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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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he that believeth hath eternall life he is as it were in heaven already therefore let us be suiters to God because faith is the gift of GOD to bestow it where it is not and to encrease it where it is yea let us all pray for the faith of Iob though thou kill me I will believe in thee It is an axiome with the Papists that faith may be without love we grant it fides Daemonum but not fides Christianorum an Historicall faith which is the faith of the Church of Rome defined by a Catechisme authorized by the Councell of Trent may be without Love and a miraculous faith may be without love 1 Cor. 13.2 But a justifying faith cannot he that is perswaded of the love of God towards him in Christ God so loved the world c. cannot but love the brethren and members of Christ. Every one which loveth him that begate loveth him also which is begotten of him They that bragge of faith and have no love are like empty vessels that give a lusty sound and have nothing in them Though I speake with the tongues of men and Angels and have not love I am as sounding brasse and as a tinkling Cymball though I had the gift of Prophecie and knew all secrets and all knowledge If I had all faith that I could remove mountaines and had not love I were nothing Though I feede the poore with all my goods and giue my body to be burned and have not love it profiteth me nothing So though I talke of Religion with a silver yea with an Angelicall tongue though I goe which is the glory of many to never so many Lectures heare Sermons receive Communions and have not love I am nothing Saint Augustine amplifies it further Signent se omnes signo crucis Let them signe themselves with the signe of the Crosse Let them say Amen that the Church rings of it let them sing Hallelujah let them fetch deepe sighes and groanes at Sermons that may be added Let them enter into Churches let them build Churches all this is to small purpose non discernuntur filii Dei à filiis diaboli nisi charitate nothing distinguishes the children of GOD from the children of the Devill but love Hereby shall all men know yee be my Disciples if yee love one another Faith without love is as a lampe without oyle vita corporis anima vita fidei charitas Bern. the life of the body is the soule and the life of faith is love faith that worketh by love Not a verbal love like them warme your selves fill your bellies and give them nothing but a reall love to feede the hungrie to cloath the naked to be an eye to the blind a foote to the lame to be a father and mother to the poore and fatherlesse to be a covering to them that their loynes may blesse us as they goe in the streets to be bountifull in our almes to all the people as Cornelius was to prepare garments for poore widowes as Dorcas did Such was the love of PHILEMON an actuall love he refreshed the bowells of the Saints Such must be the love of all true Christians My little children love not in word and tongue only but in deede and in truth PHILEMONS love extended it selfe to the Saints as is here avouched of him yet it was not couped up within the penne of the Saints the Saints must have the prime place in our love but not the whole Doe good to all men chiefely to them of the household of faith they chiefely but not they wholly Aristotle gave an almes to an unworthy man one reproved him for it Sayes he I gave it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the nature of the man not to the man the nature is Gods and must be sustained the vice is his owne and the Devills and must be reformed Their flesh is as our flesh and we must not hide our eyes from our owne flesh Neverthelesse the Saints must drinke most deepely and frequently of the cup of our love All my delight is in the Saints that be on the earth Saint Paul ordaines a collection for the Saints every first day of the weeke He himselfe was content to be a messenger to carry a contribution to the poore Saints at Hierusalem and requesteth the prayers of the Romans that that his service might be accepted of the Saints Know yee not that the Saints shall judge the world God honours them to bee the judges of the world therefore the world ought especially to be relievers and lovers of them VERSE 6. LAst of all quorsum To what end We give thankes and pray that the communication of thy faith Where 1. There is a narration of it 2. A confirmation of it Ver. 7. In the narration 1. The act of communication 2. The effect of it 3. The end of it As there is a communion of Saints so there must be a communion of gifts bonum quò communius eò melius a good thing the more common it is the better it is the Sunne communicates his light to all the world and shines the brighter for that the springs and fountaines communicate their water and are the fuller for that a nurse or mother communicates her milk to the infant and her breasts are replenished still the communication of faith of knowledge and other gifts is not a diminution but an augmentation of them Let us joyfully communicate that which we have one to another May become effectuall In some Greeke copies it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conspicuous manifest but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is rather to be embraced having an effectuall operation in others to provoke them to the like So Saint Paul provokes the Corinthians to liberality by the example of the Macedonians one student provokes another one Merchant an other and one Christian an other Sanguis martyrum semen ecclesiae the burning of one Martyr made many and the liberality of one Christian makes many liberall examples are more availeable then precepts But how By the acknowledging of every good thing Wee must acknowledge the good things that be in others The Queene of Shebah extolled the good things that were in Salomon and blessed GOD for them The elders of the Iewes acknowledged the good things that were in the Centurion God set the good things that were in Iob as on a stage and the Devill himselfe could not but acknowledge them though maliciously he depraved them Christ though he were the giver of them acknowledged the good things that were in Nathaniel Peter acknowledges the good things that were in St. Paul St. Augustine acknowledged the good things that were in St. Hierome and Hierom also the good things that were in Saint Aug. as appeares by their Epistles one to another We are injurious to God if we doe not acknowledge them No Painter
and the continuance in it Here are many excellent instructions Love is laborious If thou lovest a man thou wilt labour for him thou wilt runne and ride for him thou wilt relieve him in his wants according to that ability wherewith God hath blessed thee Love not in word and tongue only 1 Ioh. 3.18 I will not give any thing for such love as hath nothing but words Shew mee thy love by thy deeds and labour Art thou ready to doe what thou canst for thy brother art thou willing to part with thy mony thy meat and drinke for the relieving of him then thou lovest him hic labor hoc opus est this is the true labour of love indeed doest thou visit him if he be in prison for righteousnesse sake doest thou goe to him and comfort him if he be sicke never prate of love unlesse I may see the labour of thy love Iacob loved Rachel therefore he laboured for her For the glorifying of his name Here we have the end of a good worke which makes it a good work indeed when it is done for the name of Christ. The Pharisees gave almes yet because it was to procure a name to themselves it was not a good worke they have their reward amongst men they shall have none at the hands of God If thou givest to the poore because the statute compells thee or because thou shalt be hardly thought of if thou givest not or that thou mayest bee counted a liberall man and that the world may talke of thee and commend thee it looseth the title of a good worke whatsoever we doe let us doe all to the glory of God and he will recompense us Why what was this work of theirs they ministred to the Saints One speciall good worke is to minister to the Saints There were certaine women that ministred to Christ of their owne substance the woman of Shunem ministred to Elisha prepared a chamber and other necessaries for him Onesiphorus ministred to St. Paul which oft refreshed him and was not ashamed of his chaine Dorcas ministred to the poore widdowes in clothing them Doe good unto all especially to them who are of the household of faith If any Saints are in want minister to them In this sence we must all be Ministers this is a glorious service a worthy ministration in ministring to them wee minister to Christ in as much as yee have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren yee have done it unto mee and let it not grieve us to minister to Christ which hath ministred his own bloud to us The times are hard wherein we live all victualls are at an high rate many poore Saints fare hardly lye hardly goe hardly let us open the bowels of compassion and minister to them This worke above all others shall be recompensed at the day of Iudgement when I was hungry yee fed mee c. Therefore let us occupy our selves in this ministration But what doe they content themselves with their former ministring doe they set downe their staffe there No and yet Minister It is not sufficient to doe well for a time but we must continue in well doing Many soothe up themselves in their former good workes they vaunt of them such and such a thing did I. O how bountifull were we to our Preachers How kind have we beene to them O I but are you kinde still have yee ministred and yet do yee minister have yee beene zealous and yet are yee zealous have yee beene diligent hearers of the Word and yet are yee diligent have yee beene liberall to the poore and yet are yee liberall That is a worthie commendation then are yee good Christians indeed In earthly blessings wee cannot away with was or had hath any great list to bragge I was Rich I had land I had my health wee had rather say an hundred times I am rich I have my health I was good is not so much but I am yet good I am more and more good that is an excellent thing Yet there bee many that have beene good in the praeterperfecttence that are not in the present They were sober they would looke at no Ale-house but now they are common drunkards they were chaste but now are adulterers they were wont to keepe their Church well they would never misse a Sermon but now come seldome to Church every trifle will keepe them from a Sermon they were liberall but now are covetous that is a miserable thing a dolefull tune Let us so behave our selves that it may be affirmed of us we are yet good yet zealous yet religious and let not this yet be given over so long as we live This is an excellent place as any in all the bible to encourage us to good workes God will never forget them As hee puts our teares into his bottle so he puts our good workes into his booke and keepes a register of them all Men may forget the good turnes to them they wryte their injuries in steele and their benefits in water many will not acknowledge them that have beene their benefactors Pharaohs butler quickly forgate Ioseph though he foretold him of his delivery Men are forgetfull but God is not hee neither forgets us nor our workes Can a woman forget her sucking Child that shee should not have compassion on the Sonne of her wombe yea they may forget yet I will not forget thee God remembred the prayer and teares of Hezekiah 2 Reg. 20.5 The almes deeds of Cornelius went up into remembrance before God Acts 10.4 God remembers our prayers our fastings our joyfull hearing of his Word he remembers what money we have given to the poore the Cloath wherewith we have clothed them the kindnesse we have shewed to his Ministers if wee have given but a cup of cold water hee remembers it and will reward it Mat. 10.42 This should make us all zealous of good workes Now a dayes by our preaching faith in CHRIST we have through the corruption of the people preached good workes out of the Church the people nourish this conceit in their hearts we cannot merit heaven by our workes therefore it is not a pins matter though wee doe none I but God will not forget your good workes he will reward them both in this life and in the life to come he will give heaven to your workes as they are the fruits of faith though he give it not for the worthinesse and dignity of your workes therefore be full of them Good workes are not the meritorious causes of heaven yet they are the way to heaven and yee cannot goe to heaven but by the way of good workes therefore make your calling and election sure by them Blessed are the dead which dye in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Your houses and land silver and gold tarry behind when yee bee dead but your workes follow you God will not forget them but
is long a kindling but if wee provoke him too much Hee will breake forth as a fire and consume us all He is a fearefull God with whom wee have to deale therefore let us serve Him with feare and reverence in holinesse and righteousnesse all our dayes that wee may not onely avoyde this fire but enjoy the light of the heavenly Ierusalem for ever CHAP. XIII IN the 11th Chapter we had a Treatise of Faith in the 12th a Treatise of Hope now in this we have a Tractate of Love 1 The delivery of certaine precepts 2. The conclusion of the Epistle The precepts concerne the members of the Church and the Rulers verse 17. For the members 1. Hee perswades to that which is good 2. Hee disswades from that which is evill verse 4. For the performance of that which is good hee commends love to them 1. quoad affectum 2. quoad effectum verse 2.3 VERSE 1. NOt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the love of the brethren or brotherhood Of them that be brethren in CHRIST which have one Father which is God one mother the Church that suck one milke out of the two dugs of the Word of God that have one Faith one Saviour one Baptisme one H. Supper one inheritance the kingdom of heaven Let the love of these brethren continue We must love all men as they are the glorious workemanship of God created after Gods image but those especially that are His workemanship in CHRIST IESUS renewed after the image of the LORD IESUS Owe nothing to any man save love Love a Turke a Iew but especially love a Christian that embraceth CHRIST truely as thou doest There ought to bee brotherly love amongst them that as brethren professe one Faith one CHRIST and one Gospell 1 Love is the body of a Christian. 2 Love is the Seale of our election 1 Iohn 3.14 If thou hast no love thou hast no assurance of eternall life 3 Love is the sauce that seasons all vertues 1 Cor. 13. Though thou commest to Church and hearest Sermons receivest the Communion offerest up the sacrifice of prayer and praise talkest never so gloriously of Religion yet without love thou art but as sounding brasse c. therefore let brotherly love continue 4 It is a sweet thing therefore it is compared to the oyle powred on the head of Aaron it is a profitable thing resembled to the dew of Henmon therefore let it continue Yet for all that love is a rare bird among us she is much in our tongue little in our hands we talke of her but we walke not according to the rule of love Love envyeth not What envy is among the professors of the Gospell If our Neighbour be in better estate then we we grieve at it Love disdaineth not What contemning is there one of another Love seeketh not her owne Among us every man is for himselfe none regards the good of an other Love thinkes not evill it speakes not evill What cursed speaking backbiting railing and slandering is there among us Love is not onely cold but in a manner dead among us there is more love among Turkes and infidels then among Christians Drunkards love there is good fellowship among them Theeves love they have one purse Adulterers love The Divels love A legion of Divels were in one man onely wee that professe our selves brethren in Christ which ought chiefely to abound in love and be lights to others wee want love What a pittifull thing is this He doth not say let it be let it finde a footing among you but let it abide and continue he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in GOD not he that hath love He doth not say let love be as a guest among you which tarries for a night or two but let him be a continuer let him never discontinue from you The Scripture sayes let not the Sunne goe downe on thy wrath Wee must not keepe anger with us an whole night but wee must keepe love with us day and night continually Love hath many enemies that seeke to thrust her out of doores Therefore we had need to hold her and to labour for the continuance after 1 There is the Divell that cannot abide her Iud. 9.23 According to his name he is an enemy that sets himselfe against love If he see love in a Towne he will expell her if he can by one meanes or an other 2 He hath his factors and agents in all places that labour to breake the necke of love Now a dayes they bee especially two talebearers and wrangling Lawyers God tooke order in the law that none should goe about with tales yet they are too frequent in every Towne sowing the seed of dissention and nipping love in the head Therefore if yee will have love continue stop up your eares against Talebearers And as the North winde driveth away raine So with an angry countenance doe ye the Talebearer As for Lawyers they be necessary in the Common wealth as well as Physitions but as he is a bad Physition that will make work for himselfe So he is a bad Lawyer that will set men together by the eares for the enriching of himselfe Let us take heed of all that goe about to pull love from us and let her bee continued among us 3 There bee weaknesses in our selves wee are too supercilious too credulous ready on a small occasion to cast away love 4 There are many infirmities in them whom wee love yea even in the best of all Now when love sees an infirmity shee must cover it or amend it and not cast off a friend for an infirmitie The Holy Ghost not without great cause made choyse of this word continue for hee knew there were many ropes to pull us from love many that would seeke her discontinuance Wee desire the continuance of all other good things wee would be glad that wealth honour health ease prosperitie might continue and shall we not seeke the continuance of love that sweetens them all to us Doe not onely love for a time but continually But alas love is of little continuance Many have beene friends that proove enemies Herod and Pilat were friends but afterwards fell out Love is fine drinke but it growes soone sower Some there be with Amnon that hate more then ever they loved before In other things wee cannot away with the Praeterperfect tense as to say I had health I had house and land I had wealth yet wee content our selves to say I had love Indeed the time was when wee loved but now one neighbour cares not for an other That is a miserable alteration Let brotherly love continue Let her tarry with us so long as we our selves tarry Let her dwell with us in this world that shee may dwell with us and we with her in the world to come VERSE 2. THE Branches of Love are three The first concernes our neighbours 2.3 verse the second our selves 4.5.6 verse the third our rulers Having
contemned the word at length will be contemned That for the writer now to the persons to whom he writeth the mother and her children Origen speakes somewhat contemptibly of women When Christ came into the coasts of Tyrus and Sidon Behold a woman Mat. 15.22 Mira res Evangelista a strange thing O Evangelist Behold a woman that is the authour of transgression the mother of sinne the weapon of the Devill the cause of our expulsion out of Paradise I but Christ honoured women in lying in the wombe of a woman he appeared first to women after his resurrection and made them Apostolos apostolorum Apostles to preach his resurrection to the Apostles Paul preached to women There have beene women of speciall note Sarah the Mother of the faithfull Hester the nurse and preserver of the faithfull women that ministred to Christ of their owne substance among whom was Ioanna the wife of Chuza Herods steward Theano Crotoniatis was a Philosopher and a Poet too Pythagoras learned his naturall Philosophie of his sister Themistocleas Ignatius wrote to two women the blessed Virgin Mary Maria Cassabolita Cyrillus Alexandrinus Basil Chrystome Ambrose Augustine Fulgentius Bernard wrote to women Hierome wrote to many to Salvina to Faria to Agoruchia to Celantia Asella Marcellina most of his workes he dedicated to Eustochiam a noble and worthy Virgin S. Paul wrote to Apphia and S. Iohn heere to a woman The mother is first severally by her selfe described then both of them joyntly together by his singular love to them all Shee is set forth 1. By her internall and spirituall estate she was elect 2. By her externall and worldly estate she was a Lady Some of the Popish interpreters will have her name to bee elect to the Lady Elect. 1. That is a saucie transposing of the Greeke words it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Lady Elect but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Elect Lady 2. As S. Iohn doth not set downe his owne name no more doth he hers 3. The same title is given to her sister verse ult and no likelyhood that two sisters should have one and the same name there was not so great a penurie of names Elect is nomen appellativum non proprium a noune appellative not a proper name First she was a Lady a Widdow by all probabilitie else S. Iohn would have made some mention of her husband She was magna nobilis domina a great and a Noble Lady sayes Lyra shee had an ample familie she was an entertainer of the Preachers and professors of the Christian faith Catharinus supposeth she had a Iurisdiction she was a Lady of some Towns Mannours and Lordships The unlearned Anabaptists use that place as an hammer to beate downe all the seats of superiority In Christ neither bond nor free Iew nor Grecian Male nor female we are all one in Christ Iesus True indeed we are all one in Christo but not in Mundo as S Augustine doth well distinguish in Christ there is no difference but in the world there is Men and women are to be respected according to those places of honour whereunto God hath advanced them in the world whether they be Kings or Queenes Lords or Ladyes Christ makes an honourable mention of the Queene of Shebah S. Luke dedicates his Gospell and the history of the Acts to Noble Theophilus To the most noble governour Felix saies Claudius Lysias Most Noble Festus sayes S. Paul heere S. Iohn gives the vertuous woman the title of a Lady whom God hath honoured let us honour too It is he that setteth up and pulleth downe according to his heavenly pleasure otherwise we shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fighters against God as G●maleel speaketh Yea though the persons bee bad yet the places are to be respected and they in regard of their places But this was a good an holy and religious Lady an elect Lady most interpret a select Lady egregia an egregious Lady a grege segregata separated from the common sort a famous and illustrious Lady But I see no reason why it may not be expounded according to the native signification of the word it is well translated in the English The elect Lady Elect in Gods eternall Counsell as S. Peter called the strangers dispersed through Pontus Galatia Cappadocia Bythinia Asia Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father S. Paul salutes Rufus that was elect and chosen of the Lord Rom. 16.13 He speakes of Clement and other his fellow-labourers that their names were written in the booke of life Philip. 4.3 She had learned Christ as the truth is in Iesus she had a lively faith in Christ she had a demonstration of her faith by good workes by them she made her calling and election sure therefore he pronounceth her to be one of Gods elect we must judge of the salvation of others by their love and charity It becommeth us saith S. Paul so to judge of you all he was farre more charitable than they that judge none shall be saved unlesse they be of their owne stampe and goe to such a Lecture and Sermons as they doe Now he writes not to her alone but to her children too To the Elect Lady and her Children by nature and by grace too as Aquinas speaketh children both men and women but the women were Virgins sayes Lorinus because they were at home with her so were the men-children too As he made great account of the mother so of the children too the proverbe is love me and love my dogge much more love me and my children we will pray for the Kings life and for his sonnes say they So S. Iohn heere salutes the mother and the children too Vpon this he makes a testification of his love to them which is first averred in respect of himselfe 2. amplified in regard of others 3. Illustrated by the procreant cause of love in them all verse 2. Touching himselfe he pronounceth with an ardent affection whom I love in the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the which men or women I love how in truth for in the Greeke it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with an article in the truth but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in truth that is truely unfeignedly Let love be without dissimulation There is too much dissembled love in the world Love one another saith Saint Peter with a pure heart unfeignedly A kisse is a token of love For the which cause it was an use in the Primitive Church for Christians to kisse at the celebration of the Supper saith Saint Chrysostome But as he complaines many doth it with the lippes onely ac si in scenares ageretur as if they were on a stage Valentine being an Arrian kissed Ambrose but he reproved him for it Quid oscularis eum quem non agnoveris Why dost thou kisse him whom thou carest not for Greete one another with an holy kisse
Love not in word and tongue onely but indeed and truth Ioabs health and Iudas kisse are too frequent Let us love truely as Saint Iohn did Having averred it for his owne part he do●h amplifie it on the behalfe of others Not I onely It might joy her that hee loved her being the disciple whom Iesus loved but it must needs be a greater joy to her that all did love her Yet it is with a restraint all that have knowne the truth revealed in the Word for thy Word is truth saith Christ. All that have knowne it he speakes De notitia approbationis as Aquinas doth well interpret it of the knowledge not of speculation but of approbation that approve love and embrace the truth for indeed they that be of the houshold of faith are lead by one and the same Spirit therefore where one loves all love But is this so great a matter to be loved of all Woe be to you when all men speake well of you true when all tag and rag good and bad speake well of us For then wee should be happier than Christ himselfe was he could not have every mans good word Some said he was a good man others nay but he deceiveth the people All did not love him but all the godly all that loved the truth and where they love God himselfe loves therefore wee are to rejoyce in the love of the faithfull VERSE 2. THe last is the procreant cause of this love Where first there is the Loadstone that drew this love 2. The permanencie of this love in regard of the foundation whereupon it is built for the truths sake truth lasts for ever so shall this love doe They did not love her because she was an honourable Lady a beautifull Lady c. but because of the truth of the Gospell that had taken firme roote in her heart Some love for pleasure Isaac loved Esau because Venison was his meate that was his delight An adulterer loves an harlot for the satisfying of his filthy lust Some love for profit they love their friends as they doe their cowes horses and grounds for the benefit they reape by them Some love for beauty so Shechem loved Dinah Some love for honour and promotion in hope to be preferred by such a great man All these stand upon a tickle ground pleasure vanisheth and that quickly too then love vanisheth together with it When Amnon had gotten his pleasure of Tamar he hated her more than before he loved her Riches betake themselves to their wings as Salomon speaketh and flie away then love flies away too If a rich man become a poore man we set not much by him Honour is mutable the naile that is now aloft is in the dirt as it fell out with Haman then he is little regarded of any of his followers Beauty fades away like a flower then love fades away too love for the truths sake for Christs sake for the Gospels sake and that will be a permanent love But what is this truth Is not that changeable No verily For as Aquinas doth well distinguish though fides qua creditur ceaseth when we be in heaven yet fides quae creditur shall be in heaven though justifying faith ceaseth for we shall not neede to beleeve in Christ any longer when we shall see him face to face Yet the doctrine of faith which wee beleeve touching eternall happinesse purchased by Christ shall remaine when wee be in heaven the truth shall be with us for ever VERSE 3. THat shall suffice for the description now to the precation Where 1. There is the blessing prayed for 2. the persons frow whom 3. An addition made to those blessings The blessings prayed for are three grace mercy peace these be with you In the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall be with you but the future is put for the imperative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be with you and abide with you forever Aquinas doth thus distinguish them Gratia culpam delens Grace wiping away the guilt of Sinne Misericordiam poenam indulgens mercy remitting the punishment of sinne Pax Deo reconcilians peace reconciling us to God rather Grace is the roote the undeserved love and favour of God by which we are all that we are By the grace of God I am that I am Without him we are nothing the other are the branches budding from it Mercy which hath reference to our manifold miseries Peace arising of our reconciliation to God by Christ Being justified by faith wee have peace with God The persons from whom First from God the Father as the Author of all goodnesse Every good gift commeth from above form the Father of lights c. Then from Christ the Sonne of God and the Mediatour of mankinde who is 1. The Lord the Lord and King of the Church 2. Iesus a sweete Saviour that hath saved us from our sinnes 3. Christ the annointed King Priest and Prophet of the Church the Sonne of the Father Therefore God as well as the Father Where then is the holy Ghost Saint Augustine will have him to be comprehended in the gifts for we can have no gift but by the holy Ghost the destributer of them Or as Aquinas saith the holy Ghost is understood in the other two persons being nexus utriusque he sacred bond that unites them together The blessings annexed and added are truth and love Caietan with some others referre them to Christ the Sonne of the Father in truth and love that is his true and beloved Sonne they be rather to be adjoyned to the former and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with truth i. the vertue of truth and love to God and man these make a demonstration of the former to the world VERSE 4. NOw let us enter into the bowels of the Epistle The matter of it is a gratulation and an exhortation verse 5. First he praiseth her for the time past then he doth incite her for the time to come the gratulation is expressed by a joy wherewith he was ravished where 1. There is the greatnesse of his joy 2 the object of his joy 3. the rule for the ordering of it I rejoyced Christians may be joyfull Rejoyce in the Lord alwayes againe I say rejoyce At that time Iesus rejoyced in his Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he danced as it were for joy as here Saint Iohn rejoyceth in his Spirit and not a little but greatly too As the wise men rejoyced with an exceeding great joy when they found Christ. So he rejoyced with a great joy that he found of her children walking in the truth of Christ there is the object of his joy That I found by diligent observation when I was at thy house and by the constant relation of others since Of thy Children not all but some of them seldome are all good
3. an explication of it in the former clause of the 7 verse It is commended 1. by a negation of the newnesse of it 2. by an affirmation of the oldnesse of it New things are suspicious and not readily entertained What new doctrine is this say they of our Saviour the Philosophers at Athens came flocking about Saint Paul saying May we not know what this new doctrine whereof thou speakest is Tertullian calls Marcion hesternum a bird of yesterdayes hatching so is not this It is no new commandement Yet Christ calls it a new one A new Commandement give I unto you that ye love another It is both new and old old ratione substantiae new ratione circumstantiae old in regard of the substance new in regard of the circumstance 1. because being corrupted by the glosses of the Pharisees it was purged and made new as it were by Christ as a rustie sword if it be scowred is a new sword 2. because it is pressed by a new example the example of all examples the example of Christ himselfe Even as I have loved you 3. Because it should never waxe old but bee alwayes fresh and new in memory and practise 4. Because then it lay hid in the darke and obscure mint of the old Testament now it commeth out of the fresh mint of the new testament It is now delivered and made knowne to the world more apertly and plainely than before a picture done over with new colours is a new picture The newnesse of it hath beene disclaimed now the oldnesse of it is proclaimed that which we had from the beginning of the creation of the promulgation of the law or from the beginning of our conversion and calling to Christ howsoever it is old written in codice cordis in the booke of our heart by the pen of nature and in codice legis in the booke of the law published to the world To put us out of doubt he names it That we love one another 1. Love is eum complementum legis the fulfilling of the law It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a recapitulation of the whole Law Hee that hath love keepes the Law He that wants love is a continuall breaker of the Law 2. Love is indicium Christianorum the badge of Christians Hereby shall all men know that ye be my disciples if ye love one another No love no disciple of Christ. 3. It is condimentum omnium virtutum actionum the sauce that seasons all vertues and actions without that they be all unsavory If I speake with the tongue of men and angels if I had all knowledge all faith that I could remove mountaines if I fed the poore with all my goods gave my body to be burnt yet if I have not love I am nothing Though we come to Church never so diligently heare Sermons never so frequently receive the Sacraments never so devoutly discourse of Religion never so eloquently yet if we have not love we are nothing Let them be Baptized in the name of Christ saith Augustine let them signe themselves with the signe of the Crosse let them answer Amen sing Halleluja in the Congregation let them goe to Church yea let them make Churches yet if they have not love they are not the Sonnes of God but the sonnes of the devill What an admirable thing is love If we have that all things are well had if that be wanting it is in vaine to have all things Quanta est Charitas quae si desiit frustra habentur caetera Si adsit recte habentur omnia Aug. in pirmam Eppst. Ioan. 4. Love is vinculum perfectionis the bond of perfection this ties us together We are as shaves scattered without love 5. It is Sigillum electionis a seale of our election Hereby we know that we are translated from death to life because we love the brethren He that loveth not his brother abideth in death No assurance of salvation without love 6. God is love saith Saint Iohn a golden sentence Saint Paul in his whole Chapter of love 1 Cor. 13. Spake not so much in the commendation of love as Saint Iohn doth in this one short and pithy sentence The devill is hatred Of that he hath his name Satan an hater and all spitefull and malicious persons are of the devill all loving men and women are of God Many allurements to make us in loue with love yet sincere love is as a stranger among us Rara avis in terris a blacke Swan upon the earth Where is there a Damon and a Pithias Scant two neighboures in a Towne that entirely love one another yet never a page almost in the Bible but one way or other harpeth on this string When Saint Iohn was so old that he was faine to be lead to the Pulpit he went up spake these words sundry times My little children love one another and so came downe as if that were the most necessary thing to be inculcated to the people and so it is indeede VERSE 6. IN the winding of it up he gives us a touchstone for the triall of love This is love that wee walke after his commandements Whereof this is a maine and principall to love one another according to that of our blessed Saviour If you love me keepe my Commandements If the subject love his Prince he will observe his Statutes as neere as he can If a friend love his friend he will doe what he requests him if he may lawfully doe it and it be in his power If a child love his Parents he will obey his Parents in the Lord. How can we say we love Christ when we cast his commandements behind our backs Now there followeth the other branch of the exhortation to constancie in the truth which is 1. propounded then corroborated and urged verse 7. This is the Commandement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that commandement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after a kind of excellencie I will raise you up a Prophet like to me him shall ye heare This is my beloved Sonne heare him This commandement he doth illustrate by the antiquitie of it as ye have heard from the beginning How the Rhemists say by tradition from the Apostles which is come to us from man to man from Bishop to Bishop Heresies may goe from man to man from Bishop to Bishop as Arianisme did and in a short time overspread all the world It is a manifest argument of infidelity and a sure token of pride saith Basil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to reject that which is written and to bring in that which is unwritten This is the commandement that as ye have heard from the beginning by God himselfe The seede of the Woman shall breake the head of the Serpent Which is explained at large in the Writings of the Prophets and Apostles whereon the Church is built That having set our hand to Christs Plough we should
come joyfully one to another yet the joy of these meetings may be dashed sundry kind of wayes and though they be never so full of joy yet that and the meetings themselves have an end Let us prepare for that meeting when we shall meete Christ in the ayre and abide with him for ever never to depart any more VERSE 13. THe other part of the conclusion is a salutation sent to the Lady The children of thy elect sister greete thee Here Lorinus to avoid that absurdity that two sisters should have one name insinuates that the elect here maybe cognomen not nomen a surname not her proper name as Josephs surname was Iustus I but there is no surname set downe without the name premised therefore this is a meere shift Her sister is called elect in the same sence that she was because of faith and other graces of the Spirit that were in her as signes of her election Did not her sister send greeting to her as well as her children It may be her children were now with St. Iohn for their further instruction so was not the mother They should have used a more reverent tearme their duty or service to be remembred to their Aunt It is too familiar to send salutations Not onely equalls did salute but inferiors too the reapers of Boaz saluted him but inferiors salute after a more submisse manner though it be not expressed Touching salutations looke the Epistle to Philemon Amen Betweene the former words and Amen Aquinas interserts these Gracia tecum Grace be with thee Then Amen hath indeede something to answer to but those saith Catharinus are not in correctis libris The old translation hath them not Amen here may have reference to the meeting before mentioned Amen So be it God grant it may be so A COMMENTARIE VPON The third Epistle of St. IOHN VERSE 1. THe parts of this Epistle are these 1. An entrance into it verse 1 and 2. 2 The matter conteined in it verse 3. an entrance is made into it by an inscription v. 1. by a precation v. 2. The inscription pointeth out the party writing and the party to whom he writeth the person writing is described as before by his office An Elder a chiefe governour in the Church For a more ample discussing of it the reader is to be referred to the former Epistle verse 1. The person to whom he writeth is set forth by his name and by the speciall love Saint Iohn beares to him Whereof there is first an expression Welbeloved then an explication how hee loveth him in truth His name is Gajus some collect out of the seventh verse that he was a Iew as if he were opposed to the Gentiles that be there mentioned yet not he but they that came from him whom hee entertained are apposed to the Gentiles By his name he should rather be a Romane for Gajus or Cajus is a Romane name G and C are commutable letters To let all conjectures passe there be three of this name in Scripture Gajus of Macedonia Act. 19.29 Gajus of Derbe Act. 20.4 Gajus of Corinth 1 Cor. 1.14 Whom Paul baptized whom he termeth his Hoste the Hoste of the whole Church Rom. 16.23 By all probability this was hee who continued his hospitality to Saint Iohns dayes Christ saith of the woman that powred oyntment upon his head Wheresoever this Gospell shall be preached throughout all the world there shall also this that she hath done be spoken of for a memoriall of her The memoriall of the just shall be blessed but the name of the wicked shall rot Origen by dedicating most of his bookes to Ambrose a wealthy Noble man which was his Patron and Hierome by doing the like to Estochium a renowned Virgin and bountiful to good uses continue the remembrance of them to all ages and the fame of Gajus shall last so long as the Epistle of Saint Iohn lasteth this should be a spurre to others to the like This Gajus was deepe in Saint Iohns bookes and in his heart too he calls him his Welbeloved he gave not this title to the Lady to whom he wrote some say to avoyde suspition of familiarity with her being a woman a frivilous excuse for Saint Paul calls Persis and Apphia beloved without any feare of that Others suppose because it was too familiar and did not agree to the dignity of a Lady what needeth all this he gave her a more magnificent title when he stiled her Elect this was a singular comfort and honour too to Gajus that he was beloved of such a worthy man as Saint Iohn The Disciple whom Iesus loved Then he makes an explication of his love whom I love in the truth that is truely and unfeinedly See more 2 Iohn 1. VERSE 2. THe other part of the entrance is a precation or wish where 1. an inculcation or repetition of his beloved that hee might have the greater assurance of it and because there might seeme to be some defect in the former sentence here hee makes a supply of it I wish unto thee 2. An enumeration of the blessings wished prosperitie and health which are illustrated 1. by the priority or eminencie of them above all things 2. by an argument a pari of the like in his soule The vulgar translation renders it I pray which all Popish interpreters follow we will not sticke with them for that praying is a kinde of wishing and wishing is a kinde of praying Above all things in the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of all things but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before all things therefore saith Catharinus for mine owne part I would have translated it prae omnibus or ante omnia before or above all things of such importance they be But let us take a view of them 1. that thou mayest prosper 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that thou mayest take a good way goe well a metaphor from travellers S. Paul prayeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same word that here is used that hee may have a prosperous journey to the Romans from thence it is translated to all prosperity whatsoever So Saint Paul useth the word Every first day let every man put aside as God hath prospered him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and wee use to say in our common speech How doth such a one goe on that is how doth he prosper I wish that thou mayest prosper in thy children in thy servants in thy sheepe in thy cattle in thy corne in thy wine in all things appertaining to thee Worldly prosperity is a singular blessing of God which hee often bestoweth on his children It is sayd of the godly man riches and treasures shall be in his house the Lord blessed Abraham wonderfully that hee became great he gave him sheepe and beeves silver and gold Camels and Asses men servants and mayd servants hee had 318 in his house that were
sin as we have but the greatest of all is his owne goodnesse and mercy Isai. 9.6 Iohn 3.16 Both had sinned Angels and men Why was Christ made a man to dye for men and not an Angell to redeeme Angels from everlasting death because it was his owne good will and pleasure his singular love to mankinde Let us therefore magnifie him for it from generation to generation Some as Augustine observeth tooke occasion from hence to be proud and insolent See Christ tooke on him our nature not the Angels therefore we are exalted above Angels we have just cause to thinke highly of our selves As if a sick man should boast the Physitian came to my house not to my neighbours therefore I am a better man than my neighbour the reason why Christ tooke on him thy nature not the Angels was because thou wert sick of sin so were not the good Angels Neverthelesse it is a preferment to us that Christ should assume our nature to his our corruptible nature to his incorruptible as if a King should take the patcht cloake of a beggar and annex it to his royall cloake decked with Pearles and precious Stones Now as Christ hath honoured our nature in becomming man so let not us men dishonour our owne nature by drunkennesse uncleannesse covetousnesse nor by wrangling and contending one with another Christ hath graced our nature let not us disgrace it VERSE 17. WHereupon he returnes to his conclusion which he would have to be infixed in our memories I will declare thy name to my brethren which he could not doe unlesse hee were a man as his brethren are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 debuit he ought because it was his fathers will and his owne will too necessitate non coactione In all things appertaining to the substance not to the corruption of our nature He was like unto us in all things sin only excepted He was like to us in all the faculties and members of soule and body He had the same affections that we have yet unstained with sin We are sorrowfull so was He My soule is heavie to the death We are joyfull so was He Luke 10.21 In that houre Iesus rejoyced in spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are zealous so was He the zeale of thy house hath eaten me up We are hungry so was hee Marke 3.5 Wee wonder at all things so did He. We are afraid of death so was He My soule is heavie to the death Come to the Body We are little ones grow in stature so Christ Luke 2. ult We are hungry thirsty sleepy so was He He slept in a Ship Mat. 8.24 not in a Church We are weary so was he He rested himselfe on Iacobs-Well Iohn 4 6. We dye so He died also As He is like to us so let us be like him in meekenesse patience charity in praying for our enemies Brethren All are his brethren quoad naturam the faithfull quoad gratiam Iohn 20.17 He will not be ashamed to call us Brethren at the day of judgement Mat. 25.40 and shall not we call one another brother The King and Subjects are brethren the Ministers and their People rich and poore are brethren and let us not be snapping and snarling one at another but live lovingly together as brethren Both members are unfolded in the words following that is he was a faithfull High Priest Appertaining to God In divine not in humane matters The High Priest made an attonement for the people Levit. 16. So did Christ for his people GOD and man were fallen out Christ made us friends God was displeased with us he pacified his wrath towards us which the Father by an audible voice witnessed from heaven Matth. 3.17 This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased How by the bloud of his Crosse which was Gods bloud Acts 20.28 We were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold but with the precious bloud of Christ as of a Lambe without blemish and without spot 1 Pet. 1.18 19. In many things we offend all who then can be saved our sins for number exceed the sands of the Sea the least sin is sufficient to throw us into hell without Christ. But by Christ we are reconciled to his Father and have peace with him Col. 1.20 Luke 2.14 Rom. 5.1 Oh I have sinned but 1 Iohn 2.2 Christ is the propitiation for our sins Worthy then is the Lamb the Lord Iesus to receive all glory Men at Christ-masse use to take a greater liberty to sin to quaffe swill and carowse to open the floud-gates of all impiety but the consideration of Christs comming into the world should be a bridle to restraine us from sin Christ came now to make a reconciliation for our sins and shall we plunge our selves deeper into the Sea of sin God forbid The love of Christ should constraine us to forsake sin it should not make us wallow in the filthy puddle and sinke of sin Wilt thou make much of the knife that cut thy Fathers throat David though he longed for the water of the Well of Bethlehem yet when it was brought to him by three of his Worthies he refused to drinke of it saying Is not this the bloud of the men that went in jeopardie of their lives 2 Sam. 23.17 Sin cost the bloud of Christ let us not then drinke iniquity like water VERSE 18. HEE prosecuteth the former branch touching mercy As CHRIST was like to us in nature so hee was tempted as we are Saepius ipse miser miseris succurrere disce Art thou tempted whether thou art the child of GOD or not A shrowd temptation wherewith the best men and women are shaken So was CHRIST If thou beest the Sonne of God the Devill calls it into question and would have had CHRIST to doubt of it Art thou tempted with povertie with want of things necessarie for this life So Was Christ from his Cradle to his grave he was borne in a stable laid in a cratch had not an hole to hide his head in he had no money in his purse but was faine to send to the Sea for some he kept his Passeover in an other mans chamber was buryed in an other mans grave Art thou tempted with malevolent tongues with some that are ever rayling on thee So was Christ hee was termed a Wine bibber a glutton c. Art thou tempted with sicknesse the toothach the headach the cholike the gout c. We never read that Christ was sicke because he had no sinne in him yet being clothed with our nature hee knowes what belongs to paine and will succour us in all our distresses Art thou persecuted Herod sought his life as soone as he was borne A rich man that hath a good fire continually in his house a table furnished with all delicates that lyes soft on a bed of dowlne he cannot so well pitty a poore man as one poore man may doe another CHRIST being rich would become poore he would bee a man
did the rest Enoch lived so long and he dyed therefore certainely he dyed not Some maintaine this assertion that Enoch is still alive together with Elias they are kept by the providence of GOD in paradise where either they eate of the fruites of the Garden or live without meat miraculously as Moses Elias and CHRIST did forty dayes together then towards the end of the world these two witnesses shal come forth shew themselves openly to all encounter with Antichrist convert the Iewes and in the end shall be put to death But I proceed Saint Paul sayes 1 Cor. 15.51 So Enoch did not dye yet he was changed in soule and body extraordinarily assumed in coelestem patriam as Calvin speaketh yet not in coelestem gloriam freed from the miseries of this life yet not fully glorified Some glory now they have yet their full glory is now deferred till we all meete together in a perfect man in Christ Iesus It is here registred as a singular honour that God vouchsafed to Enoch to take him away They are sometimes deepest in GODS bookes that are soonest taken out of this world being fitted for it by GOD Almighty We read of two Trophenius and Agamedes that having built a Temple to Apollos required of the GOD such a reward as he thought to be best for men he granted it and within three dayes they were found dead The best we read of in Scripture tarryed not long here Iosias was taken away in the flower of his age our Saviour CHRIST lived not past thirty foure yeeres because Enoch pleased GOD he tooke him away Saint Peter being in the Mount said it is good for us to be here let us heere make our Tabernacles So we say of the Mountaine of this world it is good for us to be heere ôh that we might make our Tabernacles heere wheras indeed it were best for us to be taken out of this wretched and sinful world as Enoch was Here we are with wicked and deceitfull men there we shall be with Holy Angels here we sin continually there we shall cease sinning heere we are subject to innumerable calamities there all teares shall be wiped from our eyes Let us desire God to prepare us for death and then to take us away when it shall seeme best to his heavenly will Pope Siricius out of these words Rom. 8.8 framed this Argument they that be in the flesh cannot please God Married persons are in the flesh ergo Enoch was a maried man he begat Sons and Daughters yet he pleased God Abraham was a Maried man he had two Wives and many Children yet he pleased God in so much as heaven is called the bosome of Abraham Zachary and Elizabeth were Maried folkes yet they pleased God and walked in all his Commandements without reproofe Spiridion Bishop of Cyprus a Maried person yet he protested 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet never a whit the worse for divine duties Let us not be drowned in the pleasure of Mariage as he in the Gospell I have maried a Wife c. Let us keepe the marriage bed undefiled bring up our children in the feare and nurture of the Lord instruct our households in the wayes of God and out of Marriage we may fly to heaven as also out of a single life VERSE 6. IT is confirmed by an axiome in Divinity none can please God without faith he pleased God Ergo. Whereupon he sets downe two properties of faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be supplyed He doth not say it is hard or difficult but impossible Not to offer oblations to God that did Cain but to please God The workes of the unregenerate doe not completely please God The Iustice of Aristides the gravity of Cato the chastity of Lucretia the liberality of Caesar were not simply good works quoad formam or finem neither did they please God perfectly in as much as they wanted faith Fides est mater radix bonorum operum they did them not in faith to Gods glory therefore his soule tooke not that pleasure in them which otherwise he would have done He doth not say without policie Iacob a plaine man yet hee pleased God not without learning honour riches Lazarus a poore man yet pleased God not without beauty Ebedmelech a blackmore yet hee pleased God but not without faith Therefore let us all bee suiters to God to give and encrease faith in us that wee may please him in this life and bee glorified with him in the world to come I but all flatter themselves that they have faith wee have all faith Have yee so Saint Paul sayes all men have not faith 2 Thes. 3.2 Examine it by that touchstone Gal. 5.6 1 Ioh. 4.20 doest thou boyle in hatred against any of thy brethren doest thou say with Achab there is one Michaiah but I hate him one neighbour but I hate him then thou hast not true faith for faith and love goe hand in hand together Where there is no love there is no true faith Then he sets downe the two properties of faith That commeth that is that believeth pedibus fidei Iohn 6. Verse 44. That He is the Maker and Governour of all that sees all and judges all The foole hath said in his heart there is no God There be too many of these fooles it is to be feared in the lap of the Church Tit. 1. ult they professe they know God but by their workes they deny them We goe masked under the vizzard of Religion yet in our hearts wee say there is no God Wee speake faire and meane fowle pretend love and intend mischiefe Wee lye coozen dissemble circumvent and defraud one another as if there were not a God that sees all our juglings A rewarder In this life Gen. 24.35 The Lord blessed Abraham wonderfully so that he became great he gave him Sheep and Beeves Silver and Gold men servants and maide servants and Camels and Asses he rewarded Ioseph with honour Hester with a kingdome Dorcas with life againe In the life to come Apoc. 22.12 And behold I come shortly and my reward is with me to give every man according as his worke shall be We shall bee rewarded for our service yet not of merit but of mercy Luk. 12.32 2 Tim. 4.8 If we come diligently to Church as Hannah heare Sermons with a reverent attention as Lydia lay them up in our hearts and practise them in our lives as the blessed Virgin Mary if we come to the Holy Communion with sincere affections to have our faith strengthned and to become new men if we give with cheerefulnesse to GOD 's Minister that feeds our soules to the poore members of IESUS CHRIST God sees it and will reward it with joy of conscience in this life and with eternall happinesse in the world to come We serve not a churlish Nabal but a liberall master that will reward us for our service yea a cup of cold water shall not be unrewarded
no good with it you make your riches your enemies they will condemne you at the latter day If yee doe good with them you make them your friends and these good workes of yours will follow you at your dying day Yet some are so farre from doing of good that they doe hurt by secret counsell and perswasion Many are like rotten trees that doe no good till they dye they yeeld nor fruit while they stand when they bee cut downe they make a good fire to warme many withall So it may be there is good cheere at a rich mans buryall a dole then to refresh the poore withall that did little good while hee was alive Let us remember this Lesson to doe good and to distribute God is well pleased with such Sacrifices hee is so well pleased with them that hee will give us a Kingdome for them in the life to come Come yee blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdome c. when I was hungry c. Therefore inherit the Kingdome prepared for you VERSE 17. AS they must doe good to all so especially to the Ministers that have the spirituall rule and government of them 1. How they must behave themselves to all in generall 2. what they must doe for him in speciall In the former the duties prescribed and certaine reasons for the enforcing of them The duties are Obedience and Submission It cannot bee denyed but that all of what condition soever must submit themselves to the ministerie of the word yea Kings Princes and Emperours because it is Gods Ordinance and in so doing they submit themselves to GOD which is no disparagement to the greatest of them all Yet touching matters of externall politie in the Church and Common-wealth all on the other side must bee subject to Kings and Princes they may prescribe constitutions even of Religion agreeable to the Law of GOD to Ministers and they must obey them Let every Soule bee subject to the Higher Powers Yet in the Essentiall points of the ministery all must subject themselves to the Rulers of the Church For a more full unfolding of the matter the duties we owe to these Spirituall Fathers are foure 1. Reverence in regard of their Office Alexander reverenced Iaddus Herod Iohn the Baptist. Obadiah called Elias Lord. My father said Iohash to Elisha If wee reverence them not the Word will not have so free a passage among us They that use their Pastours unreverently sin against God 2. Love Have them in exceeding love for their workes sake It is the best worke in the world the Saving of your Soules therefore love them for it You love the Fathers of your bodies that brought you into the world and will yee not love them that beget you with the Word of truth and bring you to a Kingdome Obad. ult 3. Obedience to their doctrine exhortations and admonitions Herod observed Iohn Baptist and did many things You will obey the prescript of the Physition for the health of your bodies though it be a bitter potion you take it well at his hands and will you not obey them that give you counsell for your soules though their reproofes be bitter their rebukes sharpe Tit. 1.13 as the qualitie of the sin requires yet accept of it if they tell you and that in love of your covetousnesse drunkennesse pride malice obey them in the reformation of those vices 4. Is Maintenance All Rulers must be maintained The King hath maintenance due from the people and so must the Minister You receive spirituall things from them and is it much if ye give them carnall They that served at the Altar lived on the Altar and shall not they that preach the Gospell live on the Gospell If the Preachers would preach to us and take nothing wee would like them well but wee grudge at their maintenance an Argument that wee feele not the sweetnesse of the Word of GOD. The Galathians would have plucked out their eyes to doe Paul good withall Wee thinke much to pull money out of our purses to doe him good withall In the feare of GOD if yee be good and religious people discharge the duties that GOD requireth to them that have the Spirituall government and oversight of you Why there bee two reasons to excite us to it the one taken from the matter of their worke the other from the manner of their working They are your watchmen therefore submit your selves to them love them regard them Not over your goods and bodies as the Magistrate is but over your Soules which are more precious not as the fowler watcheth for the bird to catch it and kill it but they watch for the preservation and eternall Salvation of your soules therefore submit your selves to them All Ministers have Curam Animarum none can bee a Minister without that charge Your Soules are subject to many enemies there bee innumerable devils that seeke to carry away your Soules As the henne watches for the chickens against the kite so doe they for you against the devill There be sundry Heretiques that go about to infect your Soules with the poyson of false doctrine Papists Anabaptists Schismatiques Priests and Iesuites Arrians Nestorians c. The Ministers watch for you against them There be sectaries that for small matters would draw you from the Church there be many dangerous sinnes that are ready to cut the throate of your Soules covetousnesse pride ignorance c. they keepe a watch over you and labour to bring you out of those sinnes Therefore esteeme highly of them make much of these watchmen This is illustrated by a spurre that pricks them to this watching they know they must be countable for your Soules therefore they watch over them Iacob gave account to Laban of every sheepe he had if any were lost or torne by the wild beasts hee required it at his hands hee made it good so wee must give an account to IESUS CHRIST the great Shepheard of every sheepe in our fold This makes us to watch carefully over your Soules Some are to give a single account We must all give account of our Stewardship as private persons for themselves alone some a double accompt as Magistrates Masters Fathers Ministers therefore wee had neede to looke to it to cast over our Bookes betimes in this life that our accompts may be joyfull in the life to come That wee may say Here am I and the children that thou hast given mee Here am I Lord IESU and the sheepe that thou hast given mee Suffer us to meddle with you to reprehend that which is amisse in you for we must give an accompt for you Therefore we cannot let you alone wee cannot nay wee must not permit you to sleepe in your sinnes wee must lift up our voices as trumpets to waken you because wee are to give accompt for you The second Reason is taken from the manner of their working they would gladly doe their worke with joy they would watch over you with
house and Temple Remember that our God is a God of peace let us be peaceable Wee have had the Title now to the effect the raising up of Christ from the dead elementia in collatione pacis potentia in suscitatione filij The party raised is set forth 1. By his Sovereignty 2. By his Name 3. By his Office For his Sovereignty He is our Lord. Ye call me Master and Lord. Not every one that sayeth to me Lord c. He created us He redeemed us He hath marryed us to Himselfe therefore we are to call Him Lord as Sarah did Abraham For His Name it is IESUS the onely SAVIOUR of the world There is no other name whereby wee can be saved but by the Name of IESUS Moses was the giver of the Law yet not he but Iosuah brought the people into Canaan So they be not the workes of the Law but Christ alone that carryes us into heaven the celestiall Canaan For His Office Hee is the Shepheard of the sheepe Cyrus my Shepheard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where observe 1. What manner of Shepheard he is 2. How hee comes to bee our Shepheard If ye will know what manner of Shepheard he is he is a great one There be little Shepheards as the Rectours Curates of every Congregation but Hee is the great Shepheard 1. Great in the extent of the flocke the universall Shepheard of the whole Church throughout the world the Shepheard of Iewes and Gentiles so is none but he 2 Great in authority The sheepe are His Hee ownes them Simon feede my sheepe feede my lambes Peter as other Pastors feede them but the sheepe are Christs Iob had 7000. sheepe he had many Shepheards that kept them yet the sheepe were Iobs So Christ hath many thousands of sheepe in Christendome in the world Sundry Shepheards he places over them yet the sheepe are Christs not ours 3 Great in the charge which hee hath taken on him hee is the Shepheard of soule and body too the great Shepheard of our soules 1 Pet. 2. ult He hath care of body and soule too 4 Great in humility the King of Kings yet hee abased himselfe to be a Shepheard 5 Great in knowledge Iohn 10.3 6 Great in love and kindenesse Hee gave Himselfe for the sheepe 7 Great in power none can take them out of his hands All the Divells in hell all the wicked men on the earth cannot cozen him of one sheepe Be thankefull to God for this great Shepheard Of whom of the sheepe that is the righteous They are most fitly resembled to sheepe 1 Sheepe are humble Learne of Me I am humble and meeke 2 Sheepe are harmelesse be as innocent as Doves as harmelesse as sheepe 3 Sheepe are profitable for backe and belly 4 They are ruled by their Shepheard So whatsoever thou commandest us we will doe 5 Sheepe are lead into pastures and folds 6 They are obnoxious to many dangers to Wolves Briers Theives Dogges So many are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord delivers them out of all Happy are the sheepe that have such a Shepheard But how came He to be Shepheard Sayd the chiefe Captaine with a great summe of money obteined I this burgeship But it cost Christ a greater summe even His bloud whereby the everlasting covenant is confirmed Acts 20.28 The wine in the Lords Supper is a lively representation of this bloud The wine is red So was the bloud of CHRIST the wine is powred out into the cup So the bloud of CHRIST was powred forth for our sinnes The grapes are pressed before there is any wine So was CHRIST Wine comforts a man hee hath given him wine to make him a glad heart So the consideration of the bloud of Christ that was shed for the remission of our sins is a singular comfort to the soules of Christians By this bloud He came to be the Shepheard of the Church and this is that bloud that ratifies GODS everlasting Covenant The Covenant I am thy GOD and the GOD of thy seede is an everlasting Covenant Such as the man is such is his bond and word It is good dealing with honest men A man may be bold to build on their word And such as GOD is such is His Covenant an everlasting GOD and an everlasting Covenant of His Kingdome there shall bee no end and of His Covenant there shall be no end As He is our GOD now So he will be for ever Let this stay us up when we are ready to faint in all distresses This is that great Shepheard of the sheepe which GOD hath brought againe from the dead But was hee not able to bring himselfe from the dead Yes verily He raised up this Temple Himselfe He presented Himselfe alive Acts 1.3 Yet in respect of His humanity GOD is sayd to have brought Him from the dead which He did after a glorious manner the Angels waiting on the Sepulcher the earth trembling the graves opening sundry of the Saints rising with Him and appearing to many Our Saviour truely dyed on the Crosse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All the breath went out of His body it was wrapt up in linnen cloathes layed in the Sepulcher there it continued three dayes and nights yet God brought Him againe from the dead Hee was seene of His Apostles and others fourty dayes together they beheld the print of the nailes in His hands and feet they eat and dranke with Him and looked on Him when Hee went into Heaven Even so the same God shall bring us againe from the dead The Head is risen therefore the members shall rise the first fruits are in the barne of Heaven therefore we that are the second fruits shall be gathered thither The husband is in Heaven therefore the wife shall be in Heaven Where I am they also that believe in mee shall bee there Hee brought CHRIST from the dead the third day there was an extraordinary reason in that because His Sacred body might see no corruption Our bodies corrupted with sinne must lye putrifying in the earth till the day of Iudgement Adventus Domini clavis resurrectionis then wee shall meete CHRIST in the ayre and bee translated with Him into His Kingdome of glory Christs resurrection is a pledge of ours VERSE 21. WEE have heard of the person to whom he prayes now to the thing for which he prayes It is perfection in all good workes the which is first set downe then amplified It is comprised in these words make you perfect c. Hee doth not say in faith but in workes workes are a demonstration of faith shew me thy faith by thy workes Except your righteousnesse exceede the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall not enter into the Kingdome of heaven Their righteousnesse was to say not to doe Matth. 23.3 ours must be to say and doe too else wee shall not set a foote into the Kingdome of heaven Not every one that sayeth unto mee Lord Lord c. Therefore
Adam had a Cain Noah had a Cham Abraham had an Ishmael Isaac had an Esau. This collection doe some make but this is not necessarie he might finde them all good in externall carriage and behaviour he goes no further but how did he finde them not sitting still but walking in what not in falshood but in truth that is in the truth of the Gospell embraced professed honoured by them in framing their lives too according to the truth This doth argue the great care of this worthy Lady in the vertuous education of her children which is to bee imitated by all fathers and mothers If wee have a peece of ground we will bestow cost and paines in the manuring tilling and sowing of it If we have a young horse we will be at charge to bring him to a good pace and shall we neglect our children Children are the inheritance of the Lord and the fruite of the wombe is his reward and shall wee reward the giver so unkindly as not to give them education Which consisteth in three things religion learning manners and behaviour touching the former David and Bathsheba joyning together in seasoning the tender yeares of Salomon with the sweete liquor of celestiall pietie by the meanes of Hannah Samuel came presently à mamma corporali ad mammam spiritualem from the corporall to the spirituall dugge Eunice taught Timothy the holy Scripture from his child-hood Hierom would have Laeta to teach her daughter Paula the Canonicall Scriptures beginning with the Psalmes and ending with the Canticles the Psalmes as the easiest and sweetest the Canticles as the hardest To this end chatechizing is very requisite Clemens Alexandrinus was a chatechist Theophilus was Catechized David chatechiseth children There is a forme of catechizing and some principalls of religion specified and that hath the appellation of milke which is fit for children There were catechumenoy in the primitive Church which must say their Catechisme before they were admitted into the Church The Church of England hath a compendious and faithfull catechisme in the booke of Common Prayer which if it were diligently taught and effectually learned both young old should be better acquainted with the principles of religion and being wisely done would be more profitable than preaching without chatechizing for want whereof many that runne to Sermons have beene found to be very ignorant of the maine principles of religion For education in learning Pharaohs daughter trained up her adopted sonne in all the learning of the Aegyptians Aristippus that famous Philosopher was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taught by his mother the eloquent tongue of Cornelia was a great meanes of the eloquence of the Gracchi her two sons Hortensius his eloquence grew up inter paternos sinus in the bosome of his father and mother If we cannot nor have leysure to learne them our selves let us put them forth to learning provide fit teachers for them Iehonathan and Iehiel men of understanding were with the Kings Sonnes 1 Paral. 27.32 Iehoiadah taught King Ioash Saint Paul had Gamaleel to his Tutour a Doctor of the Law Philip procured two School-masters for his sonne Alexander Aristotle for his teacher Leonides for his directer and informer Constantine he procured three severall Tutors for his three severall sonnes one for Divinitie the other for the Civill Law the third for military discipline Concerning manners and behaviour we must bring up our children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in instruction and information that may formare mores frame their manners and put a good minde into them as the word importeth When Diogenes looked upon an unmannerly boy that eate his meate rudely he gave his master a box of the eare because the fault was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not in the Scholler but in the master Gregorie writes of a man well knowne but names him not who had a sonne to whom hee was too indulgent when any thing crossed him he was wont to curse and blaspheme his father never corrected him for it It fell out that he dyed blaspheming in his fathers armes and the Devill was seene to carry him away we are to have a diligent circumspection over the behaviour of our children when they bee young to keepe them from swearing lying pilfering and other vices least they grow up with them when they be old they be flexible in their young yeares proove inflexible afterwards While the waxe is soft ye may set a good impression on it as well as a bad the print of a Dove as well as of a vulture when it is hard ye cannot ye may safely bend a young plant so can yee not an old tree let us have a care of them while they be young least they and we repent afterwards when it is too late Naboth would not give the inheritance of his fathers to Achab children are inheritances given us of God and shall we through our negligence give them to the Devill let us treade in the steps of this renowned Lady give our children the best education we can every kinde of way We have had the greatnesse of his joy together with the object of it then comes the rule for the squaring of their walking wherein he rejoyced Not according to our owne braines or after the traditions of men but as we have received a Commandement from the Father in holy Scriptures This is his Commandement that we beleeve in his Sonne Iesus Christ and love one another Thy word is a light to my feet and a Lanthorne to my steps this is the light after which wee must walke God hath ordeined good workes that we should walke in them Let your light so shine before men that seeing your good workes they may glorifie your father which is in heaven walke as children of the light It is not a Councell which we may follow if we will it is a Commandement that must be obeyed not from a master but from a father and all children must obey their fathers Cammandement VERSE 5. THe other branch of the matter of the Epistle is an exhortatiō or an admonition where 1. he doth exhort to love in special 2 to constancie in the truth in generall v. 6. in the exhortation 1 there is the manner how it is introduced 2. the delivery of it being introduced It is introduced after a most kinde and lovely manner as Saint Paul had authority to command Philemon so Saint Iohn had authoritie to command the Lady yet they doe both rather beseech we might come with a rod yet we had rather come in love and in the spirit of meekenesse as Ambassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you through us we pray you in Christs steed that ye be reconciled to God if we can prevaile any way with you wee are glad Having made a way for it hee delivers it where 1 there is a commendation of the vertue whereunto he doth exhort 2. a nomination of it