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A17389 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of vvriters, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seauen yeeres vveeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1615 (1615) STC 4216; ESTC S120678 703,664 509

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matters of his soule This is a patterne of true singlenesse simplicitie and sincerity 3. as it is opposed to a double heart opposed I say to a hart and a hart and a double heart is eyther a wauering heart or a diuided heart men haue a double hart that wauer and are tossed with vncertainties such as are now for God and godlinesse and shortly after for sinne and the flesh now are resolued to leaue such a fault as perswaded it is a fault and by and by they will to it againe as perswaded it is not a fault heere is no singlenesse of heart And thus the heart is double in respect of times it is double also as diuided in respect of obiects I instance in two things first in matter of worship the people that came to inhabite Samaria had a diuided heart for they feared the God of the Country because of the Lions and they feared the Gods of the nations also 2. Kings 17.33 Such are they that feare Gods threatnings in his word and feare the signes of heauen too Secondly our Sauiour instances in matters of the world The minde which is the eye of the soule cannot be said to be single when it is distracted men cannot serue God and Mammon Math. 6.21.22.23.24 4 As it is opposed to spirituall pride a single heart is an humble heart as Iob sheweth Iob. 9.15.16 and sheweth it selfe in two things First that if God send crosses it will not answer or iustifie it selfe but make supplication and so acknowledge Gods loue as withall it will confesse that God doth iudge them for their corruptions Secondly if the sincere hearted man pray to God and the Lord be pleased to answer him by vnutterable feelings euen by the witnesse of the spirit of adoption yet hee will be so farre from spirituall pride and conceitednesse that fearing before Gods mercies he will be as if he beleeued not that God had heard his voice 5 As opposed to perturbation and disquietnes of the heart arising eyther from the cloudinesse and muddinesse of the Iudgement not able to discerne things that differ Phil. 1.10 or from the vnrest of the conscience shewed by hourely or frequent checkings 2 Cor. 1.12 or from the infidelity or grudging or distrustfulnesse of the heart Act. 2.46 6 As opposed to offensiuenesse and so the single harted man is neither offensiue by wrongs nor by scandalls in respect of wrongs he is innocent as the doue he is no horned beast to pelt and gore others Math. 10.16 and in respect of scandalls hee is desirous to liue without blame from those that are without or griefe to the Faithfull Phil. 2.15 1.10 Out of this may be gathered the signes or properties of a single or sincere harted man 1. He had rather be good then seeme to be so 2. He striues to be good in secret at home in hart as well as openly and abroad 3. He serues not God by flashes or fits but is constant and will pray and serue God at all times 4 He is a plaine man without fraud and guile in matters of the world he loues plainenes and open dealing yet he is not simple for in matters of his soule he is of great reach and forecast and discretion c. 5. He is a bungler in sinne he knowes not the method of Sathan 6. Hee dotes not vpon the world he can vse it as though he vsed it not hee is not tossed with distracting cares 7. He cannot abide mixtures in the worship of his God he is neyther Idolatrous nor superstitious nor humorous 8. Good successe in grace and innocency makes him more humble and fit to grieue for sinne and feele the waight of it he struggles as much against spirituall pride as against other sins 9. He doth not allow himselfe to murmure nor repine eyther through infidelity at God or through grudging enuy at men or distresse himselfe with vaine feare about how he shall doe heereafter 10. He is harmelesse desirous so to liue as he may wrong none in worldly matters nor offend any in matters of religion 11. Hee makes conscience of lesser sinnes as well as greater this is his godly purenesse 12. He is blest of God after some progresse in piety with two singular fauours First he discerneth things that differ Secondly he hath the power quietnesse and ioy of a good conscience Heere also may bee gathered negatiue signes they are not single hearted First that are hypocrites taken vp about the gilding of the outside Secondly that will serue God but at some times 3. That are skilfull in sinne to commend it or impudent to defend deny or extenuate it Fourthly that are of a guilefull and fraudulent disposition Fifthly that are eaten vp with worldly cares Sixthly that are scandalous yea some of Gods children may hang downe their heads vnder the feare that their hearts are not so single as were meere by reason of their spirituall pride the raging muddinesse of iudgement and the vnrest of the heart and conscience Thus of singlenesse of heart in Gods seruants Mens seruants shall approoue themselues to be single hearted 1 If they can honour and obey poore Masters as well as rich 2 If they can be carefull to serue and profit with all heedfulnesse and loue froward masters aswell as the courteous 3 If they can obey for conscience of Gods command though they haue no hope of reward from men or conceit nor feare of shame or punishment 4 If they be as good within as without serue with pure intention 5 If they will bee diligent in the Masters absence aswell as in his presence 6 If they will be true in the least penny not touch their masters goods to purloine it though they might secretly helpe themselues 7 If they will labour when they might be at rest 8 If they will restore what they haue ill gotten or if they bee not able will humble themselues by acknowledgement though none were able to accuse them Vse is for incouragement to all seruants and iourney men to get and expresse this vprightnesse and singlenesse of heart for better is the poore that walketh in his singlenesse of heart then he that abuseth his lips and is a foole Prou. 19.1 Yea we should all take heed that Satan beguile vs not from the simplicity that is in Christ Iesus This of singlenesse of heart Fearing God The second thing required in the maner of their obedience is the feare of God The feare of God in a Seruant must haue foure things in it First a not guiltinesse of the common vices of seruants as swearing whooring stealing gaming c. Secondly they must feare Gods presence euen doe their businesse faithfully not because the eie of their Master but of God is vpon them this is one part of their feare of God Thirdly they must pray daily to God for their Masters and the Family and for good successe vpon their owne labours this prooued that Abrahams seruant feared
to them and yet many of these Seruants were conuerted to the faith of Christ. Where we may learne that mens slaues may be Gods seruants hee hath his elect among these the deare children of God in this world may bee abased to most vile miserie and a most seruile condition The Vses are First to shew that felicitie is not in outward things for Gods seruants that had attained the chiefe good yet were in most base condition in respect of the things of this life Secondly to teach vs patience in lesser crosses whatsoeuer thou art yet thou art not a bondslaue therefore bee patient such as haue beene deare in Gods sight haue beene worse vsed then thou art Thirdly to teach vs compassion to the baser sort of men for Gods elect may be among these Lastly this is a great comfort to the abiect But howsoeuer bought seruants were most vsuall in the Apostles time yet hired seruants were vsed then too and are heere meant aswell as the other yea all seruants though they were nobles seruing in Princes Courts are tied ●o the duties generally heere required And as any seruants haue more knowledge and doe professe sinceritie in religion they are the more tied to bee carefull seruants to men they should not onely be better men and women but better seruants also Thus of the parties exhorted Be obedient Heere I consider 2. things 1 That they must obey they must approue themselues to their Masters not by wearing their cloth or cognisance or by words and complements but by painfull and carefull obedience 2 How they must obey and that may be opened thus First with reuerence with all honour 1 Tim. 6.1 both internall with high account and estimation of their Masters and externall with reuerent words and behauiour Secondly with all feare 1 Pet. 2.18 Ephes. 6.5 and this they should shew first by auoiding what might offend Secondly by not answering againe Thirdly by a holy endeauour to please them Tit. 2.9 Thirdly with subiection to rebukes 1 Pet. 2.18 2. to correction 1 Pet. 19.20 3. to their restraints first in respect of diet they must not bee their owne caruers Secondly in respect of place they must keepe the bounds of the Family and not at their pleasure bee gadding out either by night or day vpon any pretence without leaue Thirdly in respect of company they must bring none into the Family that are lewd persons or of what sort soeuer against the liking of the Master nor may they keepe company abroad to the iust offence of their Masters Fourthly in respect of apparell though they haue neuer so good meanes yet they must bee attired as becommeth Seruants And this subiection also they should shew in a ready acknowledgement of their fault when they vnderstand it It is a great fault in Seruants that though they vnderstand yet they will not answere First acknowledge and giue glorie to God and submit themselues to their masters Prou. 29.19 4 With all good faithfulnesse Titus 2.10 this faithfulnesse is required 1 In respect of the goods of the family and thus they must shew their faithfulnesse in not da●ing to purloyne the least pennie from their Maisters no pickers Tit. 2.10 2. It is not enough that they are true but they must be thriftily carefull to see that nothing be spoyled or lost or miscarry any way by their default and negligence this was the great testimonie of Iacobs faithfulnesse Gen. 31.36 2 In respect of secrets they must keepe the secrets of the Master and of the family yea and of the trade and calling to 3 In respect of the businesse of the family and heere their faithfulnesse standeth in two things 1 In diligence of labour he is not a faithfull seruant that eats the bread of Idlenesse as many seruing men do that can tell of no calling but attendance 2 In trustinesse and in this seruants must bee faithfull two waies first in their care to see their Masters directions executed in the familie as if they had beene present secondly in their speedie dispatch of busines abroad a sloathfull messenger is an exceeding prouocation to them that send him and it is a wretched fault in seruants when they are sent forth of the family about businesse they cannot find the way in againe in anie due time Thus of the duetie to which they are exhorted To them that are your Masters They must be subiect and obedient to all Masters indefinitely without difference of Sexe and so to the wife or widdow 1. Tim. 5.14 Prou. 31. or of condition they must bee obedient to the poorest as well as the rich Thus of the laying downe of the exhortation The explication followes and first of the premises According to the flesh These words may bee referred to masters and then the sense is this that seruants must be obedient euen to such masters as are fleshly and carnall men they must obey though their masters be Ethnikes or prophane persons it is a great praise for a seruant to men to bee Gods seruant also but it is a greater praise to be a religious seruant of an irreligious master to feare God in a prophane house 2 To seruants and so they are a limitation they are subiect onely in respect of their flesh and bodies and so heere is two things to be obserued The one exprest the bodies of seruants are in the power and at the disposing of the masters and therefore seruants must learne to subiect their flesh to their masters both commands restraints and corrections The other implied the soules of seruants are not in the power and at the disposing of Masters their spirits are free nor Master nor King can command the conscience Vse is first for reprofe of such seruants as giue more to their masters then is due thou oughtest to be of the same calling trade labour c. that thy master is of but thou art not bound to bee of the same religion or humor with thy Master It is a great fault not to giue the bodie to thy Master but a great fault also to giue both body and soule to bee at his disposing both are extreames Secondly should seruants feare their masters because they haue power ouer the flesh how much more should we feare God that hath power to destroy both soule and flesh in hell Math. 10. Thirdly this may be a great comfort to a seruant thy soule is as free as the soule of him that sits on a throne thy seruice in the flesh derogates nothing from the libertie of Christ in thy heart Thy best part is free In all things Seruants must obey in all things euen in things that bee against their credit profit liking ease c. There is a great sturdinesse in many seruants either they will not doe some things required or not at the time when they are bidden or not in the manner but as they list these courses are vile and heere condemned Obiect But vnlawfull and vnmeet things are required
God Gen. 24. Fourthly they must be religious in the generall duties of piety to God as well as in the particular duties of seruice to their Masters they must so serue men as they feare God also Vses First for Seruants and then for Masters Seruants must learne to doe all their labour fearing God euen that God 1. That set them in that calling 2. Whose eies alwaies behold how they discharge their dutie in their calling and inasmuch as the feare of God is made the ground heere of other duties they should learne to be the better seruants to men because they feare God Masters also must learne first what seruants to choose not such onely as will doe their worke but such as feare God also and if they haue failed in that they should labour now to beget and nurse the feare of God in the seruants they haue for Gods feare would make their seruants more dutifull to them besides the reason why their seruants fall to whoring stealing vnthriftinesse c. is because the feare of God is not in them Quest But what should Masters doe that their seruants might feare God Answ Foure things First they should pray and reade the Scriptures in their houses and Chatechise their seruants Secondly they should bring them to the publike preaching of the word Thirdly they should giue them good example themselues Fourthly they should restraine them from prophane company and incourage them and allow them libertie at conuenient times to conuerse with such as feare God Thus of the feare of God Verse 23. The third thing required in their obedience is that they doe it hartily in this Verse is the manner of the dutie and the inducement therevnto Hartilie Ex animo The obedience of Seruants should be a hearty obedience the Apostle will not haue onely feare of God but loue of the master their obedience must beginne at heart not at hand or foot if the heart bee not with their obedience the master may haue their labour and that he hath of the Oxe but such seruants lose their labour Quest What is it to obey Ex animo Answ It is to obey voluntarily and out of a heart and affection rightly ordered but especially it is to obey out of a iudgement well informed The vse is therefore to vrge them to doe it and heere I would consider of the obiections of Seruants why they cannot obey Ex animo Obiect 1 Bondage is against nature Solut. It is against nature as it was before the fall but not as it is now since the fall Obiect 2 But Christ hath made vs free Sol Free in soule in this life not in bodie till your bodies be dissolued or till death Obiect 3 But my Master is froward Sol Yet thou must be subiect 1 Pet. 2.18 Obiect 4 But he doth not onely giue ill words but blowes Solu Perhaps it is needfull for a seruant will not be corrected by words Prouerb 29.19 Obiect 5. But hee correcteth me vniustly Solu First who shall iudge thus shall seruants themselues Secondly it is acceptable if for well doing and for conscience thou endure to bee buffeted c. 1 Pet. 2.19.20 Obiect 6. But my master is not onely a froward man but a wicked man and a enemy of Christ. Solu Yet thou must honour and obey him willingly 1 Tim. 6.1.2 Obiect 7. But I am an hired seruant not a bought seruant Solu Indeed Masters haue not that power ouer them they haue ouer bondslaues but yet all seruants are heere bound to obey hartily Obiect 8 But vnmeet things are required Solu Discerne things that differ but yet obey in all things All this reprooues grudging and slow and stubborne seruants Whatsoeuer yee doe Not onely faire easie cleanly and best sort of workes are to be done willingly but all or any kinde of labour whatsoeuer though neuer so base or vile As to the Lord and not to men Doctr Seruants in obeying their Masters serue the Lord. The vse is both for instruction of seruants and for comfort for instruction they must serue their masters as they would serue the Lord with all faithfulnesse diligence willingnes prouidence conscience c. For comfort and incouragement also is this doctrine and that 3. waies First heere is a limitation they must doe no seruice to men that is against the Lord. Secondly art thou a seruant care not for it thou art Christs freeman Thirdly let not the basenesse of thy worke discourage thee for in seruing thy master thou seruest God aswell as if thou wert preaching or praying c. When the Apostle saith not vnto men wee must vnderstand not principally or onely Thus of the exhortations The reasons follow VERS 24. Knowing that of the Lord yee shall receiue the reward of the inheritance for ye serue the Lord Christ. In this verse Seruants are perswaded to obedience by a reason taken from the retribution or reward of their seruice and the matter of the verse is comprehended in this Syllogisme What faithfull men soeuer serue Christ and doe their dutie to him faithfully and cheerfully shall receiue of Christ the reward of inheritance but you Christian seruants when you performe your obsequious obedience to your Masters serue the Lord Christ ergo you shall haue the reward of the inheritance Knowing Doctr Seruants may and ought to know and bee assured of their owne saluation Vse is for confutation of Papists and vnsound men that denie certaintie of saluation for if seruants that haue not the greatest wits or knowledge that are imploied about small businesses that haue not so much liberty nor learning as other men c. yet may be assured not by coniecture or hope but by certaine knowledge by most vndoubted faith then what colour of reason can there be why other Christians the Lords people should bee denied this knowledge and therefore in the second place it should teach vs to make our calling and election sure Reward Doctr The workes euen of seruants shall be rewarded Vse is for the comfort of seruants and for reproofe of the vnbeliefe that is many times in Gods children doubting of Gods acceptation of their praier and holy indeauours shall the base and secular workes of mens seruants be rewarded and the great workes of Piety in Gods seruice not be regarded Of the Lord God will be pay-master vnto seruants and in that they are turned ouer to God for payment it implies that the most masters are careles and vnmercifull and this they are not onely in withholding conuenient food and raiment but in sending their seruants after long time of wearie labour out of their Families empty and without meanes to liue in the world Reward of inheritance Two things are heere affirmed of heauen first it is a reward and so free Secondly it is an inheritance and so sure There are foure vses may be made of this Doctrine 1. We should much loue esteeme and desire heauen it is the reward of God Princes giue great gifts but
Gods least gift must needs be glorious 2. We should learne to be liberall as God is liberall giue freely giue largely 3. Heere is a plaine confutation of the merit of heauen for heauen is an inheritance now the Sonne doth not inherit the Fathers Lands he hath not his Lands in measure according to his deserts for most an end the Land is purchased before the Sonne be borne much lesse can we merit heauen and the rather because we cannot alledge so much as this we came out of the loines of the Father seeing we are children but by adoption For yee serue the Lord Christ Doctr Christ is the chiefe Lord and therefore masters should be well aduised how they vse their seruants for they are Christs seruants and seruants should be carefull how they obey their masters for they must account to this Steward Thus of the first maine reason VERS 25 But he that doth wrong shall receiue for the wrong that he hath done and there is no respect of persons Some take this twentie fiue verse to bee a conclusion of the whole Doctrine before concerning Familie-duties as if hee would signifie that hee would not haue this doctrine of houshold gouernment more contemned then the doctrine of piety or righteousnesse for whatsoeuer wife husband childe father or seruant shall doe wrong in the neglect or breach of these commandements for the familie shall be sure to receiue for the wrong hee doth at Gods hand without respect of persons Some vnderstand the verse as a threatning to seruants if they doe any way wrong their masters But the commonest interpretation is meetest viz to vnderstand it as a reason taken from the certaine vengeance of God against all Masters that wrong their seruants and so is the second maine reason to vrge their obedience In the Verse I likewise obserue 7. Doctrines 1 Masters must accompt to God for all the wrong they doe to their seruants in word or deede 2 All Masters shall be punished of God that doe wrong if they repent not though they were otherwise neuer so greate yea though they were neuer so good or righteous men for if good men wrong their seruants God will require it and chasten them for that aswell as for other sinnes 3 The soueraignety of disposing an exact full and finall vengeance be longs to God onely men administer onely a part or drop of it 4 God will rise vp in the defence of the poorest and meanest Christians to right their wrongs 5 Seruants may not right their owne wrongs and returne words for words or blowes for blowes but commit that to God 6 Seruants must be subiect not onely to the curteous and iust but to the froward and iniurious masters Lastly God is no respecter of persons or faces hee cares no more for the master then for the man all are one in Christ Iesus there is neither bond nor free Iew nor Graecian rich nor poore but Christ is all in all things as is before declared Verse 11. Thus of the duties of Seruants Thus also of the Doctrine of the third CHAPTER THE LOGICALL ANALYSIS OF the fourth CHAPTER THE first verse of this Chapter belongs vnto the speciall rules of the former Chapter and containes the dutie of masters and the reason of it Their duty in these words Yee masters doe that which is iust and equall to your seruants The reason in these words knowing that yee also haue a master in heauen In the second verse and so to the end of the chapter is contained the conclusion of the whole Epistle This conclusion containes 1. matter of exhortation to v. 7. 2. matter of salutation from v. 7. to the end The exhortation may be 3. waies considered first as it concernes prayer v. 2 3 4. secondly As it concernes wise conuersation v. 5. thirdly As it concernes godly communication v. 6. Concerning prayer two things are to be obserued 1. the manner 2. the matter In the manner 3 things are required 1. Perseuerance 2. Watchfulnes 3. Thankfulnesse v. 2. In the matter consider 1. The persons for whom Praying also for vs. 2. The things for which that God may open c. These things are 1. briefly laid downe that God would open to vs a dore of vtterance Or 2. more fully explicated 1. By the subiect to speake the misterie of Christ. 2. By a reason For which I am in bands 3. By the end that I may vtter it as becommeth mee to speake v. 3.4 Wisedome of conuersation is propounded with limitation to the respect of some person viz. them that are without v. 6. In that part that concernes gracious communication there are two things 1. The precept Let your speech c. 2. The end of the precept that ye may know how c. In the precept note first the properties of speech 1. gracious 2. powdred with salt secondly the continuance viz. alwayes Thus of the exhortation The salutation followes from v. 7. to the end where obserue 1 a narration as an entrance 2. The salutations themselues The narration is in verse 7.8.9 and it concernes first Tichicus v. 7.8 and Onesimus v. 9. Concerning Tichicus there is two things First his praises with relation to all Christians a beloued brother or to Christ a faithfull minister or to Paul a fellow-seruant Secondly the end of his mission which is three-fold First to declare Pauls estate Secondly to know their estate Thirdly to comfort their hearts Concerning Onesimus there is likewise first his praises in relation to all so he is a brother faithfull beloued relation to them he is one of them Secondly the end of his mission is to make knowen c v 9. The salutations follow and they are first signified secondly required the signified salutations are from verse 10 to 15 the other from verse 15 to the end The salutations signified are from sixe men three of them Iewes viz Aristarchus Marcus and Iesus v 10 11 and three Gentiles Epaphras Lucas Demas v 12 13 14 The Iewes are described first by their names secondly by their country they were of the circumcision thirdly by their praises so for what they were to the whole Church Labourers fellow-workers to the Kingdome of God or to Paul and so they were to his consolatian v 11. The salutations of the Gentiles follow whereof the first is of Epaphras who is described first by his office a seruant of Christ secondly by his relation to them he is one of you Thirdly by his loue to them shewed by his striuing in prayer for them Fourthly by his zeale not onely for them but the neighbour Churches v. 13. Thus of the salutations signified the salutations required follow And those are either particular verse 15 16 17 or generall verse 18. The particular salutations concerne either the Laodiceans verse 15 16 or the Colossian Preacher who is not only saluted but exhorted verse 17. The generall salutation hath in it first a signe
Act. 17.26 2. The times will not bee alwaies faire there are perillous times times of sorrow anguish sicknesse tentation want losse feare perplexitie yea wee may purpose promise expect time of healing and curing when we shall be deceiued and finde a time of trouble Ier. 14.19 Besides Christ in the opportunities of grace is but a little while with men There is a prime of a mans life yea a prime of euery mans ministerie Ioh. 7.33 Further the Kingdome of God in the mercies of it may be wholly taken away if we bring not fruit in time of fruit Matth. 21.34.41 Lastly this is a very prouoking sinne for if God giue a space to repent and men will not know the day of their visitation most an end God casts such into a bed of affliction after they haue stretched themselues vpon the bed of securitie Reuel 2.21.22 Luk. 19.43.44 Yea many of Gods children are greatly to blame in neglecting the opportunities of assurance of grace and therefore because they are so carelesse in making their calling and election sure this forsaking of the promise of God is scourged afterwards with comfortlesse sorrowes arising from such a sense of their corruptions as makes them for a long time seeme to be depriued of all grace and mercy Heb. 4.1 Againe many men sinne egregiously against the very space of time in that they haue much leisure and time and fill it vp with little or no good imploiment Their estate that haue meanes to liue without labour is vsually accounted an estate of great ease and happinesse But indeed it is an estate of much danger for the men that abound in time without imploiment are liable to many temptations and lusts besides they are subiect to almost continuall hardnesse of heart and deadnesse of spirit for it is the labouring seruant that enters into his masters ioy Adde that men that abound with leisure are easily drawne by the inticements of ill company and much intangled with the sports and pleasures of the world Sometimes such persons grow into great habit of suspitiousnesse waiwardnesse filled with worldly passions and discontentments sometimes they prooue great medlers in other folkes businesse The remedie for these persons whether men or women is to exercise themselues in some kinde of profitable imploiment and to labour so as some way to see the fruit of it to eat their owne bread but especially they should bee abundant in the worke of the Lord they should double their imploiment in reading hearing conference mortification mercie c. Thus of wise conuersation Let your speech be gratious alwaies and pondred with salt that ye may c. Godly communication is heere exhorted vnto and for order heere is a precept Let your speech c. 2. the end of the precept that ye may know how c. In the precept concerning our speech obserue 1. the properties of speech which are two 1. they must be gratious 2. poudred with salt and then note the continuance how long the precept is in force and that is alwaies In generall wee so heare that we must looke to our words aswell as our workes and therefore they are far wide that say their tongues are their owne who shall controle them Psal. 12.4 From Coherence I obserue that he walkes not wisely that talkes not wisely for euill words corrupt good manners neither may he be accounted an honest man of life that is an euill man in tongue The vse is for triall for if God make vs new Creatures hee giues vs new tongues and if he turne the people to him by true repentance he doth returne vnto them a pure language Zepha 3.9 and therefore if any man seemeth to be religious and refraineth not his tongue this mans religion is in vaine Let It is not arbitrarie we may looke to our words if we will but it is a ●lat precept and so a matter indispensible Your God is no respecter of persons he forbids vngracious wanton and idle words in Gentlemen and Gentlewomen aswell as in poore men and Laborers he dislikes it in Masters and Parents aswell as in Children and Seruants it is as ill for the Master to spend his time in idle talke c. as for the Seruant Gracious Our words may be said to be gracious 3. waies First if we respect the cause 2 If we respect the subiect 3 If we respect the effect In respect of the cause good words are well said to be gracious 1 Because they flowe from the free grace of God without our merit for wee doe not deserue so much as to be trusted with one good word Reason yeelds vs conceits and nature an instrument to speake by but it is the God of nature that of his free grace giues vs good words 2 Our words ought to proceed from some grace of God in the heart as from knowledge faith ioy sorrow loue feare desire c. and in this sense when they are in the tongue carrie still the name of the fountaine whence they flow Againe our words must be gracious in respect of the subiect the matter we must talke of must be of good things or religious matters words of instruction comfort faith hope c. but especially our words should be seasoned with the daily memorie and mention of Gods grace to vs in Christ 3. Our words ought to be gracious in respect of the effect such as tend to build vp and minister grace to the hearers yea gracious words are faire words and faire words are first gracefull words wordes of thankefulnesse 2. Inoffensiue words not railing bitter slandering blasphemous or filthy words nay not iesting words that are intended to prouoke irritate disgrace and bite 3. Seasonable words 4 Wholesome words not filthy rotten communication Vse is for reproofe And men sinne against this exhortation 1 by omission of gracious words But 2 they do worse that vse euill words And 3 they are worse then the former two that vse their words to speake against grace and gracious courses But they are worst of all that loue euill wordes euen the wordes that may destroy either their owne soules or the soules of others 2 Heere is instruction we must labour by all meanes to get abilitie for a gracious speech either to God by praier or to men in conuersing with them and to this end first we must pray constantly and conscionably to God to giue vs gracious wordes Secondly we must get the law of grace into our hearts yea we should striue to be examples one to another not onely in faith and conuersation but in words also and if all Christians are charged to vse gracious speeches much more ministers they should speake the words of God they should keepe the patterne of wholesome words and stay all vaine babblings which increase to more vngodlines and all words that fret as a canker Thus of the first propertie Powdred with salt These are termes borrowed either from the vse
man iustified and sanctified thou must know that thy name is written in the Booke of life which cannot be without Faith In particular there are many things which haue a sure promise of ioy and comfort annexed to them First thou must lay the foundation of all eternall ioyes in godly sorrow for thy sinnes Iohn 16.20 Mat. 5.4 Psal. 126.5.6 Secondly thou must hang vpon the breasts of the Church viz. the Word and Sacraments continually with trembling and tender affection wayting vpon the word of God the Law must be in thy heart thou must buy thy libertie herein at the highest value Esay 66.2.5.11 and 51.7 Mat. 13.44 Thirdly in thy carriage thou must be a counsellor of peace Prou. 12.20 and liue in peace as neare as may be 2 Cor. 13.11 Fourthly take heede thou be not insnared with grosse sinne Prou. 29.6 Fiftly wouldest thou reape ioy sow good seede to be much in well-doing procures as a blessing a secret and sweet gladnesse vpon the heart of man a barren life is an vncomfortable life Many would reape that will not be at the payne to sow Iohn 4.36 Gal. 6.7.8 Hee that vseth his Talents to aduantage enters into his Masters ioy a ioy liker the ioy of God then man meeter for the Master then for the Seruant yet such a Master we serue as will crowne vs with this ioy Mat. 15.21 Sixtly be constant beare fruit and get the knowledge of the loue of Christ and abide in it Iohn 15.10 Lastly in the 2 Thes. 5.16 to 24. there are seauen things required in our practise if wee would alwayes reioyce 1. We must pray alwayes if wee be much in prayer wee shall be much in ioy 2. Wee must in all things giue thankes a heart kept tender with the sence of Gods mercies is easily inflamed with ioyes in the holy Ghost 3. We must take heede of quenching the Spirit when a man puts out the holy motions of the Spirit hee quencheth his owne ioyes 4. We must by all meanes preserue an honourable respect of the word publikely preached despise not prophecying 5. And whereas there be some things wee heare doe specially affect vs and concerne vs we must be carefull with all heedfulnesse to keepe those things whatsoeuer we forget try all things but keepe that which is good 6. In our practise wee must not onely auoyd euill but all appearance of euill else if wee disquiet others with griefe or offence of our carriage it will be iust with God we should finde little rest or contentment in our selues Lastly wee must endeauour to be sanctified throughout inwardly and outwardly in soule body and spirit hauing respect of all Gods Commandements and retayning the loue of no sinne so shall we reape the blessing of all righteousnesse and procure to our hearts the ioyes that are euerlasting Hitherto of the Preface Verse 12. Giuing thankes vnto the Father which hath made vs meete to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light HItherto of the Ezordium of this Epistle as it contayned both the Salutation and Preface The second part both of the Chapter and Epistle followeth and is contayned in the 12. Verse and the rest to the 23. And it hath in it the proposition of Doctrine This Doctrine propounded stands of two parts for it concerneth eyther the worke of Redemption or the person of the Redeemer The worke of Redemption is considered of in the 12.13 and 14. Verses the person of the Redeemer is entreated of from Verse the 15. to the 23. The worke of Redemption is two wayes considered of first more generally in the 12. Verse secondly more particularly Vers. 13.14 In the worke of our Redemption as it is propounded in this Verse three things are to be obserued 1. The efficient cause God the Father 2. The subiect persons redeemed vs. 3. The Redemption it selfe as it is eyther in the inchoation and first application of it on earth and so it lyeth in making vs fit or in the confirmation of it what it shall be in the end and so it is praysed first by the manner of tenure inherit secondly by the adiunct companie Saints thirdly by the perfection of it in light Giuing thankes The blessings of God vpon euery true Christian are such as they require continuall thankefulnesse to God for them such I say for the worth of them for number for freenesse of gift for continuance and as they are compared with what God bestowes vpon others in the world To the Father A sanctified heart that hath sence of grace so sees God the first cause of all blessings through the second and next causes that it maketh God the principall obiect both of prayer and prayses it is a great sinne not to acknowledge the instrument by which wee receiue any good but it is a great impietie not to giue that which is due to the principall Efficient The Father Father is a tearme of relation and is giuen sometimes to the whole Trinitie sometimes to Christ sometimes to the first Person in Trinitie so commonly and so here God may be said to be a Father in this place two wayes first in respect of Christ secondly in respect of the Christian. 1. In respect of Christ God is a Father both by Nature and by personall Vnion and in this sence two Questions may be moued Quest. 1. Whether prayer is to be made to the whole Trinitie or but to one person Ans. It is to be made to the whole Trinitie Acts 7.59 1 Thes. 3.2 2 Cor. 13.13 Obiect But prayer is here made to one person Sol. Though but one person be named yet the rest are included for the Persons may be distinguished but seuered or diuided they may not be Quest. 2. Is the Father a Redeemer in that Redemption is here giuen to him Ans. The actions of God are two-fold some are inward as to beget to proceede c. Some are outward as to create redeeme c. Now the outward actions are common to all the three Persons they are distinguished onely in the manner of doing the Father beginnes the Sonne executes the holy Ghost finisheth as in the workes of Redemption the Father redeemes vs in that hee beginnes it by deuising this course and willing it from eternitie by calling sanctifying sending and accepting of CHRIST in time the Sonne redeemes vs by taking our nature and in obeying the Law and suffering death euen the death of the Crosse for vs the holy Ghost redeemes vs by applying the merits and benefits of CHRIST to euery Beleeuer 2. In respect of the Christian God is a Father and the meditation hereof should serue for a three-fold Vse 1. For Tryall 2. For Instruction 3. For Consolation For Tryall for it stands vs much vpon to be assured of this that God is our Father in Christ by Adoption for this is the foundation of true hope for what wee want and of true
respect men for their Lands apparrell titles parentage c. but for Grace 3. Wee should not much wonder at the disorders are in the world for were it not for the Elect it would soone appeare by the ruine of all how little God cared for rebellious Reprobates 4. It is a great comfort no one of the Elect shall perish for all things be reconciled 5. It should teach vs to make much of them that feare the Lord. Let them be in stead of all things in our account Lastly seeing all things are reconciled now let vs keepe the peace euen the vnitie of the Spirit in the bond of Peace To himselfe Some reade in him There is difference betweene for Christ by Christ and in Christ. For noteth the meritorious cause In noteth the coniunction with the head By noteth the instrument Doct. We are reconciled in Christ or vnto Christ. This is true foure wayes 1. As hee is the person by whom we are reconciled 2. As his glory is the end of our reconciliation 3. As his glory and holinesse is the patterne after which our happinesse and holinesse is proportioned 4. In respect of his loue prouidence custody and protection vnto the which we are receiued The Vse of all may be to teach vs 1. To take heede of opposing disgracing or persecuting of such as are reconciled to God for hee that toucheth them toucheth the apple of Christs eye Note hee saith to himselfe 2. In the Vse of all things to carrie our selues so as we prouide to giue account and giue the things to God which are Gods and as good Stewards dispose all things in that time and according to those rules Christ hath appoynted 3. Seeing wee are now brought so neare vnto God wee should humble our selues to walke before him in all reuerence and feare And to this end wee should labour for puritie of heart that wee might see God Yea wee should hate all spirituall pollutions and be zealous in all good workes And seeing God hath chosen vs to himselfe wee should set vp the Lord to be our God to serue him with our whole heart and haue respect to all his Commandements And to this end wee should labour for speciall sinceritie in the profession of Religion an ordinary care will not serue the turne if wee will liue with the multitude wee may perish with the multitude But let vs cleaue to the Lord with a perpetuall Couenant and resolue to receiue him as our guide vnto the death Set at peace The effect of our reconciliation is peace Concerning this peace I propound fiue things 1. Who made it no other can set a peace among the Creatures but he that reconciles men to the Creator he is the Prince of peace the chasticement of our peace was upon him He is our peace 2 With whom the faithfull are at peace they are at peace first vvith themselues Peace rules their hearts Secondly with good Angels Thirdly with the seede of Abraham the Iewes the partition wall is broken downe Fourthly with Gods Ordinances God creating peace or else the Word would alwayes be goring and smiting with the stroakes of warre and words of vengeance Fiftly with the godly Sixtly with all Creatures onely there can be no peace first with the Powers and Principalities for after the two strong men haue fought there is no more peace secondly with the World the World hath hated the Master and therefore the seruants may not looke for better entertaynment 3 The effects of this peace which are principally two first the restitution of soueraignty and dominion ouer the Creatures secondly the safety of the Christian in all estates for from this peace flowes great securitie and protection euen to the poorest Christian eyther from or in dangers 4 That wee may attayne the sense of this peace we must be reconciled to God we must be sincere worshippers we must keepe vs in our wayes wee must get a meeke and quiet spirit wee must in nothing be carefull but in all things shew our requests vnto God wee must loue God and shew it by the loue of the knowledge of his Name Vses First Gods Children should know this priuiledge for themselues it will be a preseruation against sinne 2. Hence wee may gather the misery of all carnall persons that are not reconciled to God They want the protection of Angels they are vnder the gouernment of the God of this world the Creatures are armed against them they are stript of the royall priuiledges arising from the communion with Saints yea God fights against them in and by themselues as by terrours of conscience and by vnquiet affections and passions giuing them ouer to an vnruly heart What are Enuy Malice Lust and Rage but so many weapons to fight against the soule Yea God fights against the sinner by the deadnesse of his heart which both affamisheth the soule in spirituall things and takes away the contentment of outward things By the bloud Here hee notes how wee are reconciled viz. by the bloud of Christ this is that bloud of sprinckling the bloud of the immaculate Lambe the bloud of the euerlasting Couenant Christs owne bloud Many are the fruits and effects of the bloud of Christ 1. We are elected through it 2. It ratifies the Couenant of God 3. It is that Reconciliation iustifying vs from our former sinnes 4. It ioynes Iew and Gentile together in one Citie yea in one house 5. It purgeth the Conscience from dead workes 6. It turnes away wrath and saues vs from the destroying Angell 7. It makes Intercession for sinnes after Calling 8. It makes perfect in all good workes 9. By it the Faithfull ouercome the Dragon and Antichrist Lastly it opens the Holy of Holies and giues vs an entrance into heauen The Vse is first to teach vs to take heede of sinning against the bloud of Christ for if it be thus precious it must needes diffuse a horrible sinne-guiltinesse vpon such as transgresse against it If Abels bloud wronged cryed so fearefully and the bloud of Zacharias what shall the bloud of Christs doe And men sinne against Christs bloud 1. By resisting the meanes of application of Christ crucified 2. By prophane Swearing and Cursing 3. By ascribing remission of sinnes to the workes of the Law 4. By committing the sinne against the holy Ghost 5. By returning to the lusts of our former ignorance 6. By prophane and vnworthy receiuing of the Sacraments And in the Sacraments men offend against the bloud of Christ First when they come to it with an opinion of reall presence eyther by Transubstantiation or Consubstantiation for thereby they deny the truth of the bloud of Christ by consequent and open a gap to the adoration of
for euill workes that doth not first care to repent for euill thoughts and such like corruption in the minde There should man begin his repentance where God begins the discouery of our miserie And let vs learne to be more watchfull against the sinnes of our mindes and be more grieued for the drosse and corruption wee finde there and learne more to hate the sinnes of the minde such as are ignorance distracted seruice false opinions emptinesse of holy meditations euill dishonourable impure and vnchast thoughts against God or man pride malice frowardnesse vanitie securitie and vnbeliefe Doct. 2. There is in vnregenerate men a strange minding of sinne they imagine mischiefe they haue a spirit of fornication profound to decline deepely set they trust in their owne wayes so as many times they regard neither Gods word nor the rod nor the threatnings of God or rebukes of man neither can they be stirred with the foure last things This shewes as mans misery and death in sinne so the wonderfull mercy of God in forgiuing such sins It is a comfort that sinnes of set knowledge may be forgiuen And hence may be gathered a difference betweene the sinnes of the regenerate and the sinnes of the vnregenerate for the godly sinne not with a full minde they are not set in euill sinne rebels in them but not raignes Lastly this may let vs see how little cause wee haue to stand vpon our mindes or reason or naturall parts in matters of Hope and Saluation In euill Workes If the dependance and the words themselues be duely considered wee may here gather fiue things First that the euill workes of the sinner cause the strangenesse and enmity aforesaid Secondly that a wicked man can like himselfe well enough though his very workes and outward behauiour be euill He can blesse himselfe in his heart when his iniquity is found worthy to be hated Thirdly that where the life is euill the minde is euill the heart cannot be good where the workes are nought Fourthly that hee that allowes himselfe in one sinne will pollute himselfe with many sinnes Workes Fiftly when God lookes vpon the workes of euill men they are all euill note a difference if the carnall man looke vpon his owne workes they are all good if a godly man looke vpon them they are partly good and partly euill but if God looke vpon them they are all nought because his person is nought his heart is nought his end is nought the manner is nought c. Hitherto of their miserie both as it is propounded and expounded A Question may be asked how it comes to passe that men haue so little sence of their misery and are so loath to take notice of it For answere hereunto wee must vnderstand that this comes to passe because the God of this world hauing possession blindes their eyes and men doe not examine themselues before the Law of God And they are with-drawne by the deceitfulnesse of sinne which in particular they haue allowed themselues in neyther doe men remember their latter ends or the Iudgement of God before their death Their eyes are not annoynted with eye-salue a number haue not the word to direct them and some are deceiued by false Teachers which cry peace peace where there is no peace And the most are deceiued with false opinions and conceits for eyther they thinke that such like places as this are true of Gentiles and not of them whereas vnregenerate Israel is as Ethiopia vnto God or they feare that this knowledge will make men melancholy Yea some are so foolish they say this course driues men out of their wits thus Paul is mad and Christ hath a Diuell or they thinke late Repentance will serue the turne and then they may haue time enough to consider Thus of their misery Verse 22. In that Body of his Flesh to present or make you holy and vnblameable and without fault in his sight IN this Verse the remedy of their miserie is set downe where obserue first the Meanes secondly the End The Meanes is by that body of his flesh through death the End is to present vs c. In that body of his flesh through death Here are two things 1. the Nature of Christ 2. the Sufferings of Christ. But first in the generall I obserue two Doctrines First there is no remedy for the sinner but the death of his Sauiour how foolish mankinde hath beene distracted about the cure for their miserie is lamentable to consider Adam gets Figge-leaues and Israell a foolish Couer As for Death and Hell men are at a point they haue made a couenant with them Or they thinke they are helped of their misery if they can forget it they can blesse their hearts that they will not feele the smart of any curses or they will make satisfaction the sonnes of their body shall serue for the sinnes of their soules or else the Temple of the Lord their going to Church must make God amends Others couer all with the garments of their owne ciuill righteousnesse others put their trust in the wedge of gold and say to it thou art my confidence But vnto vs there is no name by which we can be safe but the name of Iesus Christ. He must rescue vs that first created vs hee makes vs partakers of loue that was the Sonne of Gods loue hee makes vs adopted sonnes who himselfe is Gods naturall Sonne Secondly It is profitable to be much in the meditation of Christs sufferings that it might sincke into our minds that we must goe out of our selues for happinesse and such meditations open a way to godly sorrow They tend to the mortification of sinne and they incline the heart of a Christian to be willing to suffer with him for hee suffered as the Master wee are but Seruants hee suffered for others sinnes wee deserue more then wee can suffer by our owne sinne Hee suffered all sorts of crosses and infinite much we suffer butlight affliction And the thought of his sufferings may make vs willing to contemne the world seeing hereby wee discerne that his kingdome is not of this world Yea we owe vnto Christ the remembrance of his sufferings It is a small thing he requires of vs when he wils vs to thinke on him often what he hath endured for vs. In that body of his flesh These words note Christs Nature yet wee must consider which Nature in Christ there were two Natures in one person personally vnited his diuine and humane Nature His diuine Nature was from Eternitie Immutable Immortall Impassible His humane Nature was conceiued and borne in time Mutable Mortall Passible one and the same without time begotten of the Father the Sonne of God without Mother and in time borne of the Virgin the Sonne of Man without Father Sonne to both Naturall Consubstantiall These Natures are in one person for that God and Man might become one in Couenant one is
of that harmonie and vnion of sinnes one with another in practise so as if one sinne be practised many will accompanie it as in Adams sinne the sinne was to eat the forbidden fruit but that would not be alone but was attended with doubting of Gods word with faith in the deuill with most in ordinate pride or desire to be like God with discontentment with their present condition with vile ingratitude with apostacie from all righteousnesse with prophanation of the sacrament with wilfull murther of all their posteritie and euill concupiscence Cain was angry that God did not accept his prophane sacrifice but would this sinne be alone no for there followes it the hatred of his brother the falling of his countenance the reiecting of Gods admonition coloured hypocrisie murther and blasphemie When desire of gaine infects the hearts of Trades-men we see by experience it will not be alone a number of transgressions growes with it as loue of the world more then God neglect of sinceritie in the vse of Gods ordinances swearing breach of Sabboth rigorous dealing with inferiours vnmercifulne● to the poore selling by false weights and measures vsurie if not otherwise yet in selling time deceit lying oppression by ingrossing of wares or incroaching vpon the trades of others 2. In respect of vnion in continuance after they are committed thy sinnes committed vanish not but by adding sinne vnto sinne thou makest vp a very bodie of sinne and so in Gods sight they stand compacted together as the very limbes of a monster 3. These sinnes may be called a bodie because they are committed by the bodie as the externall meanes of them 4. The masse of sinne in the fleshly man may be called a bodie of sinnes for that it hath many things like vnto the bodie of man or many comparisons may be taken from the bodie of a man to expresse the sinnes of the flesh As the bodie of man is a faire substance made of base matter so sinne in it selfe is most vile though it be coloured ouer by the deuill or the world with the faire proportion of profit or pleasure And as there be many members in the bodie so there are in the sinne of the fleshly man as some members in the bodie are outward some inward so are our sins As men would be ashamed of their bodies were it not for their clothing especially if there be any deformitie so would men of their sinnes were it not for their great places or faire excuses and wretched shifts they haue to hide their deformities And as the bodie of the prisoner in a dungeon is alike a true bodie with his that sitteth on the throne so sinnes that are secret that are neuer so closely committed are sinnes as well as such as are openly done As his bodie is a true bodie that yet wants a legge or an arme so it is in some though they be not murtherers or adulterers yet they may haue a bodie of sinne in them As the naturall bodie cannot liue if you take away food and clothing so neither would sinne if we did not loue it approue it defend it excuse it and if wee take away carnall reason and ill companie And as the bodie of Princes is better clad then the bodies of poore men yet it is alike a bodie of clay and corruption so are the sinnes of great men though men doe not speake so openly of them Now for vse of all First here we may see a difference between the sinnes of the regenerate and the sinnes of the vnregenerate in the godly after calling there is not a bodie of sinnes the nest of sinne is scattered sinne is not in his full strength he doth not giue his members as seruants to vnrighteousnes Secondly here men may try the truth of their repentance that is not true repentance that mortifies some one or few sinnes but that which mortifieth a whole bodie of sinnes Thirdly this shewes the greatnes of Gods mercies that can forgiue or take away a whole bodie of sinnes and transgressions Lastly this may be a great comfort to afflicted consciences that cry out of the multitude of their sinnes if thy sinnes were as many as the ioynts of thy bodie and as strong as the bodie of Goliah yet the Lord can forgiue and true repentance will pull them downe This is the matter to be mortified the manner followes Put off Sinne must be put off as the begger puts off his raggs and as the Master puts off his false seruant and as the porter puts off his burden and as the husband puts off his vitious wife and as the serpent puts off his skin There are foure things in mortification distinct The first is the dislike of sinne the second is the confession of sinne the third is the godly sorrow for sinne the fourth is forsaking of sinne this last is here meant by putting off of sinne and this the Lord stands vpon as a thing he will neuer dispense with the want of it as these places shew Prou. 28.13 Esay 55.8 Ier. 7.3.4 Esay 1.16.17 Psal. 119.9 Ephes. 4.22 c. 1. Pet. 4.1.2.3.4 Ezech. 18. 33. and there are exceeding comfortable promises made to such as are vpright in he desire and indeuour hereof Prou. 28.13 Esay 55.8 27.9 Ioel 2.12.13 Esay 1.18 Quest. But can the flesh be so mortified and sinne so put off that it shall cease to be any more in this life Answ. No for euen in the children of God the flesh will raise infirmities it will let the vnderstanding it will be framing euill thoughts it will lust against the spirit it will not alwaies allow what good is done or to be done it will present euill when good is to be done it will rebell against the law of the minde yea sometimes the soule of the poore sinner is led captiue for a time by his imperious flesh Q. But how can it then be said to be put away Answ. Sinne is put away first if it reigne not nor hold a constant dominion ouer vs it may be put away euen when it leads vs captiue if it be an vnwilling captiuitie if the power of it seeme vnto vs as a most base seruitude It is put away if men take no care to fulfill the lusts of it Secondly if there be a constant combat in some degree against it if we finde a striuing and constant fighting against the corruptions of our nature if we pray against it iudge our selues for it and mourne ouer it with an vnfeined desire to forsake it this desire to be put off is one true degree of forsaking of sinne That this may yet be better vnderstood we must know that sinne is put off fiue waies euen in this life 1. Sacramentally in the signe couenant and seale that is in baptisme 2. In the guilt of it though not in the act of it thus God puts off by not imputing 3. In act too by inchoation though not perfectly 4.
to signifie that he died for other mens sinnes Now for the second viz. the buriall of Christians they may be said to be buried euen whiles they liue for of the buriall of the bodie he cannot meane here in diuers respects 1. In respect of disgrace and reproch the throats of wicked men are often an open sepulchre into which if the names of the godly fall they are buried for the extremitie of disgrace and reproch with which they couer them 2. In respect of abnegation or the deniall of the loue and care for earthly things and so we are buried to the world when like dead men we care not for it but deuote our selues to the contemplation of heauenly things 3. In respect of mortification of our sinnes the scripture by diuers metaphors expresseth the diuers degrees of mortification For first there is the wounding of sinne when the sinner is pricked with remorse by the law Secondly the condemning of sinne when the sinner keeping a spirituall assise doth examine confesse and iudge himselfe guiltie before the Lord. Thirdly the crucifying of sinnes when the sinner racks his owne soule by godly sorrow driuing in the nailes of Gods threatnings with acknowledgment of his owne deserts and restraining his flesh through a spirituall reuenge not caring to expose himselfe to the shame of the world so that in Christ hee may finde atonement for his sinnes Fourthly the killing of sinne when the sinner puts off the bodie of sinnes and forsaketh his euill waies Now then after this followeth the last degree and that is here the buriall of sinnes Certainly there remaines euen after true repentance in the very godly a great deale of hidden corruption of nature inward wādrings distractions after the world sudden euill propositions against God or his word or prouidence or presence or promises or peoplei mpatience secret pride and somtimes hypocrisie a frequent rebellion within against good duties vnthankfulnes frequent omissions e●ther of holy duties or the care of the power of them hastines or anger impure desires thoughts of reuenge besides a great deale of disorder he may finde in desires thoughts of reuenge besides a great deale of disorder he may finde in himselfe both at home and abroad Now it is not enough nor may he rest in the former repentance but he must proceed euen to the remoouing of these remainders of corruption death commonly ariseth out of the disease of someone part but buriall couers all The worke of reformation and repentance many times begins at the care of some few principall sinnes but wee must neuer be quiet till we burie the whole old man with his works so that in one sense the buriall of sinnes is nothing else but the progresse of mortification Againe after we haue forsaken our sinnes to burie them is to keep a diligent watch ouer our nature and to take downe our flesh yea sometimes with refraining of lawfull delights or pleasures Further the buriall of sinne it may import our care after we haue left our sinnes to remoue them out of sight both out of Gods sight by suing out our pardon and out of the sight of our consciences by quieting them in the application of the bloud of Christ and the promises of grace and out of the sight of others so farre as our sinnes were scandalous also by shewing forth our repentance and care to auoide all appearance and occasions of like sinning Great is the glory and happinesse of Christians that haue attained to this buriall of sinne for these serue God in a neere acquaintance with him these haue ouercome the world these can stand before death and iudgment vnapalled these are mightie in the power of Gods ordinance these know the secrets of the kingdome of God these are without the reach of the Law and feele not the sting of crosses these are had in singular honour with God and the holy Angells of heauen and the prouidence of God is vsually eminent towards these Now for the third might someone say what hath the Christians buriall to doe with Christ how is there any relation between them Answ. Our spirituall buriall in the progresse of mortification depends vpon Christ diuers waies 1. In that he hath required and made gratious promises to it 2. In that the efficacie of the meanes by which it is wrought comes from Christ. 3. In that it is accepted of God onely for Christ and through his intercession 4. In respect of example he was buried as well as we But chiefly in respect of vertue our buriall of sinne is wrought by a vertue arising from Christs buriall in the graue The Vses of all this followes First for information here we may see how God stands vpon mortification and that men must not thinke alwaies they haue done inough when they haue left their faults and withall wee may see how dangerous a course they take that so soone giue ouer the exercises of mortification for by this meanes we cause the old sinnes many times to breake out againe and their consolations are small and seldom crosses daily trouble them and the heart is often grieued and griped with feare and terrible doubts or else they are quickly ouergrowne with a spirit of slumber Secondlie for instruction to be carefull to bury our sinnes but here take heed of the dissimilitude for in some things the comparison cannot hold as here in two things for first when we bury the bodies of our friends we bury them in hope they shal rise againe And secondly we mourne because we must part with them but both these must be denied here It is the propertie of the wicked to part with their sinnes with sorrow because they must leaue them or else with hope that at length they may returne to them againe But let all such as feare God be otherwise minded especiallie let vs learne from this comparison of buriall to aduantage our selues in what we may in mortification if the master be buried we know all his seruants will attend the funerall so is it with vs in the mortification of sinnes if wee light vpon the master sins and drag them to the graue we shall be sure of all the attendants they will follow to the funerall The Iewes manner was to bury with odours so should we our odours and sweet smelling pra●ers offered vp in the mediation of Christ. And howsoeuer this worke may seeme difficult yet God many times strangely releiues our infirmities After Iezabel was cast downe and dead ●hey had not been long within but sending out to bury her they found nothing but the skull and her feete and the palmes of her hands so many times would it be with vs if we cast downe the Iezabels our sinnes when wee come ●o fin●sh our mortification we may by the strange help of God finde the body of the master gon we know not how so as wee shall not be troubled vn●esse it be with some skull or
Wiues dutie is laid downe and inlarged laid downe in these words Wiues be subiect to your Husbands inlarged first by a reason it is comely 2. a limitation in the Lord v. 18. Secondly The Husbands dutie is propounded 1. by exhortation Husbands loue your Wiues 2. by dehortation be not bitter to them v. 19. Thirdly The dutie of Children is laid downe in these words Children obey your Parents and amplified 1. by the extent in all things 2. by reason for this is well-pleasing to the Lord v. 20. Fourthly The dutie of Parents is exprest by dehortation in these words Parents prouoke not your Children to anger and confirmed by a reason taken from the ill effect lest they be discouraged Fifthly In setting downe the dutie of Seruants there is first the exhortation v. 22.23 the reasons v. 24.25 The exhortation is both briefely laid downe in these words Seruants be obedient to them that are your Masters and explicated 1. by prouisoes about their obedience 2. the manner how they must obey The prouisoes are two one restraines Masters they are their seruants but according to the flesh the other extends the dutie of seruants they must obey in all things The manner how they must obey is set downe first negatiuely not with eye-seruice not as men-pleasers secondly affirmatiuely and so they must obey 1. with singlenes of heart 2. with feare of God 3. heartily as to the Lord. The reasons are two first from the certaine hope of reward from God v. 24. Secondly from the certaine vengeance of God vpon them that doe wrong THE METAPHRASE vpon the third CHAPTER HItherto you haue been taught exhorted and dehorted in matters that concerne faith and opinions Now it followeth that I should stirre you in such things as concerne your carriage both generall as you are Christians and particular as you are of seuerall conditions of life And the first thing you should be carefull of in the right order of your liues is to raise vp your thoughts and affections to the studie and contemplation of heauenlie things for hereby you doe effectually proue that you are risen vp in the first resurrection with IESVS CHRIST And heauenly things are aboue and therefore for their worthines fitting your contemplation and for their difficultie they cannot be reached without seeking and diligent studie and inquirie Besides is not CHRIST aboue your Head and Sauiour and where should your hearts be but where your treasure is yea where CHRIST is there in singular glorie aduanced aboue all men Angels next in glorie and power to GOD himselfe ô then how should your mindes run vpon him and to contemplate of these things is to ascend after him And when I exhort you to seeke the things that are aboue my meaning is that you should studie about them and with all wisedome raise vp not your thoughts only but your affections also to the loue of heauenly things and this you cannot doe vnlesse you withdraw your affections from things on earth whether they be traditions or worldly things or the workes of the flesh Now there are excellent reasons by which I may breifly stir you vp hereunto both from the consideration of your present estate in this world and from the meditation of your future condition in the day of CHRIST In this world two things should much moue you First that ye are but dead men for both you professe the forsaking of the world and the world accounts of you but as dead men and your afflictions drown and ouerwhelm you many times Secondly the spirituall happinesse which you haue which is the life of your life is hid alwaies from wicked men who haue no iudgement in or discerning in spirituall things and sometimes by the violence of tentation your selues discerne not your owne happines Yet be not discouraged it was so with CHRIST while he liued and though it be hid yet is it hid with GOD it is in him it is in his power and he will preserue it But especially if you thinke of the comming of IESVS CHRIST you should be stirred to the loue and study of heauenly things for then shall there be an end of all earthly felicities then shall men make accounts of all their actions and studies then will not riches auaile in that day of wrath then will the incomparable gaine and glory of godlinesse be discouered Oh the inualuable dignitie of heauenly minded Christians in that day And thus of the meditation of heauenly things The second maine part of my exhortation shall concerne the mortification both of vices and crimes First I would hence obserue those speciall sinnes which are most hatefull to God in your former course of life and then haue been most prone to When I say mortifie I meane that you should vse all the meanes indefinitely that serue to kill the power and practice of those sinnes neuer giuing ouer confession and godly sorrow till you finde the power of them abated and deaded And this I would haue you doe not only in outward sinnes but any sinne though they were as deare to you as the very members of your bodies yet you must cut them off Now some of the sinnes that I would haue you studious to auoide or mortifie are these first looke to the filthinesse condemned in the seuenth Commandement not only auoide whoredome but all kindes of wicked fleshly filthinesse and vncleannes yea looke to that internall burning or the flames of lust within that habituall effeminatenesse and passions of lust and more then all this see that you make conscience of euill thoughts and that contemplatiue wickednesse which may be in your mindes without consent of the will to practise it for euen those thoughts are filthy in GODS sight Now the last sinne I will name is couetousnesse which is a kinde of vile Idolatrie in GODS sight For these and such like sinnes bring downe the fearefull iudgements of GOD vpon the offenders and they wonderfully vexe GOD and besides to liue in these sins and loue them and continue in them is a manifest signe that they are but wicked men children of disobedience whatsoeuer they seeme to be or what shewes or profession soeuer they make And the rather should you be for euer carefull to keepe your selues from these euils and the like or speedily to subdue them and forsake seeing you haue felt by experience in your vnregenerate estate what it is to haue sinne like a Monster to liue and raigne in the heart or life You must also make conscience of iniurious dealing with others and that not only of the grosse acts of iniuries but of doing wrong in your very words yea in the passions of your heart yea to approue that now ye walke not in sinne shew your vprightnesse by putting away euen euery thing that might tend to the iniurie of others To expresse my meaning I will instance in diuers sins the vnregenerate would make no
heart with all willingnes as doing therein seruice to GOD and not to men only Knowing infallibly that if men would not reward you for your paines and faithfulnes yet GOD will who will not vse you as seruants but prouide for you as sons and heires to him For in all this labor GOD accounts you as the seruants of Christ and will reward all as if all had bin done to him And contrariwise he that doth wrong be he Master or Seruant shall receiue of the LORD for the wrong that he hath done for GOD is no accepter of persons CERTAINE OF THE choisest and chiefest points handled in the third CHAPTER A Threefold resurrection fol. 2. How a man may know whether he be risen with Christ. 3. T is as easie to reuiue a dead man as perswade a carnall man fol. 4. Eight sorts of things that are aboue fol. 4. A fourefold presence of Christ. 6. Of Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father 6. Three benefits come by tender affections 8. Three sorts of things called things on earth 8. Eight reasons in generall to disswade from affecting earthly things 9. Solomons reasons against the loue of earthly things 10.11 Christs reasons 12. The faithfull are dead three waies 13. The life of Christians is hid in diuers respects 14. Who may say Christ is their life 16. Of the appearing of Christ. 16. Six appearings of Christ. 16. Threefold iudgement 16. Who shall iudge who shall be iudged where the iudgment shall be and when 17. The signes of the second comming of Christ. 18. The forme of the last iudgment the preparation of the Iudge the citation resurrection collection and separation of the iudged the law and euidence by which men shall be iudged and the sentence and the fiue consequents of the iudgment with the vses fol. 19. to 22. What we must doe that we might be assured of the glory of heauen 26. How long we must continue our sorrowes in mortification 29. Why sinnes are called members 30. Reasons against whoredome 31. Seauen kinds of vncleannesse besides whoredome 33. Remedies against vncleannesse 34. The causes and occasions of lust 35. What couetousnes is and the effects of it fol. 36.37 the signes of it 38. remedies against it 39. Gods wrath vpon vncleane persons 41. Iustice in God considered foure waies 42. The fearefulnes of Gods wrath set out 43. The signes of Gods wrath the meanes to pacifie Gods anger and how wee may know that God is pacified 44.45.46 The markes of a child of disobedience 47. Difference between Gods anger towards the godly and the wicked 48. The profit of remembring our naturall miserie 49. A fourefold life fol. 51. How we may know when sinne is aliue and when it is dead 51. A man neuer truly repents till be endeuour to be rid of all sinne and motiues 53. Anger indifferent laudable vitious 54. Degrees of vicious anger reasons and remedies against it 55.56 Malice and the degrees and kindes of it 57. Reasons and remedies against it 57.58 Of blasphemie the kindes of it and reasons against it 59.60 Against filthy speaking 61. Of lying reasons against it and questions answered 61.62 What the old man signifieth and why corruption is called the man and why the old man 63.64 and what the workes of the old man are the old man is put off six waies 64. The necessitie of the new birth 66. Of the renouation of the creature in foure things and of the obedience in three things 66. Rules for attaining of true knowledge 67. Of the image of God in Christ in the Angells and in man 68. with their difference at large 68.69 How Christ is all in all and the comfort of it 72.73 The kindes and signes of election 74. How many waies the elect are holy 75. Fiue properties of Gods loue 76. The kindes of mercie 77. Motiues to mercie Rules how to shew mercie 78. True Christian curtesie 79 What humblenes of minde is negatiuely and affirmatiuely 80. Motiues to humblenes of minde and of diuers sorts of pride 80.81 Of Christian meeknes 81. Of Long-suffering 81.82 Of forbearance the kindes and motiues and rules for the practise of it 82.83 Of forgiuing diuers questions 84. To forgiue as Christ forgiues hath fiue things in it 85. How loue is aboue all virtues 85. The sorts and signes of loue 86. Loue is the bond of perfection three waies 87. Of Peace it is threefold 87. How it is of God and when it rules and what we must doe to get it 88. What is required in performing thankefulnes to men and what in receiuing it 90. The Scripture is the word of Christ in foure respects 92. Men sinne against the word six waies 92. Women must seeke knowledge as well as men 94. The vse of Scripture in our houses 94. Of the wise vse of the word 95. What we must doe that the word may dwell plenteously in vs and how we may know it doth 98. Who may admonish or be admonished 99. Rules to be obserued in admonition 100. What meant by Psalmes hymnes and spirituall songs and rules in singing of Psalms 101. Vnto the goodnes of the action the goodnes of the end is required 102. Things are done in the name of Christ foure waies 103. Sixe reasons why Gods children should be more carefull of their words and deeds then others 104. Of giuing thanks to God 105. Of the gouernment of a familie the authoritie antiquitie and vtilitie of it 107.108 Foure things in a holy liuing together in a familie 108. Sixe things in houshold pietie 108. Fiue things required in the labours of a familie 109. The dutie of Wiues 110.111.112.113 Why subiection is rather named in the Wiues dutie 111. Fiue things in the Wiues subiection 111. Sixe waies Wiues must honor their Husbands 111. Foure waies Wiues shame their Husbands 112. Fine waies Wiues shew faithfulnes 112. Sixe waies Wiues shew feare 112. Sixe rules for Wiues workes 112.113 What Wiues are not bound to 113. What they must doe that they may performe subiection 113. The Wiues comelinesse in three things 114. Husbands shew their loue foure waies 116. Sixe waies Husbands honor their Wiues 116. Seauen reasons why men must loue their Wiues 117. Husbands obiections answered 117. Causes why men loue not their Wiues 117. Of bitter Husbands 118. Foure rules for curing this bitternes 118. The dutie of children 121. Childrens obiections answered 122. Reasons of their obedience 123. The dutie of Parents 124.125 How Parents prouoke their Children 126. Seruants dutie 128 129.130. c Fiue faults in Seruants 128. Foure things in the manner of Seruants obedience 129. Sixe waies to know singlenes of heart 132. Twelue signes of a single hearted man 133. Eight signes of a single hearted Seruant 133. Of the feare of God in seruants 134. What Masters must doe to get the feare of God into their Seruants 134. Eight obiections of Seruants answered 135. CHAPTER III. VERSE I. If ye then be risen with Christ seeke
those things that are aboue where Christ sits at the right hand of God HITHERTO of christian doctrine now followeth christian life The Apostle hath before discoursed of matters of faith now he intends to intreat of matters of life and to prescribe rules of conuersation And these rules belong either to our generall calling as we are Christians or to our particular callings as we are people of such or such condition or state of life The generall rules are set downe from the first verse of this Chapter to the eighteenth and the particular rules begin at the eighteenth verse and continue to the second verse of the next Chapter The rules of the first kind may be referred to three heads for either they concerne first the meditation of heauenly things or secondly the mortification of vice or thirdly the renouation of life The meditation of heauenly things is vrged from v. 1. to the fift the mortification of vice is vrged from v. 5. to the tenth Renouation of life is generally laid down v. 10.11 and more specially opened v. 12 to the eighteenth The exhortation to the care and studie of heauenlie things is thus digested First it is expounded v. 1. Secondlie it is illustrated v. 2. Thirdly it is confirmed by motiues and reason v. 3.4 And thus for the order of the whole Chapter and the generall frame of this first part Before I open the words more particularly there are diuerse things may be noted from the coherence and dependence of these words with the Chapter before and the matter following in this Chapter From the coherence with the former Chapter I obserue these things-First that there can be no holinesse of life without faith and therefore the Apostle first instructeth them in matters of faith It is a true rule whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne and may be extended further then things indifferent while we are out of Gods fauour and know not our reconciliation and iustification in Christ our best actions are but faire sinnes For without faith it is vnpossible to please God Secondly that the terrestriall blessednesse of man is in respect of sinne two waies principally assaulted First with errors in opinion Secondly with corruptions in manners And against both we should learne from the Apostle in the latter part of the former Chapter and the first part of this to be armed and furnished with holy directions and meditations Thirdly that these men that are so superstitiouslie earnest and so zealouslie forward for ceremonies and the traditions and obseruations of men whatsoeuer they protest or pretend or seem to be are indeed void of true deuotion and feruent affection to heauenly thingsc. Fourthly that he that is by faith made a new creature must resolue to be at Gods appointment for his whole carriage in his generall and particular calling Thus of the coherence with the former Chapters From the order of doctrine in this Chapter two things may be noted First that before a man can be good in his particular calling he must first be good in his generall thou maist be painfull and diligent but thou canst not be euerie way a faithfull and sound hearted husband wife seruant child c. till thou be a good man or good woman in respect of grace and godlinesse And therefore we should first seeke the righteousnesse of Gods kingdome and it may serue for direction vnto such as choose wiues or seruants or the like if they be not faithfull to God how canst thou be assured they will prooue faithfull to thee moreouer wouldst thou haue thy seruants or children to be amended then bring them to the powerfull preaching of the word and call vpon them to get into the fellowship of the godly that they may learne to be good abroad in matters of religion and then thou maist hope to find them by proofe and daily experience trustie and faithfull in thy businesse finallie this reprooues both the sinfulnesse and follie of many carnall pa●ents and masters they neuer care so their seruants do their worke though they altogether neglect Gods worke And many times they restraine their seruants and children and will not let them heare sermons or come into godly companie as if that were the way to make them idle and carelesse whereas we see the cleane contrary to be true Secondly that men are neuer likelie to hold out and proue sound in the reformation and new obedience of their liues till they fall in loue with heauenlie things and grow in some measure wearie of the world and the things thereof Thus of the generall obseruations from the twofold coherence Now followeth the particular opening of the words In the proposition of the exhortation to the study of heauenly things laied downe in this verse two things are to bee considered first what or the dutie required viz. seeke those things which are aboue secondly why or the reasons to enforce the dutie and they are foure First ye are risen with Christ in the first resurrection Secondly these things are aboue and not attained without seeking or studie Thirdly Christ is aboue in his bodily presence Fourthly Christ sits at the right hand of God exalted in the glory of his father each of these strongly conclude the exhortation as will further appeare in the particular handling of them If ye be risen with Christ. There may be conceiued to be a threefold resurrection of a christian The first is sacramentall And thus we rise againe in baptisme The second is corporall and so we shall rise againe in the day of Iesus Christ in our bodies out of the dust of the earth The third is spirituall and so we must rise in this life in soule from the death of sinne or else we shall neuer be deliuered from the second death of this spirituall resurrection called elsewhere the first resurrection he here intreats And it is a worke of the spirit of grace deliuering vs from the power of sinne by which vve are quickned to the heauenly desires and endeuours of holy life by the vertue of the resurrection of Iesus Christ applied vnto vs by faith in the effectuall vse of Gods ordinances It is a worke by which we grow conformable to Christ b●ing risen againe by which also we taste of the powers of the life to come and are borne again to a liuely hope of an eternall and incorruptible inheritance the earnest of which we haue receiued and shall shortly receiue the whole possession purchased though for a time we be absent from the Lord. This first resurrection carieth with it a similitude or resemblance of Christ rising againe so as euery Christian in this work beares the Image of Christ and in him Christ riseth before our eies not onely because the Lord Iesus doth in this gracious worke giue vs a daily and fresh remembrance of his resurrection by renewing such fruits of it but also
dote on it with his heart Thirdly the nature of couetousnesse it will neuer be satisfied and how should it for the desire of the couetous is not naturall but against nature Naturall desires are finite but vnnaturall desires find no end And therefore cannot be filled with the finite things of the world Besides earthly things are vaine and empty Now the vessell that is only full of wind is empty still for all that So is the mind of the couetous His heart will be no more filled or satisfied with gold then his body with wind Hereupon it is that a couetous man is alwaies poore and hath not what he hath But hath his wealth as the prisoner hath his fetters viz. to inthrall him Fourthly the nature promise and prouidence of God He is a heauenly father is he a father why then do we doubt of his willingnesse to helpe vs and is he a heauenly father why then doe we question his all sufficiency to prouide what we need besides hath he giuen vs life and and will he not giue vs food to preserue life doth he daily prouide for thousand thousands of foules that are base creatures and will he not prouide for man whom he created after his owne image and made him Lord of all creatures doth he cloath the grasse of the field which is to day and to morrow is cut downe and will he not cloath man oh the weaknesse of our faith Besides is not the Lord engaged by promise neuer to leaue vs nor forsake vs Fiftly the condition of the couetous All his care cannot adde a cubit to his stature And besides the poore and the vsurer meet together in many things One God made them both One sunne lights them both One heauen couers them both and one graue of earth shall hold them both Sixtly the gaine of godlinesse it is bet●er thrist to couet after godlinesse For it hath the promises of this life and the life to come And who can count the gaine of godlinesse seeing God is the godly mans portion and his exceeding great reward The third preseruatiue is the daily practise of piety If we would seeke the kingdome of God first both in the first part of our life and in the first part of euery day of our life as well in our houses as in Gods house these religious duties constantly performed would be a great and continuall helpe against worldly cares they would cleanse our hearts of them and daily prepare our hearts against them But how can it be otherwise with a man then it is they must neeeds liue and die the drudges of the world seeing they haue no more care of holy duties at home or abroad they liue like swine without all care of any thing but rooting in the earth The fourth preseruatiue is the due preparation for Christs second comming For when our sauiour Christ had dehorted men from the cares of this life he adioines this exhortation let your loines be girded about and your lights burning and ye your selues like vnto them that waite for their master when he will returne from the wedding that when he commeth and knocketh they may open vnto him immediately blessed are those seruants whom the Lord when he commeth shall find waking c. One great reason why couetous men doe so securely continue in the immoderate cares for this world is because they do so little think of death and iudgement Whereas on the other side Christians doe with some ease withdraw their hearts from the world when they haue inured themselues to die daily by the constant remembrance of their latter end and by holding fast the euidence of faith and hope waiting when Christ will call for them The fift preseruatiue is to shunne the meanes and occasions of couetousnes And to this end it is good not to conuerse much with couetous persons or to get our selues liberty to conceiue the hope of any long prosperity and rest in the world and generally we should labour to obserue our owne hearts and other mens liues and what we find to be a meanes to kindle or inflame couetous desires that we should auoide and betimes set against it or mortifie it And thus farre of couetousnesse and thus also of the catalogue of sinnes from which he doth disswade The reasons follow Ver. 6. For the which things sake the wrath of God commeth on the the children of disobedience Ver. 7. Wherein ye also walked once when he liued in them These words containe two reasons to enforce the exhortation in the former verse Th one is taken from the euill effects of the former sinnes ver 6. The other is taken from their owne experience while they liued in the estate of corruption ver 7. in laying downe the reason from the effect two things are to be noted First what sinne brings viz. the wrath of God Secondly vpon whom viz. vpon the children of disobedience Before I come to intreat of the wrath of God a part I consider of it as it stands in coherence with the former reason For in these words we are assured that man liuing and continuing in filthinesse and couetousnesse shall not escape Gods wrath For they incurre both his hatred and his plagues both which are signified by the word wrath And if any aske what plagues filthy persons and couetous persons shall feele I answer briefly and distinctly that neither of them shall scape Gods wrath as the Scriptures plentifully shew The filthy person brings vpon himselfe Gods curse temporall corporall spirituall and eternall temporall for whoredome and any kinde of vncleanenesse brings vpon men many temporall plagues in their estate the fire of Gods iudgements consuming many times their whole increase as hath beene shewed before Corporall for God many times meetes with the sinnes of the bodie by iudgements vpon the body so that many filthie persons after they haue consumed their flesh and their body by loathsome diseases which follow this sinne in the end say with the foolish young man Oh how haue I hated instruction and despised correction now I am brought almost into all euill in the middest of the assembly Spirituall for vncleanenesse breeds in many a reprobate sence and finall impenitency Many also for their filthinesse are pursued with secret and fearefull terrours of conscience and sometimes frensie and desperate perturbations Eternall for the adulterer destroyes his owne soule and is shut out of the Kingdome of Heauen As hath beene also before declared Neither let the couetous person thinke he shall speed any better For God hates him wonderfully and therefore the Prophet Ezechiel sayth that the Lord smites his fists at the couetous which is a borrowed phrase to expresse most bitter and sharpe threatnings Now least the people should obiect that those were but great words the Lord would not do so they would deale well enough with the Lord. He preuenteth it and sayth can thy heart endure or can
so it is cursed speaking and a kinde of blasphemie to repine at Gods works to reproch Gods sabothes or messengers or his word Also there is a cursed speakinge which is against righteousnesse in the second table and thus it is cursed speaking When Subiects curse the king When Masters threaten their seruants When Parents prouoke their children When Husbands are bitter to their wiues When wiues braule and chide with their Husbandes When great men lord it ouer the poore and the like Cursed speaking is either before the face and so it is strife of words or behinde the backe and so it is backbiting or whispering It is cursed speaking to mocke and scorne it is cursed speaking to iudge and censure it is cursed speaking to slaunder and disgrace it is cursed speaking to be euer complayning in all places Finally it is cursed speaking when men speake euill of any man and there is a speciall kinde of it in speaking euill of godly men and this properly is blasphemie in the second table for the Lord for the honor he beares to his people is pleased to afford the name of blasphemie to their reproches as importing that he takes it as if he were reproched himselfe We should all of vs take heede of cursed speaking of what kinde soeuer for it ariseth of ill causes as enuie or malice and it hath effects for it is certaine thou werest as good peirce others with a sworde as smite them with thy tongue And therefore a bitter and cursed tongue is often compared in the Scripture to the stinge of adders and to a sword yea a sharpe sword to a razar and to arrowes and the like besides the hurt ●t doth to thy selfe for if thou bite and deuoure take heede thou be not deuoured And it is just with God thou shouldest be iudged and censured that accus●omes thy sel●● 〈◊〉 iudge and censure And though thou speake euill neuer so secretly ye●●od doth many times wonderfully discouer the shame of it before others and if man would not iudge thee for thy euill tongue yet it is certaine God will And it is many times seene that men and women of distempered and spightfull tongues are made a very abhomination amongst men so as all men are wearie of them and shunne them Lastly scornefull and cursed speaking proues a notable hinderance to the successe of the word and that these kinde of people might obserue when they come to heare they receiue not a blessing and why But because blessing is so farre from their lippes as they loued cursing so it commeth to them The vse of all may be to exhort vs to put away far from vs a froward mouth and peruerse lippes and that nothing be done through strife but rather that all things be done without murmuring or reasonings or brawlings or reuilings And herein such as feare God should striue to giue good example seeing they are as lights in the middest of ●rooked and peruerse people Q. But what are the remedies of cursed speak●ng Answ. If we haue sinned through bitternesse we should obserue two rules 1. Let thy owne words greiue thee that is labour by praier and godly sorrow to beate downe the power of thy peruersenesse without defending excusing or extenuating of thy frowardnesse 2. Keepe thy heart with all diligence Looke to the first risings of thy passions For bitternesse is first in the heart before it can come into the tongue Now for preuenting of euill speaking in others the only rule is to giue them no occasion either by words or iniurious and wicked life Ob. But they will raile and reuile without a cause Answ. Then obserue these rules 1. Betake thy selfe to praier so did Dauid 2. It is good oft-times to bee as a dumbe man that heareth not 3. Be sure thou be carefull thou wrong not the names of others else though thou bee innocent in the thinges imputed yet thou art iustly scourged with the like euill 4. The constantest and surest medicine for railing is a holy continuance in godly conuersation for though for the present it seeme not to profit the railer yet in time to come it may I adde also Salomons rule namely with an angrie countenance to driue away a backbiting biting tongue For that is many times the bellowes to kindle the fier of bitternesse and fierce speaking Filthie speaking This is another of the wretched vices of the tongue to be with all care and conscience auoided by a Christian. And therefore the Apostle in the fifth to the Ephesians also aswell as here puts it into the Catalogue of euils he would most seriously diswade them from and out of that Chapter we may gather diuers reasons against it 1. Wee are deare vnto God and therefore should follow him as deare children Now of all thinges we neuer saw any colour of this in God Angrie speaking indeede is sometimes for our capacitie giuen to God but neuer filthie speaking or any the least glimpse of it 2. Our loue should bee as Christs was Now his was to profit not to infect and it was pleasing to God not as hatred as this filth of wordes must needes be 3. It is a shame and vncomelinesse and dishonor to a Christian. 4. If any would obiect it is but a small matter the Apostle would soone answere men ought not to be deceiued with vaine words for it is sure that because of this and such like things commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience 5. This is a froth of filthinesse that should onely be found in vnregenerate men that lie in darkenes and it is a worke of darkenesse to speake filthily aswell as to do filthily 6. If wee be children of the light we should shew it by our fearefulnesse to speake or do any thing that were vnpleasing to God And we should shew it by reproouing such filthinesse in others for such filth if it be not reproued is not regarded but a Christian reproofe will make manifest in some measure that it is not good nor agreeing to truth and righteousnes and goodnesse 7. Men are in some degree of a lethargie that vse this sinne 8. A Christian ought to walke exactly strictly precisely or circumspectly it is no more then he is bound to do to make conscience of the least filthy word aswell as of filthy actions and therein to take notice of Gods will And this of the second vice of the tongue Vers. 9. Lie not one to another seeing that yee haue put of the old man with his workes Lie not one to another This is the last vice in the Catalogue lying is giuen oftentimes to the dumbe creatures and so Images lie and teach lies and so the wonders of Antichrist are lying wonders But it is most vsually and properly ascribed to man and so he lies either in nature or in worke or
followes There are many reasons why parents should bee carefull by all meanes to keepe anger out of their Children 1. Wise men and godly men can scarce gouerne this affection without sinning Psalm 4. much lesse children 2. Anger is a great prouoker of Gods anger it breedes a guiltinesse of Gods anger Math. 6. 3. It lets in the Deuill Eph. 4.26 and vsually Sathan in the times of these passions sowes the most hellish seeds and stirres most impious thoughts in them 4. It may bring them into great mischiefe in time Prouerbs 28.18 5. It is a great let to sound instruction and knowledge Eccles. 7.11 Prouerbs 14.29 6. The angry person is vsually suspitious and so vnfit for society with men Prou. 1.22.24 yea it is a great hinderance both to the profit of the word Iames. 1.21 and the power and successe of prayer 1 Tim. 2.8 7. Sometimes this rage in young persons is not to bee cooled but with bloud as in Caine. But to omit the reasons heere parents must not prouoke their children lest they be discouraged Concerning discouragement in generall we must know that it is a great sin to discourage others and a great hurt to be discouraged the people must not discourage their teachers Hebr. 13.17 those that are in authoritie must not discourage such as are faithfull and desirous to approue their feare of God and to discharge their duties Gouernours in the familie must not discourage seruants or children in their good beginnings desires after good things againe this is a Christian mercy and compassion to comfort and incourage the feeble and lastly Gods fainting children should bee admonished to bee of good comfort and to strengthen their weary knees 2. Cor. 13.11 Esay 36.3.4 Concerning the discouragement of children christian parents should bee carefull for they may be discouraged 1 From the seruice of God when they shall see carnall men vse their children better then they that make such a profession of piety 2 From the capacity and desire after the vndertaking of the knowledge or exercise of great things discouragement breakes their spirits and makes them pusillanimous 3 From the hope to please and so from the confidence of the parents loue and then at length from the very meanes of pleasing eyther by honor or obedience This of the duty of parents and children The third couple in the familie are seruants and masters The duty of seruants is set downe verse 22.23.24.25 Verse 22. Seruants be obedient to them that are your Masters according to the flesh in all things In all the words that concerne the duty of seruants I obserue 1 An exhortation verse 22.23 2 Reasons verse 24.25 The exhortation is two waies to be considered first as it is breefly set down here is first the parties exhorted Seruants secondly the duety wherewith they are charged be obedient thirdly the persons to whom to your masters 2 Secondly as it is explicated in the explication I consider 1 The promises about their obedience 2 The forme or manner how they must obey The prouisoes are either for limitation to curbe masters they are to obey according to the flesh the soules and consciences are not in bondage to men or for extent to seruants they must obey in all things The manner how they must obey is set downe 1 Negatiuelie not with eye seruice 2. not as men pleasers 2 Affirmatiuely with singlenes of heart 2. with feare of God 3. heartily as to the Lord. The reasons are 1. from hope of reward wages from God v. 24. 2. from the certaine vengeance of God vpon them that do wrong v. 25. This is the order of the words From the generall consideration of all the words I obserue 6. things 1 That seruants are to be instructed out of the word which reprooues masters that restraine seruants from hearing the word in Gods house and open not the booke of God to them in their owne houses 2 A question may heere be moued why should the duety of seruants bee thus largely in so many words set downe Answ. 1 Because vsually men shew lesse compassion to seruants therfore God takes the more care of them many men will haue some care of their children to see them taught in some manner but their seruants they wholly neglect Therefore God who is a Father to seruants as well as children prouides large instruction and comforts for seruants if they will come to his booke to be taught 2 The carefull Apostle saw that in the first conuersion of men from Gentilisme to Christianity there was greatest danger of disorder and scandall in seruants partly out of wearinesse of their bondage and seruile condition partly because men would lesse spare to tell of their faults therefore the Apostle as most fearefull of them spends many words in the teaching and incouraging of them 3 We may note here the candor of the Apostle he doth freely deliuer his mind in the behalfe of seruants with a full vent of words with great care without holding back anything that belongs vnto them He was not of the mind of most Preachers now adaies that hold the discourse of family duties especially of seruants too base a subiect for their wits and learning to be imployed in neither was the Apostle of the humour of Lawyers that seldome speake much but for great men or when they may haue great gifts the Apostle speakes as much for a seruant that could do nothing for him as for the Masters 4 In laying downe his speech to seruants hee both teacheth and comforteth them but for order hee first teacheth them and as any is more ignorant this course is more needfull to be held the common people should bee in this manner dealt withall they must first bee rebuked conuinced exhorted taught and then meet comforts to be applied and not before Lastly the scope and drift of the Apostle in all these words to keepe Seruants in order and that first to hold seruants in obedience that none vnder colour of liberty in Christ should breake vp their subiection to their Master he was no Anabaptist Secondly to meet with the faulty obedience of such seruants as were resolued to stay in seruice Hee meeteth heere with fiue faults in seruants 1 The first fault in seruants is halfe seruice or to obey in what they list this he correcteth when he saith in all things 2 The second fault is eye seruice 3 The third fault is prophanenes most seruants neuer respect piety and Gods feare but onely to please their Masters this hee meeteth with when he saith not as men pleasers but fearing God 4 The fourth fault is hypocriticall seruice this he meeteth when he addeth in singlenesse of heart 5 The fifth fault is basenesse of mind and discouragement this hee would preuent in the two last verses Thus of the generall Seruants The Seruants in the Apostles time were for the most part bondslaues bought and sold as beasts and their Masters were infidels and cruell
I answer that in cases of this nature three rules are to bee obserued by inferiours First If the matter required be onely inexpedient and vnmeet thou must obey neither doth this rule let but that seruants or inferiours may vse all humble and lawful meanes to preuent vnmeet things Secondly thou must be sure it be sinne that thou refusest thou must not disobey vpon conceit or coniecture nor vpon thine owne humor and opinion but it must appeare by the word of God to bee a sinne or else thy coniectures are no ground of disobedience if thou must needs doubt on both sides it is better doubt and obey then doubt and disobey Thirdly when it is apparant to be impious and sinnefull that is required yet thou must looke to the manner of disobedience thou must yeelde thy selfe to obey by suffering yea it is a wretched fault in seruants or inferiours that are vrged to vnlawfull things to refuse with sturdie and insolent and prouoking words or behauiour God frees thee from obedience in act but he frees thee not from reuerence and from an holy estimation and humble demeanour The vse is for great reproofe of seruants both indiscretion and stubbernes and withall it chargeth masters they must not require their seruants to lie and sweare in their shops onely to please and profit them nor may they make their seruants breake Gods Sabbaths to satisfie their wils Obiect But are they not required to obey in all things Answ They are but before he saith according to the flesh in labour not in sinne and after he saith they must so please men as they feare God too Thus of the prouisoes The forme of their obedience is set downe First negatiuely not with eye-seruice not as men-pleasers Secondly affirmatiuely 1. With singlenesse of heart 2. Fearing God 3. Hartily Eye-seruice Some take it thus not with outward seruice not onely doe the Labour of the bodie but bring the care prouidence affection of the heart or thus be obedient to your masters and let not your eye bee onely vpon your masters but vpon God the great Master of all Masters and men But I thinke the proper meaning of the word is not with eie-seruice that is not onely in the presence of your Masters not onely when their eie is vpon them so that he meets with the wretched faultinesse of such seruants as when their masters backes are turned neglect their labour fall to loitering or get them out of the doores or which is worse fall to wantonnesse drunkennesse filching smiting of their fellowes and quarrelling these seruants shall haue their portion at the day of Christ Matth. 14.48 and if eie-seruice bee condemned what shall become of such seruants as are not good no not so long as their masters are by them Not as men-pleasing Obiect Is it a fault for seruants to please their Masters Answ No it is not for they are commanded to please in all things Tit. 2.9 But two things are here condemned First so to please men as neuer to care for pleasing God so to attend a corporall seruice as not to care for the sauing health of their soules this is prophanesse Secondly such seruants are heere taxed as seeke by all meanes to please their masters but not to profit them such are they that are flattering soothing persons that serue their Masters onely with faire words but else are emptie persons such or rather worse are they that apply themselues to their Masters humors to feede them with tales or praising their ill courses and counsels or executing their sinfull mindes these seruants are many times the firebrands of contention alienate parents from their children friend from friend and keepe malice on perpetuall foote these are heere rebuked But let vs consider further is this such a fault in poore seruants that can pretend many things to be men-pleasers how foule a vice is it in freemen that are in no wants or restraint how hurtfull is it to be a man-pleaser in the Courts of Princes and in the houses of Nobles how detested a vice is it in such as are Magistrates and publike states And is it nought in the Court and Countrey certainely it is much more vile in the Pulpit and in Churchmen and euen the greater they are the worse and more abominable is their soothing and daubing Thus of the negatiue In the affirmatiue are three things and the first is singlenesse of heart In singlenesse of heart Concerning singlenesse of heart I consider it two waies 1 In the generall as it is in Gods Seruants 2 In speciall as it is in mens seruants Singlenesse or sinceritie of heart as it is in Gods seruants I consider of in two things 1 In the nature of it 2 In the signes of it Singlenesse of heart may bee discerned by the contrarie to which it is opposed 1 As it is opposed to hypocrisie a sincere hearted man is no hipocrite and shewes it three waies First hee had rather be good then seeme so as in case of almes Rom. 12.8 compared with Math. 6.2 so in the practise of piety he had rather haue grace and sound knowledge then an empty shew of it Secondly he will serue God at all times as well as at one time it is a note of an hypocrite that he will not pray at all times hee will serue God when hee is sicke but not when he is well Iob. 27.7.8.9 So it is vile hypocrisie to come to Church in Lent to heare Sermons but neuer come there or but seldome all the yeare after Thirdly he minds inward secret domesticall holinesse and piety as well as outward open and Church holinesse he is an hypocrite that kneeles downe when he comes into the Church and neuer prayeth in his family at home It is vile hypocrisie and palpable in such men as haue knees of prayer when they first come vp into the pulpit and no words of prayer when they are risen vp to speake for or to Gods people 2. As it is opposed to fleshly wisedome 1. Cor. 1.12 There is a three-fold wisedome of the flesh that batters and keepes out singlenesse and sincerity of heart 1 The first is a reaching after priuate ends in publike imployments as preaching for gaine 2. Cor. 2.17 2 The second is a cunningnesse in committing or hiding sinne It is sincerity to be wise to doe good and simple concerning euill to bee a bungler in acting it and to haue nothing to say in defence of it when it is done Rom. 16.19 3 The third is fraud shifting subtilty and guilefull and deceitfull dealing in mens course for the things of this life Thus Esau is a wild and cunning man able by reason of his craft and subtilty to liue in a wildernesse but Iakob is a plaine man a single hearted man he can make no shift to helpe himselfe in earthly things by fraud or craft but is open and plaine in all his dealings for the world but a man of great reach for
the salutation by the hand of me PAVL Secondly a request remember my bands Thirdly a loue grace be with you Amen verse 18. THE METAPHRASE vpon the fourth CHAPTER MAsters also must doe that which is iust vnto their seruants both for their soules and for their bodies also in diet wages or correction And that which is equall both while they stay with them in alowance of recreation and respect of their weaknesse and sicknesse and when they go from them not to let them go away emptie Knowing that they themselues are Seruants vnto GOD who is in heauen and will call them to accounts To conclude I returne againe to all sorts of Christians and exhort them to three things principally the first is about praier the second is about their carriage the third about their speeches For their praiers there are three things exceeding necessarie perseuerance and christian watchfulnes and thanksgiuing for the graces and blessings they do receiue Remembring vs also in their praiers that GOD would open vnto vs a doore of vtterance with libertie courage power and good successe to breake open the mysterie of the Gospell of CHRIST for which I am now in prison That I may so speake of those dreadfull secrets that I no way derogate from the maiestie of them or that trust that is committed to me or expected from me Thus of what I would specially commend to you about praier Now for your carriage I would haue you especially looke to your selues in respect of your behauiour before or amongst the wicked who are not of GODS familie and Strangers from the life of GOD it were an admirable thing to carry your selues in a wise and discreete manner towards them Hence and by all other waies shewing your selues to be skilfull Marchants in redeeming the time which hath been lost And for your communication let it be of good and holy things not offensiue or slanderous or filthy and powdred with the salt of discretion and mortification and thus let it be alwaies and in all companies that ye may speake fitlie vnto euery man and to his place and the occasion I haue sent ouer Tychicus to declare vnto you my whole estate who is both a godly man well respected and a painefull Minister that ioynes with vs in GODS workes And withall I send him to know how you doe and to comfort you by all meanes with heartie consolations And with him I haue sent Onesimus who is now a godlie man truly sincere and well respected euen he that was borne or brought vp amongst you These two will relate all things to you I haue also diuers commendations to deliuer to you some from some Iewes others from Gentiles Of the first sort are Aristarchus and Marcus and Iesus Aristarchus is my prison fellow Marcus is Barnabas sisters sonné and it is he concerning whom heretofore you receiued some aduertisements not to admit him but now if he come vnto you receiue him Iesus by his good carriage hath gotten himselfe the surname of Iust. These three are Iewes And indeed the only men that constantly hold out to help forward the kingdome of GOD they are men in whom I am much comforted Those of the Gentiles that desire to be remembred to you are Epaphras Luke and Demas Epaphras is a worthy Seruant of CHRIST and the dearer ought he to be to you because he is one of you he striueth mightily for you in all sorts of praiers being importunate with God that you might hold out without declining and be more and more compleat and full in the knowledge and practise of the whole will of GOD. For I beare him witnesse that he is inflamed with great affection both for you and them of Laodicea and Hierapolis Luke also a Phisitian both godly and greatly respected saluteth you and Demas I pray you also to remember my salutations to the brethren of Laodicea especially to Nymphas and that religious familie who for their pietie and good order are as it were a little Church And when this Epistle hath been publickly red of you send it to the Church of Laodicea to be red there also together with that letter which was sent to me from Laodicea Commend me also to Archippus your Preacher and charge him to take heed he do not his worke by halues but as he hath receiued his commission from the LORD so let him fulfill it both by constancie and painfulnesse and powerfulnesse of preaching I ioyne also my owne salutation which is written with mine own hand and not by my scribe I pray forget me not in this restraint The grace of GOD as the onely faire portion be now and alwaies with you And my confident hope is so it will CERTAINE OF THE choisest and chiefest points handled in the fourth CHAPTER HOw Masters doe that which is iust fol. 157. Masters doe vnequally fiue waies 158. Of continuance in prayer and of such as fall away from the affections and practise of prayer with the inconueniences of it 159. Obiections about prayer answered 160. Of watching in prayer 160. The doore of vtterance hath fiue things in it 162. Fiue things stops the mouthes of Gods Ministers 163. Christ is a misterie to six sorts of men 163. Christ a mysterie fiue waies 164. The Gospell hidden fiue waies 164. How Ministers must preach 165. How the people must heare 165. What it is to walke wisely 166. He walkes surely that obserues fiue rules 166. Who are without 167. The rules of answering in respect of wicked men 167. Six things obserued concerning redeeming the time 168. Foure consideration of the oportunitie of time 168. What time is lost and how time may be bought againe and how time must be vsed when it is bought 169. Motiues to redeeme time 170. Obseruations concerning gratious speech 171. The reasons why some men cannot leaue their euil words 172. What they should doe to get victorie 172. Perseuerance in good words as well as good workes 173. Six things concerning answering vnbeleeuers 173. Seuen things required in answering well 173. Foure things concerning answering beleeuers 173. Six rules about receiuing one another 178. Whether the name of Iesus may be giuen to any man 179 Eight things to winne the reputation of iust men 179. What hearers are like to fall away 180. A threefold kingdom of God 180. The priuiledges of the kingdome of grace 181. Six signes to know the subiects of Christs kingdome 181. How men may get into the kingdome of God 182. Why many hearers haue no more comfort in hearing 183. Who are Christs seruants 184. The force of prayer 185. Sorts of prayer 185 What striuing in prayer imports 186. Eight things we must fight against in prayer 186. Rules for prayer 187. The miserie of such as fall away 188. The causes of falling away 188. How many waies Christians may be said to be perfect 189. What we must doe to be perfect 189. The araignment of the ciuill honest
man 190.191.192 Twelue sorts of wrong zeale 194. Sixe things in true zeale 194. Foure sorts of men reproued about Physicke 195. Three rules for our practise concerning such as we suspect in profession 196. A religious familie is a little Church 197. Foure orders in the familie 197. Of reading the Scriptures 198. The profit of reading Scripture and the causes why many profit not 198. Painefull Preachers many times grow idle 199. How many waies men remember the bonds of others 202. Of the authoritie of the Postscript 202. CHAPTER IIII. VERSE I. Yee masters doe that which is iust and equall vnto your seruants knowing that yee haue also a master in heauen THis verse belongs vnto the doctrine of houshold gouernment and containes 1. the dutie of masters 2. the reason knowing c. In the dutie 1. the parties charged ye masters 2. the dutie required doe that which is iust and equall 3. the persons to whom it is to be performed vnto your seruants Masters All masters are charged without difference yea the wife as well as the husband by a Synechdoche the greatest as well as the meanest and the poorest must deale iustly as well as they that haue more meanes c. Doe that which is iust and equall Doctrine from the coherence That God that promiseth eternall things will prouide temporall things also In the former chapter God promised the reward of inheritance to seruants heere he takes order for their well being in the world charging masters to see that they be vsed iustly and equally Iust. Masters must doe iustly and shew it 1. generally by not requiring vniust things of them and by chusing such seruants as are iust into the familie lest by bringing in leud seruants the rest be infected For if it be a great iniustice to bring in an infectious seruant that hath the plague vpon his bodie and to appoint him to worke among the rest of his seruants that are free from the disease then it is much more vniust to bring in leud seruants that haue the plague sore of sinne running vpon them for the presence and counsell and example of leud sinners is of more power to infect a sound soule than is a plaguie man to poison the sound bodie of others 2. More particularly masters must doe that which is iust 1. to the soules 2. to the bodies of their seruants They must deale iustly with their soules by helping them to grace if it be possible but at least by bringing them to the publike meanes of grace and by priuate training of them vp in Gods feare by praier and instruction The iustice they owe vnto their body may be referred vnto three heads For either it concernes their maintenance and so they must giue them their portion of food conuenient for them or it concernes their wages and so they must giue the wages proportionable to their worke and that in due time and without defrauding them of any part of it or it concernes their punishment and so the iustice of the master must be shewed both in this that hee will punish their open disorders as also that he will doe it with instruction moderation and to profit them and the whole familie Equall Masters must not onely deale iustly but they must deale equally with their seruants And masters deale vnequally many waies 1 When they require inconuenient things for though the seruant must obey yet the master sinnes in requiring vnequall things 2 When they impose more worke than they haue strength to doe 3 When they turne them away when they are sicke for it is equall that as thou hast had their labour when they were well so thou shouldest keepe them when they are sicke 4 When they restraine them of libertie for their soules If thou haue the worke of their bodies it is equall that thou take care for their soules and if they serue thee six daies it is very equall thou shouldest proclaime libertie to them to doe Gods worke on the Sabbath day 5 When they restraine and with-hold their meat and wages 6 When they send them out of their seruice emptie after many yeares bondage and not prouide that they may haue some meanes to liue afterwards To conclude it is not equall for the master to heare euery word that men say of his seruants nor is it meet they should bring vp their seruants delicately nor yet that they should leaue their callings and the whole care of their businesse to their seruants but they ought diligently to know the state of the heards themselues Thus of the dutie The reason followes Knowing that yee haue also a master in heauen Heere are foure doctrines to be obserued 1 That there is no master but he is a seruant and therefore as hee would require his worke to be done by his seruant so hee should be carefull himselfe to doe Gods worke to whom he is a seruant 2 That Gods maiestie and mans authoritie may well stand together Christ and Caesar can well agree Mans gouernment in a familie and Gods gouernment in the world are not opposite one to the other 3 Ignorance of God and the accounts must be made to God is the cause of that securitie insolencie and crueltie that is in men That it is ill to vse seruants ill it will be required if they be wronged Thus of the reason Verse 2. Continue in praier and watch in the same with thankesgiuing In this verse with those that follow to the end of the chapter is contained the conclusion of the whole Epistle This conclusion containes matter of exhortation to verse 7. and matter of salutation verse 7. to the end The exhortation may be three waies considered 1 As it concernes praier ver 2.3.4 2 As it concernes wise conuersation ver 5. 3 And as it concernes godly communication ver 6. Concerning praier two things are to be obserued 1 How we must pray or the manner 2 For what or the matter In the manner three things are required 1. perseuerance 2. watchfulnesse 3. thankefulnesse ver 2. In the matter is further added 1. the persons for whom praying also for vs 2. the things for which that God may open c. ver 3.4 Continue in praier The doctrines implied in these words are foure 1 That our mortall condition is a condition of singular vanitie in that the best of Gods seruants are euer wanting something 2 That long praier of it selfe is not blame-worthie Christ continued all night in praier 3 That praier is of perpetuall vse in the life of a Christian. 4 That to pray by fits is not Gods ordinance neither that hee requires nor that he will accept The doctrine exprest in these words is threefold 1 That we must hold out and pray still and neuer giue ouer praier till we giue vp our soules into Gods hands 2 That we must pray vpon all occasions for health wealth successe in our calling preseruation of our estates the blessing of
as they would bee for vsually if in discretion men prooue before they trust they are taxed of pride and haughtinesse yet considering the vile hypocrisie that is in many it is better to be so censured without cause then to be beguiled by men that make their religion but a cloake to their owne ends The third rule is that while they stand and fall not into open sinne thou maiest not traduce them but conceale thy dislikes till God lay them open vnlesse greater danger might ensue by the concealment for the Lord may make him sound and giue him repentance Paul doth not dispraise Demas here as he doth not commend him Thirdly we may in this man note the propertie of many hypocrites they will not be discountenanced they are vsually impudent this man thrusts himselfe into the Apostles company and will be commended to the Churches he will haue a place though it be the last place Verse 15. Salute the brethren which are in Laodicea and Nymphas and the Church which is in his house Hitherto of Salutations signified now the Salutations required follow and these are particular verse 15.16.17 generall v. 18. The particulars concerne either Laodiceans v. 15.16 or the Colossean preacher verse 17. who is not onely saluted but exhorted or rebuked by intimation In the salutation of the Laodiceans obserue two things first the persons who are to be saluted v. 15. 2ly a speciall direction for the open reading of two epistles v. 16. The persons are the brethren in generall and Nymphas in speciall and the houshold of Nymphas Salute the brethren which are at Laodicea 1 Christian curtesie ought to haue in it a holy remembrance of absent friends 2 It is not vanitie or weaknesse but may stand with singular gifts and graces of minde to bee industrious and large hearted in the many remembrances of all sorts of Christians 3 It is profitable that men of great gifts and place should preserue their memory with others though it be but in these lighter complements of salutation for many times it may inflame much affection to godlinesse in such to whom they send their salutations 4 God hath his choice amongst men for here hee takes notice of the brethren in Laodicea onely God doth not driue in whole townes of men into the field of his grace at once for as it was then in turning men from gentilisme so it is now in turning men from profanenesse the Gospell doth not worke vpon all promiscuously And Nymphas This Nymphas was not a woman as Ambrose and Dionisius and Catharinus and the glosse would haue it for it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the end of the verse his house not hir house This Nymphas it seemes was some eminent Christian whom Paul would specially honour before the congregation and so it shewes that a speciall respect should be had of such as did excell in gifts amongst such as professe the sinceritie of the gospell And the Church that is in his ●oms● By the Church hee meanes those in the houshold that feare God whether they were women or children or seruants Now here first I consider of these persons and then of the title the Apostle giues them in calling them a Church In that the Apostle thus with honour remembers the houshold of Nymphas it shewes his singular vprightnesse in that he can respect grace in whomsoeuer hee finde it hee loues a good seruant as well as a good Master and can commend good order in an houshold as well as in a congregation This should teach vs not to haue the grace of Christ in respect of persons and hereby also we may try our loue to Gods children by examining our selues whether we can loue such as can neither profit or pleasure vs nor grace vs in the world And this may be a great incouragement to the yoong and meaner sort in that they may perceiue from hence that if they get true grace they shall be respected both of God and good men Now in that the Apostle calls this houshold a Church we may note that a religious and well ordred familie is as it were a little Church Here in one familie is prescribed what all families should be this familie is called a church because his people were godly and the word of God was read there and prayers made to God and Psalmes sung and the yonger sort were catechized and instructed Now doe we learne from hence that our houses are Churches then these things will follow 1 That Gods worship and pietie must be set vp in them how can they be churches of God if God be not serued in them 2 All must be done there in order and quietnesse and silence for so it is or should be in the Church 3 Euill persons that are incorrigible must not dwell there but must be cast out Psal. 101. 4 The Husband or Master of the familie must dwell there as a man of knowledge and wiues children and seruants must obey as the Church doth Christ. Againe are our families Churches why then religious families are in a happy case for then God himselfe will dwell there So as a stranger comming to such places may say as Iacob did of Bethel surely God is in this place Lastly should our families be Churches Oh then woe vnto the world of profane housholds should a Church be without sacrifice and can their families escape Gods wrath seeing there is neither prayer nor pietie in them but in stead of Gods seruice there is cursing and swearing and lying and chiding and filching and whoring and rayling and fighting and what not The most families are very cages of vncleane spirits where not God or good men but very deuills dwell they are very styes of vncleanesse and vnholinesse Thus of the 15 verse Verse 16. And when this Epistle is read amongst you cause it to be read also in the Church of the Laodiceans and that you likewise read the Epistle from Laodicea These words conteine a direction for reading 1 of this epistle and that both priuately and publikely 2 of an epistle from Laodicea In the generall we may obserue that the Scripture may be read it is mens dutie to doe it t is a flat precept search the Scriptures Ioh. 5.39 and this may euidently reprooue the profane neglect of the most herein in this great light many are so drowned in carelesnesse that they haue not yet so much as a Bible in their houses and others thought for their credit sake they haue gotten them Bibles yet they read them not This Epistle In that this Epistle may not be neglected but must be read it shewes that whatsoeuer is reuealed to the Church to be a part of the word of God it must be read so soone as this Epistle is written it must be read of all Christians which shewes that euery part of Gods word is to be read Now for the persons that must read the Scriptures it is here set downe indefinitely of you meaning
b Io. 8.31 c Io. 14.23.24 d 1 Ioh. 2.5 e Luk. 11.28 f 1 Ioh. 2.12 g Psa. 119.100 h Psal. 119 92 i Psal. 119.87 k Ps. 119.141 l Psalm 119 129.130 Women must seeke knowledge as well as men The Scriptures in our houses m Ps. 78.5.6 Deut. 6. The vse of Scripture in our houses n Ps. 119.112 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 o Psal. 119.72 p Ps. 119.162 q Reu. 3.18.18 Of the wise vse and entertainment of the word q Ier. 8.7 r Luk. 20.20 The vses general and speciall 4 Iudgements vpon contemners of the word Esay 29.11 Obiecti Sol. Micha 2.7 Ps. 119.155 Heb. 5.13.12 Ps. 119 96. Obiect Sol. Psal. 119.160 Obiect Sol. Esay 51.7 Obiect Sol. Obiecti Sol. Isay. 51.7.8 a Psal. 91.1 b Psal. 140. c Psal. 94.12 d Prou. 9.20 10 25. Quest. Answ. e Psal. 119.45 f Ps. 119.115 g Psa. 119.48 h Ephes. 1.18 i Psa. 119.32 k Ps. 119.171 Quest. Answ. l Psal. 15.9 m 1. Cor. 1.5.4 n Psa. 119.35 o Isay 26 9. p Psa. 119.57 q Ioh 8.31.32 r Rom. 15.14 ● s Psal. 119.11.88 72 t Psa. 119 66. Obiect Sol. u Neh. 9.20 * Esay 26 9. x Exod. 24.12 y Prou. 15.7 z Psal. 119.59 a Iam. 2.9 b 1. Cor. 10.11 c Esay 30.21 d Iob 15.6 Who may admonish e 2. Tim. 4.12 f Ephes. 6.4 g Gen. 21.12 h Iob. 31.13 Who are to admonish i 1. Thes. 5.14 k Eph. 5.11 l Tit. 1.13 m Prou. 24.24 n Pro. 9.9 o Rom 15.14 p Iob 23.15 q Iob 22.2 What rules are to bee obserued in admonition r Tit. 1.9 s Esai 11.3 t Pro. 25.11 u 2 Thes. 3.15 * Gal. 6.1 x Mat. 18.15 Prou. 25.9 y Leu. 19.17 z 2 Cor. 24. a Prou. 13.19 b Tit. 2. vlt. c 1 Thes. 5.12 Psal. 141.7 d Prou. 30.2.3 e Prou. 9.9 f Prou. 25.12 g Prou. 18 23. h Iud. 22.23 i Iob 6.27 k Iob. 13.8.9 l Iob 19.3 m Esai 29.21 n Iob 21.31.32 o Prou. 13.1 15.12 p Prou. 15.10 q Prou. 13.18 Hos. 4.4.5 r Tit. 3.10.11 What meant by Psalmes Hymnes and Spirituall songs Rules in singing of Psalms s Psal. 9.2 t Psal. 13.5 u Psal. 47.6 * Psalm 104.33 34 x Psal. 47.7 1 Cor. 14.14 y Psal. 57.7 z Psal. 57.8 a Ephes. 5.19 b Iam. 5.13 c Ephes. 5.19 d Palm 156.2 104.33 Vnto goodnesse of the action the goodnesse of the end is required e Luk. 14.19 Mat. 6. Things are done in the name of Christ foure waies Ephes. 6 a 1 Cor. 10.31 b Pro. 13.3 c Ephes. 5.6 d Iob 6.3 e Psal. 36.3 f Col. 3 8. g Prou. 17.7 h Prou. 18.6.7 i 2. Chr. 10.17 k Prou. l Acts 26. m Iob. 6.25 n 2. Tim. 1.13 o Iohn 6. p Hose 14 3. Zeph. 3.9 q Prou. 18.11 r Iam. 1. Mal. 7.21 1 Ioh. 3.18 Prou. 14 23. 2. Tim. 3.3 vlt. Psalm 119. 6. Reasons why Gods children shold be more carefull o● their words and deeds then others Why. For what Eucharist s 1. Cor. 10.30 t Rom. 7.25 u 2. Cor. 4.15 1 Thes. 5.18 How 1. Cor. 14 16. * 2. Cor. 4.15 How long Of the gouernment of a Familie 1. The authority of it a Psal. 101.2 b Prou. 24.3 2. The antiquity of it 3. The vtilitie of it c Psal. 101.2 Gen. 18.19 4. What is necessarie to the well-being of it Foule faults in the first erecting of Families 4. Things in a holy liuing together in a Familie 6. Things in holshold pietie d 1 Tim. 2.8 e 1 Tim. 4.4 f Psal. 55.18 g Psal 14.4 h Ierem. 20. i 1 Pet. 3.7 k Deu. 6.21.22 l Colos. 3.16 Ephes. 5.20 m Act. 17. What things may be taught in the familie n Exod. 12.25.26 ●3 14 o Deut. 6.6 p Psa. 78.23 q 2. Tim. 3.15 r Gen. 3.19 1 Cor. 7.20 5 Things required in the labours of a Family s Heb. 13.2 1 Pet. 18. Why subiection is onely named in the wiues duty 5 Things in the wiues subiection Wiues must honour their husbands sixe waies Wiues shame their husbāds foure waies Wiues must shew faithfulnes in fiue things Wiues should shew their feare 6. waies Sixe rules for wiues worke What wiues are not bound to The wiues comelines in three things Husbands shew their loue 4. waies Husbands honour their wiues 6. waies 7. Reasons why men must loue their wiues Mens obiections answered The causes why men loue not their wiues Of bitter husbands 4 Rules for curing of this bitternesse in men Reasons against bitternesse The obedience of children considered of more especially or more generally Childrens obiection answered Reasons why children should obey their parents By Fathers he meanes both parents How parents prouoke their children both by words and deeds 7. Reasons to preuent anger in childrē 1. Thess. 5.14 Sixe things generally obserued Fiue faults in seruants 4. Things in the manner of seruants obedience Obiect Sol. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How to know singlenes of hart by 6. things to which it is opposed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 12. Signes of a single hearted man 8. Signes of a single hearted seruant Of the feare of God in seruants What masters must doe to get the feare of God into their seruants 8 Obiections of seruants answered Verse 1. Verse 2. Verse 3.4 Verse 6. Verse 7.8 Verse 9. Verse 10. Verse 11. Verse 13. Verse 15.16 Verse 17. Verse 18. VERSE 1. YE masters do that which is iust and equall vnto your seruants knowing that ye haue also a Master in heauen Verse 2. Continue in pra●er and watch in the same with thanksgiuing Verse 3. Praying also for vs that GOD may open vnto vs the doore of vtterance to speake the misterie of CHRIST wherefore I am also in bonds Verse 4. That I may vtter it as it becommeth me to speake Verse 5. Walke wisely towards them that are without and redeeme the time Verse 6. Let your speech be gracious alwaies and poudred with salt that yee may know how to answer euery man Verse 7. All my state shall Tichicus declare vnto you who is a beloued brother and faithfull Minister and fellow seruant in the LORD Verse 8. Whom I haue sent vnto you for the same purpose that he might know your estate and comfort your hearts Verse 9. With On●simus a faithfull and beloued brother who is one of you they shall make knowne vnto you all things which are done heere Verse 10. Aristarchus my prison-fellow saluteth you and Marcus Barnabas sisters sonne touching whom ye receiued cōmandements If hee come vnto you receiue him Verse 11. And Iesus which is called Iustus which are of the circumcision These onely are my worke-fellowes vnto the kingdome of GOD which haue been vnto my consolation Verse 12. Epaphras the seruant of CHRIST which is one of you saluteth you and alwaies striueth for you in praiers that ye may stand perfect and full in all the will