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A09442 Lectures vpon the three first chapters of the Reuelation: preached in Cambridge anno Dom. 1595. by Master William Perkins, and now published for the benefite of this Church, by Robert Hill Bachelor in Diuinitie. To which is added an excellent sermon, penned at the request of that noble and wise councellor, Ambrose, Earle of Warwicke: in which is proued that Rome is Babylon, and that Babylon is fallen Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1604 (1604) STC 19731; ESTC S114472 318,460 389

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creature no not for the Angels which fell as well as man The third degree which is most principall is that whereby he loues his elect and chosen children which is that loue whereby he accepts of them to life euerlasting This third degree hath two parts for it is taken first for the purpose of his decree to loue secondly for the action or declaration of his loue For the first as I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau that is I haue purposed to loue the one and hate the other Secondly for the declaration of his purpose to loue Thirdly for the action and for the declaration of his loue and speciall fauor in speciall benefits 1. Ioh. 3. 1. Behold what singular loue God hath shewed on vs nothing the declaration of his purpose to loue vs in giuing his son for vs. So in this verse is meant Gods special loue or the declaration of his purpose to loue vs in speciall benefits Now whereas S. Iohn placeth this in the first place of all the benefites of Christ That he loued vs he would teach vs that this loue is the very ground of mans redemption the very cause of Gods liking and fauor to man Then there is no foreseene faith away with foreseene workes for he loued vs first and that alone is the cause and ground of our election and saluation But it may be obiected The loue of God as also of man respects the goodnesse of things loued so we loue a thing because it is good and when it is euill we hate it There is great difference betweene the loue of the creature and the Creator The creature loues the thing because he seeth it is good but God the Creator he first loues the creature and hence it comes that it is good because he loues it 2. Whereas S. Iohn and all the Churches of Asia as other true Churches do beleeue and are assured that Christ loues them for that S. Iohn taketh for graunted this should moue all men to haue this care to labour aboue all things to be rooted and grounded in loue seeing he places that in the first place This we do when we are assured in heart and conscience by the working of Gods spirit that he loues vs in Christ so that he which takes away the assurance of Gods loue to vs in Christ takes away the very ground of our saluation Now that we may haue this loue of God we must in all our duties to God and man draw neare to God keeping a good conscience before God all men and so if we loue God he wil come to vs stay and dwell in vs. And if we would haue his loue to be plentifully shed in our hearts then we must draw neare to him by loue and he will draw neare to vs for he louing vs first if we increase in that loue to him then will he double his loue to vs. And washed vs from our sinnes in his blood Here is the second benefit and action of Christ to his Church which is first the remission of sinnes secondly the mortification of sinnes Washed Here he sheweth that the sinnes of men are as filthy spots in their soules and after he confesseth the vile estate of the Church and euery member thereof in that he saith they were so washed For washing presupposeth filthinesse before and a corrupted estate and so should we by their example learne to consider our owne estate how that our soules and bodies be spotted and defiled with sins originall and actuall So did Dauid Psal. 51. most sensibly and excellently feele his owne wants and see his miserable estate when he desired the Lord to wash him thorowly confessing thereby his soule and body was foule stained and polluted with sinne and addes thoroughly not once and so inough bnt wash me againe and againe thoroughly till I be cleane and cleanse me rince bathe swill me in the blood of Christ to be purged and cleansed from all my sinnes In which words he sheweth his exceeding feeling of his own miseries how fouly he was defiled so should we labour to see how the spots of sinne are deeply stucke in our soules they be fast set so that one washing will not serue but we must be rinced bathed and cleansed by the blood of Christ for it is not the hand of any man or Angell which can wash away these spots nor any thing they can giue vs but onely Christ Iesus whose finger alone dipped in his owne blood can wash away our spots of sinne The consideration whereof should make vs consider our wretched estate and often to repent vs of our sins to take heed of sin which staines vs so We must labour to haue our hearts purged and cleansed by the blood of Christ and till we haue them so purged neither our faith obedience loue or any thing we do is acceptable to God The first part of this benefit of Christ containes the remission of our sinnes the taking away of the punishment and the guilt due to them the second part is the mortification of sin Which hath washed vs from all c. He addeth these words to shew that if any beleeue truly he hath pardon of all his sinnes without any restraint or limitation of these or those sinnes By his blood How can blood wash away filthinesse nay it rather defiles a man Answ. This washing stands not in the substance of the blood but in the merit thereof for the blood of Christ shed is lost and God knowes what is become of it whatsoeuer the Papists say but the merite of it washeth away sinnes Obiect But why doth Christs blood rather then any other mans blood as Peter Iohn c Answ. Because that blood was the blood of God not of the Godhead but of him who was both God and man for these two natures being vnited together make but one person and so it may be called the blood of God as Paul saith God redeemed vs by his blood that is Christ God and man God-man or God incarnate and so it being the blood of God is more meritorious then the blood of any creature whatsoeuer Besides I answer Christ was appointed by God to be a publike person to be suretie for all mankind but no man can be so to be in the roome of the whole company of mākind Then damnable is the doctrine of the Papists who hold the blood of Martyrs can merit for other for seeing they be but priuate men they cannot profit any other By blood we must vnderstand the passion of Christ being a part for the whole and withall we must remember his fulfilling of the law for in his suffering he fulfilled the whole law and in fulfilling the law he suffered and these two cannot be seuered so that this containes the whole obedience of Christ partly in suffering partly in fulfilling the law S. Iohn addeth these words and sets downe these two blessings to draw men to loue and like
sinnes for in this Chapter we find that certaine men in this Church were giuen to fornication and idolatrie close and hidden sinnes Now here he is said to haue fierie eyes to shew them he seeth these secret sinnes he knoweth their hearts much more their sinfull workes and will punish them Then by this we haue a good remedie against all secret sins The nature of man is for shame and feare of punishment to abstaine from outward crimes but being out of the companie of men he will breake the commandement of the first and second Table without any care or conscience and this euery mans conscience can best testifie that though he can abstaine from outward sinnes for shame and punishment yet he will cōmit secret sinnes But these men should remember that though they be out of the presence of men yet they stand in the presence of Christ he seeth them his fierie eye pierceth to their inward thoughts and affections and though they may bleare the eyes of men yet they cannot bleare this fierie eye of Christ. If euery man would remember this the fornicator blasphemer or any sinner it would be a good meanes to bridle and stay thē from committing sinnes both open and hidden And his feet like fine brasse He is said to haue brazen feet to shew his strength and power by which he ouercame and bruised the head of the serpent on the crosse and fully vanquished hell death and sinne by his death and also doth subdue sinne and Satan and put them vnder not onely his brazen foot but vnder the feet of his seruants and members The end why he is said to haue feet of brasse here in this Epistle is to terrifie certaine wicked persons in this Church as fornicators and idolaters nay the whole Church of Thyatira which by these wicked men were in daunger to be drawne that way This then may be a remedie for all loose liuers namely to consider of Christs brazen feet to thinke that Christ our Sauiour is in the midst of the Church walketh there and that he hath a foote of brasse to trample and tread all his enemies to powder and to destroy them The want of this is the cause why men lie in sinne and heape sinne vpon sinne without care or conscience or any feare The second part of the Epistle is the Proposition wherein is propounded the substance and matter of the Epistle It hath two parts first a praise secondly a dispraise or rebuke The commendation in the 19. verse the dispraise in the 20. verse First she is commended generally I know thy workes secondly particularly for many duties and vertues I know thy workes that is I see and allow thy workes and wayes The end why he alleadgeth and repeateth these words is to stirre vp the hearts of his seruants to consider of his presence For Christ before hath fierie eyes and here he saith I know thy workes to make this consideration to sinke more deepely and imprint it more throughly In the second part he commendeth her for many duties and vertues first loue secondly seruice thirdly patience fourthly faith and increase of godlinesse First she is commended for loue that is loue to man not to God for for that she is cōmended after in the duties to God But by loue and seruice is meant duties to man performed by man to man To know this loue better note three points first what it is secondly the property of true loue to man thirdly how it must be practised toward men Loue to man is a gift of Gods spirit whereby a man is well affected to his neighbour for Gods sake First loue is the gift of the Spirit Gal. 5. 25. Secondly it is a gift whereby a man is well affected to his neighbour that is to reioyce at his good to defend to seeke and wish his good yea to be grieued with his hurt and miserie and withall to haue bowels of compassion to helpe him in his hurt and miserie Thirdly it must be to our neighbour not by dwelling or habitation but to them which be our brethren in nature haue the same flesh with vs beare the same image of God Then all men as they be men are our neighbours though they dwell at the worlds end whether beleeuer or infidell friend or foe to these we must be wel affected Fourthly it must be for Gods sake for God must first absolutely and principally be loued and man for him so that our loue to man is a fruit of our loue to God springing and descending from it As for the propertie of our loue to man it must be feruent and that in two things first if need require euery man is bound in the compasse of his calling to lay downe his life for his brother and for his neighbour 1. Ioh. 3. 16. Secondly it must be feruent towards our enemies in the world there is much hatred malice and iniuries Now we must loue those persons from whō these come and loue must be feruent that these like water do not quench it And for the practise of our loue to man the rule is that we loue him as our selues as we loue and wish well to our selues heartily so must we loue and wish well to him This is the law of nature to do to another as we would haue him to do to vs yea this is the law of God do to all men as you would haue them do to you Is a man to sell the diuell offereth him gaine if he wil lie Now consider by thine owne law wouldest thou haue another to deceiue thee by lying no surely then deceiue not thy neighor by false weights wares or otherwise By these three things we see for what this Church was commended This loue were to be wished in vs but alas it waxeth cold euery man is a louer of himselfe seeketh his owne good no man his brothers euery man spends his labor wit and his calling to help himself no man to do good to others to help the common good or the good of the Church but to the hurt or hindering of others for men think they may make the best of their owne sell as deare as they can but we should employ all our callings if we had true loue not onely to our owne good but the good of others euen the common good of the towne country or church When men come to the Church to heare the word to pray to receiue the sacrament then they seeme to shew great loue of God but look into their callings there is no loue of their brethren which sheweth they haue no true but an outward loue of God seeing they loue not their neighbour liue by iniustice seeking to fley him and draw out his very bloud by cruell dealing by griping pilling and polling now there cannot be true loue of God where this loue of our neighbour is wanting 1. Iohn 3. 21. The second vertue for which this church is cōmended is seruice In this place
knowledge wisdome constancie zeale pietie and religion So in the old Testament he deliuered thē to his Prophets not to all but his seruants men of singular gifts and graces and of exceeding holinesse and pietie Indeed the Lord reuealed some particular things to wicked men as to Balaam but they neuer knew them comfortably It is a propertie belonging to the seruants of God to haue a vision reuealed and to know the same Now both these befell S. Iohn he was a man of exceeding holinesse of life for Christ loued him and of singular and rare gifts Now the diuell maketh no such choice but his visions befall men which are heretikes wicked notorious sinners and they haue no rare and speciall gifts as the other so that by this a man may distinguish them by the persons to whom they befall Then we must esteeme of it as a singular gift of God giuen to his owne Apostle S. Iohn After the description of Christ Iohn describes himselfe by many modest tearmes first Your brother that is of them being members all of the mysticall bodie Christ Iesus for the church of God is a familie God the Father is head and housholder Iesus Christ is the elder brother we all are fellow brethren in and by Christ being by him the adopted sonnes of God and brethren to each other By this title first he setteth out his humilitie and great modestie for he was a man at that time aboue all men which liued in regard of his gifts and holinesse of life he was the last Apostle and had apostolicall authoritie being a most true professor yet he calleth himselfe a brother to all true beleeuers maketh himselfe but equall with them though they were farre inferiour to him And so should we esteeme better of all our brethren then of our selues and make our selues inferior to them Secondly by this title we see he had his hart full of brotherly loue to all the members of the church of Christ so we are bound to loue all men as they be of the same flesh with vs but those which be of the same faith religion to these especially should we shew our loue and affection It is good reason that they which haue the same head Christ the same God the same faith hope religion and redemption by Iesus Christ should be so affected to one another and being linked by all these should haue a more neare loue then is between man man But in this world as Esay saith men hate their brethren euen for the profession of the same religion whereby they thinke to be saued If they liue with more conscience then others then they reuile speake ill of and hate them for the name of Christ. The second title Companion or fellow partner compartner in tribulations in the kingdome and in patience He was partner with them in tribulations for two causes first because at that time when he wrote this vision the whole Church was in persecutiō and tribulation vnder that cruell tyrant Domitian about fourescore or an hundred yeares after Christ and so he fled to Pathmos at that time and being mindfull of the afflictions of the Church whereof he was a member he cals himselfe a partner with them in affliction By which he shewes our estate that it is to be vnder the crosse to liue in affliction not to be companions of peace and ease but partakers of affliction and tribulation and therfore those which will be Christs Disciples and follow him they must deny themselues and take vp their crosse dayly and because of this estate the Church in this world is called the militant Church Now seeing the state of the Church is in tribulation we in this land and Church which haue had peace and quietnes so long without persecution we must know that it is giuen vs that now in the time of peace we might prepare our selues against the day of triall and persecution for seeing the estate of the Church is to be vnder affliction and persecution we are bound to looke for it and know that the Lord will come and try his Church for it must increase and grow by triall The Lord hath sent labourers into his haruest a long time which haue gathered much wheate into the Lords barne Now there must come a day when the Lord will take his fan and siue into his hands and will with the fan and siue of persecution try the wheat and winnow the corne from the chaffe that it may appeare who are his true children Then stands it vs in hand to take heed we be found good corne and not chaffe that we may abide the siue that we proue not light corne blowne about with the wind and fit to be cast into the fire to be burnt He cals himselfe their fellow partner in affliction because his pitifull hart was moued with compassion to all his fellow members and partners in affliction when he remembred their persecution and affliction they suffered vnder the cruell tyrant Dominitian Now looke what was in him the same affection should be in vs our hearts should be pitifull full of compassion for the poore afflicted members of Christ seeing they be our fellow members we should haue a fellow feeling with them and shew our compassion in pittying them If the foote be pricked the head stoopes the eye beholds and lookes on it the finger puls it out the hand applies the plaister the other foot is ready to run for help the tongue to aske for counsell and all the members are ready to affoord their mutuall helpe in pittie and fellow feeling so when any members of the Church suffer affliction be pricked with persecution for Christs cause then should we as fellow members of one body be ready to do all the helpe we can to them especially in shewing our fellow-feeling with them In the kingdome of Christ. That is the kingdome of heauen In that he sets first afliction then addes a kingdome he shewes that the afflictions crosse for Christs sake is the ready way to the kingdom of heauen it is the way which is beaten and troden by the Prophets Apostles and the Saints of God as the Apostle saith Through manifold tribulations we must enter into heauen And this momentany affliction causeth to vs an infinite weight of glory not that it deserues or effects it but that it is the path-way to heauen Then we must not thinke it strange when it befalleth vs for it is the meanes to bring wandring sheepe out of the way into the ready and beaten way to heauen nay it is rather to be thought strange when we haue no affliction for then we be gone out of the way seeing the Lord afflicts euery child which is his In patience A vertue whereby we are made able to perseuere in affliction to go on suffering till we come to heauen Afflictions are the beaten way heauen is our ioyfull end patience is the meanes to make vs
it and then we must beleeue it Then we must do as Mary did we must leaue other lesse matters and sit at Christs feete to heare his gracious words Luke 11. further we must labor to haue the same knowledge conueyed to others for if we beleeue truly we cannot containe our selues but we must needs teach others He which drinketh of the well of life out of his belly shall flow full streames of running water Ioh. 7. he cannot hold it in but will conuey it to others That this may be done first the head of the family he must teach and instruct his family for God hath bound him in conscience to spread abroad that knowledge he hath to conuey it to his family and though he be not able yet God requireth he should be able to instruct them that so a particular and litle church may be in his family Againe euery man must labour to win his enemy and those which are ignorant to beleeue the word The Scribes and Pharises compasse sea and land to make one Proselite and the wicked labour to winne men to do as they do much more should we Yea and euery man must labour to edifie those which be fellow-members with him of the same church in faith hope loue repentance and such like as Iude saith they must labor to saue some Lastly to maintaine the Religion of Christ against all his enemies to answer them and to stop their mouthes 1. Pet. 3. 15. Seeing the maintaining of the name and religion of Christ is so excellent a thing we must aboue all things labour for it to spread it abroad ouer the whole earth to defend it against all false teachers So did the church of Ephesus being persecuted and iniured by false Apostles and this is a most blessed labor to to defend Christ and his Religion and with it the honour of God In the end of the verse he setteth downe the maner how she defended it namely that she did not faint but was constant perseuered to the end So we haue had the Gospell long time preached we haue defended it with hazard of life goods we must not now leaue off but still continue and this exhortation is necessary seeing the Lord after so long peace purposeth to try vs by persecution or false teachers Then let vs purpose to be constant to the end and not as some who can change as religion changeth be of any religion To maintaine religion is commended but the principall thing for which the church of Ephesus is commended is perseuerance Neuerthelesse c. In the fourth verse Christ setteth downe a direct and seuere reproofe of this Church I haue something against thee Here Christ dealeth as a iudge calling the Church to an accompt laying actions to her charge which actiō is this Thou hast lost thy first loue that is the Church and people of Ephesus the Angel and the people haue lost that loue to God religion and man which they had when they were first called not that they left it wholly but because both people and Minister suffered their first loue to decay that now it was not so feruent and plentifull as before Ob. Christ commendeth her zeale against false Apostles Answ. It is true she had now zeale and loue but in respect of that she had first it was no zeale nay it was cold and frozen therfore he saith thou hast lost thy first loue If God had something against this Church then now he may iustly haue against all particular Churches in the world especially against vs in this land seeing we be in her estate A great part neuer had loue of Christ and many haue fallen from their first loue That some haue fallen it is plaine many in Queene Maries time were content to liue in persecution for the Gospell but after when quietnes came they became plaine worldlings as the historie of the Church records And in these dayes of peace and plentie of the Gospell such as twentie or seuen and twentie yeares agone were zealous professors now become cold and frozen professors Many I graunt are free from this sinne yet are they worse then these for they neuer had the loue of Christ and religion but are louers of themselues of this world honour riches and pleasure Now then if Christ had something against these Churches for losing their loue much more may he haue against vs who neuer had true loue of him That men now adayes be louers of themselues of this world and not of Christ it appeareth seeing most congregations and Churches after this long time of hearing the Gospell preached being daily taught yet are not bettered in opinion iudgement life and obedience but still remaine ignorant which argueth no loue of God nor of religion For it is not possible that he which loueth God and loueth religion indeed should continue from yeare to yeare in ignorance neuer profit in practise of religion in bettering his knowledge obedience And in that men liue in their particular callings without al loue to God and religion it argueth they loue not God for if they loued God they must needes loue their neighbours these going together But men practise their callings with the loue of themselues of honour riches and pleasure no loue to God no loue to religion This should moue vs to stirre vp our hearts to labor to get true loue of God of religion and of our neighbour that Christ haue no action against vs. For if a King or a mightie man shold haue an action against vs especially being iust and good it would make one quake and tremble but we haue euen the King of heauen and earth to deale with he hath an action against vs then it is best to looke about vs. This Paule vrged to Timothy that he would go beyond himselfe abound in feare loue and repentance Phil. 3. 13. he laboured to that which was before forgetting that which was behind that so he might come to perfection He looked first on his wants and then by thē tooke occasion to grow and increase in all spirituall graces We are in a way we must walke to heauen there is no standing if we purpose to come to the marke we must be as young children who first are children litle in knowledge and strength after are stronger and lastly become tall men so must we daily grow till we become tall men in Christ perfect and tall men in knowledge of religion And they which after long preaching be ignorant or make no increase in religion they be in a dangerous estate and cannot possibly come to the kingdome of heauen Hast fallen from thy first loue Hence the Papists as also other Churches gather that a man may fall away wholly and finally then this question must be cōsidered whether a man may wholy fall from grace That we may answer to this we must know grace is taken two wayes first for that fauour of God whereby it
accursed that the Iewes might be saued Againe they vrge If the righteous turne from his righteousnes he shall die ergo a righteous man may perish To these words I answer there is a double righteousnes one of the outward action another of the person the first is when a man keepeth the whole law outwardly in respect of men the second in that a mans person is righteous by Christs righteousnesse before God A man may haue the first and yet be an hypocrite and so it is meant here of the first not of the second by which mā is in deed righteous before God Ans. 2. It must be vnderstood of them which esteemed themselues righteous they pleaded that their fathers sinned they were punished so that they pretended they were iust but were not so indeed Another place is Luke 8. 13. there be some which beleeued for a time Ans. There are three kinds of faith as also of beleeuers historicall temporall and true sauing faith in the first is knowledge assent to the word yet no great ioy or reioycing in the second is also ioyned ioy and reioycing to the assent with approbation but in sauing faith there is also apprehension of the promise of God to our selues which is not in the other Now as of faith so of beleeuers there be three kinds one which knoweth the word and giueth assent to it yet hath no great loue or liking of it the second he loueth it reioyceth in it but apprehendeth not the promise but the third he beleeueth loueth and apprehendeth the promise Now the two first may fall away but the last cannot fall away and Luke is to be vnderstood of the two first not of the last But they obiect and say there is but one God and one faith therefore all faith is one Phil. 4. Answ. That is there is but one faith one doctrine of saluation and one religion so faith is vsed in the word and so it must be here vnderstood Secondly they proue it by exāples as first of Adam secondly of Dauid Adam he had grace sufficient yet he in his innocencie fell from God therefore much more we which haue not so much grace as he had Ans. Though he had greater measure of grace yet we haue more certaine and sure priuiledges of grace then he had first he had his grace by creation we by redemption which is greater then creation secondly he had the first grace not the second but we haue the first grace and the second too by promise which preserueth vs in the first grace Phil. 1. 6. 2. Thes. 1. The Lord is faithfull to establish vs to keepe vs from euill God giueth the first grace to beleeue and repent and the second to make vs to continue in the same They obiect Dauid fell from grace by two great sins one of adulterie the other of pride Answ. He fell grieuously and the graces of God were sore decayed weakned and wounded in him not cleane extinguished for then he should haue contēned God his word and religion despaired of mercie which he did not This sheweth he had the remnants of grace in his heart still though weakened and wounded Ob. 1. But he prayeth God to create in him a new heart Psal. 51. therefore he had cleane lost grace Answ. Dauid speaketh there as he felt himselfe not as he was in respect of God for he felt in his conscience much trouble and Gods wrath against him 2. Ob. But he repented not of a whole yeare Now no repentance no pardon and no pardon no grace Answ. The gift of repentance was in him when he fell and after but the practise of it shewed it selfe not till that time that the Prophet came to him he wanted not repentance simply but new repentance in practise for that fact Their third argument is from equitie of nature common reason a child of God may become the member of an harlot now one cannot be the member of God and of the diuell therefore a man may fall finally Ans. There be three sorts of mēbers a dead a decayed and a liuely member the first is as a leg of wood or brasse the second as an arme or leg taken with a palsey the third a mouing and liuely member as an hand sound and ready to moue So in Christ there is a dead mēber which is only in shew not in deed secondly a member decaied dying but not dead as a man by sin taken with a spiritual palsey which can not feele grace flowing frō Christ thirdly a liuely mēber which feeleth and liueth in Christ. Now a liuely member of Christ can not be the member of an harlot but a decaied member which is in the midst betweene dead and aliue that is the member of Christ and the member of an harlot but being not dead but dying shall be quickned againe so a man is made the member of Christ spiritually but the member of an harlot by carnall maner They say further if that men be so certaine of their saluation that they cannot fall away then this shewes there is no need of the word no need of preaching and exhortation Ans. Though a man be certaine he cannot fall away yet preaching and exhorting haue their vse not onely to worke grace but also to make men constant in grace and to perseuere to the end and though a man be certaine of his saluation yet he must vse the meanes Paul Act. 28. he knew that not one in the ship should perish yet there must not one go out of the ship Esay 38 tels Hezechiah he should recouer but he must vse the meanes and so he did But say they this doctrine maintaineth grosse securitie to teach that men are sure they cannot fall Ans. There is a double securitie one of the flesh when a man giues himselfe to the pleasures and profits of this world hauing no care or conscience of his owne saluation secondly there is a securitie of faith when one relieth wholy on Christ in the matter of saluation Now seeing that doctrine maintaines securitie not of the flesh but a spirituall securitie of faith and peace of conscience it is not to be disliked for it is a mans chiefe felicitie when a man in life and death relieth wholy on Christ. Thus the answer to the question is that a true beleeuer cannot loose faith nor fall away from grace wholly or finally but in part and for a time Seeing this decaying of loue was in this famous Church founded and preserued by the Apostles then much more is it rife in our Church seeing we haue not the like measure of grace that they had then we must looke to our selues see how we decay in loue to God and to our neighbour if we do then we shall find that after long profession we haue decaied much in loue And if we can excuse our selues yet take heed of it for seeing this famous Church was subiect to it it cannot be but we
diuell feareth not the sword or gun but this spirituall weapon will ouerthrow him I proceed to the second point their affliction is described by the persons some of you not all but some of them thirdly by the kind of affliction imprisonment he shall not kill or destroy you but imprison you and some of you not all of you Fourthly the end to trie you that your hope faith patience and other graces may be made knowne to your selues and other In all these we note that Gods prouidence is the first and generall cause aboue all causes ouerruling ordering and disposing them In this prouidence he vseth two instruments good as good Angels and regenerate men and he workes in and by these in all things and in these there is a good order no disorder The second kind of instruments be bad as wicked Angels diuels and wicked men which though they be wicked in themselues yet God can vse them well and in these is nothing but disorder and the Lord he worketh by them but not in them and permits their disorder and sinnes to shew by them his iustice and power These wicked instruments in themselues the Lord vseth well and to good ends for his prouidence is aboue them it restraines them keepes in their malice bridles them that they cannot shew their malice to the ful but be bridled and kept short being ouermastred by his prouidence So here the diuel he afflicts them yet not all but some of them and he destroyeth not but onely imprisoneth them and not alwayes but for a short time The second action of Gods prouidence vsing wicked instruments is that the Lord turneth all to the good of his children The diuell in afflicting them purposeth their destruction but the Lord turneth it to their good to proue them and trie the vertues and graces of their hearts as their faith hope loue patience c. so that the Lord doth not onely restraine their malice but turneth all things to the good of his people Now we should often thinke of this prouidence of God and for euer blesse his name for the same seeing he ouerrules the wicked instruments he restraines their malice he vseth them for the good of his children and considering of this it shold make vs to renounce our selues to commit our selues to his protection make his prouidence our sure defence and safegard in all our temptations And seeing the end of their affliction is to trie them we must al first labour to haue the power of godlinesse not onely in outward shew and formall profession but to feele the power of it truly in our hearts for the Lord wil trie vs as gold in the fire the Lord will cast vs into the fire of affliction to proue vs whether we be pure gold whether we haue pure faith vnfained repentance and a good conscience or not these wil abide the fire and not burne when formal shew of godlinesse will 2. Seeing afflictions are to trie vs we must reioyce and thinke tribulation a great blessing I am 1. Thinke it exceeding ioy to fall into temptations for by affliction our graces are made manifest to our selues and to the world The fifth circumstance is the time for ten daies Some vnderstand by this a long time as Gen. 31. 41 Laban changed Iacobs wages ten times that is many times but it is not so here for Christ speakes that to comfort them now what comfort were this to be long in affliction Others thinke that by ten daies ten yeares is meant and that because it is often in scripture so vsed seeing there is a weeke of yeares as well as of daies but that cannot be proued that they were in persecution so long and no longer Then I take it by ten daies is meant a very short time a litle space of time and this is most sutable to all the circumstances of the text and the purpose of Christ which was to comfort the Church as if he had said Thinke not thy affliction to be long for it is but for ten daies a short time In which words note two things first that the afflictions of Gods Church are for a certaine time a time decreed and set downe by God that cannot be shortned or made longer So the Lord told Abraham that the Israelites should be in captiuitie and affliction 430. yeares and so it came to passe for they were in affliction especially in the land of Egypt 430. yeares but so soone as that time was expired the same night were they deliuered So Daniel for the space of threescore and ten yeares captiuity prayed not to the Lord for deliuerance for he knew the time was certaine and could not be changed and therefore was patient but when that time drew to an end then he prayed for deliuerance and the Lord heard his prayer This should teach vs in affliction to be patient and to seeke to arme our selues with patience seeing the time of our affliction is certain and cannot be made shorter or longer we cannot be deliuered till the whole time be expired Secondly note that the afflictions of Gods Church and children be but for ten dayes a very short space of time in respect of eternall life and this is a notable comfort to any in the crosse and persecution seeing the Lord wil put an end to it it shal be but for ten dayes a short time as Paul teacheth 2. Cor. 4. 17. But yet there is more to be noted in these words euery word containing an argument of comfort for the Church for first the author of afflictions is the diuell he causeth them now feare not him for he is Gods enemy therfore thou being his enemy hast God for thy friend and then what can he do to thee to hurt thee for they which haue him their enemy their cause is good Secondly he shall not afflict all the whole Church but some of you a few of them the Lord restraines his malice he cannot do his wil. Thirdly he cannot kill or destroy them but onely afflict their bodies Fourthly he shall not do that to their destruction as he would but the Lord turnes it to try them for their good So this affliction it shall not last alwaies but for ten daies a very short time why then should you feare Let not feare ouercome your hearts be not discouraged but take Christs fortitude and courage lay aside all feare and vndergo manfully al danger to keepe faith and a good conscience to the end The third part of Christs counsell is another precept which containeth a most blessed and heauenly counsell be thou faithfull The children of God ought to be faithfull in regard of God and that fidelitie they owe to him first by promise made to him in baptisme for in that Sacrament God promiseth to his child Christ with all his benefits and the child of God promiseth and maketh this stipulation to God that he will renounce himselfe and in death and life rely onely on Christ. Now
precisenes ready for them because they haue care to do that which they professe In this very reproch they shew that they are luke-warme their mouthes proclaime it and their liues professe it and they are neuer a whit ashamed of it Whosoeuer opens his mouth to fasten this reproch vpon his neighbor he fastens vpon himselfe this marke of luke-warmnesse without shame And so they go beyond the Laodiceans which were ashamed of it and would not defend it whereas these boast of it My meaning is not to fasten this vpon euery man but I say it is a common sin more then any other Well now it being manifest that this is the common sinne of our time yea our common sin a sin that taketh hold of all sorts mark what followeth they are in a worse case then the heathen and Infidels are The common Christian is worse in some case then they for Christ preferreth them before these A man may perswade himselfe that he is in a good estate for all that but you see Christs iudgement sentence O it had bin better for them neuer to haue knowne the truth at all They are in a worse case which know Gods will and obey it not then they that neuer knew it Let vs not deceiue our selues then if we be but drowsie Protestants we are worse then Turkes We boast of our estate and we despise the Infidels but except thou ioyne with knowledge purpose of obedience thou art more vile and contemptible then they Publicans and harlots shall come into heauen before thee it is not the external profession of religion that will make the better then they but grace in the heart and obedience And this is the first point The second point is that we are in danger to be spued out of Christs mouth for this was written for our instruction and for all Churches that as luke-warme water troubleth mens stomackes so do we trouble Christ and therefore are like to be cast out euen as that is We may flatter our selues and thinke all is well as they did in Noahs time but know it we are in danger of a most grieuous iudgement namely to be cut off from Christ to be made no people Though we had no more sins but this we are in danger to be cut off for it And God can do this diuers wayes either by taking his Gospell from vs or sending in our enemies among vs. And by example of other countries the Lord sets this before our eyes dayly how he can and will do this therfore let vs not stand vpon any outward priuiledge but lay this to our hearts And so much for the first sin The second vice followeth in the seuenteenth verse Verse 17. Thou saist I am rich c. Here is a new reproofe of a new fault and that is spiritual pride These words depend on the former as a reason and cause for before they were charged with luke-warmenesse Now the cause of that is pride this is the mother that is the daughter Thou saist That is thou thinkest thus It is the maner of the holy Ghost to expresse the thoughts of men by speeches and when men thinke thus and thus the holy Ghost saith they say thus and thus because as manifest as our speeches be to one another so manifest be our thoughts to Christ. In that Christ doth thus expresse mens thoughts we may gather that this booke is canonicall for men cannot set downe in writing what be their owne thoughts much lesse other mens And so in all the bookes of Scripture the thoughts and imaginations of men are set downe euen as they conceiue them the like cannot be shewed in any writings of men It remaineth therfore that we receiue this booke as the word of God For could the Apostle Iohn by any art or learning come to know their thoughts No. Now I come the thought He expresseth their pride by the effect of it that is their thought and what is their thought I am rich That is I abound with spirituall graces as knowledge iudgement vnderstanding and memory By this thought Christ describeth their pride not outward but inward not carnal but spiritual whereby they perswaded themselues that they were in much better case and state then they were And this is the common sin of churches Against this sin of pride learne we that Christ came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance But what is there any righteous since Adams fal No but some thinke themselues righteous as did the proud Pharises which said as the Church of Laodicea here I am rich And Paul brings in the Corinthians saying We shall raigne Thus you see that this hath bin a common sin and so it is at this time In the popish Churches this opinion takes place when they perswade themselues to satisfie Gods iustice for temporall punishments by their workes and that they can merite sufficiently for themselues and others And amongst vs this wretched thought finds harbour We thinke we abound with knowledge none will seeme to be ignorant or to want knowledge and therefore not one of a hundred will aske a question nay many therefore will not heare the word because they know as much for substance as the Preacher can tell them for all a mans dutie say they is but to feare God and keepe his commaundements and thou shalt loue God aboue all and thy neighbour as thy selfe and what would you more Thus they perswade themselues that they are rich and want no knowledge when they know not one principle of religion more then the law of nature teacheth them namely Do as you would be done to Others pleade that they haue had euer since they could remember such a strong faith that they neuer doubted of Gods mercy But this is no strong faith but a strong presumption and a strange faith for true faith is alway ioyned with doubting and distrusting Others professe that they are rich in loue and they will not be drawne from it but they loue God and their neighbours when they haue neither knowledge faith nor loue Which appeareth thus let a man make relation of any bodily calamitie and you are astonished but let the Ministers tel you that you are in danger of spirituall iudgement and who is afraid where is the person that trembleth Worldly newes troubleth you but the word neuer scares you the remembrance of your owne damnable estate grieueth you not Let vs say what we will of your soules state alas you regard it not but the drunkard will continue in his drunkennesse and the adulterer and blasphemer in their wickednesse and euery man blesseth himselfe in his sins and saith God loues him and he loues God I am rich in regard of Gods fauour of spirituall blessings c. This being our sin it stands vs all in hand to labour to see it and to be humbled for it Increased in wealth or made rich This is added only for amplification to shew the measure
and bring them to amendment Now for the vse of these words Christ sets downe his ordinarie dealing with his seruants which is by reproofe and chastisement and diuers visitations for this very end that he might conuince them and correct them Euery member of Christ must come vnder his rod therefore looke for it yea marke further Christ layeth vpon all his seruants afflictions in diuers sorts according to the diuers dispositions of mens natures such as will hardly be broken of their faults he laieth vpon them more sharp punishments where men are easier to be amended there he vseth milder correction The vse of this is two-fold Prouerb 3. 12. the first is despise not the Lords chastisemēt for it is a token of his loue whēsoeuer he reprooueth or afflicteth thee by visitations and crosses make not light account but make profit of it The second is faint not arme thy self with patiēce because it is the Lords maner to chastise those that he loueth and so many chastisements so many pledges and pawnes of his loue towards his seruants By this Christ is an example to all parents and gouernours they must giue tokens of loue in necessarie corrections that their children and seruants may be brought from their misdemeanure for this end chastisement should be vsed It were to be wished that all parents and maisters did vse to giue correction thus but our case is lamentable in this respect Men thinke it enough to prouide foode and raiment for their houshold all their care is for the bodie only and they neuer seeke to reforme their misdemeanours in life This negligence brings many sinnes with it and pulleth many iudgements vpon vs. So much for the second point Amend Againe marke the order of the words Rebuke and chasten Here we haue a necessary instruction seeing Christ first propounds a direct end of his chastisement that is their amendment which that he may the better effect first he conuinceth them secondly he reprehendeth and thirdly chasteneth them and all these tend to our amendment A worthie and excellent order and to be followed of all gouernors they must propound a good end of all chastisements first the good of the partie chastised then they must vse this order first a conuiction of the conscience by the word of God secondly reprehension thirdly correction if the two former wil not serue Which being so you see how they ouershoote themselues that make correction serue for nothing but a meanes of reuenge an action of choller and rage without any purpose to better the partie Whereas this order vsed would reforme the person and stop many vices and nip them euen in the head to some it is as good as meate and drinke to be fighting and brawling Be zealous Here is a remedie for luke-warmnesse In the eight verse they had a remedie for pride now he maketh a plaister for luke-warmnesse Here first marke how these words depend on the former Christ had said Whom I loue I vse to chastise according as their faults be greater or lesser therefore seeing I haue corrected thee repent Where we are taught the vse of all reproofes admonitions and visitations the speciall end of them is to driue vs to amend As oft as the Lord doth either by word reproue or by deed correct vs it is to shew that we must repent and amend therefore whensoeuer you are visited say the Lord summons you to repent take an occasion by the visitation of further reformation yea know it that so many afflictions are so many sermons of Repentance to make you grow and increase in faith repentance and obedience Now that we may the better vnderstand what this commandement Be zealous meaneth diuers points are to be handled first what zeale is Zeale is an affection that is compounded of two affections loue and indignation or sorow therefore first we must loue Christ aboue all things if we will be zealous secondly we must be grieued and angred when Christ is dishonoured Loue of religion and griefe for the want of good successe therof will make men zealous We haue an example in Christ Ioh. 2. 17. where thus much is signified that his loue to his father was so great that the heate of his indignation had almost consumed him he preferred the accomplishment of his Fathers will before all In the second place note the diuerse kinds of zeale good that is true or bad that is counterfeit To a good zeale there is required first true faith secondly repentance thirdly knowledge As for faith it is the very root of good zeale for as Paule saith Loue is from faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1. 5. Now zeale is an affection compounded of loue and faith And as for repentance we see that zeale and it are conioyned in this place Iehu indeed was zealous but because he repented not but liued in the sins of his predecessors it was no good zeale And for the last we must know that zeale without knowledge is but rashnesse And thus you see how to distinguish true zeale from counterfeit euen by the companions of it Now further by the fruites it may be discerned First it compelleth a man to please God in all things it will enforce one ouer-rule and maister him 2. Cor. 5. 13. Whether we be out of our wit we are in it vnto God c. The very loue of Christ and his Gospell inforced him that he could not but preach So wheresoeuer this true zeale is in any measure it will make a man that he cannot but do his dutie It will burst foorth and find an issue like a flame as Elihu said he could not containe his belly would burst Secondly It will make a man indeuor to obey God with all his heart strength power Example Good king Iosia turned with all his heart Dauid prayed with grones vnspeakable according to the multitude of thy mercies c. and so goeth on maruellous earnestly and feruently he prayed not slackly and coldly but with all his force and power from the heart for pardon and reconciliation And so when he gaue thankes he saith My soule praise the Lord and all that is within me c. Psal. 103. 1. Thus you see what be the fruites of zeale and what it is to be zealous In a word then it is this to haue our hearts enflamed with a loue of Christ and his word aboue all things and to be exceeding angrie when it is disobeyed enforcing vs to do our dutie with all the strength we haue Now to end this point we heard before that lukewarmenesse in religion is our sinne generally throughout the land our zeale is cold and our profession but formall How shall we reforme this Become zealous beare a feruent loue to religion loue Christ aboue all and be grieued when you see him dishonored or his word disobeyed and false worship established Away with this slacknesse in religion otherwise it had bene better you had bene of no religion then to be neither
he vsed meanes to enter when they had barred him out Marke the vnspeakeable mercie of Christ they by their sinnes stopt Christ from entring yet he pursueth them with mercie and offereth mercie to them that refused it and contented themselues to lie and liue in their sinnes When Adam had sinned and fled from God the Lord sought him out and made a couenant of grace with him So Esay 65. the Lord saith he was found of them that neuer sought him they that neuer dreamed of mercie sound mercie In the parable of the lost sheep that sheep which was left as a prey to the wild beasts Christ sought it vp and brought it home All these places tend to one end to shew the infinite mercie of Christ. This is true in all churches yea in this of ours If we haue mercie we haue it before we seeke it nay when we refuse it as much as in vs lieth This should be an occasion to stirre vp our hearts to magnifie Christ for his mercie we should not let passe such considerations as these but rather breake out into praise of Gods loue and mercie which is a bottomlesse sea Quest. It may be demaunded how he knockes Answ. The words precedent shew the sense for these words haue relation to them He said before he would spue them out then he giueth them counsell Now by so sharpe a rebuke they might haue despaired therefore he shewes that by this threatning and rebuke and counsell he knockes that they might perceiue they were not tokens of wrath but of mercie So then this knocking is nothing else but the reproofe threatning and counsell vsed before He knocketh when it pleaseth him to make men see their sinne by such things Here then we are to marke the state of al people which haue the ministerie of the word they haue Christ among them and he standeth at the doore and knocketh at euery mans heart All threatnings of the law reproofes of sin exhortations admonitions and promises they are so many knockes of Christ. A great vnspeakeable mercie that the King of heauen and earth should do this Now then doth Christ knocke thus by preaching promises and threatnings c. then we must not be so dull dead and backward but shew more zeale If any man of great place and calling knocke at your doores what stirring is there that you may receiue him as is meete Then what a shame is this when Christ vouchsafeth to deale thus mercifully with vs Againe in that Christ cometh by the ministery of the Gospell to work our conuersion it serueth to admonish vs to turne with all speed for we know not how long he will stand and reach forth the hand of his ministerie to beate vpon our hearts Marke further this knocking is not a light and soft kind of knocking but it goeth with crying he both knocketh and crieth it is an earnest knocking of one that would faine enter Seeing then Christ standing at the doore of mens hearts knocketh so earnestly to saue mens soules we againe ought to be earnest to receiue and embrace the Gospell He knocketh in good earnest and we must accordingly by Gods grace be as earnest So much for the first token of Christs loue his desire of their conuersion which he sheweth by two signes first his waiting secondly his knocking and that ioyned with crying If any man c. Now followeth the second token namely a promise of fellowship with them after their conuersion These words haue bene much abused therefore I wil stand a litle to set downe the meaning Marke the forme of speech it is such as seemeth to giue a man an action in his owne conuersion whereby he comes and receiues Christ. So it attributes to mans will an action as if he should say I for my part stand and knocke if therefore any man heare c. This may seeme strange that such an action should be attributed to a mā that is dead in sin But this speech is vsed for iust cause for in the conuersion of a sinner there be three agents first the holy Ghost secondly the word thirdly mans will The principal agent and worker is the holy Ghost which changeth the mind and will from euill to good the will by nature willing nothing but that which is against the will of God Secondly the word which is an instrument of the holy Ghost for he works not now ordinarily by reuelation or speciall instinct and inspiration but when a man is reading or hearing the word and applying it to his heart then the holy Ghost workes in and by the word that being the power of God to saluation frō faith to faith Thirdly the wil though it be dead by nature can do nothing of it self yet when the holy Ghost begins to moue it it moues it self and striues to be altered whē God moues it We must not think mās wil is like a peece of wax which hath no actiō but only passiuely receiues and impression but the will being disposed moues and stirres it selfe Euen as fire so soone as it is kindled it burnes and as soone as it burnes is fire so when God hath once giuen grace the will moueth the mind seeth and acknowledgeth sin and the will inclined by the holy Ghost begins a strife against sin and makes a man endeuour to please God so much as he can So the will in the very first conuersion hath his action though not by nature but by grace Now considering these three actions concurre in the conuersion of a sinner hence it is that actions are ascribed to sinners which are to be conuerted as here and in manie other places not that they can do any thing of themselues without Christ but when they are wrought vpon by the holy Ghost Thus a man hath a free will in his first conuersiō by grace as fire hath some effects of fire so soone as euer it is kindled therefore it is said Repent and beleeue to impenitent persons not because they can do it of themselues but because when it shall please the holy Ghost to worke it in their hearts by the word they can turne and vse good meanes This is the cause why the holy Ghost ascribes an action to such persons when God giues grace to receiue Christ then it receiueth Christ when God opens the heart by that grace it is enabled to receiue Christ. This being the true meaning of these words let vs see how this text hath bene abused first by Papists which gather hereupō that a man hath free will in his conuersion by nature that he hath and that is the faith which sets open the heart wide to receiue Christ. Thus if you shall humble your selues and acknowledge your vnworthinesse and lay hold on Christ with true faith and testifie it by feruent loue to Christ and his members then shall your hearts be open indeed and you shall receiue Christ. Thus much for the true meaning of the condition It followeth I
Manna haue power ouer nations be clothed in white made pillars in Gods temple and sit with Christ Iesus in the throne of his Father And though the sonne of Ishai cannot make vs Captains of thousands yet that Sonne of Dauid will make vs the sonnes of God That we may do so we must beleeue the Gospell put on Christ Iesus and be renewed by repentance The first is necessarie the second comely the third profitable To come to the first it is necessarie we should beleeue for he that beleeueth not is condemned alreadie he is condemned in the counsell of God in the ministerie of the word and in his owne conscience and he shall be condemned in the day of iudgement for the wrath of God abideth vpon him The more I consider the fruites of faith the more I see the necessitie of faith Through it we are saued by it we are iustified in it we liue We are saued from Satan iustified before God and liue in the Church In the Church nay by it we liue in heauen for he that beleeueth in the Sonne of God hath euerlasting life Faith is that which purifieth the heart maketh the whole man to runne the wayes of Gods commandements giueth entrance to grace accesse to God in prayer made the Elders well reported of and each Christian to stand to the profession of Christ. It is that hand by which we must apprehend Christ that shield by which we resist all the fierie darts of the diuell and that meanes by which we do good to others By faith we receiue the spirit are members of Christ we are risen with him he dwelleth in our hearts we feed on him continually resist Satan are the children of God and the word which we heare becometh profitable And what shall I say faith is of such a qualitie that it vniteth vs to Christ maketh vs certaine of our saluation bold in our profession ministreth true ioy giueth temporall blessings sanctifieth our gifts and maketh vs refuse the pleasures of this present world In a word no sinne can condemne him who hath this true faith and no vertue can saue him who wanteth it To come to the second which is Christ the obiect of faith The most comely garment that euer we can weare it is to be couered with the robes of Christs righteousnesse Iacob was blessed by Esaus garments we are blessed by Christs garments What we see through a greene glasse seemeth all to be greene and what God seeth thorough Christ it is al amiable We must put on this aparel not as the Church in the Canticles I haue put off my clothes how shall I put them on againe or as a gowne that we cast off when we come to our home but we must so put him on that we neuer put him off againe We must put him on by imputation imitation infusion and profession by imputation of his righteousnesse imitation of his vertues infusion of his Spirit and profession of his name Thus we must labour to get Christ for what though a man could commaund the earth with Alexander the sea with Moses the fire with Eliah and the Sunne with Iosuah What though he were as rich as Salomon as wise as Achitophel as strong as Sampson as swift as Ahimaaz as beautifull as Absolon as fortunate as Metellus descended as Paul was of the bloud royal of Princes yet hauing not Christ he hath nothing Yea say a man had the abstinence of Aristydes the innocencie of Phocion the holinesse of Socrates the almes deedes of Cimon the moderation of Camillus the honestie iustice and faithfulnesse of both Catoes all these out of Christ were but splendida peccata and to be esteemed as dung in regard of Christ. For haue him and haue all things want him and want all things he is in at and after death aduantage I come to the last it is profitable to repent for if we turne to the Lord he will turne to vs and that we may turne consider his mercies in forgiuing his benefites in giuing his patience in forbearing and his iudgments in punishing The word preached sinnes committed and that few shall be saued the shortnesse of life the vncertaintie of life and the certaintie of death the ioyes of heauen the torments of hell the comfort of the elect and that else we can haue no comfort in death pray we cannot vnlesse we repent and perish we shall vnlesse we repent but blessed shall we be if we do repent But manum de tabula Magister adest this discourse following will teach vs these things and it am I bold to present to your Worships Iohn sent his Reuelation to many Churches and I present his Epistles to many worthie personages and to whom may I better present them thē to you Iohn was a disciple full of loue and you are breethrē full of loue The Preacher of these Lectures was well knowne to many but to none better then to many of you especially to those who were in my time worthie members of that most worthie Colledge with him And the rather I do it that times to come may reioyce in the Lord that from one honorable root haue issued so many profitable branches to the Church You are sixe brethren as pillars of your house there were three sisters as fruitfull vines of the same one is not but is with the Lord and her I knew a Ladie of admirable vertues the other two are and long may they be so You are all brethren by nature of one venter nation of one countrie grace of one spirit affection of one heart fortune in great fauour and of one hope by your holy behauiour And concerning brotherly loue I need not to write vnto you for you are taught of God to loue one another Your Scilurus at his death need not teach you concord by giuing to each of you a sheafe of arrowes which cannot well be broken whilst they are conioyned for you by your amitie make your selues inuincible If Chilo the Lacedaemonian died for ioy to see one sonne crowned at Olympus and Diagoras Rhodius did the like when his three children got the garland at a wrestling and Iacob so reioyced to heare of his one Ioseph to be aduanced greatly in the kingdome of Egypt how might that happie father of yours reioyce to see at one time one sonne sitting as high Sheriffe of the shire another preaching before the Iudges of Assize and the third pleading as Councellor at the barre and all the rest of great expectation in the kingdome Thus wise sons are a ioy to their parents and all may behold how good and comely a thing it
the second sense here where he cals Christ a Prince of the kings of the earth in regard as he is God and man or God incarnate the Mediator Now Christ being a King he must needes haue a kingdome which cannot stand in the might and pollicie of man as earthly kingdomes do but it is spirituall it stands in the heart and consciences of men his lawes they bind the soule and conscience to obedience And this is his priuiledge which can be giuen to no creature man or Angell to rule and raigne spiritually in the heart and conscience This spirituall kingdome of Christ is exercised in the consciences and soules of men by the word of Christ not by dint of sword or force of armes but he is a King which carieth his sword in his mouth euen his word by which he rules and raigns in our hearts he rules with the rod of his mouth Esa. 11. that is by his word by which he speaketh to mens consciences Prince of the Kings of the earth So is Christ in two respects First because he and he alone can and is able to giue lawes to bind the consciences of men yea of the greatest Monarch in the world none so high which is not subiect to his lawes Secondly he is called King of the Princes of the earth because he hath soueraigne power ouer all Kings and Potentates to saue and to destroy for not onely hath he power to make a law to bind their consciences but also if they keepe it to saue them if they breake his law he hath power to destroy them be they what they may be He hath the key of heauen to open and to shut none can controle him Reuel 3. 7. He can if he will leade them to life and saue them or else leaue them to their owne mind and so destroy them Seeing our Sauior Christ is a Prince of the greatest monarks of the world and is farre aboue them we must then with all feare trembling reuerence his high Maiestie We reuerence Kings on earth shewing great dutifulnesse to them then what reuerence ow we to him which is Prince and Lord of all the kings of the earth We cannot conceiue what reuerence we owe vnto him which is placed in the throne of all maiestie we must shew our reuerence to this Prince by hearing his word with trembling and beleeuing hearts reuerently and with conscience we must not dare to take his high name into our mouthes without great reuerence the very Kings must shew reuerence vnto this King of kings But the common practise of men doth shew what litle reuerence we haue of Christ for we haue his name in our mouthes at euery word to prophane the same to talke of it in iesting and without all reuerence we tosse it in our mouthes like a tenice ball Seeing he is King of Kings we must giue him absolute obedience Princes must be obeyed so farre as they obey him but he must be obeyed without exception absolutely and not onely absolutely but willingly must he be obeyed and without compulsion freely yea personally perpetually and in all his commaundements Men they will say they beleeue in Christ as he is their Sauiour but that is not enough we must beleeue in him as he is the King of Princes That we therefore may beleeue in him as he is King of Kings we must do him absolute obedience do his will in all things and vnlesse we beleeue in him so we cannot beleeue in him no not as he is a Sauior for these two go together Now this duty and obedience we owe to him must be done to him as we learne out of his word read and preached in the Church Seeing he is King of kings al princes kings potētates must do him seruice for they be all inferiour and subiect to him Psal. 2. the three last verses Be wise now O ye Kings be learned ye Iudges of the earth Kisse the son c. that is inwardly reuerence and outwardly obey him This their subiection must be shewed to Christ their King in the gouernement of their kingdomes for they must make and frame their lawes after the lawes of Christ Iesus they must make lawes exercise iudgement keepe Courts Assises begin and end and continue warre by his commaundements And seeing all Kings are in subiection to Christ as their subiects be to them they must therefore be guided and directed in all the matters of their kingdomes by the counsell of Christ so Dauid saith Thy lawes O Lord are my counsellers Psal. 119. 24. If Christ be soueraigne King and aboue all other Kings then all other must plant and set vp in their kingdomes the religion of Christ else how can they shew they be Christs subiects then it followes that they may not be of what religion they list And this is shewed in the parable of the mariage for when the supper was ready he sent his seruants to compell them to his supper which may be vnderstood of the magistrate whose duty is to compell men to the true Religion and profession of the Gospell of Christ. Seeing Christ is King of Kings and no man hath this priuiledge but he hence we learne that Kings on earth they in their dominions are soueraigne kings ouer all persons causes because as he is King of Kings absolutely so they are vnder him kings and haue supremacy in their kingdomes Then we see the presumption and arrogancy of the Pope and sea of Rome who would be supreame head of the whole earth and King of all Kings to put Christ out of his office and sit in his roome ouer al at his pleasure Seeing Christ is King of all Kings we must not be discouraged when we be called to suffer any affliction or crosse seeing that though the tyrants and Kings of the earth rage and bend their force to hurt vs yet we haue a King aboue them all who can stay and bridle them and if he please confound and bruise them in peeces they cannot do any thing but that which he permits them to do for he rules and raignes in the midst of all these where they are the thickest and would do most malice and can do to them as pleaseth him Now followes the second part of Christs description by his execution of his offices which consist in foure workes the first contained in these words Vnto him which loued vs the second in these Which washed vs in his bloud the other two in the two last verses which follow Which loued vs. That is the Churches of Asia and by proportion all other Churches being parts of the true Church The loue of Christ hath three degrees the first is called a generall loue whereby he loues all his creatures as they be his creatures and this loue is common to all his creatures The second degree is the loue of mankind in that he was content to become a redeemer for mankind not for any other
this booke to make them reade and take delight in it Now all of vs will say God loues me and hath pardoned my sins in Christ then we should shew our loue againe to him in taking delight in hearing and reading the word of God set downe in this or any other booke of Scripture And if we perswade our selues God hath loued vs we must then offer vp to him in signe of loue againe our selues soules and bodies to serue him to do him obedience Rom. 12. in regard of recompence to his mercies and loue shed out and shewed vnto vs. And made vs Kings and Priests to God and his Father euen his Father In these words is set downe the third action worke and benefite of Christ bestowed on his Church he hath made euery true member of it a King and a Priest Better to vnderstand these words we must consider in them foure points first the dignitie and excellency of all true beleeuers and members of Christ Kings and Priests Secondly when they be made namely hath made speaking in the time past noting that true beleeuers are Kings and Priests Thirdly the maner how we are not created such neither borne to be such but he hath made vs such Fourthly to whom to God euen the father First our dignitie and the excellencie of all true beleeuers and members of Christ hath two heads first Kings secondly Priests They are called kings not in regard of an earthly kingdome for the condition of most beleeuers on earth is base but in regard of a spirituall kingdome and in respect of the kingdome of heauen for the Lord he giues them this title and interest to be Kings to haue right to the kingdome of heauen in Christ. So our Sauiour Christ speakes to his Disciples Feare not litle flock it is your Fathers pleasure to giue you the kingdome The members of Christ are said to haue interest and title to the kingdome of heauen in these respects first because by Christ they be Lords and conquerors of all these enemies sin Satan the world death hell and our owne flesh Secondly because in and by Christ they are partakers of the kingdome of heauen they haue interest into it and right to the kingdome of happinesse for they receiue of Christ grace for grace glory for glory felicitie and happinesse for glory happinesse and felicitie Thirdly because they be made Lords of all creatures except good Angels and the Church 1. Cor. 3. 21. God is all in all to them all things are theirs they Gods and we haue interest to all his creatures in heauen and earth by Christ. Ob. But if Christ be King and al his mēbers how do they differ Answ. In two points first Christ he is the sonne of God by nature therefore a King by nature and so his inheritance belongs to him by nature but the members of Christ are the sonnes of God by adoption in his Son so that our right to that kingdome is not by nature but by adoption Secondly Christ he is King ouer all creatures whatsoeuer ouer the Angels and the Church and he is absolute King ouer all and hath his regiment in the hearts and consciences of men and can by his word bind them but his members they be not vniuersall kings for they haue not superioritie aboue good Angels and the Church neither are they absolute kings as he is neither by themselues but by Christ Iesus and as they participate with Christ in his kingdome The second part of our dignitie stands in this that we be Priests in that we be consecrated and set apart by Christ to the worship and seruice of God here in this life to serue him in spirit and truth and in the life to come eternally to serue and praise him Christ he is Priest so are we but yet there is difference First Christ he is an externall and reall Priest of the new Testament which offers vp a true reall and externall sacrifice to God the Father for vs we are not reall and externall Priests but spirituall offering vp spirituall sacrifice And Christ hath this priuiledge to offer vp a reall corporall and substantial sacrifice in the new testament we do not so When any member of Christ giues an almes he offers a sacrifice to God not a corporall sacrifice but spirituall euery way Againe note this that our Sauiour Christ he is a perfect Priest and offers vp a perfect sacrifice but we being imperfect do offer vp an imperfect sacrifice tainted and blemished with sinne but accepted as perfect for the worthinesse of Christs sacrifice Secondly we be Kings and Prists in this life for as in the entrance into an earthly kingdome there be degrees as first to giue one title to it secondly to giue him possession of it which is more then to giue one title onely so Gods children they haue the right giuen them of the kingdome of heauen in this life and as in the giuing of possession of a kingdome there be two degrees first the beginning of the possession secondly the full enioying and perfect possessiō so we haue the beginning of the possession of the kingdome of heauen in this life which stands in righteousnesse ioy and peace and they which haue these haue the kingdome of God begun in them The second part and degree is after this life which is the full fruition and possession of the kingdome of heauen but in all the true members of Christ it is begunne here and accomplished there And as we be kings in this world so we must be Priestes too in offering spirituall sacrifice to God and dedicating and consecrating our selues to his seruice Hath made vs. True beleeuers be Kings and Priests not by nature neither borne such nor by creation or birth or bloud are they such or by any other priuiledge they haue frō mā How then As earthly Kings and Priests were made in the old Testament so are spirituall Kings and Priests in the new the King was elected and ordained by a solemne calling so the Priest by a solemne election so are the Kings and Priests which be spirituall by a diuine calling In which calling note two things First Christ giueth his members right to his owne kingdome to be Kings and Priests yet not so that they can execute the regiment sustained by Christ and do the office of a King and Priest as it is done by Christ but because they belong to them in part and they haue the benefite of them both redounding to them wholly And this right they haue is brought to passe in the couenant of grace For the Lord in it promiseth that he for his part will giue to the true beleeuers in Christ Iesus his Sonne with all his benefits as he giues them this to be kings and priests For euery thing which belōgs to Christ as he is head of the Church belongs to his seruants as members and he imparts it to them in some sort Secondly in the appointing of kings
pleaseth his maiestie to make vs his children which truly beleeue in Christ and this is the fountaine of all grace loue and fauor Now if grace be taken for this fauor of God in Christ thē though the outward signs and sensible feeling of Gods fauor in Christ may be lost yet grace that is Gods fauour in Christ cannot be lost A father by some offence of his child may not shew signes of fauour to his sonne for a time but rather his anger by words or stripes yet for all this he carieth a fatherly mind to him not purposing to disinherit him So when a true child of God sinneth he then feeleth not the fauour of God for he turneth his countenance frō him for a time yet not so that his fauor is wholy lost but he still keepeth it towards vs not purposing to disinherit vs in Christ but is still our father and we his children Secondly grace signifieth not onely Gods fauour but the gifts of grace as faith hope repentance c. which are bestowed on them which beleeue Now these graces be of two sorts some necessarie to saluation without which we cannot be saued for without faith no man can be iustified sanctified or glorified Now from true faith proceedeth true hope and loue which three graces be especially necessarie to saluation and especiall graces of Gods spirit Secondly there are other graces which be profitable and needfull yet not necessarie to saluatiō as feeling of Gods fauor ioy and alacritie in inuocation of Gods name feare ioy c. and these are not so necessarie but that a man which hath them not may be saued Now then the three first faith hope loue cānot be lost finally or wholly being necessarie to saluation but the other may faith indeed may be weakened and wounded but neuer lost wholly but in part and for a time and so it is said here of the Church of Ephesus First that grace cannot be lost wholly and finally these reasons proue Math. 16. 16. Christ promised Peter and in him the whole Church that the gates of hell should neuer preuaile against him for when he saith they shall not preuaile the meaning is they shall shew very much strength but shall not ouercome or preuaile against the Church Though she may be foyled yet neuer ouercome The second reason is if it were possible he should deceiue the elect of God Mat. 24. 24. Christ taketh it for graunted that they which beleeue which are truly iustified and sanctified cannot fall finally so loose their faith Thirdly Ioh. 10. 28. Christ saith his sheepe shall neuer perish But they answer that so long as they remaine the sheepe of Christ they shall not perish but Christ cutteth off that obiection saying no man taketh them out of his hand they shall not be able by their naturall corruption to fall nor any man can take thē out of my hands The fourth reason is Ioh. 3. 36. He that beleeueth hath eternall life they say hopeth but he which hath it in hope truly he cannot loose it seeing hope cānot make a man ashamed Rom. 5. 6. and hope is grounded on faith Heb. 11. 1. Rom. 8. 30. whom God predestinateth he calleth iustifieth sanctifieth and glorifieth Now if he which beleeueth shall be iustified and glorified then he cannot fall away for he which falleth finally shall neuer be glorified Fifthly in the end of the chapter he saith nothing can seuer him and the church of the Romanes from the loue of Christ ergo not fall finally for then they may be seuered Sixthly Rom. 11. 29. Gods gifts of saluation are without repentance that is the peculiar gifts of his spirit necessary to saluation are without repentance They say God for his part repents not but man reiects that grace whereof God repented not but this makes Gods will subiect to the will of his creature and makes man to rule God to obey mans wil seeing they make mans will to rule Gods will man wils a thing God wils it not yet mans will must stand which is absurd A seuenth reason 1. Ioh. 3. 9. he which is borne of God sinneth not or cannot sin because the seed of Gods word is in him Now in the first chapter he saith that he which saith he hath no sinne lieth Iohn then meaneth here that he which truly beleeueth sinneth not that is sin ruleth not in him with whole consent but in part And man being partly flesh partly spirit as he is regenerate sin proceeds not from him but as he is flesh They answer so long as he abideth borne of God but when he ceaseth to be borne of God he sinneth then with ful consent but he cuts of that cauil and saith Neither can sinne seeing the seed of the word working by the spirit of God makeh him continue that he cannot so sinne Eighthly If a man may fall wholly and finally then he must be cleane cut off from Christ for he must first be cleane cut from Christ haue no coniunction with him before he can loose grace wholy Now if a man should be so often cut from Christ as he looseth grace then he should be often cut off and often reunited to Christ and if he should be so often reunited to Christ thē he should be so often baptised for baptisme is the sacrament of incision and ingraffing into Christ but that is absurd that baptisme should be any more then once administred ergo a man is but once ingrafted but once vnited to Christ and so cannot be reunited and neuer fall The last reason We pray Leade vs not into temptation that is suffer not Satan and sinne wholy to preuaile and to conquer vs. Now in euery petition there are two things first a commaundement to pray secondly a promise that we shall be heard therfore seeing there is a promise in the word that no true child of God shall be wholly conquered of sinne or Satan no true child of God can finally fall away Against these reasons are brought diuers arguments and they are of three sorts first testimonies of scripture secondly examples thirdly equity For scriptures they alleage these places First Exod. 32. 33. Moses prayeth to God that he may be blotted out of the book of life therfore he which is the true child of God may perish finally Answ. His petition must be vnderstood with condition if it be possible and so Christ let this cup passe if it be possible else Moses should pray for that he knew was not possible and so against his owne knowledge for he knew it could not be that one priuate man should die for the people or suffer eternal punishment for them Againe Moses in that petitiō doth principally shew his zeale and earnest loue he bare to Gods glory and the good of the people in that he neglected his owne life and desired that rather then God should want his glory and they perish he should rather die if it were possible eternally So Paul desired to be
are As we see water which is once hot if it be cooled it will be more cold and freeze harder then that which was ●euer warme so he which hath bin indued and inflamed with the loue of God and his neighbor and after waxeth cold he wil be worse then he which neuer had that heate The Hawke while she is fit to catch the prey and liuely to flie well she is set on the hand of the King and Nobleman but if she be old or dead then she is cast off or to the dung-hill so when we loue God and our neighbour with alacritie and chearefulnesse then we are on Gods right hand in his fauour and loue but if we die and decay in loue then we are in the ready way to be cast off and cast away Our loue to God is like a litle fire or flame then we must not quench it and cast water on it for that puts it out so our sinnes they be as water nay euery sin we commit it as a dish of water cast on the litle fire of our loue and by it we do what we cā to put out the fire of Gods grace but we must do as the Priests did who kept the fire on the altar neuer let it out but fed it continually so we must cherish and preserue this fire and carie wood to this fire dayly secondly we must stirre vp the grace of God dayly in vs as we would lift vp fire and blow it Thirdly that it may increase we must exercise the workes of faith loue obedience repentane and godlinesse For without these our loue to God and man will soone decay and waxe cold 2 Remember therefore whence thou art fallen In these words Christ as a faithfull Pastor of our soules prescribeth a most soueraigne remedie against the former vice namely decay in loue Now out of this that Christ rebuketh not the Church of Ephesus but withall giueth a soueraigne salue for that sore we learne that the doctrine of the law whereby sinne is reproued is to be taught but withall the Gospell must be preached seeing in it alone the remedie is to be had Then must we imitate Christ that is preach the law in precepts and threatnings and then the Gospell seeing the law sheweth only the wound the Gospell the remedie The general vse of this remedie standeth in answering to two questions the first question is A man is called effectually to beleeue and to professe the Gospell but after his conuersion by the diuell the world or his owne corruption he sinneth and woundeth his conscience how shall he recouer his owne estate Ans. He must remember from whence he is fallen and do his first works The second question is A man hath liued in ignorance after his owne lust neuer called effectually but now he is touched in conscience for his wicked life how shall such an one be reconciled to God and escape his iudgements Ans. He must saith Christ remember from whence he is fallen by his first father Adam and by his owne sinnes secondly he must repent of his sinnes past and lastly he must do his first workes to which he was bound by the law of nature and by the morall law of God Now in particular of the remedie It containeth three parts the first Remember whence thou art fallen the second And repent and do thy first workes and in the end is a reason to moue them to do these duties or else I will remoue thy candlesticke The first part remember that is remember examine thy selfe thorowly that thou maist see thy decay in thy loue and after that thinke on it often and ponder it in thy heart So that these words inioyne them two duties the first to examine themselues the second to consider of their estate 1 Examine that is enter into a diligent search of thine owne heart search thine owne particular wants especially this one want thy decay in loue Secondly she must after examination often thinke of her owne wants and often lay them to her owne heart Hence we see it is a dangerous thing for any Christian not to know his estate not to be acquainted with his owne wants Ier. 8. he blameth the people for this sinne none among them said so much as What haue I done none examined or considered his owne estate and wants In the dayes of Noah they knew nothing till the floud came on them they neuer looked to their owne estate or regarded and considered Gods iudgements or their owne sinnes and wants And in our time this sinne is too common not one of a thousand examineth his life considereth his owne wants and sinnes nay now if a man turne his eye to see his owne sinnes why then this is a meanes to worke melancholy in a man and so most men flie this which is so necessarie a discipline We see it is a speciall dutie of them which liue in the church to be acquainted with their owne estate to know and often consider their owne wants and sinnes Zach. 2. When he beginneth to preach repentance he biddeth them search themselues or fanne and winnow themselues as a man would search for a litle thing in an heape of chaffe Then we must search our selues diligently and narrowly yea the least thing in vs as Zacharie biddeth his auditors And after that we find wants in our hearts we must consider of them seriously for no man can repent truly till he know his owne estate throughly then we must often consider it and be well acquainted with it Psalm 119. vers 59. I considered my waies that is I entred into my selfe and finding mine owne wants then I turned me to thee And here we see the very cause why so few repent truly because they remember not whence they be fallen and know not their owne estate The second part is Repent first when thou art well acquainted with thine owne estate knowest thy wants and sinnes then in the second place repent In handling of this dutie note fiue points the first what repentance is the second how it must be practised the third who commaundeth it the fourth who must practise it the fifth for what end Repentance is first properly for the place of it in the mind of man for it is after some folly ouerslip or error to be better aduised which is proper to the mind and therfore repentance is properly of the mind Againe it is a change in the mind as of an euill mind to become good a turning from sinne to grace from all sinne to God Act. 26. 20. Now this turning from sinne to God standeth in a purpose and resolution whereby a man by Gods grace purposeth to turne from all sinne to serue the Lord and cleaue to him in obeying his commaundements First then there must be a purpose in the mind from which proceedeth a turning of the whole man in will affections and action which is the principall thing in repentance namely the turning of the whole
when a man keepeth this promise made in baptisme and performeth this condition to God and stipulation then he is faithfull to God when he breaketh it then he is vnfaithfull 1. Pet. 3. 21. Secondly the Lord he giueth his seruants many graces as faith hope loue repentance c. these he committeth to man to see how he will vse or abuse them 1. Tim. 6. 20. we must labour to keepe them to vse them well and this if we do to Gods glorie and to our owne good then we be faithfull to God else not as if a man commit a thing to be kept by another if he loose it or keepe it not well he is not faithfull to him Be faithfull As if he had said Thou hast made a promise in baptisme to keepe faith and a good conscience and thou hast had many graces promising to vse them well to keepe them in life and death be faithfull in persecutions afflictions keepe faith and a good conscience and then thou artfaithfull Against this dutie three sorts of men offend first they which though they haue made a couenant in baptisme to serue the Lord to keep faith and a good conscience yet liue in ignorance and securitie neuer seeking to know the Lord to vnderstand his will or to obey him yet these will brag of their good meanings though they haue no care at all to please God no care to keepe their couenant made with God and their stipulation in baptisme to him Secondly they which for a good while haue had faith and a good conscience and haue come to serue the Lord yet after long time fall away being entangled with the world with the profits and sinnes thereof and so leaue all and come to breake faith and a good conscience both these are vnfaithfull seruants and their reward if the Lord dealt in iustice with them is destruction and yet all men in a maner be of these two sorts they either liue in ignorance or fall away after a long time The third sort are they which professe a long time liue in faith and good conscience and be earnest professors yet in time of triall and persecution they will leaue all profession of religion to saue themselues Then seeing all these offend we must labour to know God to obey him to keepe his graces bestowed on vs to the end to liue and die in his seruice and to lose our life rather then any one grace which God bestoweth vpon vs. And I wil giue thee the crown of life Here is a reasō to moue thē to go on in persecutiō to be faithful to the end Hēce the Papists gather that a man may merit heauen seeing there is promised a crowne of life Ans. It is called a crowne of life by resemblance for as men in a race first run and after they obtaine the crowne at the end of their race so men must first in this world liue godly run and finish their course after that they haue their crowne in heauen I answer againe this reward is not of the worke but the promise is made to the workers not to the martyredome but to the martyr which hath by suffering death shewed his faith in Christ it is not made to the passion or suffering but to the person suffering not for his suffering but to him as he is in Christ declared to be so by his suffering death So then that promise is not made to the work but to the worker and not for his work but for the worthinesse of Christ in whom he is a true member of the Church The vse then is that if we keepe this promise in Baptisme made before God his Angels and the Church we shall haue the reward of all which is the crowne of life in the kingdome of heauen promised to such as be faithfull to the end Let him which hath an eare heare In these words are the cōclusion or last part of the Epistle Now in these three verses for the most part is a rehearsall of those things which Christ deliuered before in this and in the former Chapter Now seeing Christ the head and Doctor of his Church is most perfect in his doctrines both for matter and maner of deliuering the same seeing he repeateth againe and againe the same things and seeing Peter put them often in mind of their common saluation hence we note that Ministers may often repeate the same doctrine not onely the same matter but in the same maner and words So did Christ the head Doctor of the Church so may we or any preacher preach the same sermon againe in maner and matter not for to ease our selues but for the good and benefite of the Church as Christ seuen times repeateth the same doctrine to the good of the Church and common benefite of all The hearers then if they find the Preacher shall deliuer the same doctrine againe or often they must not find fault for then they might as well find fault with Christ himselfe who not once or twise but often repeated the same words In this eleuenth verse is a conclusion of the Ep●stle to the Church of Smyrna and it hath two parts first a commaundement secondly a promise In the commandement first what is cōmanded secondly to whō The duty commanded is to heare There are two kinds of hearing good and bad Here he requireth good hearing with faith and obedience not naked and bare outward hearing Then we see the true knowledge of the Gospell standeth in hearing with faith and obedience for we know no more then we beleeue and obey if we beleeue and obey nothing we heare and know nothing with sound hearing to saluation The second thing is to whom the commaundement is giuen to them which haue eares to heare for some are deafe some be liuely and hearing hearers They are deafe which heare onely with outward and bodily eares not affected in hart nor chaunged in life by the word they are good hearing hearers which are touched and affected by the word changed and renued in life by the same hauing not onely outward eares of the head but inward bored by Gods spirit in the heart Hence we learne two things first that election is not generall and vniuersall of euery particular man for there is was and shall be euer some deafe hearers Secondly we learne our duty that we must not onely heare the word and lend our outward eares but withall ioyne faith obedience and conuersion in life so heare that we be changed in life and turned to God else our hearing is fruitlesse nay to damnation The third thing is what they must heare What the Spirit saith namely that which is before in the former words deliuered by Christ. The principall things be these first that the Lord seeth and regardeth the tribulations and afflictions of his Church secondly that Gods Church and people being to suffer the crosse and afflictions must forethinke of it and consider of it before
it is a vertue and work of loue whereby a Christian man becomes a seruant to euery man for his good This is commended and described Heb. 6. 10. Paul Gal. 6. commaunds vs to do seruice one to another by loue 1. Cor. 13. loue seekes not her owne but the good of others So Christ Iohn 13. commaunds his to be seruants one to another in those good things which God giueth vs. As we must do them good in all we can so one speciall dutie here mentioned is to be ready to releeue according our abilitie the want of the Church for we must haue first loue and charitie then seruice as a braunch springing from loue Heb. 6. 10. which is when we are ready to bestow our goods or gifts which God giueth vs to the good of the Church especially the godly in the Church This were to be wished in England but it is not seeing the richest sort bestow their goods in hawks hounds beares buls dogs and other their pleasure and pastime but when any comes to be bestowed on the poore then they be strait handed all comes as hardly frō thē as a rib out of their side We see men can be content yearely to bestow much money in playes pastimes and other delights and that with zeale and earnestnes but come to the poore our owne flesh to our brother who beares the same image of God as we do here we sticke and from winter to winter suffer them to starue for want of that which our dogs haue To moue men to help the poore first see how men in the old testament were charged with offerings first fruites sacrifices and many other ceremonies now these be ended but instead of that altar the poore they be the altar whereon we must offer our burnt offerings our sacrifices Secondly Esay 58. 10. he which imparts his heart to the poore that is seeing him in want hath his heart touched with the bowels of compassion and testifies his loue in releeuing his want this man hath a happie promise his name shall not be put out but shine for euer and this is true religion to visit the fatherlesse and widow to comfort and releeue them Iam. 1. Prou. 25. He which giueth to the poore lendeth to the Lord. Now the Lord he comes in his person to borow he makes the pore his stewards to gather it in wilt thou say him nay to lend him of his owne thou wilt not Wouldest thou haue him stay or send his steward away emptie Again Christ comes in their person he askes an almes he saith in their person I am hungry naked fatherles and motherles and in them he stands crauing at our doores Now if we would escape that horrible sentence of condemnation Away from me c. let vs not say him nay or deny him But if we wil be liberall in any thing and bestow largely on any thing bestow it on the poore our owne flesh and so we lend to God who is the best paymaster and we giue to Christ who will not let it be vnrewarded Now followeth the third particular vertue for which Christ commends the Church of Thyatira which is faith that is fidelitie whereby we are faithfull to God in keeping our promise made to him in baptisme wherein we promise to renounce our selues to beleeue in God three persons one true God to obey him all our life time this is commaunded 1. Tim. 5. 12. Now it would be wished that our Church might be commended for this fidelitie but it cannot for though it be a common thing among vs to sweare by our faith yet there is litle faith in our hearts yea litle care to keepe this fidelitie promised in baptisme for some of vs lie in ignorance neuer knowing what promise we haue made to God and such are many among vs young olde high low rich poore Others they haue no care of goodnes of heauen or heauenly things but of eating drinking sporting in which they spend their days neuer thinking of Christ or of their promise to him A third sort are those which we account honest and wise men but they come short indeed for these set their hearts on riches and the things of this world spend their strength and wit in the getting of them and haue their hearts glued to them They like Molds are euer in the earth We call them I say honest men but indeed they deny God forsake their first faith and fidelitie to God in baptisme and in stead of the true God erect an idoll euen their riches and of these we haue great heapes Then it stands vs in hand often to remember our promise in baptisme to renounce our selues the things of this world to beleeue in Christ to performe obedience to him in al our life for if we go on and stil deny our first faith nothing belongs to vs but condemnation The fourth vertue is patience whereof we haue heard in this and the former chapter Here marke how patienc is ioyned with loue to men faith to God and seruice to men and God The reason is because no good action can be done of any man without patience loue and faith without it are nothing for if a man do his dutie to man he shall be sure to be hated now without patience he ceaseth to do his dutie So if a man beleeue in God and professe the same the world contemnes him now without patience he cānot perseuere constantly Patience is the effect of faith Rom. 15. faith brings forth hope and Mat. 13. the good ground brings forth fruit but in patience All that a man doth if it be done acceptable to God it must be ioyned with patience Then we must in all our gifts and graces ioyne patience with our hope faith loue knowledge c. 2. Pet. 1. 6. No grace can shew it selfe without this a man cannot endure the crosse without it And thy workes Christ before had said the same here he repeateth it againe which is not idle for no word in scripture is idle but by this Christ shewes his exceeding approbation of the workes of this Church of Thyatira that they were such as he liked of not in a meane but in exceeding great measure the cause why he liked them so followeth afterward Now seeing Christ repeates these words after foure worthy vertues he doth it to shew vs what things are required to a good worke namely faith loue seruice patience and fidelity for to do a worke to God we must ioyne these foure vertues and therfore Christ addeth these words both before and after these vertues First faith is required because in doing any actiō euery mā must shew his fidelitie to God which we do when before we do any worke we search the word of God whether it be commanded or forbidden there for no worke we do can please God vnlesse we be perswaded out of the word that it is lawfull nay being not of faith it is sin Rom. 14. Secondly our works
must not proceed from faith alone but from faith and loue ioyntly together for faith worketh by loue and though a man do neuer so good things if not in loue it is nothing 1. Cor. 13. Thirdly a speciall seruice is required to God and man for all our workes must be done in seruice to man for the end of our callings be to do seruice to man and withal in doing seruice to man to please and serue God Paul commaunds seruants to please their masters in the Lord as seruing him so of all men it is vnderstood that they in doing the workes of their calling must do them in seruice to men and withall to serue God Col. 3. 21. This ouerthroweth the Papists fasting praying pilgrimage hard attire and whipping themselues to pray to Saints and offer to them for these come not from faith and loue neither are they done in seruice to men to do them good in soule or body for these neither benefit themselues nor other Last of all patience is requisite that a man may haue constancy and perseuerance for no man can do a good worke as he ought but many will mocke and iest at him he shall haue many crosses by wicked men euen by Gods prouidence now that he might be constant patience is necessarie that so as the good ground he may bring foorth fruit but in patience To apply this euery man in doing any thing in his particular calling must labour to shew these foure vertues his faith to God loue to man his seruice to God and man and haue patience to vndergo all troubles which come by doing his dutie For if a man do the worke of his particular calling be it neuer so base yet it is as good a worke to God in it kind as to preach the word and to giue almes The fifth vertue is that her workes were mo at last then at first The Church of Ephesus was discommended for her decay in loue but here Christ commendeth this Church for increase in godlinesse and vertue It were to be wished that our Church might be commended for this vertue but alas it cannot for the bodie of our people are in number increased but litle in practise and obedience Heb. 5. They indeed in regard of the time might be teachers hauing so long heard the word but yet they need to be taught euen the principles of religion for though they heare daily yet is there no knowledge no increase of zeale or of repentance no going on in grace 2. Tim. 3. they are euer learning yet neuer come to knowledge This is a common fault in all estates men heare much learne litle and practise lesse nay we haue a worse fault for many among vs hauing heard good things go backward loose them become worse or else stand at a stay And this is our shame that many places which heare the wordlesse go before vs in knowledge faith obedience and repentance Then if we would auoide Gods wrath and discommendation let vs now increase It is not enough for old men to say they cannot though their memorie faile yet they must labour to haue good and zealous affections Young men must employ their strength and wit and memorie in this to increase in grace not to quench any grace but to stirre thē vp for to him which hath is giuen but frō him which hath not is taken away that he had Then all must labor to go on in grace that the teacher may haue comfort and the hearers be freed from shame and discommendation Notwithstanding I haue something against thee Here Christ after his high commendation rebuketh the Church of Thyatira first the whole Church secondly a certaine woman in the Church The rebuke concerning the whole Church is in the twentieth verse in which is first the reproofe it selfe secondly the reason of it Neuerthelesse That is though I haue hitherto commended thee yet thou hast something which I like not but greatly dislike Of this I haue spoken before Secondly the reason of the reproofe Because thou sufferest the woman Iesabell to teach that is because they suffered a certain woman namely Iesabel in the assemblies to teach and seduce the people First obserue in these words the great power and authority which this Church had giuen her of God for besides the power of preaching the word and administration of the Sacraments she had power to appoint who should preach who shold not and further authoritie to restraine wicked men and women by her seuere gouernment The like power was in the Church of Ephesus so of al Churches in preaching of the word administration of the Sacraments to appoint who shold preach and who not and also to restraine wicked men that they commit not what wickednesse they will in the congregation And this authoritie hath the Lord giuen to all Churches nay without this no Church can continue or stand And it is not sufficient to haue rule in the congregation but seuere gouernment wherby wicked men may be kept in order and because this Church vsed not this power therefore she is discommended Now in euery Church where the word is preached and Sacraments administred there they haue the same power yet we see how sin abounds fornication adulterie blasphemie vsurie drunkennesse and all for want of this gouernment which should represse such sinnes This Church sinned first in suffering a woman to teach secondly to seduce the people of God This word teach signifieth to teach publikely in the assemblies Then they sinned in suffering a woman Iesabel to teach publikely in the open assemblies of men For 1. Tim. 3. 8. I permit not a woman to teach 1. Cor. 14. 34. they must keepe silence But it may obiected first that Deborah and Huldah were Prophetesses Ans. They were extraordinarie and we may not make an ordinarie rule vpon extraordinarie actions Secondly 1. Cor. 11. If a woman pray or prophecie Ans. First there were such in the infancie of the Church and were extraordinarie Secondly they did sinne and as a fault it is rebuked in the fourteenth Chapter where he commaundeth women to be silent Thirdly women are said to pray because they giue assent to the Minister praying saying Amen and to prophecie by singing Psalmes and reading Scripture for so much the word Prophecie signifieth being taken largely So 1. Chron. 25. Asaph is said to prophecie when he sung with instruments of musicke in the congregation Seeing Christ rebuketh them for suffering a woman to teach in the congregation we see it is not warrantable that she should administer the Sacrament of Baptisme no not in the time of necessitie for the word and Sacraments go together Now Christ will not haue a woman to preach the word therefore not to administer the Sacraments And though women be forbidden to teach in the congregation yet they must teach at home Salomon he learned many lessons of his mother who taught him at home Prou. 31. So 2. Tim. 1. 5. Timothy was
is plaine in the old new Testament But how can these signifie thoughts and affections seeing thoughts be in the braine affections in the heart neither of them in the reines Ans. By resemblance for as the reines be in the most secret and inward parts of the bodie so thoughts be in the most hidden part of man namely his soule So thoughts are said to be in the heart because they haue operation in the heart though they be placed in the brain Search that is with such circumspection and diligence as bringeth the finding out of that we seek By this is signified that Christ seeth not onely the outward actions but the inward affections and motions nothing the most secret is hidden from him We see by this Christ is not onely man but very God for he which hath the true propertie of God is very God Christ hath ergo He which is God alone can search the heart the thoughts motions and inclinations of the heart but Christ can therefore he is true God one person consisting of two natures the Godhead and manhood Againe seeing Christ discerneth the heart we must in all things take heed of hypocrisie especially in matters of religion when we seeme to be that outwardly which indeed we are not inwardly but we must looke that we be that in truth and in heart which we would seeme to the world to be draw nigh to God with our souls as we do with our bodies lips words and actions For Christ is very God seeth and searcheth our hearts thoughts and affections he looketh not so much to the outward as the inward seruing of him we must worship him in spirit seeing he is a Spirit Besides we must suspect our selues for vnknowne sins for such is the depth of our corruption that we cannot sound the bottome of it neither can we thorougly see the pronenesse of our nature to sinne and corruption Therefore we must suspect our selues euen of all sinnes which we know not and not excuse any sinnes So did Dauid Psalm 19. after earnest search as though he had said Lord I haue searched my heart but I cannot sufficiently know mine owne corruptions therefore O Lord forgiue me all mine vnknowne sinnes And if we could thus suspect our selues we would better practise repentance and liue with greater care but ignorant persons not able to search their corrupt hearts they blesse themselues and excuse themselues nay say they can keepe the whole law Now Christ hauing cut off the first corrupt cōceipt preuenteth the second wherby they might hinder and auoid his iudgement for they might say though the Lord send iudgments yet we shall be safe they shall not come nigh vs. Thus they and euery sinfull man doth say Esa. 28. They in common iudgement make a league with hell saying Gods iudgements shall not come nigh them This is a naturall corruption of our hearts that in common iudgement we shall escape and euery man liketh this Now Christ to cut off this corrupt conceipt saith And will giue as if he had said you may flatter your selues thinke when I send iudgement you shall escape but I will giue to euery one none excepted according to his workes therefore flatter your selues no more I will giue That is I will reward partly in this life and partly at the day of iudgement for it is meant especially of the last iudgement Rom. 2. Reu. 20. Hence the Papists gather that men must be saued not onely by faith but workes seeing God will reward good workes Ans. 1. Their reason standeth thus by that we are iudged by the very same thing we are saued but we are iudged by workes therfore saued by works The flat maior is false for we must distinguish betweene iudgement and iustification To iudge is to declare one iust by his signes as his workes to iustifie is to make a man iust in which we consider nothing but Christ and our faith applying him to vs. So then we are iudged by workes but not iustified neither saued by workes Answ. 2. Christ saith not I will giue for their workes but I will giue them according to their works as their workes be not for them where he maketh workes an outward signe and rule according to which he wil frame his iudgement to declare men iust Seeing euery man must be iudged that is saued or condemned by his workes then good workes are necessarie to saluation for we must be iudged by our workes and saued according to our workes therefore they be necessarie not as causes either efficient or helping any waies but as fruites effects and signes of our faith and markes in the way to heauen which must direct vs to eternall life Seeing we shall be iudged in this life but especially in the last day by our workes we must labour to abound in good workes not to winne heauen by them but to assure our selues we belong to Christ and shall be truly vnited to him Now all good works are either the works or duties of the morall law of God or else they be those workes of our calling both generall as we be Christians or particular in that calling God placeth vs done in faith and loue to Gods glorie the good of others and in obedience to God These be good works to God though the calling be neuer so base for which we shall be rewarded and according to which we shall be iudged and saued Now contrarily euil works they be euident signes of condēnation look how many euil works we do they be so many brands and markes of our soules to shew we be the children of Satan Here we see there are degrees of glorie in heauen and of punishment in hell for he will reward euery one according to his works Then they which haue abounded in good workes they shall haue greater measure of glorie the fewer works the lesser glorie so they which haue committed greatest sinnes they shall haue greatest measure of punishment they which lesse lesse punishment in hell fire And vnto you I say In this foure and twentieth verse he cometh to the second part of his counsell to the Church and Angell of Thyatira that is the better sort of the Church But before the counsell he setteth a preface in which preface note first who speaketh secondly to whom For the first who speaketh namely I. Where Christ as doctor of the church challengeth to himselfe all supremacie and sufficient authoritie ouer the Church for all his Ministers come in his name not in their owne The Lord saith or Christ saith But Christ he comes in his owne name I say Noting he is the head Doctor and teacher of the Church the fountaine and head of all doctrine deliuered to it This Christ saith to smite a reuerence in their harts seeing this counsell is not deliuered to them by any man or Angell but by Christ himselfe who deliuered it to Iohn For the second to whom he giueth counsell namely you that
bow and crowch and humble our selues before him And this is the cause why most of the people euery where content themselues with outward and formal worship with mumbling ouer their Creed Pater noster and the tenne Commandements they were neuer smitten downe with feare of Gods iudgements and their owne sinnes their natural pride was neuer beaten downe with their owne vnworthinesse Then if we would be true worshippers of God let vs come willingly let vs worship God in soule and bodie and let vs come with humbled hearts with mortified minds and affections and so we shall worship him aright The second fruite of the conuersion concerneth man Before thy feete meaning the church of Philadelphia namely that they being conuerted to the church of God should reuerence it and the members thereof They shall cast themselues downe in the congregation as men not worthie to be mēbers of the church but as a footstoole for them to trample and tread on by reason of the great sinnes which these conuerted Iewes had before committed This their exceeding reuerence shewes it selfe in the roote of the same which is a base conceit and vile opinion of themselues and so should euery true conuert study to confesse namely that he is the greatest sinner of all Gods children and thinke so basely of himselfe that he can be content to be not a member but the footstoole of the congregation and this must we follow if we be truly cōuerted we must haue a base opiniō of our selues think we are the most vile of all Gods people giue place to all men in regard of our sins Paul Tim. 2. calleth himselfe the chiefe of all sinners and we must do the like for the proud Pharisaicall heart is farre from repentance but the lowly and humble heart is accepted of God And shalt know that I loue thee Here is a reason of the former words for why did these persecuted Iewes become true worshippers of God and beleeue in him and reuerence his church The reason is because I wil make them perswaded that I loue them and this is the ground of all true reuerence All superiours haue reuerence due to them by Gods ordinance as the father master Magistrate c. Now that they may haue true reuerence of their inferiours they must first labour to be beloued of the Lord and then they procure to themselues true reuerence for the loue of God to vs is the ground of this Then those which excel in birth or riches they must not looke to be reuerenced for them but for that they be loued of God And whence cometh it that men in authoritie as the father master Magistrate Prince c. want their due honor and reuerence but because they seeke not the ground of it namely to be in the fauour of God Because thou hast kept the words of my patience Here is the second promise of Christ namely preseruation of this church in time of most bloudie persecution This Epistle and booke was written by Iohn after Christs ascension in the daies of Diocletian Now after him came Traian who raysed a most bloudy persecution against the church in al countries putting to death many of Gods children Now of this persecution Christ foretels this church and withall makes this promise that he will preserue them out of the Emperors hand and addeth a reason They were constant to obey his Gospell In the promise consider first the occasion Because thou hast kept secondly the thing promised Deliuerance thirdly a prediction or prophecie of that which should come on this Church The occasion Because thou hast kept the word of my patience Some vnderstand by word of patience the cōmandement of patience which she shold obey but that is too narrow but it signifieth the doctrine of saluatiō taught in Christ. And this doctrine of saluation is called the word of patience first because the doctrine of the Gospell teacheth vs patience secondly because it is an instrument of patience to worke it in vs for when a man beleeueth his saluation in Christ then he is patient in all things Thirdly and especially because the Gospell cannot be obeyed constantly to the end without patience For a time one may obey but it is impossible to obey and be constant to the end without patience The good ground bringeth foorth fruit but in patience Luk. 8. This Church receiued the doctrine of the Gospell and constantly beleeued it for which is promised deliuerance in persecution Then we see that the grace of God well vsed is rewarded with plentie and increase of grace so that they which haue but small measure of grace yet if they be faithfull the Lord will reward it with greater increase This should make vs take pains to increase and vse our talent of faith patience repentance and obedience to the glorie of God and good of men and the Lord will double and triple the same otherwise he will take that talent from vs. The doctrine of the Gospell being a doctrine of patience how necessarie is it for vs to learne the same seeing the calamities and afflictions belonging to any calling are very many We must get our bread in the sweat of our browes and no man is free from sicknesse sorrow and death Now if we would indure these afflictions we must haue this grace of patience and constantly beleeue the doctrine of saluation by Christ which will make vs patient in any crosse whatsoeuer Againe we professe the Gospell of Christ now this is a doctrine not of disorder but of all order and moderation teaching vs to moderate and hold in our affections and will whereas if we want it we are caried away at their pleasure My patience Christ calleth it his because he is the author of it and worketh it in vs. And this is added to beate downe the pride of this Church For when Christ commended them for obedience they might begin to be too proud Therefore he hauing commended her lest she shold be so he telleth her it is not her owne but his gift he putteth it into her heart And this may beate downe the pride of our hearts when we consider that we haue nothing of our selues but all good things in vs come from Christ he bestoweth them on vs he giueth all nothing we haue of our selues What hast thou that thou hast not receiued why then should we be proud of it I will deliuer thee That is from the great and bloudie persecution of Traian which lasted fourteene yeares wherein many of Gods children were put to death Hence note that God hath set downe the very times and houres in which he will trie the faith of his children Deut. 8. the Lord led Israel through the wildernesse fortie yeares to trie them Chap. 13. 3. he sendeth false Prophets to trie his seruants whether they will cleaue to him or not So the Lord hath set times to trie his for their sins and to see what grace is in their hearts So he
is called that Counseller He is both King of and Counsellor to his Church And surely this title of right belōgeth to him for first by his office he aduiseth men how they shall escape eternall death and be saued secondly he teacheth how a man may please God in all his actions thirdly how he may flie sinne These three he doth daily in his church and children and that not by extraordinarie but euen by ordinarie meanes as by his word and spirit and therefore may well be called our Counseller neither can any either Angell or man thus counsell vs but onely Christ. Now in that Christ is such a person by office and profession therefore we must acknowledge him to be our Counsellor yea the Counseller of the Catholike Church and euery part therof Therefore we learne to do him all the honour we can Counsellors of the common law are feed reuerenced and honoured for their counsell though it be but for worldly matters and it oftentimes faileth Much more is Christ to be honoured whose counsell concerneth the things of God and cannot faile but shall stand Nay as his counsell is infinitely more excellent then the counsell of any other creature so much more is he to be honoured Further in all dangers and temptations one must resort to Christ for counsell for to this end is he a Counseller He told them they were miserable and therefore gaue them counsell declaring that he is at hand in all our miseries and distresse And therefore we must resort to Christ for his counsell and rest vpon it and order our selues according to it The good king Iehosaphat when the Moabites and Ammonites banded together was in great distresse but what did he We said he know not Lord what to do but our eyes are toward thee That is we looke to thee for counsel and direction we must rest rely vpon thee for wholesome counsel good direction So should all men do in distresse and daunger as we are now by reason of our sinnes and the professed malice of our enemies for by all likelihood these dayes are the time of our chastisement and correction therefore we must say as he said Therefore in all distresse whether it be sicknesse or pang of death forsake all ill counsell go not to wizards and Astrologians for helpe but humble your selues and pray for his counsell So much for the first part that is the maner of prescribing this remedie Now of the remedie it selfe As the miserie had three parts and those great miseries all so Christ propoundeth his remedie in such sort that it is answerable to the three branches of the miserie first gold that thou mayest be rich secondly rayment thirdly eye salue By gold according to the analogie of the Scripture we are to vnderstand the graces of Gods spirit as true faith repentance feare and loue of God man All these are called gold as the triall of our faith is said to be more precious then gold We may likewise vnderstand al other gifts of the spirit yea all Christs merits Christ himself the fountaine of all Purged by the fire That is precious and fine gold of speciall account that is purged from all drosse by the art of man This sheweth what is the propertie of his gifts and graces they are as precious as fine pure gold as 1. Pet. 1. 5. This is worth the marking that the gifts of Gods spirit are of great price and value and that before Gold Psal. 119. 72. Math. 13. 4. This teacheth all how to beautifie themselues in soule and bodie The blind and false opinion of the world is that strange attire and forreine fashions beautifie and adorne the bodie and it is commonly thought that Iewels and precious stones adorne vs and indeed it is true in some persons such as be great personages but strange fashions and outlandish attire disgraceth the bodie The right way to beautifie the bodie indeed and to make it truly glorious and to adorne the soule also i● to get these graces for these are as precious as fine gold Our bodies shold be the temples of the holy Ghost the houses of a worthie guest therefore we should the rather labour for the best ornaments And if you will adorne your selues as you ought you must do it with the graces of Gods spirit and abhorre these fond and absurd fashions which no wise man can like of That thou maist be rich c. These graces haue a further effect and serue not onely to adorne and beautifie but also to make men rich Here then see the common folly nay madnesse of men which spend all their time wit and strength to enrich their bodies and leaue their soules vnfurnished What a madnesse is this that so many should neglect true riches and studie for nothing more then that which is nothing lesse then riches euen counterfeit riches By this text it is more then manifest that such are more then mad and that this folly is very great Therefore seeing true riches be the graces of Gods spirit seeke for these So much for the first part of the remedie White garments That is Christ himselfe and his righteousnesse imputed As Gal. 3. 27. euen as a garment is put on the bodie so is Christ and his righteousnesse and the fruite thereof that is sanctification all this is meant by garments here Now the end is to couer the nakednesse of the soule which is deformed and defiled with sinne Eye salue That is the spirit of illumination knowledge wrought in the mind by the spirit of God For as eye-salue doth cleare the eye sight and sharpen the same where it was by some occasion hindred so doth Christ by illumination make a man know and vnderstand God in Christ and discerne betweene good and euill of things temporall and eternall Thus you haue the meaning of these words Now by the exposition you may see that by all these we can vnderstand nothing but Christ himselfe and his merits One and the same thing is signified by three words to shew that there is in Christ the fulnesse of grace and that he hath remedies for all our wants The Laodiceans were poore in spirituall goods and Christ was their riches naked and he their garment blind and he their eye-salue So that looke how many sinnes there be in men so many contrarie remedies there be in Christ. What wants soeuer be in vs he hath a supply of them all The Papists make him an insufficient Sauiour in that they patch our merits to his and so they disgrace Christ but we are to count Christ a most perfect and absolute Mediator and Redeemer in himselfe without vs. To buy The meanes how these worthie gifts of God are gotten Christ saith by buying and bargaining he saith not receiue but buy This is an allusion to the state of that citie which was rich and consisted most of Merchants which liued by buying and trafficke therefore he speaketh to them in their
owne kind as if he should say You are a people exercised in buying and selling and are delighted with nothing more therefore come I haue wares for you of sundrie sorts gold garments and eye-salue buy of me Then the word buy must not be vnderstood properly for so we can buy nothing of Christ but all is giuen vs. This is said onely by way of resemblance and I will shew wherin it standeth The principal things in bargaining are these first a man that is to buy seeth his want desireth to haue it supplied secondly he cometh to the place where it may be had calleth for it looketh on it and liketh it thirdly he maketh the price and value of it he cheapeneth it fourthly he giueth money for it or moneys worth and so buyeth it fiftly if it be a great summe he giueth earnest in hand So by a certaine proportion and resemblance there is a kind of bargaining between vs and Christ. For a man must feele himselfe to stand in need of Christ and of his merits and so see his owne want and miserie For because men see want of bread meate drinke and cloth in their houses therefore they go to buy of the baker brewer butcher and draper c. Well then looke how sensibly a man feeleth the want of these things so euidently should we feele our want of Christ and his merits And as the feeling of our want is the beginning and occasion of our going to buy so it should be in this our merchandise Againe we should hunger and long after Christ. As a buyer taketh liking of and longing for that he wanteth and is thereby stirred vp to buy so besides the sense of our want we should hunger and thirst after Christ. Besides we must prize Christ at so high a rate that we count all things else as drosse and doung as Paule counted most excellent things no better we must value him aboue ten thousand worlds Lastly we must make an exchange How seeing we can giue him nothing but his owne therefore he saith Come buy without money Simon Magus would haue bought him for money and was deceiued Yet there must be an exchange we must giue him all our sinnes and receiue his righteousnesse See here a most blessed exchange for our shame and confusion we haue Christs righteousnesse and his merits How Thus when we begin to humble our selues and pray for remission and reconciliation then this change is made Though we can giue him no earnest yet he giueth vs earnest What is that It is some portion of Gods spirit some small measure of his grace that is our earnest that we shall haue the kingdome of heauen And thus heauen is bought and sold betweene Christ and vs. When the heart mourneth for sin and praieth for pardon and purposeth to sin no more this is the worke of Gods spirit in vs and the earnest of our eternall saluation in heauen Be our graces neuer so few or small it is a sufficient earnest as a penie is for a bargaine of a hundred pound Seeing all these things concurre to the receiuing of Christ therefore he calleth it bargaining So this point is plaine how this spirituall bargaine is made and why it pleaseth Christ to terme it so Now we see that we are commaunded this dutie but how stands the case with vs Surely though many come to Church few make that bargaine which is mentioned we are like passengers by sea which see many goodly buildings fruitfull lands soiles and sumptuous cities but they make no purchase of them so we come and heare the word but where is the partie that makes this bargaine with Christ Come to particulars I appeale to all your consciences who almost feeleth or seeth his owne want and miserie Men can soone see the want of necessaries in their houses but this they cannot see And as for the desire of Christ and longing for him there is none When you are drie or hungrie you can say you are drie and hungrie but who saith I thirst for Christ If we looke to our estimation of Christ we are plaine Gadarens and of Esawes mind we set more by a messe of red pottage and esteeme the basest things aboue Christ and his merits nay we are loth to part with our sins and to take his righteousnesse we will rather keep them stil then change for the better Who taketh Christs righteousnesse and declareth it by fruites We can be content to loade Christ with our sins but we wil not be loden with his righteousnes Is this a good change No it is not Euery man can say he must rise betimes which shall go beyond him in base and earthly bargaines but who hath regard of this excellent and heauenly bargaine Then to conclude I pray you al make this bargaine with Christ and do it presently let it be your first worke You are carefull to put your children to good trades and you do wel but be as carefull that they may make this bargaine and you shall do much better This is the cheapest and the best bargaine that euer was made it will make you and yours rich for euer as for other bargaines many cannot get them and many loose them when they haue gotten them this onely is durable Verse 19. As many as I loue c. We haue heard a sharp reproofe and as sharp a threatning by which because they might take occasion to doubt and despaire of Gods mercie and fauour in Christ Iesus therefore now he takes away all occasion in the 19. and 20. verses First thus If I vse to rebuke and chasten all that I loue then you need not doubt of my mercie albeit I rebuke and threaten you so This I take it is the proper occasion of these words Now see the meaning I loue Christ loueth the creatures two wayes first as a Creator secondly as a redeemer As he is a Creator he loueth them with a generall and common loue whether the creatures be reasonable or vnreasonable As Redeemer he loueth them with a speciall and peculiar loue not cōmon to all but to that part of mankind onely which is elected and chosen to saluation And of this last loue he speaketh here as if he should say As many as I loue communicating with them my righteousnes and life eternall I rebuke The word hath a larger extent and signification first to conuince one of a fault and then to checke or reproue the person and it cannot well be rendred in one English word And chastice that is with such a kind of correction which a father vseth to his child which is called nurture to breake a child of his fault and to teach him obedience and so it is vsed Prouer. 3. 12. whence this text is borrowed The meaning then briefly is this All those persons whom I loue I conuince of their particular faults and rebuke them and like a louing father I chastise them and nurture them to breake them of their vices
all three and that the Father doth the Sonne doth and what the Sonne doth the holy Ghost and the Father do in outward actions Secondly Christ after his ascension teacheth not bodily but by his spirit for Christ being at his Fathers right hand sendeth his comforter to leade vs into all truth Now seeing the holy Ghost speaks in the Scripture he teacheth vs we see how the church of Rome sinneth in that they will haue a iudge which must speake for Christ he being in heauen and the Scriptures being not able to speake but are as a dumme iudge therefore the Church that is men in the Church they must be iudge of Scriptures But we see that the holy Ghost speaketh in the Scriptures and Christ he is iudge alone of them The Church is an instrument onely and cannot giue sentence of them but they be of themselues sufficient to take away any doubt whatsoeuer 2 Faith is no part of repentance but a cause of it for they be 2 distinct parts of Christianity the first a sermon beleeue and repent where repentance followeth faith as a fruite of it Thirdly obedience is no part of repentance but a cause thereof ergo repentance stands not in these three properties neither is all one with regeneratiō for this goeth before them for godly sorrow is the cause of repentance but regeneration is before godly sorow ergo before repentance too The second point is how we must practise repentance this stands in two things first true humiliation secondly true reformation of life Humiliation stands in confessing our sins miseries and wants and in condemning our selues for them and in harty praier to God for pardō Reformation is the changing of our bad actions to good and if need require to make satisfaction to men Dauid Psal. 32. first humbled himselfe secondly he prayed for pardon and withall promiseth reformation of life Manasses fel from God but he prayed to God humbled himselfe 2. Cron. 33. 12. So the prodigal son And Dauid in all these Psalmes of repentance humbles himself Psal. 32. 38. 51. 130. 143. 77. And so must we do if we truly repent Then we see the dānable doctrine of the Papists which make repentance stand in contrition and confession of sins to a Priest satisfaction for a man may do all these and yet be a reprobate So did Iudas he had contrition confessed his sinne made satisfaction and yet his repentance was not true repentance Another abuse is that they make contrition a part of repentance which is indeed no grace but may be a cause of grace Besides to confesse all sinnes to a priest is a gibbet to a mans conscience and more then God himselfe requireth Last of all to teach that a man must satisfie Gods iustice is to ouerthrow the satisfaction of Christ. The third point is Who commaunds this It is Christ. Now some out of these words gather that God giueth sufficient grace to euery man to repent if they will for say they if he command repentance and yet some cannot then he but mockes them and it is as if we should bid one bound hand and foot to rise and walke Ans. The Lord giueth not that commaundement to euery particular man but to the Church or to some people which shal become a Church and then he doth it to gather the elect Now in the Church there be elect and reprobate now this commandement to repent is giuen to the elect directly but to the reprobate by consequence as they be among the elect in the church And this commaundement is giuen to both for diuers ends first to the elect to shew them what they ought to do not their ability what they can do secondly that it may be an outward means to bring them to repētance for when he giueth them this commandement he is present by his spirit Phil. 2. 12. he bids them work out their saluation but addeth God giueth the will the deed shewing that God giuing that commandement is present by his spirit to worke in them abilitie to performe it Now the wicked being in the Church haue the same commaundement not directly neither to those ends but first to keepe them in outward ciuill order secondly to make them without excuse But whereas they reason thus If Christ command all to repent then all haue sufficiēt grace to repēt but the first is true ergo Ans. The first part is false vnles it be restrained thus if he command to this very end that they should repent and practise it for he giueth cōmandement to some not that they may do it but as to Pharaoh to harden their harts For the second part that he giueth commandement to all the meaning is he giueth it onely to the elect directly because he giueth them his spirit to obey it but to the wicked by consequence as they be mingled in the Church with his owne children The fourth point is who must repent namely the Angel and whole Church of Ephesus Ob. But they had repented before how then doth he bid thē repent againe Ans. There are two degrees of repentāce one is the beginning the other is the renewing of it In the practise of which two stands the whole life of a Christian first to begin to repent when he is truly called and secondly in continuing and renuing it dayly as he often falleth If we haue begun by Gods grace we must not stay there but go on and be renued euery day There is no man but he shall see in him selfe daily new sins slips and wants for which he must haue renewed repentance Then seeing we daily increase our sins we must take heed we lie not or continue in sin without this repentance for we are not so much condēned for sin as for lying in sin this if a man repent brings not condemation but lying in sin doth then aboue all things take heed of this let vs daily labor to know our sins to be acquainted with our wants to humble our selues pray for pardon 2. Cor. 5. 20. I beseech you saith Paul be reconciled to God they were reconciled before for they were iustified and sanctified but he would haue them to labour to be more assured of their iustification and to haue a more full and sensible feeling of it and that because their apprehension by reason of their weaknes is but sin all The like must be had of vs. The fift point is why or for what cause namely for their decay in loue especially and other wants Christ prescribeth to thē repentance not that they had none at all And so Christ preacheth to vs by his Ministers to repent of this decay in loue if we haue had loue and feele it now decayed we must repent if we haue not then we must labour to haue it And Christ we see giueth a large commaundement not for drunkennesse whooredome theft or such grosse sins but euen for their decay in loue want of knowledge faith feare
c. The common people be of the Pharisies and Iusticiaries mind that they need no repentance seeing they liue ciuilly not tainted with horrible and grosse sins but we must repent for other sins as want of knowledge loue obedience c otherwise we cannot truly repent Now if we must repent of al sins much more of notorious sins as of Atheisme which now abounds and spreads abroade of pride in apparell contempt of the Gospell which increaseth in all places for want of mercie for crueltie and for those sinnes which can sooner remoue the candlesticke from vs. Now the remedie is to do their first workes to returne to their first loue to God his word and to man This is in the last place seeing this repentance neuer perisheth or decayeth but must be euer renewed So then he would haue vs also to remember what good thoughts affections actions we haue had to get them againe and neuer loose them after We must remember to do our first workes which the Lord graunted to vs at our first calling them we must labour to do againe Or else I will come against thee shortly Whenas our Sauiour Christ had rebuked the church of Ephesus for decay in loue and set downe the remedy first to remember whence she was fallen secondly to repent thirdly to do her first works in these words he layeth downe a reason to moue her to vse the remedie especially to repent if she will not then he will come against her shortly This containeth three parts first a generall threatning or cōminatiō or els I wil come to thee secondly a particular threatning and will remoue thy candlesticke thirdly a condition of the two threatnings except you repent Because he speaketh to all Churches this shewes our dutie in reading or hearing the word that we apply all that is spoken of one man or to one Church to our selues when we see any vertues commended we must imitate them or vices discommended we must search our selues whether we be cleane of them The promise To him which ouercommeth c. hath two parts first to whom it is made namely to him which ouercommeth secondly what is promised I will giue him of the tree of life namely eternall happinesse The partie to whom is he which preuaileth against all his spirituall enemies the diuell the world hell death and his owne flesh That we may ouercome these three things are necessary first a man must be borne anew become a new creature in Christ. 1. Iohn 5. for when a man is borne anew he is free from sinne and ouercommeth all his enemies Secondly he must haue true faith by vertue whereof he must deny himselfe and wholy rely on Christ 1. Iohn 5. We ouercome the world by our faith for he which truly beleeueth in Christ he is partaker of Christ of his victory ouer death hell sinne and the diuell and hath his naturall corruption abolished and weakned Thirdly that we stand against all our enemies with faith and good conscience to the end And he which hath these three he is able to resist al these his enemies To them which ouercome Ergo it is false that the promise of the Gospell belongs to all men without exception that God offereth life and saluation to all vnlesse they will reiect it for saluation is promised onely vnto them which are borne anew which haue faith in Christ denying themselues and they which stand out against all their enemies by faith and good conscience to the end of their dayes Is this so is the promise made onely to conquerers we must then labour to be conquerers to ouercome all our spirituall enemies but to liue in sinne to be the seruants of Satan that is slauerie and hell it selfe and for a man to say in truth of heart that he hath ouercome all these his enemies this is freedome and happinesse And though a man be neuer so great among men yet if he be the vassal of sinne an Satan he is out of the fauour of God and most miserable Secondly the thing promised is life eternall which is set out by two circumstances first by the cause of it I will giue secondly what to eate of the tree of life In which words is an opposition betweene Adam and Christ for Adam by his sinne depriued himselfe of the tree of life but Christ hath set open the tree of life that we may haue free accesse to it Adam he lost an earthly paradise Christ hath prepared an heauenly paradise The tree of life stood in the midst of the garden whereof Adam did eate It was called the tree of life first because it was a sacrament that is a signe and pledge to him of eternall life if he had continued in his estate Secondly because this tree had a vertue in it from God to preserue Adam for euer from death and old age and to make him continually to liue if he stood This tree of life was a true figure of Christ the Redeemer and Sauiour for as that tree had vertue in it from God to preserue Adams life so that he should haue liued for euer and be kept from old age so Christ Iesus the Mediator and Redeemer he liueth not onely as he is God but as he is man and not for himselfe alone but to conuey quickening vertue to all which beleeue in him and are partakers of his merits by a true faith To eate of the tree To eate signifieth sometime to beleeue as Ioh. 6. 50. but it cannot be so here seeing we cannot in heauen beleeue in Christ but to eate of that tree is to haue immediate fellowship and communion in heauen with Christ for euer For Christ shall be to vs a tree of eternall life for euer yea all in all to euery one of vs. In this first point of the promise note two things the first wherein consisteth eternall life namely in immediat fellowship cōmunion with Christ in heauen for euer and this is our true felicitie to eate of the tree of life to partake with Christ in heauen who shall be to his all in all that is all happinesse that heart can wish Therefore it standeth not in outward meanes as meate drinke apparell sleepe respiration recreation c. but in the eating of the tree of life that is in the immediate fellowship with Christ Iesus for euer Secondly the place of this tree is the midst of paradise where Christ putteth a difference between the tree of life in the earthly paradise and this in the heauenly paradise He saith in paradise that is in the third or highest heauē a place of ioy and pleasure where the Lord especially sheweth his glorie and where he prouideth happinesse for his children There are indeed three heauens one where we liue and breath and where the clouds be the second where the starres be the third is the place where the Lord sheweth his presence and where he will haue his children be Of this Paul speaketh when he was rapt