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A17384 A commentary: or, sermons vpon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter vvherein method, sense, doctrine, and vse, is, with great variety of matter, profitably handled; and sundry heads of diuinity largely discussed. By Nicholas Byfield, late preacher of God's Word at Isle-worth in Middlesex. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653. 1623 (1623) STC 4211; ESTC S107078 497,216 958

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and yet become grieuous to men by their vile offenses Thirdly vnfruitfull Christians which lie in a continuall barrenness whose ground is alwaies fallow haue but little consolation from hence for though they are better than the former in that they are not openly wicked yet they fall short of their duty heer because they do not more effectually shew forth the graces of Christ. And that there may bee a healing of this error they must mend first their ignorance and pray to GOD to teach them to profit secondly their slothfulnesse rowzing vp themselues to more zeale of good works and care to answer the opportunities of well-doing Vse 2. Secondly for instruction All that loue the Lord Iesus should hence be perswaded to increase in all care of well-dooing and study how to shew forth the light of their workes before men and the rather because 1. They haue receiued such singular mercy from the Lord. 2. They shall heerby glorifie their heauenly Father and make Religion to be well-spoken of Phil. 2.15 16. 2. Thes. 3.21 and put to silence the ignorance of the foolish we should be as tender of the honour of our profession as of our owne honour 3. They shall heerby wonderfully establish their owne harts in the assurance of their calling and election 1. Iohn 1.5 6. 2. Pet. 1.5 to 10. and much increase their owne contentment and joy in the Lord 1. Cor. 15.58 4. They shall haue a full and plentifull reward in the day of the Lord Rom. 2.7 8 9 10 11. 5. The hearts of their Teachers shall bee heerby filled with ioy when they see they haue not laboured in vain Phil. 2.16 2. Cor. 3.1 2 3. Of him that c. In the third place it may bee heer considered of why those vertues shewed forth by Christians are yet called the vertues of Christ. For answer whereunto we may be informed that they are the vertues of Christ in diuers respects First because they are such vertues as are had onely by such as bee in Christ by effectuall calling for all the Wicked are strangers from the life of God Secondly because they are receiued from the Spirit of Christ of his fulness we haue all receiued these graces Iohn 1.14 Eph. 1.21 Thirdly because they are shewed forth for his glory All our gifts and seruices are deuoted to the glory of Christ as they are in him so they are for him Lastly I think they may be called the vertues of Christ because they resemble his vertues as the picture of a man is called by the name of the man himself And the consideration heerof should the more incite vs to the care of these vertues seeing wee are heer to follow no worse a patterne than the example of the Lord Iesus himself and withall we should be the more humble when wee haue had and done all we can seeing we haue nothing but what we haue receiued And since all should be for his glory we haue reason to say at the best Wee are vnprofitable seruants And withall it should comfort vs against the sense of our infirmities to consider how weak soeuer wee haue been yet our gifts are acknowledged for the vertues of Christ himself and by the benefit of Christ's intercession are accepted of God as if they had bin found in the person of Christ himself Thus of the third point He that hath called you The fourth thing to be noted is this Periphrasis heer giuen of Christ. In stead of saying the vertues of Christ hee saith the vertues of him that called you which he doth of purpose to exalt the praise of the gifts of God in our calling and partly to shew that we enter vpon the possession of the former prerogatiues the most of them when we are called by the grace of Iesus Christ and partly thereby guiding vs to the knowledge of that work of God which may assure vs of our interest in the former prerogatiues All which shewes that we haue great reason seriously to study the doctrine of our calling by Iesus Christ. Calling is either personall or naturall or spirituall or supernaturall The personall calling is to some office the naturall to the exercise of some morall vertue the spirituall or supernaturall is to Christ calling vs to seek happinesse and blessednes in him This is heer meant And so the calling of a Christian is to bee reckoned among the gifts or endowments God bestowes vpon his people which that wee may distinctly vnderstand according to the order of them there are seuen gifts of God First vocation by which he calls men out of the world into the Church Secondly iustification by which he forgiues the Called their sins and clothes them with the rich Robe of Christ's righteousnes Thirdly sanctification by which he qualifies their nature with all heauenly gifts necessary for their saluation Fourthly adoption by which hee acknowledgeth and receiueth them for his sonnes and heirs Fiftly Christian liberty by which hee frees them from all things that might hold them in bondage or in a seruile condition as from the rigour and curse of the Law from the dominion of sinne from the burden of Moses ceremonies and humane traditions and from those seruile fears in God's seruice bred by the spirit of bondage Sixtly consolation by which he keeps them in this happy condition which hee performeth three waies 1. By defending them against all aduersaries 2. By deliuering them out of their many troubles in their militant estate 3. By bestowing vpon them the gifts of perseuerance to the end and for euer Seuenthly temporall blessings by which hee furnisheth them for this present life The six first of these are gifts principall the last is but accessary The three first are the chief gifts and the three next are such as arise out of the first Now this work of calling men into the church is either externall or internall By the externall men are called into the visible Church by the internall men are cald into the inuisible Church And that we may conceiue of this distinctly in respect of calling all men may be cast into foure companies First some are not called at all any way by the Gospell as many of the Pagans c. Secondly some are called onely externally as those in Mat. 20. Many called but fewe chosen Thirdly some are called internally onely as the thief on the Crosse. Fourthly some are called both internally and externally so the Elect of God for the most part and ordinarily It is the last sort of men that are vnderstood heere Now that this work of God calling vs may in the order of working bee more cleerely vnderstood we may conceiue it thus The first cause is Gods loue of men his kindnes and loue to men as the Apostle calles it Tit. 3.4 First that God conceiues in himself a compassionate loue of man lying in his extreme naturall distresse Secondly Christ then as Mediator laies the ground of this calling and
Prouer. 13.19 And whereas there is no peace to the wicked the righteous is at peace with God with Angels with the creatures and with all godly men Fourthly because it is the most durable life for the fear of the Lord prolongeth the daies but the yeers of the wicked shall be shortned Pro. 10.27 30. The way of righteousnes is life and in the path-way thereof is no death Prouerbs 12.28 As a whirl-winde so is the wicked seen no more but the righteous is an euerlasting foundation Prouer. 10.25 Fiftly because it is a life that ends the best of all mens liues for the wicked is driuen away in his wickednes but the righteous hath hope in his death and great hope too hauing the promises of a better life and so much glory as the eye of mortall man neuer saw nor ear of man heard nor came into the hart of a naturall man Pro. 14.32 1. Tim. 6. 1. Cor. 2.9 Sixtly because righteousnes is more proper to the soule What is riches or honour or any outward thing to the soule of a man or what shall it profit a man to prouide for the whole world to be his estate if hee prouide not grace for his soule Riches profit but the outward estates of a man whereas righteousnes profits the man himselfe And therefore Adam's losse was greater in losing his innocency than in losing of Paradise What can it profit a man to haue all other things good about him if he be not good himself Vse The vse should bee first for triall Men should throughly search themselues whether they be indeed righteous men and the more carefully should they search because the most righteous on earth haue their many ignorances and frailties There is no man but sinneth daily and in many things and besides a man may attaine to some kinde of righteousnes and yet not enter into the Kingdome of heauen as there is a generation that are pure in their owne eies and yet are not clensed from their sinnes And the Pharises had a righteousnes that had many praises they gaue alms and fasted and praied long praiers and did that which was warrantable in respect of the Law outwardly and yet if our righteousnes exceed not the righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharises we cannot enter into the Kingdome of heauen Quest. But how may a man knowe all his infirmities notwithstanding hee bee truely righteous and haue such a righteousnes as doth exceed the righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharises Ans. For answer heerunto I will cast the signes of a righteous man into two ranks First such as describe him in himself secondly such as describe him in the difference from Pharisaicall righteousnesse The signes that describe him in himself either appeare vpon him in his infancy or in his ripe age In the very infancy of the iust man euen when God first changeth his heart and clenseth him and raiseth him vp to liue righteously there bee diuers things by which hee may discern the truth of his sanctification as First by the dissoluing of the stoninesse of his heart When God comes effectually to clense a man hee takes away the stony heart out of the body and giues him a heart of flesh he may feele his heart melt within him especially when hee stands before the Lord when the Lord is fashioning of him for himself by his Ordinances Ezech. 36.25 26. Hee hath a new heart that hath not a stony heart Secondly by the rising of the day starre in his heart The Father of lights when he reneweth the heart of a man causeth a sudden heauenly light as it were a starre to shine in the vnderstanding by vertue of which men see more into the mysteries of Religion in that first moment than they did all the daies of their life before This is that new spirit the Prophet speaks of Hee that sate in darknes before now sees a great light he sees and wonders at diuine things in Religion whereas before hee was a sot and vnderstood nothing with any power or life and by the comforts of this light he can heare as the Learned vnderstands doctrine in a moment which before was altogether harsh and dark vnto him 2. Peter 1.19 Ezechiel 36.28 Psalm 119.130 Mathew 4.16 Esay 50.4 Thirdly by his vehement desire to righteousnes or after righteousnes Mathew 5.5 Which hee shewes many waies as by the loathing of himself for his want of righteousnes and for all his wayes that were not good Ezech. 36.35 and by his estimation of righteousnes aboue riches all worldly things Psalm 3.8 9. and by his affectionate enquiry after directions for righteousnes Men and brethren what shall we doo to be saued Acts 2.37 and by his longing after the Word of truth by which he may learn righteousnes Fourthly by his estimation of righteousnes in others he honours them that fear the Lord as the onely Noble Ones all his delight is in them and he loues them and longs after them for righteousnes sake Fiftly by the couenant he makes in his heart about righteousnes he not onely consents to obey Esay 1.19 but hires himself as a seruant to righteousnes resoluing to liue to righteousnes and spend not an houre in a day but a life in the seruice of righteousnes Rom. 6.13 18. And as the righteous man growes more strong and better acquainted with God and his Ordinances and the works of righteousnes other signes break-out vpon him which doo infallibly prooue the happinesse of his condition such as are First vexation in his soule at the wickednes and vnrighteousnes of others 2. Pet. 2.8 Secondly reioycing with ioy vnspeakable and glorious when he feels the comforts of GOD's presence and begins to see some euidence of Gods loue to him in Christ 1. Pet. 1.9 Thirdly the personall and passionate loue of the Lord Iesus Christ the Fountain of righteousnes though hee neuer saw him in the flesh esteeming him aboue all persons and things 1. Peter 1.9 Phil. 3.8 9. longing after his comming with great striuings of affections 2. Cor. 5. 2. Tim. 4.8 c. Fourthly flourishing like a Palm-tree when he is planted in the House of the Lord and enioyes powerfull means in the House of his God growing like the Willowes by the water-courses Psalm 92.12 13. and 1.3 Fiftly resolution to suffer any thing for righteousnes sake Mat. 5.12 so as hee will forsake father or mother house or lands yea life it self rather than forsake the truth and the good way of God Mat. 16.23 Mark 10.29 Sixtly he liues by faith The iust liues by faith In all estates of life he casteth his cares and himself vpon God trusting on the merits of Iesus Christ and is in nothing carefull but patiently waits vpon God Gal. 2.2 Heb. 10.38 Gal. 3.11 And thus he is described in himself Now his righteousnes is distinguished from the righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharises by diuers signes and marks as First in the ends of it
and soundly grounded in our particular assurance of Gods fauour in Iesus Christ and our owne eternall saluation Heb. 6.11 Col. 2.6.7 And for the exercise of faith wee should striue to learn euery day to liue by faith in all the occasions of our life spending the remainder of our liues in the faith of the Sonne of God holding fast our confidence and not withdrawing our selues Heb. 10. Gal. 2.20 Yea wee should striue to bee examples one to another in our faith in GOD 1. Tim. 4.12 Thirdly wee should abound in loue one to another and towards all men This the Apostle praies earnestly for and this we should shew by all diligence in preseruing peace and vnitie amongst ourselues so as there should be but one heart minde amongst vs. To this end bearing and forbearing supporting one another we should grow also in the tendernes and hartines of our affections one after another longing one for another and delighting one in another yea our loue sholud grow euen in seeking to enlarge our acquaintance with such as feare God but especially in the labour of our loue to doe good to such as feare God should we grow c. Fourthly we should grow in mercy and that both in the bowels of pity and in the abundance of the fruits of mercy Col. 3.12 2. Cor. 8.2 7. and 9.11 Iames 3.18 Fiftly we should grow in patience and meeknes and lowlines of minde Patience should haue his perfect work and it wonderfully would become vs if we could increase in the image of Iesus Christ for meeknes and lowlines To be free from passions and pride oh how it would adorne vs It is that one grace Christ so much vrgeth vpon vs and was most eminent in himselfe Math. 11.29 Iames 1.4 Sixtly We should grow in praier and the gifts that concerne our communion with God wee should labour to be mighty and powerfull in prayer able to wrastle with God himselfe and ouercome him as Iacob did and to this end wee should pray alwaies and learne to pray all manner of praiers in all things making our requests knowne to God with supplication especially we should striue to abound in thanksgiuing to God in all things giuing thanks This is the greatest honor we can doe to God 1. Thes. 5.18 19. Philip. 4.7 Psal. 50.23 Col. 1.11 Ephes. 6.18 2 Cor. 4.15 Seuenthly We should grow in the contempt of the world and the lesser estimation of the things of this life we should striue more more to expresse a mortified conuersation vsing the world as if we vsed it not setting our affections on the things that are aboue and hauing our conuersation in heauen confessing our selues to bee strangers and pilgrims and with all eagernesse embracing the praises of a better life Hebrewes 11.13 Philip. 3.20 in nothing being carefull Philip. 4.6 hastning to the comming of Iesus Christ 2. Pet. 3.11 Eightthly We should exceedingly striue to grow in the holy reuerēt vse of gods ordinances striuing to come with more feare and sence of the glorious presence of God This is a wonderfull hard lesson and little heeded of the most Oh that we could get it to serue the Lord with feare and to reioyce but yet with trembling Oh blessed is the man that can feare alwaies and work out his saluation with feare and trembling Ninthly There is another gift we should grow in and it is maruelously necessary and comely and yet extremely neglected and that is vtterance of which the Apostle makes mention in his short Catalogue 2. Cor. 8.7 vtterance I say to be able to speake one to another with profit and power in the things of the kingdom of God This is an admirable grace and such as attaine it and grow in it how precious are they amongst the Saints Tenthly In that 2. Cor. 8.7 you may see two other things we should increase in The one is in all diligence we should more and more euery day cast about how we might take more paines to doe good and be more profitable to others and for our owne soules we should increase our paines Eleuenthly The other grace we should grow in there mentioned is the loue to our teachers as God abounds towards vs in the profit of their paines so we should grow in affection to them till we get that singular loue of them which the Apostle speaketh of 1. Thes. 5. Twelfthly Now ther is one thing more which being added would make vs wonderful compleat Christians glorious shining lights in the world that hold forth the life and power of the word in the midst of crooked peruerse multitudes of men and that is contentation Oh the gaine of godlines if we were settled and contented with that we haue and could learne of the Apostle in all estates to be content To haue the skill to want and to abound and yet by Christ to doe all things This would finish the glory of the whole frame of godlines and be like a crown to all other gifts and graces 1. Tim. 6.6 7. Philip. 4.11 12 18. Now for the third point namely the rules to be obserued That we may grow They may be referred to these heads First We must be diligent and conuersant in searching the writings of the Prophets and Apostles in the name of Iesus Christ as the chief cornerstone and then the promise is that our harts shall be so sweetned and seasoned with these diuine knowledges that God himselfe shall be with vs and dwell in our hearts as a holy temple and we grow more and more in acquaintance with God Eph. 2.20 21. Secondly We must bring so much sincerity to the grace of Christ and the vse of the meanes as to resolue to seek growth in all things as well as one setting our hearts wholy vpon the kingdom of God we must not goe about godlines with a diuided heart we must grow vp in all things or else in none we shall not prosper if we be false-harted in any part of Gods seruice Eph. 2.15 Thirdly We must in all things depend vpon God and seeke to him by daily prayers for a blessing vpon our desires and the meanes and our endeuours For else Paul may plant and Apollo may water but it is God that must giue the increase 1 Cor. 3.6 Fourthly We must be carefull to imploy the gifts we haue and to practise as fast as we heare For to him that hath for vse shall be giuen but from him that hath gifts wil not vse them shall be taken away that which he hath Math. 13.11 Fiftly We must get an humble heart and preserue in vs the sence of our owne vilenesse and a lowly minde and conceit of our selues accusing our euery-daies euill waies before the Lord. For Gods promise is to giue more grace to the humble Iames. 4.7 Sixtly It is a great occasion of increase when a man doth Gods work with as much cheerefulnes as he can God loueth a cheerfull giuer and
will make all grace abound to them that striue to liue to be his seruants 2. Cor. 9.7.8 Seuenthly You must pray that your masters or if you will ministers may haue their harts enlarged and made fat and that they may come vnto you and conuert you with abundance of the blessings of the Gospel For if there be famine or scarcity and barrenness in Gods House you will not thriue well at home Rom 15.29 Eightthly We must take heed of al such things as hinder our growth as namely 1. Hypocrisie When men aduance a profession of Religion onely for carnall ends and seeke more the praise of men then of God These mens hearts will be fearfully blasted 2. Errors in opinion of strange doctrines 2. Pet. 3.17 18. Hebrews 13 c. 3. Spirituall pride 2. Cor. 12.6 7. For God giues grace to the humble Iam. 4.7 4. Headstrong affections as the passions of anger or the like these pull men back and hinder the growth maruelously 1 Cor. 3.2 3. Eph. 4.30.31 5. Liuing in places where we haue not powerfull meanes for our soules Eph. 4.13 For where vision failes they perish must needs faint and be starued in the famine of the word 6. Discord with such as feare God For if wee grow wee must grow vp in loue holding communion with the body of Christ Eph. 4.15.16 7. Domesticall vnquietnes and disorder For that will hinder not onely prayer 1 Pet. 3.7 but all other parts of piety 8. Worldliness This was the sinne did vndoe Demas 9. Sinister iudgement of our own practices in godliness when we are either iust ouermuch that is think too highly of what we do or wicked ouer-much that is thinke too vilely of the grace of God in vs or the good wee doe both these hinder Christians extreamely 10. The loue of any particular sinne For if once we dally with any corruption grace is dulled and the spirit of grace greeued and vexed in vs. Now for the fourth point we may know whether we grow or no by diuerse signes First if we be planted neere the riuers of water if the Lord make vs happy in liuing in such places where the means of grace aboundes and the ordinances of God florish in their life and power Psal 1.3 Eph. 4.13 Else if a good tree be planted in a dry heath far from water or raine no maruell if it grow not And when the Lord doth make the meanes plentifull hee doth vsually make his grace plentifull in so many as are ordaind to life Secondly and especially if we be conscionable in the vse of the means if wee measure to God in sincerity in hearing praying reading and receiuing the Sacraments c. there may be no doubt but God wil measure to vs in the plenty of his blessings if wee suck the milk of the word with desire we shall growe Wee need no more doubt whether our soules growe in grace if we can bring constant affections to the means than wee would whether the bodies of our children would growe if they haue good nurses and doo suck the breasts well Thirdly grace growes in vs as humility doth grow God wil giue more grace to the humble Iam 4.8 And look how we thriue and continue in true humility so we thriue in grace and contrariwise as pride and conceitednes growes in vs so doth true grace wither And the like may be said of meeknes which is a grace that orders the affections as humility doth the minde Fourthly we may try our growth by our loue to the godly the members of the mysticall body for the body of Christ increaseth in the edification of it self through loue As the loue of Gods children groweth or decaies in vs so doth grace growe or decay Eph. 4.15.16 This loue is the bond of perfectnes Col. 3.13 Fiftly we must try our confidence in God and the assurance of our faith For as grace growes so doo we growe more established and settled in God and the hope of his kingdome This is to abide in Christ and thus to trust in the LORD hath a promise of such a blessing as that man shal not wither Ier. 17.7 8. Sixtly we may discern our growth by the decay of taste in sinne and the world As the violence of temptation and the admiration of the pleasures and profits of this life go out of vs by the same degrees doth the holy Ghost get the victory and the Spirit settles the possession of grace in vs c. Seuenthly wee may discern it by our teachablenesse and honouring of prophecying when our Teachers according to their lines may bee inlarged and liue without suspicion or censure when we can beleeue them and rest in their testimony aboue the whole world 2. Cor. 10.15 2. Thes. 1.10 Eightthly wee may easily discern it by our constancy and frequency in good works either of piety or mercy or righteousnes either at home or abroad For to such as haue for vse it is certain more is giuen Mat. 13.11 Ninthly wee may knowe it by the frequency of our communion with God If the Lord daily dwell in vs or with vs and reueal himself to vs by the signes of his presence there is no doubt to be made of our growing The heart of a christian is Gods Temple and you may bee sure all prospers well in the Temple when the cloud sits there or often appears there Eph. 2.20 21. Vse The vse of this whole doctrine concerning growth may serue first for humiliation and so in many things First our hearts should smite vs for our ignorance There are many things of excellent fruit and praise which we haue not at all laboured in diuers of the twelue things before Secondly for our deadnes of heart and vnprofitablenesse of life which is aggrauated against vs 1. When God giues vs much means 2. When wee are insensible or at least incorrigible knowe all is not well and feel our selues to be lashed and yet mend not 3. When wee are slothfull and weary wil not stirre vp our selues nor receiue direction for the making vp of what is lacking to our faith or to any other gifts especially when wee are weyward and will go about rather than bee at the triall of direction or asking the way Ier. 31.21 3. Much more to such as are so farre from growing that they fall away and decline lose their first loue and what they haue wrought begin in the Spirit and end in the flesh This much vexeth God and is extremely dangerous to the parties Esay 1.4 Ier. 7.24 and 15.6 2. Pet. 2.20 But that this may not either pearce too farre or fall too deadly or flat vpon any that are guilty we must knowe there is a double declining or apostasie The one inward the other outward First the inward is when a mans heart is falne off from the care of godlinesse and the means of it and regards iniquity constantly being possessed of the raign of habituall hypocrisie and this
may bee in men that outwardly frequent the meanes and make a shew of godlinesse Secondly the outward declining or Apostasie is when men outwardly liue in grosse sinnes or follow scandalous courses and are at last relapsed to the violent courses of the world so as the meanes of godliness is neglected Againe declining is first either totall secondly or in part First totall when we fall off from all godliness and all the meanes of it and so only they fall that sinne against the holy Ghost Secondly in part is when men fall into some sinne or error and not lose all conscience of well-doing and such is their Apostasie also that fall off from the care of some of the ordinances of God as when men vse the priuate and neglect the publike or vse the publike and neglect the priuate c. Question But what shall a man doe to help himselfe that findes he hath declined c Answer He must take vnto himselfe words and confesse his sin to God and returne to the Lord hartily he will heale euen his back-sliding Hose 14.3.4.5 Vse 2. Secondly for instruction and so it should perswade with vs mightily to hold on and neuer faint in the way but striue to the perfection of euery good gift of God not being weary of well-doing knowing that it is ashame still to bee children and that God doth require a righteousnes of vs that should exceed the righteousnes of all the Papists and Pharises in the world and to this end we should preserue in vs this desire after the sincere milk of the word and watch against securitie and slothfulnes the dangerous moathes of godliness Vse 3. Thirdly such may bee much encouraged who haue their hearts set vpon growth and doe prosper in Gods work though otherwaies they haue many afflictions or infirmities yea such as with true hearts doe mourne for their not growing as they think may consider of many comforts to vphould themselues by as 1. Our Sauiour Christ had not all degrees of grace at once but grew in grace by degrees 2. Though thy gifts bee small and grow in thee like a graine of mustard-seed yet it may grow to a maruelous increase Math. 13. 3. Though thou haue many infirmities yet thou maist beare aboundance of fruit as the vine which is the weakest plant yet is not therefore barren Isaiah 27.2 4. Though thou haue little meanes to help thy selfe by yet thou maiest by the blessing of God grow The lilies spin not and yet are gorgeo●sly clothed Math. 6.28 5. If we sowe good seed it is certain the Lord will giue increase 1. Cor. 9.10.11 6. Though we sowe in teares we shall reap in ioy Psal. 126.5 6. yea though we be extreamely oppressed and reproached as the Israelites grew euen the more they were hated and oppressed in Aegipt Mark 4.8 7. We haue great helpes the word is more effectuall to the soule then milk to the body and we receiue influence from Christ our head Colos. 2.19 and euery member of the mysticall body makes some supply to further the growth of ●he whole body Eph. 6.16 Verse 3. Because ye haue tasted that the Lord is gracious or bountifull THese words containe the fourth reason to perswade to the desire after the word and it is taken from the experience they haue had of the goodnes of God comforting them in the word If euer they tasted the sweetnes of the word they must needes haue an appetite to it In these few wordes there are diuers poynts of Doctrine to bee obserued and explained as namely First That God is gracious Secondly that God doth graciously sweeten the word to his people as God doth shew his graciousnes in the word Thirdly that where there is a true taste of the sweetnes of the word there the soule growes in grace Fourthly It is but a taste of the sweetnes of God which can be had in this life Fiftly many liue in the church and yet neuer taste of the sweetnes of God and his word Sixtly It is a singular shame for such as haue felt the sweetnes of the word to faile in their desire after it For the first Where the Lord is praised for graciousnes by the word vsed in the originall heere it is to occasion in vs the admiration of the goodnes of Gods nature For in this one word are many distinct praises imported As First That hee is free and doth what he doth freely without respect of merit or desert in men and this is one thing which if wee finde should much incite vs to regard what he saith or requireth of vs. By this Argument are men called vpon Isaiah 55.1.2 3. Secondly that hee is kind to his very enemies For so the word is applied Luke 6.35 and questionles it should bee a great thing to perswade with a man when he comes to the word to regard it with much affection if he knowe that God thereby will doe good to his very enemies and that in that ordinance God is went to shew the mirror of his mercy in reuealing his loue communicating the blessings of his Gospell to such as come into his presence with hatred of their owne waies Thirdly that he is courteous and in a speciall manner kinde to and fond ouer his own people with incomprehensible indulgence the word is rendred Courteous Eph. 4.32 And all ages must wonder at this kindenes of God in Iesus Christ Eph. 2.7 And thus hee deliuereth his seruants from their feares Psal. 34.3 or 4. Fourthly that hee is bountifull and liberall and giueth plentifully so the word is vsed and giuen to God Rom. 1.5 Fif●ly that hee is gentle and easie to bee intreated or preuailed withall Hence that his yoke is said to bee easie Math. 11.30 where this word is translated easie and heereof comes the word rendred gentlenes Gal. 5.22 and thus hee is said to bee maruelous kinde in hearing praier Psal. 31.21 22. and 34.4 6 15. Sixtly that he stands not vpon respect of persons and thus he regards the poore Psal. 68.10 and will not disdaine to teach sinners his way Psal. 25.8 Seuenthly that he is sweet that is wonderfull comfortable pleasing and filling with delight Eightthly there is one specialty of Gods goodnes to which this word is applied and that is the accepting of the Gentiles to fauour when the Iews were cut off Rom. 11. Vse The vse of this point is various For First It should kindle in vs admiration All ages should gaze and wonder at such matchless good nature and kindnes in God Ephes. 2.7 Secondly It should break our hearts with sorrow and repentance for our sins to think of it that wee offend a God so kinde so good so bountifull Rom. 2.4 Hose 3.5 Thirdly It should perswade with men that neuer felt this to taste and see how good God is Psalme 34. Question What must we do if wee could or might taste of this sweetnes of Gods nature Answer The Prophet Dauid telles vs
of two things Psalme 34. First thou must pray vnto him and make him thy refuge in all distresse Secondly and thou must put thy trust in him and then certainely thy face shall be lightned and thou shalt not be ashamed and I may adde two things more First Thou must loue his Word waiting vpon him in his Sanctuary Secondly and yeld thy selfe ouer to be his seruant and thou canst not faile to finde this goodness of the Lord. Fourthly It should inflame affection in the godly They should fall in loue with God Oh loue the Lord all yee his Saints Psalm 31.19 21 33. What can more draw affection then sweetnes of nature Fiftly It should perswade all Gods seruants to liue by faith and not through vnbeliefe in the time of affliction or temptation to dishonor god Why saist thou thy way is past ouer of God Or why sayst thou The Lord hath forgotten or will not forgiue Esay 40.27 49.15 16. Exod. 34.6.7 Sixtly It should kindle in vs a vehement desire to imitate so sacred a nature and continually to striue to be like the patterne in God for curtesie Eph. 4.32 kindness 2. Cor. 6.6 and all louing behauiour Colos. 2.12 1. Cor. 13.4 and easie to bee intreated Iam. 3.17 and loue to our enemies Luke 6.35 We should be followers of God Eph. 5.1 we should beare his image especially herein Col. 3.10 Seuenthly How should our hearts bee satisfied as with Manna when we feele this sweetnes of God to vs in particular either in the Word or prayer or in his works We should euen be sick of loue our sleep should be pleasant to vs and our hearts filled with gladnes What greater felicity can there be then that such a God should loue vs Psal. 63.6 Ierem. 31.26 Cantic 2.5 or 6. Eightthly We shold be carefull when we haue felt this sweetnes of the Lord to preserue our selues in this communion with God and abide in his goodnes as the Apostle vseth the Phrase Rom. 11.22 Lastly it should much affect with sorrow and shame all impenitent sinners and that in two respects First because they haue lost their time and liued without the sence of this sweetnes in God the Apostle Tit. 3.5 vseth this Phrase The bountifulnes of God appeared The word shined as the sunne doth in the rising which imports that the world was nothing but darknes till men found by experience the goodnes of God Secondly because they haue so long offended a nature of such infinite goodnes this will proue a grieuous aggr●uation of their sinne and misery For such a goodnes so prouoked will turn into extreme fury such mercy abused will be turned into vnspeakeable fiercenes of indignation as appeares Deut. 29.19 20. and Rom. 2.4 5. The second Doctrine is that God doth graciously sweeten his Word to his people or God doth shew his graciousnes especially in his word Hence it is that Gods seruants haue acknowledge the word to be sweeter then hony and the hony-comb Psal. 19.10 119.103 and the holy Ghost compareth it to feasts yea royall feasts Esay 25.6 Prou. 9.4 Luke 14.17 and the Apostle acknowledgeth a sauour of life vnto life in the Word 2. Cor. 2.14 The consideration whereof should teach vs diuers duties First To labour to finde the word so vnto vs to seeke this sweetnes in the word and to that end we must mingle it with faith else there will be no more tast in it then in the white of an egge and besides we must come to it in the tediousnes of our own vilenes For we are neuer fitter to tast of Gods grace then when we are deiected in the true feeling of our owne vnworthines God will giue grace to the humble and further we must get an appetite and affection to the word For the full stomach loatheth an hony-combe but to the hungry soule euery little thing is sweet Prouerbs 27.7 and lastly we must take heede that wee marre not our tastes before we come as they doe that haue sweetned their mouthes with wickednes and spoyled their rellish with the pleasures of beloued sinnes Iob 20.12 Such as liue in the delight of secret corruptions euen they that account stolne waters sweet may bee the guests of Hell but Gods guests they are not onely they that ouercome eate of the hidden Manna Reuel 2. Secondly When we haue found hony let vs eate it Prou. 20.13 That is if the Lord be gracious vnto vs in his word let vs with all care receiue it into our harts and with all affection make vse of it Lose not thy precious oportunity Thirdly It should teach vs in all our griefes and bitternes to make our recourse to the Word to comfort and sweeten our harts against our feares and sorrowes For at this feast God wipes away all teares from our eyes Esaiah 25.6 8. Fourthly The sweetnes of the Word when we feele it should satisfie vs yea satisfie vs aboundantly We should giue so much glory to Gods goodnes as to make it the abundant satisfaction of our hearts Psal. 36.6 Fiftly Yea further we should labour to shew this sweet sauour of the word in our conuersations by mercy to the distressed by gracious communication by our contentation and by all wel-doing that the perfume of Gods grace in vs may allure affect others that the very places where we come may sauour of our goodnes euen after we are gone Sixtly We should be alwaies praising of God for the good things of his Sanctuary acknowledging all to come frō his free grace without our deserts Psal. 84.4 entertaining his presence with all possible admiration saying with the Psalmist O Lord how excellent is thy goodness Psal. 36.9 Seuenthly We should pray God to continue his goodness to them that know him and to vouchsafe vs the fauour to dwell for euer in his house Psalm 36.11 Eightthly And constantly the experience hereof should set vs alonging our soules should long for the courts of Gods house and our hearts cry for the daily bread in Sion and we should constantly walk from strength to strength til we appear before God in Sion Psalm 84 and the rather because besides the sweetnes there is a plentifull reward in keeping Gods Word Psalm 19.20 Secondly from hence we may bee informed in two especiall things 1. Concerning the happinesse of the godly in this life notwithstanding all their afflictions and sorrows Thou seest their distresses but thou seest not their comforts The stranger doth not meddle with their joyes Oh how great is the goodnes of God in giuing his people to drink out of the riuers of the pleasures in his house when hee makes their eies to see the light in his light Psalm 36.8 9. Psalm 65.4 2. Concerning the office of Gods Ministers They are the perfumers of the world the Church is the perfuming-pan and preaching is the fire that heats it and the Scriptures are the sweet waters Or the Church is the mortar preaching the pestle and
taste of the comforts of a better life Why long wee not to enioy those pleasures for euermore Psal. 17. vlt. Yea we may know how good it is to bee in Heauen by the taste wee haue sometimes on Earth If it doe vs such vnspeakeable ease and ioy to feele of the sweetnes of God for a little moment Oh how great then is that goodnes God hath laied vp for them that feare him Psal. 31.19 The smaleness of the quantity and shortnes of the continuance of our tast of the graciousness of God on earth should make vs to vse the meanes of communion with God with so much the more feruency and frequency and humility Doct. 5. A fift doctrine is that many in the Churches of Christians neuer so much as tasted of the sweetness of Gods grace and word and that may bee a cause why the Apostle speakes with an If as knowing it was a great question whether many of them had had experience of the sweetnesse of the Word Question Now if any aske what should be the cause that many Christians haue so little sence of the sweetnesse of the word and Gods graciousness and goodness in the Word Answere I answere that it is First with many so because they want the ordinances of God in their power and life of them They want powerfull preaching some congregations haue no preaching at all and many that haue preaching haue it not in the life and power The spices of the word are not beaten to the smell as they should be 2. Cor. 2.15 16. Secondly In others because the taste of the pleasures and profits and lusts of the world are in their hearts when they come to the word and so by the cares of life all sence of sweetnes is beaten out Math. 13. Luke 14.24 Thirdly It is in the most because they consider not their misery in themselues nor remember their latter end A man neuer knowes the sweetnes of Christ crucified till he be pricked in his heart and afflicted for his sinnes and forlorne estate in himselfe by nature and till men know how to number their daies they will neuer apply their hearts to wisdome Psal. 90.12 Fourthly Some men are infected with superstition and the loue of a strange god They prepare a table for the troope and therefore are hungry when Gods seruants eat and vexed when they sing for ioy of heart They cannot feele the sweetnes of the Gospell their hearts are so poisoned with secret popery Esay 65.11 13. Fiftly Some men taste not of wisdoms banquet because they leaue not the way of the foolish All sense is extinguished by the euill company they keep Prou. 9.6 Sixtly Too many Christians are poisoned with some of the sinnes mentioned in the first verse of this Chapter that destroyes both taste and appetite in them Seuenthly Some are fearefully deliuered to a spirituall slumber the Iustice of God scourging their impenitency and disobedience that made no vse of his iudgements and the remorses they felt before And so are in the case of the Iewes Rom. 11. Eightthly Because God doth for the most part reserue these tastes as the onely portion of his owne people and therefore neuer wonder though the common multitude attain not to it Psalm 36.8.9 Lastly the best Christians are often much restrained in their taste of the sweetnes of Gods fauour and presence because they are not carefull enough to attend vpon God in his ordinances they doo not seek God and striue to finde Gods fauour and presence in the means they hear and pray loosely with too much slacknes and remisnes of zeal and attention The consideration heerof should serue much to humble and melt the hearts of such as feel this to be their case they should be afraid and tremble at the iudgements of God vpon them heerin and fear their owne case and by speedy repentance make their recourse to God in the Name of Christ to seek a remedy for their distresse And to this end 1. They should gather a Catalogue of all such sins as they knowe by themselues for which they might most fear Gods displeasure and then go in secret and humble themselues in confession of those sinnes striuing till the Lord be pleased to giue them a soft hart and sensible sorrows This course will both marre the relish of sin and besides it opens the fountain of grace and ioy in the heart of a man Hosh. 14.3.5 Mat. 5.6 2. They should there attend with all possible heed to the Word of the Lord hearing it as the Word of God and not of man with this sincere couenant of their hearts to do whatsoeuer the Lord commands and then the Lord wil not long with-hold himself Secondly the Godly that finde this sweetnes in the Word should be so much the more thankfull for the gracious entertainment GOD giues them in his House in that hee hath not nor doth deal so with thousands of Christians as he deals with them Doct. 6. The last doctrine is that it is a shame for such Christians as haue felt of the sweetnesse of the Word to lose their appetite or any way to abate of their company in resorting and constancy of desire after it or estimation of it This answers to the main scope because these words are brought-in as a reason to excite appetite The remembrance of the good we haue found in the House of God should make vs loue it stil though we doo not alwaies speed alike wee should beleeue that God will return though hee hide his face for a time Such Christians then must bear their shame that haue lost their first loue and repent lest God take away the Candle-stick from them Verse 4. To whom coming as to a liuing stone disallowed of men but chosen of God and precious HItherto of the exhortation as it concernes the Word of God The exhortation as it concerns the Sonne of God follows from verse 4. to verse 13 wherein it is the purpose of the Apostle to shew vnto them in the second place the principall means of holinesse euen the originall fountain it self and that is Christ to whom they must continually come to seek grace if euer they will prosper and growe in godlinesse In the exhortation as it concerns Christ three things may be obserued First the Proposition wherein hee tels them what they must doo verses 4 and 5. Secondly the Confirmation of it and that two waies First by testimony of Scripture shewing what Christ is which Scripture is both cited and expounded verse 6 7 8. Secondly by the consideration of their owne excellent estate in Christ which is set out positiuely verse 9. and comparatiuely verse 10 or thus it is confirmed by arguments taken from the praise first of Christ verses 6 7 8. secondly of Christians verses 9 10. Thirdly the Conclusion where hee shewes the vse they should make both in what they should auoid verse 11. and in what they should doo verse 12. That which in generall
may be obserued is that Christ is the main Fountain of all grace and holinesse It is he that fils all in all things Eph. 1. vlt. All the treasures of wisdome and grace be in him in whom the God-head dwels bodily Col. 2.3 9. It is he that is made vnto vs of God wisdome righteousnes sanctification and redemption 1. Cor. 10.30 He was long since acknowledged to be the Lord our righteousnes Ier. 23.6 The knowledge heerof may both inform instruct and comfort vs. First it may inform vs concerning the grieuousnes of our disease The nature of man is so farre past cure that vnlesse the Sonne of GOD sanctifie himself with vnspeakable holinesse we can neuer be sanctified Iohn 17.19 yea the Word it self is not auaileable without the grace of Christ as it appears in that seuenteenth of Iohn where both the Word and Christ are intreated of Secondly it may teach vs first to ascribe glory to Christ who in this respect is most worthy to be acknowledged the Head of all Principalities but especially the Head of the Church from whom commeth influence of all grace and goodnes Eph. 21 22.23 Secondly it should teach vs aboue all gettings to labor to get Christ crucified into our hearts It is Christ in vs that must be our riches and our hope of glory Col. 1. 27. yea this will bee vnsearchable riches to vs we should determine to knowe nothing saue Iesus Christ and him crucified 1. Cor. 2.2 Thirdly let him that glorieth glory in the Lord Iesus 1. Cor. 1.4 7. And therefore God forbid I should reioice in anything but the Crosse of Christ whereby I am crucified to the world and the world is crucified to me Gal. 6.14 Thirdly it should bee a great comfort to the Godly both in respect of their vnion with him in regard their Head is so infinite in holinesse as also in respect of that supply and help that they may continually haue from him against all their infirmities and defects and lastly in respect of the hope of the full confirmation of their holinesse in the day of Christ. And thus of the generall Doctrine The first thing in the exhortation to bee considered is the Proposition in which two things are to be marked First what Christ is secondly what the Christian must bee in respect of Christ. There are fiue things in the description of Christ. First he is a gracious Lord that is imported in the first word To whom that is which gracious Lord mentioned in the end of the former verse Whereby the Apostle applies that to Christ which was before spoken of God generally as hee that is God with the Father and as that person in whom the Lord shewes his graciousnes to men Secondly hee is a liuing stone Thirdly hee is in respect of the world and the base respect and vsage of him once disallowed of men Fourthly he is elect of God Fiftly he is precious Now that which Christians must be and doo that they may receiue holinesse from Christ is that first they must come vnto him Secondly they must bee liuely stones Thirdly they must be built vp in him Fourthly they must become a spirituall house Fiftly they must bee a holy priesthood to offer vp spirituall sacrifices vnto God such as may be acceptable in Iesus Christ. For it is to be noted that the word Are built vp may be rendred Be ye built vp howsoeuer it bee read The intent is to perswade them thereto Ye are built vp that is if you bee right that is a thing must not be wāting so the sense is the same First then of the description of Christ. And therein the first point of doctrine that offereth it self to our consideration is that Christ is a gracious Lord. He is a Lord and Master to all true Christians and such a Lord and Master as neuer men serued for wonderfull graciousnes That he is a Lord to the faithfull is euident by other Scriptures also 1. Cor. 1.2 He is said to bee a Lord to all that call vpon him in euery place Thus Dauid cals him My Lord Psalme 110.1 And great Apostles confesse themselues to bee his seruants Rom. 1.1 Iude 1. 2. Pet. 1.1 And that hee is most gracious the Apostle shewes when hee tels that all Ages haue cause to wonder at the maruellous kindnes that God hath shewed to men in Christ. The vse may be both for information instruction and consolation First we may hence be informed that Christ is God with the Father For the which the Prophet Dauid Psalme 34 whence the words of the former verse are borrowed Giue to God the Apostle applies heer vnto Christ and the reason of the application may in the second place inform vs that God is gracious to men onely by Iesus Christ. It is impossible euer to feel or taste of Gods graciousnes but in his Son And thirdly we are heer told as it were that Christ is God visible God is made visible and sensible to men by Iesus Christ This is that mystery of godlines God is manifested in the flesh Secondly Is Christ our Lord and Master then these things will follow 1. That we must liue and die vnto Christ Rom 14.7 8 9. we are not our owne men wee must liue to him that died for vs 2. Cor. 5. vlt. The loue of Christ must constrayne vs and all old things must be passed and all things must become new vnto vs. If Christ be our Lord where is his seruice he must rule vs and rule ouer vs. If we walke in the vanitie of our mindes according to the deceiueable lusts of our old conuersation we haue not yet learned Christ nor the truth that is in Iesus Eph. 4. And therefore let vs euery one looke to his waies as he that must one day giue account of himselfe vnto Christ which will bee Iudge both of quick and dead Rom. 14. 2. That euery knee must bow at the name of Christ and euery tongue must confesse his soueraignty to the glory of God Philip. 2.1 Rom. 14. We must all take notice of his supreme authority and forme in our hearts all possible reuerence toward him 3. We must not iudge one another For what haue we to doe to iudge another mans seruant He stands or falls to his owne Master Rom. 14.4 9. Thirdly it ought to be the singular ioy of our harts that wee serue so glorious a Master Neuer seruāts serued such a Lord as may appear by the enumeration of diuers particular differences As First other masters are not wont to die for their vassals Christ shed his blood for vs one drop of whose blood was more precious then all the bloods of all the men in the World and this he did onely to ransome and redeeme vs that wee might bee a peculiar people vnto him Titus 2.13 Secondly neuer Master had such power to prefer his seruants Christ hath all power in heauen and in earth Mat. 28. and all that to
came downe from heauen to signify that true zeale is kindled in heauen and comes down from aboue It is no ordinarie humor nor a rash fury It is no wilde fire And it was required about this fire that they should preserue it and neuer let it goe out but put fuell still to it and so it was kept for many yeeres so must wee doe with our zeale wee must labour by all meanes to preserue the feruencie of our hearts that wee neuer want fire to burne our sacrifices Our zeale should bee as the loue mentioned Can. 7.10 that much water could not quench it Euery sacrifice must haue fire Marke 9. Sixtly The sacrifices must be salted with salt so must our Christian sacrifices as our Sauiour Christ shewes Marke 9.49 50. And thus we must haue the salt of mortification and the salt of discretion and we must looke to it that our salt lose not his saltnes but that it haue a draining power in it to extract corruption out of our sacrifices our words to God and men must bee powdred with salt Col. 4.6 and so must all our actions Seuenthly the sacrifices must be without leauen Leuit. 2.11 Leauen is wickednes or malice or sowrenes or deadnes of heart or worldly griefe euen whatsoeuer leaueneth that is infecteth or maketh the meate offring to be heauie or sowre 1 Cor. 5.8 Eightthly in the same place of Leuiticus 2.11 Honie likewise is forbidden to be mingled with their sacrifices and by hony may be meant our beloued sinnes or particular corruptions wee should especially watch against them in the time of performance of holy duties that they mingle not themselues with our sacrifices by infecting our cogitations Ninthly the offring must bee waued and shaken to and fro before the Lord Leui. 7.3 And this signified the wauing of our lips in praier to God for his acceptation our sacrifices should bee soundly tossed to and fro in praier before the Lord Iob prayed before he sacrificed Iob 42. Tenthly on the Sabbath the sacrifices were to bee doubled to signifie that in a speciall manner wee should consecrate our selues to piety and mercy on the Sabbath day Eleuenthly our sacrifices must bee offered vp with all gladnes of heart and spirituall delight Thus Gods people were said to be a free-harted and willing people Psa. 47.9 and 110.3 And this was shadowed out partly by the oile that was powred into the meat offerings which is expounded to be the oile of gladnes and partly by the feast they made at the end of their solemne sacrifices vnto which they inuited their friends to ioyne with them in reioicing before the Lord and it is likely Dauid alludes to this feast when he saith hee would take the cup of saluation and praise the name of the Lord For as yet the Lords Supper was not instituted nor doe we read of any vse of a cup in the sacrifices or sacraments themselues Exod. 18.12 1. Chr. 16.1 2 3 4. Psal. 116.13 Twelfthly If wee be called to it wee must not deny vnto God the fat of the kidneies and the inwards By the fat was meant the things which are dearest to vs most beloued and that most delight vs and if the seruice of God and the Church and the poore require it wee must deny our selues and sacrifice what is most deare to vs. Thirteenthly the Apostle to the Hebrewes Chap. 13.13 addes that we must not leaue off wel-doing for reproach sake but be contented to bee like Christ who suffered without the gate as scorned of men and like the sacrifice was burnt without the campe Though all men hate vs and speake euill of vs and cast vs out of their companies yet wee must persist in our intention to sacrifice still to God Fourteenthly In the Sacrifices God had a great respect of mercy that cruelty were not shewed as Leuit. 22.27 When he enioyned that the creature must be seuen dayes vnder the damme and that no damme with the young one was to be slaine the same day Certainly God abhorreth that cruelty should bee exercised vnder pretence of piety Cursed be those long praiers that will deuoure widowes houses Matth. 23. In one thing we differ from the sacrifices For the sacrifices were dead or consisted of things without life but wee must be liuing sacrifices wee must do what we will do while we are aliue and must do it liuely with the affections that belong to the duties to be done Vse The vse may be briefly twofold for partly it should humble vs for our neglect of praiers and thanksgiuing and almes and contrition Wee omit the maine duties of our generall calling when we omit these It was the abomination of desolation when the temple was without sacrifices and how can it but be exceeding vncomely with Gods spiritual house that hath not sacrifices in it We are Christians but in name when pietie and mercy is neglected But especially we should be instructed from hence to mind our worke and to striue to answere our high calling by a continuall care day and night to exercise our selues herein the smoke of our incense should daily ascend vnto God The Apostle Paul beseecheth the Romans by the mercies of God to look to their sanctifying Rom. 12.1 Which shewes it is of wonderfull necessity and would make vs in some measure walke worthy of the Lord. And to the Hebrewes he bids them take heede of forgetting these sacrifices importing that vsually our deficiency in these seruices are from forgetfulnes we forget to pray and forget to shew mercy euen after we haue purposed both And thus much of the worke of a Christian. Now his honour followes Acceptable to God by Iesus Christ. Wherein three things may be noted First that howsoeuer piety and mercy and weldoing find little acceptation in the world yet it shall neuer want honour and great esteeme with God Pious and mercifull Christians shall neuer faile of the loue and fauour of God Their workes are accepted It is true that God may change his minde concerning the Ceremoniall Sacrifices but the acceptation of Christian Sacrifices is a thing established with God Heb. 10.9 These offerings shall be pleasant vnto the Lord Malach. 3.4 They are well-pleasing in his sight Heb. 13.16 They are a sweet sauour vnto the Lord Phil. 4.18 God hath a booke of remembrance Mal. 3.17 and our fruit shall certainly remaine Ioh. 15.16 And thus Cornelius his prayers and almes came vp before the Lord Acts 10. Secondly that it is not enough to doo good duties but wee must striue so to doo them that God may accept them Heb. 12.28 Esay 1.11 12 13 14. Thirdly that now our best works are made acceptable to God onely by Iesus Christ Reu. 8.3 4. It is from the presenting of Christ that wee are found holy and without blame in Gods sight Col. 1.22 Therefore we must doo all in the name of the Lord Iesus Col. 3.17 Vse The vse of all should be to teach vs with all care to
all others in diuers respects First because these writings were inspired all of the holy Ghost 2. Tim. 3.17 2. Pet. 1.21 so were no other writings Secondly those writings containe a wisdome far aboue all that that can be had by the Princes and men of this world the platforme of the wisdome that is in God himselfe 1. Cor. 6.7 Thirdly they were penned by more excellent men then any other writings the greatest wisest holiest men Moses Dauid Salomon the Prophets Euangelists Apostles c. Fourthly they haue such properties as no other writings haue they are more perfect pure deep and immutable then any mans writings These can tame all things necessarie vnto faith and a good life 2. Tim. 3.17.18 These writings onely are pure without fault or error or any corruption in them and for depth and maiesty neuer any writings came neere them and for vnchangeablenes Heauen and earth must passe away but a iot of Gods Word shall not passe away Math. 5.24 1. Pet. 1.23 Fift If wee consider the effects that must bee acknowledged to the praise of the Scriptures which can bee true of no writings besides no writings can describe God so fully to vs no writings do so bring glory to God no Scripture but this can conuert a soule to God Heb. 4.12 13. Other writings may shew vs some faults to bee auoided but giue no power to subdue them Psal. 19.8 These writings onely can minister solid comfort to vs in aduersity and these onely can make vs wise to saluation and perfect to euery good word and worke The consideration whereof should work in vs a singular loue to this booke aboue all other bookes in the world yea aboue all the treasures in the world we should account them with Dauid more sweet then hony and more precious then Gold Psal. 19.11 Psal. 119.14 15 27. Thirdly the third thing may bee noted from hence is the harmony of all these bookes they all agree as if they were but one writing yea one sentence yea one word Though the bookes were written by diuers men yet they agree so perfectly that they all sound one thing for they were all inspired by the same Spirit of God which should teach vs when wee meete with doubts or obiections or see●ing contradictions to condemn our owne ignorance and to be fully resolued that there is a sweet harmony though wee doe not see it And secondly and especially it should knit our harts to the Scriptures wee should be affected as with the most delightfull musick of the world or in the world Fourthly the fourth thing concernes the vse of Scripture and so wee may note two things First that we must receiue no opinions but what can bee proued by Scripture To the law and to the testimony if they speak not according to these it is because there is no truth in them Isaiah 8. Secondly we may note hence that the best men must proue what they teach by Scripture If the Apostles did it who were men priuiledged from error then much more must other men wee must beleeue no man aboue what is written 1. Cor. 4.6 and he is accursed that teacheth other things then what is written Gal. 1.7 though he were an Angel from heauen Which should teach vs to get proofes into our heads for all that wee beleeue and to take heed of receiuing traditions euen from good men For there be traditions on the right hand as well as on the left Ioh. 5.39 Acts 17.1 Thes. 5.21 Secondly Thus of the place where this testimonie is The manner how it is there is in the word Contained It is contained in Scripture Contained 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is much adoe about the word heer rendred Contained among Interpreters The word sounds actiuely in the Originall as if it were rendred doth containe or he containeth But the Translators and many Interpreters think the actiue is put for the passiue He containeth for It is contained If we read it actiuely then the Name of God must bee supplied thus Hee that is God contained it in Scripture noting that as a singular treasure God hath placed this Testimonie in Scripture concerning Christ and faith in him and sure it is a great treasure that wee may haue places in the sure Word of God that so plainely testifie of Christ and our happines in him wee should take great notice of them and bee much thankfull to God for giuing vs such sentences so briefely and yet so plainely and fully to informe vs. Some supply the name of Christ and so they say Christ containeth that is excelleth as the word may signifie Hee is had fully and excellently in Scripture and in particular in this testimonie of Scripture The word rendred Contained signifies sometimes barely to bee had sometimes to bee possessed as Luke 5.9 They were possessed with fear And so we possesse a great treasure in Scripture when wee haue such Testimonies as these There is a Nowne deriued of this Verbe which is thought by the exactest Diuines to mean a speciall Section or portion and when it is applied to a place in Scripture it signifies such a Scripture as is diuided from the rest as a principall matter either to bee meditated of or expounded Such was that speciall portion of Scripture which the Eunuch had to meditate of and Philip expounded to him Acts 8.32 where the word is vsed And so whether the word bee vsed actiuely or passiuely it commends vnto vs this place of Scripture and withall shewes vs a way how to inrich our selues namely by singling out such choise places throughout the Scripture as may most fittingly furnish our thoughts for meditation in the maine matters of Religion Wee may heere note what cause we haue of thankfulnes to God for the helpes wee haue in teaching seeing wee haue the Chapter and verse quoted to vs which they had not in the Primitiue Church and withall wee may obserue that one may haue the profit of the scriptures though he cannot quote Chapter and verse And thus of the second thing concerning this testimonie Thirdly the third followes which is the matter testified which concernes either the giuing of Christ or the safety of the Christian in beleeuing in him In the words that describe the giuing of Christ obserue First the wonder of it in the word Behold Secondly the Author of it God I lay or put Thirdly the manner of it Hee laid him downe as the stone of a foundation in a building Fourthly the place where In Sion noting that this gift of Christ belongs onely to the Church Fiftly what Christ was vnto the Church viz. a chiefe corner stone elect and precious Behold This word is vsed in Scripture sometimes to note a thing that is vsually knowne or ought to bee knowne so Dauid saith Behold I was conceiued in sinne Psalme 51. Sometimes to note that some great wonder is spoken of and must bee much attended In this place it may note both For it is certaine
similitude that Christ is laid as the Mason laies the chief corner stone in the earth For it imports First The diuine nature of Christ that he was before he was incarnate as the corner-stone was before it was laid for a foundation Christ descended from heauen Eph. 4.7 9. Secondly The vnchangeablenes of Gods ordinances concerning the giuing of Christ. Hee hath laid him as a foundation that hee would not haue taken vp againe Thirdly the hiding of the glory of Christ and of his life He is of singular vse to the church and the Frame of God's work appeareth in his members but Christ himself is hid with God Col. 3.3 He is like the stone hidden in the earth hee is buried in the ground and therefore wee should be the more patient if our life be hid also with God Fourthly it may be by this tearm the mystery of the birth and conception of Christ is intimated God digged the ground of our natures in the womb of Christ that hee might lay Christ there c. Fiftly so it may likewise import the sanctification of the humane nature of Christ who was qualified as the stone is squared when it is laied down Thus of the manner The place follows In Sion Sion for certain was a Fort of the Iebusites built on a hill close to Ierusalem which was taken by Dauid and called the City of Dauid 2. Sam. 5 7 the Temple being afterwards built heer The Church of the Iewes was cald Sion because heer they assembled and so afterwards it was the title giuen to the Church of God both of Iewes and Gentiles that agree in one faith and true Religion Zach. 10.11 And in especiall by Sion is meant the place of the assembly of the Saints the Sanctuary In the twelfth to the Hebrews verse 22. it is thought to signifie the saints in heauen euen the Congregation of the first-born In this place it must needs mean the Christian Church in which GOD built the new world laying the foundation in Christ incarnate which began in Ierusalem euen at Sion in the Letter Now when the Lord cals his Church by this name of Sion it is to import diuers things partly to tell vs what we were by nature and partly to tell vs what we are by his grace and fauour By nature what were our assemblies but Forts of Iebusites in which multitudes of Iocusts swarmed we were Canaanites enemies to God and all true religion we were the halt and the blind mentioned Mic. 4.6 7 alluding to that in 2. Sam. 5.6 7. But being conquered by Dauid our King euen Christ the Sonne of Dauid we are new fortified for his vse and our estate is fitly resembled by Sion 1. The Church is like Mount Sion for visibility Christians are like a City on a hill they are such as all sorts of men easily take notice of not that the men of the world are in loue with Christians but many times out of the hatred of the truth set they eies and thoughts vpon them Matthew 5 c. Secondly the godly are like Mount Sion for vnremoueablenesse they that trust in the Lord are like a mountain men may as soon remooue a mountain as remoue them from God and happinesse in God Psal. 126.1 Thirdly the Church is like Sion in respect of Gods habitation there God dwels there hee keeps house there and in the assemblies thereof he feeds his people The Sanctuary is Gods foddering place it is the City of God the mountain of his holinesse the City of the great King the City of the Lord of Hostes God shines there Psalm 48.1 2 8. Psalm 50.2 He is known there familiarly because his dwelling place is there Psalm 76.1 2. He hath chosen his Church out of all the world it is the place only which he hath desired it is his rest for euer Psalm 132.73 14 15. It is the place of the Name of the Lord of hosts Esay 18.7 As Dauid by an excellency reckoned Sion to bee his City of residence so God doth account of the Church as all he hath as it were in the world Fourthly it may be that the Church is resembled to Sion for the littlenesse of it in comparison of the world euen in Sion that is so much despised will God lay his corner-stone Fiftly but the principall thing heer intended is To signifie to vs that God loues his Church aboue all the world and that he will giue Christ to none but to the Church Out of Sion there can be no saluation and in Sion there is all happinesse to be had The consideration heerof may serue vs for many vses Vses First we should hence inform our selues concerning the excellency of the Church of God aboue all other Assemblies of men in the world Wee should learn to think of the Assemblies of Christians as the Sion of God shee is the Mountain of his holinesse the ioy of the whole earth Psal. 48.1 2. the perfection of beauty where God shines more than in all the world besides Psal. 50.2 The Moon may be confounded and the Sunne ashamed when the Lord is pleased to shew himself to raign in Sion and before his Ancients gloriously Isaiah 24.23 yea the Church of God is an eternall excellency Isaiah 60.15 wheras all other glories will vanish And besides we should hence be informed concerning the necessitie of obtaining saluation in the Church For this text shewes vs that Christ is no where laid but in Sion and can no where be found but in the true Church In Sion onely hath God placed saluation for Israel his glorie Onely the godly are Gods Israel Onely in Israel doth God glorie and onely in Sion can Gods Israel finde saluation Isaiah 46. vlt. Secondly Hence wee should especially bee moued to an effectuall care to make it so since that wee are in the true Church and that we are true members of Sion and withall wee should striue aboue all things to procure for our selues the ordinances of God in Sion It is said of the godly distressed for want of meanes that going they went and weeping they did goe to seek the Lord in Sion with their faces thitherward and with a resolution to bind themselues by couenant to the Lord to bee any thing hee would haue them to be onely if they might finde fauor in his eies heerein Ierem. 50.5 Quest. Now if you aske mee how the true members of Sion may bee knowne Ans. I answer first generally that all that are in Sion are not of Sion and further that wee must not iudge of true Christians by their number For God many times takes one of a Tribe or one of a City and two of a Tribe to bring them to Sion Ierem. 3.14 But yet to answer more directly Thou must be a new creature or thou art no member of Gods true Sion For of euerie one in Sion it must bee said Hee was borne there Psal. 86.5 The gates of Sion are to bee opened onely that
estimation from them or at least put them to silence c. For the first if wicked men bee offended for doing good wee are not to regard their offence As when the Pharises were offended at Christ he cared not but said Let them alone they are blind and leaders of the blinde c. Math. 15.14 And so the Apostles answered It is better to obey God then men Acts 5.29 It is better that scandal arise then that the truth should bee forsaken Thus Michaiah cares not for the offence of Ahab nor Eliah and in this case Leui is not to respect father or mother bretheren or children Deut. 33.9 And so though wicked men bee offended wee must preach the Gospel with all plainenesse and not affect wisdome of words 1. Cor. 1.23 and wee must labour for the meate that perisheth not and must pray vnto God and vse religious exercises in our houses as Daniel did wee must renew Iustification by our owne workes and we must suffer in a good cause and wee must with strictnes auoid the excesses of the time Now for the second we may be guilty of giuing offence to the wicked First by scandalous and vicious life thus Dauid gaue offence Secondly by indiscretion in the manner of doing good duties as if men pray or fast or giue almes to bee heard or seene of men Thirdly by rash zeale as when men proclaime to the world a great deale of strictnes in things that are not grounded vpon the Word and yet are tainted openly with known infirmities and sinnes or when men are violent and rash censurers especially in things they commit themselues or when men neglect their calling and liue inordinately and are busie-bodies vnder pretence of Religion or when men that haue a faire dore opened to doe good by preaching the Gospell will not yeeld in some indifferent things that they may winne them as woe had beene to Paul if he had not beene a Iew with the Iewes that hee might gaine the Iewes thereby or necessity lay vpon him the preaching of the Gospell or to preach the Gospell though it were clogd at that time with condition of yielding to the Iewish ceremonies 1. Cor. 9. Now for the third there are diuers excellent rules that may much adorne the liues of Christians in their courage toward the wicked and so either preuent scandall or leaue them without excuse themselues being Iudges as they will confesse in the day of visitation These things then will much aduance our cause before wicked men to shew in our conuersation 1. Integrity and harmelesnes and sound care of the practising of godlines Philippians 1.15 16. 2. Submission and obedience vnto the King and his humane ordinances 1. Peter 2.13.14.15 3. Reuerence and feare when we intreate of any thing that concernes God and Religion 4. Meeknes of wisdome expressing a minde free from conceitednes frowardnes or affectation Iam. 3.13 5. Mercy to the poore and a minde free from the greedy desire of earthly things a serious declaration of the contempt of the world Iam. 1.26 Math. 5.16 c. 6. Quietnes and peace to be shewed first in studying to be quiet to meddle with our owne busines secondly in making peace amongst others Math. 5.8 7. Loue to our enemies being ready to pray for them or doe them any good Lastly hence may be gathered some matter of consolation for the godly For first if the Lord haue kept them from taking offence hee hath freed them from a great sore spirituall iudgement Secondly if the wicked should be so peruerse as to take offence when he giues none yet this may stay him that Christ himselfe was an offence vnto them Thirdly as it is a great iudgement to bee offended at Christ so it is a great mercy and supernaturall grace when the Lord makes our hearts able to loue the Lord Iesus in all sincerity Hitherto of the first kinde of punishment the second is that Christ shall be to them A rock of offence that is they shall fall vpon Christ as the ship doth vpon the rock and be broken all to pieces There shall bee a desperate anguish vpon their consciences perceiuing themselues to haue no right in Christ by the feare of which as men that haue suffred shipwrack they shall be out of all hope of mercy Thus hee that falleth on this stone shal be broken and vpon whom it shall fall he shall be ground to powder Luke 20 17. The consciences of wicked men are diuersly affected some are without feeling of any grieuance in the matters of their soules some haue feeling The consciēce is without feeling either through a continuall security and sleepines which is in all men or through a searednes by which some men are growne past feeling Now those wicked men that haue any feeling in this text are cast into two sorts for either they are offended or they despaire Christ is to those latter an occasion of their ruine they suffer shipwracke vpon Christ which is ioyned with singular offence or paine or grieuance of their consciences This rocke is like that in the Iudges chap. 6.21 out of which fire went and consumed them The despaire that wicked men feel is of two sorts For either it is a despaire which riseth from their perswasion of their want of helpe in spirituall things or from their want of help in outward things somtimes they fall into desperate tormēts and griefs and fears about outward things either vpon fear of danger or vpon an apprehension that they are vtterly vndone or shall be in matters of the world this was the despair mentioned and this despair was in Saul Achitophel and Belshazzer Dan. 5. and in the Iews when they said there was no hope Ier. 2.25 and this was in the Aegyptians Babylonians Tyrians and their case in the desolation of their estate by warre mentioned in many chapters of the Prophet Esay But this despair is not meant heer for this is a despair of all help or saluation of the soule by Christ conceiuing that they are vtterly cast off of God and shall perish for euer Thus Cain and Iudas despaired of all mercy in God And this despaire of saluation and all happinesse is felt either in hell or at the day of Iudgement or in this life First it is certain that the Wicked feel an eternall despair in hell which increaseth their torments because they haue no hope of ease or help and thus also the diuels despair This despair in hell is a meer gnawing the conscience and tormenting it which neuer dieth Secondly they also feel despair with singular horrour when they come to appear before Iesus Christ at the last Day when they behold the face of the Iudge and feel within them a witnes that tels them they shall bee damned This torment will then come vpon them like the pains of a woman in trauell and their anguish will bee so great that they will cry to the mountains
degree of the misery of wicked men I take it it is especially the darknes of ignorance is heer meant though the other cannot be excluded That which is euident to bee obserued from hence is that all men that are not effectually called liue in darknes and walk-on in darknes Eph. 4.17 1. Iohn 2.9 Psal. 82.5 It is a continual night with them they are like the Aegyptians that could haue no Sunne to light them but were couered with palpable darknes Neither are they helped that they enioy the light of the Sunne for of all darknesses that which comes from the absence of the Sunne is the least or hath least distresse in it If a man liued where hee should neuer see day or were born blinde yet his distress were nothing in comparison of the darknes especially spirituall that lieth vpon the poor soule of an vnregenerate man which lieth shut vp in miserable darknes which these men may feele in themselues by their liuing without GOD in the world and by the absence of the ioies of God and by their singular vncapablenesse in the things of the Kingdome of GOD and by their strange and absurd errours in conceiuing of matters of Religion by their monstrous thoughts and obiections they feel at some times and disability to conceiue of the worth of eternal things though the least of them bee better than the whole world and lastly by their want of discouering what to do almost in all the occasions of life Vse The vse may bee for singular terrour to wicked men if they had hearts to consider of it to knowe that they liue in such a condition as no prisoner can suffer in the worst dungeon of the world and the rather if they consider the aggrauation of their distresse in respect of the darknes they liue in or are likely to liue in as First that they haue the Diuels as the Rulers of the darknes they liue in who like cruell Iaylers will see to it that they bee kept still in their dungeon with all increase of heauinesse and misery Eph. 6.12 Secondly that their darknes is also the shadow of death a most deadly poisonfull darknes that daily increaseth in the infection and annoyance of it Esay 9.2 Thirdly that they suffer so many kindes of darknes in the vexations and discomforts of each of them Fourthly that it is such grosse darknes so thick and palpable without any mixture of true light or comfort if they had but star-light or moon-light it were some ease Fiftly that they are neither safe walking nor lying still If they walk they go in singular danger for they knowe not whither they go 1. Iohn 2.11 Iob 18.5 6 7. If they lie still and sleep it out they are in danger to be swallowed vp eternally Sixtly that this darknes will not hide from God All they doo is manifest before him Esay 29.15 Seuenthly that it is a continuall darknes it will neuer be day with them so long as they liue in that estate without repentance Iob 15.30 All his daies he eats in darknes Eccles. 5.17 Eightthly that they are in danger euery hour to bee cast into vtter darknes where will bee no ease nor end He knoweth not that the day of this darknes is ready at hand into which if hee fall he shall neuer depart out Ninthly that this is the case of euery vnregenerate man the whole world of them lieth in darknes and not one escapeth it their whole earth is without form and void and their heauens haue no light in them Ier. 4.24 Ob. But wee see wicked men haue ioy and comfort many times Sol. They haue certaine sparkes of light like the light smitten out of the flint first they cannot warme themselues by it nor see how to direct their waies secondly it will quickly goe out thirdly howsoeuer it bee for a time heere yet at length they must lie downe in sorrow Esay 50.10 And the consideration heereof should in the second place much reproue the peruersenes of wicked men and that in diuers respects and considerations First that they can bee silent in darknes as the phrase is 1. Sam. 2.9 that they can liue so securely neuer make mone or humble themselues in their distresse Secondly that they dare which is worse many times call darknes light and light darknes and defend it that they are in as great liberty and safety as the best of them all Oh woe vnto them because they call darknes light Esay● 20 Thirdly that they will not come into the light when the dore is opened and while there is spirituall means of light What a thing is this that light is come into the world and the darknes comprehendeth it not Ioh. 1.5 Fourthly this is their condemnation that they loue darknes more then light and preferre their vile condition before the condition of the children of the light Ioh. 3.21 Thirdly let these poore wretches bee instructed if it bee possible 1. To embrace the meanes of light 2. To pray to God to be intreated of them to lighten their darknes doth not hee iustly perish that may enioy the light for asking for it yet and will not Ob. If any ask how may they knowe that they are in darknes Ans. I answer First By the vncapablenes and insensiblenes of the soule in the things of the Kingdome of God Eph. 4.17 1. Cor. 2.14 Secondly By the workes of darknes by the continuall practice of sinne without sound repentance Rom. 13. 1. Iohn 1.6 7. Thirdly in particular by the habituall hatred of the godly because they follow goodnes 1. Ioh. 2.9 11. Fourthly by the absence of God in the vse of his ordinances who is as the Sunne to the Godly Psal. 84.12 And thus of the vse that concerns the wicked Vse 2. Godly men should from hence gather encrease of consolation in their harts from the consideration of Gods mercy in translating them from the Kingdome of darknes into the Kingdome of his deare Loue Col. 1.12 13. they are the men vpon whome God hath accomplished the prophecy and promise of his grace They are the deafe men that are made to heare the words of the book and the blind men that see out of obscurity and darknes Esay 29.18 19. The Lord hath made darknes light before them and brought them being but blind men by a way they knew not Esay 42.16 The people that sate in darknes haue seene great light Esay 9.1 These men are the prisoners that once were in darknes and God sent his owne Sonne to the prison dore to bid them come foorth and shew themselues Esay 49.9 And their deliuerance from darknes should be the more comfortable if they consider First what a world of people are yet couered with darknes Esay 61.1 Secondly that darknes shall neuer returne They enioy a day that neuer shall haue night following Ob. But is there not darknes still in godly men as well as in other men Sol. I answer In some
other men But the maine point is that God's people are the only people in the World None worthy to be called a people in comparison of them No subiect in any gouernement so happy as Gods people vnder his gouernement in Christ and therefore to bee made the people of God here is reckoned as a condition beyond all comparison Now that Gods people excell all other Subiects in the World may appeare many waies First in respect of the loue of God that hee beares to his people which hath foure matchlesse prayses that no King on earth can afford to his Subiects For first it is an euerlasting Loue when all the fauor of the Princes on earth is both mutable and mortall Secondly it is a particular loue to each Subiect All the people are loued and by name Deut. 33.3 The Lord counteth when he reckons his people he was become their God Psal. 87.5 6. Thirdly it is a free loue There was no desert in vs whereas Princes looke at somewhat that may pleasure themselues euen where desert is lesse Fourthly it is a tender Loue and therefore Gods people are said to be married to their King and God Hosh. 2.19 and therefore God is said to account his People to be his Portion Deut. 32.9 Secondly they are an elect People which hath a twofold consideration in it For first they are elect from all eternity and so euery one of the People hath a particular act of Parliament to assure his right Rom. 11.2 And secondly they are elect in time that is they are separated and culled out of all the people of the World Thirdly all Gods People haue a generall pardon giuen them for all offences Ierem. 31.34 He saues his People from their sinnes and this pardon is grounded vpon a sufficient atonement made by a most faithfull high Priest for them Heb. 2.17 Who also sanctified all this People with his own blood Heb. 13.12 Christ is giuen for couenant he is their surety for them their witnes Esay 42.6 55.5 Who also redeemed them with his blood All a People of Purchase Fourthly all Gods People are qualified with new gifts aboue all the people in the World their natures be amended they are all washed and clensed from their filthinesse there is not one vile person amongst them Ezech. 36.25 37.23 c. He hath formed them for himselfe and his owne seruice Esay 43.22 Fiftly all Gods Subiects are adopted to bee Gods sonnes and so can no Prince on Earth say of his they are as it were the fruit of his womb Psal. 110.3 Sixtly the Lawes by which they are gouerned are the perfectest in the whole world For the Law of God is perfect Psal. 119.8 Seuenthly all Gods people liue in his presence and see his glory Exod. 33.16 Leuit. 26.11 12. Zach. 1.10 11. Psal. 95.7 Other Kings haue many subiects they neuer saw and few that haue that preferment to liue in the Kings presence or neere about him Eightthly God feasts all his subiects and that often and in his owne presence and with the best prouision of the world Esay 25.8 Esay 65.13 14. Ierem. 31.14 Kings would soone consume their treasure if they should doe it often or almost once c. Ninthly no people so graced of their King in hearing requests and receiuing petitions For all Gods people may cry and bee heard and at all times and in all suites which no King on earth can grant to all his subiects and seldome or neuer so much as to any one Esay 30.19 Iohn 14. Whatsoeuer they aske in the name of Christ shall bee granted vnto them Tenthly they are the longest liued of any people As the daies of a tree are the daies of my people saith the Lord They may endure many a storm but they are fast rooted still Mine Elect shall long enioy the works of their hands Esay 65.22 For first they onely haue the promise of a long life in this world and it is limited onely with that condition If it bee good for them And secondly if that God take away some of his people and that quickly out of this world yet that shortens not their life or dependance vpon God For when they dye a bodily death they are said to bee gathered to his people or their people and there receiue eternall life instead of it Death doth not put them out of seruice or depriue them of the Kings presence but remoueth them onely out of one roome into another whereas they stood below staires before they serue now aboue staires and are all of the Presence and Priuie-Chamber to God Eleuenthly they are the wealthiest people in the world none better prouided for For first for Spiritual gifts and rich fauours from the King of kings they are not destitute of any heauenly gifts 1. Cor. 1.5 Eph. 1.3 And for outward prouision God hath taken all the chief creatures and bound them to serue them with prouision in whatsoeuer they want The heauen the earth the corne c. all are bound for the supply of their wants Hos. 2.21 22 23. Twelfthly they excell for protection Whether we respect their preseruation or the reuenge is done vpon their enemies For their preseruation though the earth and the heauens should bee shaken yet God will be the hope of his people Ioel 3.16 and as the mountaines are about Ierusalem so is the Lord about them that feare him and therefore they cannot bee moued Psal. 125.1 2. and if the rod of the wicked doe enter vpon them yet it shall not rest vpon their lot v. 3. of the same Psalme And for vengeance It is certaine the Lord will auenge their quarrell vpon all their enemies though they be vnable to right their own wrongs and because God would haue it done throughly hee reserues the work of vengeance to himselfe to make the recompence Heb. 10.30 Rom. 12.20 Vses The vse may bee both for Consolation and Instruction For it should exceedingly comfort Gods children considering what singular happines they enioy by the gouernment of Iesus Christ. Oh! blessed are the people whose God is the Lord Psal. 33.12 and 144.15 Moses admires a little before his death the wonderfull felicity of the godly considered as they are God's people Israel is happy none like to God's people or this people nor is there any like vnto the God of Ierusalem For God rides vpon the heauen in their help the eternall God is their refuge and vnderneath are the euerlasting Armies He wil thrust out their enemies before them and say Destroy them Israel alone shal dwel in safety The Fountain of Iacob shal be vpon a land of corn and wine and his heauens shal drop down deaw They are a people saued by the Lord who is the shield of their help and the sword of their excellency Their enemies shal be found liers to them Deut. 33.26 to the end And this excellent estate is the more comfortable to be thought vpon 1. Because people of
some way breed in vs a hatred of vice and a loue of honesty this is the vse of all Scripture 1. Tim. 3.16 17. Which may serue for triall of such as come to the Word they may knowe whether they be good or euill hearers by the impression made vpon their hearts by the Word And it may serue for information to shew vs the excellency of the Word aboue all other Writings because there is no line in Scripture but some way it tends to the redresse of our natures from sin and to plant holinesse in vs which can be true of no human Writings And withall it shewes the happy estate of the godly who though they haue many diseases in their natures yet they haue wonderfull store and variety of medicines in God's Word to heal their natures If for the diseases of our bodies there bee but one herb in the whole field that is good for cure we haue reason to think that God hath prouided well in nature for vs but how is his mercy glorious who in the spiritual Field of his Word hath made to growe as many herbs for cure of all our diseases as there be sentences in Scripture And lastly it should teach vs to vse the Scriptures to this end to redresse our waies by them And thus in generall The first part of the epilogue hath in it matter of dehortation where obserne First the parties dehorted who are described by an epithet importing their priuiledge aboue other men viz. Dearly beloued Secondly the manner of propounding the dehortation viz. by way of beseeching I beseech you Thirdly the matter from which hee dehorts viz. fleshly lusts Fourthly the manner how they are to bee auoided viz. abstain from them Fiftly the motiues First Yee are strangers and pilgrims secondly these lusts are fleshly thirdly they fight against the soule Dearly beloued This tearme is not vsed complementally or carelesly but with great affection in the Apostle and with speciall choice and fitnes for the matter intreated of which we may obserue in the most places where this louely epithet is giuen to the godly in other Scriptures GOD is exceeding choice of his words hee neuer mentioneth the tea●ms of loue but hee brings to his children the affections of loue as I may so say Men through custome vse faire complement of words when their hearts be not moued but let our loue bee without dissimulation But let that go The point heer to bee plainly obserued is that Christians are beloued of all other people they are most loued I will but briefly explicate this First GOD loues them and that with infinite and euerlasting loue and hath manifested it by sending his owne Son to be a propitiation for their sinnes 1. Iohn 4.9 10. Secondly Christ loueth them which hee shewed by giuing his life for them Thirdly the Angels of heauen loue them which they shew by ioying in their conuersion and by their carefull attendance about them Fourthly the Godly in generall loue them There is no godly man that knowes them but loues them for euery one that loues God that begot them loues euery one that is begotten of God euery one I say that he knowes 1. Iohn 5.1 Lastly the godly Teachers loue them which they shew in that they are not onely willing to impart to them the Gospell but euen their owne soules because their people are dear vnto them 1. Thes. 2.8 Now this loue of God of Christ of the Angels of the godly men Ministers should serue to support vs against the contempt and hatred of the world wee haue a loue that is much better than the loue of worldly men can be to vs. First because it is of better persons and secondly because it is of a better kinde for it is more feruent and it is more pure and more constant Worldly men can shew no loue that hath comparison to the loue of God or Christ or any of those for the feruency of it And if worldly men loue vs it is to draw vs vnto one euill or other and besides it will not last for wicked men will agree with themselues no longer than so many Curres will agree they are alwaies contending hatefull and hating one another Secondly this point should much check the vnbeliefe of Christians and their vnthankfulnesse for many times they are affected as if they were not beloued of any whereby they much dishonour the loue of God and of Christ and of Christians towards them also and thereby they flatly contradict the Text which saith They are beloued Thirdly impenitent sinners should bee moued heerby to become true Christians because till then they are monstrous hatefull creatures GOD loaths them and their works Iohn 3.36 Esay 1.11 c. And such vile persons are vile and odious in the e●es of the godly Psalm 24.4 Psalm 15. Fourthly Christians should labour to preserue this loue vnto themselues with increase of the comfort of it and so diuers things would much aduantage them in this loue as 1. Faith To liue by faith commends them wonderfully to God's loue as being the condition mentioned when he sent his Sonne into the world Iohn 3.16 For without it it is impossible to please God 2. Humility would much commend them to the loue of the Angels who reioyce more in one sinner that is penitent than in 99 iust men that need no repentance 3 The fruits of wisdome mentioned Iam. 3.17 haue a maruellous force to win loue among men To be pure in respect of sincere Religion to be gentle and peaceable free from passion and contention to be easie to be intreated to be also full of mercy good works and all this without iudging or hypocrisie to bee no censurers nor counterfets oh this is exceeding amiable if these things were carefully expressed 4. And for their Ministers two things would much increase their loue to them First obedience to their doctrine for this will preuail more than all the bounty in the world 1. Thes. 2.13 Heb. 13.18 Secondly to conuerse without back-biting or vncharitable iudging of them By these two the Philippians and Thessalonians were highly aduanced in the affection of the Apostle and through the want of these the Corinthians lost much in the loue of the Apostle Thus of the persons dehorted The manner of the dehortation followes I beseech ye In that the Apostle in the name of God doth beseech them diuers things are imported as First the maruellous gentlenesse and loue of God to men hee that may command threaten punish yea cast off yet is pleased to beseech men Secondly the dignitie and excellency of a cleane heart and honest life It is a thing which God by his seruants doth vehemently begge at our hands Thirdly the honor of a Christian he is spoken to as to a great Prince as the two former reasons shew him to be Fourthly a rule of direction how to carry our selues towards others in the case of reformation wee must learne of the
it is profitable to all things 1. Tim. 4.8 And these workes must needs be accounted good works for they are dear works the bloud of Christ was poured out that wee might bee clensed from dead works to serue the liuing God Heb. 9.14 Thirdly all works of repentance all that a Christian doth about his humiliation or reformation are euangelically good works as if he confesse his sinnes and doo execution vpon his sinnes if hee make satisfaction for his trespasses to men if he reform himself or his houshold or his charge these and the like are all good works 2. Chron. 19.3 Fourthly to suffer for a good cause is reckoned in the number of good works as to forsake father or mother house or land wife or children liberty or life for Christ's sake and the Gospell it is in the number of those good things shall haue good reward Mat. 19.29 Ier. 31.16 Ruth 2.11 12. Fiftly works of mens particular callings whether in the Common-wealth or Church or family or any vocation or trade of life so workes of Iustice are good workes and to obey Magistrates is called well-doing verse 14 of this chapter so to preach the Gospell is a good work 1. Tim. 3.1 So in the family for parents to bring-vp their Children well is a good work 1. Tim. 5.10 yea the labours of seruants in the family are such workes as shall haue reward of God as well as workes of piety Esay 6. Col. 3. Sixtly works of mercy are good works whether it be spirituall mercy to instruct admonish or reproue or comfort Psalme 140. or whether it bee outward mercy in giuing lending visiting defending the poore or the like All confesse these to be good works Act. 9.16 But that almes may be a good work these three rules must bee obserued First that it be giuen of goods well gotten else no good workes Secondly that hee that giues it haue a good eie to distribute where there is need for to keepe a good house and to entertain ruffians and drunkards and gamesters is not a good work nor hospitality because heere is not a good eie Thirdly almes must bee giuen for a good end not for the praise of men or to merit thereby Mat. 6. Thus of the kindes of good works The questions follow Quest. 1. How can any workes done by any man in this life bee accounted good seeing there is none that liueth and sinneth not yea al our works euen the workes of the most righteous are as a menstruous cloth Esay 64.6 For answer heereunto I say It is true that if God looke vpon the best works of the most godly in this life and examine them by the rigour of his couenant which he called His couenant of works then no flesh liuing can haue cōfort of his works but all will appeare lothsom as a menstruous garment But the works of the beleeuing Christiās are otherwaies to be considered of For First they are tryed by the couenant of grace by the benefit of which couenant hee is deliuered from the rigorous perfection of the Law and his vprightnes is accepted in stead of perfection he is now no more vnder the Law but by God's grace acceptation his works are taken as if they had been perfect Secondly he hath the benefit of Christ's intercession who presenteth his works before God couering the euill of them and tendering them to God who accepts them for the loue hee beares to his Sonne and thus we read in Scripture that Christ presents the praiers of the Saints Besides that the Christian may not think too vilely of his works but be comforted in the Lord concerning them let him further consider these things First that his good works haue the Spirit of Iesus Christ which is in him for the Fountaine of them 1. Cor. 12.11 Esay 26.12 Secondly that the bloud of Iesus Christ was shed not onely for his iustification but also for his sanctification Heb. 9.14 Thirdly that though his works are not good effectu yet they are good affectu they are good in desire his desire was to haue them as good as God himself did require And this God is pleased to accept as if the work were perfectly done Quest. 2. What are works good for in that they are called good works Answ. I answer first affirmatiuely they are good 1. To testifie our thankfulnes to God for all his benefits in respect of which wee are debters vnto God Rom. 8.12 2. To assure the truth of our faith as the fruits of faith Mat. 7.17 1. Tim. 1.19 Iames 2. 3. To witnes our election and to make our calling sure 2. Pet. 1.10 4. To discharge our duty of obedience vnto which we are bound euen in the couenāt of grace 5. To further the edification of our brethren whom we help both by example and by well-doing to them 6. To winne wicked men to a better estimation of our Religion and to stop their mouthes as heer so verse 15. 7. To glorifie God as is in this place mentioned 8. They are good to make vs capable of rewards from God in heauen Heb. 10.36 Rom. 2.7 8. yea and in this life too 2. Tim. 4.8 Secondly I say they are not good 1. To iustifie vs before God as it is at large prooued by the Apostle in the Epistle to the Romans and Galatians onely they are good to iustifie vs before men Iames 2. 2. Not to merit or deserue heauen by them mens euill works doo merit punishment for the wages of sinne is death but our good works cannot merit both because the Scripture denies it expresly Eph. 2.8 as also to omit other reasons because the nature of merit casteth away our works for there must be three things in a work that must merit First it must bee a free work that was not due by any debt whereas our works are a part of our duty and we owe more to God than we can doe Luke 17.9 Rom. 11.35 Secondly the worke that should merit must bee profitable to him of whom we would merit but no goodnesse of ours can reach to God to profit him Psal. 16.3 Iob 22.2 Thirdly the worke that must merit must be of equall value with the thing that is giuen for it but neither our sufferings nor our deedes in this life can be worthy of the glory that is to bee reuealed Rom. 8.18 and therefore is eternall life called The gift of God Rom. 6.23 The vses follow and are especially for Instruction for this doctrine of good works should teach vs First to take notice of this doctrine and as we are carefull to beleeue so to be carefull to maintain good works and hereby to confute the malicious Papists that falsly charge vs to deny and disgrace good works Tit. 3.8 14. Secondly euery man should bee ready to doe good works yea to euery good worke since they are required of God and are so many waies good and serue vs for such excellent vses Yea wee should be zealous
of good workes wonderfull eager and desirous to inrich our selues that way Tit. 3.1 2.14 yea we should hereby shew that we are indeede wise Christians and well skilled in the vse of our Religion Iam. 3.13 and not men onely but women also should be forward in good works 1. Tim. 2.10 It is their best apparel w hc should be a speciall motiue to them that are so carefull of their attyre indeed good works are to be desired and laboured for as the best apparell of any Christian yea they are his armour too Rom. 13.13 Yea they are a principall way for his inriching and preferment 1. Tim. 2.20 so as it is a great curse vpon a Christian to haue no minde to do good workes to be reprobate to euery good worke Tit. 1. vlt. Thirdly since there are so many things necessary to the constitution of a good worke Christians should in stead of prying into the liues of others euery one trie his owne workes and turne often to the light that it may be indeede manifest that his works are wrought in God Gal. 6.4 for one day euery mans works shall be tried in the fire when times of tryall by great afflictions either vpon mens Consciences or otherwise come that man's works that neuer seeme glorious and praise-worthy will bee reiected and cast away euen by our selues as vile and vnprofitable Besides at the best in our prosperity if the most of our workes be tryed by the fire of these rules of God's Word it is much to be doubted that our workes will burne though vpon our repentance for the euill that cleaues to our best workes our selues may bee saued in the day of the Lord. Let Christians therefore be careful that they lose not the things which they haue wrought Now a Christian may lose his workes diuers wayes First if he be but a Christian in shew hee may nay hee shall lose all hee doth The Pharises lost all their workes because they were done in hypocrisie Secondly the Christian that hath some kindes of heauenly gifts and temporary grace by falling away in the time of temptation loseth all that hee had wrought before God requires patient continuance in well-doing Rom. 2.8 Thirdly the true Christian may lose what hee wrought if he doe his works without respect of these Rules If it be not manifest that his workes are wrought in God they are lost to him so many of his works as are so wrought Besides he loseth the comfort of all that hee hath wrought and the sense of it if he fall into grosse sinne after calling for so long time as he continueth in sinne without Repentance Thus of good works Which they shall behold It is manifest from hence that good works may and ought to be so done as that men may see them It is not true that all good works must be hid from the view and beholding of other men this may seeme strange because the Pharises were blamed for doing their works to be seene of men but yet it may be easily and plentifully proued I will first proue it and then explane it for proofe our Sauiour Christ requires that the light of mens good works should shine that men may see their good works Mat. 5.16 Christians in respect of their practice should be as shining lights in the midst of a froward and crooked generation Phil. 2.15 16. They must maintaine good workes Tit. 3.8 They must shew their Faith by their Workes and so they are iustified before men by the workes which they behold Iam. 2. They are the expresse words of S. Iames also in the third chapter verse 13. Let him shew by good conuersation his works And the Apostle Paul saith If there be any praise think on those things that may get praise Phil. 4.8 Yea some Christians are charged to be paterns of good works Tit. 2.7 Now for explication of this point I would consider first what works may bee shewed and then secondly what works may not be shewed For the first I will onely now instance in the Apostle's catalogue in the second of Titus Ould men may safely shew sobriety grauity temperance soundnes of their faith loue and patience Ould women may safely carry themselues in a holy behauiour and bee teachers of good things especially to the younger women Young women must shew their sobriety loue and obedience to their husbands discretion chastity care of their children and houshold affairs Young men may shew that they bee sober-minded Ministers offend not by teaching vncorrupt doctrine with grauity and sincerity nor when in conference they speak soundly and things that cannot be iustly taxed Seruants offend not by shewing obedience to their masters and all good faithfulnes and desire to please them well in all things For the second the shew is condemned in diuers sorts of works as 1. Secret duties of what kinde soeuer must not bee done to the beholding of others thus to pray or fast that others may see or hear is not lawfull Mat. 6. 2. Such works as are done deceitfully are iustly taxed for the shew of them as when Ananias and Saphirah will make a shew of bounty which was not performed as they pretended Acts 5. 3. All works that are done with affectation when the praise of men is simply and only sought are Pharisaicall and ill done 4. All the works that are done about the vse of the means of godlinesse if practice bee not ioyned with them are reiected of God and the shew of them is condemned Thus to make a shewe of hearing Sermons reading the Scriptures frequent and long praiers strict obseruing of the rest of the Sabbath and the like when there is not a sound care of a holy life are not good works nor is the shew of them commended Esay 1. Mic. 6. 5. To shew care of lesser duties and liue in the carelesse and manifest neglect of greater and more necessary duties is likewise Pharisaicall and condemned Mat. 23. Thus of the beholding of good works They may glorifie God To glorifie GOD is in the etymology of the word to make God glorious Now the glory of God is the excellency of God aboue all things as is by way of exposition added Esay 35.2 The question then is How can God bee made glorious or excellent seeing his excellency is as infinite as his nature is and to that which is infinite nothing can be added For the resoluing of this question wee must vnderstand that if Gods nature be cōsidered in it self it is so excellent as nothing can bee conceiued or done that should bring glorie to it But when the Scripture speakes of glorifying of God it meanes it of such an excellency as to our capacity by reflexion and resemblance some way expresseth the similitude of Gods excellency which wee call his glorie And so God is glorifyed by himselfe or by vs. God hath made diuers impressions of his owne excellency and set it out by way of
3. There is not couetousnes or the loue of world there 1. Ioh. 2.14 Iam. 4.3 he vseth the world but hee admires it not His taste in earthly things is lost Hee sauours them not as hee was wont to do Romanes 8.5 And as in these things hee is new so in the furniture of his heart hee is in many things new for First hee hath a new minde hee is renewed in the spirit of his minde which appeares first by his capablenes in spirituall things Hee that lately could not perceiue the things of God 1. Cor. 2.14 now heares as the learned hee sees in a mirour hee lookes and wonders The vaile is taken away that before couered him 2. Cor. 3. Secondly by the transcendencie of the things hee knowes he can now looke vpon the verie Sun hee knowes God and Iesus Christ and the glory to come and the excellent things giuen of God which the heart of the natural man neuer perceiued Iohn 17.3 1. Cor. 2.9 10. Thirdly by the instrument by which hee vnderstands hee sees by faith and not by Reason in many things he is fully assured in diuers Mysteries where sense and reason can giue-in no euidence Secondly hee hath newe affections I will instance but in two of them sorrow and loue He is another man in his sorrowes which appeares both in the causes and in the remedies of his sorrowes For the causes hee was wont neuer to be sorry for any thing but his crosses now hee is seldome sorry for any thing but his sinne And for the remedies he was wont to driue away his sorrowes with time sleepe and merry company but now nothing but good words from God will ease him his loue may be tryed by the obiects and so whom hee can loue truely or whome hee doth loue vehemently Hee can loue his very enemies which hee could neuer doe before And hee doth loue Iesus Christ though he neuer sawe him 1. Pet. 1.9 and so feruently as hee accounts all things in the world which hee was wont so much to dote vpon but as losse and dung in comparison of Iesus Christ Phil. 3.8 9. Fiftly hee hath a new behauiour with him hee is wonderfully altered in his carriages which appeares in diuers things First in respect of the rule of his life hee walks by rule Gal. 6.16 Hee commeth daily to the light to see whether his works be wrought in God Ioh. 3.21 This is a signe giuen by our Sauiour Christ in that place Hee is carefull to order his behauiour by the warrant of the word Phil. 2.15 16. Secondly in respect of the meanes hee vseth for the ordering of his conuersation And so hee taketh presently hold on Gods Sabbath hee is carefull to keepe the Sabbath honouring that day aboue all others and esteeming and desiring it for the imployment thereof Thus the Lord of the Sabbath saith that it is a signe by which hee knowes the people whether they bee truly sanctified or not Exod. 31.13 Esay 56.2.6 Thirdly in respect of the things hee imploies himselfe in hee chooseth the things that please God Esay 56.4 his desire is now in all his waies to do such things as might bee acceptable to God Whereas before hee was most carefull to please men or to satisfie his owne lusts Fourthly in respect of the manner of his conuersation In which foure things especially shine first humility hee shewes that the great opinion of himselfe is taken downe in him hee is lowely and meek which hee hath learned of Christ Math. 11.29 Secondly affectionatenes Hee loues the name of the Lord and to bee the Lords seruant Esay 56.6 Hee doth good duties with good affections Thirdly contempt of the world hee can deny his profit pleasure ease credit or the like Hee is no more worldly or eaten vp with the cares of life He doth not esteeme of earthly things as hee was wont to doo and shewes it in his carriage Fourthly sincerity for now hee hath respect to all the Commandements of God hee desires to bee sanctified throughout he is not mended in many things as Herod was but is in some degree mended in all things and besides hee is carefull of his waies in all places and companies hee will obey absent as well as present Phil. 2.12 and there is no occasion of offense in him 1. Iohn 2.8 He is wonderfull wary and carefull to prouide that he may not bee an offense to any body and withall hee is not found to striue more for credit than for goodnes or more ready to iudge others than to condemn himself Iames 3.17 If this description be throughly waighed it will bee found to contain the most liuely and essentiall things that distinguish true Conuerts from all othermen Nor may the force of any of these bee weakned because many that seem true Christians doo shew the contrary to some of these for many that seem iust to men are an abomination to God and besides these things may be in the weak Christian in some weak measure though not so exactly Thus of the third doctrine Doct. 4. We may hence note that there is a peculiar time for the keeping of this visitation of grace All the times of mens liues are not times of visitation there is a speciall day of visitation called in Scripture The day of saluation the accepted time the due time the season of God's grace 2. Cor. 6.2 That this point may be opened first we may consider of the acceptation of this word Day It vsually notes a naturall day that is the space of foure and twenty houres Sometimes it notes the artificiall day of twelue houres from the morning to the euening so Iohn 11.9 Sometimes it notes time generally as in such Scriptures as say In those daies the meaning is In those times Sometimes it notes some peculiar season for the dooing or suffering of some notable thing as the speciall time when God plagues wicked men is call'd their day Psalm 37.13 Iob 18.20 So the time when Christ declared himself openly to bee the Messias is called his day Iohn 8.46 So it is heer taken for that speciall part of our time of life wherein God is pleased to offer and bestowe his grace vpon vs to saluation Now this cannot be the whole space of a man's life for it is euident that many men for a long time of their life haue not at all been visited of God in this visitation of grace they haue sate in darknes and in the shadow of death and this time is called night Rom. 13.13 Again others are threatned with the vtter losse of God's fauour if they obserue not a season as Heb. 3.6 c. Luke 19.41 42. Yea some men haue liued beyond this season and for not obseruing it were cast away Pro. 1.24 28. The very tearm heer vsed shewes it for when he saith The day of visitation he manifestly by the Metaphor of visiting proues a limitation of the time for all the yeer
God will certainly bee a reuenger of this disobedience it being his owne cause as well as the Magistrates Besides it serues to informe vs concerning the admirable power and wisdome of God in effecting the subiection of man to authority of Magistrates all men naturally affect to excell and like not superiority in other men and besides it is needfull that one man should gouerne and keepe in order millions of men disposed as before Now this well points at the cause of this order and subiection which is the respect of God God naturally hath planted in the hearts of men a feare to rebell or disobey euen for fear of God himself more then Princes and besides God hath made man to see by experience that hee doth defend the persons and rights of Kings by reuenging the disobedience of men this naturall conscience keepes vnder naturall men Now though the Apostle would haue godly men to obey for the same reason yet it is vpon a higher ground for godly men are instructed by the Word of God to obey Princes yea herein differs the obedience of the godly from the wicked that the godly man obeyes for the meere loue hee beares to God and the wicked onely for feare of vengeance from God so both obey for a higher reason then the respect of Princes themselues euen for the Lords sake the one for the loue of God and the care of his glory the other for feare of his punishments and iudgements Lastly it shewes men must so acknowledge the glory of Princes as that especially we haue respect vnto the glory of God who is King of Kings we must obey Kings in the land so as God be not disobeyed Thus of the Proposition the Exposition followes The Apostle labours to cleare this doctrine from diuers scruples might be conceiued by Christians whether they arise from the diuersitie of the sorts of Magistrates or from their soueraignety For the sorts he shews they must obey Magistrates of all sorts both superior and inferior the highest and those which are subordinate to them both Kings and Gouernors also for their soueraignety Hee teacheth them to obserue the supremacy of Kings and Monarchs In generall wee may learne from the Apostles care to preuent mistaking herein that he accounts it a pernicious thing to erre about the authority of Princes and their Gouernours and experience shewes it to bee pernicious sometimes to the persons of Kings who are often by treason murthered vpon wicked and erroneous grounds and sometimes to the subiects who drawe vpon themselues not onely fearefull sinnes but miserable punishment also by erring herein somtimes it is pernicious to religion it selfe and religious causes giuing not onely scandall but procuring desolation in the Churches through errors somtimes on the left hand and sometimes on the right hand Whether to the King It may be questioned whom the Apostle meanes by the word King Such as vnderstand the Epistle to be written to the Iewes may perhaps conceiue that the Kings that ruled by deputation in Iudea should be meant such as were Herod and Agrippa But in as much as the Iewes were scattred through the Prouinces and those prouinciall Iewes were most in quiet and in as much as for the reasons afore giuen it is likely that the Epistle was written to all Christians both Iewes and Gentiles therefore by the King hee meant Caesar. And then a more scruple ariseth for the Romans hated the name of a King and Caesar was an Emperour to which diuers things may bee answered First that though the present gouernour was an Emperour yet the Apostle knowing that the most monarchies in the world would rest in the title of King in all ages therefore hee vseth that title that may concerne the most of the Elect in all ages Secondly that though amongst the Romans the title of King was not vsed yet the Grecians in whose language hee writ did familiarly vse the word which wee translate King Thirdly the Apostle might haue respect vnto the signification of the word as vnto a word which was most effectuall to note the highest dignity among men For it notes him that is the stay or foundation of the people or the common-wealth and though ambitious men sought new titles as higher yet the Apostle knew that this was most maiesticall and honourable for the tearm of Emperour in the signification of it may agree to any subordinate rule who gouernes or commands other men Fourthly it may bee that the Apostle knowing the hypocrisie of those Emperours who onely disclaimed the name of Kings to auoid the hatred of the people and yet sought the full right of Kings and so to destroy the liberty of the people giueth the name they sought in substance though not in tearme Where by the way wee may note how hatefull hypocrisie is to God and how vaine it is God will vnmaske euen Kings if they dissemble with him He that tryeth the hearts reines iudgeth according to truth and will not bee deceiued with pretences Though men durst not charge Caesar to affect the kingdom yet God dares and will require at his hands the ambition of his heart And if God will not beare with dissimulation in Kings much lesse will he beare it in meaner men hee hates hypocrisie and fained pretences and painted showes wheresoeuer hee findes it which should teach vs all to labour for a plain and vpright heart in all things to direct our words and carriage according to the true intent of our hearts For besides that God will plague men for their dissimulation which cannot be hid from him it fals out vsually that such as vse dissembling are perpetually suspected all their faire pretences notwithstanding as those Caesars were Lastly the Apostle may name Kings to preuent rebellion in the subiects which either should feare such as affected the title or liue vnder such as professed themselues to bee Kings and so the meaning is that hee would haue them obey euen Kings how hatefull soeuer naturally that kinde of gouernment did seeme vnto them It may bee that the Apostle mentioneth Kings as the last kinde of gouernment a Monarchy being in many respects the most excellent forme of gouernment as being such a form of gouernment as comes neerest to the similitude of God who is not onely one in nature but in gouernment also and is most agreeable to nature which doth affect vnity as well in the body politicke as in the body naturall But I let this passe as a question belonging rather to the Politickes then to Diuinity to be discussed at large Thus coniecturally of the reason why the Apostle vseth this tearm Concerning Kings I propound these things to be considered of First the Originall of Kings Secondly the excellency of Kings both these tend to work in man the care of obedience to them and their Lawes Thirdly the indefinite manner of propounding the tearm shewing that this submission belongs to all Kings Fourthly the vses of all
praise as well as such as do euill dispraise Vse 2. Secondly it may much condemne the corruption of heart which appeares in many men in this point in sinning against the iust praises of others either by speaking euill of them and blemishing their good names which is to steale their riches from them or by withhoulding due praise which is to withhold the good from the owner thereof It should much affright such as are guilty of this fault that our Sauiour Christ measures our loue to God by our readines to praise for the Works of God done by another Iohn 5.41 42. It is a signe that men loue not God when they loue not goodnes in others which sure they doe not if they commend it not Doct. 5. Weldoing ought to be esteemed whersoeuer it is found in a subiect as well as a Prince in a seruant as well as a Master in all estates and conditions of men For God doth so as may appear Ephes. 6.7 8. and grace and goodnes is alike precious wheresoeuer it is in the like degree which serues to rebuke that secret corruption in the natures of men that are apt to obserue and praise good things in greater persons but withhold the incouragement is due to other men onely because they are poore and because they are worser Iames 2.1 2 3. You may now by this doctrine try whether they be good themselues For it is a signe of goodnes to obserue and loue goodnes wheresoeuer he seeth it in a seruant as well as in a frend and in a poore Christian as well as a rich Doct. 6. It may bee yet further obserued that if men would bee praysed they must doe well praise is onely due to weldoing Rom. 2.10 2. Tim. 2.20 21 1. Thes. 4.4 Rom. 13.5 And therefore it is a poore praise that men raise to thēselues for other things all that fame which is raised for any thing but weldoing is externall vain and therefore they are greatly deceiued that rest in the report that is raysed from their wit or beauty or birth or preferment or sumptuous buildings or the like Those may cause a great fame but onely well-doing can cause a good fame Secondly it shewes that hypocrites that haue gotten reputation onely because they are thought to bee good haue but built in the sands For when in time it shall appear that their owne works doe not praise them they shall find that the praise of men will not last It is not saying well that works a durable good name but doing wel It is but complementing at the best to professe and promise great care of practice and praising and yet bee barren and vnfruitfull Vse 3. Thirdly this shewes the great corruption of their nature that so vnquietly seek after praise and complain how much they be neglected and yet their own consciences know how idle and vnprofitable they are and which is worse that they not onely doe not well but manifestly doe euill and sin daily in pride and enuy in passion and wilfulnes or other open transgressions This thirst after respect aboue others is a signe of a great strength of hypocrisy when they are more desirous to be thought good then indeed to be so and more carefull of the praise of men then of God Fourthly they sinne shamefully that praise the wicked and iustify him that God condemneth but Salomon hath set a note vpon those persons that they are naught themselues For hee saith that they that break the law praise the wicked Prou. 28.4 and 24 25. Psal. 10.3 Fiftly they are yet worse that glory in their shame that seek praise for the excesse of wickednes committed by them either against God or men as they doe that would bee commended for their cost bestowed on Idols or for their worshipping of Saints or Angels or for their reuenges and wrongs done to men or for their mightinesse to hold out in drinking wine or for their filthy acts of any kinde or for their excesses in strange apparell or for the raysing of themselues by vnlawfull meanes or for their deliciousnes in their fare or the like As those glory in their shame so their end is damnation Phil. 3.18 Lastly this doctrine should beget in men a great desire to liue profitably and to doe good and in a speciall manner to apply themselues to such works as are most praise-worthy Quest. Heere then ariseth a question What things in particular doe most aduantage a mans iust praises Ans. The answer is that there are diuers things will make a man to bee much praised as First to honour God hee hath promised to honour those that honour him Prou. 8.17 Now to honour God is to seek his Kingdom first and to confesse his name before men though it bee in euill times Secondly humility and a lowely carriage with meekenes For the humble shall bee exalted and the proud brought low Luke 1.14 20. Thirdly mercy to the poore This made the Macedonians famous in the Churches especially to shew it liberally and readily 2. Cor. 8. Fourthly diligence and exact carefulnes to discharge the labours of our particular calling with all faithfulnes this made the good woman famous mentioned Prou. 31.27 28 29 30 31. especially if wisdome and prouidence bee ioyned with diligence Fiftly to liue in peace and stand to bee quiet and meddle with our owne busines and to be a peace-maker winnes a great deal of praise 1. Thes. 4.11 Math. 5.9 Sixtly to bee exactly iust in mens dealings and true in his words and contracts this wil make men abound with blessings The word is praises as it is in other places translated Prou. 28.20 Seuenthly to bee courteous is to bee amiable so as it bee done without affectation and not directed for thy owne ends and not done with dissimulation Eightthly to doe good to our enemies to bee not onely ready to forgiue but to pray for them forbeare to wrong when it might be executed and to shew all willingnes to ouercome their euill with goodnes Rom. 12.20 21. Ninthly a care in all things strictly to submit our selues to the iust Laws of men auoiding transgression for conscience sake as the coherence in this place shewes And thus of the sixt doctrine Doct. 7. It may yet further bee obserued from hence that God doth require Magistrates in a speciall manner to looke vnto it that they doe all they can to praise and incourage Godly men and such as do good in the countries where they liue Rom. 13.5 This is the end of their calling Iob 29.25 This wil proue heauy one day for those prophane Magistrates that in the places of their abode disgrace men more then such as are godly and countenance none more then such as are most dissolute and lewd of life The iudgements of the Lord wil be terrible against these vnrighteous men Lastly the Antithesis is heere to be noted For when hee saith that such as doe well should be praised he doth not say
First they seeke not only painefull and skilfull but religious seruants Psal. 101.1 6 7. Secondly they not onely licence but teach their seruants to keepe God's Sabbaths and to worship him Commandement 4. Genes 18.19 Thirdly they will not command their seruants to doe any thing that is sinfull or to lie as snares or defraud others for their profit Fourthly that receiue their seruants especially such as are Religious as their brethren Fiftly that are ouerseers as well of the manners of their seruants as of their labours being as carefull that their seruants be no worse to themselues than to their Masters Sixtly that vse their seruants well not onely praysing them for well doing but alwaies rewarding their seruice with liberall wages and when they part from them not suffering them to goe from them empty without portion c. Masters shewe their gentlenesse also diuers waies as First when they vse their Authority moderately or are not haughtie or violent towards their seruants Secondly when they passe by their infirmities and take not notice of all the ill they say or doe Eccles. 7.22 Thirdly when their seruants offend they chide them with good words and not reuile them But also to the froward Froward Masters are such as are bitter to their seruants hard to please that are apt to finde fault that vse their seruants hardly in words or deedes but chiefely such as are cholerick and passionate and peeuish in their carriage towards their seruants So that foure Doctrines may bee noted from these words and from the coherence Doct. 1. First that God takes notice of the faults of Superiours as well as hee requires duties of Inferiours he sees frowardnes in masters as well as disobedience in seruants and the reason is both because God is no respecter of persons and also because hee giues his Law to all men And therefore Superiours must make conscience of their duties for though in all things they are not to giue accounts to their Inferiours yet they must giue accounts of all they doo to God Col. 3.24 Doct. 2. That God sees and dislikes such faults as the lawes of man take not notice of If a Master should kill his hired seruant mens lawes would take hould of him but if he be neuer so froward with him he may escape mens lawes But though the lawes of men punish not frowardnes yet God will So wee see in the exposition of Christ giuen vnto diuers commandements Mat. 5. man failed in killing adultery purity c. not once thinking of anger lust filthy speaking reuiling c. yet God forbids euen these things also which serues to reproue the folly of such as iustify themselues for very iust men because they offend not the lawes of men but neuer consider that God can finde a world of faults in them that mens lawes cannot because God sees the heart and by his Lawes requires obedience of the inward man and condemnes all sweruing from the right temper of heart and carriage And therefore wee should all looke to our waies to approue our selues not onely to men but to God and so to confesse the imperfections of mens lawes as to admire the perfection of Gods Word Doct. 3. That frowardnes is a vice to bee auoided of all sorts of men It is not onely vncomely in seruants but in Masters too and so consequently in all sorts of men and it is to bee auoided for many reasons First if wee consider the nature of the vice either in it selfe or by comparison It is of it selfe a kind of madnes A froward person during the fit is in some degree a mad person Besides they are very foolish and absurd The month of the righteous saith Salomō bringeth foorth wisdom but the froward tongue shall bee cut out In which words note the opposition The righteous mouth brings foorth wisdome but the froward mouth brings foorth foolish things and therefore shall bee cut out Pro. 10.31 Could froward and peeuish persons remember and consider what passeth from them in these fits they would be wōderfully ashamed of themselues Againe consider how contrary frowardnes is to Gods nature He saith of His words that there is no frowardnes in them Prou. 8.8 to note that frowardnes is a thing altogether contrary to God so as the froward persons in their froward fits are not like God but rather like the diuell Secondly if wee consider the causes of this peeuishnes and frowardnes either in man or woman wee shall find that this ill humour is bred of vile causes sometimes it comes of drunkennes as is noted Prouerbs 23.33 alwaies it proceedes from ignorance and want of wit and discretion Prou. 2.11 12. and vsually it ariseth of idlenes and want of constant imployment and of pride arrogance and stomake Pro. 8.13 It sometimes ariseth from iealousy and suspicion sometimes it is raised by idle and vile hypocrisy while they striue more for reputation to be thought good then indeed to be such either as they would seem to be or should bee Thirdly if wee consider the effects of frowardnes For those are vile whether we respect the froward persons themselues or others or God First for themselues It is a vice most vnprofitable For it is like a disease full of anguish and vnquietnes it eates vp their owne hearts troubles their minds and robs them of al contentment besides it breeds a grieuous indisposition in them to all good duties both to God and men and brings vpon them many mischiefes It dares annoy their friends For they that are wise will make no frendship with the froward and in such as are tied to them that they must needs conuerse with them it much alienateth their inward loue and respect of them And therefore Salomon saith well Hee that hath a froward heart findes no good and hee that hath a peruerse tongue falleth into mischiefe Pro. 17.20 And againe Thornes and snares are in the mouthes of the froward Pro. 22.5 Secondly to others their peeuishnes is a great vexation and burthen Hence came the prouerb The lips of the righteous know what is acceptable that is a godly patient discreet man is exceeding pleasing to others in his words and carriage but the mouth of the wicked speaketh frowardnes that is a sinfull peeuish foolish person is in his word and carriage exceeding troublesome and vnpleasing for so the Antithesis imports Besides it breeds discord a froward mouth soweth discord Yea it many times driues such as conuerse with such persons into perplexities and amazednes that they know not what to doe to free themselues from their peruersenes according to that of Salomon The way of a man is peruerse and strange but as for the pure his work is right Prou. 21.8 And therefore Dauid when hee was to order his family is specially carefull that no froward person dwell with him For where frowardnes is there is confusion and euery euil work I●rem 3.16 Thirdly if wee respect God It is a
companion a man hath all the dayes of his life It is euer with him and speakes good vnto him and comforts him A man that hath no company needes not be alone for hee may conuerse with much delight with his owne Conscience and it is the surest friend a man can haue For it will neither hurt him by flattery nor forsake him for any carnall respects and being an internall agent is out of the watch of all outward hindrances and is alwaies a messenger of good things to a man and fits him and fills him with peace that passeth all the vnderstanding of all men that want a good Conscience Secondly it giues a man assurance of the best treasures it makes a man certaine of his saluation For a good Conscience will not bee quiet till it know the loue of God and the promises of grace in Christ and the assurance that conscience giues is a better assurance than any man can haue for his lands or any estate on Earth because it is so highly honoured that God's owne Spirit doth not disdaine at any time to witnesse with it and to it Rom. 8.15 16. Thirdly by reason of that new acquaintance and affinity it hath with the holy Ghost it brings vs into a familiar friendship with God as being an immediat Agent with the holy Ghost in all things that concerne vs for God's Spirit treates with the Conscience and the Conscience treates with the Soule Fourthly it is a continuall bulwarke against the Diuel and all his fiery darts whether he tempt vs to sinne or to feare and doubting For so soone as the temptation is cast in a good Conscience by her reasoning presently throwes it out reseruing principles both of precept and promise alwaies in a readinesse to that end so as by contrarious reasoning within vs it both hinders vs from yeelding to sin and supports vs against all doubts and feares Prou. 28.1 Fiftly against all afflictions and disgraces and reproches of the World a good Conscience still comforts a man and makes him reioyce by the force of the testimony thereof 2. Cor. 1.12 So as it is most true that A good Conscience is a continuall Feast he neuer fares ill that hath a good Conscience Psalm 7.8 Pro. Acts 24.16 Rom. 9.10 Sixtly and the greater is the comfort of a good Conscience because it will comfort vs and stand by vs and for vs when all other comforts faile It will neuer leaue vs in sicknes or in death and so is better than a thousand friends or wiues or children yea it will go with vs to the Iudgement-Seat of Christ with this assurance that as a good Conscience speaks to vs now so will Christ speak to vs at that Day Rom. 2.16 Thus of the sorts or kindes of Consciences The last point is about the bond of Conscience what it is that can binde a mans Conscience and the doubt ariseth from this and other Texts because heer a seruant is bound in Conscience to submit himself to a froward master both to his command and to his punishments and other Scriptures speak of his obedience to Superiours for Conscience sake For answer heerunto wee must knowe that God and his Law haue power simply and absolutely to binde Conscience that is to vrge it to require obedience of a man or to accuse if he obey not or to excuse if he obey As for the authority of Masters or other Superiours it cannot reach to the Conscience properly for they haue no power to command or punish Conscience but that which ties Conscience to submit vnto them is the commandement of God in his Word in this and such like places And therefore hence wee may learn the difference between the power of mens lawes and the power of GOD's Word which difference will further appeare distinctly in many things First men may make many lawes either ecclesiasticall or ciuill which binde not at all yea which wee are bound not to keep as if they command a thing contrary to the Word of God and in that case it is better to obey God than men and Conscience is first bound to God Acts 5. Dan. 3. Now all God's Lawes binde Secondly if such as are next aboue vs in authority command vs any thing contrary to the lawes of the supreme Magistrate to whom they and wee are bound we are not tied to obey Thirdly mens lawes can onely binde vs to outward working or suffering they cannot make laws or inflict punishment vpon the hearts or mindes of men whereas God's Lawes enioyne obedience vpon the inward man as well as the outward and eternall punishment as well as temporary Fourthly the best laws of men where they bind most binde not by any immediate power of their owne but by fear of God's Word that enioyns vs to obey their lawfull authority Fiftly mens lawes euer binde with limitation that is with respect of the end of the law and the person of the law-maker and the offense of others and heerupon Diuines say If mens lawes be omitted so as the end of the lawes be not hindred that is that the Common-wealth be not damnified or other particular ends crossed or offense be not giuen as much as in vs lieth or the Law-giuer bee not despised or contemned the Conscience may not accuse a man of sinne Sixtly some Lawes of men are meerely penall note that I say meerely penall that is they are made about matters of lesse importance and not vttered precisely in commanding tearmes or so vttered that the Common-wealth is accounted by the Lawgiuer to bee sufficiently prouided for if the penalty bee inflicted Now hee that is ready to pay the fine or the penalty and doth not transgresse but in some case of necessary respect hee is not to bee charged with sinne before God And thus of Conscience and of the laying downe of the first reason The auouching of it followes in verse 20. Verse 20. For what glory is it if when you bee buffeted for your faults you shall take it patiently But if when you doe well and suffer for it you take it patiently this is acceptable with God WHere the Apostle makes it good that the best praise is to suffer wrongfully First by affirming that it is no true glory for a man to suffer for his faults and endure it Secondly by shewing that to suffer patiently for well doing is a thing verie acceptable to God That it is no true glory for a man to suffer for his faults that he endure it patiently hee expresseth in these words What glory is it if when yee bee buffeted for your faults you take it patiently Out of which words diuers doctrines may bee briefly noted Doct. 1. First that men of all sorts doe naturally affect glory or praise or reputation and are guided by it in their actions or sufferings euen the meanest sort of men set before themselues something which they glory in and according to which they order themselues as heere seruants euen of the worst
that loue not the Lord Iesus 1. Pet. 1.9 2. Cor. 16.22 Fiftly we should therefore eare the Passeouer with sowre hearbs we should remember his grieuous suffrings with harty affection and melting of soule before the Lord when wee come before him to celebrate the memory of his Passion in the Sacrament Sixtly we should no more stagger or wauer in faith but with all peace and ioy in beleeuing rest vpon the propitiation made by Christ for our sins we should therefore confidently beleeue the pardon of all our sinnes because hee hath borne our iniquities If any man sinne wee haue an Aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sins Seuenthly wee should neuer more bee afraid of death and hell for our debt being paied by the surety the hand-writing that was against vs is now cancelled Col. 2.15 and there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus Romanes 8.1 Heb. 2.14 Eightthly wee should not be so much troubled to bee vniustly traduced seeing Christ beyond all example suffered most vnspeakeable ignominie bearing the imputation of the sinnes of all the Elect. Ninthly seeing hee hath beene made in the similitude of sinfull flesh and suffered for sinne in the flesh wee should striue to bee made the righteousnes of God in him and as hee hath borne our sinnes so should wee striue to beare his vertues Who his owne selfe It is emphaticall that the Apostle saith Hee bare our sinnes his owne selfe For there bee two things which are heere imported First that hee had no partners there were none with him Hee bare all himselfe Esay 59.16 Hee trod the wine-presse alone Esay 63.3 5. And therefore it is a vile dishonour to Christ to ascribe any part of satisfaction to our selues or to any Saint or Angel Secondly it imports that therefore his suffering is of infinit valew in that he bare all his owne selfe in person who was God and man Then it will follow that he hath made a sufficient propitiation for all the world 2. Ioh. 2.1 2. In his body Quest. Why did he not suffer in his soule Ans. Yes for so saith the Scripture Hee made his soule a sacrifice for sinne Esay 53.10 and the Sonne of man came to giue his soule a ransome for many Math. 20.28 Marke 10.45 This was shadowed out by the Holocaust or whole burnt-offering for it noted that the whole man should suffer So in the Sacrament the breaking of the bread is not referred so properly to his body for there was not a bone broken of him saith the holy text but fitly to his soule which was broken with sorrowes and heauines for our sakes So that by the body he meanes synechdochically whole Christ but yet the body is named because That was the outward sacrifice that was offered for our sinnes on the tree Christ then bare our sinnes in his body What may wee learne from thence First wee see a manifest difference betwixt Christs Priesthood and theirs in the Law For they offered the bodies of beasts or fowles but Christ offered his owne body Secondly wee may take comfort in the assurance that hee is the Sauiour of our bodies as well as our soules Thirdly Seeing such grieuous things befell the body of Christ why seeke wee so much ease for our bodies why pamper wee our flesh so and why are we so impatient in the paines of our bodies and remember not what Christ suffered in his body Fourthly we should therefore esteem his body to bee a precious body aboue all bodies ●●eing it was laid downe as a price for our sinnes yea wee should long to see that glorious body of his that wee might admire it and adore it and embrace it and in the meane time loue and delight in the Lords Supper that exhibiteth the body of Christ spiritually vnto vs reioycing in such meetings aboue the ioy of all carnall people before any other things Fiftly wee should therefore take heed of sinning against our bodies but make conscience to serue God both in body and Spirit and say with Dauid Christ Lord a body thou hast giuen me for I come to doe thy will Sixtly what cursed monsters are swearers that teare the body of our Lord with their cursed oathes and rake their nailes in his wounds with their blasphemies On the tree The originall word signifies somtimes a staffe Mat. 26.47 sometimes a pair of stocks Acts 16.24 sometimes a tree growing Reuel 2.11 vsually wood 1. Corinthians 3.12 Heere a Gallowes made of wood Christ bare our sinnes on the tree because hee did in a speciall manner suffer bitter extremities on the tree which hee suffered as our Suretie and for our sinnes for First to die on a tree was by a speciall Law of God made a curse and so is euery one that hangs on a tree Gal. 3.13 Secondly he was debarred of the benefit of ordinary naturall comforts For he liued in paine 3 hours in the darke and had not the light of the sun Thirdly in that darknes he was put to the most fearefull conflict with the diuels which at that time did with their vtmost fury assault him and fight against him Colos. 3.25 Fourthly he endured most grieuous paines and to●ments of body and the effusion of his most precious blood Fiftly hee was reckoned amongst the wicked in his death and therefore hanged betweene two malefactors Esay 53.9 Sixtly hee was reuiled by the base multitude and mocked and derided by the chiefe Priests and Scribes Math. 27.39 to 45. Seuenthly God his father powred out vpon him the fearefull viols of his wrath in withdrawing for a time the sense of his fauour Math. 27.46 Eightthly his whole body was offered vp on the tree as a Sacrifice for the sinnes of the world and the substance of all the sacrifices in the Law Vses We haue therefore cause to reioyce in the crosse of Christ aboue all things For on the tre hee freed vs from the curses of the Law and purchased for vs the blessings promised to Abraham as the father of the faithfull Gal. 3.13 14. and besides by suffering so shamefull a death he hath sanctified all sorts of waies of inflicting death vpon the godly so as now they may with comfort in a good cause or after repentance for their faults euen suffer that death on a tree with ioy And wee should the more praise God for his fauour if he suffer any of vs to die of any other more easie or more honourable death And then wee may againe see the hatefulnesse of sinne in that God punishing our sinnes in the person of his owne Sonne doth not omit the very circumstances of abasement his iustice exacting not onely death but that painefull and ignominious death on the tree Lastly hence we may see how little cause there is for Christians to plead merit if they think how fearfully sinne hath angred God and withall how senselesse the best of vs are when wee
to heale the body as well as the soule But the especial healing is at the resurrection when all the bodies of the Saints shall be healed perfectly of all diseases and freed from the very disposition yea the very possibility to haue any diseases Vse 1. The vse should bee for great comfort to the godly when they are distressed they may and ought to looke vp to Christ and say If it bee good for mee my Sauiour wil heale me and the rather because Christ is such a compassionate Physician and hath had the feeling of our infirmities and paines that way and besides hee is such a Physician as can doe two things that neuer Physician could doe For first hee can take away the first causes of diseases which is sinne which no Physick can doe Math. 9. Secondly hee can cure our bodies when they are starke dead which neuer any Physician could doe they may helpe some liuing bodies but they could neuer helpe one dead body Yea such as finde not cure for the paines of the body should bee of good comfort because they should haue had cure of it if it had beene good for them and they must consider it is the Lord that doth it Psalme 39. and that all shall worke together for the best Romanes 8. and that nothing can separate them from the loue of Christ and that they are deliuered from eternall paine and that Gods deare children haue suffered as great torments or weakenesses Vse 2. Secondly all men should bee taught to seeke to Christ for cure since it is his office to heale and to this end men are bound to looke to diuers rules if they would haue CHRIST to heale them First they must seeke to him for cure they must pray him to heale them wee doe not read that euer Christ healed any sick person vnlesse he were brought to him or hee intreated to heale him wee must pray for our bodies as well as our soules Thus did Dauid Psalme 6. and 31. and Hezekiah c. Secondly wee must vse the lawfull meanes wee can get for our healing our Sauiour shewes that when he said The whole needed not the physiciā but the sick the sick then doe need and must with conscience and care vse all lawfull and outward helps that they can attaine to that are fit for them Mathew 9. Thirdly they must take heed of trusting vpon the Physician or Physick giuen them that was Asa his great sinne For if wee bee cured it is not Physick but Christ that healed vs. Fourthly wee must bring faith to bee healed for our bodies also This our Sauiour often asketh after when hee is about to cure mens bodies as the Euangelists shew Fiftly wee must bee carefull to seek the remouing of the cause of our diseases which is sinne especially if wee finde that God hath a quarrell with vs for any speciall fault wee are falne into Thus Dauid got the punishment of his sinne remitted by iudging himselfe for his sinne Psal. 32.4 5. Sixtly we must submit our selues to Gods will and in the case of our bodies must resigne our selues into his hands to let him doe with vs what it shall please him since hee knowes what is best for vs and if Christ will not heale vs now yet to comfort our selues as Iob did in the hope of that time when our Redeemer will bee seene of vs in the body when it shall bee vtterly and for euer freed from all paines and infirmities whatsoeuer Iob 19. Doct. 4. It is further to bee noted that wee are not onely healed by Christ but it is by his stripes The wounds made in his body doe heale our bodies which should make vs so much the more to loue the Lord Iesus and the more patiently to beare it if we be not presently healed because he did beare more grieuous paines euen in the body and because if it were good for vs he would heale vs in that hee paied so deare for our healing Verse 25. For you were as sheepe going astray but are now returned vnto the Shepheard and Bishop of your soules HItherto of the effects of Christs sufferings in respect of vs In respect of himselfe the effect was his exaltation to become the Shepherd and Bishop of our soules euen of the soules of all the Elect which is so implied in the words of this verse as withall in a passage is expressed both our misery without Christ and our happines vnder his gouernment The words of this verse in themselues containe three things First our misery by nature in our selues wee are as sheep deceiued or going astray Secondly the meanes of our recouery out of that estate and that is the causing of vs to returne Thirdly our happinesse vnder the gouernment of Iesus Christ to whose charge wee are committed when we returne The first words expressing our misery are words borrowed out of the Prophet Esay chapter 53.6 7. and in the words vnregenerate men euen God's Elect among them are likened to sheep A sheep is a certain image to resemble a man by And so we finde in Scripture that a sheep is the image or resemblance first of Christ-man He is likened to a sheep dumb before his shearer for his silence and patience at his arraignment Esay 53.7 Secondly of men that are true beleeuers for the harmlessenes tractablenesse and profitablenesse Mat. 25.33 Thirdly of men that erre and wander out of the way of godlinesse and so wicked men before their calling are likened to wandring sheep yea godly men after their calling in respect of their falls or failings are likened to sheep going astray as Dauid saith of himself Psalm 119. vlt. But heere it is vnderstood of the Elect of GOD before their calling The word heer rendred Going astray properly signifies deceiued and is so vsed in diuers places of the new Testament but the metaphor to the which it is ioyned requires it should be expressed Going astray or wandring or erring but so as it doth import two things First the euill condition of the vnregenerate they are like wandring sheep Secondly the curse of it and that is they are deceiued they are as sheep deceiued Now that this point may bee distinctly vnderstood I propound fiue things to be considered of First what faults in men are meant by the tearm of going astray Secondly what the misery of their condition is that doo go astray Thirdly what the cause is of their going astray Fourthly by what signes a lost sheep may be knowne especially such as are within the Church which seemes to be the Fold And lastly the doctrines that may be briefly noted out of all the words of that part of the verse For the first Vnder the tearm of erring or going astray are construed in Scripture errors in opinion Iames 1.16 Mat. 22.29 called erring from the faith 1. Tim. 6.10 whoredome Numbers 5.12 idolatry Deut. 13.5 drunkennesse Esay 28.1 7. bribery and all waies of vnrighteousnes 2. Peter 2.15 all deuising of
water as the Prophet speaketh Ier. 6.6 Fourthly especially when men are shamelesse and impudent in offending Ier. 6.15 and 8.12 Vse 2. And therefore men should be instructed and take notice of their condition and danger and foresee this day and vse all meanes to preuent it for if men would turne vnto God speedily and repent with sound sorrowes for their sins the Lord would perhaps bee intreated and forgiue the punishment of their sinnes Ier. 6.6 Thus of the visitation of iustice The visitation of mercie followes The visitation of mercie is when God comes amongst men to shew some speciall mercie and so hee visits either about temporall or about spirituall things In temporall things hee visits either in the case of blessings or afflictions In respect of temporall blessings hee visited Sarah Gen. 21.1 when he gaue her a sonne In respect of afflictions God visites first when hee sends such crosses as doe trie the innocencie and sinceritie of his seruants so Psal. 17.3 Secondly when hee lets his people knowe that he takes speciall notice of their distresses sorrowes so Exod. 4.3 Thirdly when hee sends his seruants speciall deliuerances and so to visit is to deliuer Thus of the visitation in temporall things which is not heere meant The visitation in spirituall things is the gracious prouidence of God reuealing his marueilous and euerlasting mercies vnto his Elect and so hee visits man either by Christ or by the Gospell Hee visited his people when hee sent his Son to redeem them Luke 1.68.78 and 7.16 And so hee doth when hee sends his Gospell by his seruants to this end to reconcile the world to himselfe in Christ and thus God visited the world when hee sent his Apostles vnto all Nations preaching the Gospell And thus hee doth visit a Nation when hee sends the Gospel thither or a congregation when by the preaching of the Gospel he gathereth a people to himselfe There is also a personall and particular visitation when God singles out this or that man from the rest and conuerts him And so in this place to visit the Gentiles is to gather out of the Gentiles a people to his name as in the case of this Apostle is said Acts 15.14 Which place may well expound this So that the day of visitation if wee respect whole congregations is the time when God sends them the powerfull preaching of the Gospel and doth thereby muster and presse a people to himselfe And if we respect particular persons it is the day when God effectually calls them and conuerts them Six things may bee obserued here concerning this visitation of grace First that till God doe visit wicked men with his grace from heauen there will bee no sound reformation in them Their naturall conscience the shame and punishment of men with the Lawes of Princes or Churches may restraine somewhat of the excesse of sin but it is God's visitation onely that can work a sound and thorow reformation There is little hope these Gentiles which speake euill of Christians will euer cease till the day of this visitation and the reason is plaine because the lawes and punishments of men cannot giue a new nature to the offenders which God in his visitation doth The vse is therfore to confirm the patience of the Saints They haue endured and must endure the euill words of wicked men and if any bee wearie of their iniuries they must pray earnestly for their conuersion The Wolfe doth not alwaies deuour nor the Fox alwaies deceiue nor the Dog alwaies bark but yet so long as they keepe their natures they will occasionally discouer themselues And therefore also Christians should learne discretion not to trust worldly men ouer-farre vpon newe pretenses Doct. 2. Secondly hence we may note that God hath his time wherein hee will certainely visit his people Hee hath his day of visitation All that God hath giuen vnto Iesus Christ shall bee gathered in Gods due time That which was beleeued concerning the gathering of the Israelites out of Egypt into Canaan that God would surely visit them bring thē out Gen. 50.24 25. is much more certainely to bee beleeued of the spirituall gathering of the elect out of this world into the Canaan of God And the reason is because their conuersion depends vpon Gods eternall decree and the foundation of God remaineth sure and hee knoweth who are his 2. Tim. 2.19 And not one of them shall bee lacking in the season of their calling Ier. 23.3 4. The vse may bee for the confirmation of our faith concerning the calling of such Iewes Gentiles or Christians as yet sit in darknes and want the meanes of their Calling God hath his day and he wil prouide for the calling of all his Elect how vnlikely soeuer the worke seeme to vs. Doct. 3. Wee may hence note that when God hath visited a man with his grace hee is suddenly become another man hee is wonderfully altered from that which hee was before The vse should be for tryall No Christian can haue comfort that they are visited with the grace of God if old things be not past with them and all things become newe for euery man that is visited with true grace First hath a newe Master Hee will no longer serue any strange Lord For hee hath couenanted firmly with God to work righteousnes Rō 6.16 18 Secondly hath newe acquaintance He that was wont to walk onely in the way of the wicked is now a companion onely with them that feare God all his delight is in them Psal. 16. and 26. Thirdly hath a new Language he speakes not as he was wont to do For first his Mother-toūg he hath vtterly forgotten Hee cannot curse and lye and sweare and raile and speak bawdily as he was wont to doe which the coherence shewes here Secondly in diuers things he is furnished on a sudden with Language he could neuer speake before as in the gift of prayer hee can now speak to God and discourse with him that before was dumbe and opened not his mouth Zephany 3.9 Fourthly hee hath a newe heart Zach. 36.27 Which appeares in what hee hath not which was wont to bee in his heart and in what hee hath which was neuer there before And for the first branch there is not in him any of these things following By the way vnderstand that these things are not in him as they were wont to bee that is they raigne not or they lie adying and so 1. There is not guile there his spirit is without guile Psal. 32.2 Which hee shewes in that he auoydes lesser sinnes aswell as greater is as good in secret as well as in companie and serues God in his spirit aswell as his body and is more desirous to bee good then to seeme so 2. There is not malice and passion there Esay 11. His outrageous and boisterous passions are subdued of a Lyon he is become a Lamb.