as a cause why we must hope If any say that patience is a good worke and Paul faith hope springeth of patience therefore hope springeth out of works I answere hope commeth of patience but not as from a cause of it no more then afflictions bee cause of patience Furthermore from hence wee are admonished that such as alwaies doubt of their Saluation can haue no Christian hope therefore they must striue against doubting Lastly there is great vse for them which feele themselues indued with Christian hope for whatsoeuer their afflictions or enemies or sinnes bee yet they cannot bee confounded but at last must be happy for we are saued by hope Rom. 8. Tim. Now come to the second part of this text and tell vs how many wayes is the loue of God taken in Scripture Sil. Two wayes either passiue for that loue wherewith God is loued of vs 1 Iohn 4 12. or actiuely for the loue wherewith God doeth loue vs in his Sonne this is meant here Tim. How may it appeare that it is put here for that loue wherewith God loueth and embraceth vs Sil. First by the reason vsed in the next verse for Christ dyed for vs which proueth Gods loue to vs. Secondly by the 8. verse following where it is written God commendeth his loue to vs. Thirdly wee haue not our hope certaine and vnshaken because we loue God but because God who deceiueth not loueth vs. Tim. In what meaning is Gods loue said to bee shed abroad in our harts Sil. It is thus much that the sence and feeling of his loue is shed and powred into the hearts of his children Tim. Did not God loue the elect from euerlasting before they were borne Silas It is true howbeit that was onely in purpose and decree and so it was secretly knowne to himselfe But Paul speaketh of the manifestation of this loue vnto the elect after they are borne a new for when the elect are regenerate then God dooth expresse his loue vnto them and they do by faith lay hold of the loue of God beleeuing that they are loued of God and haue their harts affected with a ioyous feeling of it For as the box of costly and precious ointment which the woman poured vpon Christs head Mathew 26 7. gaue no fauour while it was shut up in the box but being shed powred out did yeelde a most sweete sent and sauour vnto all which were in the roome euen so the loue of God is pent and shut vp as it were in Gods decree before regeneration and faith so as it is not felt of the elect but at their new birth when they haue faith to beleeue the promise of saluatiō by Christ thē this loue is as an ointment powred out and doth exceedingly and plentifully refresh the hearts of the elect with the sence and feeling of it Tim. What then is the doctrino we learne heere Silas That the most louing God is content not onely to loue his children but withall doth assure them of his loue so as they certainly know that they are loued and are cheared in their hearts by the perswasion of his loue For as it is nothing to a blinde man to know that the Sunne is a glorious bright creature when himselfe cannot see it or to a poore man to know where much treasure is whiles himselfe cannot come at it so it is nothing to heare and know that there is much loue hid in God except our selues feele it and become partakers of it Examples we haue of the Apostles many other beleeuers Acts 5 41. Rom 8 38 39. who haue had the sence of Gods loue in their hearts and haue reioyced therein euen in their extreame afflictions in the flames of fire and depth of Dungeons horrible and darksome Tim. Haue the faithfull a feeling of Gods loue alwaies in one tenor and like measure Silas Neither of both but by sinnes and temptations it is often interrupted as the light of the Sunne is darkned and lessened by mistes and clowdes yet this loue of God shall alwayes endure in them because God altereth not Tim. Whence commeth the feeling of Gods loue Silas It is the especial worke of Gods spirite of Adoption Rom. 8 16. and it commeth by the free gift of God who giueth it to all the members of his son Rom. 8 9. Ephes. 1 13. Tim. What doth the sence of Gods loue giuen them by the spirit worke in the faithfull Silas First a feruent and vnfaigned loue of God 2. Cor. 5 14. 1 Iohn 4 19. We loue him because hee loued vs first Secondly an hearty loue of our neighbor for Gods sake 1 Iohn 4 21. Thirdly ioy in the holy Ghost 1 Pet 1 8. Lastly great encrease of hope in a more full assurance of inioying the glorie looked for inasmuch as God who loues vs and holds vs deare vnto him cannot change nor deceiue vs. Silas I pray you tell vs heere is it the nature of hope to bee certaine and to giue this assurance ye speake of Silas Of hope generally taken it is the property only to looke and expect for a thing which wee haue not Rom. 8 24 25. but the certainty and assurance of hope growes from the nature of the things hoped for which if they be certaine and haue sure and certaine causes the hope is certain and assured otherwise it is not for hope
after the committing whereof men become more humble and warie Which yet is not the proper meaning of this place because it doeth particularly treate of afflictions and of the crosse and of the good that comes thereof which is eternall life or the saluation of our soules which being the chiefe good whither all good things tend is heere called of the Apostle by an excellency that good Tim. What is meant heere by working together Silas It signifies thus much that afflictions themfelues in their owne nature doth not bring foorth that good heere spoken of Tim. But how then comes it to passe that they are so profitable Silas By the force and vertue of another supreme cause working togither with afflictions to wit the maruailous goodnesse and wisedome of God disposing the afflictions of his people to their good As Ioseph said to his Brethren Gen. 50 20. When ye thought euill against me God disposed it to good euen to saue much people aliue so when as Satan by afflictions meanes to driue vs to despaire God disposeth them to an happie end euen to encrease hope Rom. 5 34. For if a Physitian who is but a man can so temper Hemlocke or other poysonous things to make it become medicinable much more can God so temper and dispose of afflictions that they shall be wholesome to his children Tim. What is the Instruction to be gathered from hence Silas That afflictions through Gods great mercy do helpe forwards the saluation of his children the reason heereof is because they are Instruments whereby the holy Ghost mortifieth their sinnes weaneth them from the loue of the worlde stirres them vp to better obedience quickens their prayers exerciseth their patience lastly humbles the pride of their heart Iob 33 16 17 Rom. 5 4. 1 Cor. 11 32. Psal. 119. Tim. What vse is to be made of this point Silas It serueth much to strengthen our mindes vnto godly and constant patience Secondly to reproue such as faint in their troubles Also to see how to make our profit of euery thing Tim. Proceede now to the latter part of this verse 〈◊〉 me how those persons be described vnto whom afflictions shall do good Silas They are described by these three markes First they be such as loue God Secondly such as are called 3. they are such as are elected or called of his purpose Tim. How do these three markes depend one vpon another Silas Thus loue is the effect of Gods calling and calling is the fruite of Gods purpose None can loue God except first he be called our calling proceedeth from the eternall purpose of God Thus our Apostle setteth downe things first more manifest and afterward thinges more secret First the effects and then the causes For as Gods purpose is the cause of calling so is calling in order before Faith and Faith before Loue in order of causes Tim. Tell vs now first what it is to loue God Silas It is to set the delight of our heart vpon him and to take pleasure to thinke and speake of him of his properties word and workes with liking and ioy studying by all meanes in all thingsto set foorth his glorie They which hate and abhorre God do the quite contrarie to all this Tim. Whence springeth this loue of God in vs Silas From the sence and feeling of Gods loue toward vs 1 Iohn 4 19. For it cannot bee that any man shoulde certainly perceiue the loue of God towardes himselfe in Christ for eternall life but that that loue will constrain him to loue againe 2 Cor. 5 14. Also the goodnesse and mercie of God in Christ is such a beautifull and amiable thing as being certainely knowne it will bee both earneftly loued and desired Tim. Why is it written they that loue God and not they that are loued of God Silas Because it is better knowne to vs namely in afflictions what loue we haue to him then what hee hath to vs for this is out of vs the other is within vs God striketh those he loueth Tim. By what speciall note may one know himselfe to be one of their number which loue God Silas By an vnfained purpose and endeuour to obey his word Iohn 14 15. If ye loue me keepe my commaundements Also verse 21 23. Tim. What is the reason that the Apostle speaking of patience suffering afflictions doth rather mention the loue of God then of our neighbor Silas Because our loue to God is that that maketh the burthen of afflictions more easie and light to bee borne euen as a man is ready to beare any calamitie for his sake whom he loueth at his heart thus did Ionathan for Dauid And as the seruice of Iacob 14. yeares seemed nothing to him for the loue which he bare to Rahel so they that truely loue God will for his sake suffer such aduersities as he sendeth either for correction or triall and this is the reason also why hee rather mentioneth loue then faith For howsoeuer patience springeth from Faith yet the next and immediate cause of it is loue Secondly it is to put a difference betweene counterfet sincere faith which cannot bee seuered from loue Gal. 5 6. whereas they that professe faith and say they beleeue when they do not haue their hearts void of al loue either to God or to their neighbour or themselues as appeareth in the example of Cain Esan and Iudas Tim. What instructions are we now to gather from this first marke Sil. Two First that the sound loue of God is needfull to all those which shall beare afflictions patiently Iames 〈◊〉 12. First because it maketh the godly valiaunt keeping them from fainting vnder the greatest crosses which is to be seene in the example of the Apostles Paul and Peter and other Martyrs who because they loued God were therefore ready to endure much for him Secondly it kindleth their zeal and maketh them earnestly bent to glorifie God by their constancy Tim. What profit are we to make of this point Silas First it stirreth vs vp to seeke for the loue of God and for the encrease of it in our hearts seeing we cannot be patient without it Secondly it warns vs by our patient-bearing to shewe our loue to God as God by his chastisements shewes his loue vnto vs Heb 12 5 6. Tim. What other instructions ariseth from hence Silas This none but Gods children can be patient in afflictions because none can loue God saue his owne children therfore they haue but the shadow of patience and be blockish and sencelesse rather then patient Tim. What vse is of this Silas It affoords comfort to such as haue patience in afflictions because this is a testimony vnto them of their adoption Secondly it teacheth vs that wicked men how quiet soeuer they are in afflictions yet they haue not true patience but an apearance of it they are rather blockish then endued with true Christian patience Ti. What is the
constancie were called in question as Augustine and Ambrose thinke but passiuely for that loue wherewith the faithfull are beloued of Christ as if the sence of that could be shaken out of their hearts That this is the meaning may appear by the end of the 37. and 39. verses which expound it of Gods loue to vs. Also it appeares by that which goes before our Text for Paul had spoken of Christs loue to vs witnessed by his dying for vs rising againe sitting at the right hand of God and making request for vs all which proueth his great loue toward the elect Tim. How may it bee further knowne that the sence of Christs loue is heere to be vnderstood Silas By Pauls scope which is to comfort beleeuers who would haue no comfort of Christs loue except they felt it as Rom. 5 5. Againe it is the sence and perswasion of Christs loue that Satan by crosses seekes to wrest from vs. Tim. What learne we from hence Silas A good Lesson which is this the godlie must make reckoning to haue the perswasion of Gods loue assaulted and sore shaken The reason is because it is a notable aduantage to Satan and hurt to Gods children to doubt of Gods loue to them For then Satan may bring in impatiency despaire dulhesse in Gods seruice disobedience loosenesse of manners and all iniquity which we are kept from by the sence of Gods loue quickning our loue and causing to hope in him wel constantly Tim. What is the vse of this point Sil. It warneth the beleeuers to arme themselues against this assault labouring by all meanes to setle their hearts more and more in the assuraunce of Gods loue holding fast that truth that Gods loue is most constant and nothing in the world can be of such force as to hinder it much lesse to plucke it away so as sin and security be taken heed of This was Pauls perswasion for his part verse 28. and pray vnto God that yee also may bee thus perswaded and striue mightily for it Tim. Now shew vs particularly what things they bee which be contrary to our perswasion of Gods loue Sil. They be either crosses and calamities whereof he rehearseth seauen or enemies whereof he mentioneth nine in number Tim. Shew vs the meaning of these calamities in particular Sil. First by tribulation is meant euery thing which presseth or wringeth to wit any vexation Secondly by anguish is meant streightnesse of place properly but by a Metaphor preplexity of minde when one knowes not what to doe an example heereof we haue in Ichosaphat 2. 〈◊〉 20 12. Thirdly by persecution is meant some extreame violence offered by Tyrants and wicked men to our goods name person or life Fourthly by famine is meant hunger through wante of victuals to sustaine our life Fiftly nakednesse signifies want of apparell and cloathing to couer and defend our bodyes from cold Sixtly by perill is meant dangerous distresses which put a man in perill and ieorpardy such as Paul reckoneth 2. Cor. 11 25 26. and Heb. 11 36 37. Lastly by sword is meant slaughter cruell tormenting death or punishment by barbarous sauage bloud-shed as happened to Abell the Prophets and Christ and holy Martyrs Tim. What obserue you in this particular rehearsing of calamities Silas First what heauy and hard things the godly are subiect vnto for their profession sake others haue felt these things and we must prepare for them Secondly the Apostle by reckoning vp the most bitter things would teach vs that seeing these things cannot put out the sence of Gods loue neither any else in the world can doe it For what can goe beyonde these for smarte or shame Tim. But how is it proued by the Apostle that the faithfull are subiect vnto the sworde and bloudy slaughters for the Gospels sake Silas By a text out of the psalme 44 verse 22. For thy sake we are killed all the day long we are counted as Sheepe for the slaughter All the day may signifie all times of this life or without intermission or all the time of the world Tim. What things doe yee note from this testimony of the Psalme Silas First that Christians are subiect euen to death and slaughter as well as other calamities Secondly that in this respect wee are like vnto Sheepe not which are fedde for wooll or store but such as are appointed for the kitching Thirdly they are put in mind to be meeke and patient in suffering of death euen as sheepe are vnder the Butchers hand Fourthly that death doth continually hang ouer their heads euen all day long either for that they are ready euery day to dye if neede require or because their continuall dangers are so many deaths as it were Lastly that the cause of the death of Gods Martyrs is not any crime of their owne but their sincere faith and profession of Christ for thy sake as Math. 10. for my names sake and Mat. 5. Tim. But what is the comfort of the faithfull against all these terrible things Silas Euen this that in all these things they are more then Conquerors The meaning heereof is that true beleeuers in their miseries they doe not onely not fainte and are ouercome but themselues get a glorious victory ouer their crosses and persecutions both by their patient wearying and vanquishing the persecutors themselues brought to heauen Tim. But how may this be that the slaine and conquered should yet be Conquerers Silas Indeed this is a paradoxe and strange to carnall reason yet it is most true in this spiritual warfare howsoeuer it be otherwise in the bodily warrefare For the Saints when they suffer and are killed they are not onely patient but reioyce and glory which is the parte of victours Rom. 5 3. Secondly because by their constancy they doe euen daunt the minds of their persecutors who rather seeme to bee ouercome then the Martyrs which suffer Example heereof in the Pharisies Acts 4. and in Iulian the Apostata whose cruelty was conquered by the patience of the Martyrs Lastly of some of the Romaine persecutors in the ten first persecutions whose barbarous sauagenesse was euen tired with the stedfastnesse of the Saints in suffering Thirdly the Diuels practise is by crosses to wrest from Gods children their confidence in Gods loue which is rather increased by this meanes Rom. 5 5 6. Tim. But whence haue they strength to be so stedfast to hold out and to conquer Silas Not from themselues who are farre vnequall for so great a battaile but from the helpe and aide of God confirming and establishing them The cause that mooueth God to affoord this strength is his great loue which he beares them in Christ Through him that hath loued vs. Tim. What is our lesson from hence Silas That the victory which beleeuers doe get ouer all their troubles depends not vpon their owne power or merites at all but meerely solely and wholy in the loue that God beares them in Christ see 1.
Cor. 15. 57. Ttm. What vse of this Silas It warnes the Saints in their greatest patience constancy to be humbled seeing they haue nothing but what they receiue from Gods loue Secondly it must stirre them vp to great thankfulnesse to God so graciously and mightily confirming them Thirdly it admonisheth weake Christians in the time of any calamity to flye to the throne of grace for succour distrusting themselues as Iehosaphat did Lastly it teacheth that the faithfull can neuer fall from Gods loue Of this before 2. Dialogue on verse 2. Chap. 5. DIAL XXXII Verses 38 39. For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Tim. VVHat doeth this text containe orwhereto tendeth it Silas The same which did the former euen to prooue that no enemies or euils how many sundry or mighty soeuer can breake off Gods loue to the faithfull that hee should cease to loue them and cast off the care of their saluation which beleeue in his Son Iesus Tim. What be the parts of this text Silas Two first an enumeration or rehearsall of the seuerall enemies which may terrifie and threaten our separation from Gods loue Secondly a most sweet consolation that Gods loue to beleeuers is constant doe all enemies against them what they can doe This comfort is set foorth by the certainty thereof in these wordes for I am perswaded c. Thirdly by the cause of it verse 39. because it is grounded on the merits of Christ the Redeemer and not on themselues or any creature Which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Tim. Resken vp those enemies which wrestle against beleeuers and shew vs the meaning of euery one of them in particular Silas They bee nine in number as 1. life 2. death 3. Angelles 4. principalities 5. powers 6. things present 7. things to come 8. height 9. depth Saint Paul in Ephe. 6. 12. reduceth them all to two heads First flesh and bloud Secondly spirituall wickednesses the meaning of them is this By life and death is meant all things which endanger vs about life and death or prosperity and aduersity which be companions of life and death By Diuels is meant wicked Spirits which seeke by all meanes to lead vs from God and endeauour to separate vs from his loue yea good Angels are meant too by supposition hyperbolical like to that saying Gal. 1 8. Also by principalities powers is meant such Angels as are set ouer Empires and Kingdomes also ouer Cities and particular Countries as Dan. 11. or tyrants of the world with their whole power according to that threatned Mat. 10 17 18. Moreouer by things present and to come wee are to vnderstand all things which do presently or heereafter may happen to vs in this worlde and the worlde to come or all both good and euil things which now or heerafter shal come to vs. By height is meant things high and marucllous or whatsoeuer strange and vnaccustomed thinges happen from Heauen by high and by deepe is meant whatsoeuer thinges burst foorth of the lower partes and Regions of the earth and lastly by Creatures is meant euery thing created in the vniuersality of this whole world Tim. What learne we by this magnificent rehearsal Silas That Christians and Christianity bee assaulted with meruailous and sundry enemies Of this see before what hath bin said Tim. What is the vse of th s Silas That euery Christian hath neede of a strong Faith and much patience and continuall watchfulnesse so much the more by how much the more the malice number of enemies are greater Tim. What are we to learne of this that hee sayth of these particulars that they cannot separate vs from the loue of God Silas That the loue which God beareth his elect is immoueable and most firme the reasons hereof are First because nothing in the world is able to hinder break it off Secondly he himselfe will neuer alter it because hee is vnchangeable Tim. What vse heereof Silas It conuicteth both the Papists and Lutherans of error who teach that such as are in the state of grace Gods loue may loose it and fall from it Se condly it affordeth much consolation and ioy in time of deep temptations to al such as are infallibly assured that they stand in the loue of God whatsoeuer they lose yet they keep still Gods loue whereof before enough Tim. But may any Christian be after this sort assured Silas Yes Paul the Apostle was so as himselfe confesseth in this place I am perswaded c. Tim. Yea but he speaketh this of his owne person what is that to vs there is great diffrence between Paul other christians Silas Paul speaketh many things of himself which are not peculiar to himselfe but in common do belong to al Christians as Gal. 2 20. 6 14. Phil. 1 21. and often elswhere Secondly in the last words of this text he wraps vp all other beleeuing Christians with himselfe saying Who shall separate vs. Thirdly euery true beleeuer may be certainly assured of his own saluation vpon the same grounds that Paul was of his which grounds are eyther Theologicall and necessary others are but Logicall and profitable only The Theological and necessary grounds bee first the foreknowledge and immutable purpose of Gods election Rom. 8 30. manifested in calling Iustification Sanctification The second is the inward perswasion of the holy Spirit witnessing to their spirites that they are Gods children Rom. 8. 16. Thirdly the most faithfull promise of God that such as do beleeue in him shall haue euerlasting life Iohn 3 18. Fourthly Christ his deliuering himselfe to death and his nowe making request in heauen for them Rom. 8 32 33. Lastly the effects of Gods sanctifying Spirit in their hearts to wit vnfained faith and diligent loue 1 Thess. 1 3 4. The Logicall and probable grounds be all the outward protections and blessings of God which being very many great though they haue no force in themselues to perswade vs to the loue of God yet being ioyned vnto the former they helpe well to strengthen our assurance and to make the matter more euident For Gods Children haue them as testimonies of their Fathers loue and fruits of redemption Tim. Now shew vs what vse is to be made of this Silas First it conuicteth the Papists of errour in that they teach that we haue but a probable and coniectural assurance of our election to wit by hope as they speak to hope well of it vnlesse it be some certaine men who knew by reuelation Gods loue as Abraham Isaac Iacob Dauid Paul c. or of the predestinate in generall but for any particular man to assure himselfe that God loues him and that he is iustified and shall be saued they esteem it presumption
goodnesse and purpose Tim. But how may it bee proued that in this testimony the Prophet comprehendeth things belonging to saluation Silas First because all Gods blessings had their foundation in Christ and in the couenant of grace through him For if God gaue the Israelites Canaan as a more fruitefull land it was because he was mercifull to them now certainly God is mercifull to his people no otherwise then for Christs sake in whom hee is well pleased Mat. 3 17. Therefore vpon the promise of Christ depends all externall blessings giuen to the faithfull before the comming of Christ. Secondly the possession of the land of Canaan was not simply promised and giuen to Iacob and his posterity but as a type figure and signe of the heauenly inheritance Heb 11 13 14 15. Therefore doth Paul proue the election of Iacob to eternal life by the enioying of that land and the reprobation of Esau by thrusting him and his posterity out of it Then these temporall thinges were effects and signes of Gods loue and hatred Tim. But that was spoken of the posterity of Iacob and Esau how well doth it agree vnto their persons Silas It agreeth vnto both though principally vnto Iacob and Esau as the two Authors yet so as that some of Esaus posterity might be saued and of Iacobs prosterity some might be damned without any impeachment vnto this truth namely that God chuseth vnto saluatiō most freely whomsoeuer he electeth Tim. Now interpret the wordes and tell vs what it is to loue Sil. To loue is to will vnto one the greatest good euen eternall saluation and all things which bring thither Tim. What things doe ye consider in Gods loue Sil. First purpose Secondly manifestation As in our loue to others first wee wish them good whom we loue and then wee doe them good as in the example of Parents friends husbands c. So it is in God hee purposeth all good to his Children chusing them from euerlasting to be saued by Christ and afterwards when they come into the world he makes knowne his loue by their effectuall calling sanctifying and renuing their hearts ingendering in them a study of good workes strengthening them to an vpright obedience and perseuerance in grace and finally glorifying them in heauen Rom. 8 38 39 30. Iohn 3 17. Rom. 5 5. Tim. But if wee were alwayes loued of God how were wee then his enemies Silas Wee were enemies because of sinne which God extreamely hateth but loued because of his election and mercy Though hee out of his purpose decreed the cheefest good to his children yet while they sticke and remaine in their naturall corruption being out of Christ they were children of wrath enemies vngodly c. Ephe. 2 1 2 3. Tim. What is our instruction from hince Silas That our saluation and all that appertaineth to it springeth altogether from Gods eternall loue The reasons heereof bee first because God being most free would not fetch the cause of our saluation from any other thing then from himselfe Secondly because there can no higher or former cause of mans good bee giuen then Gods good pleasure Thirdly to beat downe the pride of mans heart that hee might not glory in his owne merites but render the whole praise of his saluation and whatso euer belongs thereto to the free loue of God in Christ. Tim. But though God were not moued to chuse vs for any workes in our selues yet was hee stirred thereunto for his sonnes sake Silas Not so neither but contrarily the loue of God did moue him both to purpose and to giue Christ for our Sauiour and therfore could not be the impulsiue cause to Gods loue to the which it is subordinate and not superior Indeed sinners hauing offended God are 〈◊〉 to fauour for Christs sake so they beleeue and repents but that is because God out of his loue had decreed such a meanes of our recouery Tim. What vse of this Silas It teacheth a difference betweene Gods loue and our loue his wayes and our wayes for we are not bounde to loue or to chuse any person but in respect of his worth euen in our enemies we are to esteem Gods creation and adoption in them as grounds of our loue but with God there is no such matter who findes no cause of louing vs out of himselfe vnlesse we speak of his actuall loue which he bare vs in time and hath reference to his owne image restored in vs Psal. 11 7. Secondly hence wee haue a spurre giuen vs to quicken vs to thankfulnesse when we consider that both for our selues and whatsoeuer good thing we haue we are beholden to Gods eternall mercy for it Thirdly wee must endeauour in euery blessing that wee haue to see the loue of God in it since his loue is the fountaine of all good eyther temporall or spirituall that comes vnto vs. Lastly wee are warned as God loued vs freely so to loue him freely not for his benefit onely or feare of punishment but meerely for himselfe In louing God studying to loue God his infinite most sweet loue grace mercy bounty and all other thinges in him and for him Tim. In what meaning is hatred applyed to God in Scripture Silas In a three-fold sence First to hate it signifieth not to loue and chuse Secondly rustly to decree punishment and inflict it Psal. 5 3. Thirdly to be displeased with things done against his law God is not saide to hate Esau in this last sence for hee was hated of God before hee had done any euill but in the two former meanings God hated him for he did not elect him and hee appointed to destroy him in regard of those sins which he should commit after he was borne Tim. What is the instructions from hence Silas That Gods hatred is the soueraigne and chiefe cause of the damnation of the wicked their owne sinnes eyther actuall or originall or both beeing the meritorious cause Secondly by the example of Esau we learne that all men are not chosen but that there are some reprobated as well as elected Lastly that Gods promises though they be preached vnto all the members of the visible Church yet they do take no place in those which are not elected DIAL VIII Verse 14 15. What then is there iniquity with God God forbid for hee saith to Moses I will haue mercie on whom I will shew mercy and will haue compassion on him on whom I will haue compassion Tim. VVHat is the purpose and drift of this Text Silas To cleare God from al iniustice in the matter of his eternall predestination Tim. What be the parts of this Text Silas First an obiection verse 14. Secondly an aunswere verse 15. Tim. What is the obiection and whence doth it arise Silas The obiection is that there is iniquitie with God or that God is vniust It doth arise from the pride of mans corrupt reason rebelling against the counsell of God Tim. What is
saluation and cannot bee sure of it by an ordinary and infallible certainty Secondly to exhort all Christians to endeuour the making sure of their owne election to themselues according to the counsell 2 〈◊〉 1. 10. and it is made sure by the fruites of sanctification 2 〈◊〉 1 5 6 7. Tim. What is the second argument to proue the Iewes to be not reiected from saluation by Christ Silas It is taken from the efficient cause to wit Gods eternall and vnchangeable loue the reason standeth thus whome God from euerlasting loues as his owne and electeth them these he neuer casteth off this proposition is in the beginning of the second verse but there are some of the Iewes whome God did loue and chuse from euerlasting this proposition is not expressed but infolded in these words his people therefore all the Iewes are not reiected this must be vnderstood as a consequent necessarily arising of the promises Tim. What is meant by casting away in the 2. verse Silas To repell or driue from God and Christ Iesus and from eternall life in heauen God hath done this to euery Iew. Tim. What signifies foreknowledge Silas Predestinating so Ambrose expoundes it or whome hee loued and embraced beeing elected from the beginning so Beza expounds it and maister Caluine puts foreknowledge for Gods good pleasure There is in God a twofolde prescience or fore-knowledge the one is a bare speculatiue foresight whereby hee vnderstandeth all things which be and are done in the worlde This belongeth not somuch to his will as to his knowledge and is no cause of things for things are therefore done not because they are foreseene but for that they be decreed Secondly foreknowledge is a knowledge in God with loue and approbation 2 Tim. 2. 19. Rom. 8. 29. this kinde of prescience in God is the cause of things and it is all one with election or predestination which is a knowing of some persons from euerlasting and 〈◊〉 them in his loue as his owne whom he will saue by Christ. Tim. What doctrine ariseth from these words Silas These two First wee are to learne that the first and highest cause of mans election and saluation is the eternall loue will or good pleasure of God as may appeare out of Mat. 11 26. Rom. 11 8. Ephe. 1 5. Rom 27 28. Rom. 9 15 18. For what can God haue out of himselfe to goe and be before himselfe and who hath giuen God first Rom 11 35. Tim. What vse of this poynt Silas First it confutes the error of such as will haue the bare prescience of God to be the cause of election and saluation this was Chrysostomes error who held that as God foresaw men would beleeue liue wel so he choose them also Ambrose was of this minde so expounding Romanes 9 15. and Augustine attributed election to foreseene faith which errour he retracted after Pelagius and his followers did erre in this matter grosly Tim. How is this errour confuted Silas First because the bare foresight of God is not the cause of the existence of any thing for hee knewe before those things which shall not bee as those which shall bee Secondly Iacob was loued and chosen of God ere euer he had done any good thing from Gods purpose nor from his bare prescience Rom. 9 11. Thirdly seeing all men were to be alike corrupt through sinne there was no good thing hee could foresee in any therefore all men shoulde haue beene reprobate if his bare foresight had beene the ground and cause Lastly the Scripture expresly denyeth that mans worthinesse is any cause of mans election Deut. 7 7. See the place Tim. What other thing learne we frem the former doctrine Silas That wee doe owe all thanks and prayse to Gods free loue for electing calling and sauing vs. Thirdly here is matter of comfort by assuring vs that now we are God will not refuse nor destroy vs since hee loued so long before we were And lastly heere is an exhortation to loue all the Children of God since they are euerlastingly beloued of God this is cause sufficient to make vs take heed how we hate any vpon whom God eternally hath set his loue and to repent of our vnkindnesses towards them Tim. What other doctrine ariseth from the 〈◊〉 of this second verse Silas That such as God foresaw and elected before all worlds cannot possibly perish The wordes of our Text do fully auouch this truth God casts not of his people whom he knew before againe it is written Mat. 24. 24. that it is not possible the elect should perish and Rom. 8 30. The predestinate shall be glorified and lastly Christ hath prayed for al the elect that they may haue his glory in heauen Iohn 17 24. Reason also confirmeth this truth for the loue of God is immutable therefore they cannot perish whom he loues for then should God alter and be changeable if the elect could fal from Gods loue and be Reprobates but because God changes not he that is once loued of God is euer loued and therfore cannot bee condemned in hell Hence is the election and fore-knowledge of God compared vnto a seale and foundation which bsares things of great stablenes 1. Ti. 1 17. Mountaines of Brasse are not so strong as Gods louing purpose and decree is I am not as men that I should repent nor as sonnes of men that I should 〈◊〉 againe I am 〈◊〉 I change not Tim. What profite of this doctrine Silas It confuteth the error of such as say the elect may lose Gods loue by their owne fault this is to make God vnable variable and the Scriptures false Secondly it teacheth the estate of the elect to bee most stable and permanent not in respect of their owne strength but of Gods loue and counsell Thirdly it comforteth the poore afflicted consciences of Gods children against the feare of damnation such as once haue perceiued their owne 〈◊〉 may be assured of it for 〈◊〉 Fourthly it is a preseruatiue against despaire and a motiue to continuall thankefulnes that God hath set them in such an vn moueable condition If we blesse God for his temporall perishing benefits what praise doe wee owe for the lasting fruites of his eternall loue and mercy DIAL II. Verses 2 3. Know ye not what the Scripture saith of Elias how he makes request vnto God against Israel saying Lord they haue killed thy Prophets and digged downe 〈◊〉 Altars and I am left alone and they seeke my life Tim. VVHat doth this text containe Silas A third reason of his deniall taken from the like example of Elias dayes or from the like estate of the olde Church in the time of the Prophet Elias The summe hereof is thus much That as it was in the time of Elias so it is in the times of Paul the Apostle then very many Iewes were preserued in Israel frō Idolatty though Elias knew not of them so now though Paul were ignorant of it
of loue 1 Tim. 1 5. Secondly beside reprehension heere is exhortation to all to striue for vnfaigned loue in all their dealinges with men by word or deed to declare the truth of their loue secming to be in kindnesse what indeed they be and being what they seeme for God hateth hypocrisie it is odious in his sight and vnto all good men Also dissimulation as it is contrary vnto the nature of God so it is hurtfull to our neighbor it makes vs like a broken bow whereof the shiuers are ready to run into his hand which leanes vpon it or a broken staffe which fayleth him that trusteth thereunto or vnto a loose tooth for so is a false friend Tim. What is meant by the next precept of abhorring euill and cleauing to that which is good Silas It may be generally expounded of the nature of true and perpetuall repentaunce taking euill for filthinesse of sin and good for holinesse and goodnesse and then the meaning is that vnto true repentance is required not onely to flye sinne and to loue righteousnesse but to loath and detest sinne and haue in abhomination whatsoeuer is euill in his eyes also not coldly to aproue good things commanded of God but feruently to embrace them striuing to be glued to them to becom one as it were with that which is good which is meant by cleauing to it Heereof we haue Dauid an example Psal. 139 22. but more especially it may be restrained vnto loue whereof we spake in the former Aphorisme and then by good and euill vnderstand not only that which is honest and dishonest but that also which is profitable and hurtfull by abhorring and cleauing is meant extreame hatred and singular desire Tim. What lesson from the words thus interpreted Silas First that our loue to our neighbour must not hinder vs from abhorring that which is euill and sinfull in him though he bee neuer so deare a friend nor from liking eagerly embracing that good and vertue which is in him be he neuer such an enemy vnto vs. As the loue of mens persons must not make vs loue their faults or flatter them or winke at them or defend them so the hatred of mens vices must nor drawe vs from the desire and earnest delight in that which is good in anie man Furthermore it is the property of true loue to be exceeding loath to iniure or hurt ouer neighbour or suffer him to bee hurt in any thing which is precious vnto him as his name person goodes wife saluation c. but rather verie earnestly to studie how to pleasure and helpe him in all and euerie one of these to thinke and speake and do him good being so bent vnto the profit of our Neighbour as to our owne welfare according to the saying of our Sauiour Christ Loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Tim. In the next short sentence what is meant by affections and by brotherly loue Silas The first worde signifies such naturall affections and tender loue as is in parents towardes theyr Children whereof see Iacobs example Genes 37 35. and Mary Luke 2. and the latter worde implyeth such loue as is betweene Brethren borne of one and the same Parents whereof Ioseph is a President vnto vs. Moses and Paules loue vnto their Kinsmen was vehement Exodus 32 32. Romanes 9. 1. Christians are Bretheren by profession Tim. What learne we from hence Silas That their loue amongst themselues one towardes another must not bee common and ordinarie but singular and verie great like vnto that which Parents doe beare to the children of their wombe and wherewith Brothers affect one another and no manuaile seeing our loue must extend euen vnto the spending of life and not of our substance onely for our Brethrens sake Rom. 16 4. 1. Iohn 3 16. see like precepts 1. Thessa. 4 9. Hebrewes 13 1. 1. Peter 1 22. 2. Peter 1 7. Tim. Are Papists which professe and beleeue the doctrinc of the councell of Trent our brethren and be all our brethren to be loued alike with the same degree of loue Silas Such Papists be not our brethren namely if they bee learned and haue knowledge for they doe not professe the same doctrine nor the same religion with vs which is the band of brotherhood but raze the foundation of faith and works Secondly they haue not the same Sauiour but a disguised one such a one as shall saue them by their owne merites at least in part Thirdly they haue the great whore mentioned Reuel 17. and 18. for their mother and we haue the chaste spouse of Christ to our mother Fourthly they haue no true sacraments but bastard ones for the Lords supper is al corrupted and depraued with their inuentions they turne the Communion into a priuate supper and they ouerturne the doctrine which baptisme should seale Fiftly they confidently holde and pronounce peremptorily all vs to bee in the estate of damnation iudging though falsely and rashly vs to be Heretickes Schismatickes c. So wee ought to deeme of them which liue and dye in the papacy how can we be brethren which be so miserably diuided Now towards such as be our brethren by ioynt confession of the same holy faith wee are commanded to loue all these with the same kinde of loue that is sincere and great but not in the same measure for as any of the brethren be more 〈◊〉 linkt vnto vs by bandes of nation or nature or of affinity or be more plentifully endowed with grace so we are to declare the force and bring foorth the fruites of our loue rather towards them then others howbeit we are to loue all which are of our Christian religion with a brotherly loue according to those many and plaine exhortations of the word before set downe Tim. Now for the last precept what doth honour signifie and what is it to goe one before another in giuing of honour Silas Honour signifies a good opinion conceiued of others and outwardly testified by wordes gestures deeds c. The grounds or begetter of this opinion bee these 4. First authority publike in Magistrates or Ministers priuate in parents or Maisters Secondly dignity or any thing wherin another excelleth as to be a creature a man a Christian a childe of God a member of Christ c. and to each of these there belongeth honour and cerraine reuerence Thirdly guifts outward of the body or inward of the minde eyther naturall ciuill morall or spirituall and theologicall as faith hope loue repentance c. Fourthly merites when any deserue well of Schooles or Church or Common-wealth by publike benefits as that Centurion did Luke 8 4. These be the causes of a good opinion many be the signes of it to shew it by amongst which vailing the Bonnets bowing the knee slāding before them rising vp relecuing them Mat. 15 6 7. It is first to haue a lowly opinion of out selnes Secondly to thinke better of others
fortitude and courage And lastly it wil leade them by the hand to another experience of themselues that they are the sonnes of God truly and indeede not in name and profession onelye this last experience is especially meant heere as appeareth by the 5. verse of this chapter Tim. What is the fruite of this Christian experience Sil. Hope which is a sure expectation whereby beleeuing Christians do certainly look to enioy the good things promised especially the blessednesse of eternall life Tim. How is it meant that experience bringeth foorth Hope seeing there is no patience nor experience except first there be an hope of glory How is it that hope doth beget experience and yet experience doth bring forth hope how can hope be both the mother daughter of experience Silas The case standeth thus hope of glorie causeth that afflictions are suffered patiently in this patience Gods Children haue triall and experience not onely of the great might of God strengthning them but also of his great loue in conforming them vnto his own sonne this triall breedeth a better and a larger measure of Hope Tim. By what meanes doe the faithfull attaine this greater Hope Sil. By this Christian consideration that seeing God was present with them to aide them vnder their crosses therefore they will hope he will likewise do it still and in the end make them happy For as an honest poore man who vppon confidence he hath in some rich man borroweth of him money in his neede and being pleasured often and chearefully he gathereth new hope of like fauour in the like necessity so Gods Children being kept and blessed with patience in some great affliction vppon this triall conceiue good hope that God will strengthen and deliuer them Like vnto this is the saying of the Prophet Psal. 9 10. Let him that knoweth the Lord trust in him and teacheth the same instruction with this Text namely that such as by triall in their afflictions know the goodnesse and power of God haue cause by this experience to gather much trust and hope in God for the time to come Tim. What are we learne of this Silas First the maruailous goodnesse of God in raising vp the hearts of his Children vnto a more strong hope by afflictions whereby Sathan seeketh by all means to driue them to dispair Secondly Christians are bound to make this good vse of their experience thereby to gaine much heart and more confidence in Gods goodnesse for heereafter Example we haue in Paul God hath deliuered me saith he and he will 〈◊〉 me 2 Tim. 4 17 18. Also of Christ who by the long experience of his Fathers helpe gathered good hope euen in the very agony of death saying My God my God Math. 27 46. Thirdly the Kingly prophet Dauid as appeareth in Ps. 23 6. and 1 Sam 17 35 36. for we our selues make bolde to trust them whom we haue alwayes found friendly faithfull vnto vs. Tim. But is it not presumption to beare our selues thus bold towards God Sil. No such thing it is presumption to leane vpon our owne strength and wisedome merits and works but to rest stedfastly vpon God his mercy and truth it is the duty of Christian hope and also it is an honour which is due to God for euen by our stedfast hoping in him he is acknowledged to be a God constant in his truth mercies Therefore it is a grieuous sinne in such as by their long experience of Gods kindnesse in blessing and protecting them do not grow in hope of his goodnesse and power for heereafter but waxe rather more faint distrustfull This is a token of a very weake if not of a wicked heart DIAL V. Verse 5. And hope maketh not ashamed because the loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vs. Tim. What doth this text contayne Sil. Two things first a property or effect of hope that it doth not confound or it doeth not make ashamed Secondly a reason or cause why Christian hope of heauenly glory is so certaine as it doth not make the faithfull ashamed because the Holy Ghost perswadeth them that God loueth them in that hee gaue his Sonne to death for them being his enemies here it is that they do most surely hope in God for how may they not firmely looke for all things from him who spared not his Son for them Rom. 8. 32. Tim. What hope is here spoken off Sil. That Hope mentioned before in the second verse which is there called the hope of glory and this is the hope that doth neuer make ashamed because this hope doeth not frustrate or voyd men of the thing hoped for Tim. How many wayes do men become ashamed Sil. Two wayes first vpon the conmitting some sinne Rom. 6 21. Secondly by missing our desires and hopes Tim. How doeth this help to the vnderstanding of our text Sil. Thus they which haue the hope of blessednesse in them shall not misse and forgoe the thing they hoped for and so shall haue no cause of beeing ashamed againe by considering the nature of humaine and ciuill hope which if it doe not attaine the thing hoped for there is shame which is not here in Christian hope because it alwayes is sure to attaine the glory which is hoped and looked for therefore no shame can follow it Tim. Wherefore doe some translate it thus hope confoundeth not Sil. They had regard to that perturbation of minde which goeth after shame for the missing of our hope bringeth shame and shame bringeth trouble or confusion in the mind It is also saide of faith Rom. 10. 11. that it confoundeth not and this is not to bee maruailed at because faith and hope be of so neere kindred hope looking to the performance and faith to the trueth of Gods promise Tim. What is the doctrine of these words hope maketh not ashamed Sil. That the godly are assured to be saued and glorified in heauen for first the hope of the godly shall not make them ashamed but the godly do hope for euerlasting life therefore they are sure and certaine of it otherwise their hope would bring shame Secondly the godly are saide to reioyce vnder the hope of glory but there is no reioysing with godly wisemen but in thinges assured and most certaine Thirdly the godly do stay their hope vppon Gods mercifull and true promises which are constant and cannot deceiue therefore their hope is certaine Fourthly their hope looketh to the power of God by perswasion whereof their hope is nourished Lastly if their hope were not certaine how could they call God their Father which cannot be done in truth where there is not affiance and confidence in his loue Tim. But though the hope of the godly bee certaine for the present yet their great and many sinnes and the changeablenesse of their will may make their perseuerance to the end to be doubtfull Sil. First if hope were at any time vncertain and
vnto vs to send him at a time when a floode of wickednesse had ouerflowed all Thirdly that there is a fit time for euerie work of God which should teach men to waite vpon God Eccles. 3 1. Tim. Where unto gaue he Christ for vs Sil. Vnto death which was a dissolution of his bodie and soule ioyned with the curse of God Galath 3 13. Of this death there was great neede For Gods Iustice had decreed it his word foretolde it the sacrifices prefigured it the foulenesse of mans sin deseruing it Christ willingly suffered it man was sufficiently redeemed by it and God greatly glorified by it Tim. What vse heereof Silas It sheweth vs the greatnesse of mans sinne and of Christs loue of Satans malice and of Gods Iustice of Popish blindnesse and corruption which teach some sinnes so light and veniall as asprinkling of holy-water and ashes will purge them DIAL VII Verse 7 8. Doubtlesse one will scarce die for a Righteous man but yet for a good man one dare dye but God setteth out his loue toward vs seeing that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for vs. Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To set foorth and extoll the loue of God towardes vs by a comparison of the lesse with the greater The sum of this comparison is this There is scarse any mans loue so great as that he will die for a iust person though hee bee also good and profitable vnto him how great then was that loue that moued God to giue his Son to death for vs which were sinners and his enemies From whence the Apostle doth gather that if Gods loue bee such as our sinnes before we did beleeue and whiles we were enemies could not hinder him from giuing his son to die much lesse shall those sins which wee do afterwards be able to hurt our saluation therefore the hope which the godly haue in God cannot make them ashamed Tim. What he the parts of the comparison contained in this Text Silas Two First a proposition verse 7. Secondly an application verse 8. Tim. What is heere meant by righteous Sil. Not a iust matter or cause but a iust man as is to be seene both by the 6. and 8. verses where hee vseth words noting persons Tim. What difference is there betweene a iust man and a goodman Silas Some vnderstand a good man to be Christ for whom Martyrs dyed Others by a good man vnderstand one who is profitable to vs this is most probable Others put righteous and good both for one thing Tim. Why doth the Apostle say It may bee one dare dye for a goodman Si. Either for that if any did die for others it were more for their owne sake then for another mans sake or else for that he neuer found nor knew any such example As if he should say it may be but for my part I knowe of none that euer did so Tim. What instruction now doe ye gather from these first words Sil. That a mans life is a deare and precious thing for seeing so few are found that will giue their life for righteous men this sheweth that men holde their liues in very greataccount Tim. What doth this put vs in mind of Sil. Surely of thus much that the charity of the best men is faint and faulty because the Apostle knew none whose loue had carried them so farre as to die for their brethren whereas we ought to do so 1 Iohn 3 16. Tim. Can ye tell vs of none that haue aduentured their lines for others sake Sil. Yea the Apostle Paul as he witnefleth of himselfe 2 Corinth 12 13. also Aquila and Priscilla Rom 16 4. and the Martyres This was great charity but yet not to bee compared with the charity of Christ which he shewed towards vs. Tim. One would thinke that it did rather exceed his loue for it is a greater matter for a meere man to dye then for him that is more then a man hrist could take vp his life againe and so could not other men resume theirs Sil. The charity of Christ yet far exceedeth that other for first Christ is of more dignity by farre then any man therefore his life by far more worth then ours Secondly the loue towards sinners is far more then that loue which is towards good men for that is free from all selfe respect and therefore is the more pure lone Tim. What instructions gather ye from hence Sil. That the loue of Christ to his Church far surmounteth all the loue of al men towards men Tim. What vse is to be made of this 〈◊〉 singular loue Sil. First it serueth for confirmation that hee will not cast out and condemne such as he hath thus loued as verse 10. Secondly it serueth for imitation for it Christ so loued vs wee ought also to loue one another Iohn 15 12. 1 Iohn 3 16. This is the marke we must aime at and wherin we come short we ought to be sorry and amend Tim. But when the Apostle sayth Christ dyed for vs while wee were yet sinners hath his death brought this to passe that we are now no more sinners Sil. After wee beleeue that Christ dyed for vs and are regenerate by his Spirit we haue sinne still but we are not any longer to be called sinners because that now our sins by forgiuenesse are blotted out and that which remaineth still in our nature it raigneth not and the denomination of a person or thing is euer from that which is more excellent and worthy But here the Apostle meaneth by sinners such as be vnder the guilt and dominion of sinne as al men are before faith Tim. What could God see in vs then to moue him to loue vs Sil. First he saw in vs his own creation which he loued with a generall loue as he doth all the works of his hands Secondly he saw in vs much misery through sinne and this made him loue vs with a pittifull loue Thirdly her loued his elect being yet sinners in that he purposed in himselfe to call and iustifie them in due time And nowe lastly hauing grafted his elect in his Sonne by faith and instified them he loueth them actually hauing set his owne image in them Tim. You hold then that there are seuer all degrees and kinds of Gods loue euen towards his 〈◊〉 Sil. There be so for hee cannot loue his elect with that degree and kinde of loue when they are sinners as he doth after they are now in his Sonne iustified and sanctified for now sinne which bred hatred and enmity is defaced and cast out by remission and holinesse which God loueth is imprinted in them and brought in by renouation DIAL VIII Verses 9 10. Much more then being now iustified by his bloud we shall be saued from wrath through him For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saued by his life Tim. VVHat
thinke ye of these wordes as Pharaoh liueth as thy soule liueth or verily verily Gen. 42. 15. 1 Sam. 17 55. Iohn 3 5 Silas They be earnest asseuerations affirming weightie things somewhat grauely and vehemently but are no Oathes Tim. Why doth Paul say I speake truth and lye not Silas This is spoken after the manner of the Hebrues who say one thing twice for plainnesse Also one may speak truth and yet lye the thing may be a truth which one speakes and yet he thinke it a lye This Paul disclaimes professing sincerity of mind as well as truth in his words he is no Equiuocator Tim. What other things do ye learne from hence Silas That though ones conscience bee a thousande witnesses euen a good conscience as well as an euil yet Christ and the Spirit are greater then the Conscience seeth more and further 1 Iohn 3 20. Again from hence we learne that a Christian may take a priuate oath lawfully though it be not before a Iudge or Magistrate Example heereof wee haue of Abrahams seruant Genef 24 3. of Rahab and the Spies Iosh. 2 12. and of Paul in this place it appeareth also by the nature and end of an Oath Heb. 6 16. but it is to bee done in graue and important cases and not in light and trifling thinges but when it behooues and concerneth Gods glorie and the saluation or some great good of our neighbor that some doubtfull thing should be confirmed with an oath Thus was the case heere it was necessary the Iewes shoulde know and beleeue that Paul had true and great sorrow for them least vpon suspition of his 〈◊〉 toward them they shoulde haue despised the Doctrine of saluation brought to them by his writing to their owne destruction and Gods dishonor therefore hee gaue an oath as a pledge of his truth Tim. What vse of this point Sil. It reproues such as take rash Oaths as prophane persons do Also such as refuse lawfull oathes priuate or publicke as the Anabaptists do Tim. May not one refuse to sweare rather then to lay ones hand on a Booke Silas No for that is nothing to the forme and substance of an Oath which is one among all Gods people but a circumstance and ceremony which is diuers in diuers Countries The Iewes laide theyr hand vnder the Thigh Genes 24 3. Also they lift vp their handes to heauen Tim. How is the greatnesse of his sorrow set forth Silas First by the measure of it it was great Secondly by the length of it it was continual Thirdly by the subiect of it it was in the heart Tim. What is meant by heauinesse Silas It is a griefe arising either from feare of some euill at hand or the seeling of some present euil vpon our selues or others as ioy is a sweete motion of the heart from hope of som future or sence of some present good And whereas he saith that his heauinesse was great he meaneth that his griefe was not small or ordinary slight or meane but very vehement and greeuous such as did sore vexe him Tim. What manner of sorrow is that he speaketh of Silas It signifies such a greefe and paine as woemen in trauell feele which of all bodily sorrows is most sharp and bitter such was the torment that Paul had in his minde for the Iewes Tim. But why doth he call this sorrow continuall Silas To shew that howsoeuer the paines of a woman end at the birth of a childe or shortly after yet hee in his sorrow could finde neither remedie meane nor end Tim. What Instructions may we gather from these wordes thus opened Silas First they teach vs that Gods children bee not stockes blockish and sencelesse Secondly that we ought to bee touched with a feeling one of anothers misery Thirdly that aboue all other miseries we are bound exceedingly to grieue for the vnbeleefe and destruction of others because that is the greatest euill and therefore it should most affect vs. Fourthly it is best knowne what loue we beare vnto others by our griefe for their harms For thus Paul seekes to confirme his great loue towards the Iewes by witnessing his great greefe which he conceiued for them Tim. What vse is to be made of this last instruction Silas It conuicteth such to be void of Christian charity as are not affected at the hurts and harmes of others especially at their spirituall dangers and miseries no griese no loue Tim. What was the 〈◊〉 of his heauinesse Silas His heart which is the sense both of life and affections which may put vs in mind that the sorrow which Paul had for the Iewes was most bitter and dangerous The reason heereof is because there is no sorrow like vnto that which presseth the heart for it doth by little and little quench the vitall spirits and oftentimes bringeth death with it if it be immoderate many haue suddenly dyed of hearts sorrow being extreame Tim. But what might be the cause of this extreame sorrow of the Apostle Silas The damnation of the Iewes for their vnbeleefe sake because they reiected the Gospell refused Christ as appeareth in that he wisheth himselfe to be separated from Christ for them it argues that they were separated from him else there had beene no cause of such a wish Tim. What is it to be separated from Christ Sil. To be remoued and put from the fauour of God from the saluation purchased by Christ from al hope of it and in a word to perish and bee condemned for euer For without Christ there can bee no grace of God no saluation no hope of being saued nothing but condemnation Tim. But did Paul well in praying for his owne damnation or whether was it his prayer that he might perish Silas The truth is Paul makes no such prayer and if he had he had sinned greatly in praying vnlawfully and vainely The reasons be first because his prayer had crossed the constant purpose of God and his owne certaine perswasion spoken of in the former Chapter Secondly Paul was not bound to preferre the saluation of the Iews before Christ and his grace Tim. If he did not make a prayer heere to bee cut off from Christ what then thinke you of it Silas The sence of the Apostles words is thus much that he could haue wished to be cut off from Christ and so to haue deliuered the Iewes from damnation by the losse of his owne saluation had it beene possible For the speech is conditionall if it might haue beene hee could haue wished to be damned for them that he being but one had rather perished then such a multitude Like vnto that speech of Dauid wishing that hee might haue dyed for his sonne Absolon which as it bewrayeth Dauids affection for his sonne so this sufficiently discouers Pauls exceeding great affection for the Iewes how great it was But as Dauid knew that his life could not redeem the death of his sonne being already dead so it fared with
Paul Tim. Whom doth he meane heere by his brethren Silas The Iewes which were his kinsmen as beeing all Israelites of his stocke and bloud and wheras he saith for his brethren he meaneth in their stead and roome or in their behalfe as Christ is said to haue dyed for vs. Tim. What are the doctrines to be learned from this verse Silas It teacheth that Christians must be carried with a great desire of others saluation and namely of such as neerest vnto them as their kinsmen children seruants stocke or linage The reason is because saluation is the greatest good wee can procure to any therefore in the furthering of it our loue should most appeare Tim. What profit is to be made of this point Silas It reproues such as earnestly desire other good things to theirs but are cold in descrying and seeking the chiefe good Secondly it comforteth all that finde any measure of this desire in them that they are guided by the Spirit of God Lastly it exhorts all men to striue for a greater measure of it because it will be a witnes that they are led by the same Spirit that was in Paul Tim. What other instruction from hence Silas It proues that Christs loue exceedes all loue because hee indeed was made that for vs sinners and his enemies which Paul could haue wished to bee made for his brethren which is to be a curse Gal. 3. 13. Tim. What vse of this Sil. It warneth vs after Christs example especially Pasiors deeply to loue thirst after one anothers saluation Secondly it rebukes all others which either by counsell or euill example helpe forwards others damnation or by keeping away the meanes of eternall life wholly or in part in substance or degree DIAL II. Verses 4 5. Which are the Israelites to whome pertayneth the adoption and the glory and the couenants and the giuing of the law and the seruice of God and the promises of whome are the Fathers and of whome concerning the flesh Christ came who is Codouer all blessed for euer Amen Tim. VVHat is the drift and purpose of this text Sil. To render reasons of his deep loue and griefe for the Iewes for whose sake hee would haue wished himselfe accursed and destroyed to haue had them saued this his exceeding charity he now doth expound and set forth the true reasons thereof Tim. From whence are these reasons drawne Silas They are all taken from the noble properties of the Iewes and those adioynts or qualities which are in number ten whereof now wee will speake in order The first is that they were his brethren or kinsmen according to the flesh this is a great occasion to make vs loue our neighbour so much the more as Christ did this nation and his owne mother and as nature teacheth euen heathen to doe as 1 Tim. 5. 8. Their second property is that they were Israelites that is Gods people such as were Princes and conquerers of God This name God for honour sake gaue to Iacoh who ouercame God in wrestling see Genesis 33. 38. thereof called Israel and he thought it an excellent blessing to haue his children called by his name Israel as ye may see in his prayer Gen. 48. 16 And this is the second cause of his so great griefe for their destruction that a people consecrated to the true God who delighted to be called the God of Israel should 〈◊〉 The third property is adoption by which wee are not to vnderstand that eternall adoption peculiar to the elect whome God purposed before all worlds to make his children in Christ and accordingly doth actually adopt them in time when he calleth them effectually but the external adoption to be accounted and esteemed the onely Church of God all other Nations and people being passed by and refused by vertue of which dignity God himselfe calleth Israel his Sonne yea his first borne yea his treasure c. Exodus 4. 22. and 19. 5. 6. Deut. 32 8. 9. Iere. 31. 20. I am their Father and Ephraim is my childe and first borne And this is the third cause of his sorrow that they should be lost which had so worthy a priuiledge Their fourth property is the glory by which is meant the Atke which was a token of Gods presence 1 Sam. 4. 21. 22. There also God hearde the prayers and prayses of his people and gaue forth oracles vnto such as sought them and in regard of it the Tēple is called the habitation of his glory or the place where his honour dwelleth Psal. 26. 8. Therefore no people as it is in Deut. so noble to whom God came so nigh as to this people Now what a griefe to a good friend is this that such a nation should be cast out and anathanized Their first priuiledge and quality was the couenant that is the Table of the couenants by a Metonymie and hee speakes in the plurall number because there were two Tables Deut. 9. 11. in these God wrote with his owne hand his Morall Lawes and Statutes Some vnderstande it of the couenant which God often made with this people for eternall life by Christ howbeit this was but one howsoeuer it was often renued with Abraham Isaac c. Also the promises which are after named cannot be seuered from the couenant which stoode in promises of eternall and temporall happinesse The sixt property is the giuing of the Law to wit the iudicial Law for the Common-wealth which surpassed all the Lawes of Solon 〈◊〉 Numa Draco Themistocles and Mines For they came from heauen God being the immediate authour and were full of equitie a meruailous credit and renowne to this Nation as Deut. 4 8 32. Their seauenth property was the seruice of God euen the Priest-hood with such outward rites and sacrifices wherein God would be lawfully serued of the Iews till Christ and this was the ceremoniall worship Hebr. 9 1. This was so perfect that nothing could be added to it The eight property was the promises both Legall promising life on condition of keeping the law perfectly also Euangelical promising remission of sinnes with saluation in heauen to the beleeuers in Christ temporal promises and eternall promises and of the calling of the Gentiles No people had such promises by which God sought to alure and inuite this people to his obedience Their ninth priuiledge and dignity was that of them came the Fathers that is they bee the off-spring of the Patriarkes and holy men whose praise is in the Worde which also had the promises of Gods mercie vnto theyr posterity for a thousand generations Gen. 17 4. Com. 2. and this is no vsuall commendation to come and to bee borne of such noble progenitors as Abraham Isaac Iacob were by whose example they might haue great help to piety and pricks to godlinesse yet so farre to degenerate as now the Iewes were this could not but much greeue the Apostle who much loued them The last dignity of the Iewes is that
of these things Sil. By a prolepsis or rhetoricall in sinuation protesting his good will towards them and preuenting of suspition and hatred towards him in the Iewes Tim. Was there any inst cause or necessity why the Apostle should vse any such entrance by preoccupation Silas Yea very iust For in the former precedent Chapter he had prooued that the promises of grace belonged not generally to the Iewes beeing the most part of them reprobates and had saide that they stumbled at the stumbling stone verse 33. In this Chapter he takes from them all praise of righteousnesse by the workes of the law which were two things they much boasted of the promises and the lawe also hee directly speakes of their reiection from God Now least the Iewes should ascribe these discourses vnto Pauls hatred of their Nation and so become vnwilling to entertaine his doctrine therefore it seemed very behoouefull hee should testifie his good will towards them and to pacifie their mindes that they be not exasperated with such sharpe and harsh things as the Apostle wrote of Tim. What lesson are wee to learne from this arte and proceeding of the Apostle Silas That the Ministers of Christ are so to speake truth as they be carefull to doe it out of louing affections and the hearers ought to haue a good perswasion of their teachers good will towards them The reasons heereof be First if all Christians must reprooue out of loue much more the Ministers of the Gospell because it behooueth them to excell in all graces for example sake Secondly the Spirite of the Gospell is a Spirite of loue and compassion and the Ministers ought to be led with this Spirite Thirdly reproofes will hardly or not at all profite them when the teachers loue is suspected and his person hated Lastly it is a very good preparation for the hearers to be forestalled and possessed with a good opinion of the Teachers good will towards them as Physitions by sweetning bitter potions make the patient the willinger to take it And Rhetoritians being to speake of vnpleasant things wila first mollifie their mindes and win their good will by some artificiall insinuation so ought Preachers to do much more as occasion and cause requires by how much it imports him and his flocke the more that his hearers thinke well of him And if the Scorpion will first lay fast holde on them with his claw whom he purposeth to strike with his tayle then ought much more they to imbrace them by loue whome they must cure by reproofe Tim. What profit is to be made of this lesson Silas It teacheth that Ministers haue neede of great wisedome to discerne their 〈◊〉 and that also which they teach that they may know what it is that is likely to giue offence also when to vse friendly admonitions and sharpe reprehensions Secondly it teacheth that Ministers ought to be endowed with a spirit of singular loue and to expresse good will euen to such as are contrary minded so long as there is any hope for to winne them Thirdly that they ought to haue an vpright heart that in shewing loue and preuenting offence they may not conceale any truth or smoothe any vice out of flattery and desire to please man Fourthly heere is a reprchension to such as will bee Ministers and yet altogether lacke these graces as if a lame man would attempt to runne and a blinde man to take vpon him to be a guide Lastly heere is an admonition to all hearers to striue in themselues against all suspition that their teachers exhorte and reprooue out of hatred of them as they would euer desire to take any profite by their labours For wee are verye apte to mistrust and Sathan by his suggestions will drop into vs ill affections and therfore looke to it and put away iealousie Tim. Come wee now to the Text and tell vs what bee the parts of his prolepsis Silas These foure First hee protests his good will towards them Secondly he proues it by an argument from the effect to wit his earnest prayer for their conuersion and saluation verse 1. Thirdly he mentioneth the engendering cause of his loue towards them to wit their zeale of God Fourthly he rehearseth three faults in their zeale First ignorance Secondly spirituall pride Thirdly obstinate contempt of the grace of Christ verse 3. Tim. In what sence doth be call them brethren Silas Because they were his kinsmen by naturall generation see Rom. 9 3. Thus hee calleth them that hee might both expresse and excite good will and prouoke readinesse to heare and beleeue him Tim. What is meant by hearts desire Sil. Exceeding great pronenesse and readinesse of loue or more then common euen singular good will such as is ioyned with delight and exceeding great pleasure in those which are loued For the word heere vsed is the word whereby the eternall loue of God towards the elect is notified as Mat. 3 17. Ephe. 1 5. Luke 2 14. Tim. What doctrine is to be gathered from hence Silas That in all the prayers which wee make to God for our selues or others the desire of the heart must goe before The reasons heereof bee these First the commandemenr of God Prou. 23 26. My sonne giue mee thy heart Secondly the nature of God who being a Spirite will bee worshipped spiritually with the desire of the heart Iohn 4 24. Thirdly this is the very cheefe thing in prayer Psal. 25 1. Marke 11 24. Fourthly without this prayer cannot be feruent and vnfained and therefore cannot be heard For the promise is made vnto feruent prayers Iames 5 15. Marke 11 24. Lastly such prayers as come from hearty desires are onely pleasing and acceptable to God and they onely testifie that we haue the Spirit of God Rom. 8 26 27. Tim. By what meanes are these desires stirred vp in the hearts of Gods Children Sil. By the due and godly meditation First of the excellency of the thinges we pray for Secondly of the necessity in that we cannot be happy if wee be without them Thirdly of our greeuous sinnes which deserue things quite contrary to the things we doe pray for Tim. What vse of this point Silas It teacheth that the thing cheefest in prayer is that the heart be set on work in sending vp good desires towards heauen as sparkles out of a furnace Secondly it sheweth the true cause why that many prayers of the godly speed not euen for that their desires are cold and faint and slender Thirdly it warneth that the prayers of the wicked are but bablings vaine abhominable because they call on God with their lippes the desire of their heart being farre from him Mat. 15 8. Lastly the distinction of mental and vocall prayer is iustified by this place and indeede no distinction in diuinity is currant but that which hath ground in the Scripture directly or by good deduction Tim. In that the Apostle prayeth for them
world And reconcilement is put for saluation wherof our atonemēt with God by Christ is the chiefest part because a sinner entreth then into the estate of saluation when sinnes are pardoned through Christ. Tim. But how may the casting away of some be the reconciling and sauing of others seeing euill must not bee done that good may come of it Silas First the casting away of the Iewes as it comes from God had the nature not of an euill but of a good worke because it was the execution of his Iustice vpon them for their vnbeleefe Secondly it was not properly the cause of the Gentiles saluation but accidentally insomuch as the Iewes being cast out by that occasion the Gentiles were called to Christ who could not be called till they were reiected by reason that the Iewes malice was such as made them to contemne the grace of Christ and to enuy that the Gentile should bee partakers of it Neither would they enter nor suffer others as a Dogge in the manger which neyther eateth the Hay nor suffereth the Oxen to eate it therfore as by tumbling down the dogge the beast comes vnto the foode so by casting off the stubborne Iewes the Gentiles found enterance both into the estate of Grace and Reconciliation with God Tim. What instructions haue wee from the former part of this Verse Silas First that God can turne the greatest euill to much good for his children the reason is his most admirable wisedome and goodnesse euen as Satan by his very great malice and subtilty can so poison the best things as they proue hurtfull to the wicked Tim. What is the vse to be made of this point Silas First to mooue vs to loue praise and admire the most singular loue and wisedome of God Secondly to labour after Gods example to make benefit of all euils which happen to our selues or others euen of our owne sinnes and of the transgressions of other men to make vs more humble and watchfull thereby for the time to come Tim. What other Lesson learne we from the beginning of this verse Silas That the summe of the Gospell is to preach reconciliation with God to wit that of sinners enemies and vngodly being without God and true life subiect to wrath and death for sinne wee are receiued to fauour and become friends children and heyres of life through Iesus Christ beleeued in See 2 Cor. 5. what Paul saith of God in verses 18 19. and of the Apostles and other Ministers verse 20. Tim. What be the parts of reconciliation Silas Two First remission of sins or not imputing our faultes with imputation of Christ his perfect iustice in keeping the Law vnto beleeuing sinners Secondly Sanctification in killing the strength of sin and quickening the soule by works of righteousnesse in the Spirit Rom. 6 2 3 4. Remission takes away the guilt and paine of sinne Sanctification remoues the dominion kingdome of sinne that it raigne not Rom. 6 12. and is a necessary companion of remission and fruite of reconciliation with God 1 Cor. 1 30. Tim. What profit is to be made of this point Silas That Preachers ought diligently to teach this Doctrine of reconcilement and the people to learne it that they may be throughly acquainted with Gods mercies to their comforting after heauinesse for sinne and their own miseries to their humbling after grace bestowed on them For as nothing will so cheare vp a troubled spirit as the declaration of the sweete sure mercies of Christ vnto firme and full attonement with God so nothing is more auailable to humble them thē the remembrance of their vnhappy condition in being strangers from God Tim. Come to the latter part of this verse and tel vs what is meant by receiuing as also by life Silas Heere the effect or consequent is put for the cause or antecedent which is an effectuall calling or receiuing of the Iewes into the Christian Church and by life is meant the quickning by grace to liue to God being before dead in trespasses Thus Oecumenius expounds this place What saith hee shall bee their assumption but this that we may say of him that assumeth or receyueth that he reuiueth them being dead in sinnes This speech is borrowed from the last great resurrection of the body whereunto the Scriptures do often resemble the restitution of the Iewes both from their bodily and spirituall calamities See Esay 26 19. Hos. 13 14. Ezek. 37 11 12 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 11 12. to teach vs that the restitution of the Iewes beeing spiritually dead to the faith of Christ in the end of the world shall be as certaine and sure as that the corporally dead shal be raised out of their graues at the last day which is an Article of our faith Tim. What else are we taught from hence Silas That in all men naturally there is no more strength to do a good worke no not to thinke a good thought pleasing God then there is force in a deade man to do any worldly worke Iohn 15 5. 2 Cor. 3 4. 1. Cor. 2 14. This confuteth the counsell of Trent which teacheth that wee haue power if we will to receyue grace offered to beleeue and repent when wee are exhorted Session 6. But this is false because God must draw vs to Christ Iohn 6 44. also work in vs both the will and deede Phil. 2 13. and because of our wil being dead God is not onely to helpe it but to reuiue vs by putting as it were a new soule of grace into vs. This must stirre vs vp to giue the whole praise of our newe birth to God as Col. 1 21. Ephe. 1. 1 2 3. Againe from hence we may learne that wee may not despaire of the saluation of any either of others or our own how hopelesse soeuer For if God can reuiue the Iewes now sixeteene Ages rotten in the graue of sinne then how much more others also see Iohn 5 25 28. Tim. What Vse of this last point Silas This must nourish a charitable opinion of the greatest sinners and preserue men in hope of thēselues so they do not deferre but betimes endeauour to turne from sinne and seeke to God who is rich in mercie and power whose example should teach vs not to be cruell and rigorous as many Christians are being far vnlike to God who enclineth to pity pardon and to saue euen most for lorne offenders 〈◊〉 Whereas many thorough hardheartednesse be so implacable as nothing will appease them no 〈◊〉 and confession after crimes yea sundry Parents be heerein wodrthy to be blamed that as some are too indulgent so others too too seuere refusing to take to fauour their relenting and repenting children Oh what would become of themselues if God so deale with them But there is much mercy with God and plentifull compassions so ought there also to bee with men DIAL XIII Verse 16. For if the first fruites be holy so is the whole lumpe and if
therefore God loueth their children and will in his due time conuert them because hee hath set his loue vpon them for his nature is such that he repents not nor changeth his holy purpose and heauenly calling Tim. But what will it helpe the Iewes being themselues vnbeleeuers and vnholy to descend of holy and faithfull Fathers more hereafter then heretofore it hath done Silas First the couenant which was giuen to the Fathers makes all such as come of them to bee holy though not with personall holinesse yet with federall so farre as to be counted Gods people and to haue right and title to the word and Sacraments as before Secondly he speaks now of such as are not onely vnder the couenant but vnder Gods free election and therefore such as must be called in time and made to walke in the steppes of their Fathers saith who shall bee loued and receiued not so much for their Fathers as because of Christ in whome they beleeue as their Fathers did before them Tim. What is our doctrine from hence Silas That God extends his loue to the godly parents and to their issue which imitate their faith and goodnesle euen as amongst men the friendship and kindnesse of parents we often see is conuayed to their children as Dauid loued Ionathan the Father and Mephiboseth his Sonne So God deriueth his loue to the children which be like vnto their good and righteous parents Psal. 112 2. and we read that God remembred Isaac for Abrahams sake and did good to Salomon for Dauid his fathers sake see the 2. commandement Exod. 20. Tim. What should this teach vs Silas First it warneth vs all herein to imitate God to continue our loue in a constant tenour from Father to the childe there being no iust cause to the contrary as Dauid loued and honoured Chimham when he could not doe his Father Barzilai any good by reason of his old age 2. Sam. 19 38 Secondly not to hate the wicked longer then they abide in their refusall of the Gospell but as God and Angels receiue loue and ioy at sinners when they conuert so ought we men Luke 15. Thirdly that Children which haue had godly parents shall bee inheritours of the same grace and loue so as they be followers of the piety of their parents If they degenerate God will hate them as he did the Iewes which grew out of kinde but if they bee like to their beleuing progenitors they shal taste of the same loue Lastly seeing God loueth many of the Iewes let not Christians hate them neglect or despise or bee vncourteous or hurtfull to them but dayly and earnestly pray for the conuersion of such amongst them as pertaine to Gods election and couenant prouoking them by our Christian and godly conuersation to come vnto and to like of the Gospell and not driue them more backwards from Christ by superstitious vsages and corrupt manners for which the Idolatrous Papists and carnall professors haue much to answere to God who will be a seuere reuenger of such scandals Tim. Go forward to verse 2. which hath a new reason from the nature of God to proue his vnchangeable loue to the Nation of the Iewes because God himselfe cannot change his owne counsell Tell vs what is meant by guifts and calling and by without repentance what is our instruction from this whole verse Silas By guifts he meaneth not either corporall good things as health strength beauty nor yet naturall gifts of the minde as wit memory c. nor worldly goods as riches honors nor all spirituall good things as knowledge gift of preaching prayer c. for these may be and are lost and taken away from many Whereas Paul speaks of gifts which be irreuocable once had are no more lost as election and the speciall fruites thereof viz. remission of sins iustification faith repentance sanctification hope loue perseuerance in grace glorification these peculiar gifts which flow out of Gods eternall predestination and loue Also that calling which is according to Gods purpose which is euer effectuall to the change and renewing os the heart and of these it is written they bee without repenrance that is immutable without any alteration Repentance the cause of change being by a metonymie put for mutation which is the effect for therefore men change because they repent not but that these guists and others failing in thēselues as things created be subiect to change God alone being absolutely without change being simply and infinitly eternall but seeing God who besto weth them will neuer call them back hence it is they are not altered and free from change For that which causeth repentance and change is either want of counsell and foresight to vnderstand things thoroughly or of power not beeing able well to effect what was well considered Now in God there lackes no wisedome nor power for he knew al his workes and none can resist his power therefore such Iews as he knew before and whom he gaue to his Sonne to bee redeemed and deliuered cannot fall from these guifts and calling of God This word then without repentance must not with Erasmus bee referred to the guifts and things themselues nor with Stapleton and other popish Sophisters be so taken as if God had no cause to repent of his reiecting the Iewes for that therof came such a good as the conuersion of Gentiles it being Pauls purpose by this assertion to prooue the calling of the Iewes but this must bee referred to the fixed and most good and wise counsell of God towards his elect such as he had spoken of Rom. 8 30. Whom hee predestinated them hee called and iustifieth and glorifieth In these the guifts and calling of God bee without alteration insomuch as neyther Diuels with all their malice and might nor the Saints with all their weakenesse and inconstancy can bereaue them of their guifts and inward calling because God the author and worker is constant and so prescrueth what he bestoweth as neyther he takes them away nor suffereth his children to cast them away Of which matter reade the Dialogue on Rom. 5. 2. Tim. But howsoeuer there bee no repentance and changing of purpose with God and therefore seeing according to his euerlasting purpose hee promised that the seed of the Fathers as of Abraham c. shall be holy hee will stand to his promises and out of the Iewes will gather all his elect for this is his proper nature not to repent him his guifts and calling are without changing yet God remaining constant men through their default may shake off their calling and cast off their 〈◊〉 and so fall away from God and from beleefe in him Silas For answere heereunto first this doth imply a contradiction that the Saints should loose their guifts and their calling prooue temporall and yet God abide constant For he hath by promise bound himselfe to the elect that he will holde his hand
all to increase and preserue them what we can This must moue vs both to pray for greater measure of grace to be able to performe this better heereafter and instantly to beg pardon of God through Christ for our failing heeretofore for the debt of charity being neglected doth increase the debt of sinne and looke how much wee come short of paying the debt of loue so much we multiply the debt of sinne and therefore stand in need both of faith to beleeue the forgiuenesse of that which is past of repentance to amend our liues for time to come to walke henceforth in charity dooing all our things in loue Tim. Come now to the reason of the Apostle why we should loue one another and tell vs what is meant by the law and by the fulfilling of it Silas Among sundry acceptions of the word lawe as first for the books of Moses Secondly for the whole doctrine of the word Thirdly for the morall precepts giuen in Mount Sinai c. heere it is put for the second 〈◊〉 because he discourseth of the duties to our neighbour the loue whereof beeing coupled with the loue of God as an effect with the cause therefore it may well comprehend the whole morall law By fulfilling is meant heere not the exact keeping in euery point without any swaruing but the careful endeuour to do one commandement as well as another without baulking any of them The drift of the Apostle heere being this to teach that the law is generally kept by the exercise of loue which is therefore saide to bee the fulfilling of the law First because it is the end of the commandements 1. Tim. 1 5. Secondly for that it is the motiue to stirre vp to euery duty both to God man Thirdly because it is the summe of the law Math. 22. 37. 38. 39. Finally because it is the perfection of the lawe and were it perfect in vs would make vs perfect keepers of the law Tim. What is the doctrine we are to learne from hence Silas This ought very much to kindle our loue seeing it is such a helpe to the fulfilling of the lawe then which there is nothing except faith in Christ eyther of more honour and beauty or of more profite and benefit then to be keepers of the lawe by which first wee haue 〈◊〉 with God whose image of holinesse and righteousnesse is most absolutely and liuely purtrayed in the lawe the neerer therefore we come to the law the liker we are to God Againe our study to walke in the law is both a signe of a blessed man and the way to blessednesse Psal. 119 1. and 112 1. If the keeping of the law be so beautifull and beneficiall iudge how behouefull it is to imbrace loue which inables vs to keepe the law heere in some measure and in heauen perfectly As Paul saith of loue if wee had all graces without it they were nothing so may I say if we could keepe all the commandements and not do them in loue it were nothing Wherefore let all men that haue their hearts endued with loue thinke they haue a great blessing and thanke God for it and as the Apostles prayed Lord increase our faith so let euery good Christian pray Lord encrease my loue for the more we loue the more we fulfill the law and the more we fulfill the law the more we resemble God the giuer of the lawe and the liker wee are to God in holinesse the more we are to be like him in happinesse Besides all this though loue bee not the forme of faith yet it is a necessary effect of iustifying faith which workes by loue Gal. 5 6. and a fruite of the Spirite Gal. 5 22. The bond of perfection Col. 3 14. The badge of a Christian Iohn 13 35. Touching the properties works of loue also for the excellency and continuance read 1. Cor 13 4. to the end Tim. But whereas many pretend loue and haue it not how shall wee know when we haue indeede the gift of Christian charitie Silas First by the obiect of our loue if it bee right that is if we loue euery one that is our neighbour louing one man as well as another without partiality though some men more then others being wel affected vnto all howsoeuer others be affected vnto vs as Christ loued his enemies so must we This is one and the best triall of our loue Secondly by the measure or maner rather of our loue that we loue our neighbor as our selus that is as constantly without fainting as sincere without dissembling being as carefull through loue to bee helpfull to the bodies and soules of others and to euerie thing that is deere vnto them as we would haue it done to our selues Thirdly by the quality and nature of loue which stirs vs vp to respect one man as well as another though not so much so to tender him in one thing as well as in another for what God ioynes no man may separate that God which commaunded loue to our Neighbours persons hath enioyned charity towardes all the things of our neighbors not to hurt him in any of them no not so much as by a thought much lesse by disgrace or cruelty or vncleannesse or oppression or slander For if we do keepe that Law of not stealing and dooing wrong and breake the other which forbids adultery or incontinency or keepe this and trespasse by false witnesse being full of lies and euill reporters or false accusers of others or vntouched in all these yet be cruell vnmercifull and fierce offending against that Lawe which prohibits murthers or at a word caring somewhat to obserue one and being loose and licentious in transgression of some other not dooing many euils against our neighbors yet stiffely and obstinately culpable in some one or few certainly our loue is not that christian godly loue which looketh to euery precept and preuenteth the euill and harme of our Brethren in euery thing as much as lyeth in vs for loue dooth none euill vnto our neighbor Touching these singular and particular Precepts note that that of honouring Parents is omitted because they might be contained vnder powers also in an other Commandement the Commandement of Adulterie is prefixed vnto the Commandement of Murther Lastly this of fulfilling the Lawe by loue is ill wrested of Papists to proue Iustification by workes for this is not heere the Apostles purpose and when they shall proue that any meere man hath perfect charity such as the Law exacteth we will then confesse that righteousnesse before God may come by loue Meane while wee dare not crosse the doctrine of the Spirit teaching in so many plaine texts righteousnesse to be attained by faith without the workes of the Lawe which yet wee may in some sense bee saide to fulfill both because in our head it is perfectly kept that is allowed to such as beleeue in him Also with Augustine we say Quicquid 〈◊〉
succour vs when we are tempted Heb. 8 2. Silas What comfort commeth to vs by his being Man Silas That God hath infinitelie set his loue vpon vs whose nature he would haue his Sonne to assume Also we are 〈◊〉 that he pittieth vs in our 〈◊〉 himselfe hauing beene 〈◊〉 and had experience of all the infirmities and miseries of our Nature Heb. 2. and 4. Tim. What Instructions take we from hence Silas That we ought to be humble in our conuersation seeing Christ so humbled himselfe as beeing God to become a seruant and to dye Phil. 2 6 7 8. Secondly that we neuer doubt of Gods loue toward vs whereof such a pledge is giuen vs in the incarnation of his sonne Iohn 3 16. Rom. 5 8. Thirdly that we studie and striue to returne al loue to him who so loued vs and by loue to serue one another as Christ through loue became man to serue his fathers will for our good Rom. 15 1 2 3. Ephe. 5 2. DIALOGVE III. Verse 4 5 6. 4 And declared mightily to be the Sonne of God touching the spirit of Sanctification by the Resurrection from the dead 5 By whom we haue receiued Grace and Apostleshippe that Obedience might be giuen vnto the Faith for his name among all the Gentiles 6 Among whom ye be also the Called of Iesus Christ. Tim. VVHat is the 〈◊〉 of this fourth Verse Silas That Iesus Christ is God Omnipotent of the same power Maiesty with his father so declared to the world by his glorious resurrection which was a worke of Diuine power Tim. What is meant by the spirit Silas His diuine Nature as the flesh against which it is set signifieth his humaine nature See Spirit vsed in like sence 1 Tim. 3. 16 1 Pet. 3 18. Heb. 9 14. Tim. Why doth he put Sanctification to spirit Silas To expresse the worke of his Diuinitie sanctifying his manhood with al graces aboue measure and quickning that flesh which he assumed vnto a life which is no more subiect to death Thus both Chrysostome and 〈◊〉 expound it of Christes owne rising Tim. By how many wayes did hee manifest himselfe to be the Sonne of God Silas By these seauen wayes The first is his Diuine and effectuall Doctrine for no meere man could teach as he taught also by his most innocent Life Secondly by his powerfull Myracles which were euidences of his Godhead beeing done by his proper power Thirdly by his fore-telling things to come Fourthly by his knowledge of mans thoughts Math 9 4. Fiftly by ordaining of the Sacramentes of his Church Math 26 20. Sixtly by institution of Ministers for the teaching and ruling his Church Mat. 10 and 28. Seauenthly by raising himselfe from the dead which is a worke sarre passing humaine power and therfore fitly brought heer to proue his Diuinity Tim. But Elisha and Paule raised the dead and wrought other Myracles yet were but men Silas True this was by a borrowed power euen in Christs name but Christ did raise himselfe which is more then to raise others as Prophets did and shall raise others by his owne proper power which argueth him to be more then a man not as an instrument but as a principall Efficient Tim. For what reasons was it needfull for him to bee a verie God that should be our Sauiour Silas For these Reasons First that he might giue full merit to the dooinges and sufferings of his manhood for a meere creature cannot merit of the Creator God Secondly that in his sufferinges which of it selfe hee might support his man-hoode could not beare such a waight of wrath as fell vppon him Thirdly that hee might giue his spirit to the elect to sanctifie them for the spirit being God none but God could giue him Fourthly that he might raise vp himselfe from the dead and all his members with him at the last and great day Fiftly that hee might bee a maintainer of that saluation which hee hath purchased and a Protector of his people for euer therefore his members trust in him and call vpon him which were a grieuous sinne if he were but a meere man for cursed is hee that maketh Flesh his arme Tim. What Vse is to be made of this truth Silas First it serueth to stirre vp our thankfulnesse towards God who hath giuen vs such a mightie Redeemer Luke 1 32. Secondly it should cause vs to put our whole affiance in him against all dangers and enemies bodily and spiritual Psal 2. verse last Lastly to be obedient to his voice speaking to vs in his word seeing he is that mighty God able to punnish all disobedience Acts 3 13. Heb. 2 2. and 4. Tim. What is meant by the Apostleship Silas The guift or faculty of that calling to be an Apostle secondly to be able to teach the church both which he had immediately from Christ. Tim. Why is it called Grace Sil. Because it is freely giuen him not onely without but against all desert and merit from the meere goodwill and fauour of God at the time of his conuersion by grace and togither with it Tim. Of whom did he receiue this Grace Sil. Of Christ immediately who both called and furnished him with authority and guifts euen then when hee went about to persecute and oppresse the Church that hee might be to the praise of his glorious grace Tim. To what end did he receiue it Silas To a twofold end and purpose First it is in respect of men to draw them by the inward work of the spirit ioyned to his preaching to beleeue and obey the Gospell of Christ. Secondly in respect of Christ that his name may be glorified by the calling and submission of many soules to his Doctrine acknowledging him for their Sauiour and GOD who before serued dumbe Idols as they were led Tim. Towards whom did Paul exercise his Apostleship Silas Especially towards the Gentiles amongest whom Christ was mightie by his Ministerie as by Peter he was mightie amongst the Iewes Gal. 2. 7. Tim. What do ye learne out of all this Silas That the guift and function of the Ministery are Christs free guift secondly that the vse of them is to be referred vnto the honour of Christ by winning men to beleeue and acknowledge him for they Sauiour by calling vpon his name and being called after his name Christians of Christ thirdly that Christ is a common Sauiour of Iewes and Gentiles which beleeue so as the difference of nations is taken away Acts 10 31 32. Tim. What are we to learne for our instruction and aedification out of the 6. Verse Sil. These foure things first that Paul doth wisely draw the Romanes with compasse and ranke of them to whom his commission as an Apostle did appertaine both to put from himselfe the suspition of a curious busie bodie and to make them more willing to receiue him being sent to them with authority to be their Instructer Also to humble the pride of the
They are to be driuen away with an angry looke as the East winde driueth away the rayne they therefore doe sinne much which receiue tales with a delight to heare other mens sinnes for if there were no receiuers of tales there would be no bringers of tales the one hath the Deuill in his care the other hath the Deuill on his tongue Lastly such shall enter into heauen as receiue not false reports against their neighbour Psal. 15 3. Tim. But what thinke ye are all complaints to be accounted whisperings and back-bitings Sil. No if these conditions be obserued First that the party complayned off be first duely admonished Secondly if the complaint bee put to such as haue power to redresse the fault Thirdly if the complayner secke nothing but the amendment of the party Lastly if hee grieue that hec hath cause to complayne and pray for his conuersion doing all in loue these two last vices are forbidden in the ninth commandement Tim. What is the next vice Sil. Haters of God such as be hated of God and be haters of him such be al back-byters and whisperers persons which deserue the hatred of God Tim. Are there any which be haters of God Sil. There be such as this place and other moe do mention God doth not deserue any hatred of them but rather hath in him all causes of loue both goodnesse and beauty but it commeth to passe that men hate God through that naturall corruption which they deriued from Adam for whilst man bare Gods Image he loued him and was loued of him but when he put on Sathans Image was vnlike to God then began he to hate God and was hated of God Tim. Are there not degrees of hating of God Sil. True there be so First some doe it and know it not Secondly there are some that hate him and know it Thirdly there are some which are secret haters of God Fourthly there are some which are open haters of God Tim. By what markes may it be knowne that men hate God Sil. By these especially First by seldome praying or coldnesse in prayer Secondly by neglecting to praise him or doing it without delight Thirdly by hating or hurting his Children Fourthly by beeing loath to thinke or speake or heare of God as Atheists Fiftly by ordinary disobedience to his word Sixtly by not procuring the good or by seeking the hinderance of his Gospell being enemies to Religion Lastly by murmuring and repining vnder his correcting hand DIAL XIX Verse 30. Doers of wrong proud boasters inuenters of euill things disobedient to Parents Tim. WHo be meant by doers of wrong Silas Such as be contumelious or despitefull reproachers of others in an insolent manner insulting petulantly ouer others Tim. How many wayes may wrong be offered and done Sil. Sundry and many wayes First wrong may bee done in thought word and deed also to soules bodies goods or name also by doing euill that we should not doe and leauing vndo e some good that we should do also by fraud and violence Moreouer wrong may bee done in our particular callings when the duties thereof be not well done as also in priuate affaires and in place of iudgement this is vilest Tim. What reasons may keepe vs from doing of wrong Silas First that we may bee like God who doth no wrong to any and shew our selues his Children Secondly that we may be vnlike Sathan whose plotting and practise is continually how to doe some wrong Thirdly we would haue no wrong done to our selues Fourthly it is directly against Gods word Fiftly it dopriueth men of Heauen 1. Cor 6 9. vnrighteous persons shall not inherite Heauen Sixtly it bringeth iudgment euen in this life as in Iesabels example whereas the contrary that is to deale iustly procureth many blessings as in the example of Iob. Lastly it hurteth our name and woundeth our Conscience and it is a cause that wrong is done to our selues for with what measure wee meate to others that shall be meate to vs againe Mat. 7 2. Tim. What is pride Sil. An high conceite of our owne excellency cyther arrogating to vs what we haue not and are not or beeing too high minded for that we haue Tim. What is the matter of Pride Sil. The guifts of body and mind supposed or in truth possessed Tim. What be the remedies of this vice Sil. First to consider the danger which is great and certaine as it is written God resisteth the proud 1. Pet. 5 5. And pride goeth before a fall Prouer. 16 18. Secondly to remember Christs example as Phil. 2 5. Let the same minde be in you which was in Christ. Thirdly to thinke what promises be made to the vertue of humility 1. Pet 5 5. God giueth grace to the humble Fourthly to thinke whereof we are made and whither we must goe for dust we are and to dust we must returne Gen. 3 19. Lastly how vnfit we are to any good and that al the good wee haue or doe it is giuen vs 1 Cor. 4 7. Finally pride in the minde is the same that a swelling is in the body Tim. What call ye boasting Sil. To glory or insult in any thing whereas many proud men boast of that that they haue the boaster is one who brags of that which he hath not Tim. How many kinds be there of boasting Sil. One necessary vrged by importunity of euill men such as Paul vsed 2 Cor. 11 16. Secondly Christian boasting which is a holy confidence in Christs merits Thirdly a vaine and foolish boasting which is a boasting of things we think we haue done or which others haue done by our means or of wickednes this is the worst boasting Tim. What reasons against this foolish boasting Sil. First it breaketh a rule of the word euen that rule which biddeth vs to be modest and lowly Secondly it is a signe of a vaine and ambitious heart Thirdly it maketh vs resemble the Diuell Math. 4 9. Tim. What do ye call inuenters of euill things Sil. Such as are not content with the euils that bee already in vse and practise doe study to finde out new euils as the proud man he inuenteth new fashions the couetous man hee inuenteth more wayes of gaine the opressor inuenteth new cruelties and torments the Epicure inuents new deuices new pleasures and delicates Such were Tiberius Sardanapalus Phalaris who rewarded such as found new delights and new torments Tim. What Reasons against this vice Silas The euils which men do inuent do commonly hurt the inuenters Psalme 7 15. They shal fall into the pit which they digged for others Tim. Wherein doth disobedience to Parents shew it selfe Silas First in their impatient bearing of corrections Secondly in an vnwillingnesse to obey things commanded well and iustly Tim. In what things chiefely are Children to shew obedience to parents Silas In two things First in choise of their Calling or Trade of life Secondly in their marriage and choise of their yoake fellow This may appeare by
the Conenant standing in reconciliation with God and newnesse of life It consisted of a reciprocall promise GOD promised pardon and grace the people promised faith and obedience Gen. 17 1 2. Tim. Vpon what things or in what respect was this Sacrament profitable to such as did keepe the law by performing morall obedience vnto God Silas In these respectes First it did serue to distinguish Gods people from al other people Secondly it did serue as a Seale to assure them of the forgiuenesse of their sinnes and of Gods fauour Thirdly it did admonish them of their duty that they must abandon all sinfull and wicked desires and affections and remaine holy to God Lastly it was an instrument of the Holy Ghost to the mortification of sinne Tim. What was further taught from this that hee saith Circumcision was profitable Sil. Namely to grant and yeeld vnto any with whom we haue to doe in causes of Religion what is in reason and truth to be yeelded Tim. What was learned from this that he saith Circumcision profiteth him that is a doer of the Law Sil. That the fruite and profit of sacraments dependeth vpon the faith and godlinesse of the receiuers and not vppon the action done and the word spoken for sacraments they doe not make a wicked man righteous but he that is already righteous they confirme him in his righteousnes and encrease graces giuen but as for wicked men neither sacraments nor any other externall thing can profit them whilest they liue wickedly without faith and repentance Tim. Then sacraments haue not grace inclosed in them as the vertue of healing is enclosed in the medicine nor do not regenerate iustifie and saue men by the very worke done Sil. No verily but all their vertue is from God who at his good pleasure maketh them profitable to his children which feare him and receiue them duely walking before God and being vpright Tim. But sithence none are so vpright but that still they be transgressors and therefore no keepers of the Law which implieth an exact performance of the whole Law therefore the Sacraments cannot bring profit vnto any And then in vaine were they ordained Sil. This Text which saith Circumcision is nothing to such as keepe not the Law speaketh of impenitent transgressors such Hypocrites as doe sinne and continue in their sinnes without any godly griefe for their falles or confidence in the grace of Christ for remission of their faults to these indeed Sacraments bring no benefit at all Howbeit such as do transgresse the law by infirmity against their owne purpose and resolution being heartsorry vpon their disobedience once espied groning with vnfeigned sighes for the offence of God thereby and endeuouring to arise by repentance such haue fruit by the holy Sacraments because they stand to the condition vpon which the force and benefit of the Sacraments do depend For they keepe the Law tho not in their owne person yet in Christ in whom they beleeue and for whose sake their daily slips and faults of frailty are not imputed Christ being made to the fathfull the end of the Law for righteousnesse Rom. 10 4 5. of which righteousnesse as Circumcision to Abraham and the godly Fathers before Christ so Baptisme the Lordes Supper since Christ his comming be seales assuring vnto the godly Beleeuers their iustification with God by faith in Christ. Whereas to the vnfaithfull wicked liuers they are vtterly voyde and of no force except it be to seale vp their iust condemnation and to be a witnesse against them Sil. How do you proue that godlinesse is required in them that shall profitably receiue the Sacraments and that to vngodly men they are vaine and of no vse Tim. By 1 Corinthians 11 24. the end of their examination is to finde faith and repentance which wicked persons do want Also by the example of Iudas and of Simon Magus and by infinite testimonies of holy Scripture namely by this Text which vnto the promise of grace on Gods behalfe mentioneth on the peoples part the conditiō of obedience without which God is not bound to stand to his promise Tim. What is the profit that a godly man taketh by the Sacraments if he come repentantly and doe beleeue the promises of the Sacrament Silas Manyfold and verie great First it stirreth vp and strengthneth faith in the forgiuenesse of our sinnes by Christ and so knitteth vs more straightly vnto God the Father by him Secondly it kindleth our loue vnto God Thirdly it kindleth our loue one towardes another Fourthly by it God mortifieth and killeth our corrupt lusts Fiftly it encreaseth hope of heauenly glory in the faithfull Lastly it prouoketh thankefulnesse praise to God for all his free mercies by Christ Iesus DIALOGVE XVII Verse 28 29. For he is not a Iew which is one cutward neither is that Circumcision which is outward in the flesh but hee is a Iew which is one within and the Circumcision is of the heart in the spirit not in the letter whose praise is not of Men but of God Tim. WHat is the drift of this Text Sil. To teach who is the true Iew and what is true Circumcision and who is the false Iew and counterfeit Circumcision Tim. What is false Circumcision and who is a false Iew Also what is true Circumcision who is a true Iew. Sil. The false Circumcision is that which is outward onely in the flesh and in the Letter whose praife is of men True Circumcision is that which is inward also in the heart and in the spirit whose praise is of God Tim. What do ye call outward Circumcision and a Iew outward Silas That is outward Circumcision when the foreskin of the flesh is pared away without any mortification of sinne and he is an outward Iew which is one by profession onely and before men without any inward renewing of his minde by the spirite of God working Faith and conuersion of the heart vnto God which was the thing promised on the part of the Circumcised Tim. Let vs heare now more fully the difference betweene one that is a true Israelits and one that is a counterfeit by consequence of a true Christian and an Hypocrite Sil. The differences are many which I wil rehearse in order First of all the true Israelite loues God for himselfe The counterfeit loues God for his benefites the one loues the word because it is his word the foode of his soule the other because of knowledge which delighteth him which is a natural thing The one loueth Gods Children because they belong to God the other loues them for some carnall respect as for profit credite kindred The true Israelite seeketh the praise of God the false praise and reputation of the worlde the one desires chiefly to haue himselfe and his dooings approued of God the other chiefly desireth this that he and his workes might be seene of men The true Christian looketh as much to the manner of doing as to the
of those singular thinges without fruite for the whole Scripture is profitable howsoeuer wee may not become followers of them therein yet there is of euery Scripture a profitable vse perpetuall to all times Tim. What other things may bee noted from this ground of the Apostles application Sil. Sundry things first the sauing vse of the Scriptures is proper to the faithfull for whose good alone they were written a speciallmercy Scondly that diuine trueth must bee prooued by diuine Scripture and not by humaine writers which are of no authority in matters of saluation Thirdly examples serue very well to declare doctrines and commaundements because to thinges hard and doubtfull they bring great light and cleerenesse for that in them the minde and sences both are ioyned together Fourthly we learne that it is a great comfort to the faithfull to bee made equall to Abraham in iustification To Iusticiaries mercenarie hypocrites infidels and prophane vnbeleeuing worldlings it hath no comfort Tim. What is the fourth thing contayned in this text Sil. To lay forth the two principall thinges whereunto faith leaneth to witte the death and resurrection of our Lord. For Christ dead and raysed againe is the thing which a true faith chiefly looketh vnto because there it is that faith findeth matter of support stay to itselfe Therfore the Apostle doth ioyne his death and resurrection togither because neither his death without his life nor his life without his death could any whit auaile vs to Saluation Hence are they in Scripture so often ioyned togither Pagans can beleeue that Christ being a man died but that he is risen they do not Tim. Who deliuered Iesus to death Sil. Iudas for his gayne the Iewes for enuy Christ deliuered himselfe for his Fathers will to obey it God the Father deliuered his Sonne for the redemption of sinners out of his loue as it is written So God loued the world Iohn 3. 18. This last deliuering is meant here Iudas Christ God did one and the same thing but not for one and the same end therefore Iudas a sinner and God iust Tim. What was learned hence Sil. That the whole efficacie of Christs death doth depend vppon Gods free will and decree that is that his death had beene of no force to satisfie Gods wrath had he not dyed according to the determination of his father and this is that which is written Iohn 6. 27. Him hath God the Father sealed Tim. To what death was Christ deliuered Sil. To the most shamefull and cruell death of the Crosse his bare death is not onely here meant but all the miseries of his life yet his death onely is named because it was the perfection of all and that wherein his obedience most appeared the top of his obedience Epilogue of his passion Tim. What necessity was there of his death seeing hee was free from sin in himselfe Sil. Although himselfe had no sinne yet our sinnes were all imputed to him as to our surety and pledge who was to answere for vs. But further this was the end for which hee dyed that ouercomming death in his resurrection he might fully satisfie for our sinnes For death by GODS iust decree was pronounced the wages of sinne Genesis 2. we had surely suffered it eternally if our Mediatour had not both borne and conquered it Tim. What sins doth he speake of Sil. Not our light and common infirmities but our most grieuous and haynous sinnes by the which wee deserue euen to fall from the grace of God if he should deale with vs in rigour not his but our sinnes were the cause of his death which suffied for all hath acquitted vs from them all one and other Tim. What learne we from hence Sil. Very many things first that we are bound to loue Christ who so loued vs. Secondly we must loue our enemes as Christ Iesus dyed for his enemies Thirdly sinne is a most loathsome thing being the cause of Christes accursed d at h Fourthly that there is iust cause of beeing humbled by this consideration that wee were the meanes of Iesus death wee killed the Lord of life Fiftly there is matter of great comfort to heare that our greatest sinnes are done away by his dying for vs for his bloud was of infinite value being the bloud of God Acts 20. Sixtly that all men must be fearefull to offend God who shewed himselfe so mercifull and so iust in the death of his sonne iust to his Son standing in our roome but mercifull to beleeuing sinners whome he absolueth by his Sonnes death let this mercy leade men to reuerence God continually Tim. Did Iesus remayne in death Sil. No surely for then he should be thought to dy for his owne sinnes also to be but a meere man and therefore he rose againe euen to declare that hee was God and absolued from our sinnes and wee in him for in that death could not hold 〈◊〉 in his denne and house that made it manifest that our sinnes which hee tooke vppon him were all discharged that we might be iust through him This is the meaning of that which is here written Hee rose againe for our iustification Christ is sayd to be raised of God who deliuered him and of himselfe for God doth all things by his Son Tim. Is there any other fruit of his resurrection Silas Yea for thereby Christs members are raised vp to newnesse of life Rom. 6 4. Also it is a pledge of our resurrection to life eternall at the last day 1 Corm 15. Lastly in his resurrection he began his exaltation vnto glory and hath giuen sufficient testimony and declaration of our absolution from sinnes out of which sithens he was deliuered as his raising againe did proue for he had stayed in death if but one sinne had beene vnsatisfied for heereby we haue assurance of our iustification in him CHAP. V. DIALOGVE I. Verse 1. Therefore being iustified by faith wee are at peace with God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Timotheus WHat is the connexion or dependance betweene this Chapter and the former Also tell me the argument of this Chapter and of what parts it consisteth Silas Paul hauing taught in the last verse of the former Chapter that mans iustification before God was founded vpon the death and resurrection of our Lord Iesus being by faith apprehended now he continueth the same argument and sheweth what a riuer of benefits do flow out of this Fountaine of free Iustification both to present comfort and life eternall in the heauens Vpon the rehearsall and demonstration of which benefits as the two principall parts this Chapter standeth For first he reckoneth vp the seuerall and singular fruites of the passion and resurrection of our Lord beginning with iustification the foundation of reconciliation peace whence the rest do yssue to ver 5. after followeth the demonstratiue confirmatiō of the same to verse 19. Vnto which is anexed an answer touching a question wherefore the
to depart from God This reason may bee strengthened by the consideration of Gods infinit power an 〈◊〉 truth which maketh him able and carefull to performe vnto the elect his most mercifull couenant Rom. 4. 2. The fourth ground or reason is the intercession of Iesus Christ who as hee prayed for Peter that his faith should not faile Luke 22. 32. so in Iohn 17. 11 hec prayeth for all the Apostles and all beleeuers that they might continue in grace vnto the end and God the father will deny nothing to his Sonne who is heard in all which hee prayeth for The fift ground is from the nature of spirituall and sauing grace which is not subiect to corruption but is permanent this may appeare by the wordes of our Sauiour Iohn 16. 22. My ioy shall none take from you also Iohn 14. 16. My spirit which I giue to you shall abide with you for euer and Saint Peter in his first Epistle 1 23. calleth the seede whereof we are begotten anew immortall seed and S. Iohn saith it remaines in those which are born anew Lastly S. Paul sayeth that the guifts of God are without repentance Rom. 11 29. Nowe the reason why sauing grace doeth not corrupt and dye is because it is confirmed and preserued of GOD Iude 1 5. Sixtly the constancy of the loue of God who neuer 〈◊〉 nor casteth out such as once in loue he imbraceth Iohn 13. 1. Moreouer the faithfull are committed of the Father to Christ to bee kept who beeing stronger then all none can plucke them out of his hands Iohn 10 18. Lastly if any which once be truely Christs members and Gods children could vtterly fall from God both the power and truth and will of God must bee called in question The stablenesse of Gods children may be set foorth by these comparisons First of a tree planted by the waters side whose fruit and leafe neuer fadeth Psal. 1. 2. Secondly of a Cedar tree in Libanon which is a strong and lasting tree Psal. 92 12. Thirdly of a high and firme mountaine which is impregnable not to be preuailed against Psal. 125 1. Lastly of a house built vpon a Rocke which standeth vnmoueable against all weather Math. 7 24. Tim. By what meanes bee the faithfull preserued in this estate of Grace Silas Especially by the Ministerie of the worde and Sacraments also by priuate prayer and Meditations also by conference and practise of the word Tim. Will not this Doctrine breede securitie in Gods children Silas No because the Scripture which teacheth their stedfastnesse doth also teach that their owne care and watchfulnesse is required thereunto as in that saying of Paul Let him that standeth take heede least he fall 1. Cor. 10 12. 1 Iohn 5 18. Tim. What profit is to be made of this Doctrine Silas First an earnest desire to bee in such a permanent condition as in earthly things wee couct the most dureable Secondly a great thankfulnesse to God who hath set vs in so firme an estate of happinesse Thirdly Gods Children may arme themselues with this doctrine against the dread of being vtterly forsaken Fourthly it will stirre vp a diligent heede and looking to our selues to continue in the vse of all good meanes Tim. What is the fourth fruite of a iustifying Faith Sil. Ioy vnder the hope of Gods glory Secondly Hope Thirdly the ioy which ariseth from hope of his glory Tim. Doth God Communicate his glory vnto his Saints Silas He doth so as it is plaine by these wordes and Rom. 8 29. But whereas the Prophet Esay saith he will not giue his glory to another that is his essentiall Diuine glory which is peculiar to himselfe as God as to trust in him to pray to him this he will not giue to another but his blessed glorie of this his Children shall haue part so far as they be capeable of it Tim. In how many things doth this blessed glorie of Heauen consist Silas In three things First in remouall of all maner of miseries from which the Children of God in heauen shall be as free as God the Father for it is written Reu. 14 13. Blessed are they that die in the Lord they rest from their labours Reuel 21 4. All teares shall bee wiped from their eyes also There shall be no sorrow nor cry nor pain Secondly they shall be as free from sinne as God himselfe is for in the heauenly Citty no vncleane thing shall enter Thirdly they shall enioy the presence of all good in all perfection and for euer Tim. What is the glorie peculiar to the bodies and soules of Gods Children in heauen Sil. Their bodies shall bee strong immortall incorruptible beautifull and bright as the Sunne 1 Cor. 15 41. Math. 13 43. and their soules shall bee filled with the loue of God and of his Saints For euerie glorified person shall raigne as a King hauing a crowne of glorie set vpon his head Moreouer this glory shal know neyther end nor measure but is infinite both for continuance and degree But their glory shall not be equall all shall haue glorie that is heauenly glory and most blessed glory and all shall haue fulnesse of glorie but all shall not haue equall glorie there shall bee more or lesse according to the measure and fruits of faith as an hundred vessels cast into the sea all shall be ful but one may containe more then another Tim. What do ye cal the hope of glory Silas A certaine expectation or looking for it to inioy it heereafter as verily as though we had it already For it may appeare by that which is written of it in this chapter that there is great certainty in Christian hope because the Apostle saith That Hope maketh not ashamed which it would doe were it doubtfull and might faile vs. Tim. What ariseth of this Hope Silas Vnspeakable and glorious ioy of heart Tim. What do ye cal this ioy and how doth it differ from worldly ioy Silas This ioy is an holy affection of the heart being made glad and chearefull vpon this vndoubted trueth that the time will come when all euill shall bee taken from vs and all good bestowed vpon vs in all perfection that is when we shall be glorified with God This ioy doth differ from worldly ioy in sundrie and manie things First Christian ioy commeth from the spirit the other from the flesh Secondly Christian ioy ariseth from the sence of heauenly blessings present and hope of full blessednesse to come But worldly ioy springeth from the hauing and presence of earthly and perishing good things of this life Thirdly christian ioy is lasting worldly ioy is fading Lastly Christian ioy stirreth vp to the praises of God in whom they ioy worldlie ioy 〈◊〉 vp to the comendations of such worldly things and pleasures as men loue and delight in I et worldlinges striue to turne their carnall ioy which is as the cracking of thornes short and vanishing into spirituall ioy which is alwayes lasting
of worldly things which we may call humaine or ciuill hope it is of things vncertaine which may fall out or not fall out because they haue vncertaine causes and this hope hath no assurance but is ioyned with continuall doubting but Christian hope it hath alwayes assurance and certainty ioyned with it because it is of spirituall blessings and protections also of heauenly glory which commeth of a most firm cause namely the vnchangeable good will and loue of God as also his most free and firme promise in Christ. Tim. Whereunto doth this serue Sil. To reproue both the Papist and ignorant prophane Protestants which seuer assurance from Christian hope wherein they doe iniury to God himselfe and shewe that they are not such who haue his loue shed abroade in their harts DIAL VI. Verse 6. For Christ when we were yet of no strength at his time died for the vngodly Tim. VVHat is the drift and end of this text Sil. To confirme that which hee had said of the loue of God towards vs by an effect and fruite of his loue which is the death of his Sonne Christ Iesus Here beginneth the demonstration which is the second part of this Chapter as before Tim. How is this set foorth Sil. It is set foorth by a double circumstāce of time first in that the Sonne of God was giuen to death for vs at that time when we were yet weake vngodly sinners and enemies Secondly in that he dyed for vs at the time appoynted of his Father called his time Tim. What be the parts of this sixt verse Sil. Foure first what ones God loued weake and vngodly ones Secondly by what guift hee expressed his loue his Sonne Christ. Thirdly at what time the guift was bestowed at his time Fourthly to what thing he was giuen to death Tim. Now come to the interpretation of the words and first tell vs what is meant by weake in this place Sil. The word here vsed is applyed sometime to the body then it signifieth either weaknesse which commeth by some disease or sicknesse after which men bee feeble or else it noteth the want of al might as in that text of 1 Cor. 15 43. The body is sowne in weakenesse or it is affirmed of the minde and then it is either put for small strength as Rom. 15 1. or for no strength as here in this text that this is here meant may appeare by this that they which are called weak the same are called vngodly sinners enemies such are voyd of all spirituall and sauing power to beleeue or repent Tim. What doe these termes teach vs Sil. That they for whome Christ was giuen to death were such as had no force of their own to help themselues but needed all manner of helpe vnto saluation Secondly that such as Christ died for doe not onely neede all helpe but being vngodly refuse helps being offered and beeing sinners encrease their euils more and more and which is most of all they grow in hatred of the remedy being open enemies to God heere is a singular gradation to amplify Gods loue to lost mankind Tim. What is the vse to be made of this truth Sil. It sheweth the wretched estate which men liue in without faith in Christ. Secondly it condemneth the madnesse of such as affime that the elect beeing in this estate were yet Iustified and the sonnes and heires of God this their madnesse may appeare in this that the selfe same persons at one time shal be actually and indeed both enemies and friends to God sinners and righteous vngodly and sonnes to need all helpe and yet to haue all helpe this is to confound heauen and hell grace and corruption Sathan and God death and life togither Thirdly it confuteth the Pelagian and Papist who ascribe some strength to nature to prepare at least to dispose it selfe to grace This the Pelagian sets forth by a similitude of waxe fitte for any impression of white paper or a naked table ready to take any forme so is our nature say they apt to learne if it be but taught vs also the Papists they expresse it by the similitude of a man sore wounded or much enfeebled or laden or borne downe with bolts and fetters which with a little helpe of another mans hand will raise vppe himselfe and make shift to stand vppon his feete So say they nature is but wounded enfeebled or ouerburthened and with litle helpe of grace can reare it selfe to heauenwards These their corrupt opinions appeare to be false by Ephes. 2. 1. where it is written that wee are dead in trespasses and sins and therefore as touching God and godlinesse wee are by nature dead corps and in this our text we are said to bee of no strength Fourthly it prouoketh Gods children to great humility and thankfulnes towards God to consider what they were before their conuersion for the more miserable our former estate the more amyable present grace also it must moue them to compassionate others which yet be in this woeful estate seeing themselues once were such And lastly it must stirre vp a feruent loue to God who in this most pittifull case loued vs and gaue such a guist and remedy to vs and for vs. Tim. What was that gift whereby God doth expresse his loue vnto vs being so sinfull and wretched Sil. No lesse then Christ his owne and onely begotten Sonne which is the greatest and best guift that the most great and good God could bestow vppon mankinde the reason is because it is more worth then all the world for it is himselfe in the person of his Sonne therfore the greatest Also through this gift all other gifts are made good and profitable to vs which else would bee so many curses Therefore the best cause that moued him to bestow such a gift vpon vs was the good pleasure of his will which here and elsewhere is called his loue Iohn 3 16. 1 Ioh. 4. Tim. What did we learne by this that God would witnes his loue by such a fruit of it and gift Sil. That our loue must be like the loue of God that is an effectuall and fruitfull loue not in purpose onely and goodwill but in effect as wee are able to expresse it Secondly that as God declareth his great loue and that to his enemies so after his example wee should out of loue do good to our enemies whereby we are knowne to be Gods Children Luke 6. For euen Infidels and the most wicked persons they will loue such as loue them Math. 5. Tim. What doth this meane which is added According to the time or at his time Silas It meaneth thus much euen that fit and conuenient time appointed of his Father called fulnesse of time Gal. 4 4. and his houre John 5 25. for God hath his times appointed for all his workes Eccl. 3 1. Tim. What followes of this Silas That Christ could come neither sooner nor later then hee did Secondly it commendeth the more Gods loue
and manifcst Tim. Seeing you say that he that is in Christ by faith may know that hee is so declare vnto vs by what meanes hee may know it Silas By two meanes First euery true beleeuer hath with his faith a gift and power from Gods Spirite wherby he vnderstandeth and seeth his owne faith as one that sees or feeles or walkes knowes infallibly that he doth these things Besides it is written that by the Spirit we know the things that are giuen vs of God 1. Cor. 2 12. Where-vnto adde the example of the man Marke 9 24. and of Paul 2. Tim. 1 12. excepting the time of some great fals or strong temptations or the instant of a mans new birth when this knowledge of a mans owne faith is not so cleare Secondly euery true beleeuer may know it by the proper and peculiar fruite of a true faith to wit by an holy and vpright conuersation which is called heere the not walking after the flesh but after the Spirite For as the Sunne is perceiued by his heate and light and the goodnes of a tree is knowne by the fruite and a liuing man by his motion speech and actions so a beleeuing Christian is discerned to be such a one by his godly and religious life Therefore are we exhorted by Peter to make our calling electiō sure by good works 2. Pet. 1. 10. For howsoeuer faith go alone in the apprehending Christ and in the matter of our saluation by him yet in our conuersation it is not alone but accompanied with good workes as tokens and signes to make it knowne Therefore seeing a faithfull person cannot bee condemned and perish and euery such an one hath good meanes whereby to know his owne faith Heerevpon it followes necessarily that euery faithfull person may assuredly know he shall be saued Tim. Let vs heare what profit and vse wee are to make of this trueth Silas It doeth conuict the Papists who teach that the faithful in this life can haue no ordinarie certainty of Gods grace and their owne saluation by their faith For thus they write in the 〈◊〉 hemish Testament that it is a most dānable false illusion and presumption to say that a particular man can say that he is assured insallibly that himselfe is iustified and hath certaine knowledge of his owne predestination they allow a certaine knowledge by speciall reuelation and probable perswasion by hope Tim. What harme and inconuenience will follow this incertainty and doubting of saluation Silas The ouerthrow of all Christianity and Religion For except we be sure of grace free loue to vs in Christ for our saluation we cannot loue him nor hope in him nor pray to him nor obey him nor be thankfull to him nor do any other good worke but in hyprocrisie 1. Iohn 4 19. Rom. 5 2 3 10. Secondly this doctrine of incertainty and doubting of saluation shakes the sufficiency and persection of Christs merites destroyes the truth and constancy of Gods promise weakeneth the testimony of the holy Spirite witnessing to the faithfull that they are Gods Children Rom. 8 16. Tim. Yea but they which are now in Christ and doe beleeuē are not sure to perseuere to the end Silas Yes he that is once in Christ shall euer bee in him A member of Sathan may become a member of Christ but a member of Christ can neuer bee the member of Sahtan for none can plucke them from Christ Iohn 10 28. Who also prayeth for our perseuerance Ioh. 17 11. Tim. What other profite is to bee made of this former trueth touching the certainety of Saluation beleeued in Silas In all terrors of Conscience and conflictes with sinne it ministreth no small comfort to the godlye to know and be assured that their saluation standes firme and immooueable Lastly heere are all men admonished howe to iudge and discerne of their owne faith whether they bee true beleeuers and such personnes as shall not bee condemned which may bee done by the second condition heereunto added and annexed to wit if hee walke not after the Flesh but after the Spirite Tim. What is heere meant by walking Silas Liuing or ordering and disposing our life and actions Tim. What is heere meant by Flesh and by Spirit Silas By Flesh is meant that vicious quality of sinne or corruption of Nature with the blinde and wicked motions thereof and by Spirit is meant that qualitie of holinesse created and working in vs by the Spirit of God by a Metanomie of the cause for the effect Tim. Shew vs now who may be sayde to vvalke after the Flesh Silas Not they which haue corruption of nature and sinnefull motions for these be in euerie godly person but they which in their liuing and ordering of their life and conuersation doe follow these sinnefull motions and lustes as their guides and Leaders so thinking speaking and dooing as their owne carnall blinde reason and corrupt affections leadeth directeth and gouerneth them This is to walke after the flesh to set ones course by the counsell and direction of his corrupt reason and wit Tim. May not a man walke after the flesh whose Workes are outwardly good and honest as when hee prayes heares the word giues thankes reproues sin bestowes almes giues counsell c Silas It is very true hee that doth these things and other good things and doth them often and continually yet may be a person that doth walke after the flesh if he do them out of a corrupt carnall minde and vnpure conscience seeking to please himselfe and other men being carried with his owne profite or praise and not seeking Gods glory Finally doing them rather of custom then of conscience and obedience to Gods commandement Tim. Then tell vs how many sortes there bee of them that walke after the flesh Silas Two sorts the first be they which are wicked and open sinners hauing cast off the reuerence of God and shame of man as Drunkards common swearers periured persons adulterers common lyers couetous railers contentious persons and the like The second sort be Hypocrites which cloake their actions and life with appearance and shew of faith obedience of the worde good conscience and the spirit of God yet in trueth they are voide of all these and haue no other leader guide or ground of their life and doings but their own ignorant minds and false hearts being wholly carried with bye and fleshly respects and worldly gaine Tim. Giue vs some plaine markes whereby they that in this sort walke after the flesh may perceiue it in themselues that it is so Sil. First that they vse not to take counsell of Gods word to make it their rule of euery particular action of their life Psal. 119 9. Secondly they neuer looke vpon their patterne and example Christ Iesus how he spake did that they may do the like 1 Iohn 2 5. Iohn 10 27. Thirdly they do not by prayer lift vppe their hearts to God to gouerne them in their counsels speeches and
and mortall which is prooued Heb. 9 27. also by experience and reason which is dwelling sin wherof seeing none be free therefore all be fraile and vnder death Tim. What vse of this instruction Silas It serueth much to shake off pride and security and to prouoke all to watchfulnesse and humblenesse Should dust be proud should man be secure seeing he must die and come to iudgement Tim. What is the answere to this obiection Silas The Spirit is life because of righteousnes Tim. What is meant here by the Spirit Sylas Some by the spirite will haue meant the Holy Ghost the spirit of God and Christ dwelling in vs then the meaning is though we carry about vs mortall bodies yet the holy Spirite of Christ dwelling in vs is euen in this mortality the earnest and pledge of immortall life in heauen But by Spirite heere is meant the spirituall part of man to wit the soule being 〈◊〉 by the spirit of God The opposition betweene the spirit and the body do require this sence Tim. What vse is to be made of this point Silas A singular comfort against the terror of death the horror conceiued from the putrifaction and rottennesse of the body in the graue that howsoeuer the body must die by the decree of God yet the soule being sure of eternall life shall liue for euer with Christ in heauen the better part shall be well euen most happie and the worst part the body must follow in time for being both the members of Christ and temples of the Spirite both must be vessels of celestiall glory Tim. What other instruction from hence Silas Whosoeuer is righteous indeed by inherent and imputed righteousnesse he may bee vndoubtedly sure that he shall liue for euer eternally with God first in his soule then in his body The reason is because such haue the beginning of eternall life and therefore are sure of the possession For God will finish that which hee begins also he will keepe his promise Tim. What vse of this point Silas It should cause euery one to search whether he be iustified and sanctified He that findes these vpon due examination findes strong testimony of his eternall saluation whereof the lesse we doubt the more sure we are of righteousnesse Secondly it affoordes a sharpe reproofe to such as are vnrighteous as their liues do shew yet promise to them selues life eternall and professe the hope of it these lye and deale not truely whosoeuer saith that he shall liue happily yet hath no care to liue holily He that walks in darkenesse and saith that hee hath communion with light doth deceiue himselfe DIAL X. Verse 11. But if the Spirit of him that raised vp Iesus from the dead dwell in you hee that raised vp Christ from the dead shall also quicken your Mortall bodyes by his Spirit that dwelleth in you Tim. VVHat doth this Text containe Silas A Consolation taken from the effects of the Spirit raising vp our vile bodies vnto a glorious life It dooth naturally arise from the former verse after this fashion Our bodies when they be dead and do lye and rot in the graue they shal be quickned again at the last day by the power of Christs spirit The sum whereof is thus much that howsoeuer death and corruption in the graue be things very terrible yet for all that this is no small comfort vnto the faithfull that the same Spirit which at their death giues eternall life to them as concerning their soules shal also at the length quicken their bodies that the whole man may liue and be blessed for euer Tim. Let vs now come to expound the words and tel vs what is meant heere by Him and the Spirit of him Sil. By him is meant God the Father from whome because the holy Ghost proceedeth therefore it is called his Spirit or the Spirit of him Tim. What is meant heere by Iesus and the raising him vp from the dead Tim. By Iesus is meant the body of Iesus which being crucified and dead was quickned againe the third day and this is called the raising vp Iesus from the dead A Synecdoche of the whole for a part Tim. What do ye learne from these wordes thus opened and declared Tim. VVHat is the summe of this 12. verse Silas That Christians must not liue after the flesh but after the Spirite which though it be not expressed yet it must be vnderstood by the law of contraries Tim. By what argument is this exhortation pressed and vrged vpon vs Silas By foure arguments The first is taken from that which is equall and honest verse 12. The second from danger the third from profit the fourth from the easinesse of it verse 13. Tim. What is the argument taken from honesty Silas It is this Common honesty requireth that euery man pay his debt now all the faithfull are debters to the Spirite and therefore wee are all bound to pay this debt by liuing after the Spirite Tim. What are we to learne generally from this exhortation Silas Two things First that in good order of teaching exhortation must follow doctrine the reason is first because exhortation pierceth deeper and sticketh longer when it is built firmely vpon the ground of some doctrine euen as doctrine becomes more liuely when there is an edge set vpon it by exhortation Secondly from hence we are generally taught that it is a point of honesty and iustice to answere and satisfie our debts as it is written Rom 13 8. Owe nothing to any man Whervnto adde the example of the widdow mentioned in 2. Kings 4 7. who being charged with many Children yet sold her substance to pay her debt See more touching this vpon the Dialogue Rom. 13. 8. Tim. What vse is to be made of this point Silas It reproues sundry sorts of people First such as borrow and neuer meane to pay taking all to bee their owne that once comes into their purse Secondly such as are of opinion that whatsoeuer is lent them is their owne if they neede it neyther are they bound to restore Thirdly such as will pay their debts but they doe it out of a loue not to honesty but to their own reputation Fourth ly such as wickedly deferre payment to the hurt of their creditours or wholly defiaude their creditours by vniust tricks Fiftly such as discharge their debt but doing it with an ill will louing them the worse which haue trusted them with their mony that prouerbe being often fulfilled in this case When I lent I was a friend but when I asked I was vnkinde Sixtly it rebukes Ministers which pay not the debt of teaching to their people the people that pay not their due and debt of maintenance to their teachers Rom. 1 14. I am a debtor to the Grecian 1 Cor. 914. The Lord hath so ordained it that they which preach the Gospell should liue by the Gospell Tim. In what respects or by what wayes doe the faithfull become debters to
manifold is it Silas Two-fold It is the inheritance eyther of glory or of dominion and power The inheritance of glory is this that after his death he being risen and ascended into Heauen he liueth there most blessedly and gloriously his body and soule being wholy freed from all infirmities and temptations and filled with all ioy and glorious brightnes euen like the Sunne in the Firmament also his inheritance of dominion and power consists in this that in his humane nature he is exalted and listed vp aboue all principalities and powers and euery name that is named in earth hauing all creatures and the Church it selfe subiect to him as vnto their head Ephe. 2 21 22. Phil. 2 9. Notwithstanding although that the elect be partakers of this double inheritance of Christ yet they are not partakers in equall degree For Christ raigneth in Heauen as Gods onely and first begotten but the faithfull are but adopted children Phil. 3 21. Reuel 3 21. Reuel 2 26. Rom. 8 29. By al this then appeareth that the children of God are very honourable personnages because their dignity is not carnall and earthly such as may wither and perish but spirituall and heauenly such as endureth for euer Tim. What vse and profit may be made of this Silas First it should admonish the faithful not to behaue themselues basely by making themselues seruants to their filthy lusts but endeauouring to follow the direction of the Spirite in all things 1. Iohn 3 2. 2. Pet. 3 11. Secondly not to take any leaue vnto our selues to thinke of or deale basely with such excellent personnages as Gods children be Tim. But tell me I pray you doe these honourable and worthy personnages giue any Scutchion or Coate-Armour Silas That they doe the feild and ground whereof is Azure and Gules for they are celestiall creatures borne from aboue Iohn 1 13. And they are a people purchased by the bloud of Christ Acts. 20 28. The partes of this armour be many and seuerall First in their Armour they giue the Eagle in respect of their aspyring aloft as it is written Where the carkasse is there will the Eagle resort Luke 17 37. Secondly they giue an Helmet or Anchor to wit their Hope which stayes their soules against all the Waues of temptation Heb. 6 19. Thirdly they giue a Lyon because of their Christian fortitude despising all threatnings and dangers Prou. 28 1. The Righteous are bolde as a Lyon The fourth is the band of Charity which knits together the faithfull as many stickes tied fast togither with one band Col. 3 14. Fiftly they giue a Sheepe to witnesse their meekenesse and obedience Iohn 10 27. My Sheepe heare my voice follow me Sixtly they giue a Doue to witnesse and represent their simplicity and innocency Math. 10 16. Be innocent as Doues And lastly they giue the Serpent to signifie their godly prouidence and wisedome to forecast and preuent dangers Math. 10 16. Bee wise as Serpents Vnto all which may be added the girdle of verity the sword of the Spirit and the breast-plate of righteousnesse Ephe. 6 14 17. Tim. What is the morall or meaning of this their Coate-Armour Sil. It serueth to put all Gods children in minde that if they will walke worthy of that their honourable and worthy calling they must expresse and shew forth a true faith a firme hope vnfained loue Christian courage meeke obedience innocent simplicity Serpentine wisedome and generally an heauenly purity in all partes of their conuersation as they may honour the house and stocke to which they belong and of which they come DIAL XVII Verse 17. last part If so be that wee suffer with him that we may also be glorified with him Tim. VVHat doth this text containe Silas At this Text the second parte of the Chapter beginneth concerning consolation vnto such as are vnder the Crosse and suffer for Christ. Hitherto hath continued the first part of the chap ter wherein blessed Paul hath ministred comforte to the faithfull against the remainder of their sinfull corruption and earnestly exhorted them to the diligent mortification of all their sinfull lustes and corruptions not to beare with these though they feare no condemnation from them Now the Apostle vseth a transition passing forwards to that part of the Chapter which strengthneth the Saints against the bitternesse of the Crosse and exhorteth them to be constant in the bearing of it without fainting or being weary in their minds Tim. How doe these words depend vpon the matter contained in the verse going before Silas Hee had saide a little before that the sonnes of God are sure for euer to liue in heauenly glory now he proueth it by a fresh and new reason taken from the vse of afflictions that the beleeuing Romanes and other the sons of God shall be inheritors because they haue taken vp their Crosse. This reason may bee framed two waies and both very good First by inferring the cōsequence or that which comes after by an antecedent which necessarily goeth before as thus They which shall be glorified in Heauen must suffer afflictions heere for Christ But yee Romanes which are the sonnes of God doe suffer afflictions for Christ ye are therefore sure to be glorified with him The strength of this reason dependeth vpon the authority of the worde of God affirming that such as dye with Christ shall raigne with him and that such as suffer with him shall bee glorified with him 2. Tim. 2 12. Which is the selfe same thing which is here saide in our text if with that great learned man Peter Martyr wee reade as wee may for these words if so be seeing that or because The second way how this reason may be framed is by a reasoning frō the lesse vnto the greater after this fashion If ye bee partakers with Christ in his Crosse and in his sufferings yee shall much more be partakers with him in his kingdome and glory Thus Chrysostom gathereth the argument Tim. Tell vs now the sum of this sentence Sil. It is thus much that so many as are vouchsafed this mercy valiantly to endure tribulation for the Gospell thereby they may bee well assured that they shall inherit eternall glory God meanes to crowne all such as take vp the Crosse. Tim. What Instructions are we to learne from hence Sil. Two First it doth admonish vs what the condition state of the Children of God is in this life is namely this that that way which Christ passed from this life into his glory by the same way must they passe this life vnto glory euen by tribulations and afflictions whereof there is very plentifull proofe in many places of the Scripture as Math. 10 37. Luke 14 26. Acts 14. 22. 2 Tim. 3 12. Heb. 12 5 6. The causes why Gods will is to haue it so are sundry and many but these are the chiefe First for the triall of their Faith in God and also of their loue towards God 1 Pet. 1 7.
the sonnes of God which plainely shewes that their deliuerance is another thing then beeing brought to nothing euen a communicating with the sonnes of God in one part of their glory to wit in incorruption and immortality which the creature had by Creation and by naturall instinct still desires to recouer it as verse 22. Fourthly euery creature desireth it owne preseruation naturally and abhorreth destruction therefore it is not a bringing to nothing this deliuerance for the creature woulde neuer desire that that is against nature Fistly Peter in Acts third verse 22. speaketh of restoring not of men onely but of all other things Lastly the same Apostle Peter exhorts vs to liue without blame because there should be new heauens and new earth all this doth argue and strongly prooue that this deliuerance of the creature shall not be by a reduction into nothing but by an alteration into a better estate The restitution of the creature shall be like the resurrection from the dead but what shal be the particular properties workes and vses of all and euery creature after the last iudgement let no man enquire because it is not reuealed in the worde 〈◊〉 heere is place for that which Tertullian calleth a learned ignorance Tim. What profit is to be made of this trueth Silas First it serues to strengthen our faith concerning the certainty of heauenly glory because the naturall appetite of the creature after heauenly glory is not in vain Secondly it warneth the godly not to be troubled with the confusions and disorders of the world because one day God will bring all these thinges into better frame Thirdly it must call our hearts from the imoderate loue of money and other riches because these being no part of the world must be consumed burnt vp by the fire therefore it is a folly to loue them too much Fourthly it should stirre all men to endeuour earnestly newnes of life because if the creature cannot enioy glory vntil it be first cleansed and changed then much lesse we before we be purged and purified from our spots of sinne by continuall repentance Tim. What other Doctrine is to bee raised out of this 21. verse Silas This that the creature is vnder great misery vntil the time of restoring commeth Their misery standeth in two things the first is bondage in that they are driuen to serue wicked men diuels The second is corruption in that many liuing creatures perish for vs dayly and such as are without life shall bee dissolued and changed The reason heereof is first Gods decree appointing it to be so as the euent hath declared for nothing fals out in time which was not decreed before all times The second reason heereof is Mans sin for whose sake and vse as God created the world at first in perfection so when he being Lord of the creature transgressed the world was impaired and subdued to corruption through his disobedience As the primum mobile like a wheele dooth carry about in his motion all the other Spheares so the good euil condition of the creature dependeth vpon men Tim. But was this righteous in God to curse the Creature which sinned not Sil. Yea verily First because the onely will of God is the Soueraigne cause of all righteousnesse Secondly if ciuill Iustice of earthly Princes may without wrong punish traitors themselues and their children also much more rightfully may diuine Iustice for the treason of Adam curse the Creatures which were made for his sake Tim. What vse are we to make of this point Silas First it teacheth patience in afflictions for the godly shoulde not faint in their calamities seeing the creature quietly suffereth misery for their sake Secondly this should moue vs to abhor sin which is such a venomous thing in that it hath infected all creatures aboue vs about vs and beneath vs. Thirdly it must mooue vs to pitty the creature being liable and subiect vnto labour wearinesse yea and death for our sakes Lastly it reproueth the cruelty of such as sport themselues in the mutuall murdering of the creature the death and destruction whereof being a part of the curse for our sins wee may not make it our recreation Gods curse may not be sported with I mean it not of the lawfull sport by hawking hunting c. where the vse of the creature for sustentation of out life is sought after For all creatures giuen to man to vse may for his vse be killed yet with the least cruelty DIAL XXI Verse 22 23. For wee know that euery creature groaneth with vs also and trauaileth together vnto this present time not onely the creature but we also which haue the first fruits of the Spirit euen wee doe sigh in our selues waiting for the Redemption of our body Tim. VVHat doth this Scripture containe Silas It further prooues the certainety of heauenly glory by a double desire the one of Gods creatures verse 22. the other of Gods children verse 23. Tim. In what words is the desire of the Creature set downe Silas In two borrowed speeches the one of groaning together the other of trauailing in paine The former is taken from such as sigh and grone vnder a common burthen which is too heauy for them The other is takē from women which bring forth children with great sorrow and paine Tim. Is it meant that the creatures doe 〈◊〉 together with vs or one together with another Silas Though some take it that their groanes bee on our behalfe and for our cause crauing vengeance vpon the wicked our enemies and desiring liberty for vs yet because this sence doth crosse the beginning of the next verse wher he speaketh of our groning it is rather to be thought that the meaning of the apostle is that the creatures amongst themselues mutually doe with sorrow expect the end of their misery That this is so appeareth first by our owne sence for we doe see that the creatures are vnder vanity and made by the prouidence and commandement of God to serue our necessity Secondly by the word of God which teacheth vs plainely both the originall and end of their misery Tim. What are we to learne now out of this 22. verse Silas Matter of great comfort both for the creature and for so many as are Gods children which consisteth heerein that both their and our vanity and misery shall not onely haue an end but shall end ioyfully for as at the trauaile of a woman in the birth of a child there is ioy when a child is brought into the world so shall the conclusion of our misery be ioyfull and happy both to men and creatures Tim. But haue Gods children no other and surer ground of their deliuery from misery Silas Yes verily for their desire and hope of deliuerance is built vpon two firme grounds laide downe in the 23. verse The first is the sence and feeling of the guifts of the Holy Ghost for they haue the first fruits of
second marke of such as profit by afflictions Silas Vocation or calling Tim. What calling is spoken of in this place Silas Not that which is peculiar to each but that which is common to all the Children of God which is that worke of the Spirit of God effectually drawing the elect through the preaching of the Gospell from ignorance and vnbeleefe vnto true knowledge and Faith in Christ. Tim. What is the instruction from hence Silas This seeing the end of our calling is to bring vs to Faith it must needs be that afflictions shal do them good which are called because to them that beleeue there is no condemnation and therefore all things must serue to their saluation who be called to faith Tim. What is the vse to be made of this point Silas To moue vs to seeke for a true calling because till we be called and doe beleeue there is nothing neyther prosperity nor aduersity that can doe vs good Secondly to moue them to thankfulnesse which haue this calling because they haue receiued one of the greatest mercies of God Tim. What is the third marke of such as shall take benefite by the Crosse Silas That they be such as belong to Gods purpose for that which followes plainly teacheth that this is not meant according to our good purpose as Origen thought Tim. What is heere meant by the purpose of God Silas The decree of Gods election or the eternall good pleasure of his will for the sauing of some by Christ which is as Augustine saith a preparation of the benefits and mercies of God Tim. What are we to learne by this that the Apostle speaks heere of Gods purpose Sil. That the faithfull are beholden to Gods eternall election and purpose for all the good they get by afflictions or any other way For Gods purpose is the soueraigne cause of all that good that is in man or doth happen to man Rom. 9 15. Ephe. 1 4 5. 2. Tim. 1 9. The reason heereof is because God hauing once purposed to saue men it cannot be but that they must haue all good things which belong to their saluation For God hath purposed the meanes as well as the ende and will cause euery thing to serue for their good whom he hath loued from euerlasting Tim. What vse of this point Silas First it reproues such as scoffe at Gods purpose or attribute any thing to free will or fortune Secondly it warneth the godly to acknowledge the eternall goodnesse of God in all things that come to them and to bee confirmed in the perswasion of it by such wholesome effects as they perceiue and feele in the course of their life Tim. What may we learne by this that the Apostle ioyneth purpose and calling together Silas First that the purpose of God for our saluation is manifested in our calling which is the first fruite of our election Rom. 8 29. Secondly it serues to distinguish an outward calling by the Gospell from an inward effectuall calling which leades to Christ for all which be called by the Gospell are not called of Gods purpose Thirdly to teach that all be not called nor do loue God but elect ones onely and that after the time of their effectuall calling Tim. What are we to learne by all these markes together Silas That such as are the better by their afflictions more humbled and made more obedient haue a good witnesse that they loue God and are the called and elect of God because none but these can profit by afflictions vnto sound obedience of the word Such as had Dauids grace can say with Dauids words Since I was as sticted I haue learned to keepe thy statutes Psal. 119. DIAL XXVI Verse 29. For those which he knew before he also predestinated to be made like to the image of his Sonne that hee might be the first borne amongst many brethren Tim. VVHat doth this Text containe Silas A proofe of the former Argument of cōfort and patience in afflictions taken from the commodity which they bring which was this that afflictions shall turne to the saluation of such as loue God and are called according to his purpose This the Apostle prooueth by two reasons the former is taken from the definition of Gods purpose which is the fore-knowledge of God predestinating some to be made like vnto his Sonne Christ. Tim. How doth the Apostle make this definition serue his parpose Silas By reasoning in this manner Whosoeuer be called of the purpose of God are fore-knowne and predestinated to bee like vnto Christ. But Christ hauing suffered asslictions was afterward glorified Therefore such as God bath called of his purpose must suffer with Christ that they may be glorified with him for being conformed to Christ in temporary afflictions they must be conformed to him also in eternall glory Tim. What is the other reason to proue that all things worke together for the saluation of such as are called of his purpose Silas It is by an vnchangeable connexion or knitting of causes and effects together after this sort Whom God purposeth to saue them he foreknew whom he foreknew thē he hath predestinated whō he hath predestinated thē he calleth whom he calleth them he iustifieth whom hee iustifieth them he sanctifieth whom he sanctifieth them he glorifieth Therefore by reason of this immutable linking of Gods purpose to mans saluation the faithfull must be brought to glory by afflictions for it must needs bee that to the sonnes of God which loue him and are called of his purpose all things turne to their saluation Tim. What be the parts of this 29. verse Silas Two a proposition and a limitation The proposition layeth downe the meanes by which God bringeth all them to glory whom he purposeth to call to the likenesse or conformity with Christ his Sonne The limitation is that howsoeuer Christ and Christians be like yet he still hath the preheminence as the elder brother or as the first begotten Tim. What is meant by this word knew whome hee foreknew Silas Fore-knowledge of God in Scripture hath a double signification First there is in God a knowledge of prescience whereby God long before knoweth what persons and things good and euill shall be in the world present and to come this is by Diuines called Gods prescience or the knowledge of his prescience whereof we reade Acts 2 23. Secondly there is a knowledge in God of fauour whereby he knoweth some before hand as his owne with whom he was well pleased from euerlasting This is by Diuines called the knowledge of his loue or approbation and it is the same which the Apostle calleth his good pleasure Ephe. 1 6. In this sence the word is vsed Rom. 11 2. as also in this our text Whom he foreknew that is they whom he loued and elected from euerlasting out of the lost lumpe of mankinde As the loue which God exerciseth towardes the faithfull is in Scripture called his knowledge Psal. 1 6.
So the decree of his loue from euerlasting is tearmed fore-knowledge Tim. What is the instruction that we gather from hence Silas That God doth not begin then to loue his elect when they bee in this worlde and are regenerated but hee hath loued them in his decree and purpose from euerlasting For vnto God those things towardes men were long since purposed and appointed saith Chrysostome Tim. But if this be true that we are from euerlasting loued of God how can we at any time be enemies to him Silas Though we be loued as creatures and more loued as Gods elect yet in respect of inherent and remaining corruption we are enemies of God beeing neuer actually beloued till we be regenerate by the Spirite of God and haue his image imprinted in vs. Tim. What vse is to be made of this point Silas First that God hath certainly loued vs in this it appeareth that our election is most firme so as the chosen must needs come to glory because whome God loueth once hee loueth to the end Secondly seeing God loued vs in his purpose when we were sinners wee ought therefore to loue him againe and also one another euen our very enemies Thirdly if God loued vs euen when wee were enemies hee will nowe much more loue and saue vs seeing wee are reconciled by his Sonne through faith in his bloud Tim. What is the second instruction Silas That the eternall good will and pleasure of God is the spring and fountaine of all spirituall graces now and heauenly glory hereafter The reason is for that the Apostle setting downe the causes of our saluation nameth the foreknowledge of God as the head and chiefe of the rest for wee are therefore predestinated called iustified and sanctified glorified because God knew vs for his own before the foundation of the world Tim. What vse is to be made of this poynt Silas It teacheth that faith loue and good workes cannot bee the cause of our election because Gods foreknowledge and election is the cause of them Secondly it confuteth such as woulde haue our beleeuing and working well to come in part frō our naturall free will wheras in trueth they are all the fruites and gifts of Gods eternall election and loue by which they are giuen to vs and wrought in vs insomuch that we haue neither good counsell thought nor good deede but that which God hath decreed to put into vs from euerlasting Ephe. 1. 4. wee are chosen in Christ not because wee were but to bee holy Tim. What is it to predestinate Silas To predestinate is to decree any thing before hand and bring it vnto a certaine end through certain and appointed meanes If this predestination saith Augustine can be deceiued then may God be ouercome of mans sin which cannot be Tim. What learne we from hence Silas That predestination is ioyned vnto foreknowledge as subordinate to it Gods foreknowledge is no bare and idle thing but is euer coupled with his decree and ordinance whatsoeuer God knoweth or seeth before hee ordaineth to some speciall end and vnto that end hee shall at last bring it this is it which is here called predestination Tim. If this be so that all things are foreordained of God howe is hee not the authour of sinnes for they bee in the number of things Silas Sinnes are foreordained of God not as they are sinnes but as they are the meanes to effect his counsell thus Adams fall and Iudas treason were foreordained of God as meanes whereby God did effect and serue his own counsell in sauing the elect to the praise of his mercy and condemning the wicked to the praise of his iustice Secondly predestinating in scripture may be taken generally and largely for Gods generall and whole decree touching all things and persons or strictly for the decree of election whereby he hath foreordained some to saluation as the end and confourming to Christ as the meanes to leade to that end and so it is here vsed Tim. Wherein stands this conformity with Christ Silas In two thinges first in being like vnto him in respect of the end that as Christ is nowe glorified in heauen so all that are predestinate shal be glorified with him Secondly in being like vnto him in respect of the meanes standeth thus that as Christ entred into his glory through holinesse and suffering afflictions and death so they that liue godly and are ready to suffer with Christ for Christ are sure to be saued with Christ. Tim. What is our instruction from hence Silas This euery one that looketh to inherite eternall life in heauen with Christ must endeuor to bee like him in this life they must be holy and righteous as he was and be ready to suffer afflictions as hee did The reason here of is Gods eternall decree and ordinance whereby hee hath appointed it to bee so that they shall bee partners with Christ in his heauenly glory whosoeuer shall bee followers of him here in his patience and holinesse which are the way we are to walke in vnto our country which is aboue Tim. What is the vse to be made of this Silas First here is an exhortation to moue vs to liue holily according to the will of God and to suffer afflictions with patience according to the example of Christ as wee desire to haue communion with Christ in his blessednesse Secondly heere is comfort for such as suffer any manner of shame or iniury for Christ and his word for this likenesse with Christ in his infirmities is a witnes that we shall be like vnto him in glory Thirdly here is sharp reproofe for such as liue prophanely and shunne the crosse saying it mattereth not how we liue or what we doe for wee must be saued if we be predestinate and if not then we cannot be saued though we do liue well Tim. How is Christ the first begotten amongst his brethren Silas This phrase hath reference to the custome of the Iewes whose first-borne did excell his brethren both in power and portion in dignity and possession so doeth Christ far excell all his brethren who are all like to Christ but not equall with him neither in nature office glory nor dominion for by nature hee is God truely and God-man in vnity of person for office the onely redeemer and mediatour of his Church therefore onely king and high-priest for glory and dominion he sitteth vpon his Fathers throne hauing a name aboue all names Phil. 2. 9. DIAL XXVII Verse 30. Whome he hath predestinate them he hath called whome he hath called them hee hath iustified and whome he iustifieth them he glorifieth Tim. VVHat doth this text contayne Silas The seuerall actions and effects whereby God doth witnes his eternall loue to his elect ones and by which as meanes hee bringeth them to their purposed and promised blessednes Here is the golden chain wherby men chosen are drawne vp and ascend to heauen here be the steps and degrees
whereby Gods eternall loue descends to his chosen and whereby they climbe to their decreed felicity to which none can come but through these meanes by which means the elect are sure to attaine it yea though they be afflicted here which causeth them to bear afflictions more patiently and valiantly in that they perceiue their saluation to be of God by so many excellent works of his grace so certainely and vndeceiueably procured and effected Tim. What are the degrees whereby the elect arise and climbe to blessednesse in heauen Silas Foure 1. predestination 2. vocation 3. iustification and glorification the first of these is done afore all times the three last of them be performed in time Tim. What doe ye call predestination Silas It is an action of God peculiar to all the elect which are purposed vnto saluation the rest of mankinde being passed by and left to their corruption and iust perdition This action of God is not done in time but from euerlasting God fore-ordaining his elect both to the end which is eternall life and vnto the meanes leading thither to wit vocation faith iustification sanctification the Crosse also death eyther naturall or violent The very worde predestinate is taken foure times in Scripture in this sence as Rom. 8 29 30. Ephe. 1 5 11. But yet the matter and doctrine it selfe is handled in very many places as Rom. 9 and 11. Ephe. 1. Mat. 11 25. Iohn 6. and 17 6. Acts 13 48. 1. Thes. 5. 1. Pet. 1 2. Iude 4. Reuel 17 8. and else-where often Tim. Some thinke this doctrine should not bee taught and therefore raile at the teachers of it what thinke ye do they well Sil. No verily for it ought to be taught to Gods people and Gods Ministers should sinne if they passed by it My reasons for this be these First because Christ and his Apostles taught it and their example is warrant enough for Gods ministers For as the Apostles were followers of Christ in doctrine and life so ought other Ministers Secondly it is a part of Gods reuealed will and therfore belongs vnto vs Deut. 29 29. Thirdly it is a speciall ground-worke of comfort and patience vnder the Crosse to knowe our predestination to bee so vnchangeable strong and firme as our Apostle doth heere aduertise vs ●●at afflictions though many and great cannot hinder ●●●t further our saluation Fourthly it is the Mother of all godlinesse to which a man or woman doth then and neuer before seriously and chearfully apply themselues when they vnderstand by Faith Gods eternall loue towards them in their free predestinating to life 1 Iohn 4 10. We loue him because he loued vs first Lastly it begetteth true and ioyfull thankfulnesse which we will not offer vnto God except wee know that all good comes of his eternall purpose without any respect to our worthinesse Tim. But the conceite of Predestination and that the Predestinate persons must be saued dooth take away from men all care of Faith Ministery Prayer and Good workes vse of Sacraments c. Silas This is a verie slanderous vntrueth because the Doctrine of Predestination doth necessarily put commend vnto vs all these meanes so farre off it is from destroying them or extinguishing the care vse of them because it is taught that whome God predestinateth them he calleth iustifieth and glorifieth Thus vnlikely it is that Predestination should exclude Christ the Gospell Faith Calling Iustification Holinesse of life as it doth include and inferre all these necessarily The reason heereof is because it is wholesomly taught beleeued according to Scripture that God predestinating vnto the end hath also fore-ordained to the meanes which bring vs vnto such an end and that immutably and most freely And therefore it is a grosse error to say this Doctrine breedeth either desperation or licentiousnes Tim. What is heere meant by Calling Sil. It is that meane or worke of God wherein his eternall loue in predestinating vs to eternall life doth first appeare and shew it selfe vnto vs for till the time of our Calling the decree of predestination is secret and hidden in Gods counsell but by our Calling it is made knowne to the elect themselues For if God doe call all those in time whom he ordained to life before all times then such as be called may thereby know they are predestinated as the cause is knowne by the effect the roote by the fruit the fountain by the riuer so Gods eternal loue by calling Tim. Yet it is written Math. 20. 16. that many are called but few chosen whereby it should seeme that calling is no sure marke of election and predestination vnto glory Silas It is true there is an outward calling by the Gospell onely which wants the inward grace of the Spirite to make it effectuall this is common to many reprobates and is no sure token of election because it brings no further then to the bare knowledge and profession of Christ and to some generall and sleight reformation such as an hypocrite may haue but not to Christ himselfe by faith in the gospel But the calling which is both a fruite and a certain note of predestination is such a calling which together with the outward preaching of the word hath the inward working of the holy Spirite to be get faith in the Gospell whereby a man is carried to Christ himselfe to be planted in him and ioyned to him as a true member and to be gouerned by his spirit working in vs obedience to our caller of this calling our text speakes Tim. What instructions are to bee learned from this which hath beene sayd of calling Sil. First how needfull a thing it is for vs to haue the gospell and the preaching thereof seeing persons of yeares are not ordinarily called vnto the faith of Christ without it Rom. 10. 14. Secondly that no Christian must rest in an outward generall calling and knowledge though it be a great mercy but striue and labour after that especiall and effectuall calling which is euer coupled with faith and obedience to the Gospell Thirdly such as haue this calling haue exceeding cause to reioyce and be glad and to bee thankfull to God because they haue receiued an vndoubted pledge of Gods loue and their owne saluation in such sort as they may glory in God yea euen in tribulations Tim. But what shall we thinke of Infants that cannot heare the Gospell cannot they haue an effectuall calling Silas Yea all predestinate Infants and such wee are to take all the infants of Christian Parents to be for that they belong to the Couenant and we know nothing to the contrary they haue an inward calling by the Spirit though not after the same manner as persons of discretion and yeares For the Apostle heere speakes of the meanes how all the elect are brought to blessednesse therefore seeing infants are predestinate as no doubt many be they must of necessity bee iustified and haue a Calling For whom hee predestinateth them he
by our loue to God and our brethren and by our hope of glory If we finde these things in vs then God is with vs because these are proper to his elect ones This serues to discouer hypocrites and to call the saithfull to a tryall and examination of themselues whether they haue these things or no as they may praise God for the graces they shall finde in themselucs and pray more feruently for supply of all their spirituall wants DIAL XXIX Verse 32. Who spared not his owne Son but gaue him for vs all to death how shal he not with him giue vs al things also Tim. VVHat doth this Text containe Silas First a sound proofe that God is with the faithfull as a louing sather to protect them and to take care for them Secondly an 〈◊〉 to a particular assault touching want penurie and extreame pouerty and neede of all thinges The former temptation was de 〈◊〉 mali this is de absentia boni for lacke of thinges needefull 〈◊〉 hauing our Sauiour Christ they can lacke nothing Tim. How doth he proue that God is with beleeuers Silas By an vndoubted signe or fruite of his loue because he freely gaue them his owne Sonne to bee their redeemer and Sauior both by merit and efficacy this is such an argument of his loue as there cannot be a stronger Other Fathers giue all to spare and redeeme their children but God hauing but one childe gaue him to spare vs which are vngodly and his enemies Of this loue Rom. 5. 8. Iohn 4. 9. Tim. How is this gift set forth in this text Silas First by the giuer God Secondly by the meanes and end free and precious gift Thirdly by the substance of the gift his owne Sonne Fourthly by the persons to whome to wit all elect beleeuers Lastly by the consequents or appurtenances of this guift With Christ all thinges are giuen Tim. What learne wee from hence that God is the authour of this great gift Silas That not onely our saluation but euen the sending of Christ the worker of it depends vppon the good will of God 1 Iohn 3. 16. Rom. 5. 8. Tim. What vse is to be made of this instruction Silas It confuteth the opinion of merite by workes for if Christ bee not the soueraigne and first cause of our saluation but Gods loue is aboue it then much lesse are our workes the cause of eternall life Secondly it commends the exceeding loue of God that hee being so great would respect vs so little which should moue vs to loue and reuerence him againe and to expresse it by our sincere and entire obedience to his word and by suffering for him Tim. What are we to learne from hence that he sayth God spared not his Sonne Silas That this guift for the kinde and quality is rare and precious because things which are rare and excellent vse to be spared and are seldome or neuer to be spent but when it is to purchase something which is more deare excellent An Emperor of Rome chused rather to spare his money then to redeeme his Souldiers beeing taken prisoners but to redeeme vs God woulde not spare no not his owne Son because no mony nor treasurie would serue the turne but only the bloud of his Sonne 1 Pet. 1 18 19. Tim. What profit of this Silas It should warne vs that wee spare neyther our selues goods or any thing how deare soeuer to please and glorifie God Shall not God spare his Sonne but kil him for vs and shall we spare to mortify our sinful lusts to please and honour him Tim. What learne wee from hence that the gifte is called His owne Sonne Silas It teacheth against the Arrians that Christ is God coessentiall to his Father Iohn 5 18. Secondly it distinguisheth Christ the naturall Sonne from adopted ones which are not his proper or owne sons but by acceptation and grace Thirdly it highly extolles the loue of God which hereby appeares to be very great by the greatnesse of the thing giuen If Abraham shewed how he esteemed of God in that he offered to haue giuen his Son Isaac how dooth God declare his loue to vs by giuing his owne Son for vs Moreouer this serues to comfort Gods people in all their wants necessities whatsoeuer for seeing God gaue vs his Sonne it is not possible that he should keepe any thing frō vs which is good for vs. The reasons hereof bee very strong First because Christ is the greatest good thing he is more worth then a thousand worldes and he that giues the greatest good wil not sticke at the lesser Thus Christ reasons Math. 6 25. If he giue you life he will much more feede you and cloath you Secondly Christ is the Fountaine of all other good thinges it is for him and through him that wee haue any thing else that is good and al good things come from him as riuers from the spring and beames from the Sun therefore hauing him we can want nothing and possessing him wee possesse all things The due meditation heereof affoordes strong comfort in time of any want or penury it is not so forcible a remedy against the temptation of want to heare God say that he will not forsake the righteous he will not faile nor forsake them or they that feare him shall lacke nothing that good is as to heare and belieue that he hath giuen his Sonne for vs in whom the sicke the needy and disgraced may finde health riches and honour and all things else Tim. What else are wee to learne from the latter part of this sentence Silas That Christ and the things of Christ cannot be diuided but that he which hath the one must haue the other his person and benefits be inseparable See Iohn 6 40. These benefits they are either spiritual as righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1 30. or earthly good things so farre as they are behoouefull for his members either they be supernal things as God or equall as Angels or inferiour as the worlde all is giuen with Christ. Tim. What vse is to be made of this point Silas It reproues two sorts of men First Papists who shut out the wicked from eternall life and yet affirme that they eate Christ in the Sacrament Secondly such as would haue vs partake in the benefits of Christ without partaking with himselfe as if a branch could haue the iuice and life of the Vine and not be in the Vine Besides it greatly comforts such as be married to Christ by faith for hauing him they are sure to haue al his things euen as a woman maried to her husband communicates in all his honour and wealth Tim. What are wee to learne from hence that Christ is saide to be giuen for vs Sil. It teacheth that wee haue not deserued Christ because he is a gift yea a free and frank gift proceeding of meere fauour and loue as the worde heere signifies Also it stirreth vs
the cruelty of Sathan in as much as these either dare not appeare before God to accuse and charge vs or if they doe it it is but lost labour since GOD the iudge hath discharged vs. Secondly as it shewes the happines of iustified persons so it bewrayes the great misery of such as doe not beleeue because they bee subiect to the accusation of sin and Sathan themselues and of the world and to the condemnation of God and his law Tim. So doe the beleeuers because they haue sinne still in them and Gods iustice must needs condemne sinne how doth the Apostle answere this assault Sil. Thus that Christ being dead he hath in his death made satisfaction and where satisfaction is made to diuine iustice there is no cause to feare condemnation which doth neuer proceede but against persons who cannot satisfie neither by others nor themselues Tim. Tea but what can a dead man profit vs Silas Nothing at all had death swallowed him vp and subdued him but Christ once dead is risen againe and now sitteth at the right hand of God Tim. Hath God a right band or doth Christ sit in heauen Sil. No not so for in heauen be no seates and God is a Spirit and therefore is no bodily substance hauing fleshly members but the meaning of this phrase is that Christ liueth in heauen blessedly and raigneth in exceeding glory and power not onely as he is God but also as he is man being exalted in his kingdome and Priest-hood and declared king and head of his Church before God and the Angels hauing all things subiect to him Of which singular dignity and honour giuen to him by his Father reade Mat. 28 18. Ephe. 1 20 21 22. Phil. 2 9. Col. 2 15. 10. 13. 3. Tim. What is meant by this that he makes request for vs in Heauen Silas That as he once merited our saluation in earth by dying so he now continually preserues it for vs in heauen by his intercession for vs which is not now in humiliation by kneeling vpon his knees as in the dayes of his flesh nor as the Spirite doth by stirring vp requests for vs but hee now maketh request by the vertue and merite of his death appeasing his Fathers wrath and turning his fauour towards vs so often as wee sinne of infirmity and seeke for pardon in his name Tim. Tell vs distinctly in what things doth this intercession of Christ consist Sil. In foure things First in his appearing for vs before God Heb. 9 24. Secondly in his satisfaction once performed to Gods iustice for vs Heb. 10 12. 14. Thirdly in that his will is that this satisfaction should euer stead all his members before God Heb. 10 10. Lastly the consent of God his Father resting in this satisfaction and will of his Sonne Iohn 11 42. Tim. What is the benefit that beleeuers haue by this intercession of Christ to whom alone this honour is peculiar Silas Exceeding great for it quits them from all feare of condemnation by Gods Iustice in respect of theyr sinnes because where Christ becomes Patrone for to defend against the sentence of damnation it is in vaine for sinne Law or Sathan to attempt any thing against beleeuers Euen as an innocent person is safe so long as he hath his learned aduocate to answere things obiected and to pleade his innocency and as one accused vnto a Prince is well as long as he hath a friend in the Court to speake for him so is it with all beleeuers who haue the Iudge himselfe both iudge and aduocate 1 Iohn 2 2. Tim. What other thing is to be learned from hence Silas Two thinges First that the sinnes of the elect shall neuer come into examination or inquiry being all for giuen and couered Secondly that Christ Iesus is a sufficient remedy against all things that may trouble or feare the conscience and that these four maner of waies First by his death freeing vs from sinne and damnation Secondly by his rising againe getting righteousnesse victory ouer all his enemies Thirdly by being at the right hand of God he sheddeth downe the holy Ghost vpon vs with his sauing graces Fourthly by his intercession he effectually applies vnto vs all his merites and continually preserues vs in the state of grace and saluation Therefore all that seeke for any soul comfort from any thing in heauen or in earth in themselues or others they are most miserably seduced for Christ is alone sufficient both to merit and preserue our saluation vnto vs. Away then with abhomination cast away those blasphemous prayers and professions of Papistes touching the blessed Virgin Marie calling her Queen of Heauen our hope our onely hope our health our saluation our comfort refreshing and our ioy our deliuerer from danger our refuge and calling vpon her in life to defend in the houre of death to protect to entreate God the Father not as intercessor but with authority to command the Son Christ as a Mother with such like horrible impieties vnto her and to the Crosse and to Thomas Becket and to Saint Francis as their owne rotten Bookes do witnesse DIAL XXXI Verse 35 36 37. Who shall separate vs from the loue of Christ Shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednesse or perill or sword as it is written For thy sake are we killed all the day long we are counted as Sheepe for the slaughter neuerthel esse in all these thinges wee are more then Conquerors through him that loued vs. Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To confirme and comfort faithfull hearts against a new and most daungerous assault made against their faith by sundry greeuous crosses and enemies by which Satan endeauoureth to shake out of the minds of the godly the perswasion os Gods loue toward them men through weaknesse being apt to thinke that they are not loued of God when they are sore and long afflicted as if troubles and calamities were so many testimonies of his anger and wrath as Dauid complaines Psal. 13 1. And against this temptation they are heere strengthned Tim. What be the parts of this Text Silas Two First a question verse 35 36. Secondly an answer verse 37. The question containes two things First a rehearsal of the particular calamities which fight against the beleeuers and seem to wrest out the sence of Gods loue from them verse 35. Secondly a confirmation of the last calamity to wit the sword by testimonie of Scripture verse 36. The answere containes a notable consolation from the contrary euent to wit the most wholesome yssue of calamities and crosses wherein the beleeuers are not onely not ouercome but do ouercom yea do more then conquer This euent is set forth by the cause which is the vnchangeable loue and assistance of God through him that loued vs. Tim. What is meant heere by the loue of Christ Silas It is taken heere not actiuely for that loue wherewith wee loue him as if our
what doth this teach vs Silas That our Christian loue one towards another doth no way more firmely manifest it selfe then by praying one for anothers saluation Thus Paul proues the truth and earnestnesse of his loue to the Istaelites by this duty of praying for their conuersion to Christ that they might be saued Which shewes it to be a speciall euidence of loue yea Paul did more demonstrate his loue in praying for the Israelites good then when hee greeued for their euill because it is more to bee saued then to be deliuered from paine Also Steuen at his death witnessed his charity by his supplication vnto God for his persecutors Acts 7. 60. And Christ also manifested his deepe loue to his crucifiers by praying God to forgiue them Moreouer Paul testified his loue to all the Churches in the beginning of his Epistles by thanksgiuing and prayer for their faith and loue and it cannot be but a man must loue him hartily for whose repentance and saluation he heartily prayeth Tim. Whereunto must the knowledge of this trueth serue vs Silas First to reproue them for want of loue which foreslow or forget to pray for others or do it not for their being saued Secondly to consute them of errour who thinke loue to consist onely or chiefly in good speech or almes or other outward woorkes of mercy to the body Thirdly here is an admonition to euery one to proue vnto himselfe the trueth of his Christian loue by his diligentand earnest prayers for the good of others namely for their conuersion and saluation which is the chiefest good For whosoeuer he be that truely loues another doth euer aime at the good of the party loued and especially of that which may doe them most good and that what can it else be but the saluation of their soules after Pauls example here Tim. But aid this prayer preuaile with the Iewes to get them all saued Silas No these words set forth not the effect and what fruite came of his prayer but what scope and end he propounded to his prayer which was not earthly and temporall but eternall good things Tim. But why would Paul pray for them whome he knew to be cast out from God and saluation Silas All were not so and for the other he might pray Rom. 11. 1. Secondly the nation of the Iewes were not cast out for euer but for a time and therefore hee might pray for the saluation of such as were to be called Rom 11. 25. This admonisheth all Christians what things in prayer they ought especially to begge for others and that the euent of their prayers euen for the most exellent good which euer endures doeth depend vppon Gods pleasure whereof sithence wee can take no certaine knowledge in respect of particular persons therefore out of Christian charity wee are to wish well to all whome God vouchsafeth the name of his people or with this limitation all whome God hath giuen to Christ. DIAL II. Verse 2. For I beare them record that they haue the zeale of God but not according vnto knowledge Tim. VVHat doth this verse containe Silas Two thinges first the testimony of Paul touching the zeale of the Iewes which engendred his loue towards them The second is a correction of his testimony giuing them to witte that their zeale was erronious and void of knowledge Tim. What doe ye call zeale Sil. It is a very earnest loue of something ioyned with griefe for the hurt done to it as the louing mother or wife doe grieue for the harme done to their childe or husband Tim. What things are required vnto zeale simply considered Silas Three first a thing must bee vehemently loued for zeale is loue encreased Secondly a wrong true or supposed is to be offered to the thing so feruently loued Thirdly thereupon ariseth a great griefe conceiued with a desire to repell the wrong This affection of zeale in it selfe is not good or euil but is an indifferent affection and many times it is found in men both good and euill for the Apostles were zealous and so were the Pharises Christians were zealous and so were the Iewes too as appeareth in this Text as now some Protestants in their way be zealous so be many Papists Tim. What call ye the zeale of God Silas A great griefe of heart for some wrong done to him his will doctrine worship or glory or people with a desire to hinder or repell the same with all our power Tim. What is meant by this that they had the zeale of God Silas That they had a burning desire in their hearts to promote the glory of God and weere grieued for hurt done to it as they thought by Christ and his Apostles and their doctrine Tim. Whether was this their zeale sinfull or no Sil. In that they greatly affected Gods glory were mooued with indignation for that which was done against it thus farre their zeale was good and was both loued and commended of Paul but because it was not gouerned by faith and sound knowledge it was blinde ignorant and erroneous and therefore it was vicious for it made of Religion error and ignoraunce of such things as we ought to know so by sinne defiled their affections and actions which in their owne nature were good Tim. What knowledge is needfull to zeale that it may bee a right zeale Silas A threefold knowledge First of the thing loued Secondly of the hurt done to it Thirdly of the end which we propound to our zeale Tim. The zeale of the Iewes how did it faile in the knowledge of these three things Silas First they did not knowe the thing loued for they rightly knew not Gods worship and glorie which they thought to stand in ceremonies and outwarde obseruations of the Law and not in the faith of Christ and obedience to the Gospell Secondly the wrong which they thought to be done to God by the gospel of Christ was but supposed and no true reall wrong For the preaching Christ which out of blinde zeale they persecuted did much aduance Gods glorie and the praise of his grace that in his beloued Sonne he would freely accept sinners Thirdly they also stroue for vaine-glorie and their owne praise out of self-selfe-loue which they choked with pretence of Gods glorie and so fayled in the end of their zeale aswell as in the obiect Tim. What Doctrine are we to gather out of this verse Sil. We learne first by Pauls example to loue allow of the good things which we finde euen in bad men although they be ioyned with much sin and wickednesse For the zeale which the Iewes had to God albeit it had no knowledge to guide it yet seeing in it selfe it was a good thing the Apostle commends it and beares witnes to it Christ also loued the good things which he saw in the couetous yong man that trusted in his riches Marke 10 21. also the Prophet Dauid praised many good things in Saul 2
bring you tydings of great ioy c. Tim. What signifies to obey the Gospell Silas To beleeue the doctrine of saluation by Christ and thus the word is vsed in Acts 6 7. and Romanes 1 5. whereupon it is tearmed the Lawe of Faith Rom. 3. 27. because it requireth obedience Tim. For what Reasons is Faith called Obedience and to Obey put for Beleeue Silas Because to beleeue is the chiefest obedience it is commanded vs to beleeue in Christ 1 Iohn 3 23. and our reason and iudgement is naturally repugnant to the Doctrine of the word for they are darknesse Ephes. 5 8. Therefore to assent to the word and willingly to beleeue the truth without reasoning and gainsaying it is a verie great obedience Secondly this obedience of Faith bringeth forth obedience in practise for faith purifieth the heart Acts 15 9. and workes by loue Gal. 5 6. No Christian shall obey God by louing him and our neighbour by slaying sinne and dooing righteousnesse vnlesse he first beleeue that the word is from God and submit to it by Faith Tim. What will follow heereof Sil. First that all vnbeleeuers are obstinate and rebellious sinners against God though they think otherwise and be held for honest men Secondly that such as lacke Faith cannot perfourme any obedience vnto God it is sinne if it be not of faith Tim. What Doctrine ariseth from hence That all which heard the Apostles did not beleeue them Tim. That the Faith of the Gospell is not common to all which heard the Gospell as it is written All men haue not Faith 2 Thess. 3 2. Also experience proueth the truth heereof for the Prophets complaine that few beleeue their preaching Esay 53 1. Also Christ when hee preached the doctrine of the Gospell most clearly and mightily confirmed it by myracles yet but one heere and there did receiue it scarse one man of a thousand such also was the successe of the Apostles preaching as this place proueth and such it is continually Tim. But Paule had sayde that hearing bringeth foorth Faith Silas It is true that hearing of the word is necessarie to faith but not on the contrary doth faith necessarilie follow of hearing If any man do beleeue it is thorough hearing as an outward meanes but not euery one that heareth proueth a beleeuer Iustification presupposeth vocation but vocation is not alwaies accompanied with Iustification Tim. What is the reason why all which heare do not proue beleeuers Sil. Because all are not elect and it is a certain thing that onely such as are ordained to life do beleeue Actes 13 48. Thence it is called the Faith of the elect Titus 1 1. and they are said to be called which are predestinate Rom. 8 31. Secondly because outward hearing is not enough to engender faith there must be also an opening of the eyes and heart by the Spirit Acts 26 18. and 16 14. But this Spirit the world cannot receiue Iohn 14 17. Such onely receiue it to whom it is giuen Math. 13 11. And Esay 53 1. hauing saide few beleeued their report addeth this as a reason because The arme of the Lord was not reuealed that is Gods powerfull spirit did not touch their hearts effectually Thirdly in some their pride and ouer-weening by conceyuing too highly of their owne wit and vnderstanding leaning vnto their owne naturall wisedome is a very great hinderance to faith Math. 11 25. 1 Cor. 1 26. Fourthly many stumble at the pouertie of Christ and his followers Mat. 11 6. To which may be added the wicked examples of preachers and professors of the Faith as a great obstacle Tim. What vse is to be made heereof Silas That we now do not the lesse esteeme the Gospell though we see it generally vnfruitfull because this hath beene the portion of other times and ages herewith Christians must arme themselues that they bee not offended to see the multitude of vnbeleeuers and there is no place so ful of vnrighteous men as where the word is most preached which is a great occasion of stumbling to cause men to thinke ill of the Doctrine as if it were the proper cause of wickednesse or at the leastwise vnable to conuert sinnes whereas the faulte is not in the word nor alwayes in the teachers but in the indisposition naughtines of the hearers the seede being good but the ground barren and euill Secondly it confutes such as thinke the Faith of the Gospell to proceede in part at the least from the naturall strength of mans free will whereas this beeing equall and of the like force in all men then should all men haue Faith and equally obey the Gospell If free will were the cause of beleeuing that is if men did therefore beleeue and receiue Grace offered because they are willing to receiue it might refuse if they would if Faith might come after this fashion who is it but he would be content to be a beleeuer But the Scripture teacheth vs that Faith is the gift of God Tim. From whence doth the Apostle fetch this testimonie of Esay to prooue the fewnesse of beleeuers what is the drift of that Oracle Silas He doth fetch it from Esay 53 1. the drift both of the Prophet there and the Apostle heere is all one euen to complaine of the Iewes infidelity namely that the ioyfull message of the Gospell had so harde successe and vnhappy end among them as that the greatest number should still abide in their vnbeleefe wherewith seeing men were not mooued therefore Paul turneth his complaint to God and mourneth for it before him Tim. What are wee to vnderstand by this Question Who hath Sil. This question signifies sometimes None at al as Rom. 10 6. and it is sometimes put for Few as Psal. 15 1. and heere likewise Tim. What signifies Report Silas The word in the Hebrew signifies hearing or the Doctrine which was heard not which the Apostles themselues heard of God but which the Iewes heard from the Apostles therefore it is saide Our report in which word the thing which is the obiect of hearing is put for hearing it selfe Tim. What Doctrines from hence Silas That the Prophets by the Spirit of prophesy did foresee what effects would follow the Gospell preached to the Iewes God foreseeth all thinges of himselfe primarily men do it secondarily by the helpe of his Spirit Secondly we learne that it is a cause of great greefe to the Ministers of God to see none or little fruite to come of their teaching Heb. 13 17. wherein they must shewe patience considering it was the portion of Christ his Prophets and Apostles Thirdly wee learne that when the Gospell was first deliuered to the Iewes the smallest number did receiue it euen an handfull in respect of the rest which resisted it like to the gleannings in haruest or Grapes after the vintage The cause heereof was not the prophesie of Esay because he foretold it but the cōtrary rather beeing true
54. and yet being thus pricked and vexed they be not awaked out of their slumber to returne to God and forsake their euil waies no more then one in an heauy sleepe can be awaked by shaking and pinching hollowing or crying or blowing an horne in their care Tim. What is meant by the spirite of slumber Silas Spirite though sometimes it signifies no more but the mind as Esra 1 1. Esay 19 3. yet heere it noteth the instrumentall cause of this slumber to wit the euill spirite or Sathan which God as a iust Iudge sendeth into wicked men in his righteous iudgement to direct and driue their hearts to wicked thingsas he sendeth a good Spirit into his Children to direct and moue their hearts and wils to good things This is vsuall in Scripture when the word spirite hath put to it epithites good or bad then it noteth the operations and effects of Gods grace or iustice As Spirite of truth peace grace loue wisedome prayer c. signifieth these good things and Gods Spirite to be the worker of them On the other side the spirite of fury giddinesse slumber fornication enuy lying error c. noteth these bad effects and Sathan the euill spirite to be the worker and neerest cause of the same Tim. What doctrines ariseth from these words thus opened Silas First that wicked men which are vnder hardnesse of heart are vtterly blockish and sencelesse in respect of diuine and heauenly things as a man which is in a great slumber vnderstandeth nothing of earthly things This is that which is plainly saide in Esay 6 9. and Mat. 13 15. and Acts 28 27. that though they see his workes and heare his words yet they neyther heare nor see but are without vnderstanding euen like Horse and Mule that haue no discretion Psalme 32 9. so are the wicked very brutish and stupid in the matters of heauen In other matters which belong to this present life they be for the most part of them quick-sighted verie prouident and circumspect one must rise earely that would deceiue them or go beyond them in bargaining Nay they haue the slight to fetch ouer others and hee must haue both his eyes in his head that shall escape them but come to the things that belong to God and eternall life it is a wonder how little vnderstanding and sight feeling and sence they haue heerein An image heereof we haue in Nicodemus Iohn 3 4. the Woman of 〈◊〉 Iohn 4. the Scribes and Pharisies c. Secondly from hence we may see why the wicked profit not by the admonitions of the word euen because they are fast asleep in sinne and inwardly deafe hauing their eares stopped and their eyes shut vp and their hearts hardned When they that are lyers backbiters promise breakers Vsurers c. reade and heare that which is written Psal. 15 verse 3 4 5. When couetous persons railers c. reade what is written 1 Cor 6 9 10. When such as liue in enuy adultery c. heare or reade what is written Gal. 5 19 20 21. When ignorant persons reade or heare that which is written 1 Thessal 1 8. and proude persons that which is written 1 Pet. 5. 5. and worldlings reade that which is written Ephef 5 3. and yet are not reformed nor once so much as go about to amend themselues the reason cannot be for that they thinke these thinges to be fables for they know and confesse them to be Gods word or for that such sayings are darke for they are so euident cleare and plaine as anie childe may vnderstand them or because they are neuer tolde of these things for their eares are continually beaten with those sayings The true reason therefore is for that they are like the deafe Adder spoken of in the Psalme that will not heare the charmer These sinners are deafe with the worst kinde of deafenesse for they will not heare and obey and who is so deafe as he that will not heare They are like vnto the Iewes spoken of in Zach. 7 11 12. 13. and to such spoken of Prou. 1 24 25. and to such as God speaketh of in another Prophet I haue cried they would not answere euen as it fareth with them that are in a Lethargie though a Trumpet be sounded in their eares yet they stirre not so it is with these men though Gods Ministers to awake them do thunder out Gods iudgements lifting vptheir voices like a trumpet yet they are no whit moued to Godwards because the spirit of slumber is vpon them It is written of Pharaoh that he did not hearken to the words of Moses because his heart was hardened Likewise the vngodly while their soules be sencelesse cannot but despise all the word and their teachers which bring it and set it before them which is a most dreadfull state For the mouth of the Lorde hath spoken it that when they cry to him in their extreamities hee will heare them Prou. 1 26 27 28. Zach 7 13. These things howsoeuer they are matter of greefe vnto Gods Ministers yet are they still bound to do their dutie with constancy and patience because it pleaseth God to execute his iudgements vpon the wicked through their instructions which shall be strong euidences against them to conuict their obstinacie Gods word is a sweete smelling sauour to GOD euen when it is a sauour to death Tim. How may it be proued that the worde is still to bee preached to harden impenitent sinners to be as a testimony vnto them and against them Silas By Esay 6 9 Ezek. 2 5. The former place proues that God vseth his Ministers by them to harden such as haue contemned his word and the latter proueth that euen vnto the already hardened they are still to speake that their condemnation may be the more iust dredful Tim. What is the next instruction from these words Silas That such as haue forsaken God are giuen vppe vnto the wicked Spirit Sathan by his working more and more to be blinded and obdurated This appeareth Ephes 2 2. The Spirit that works in the childrē of disobedience 2 Cor. 4 4. 2 Thessal 2 10 11. For it is very iust that they that wil not be gouerned by the word of God should be committed ouer to the gouernment of Satan as a Iudge deliuereth a malefactor ouer to the hangman As God threatens his people to set Tyraunts ouer them when they had beene vnthankfull for good Princes so he will giue the diuell to be their Ruler that will not be ruled by himselfe And such must needes bee driuen on to all mischiefe and hell in the end as haue Satan to bee their Rider to hold the reines in his hands as it hapned to Iudas Cain and Esau and inumerable others heretofore and daily Tim. What profit is to be made heereof Sil. It teacheth the miserable condition of such stubborne sinners as hate to be reformed for they are vnder the power of Satan and held
because themselues were holy holy by a couenāt-holines so as to be reckoned Gods people and to haue the seale Tim. What profite are wee to make of this doctrine to our selues Silas First it teacheth vs what a great worthinesse it is to descend from Christian parents because to such all the prerogatiues of the couenant all the immunities and priuiledges of the Church belong vnto them euen as the Children of the Iewes had right by Gods couenant vnto circumcision and other sacraments to the sacrifices and promises Likewise now such as bee borne of Christian parents haue title to baptisme the Lords supper to the word of law and Gospell and all other priuiledges of the Church which is a fauour wherein in no wise doe partake eyther Turkes Pagans or Iewes as they stand at this present And in this confidence it is that we offer our Children to be baptized being branches of an holy roote by blessing of the Couenant Secondly this serues to confute the Anabaptists which deny vnto Christian children the benefite of baptisme as if our condition were worse vnder the new Testament then the Iewes vnder the old or as though the signe must be holden from them to whom the couenant it selfe appertaines Thirdly it affoords matter of great comfort vnto all such Christians as at any time shall be afflicted in minde for theirsinnes to remember that they are vnder that couenant which promiseth remission of sinnes to parents and their children With this very argument did Peter cheare the hearts of the Iewes when they were pricked with sorrow for the killing of the Lord of glory Acts 2 38 39. Fourthly it confirmeth our faith and perswasion touching this maine mystery and truth of the restoring of the Iewes in as much as they springing from Abraham and Iacob as from an holy roote and from the other Patriarches as first fruites sanctified to God it is therefore without all doubt and a thing of certainety that the blessing and prerogatiues of the Couenant made with the parents shall flow and breake forth at last to the making of very many of them true members of the inuisible Church as now it causeth all our children to become members of the outward visible Church for whō is God to be prayed that they may not onely assent firmely vnto and lay hold vpon the promises of eternall life by faith but bring forth also the fruites of good workes by loue without the which the parents piety will but little profit the children DIAL XIIII Verse 17. And though some of the branches be broken off and thou being a 〈◊〉 Oliue tree was grafted in for them and made partaker of the roote and fatnesse of the Oliue tree boast not thy selfe c. Tim. HOw doth the Apostle Paul proceede Silas He bringeth forth a third argument to dehort the beleeuing Gentile from despising and reproching the reiected and vnbeleeuing Iewe. Hee had first saide that their casting off was to the great commodity of the Gentiles namely the vocation of them to God by the Gospell Secondly he gaue hope to the Iew of their repairing because they were an holy people and separated from all other Nations by the promises and couenant of life which was giuen them Now thirdly hereasoneth from the condition of the Gentiles both that which is past they were a wilde Oliue and that which is present they were grafted into the true Oliue whervpon dependeth a double grace one that the Gentiles are made partakers of the roote of the Oliue and secondly that they doe inioy the fatnesse that commeth of the roote that is they haue communion with Christ the Church and the Gospell The summe of the argument is thus much Yee Gentiles beeing once like a wilde Oliue are now planted into the true Oliue therefore doe not proudly boast your selues with the reproch of the Iewes This argument is wholly contained in the texte and hath two parts both expressed One is the antecedent part in verse 17. The other is the consequent in verse 18. which is enforced by a new reasō drawne from that which is absurd or vnhonest because we Gentiles bare not the Iewes but their roote doth beare and sustaine vs now it were an vnthankeful and vnhonest part to disdaine that which doth support vs. Tim. But how is this Scripture knit and coupled to the former Sil. By a prolepsis or preoccupation thus The Gentiles might say What did it profite the Iewes to come of an holy roote seeing they are cut off from the stocke of the holy Patriarches To which Paul answereth What though they were once holy branches and now indeed broke off yet not all but some onely whereas you Gentiles were a long time vnholy a wilde Oliue strangers from God and now of free fauour are grafted into their place therefore be not proud but modest and humble Tim. What is meant by broken branches Silas The Israelites which were like vnto branches broken off from a tree and are good for nothing but to perish and wither So the Iewes were cast out from grace and saluation as rotten branches Tim. Why doth he say some and not many or all seeing the greatest number of Iewes were refused in Pauls time Silas Paul speakes not of one age of them but of the whole nation in all ages euer since they were separated in Abraham to be Gods owne peculiar people and so from thence to the end of the world and then who perceiueth not that the Apostle might well say some seeing so very great a part were saued for there were many Patriarches Kings Prophets Priests and innumerable priuate men and women all deare to God and wee reade of fiue thousand conuerted at the beginning of the Gospell by Peter and other Apostles Acts 2 and 4. And towards the consummation of the world in great heaps they shal be drawne to Christ So as Paul did well to say a certaine number onely were broken off Tim. But if many of the branches be broken off it may seeme the elect may perish for what are the branches but Gods owne elected people Silas It is impossible that the elect should perish Christ hath saide it Mat. 24. 24. For the gifts of election faith and iustification c. are without repentance such as God neuer changeth and taketh away but if the elect perish thē must God change Rom. 11 29. Paul therefore speaketh not heere of right and true branches such as elect and faith full persons be which cannot be cut off but of counterfeite seeming branches who be such in their owne opinion and in the account of the Church but not beeing indeed elected and called to Christ and these may and doe fall away The ground and proofe of this difference we haue in Iohn 15 2 3 4. also Rom. 9 7. where is a plaine oddes betweene the children of Abraham and Rom. 2. 31. where is mention made of Iewes inward and Iewes outward in the Spirit and in the letter And 1. Iohn 2
reprobate because howsoeuer no man in Gods eternall counsell is refused for sinne yet God in time doth not destroy men but by reason of their ignorance vnbeleefe and sinne so as man beareth in his own bosom the roote of his own ruine he may blame nothing but his owne vnbeleeuing heart reiecting Gods promises most wickedly Secondly wee learne that vnbeleefe is a sin most odious vnto God and dangerous vnto men in whom it raigneth For as it cast Adam out of Paradice and kept Moses from entring into the promised Land So it depriued the Iewes of the couenant and promises of saluation The reason why God doth so detest it is first because it robbeth him of his glory quite taking from him the praise of his truth power and mercy which in effect is to make no God at all but an Idoll Secondly vnbeleefe doth reproach God and maketh him a lyar which is to make him not a God but a Diuell who is the father of lyes 1. Iohn 5. 10. Thirdly because as faith is the mother of all good workes so infidelity is the mother of all euill for from thence it is that we runne into all euill because we doe not beleeue the word of God whereas other sins spoile God of his authority the vnbeleefe strips him of his efsence and very being Lastly vnbeleefe is such a sinne as doth violate deface the whole doctrine of the Gospell whereas other sins are committed but against some one part or parcell of the word of God Tim. What profite are Christians to receiue from the knowledge and meditation of this doctrine Silas It serues to informe vs in what miserable case the members of the Church of Rome liue aud dye in in so much as they do flye to the merite of their owne works for life and saluation before God reiecting the grace of Christ by vnbeleefe euen as these Iewes did Secondly it serueth to exhort vs Christians that we neuer seeke otherwise to be iustified and saued then by the faith of Iesus Christ. For if the Iewes fell from the couenant of God and lost all their dignity temporall and eternall because they set vp their owne righteousnes by workes and would not seeke to be iustified by beleeuing in Iesus Christ how may we looke to keepe our dignity degree and standing if we shall refuse Christ through infidelity and trust in our owne merites Lastly it warneth vs aboue all other sinnes to striue against an vnbeleeuing heart for whatsoeuer sinnes wee haue yet they destroy vs not so we haue faith to beleeue the remission of them and wicked men are damned not so much for committing sinne as for vnbeliefe because they refuse mercy and pardon offered Not but that the least sin hath in it the merite of eternall death Rom. 6. verse last much more the greatest But as the smallest sin shall bee imputed to him which is an vnbeleeuer so not the foulest shall bee laid to his charge which truely repenteth and beleeueth in Christ as wee learne from Marke 16. 16. Iohn 3. 16. 18. 35. Acts 10 43. DIAL XVII Verses 20 21. And thou standest by faith bee not high minded but feare for if God spared not the naturall branches c. Tim. OF what kinde be these wordes Sil. They be extraordinary stirring vp the beleeuing Romanes vnto Christian humility and godly feare and they bee dehortatory dehorting them from pride arogancy and security Tim. What be the parts of these words Silas Two first a proposition be not high minded set foorth by the contrary humble reuerence of God or reuerent humility Secondly the rendring of reasons to confirme the duty propounded These be two the one is taken from their present good condition to wit their free insition or grafting into Christ by faith thoustandest by faith The second is drawn from their future danger if they should grow proud and carnally secure then they also should bee broken off as the Iewes are This reason should be thus amplified by an argument a minori for it is lesse likely that God would cast away and cut off the naturall branches and true Oliue the Iewes his first and peculiar people then the wilde braunches the Gentiles which were afterwards planted in Therefore if hee haue done that hee will also doe this except they feare the offence of God and bee humbled by the due sight of their vnworthines The summe and scope then of this Scripture is to perswade the beleeuing Gentiles in regard of Gods free and great mercies also in respect of very great perrill that they bee not puffed vp with Gods benefits and so waxe proud and carelesse but rather be carefull labouring day and night in godly feare to preserue their faith and to keepe themselues in that gracious estate wherein they are settled by the faith of Christ. Tim. Come to the wordes and tell vs what is meant by thou Silas The whole body and congregation of the Gentiles of what countrey soeuer and namely the Christian Romanes which had receiued the religion of Christ which are here spokē vnto as if they were but one man that euery person might thinke himselfe spoken vnto and so apply it Tim. What signifies standing Sil. Sometimes the certainty of faith and grace Rom. 5 2. sometimes constancy 1. Corint 15 1. and 16 13. but here it signifies the state and condition of a Christian or of a member of a Christian Church standing is the same with grafting verse 19. Tim. What signifies faith Sil. Either the profession of faith in the mouth if wee referre this vnto such as be hypocrites which are known to God onely or the guift of true and liuely faith in the heart freely apprehending Gods grace in Christ if wee referre it to true beleeuers The summary meaning is thus much that our condition and estate as we are Christians and members of Gods Church doth consist wholly and onely by the mercies of God embraced by fayth in Christ either seemingly as by counterfet Christians or truely and indeed as by right Christians which are so indeed as they be named Tim. What is the doctrine out of these first words Silas That the state and very being of a Christian dependeth on faith For as before Paul layed downe infidelity to be the true and proper cause of the breaking off destruction of the Iewes so now he signifieth faith to bee the very cause of ingrafting the Gentiles into Christ. Faith is it then that makes vs to bee Christians and members of Gods Church Galat. 3 26. Wee are made the 〈◊〉 of God by faith in Christ and againe We are made righteous by faith And herein is a maine difference betweene faith and all other graces and works of the Spirit as hope loue repentance c. that those doe not make vs but declare vs to be the children of God as it is sayed of loue that thereby wee are knowne to be Christs Disciples Iohn 13 35. 1. Iohn 3 23. but by faith we are
and their duty to God or else a slauish feare of Gods terrible iustice and vengeance because of sinne driuing men to perplexity of minde and despaire of Gods mercies Both these kindes of feare bee euill in their owne nature howsoeuer the latter is oftentimes occasion of good to Gods children through the wisedome and mercy of their heauenly Father making it a meanes to prepare their soules for grace like as a needle or a bristle makes way for the threed to enter and to go through and then the bristle is cast away so is this seruill feare expelled where faith and charity towards God hath once found entrance Tim. What feare then is it which is here commanded Silas An ingenuous godly and humble feare breeding continuall care not to offend God by any sinne as much and as farre as frailty will suffer and to deserue to loose his fauour and to be depriued of our faith and other his graces bestowed on vs. Such a feare as vseth to bee in good childeren towardes their parents whome they are very loath to displease for their loue and kindnesse shewed vnto them So this filiall feare of God causeth the faithfull to auoyde the offence of God not so much for punishment as because of his mercies and goodnesse and for loue of righteousnes Oderunt peccare mali formidine poenae Oderunt peccare boni virtutis amore An example to illustrate these two sorts of feare good and bad may be this in the Sonne of a Iudge and a malefactor both at once standing in the Iudges presence sitting on the seate of iustice they both are afraid the malefactor hating the Iudge feareth him because hee hath a sword and power to punish him the child out of a loue of his Father doeth reuerence his presence and dare not by any misbehauiour prouoke his Father to wrath Of this latter feare Paul speaketh heere and also all other texts which contayne commendation of feare are thus to bee vnderstoode as Exodus 20. 20. Deut. 6 13. Psalm 112 1. Iob 1 1. Acts 10 2 35. Psal. 25 14. Tim. Whence ariseth this good and childe like feare whereby the breach of the lawe is more feared then the curse Silas From a particular and due knowledge of our own naturall weaknesse and pronenes to fall into sinne Math. 26. 41. The flesh is weake As young children through feeling their owne weaknesse and readinesse to stumble are afraide and become more carefull to get them a stay so it fareth with Gods children Secondly from the malice and strength of Sathan who as a roaring Lion goeth about seeking whome he may deuoure 1. Peter 5 8. Therefore we haue great need to be sober and watchfull as many feare him too much so we may do it too litle Thirdly from the often and earnest consideration of Gods presence whose eye is euer ouer vs. Also of his great power being able to kill bodye and soule and to cast them into hell Luke 12 5. and of his most terrible wrath and vpright Iustice iudging and chastening sinners without respect of persons 1 Pe. 1 17. Lastly from sence of Gods sweet mercies in Christ Psal. 130 4. Tim. What reasons are there to enforce this exhortation and to perswade Christians to haue GOD alwayes in feare Silas Verie many and strong reasons First the commaundement of God very often enioyning vs to feare him as heere so in many other places Secondlie the great praise which God himselfe giueth to this grace as that it is the beginning of wisedome Prou. 9 10 and 1 7. The well-spring of life Prou. 14 27. Our Treasure The instruction of wisedome Prou. 15 33. See Prou. 14 26. and 16 6. and 9 23. and 28 14. Thirdly the precious promises made to them which feare to sin against God that they shall be blessed that they shall bee preserued See Psal. 112 1 2. 3 c. Also Psal. 128 1 2 3 c. Fourthly such also are pleasing and accepted of God Actes 10 31. Fiftly great profit comes by the feare of GOD it constraineth to good it restraineth from euill example in Ioseph Gen. 39 9. and the Midwiues Exod. 1 13. Also by meanes of this feare Christians stand in the Faith escape breaking off and destruction whereas proud secure Christians lose that faith which they haue their other graces and at length the happinesse For from him which hath not shall be taken away euen that which hee hath Such as liue awfully in lowly reuerence of God do maintaine their faith and preserue themselues vnto celestiall blessednesse as Paul here not obscurely telleth the Romanes that vnlesse they did feare they should be broken off which indeede is come to passe as all the world now perceiueth as the Iews were for their proud contempt of Grace Tim. But seeing Gods Children are bolde as Lyons Prou. 28 1. and blessed with confidence through Faith Ephes. 3 12. How is it that they do feare Silas Gods faithfull children consist of a spiritual regenerate part and of a carnall vnregenerate part In the inward regenerate part there is good confidence by reason of Gods goodnesse in Christ apprehended by Faith yet the flesh or vnregenerate part suggesteth continually doubtfull or fearefull thoughts and carnall infirmity putting the godly in dreade and trembling which yet is subdued by the strength of Faith For as a little childe which is set aloft on horsebacke behinde or before his father whē he lookes towards the ground and remembreth his owne weakenesse is made affraide of falling but yet he ouer commeth this feare and is in good heart when he thinkes that his louing father hath him fast tied to him by a Towell or holdeth him in his hands Or as a man set on the top of an high Tower whiles his minde runneth vpon nothing but the height of the Tower or what a deepe way he may fall and that his fall will be with certaine daunger of death it is not possible but his minde being vpon these things must be smitten with horror But when his eyes are turned towards the barres and battlements which firmely staieth him then he takes spirit to him and puts away feare euen so likewise the 〈◊〉 Beleeuers when they consider with themselues how weake they are being verie prone to euill and also doe thinke vppon the naughtinesse of their bad workes and the imperfection of theyr best workes and the seuerity of Gods Law requiring their vttermost obedience threatning destruction to the least disobedience finally how vnresistable the power and horrible the wrath of God is against sinne these considerations being vehement cannot but deiect the mind and cast it downe with feare But on the other side when they cast their eyes vpon the mercies and exceeding clemency of God his most constant promises and the infinite merits of Christ communicated with them by faith then their feare is either laide aside or lessened they are much comforted and waxe bold in God Tim. But seeing a true Faith
It is by Ezra to the Iew and by the Prophet Esay to Ezekiah imputed as a fault that they forgat his mercies and rendred not to God according to his great goodnesse Tim. What is the second reason Silas It is taken from the effect of this sacrifice because GOD accepteth such a sacrifice so well qualified for they are after his owne heart For God being a spirit and holy cannot but delight in holy and spirituall 〈◊〉 being offered vp in the name of Christ 2 Pet 2 5. and proceeding from faith the Spirit of God Heb. 11. 5 6. Gal. 5 22 23. A great encouragement to euery Christian to labour harde in the deniall of himselfe and mortification of his lusts to know this to bee accepted with God Must wiues study to please their husbands 1. Cor. 7. 34. and seruants their Maisters Ephe. 6 5. euen their vncourteous maisters 1. Pet. 2 18. How much more then ought you to please God your Lorde husband father and redeemer who hath forgiuen you all your sinnes and called you to an inheritance immortal in the heauens 1. Pet. 1 4. These two reasons can be of no force with an vnregenerate or euil man or woman which neuer were partakers of his sauing mercies no not of one crum of them nor yet euer had their hearts framed by the Holy-Ghost to any sound care of pleasing God but the godly which haue receiued but one drop of Gods mercie in Christ and are led by his Spirit these will be mighty perswasions to make them more vpright zealous in Gods seruice DIAL II. Verse 2. And be not conformed vnto this world but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mindes that yee may prooue what is that good that acceptable and perfect will of GOD. Tim. WHat is the matter and method of this Text Silas It containeth the second generall precept concerning all Christians of euery degree and sort For the forme of it is set downe negatiuely then amplified by the contrary affirmation We are forbid to follow the fashions of this worlde and 〈◊〉 enioyned if we will please and serue God to make the will of God reuealed in his word the rule of our life and manners which will is set forth by three especiall qualities First good Secondly acceptable Thirdlie persect This verse then hath it in the explication of the former expressing plainely what was there figuratiuely set downe teaching vs the manner how Christians may offer themselues to God namely if they auoid the corrupt lusts of the world and endeauour thorough the regeneration of the Spirit which beginneth at the change of the minde the principall part of mans soule to allow and do the thinges which God willeth and approouerh being good acceptable and perfect Tim. What is meant by the world and by being conformable vnto it Silas Men vnregenerate and meerely naturall and all which is contrary to Gods will which is heere called the world as often elsewhere Iohn 14 17. 1 Iohn 2 14 15 16. and chapter 5 19 c. because such persons do still sticke in the vncleane and filthy mire of worldlie lustes which they obey with greedinesse Also for that they wholly minde earthly things louing them and caring for the thinges of this life neglecting heauenly things The conforming to these men is to like and allike them and to bee like them in their conditions to follow their fashions forme and guise of liuing shaping our courses semblable vnto theyrs putting on their forme and shape in our behauiour What the fashions of the world be see 1 Cor. 6 9 10. Galath 5 19 20 21. 1. Pet. 4 3. 1 Iohn 2 14. Ephes. 4 18 19 20. Tim. What is our doctrine from these words of the Text thus explained Silas Gods children must not in any wise make the manners of worldly and wicked men the rule and patterne of their life action The proof hereof see Psal. 1 1. Walke not in the way of the wicked c. and Prouer. 1 10. and Chap. 4. 14. we are forbid to goe after sinners wherunto agreeth that of Mat. 7 13. forbidding to enter into the broad way and that of 1. Pet. 4 4. that wee should not run with the wicked vnto the same excesse of ryot nor to be companions with the workes of darkenes Ephes 5 7 11. All which do teach vs that in framing our conuersation we may not imitate the fashions deeds of euill men The Reasons heere of be these First Gods people are a kingly Priesthood Pet. 2 9. therefore the fashions of worldly men do not become them For since the elect are made Priests vnto God it behooueth them to haue the whole life and all the parts of it wel ordered saith Chrysostom The Priests vnder the Law might not touch any vncleane carkas of men or Beasts neither may Christian Priestes meddle with polluted rotten lustes such as carnall men wallow or welter in Secondly the lusts of the world are not of God but of the diuel Iohn 2 16. But Gods children in their baptisme haue by solemne promise renounced the Diuel and all his lusts and therefore may not follow them without running into the guilt of perfidiousnesse and promise breaking Thirdly the faithfull haue put on Christ Iesus Gal. 3 27. and haue him dwelling in their hearts by faith Ephes. 3 17. Therefore they may not put on the sinfull affections and foolish fashions of this world for what communion between Christ and the world from which he hath redeemed vs Also his Gospell and grace teacheth vs to deny worldly lusts Titus 2 11. Fourthly God and the corrupt custome of sinners cannot both bee loued for if we loue the world and the things thereof the loue of God is not in vs 1. Iohn 2 15. Iames 4 3. The amity of this world is enmity with God but Gods children are bound to loue God aboue all yea alone all thinges bee for him and in him therefore they ought to abhorre the world Fiftly it is dangerous euen in this life for the godly to do after the customes or to delight in the company of sinfull men Peter among worldly men learned to deny and sorsweare his Sauiour Iehosaphat was forbid familiarity with Achab Wilt thou loue him whome God hateth 2. Chron. 19 1. and Iosias by conuersing with and conformining himselfe vnto an heathen king loste his life 2. Kings 23 29. The Israelites by framing themselues to the Egyptians in idolatry Exo. 32 1 2 3. and to the Moabites in adultery Num. 25 1 2. pulled due iust vengeance from God vpon their owne heads Dauid amongst the Philistims learned to dissemble and was in hazard see the title of Psalme 34. Sixtly the ende of the children of this world such as fashion themselues like to it is damnation Phil. 3 19. also see 2. Thes. 1 9. 1. Pet. 4 5. Lastly the fashions delights pleasures and lusts of worldly persons doe in a
were accepted of God it was therfore because they beleeued and did his will Cain Esau Achab Iudas and others that haue beene reiected of God it hath bin because they reiected and refused his will As parents and masters accept such children best which striue to do their will so it is with God Tim. What profite may come to vs by the meditation of this doctrine Silas It must serue to stirre vp all good Christians more to loue and follow the will of God which is so good so holy so perfect Secondly it must warne all such men to looke to themselues and betimes to repent which care not either to know what his wil is or to gouerne or guide their wayes by it for the more excellent the will of God is the more iust and heauy will their condemnation bee which neglect it Thirdly it sharpely reproues such as make eyther their owne corrupt lusts or the sinfull customes or the examples of the times or commandements of men the patterne and rule of their conuersation Mat. 15 15. Lastly it confutes the Papists which charge the will of God with imperfection as if it were only giuen for such as are rude and not for the strong and perfecter men Also which equall to it and match with it apocryphal writings and traditions of the Church as things to be receiued with like affection and reuerence as the very perfect will of God it selse as Tridentine councel blasphemously hath decreed and written Heere also is an argument for the fulnesse aud perfection of Scriptures because in them onely is found the good acceptable and perfect will of God When I goe from the Scriptures who shall tell me what is the will of God saith one of the Fathers DIAL IIII. Verse 3. I say then through the grace that is giuen vnto me to euery one that is among you that no man presume to vnderstand aboue that which is meete to vnderstand but that he vnderstand according to sobriety as God hath dealt to euery man the measure of faith Tim. VVHat is it that the Apostle doth now perform and how doth he proceede Silas The Apostle hauing already giuen vs his generall exhortation in the two former verses that we should serue God first by studying how to please and obey him by mortifying of our lusts And secondly by not studying how to frame our selues like the children of men he doth in this verse descend to particular duties whereof the first is an Apostolicall sanction or proposition touching the right vse of spirituall guifts and the due administration of ecclesiasticall functions vntill verse 〈◊〉 Tim. What is the summe of the speciall exhortation in this third verse contained Silas That no man carry himselfe proudly in respect of his guifts hauing an ouerweening opinion of himselfe as if he knew more then hee doth know but to thinke modestly of his owne knowledge and guifts and to apply them with discretion to the good of others according to the measure of them and the meaning of God the giuer which was not for ostentation and contention but for mutuall edification Tim. What be the parts of this present exhortation Silas They be two First the exhortation it selfe Secondly the explication with certaine reasons annexed to giue an edge to the exhortation The exhortation hath a preface and the matter The preface pointeth at Pauls Apostolicall authority enabling him to command and putteth on the Romanes and all other Christians a necessity to yeeld obedience The matter of the exhortation consists of two precepts First that we bee not arrogant presuming to vnderstand more then is meete or to be too wise Secondly to vnderstand according to sobrietie that is modestly to esteeme of our guifts the reasons are these First from the author because God is the giuer Secondly from the measure no one man hath all but each his portion Thirdly from the vniuersality of receiuers euery one hath his proper guift there is none which hath not his talent Fourthly from the nature of the guift it is no temporall but a spirituall guift therefore no man ought to be insolent to despise others but each to be content with his own grace and to vse it wel The cause which moued Paul to this exhortation was great emulation which burst out into contention the Iewes would be preferred before the Gentiles and the Gentiles despised the Iewes such as had more worthy guifts disdained their inferiors Tim. What things are to be obserued in Pauls preface Silas First that he giues not a counsell but a commandement for I say signifies as much as if hee had saide I bid I command I enioyne as the manner of the Latine is to put dico for iubeo so as this is no indifferent thing which men may doe or not but a necessary precept which may not at any hand be omitted without sinne We are further to marke that whereas the Ministers of Christ may sometimes speake mildely out of loue as in verse 1. so sometimes they may command precisely out of that power which Christ hath giuen as heere and 1. Tim. 6 17. 2. Tim. 4 1. The second thing to be noted is the vniuersality of this precept that it is to all and euery one it reacheth throughout to euery member or officer of the Church whatsoeuer his office or guift be there is none exempted be he high or low learned or vnlearned they are bound to submit themselues to this precept concerning humility in vsing rightly their guifts and offices If they be inferior persons and haue meane guifts they haue need of it for to keep them from enuying them which haue better If superiors and haue more excellent graces then they haue need of it to keepe them from pride and disdaining them which haue lesse Lastly whatsoeuer they bee they shall neuer turne their guifts to the profite of others and of publike good vnlesse they be modest and sober minded The next thing to be noted in this preface is that Paul doth bring foorth his Apostalicall calling and function to warrant his precept For grace in this place signifies neither the guift of holy eloquence or power in speech nor yet the guifts of wisedome as some thinke but by a Metonymie of the cause for the effect it is put for the Apostolicall vocation as also Rom. 1 7. and 15 15. which is therefore called grace because hee receiued it freely being put into this office when he thought not of it yea he was a blasphemer and persecutor of the Church Acts 9. 1. Tim. 1 19. And this he doth to shew hee was no intruder or ambitious vsurper which thrust in himselfe doing more then he might well doe in giuing precepts to Churches as also to draw the Romanes and in them all Christians to yeeld vnto the practise of this precept with all good reuerence and submission that they be not found to striue and fight against the Lord Iesus speaking to vs by the Apostle Paul whome to hearken
the right disposing of the publike almes there were appointed Officers Acts 6 5. whose guift was simplicity without fraud vaine-glory couetousnesse or frowardnesse to giue out the almes The second Ministers were they which were ioyned as assisstants and helpers to the Pastors for good gouernement of the flocke to preuent scandals and offences 1. Cor. 12. 28. 1. Tim. 5 17. These Mc Caluine calleth Seniors Osiander censors of manners Tertullian presidents which obserued and attended manners and outward behauior only there guift is diligence which containeth both a resolute purpose and great endeauour with delight to do the businesse and charge committed to them The third and last Ministers bee mercy-shewers not such as be spoken of Mat. 25 35 36. for these workes be common to all Christians but such mercifull workes as be mentioned 1. Tim. 5 10. Their guist is cheerefulnesse which containeth in it three things first alacrity of heart secondly gentlenesse in words thirdly pleasantnes in countenance they which were to be implyed in this seruice of mercy shewing vnto sicke aged impotent strangers exiles orphanes as their worke was such as might breede lothsoinnesse to attend sicke and feeble so they were to bee olde widdowes and aged men whoe naturally are sowre and testy therefore needed this precept of cheerefulnesse DIAL VI. Verses 9 10. Let loue be without dissimulation abhorre that which is euill cleaue to that which is good Be affectioned c. Tim. WHat is beere performed by Paul Silas After particular duties in respect of a gift and a function in the Church now hee turnes vnto generall dutyes and commendeth vnto Christians certaine generall graces pertaining vnto common conuersation whereunto he exhorteth them namely to continue in the practise of them for being beleeuers they already had begun to exercise these vertues as namely loue courtesie diligence feruency hope patience prayer liberality hospitality humility mutuall affection and simplicity forbearing of reuenge and such like godly grace as ornaments of our Christian profession and fruites of charity Of this loue heere be in our text sundry good precepts First that it be true without dissembling Secondly discreete abhorring euill Thirdly firme in adhering and sticking to goodnesse Fourthly vniuersall to all the brethren without partialnesse Fiftly fernent and earnest without coldnesse Sixtly humble without ambition Tim. Wherefore doth be begin with loue why is this first named of all other vertues mentioned in this Chapter Sil. Because it is the chiefe guift aboue other and sountaine of all the rest which doe spring out of loue as head-spring and mother of them all Before in former Chapters whiles Paul discussed the doctrine of grace and entreated of free Iustification by Christ he neuer mentioned loue for that it had nothing to do in matter of forgiuenesse of sinne either to merit it or to receiue it It doth onely declare as a signe who be iustified and pardoned by faith But now he giueth exhortation to manners and good life hee nameth loue as the chiefe and principall grace which swayeth most in the matters of a Christian life and conuersation being ringleader vnto and breeder of the rest for therefore doe men behaue themselues iustly meekely peaceably chastly and curteously because they do loue Tim. By what Reasons may it bee proued that charitie is a chiefe gift of the spirit Silas Not onely because Paul nameth it in the first place as heere and Galath 5 22. and for that it is the roote of all the rest as Faith is the roote of loue but thirdly because it is the summe of the Law Rom. 13 10 And fourthly it makes al graces profitable which are of no vse without charity 1 Cor. 13 1 2. and fiftly it is the band of perfection which knits all Christians and holds all duties together as stickes are made fast by a bande And sixtly it is the maine badge and cognisance of true Christianity and a certaine note to discerne a true Christian from a counterfet Iohn 15 35. 1 Iohn 3 14. Lastly it is perpetuall and remaineth after other giftes when Faith and hope ceaseth it continues 1 Cor. 13 13. Tim. What Vse is to bee made of this Doctrine touching the excellency of loue Silas First to enflame our hearts more and more with the loue of this louely grace more earnestly to seeke after it also more heartily to praise God for it I exhort therefore as Paul Col. 3 14. that aboue all things wee put on loue Tim. Of what quality is that loue we are exhorted vnto Silas Such loue as is without dissimulation that is it must bee true sincere from the heart without fraude guile deceite false shewes or wrinkles Tim. How may a Christian iudge of himselfe that he hath this vndissembled and vpright loue Silas There be three rules by which it may be discerned to be voide of hypocrisie First when one doth heartily loue God and that which is pleasing to him A good rule for then wee cannot choose but in our loue to our neighbour to be sincere because sincerity and truth is a thing highly pleasing to God The second rule when we are ready to do towardes our neighbour as wee our selues would bee dealt withall by others This rule is commended in Math. 7 12. for no man will dissemble or deale falsely with himselfe The third rule is not to loue in word and tongue onely but in truth and indeede 1. Iohn 3 18. not as they are spoken of in Iames 2 15 16. but as God loued mankinde to whom he promised his Sonne by word and afterwarde sent him at the sulnesse of time Gal. 4 4. or as Christ who shewed his loue not onely by kinde speeches but by giuing his life 1 Iohn 3 16. so our loue must bee expressed in actions and then it is sound and vndissembled Lip loue is lying loue Tim. To what profit may we turne this doctrine Silas It serues for iust and due reproofe of all such as make shew of loue and mean it not such as giue sugred for words to hide the gaule of the heart and the bitternesse of the hand speaking faire when they meane foule as Caine did speake to Abell Ioab to Abner and Amaza and Iudas to Christ. These had honie in their lippes and swords in their hearts Secondly such as shew loue out of seruile base feare and dread as Malefactors and Offenders do to seuere Magistrates bad seruants to their vncourteous Maisters and the poore to the mighty whō they could wish in their graues yet by speeches and gestures pretend much reuerence and loue Thirdly such as loue others for profit which they hope to suck out of them so long they make much of them giue kind words as Felix did Acts 4. At a word all such are heere condemned as do not loue their neighbors out of a pure heart the seate of loue vnfaigned Faith the cause of loue a good conscience the companion
we are admonished in many places Math. 24 13. Rom. 5 4. Heb. 10 36. 2 Pet. 2 9. To hope and patience must be ioyned prayer which is a notable armour and Weapon against troubles because it gets wisedome how to carry our selues in afflictions and diuine helpe how to come out of it that we may ouercom Iam. 1 5. Ps. 50 15. Our prayers may thē be said to be continual eyther when we cal vpon God by offered occasions necessities bodily or spirituall or when by no meanes wee intermit the set hours or times of prayer or else when we are instant in praier asking earnestly Ia. 5. or tho we be not heard presently when we continue to ask without ceasing Lu. 18. or els we may vnderstand this not of mouing of the lips but the desires of the heart which when they are continuall our prayers bee continuall for a continuall desire is a continuall prayer God will heare the desires of them that feare him Psal. 145. It was an heresie condemned in Eutiches and the Masstlians that thought Christians ought all their life long to doe nothing else but pray abusing this and the like Texts to this end Whereas besides Prayer the workes of our generall and particular vocation are to bee followed yea in Gods seruice there is preaching Sacraments must haue time allowed It is a greeuous sinne in many Christians at this day which contenting themselues with publicke prayer which is a good thing neglect set Prayers in their families or foreslow the iust occasions to turne vnto God by prayer or in their prayers do behaue themselues coldly or carelesly such as these they both fall into many euils and are left in their euils without comfort because they seek not vnto God feruently for his ayde and protection Finally remember vnto all these precepts and to the rest following to knit these first words of this Chapter I beseech you at a generall and most forcible motiue to stir vs vp to practise them as we would not cast from vs and make our selues vnworthy of the mercies of God whereunto not all the world is to be compared no not to the least of his speciall and sauing mercies in Christ. DIAL VIII Verses 13 14 15. Distributing or communicating vnto the necessities of the Saints 〈◊〉 giuing your selues vnto hospitality Blesse them which persecute you Blesse I say and curse not Reioyce with them that reioyce and weepe with them that weepe Tim. VVHat is requirtd by the first of these precepts Silas Liberality or mercy to the poore that we be ready to giue them almes acording to their need The word translated necessities signifies vses to teach vs that as wee may not minister to the delicates of the poore so we may not stay til extreame necessity vrgeth them vnto this duty of mercy in giuing There be manie exhortations in the Scripture vppon sundry and great Reasons as Heb. 13. 16. where it is called a Sacrifice and God is saide to be well pleased with it In Phil. 4 18. it is called an Odour of sweete smell a Sacrifice acceptable to God And Actes 20 35. it is saide that it is a more blessed thing to giue then to receiue and Luke 16 9. we are charged to make friendes of vnrighteous Mammon by giuing to the poore that they may receiue vs into cuerlasting habitation and 1 Tim. 6 18 19. of distributing to the poore Paul saith it is the laying of a good foundation against the time to come Againe Christians bee stewardes and it is required that stewards be faithfull to dispose their goods to the minde of their Maister and his mind is that such as haue much should giue to such as haue little and that the abundance of some should supply the wants of others 2. Cor. 8 13 14. Further by being mercifull to the poore we are like our heauenly Father which is mercifull and giues liberally Math. 5 45. also we expresse loue kindnesse to Christ by doing good to his members Mat. 25 35. 36 37. We witnesse to our selues and others the truth of our faith which works by loue Gal. 5 6. and comforts the heart of our Brethren Phile. 7. and brings glorie to God and our profession Besides al these forenamed reasons ther be three reasons more in our text to perswade vnto this duty as the loue of Saints because poore christians are Saints purged by the blood and sanctifyed by the Spirit of Christ. Secondly the compassion of their necessities and wants which we are bound to pitty Thirdly liberality in communicating By which word of communicating we are put in mind in that the Apostle saith rather communicating then giuing that the poore haue an interest in the goods of the rich as touching the vse by vertue of Gods commandement and that the rich ought to communicate with them in affections and simpathy by releeuing them as if they felt their wants and suffered with them Heb. 13 3. And lastly that betweene rich and poore there is a kinde of spirituall trafficke and merchandize the rich communicating temporall things in making the poore partakers of their substaunce and the poore spirituall in making the rich partakers of their prayers The examples of such men as haue perfourmed this duty is first Dorcas Acts 9 39. making coats to giue to the pore the brethren of Antioch sending relief to the pore Saints at Ierusalem whom also the Church of Macedonia did releeue euen beyond their power 2 Cor. 9 2 3. Now as for the maner how beneficence is to be performed 2 Cor. 8 9. chap. not grudgingly or of necessity or sparingly not of compulsion but out of a Christian compassion of a ready mind with cheerefulnes for the loue and sake of Christ and as to him for God loues a chearful giuer For the quantity it must be much where much is 2 Cor. 9 8 11. 1 Tim. 6 18. no certaine stint or rate but according to thy ability and thy neighbors necessity Tim. What are the vices contrary to this duty Silas They be couetousnes prodigality for by excesse in apparrel eating drinking Christians are made both vnable and vnwilling to doe this dutie as they might and ought if they were temperate and kept a seemelie moderation and measure in the vse of Gods blessings bestowed on vs and couetousnes doth quite choake the affection of liberality it hardens the heart of the rich against the poore and binds vp their hands so as nothing comes from thē vnles it be wrung out by great entreaty or by authority as seises Lastly in giuing christians are to beware both of opinion of merite which poysoneth Popish liberality and of vaineglorie which spoiles the bounty of many Protestants giuing to bee seene and talked of Tim. What is the next duty heere exhorted to Silas After beneficence Paul exhorts vnto hospitality by being ready to entertain strangers and exiles such as were driuen from home for the Gospel where of great
stoop to take it vp it had so many cares annexed to it In respect whereof Queene Elizabeth spake it openly in the Parliament house that she had rather bee a milke-woman then a Queene were it not more for her subiects sake then her owne And of a certaine Romane wee reade that long aspiring to be Emperor hee was not so forward to haue it as feeling the burthen he was willing to cast it off yea moaned and complained of the burthen of it that it was heauy If this matter were throughly considered it may restraine many men from aspiring to places of gouern ment which are ioyned with so many and so great incumbrances and troubles if their duty be thorowly done also it would preuaile with subiects to encourage thē without grudging and murmuring willingly yea cheerefully to bring in all such payments which are reasonable and necessarily imposed vpon them for the publike good or for the sustentation of publike persons Such as are compelled to pay doe heereby deserue rebuke Withall hereby are reproued our Romanists which both de facto iure exempt the persons of the Clergy in criminall causes from ciuill tryals and their goods from ciuill payments according to a decree of Boniface the 8. and the corrupte opinion of Bellarmine that the Clergy is exempt in person and goods by donation of Princes and of Thomas Aquinas that the law of nature hath freed the Clergy though Princes had not cleared them But all this is quite contrary to the law of God who requires euery soule to be subiect v. 1. and tribute is a part of subiection verse 6. Secondly to the example of Christ his Apostles who paide polle mony Mat. 17. Thirdly to the lawe of reason and nature which teacheth that members of a common-wealth and such as partake of the benefit of Gouernors should in common maintaine gouernemnt it beeing vnreasonable that when others are burthened Ministers should be eased hauing mony lands and possessions aswell as others alwayes excepting such immunities as they enioy lawfully and some where in that proportion as were they exempted Princes should loose the third part of their kingdome as now in Spaine and was sometime in England Tim. What is signified by feare and honour Silas Not feare after a crime committed which is of an euill conscience but an awe to offend and doe a fault which is of a religious heart bearing reuerence to Gods order and carefull to obserue good lawes without giuing offence Honour is the testification of inward feare by outward signes as vailing the cap bowing the knee rising vp because of their place and dignity keeping silence before them speaking well of that they do well couering their infirmities not as Cham blazoning the faults of Rulers comming to them vpon command answering them with good reuerence and meekenesse attributing to them their due titles c. All which belongs to the honour of our superiors may be brought to these few heads 1. loue to their office and Gods ordinance in it 2. reuerence of their dignity and power 3. thankefulnesse for their care labour and the benefits which come thereby to all 4. charity in construing wel their actions interpreting doubtfull things to the best part 5. prayer for Gods assistance protection 6. obedience to lawful cōmandements 7. patience in suffering euen vniust punishment without resistance DIAL VI. Verses 8 9 10. Owe nothing to any man but to loue one another for he that loueth another hath fulfilled the law For this thou shalt not commit adultory c. Tim. HOw doth the Apostle proceede and what agreement hath this with the former Silas This is the second generall part of this Chapter containing an exhortation to mutuall loue It hath this coherence with the former matter wherein hauing exhorted to render Magistrates their due particularly hee nowe generally perswades all Christians to pay vnto all sorts of men whatsoeuer they owe them not ceasing till they bee quit srom all debts by which occasion he stirreth vs vp to pay the debt of charity for if all debts must be paide then must charity be exercised because that is a debt and profitable for vs to the keeping of the law which he proueth by these two reasons one by the enumeration of particulars verse 9. as thus The particular precepts of the law are these Thou shalt not commit adultery c. but loue inableth vs to the keeping of these precepts therefore is loue the fulfilling of the law the assumption and conclusion of this argument are in the tenth verse The second reason is loue doth none euill therefore it is the keeping of the law Of these 2. reasons the former is drawn frō a profitable effect of loue the latter from remouing of the contrary effect Tim. What is the doctrine we learne from the first words of the text Owe nothing c Silas That it doth behooue euery Christian to haue an honest care for the payment of his debts of all kindes both ciuill and morall This proposition needes explanation confirmation and application I explaine it thus it is a part of euery wise man so to liue if it be possible as he may free himselfe from all pecuniary debts First that hee may not bee obnoxious to others and the lesse bee his owne man Secondly the more a mans debt is so the lesse is his substance Thirdly debt is a disquiet vnto an honest minde and hath some apparance of discredit Some by debt hurt their name their profession and their posteritie The best meanes to auoyde debts are these First frugality and moderation in expences euer keeping vnder rather 〈◊〉 at any time going aboue our degree and ability For whereas diuers there be who go ouer shooes and Bootes yea and ouer eares too in debt that fals out by ouer-eating and drinking or by ouer building or by ouer purchasing or ouer cloathing themselues theyrs Secondly warinesse in contracts and bargaines Thirdly by auoyding rash suretiship when we know neither the men nor their estate for whom we become pledges In this there is much folly and oftentimes the end therof is beggery as Salomon in many places teacheth so doth debts which commeth by gaming and ryotous liuing Fourthly by eschewing to take money vpon Vsury for that biteth as the Hebrew word signifieth gnaweth estate of many a man to the bare bone at last But sithence it sareth so with many men as it is hard for thē to trade in the world without debt in this case wee are charged by the Apostle to make due and timely satisfaction Tim. But what if my neighbour will forgiue the debt Or what if he be not able to pay it Or what if the debt be small or the creditor be dead none appointed to require it Silas Though the debt be forgotten and neuer demanded yet art thou bound to pay if thou bee not forgiuen and quite discharged If thy debt be so great and thy selfe so poore as thou beest
not able then after the counsell of the holy Ghost in the Prou. Chap. 6. verse 3. Go humble thy selfe c. purpose restitution promise to pay it when thou shalt be able and if the Creditor bee dead and the debt small and no order left to exacte it yet remember that there is as good right to a peny as to a pound and what cannot be rendred to the creditor pay it to his children or the next of his Kindred or in defect of such to the poore for a Christians care must be not to owe any thing to any man Tim. By what Reasons may this dutie bee confirmed and vrged Silas The lesser light of nature teacheth vs to giue vnto euery man that which is his owne Secondly the greater light of the word instructs vs to deale iustly and it is a maine part of Iustice commutatiue to pay debtes Thirdly by paying of debts we shall please God finde him ready further to blesse vs. See the example of the Widdow 2 Kings 4 1 2 3. Fourthly by this meanes we preserue our credit with men and the peace of our conscience with God and escape the danger of Lawes humane and diuine Iustice. Whereas on the contrarie by liuing in debt carelesly we offend God whose Law wee breake we wound our Conscience by iniustice we hurt our owne estimation and slander our profession causing men to speake hardly not onely of our selues but of the Gospell for our sakes Lastly we also incurre the penalty of the Law to wit imprisonment and the paincs of eternall death to wit hellish torment for our vnrighteousnesse 1 Cor. 6 9. Tim. What vse are we to make of this instruction Silas First it serueth for reproofe of such as runne in debt by borrowing and do not meane to restore Secondly of such as in payment of debtes are partiall satisfying some and not others when as they haue wherewith to satisfy all This is the case of many Bankerouts which breake that they may escape by paying by quarters or halfes Thirdly of such as do pay but it is grudgingly driuing their Creditors to recouer by Law what was lent them in loue All these are worse then Paganes or Iewes For the Heathen Romanes so abhorted loose debters as they made a Law to cut them in pieces and to satisfie euery Creditor with a quarter Wherunto the Gospell alludeth in allotting punishment to the vnfaithfull Steward Math. 24 51. The Iewes though somwhat milder yet seuere enough against wretchles debters who by their Law must bee solde and themselues their wiues and children become slaues to satisfy theyr Creditors 1 Kings 4 1. Secondly heere is an exhortation vnto all persons as tender either Conscience or credite and regarde either God or man either present or future hurt to be willing and ready according to their meanes and power to answere vnto euery man that they owe them euen to the vtmost farthing yea although it cannot be done but to their owne impouerishing considering two things especially 1. that a little with righteousnesse is better then much with iniquity 2 and what hapned to the widdow that was careful to pay hir debts her Oyle by Gods Blessing was encreased till she had enough for the Creditor and a remnant and remainder for her selfe and children to liue on 2 Kings 4 7. Howbeit let this be done not for reputation to keepe credit or for profit sake that ye may be trusted againe but of conscieace and obedience to that God which hath said owe nothing to any man that you may bee sure to bee comforted blessed in your deeds as the Apostle Iames speaketh in another case Iames 1 25. Tim. But doth this sentence reach no further then to pecumary debts alone Silas Yes it is to be extended to debts both naturall and morall euen whensoeuer there is any obligation or bond either of nature as betweene Father and children Husband and wife or of religion as betweene all other inferiours and superiours whether Magistrates or Ministers c. all these are debters one to another What Paul saith of himselfe Rom. 1 14. I am a debter to you Romanes c. is true of all Superiors And what he affirmeth of Philemon 19. verse Thou owest thy selfe c. belongs to all inferiors in some sort This consideration that mutuall duties are so many debts should much prouoke vs vnto serious performance What man is there that hath but common honesty but will take care of his debts to pay them and till the Booke be crossed the bils canceld will giue himselfe no quiet Now if wee take not to heart our mutuall duties to do them because they be debtes what may this argue but that wee are worse then honest ciuill men hauing lost both the shame of the Worlde and also the reuerence of Almightie GOD Tim. What other debt is there yet behinde for Christians to looke vnto Silas The debt of loue for when the Apostle saith Owe nothing vnto any but loue it strongly implies that loue is a debt yet such a debt it is as in sundry thinges differs from ciuill debts which are due but to some persons whereas loue is to be exercised towards all friends enemies Infidels and Christians Secondly other debts being paide our substaunce is diminished but loue by paying it to others encreases in our selues reddendo multiciplicatur as one saith Thirdly other debtes may bee paide while we liue but this of loue cannot be satisfied in this life it is due in heauen both to God to Angels and to Saints 1 Cor. 13 13 Fourthly debts of mony are to be paide at certaine times and places but the debt of loue is due alwayes euery where Fiftly other debts may be dispensed withall and forgiuen but the debte of loue not so Men cannot and God will not discharge vs the practise of our loue though he will forgiue the 〈◊〉 of our loues Lastly other debts beeing once paide are no more debts but loue although it be paide is still due it is alwaies in paying and euer owing because the groundes thereof bee perpetuall First the precept of GOD Loue thy Neighbour as thy selfe Math. 22. Secondly our common Nature euerie man being anothers flesh Esay 58 7. Pro. 11 17. Thirdly the image of God imprinted in our nature Lastly common profession hauing all one Sauiour by grace to wit Christ as wee haue all one father by nature to wit Adam Now fithence charity is a debt and such a debt as we are all bound to pay it stands euery man vpon that hath any conscience of this debt to looke vnto all the particulars thereof which beeing sundry and many some things being due to the soule of our brother as to comfort exhort rebuke c. Other things due to his body as to couer his nakednesse feede his hunger c. also we being debters to the dignity life chastity substance and name of our neighbour in none of these to impaire him but in
them necessarie As these weak Iewes which beleeued in Christ did esteem of difference in meates and dayes that a conscience was to be still made of them and that without contempt of Moses and sinne against God the Lawgiuer they could not bee omitted Howbeit Paul would haue Christian Charity nourished and brotherly society between them and the beleeuing Gentiles How far then be the churches of Lutherans in Germany deceyued which break off society with the Churches of Caluinists as they are termed for distinction sake because of dissention about the Bread in the Communion whether it should bee eaten whole or broken The Churches of 〈◊〉 and Galatia thorough craft and seduction of false Teachers helde some fundamentall errors yet hee honoureth them still with the Title of the Churches of Christ and saluteth them as Brethren because they sinned not obstinately and with an high hand as Rome doth DIAL II. Verses 3 4 5. For God hath receiued him who art thou that iudgest another mans seruant he standeth or falleth to his owne Maister yea hee shall bee established for God is able to make him stand This man esteemeth c. Tim. WHat do the third and fourth Verses contain Silas The three Reasons before spoken of The first whereof is in these words For God hath receiued him Tim. What is meant by Receiuing and by Him Silas Receiuing signifies the taking and adopting some to be his people which were not his people By Him is meant the Gentiles who beeing enemies and strangers from God and Infidels and seruers of idolles by the loue and fauour of God were taken into the Family of the Church to be members of Christ thorough faith Albeit these wordes do belong also vnto the Iew weake in faith for euen Him also hath God graciously adopted in Christ yet the word iudging which immediately goes before and followes after shewes it dooth more fitly belong to the beleeuing Gentile by the Gospell brought neere and receyued to bee a people for it was the Iewes fault to iudge the Gentile as they despised the Iews The sum of the Apostles reason is this Seeing God hath so dearely loued the Gentiles as to make them his people therefore the weake Iewes were too blame to condemne them for vsing their Christian liberty in meates and dayes Tim. What doctrine are we to gather from these words Silas That all beleeuing people bee they Iewes or Gentiles are deare vnto God The reason heereof is because they are his children by grace and the members of his Sonne hauing their sins forgiuen them and his image imprinted in them being heyrs of God fellow-heyres with Christ also beleeuers are the spouse of Christ his flock the husbandry vineyard of God This must cause vs to receiue and make much of those whome God hath taken into his loue In Kings Courts they are loued of all which are loued of the King When the King would honor Mordechai euen Hamon must do him honor so it is our part kindly to affect and entreate all them whome the King of Heauen is kinde vnto There are no earthly Parents but account themselues contemned or loued by the contempt or loue of their children so God holds himselfe respected or despised when we respect or despise his children for they be as deare to him as the Apple of his eye as the Signet vpon his right hand As God will blesse them which blesse his people so he will curse such as curse them This may strike a terror into all such as hate the righteous and exercise tyrany towards such as be Gods friends and must serue to keepe all Christians from rash vncharitable censuring and iudging one of another least we be found among those who doe iniury vnto such as GOD hath accepted of for his owne Lastly it dooth instruct and informe vs all what reckoning we are to make of such as bee their euen brethren namely that wee are to account of them as persons receiued of God into his speciall fauour For howsoeuer we cannot infallibly be assured yet we are to be charitably perswaded of other Christians that they are adopted of God and receiued into his speciall fauour if wee see but the least argument of their effectual calling Vpon which grounds we must speake and thinke louinglie of them and of their actions as far as we may do it with truth and reason tendering all that we haue to do withall as men partakers of one nature but much more as Christians partakers of the same grace Tim. Come to verse fourth Who art thou and tel vs what it containes and meanes Silas It hath in it the second reason drawn from common equity thus Beleeuers are seruants of God but we may not condemne anothers seruant therefore wee may not iudge one another in thinges indifferent The assumption is set downe by way of interrogation which hath the force of an affirmation It is the Law of Nations that they which be equally seruants to one Lorde may not iudge one another but by their Lords appointment without iniury to their Lord. No Prince wil take vpon him to punish the seruants of another Prince and that made Dauid to be angry when hee heard how Hanun King of Ammon had abused his Seruants 2. Sa. 10 1 2 3. c. Wee our selues would take it as a great preiudice vnto vs if any should censure or chastise our Seruants Common Law of the land punisheth such as strike other mens seruants there lyeth an action of bartery in that case The knowledge of this equity kept Paul from retaining with him Onesimus because hee was another mans seruant without whose knowledge and leaue bee would not keepe him From this naturall and Nationall Law the Apostle heere perswades peace inasmuch as it behooued the seruants of one and the same Lorde with kindnesse and loue to embrace one another Tim. What instructions are we to take from hence Silas First hence we learne what is the condition of all Christians namely to be the seruants of Iesus Christ who hath bought and purchased them with a price 1. Cor. 6 20. Howsoeuer they are set free from Sathan and sinne yet they still haue a Lord to whom they owe homage and 〈◊〉 Christ hath in such wise set the elect free as they still 〈◊〉 the seruants of him that deliuered them from the hand of their enemies Luke 1. As in warre such as were taken prisonners were ransomed became seruants to them that redeemed them 2. Kings 5 1. So it fareth with 〈◊〉 Tim. What is the vse of this instruction Silas As it is the part of 〈◊〉 seruants to study how to please their Lord as the seruants of the Centurion Luke 8. and to please one another euery one being ready to helpe and comfort his follow so it is the duty of Christian seruants to labour in all things to please Christ for his sake to please one another in that which is good for peace and edifying For as it
These be the Contents of this present Chapter and coherence with the former Now the parts of the whole Chapter be two First an exhortation continued to stirre them vp vnto Christian loue patience and concord vnto ver 14. Secondly the conclusion of the Epistle which containeth three things First an Apologie of his writing to v. 22. Secondly a promise of his comming vnto verse 30. Thirdly a petition for their prayers vnto the end of the Chapter Tim. What is the scope of this our Text Silas To perswade brotherly charity towards the weak to beare with all their infirmities both in Faith and maners This dutie of charity is first propounded in two precepts The first to beare with the infirme the second not to please our selues This is negatiuely set downe the other affirmatiuely In the other three Verses following hee confirmeth his precept by two reasons one by the end of our gifts which is to strengthen the weake verse 2. the other is from the fact of Christ who pleased not himselfe but vs in bearing our infirmities which is prooued by a Testimonie out of the Psalme 69 9. and verse three And least this authoritie might seeme not to bee fitly alleadged or to belong to vs therefore in verse 4. hee layeth out the generall vse of Scriptures to be for our learning and life Tim. Interprete the wordes and tell vs what is meant by strong and weake Also by infirmities and bearing vvith them Silas Strong or mightie signifies Christians of better knowledge and more pure life such as were better taught and of greater holynesse Note that he putteth himselfe into the number of the strong Wee not out of ambition but in truth as it was for he had extraordinary gifts and reuelations to set himselfe for an example of his owne doctrine the better to mooue others to doe that which they perceiud him to do before them As Gedeou in the Iudges 7 17. saide to his men so euery Minister should say to his flocke What ye see me do that do yee There should bee a sweete harmony betweene the words and workes teaching and dooing of a Pastor See Acts 1 1. Phillippians 4 9. By weake are meant the feeble not in body but in minde being inferiour to others in knowledge and godlinesse And though the worde Englished infirmities do reach to all weaknesses both in state by want in sexe as of women in bodye as by sicknesse and old age all which we are to beare with others in pittying and releeuing them as we may yet here are to be vnderstood spiritual weakenesses not great vices and open crimes murther periury adultery c. as errors in Doctrine which be not against the foundation ignorance in some truth forgetfulnesse c. also sudden passions of anger griefe c. and faylings or slips in life which do not ouerturne honesty of maners as some rash and ydle speech c. these be called infirmities that is the sicknesses and maladies of the Christian soule which is shewed to be weake by them To beare these infirmities it is a speech borrowed from the frame of mans body where the bones which be the strongest parts doe beare vp the flesh and other weake partes or else from buildings where the pillars do beare vp the burthen of the house See 1 Kings 5 17. and Reuel 3 17. where beleeuers are called pillers Tim. What is our Doctrine from this first precept thus opened Silas First that all spiritual weaknesses are waighty and heauy burthens to be borne as young children and sicke persons are burthenous and troublesome to such as attend them so infirme Christians which haue errors and fraileties are vnto such as liue with them they are such a burthen as one takes vp with griefe and layes downe with pleasure such as haue much to deale with them feele it to be so to their great molestation This doctrine serueth both to humble the weak to walke in more lowlinesse and to labour for more strength that they may bee lesse irke some and grieuous Secondly it warnes the stronger sort that they haue cause to pray for much patience and power to bee able to beare such cumbersome burthens Tim. What is the next doctrine from these first words Silas That it is a duty not a gratification curtefie or indifferent thing which neede not bee done for such as be more fully instructed to sustaine or beare the vnskilfull and persons of meane guifts This duty of bearing hath in it these soure actions First with patience to suffer Secondly with compassion to pitty and pardon imperfections Thirdly with wisedome to admonish Fourthly with loue to correct and reproue that they may be healed The reasons of this duty be these First we are members one of another Secondly we haue one neede of another in some things as in other things they haue need of vs. Thirdly we must doe as we would bee done too Fourthly lawe of nature teacheth stronger to helpe weaker as it is done in a naturall body Fiftly the law of God commands to lift vp our neighbours sheepe beeing fallen into a ditch much more is this to bee done to a feeble brother that falleth into any sinne Sixtly the weake in faith are like to the sicke in body and who would not pitty and helpe such as cannot helpe themselues They are like to little children which stumble and fall and such who would not take vp Did a Samaritane kindly intreate a wounded Iewe and should not wee kindly respect a weake brother Oh let vs then in loue consider one another with true repentance for that which is past let vs henceforth with all our might striue against selfe-loue impatience fiercenesse pride cruelty and vncharitablenesse Tim. Come to the second precept and tell vs what it is not to please our selues Silas Not wholy or onely to seeke our owne commodities with neglect of that which may be pleasing or beneficiall to our brother Hence wee learne that it is a sinne for a man to satisfie himselfe with contempt of others to foreslow what may be profitable vnto others being altogether giuen to attend that that pleafeth our felues For first this is against the nature of charity which seeketh not her owne things 1. Cor. 13 5. Againe it is contrary to the practise of blessed Paul who pleased not himselfe that he might profite and please others 1. Cor. 9 19 20 21. Chap. 10. verse 33. Tim. But what reasons doth the text affoord vs why wee should satisfie and please our neighbour as well as our selues Silas One is from the ende why God hath giuen more knowledge and greater guifts vnto some which is the good and edification of our weake neighbours that is to make them stronger and better in faith and piety therfore hath God giuen to some greater and more graces to direct and support such as haue fewer and lesser As in a naturall body the guifts of the most excellent parts are giuen thē to conduct
the Romanes that being inriched as much as the Grecians indebted no lesse to the Iewes from whome they receiued the doctrine of Christ by the Apostles therefore they ought to follow the example of Macedonia and Achaia of whom Paul witnessed 2. Cor. 8 1. 2. 3. that their extreame pouerty abounded to their rich liberality beeing willing euen aboue their power so as the Romanes being better able and alike ingaged the Gospell also comming to them from Sion it behoued them at least to be as francke as the Christians of Macedonia were of such a matter Paul very artificially and wisely doth here aduertise them when he commends this duty in others hee doth excite them vnto it Tim. The verses 28 29. are yet behind will not this fountaine also send out some sweete streame Silas Yes as namely first that almes or workes of mercy be likened to fruite for they are the fruites of the Spirite Gala. 5. they spring from faith and charity also they do please God as pleasant fruite doth our palate Thirdly a fruite because almes was profitable both vnto the giuer as witnesses of their profession and to the receiuer whose necessities are relieued bowels comforted yea to God himselfe who reaped therby the fruite and calues of mens lips Lastly commodious to others for example sake Let al Christians heereby take more encouragement to abound in this fruite which is so delightfull to God as an odour of sweete smell and so very and manifoldly beneficiall to themselues which are bountifull giuers by increasing euen their earthly store Giue and it shall be giuen abundantly good measure pressed downe shall men giue into your bosome Luke 6 38. Because rich men beleeue not this therefore they are eyther illiberall and handfast sparing too much or prodigall and wastefull spending too much chusing the one to fill their chests and the other their lusts rather then to be fruitefull in workes of charity publike and priuate Secondly note heere Pauls fidelity that as a treasure signed shut vp in a close place or as letters sealed which others may not looke in and reade so he was carefull that this almes might safely come to their hands to whome it was meant therefore would not commit and turne ouer the care to others but himselfe would performe that is discharge the trust placed in him This it is which is meant when he saith when I haue sealed this fruite Such as deale falsly or fradulently in Orphanes goods or almes giuen to the poore or in reuenues of Hospitals are condemned by this example of Paul which calleth vpon all which haue trust reposed in them to declare all good faithfulnesse the want whereof hindereth mercy and makes loue of many to bee cold who dare not exercise liberality because there is so little fidelity Woe be to them by whom such offences come repent or perish Finally whereas Paul promiseth to bring with him an abundant blessing of the Gospel that is the Gospell which abundantly publisheth the eternall and most free grace of God in Christ by whom all nations are blessed through faith in him he doth herein like affectionate parents which going afarre off into strange countries doe kindle in their childrē a longing desire of their returne by large promises of some special gift at their cōming againe so the Apostle doth quicken the desires of the Romanes after his presence with promise of the greatest good which he could bring such as was able to make them partakers of all Gods spirituall blessings and of blessednes euerlasting Of this he was sure I know it because he had it by reuelation Acts 19 21. After Pauls example let preachers much rather seeke to do then to receiue good in places where they come or trauel it being a more blessed thing to giue then to receiue Acts 20 35. How is the spirit of Paul differing from the spirit of Romish prelacie whose comming is more pompous and chargeable then profitable and commodious to others Let godly Pastors also imitate his godly wisedome in stirring vp and increasing the good wil of their flockes towards them delighting in their loue and prouoking them to loue purposing promising and perfourming whatsoeuer may tend to make their people truely and for euer blessed though if need be with their labour and losse of liberty liuing and life So Christ so the Prophets and so Apostles haue walked DIAL VI. Verses 30 31 32 33. Now I beseech you brethren for the Lord Iesus Christs sake and for the loue of the Spirite that you do striue together with me in your Prayers to God for mee 31. That I might be deliuered from those which do not beleeue in Iudea and that my seruice which I haue for Ierusalem may be accepted of the Saints 32. That I may come to you with toy by the will of God and may with you be refreshed 33. Now the God of peace be with all Amen Tim. LEt vs haue the meaning method and matter of these 4. verses with most perspicuous breuity Silas They containe the last part of this Chapter his commending himselfe to their prayers with an exceeding religious obtestation euen as Christ or his Spirit be deare vnto them so that they be ready not to help but to fight togither with him in prayer to God the authour all good the protector against all euill verse 31. Then in verse 32. the subiect of their prayer or things to be praied for on Pauls behalfe are two First to be set free from the vnbeleeuing and cruell Iewes which maligned Paul most of all other Apostles and disciples of Christ. Secondly that the poore Church of Ierusalem might as thankfully accept the almes brought them by him as it was freely and voluntarily giuen them Afterwards he notcth the effects and fruits of their mutual praiers one was that he might come to them being saued from the fury of enemies and the other that he might come with more gladnes if he vnderstood his seruice for the poore Brethren to be accepted otherwise his comming would be with griefe verse 32 33. Tim. Come to the matter and touch the Doctrines reasons and vses verse by verse as ye did before Silas The first Doctrine out of the 30. verse is that the stronger do neede the praiers of the weaker The reason is because there will be still somewhat wanting to the best and the force of prayers depends not vpon the worthinesse of persons for the Romanes were lesse worthy then Paul but on Christes merites in whose name whosoeuer come to God shal be heard for themselues other For that God which commands vs to pray for our selues enioyneth vs to pray for others especiallie our teachers as hauing more neede vnto and more right in our prayers then other Christians haue The Vse is to warne the weaker to shew their charitie in praying for the worthier and the worthiest their humility in seeking the request of the meanest How much more ought the infirme to desire earnestly
first gathered together in their house to celebrate their assemblies for they might not haue in most places the free vse of Christian religion through the malice of the Iews somewhere elsewhere of Gentiles see Acts 13 14. Epenetus is intituled the first fruits of Achaia both because hee was in order of time the first which professed Christ in that country as first fruites came before the rest and for that in degree of piety and vertue excelled others as first fruites are both reaped before and be the chiefe and choice of the crop A worthy thing it is to giue the onset and begin to leade others the way which feare and worldlinesse makes men backward to doe yea keepeth numbers from following others that haue broken the Ice and made an entrance into the zealous profession and practise of Christianity The other titles of beloued approued of labouring in the Lorde and beeing in the Lord giuen to diuers heere doe note howe deare they were to Paul for their profession of faith or fruites of their faith teach that others ought to be so farre foorth beloued and esteemed of as they pertaine to Christ our common Lord shew the same by their faithfull endeuors to further the Gospell Also note v. 7. to be in Christ signifies to be a christian or faithfull person and to bee approued in Christ is to bee vnblameable or without reproofe nay well allowed offor his faithfulnesse and constancy in the cause of Christ. Whereas he salutes some of his kinsmen learne that to our kindred when they be godly we are tied by a double band one of nature the other of Religion therefore such as forsake and forget their Christian religions kindred do giue cause to fear least neither piety nor humanity be had in regard by them Such as were in bonds with Paul for the Gospell sake are therefore called his fellow-prisoners They suffered bondes and imprisonment with him and so shewed their hearty loue both to Christ and to his Apostle Paul whom they forsooke not as diuers others did 2. Timothy 4. All forsooke mee but did cleaue to his doctrine by faith and became his fellowes in afflictions Let Christians learn thus to loue the word and the Ministers of it such imprisonment is more sweet then liberty Also whereas some are commended for labouring in the Lord and others for labouring much in him that is in the divulging of his truth and edifying his Church or doing other seruices of charity heereby wee do learne that there is a difference among Labourers some according to their meanes opportunities gifts great zeale labour more and some lesse but each are to haue their due praise euen he who laboreth litle as well as he who laboureth much none are to be defrauded Whereas v. 13. Rufus mother is called Paules Mother vnderstand a Mother by affection not naturall Obserue that Aristobulus and Narcissus are not saluted as beeing belike not yet conuerted and Narcissus is thought to haue bin full of riches and naughtinesse ouerthrowing many a woorthy man by calumnies yet both hadde Christians in their families The kisse which Paul mentioneth v 16. sheweth the custome to be ancient for the Saints at their meeting do declare mutuall good will by a kisse which was giuen sometime in token of subiection as Gen. 42. and Psal. 2 12. Sometimes a signe of Charity this was cheefly done before the receiuing of the Eucharist to testifie peace and brotherly amity Whence arose the superstitious kissing the Paxe in popery which depraues abuseth al good things By adding holy he distinguishes 1. chast kisses from wanton 2. adulatory and 3. proditory and 4. dissimulatory kisses such as Ioab Iudas and Ammon gaue which is no small thing For as giuing the hande one to another at our meeting after long absence signifieth the deliuery of our heart to him toward whom we vse such gesture so kissing of all other gestures hath I know not how the most euident expresse representation of that which is within For whereas life consisteth in respiration and our breathing is by our mouth kissing is a signe that a man is ready to communicate and as it were to infuse his own proper soule to another A custome not so ancient for vse 1 Pet. 5 14. in Eastern Churches especially but now is as grosly abused in the Westerne and by such as affoord this loue-token euen to dogs Finally whereas Paul familiarly nameth and saluteth many of his acquaintance at Rome and farre more then other Churches being better knowne vnto him yet not once mentioneth Peter who should be the chiefe Pastor there as Papists say The Apostle either did forget and neglect him which is vnlike or Peter was vnworthy as an Apostata of his salutation which is vntrue or Peter was not then at Rome which is not vnprobable yea whether he were there at all or no is vncertaine For we do not finde in all the history of the Acts or other partes of the new Testament that euer Peter came at Rome no not one syllable to that purpose therefore it can bee no Article of faith or thing necessary to bee beleeued vnto saluation for all such things are either expresly written or by necessary deduction to bee collected out of Scriptures which are as Origen saith the sole norme and rule of Faith the vnmooueable Canon of verity as 〈◊〉 the most exact gnomon ballance square of all truths as Chrysostom Againe what shal we say if the Scriptures doe teach the quite contrary For Paul was conuerted a year or thereabouts after the ascension of our Lord. The third yeare after Pauls miraculous conuersion in his way to Damascus Peter went to Ierusalem where hee continued with Paul the space of fifteene dayes Gal. 1 18. all this while Peter was not at Rome Eight yeeres after Pauls conuersion Peter was abiding at Ierusalem beeing imprisoned was sought for to be killed by Herod about the 3. yeare of Claudius as yet then he was not at Rome Acts 12 2 3 4. c. Sixe yeares after that euen full fourteene yeares after that hee first had met Paul at Ierusalem which was the 51. yeare from Christs birth hee was at Ierusalem where hee gaue Paul and Barnabas the right hand of fellowship Gal. 2 9. At which time a councell was held at Ierusalem Acts 15. and then it was agreed vpon by mutuall consent Galat. 2 9. that Paul should preach vnto the Gentiles and Peter to the Iewes who by an edict were cast out banished from Rome so as all this while hee came not there When the Councel was dissolued whither did Peter goe to Rome his Sea and seate as the Papists faine nay to Antioch where hee was to his face a bold acte to be done if Peter had beene Pope hee was I say reproued of Paul for his dissimulation Galath 2 11. Moreouer when Paul was first led prisoner to Rome hee found not Peter there for then would not
in mens writings if they haue otherwise writ ten then the truth will beare Aug. Interpret Doctrine Doctrine Reason Tradidit Robo am in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sicut Deus tradidit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pseudo 〈◊〉 Aug. Reason Vse Doctrine What a feare fullheauy punishment it is to haue an heart hardened Reasons Vse Sin is of God as a recompence not as an offence as a retribution but not as a transgrescion Scope Parts Doctrine Reason Vse Doctrins Lutherans also do much wrong vs in this matter Therebe sundry predictions which are no maledictions 2 part of the Chapter Two ends of Gods counsel in reiecting the Iewes Doctrine Reasons Vse Doctrine Vse How to reape benefit by sin Doctrine Doctrine Doctrine Interpret Summe Doctrine Reason Vse Doctrine Doctrine Reason Vse Doctrine Reason Vse Proposition Assumption Conclusion Interpret Doctrine Reason Vse Interpretation Doctrine How the Ministerie is to be made honorable Vse Parts Interpretation Doubt Solution Vse Doctrine Reason Vse Interpretation Doctrine Reason Vse Doctrine Interpret Vse Doctrine Reasons Interpret Doubt Solution Doubt Solution Vse See 〈◊〉 notes on 1. Iohn 4. 18. Doctrine Vse M. Perkins Reasons Vse Solution Doubt Solution Reasons why the Apostles doe proue their doctrine by Scripture of the old Te stament We must otherwise iudge of the canonicall Scripture then Catholike authors Interpretation Explanation of the doctrine Ezek. 37. 1 2. 3 4. c. Doctrine Reasons Vse Interpret Doubs Solution Doctrine Vse Mal. 3 6. Numb 13 19. Esay 46 11. 1 Sam. 15 29. Psal. 110 4. Iam. 1 17. Psal. 4 2 3. Doctrine Interpret Doctrine Reasons Reason Vse Doctrine Reason Doubt Doctrine 1 Cor. 10 30. Properties of our Christian Sacrifice Manner Interpret Vse Vse Sacrifice twofold proper and improper Of proper sacrifices two ends and two kindes The improper spirituall sacrifice here meant Reasons why Christian obedience is called sacrifice Vse Properties of our Sacrifice See Psal. 136. whole Coherence Summe Interpretat Why naturall men be called the world Proofe by scripture Reasons Similitudes Vse Such maisters such seruants Regis ad exemplum 〈◊〉 componitur 〈◊〉 Doctrine Doctrine Authoritie Reason Vse Doctrine Reason Vse The minde is first to bee made good Interpretat Doctrine Reasons Summe Deus dixit Gen. 1. Double 〈◊〉 briety Coherence Similitude The Pope no head of the Church Christ gaue some Apostles some Prophets c. Ephes 4 11. but he gaue no head Ephes. 4 11. Phil. 1. 1. 1 Tim. 3 8. Prophesy or Ministry So Origen and M. Peter Martyr take it generally for Doctrine and exhortation also 〈◊〉 Prophesying subdiuided Thus Peter Martyr Oleuian and M. Doctor Willet do distinguish them Differing guists verse 6. Ministry subdiuided Acts 6 3 5. Thus Martyr Olcuian Orinaus and Paraeus do iudge Piscator also Like to our Church-wardens and Side men Thus Faius and Gualter and Paraeus expound it Coherence Sixe properties effects of charity Doubt Solution Note this Doctrine Reason Vse 1. qualitie of loue Three Rules whereby to iudge sincere loue The 2. words in the originall signify an hatred with vehemencie and to be ioyned vnto that which is good with a strong and indissoluble bond Pet. Martyr out of Chrysostoms Interpret Brethren because they communicate in one the same thing then ore thoy loue one another by good right 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 Church neyther sound Church nor sound member Rainold The faith of 〈◊〉 now 〈◊〉 of old Rome is not euen The great Anti-christ no where but at Rome What honour is How ingen dered What it is to go before other in giuing honour 2. Extreames of diligence Feruencie or zeale So M Beza affirmeth Hope patiēce Prayer How our praiers be continuall Hospitality Blesse what it is Where were patience or experience or hope without these persecutions of wicked men saith Chrystostome Mutuall affection What 〈◊〉 there is in contention about religion on the examples of Iewes and 〈◊〉 of Arrians Christians of Papists and Hugonites of Lutherans and Protestants of Formalists and 〈◊〉 as they be called doe witnesse Effect of Arrogancy Innocency of manners Reasons of a peaceable life Doubt Solution Magistrates be lawfull auengers How we may vse Lawe and authority Augustine vnderstandes by coales of fire the burning gripes of Repentance making anenimy relent beeing mollified by benefits as Ierom saith Others of burning charitie fire of loue as Martyr and Lyra. Others of both as M. Caluin c. Subiect what it imports Similitudes Powers Doubt Solution The kinds of power Mariti 〈◊〉 Patria 〈◊〉 Vse 2. Reason How Magistrates may be resisted A good wary wise prince is oftentimes sold. Reason Doubt Solution Doubt Solution Doubt Solution Doctrine Reasons Vse How loue is the ulfilling of the law and why Doubt Solution The Triall of Loue. Kairos Sleepe naturall and spirituall A natural and a spirituall waking Interpretat To cast off what Armour Of light why Interpretat Summe Vse How why Christ a garment Christ is truly 〈◊〉 two wayes Doctrine Doctrine Doubt Solution Great 〈◊〉 betweene 〈◊〉 and West Churches about obseruation of East r. betweene Luther protestants about breaking the bread This kinde of Carbonarie faith Cardinall Hosius requireth in all which dy wel and holds it sufficient for their saluatiō Scope Rom. 8 5. What it is to liue to Christ What it is to dye vnto the Lord. What is meant by Iudging Vse 7. things confiderable by this text about the last iudgement Acts 17 31. 1 Cor. 15 25 26 27 28. Howthe place of Esay cited by Paul is to be vnderstood The corporal superstitious bowing of the knee to the letters and 〈◊〉 of Iesus name for they do it not to the Lord or to Christ or to Emanuell is not to be proued by this Text. Diuels haue no material keees yet they also must bow Doctrine Vse Interpretat 3. Doctrine Vse 1 Cor. 6 9. Gal. 5 21. Vse Righteousnes Peace Ioy. Doctrine Note this He meaneth by faith an vndoubted certainety of minde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the truth of God 〈◊〉 Acts 15 9. Titus 1 15. An Infideil is 〈◊〉 of sinne because he dooth his workes not of faith or to the end for which he should and he doth them with an vngodly will Aug. Order and partes of the Chapter Vse Doctrine Vse Reason Doctrine Doctrine Reason Vse Doctrine
only a bare Testimony 1 Cor. 2 12. Ephes. 1 17 18. 1. Iohn 3 24. Tim. What is the second witnesse of our adoption Silas Gods Spirit is the first and our Spirit is the second Tim. But seeing our hearts know not the minde of God and they be deceiueable aboue measure how can this bee a meete witnesse Silas Indeede our stony harts such as they are by nature are blinde and deceitfull but our fleshy heartes which we haue from grace are not so for our hearts as they are renewed by the Spirit of God doth knowe the minde and good will of God towardes vs and beares a sincere and infallible testimony of it vnto vs. For it is written The Spirit of man which is in him knowes the things of man 1 Cor 2 11. Also if our hearts do not condemne vs we haue boldnesse towards God 1 Iohn 3 21. But it were not possible that wee should haue boldnesse and confidence towardes God if the testimonie which our hearts beareth vs were doubtfull and wauering and not certaine and firme Tim. What is then meant heere by our Spirit Silas Not our soule as it is a naturall part of man but our regenerate and sanctified conscience and affections In which sence the word Spirit is vsed by Paul 1 〈◊〉 14 15. 1 〈◊〉 5 23. It was well therefore obserued of one certaine learned and iudicious Writer that this Text saith not that the Spirit beareth witnesse to our soules but to our spirite Tim. Yet the Sanctification of our 〈◊〉 is altogether verie imperfect and weake and therefore shoulde rather cause vs to doubt of our Adoption then to certifie and assure vs of it Sil. The imperfections of our regeneration doth and may make the witnesse of our spirit lesse strong and full but no whit hindereth the certainty of it which ariseth not somuch from the measure as from the trueth of our sanctified desires and affections euen as a childe may be sayde to walke and goe certainly and truely as a man though not so firmly and steadily and a small peece of gold may bee as pure as a greater though not of such value and an honest poore man may beare as true a witnesse as an honest rich man though hee lacke the credit of his wealth and purse Tim. Tell vs now after what sort our Spirit and conscience renewed doth beare this witnes vnto vs Silas By a kinde of reasoning framed in a regenerate minde after this sort They are without doubt the Children of God who haue such holy motions and affections as are stirred vp by the Spirite of adoption and be proper to the godly which haue that Spirit This proposition though plaine enough in it selfe yet is proued by the 14. verse of this Chapter in these wordes As many as are ledde by the Spirit of God they are the Sonnes of God But saith the regenerate man I am truely indued with such motions and affections This assumption is testified by the regenerate conscience which is in stead of a thousand witnesses certifying euery newe borne childe of God what graces hee hath receiued from the Spirite of God according to that which is cited before 1 Cor. 2. 11. Therefore he inferreth I am the childe of God This conclusion is the testimony of our spirit and renued heart Tim. Tell vs nowe particularly some of those motions and affections of a sanctified heart whereby we may be assured that we are the Sonnes of God Silas They be innumerable and very many yet for order sake we may bring them into a few heads As first they bee such as concerne either Gods mercies in Christ. 2. or his Word 3. or his Ministers 4. or the Sabaoths and holy assemblies 5. or Sacraments 6. or workes 7 or his children 8. or his religion 9. or our sinnes 10. or the ioyes of heauen 11. or the paines of hell Tim. What be the affections of Gods children touching the mercies of God in Christ Silas Three first to thirst and long after them in a true feeling of the neede of them Esay 55. 1. Iohn 7. 37. Secondly to prize them aboue all things in the world which be most precious Phil. 3. 8. Thirdly to extoll and praise them before others that they may be drawne to the loue of them Psal. 103. 1. 2. 3. c. Psal. 34. 3. Tim. What be the affections of Gods children towardes the word and Ministers of God Silas Touching the word first they delight in the law of God touching the inner man and loue his statutes Psal. 119. 97. Rom. 7. 22. Secondly in their iudgement they approoue it and esteeme it aboue pearles Thirdly in their mindes they marke and heede it well Fourthly in their hearts they beleeue it Fiftly in their memories they keepe it and treasure it vp Sixtly that with their eares they 〈◊〉 vnto it with trembling and reuerence Seauenthly with their mouthes they confesse it and speake good of it And lastly that they submit their whole man to the obedience and practise of it in all sincerity and constancy Prou. 3. 13. 14. Psal. 119. 8. 9. 10. Mat. 7. 24. Also touching the Ministers they acknowledge them and haue them in singular loue for their workes sake 1 Thess. 5. 12. 13. Secondly they doe readily submit themselues to be ruled by their wholsome instructions Heb. 13. 17. Thirdly they be thankfull to them in ministring to them a cheerfull sufficient maintenance Gal. 6. 6. and 4. 15. Lastly they helpe them with their earnest prayers Rom. 15. 13. Colos. 4. 3. and otherwise as need and cause requireth Acts 9. 25. Tim. What bee the affections of Gods children towards the Sabaoth and holy assemblies Silas Touching the Sabaoth they be thus affected towards it they call it their delight they doe not their owne workes nor seeke not their owne will nor speake a vaine word on that day Esay 58 13 14. Secondly they remember to keepe it holy Exod. 20 8. Touching the holy assemblies it is their geiefe to be kept from them by any vrgent occasion and when they come to them they first looke to their feete Psal. 84 1 2. Eccle. 4 17. Tim. What be the affections of Gods children towards the Sacraments Also towards his workes Silas Touching the Sacraments they reuerently thinke of them and willingly submit themselues to the vse of thē in respect that they are Gods ordinance and the seales of grace Rom. 4 11. And touching the Lords supper they will neuer receiue it without due examination of themselues because of Christs commandement and the dignity of the supper 1. Cor. 11 28. And touching the workes of God that his workes of iudgement mooue them much to feare his power and iustice Acts 5 11. And his workes of mercy vpon themselues and others moue them to loue him and to trust in his name Psal. 116 1. Acts. 4 31. Tim. What be the affections of Gods Children towards the Brethren as also towards Christian Religion Silas Touching
the Brethren they doe vnfainedly loue them whether they be friends or enemies and especially witnesse their loue in praying for them and seeking and helping forward their saluation and giuing thankes vnto God for their graces also by pittying and releeuing their miseries Luke 6 30. Rom. 10 1. 1. Thes. 1 2 3. 1. Iohn 3 14 17. And touching Christian religion First they feruently loue it Secondly they endeauour to promote and further it Thirdly they hate whatsoeuer is contrary vnto it And lastly they study to adorne it by expressing the power of it and walking according to the rules of it Psa. 119 128. 1. Tim. 6. 1. Iames 1 27. Tim. What be the affections of Gods children in respect of sinnes Silas First they mourne for the sinnes of others as did Dauid Psal. 119. 136. and Paul Phil. 3 6. Mat. 5 4. Secondly touching their owne sinnes if they be past they are ashamed of them Romanes 6 21. If they be present they haue a godly sorrow and earnest strife against them 2. Cor. 7 10. Rom. 7 23. And lastly for sinnes to come they are afraide to fall into them and haue a great care to preuent them 2. Cor. 7 11. Tim. What are the affections of Gods Children to the ioyes of Heauen and the paines of Hell Silas Touching the ioyes of Heauen they haue hope and a certaine and constant looking for them Rom. 8 24. Heb. 9. 28. Titus 2. 13. Also they haue great ioy of heart vnder the hope of enioying heauenly glory Rom. 5. 2. Touching the paines of hell they haue a great feare and terrour in respect that they haue deserued them with a maruailous care to auoyd them 2 Cor. 5. 11. 2 Tim. 4. 1. 2. and the wayes that leade to them Tim. But what if any do feele in themselues these motions to be few and feeble Silas Let such for their comfort haue recourse to the least measure of sanctifying graces which consists in a detestation of their sinnes euen in this respect that they are an offence to their good God Secondly a hearty desire of hoping and beleeuing the forgiuenesse of their sinnes and aboue all other things that they may bee in Gods fauour and not onely that they may be happy in heauen Tim. What if any finde none of these affections in themselues Silas First let them not despaire Secondly let them waite vppon GOD in the vse of all apppointed meanes Thirdly let them abstaine from the outwarde act of sinne and keep downe their inward desires as much as they can Lastly let them often humble themselues by a particular confession of their knowne sinnes and earnest prayer for pardon of them For he that is not called now may be called to morrow who knoweth what a day may bring forth Gods infinite power woorkes mightily and sodainly and his mercies bee bottomlesse therefore cast not hope away DIAL XVI Verse 17. If we be children we are also heyres euen the heyres of God and heyres annexed with Christ. Tim. WHat is the drift and scope of this text Silas To conclude the maine argument and reason by which the Apostle before did exhort the Romanes by the spirit to mortifie the deeds of the flesh This argument was taken from the euent which shall follow them which liue after the spirite and not after the flesh namely eternall life giuing to wit that such shall liue for euer because they are the sonnes of God from hence the Apostle now concludeth that if such as walke after the Spirit bee sonnes then they must inherit euerlasting life in heauen for all Gods children be heires and haue right to the heritage of heauen This conclusion doth very liuely set forth the manifold and great dignity of true beleeuers the more to stirre them vp cheerefully to follow the gouernment of Gods Spirit Tim. What be the degrees of the dignity of the faithfull Silas They bee these foure first that they bee not seruants but children Secondly that all of them bee heyres Thirdly that they bee heires of God not of any mortall king but of that king which is immortall namely GOD. Lastly that they bee coheires or heyres annexed with Christ. Tim. Tell vs now what is meant by children Silas Euen all the sonnes and daughters of God whosoeuer they be which haue the spirit of adoption and beleeue in Christ. Tim. But Christ is the onely begotten child of God how then can the faithfull be children Silas True indeede Christ is the onely begotten childe of God according to nature being begotten of his Fathers substance from euerlasting but beleeuers bee children by grace of adoption being by nature the children of wrath Christ is a child of the substance of God his Father whereas the beleeuers are children by fauour Tim. Is this so great a dignity to bee the childe of God by grace Silas It is so for first such as haue Christ to bee their brother Mat. 12. 50. Heb. 2. 12. Secondly the Angels are their seruants Psal. 34. 7. Heb. 1. 14. Thirdly themselues are Priestes Prophets and Kings 1 Pet. 2. 9. Reue. 1. 6. Fourthly the whole worlde yea euen heauen is their right and possession 1 Cor. 3. 22. 23. If it bee counted so great a dignity to be the childe of an earthly King what a worthy thing must it then be to be the childe of the King of Heauen For to be the childe of God is no empty title because by it we obtaine this dignity to bee heires The lawe of nature doth yeelde this vnto children that they shall enioy the inheritance which is left vnto them by their deceased Parents and the Lawe of grace doth promise the heauenly inheritance to all which bee children of God by faith in Christ. Tim. Howbeit among the Children of Abraham Isaac onely had the inheritance the rest had gifts and were sent away Gen. 25 5 6. Silas It is true because God so commanded and the promises were made to Isaac but the case fals out otherwise betweene the children of God and of men for amongst men in sundry countries all Childeren bee not heires but sonnes onely and in some places not all sons but the eldest sonne alone but Gods children bee they sonnes or bee they daughters they bee all heires euery one without exception There is neither Male nor Female with God Tim. But whose heires are they and what is their inheritance Sil. They are heires of God and God himselfe is their inheritance one and the selfe-same person is both father and inheritance in this case for to enioy God fully and perfectly in his Sonne Christ this is the inheritance of the Saints whoe in God doe enioy all other things Gods children therefore they are great heires and they haue a goodly heritage Psal. 16 4 5. 1. Cor 3 21. Tim. What is the fourth part of the dignity of the faithfull Sil. That they are heires annexed with Christ or ioynt heires with Christ. Tim. The inheritance of Christ how