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A22481 A commentarie vpon the epistle of Saint Paule to Philemon VVherein, the Apostle handling a meane and low subiect, intreating for a fraudulent and fugitiue seruant, mounteth aloft vnto God, and deliuereth sundry high misteries of true religion, and the practise of duties Ĺ“conomicall. Politicall. Ecclesiasticall. As of persecution for righteousnesse sake. ... And of the force and fruit of the ministery. Mouing all the ministers of the Gospell, to a diligent labouring in the spirituall haruest ... Written by William Attersoll, minister of the word of God, at Isfield in Suffex. Attersoll, William, d. 1640. 1612 (1612) STC 890; ESTC S106848 821,054 582

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Iesus To these precepts and example before remembred wee might adde diuers other out of the Booke of God to teach vs that to whom soeuer GOD hath vochsafed this grace and giuen this honour to make him a Father of Children a Mayster ouer Seruaunts a Gouernour ouer an Houshould hee requireth with all this dutie and therefore layeth it as a burthen vpon his Shoulders to teach to exhort to admonish to reprooue and to instruct all those that are vnder his charge and iurisdiction Reason 1. The Reasons inforcing this Doctrine are many in number strong in value and manifest in the view of all that will rightly consider of them For first all Christians are generally charged k Leuit. 19. Hebr. 3 13. 1 Thes 5 11. to exhort and admonish one another as we see 1. Thess 5. 11. Heb. 3. 13. 14. Leuit. 19. 17. So then vnlesse the rulers of Families will exempt themselues out of the number of Christians they cannot shake off this yoake but they are bound to edifie and exhort daily their Families least their harts be hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sin If then we be bound generally to admonish one another euen those to whom we are lesse bound much more are we to do it to such as we are tyed vnto by a double band and a neerer coniunction Reason 2. Secondly euery Mans house is his priuate charge which he must ouer-see it is as his Flocke which he must attend it is as his Cittie ouer which he must watch and thereby fit them for the hearing of the publique Ministery of the word and therefore must answere for their negligence This wee see in the example of Eli. 1. Sam. 2. 29. He is charged with the sinnes l 1 Sam. 2 29 of his Children which they had committed and to haue honoured them aboue the Lord. This is a greeuous fault and an horrible offence to set yp our Sonnes in stead of God and to make more account of them then we do of the most high Hence it is that Salomon saith m Pro. 27 23. Be diligent to know the State of thy Flock and take heed to the Heards Such as are Shepheards ouer the Sheepe of the Pasture which are vnreasonable ought to care prouide for them much more ought such to be diligent and watchfull as haue the people of God committed vnto them and haue a charge to looke to his sheep which are indued with reason whose Soules are immortall who beare the Image of God vpon them and for whom Christ Iesus shed his most pure and precious blood Euery man hath some charge or other greater or lesser in the Church in the Common-wealth or in the family and euery one must be diligent to know the estate of this charge labouring earnestlie to discharge it And if we will make conscience of our dutie wee shall finde the least flocke enough for our feeding the least fielde sufficient for our tilling the least house great enough for our teaching and ordering Reason 3. Thirdly we may be drawne to the discharging of this duty if we consider the profite and benefites that arise from hence First it will bee a meanes to make them more carefully to learne to know the will of God when they consider it shall be required of them and an account taken how they heare Secondly it will cause them to retaine in mind and memory the better the Lessons which they haue learned when they haue whetted them vpon their Families Thirdly God will encrease his guiftes and graces that are in them already he will blesse them with a new supplie for to him that hath shall be giuen and he shall haue aboundance Fourthly it will breede and begin great obedience and dutifulnesse in all the degrees of their Families first to God then to themselues and afterward to others to the preuenting of a thousand houshold greefes and troubles that arise for want thereof This obedience is a thing which all Fathers and Maisters greatly desire Euery one desireth to haue dutifull Children and faithfull Seruants this is the way and course to be taken that we may attaine vnto it So when such as haue beene instructed and nurtered by vs shall goe abroade into other families of their owne and grow to haue houses themselues as they haue beene instructed so will they instruct their Seruants and deale toward them as they haue beene dealt withall themselues Lastly the publike ministery is made more fruitfull vnto them in that the seede sowne in their harts is watered and thereby made to spring vp And this is found true by daily experience in our assemblies that let the Minister teach neuer so diligently in his charge vnlesse there bee a seconding and furthering of his labours in seuerall families at home all the doctrine deliuered and heard is troden vnder foot choked and forgotten Reason 4. Fourthly innumerable are the euils and manifolde are the mischiefes that come of the neglecting of this duty First it is the Mother of all the ignorance and grosse blindnesse that ouerfloweth and ouerthroweth the Church For from what cause commeth ignorance but from the want of teaching as darknesse proceedeth from the want of light Secondly it causeth the Lessons and instructions taught on the day of the publique assembly to bee forgotten of Maister and Man of Mother and Daughter of Father and Childe before the next day Often teaching and much repeating make a diligent Maister and a profitable Scholler Thirdly from hence come all domesticall braules contentions stubbornnesse and disobedience that the House is diuided against it selfe which would be remedied and preuented by this meanes Lastly the neglect of this duty bringeth Gods iudgements vpon the whole Familie So then whether we consider the common duty of exhorting that lieth vpon all or that the priuate house is a priuate Church or that the benefits are many where this duty is practised the euils many that grow where it is neglected in all these respectes we see that it is a speciall duty required of all gouernors to labour to plant and to sow the Seedes of true Religion in the heart as it were in the ground of those that are committed vnto them Obiect 1. Before we come to the vses of this Doctrine certaine Obiections are to be remooued whereby many stumble and fall downe The Sluggard pretendeth there is a Lyon in the way and feareth danger when there is none So soone as Adam had sinned by and by hee sought Figge leaues to couer his shame Many are the deuises of men dawbing with vntempered Morter to excuse their neglect or contempt of this duty Some say they are ashamed to pray to read to teach in their families and housholds and to call them together for such endes They are ashamed of it because it is good because it is commaunded but they are not ashamed of committing open sinnes in open places They shrinke backe when any good duty is to be performed
both what may bee learned by it and how it may bee applyed vnto vs. First of all it teatheth that though education bee a notable meanes of reformation and working good in the hearts of those that heare instruction and albeit Parents and Maysters bee thereby discharged as they that haue done their dutie yet bare teaching is not sufficient to conuert the soule and to settle the Conscience in good thinges Noah was as carefull for the instruction of Cham and Canaan as of the rest that were of his house belonged to his charge yet they followed not his Doctrine but scoffed at him that was both Pastor and Parent Dauid a man after Gods owne heart walked in the middest of his house in the vprightnesse of his Conscience yet he had an incestuous Ammon a Rebellious Absolom a licentious Adoniah all of them vngodly and vngracious Children So then although education be a good meanes yet it is not a sufficient meanes to worke reformation He that laboureth in planting and watering is nothing except God giue the blessing of encrease We see this euidently in the publicke assembly as well as in the priuate family in the house of God as well as in the house of man There is a difference of hearers according to their diuers dispositions f Math. 13 13 14. some are deafe hearers that haue not their eares boared through to the heart they haue onely outward eares and regarde no more but outward hearing and are no way mooued with that which is spoken dead-hearted dull-eared dim-sighted heauy-headed Others beside their bodily eares haue the eares of their hearts opened by the word and worke of the Spirit made plyable and tractable to receiue imbrace and beleeue that which they heare So is it in the priuate instruction vsed in priuate Families all that heare with the outwarde eare are not reformed all that are instructed are not conuerted Obiection What then Shall not Fathers teach their Children and Maisters their Seruants and Householders their Families because some haue not beleeued and many remaine as blinde and blockish as they were at the first Answere Yes it is their dutie to bee dilligent in teaching them and in laying the foundation of Christian Religion among them howsoeuer it bee receyued or reiected of such as bee in their houses and belong vnto them Were not he a simple Husbandman that would neglect to sowe his Ground because hee knoweth that some of the Corne will neuer grow vppe to bring foorth fruite but dye in the earth Or were not hee an vnwise Law-giuer that will not haue wholesome Lawes enacted and established because some transgresse them and disobey them and make no account of them Or were not hee a very foolish Father who because hee hath one rude and riotous Sonne that will not reuerence his person nor fulfill his Commaundements nor regarde his Authoritie nor feare his threatninges woulde therefore holde his peace and refraine himselfe from instructing and informing his other Children in the wayes of Godlinesse Or were hee not a badde Gardiner who because some of his Ground bringeth forth Weeds and Nettles would therefore refuse to water the Hearbes that are meete for the vse of man When the Lorde sent his holy Prophets to reprooue the stubborne and stiffe-necked Iewes hee knewe what entertainement them-selues shoulde finde and what effect their Doctrine woulde haue taken yet to make them without excuse they were commanded to go that they might be conuinced of sinne seeing there had beene a Prophet among them The Prophet Ieremy being called of God to preach the word is told afore-hand that they shoulde not obey his word g Ier. 1 19. Ezek. 2 5 7. and 3 7. but fight against him Likewise Ezekiell being sent to the children of Israel is shewed that they would not heare him nor cease from their waies Whereby we see that howsoeuer the people were stiffe-necked and stif-harted howsoeuer their faces were stronger then the Flint and their fore-heads were harder then the Adamant yet God would haue his worde offered vnto them and laid before them He hath mo endes then one of the preaching of his word sometimes he vseth it to soften and sometimes to harden sometimes to saue and sometimes to condemne somtimes to be h 2 Cor. 2 16 the sauor of life vnto life and sometimes to be the sauor of death vnto death So should it be with all godly housholders howsoeuer they haue many that harbour in their houses are entertained within their wals that regard not the fear of God but pull away their shoulders from the sweet yoak of God yet they are not to surcease or wax faint and weary but to continue the instruction of them the powring of water vpon the hard stone proouing if God at anytime will soften their harts and giue them repentance that they may come out of the snares of the Deuil of whom they are holdē captiues We know not at what time God may work in them and call them to a sight of their sinnes and to a turning from their sins They may heare that in the time of their ignorance which they may practise in the time of their knowledge They may hear that Doctrine which though it lye hid and couered as Corn in the earth or as fire in the ashes a long time and seeme buried in perpetuall forgetfulnesse yet it may afterwardes break forth as the light and kindle in their harts as a mightie flame Thus peraduenture it might be with this Onesimus when he was conuerted by the Ministry of the Apostle to the Faith of Christ he might cal to his remembrance many good thinges that hee had heard before but neuer a whit regarded nor respected and now profit by that Doctrine that before he had despised and derided The Disciples of Christ did not by and by receiue nor conceiue of his preaching but when i Iohn 2 22. hee was risen againe they remembered what hee had deliuered vnto them So ought wee to deale toward such as are committed vnto vs let vs plant and water committing and commending the successe and encrease of all our labours vnto God Vse 2 Secondly seeing where there are good meanes are many times godlesse and gracelesse men we learne that to heare to saluation and to receiue willingly instruction is no generall or common grace no man can beleeue sauing hee to whom it is giuen It is the guift of God that must open the vnderstanding and boare through the eare and sanctify the heart before any can heare with a desire to vnderstand or lay it vppe with a purpose to practise and obey Hence it is that the Prophet saith k Esay 50 5. The Lord GOD hath opened mine eare and I was not rebellious neyther turned I backe The Euangelist Luke teacheth that when the Apostles preached the Gospell so many as were appointed to saluation beleeued which was a fruite of their election others mocked which was a
from whence he came Doctrine 5. The Gospel doth not abolish or diminish ciuil ordinances and distinct degrees among men Heereby we learne that the Gospell of Christ doth not dissolue or abolish but confirme establish ciuill ordinances distinct degrees and politick constitutions among men as between Princes and Subiects Parents and Children Husband and Wife Maister and Seruants Superiors and Inferiors This appeareth in many places of the worde where the seuerall and distinct duties of n Rom. 13 1. seuerall and distinct callings are mentioned and required by the Apostle Heereunto commeth that which he setteth downe Rom. 13. Let euery soule be subiect to the higher powers for there is no power but of God and the powers that be are ordained of God Likewise o Ephes 5 22 25. 6 1 2 5 9. Col. 3 18 19 20 21 22. writing to the Ephesians he chargeth Wiues to submit themselues vnto their husbands as vnto the Lorde he willeth Husbands to loue their wiues euen as Christ loued the Church and gaue himselfe for it he requireth of Children to obey their Parents in the Lorde for this is right he commaundeth Fathers not to prouoke their Children to vvrath least they be discouraged but to bring them vppe in instruction and information of the Lord he prescribeth vnto Seruants to be obedient vnto them that are their Maisters according to the flesh with feare and trembling in singlenesse of their hearts as vnto Christ and he setteth downe the duties of Maisters that they should deale iustly with their seruants putting away threatning knowing that euen their Maister also is in Heauen with whom there is no respect of persons In like manner when he writeth to Timothy he saith p 1 Tim. 6 1. Titus 2 9 10 and 3 1. Let as many Seruantes as are vnder the yoake count their Maisters worthy of all honour that the name of God and his Doctrine be not euill spoken of And Titus 2. Let Seruants bee subiest to their Maisters and please them in all things not answearing againe neither pickers but that they shew all good faithfulnesse that they may adorne the Doctrine of God our Sauiour in all things for that grace of God that bringeth saluation vnto all men hath appeared The like exhortations and establishing of ciuill ordinances we see in Peter q 1 Pet 2 13 14 and 3 1 2 7 Submit your selues vnto all manner ordinance of man for the Lordes sake whether it bee vnto the King as vnto the Superiour or vnto Gouernours as vnto them that are sent of him for the punishment of euill dooers and for the praise of them that do well So likewise hee chargeth the Wiues to bee Subiect to their Husbands that euen they which obey not the word may without the word hee won by the conuersation of the wiues while they beholde their pure conuersation which is with feare And the Husbands he teacheth That they should dwell with them as men of knowledge giuing honour vnto the woman as vnto the weaker vessell euen as they which are heyres together of the grace of life that their prayers be not interrupted Christ our Sauiour willeth vs to r Math. 22 21. Giue vnto Caesar the things that are Caesars and vnto God the thinges that are Gods The Apostle hath heaped together manie such precepts vnto the same Å¿ 1 Cor. 7 3 5 10 11 12 13 20 21 22. purpose 1 Cor. 7. Let the Husband giue vnto the wife due beneuolence and likewise the wife vnto the Husband defraude not one another except it bee with consent for a time vnto the married I commaund not I but the Lorde let not the wife depart from her Husband and let not the Husbande put away his wife If any Brother haue a wife that beleeueth not if shee bee content to dwell with him let him not forsake her and the woman that hath an Husbande which beleeueth not if hee bee content to dwell with her let her not forsake him Let euerie man abide in the same Vocation vvherein hee was called Bretheren let euerie man wherein hee was called therein abide with GOD. All these rules and commaundements serue to teach vs this truth that howsoeuer the gospel doth make vs al as brethren and ioyne vs together in one body yet it doth not abrogat and abolish the difference betweene man and man and bring in an Anarchy and confusion but setleth a distinction betweene Prince and subiect betweene Maister and seruant betweene high and low Reason 1. This Doctrine of the gospel will better appeare if we marke the reasons For first God is not the author of confusion and disorder but of peace and order Look vpon al the creatures of God in heauen earth on high and beneath and we shal be constrained to cry out with the prophet t Psal 104 24 O Lord how manifold are thy works In wisedom hast thou made them al the earth is full of thy riches Al tumult and sedition al disorder and insurrection commeth from the deuill he is the author thereof For he first brought in sin and sin brought in disorder Hence it is that the apostle saith u 1 Cor. 14 33 40. Colos 2 5 God is not the author of confusion but of peace as we see in al the churches of the Saints He commandeth that al things be done honestly and in order he commendeth the goodly order that is obserued among the faithfull and therefore he teacheth not any disorders nor alloweth them where they are Reason 2. Secondly Christ came not into the world to abolish the Lawe but to establish it x Mat. 5 17 18 as he testifieth Mat. 5. Thinke not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy them but to fulfill them for truely I say vnto you till heauen and earth perish one iot or one title of the Law shal not escape till all things be fulfilled Now we know that the moral Law commandeth the honor of Father and Mother that is of all superiors who beare a part of his image If then the end of his comming were to ratifie the Law then it followeth that the Law making a difference betweene superiors and inferiors remaineth and shall remaine in his full strength power and vertue Reason 3. Thirdly the Gospell commaundeth hearty obedience as vnto God and therefore doth not dissolue or disanull true obedience nay it is a praise and ornament to the Gospel when all sortes walke in the duties of their seuerall Callings and specially such as are the obedience of others Seruants are the lowest condition in the Church and yet the Apostle teacheth that by vprighnesse of their life and obedience to their Maister for Conscience sake y Titus 3 10. 1 Tim. 6 1. they may adorne the Doctrine of God our Sauiour in all things and on the other side by the euil life stubbornesse and disobedience of seruants that professe
of Princes in troubling of Common-wealths in plotting and practising of Treasons in murthering of Princes and in setting all things in an vprore Thirdly the Bope vsurpeth a power to free subiects from their allegeance and their oath of obedience as appeareth by the Popes two Breeues that hee sent ouer forbidding his popish Catholickes to sweare homage and fidelitie to the King Fourthly their teachers of popish Diuinity publish and maintaine manie Treasonable positions tending to the dishonour of Princes and to the ouerthrow of Kingdomes It is well knowne to all the World what Bellarmine hath deliuered in the Controuersies of Religion that he hath published to be read and viewed of all men how basely he hath spoken of Princes and how boldly he hath diminished their authority that he might establish the Popes Temporall Soueraignety He teacheth out of his Doctours Chaire or rather from his Orators Deske o Bellar. de laic lib. 7. cap. De pontif lib. 1. c. 7. et lib. 5. cap. 8. 7. that Princes are rather Seruants then Lords subiect not onely to Popes and Cardinals but to Byshoppes and Priests that Princes haue their authority not immediatly from God nor from the Law of God but by the Law of Nations that Princes may be deposed and dethroned by their Subiects and other placed in their stead that the Pope hath Temporall power indirectly that obedience is due to the Pope for conscience sake but to Princes for pollicy sake That the cause why Christians in former time deposed not Nero the Tyrant and Iulian the Apostata and Valens the Arrian and such like was because they wanted Temporall power and if they had not wanted strength they would not haue wanted will to do it that if Princes go about to turne away the people from their base Roman and Bastard-Catholike Faith they may and ought to be depriued of their dominions Heereunto we might adde many like principles of their deuilish Diuinitie taught in their Schooles and brought into the State and practised by their Disciples out of Sanders p Sand. devisib Monarch lib. 2. cap. 4. who was himselfe an Arch-rebell and perrished in his rebellion that he had raised being not onely a beholder of it but an Actor in it Whereby we see if he had no other matter what we are to esteeme of the Roman Religion namely that it is a counterfeit Religion to be abhorred of all true Christians being the Nursery of Treasons and the Mother of all abhominations which setteth vp the Pope as the great Idoll and Arch-rebell of the World so that he vsurpeth a Supremacy ouer all Ciuill Gouernments in the Earth whereas the true Christian Religion is as contrary to this as light to darkenesse which teacheth to bee subiect to the higher powers for Conscience sake which teacheth to feare God and to honour the King which teacheth all degrees as well q Chrys hom 23. in Rom. 13. Ecclesiasticall as Ciuill to stoop downe to this ordinance of God Our Weapons are Prayers and teares our means that we vse are supplications to God and to Man But these Seducers put downe the honour of Kings and Princes and teach them that depend vpon them to take vp Fire and Sword and all other seditious practises which the God of this World teacheth the Children of rebellion so often as occasion of aduantage and hope to preuaile serueth them Vse 3. Lastly seeing the Gospell doth establish not abolish strengthen not weaken confirme not disanull the ordinances that God hath setled among Men we learne that whosoeuer is a good Christian and hath rightly embraced the Gospell is also a good obseruer of Household Gouernment and of Common-wealth Gouernment which stand with the word of God and the maintenance of peace and humaine society I say then that a faithfull and sound Christian is a good Subiect a good Father a good Maister a good Wife a good Childe a good Seruant a good Common-wealths-man The Church and Common-wealth are as louing Sisters liuing dwelling growing flourishing prospering decaying and falling together We must all consider our common and speciall calling and know that Christian duties and Personall duties must not be deuided the one from the other but bee coupled and ioyned in one man It is not sufficient for a man in common conuersation to be a Christian but he must shew himselfe to be so in his speciall calling A Magistrate must not onely be a Christian but he must bee a Christian Magistrate A Father and Maister must not onely be Christians but they must be Christian Fathers and Christian Maisters It is not enough for vs to be Christians abroad we must not content our selues to be Christians in the sight of others but we must manifest our selues to be so in the administration and gouernment of our particular Families and in the discharge of our seuerall duties toward Wife Children and Seruants This reproueth many that liue among vs who beare themselues abroad as men forward in Religion eatnest in their profession and such as would be accounted to goe before many others yet take a view of them what they are priuately in their owne houses and what duties they performe toward their Families they haue lost the reputation at home that they had abroad and shew themselues to be more carefull to seeme religious and to bee thought great Christians then to be good Christians indeede The like we may say of all Inferiours It is not enough for the Wife the Childe the Seruant the Subiect to shew themselues faithfull and religious openly in the Congregation and other places of resort but they must shew themselues right Christians in their reuerence subiection and obedience toward those Superiours that are set ouer them Euery one hath two callings generall and personall Thus we see that as euery one hath two callings one generall which is the calling of Christianity common to euery member of the the Church the other personall or particular which is the discharge of speciall duties in regard of that distinction made betweene man and man so both these callings must be ioyned together in our life as the body and soule are in one man If one of them be wanting the other is missing If they doe not meete together in one person there is onely a shew of true Christianity but the substance is absent A good Christian therefore cannot be an euill Subiect an euill Seruant If they haue Christ Iesus formed in them it will make them obey for Conscience sake Nay heereby wee see that onely such as feare God are good Subiects others cannot be For the wicked and vngodly doe prouoke God to anger against the King against the Kingdome and to procure the destruction of them both by their sinnes This is it which Salomon teacheth in the Prouerbes r Prou. 28 2. For the transgression of the Land there are many Princes thereof but by a man of vnderstanding and knowledge a Realme likewise endureth long Thus
that such as contemne their Parents and refuse to helpe and succour those that GOD hath made nearest vnto them and so bound them in a greater band doe commit the greater sinne and plainely declare that their hearts are voyd of naturall affection The third reproofe Thirdly this Doctrine reprooueth those that where most causes and reasons concurre and meete together to vrge them to their dutie do not make vse of them nor bind themselues more closely and straightly with them nor shew more kindnesse being moued by them so that the greater and moe the meanes are to tie them in affection one to another the lesse many times their loue is This may be made plainely to appeare vnto vs if we consider the particular practise of the people toward their Minister and the generall behauiour of one of the faithfull toward another God hath bound the people to their owne Pastor by a straighter and neerer coniunction then to the Shepheards of other Foldes because they haue a greater charge of their Soules and must giue an account for them to the cheefe Shepheard of the Sheep and yet we see they are most bitter and violent against them because they reprooue their sinnes and discouer their corruptions that they themselues may see them and forsake them and God may forgiue them Shall the sicke person hate the Phisition because hee sheweth him his disease and offereth his help best endeuour to cure it In like manner shall we be spightfully intreated and cruellie handled and mortally maligned that wish them the greatest good shew our selues their best friends deale faithfull with their Soules and labour to bring them to eternall happinesse This is it which the Apostle speaketh to the Galathians e Gal. 4 16. Am I therefore become your Enemy because I tellyou the truth Thus also the Prophet Ieremy complaineth f Ier. 18 20. Shall euill be recompensed for good For they haue digged a pit for my Soule remember that I stood before thee to speake good for them and to turne away thy wrath from them We pray for them we stand in the gap wee exhort and admonish them we desire to cure them of those sinnes that fight against their Soules to destroy them Secondly we are to draw from hence a generall consideration that as God hath called vs with an holy calling into the bosome of the Church so he hath linked the faithfull in loue one to another and yoaked them together with the sweet yoake of his Gospell and yet how many are there that professe the name of Christ and will needes be accounted true Christians that cannot abide the Children of God but hate them with an vnfained hatred and account them as their Mortall enemies If we should see a man rage against the members of his owne bodie g Marke 5 5. and strike himselfe with stones to the wounding of the flesh like the man possessed would we not seek to binde him with Chaines and say he were mad and out of his wits So likewise if we be in Christ we haue him as our head and are members one of another and therefore such as nourish the passions of hatred as Coales of fire kindled in their breastes are out of their right minde as men distracted and beside themselues No man euer yet hated his owne flesh but nourisheth h Ephe. 5 29. and cherisheth it euen as the Lord doth the Church We haue many effectuall meanes and strong reasons to ioyne our affections one to another i Ephe. 4 4 5. There is one Body and one Spirit there is one hope and one inheritance there is one Faith and one Baptisme there is one God and Father of all which is aboue all and thorough all and in vs all These are so many bands to hold vs together if wee plucke these Chaines asunder and breake the Fetters in peeces that no man can tame vs nor binde vs we are not liuing but dead members and offer violence to our owne flesh The single knot of nature ought to be sufficient to knit vs one to another and the least thred of naturall coniunction of our humane Nature ought to sew vs together as a Garment fitted for our bodie how much more when many occasions meet together which should establish brotherly loue to continue among vs Vse 3 Thirdly seeing coupling of many reasons together and the meeting of many good respects in one giueth the more cause of ioy and gladnesse of louing and caring one for another it giueth a profitable instruction to all Children and Seruants and other inferiors to performe the duties of honor and reuerence to their Fathers and Maisters If there were no other means this were a sufficient meanes to make them tractable and attentiue to the wordes and directions of their Fathers and Maisters euen because they are their Fathers and Maisters For this includeth many reasons and ioyneth them in neerer bandes then they were tyed together before and detecteth them of a greater sin and maketh them guilty of a greater iudgement When it pleased God to open the mouth of Baalams i Num. 22 28. Asse to reprooue the foolishnesse and wickednesse of that false Prophet it was his fault not to hearken nor giue heede to that which is spoken vnto him When God instructeth vs by the Creatures which are the common Maisters of all mankind we must learne the inuisible thinges of God by them When the Wise-man passed by the fielde of the slothfull k Prou. 24 30 31 32. and by the Vine-yard of the Man destitute of vnderstanding which was growne all ouer with Thornes and Nettles he behelde and considered it well he looked vpon it and receiued instruction But when the Lord chuseth one to speake vnto vs and to informe vs in his waies which hath beene the Instrument of our life and being of our peace and welfare of our good and saluation we ought to haue more respect to his person and to his perswasion as he is a more honorable Messenger and as his words do proceede from greater loue and kindnesse toward vs. This serueth greatlie to reprooue all rebellious Children and contemptuous Seruants which dislike and distast the holie instructions and informations of their Fathers and Maisters If they receiue any temporall commoditie from them this doth rellish well in their mouthes but they regard not their counsels they will none of their instructions These are wicked Children these are vngodlie Seruants An euill Child is but halfe a Child an euill Wife is but halfe a Wife an euill Seruant is but halfe a Seruant an euill Subiect is but halfe a Subiect The godly and gratious Child is a Childe indeede a godly and gratious Wife is a true Wife indeede a godly and gratious Seruant is a right Seruant indeede a godly and gratious Subiect is to be accounted and acknowledged a true Subiect indeede For as there are degrees of coniunction of mankinde one to another which are
are as certaine steppes whereby we climbe vp to the society and mutuall loue of others so the moe steps and degrees there are the greater ought our loue to be To be a man created after the Image of God is one degree and challengeth loue from vs to be performed toward him To be ioyned in a Politicall or Domesticall knot to wit in the Common wealth or in the priuate Familie as the Prince and Subiect the Father and Sonne the Maister and Seruant is another and a neerer degree and ought to be the cause of farther loue But if to these naturall and ciuill respects there be added a spiritual Communion in Christ which is the best band that bindeth faster then all the rest whereby the Subiect is made his Princes brother the Child his Fathers Brother and the Seruant his Maisters Brother this requireth a more faithfull and feruent loue and a farther degree of our affection toward them On the other side if the coniunction betweene them be onely in the two former considerations there can be no true and sincere loue betweene them albeit they bee so closely tyed together no although they be Fathers and Children Husbands and Wiues Maisters and Seruants Princes and Subiects For where Christ Iesus is not there can be no singlenesse and soundnesse of the Soule whosoeuer loueth not in the Lord he cannot loue from the heart and where there is no true piety there can be nothing else but hypocrisie which is the bane and poison of true loue Hence it is that hee which hath an euill Seruant doth not in truth possesse him he hath an interest and propriety in the least part of him he may haue his handes but he cannot haue his heart So the Apostle sheweth that while Onesimus was a wicked man and an vnbeleeuer his Maister Philemon could not commodiously vse him he wandred therefore a while from his House that by changing of the place he might be turned into another and returne a new man before an vnworthy Seruant but now a profitable Seruant nay a beloued Brother made neere and after a sort equall with his Maister thorough Faith in Christ Whensoeuer therefore Kinges and Princes Fathers and Maisters being beleeuers haue vnder them and belonging vnto them such as are vnfaithfull and vnbeleeuers they cannot promise to themselues that they haue the whole rule and command ouer them This appeareth euidently in the Popish sort that beleeue the Doctrine of the Councell or rather Conuenticle of Trent if one that professeth the Gospell haue a Wife or Child or Seruant embracing that falsly named Catholike-Religion that rest vpon the deceiueable errors of the Priests and Iesuits and all of them vpon the decree and determination of the Pope he cannot make his accounts except he account amisse that he hath full power ouer them or the rule of their liues or the loue of their hearts We see it oftentimes come to passe in Subiects adhering to the Dregges of Popish superstition that notwithstanding the bands of fidelity and allegiance whereby they are obliged to their Princes they breake out into actions of open Rebellion and seeke the subuersion of King and Countrey and Religion If then a man would haue an absolute and Soueraigne commaund ouer his Inferiours and be assured to haue a whole and entire Wife that his heart may trust in her and her heart rest in him if a man would haue a dutifull Child and a faithfull Seruant to do his will and performe seruice vnto him for conscience sake he must make choise of such as haue in them the feare of God the Faith of Christ the guifts of the Spirit the loue of Religion the desire of instruction and the care of saluation If these be wanting neuer thinke their affection can be firmely setled toward thee but vpon euerie occasion it will be easilie remooued from thee It is the surest and fastest knot that Christ knitteth all other bands will quickly be broken and loosed Vse 4 Lastlie seeing the encrease of many bands meeting together doubleth and trebleth the care and loue one toward another so that where the smallest number of meanes is found there also is found the smallest loue and where the greatest number of occasions concurreth as it were on an heap there ought to bee the surest knot of friendship and amitie it should put all superiours in minde of a necessary dutie to be carefull to instruct those that belong to their seuerall charges and iurisdictions that so they may tye them with a surer knot to themselues and haue the better seruice at their handes For seeing they are neerer coupled vnto them that are vnder the reach of their authoritie or the roofe of their houses then vnto the rest of mankinde they ought to haue a greater respect vnto them and beare a dearer loue vnto them euen vnto their bodies how much more vnto their Soules But wee cannot better testifie our loue vnto them and shew our care ouer them then by making knowne vnto them the workes of the Lord and the waies of saluation If we be commaunded to l Heb. 3 13. Exhort one another while it is called to day and to stirre vp one another to good things m 1 Thes 5 14 if we must admonish them that are out of order and comfort the feeble minded how much more are wee bound in conscience to perfect it to those that depend vpon vs and are neerer vnto vs It was the first and principall care of all the godly Kings that had true Religion in their owne harts to prouide for the instruction of their subiects The Apostle writing to the Ephesians and prescribing the distinct duties of sundry persons forgetteth not the Father and the Son and as he chargeth Children m Ephe. 6 2 4 To obey their Parents in the Lord so he commaundeth Parents to bring them vp in the instruction and information of the Lord. Thus godly Maisters haue vsed all diligence to bring their Seruants to haue a desire of Religion and a loue to the exercises of pietie whereby oftentimes such a good worke hath beene wrought in them that they haue accounted their Maisters as second Fathers and as spirituall Fathers confessed themselues more bound in all dutie to them then to their naturall Parents hauing learned that to the glory of God and the saluation of their Soules by their Maisters instruction which they could neuer vnderstand by their Fathers education They haue confessed themselues to haue gained more by such a seruice then if a large portion a rich inheritance and great reuennewes had beene left vnto them And indeede this is the onely way to teach Children dutifulnesse and to frame our Seruants to obedience to plant godlinesse in them and to water that which is planted The neglect of this care in vs will make them carelesse and the making of no conscience to teach them will bring them to be vnconscionable in their places If we be dumb and open not
their negligence as Eli did of the offences of his Children Hence it is that in the fourth Commaundement prescribing the time of Gods publike worship g Exod. 20 10 the Housholder is charged to haue care of his Son of his Daughter of his Seruant of his Stranger Iacob called for his people and assembled them together h Gene. 35 2. when he went to Bethell Dauid went with a great traine and company into the house as those that goe to a Feast when he saith i Psal 42 4. When I remembred these thinges I powred out my very heart because I had gone with the multitude and led them into the house of God with the voice of singing and praise as a multitude that keepeth a Feast Behold heere the godly deuotion of a religious heart as the Hart brayeth for the Riuers of Waters so his soule panted after God and his publike worship neither could he content himselfe to goe alone but it was his comfort and delight to leade others as it were by the hand with him that they might finde that sweetenesse in the word that hee found and be partakers of the benefit that hee reaped thereby Vse 5. Lastly seeing it is so necessary a duty to teach our Housholds we must acknowledge that it is as necessary for Children and Seruants to bee taught and instructed It should be therefore our care and desire to dwell and inhabite in such places and houses as that we may be trained vp in godlinesse and learn our duties to God and man It should bee our care and desire to place and bestow our Children with such persons as that they may be brought vp in the feare of God There is not one of those in our Families euen the lowest and meanest but of meate drinke cloathing or wages bee at any times denyed or detained from them they will thinke themselues wronged and misused and are ready to complaine of the iniury How much more if there were in them any care of their Soules or loue of the life to come would they mourn and lament when they are debarred and defrauded of this most necessary portion the knowledge of true Religion appointed by the Lord to be bestowed vpon them If a man be to take any Farme he will not doe it hand ouer head but he will know what Acres hee shall haue what arable ground what Meddow and what meanes of his maintenance but how many are there that seek to others for their seruice who neuer consider what instruction they shal haue or whether they be likely euer to hear of the Name of God There is no Man so simple in wit but if he put his Sonne to bee an Apprentize and his Maister within his yeares doe not teach him his occupation hee will and may iustlie thinke his Childe much misvsed what a wonderfull blindnesse and blockishnesse then doth it argue in them that care not where they put and with whom they place their Children so they learne their occupation they regard not whether they learne any Religion and neuer enquire whether their Maisters take any pains or not to teach them the precepts and instructions that belong to a Christian which of all callings vnder heauens is both the most honourable and in the end shall be acknowledged to bee most profitable Let vs therefore put out our Children to bee the Seruants of those that may learne them to be the Seruants of God Let vs so binde them to their Trade that we may be sure they may learne the Trade of Trades the Art of Arts the Mysterie of Mysteries that is Religion and Godlinesse If wee haue little to leaue our Children and small wealth to bequeath vnto them yet if we bring them vp to this Trade and binde them fast vnto it we shall leaue them a worthy and wealthy portion for all men must bee of this Trade We see how costly other Trades are and what a round summe must be giuen with our children to serue for them but we may k Esay 55 1 2. without cost and without Mony make our Children of this Trade which is the best and most gainefull of all others l 1 Tim. 6 6. For godlinesse saith the Apostle is not onely gaine but great gaine if a man bee contented with that he hath If thou haue not learned this gainefull and profitable Trade thou wilt be neuer but a Begger and a Bankerout for being destitute of this thou art without Grace without God without Heauen Thus much of this doctrine 3 Grace be with you and peace from God our Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ The order of the words and the interpretation of the same Hitherto wee haue spoken of the first part of the Praeface of this Epistle touching the persons writing and written vnto Now we come to the second part to wit the prayers which he maketh which are of two sortes a salutation and a thanksgiuing the salutation is a greeting which the Apostle wisheth to all the persons before named wherein we are to consider two pointes first what blessings the Apostle desireth to be giuen vnto them Secondlie from whom he craueth them The blessings which he prayeth for are two namely Grace and Peace By Grace we must vnderstand the free fauour meer mercy and good will of God towards vs whereby he hath eternally vndeseruedly loued vs in Christ who are a people by nature not beloued but deseruing to be disgraced by him and hated of him The second blessing that he beggeth for them is peace whereby is meant all kind of benefits spirituall and temporall which flow vnto vs from this Fountaine and grow out of the root of grace and therefore ordinarily in other Epistles it is annexed vnto it Grace heere mnntioned is not any gift in vs but it is Gods and in God it is his gratious fauour free loue and good will whereby he is well pleased with his elect in and for Christ Peace is not any guift in God but in vs and is that holy vnity and blessed concord which is in the Kingdome of God among Gods Children this concord and agreement of Gods Children is a fruit and effect of grace Paraphr So then the meaning of the words is this We wish vnto you all the fauour of God in Christ and that concord which is propper to Gods Church and Children hauing peace with God with his holy Angels with his Church with your owne hearts with your enemies and with al his Creatures Secondly in this verse is set downe the cause the worker and author from whom these blessings come to wit the Father and Iesus Christ God the Father the Fountaine of them and Christ our Lord as the Cunduit pipe by whom they are carried and conueied vnto vs. Obiect But it may be obiected why is the holy Ghost left out why is not he named do not these guifts come from him as well as from the Father and the Son
see that many complaine of the hardnesse of the world of the straitnesse of the times and of the miserablenesse of many men Alas say they it neuer went worse with poore men wee know not what to do with our Children how to employ them or where to bestowe them except a man be able to giue a round and rich summe with his sonne he cannot get him a Maister or prouide him a seruice or bind him to a trade or place him to get his liuing another day But vnderstand O yee vnwise among the people and ye Fooles when will ye be wise How long will wee liue in the Church and yet not learne this one lesson which is the foundation and fountaine of al the rest that godlinesse is the greatest gaine Bind them to this trade this is the best trade with which no other can bee matched or compared this requireth no great stocke or substance to put them foorth They that haue nothing to giue and little to liue vpon may asloon aduance and preferre their children this way as they that haue great riches large possessions Hence it is that the Prophet saith m Esay 55 1 2 Ho euery one that thirsteth come ye to the Waters and ye that haue no Siluer come buy and eate Come I say buy Wine and Milke without Siluer and without Money wherefore do yee lay out Siluer and not for Bread And your labour without being satisfied Hearken diligently vnto me and eate that which is good and let your soule delight in fatnesse Whereby we see that whosoeuer are called to be of this Science it wil be able to maintaine the Tradesmen it will bring in the greatest profit There are so many of some Trades that they feare one will not bee able to liue by another one enuyeth another and hindereth another It is not so in this Trade the moe the better the moe the merrier euery one helpeth another and all do make vp a blessed fellowship and communion of Saints If then thou haue a care to put thy sonne to an Occupation that he may learn to liue another day and neglectest this which is the cheefe and ground of all thou art greatly deceiued in thy choise and Christ Iesus shall laugh thee to scorn for thy folly Let me therefore commend this waighty businesse of bestowing thy sonne to thy wise consideration a greater gaine I cannot name a richer trade thou canst not finde a better Maister hee cannot serue a farther freedome he cannot obtaine a surer inheritance he cannot purchase This is it which Salomon pointeth out vnto vs Prou. 22 6. Teach a childe in the trade of his way and when he is old he shall not depart from it Furthermore if we desire to haue our Seruants that attend vpon vs and labour for vs to be obedient and faithfull vnto vs painfull in their calling and trusty in their businesse let vs know that we our selues must be the means to procure it and further it by seeking their saluation and labouring earnestly their conuersion If they be truly Religious they will be truely righteous if they once know how to serue God faithfully they will soone learn to serue vs faithfully for Conscience sake Many haue euill seruants and vngracious Children they see it they complaine of it they seeme to lament it but they neuer consider that the cheefest fault is their owne Haue wee Seruants or Children giuen to lying to deceiuing to fraude to falshood to robbing and stealing and breaking out into sundry disorders in their life Let vs marke what the cause is let vs see where is the occasion and let vs prouide howe these abuses may be remedied and redressed There is no better way to recouer them then to teach them their duties to shewe them their sinnes out of the word of God and to lay before them his Iudgements that are due vnto them It is a great blessing of God to haue a Religious seruant he bringeth the blessing of God with him the heart of his Maister may trust in him and he shall haue no neede of spoile he will do him good and not euill all the dayes of his life This wee see in the seruant of Abraham who as hee had a care to teach and traine vp his housholde in the wayes of godlinesse so the Lord blessed him with a faithfull family and a n Gen. 24 42. religious seruant whom hee employed in a waighty businesse of fetching home a Wife for his Sonne Isaac The like we see in Ioseph he was sold for a slaue and brought down into Egypt and bought at the hand of the Ishmaelites And the Lorde o Gen. 39 2 3. was vvith him and he was a man that prospered and was in the house of his Maister the Egiptian and his Maister saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all that he did to prosper in his hand So afterward when as thorough ●he slanderous accusation and false information of his Mistris he was cast into prison p Psal 105 18 where he was laid in Irons and his feete were held in the stockes the Lord made his innocency known and shewed mercy vnto him and got him fauour in the sight of the Maister of the prison q Gen. 39 22. and the Keeper of the prison committed to Iosephs hand all the prisoners that were in the prison whatsoeuer they did there that did he and the Keeper of the prison looked vnto nothing that was vnder his hand seeing that the Lorde was with him for whatsoeuer he did the Lord made it to prosper Beholde heere in Ioseph as in a cleare glasse the right picture and patterne of a right religious seruant who being a poore prisoner and lying in a darke Dungeon beeing vniustly falne into the displeasure of his Maister and wrongfully cast into a close prison did in that wofull and pittifull condition both gain glory to God beautifie his owne profession and seeke the good of his Maister that put his trust in him For no man is in so low and meane an estate if he be a poore Seruant a base Kitchen boy or a vile prisoner but by diligence in his Calling such as it is and by shewing fidelity to his Maister such as he is may greatly glorify the name of God whom he doth serue and adorne the Gospell of Christ which he doth professe Hence it is that the Apostle exhorting all religious seruants saith r 1 Tim. 6 1 2 Titus 2 10. Let as many seruants as are vnder the yoake count their Maisters woorthy of all honour that the name of God and his Gospell be not euill spoken of and that they may adorn the Doctrine of God our Sauiour in all things The example of Iacob also is worth and worthy the obseruation in this case who albeit he serued an hard froward Maister yet he rather considered what he ought to doe then what the other deserued to suffer so that he witnesseth
did Paule him so Or doth hee thinke it enough to make him almost a Christian No halfe a Christian is no Christian and almost godly is not godly Therefore his desire was to take him by the hand or rather by the heart if he could haue sounded into the depth and bottome of it and to haue led him from Almost to Altogether Hence it is that when he seeth him comming toward Christ hee casteth out his Net to catch him if it were possible saying vnto him I would to God that not onelie thou but also all that heare mee to day were both almost and altogether such as I am except these bondes Thus he ceaseth not continually to call vppon the Churches to encrease more and more and to proceed from grace to grace Againe it belongeth to euery Maister of the Family to water that which himselfe or the Minister hath planted and to be alwayes weeding out the bitter roots that spring vp in his Garden If we haue brought any of his family to godlinesse and to embrace the Gospell let him make much of them let his countenance bee toward them let him fauour them aboue others and admonish them to frequent the exercises of Religion remembering that it is as great a Vertue to keepe as to get to preserue as to finde to holde fast as to take Moreouer as it is a generall dutie belonging to all of vs h Hebr. 3 7. and 10 24. to exhort one another while it is called to day and stirre vp one another to good things so if by our example of life or lighting of them a Candle to see their wayes they shall come to the acknowledgement of the truth we should loue them dearly and prouoke them to go farther forward in good works assuring them that such as continue to the end shall be saued This serueth seuerely to reproue those who hauing beene zealous in the faith and witnessed a good confession before many witnesses and beene a meanes to open the eyes of others to behold the glorious light of the Gospell that before wandered in darknesse are now gon back themselues or seeme to stand at a stay i Reuel 2 4. and haue left their first loue To whom I can say no more but wish them to turn backe to consider what they haue beene and to remember what they are knowing that it had beene better for them k 2 Pet. 2 21. neuer to haue knowne the way of righteousnesse then after they haue acknowledged it to turn away from the holy Commandement Let all such therefore call to minde the exhortation of Christ to the Angell of the Church of Ephesus l Reuel 2 5. Remember from whence thou art fallen and repent and do the first workes or else I will come against thee shortly and will remoue thy Candlestick out of his place except thou amend It is a great shame to shew the way to another and to go out of it himseife to teach another and not to teach himselfe to stir vp another to go forward and himselfe to go backward to kindle zeale in others and himselfe to grow cold lukewarme and therefore to giue occasion to others to think that their former profession was but an heate of youth seeing they decline in their olde age On the other side such as haue bin won to the Gospell by others ought entirely and feruently to loue such as haue conuerted them to shewe themselues euery way thankfull vnto them The Apostle beseecheth the Thessalonians m 1 Thess 5 12 13. To acknowledge them that labour among them and are ouer them in the Lord and admonish them that they haue them in singular loue for their workes sake Who is it if he were blinde and had his sight restored vnto him would not speake well of him by whom it was restored and acknowledge himselfe bound vnto him all the dayes of his life We are all naturally borne blind haue not one eye to see the sauing truth of godlinesse If then we attain the sight of our selues and to knowe our naturall blindnesse how ought wee to praise Gods mercy toward vs and to loue those by whom we haue the eyes of our minds enlightned He is a very vnkind and vnthankfull person who hauing lost his way in a great and terrible wildernesse where hee knoweth not which way to turne or returne not whether to goe to get out meeteth with a certaine guide that is able and ready to conduct him and to enstruct him in his way wil neuer so much as open his mouth to giue him thankes Or hauing beene cured and recouered from a daungerous and desperate disease that brought him to the doores of death will neuer acknowledge the benefit and good turn that he hath receiued So is it with those that haue wandered a long time in the vanities of this world and in the pleasures of the flesh as in a wildernesse it is the greatest ingratitude not to acknowledge those his best and surest friends that haue shewed them the strait gate and the narrow way that leadeth vnto life And if our soules haue bin saued from death to which we made hast and ranne with greedinesse if there bee any comfort of loue or fellowship of the spirit or any compassion and mercy in vs we ought to shew it to those that haue bin as spiritual and speciall Physitians vnto vs to deliuer vs from death and to restore vs to life Whom I haue sent againe Hitherto we haue spoken of the first reason that concerneth the person of Onesimus who was vnprofitable but now is becom very profitable The second sort of reasons are touching Paule himselfe and touch either the present action of his sending of him backe or the common friendship that a long time had bin betweene Paul and Philemon The first of these reasons is in this 12. verse which may be thus concluded If I haue sent Onesimus backe vnto thee then it is thy duty to receiue him But I haue sent him backe againe Therefore it is thy duty to receiue him If there had not bin great cause that Philemon shold receiue him the Apostle would neuer haue sent him especially seeing hee found his abode with him and his seruice done vnto him very profitable Now we are to mark in this place that Paul requireth not Philemon to make his seruant free and to discharge him of his bondage and albeit Paul had great need to haue vsed the ministration of Onesimus in the extreamity of his imprisonment yet beeing another mans seruant and not his owne belonging to his own Maister and not to him and knowing that he ought not to couet another mans seruant he would not detaine him but sent him backe to Philemon to whom hee did appertaine and from whom he departed This is consonant to the trueth and purity of the Gospell this the Maister might well require and this dutie the seruant was bounde to performe euen to returne and repaire againe
with me that in thy stead he might haue ministred vtno me in the bonds of the Gospell 14 But without thy mind would I doe nothing that thy benefit should not be as it were of necessitie but willingly The order of the words in this diuision HItherto we haue spoken of the reason that Paule vrgeth to Philemon to receiue his Seruant drawn from the action of his sending of him back Now followeth the preuenting of Obiections taken eyther from Paule his retaining of him Verse 13. and 14. or from Onesimus his departing from his Maister Verse 15. and 16. The first obiection is concerning the keeping and retaining of Onesimus the obiection is wanting and may be thus supplyed For Philemon might haue saide I heare many words how profitable he is to me how deare to thee I know no such profit in him I can see no benefit that I am like to receiue by him of this I am well assured I haue sustained great losse by him If then he be so necessary and profitable and if he be as deare vnto thee as the Sonne that commeth out of the Bowels of the father why didst thou not retaine him still with thee To this the Apostle maketh a double answere first he graunteth and then he reuoketh that which he had graunted For hee confesseth that his desire was to haue detained him which he maketh plaine by a reason drawne from the end that he might haue continued To minister vnto him in the bonds of the Gospell In the next verse he ioyneth a correcting of that which he had granted to wit that he would doe nothing in this matter without the assent and consent of Philemon his Maister which reuocation he amplyfieth by an Argument from the end That thy benefit should not bee as it were of necessitie which also is declared by the contrary but willingly In these wordes howsoeuer they bee naturally the preuenting of an obiection is included also a certaine reason For the Apostle in this Epistle vseth more shew of Art and force of perswading and power of reasoning and skill of creeping into the heart of Philemon then he vseth ordinarily in other places and therefore in remoouing obiections hee argueth and in arguing he remooueth Obiections This appeareth euidently in this place For he reasoneth and strengthneth his request by this Argument Whom I desire for the good parts that I see in him to retaine that in thy place he might serue me in the bonds or cause of the Gospell him thou oughtest to receiue louingly and willingly But Onesimus for whom I intreat is such a one Therefore thou oughtest to receiue him louingly and willingly The meaning of the words This is to be considered of vs touching the order of the wordes Now let vs see what is to be knowne concerning the meaning of them When he saith Whom I would haue retained he sheweth againe what great account he maketh of Onesimus being as it were the onely man whom he would haue made choise off if it had beene in his liberty to haue comforted him and ministred vnto him in the time of his affliction and imprisonment Againe when he saith For thee or in thy stead he inferreth that Philemon himselfe did owe vnto him that duty if he should require it of him and vrge it from him He mentioneth The bondes of the Gospell meaning thereby the afflictions which the Gospell had brought him wherein the Genetiue case doth note the cause as we saw before verse 1. and 9. As if he should say the cause why I am prisoner and put in bands is the preaching of the Gospell In the 14. verse he saith Without thy mind I would doe nothing where by the generall put for the special he meaneth without thy counsell and consent I would not doe this thing that is retaine Onesimus with me I would doe nothing touching the keeping of him from thee to whom as thy Seruant he doth properly belong Lastly he addeth Least it should be of necessity that is least I should extort and wring it from thee against thy will and so seeme to compell thee hereunto whereas thou shouldst doe it cheerefully and willingly This is the Method and meaning of this diuision according to which order and Interpretation the words are thus much in effect If thou aske a reason why I kept not Onesimus with me seeing I make him so profitable and worthy to be loued and liked so comfortable trusty and seruiceable I aunswere I could haue beene content with all my heart to haue done so he is my Son and I his Father but withall he is thy Seruant and not mine and thou art his Maister and not I and therefore I ought not without thy leaue knowledge and consent to keepe him for the Gospell maintaineth and not dissolueth politicke order and houshold gouernment which both are the ordinance of God Besides a benefit and good turne should come with a cheerefull heart and a willing mind and ought not to be gotten by constraint and compulsion and therefore I would know thy will before I kept him to my selfe Diuers pointes to be obserued Before we come to the particular handling of the Doctrines that arise from hence some thinges breefely are to be noted which I will breefely obserue without any long and large application First of all the Apostle intimateth his desire to haue retained Onesimus with him and that he was loath to suffer him to depart from him which declareth that the presence of those that are deare vnto vs in Christ is welcome pleasant comfortable much set by and we greatly desire to keepe them continually with vs. For as loue is the knot of coniunction that bindeth vs together though we be absent and farre seuered one from another so it craueth and requireth the bodilie presence of those whom we entirely loue which howsoeuer wee cannot obtaine in this life for as much as our earthly affaires will not suffer it yet wee shall be sure to enioy it perpetually and without ende in the life to come when we shall haue the greatest ioy and comfort one in another that can be wished or desired such as the eye hath not seene nor the eare heard neither hath it entred into the heart of man to conceiue Secondly note with me the end why he desired to retaine Onesimus with him that the Seruant might doe seruice to him in the Maisters stead The end then is the Ministery and attendance which Paule might of duty require of Philemon himselfe If then the Maister be bound to doe his seruice and wait vpon the Apostle much more the Seruant Whereby we may note and marke how great right and iurisdiction hee that hath gotten and gained a man to Christ hath ouer him whom hee hath gained so that he may challenge not onely one of his Seruants but himselfe to Minister vnto him and to help him in temporall and transitory things For he that hath receiued spirituall blessings cannot without
they are done more then what is done This is it which the Apostle expresseth 2 Cor. 8 12. If there bee first a willing minde it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that a man hath not This layeth before vs the abundant kindnesse of God who albeit he be a spirit euery way perfect yet he accepteth our lame and defectiue seruice Our duties shall be all acceptable in his sight though they bee performed in great weakenesse and mingled with many imperfections which were sufficient to cause them to be reiected and refused if we be carefull to do them in the truth and vprightnesse of our hearts and with chearefull and ready minds All things must be done in loue and this must bee considered in all the workes of our hands This ministreth a double comfort First vnto such as are of poore and lowe degree to consider that GOD regardeth the heart more then the hand and our willingnesse more then our worke Hence it is that euen seruants whose condition is lowest in the family and which meddle not in great matters or in waighty affaires or in excellent works yet are charged with this affection and in sincerity to behaue themselues in those inferiour duties x Col 3 22 23 Ephes 6 5. Seruants be obedient vnto them that are your Maisters according to the flesh in all things not with eye-seruice as men-pleasers but in singlenesse of heart fearing God and whatsoeuer ye do do it heartily as to the Lord and not to men Where he sheweth that seruants must do their duties not as seruing for the penny or ayming at the filling of their belly or contenting themselues to please their maisters eie but euen as seruing God looking for a recompence from him knowing that he hath placed them in that estate requireth those things in truth and sincerity to be performed as vnto him For the Lord doth not see as man seeth he doth not look to the outward action but he beholdeth with what hart al things are done and therfore measureth according to euery mans deed whether he be high or low rich or poore Lord or Seruant The best hart hath the best recompence the worst hart hath the worst wages There is a great difference between work and work some are great some litle some beautiful some base some high some mean some low but whatsoeuer I do if I do it chearfully as seruing my master Christ that looketh vpon me albeit my calling be neuer so simple as to wash dishes to wipe shooes to scoure the spit to sweep the house I please God therein as well as he that manageth a kingdom that ministreth Iustice that preacheth the gospel True it is the work is greater to rule the affairs of State then to remain in the kitchen yet he shal be better accepted of God that performeth these smal things hartily then he that doth the greatest works grudgingly either drawn by importunity or cōpeld by necessity Thus it doth fal out that a poor seruant carrying this mark and testimony with him is more acceptable to the Lord then he that hath done greater things to the iudgment of the eie to the shew of the world and to the sight of men Secondly this serueth as a singuler comfort to euery one of vs that groane vnder the burden of sin that feele the weaknesse of our faith and are dismaied at the smalnesse of our sanctification Wee know how busie Satan is to watch his aduantage of our infirmities and imperfections to perswade vs that we haue no faith at all that we are without repentaunce without grace and without regeneration because we feele great defects and many wants in our best workes and our best gifts But this must comfort vs that God accepteth of that measure that he hath giuen vs euen according to that which we haue not according to that which we haue not A weak faith shal be as auayleable to apprehend Christ as a strong faith If we haue a desire and an hungering after grace z Psal 145 15 and 10 17. He will fulfill the desires of them that feare him he also will heare their cry and saue them God hath assured vs that as hee hath begun his good worke in vs so he will finish his work and in his good time bring it to perfection When we finde any dulnesse and vntowardnesse in our selues if we hate and dislike them and labor to profite and grow forward in sanctification God accepteth our willingnesse and readinesse though our strength be not answerable to our desire or the outward worke answereable to our hart For God is faithful and will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue the strength that he shal giue vs and the Lord Iesus is a merciful Highpriest who will not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoking flax Let vs al therefore looke that a willing and ready mind be found in vs. Againe this must be considered in all things If we come to hear the word and to exercise the duties of Gods worship if we do it for fashion sake for feare of the law for the praise of men or for custom they are nothing worth they ought to be performed in obedience to God in loue of his ordinance in delight of his worship in singlenesse of heart and in an earnest affection to the meanes of our saluation The like we might say of giuing of almes and liberality toward the poore if they be not bestowed with promptnesse of minde with compassion of heart and with feeling of the wants of those that craue our helpe they are nothing at all respected of God nor they that distribute thē rewarded of him Vse 2 Secondly seeing only that duty which is done freely and not by compulsion deserueth due commendation this reproueth al those things that are don vpon wrong grounds and euil foundations It is not enough to doe a good thing but we must do it well It is not sufficient to do those things that are godly but we must do them in a godly manner Let euery one heerein carefully examine his soule and try his owne heart whether hee do the duties of his calling vnwillingly vncomfortably and vpon necessity for feare of danger for auoyding of shame for keeping of his credit for praise of the world or such like causes which are all false motiues or whether he do them hartily and chearfully as in the sight of God before whom all things are naked open This is to be considered as well of the Minister himselfe as of the people that heare him and are partakers of his labours The calling a The Minister must preach willingly and of a readie minde of the Minister is an high and mighty calling he is the Steward of God and a watchman ouer the people for whose soules hee must giue an account in that great day of the Lord. It is not enough for vs to labour among them though wee should worke and
confesse it they haue great names and high Titles of honour giuen vnto them Å¿ Psal 82 6. I haue said ye are Gods and ye are all Children of the most high But ye shall die as a man and yee Princes shall fall like others If then there be so little difference in the life and lesse difference of the death of rich and poor of Maister and Seruant of Magistrate Subiect we shal find a greater equality and parity betweene them in holy and heauenly things We allow them to be as the elder brethren but they must know and consider that other are as the yonger bretheren of the house and haue the same priuiledges giuen vnto them For if the Lord Iesus be not ashamed to call vs all brethren shal they be ashamed to confesse one another to be equall in the matters of our redemption and saluation Shall the rich man disdaine the poore or the Prince his people or the Maister the seruant or the Free-man him that is bond seeing the Lord of life that is equall with his Father in might and Maiesty vouchsafeth to repute vs al in the place of Brethren Hence it is that he saith in the Gospell speaking of lodging the stranger in our houses of cloathing the naked with our Garments of feeding the hungry with our meats of visiting the prisoners with reliefe of refreshing the sicke with our comfort t Math. 25 40. Verily I say vnto you inasmuch as ye haue done it vnto one of the least of these my Brethren yee haue done it vnto mee Who are more disgraced and contemned in the worlde then such as are Strangers or Prisoners or naked in necessity Yet these poore contemptible ones are deare in his sight tender as the Apple of his eye and acknowledged of him to be his Bretheren Wee are not worthy therefore to bee esteemed of Christ if we regard not such as are in greatest price and cheefest account with him So then we must take heede that wee neuer despise and deride and disdain those that are called the Brethren of Christ nor refuse to imbrace them as our owne Brethren This is that vse which the Apostle vrgeth in setting downe the duties of Maisters u Ephes 6 9. Ye Maisters do the same thinges vnto them putting away threatning and know that euen your Maister also is in heauen neither is there respest of persons with him Where we see how hee moueth all Maisters to cast off all pride and high conceite of themselues and to Loue their faithfull seruants as their faithfull Bretheren It is not farre from this purpose which Iob speaketh touching his practise and behauiour toward his Seruants x Iob. 31 13 14 15. If I did contemne the iudgement of my seruant and of my Mayde when they did contend with me What then shall I do when God standeth vp And when he shall visit me What shall I answere He that hath made me in the womb hath he not made him Hath not he alone fashioned vs in the womb Where the holy man commendeth mildnesse in all Gouernors and reprooueth the exercise of cruelty toward their seruants Hee gaue them free libertie to declare and debate the matter with him to alledge what reasonable excuse soeuer they had considering with himselfe that we haue one common Creator and maker and are partakers of the same Nature and concluding thereuppon that albeit such as are bound to serue vs bee of low degree and despised in the world yet they neuerthelesse are our brethren So then such as are aduanced vnto high places and set in authority ouer others are not to trample them vnder their feete to despise and set them at naught to account them as vile persons in their eies but to vse them with mildnesse and to behaue themselues in al lowlines to rule their houses with al gentlenesse We must remember that wee haue a Maister in heauen so that albeit he hath exalted vs on high yet God standeth aboue all and is the Maister both of the Maister of the seruant O that this were well waighed and wisely considered and thoroughly learned of all Superiors that sit at the sterne and guide the ship The higher and greater our places are the lower and lesser ought our hearts to be If we be made Magistrates and Maisters and Rulers to gouern others let vs confesse they be Brethren with vs. This yeeldeth a profitable meditation to all Christian Gouernors when we behold any of our Inferiors thogh they were our bondmen in any trouble or distresse to thinke earnestly vpon these things If God haue made mee neuer so high when I see the people pinched with dearth and famine that they are ready to perish and famish in the streats for want of Bread I must knowe they are not Dogges though many make no better nor farther reckoning of them alas alas they are my Brethren When the Pestilence walketh in the darkenesse and the plague destroyeth at noone day that God striketh downe with his fearfull hand that thousands fall at our side and ten thousands at our right hand for he oftentimes maketh hauocke and bringeth desolation into many houses and families I must thinke it is no Murraine of Cattle they are my bretheren When I behold the oppression of the poore and the grinding of the faces of the needy that they are eaten vp as bread and sold as old shooes for nothing I must haue this feeling of their affliction they are not as Horsses or Asses ouer-laden with their burthen whom yet if it were so y Exo. 23 4 5. we were bound to pity raise vp though belonging to our enemy they are my poore and dear brethren whom God hath created whom Christ hath redeemed whom the holy spirit hath sanctified whom the word hath regenerated whom the church hath nourished whom the Angelles haue guarded and who together with me in the last day shall be glorified At that day shal God be all in al when Christ Iesus shall abolish all power and authority among men when Princes must resigne their kingdomes and cast downe their crownes at his feete then there shall be no more Prince and Subiects Pastor and people Mayster and Seruant Father and Sonne Husband and Wife These degrees indure but for a season which must haue end when Christ shall come to iudge the quicke and the dead If God haue made me a Maister and committed Seruants to my charge they must not be respected as my Swine or Oxen they are my Brethren and therefore I must looke vnto them in time of their sickenesse vse all good meanes for their deliuerance The Centurion in the gospell is commended that when his seruant fell sick was in danger of death he came to Christ z Math. 8 6. for help and succour If a man haue a Bullocke and beast that is diseased he will aske counsel seeke remedy much more ought we to deale mercifully with our seruants which God
please the tast of a well-affected stomacke I confesse the fault is in the Cooke that hath prepared and dressed it I would therefore entreat thee to accept of these three Dishes and to consider the person that was the writer the person to whom he writeth and the person for whom he writeth The person that penned it was Paule the Apostle the person to whom it was written was Philemon the Maister the person for whom hee wrote was Onesimus the Seruant Vpon these three as on certaine pillers stand the maine drift and purpose of this whole Epistle heere expounded Touching the first o The person of the Writer of the Epistle which is Paul the Writer he doth not stile himself in this place as commonly he vseth An Apostle of Iesus Christ but The Prisoner of Christ and declareth that he begat Onesimus to the Faith in Prison It is honourable to the Saintes to suffer for the truthes sake The Apostles reioyced that they were p Actes 5 41. Iames 1 2. Counted worthy to endure afflictions and troubles in a good cause They endured imprisonment as Martyrs not as Malefactors as Preachers of the Gospell r 1 Pet. 1 15 not As Busie-bodies in other mens matters as doers of good not as euill doers neuer ceasing to further the saluation of others euen when their bodies were restrained of libertie and yet in this want of enlargement they were mighty in deede and word to worke the conuersion of such as resorted vnto them verifying the saying of the Apostle 2. Tim. 2. 9. ſ 2 Tim. 2 9. I suffer trouble vnto bondes but the word of God is not bound Whiles he pleaded his cause in Chaines t Actes 16 28 hee had Almost caught Agrippa in the Chaine of the Gospell and wonne him to the Faith When he was come to Rome he would not be idle u Act. 28 17 23. but called the chiefe of the Iewes together and then expounded vnto them the way of Saluation testifying the Kingdome of God and perswading them those thinges that concerne Iesus both out of the Law of Moses and out of the Prophets from morning to night Thus doth one say most truely of him When he was bound he was stronger then they that bound him when he was a Captiue he was freer then they that kept him and when his Iudges examined him he examined them and set them at libertie that were vnder the thraldome of sinne and Sathan It is truely said of the Wise-man x Prou. 11 30 Dan. 12 3. He that winneth Soules is wise and shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and such as turne many to righteousnes shall shine as the Starres for euer and euer This wisedome is no where to be found no where to be sought no where to be learned but in the Word of GOD which is the wisedome of God and the power of God So then we see it is not the punishment that maketh a Martyr but the cause Some are punished as Malefactors some dye as Martyrs Ioseph was cast into the same y Gene. 39 20 and 40 3. Prison with the Butler and Baker of King Pharaoh They suffered imprisonment in the same place but the cause was not one for which they suffered Iosephs Maister tooke him and put him in Prison in the place where the kings Prisoners lay bound and there he was in Prison but because it was in a good cause and for a good conscience the Lord was with him and shewed him mercy and got him fauour in the sight of the Maister of the Prison The like we might say of Paule and Sylas who were not onely beaten with Rods but clapped vppe in close Prison with Malefactors but they were not without comfort in their sufferings z Actes 16 25 For At midnight they prayed and sung Psalmes vnto God so that the rest of the Prisoners heard them They suffered a 2 Tim. 2 9. As euill doers but not for euill doing And albeit they were Prisoners yet they were Christian Prisoners and when the body was ready to be offered and the time of their departure drew neere forgat b August ser de Sanct. Cypr. not their Apostolicall care of the Churches and watchfulnesse ouer the Lordes Flocke yea we see Paule in this place forgetteth not a base Seruant as shall bee shewed afterward Touching the second point c The person to whom Paul writeth we are to consider the person to whom Paule writeth which is to Philemon crauing at his hands the fruit of Christian Equitie and Moderation to forgiue him that had offended him according to the doctrine of the common Maister of them both Iesus Christ Luke 17. d Luk. 17. 3 4 Take heede to your selues if thy Brother trespasse against thee rebuke him and if hee repent forgiue him and though hee sinne against thee seauen times in a day and seauen times in a day turne againe to thee saying It repenteth mee Thou shalt forgiue him It is a great vertue in thee if thou e Isidor lib. 2. soliloqu wrong not him of whom thou art wronged It is great Fortitude if when thou art wronged thou remit it It is great Glory if thou be willing to spare him whom thou hadst power and ability to hurt As Christ taught forgiuenesse to others so he practised his owne Doctrine and f Luke 23 34. prayed for those that were his persecuters Philemon had bin greatly wronged by his false and theeuish seruant yet Paul craueth pardon for him vpon his repentance toward God and his submission toward his Maister It is the Doctrine of the g The doctrine of the Nouatiā Heretickes Nouatian Heretickes to deny hope of fauour and forgiuenesse to such as are fallen against whom Cyprian hath written a learned Epistle h Cypri ad Nouatian haeretic whereby they go about to kill whereas they should cure them that are wounded and to swallow vp them in despaire whom they ought to raise vp with comfort For they alledge that Christ threatneth k Math. 10 33 Whosoeuer shall deny him before men them will he deny before his Father which is in heauen But he vnderstandeth such as perseuer in it without repentance denying him vnto the end and forsaking him vnto the death such indeede he will disclaime and deny in the kingdome of his Father which plainely appeareth by the contrary in the opposite Member going before l Math. 10 32. where he promiseth that Whosoeuer shall confesse him before men them will hee also confesse before his Father which is in Heauen whereby hee meaneth such as continue in that confession and are faithfull without starting backward Peter being in the High-priests house did deny his Maister that chose him not only to bee an Apostle but to bee an elect vessell to preach the Gospell both to Iewes and Gentiles he denied him that bought him and redeemed him in word with an Oath with Cursing and Execration
to whom it is written so we are d The person for whom this Epistle is written to marke the person for whom it is written to wit for Onesimus a seruant a fugitiue seruant a false seruant a fraudulent seruant A base and meane subiect for the Apostle to handle howbeit penned in so high and heauenly a manner and contriued with such exquisit Art and excellent Iudgement that it ouer-reacheth the meannesse of the matter and leaueth no excuse that Philemon could alledge to wind himself from him and manifesteth the speciall care that Paul had of this poore penitent person It is recorded of e In the works of Maister Greenham M. Fox of blessed Memory when one told him that a certain man of none of the greatest or highest callings who had receiued much comfort from him in the dayes of his trouble was desirous to acknowledge his thankefulnesse toward him and asked him whether he remembred such a one He answered I remember him well I tell you I forget Lords and Ladies to remember such Many there are that are ashamed of such as are of low degree whom notwithstanding God loueth for whom the Sauior of the world died and to whom the word of saluation is preached When the Church was in Abrahams house it consisted not onely of such e Gen. 17 12. as were borne in his house but of such also as were bought with his money of any stranger that was not of his seed and when the Lord gaue vnto him the seale of his Couenant he commanded him to circumcise not only himselfe and his sonne his Steward and the cheefest partes of his family but euery male euen the least and lowest that lodged vnder his roofe As then the Wise-man saith in the Prouerbes f Prou. 17. 5. Hee that mocketh the poore reproacheth him that made him so he that despiseth a seruant because he is a seruant dishonoreth God that made him a seruant Hence it is that the g Titus 3 9 10 Apostle chargeth such to be subiect to their Maisters and please them in all things not answering againe neither pickers but that they shew al faithfulnesse that they may adorne the Doctrine of God our Sauiour in al things They are therefore through pride and disdaine not a little deceiued but wander wide out of the way that thinke religion commeth not downe so low as vnto seruants that Gods prouidence vouchsafeth not to respect them that it booteth not to giue them any instruction True it is God hath established by his owne ordinance a difference betweene the Mayster and the Seruant as our Sauiour sheweth Luke 17. h Luke 17 7 8 Who is it also of you that hauing a seruant ploughing or feeding Cattle woulde say vnto him by and by when he were come from the field Go and sit downe at table And would not rather say vnto him Dresse wherewith I may sup and gird thy self and serue me til I haue eaten and drunken and afterward eat thou drink thou c. The Gospell doth not abolish the distinction betweene man and man betweene high and low betweene Maister and Seruant yea when they are al beleeuers as is plentifully handled in this Commentary howbeit the writ of partition is not so great nor the wall of separation so farre distant betweene them wee should thinke the Lorde careth for the one and contemneth the other who made them both preserueth them both redeemed them both sanctifieth them both and will glorifie them both This did Iob wisely i Iob 31 13. consider Chap. 31. If I did contemn the iudgement of my seruant of my Maid when he did contend with me what then shal I do when God standeth vp And when he shal visit me what shal I answere He that hath made me in the womb hath he not made him Hath not he alone fashioned vs in the womb The Heathen that saw nothing but by looking through the windowes of nature themselues being meerely naturall men tooke vppon them their iust and lawfull defence and pleaded for them at the bar of reason when they were vsed oftentimes no otherwise then the Beasts and Cattle that Master and seruant had k Macrob. lib. 1 Saturn cap. 11. one the same beginning were norished with the same Elements did draw in the same aire did tread vpon the same ground and returned in the end into the same earth Yea their plea for them went a great deale farther Though they are bondmen yet they are men albeit they are seruants yet they are our fellow-seruants He is indeed become a seruant but it is through necessity A Seruant in bodie but a Free-man in minde And peraduentuee the Maister himselfe that ruleth ouer him may be more slauish then he He that is a Drudge or seruant to his owne lusts to Wrath to Enuy to Couetousnesse to Ambition l Cicer parad 5. is a right seruant obeying most foule and filthy Masters and none a baser Bondman then such a one He is a true Maister and a right Free-man that hath learned m Plut. desuperstitione to rule ouer his owne affections such a man is stronger then he that ruleth a Citty The other are seruants against their willes but these serue and obey as most vile vassals willingly neither do they desire freedome We are not to esteeme of men by their estate or as we say commonly by their fortunes but by their manners We may alter our maners n Sene. Trag. in Traad our condition we cannot alwayes He is no great wise man that purposing to buy an horse looketh not vpon him but contenteth himselfe to view onely the Bridle and Saddle so is he as simple and shallow which iudgeth of a man by putting on a gay coat or by the wearing of a precious garment or by the condition of his outwarde person and not by the inward Guiftes and Ornaments of the minde Abigaile is renowned for a Woman q 1 Sam. 25 3. of singular wisedome and that worthily yet she disdained not the counsel of her seruants Naaman was Captaine of the King of Aram yet he refused not the aduise of his attendants that waited vpon him These persons iudged it to be no disgrace or disparagement to their high calling nor any sawcinesse in their seruants to presume to teach them and tell them their duty nay without guiding themselues by them and following their direction the one had beene exposed to miserable slaughter the other had returned in the vncleannesse of his leprosie whereas by this meanes the one was preserued the other was cleansed It is therefore an vntrue and vnsauourie Prouerbe that r A wicked and witlesse Prouerbe A man keepeth in his house so manie enemies as seruants for we haue them not enemies but we make them so when we behaue our selues toward them tyrannously cruelly contumeliously spightfully outragiously Å¿ Macr. Satur. lib. 1. cap. 11. doing against them so much as
we dare do not so much only as we ought to do not considering how lawfull it is but how powerfull we are how weake they are All the prophane Histories are full of worthy examples of many Seruants who are commended for their trust and faithfulnesse Wittinesse and Courage Might and Magnanimity to all posterity and haue not doubted to giue their liues to death in their Maisters quarrell It is not therefore much to bee maruelled at that the Apostle perceiuing how t Heb. 4 12. Mighty the word had bin in Operation vpon Philemons Seruant doth account him as his Sonne and seeketh to reconcile him to his Maister in which respect he was willing and desirous to haue u Phile. 13 14 kept him with him to Minister vnto him He claimeth some authoritie ouer him being his spirituall Father howbeit because he was not only his Sonne but also another mans Seruant he would not retaine him without his Maisters knowledge Let them not therefore for their low degree be contemned nor haue the meanes of instruction denied vnto them Thus I haue set downe to thy view Christian Reader the scope of this Epistle wherein the Apostle in a narrow compasse doth couch together many Mysteries of our Religion which I haue laboured to lay open in this Commentary And howsoeuer the worke is growne in bignesse extended in length vnder mine hands more then at the first I purposed and intended yet I hope the manner of handling heerein obserued shall easily recompence thy labour bestowed in reading I cannot in few words comprehend the matters that are heere and there dispersed throughout the Booke Among many other these points are principally handled Touching affliction for the truth and persecution for righteousnesse sake Touching Christian Equity and Moderation Touching Gods free grace forgiuing offences Touching houshold Gouernment and Priuate possessions Touching the conuersion of Sinners and the Communion of Saintes Touching Faith and Good Workes Touching Friendship and Surety-ship Touching Prayer and Hospitality Touching the Gospell and Almes-deeds Touching Gods prouidence and of the force fruite of the Ministry as is more at large to be seen in the Table of the doctrines Accept I pray thee the paines I haue taken in the discussing of these points pardon the escapes if any be into which I haue fallen as in trauelling so long a iourney it is easie to fall into a slumber and wheresoeuer thou vnderstandest the hand of God to haue beene with me in publishing the truth giue him the glory ascribe the praise vnto his great name to whose grace goodnesse I commend thee Thine in our common Sauiour William Attersoll A BRIEFE RECAPITVLATION OF ALL THE DOCTRINES HANDLED AT LARGE IN THIS EPISTLE Out of the Praeface THe course of the Gospell cannot bee stopped but will haue his passage in the world page 1. The Argument and occasion of the Epistle together with the vses thereof page 7. Verse 1 and 2. Doct. 1. Good things must be followed and sought after earnestly and feruently not coldly and carelesly pag. 9 Doct. 2. It is no disgrace or reproch to the Seruants of God to bee cast into prison for the Gospels sake pag 12. Doct. 3. The persecutions of all true Christians are the persecutions of Christ Iesus when they are imprisoned for Christs sake page 15. Doct. 4. All good duties to God or man are better doone by the helpe of others then alone by our selues pa 21 Doct. 5. A christian friend wil performe any christian duty to his friend page 25. Doct. 6. Christian women should be helpers vnto their husbandes as heires together of the grace of life page 29 Doct. 7. The calling of a Minister is a painfull and laborious a needefull and troublesome calling page 33. Doct. 8. It is the duty of all house-holders to teach and instruct their families that belong vnto them page 38 Verse 3. Doct. 1. The free fauour and mercy of God in Christ Iesus is first and aboue all other things to be desired and prayed for page 48 Doct. 2. Such as are in Gods fauor haue his blessings flowing vnto them and following them page 55 Doct. 3. All blessings temporall and eternall are to be craued from God alone in Christ Iesus page 61 Verse 4 and 5. Doct 1. Men ought to take cause of great ioy to see others growe and proceed in good things page 68 Doct. 2. It is the nature of faith to apply the mercies and promises of God to our owne selues page 76 Doct. 3. It is the duty of the faithfull to pray not onely for themselues but also for others page 82 Doct. 4. True Religion must not onely bee inwardly beleeued but also outwardly confessed and openly professed page 86 Doct. 5. Faith and Loue are the cheefest thinges that commend a man to God and his Church page 95 Doct. 6. Faith in Christ and Loue to the Saints do alwaies go together in all the seruants of God pag. 99. Doct. 7. Christ must be the Obiect of our faith we must looke vnto him and depend vpon him page 106 Doct. 8. The workes of mercy are especially and aboue before others to be shewed to the poore Saints that are godly 111 Doct. 9. Such as truely beleeue in Christ and belong to him are Saints page 117 Verse 6 and 7. Doct. 1. It is our duty to stir vp our selues and others to encrease in good things page 126 Doct. 2. The guifts which we haue receiued must not lye hid in vs but be employed to the good of others 140 Doct. 3. The goodnesse of God bestowed vpon our selus or others must be published abroad and made known to others page 142 Doct. 4. The spiritual graces of God bestowed vpon others doe giue occasion of ioy to the Saints pa. 147 Doct. 5. The workes of mercie are to bee shewed to the poore distressed Saints page 154 Verse 8 and 9. Doct. 1. The Office of the Pastour and Minister of God is an Office of power and authority vnder christ 163 Doct. 2. Gentle meanes are to bee vsed rather then seuere to perswade men to holy duties page 172 Doct. 3. Superiors in guifts or age or both are to bee reuerenced and regarded aboue others pa. 177. Verse 10. Doct. 1. The least and lowest member conuerted to Christ must not bee contemned or condemned page 184 Doct. 2. The same affection that is betweene the Father and the Sonne ought to be betweene the Minister the people committed vnto him 189 Doct. 3. The preaching of the word is the ordinary meanes and instrument of our conuersion and regeneration page 205 Verse 11. and 12. Doct. 1. Christian religion maketh a man profitable and helpfull vnto others that before hath been iniurious and hurtfull page 227. Doct. 2. In godly religious and reformed families are many times vngodly obstinate and vnreformed persons both Children and Seruaunts page 237 Doct. 3. Former Offences albeit great and heynous vppon true repentance are to bee
is in vaine for them to resist God and the power of his might Let them refraine from iniuring his Seruants and from going about to stop their mouthes let them remember what Gamaliell said n Acts 5 38. Now I say vnto you refraine your selues from these Men and let them alone for if this counsell or this worke be of men it will come to naught A notable lesson to bee learned of all malicious men and bloudy persecuters of the Gospell that would if it lay in them bury all remembrance of Christ and his Gospell they shall finde and feele the strength of him against whom they wrastle they shall see the folly of their owne waies and the madnesse of their owne workes and they shall in the end perceiue it to be as vnpossible and themselues as vnable to hinder the free passage of the Gospell as to bind the wind in their Fistes or to stop the Raine of Heauen from watering the earth Hence it is that the Prophet speaketh to like purpose to the Enemies of the Church o Esay 8 9. Gather together on heapes ô ye people and ye shall be broken in peeces and hearken all yee of farre Countries gird your selues and ye shall be broken in peeces gird your selues and ye shall shall bee broken in peeces Take counsell together yet it shall be brought to naught pronounce a decree yet it shall not stand for God is with vs. Vse 3. Thirdly seeing the Gospell cannot be stopped it it is the dutie of all of vs to pray for the free passage of it We haue a promise that God will spread abroade his sauing health and magnifie his great Name ouer all the Earth now it belongeth as a speciall duty to vs to pray vnto him to glorifie himselfe and to make his Name knowne among the Sonnes of Men. This charge doth the Apostle giue vnto the Thessalonians p 2 Thes 3 1 2 Furthermore Bretheren pray for vs that the word of the Lord may haue free passage and bee glorified euen as it is with you and that we may be deliuered from vnreasonable and euill Men for all men haue not Faith It is the duty of all the godly to pray for the enlarging of the Gospell whereby the Kingdome of God is also enlarged Let vs be mindfull daily of this duty desiring of the Lord this grace that the Gospell may be freely preached and cheerfully receiued q Math. 9 38. that he would send forth labourers into his Vineyard and maintaine them against rauening Wolues that seeke to deuour them that he would blesse their labours and remoue all stumbling blockes out of their way that hee would giue them courage and constancy in discharging their duty vtterly remoue al hirelings and false teachers out of his Vineyard It is God that must thrust forth Labourers into his Haruest It is he that fitteth them to the worke It is he that blesseth them in the worke Let vs not therefore be wanting to our selues but pray to the Lord of the Haruest to send out able worke-men to gather the Corne into his Garner The cause why we are not furnished with such Teachers and if we bee furnished yet the worke doth not prosper vnder their hands is because we doe not aske for a blessing from God from whom euery good guift proceedeth Vse 4. Lastly this serueth as a great comfort both to the Pastors and people For seeing the Gospell shall haue his course let the Ministers boldly go forward in the discharge of their dutie and teach the people committed to their charge Let vs not feare the faces of Men. The word which we preach is the word of God who is able to maintaine it and make it mighty in our mouthes to cast downe hils and holds that lift vp themselues against it He is able to danut and dash in peeces all those that set themselues against it The worke is the Lords the Worke-men are the Lordes the blessing and successe is the Lords and they that striue against it fight against the Lorde Let vs comfort our selues in these thinges against all the disgraces and reproaches of the World And concerning the Professors of this Gospell let this Minister comfort also vnto them that they builde not vpon the Sand or vppon a weake Foundation but their building standeth vpon a Rocke which shall neuer be remooued The Apostles comfort themselues and encourage one another r Acts 4 29. in the worke of the Ministery because they were assured that the word which they deliuered was no vaine word nor deceiueable Fable but the Gospell of Christ who chose them to the calling and sent them to the worke and strengthned them to stand and gaue them wisedome to conuince and confound all their Aduersaries Likewise Paule teacheth ſ Phil. 1 14. That many of the Brethren in the Lord were boldned through his bands to confesse and professe the truth of God We cannot fall except the word fall with vs nay except God fall with vs so long as wee stand fast in the Faith Wherefore howsoeuer others shrinke backe and make ship-wracke of a good conscience let vs hold out vnto the end and then wee shall be sure of eternall happinesse in the Heauens The occasion and argument of this Epistle Hitherto we haue handled the time when this Epistle was written and the place from whence it was written to wit when hee was in prison Now let vs consider the Argument thereof and the occasion whereof it was written The occasion of penning and writing this Epistle was double First generall for the instruction and direction of the whole Church in some necessary points of faith and obedience intreating most waightily and wisely of Iustice mercy mildnes meeknes moderation reconciliation Christian equity u Caluin vpon Philemon insomuch that he seems rather to respect the edification of the whole Church then to haue in hand the businesse of one poore and priuate man The speciall occasion was to intreat at Philemons hands to pardon his seruant that had offended him and to accept his subiection and submission vnto him This Phile. as it seemeth was a cittizen of Colosse x Hierom. in prolog Coloss Erasmus in hunc locum a citty scituate in Phrygia not far frō Laodicea whose seruant Onesimus committing either Theft in purloyning away his Maisters goods or some other great and grieuous crime as the manner of leud and euill Seruants is ran away from his M. as far as Rome being many hundred miles distant from Colosse where he supposed he should heare no more of him or if he did would not follow and pursue after him so far This Fugitiue and Runnagate Seruant false fingered and false hearted comming to Rome y Synop. Athana in hanc Epist was by the gratious prouidence of God brought where Paul the Apostle lay bound in prison and hearing him among others preaching the Gospel of Christ to Remission of sins to all
that repent had his hart opened and was by Gods blessing conuerted to the Faith became a sound and sincere Christian and performed sundry duties of loue to Paul ministring continually vnto him in the time of his Captiuity as a dutifull Sonne to his spirituall Father But after the Apostle vnderstood that hee was another Mans Seruaunt and belonged vnto him as it were a part of his possession though he found him in his distressed and afflicted estate very profitable comfortable and necessary vnto him yet he would not detaine him from his Mayster to whom by the Word of God by the light of Nature and by the Law of all Nations he appertained Hence it is that hee sent him backe againe to his Maister with this Epistle in which the Apostle dooth by force of reasons and vehemency of words vrge Philemon to entertaine and retaine with him his fugitiue and offensiue Seruant but now greatly altered and throughly changed by the power of Gods word z Psal 19. 7. Which conuerteth the Soule and giueth wisedome vnto the simple as the Prophet teacheth vs. The vses of the former Argument of this Epistle Thus we see how Paule intreateth and obtaineth pardon for Onesimus a Seruant that was conuerted by the preaching of the Apostle which offereth vnto vs diuers good and profitable vses Vse 1. First we see that Christ Iesus reiecteth none that come vnto him how base and simple soeuer they be All such as repent and beleeue the Gospell whether Maisters or Seruants high or low rich or poore are accepted of him who is Lord of all and with whom is no respect of persons A notable comfort to all of low place and meane condition to consider with themselues that howsoeuer the men of this World haue many times no respect vnto them yet they are deare to God and regarded of him who openeth to them the doore of saluation and reserueth for them a Crowne of righteousnesse He appointeth his Word and Sacraments for them as well as for others and hence it is that for the most part the poore receiue the Gospell a Gal. 3 28. There is neither Iew nor Graecian there is neither bond nor free there is neither Male nor Female for ye are all one in Christ Iesus Vse 2. Secondly this instructeth vs not to contemne or despise any how vile soeuer they may seeme in our eyes but to be carefull for their good and to further their conuersion b Mat 18 10. according to the counsell of Christ our Sauiour Math. 18. See that ye despise not one of these little ones for I say vnto you that in Heauen their Angels alwaies behold the Face of my Father which is in Heauen For the Sonne of Man is come to saue that which was lost Many are basely and badly thought off in this World who are in great price and estimation with GOD. Many are wronged and oppressed of Men of whom the high God of Heauen taketh care and charge We are ready to respect the outward face and person of Men but he regardeth the heart God the Father loueth them woe therefore to them that hate them Christ Iesus came to saue and redeeme them woe therefore to all them that seeke to hurt and destroy them It pleaseth God oftentimes to call the Seruant and to let the Maister alone suffering him to perrish in his sinnes This is the cause that the blessed Virgine magnifieth the Lord and that her Spirit reioyceth in God her Sauiour c Luke 1. 52 53. Because he looked on the poore degree of his Seruaunt and had doone great thinges for her Hee pulleth downe the mightie from their Seates and exalteth them of low degree He filleth the hungry with good things and sendeth away the Rich empty Vse 3. Thirdly we learne that no man ought vnder any colour of Religion and pretence of godlinesse to keepe away other mens Seruants from their owne Maisters Paule found the Seruant of Onesimus faithfull to helpe him and forward to Minister vnto him yea he might be bold with Philemon his Mayster yet he would not detaine him with him without his allowance and approbation The Gospell then doth not destroy and disanull the diuers degrees and orders established in the World but rather confirmeth and strengthneth them It alloweth not the Seruant to resist and rise vp against the Maister although hee should be a beleeuer and his Maister an vnbeleeuer or he be a beleeuer as well as his Maister and in knowledge of godlinesse be equall vnto him but teacheth him to obey for conscience sake d 1 Tim. 6 1 2. and to Count his Maister worthy of all honour that the Name of God and his Doctrine be not euill spoken of And they which haue beleeuing Maisters let them not despise them because they are Brethren but rather do seruice because they are faithfull and beloued and partakers of the benefit These things teach and exhort Vse 4. Fourthly we are to marke that the Lord requireth of vs to bee ready to forgiue and forget the wronges and iniuries that are done vnto vs. Let vs put from vs all rancor and mallice and not suffer the Sunne to goe downe vpon our wrath O how e Math. 18 27 great is the mercy of God toward vs How great is our debt toward him Let vs put on the bowels of pitty and compassion forbearing one another and forgiuing one another f Col. 3 13. If any Man haue a quarrell vnto another euen as Christ forgaue euen so doe ye If we come to any of the exercises of our Religion to heare the Word to receiue the Sacraments or to call vpon the Name of God if the Leauen of maliciousnesse haue infected our heartes the word of life is made the sauour of death the Sacraments are made Instruments of Wrath and our Prayers are turned into Sinne. We are taught in our Prayers to aske g Chrysost hom 1. in Philem. forgiuenesse at the hands of God as we our selues performe this duty toward our Brethren The promise of forgiuenesse is made to them that doe forgiue h Mark 11 25 When ye shall stand and pray forgiue if ye haue any thing against any man that your Father also which is in Heauen may forgiue you your trespasses For if ye will not forgiue your Father which is in Heauen will not pardon you your trespasses This accordeth with the precept of Christ Math. 5. If thou bring thy guift to the Altar and there remembrest that thy Brother hath ought against thee i Math. 5 24. Leaue there thine offering before the Altar and goe thy way first be reconciled to thy Brother and then come and offer thy guift If we desire As new borne Babes the sincere Milke of the word that we may grow thereby k 1 Pet. 2 1 2. We must lay aside all maliciousnesse and all guile and dissimulation and enuy and all euill speaking If we would be
doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiuing our owne soules we must l Iam. 1 21. Lay apart all filthinesse and superfluity of maliciousnesse and receiue with meekenesse the word that is grafted in vs which is able to saue our Soules Now we haue in this Epistle m Illyr arg in hanc Epistol a most worthy example of receiuing them that are fallen of forgiuing the penitent of the pardoning of iniuries of ioy for the conuersion of a Sinner Yea we learne not onely to be louers of peace but to be makers of peace as Paul doth betweene the Maister and the Seruant Our Sauiour pronounceth them blessed n Math. 5 9. That are Peace-makers for they shall be called the Children of God We are charged not onely to seeke peace our selues but to make peace with others whereby we beare the liuely Image of God who is called the God of peace we are made like vnto Christ who is our peace and hath reconciled vs vnto his Father Vse 5. Fiftly we are taught to take heede we doe not rashly sit in iudgement vpon any This euill Seruant had picked and purloyned from his Maister and when he had done ranne his waies yet GOD found him out and gaue him repentance when he sought not after God It is a common Prouerb He runneth farre that neuer returneth Christ Iesus calleth some at the leaueth houre as hee did the Theefe that hung with him vpon the Crosse The Apostle chargeth that o 1 Cor. 4 5. We iudge nothing before the time vntill the Lord come who will lighten things that are hidden in darknesse and make the counsels of the heart manifest and then shall euery man haue praise of God And in another place p Rom. 14 4. Who art thou that condemnest another mans seruant He standeth or falleth to his owne Maister All men are in the hand of God and all times and seasons are disposed by him The Husbandman Tilleth the ground and soweth his Corne but it doth not by and by gtow vp The Disciples of Christ heard many things of his mouth which seemed buried and forgotten but the precious fruit thereof appeared plentifullie afterward Let vs not limit vnto God his times and seasons nor goe about to teach him knowledge Paul was a Persecuter of the truth a Blasphemer of God an oppressor of the Church yet in the end he was called by the voyce of Christ Let vs therefore condemne no man nor iudge any rashly least we be iudged Vse 6. Lastly we see euidently as in a Glasse in this Epistle that all that are elected of God to eternall life shal in Gods good time be called effectually to the knowledge of the truth God hath made all things in number waight and measure As no more shall be saued then he hath appointed so not one of them shall bee lost that he hath prepared to be heires of glory God hath many waies to pull them out of the fire whom he will haue saued So many as belong to him he will at one time or other send them and offer them the meanes of their saluation yea when we least of all seeke our owne good and intend our owne conuersion it pleaseth God to call vs and to gather vs into the bosome of the Church The Parable q Math. 20 1. of the Housholder hiring labourers into his Vineyard teacheth that he calleth at all times and houres of the day We see it in the example of Paul when Christ Iesus called vnto him from the Heauens he thought nothing of his owne conuersion but of the Churches subuersion Wee see it in the Penitent Theefe in Manasseth in Mary Magdalen and many others VVe see it in Onesimus in this place Who would haue imagined that this man playing the vile Runna-gate and the false Theefe and departing out of the religious House of godly Philemon which is honoured with the Name of a Church would euer haue turned a new leafe and come to the acknowledgement of the truth who would haue thought that the prodigal Son r Luke 15 24. going from his Father forsaking his Brother wasting his patrimony and spending his strength and wealth vpon Harlots would euer haue seene his owne folly and that it should be said of him My Son was dead and is aliue againe he was lost but he is found This is that which is set downe in the Actes of the Apostles Å¿ Acts 13 48. When the Gentiles heard it they were glad and glorified the word of the Lord and as many as were ordained to eternall life beleeued God is able to make a way for the execution of his purposes and knoweth how to accomplish his decrees Thus much of the circumstances of time and place as also of the Argument of this Epistle Now let vs come to the words 1 Paul a Prisoner of Iesus Christ and Brother Timotheus vnto Philemon our deare friend and fellow helper 2 And to our beloued Apphia and to Archippus our Fellow-Souldier and to the Church that is in thine House The order of the words and interpretation of them In this Epistle we are to consider two thinges First the Praeface in the three first verses Secondly the substance and matter of the Epistle in the rest The Praeface or entrance containeth the inscription or Title in these two verses sundry prayers in the foure verses following The inscription remembreth both the parties writing to wit Paul and Timothy and likewise the persons to whom the Epistle is written Philemon Apphia Archippus and the Church that was in Philemons house These persons as well writing as written vnto are not barely and nakedly set downe but are described by their seuerall notes and titles giuen vnto them wherein are contained seuerall Arguments of perswasion to mooue Philemon to that whereunto he exhorteth and intreateth him And first for himselfe a Captiue and Prisoner hee mooueth him to respect his suit in regard it was the suit of one vnder persecution bound in chaines and kept in thraldome whom he ought to pitty especially seeing he was a Prisoner of Iesus Christ that is not for any bad cause but for the professing and Preaching of the glorious Gospell of Christ Secondly he ioyneth in this suit with him Timothy a Brother nay more then a Brother a famous Euangelist whose commendation was thoroughout all the Churches who with him intreated for his Seruant Moreouer concerning those to whom this Epistle is written first Philemon himselfe is mentioned with whom he presumeth to preuaile both because there is mutuall loue between them louing one another in the truth and Christian Faith and because he is a fellow-helper seeking to promote and further by all good meanes the course of the Gospell in both which respects there should be a neere familiarity and speciall interest one with another Secondly to him he ioyneth Apphia which seemeth to be his Wife both because she hath the second place after Philemon and
because she is set before Archippus who was the Pastor and Minister of that Church as we shall see afterward He calleth her a beloued Sister most deare vnto him for the common faith mouing her also to plead this cause and to further this request with her husband whom he would not nor could not deny in so reasonable a suit Thirdly he nameth Archippus and calleth him a Fellow-Souldier because they of the Ministery if they be faithfull are in continuall warfare not onely against the continuall engines and assaults of Sathan who withstandeth their Ministery but against false teachers and against many vnreasonable men as also against the sinnes and corruptions that raigne or arise in their seuerall charges We see how men destitute of faith make continual warre against them one way or other This man thus described by his Office was Pastor and Preacher of the word in the Church of Colosse t Colos 4 17. as appeareth by the wordes of the Apostle writing to the Colossians Chap. 4. Say to Archippus take heed to the ministery that thou hast receiued in the Lord that thou fulfill it He nameth him with the rest because the Pastors and Ministers of the Church ought to preuaile much with all the professors and people that are vnder their charge beeing to them in place of Fathers that may or should commaund in the Lord. Lastly he remembreth the Family of Philemon which he doth entitle with an honorable Name calling it a Church which serueth to the singuler commendation of this Seruant of God as one that did so guide instruct and gouerne his priuate Houshhold as all faithfull Gouernours of Families ought to do as that it might truely be reputed a company and Congregation of Men Women and Children that are dedicated vnto God to his worship and obedience according to the saying of Christ u Math. 18. Where two or three be gathered together in my name there am I in the midst of them Euery Christian Family is a particular and little Church where God is sincerely honoured and worshipped which is another speciall reason to win Philemon to his purpose thinking so reuerently and religiously of him and his priuate charge Obseruations out of these verses pointed out It remaineth after the order and interpretation of the wordes to see what Obseruations arise out of the same If wee should stand vppon euery particular point that might be raised out of the Text it would be both endlesse and fruitelesse Againe the Scripture is as a liuely Fountaine that can neuer be dryed vp it is as a rich Treasury that neuer can be emptyed VVherefore before that we come to handle the principall and especiall Doctrines it shall not bee amisse to point out diuers instructions that the Apostle intimateth And first marke that among all that are heere named none is mentioned without his Title of honour to teach that euery one ought to haue some-what to commend him and whosoeuer lead an vpright and holy life their name ought to be renowned and honoured in the Church of Christ which should also cause them to be well reported of vnto posterity Secondly obserue that Paule ioyneth with him Timothy he excelled him in the greatnesse of guifts and in the function of Apostle-ship yet hee calleth him his Brother thereby giuing vs an example of Christian modesty whereby it commeth to passe that the godly as they are placed in an higher degree do behaue themselues so much more lowly So the Apostle willeth vs x Rom. 12 16 Phil. 2 3. Not to be high minded but to make our selues equall to them of the lower sort and to thinke better of others then of our selues Thirdly albeit he were the principall that wrote and Philemon the chiefe to whom this Epistle is written yet to himselfe he ioyneth Timothy and to Philemon he annexeth as Helpers in his suit Apphia his Wife Archippus the Minister and the rest of the Church in his house all which he mustereth together as meane to make an attonement with his Maister which example teacheth all Christians especially the Ministers of the word to seeke peace and labour to make peace among Bretheren that one may be reconciled vnto another and al men liue in charity and vnity together Heereunto commeth the counsell and commaundement of Christ our Sauiour y Math. 5 9. Blessed are the Peace-makers for they shall be called the Children of God Hereby we shall giue comfort to mens consciences and remooue the stumbling blockes and offences that daily arise among Neighbours On the other side we may truly say Curssed are all debate makers for they shall be called the Children of the Deuill For such as make debate and raise contention and kindle strife between Brother and Brother is as it were casting Oyle into the fire are not of God who is the Authour of loue but are guided by the spirit of the Deuill whose workes they follow and practise Fourthly in ioyning all these as Mediators for Onesimus we see the singular wisedome of the Apostle he leaueth nothing vnattempted to effect his purpose He doth not deale slightly and rawly but vseth conuenient meanes and fit persons to worke this reconcilement For he employeth and ioyneth the helpe of Apphia and Archippus to appease the Maister and to draw him to receiue his Seruant into his former fauour This is the dealing that Christ prescribeth z Mat. 18 16. That we should take with vs two or three that by their authority reconciliation may be effected and euery word may be confirmed Lastly obserue that notwithstanding the difference in gifts and sex betweene the persons here named and expressed they haue all some marke of loue set vpon them they are Bretheren and Sisters they are frends and fellow-helpers and all deare one to another to teach vs that there ought to be a neere coniunction not to be dissolued and a fast not of loue not to be loosed betweene all those that are true members of the Church and professors of the faith Paule a Brother of Iesus Christ and Brother c. Here are many persons heaped together In all this we see the Apostle is exceeding earnest vsing all the reasons and most effectuall perswasions that he can to obtaine this his purpose whereunto he mooueth Philemon He marcheth together in battell array as it were an army of Arguments to constraine him to yeeld yea euery sentence or rather word of the sentence seemeth to bee as a Furnace to dissolue the heart and to melt the affections of Philemon into loue and compassion toward his Seruant that had so deceiued and abused him the Lord also heerein shewing what care he hath and what care all other Christians should haue for the comforting releeuing and curteously entertaining of the simplest and basest seruants of God Doct. 1. Good thinges must be earnestly followed after From this practise of the Apostle we learne that good things must be carefully and earnestly followed yea by all the
life and the yeares of their age proceed and hasten vnto an end yet they neuer endeauour to proceed in Godlinesse and to hasten to Gods Kingdome whereas we should all prouide that as the outward man decayeth so the inner man may be renewed and as the body is weakened so the spirit may be strengthened Wherefore let all such know that not to go forward is to go backward not to encrease is to decrease not to labour is to loyter not to go before is to come behind and not to proceed is not to profit but to loose all Our Sauiour speaking z Mat 25 18 26 27 28 29. of the seruant to whom he had giuen one Talent that digged it in the earth and hid his Maisters money saith Thou euill seruant and slouthfull thou knewest that I reape where I sowed not and gather where I strewed not thou oughtest therfore to haue put my mony to the Exchangers and then at my comming should I haue receiued mine owne with aduantage take therefore the Talent from him and giue it vnto him which hath ten Talents for vnto euery man that hath it shall be giuen and he shall haue abundance and from him that hath not euen that he hath shall be taken away Cast therefore that vnprofitable seruant into vtter darknesse there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Where we see he went not backward he lost not that which he had but he kept his owne and yet he is called an vnprofitable seruant and is cast into vtter darknesse So the Apostle reproueth the Hebrewes because a Heb 5 12. when as concerning the time they might be Teachers yet they had need againe to be taught what are the first principles of the word of God and were become such as had need of milke and not of strong meat The second reproofe Secondly it reproueth such as runne a while and then giue ouer so that al their righteousnesse is as a morning dew These are they which were zealous but they returne to their old sinnes and start away as if they had neuer beene the men This the Apostle condemneth in the Galathians b Gal 5 7. Chap. 5. Ye did runne well who did let you that ye did not obey the truth Hymeneus and Philetus were held to be great Christians and obtained a good report in the Church c 1 Tim 1 19 20 and 2 Tim 2 18. yet afterward they fell away putting away a good conscience making shipwracke of faith and saying that the resurrection is past already thereby shaking the foundation of religion as it were a maine pillar of the building and so destroying the faith of certaine In like manner he complaineth of Demas a great professor of the Gospell d 2 Tim 4 10. that he had forsaken him and embraced this present world Good beginnings helpe not without good proceedings If a man haue a long iourny to make what auaileth it to go many miles if he stand still in the mid-way he were as good neuer begin as not continue We see this in Lots wife she went out of Sodom with her husband and seemed as forward as he but in the end she looked backe e Gen 19 26. and was turned into a Pillar of Salt We must forget that which is behind we must not pause in our race nor stay to take breath vntill we come to the end of our course when wee shall freely breath and rest from all our laboures We must therefore striue and contend that we may out-go not onely others but euen our selues We must neuer stay our iourney but alwaies hasten and so euery day amend our pace that we runne more swiftly to day then we did yesterday and to morrow then we did to day This the Apostle teacheth setting downe the lawes to be obserued in running f 1 Cor 9 24. Know ye not that they which runne in a race runne al yet one receiueth the prize So runne that ye may obtaine And againe If g 2 Tim 2 5. any man striue for a Maistery he is not crowned except he striue as he ought to do Wee haue in the holy Scriptures many lawes to incite and prouoke vs to walke to goe forward to runne to striue to wrastle but we haue none to sit still to be idle to loyter to be carelesse and secure like to those that stood idle in the Market place h Mat 20 6. to whom Christ said Why stand ye heere all the day idle It is the will of God that we should alwaies make strait steps with our feet in this life that when we haue kept the faith and finished our course we may rest from all our laboures It is a wofull case to runne and neuer to come to the iourneyes end to labour and yet to reape no fruit of his labour This made the Apostle say i 1 Cor 9 26. I therefore so runne not as vncertainly so fight I not as one that beateth the ayre It is not enough to runne except we runne well The third reproofe Thirdly it reproueth such as enuy the good blessings of God vpon their bretheren For if we should desire their profit as well as our owne and their encrease as wel as our owne we ought not to repine at their good successe in or heauenly It is noted to the great praise and commendation of Moses that when Ioshua enuied the guift of prophesie in the Elders and would haue Moses to forbid them he answeared k Num. 11. 29 Enuiest thou for my sake Yea would God that all the Lords people were Prophets and that the Lord would put his spirit vpon them He cared not what became of his owne credit and estimation among the people so that God might be honored glorified among them The like mind was in Iohn Baptist when his Disciples tolde him that all men began to flocke after Christ and to resort to him whereby they feared the fame of their Maister would decay he said vnto them l Ioh. 3 28 30. Yee your selues are my witnesses that I said I am not that Christ but that I am sent before him hee must increase but I must decrease The like wee see when the Disciples of Christ forbad him that cast out deuils in Christs name because hee was not one of the Disciples for Christ said vnto them m Mark 9 38. Forbid him not for there is no man that can do a Myracle by my name that can lightly speake euill of me whosoeuer is not against vs is on our part Let vs take heede of this enuy which is a greefe arising of another mans prosperity alwayes ioyned with a secret kinde of malice towardes him that is enuied This is a wilde plant springing vp in the soule which destroyeth true Charitie reioysing at the euill and sorrowing for the good that befalleth our Brethren And howsoeuer enuie be noysome and pernitious to others it is more hurtfull to him that
of those thinges they enioy no more then of those things which they haue not obtained This made the Apostle say f Heb. 6 11 12 We desire that euerie one of you shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope vnto the end that ye be not sloathfull but followers of them which through Faith and Patience inherit the promises God is constrained oftentimes to take away the means that he sendeth for our good whē we make no good vse of them he taketh away good Pastors he sendeth setteth vp euill Pastors in their roomes when we do not profit nor are careful to make others profit by vs. This the Prophet Zacharie denounceth from the mouth of the Lord g Zach. 17 16 I will raise vp a Shepheard in the Land which shall not looke for the thing that is lost nor seeke the tender Lambes nor healt that that is hurt nor feede that which standeth vp but he shall eate the flesh of the fat and teare the clawes in peeces This also Christ our Sauiour teacheth in the Gospell h Math. 13 12 Whosoeuer hath to him shall be giuen and he shall haue abundance but whosoeuer hath not from him shall be taken away euen that he hath Furthermore in the parable of the man that going into a farre Countrey called vnto him his seruants and deliuered vnto them his goods we see that the euil seruant that hauing receiued a Talent hid it in the ground brought onely a Talent to his Maister againe hath i Math 25 28. that taken from him and it is giuen to him that had gotten and gained fiue Talents It is accounted an euill Tree not that onely which bringeth forth euill fruit but that also which bringeth forth no fruit It is accounted euill ground not onely that which beareth Thornes and Briars but that also which bringeth forth no Corne for the vse of man He is accounted an vniust steward not onely that wasteth his Maisters goods conuerteth thē to his own vse but he that keepeth them safe and sound without imployment which he had receiued to lay out to dispense and to distribute He is accounted an euill seruant not onely that selleth to others or reserueth to himselfe his Maisters Corne which he should haue sowed in the earth that it might haue brought forth great increase and a plentifull Haruest but he that keepeth it by him and in the end deliuereth it backe in the same manner and measure that he tooke it So are we vnfaithfull seruants vniust Stewards and euill bestowers of our Maisters mony if we let it lye by vs and do not imploy it to some gaine If then they be blamed and vnrewarded that gaine nothing what shall they be esteemed that loose the Stocke and dash away the principall Againe if God haue giuen vnto vs this worldes good he requireth of vs to do good with it to helpe those that are in want and to distribute to the necessities of the Saintes Hath God beene liberall to vs that we should be hand-bound and heart-bound vnto others He hath left the poore with vs that we should be in stead of God to them k Exod 4 16. as Moses is said to be giuen to Aaron in Gods stead as a wise Councellor so we are appointed to be vnto them as a wise distributer supplying that which is wanting vnto them How should God giue much vnto vs when for his sake we will not giue a little If we were in their case and condition and had experience how great the misery of want is and how heauy the burden of pouerty is we would be willing to be refreshed comforted and eased l Mat 7 12. Therefore whatsoeuer ye would that men should do to you euen so do ye to them for this is the Law and the Prophets Whatsoeuer we do vnto them shall not be vnregarded or vnrewarded we sow it in a fruitfull ground and we shall reape it againe with great encrease Vse 3. Lastly seeing we must imploy that which we haue receiued to the benefite of others it serueth greatly to comfort such as haue beene careful to communicate to others rhose thinges that they haue receiued and to make them partakers of the same comfort that they haue reaped by them It is a blessed thing when men haue endeuoured to their power to benefit others to exhort them to admonish them to comfort them to refresh them and haue vsed our guiftes to the profit of our bretheren O what a wonderfull comfort and consolation shall it be vnto vs when we must leaue this world and go the way of all flesh to remember that we haue not spared to do good to others wee haue not failed to benifit others we haue not ceased to scatter abroad a part of that which we haue gathered Let vs lay this to our heartes and apply it to our consciences both we that are the Ministers and you that are the people If we that are made watchmen ouer the Citty of God and ouerseers of the Church shall to the vtmost of our power imploy our guifts and spend our selues to giue light to others God will not forget the labour of our hands but great shall be our reward in heauen according to the promise mentioned in Daniell the Prophet m Dan 12 3. They that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the Firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse shall shine as the Starres for euer and euer Heereunto accordeth the answere of Christ to the question of Peter n Luk 12 42 43. Who is a faithfull Steward and wise whom the Maister shall make Ruler ouer his houshold to giue them their portion of meat in season Blessed is that seruant whom his Maister when he commeth shall find so doing We shall find more comfort of conscience and ioy of heart and gladnesse of spirit when we depart this life that we haue beene faithfull in that little committed to our trust and made others partakers of it as well as our selues then if wee had great abundance of earthly blessings and were owners of the whole world The like comfort shall all faithfull people of God find that haue distributed their Maisters goodes they shall receiue their reward according vnto their worke We see the haruest is answereable to the seed time and they shal reap as they haue sowed Then they shall tast the sweetnesse and reap the comfort of their labor bestowed in applying themselues to the profit of others Their last day shall be a blessed day vnto them when they shall finde God as readie to communicate vnto them his glory as they haue bin to do to others their duty and to bestow vpon them the fruits of mercy and the works of charity The greatest good is to seeke to gaine their soules the next is to giue to their bodies On the other side howe vncomfortable shall that day of our leparture be how wofull and full of trouble bringing
horror of conscience vexation of spirit and confusion of face Woe then woe I say to all idle Ministers and sluggish people that when they are to bee gathered vnto their Fathers and ly vpon their death beds cannot remember what good they haue done but shall bee troubled and tormented with the consideration of this what good they might haue done that they might haue beene fruitfull trees but haue beene barren Good ground but haue beene euill These men haue nothing else to muse and meditate vpon but how they haue spent whol dayes and nights whole moneths and yeares in eating and drinking in feasting and company in pleasures and pastimes in surfetting and drunkennes and what comfort shall their poore distressed soule and languishing bodye feele in that day but crie out with a lamentable cry and a pittifull howling able to mooue the stones and to pierce the rockes that all is vanity and then condemne their folly that haue placed their happinesse in this vnhappinesse and the ioy of their spirit in this sorrow of their heart For if that be true which the Prophet saith o Psal 128 1 2 Prou. 10 4. Blessed is euerie one that feareth the Lord and walketh in his wayes when thou eatest the labours of thine hands thou shalt be blessed and it shall be well with thee It is no doubt as true that such as eate not the fruit of their labors but eate the fruite of their lazinesse and loytering are accurssed This is it which our Sauiour addeth p Luke 12 45 46. If that seruant say in his heart My Maister doth deferre his comming and shall begin to smite the Seruants and Maidens and to eate and drinke and to be drunken The Maister of that seruant will come on a day when he thinketh not and at an houre when he is not ware of and will cut him off and giue him his portion with the vnbeleeuers that Seruant that knew his Maisters will and prepared not himselfe neither did according to his will shall be beaten with many stripes Where he teacheth that as eternall life is the reward of diligence and discharge of our duty so is eternal destruction the wages of all idle bellies Such as do no good to others shall know at the last that they haue indeed done no good vnto themselues The more seruiceable wee haue beene to others the more profitable shall we be in the end to our selues and the comfort of all shall be felt in our hearts when wee shall say with the Apostle q 2 Tim. 4 7 8 I haue fought a good fight I haue finished my course I haue kept the Faith henceforth is laid vp for me the Crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous iudge shall giue me at that day and not to mee onely but vnto all them also that loue his appearing A notable example heereof wee haue in Obadiah who was Gouernor of Ahabs house when he saw himselfe in distresse of famine in fear least Eliah should depart he called to remembrance the fruits of his Faith the worship of God and the fauour shewed to his children and heerein hee was comforted When Iezebel r 1 Kin. 18 13 slew the Prophets of the Lord he hid an hundred men of the Lords Prophets by fifties in a Caue and fed them with bread and water Let vs therefore neuer bee without such arguments to comfort vs wee shall finde the benefit of them when we are in trouble and especially when we are going out of the world And that whatsoeuer good thing is in you through Christ Iesus may be knowne The Apostle in these wordes mentioneth this to be the cause why he would haue the guifts of God bestowed vpon Philemon to be communicated to others because by that meanes they might be made knowne to others and acknowledged by others and so spread abroad farre and neere Doctrine 3. The goodnesse of God toward our selues or other must be made knowne Wee learne from hence that it is the duty of euery one to manifest and shew forth yea to spread abroad and to speake of the guifts of God bestowed vpon themselues and others When God is good toward vs and distributeth his graces among vs we must be ready to confesse and acknowledge them when we feele them in our selues or see them in others This our Sauiour a Mat 5 16. teacheth Math. 5. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in Heauen Thus the spirit of God in the Scriptures remembreth the righteousnesse of Noah the faith and obedience of Abraham the patience of Iob the chastity of Ioseph the meeknesse of Moses the single heart of Dauid the sincerity of Nathaniell the labours of Paule the repentance of Peter the restitution of Zacheus Christ Iesus publisheth the graces of God that shined in Iohn Baptist b Iohn 5 35. he saith he was a burning and shining Candle and that they would for a season haue reioyced in his light The Apostle declareth c 1 Tim 4 14. that the faith of the Romanes is published throughout the whole world The praise of Timothy was noysed and notifyed in the Church wherof Paule putteth him in mind to make his proceedings answearable to his beginnings and to the hope that was conceiued of him c 1 Tim 4 14. Despise not the guift that is in thee which was giuen thee by prohecie with the laying on of the handes of the company of the Eldership So likewise the fact of Mary annointing the body of Christ and working a good worke vpon him to bury him is commanded to be made knowne and not kept secret d Mat 26 13. Verily I say vnto you wheresoeuer this Gospell shall be preached throughout all the world there shall also this that she hath done be spoken off for a memoriall of her Thus the Apostle remembreth the e 1 Thes 1 3. effectuall faith and diligent loue and the patience of that hope in our Lord Iesus Christ which was in the Thessalonians So he recordeth and commendeth the liberallity that was in them of Macedonia toward the poore Saintes at Ierusalem that were in distresse All which Testimonies serue to teach vs that it is our duty to publish the guifes of God vpon vs or our bretheren not to hide them to spread them abroad not to smother them to make them knowne not to couer and conceale them to our selues Reason 1. And albeit these examples may be sufficient to moue vs to embrace this as a certain truth yet we haue sundry reasons yeelded in the Scriputre farther to confirme it vnto vs. First to the end that Gods graces being seene knowne he may be glorified and blessed for them who is the author and giuer of them It ought to be our chiefest desire and study that God may haue his praise and glory among vs. This is that reason which Christ our Sauiour
Child of the Deuill and of representing his Image For as the names giuen to Sathan describe his nature so the word Deuill in the orriginall tongue which the holy Ghost vseth q Reuel 22 10 signifieth a false accuser a carper a cauiller a disgracer a slanderer one that by all means seeketh to deface the truth and those that vphold and support it Thus the nature of our spirituall aduersity is notably painted and purtraied out vnto vs. His whole practise standeth in false accusations wrongfull imputations and wilfull calumniations of God to man and of man to God He falsely accused God to our first parents in the beginning r Gen 3 5. to enuy their good estate and therefore of malice forbad them the Tree of the knowledge of good and euil He falsely accused Iob to serue God s Iob 1 9 10. 11. in hipocrisie not in sincerity with shew of the body not with singlenesse of heart to be seene of men not to approue himselfe with an vpright conscience in the presence of God These quallities of the Deuill are to be found in all the wicked If you talke and reason with them of such as truely feare God either they will censure them as Hipocrits and falsely accuse them not to be the persons which they make profession to be or else they will detract from them and diminish those guiftes that God hath abundantly bestowed vpon them Christ Iesus himselfe could not escape this viperous brood who was accused by the Deuils ofspring and the Children of darknesse the Scribes and Pharisies to be a Samaritan to haue a Deuill to be a Drunkard to be a Seducer a Blasphemer and what not So was it with his Apostles they were filled with the holy Ghost and endued with the guiftes of tongues yet they felt the smart of this rod and were wounded with this sharpe sword they were accounted Deceiuers accused as Drunkards slaunderd as Disturbers of the common peace and reuiled as Traitors and Rebels against Caesar for the Disciple must not looke to be t Iohn 15 20. aboue his Maister nor the seruant greater then his Lord. These reuilings and reproaches are not peculiar to Christ and his Apostles but common to all the faithfull and true beleeuers in his name they tast of the same cup and haue the like measure measured vnto them They are slandered and backbited they are reuiled and taunted for the truthes sake But let all such carpers and cauilers looke to themselues and take heed to their estate u Iohn 8 44. they resemble their father whose workes they doe and they shew themselues to be petty-Sathans and very Deuils incarnate Now such as are the Children of the Deuill must look to haue their portion with the Deuill and his Angels Let vs therefore be ready to magnifie the mercies of God toward our bretheren let vs speake of the praises of him that hath giuen them let vs remember what God hath done for vs and others and especially let vs beware that we do not disgrace them and their guiftes which tendeth to the dishonour of him that gaue them For as Salomon saith x Prou. 17 5. and 14 31. He that mocketh the poore reprocheth him that made him so is it true that whosoeuer contemneth and despiseth reuileth and treadeth vnder his foot the Godly adorned from the Throne of God with the precious graces of his spirit he reproueth and reproacheth God himselfe y 1 Iohn 2 29 who hath giuen that annointing which they haue receiued of him Thus we see how we are to behaue our selues in respect of Gods guiftes we must not be ashamed to confesse them but we must be both ashamed and afraid to deface them and so to defraud God of his honour due vnto him Vse 2. Secondly seeing it is our duty when God hath beene good vnto vs or others to make knowne his goodnesse we learne heereby how the Saintes of God may be rightly and religiously honoured of vs and remembred to their euerlasting praise It is our dutie to giue thankes to God who hath blessed them with his graces and gouerned them by his holy spirit and to pray vnto him so to direct vs dispose of our waies that we may follow their godlines walk in their steps wherein they haue gone before vs. True it is the church of Rome go a great deale farther and teach vs to go further in the honoring of them then God alloweth the word approueth For they lade them with the spoils of Christ take from him the royalties of his Priest-hood therfore indeed they do not honor them but dishonor and disgrace them when they decke them with feathers that are not theirs Is there any good godly man liuing on the face of the earth that could bee content to haue theeues and robbers spoile other men of their goods and bring them vnto him and if they offred them would he accept and receiue them If he would not receiue them as his owne but refuse reiect them as belonging to others how shold the blessed Virgin the holy Apostles and other Saintes of God account those sacrilegious wretches to be their friends which rob spoile God of his honor and thrust Christ Iesus our mediator from his office to bestow vpon thē It is their honor to honor the same God with vs and to worship him And it is our honoring of them to giue all honor to God by walking in those wayes wherein they haue ledde vs the way and by following the light which they haue carried before vs. And if we would know how to honour the Saints aright and to giue them their due z Wherein the honour of the Saints consisteth it consisteth in these pointes First that God be magnified and praised in them our praising of them must tend to the praising of him who hath aduanced them and crowned them with his gifts God must be all in all to vs and his glorie must be preferred and sought for of vs. The Apostle remembring the History of his owne calling and conuersion telleth that the Churches of the Iewes saide a Gal. 1 22 23 Hee which persecuted vs in times past now preacheth the Faith which before hee destroyed and they glorified God for me When they heard he was gained to the Gospell they considered therein the power goodnesse and mercie of God and with ioy of heart they gaue him thankes for it Secondly the Saints should be honoured by an approbation of Gods guiftes in them and by an honourable mention of them For seeing they haue vsed the gifts of God faithfully he wil haue their gifts praised and extolled and the Saints themselues to be magnified commended So the Apostle mentioning his persecuting of the church in the time of his ignorance addeth b 1 Cor. 15 10 But by the grace of God I am that I am and his grace which is in me was not in vaine but I laboured
example of life If wee had learned since wee entered into Christianity but nowe a little and then a little heere a Precept and there a Precept we might in short space haue attained to a great measure of vnderstanding and bee daily fitted to Gods Kingdome But alas such as should bee olde in Faith are verie Babes and Children a thing greatly disgracefull and reproachfull to their yeares condition The Apostle chargeth the Corinthians h 1 Cor. 14 20 Ephes 4 14. that they should not be Children in vnderstanding as concerning maliciousnesse hee would haue them Children but in vnderstanding to be of ripe age Whereby wee see that aged persons do quite degenerat from that which they ought to be when they remaine voyde of knowledge and destitute of spirituall Wisedome and suffer many that are young in yeares to ouertake them yea to ouer strip them and go many degrees before them If a man should binde his sonne an Apprentise to some Science or Occupation and when he had serued his time should be to seeke in his trade and bee neuer a whit the more his Crafts-maister in the ending of his yeares then he was at the beginning we would thinke hee had lost his time and complaine of the iniury of the Maister or of the carelesnesse of the Seruant If a Father should put his sonne to Schoole and hee alwayes continue in the lowest Fourme and neuer ascend higher wee woulde iudge great negligence to be eyther in the Maister or in the Scholler Behold the Church of God is the Schoole of Christ and the best place to learne the Science of all Sciences if we haue liued long therein some of vs twenty some thirty some forty yeares and some longer and yet be no wiser in Religion then a childe of seauen yeares old i Heb. 5 12. is it not ashame for vs and may wee not bee condemned of great negligence in the matters of our saluation Let vs examine our selues how wee haue profited and compare our proceeding in knowledge with the length of time that God hath graunted vnto vs. He may iustly require great things of vs and challenge at our hands much fruite who hath affoorded vnto vs great meanes for our growth and encreasing in all good things Verse 10. I beseech thee for my son Onesimus whom I haue begotten in my bonds The order of the words HItherto we haue spoken of the description of Paule crauing to be heard and respected in regard of his age and office which is the second part of the sentence before remembred Now we are to obserue the third point which is concerning Onesimus whom he setteth forth first by a note of relation My Sonne then by the cause Whom I haue begotten in my bonds The Apostle in this Verse beginneth to enter into his suite shewing for whom he doth intreat and afterward for what he doth entreate To his request hee annexeth diuers reasons first because he begat him that is brought him by the preaching of the Gospell to the true Christian faith and therefore he is earnest to intreat for him Secondly because his Maister should now finde him profitable vnto him that is faithfull trusty and seruiceable for so will true Christian seruants be whereas such as are vngodly will be vnfaithful and such as haue not the feare of God before them cannot answere the trust that is reposed in them for Conscience sake Thirdly because Paul loued Onesimus tenderly and deerely as his owne bowelles not as a seruant but as his son not onely as a Brother but as his owne bowels This is the order of the words The meaning of the words Let vs breefely see the Interpretation of this Verse and reserue the rest to his proper place First of all when hee calleth Onesimus his sonne hee meaneth it not in respect of the naturall birth and generation but of the spirituall and super-naturall So that by a borrowed speech he meaneth one brought to his Faith by his Ministry Likewise when he saith Whom I haue begotten the meaning is whom God by mee did effectually call to embrace and beleeue the Gospell It is not the worke of a mortall man to frame and reforme the soule vnto the Image of God He onely nameth himself as the author of his regeneration which he doth not to oppose himselfe to God but only to shew what God doth by the ministry of man Lastly when he addeth In my bonds he meaneth when he was a prisoner and lay in prison This Verse according to this exposition of the wordes is thus much in effect as if he had said Hauing thus prepared thee for that which I am to intreate from thy hands if now thou wouldst know the party or person for whom it is surely it is thy runnagate seruant Onesimus and vpon these grounds he is my spirituall sonne for I haue begotten him in the time of my captiuity to the true profession and obedience of the Gospell Obseruations out of this Verse Before wee come to handle the Doctrines and instructions arising out of this verse it shall not bee amisse to set downe diuers profitable obseruations that may be considered First we see heer a Rhetorical repitition of the same word I beseech thee being aged and a prisoner I beseech thee for my Sonne Onesimus This redoubling of his prayer and intreating vsed also k 2 Cor. 10 1 2. elsewhere sheweth the desire and manifesteth the earnestnesse of his minde he was not colde in his suite as if he regarded not whether hee obtained it but prosecuted it with his whole desire and full purpose so that he contenteth not himselfe once to beseech him but beseecheth him againe Secondly we see that the person of him whom we will commend to any man hath great force to moue him and to preuaile with him to graunt vnto vs that which we craue and desire at his handes Wherefore whosoeuer would be commended vnto any must looke to himselfe that he haue in him somewhat woorthy commendation For as another mans mouth shoulde praise vs not our own so the matter of praise must be in our selues A false praise is a true dispraise and a wrongful commending is a reall discommending The praise that commeth from others must proceede from a due desert in our selues If the Apostle had not found a great alteration he would neuer haue giuen this commendation to Onesimus Thirdly we see an example in Paule of wonderfull humility and lowlinesse of minde See heer the difference betweene Paule the Apostle and the proud Byshop of Rome Paule beseecheth where he might command but he commaundeth where he hath no warrant to beseech For the Pope vsurpeth authoritie ouer Princes and Kinges hee cursseth and banneth hee threatneth and thundereth out his excommunications It is not so with our Apostle for such is his exceeding modestie and mildnesse of Spirit that he abaseth himselfe to bee a false and fugitiue seruant whom hee embraceth as his owne
Sonne What coulde bee more reproachfull then to robbe his Maister and then to play the runnagate that so he might runne on in his euill course and deliuer himselfe from punnishment Yet wee see the Apostle is not ashamed of him is not ashamed to cal him his Sonne that Philemon might not be ashamed to receiue and to accept him as his Seruant For if he be the sonne of Paule he may bee esteemed the seruant of Philemon Fourthly wee see how effectuall the sounde conuersion of a sinner to God ought to bee and how forcible it should bee to preuayle with vs to winne our Loue towardes him and cause vs to performe all the duties belonging vnto him For wee may not bee ashamed to account him eyther as a Sonne or as a Brother whome GOD accounteth for his owne sonne and seruant We are most vnworthy to be called the sonnes of God if we refuse his children to be our brethren But if we marke this aright we shal find the number of those to be few which regard the Faith conuersion saluation other spiritual blessings bestowed vpon their brethren as they ought and therefore testify no loue shew no ioy performe no duties when they behold sinners conuerted vnto God Fiftly we see that the name and praise of a spirituall Father which is proper to God alone is communicated to the Apostles and Ministers of God whereas God onely doth renew and regenerate vs by the power of his spirit the Ministry onely is mans whether hee be Pastor or Apostle Our Sauior teacheth vs l Math. 23 9. to cal no man Father vpon earth It is no worke of man be hee neuer so excellent to frame and reforme the soule into the Image of God But because we are borne anew by Faith and Faith commeth by hearing the Minister as the disposer of the Mysteries of God doth vnder God perfourme the dutie of a Father So then seeing the word of God preached by the mouth and Ministery of man is the immortall seede of eternall life it is no maruell if he bee called by the Title of a Father from whose lippes we conceiue that seede and receiue that worde Thus much is to be obserued of vs in general out of this verse Now let vs come to the particular Doctrines I beseech thee for my sonne Onesimus c. Wee are heere to marke the scope and purpose of the Apostle in these words We see he vseth exceeding earnestnesse and importunity to haue him receiued to his Maisters fauor The condition of Onesimus was this he was a seruant of the basest calling For men Seruants and Maid-seruants in those dayes were not as they be nowe Men had them not for Wages and hire as they that wer bound to do no more then Couenant but they were Bondslaues to bee bought and sold in the Market and their Maisters possessed them as Oxen and Cattle and hadde power ouer them of life and death Now albeit he were a seruant of this kind and condition and had beene besides a runnagate and a Theefe deseruing greeuous punishment euen death yet he pleadeth his cause being conuerted with as great force and feruency as can be expressed Doctrine 1. The least and lowest member conuerted to Christ must not bee contemned We learne from this loue appearing in the Apostle that the basest person in the Church truly conuerted brought vnto Christ should not be contemned but most louingly tenderly and Brotherly regarded The least lowest member that belongeth to God ought not to be reiected and debased but highly for Christs sake to be honored and respected We see how Christ calleth vnto him all that are weary and heauy laden m Mat. 11 28. promising to ease and refresh them Likewise he embraceth the poore and simple as louingly and cheerefully as the rich and wise of the world The Publicans and sinners are accepted of him that were hated of the Iewes The Woman taken in adultry accused by the Pharises is exhorted by him to repentance The Blinde man restored to his sight n Iohn 9 35. and 8 11. and cast out of the Synagogue is sought out by Christ and taught to beleeue and broght to be a true member of the Church The penitent Theefe hanging o Luke 23 43 vppon the Crosse and hearing Christ preach is conuerted to the Faith and receiued into paradise It is not the will of p Mat. 18 14. our heauenly Father that one of these little ones should perish When the prodigall sonne had wasted his wealth and his strength in riotous liuing q Lu. 15 20 24 so that necessity fell vppon him and Famine constrained him to eate of the huskes wherewith he fed his Swine his Father receiued him into his fauour and had compassion vpon him hee willed him not to returne backe to his Harlots and to betake himself to his former companions but while he was yet a farre off he reioyced to see him and embraced him when he saw him saying This my sonne was dead but is aliue againe he was lost but he is found and they began to be merry The incestuous Corinthian swept out of the Church by the censures thereof r 1 Cor. 5 4. 2 Cor. 2 6 7 and deliuered vp to Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the Spirit may be saued in the day of the Lord Iesus and wandering as a stray Sheepe from the sheepe-fold is brought againe into the house of God and into the assembly of the faithfull The Apostle hearing of his sorrow for his sinne and of his vnfaigned repentaunce saith It is sufficient vnto the same man that he was rebuked of many so that nowe contrary wise yee ought rather to forgiue him and comfort him least the same should be swallowed vp with ouermuch heauinesse The like we see might say of Mary Magdalen who was infamous in life out of whome Christ cast seauen diuels Of the Cananitish woman whom he heard and helped of the Cripple that lay at the Poole whom when Iesus founde in the Temple Å¿ 1 Iohn 5 14 hee exhorted to sinne no more being now made whole least a worse thing come vnto him Likewise the Euangelists declare that by the power and loue of Christ t Math 11 5. the blind had their sight restored the Leapers were clensed the dead were raised the halt walked the sicke were healed and the poore receiued the Gospell So the Apostle willeth u 1 Tim. 6 1. seruants that are vnder the yoke to account their Maisters worthy of all honour that the name of God his Doctrine be not euil spoken of All these places of Scripture serue to teach vs that such as are of meanest account and least estimation beeing conuerted to the Faith and belonging to Christ are greatly to bee regarded and entirely to be beloued Reason 1. This shall not seeme any thing strange vnto vs if we marke the Reasons whereupon it is grounded For first
wisedome in the end be turned into folly our presumption into despaire our dallying with the word into destruction Thirdly wee are put in mind by this meanes of our regeneration to acknowledge the happy estate and condition of that Nation of that people of that parish to whome God hath vouchsafed the preaching of his word because it is a sure pledg proof of his loue toward them and a manifest argument and testimony that he hath a Church there to be gathered a people to be conuerted and many soules to be saued For euen as God withholdeth the meanes of saluation from those that he doth not determine to saue i 1 King 17 1. As he stayeth the heauens from raining vpon the earth when he will bring a famine so when he will shew mercy he wil send the meanes plentifully It was a great mercy to the Iewes when Christ called his Disciples k Math. 10 6. and bad them Go and preach to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel that the kingdom of heauen was at hand It was a great blessing intended to the Macedonians when a vision appeared to Paul in the night l Acts 19 6 10 and 18 10 11. There stood a man of Macedonia and prayed him saying Come into Macedonia and help vs whereby Paul was assured that the Lord had called him to preach the Gospell vnto them It was a great fauour bestowed vppon the Corinthians when the Lorde saide to Paul Feare not but speake and hold not thy peace for I am with thee and no man shall lay hands on thee to hurt thee for I haue much people in this City so he continued there a yeare and sixe months and taught the word of God among them Where the Lord telleth his seruant that he had people there whome he meant to saue and therefore he sent them his word to saue them yea he had much people there to saue and therefore the Apostle must bestow much time and diligence among them to bring them to saluation When God would preserue Moses out of the waters that might haue drowned him hee sent m Exod. 2 5. Pharaohs daughter to the Riuer to take vppe the Childe and to prouide for it who brought him vp at her owne cost So when God will saue a people from their sinnes and make them partakers of his Kingdome hee offereth vnto them the meanes he sendeth his word he giueth guiftes vnto his Ministers hee toucheth their hearts with a Conscience of their duties and causeth them to preach vnto them that so they might be conuerted and saued If God haue thus blessed vs and bestowed this mercy vpon vs which he hath denied to many places and persons n Amos 4 7. causing it to raine vpon one Cittie and not vpon another Cittie so that one peece was rained vppon and the peece vvhereupon it rained not vvithered Let vs therefore acknowledge this goodnesse and walke worthy of this benefit least the Gospell bee remoued from vs and giuen vnto another Nation that will bring forth the fruites of it When the Gospell was offered vnto the Iewes o Acts 18 6. and they resisted blasphemed the Apostle shooke his raiment and saide vnto them Your blood be vpon your owne head I am cleane from henceforth will I go vnto the Gentiles It had beene better for vs we had neuer had the word preached among vs then to haue it offred and we not regard it It shall bee easier for the Turkes and Sarazens in the day of judgement then for vs for if they shall be condemned that neuer had the truth of God among them and knewe not what the preaching of it meaneth much more iustly shall we perish that haue had the Gospell taught in our streets and brought vnto our doores and Christ Iesus described in our sight and among vs crucified Let vs therefore take heede that the Gospell be not the sauour of death to death vnto vs and that Christ be not a rocke of offence to stumble at least if we fall on him he grind vs to peeces and to powder Vse 2 Secondly seeing the word preached is the meanes whereby we are regenerated it teacheth the Minister to be careful to exercise his duty with faithfulnesse and seruiceablenesse to Christ and his Church Heereby he shal deliuer his owne soule gaine glory to God and turne many vnto righteousnesse This made the Apostle say p 1 Tim. 4 15 16. 1 Cor. 4 1. 2 Cor. 4 5 6. We preach not our selues but Christ Iesus the Lord and our selues your seruants for Iesus sake The Lord Iesus himselfe went about all Citties and Townes preaching the Gospell and healing the sicke The Apostle Paule saith of himselfe q 1 Cor. 6 19. A necessity is laide vpon me and woe vnto mee if I preach not the Gospell And thus he exhorteth the Elders of Ephesus Take heede vnto your selues and to all the flocke whereof the Holy-Ghost hath made you Ouer-seers to feede the Church of God which hee hath purchased with his owne blood Acts 20 28. It is his dutie to be well studied in the word of God to exercise himselfe carefully in the reading thereof that he may be able to declare the same vnto the people He must be as a plentifull Store-house of all necessary prouision that they may resort to him and seeke the Lawe at his mouth For how shall he be able to teach another that which hee himselfe hath not learned Or how shall he deliuer that which himselfe neuer receyued Neither is it enough for him to seeke knowledge himselfe and to keepe continually in his study till he become as r Greenh part 4. Sermon 4. one saith as a Tun that wil not sound being full when one knocketh vpon it but he must come foorth and preach the word of God and deliuer wholsome doctrine and declare by feeding the flocke of Christ that hee loueth his Maister and the Maister of the Sheepe whose seruant he professeth himselfe to be This is it which the Apostle Peter teacheth Å¿ 1 Pet. 5 2 3 4 Feede the flocke of God which dependeth vpon you caring for it not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready minde not as though ye were Lords ouer Gods heritage but that ye may be ensamples to the flocke and when that cheefe Shepheard shall appeare ye shall receiue an incorruptible crowne of glory If we do not thus labour but loyter in the Lords Vineyard we cannot assure our selues to be the Ministers of the Lord but robbers and spoylers nay murtherers and man-slayers who do not onely eate the sins of the people and fill our bellies with the sweat of other mens browes but make a prey of their soules and expose them to bee destroyed and deuoured of their enemies When the great day of the Lord shall come and the great Shepheard of the Sheepe shall appeare and a great account of our Stewardshippe
shall bee taken of vs wee shall beare the burthen not onely of our owne sinnes but of all the sinnes of the people and euerie soule belonging vnto our charge that hath perrished thorough our owne negligence shall bee laide to our charge and his blood be required at our handes and so shal becom horrible Reprobates in Hel to be tormented with euerlasting pains For euen as the holy mā speaking of this calling teacheth that a faithful messenger of God and interpreter of his wil is but as one of a thousand that though they be many that vndertake the office yet the number is few rare that make Conscience of their dutie to God and his people so on the other side few of this many shall be saued but be cast as notable diuels into hell draw with them thousands into destruction Neither is it sufficient for the Ministers discharge if he teach sildom or now and then as at euery quarter day when he commeth to reckon with them or once a month to auoide the Law but he must watch and teach and feede his flocke continually t 2 Tim. 4 1 2 And preach the word in season and out of season The greatest labor shall haue the greatest reward They u Dan. 12 3. that turne many to righteousnesse shall shine as the Stars for euer and euer Euery x 1 Cor. 3 8. man shal haue his wages according to his worke They that imployed their Maisters mony y Mat. 25 30. gained by it are accounted good faithfull seruants but the ydle and loytering seruant that would do nothing but hid his talent that was giuen vnto him was cast into vtter darknesse and rewarded according to his deserts Let vs therefore labour to haue a cleare conscience toward God and man The more paines we take the greater shal be our comfort the more diligently we sow the more plentifull shall be our haruest If we be painful in our callings and diligent in teaching the people z Co● 3 1 2. We shall not neede as some other Epistles of re-commendation vnto them or Letters of re commendation from them for they shal be our Epistle written in our harts which is vnderstood and read of all men And concerning those committed to vs to feed we see by experience that they cannot liue without food they cannot grow and prosper without a daily supply so their soules cannot liue vnto God a spirituall life vnlesse they bee often fed and plentifully nourished by the milke of Gods word When Paule tooke his leaue to depart from Ephesus he propoundeth before the Elders his owne example a Acts 20 31. Remember that by the space of three yeares I ceased not to warne euery one both night and day with teares This faithfulnesse is to be found in vs as our comfort in this life our crowne in the life to come alwaies prouing when God wil giue faith and repentance neuer to be repented of We know not the times and seasons that God hath kept in his owne hand If he touch not the heart at one time and leaue a blessing behind him he may touch it and frame it vnto obedience at another time It behooueth vs therefore to vse the meanes to sowe vnto them spirituall things and to commit the successe of our labours vnto God b 1 Cor. 3 6 7 seeing Paule planteth and Apollos watereth but it is GOD that giueth the encrease Vse 3. Thirdly seeing the word preached is the ordinary meanes of our regeneration it teacheth the people to looke to their feet when they enter into the house of God and to take heede how they heare It is not left to their owne choise whether they wil hear or not no more then it is to the Minister whether he will preach or not It is required of them that they reuerence them obey their Doctrine loue them prouide for them pray for them and in al things esteeme of them as the messengers of Christ as the Ministers of the word as the ouerseers of the Church yea it standeth them vpon to heare the word at their mouths to account of it as the meanes of their saluation It is great ignorance impiety to desire any other means to haue faith then that which he hath appointed for vs. It is the great mercy and goodnesse of God to appoint mortal men subiect to sin and al infirmities as we are at whose handes we may be fed at whose mouths we may be taught and with whom we may talke familiarly and yet by their simple Ministry may haue as good assurance of saluation in this life and of glory in the life to come as if the Lorde himselfe should speake from heauen For the word of God is as the gate of heauen and hee hath committed the Keyes thereof to his faithfull Stewardes c Math. 16 19 That whatsoeuer they binde on earth should be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer they loose on earth should be loosed in heauen True it is many foolish faithlesse men perswade themselues that they should repent and beleeue the Gospell if they might heare God himselfe speake or if one came from the dead to tell them what they should do to be saued When Caine had conceiued malice and murther in his heart and intended to kill his Brother d Gen. 4 6. the Lorde spake vnto him set his sinnes in order before him and threatned iudgment against him vnlesse he repented but did hee repent at the voice of God and turne vnto him with all his heart No he fell from euill to worse and added one sinne vnto another till he had filled vp the measure of them All the Israelites heard the Law of God in the wildernesse and saw his wonderfull workes that hee shewed among them yet they beleeued not neither ceased to murmure and rebell against him Iudas one of the twelue was reprooued of Christ for his treason so were the Scribes and Pharisees for their hypocrisie yet none of them repented or at the least many of them repented not at his preaching vnto them wherefore it is not the hearing of the voice of God can giue vs repentance it is his changing of our hearts and renewing of vs in the inner man that casteth vs into a new mould and worketh in vs a new birth When Christ Iesus was nayled vpon the Crosse they said e Math. 27 42. He saued others but hee cannot saue himselfe if he be the King of Israell let him now come downe from the Crosse and we will beleeue in him But if he had come downe at this taunt cast out vpon him wold they or could they haue beleeued Or could Christ haue beene the true Messiah if he had discended seeing it was the end of his comming into the world that hee might suffer f Esay 53 7. Psal 22 17. 69 21. and fulfill the thinges that were foretold by the Prophets Or would they not rather
ſ Gen. 31 40. Hee was in the day consumed with heate and with frost in the night and his sleepe departed from his eyes whatsoeuer was torne of Beastes he brought it not vnto him but made it good himselfe This is it which the Centurion in the Gospell confesseth and commendeth in his seruants t Math. 8 9. For I am a man also vnder the authority of another and I haue Souldiers vnder me and I say to one Goe and he goeth and to another Come and hee commeth and to my seruant do this and hee doth it These examples also of that seruant and Souldier that waited vppon Cornelius is notable to this purpose u Acts 10 7. who being trained vp in the feare of God shewed all fidelity and forwardnesse to performe the will and commaundement of his Maister and went to bring Peter by whose Ministerie they might bee further instructed Thus we see that religious seruants are the best Seruants the most dilligent Seruants the most true and trustie Seruants the most prouident and profitable Seruants and therefore it belongeth to al Masters of families to be carefull to teach them the feare of the Lorde and to traine them in the wayes of godlinesse Heereby they shall honor God heerby they shal do great good to their soules heerby they shal discharge a good Conscience heereby they shall procure their owne profite and further their owne gaine Which in times past was to thee vnprofitable but nowe profitable both to thee and to mee The Apostle in this place speaking of the estate of Onesimus and shewing what hee was before his Conuersion and what hee was after dooth fitly distinguish the times and sayeth that before his Calling to the Faith hee was vnprofitable seruing to no other purpose but to feede himselfe and fill vp a place but no good no grace no godlinesse appeared to bee in him But where did he conuerse and lead this life Was it where the name of God was not knowne or where the sound of the Gospell was not heard No it was in faithfull Philemons house This may at the first seeme a very strange and wonderfull thing that he liuing in so religious an house in so reformed a family with so godly a company which had the reputation of a little Church should fauour nothing of piety nothing of Christianitie but remaine in vnfaithfulnesse toward God and in vnrighteousnesse toward his Maister Doctrine 2. In godly families are manie times vngodly Children and Seruants In godly families are manie times vngodly Children and Seruants From this description of Onesimus in the time of his ignorance before his eyes were opened and his heart reformed wee learne that it falleth out notwithstanding the desire and diligence of the Gouernors of the house that in reformed families are oftentimes found vnreformed persons In godly places do many times lurke vngodly Children and vncorrigible seruants into whose hearts no instruction will enter and whose disposition no meanes of reformation can alter We see this in the first family that euer was vpon the earth and there haue beene no more wicked men in the world then they that haue had the best meanes to direct them Adam had malicious and murthering Caine Abraham had persecuting and sauage Ishmaell Noah had scoffing and cursed Cham Isaac had vngracious and prophan Esau Dauid had ambitious and aspyring Absalom So it was with Eli with Samuel with Hezekiah with Iosiah sundry others who after good means vsed by themselues haue found much euill practised by their Children The Fathers are often carefull to lay a good foundation to nurture their children with good instruction a Homer Odysis lib. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet few children prooue like their Fathers but are a degenerate and vnregenerate off-spring Reason 1. And albeit this do sufficiently appeare vnto vs by Testimonies of Scripture and by daily experience yet we shall farther be confirmed in this truth if we waigh the Reasons whereupon it standeth First Religion commeth not by inheritance and grace cannot be conueyed by propagation but euery man begetteth his like as he himselfe is by nature as one Serpent engendereth another This Moses teacheth that when Adam was faln from God and had lost the grace of sanctification b Gen. 5 3. He begat a child in his owne likenes after his owne Image Godly Parents may leaue their children temporal possessions but they cannot bequeath vnto them Faith and a good conscience which are not to be found in the naturall man Reason 2. Secondly there must be a new byrth begun by Gods spirit for the grace of regeneration whereby we are brought to haue one foote in Gods Kingdome is not of flesh and blood but of water and the spirit it is not of the will of man but of the worke of God This is it which our Sauiour setteth downe c Iohn 1 12 13 and 3 3 5. As many as receiued him to them he gaue prerogatiue to be the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue in his Name which are borne not of bloode nor of the will of the Flesh nor of the will of man but of God Likewise when hee disputed with Nicodemus who was ignorant of this Doctrine he saith Verily verily I say vnto thee except that a man be borne of Water and of the spirit he cannot enter into the kingdome of God It is he onely that gaue the heart that is able to change the heart it is hee that gaue the eyes that is able to open the eyes Reason 3. Thirdly albeit the vnregenerate persons and loose liuers doe not want education and good bringing vp yet they are not amended and reformed because God doth not purpose their conuersion but appoint their confusion The Lord stirred vp Pharaoh d Rom. 9 17. to this same purpose that hee might shew his power in him and that his name might be declared throughout al the earth yet he sent vnto him Moses and Aaron to cleare his owne Iustice to make him without excuse The like the Scripture speaketh of the sonnes of Eli who were reproued of him for making the Israelites to trespasse and to abhorre the offerings of the Lord yet they regarded not his reproofe beeing the Father of their bodies the Priest of the most high God and the iudge of the people and this reason is rendered why they obeyed not his voice hearkned not to his Counsell e 1 Sam. 2 25. Because the Lord would slay thē So then whether we do consider that grace cannot be conueyed by propagation or that it is the proper worke of the spirit to effect our regeneration or that God will glorifie his great name in the confusion of such as break the bands and cast away the Cordes of Discipline from them wee cannot greatly maruaile that in reformed places are oftentimes to bee found vnreformed persons Vse 1. Let vs make vse of this Doctrine and see
maliciousnesse be ye curteous one to another and tender-hearted freely forgiuing one another All these Testimonies and examples as a Cloud of Witnesses serue to teach vs that repentant offenders must be forgiuen and their offences blotted out of our remembrance Reason 1. The reasons to confirme this truth farther to our consciences are not far to seeke but neere at hand For first hereby we imitate our heauenly Father and are made like to him As we are commaunded to be holy as he is holy so we are charged to Be mercifull Å¿ Luke 6 36. Ezek. 18 23. because our Father also is mercifull who hath not desire that the wicked should dye but that he should liue if he returne from his waies God is prouoked of vs euery moment and we are indebted vnto him ten thousand Talents yet he is intreated of vs and he is reconciled vnto vs so that he maketh his Sunne to arise vpon the good and euill and the raine to fall vpon the iust and vniust ought not we therefore to loue one another and to forgiue one another after his example This is the reason vsed by the Apostle t Col. 3 12 13 Now therefore as the elect of God holy and beloued put on the bowels of mercy kindnesse humblenesse of minde meekenesse long-suffering forbearing one another and forgiuing one another if any man haue a quarrell to another euen as Christ forgaue euen so doe ye It were wofull to vs if God were not ready to forgiue for we finde our selues ready to offend and one sinne vnpardoned is sufficient to make vs be condemned Reason 2. Secondly our forgiuing of our Bretheren giueth comfort and confidence that we our selues shall be forgiuen We are taught to gather assurance of pardon to our owne hearts from our readinesse to forgiue others that God wil in Christ hath forgiuen vs our trespasses This we see in the fift petition of the Lords Prayer when we are taught to say and to pray u Luke 11 4. Forgiue vs our sinnes for euen we forgiue euerie man that is indebed to vs. Euery one would be glad to haue a sure testimony and infallible witnesse of the forgiuenesse of his sinnes for from hence commeth our greatest comfort Now there cannot be stronger Argument to worke in vs this perswasion seeing that we by examining our affections toward our Brethren may conclude the certainety of Gods mercy toward vs. For our forgiuenesse is not made x Cyprian sermo 6 de orat dominica the cause but the signe and Seale of Gods forgiuenesse for as much as his pardoning of vs doth worke in vs the pardon of others Reason 3. Thirdly it is a certaine thing that such as will not forgiue shall themselues neuer be forgiuen Our forgiuenesse is vpon condition if we remit the offences of others if we retaine them our owne sinnes are also retained If then the example of God and our owne assurance cannot draw vs to this duty let the greatnesse of the danger moue vs to forgiue which hangeth ouer their heads that harden their hearts in hatred and mallice against their Brethren This our Sauiour setteth downe immediatly after the Lords Prayer y Math. 6 14 15. Mat. 11 25 26 For if ye doe forgiae men their trespasses your heauenly Father will also forgiue you but if ye doe not forgiue Men their trespasses no more will your Father forgiue you your trespasses And in another place he saith When ye shall stand and pray forgiue if ye haue any thing against any Man that your Father also which is in heauen may forgiue you your trespasses for if you will not forgiue your Father which is in Heauen will not pardon you your trespasses This the Apostle Iames assureth z Iames 2 13. That there shall be condemnation mercilesse to him that sheweth not mercy and mercy reioyceth against condemnation This we see in the example of that euill Seruant that fell from his Maisters fauour and was denyed forgiuenesse For when as being vnable to pay a Mat. 18 26 27 28 29 30. He cryed for mercy desired forbearance and promised payment his Maister had compassion vpon him loosed him and forgaue him the debt But when that Seruant dealt hardly with his Fellow-Seruant that ought him an hundred pence so that he laid handes vpon him tooke him by the throat and cast him into Prison his Lorde called backe his grant and required the debt of him and deliuered him to the Tormentours This may seeme very strange at the first that his Lorde should forgiue the Debter yet and afterward exact the debt of him to pardon the offence and to punnish the offender This may seeme all one as if a Magistrate should remit the theft and execute the Theefe But we shall not greatly maruaile at this dealing if we consider that God giueth pardon vpon condition and that we receiue pardon vpon condition True it is this condition is not alwaies or heere in this place expressed but it is here and alwaies to bee vnderstood Notwithstanding sometimes the condition is added as when Christ saith Condemne not and ye shall not be condemned forgiue and ye shall be forgiuen Luke 6. So that he forgiueth vs our offences condicionally that we forgiue the offences of our Brethren Thus he forgaue the Seruant that was not able to pay to teach him compassion and mercy toward those that were indebted vnto him If we will not forgiue but require of our debters the vtmost farthing we shall finde the Lord as hard and our selues to make a Law against our selues Wherefore to the end that Gods example may be followed in well doing that our owne consciences may be assured of forgiuenesse and that great danger is incurred through want of forgiuenesse we learne that God requireth it as a speciall duty of vs to shew our selues ready and forward to forgiue our Bretheren that haue wronged and offended vs. Obiections made against this doctrine And howsoeuer this Doctrine be proued by Scriptures cleered by examples and confirmed by reasons yet as it standeth not with the liking of flesh and bloud which is ready to reuenge and breath out threatnings so carnall reason ministreth many obiections which are not to be passed ouer but to be diligently discussed and dissolued It shall not therefore be amisse before we proceede to the vses to answer such questions as stand in the way whereat the vnleatned stumble as at a stone that lyeth in the way which being determined we will handle the Vses Obiection 1. First seeing we are bound to forgiue euery one that is indebted vnto vs the question may be asked whether this extend to all debts and that we are charged to forgiue all our Debters Answere I answere debts are of two sorts either Ciuill which commeth by Couenants of buying and bargaining one with another without which the life of man cannot consist Of these mutuall Couenants and Contracts betweene
he He layeth all these aside and resolueth thus Are not we Bretheren And shall we striue What a shame would this be to vs What a dishonour to God What an euill example to these Nations that liue among vs What a stumbling blocke of offence shall we lay before them to cause them to blaspheme God and to speake euill of vs of our Religion and of our holy profession Let not vs therefore tarry till others come and offer conditions of peace but let vs seeke peace and ensue it Shall we stand aloofe and hang backe from agreement with them because we take our selues to be abused wronged slandered and iniured Shall God commaund vs to forgiue and will we answere presumptuously we will not forgiue Shall the Lord say vnto vs Thou shalt not hate thy Brother in thine heart and will we reply audaciously we will hate him Or if we doe not scorne God to his face what will we what can we alledge or what shall we bring for our defence that Abraham might not haue brought as well as we Will we say we are more excellent and therefore reason it is that they should bow the knee vnto vs Will we say we are the better men So was Abraham Are we richer and wealthier So was Abraham Are we elder in yeares and so looke that the younger should yeelde So was Abraham Haue we many Friendes to ioyne with vs to see wee shall haue no wrong and to take our partes So had Abraham Are we mighter in force and power So was Abraham he went euery way beyond Lot Now then if we be the Children of Abraham h Iohn 8 39. we must doe the workes of Abraham Whatsoeuer priuiledges we haue to aduance vs aboue our Brethren vnder colour whereof we shroud the corruption of our Nature and the mallice of our heartes let vs lay all aside and cast them into the Dust let vs renounce age and honour let vs cast from vs birth and yeares let vs deny wealth and worship to the end we may be little and lowly in our eyes Abraham got more true honour by yeelding then we can doe by our proude lookes lofty stomackes and corrupt mindes He that hath most godlinesse will relent soonest Let vs striue who shall goe before another in mercy and forgiuenesse and put farre away all bitternesse of Spirit and put on all humblenesse of minde But alasse where is this meekenesse and long-suffering while we raile and rage one against another If the least occasion of contention and iarre be offered how ready are we to embrace it to nourish it to prosecute it with all extreamity When we are a little mooued are these the wordes of Brethren I will not take this abuse at his handes I will neuer put vp this iniury I will not be made such a Noddy I will sue him at the Law I will not leaue him worth a Groat I will make Dice of his Bones I will tread vpon his Graue and shall I yeeld vnto him I will neuer doe it O my Brethren is this to follow the steppes of faithfull Abraham or to be like him who was so wise so meeke so great a louer of peace and concord If we be ashamed to tread in his pathes take heede least the God of Abraham bee ashamed of vs both in this life and in his Kingdome for euer We boast our selues to be the Children of Abraham we account our selues to be true Christians and yet we will neither follow the example of Abraham nor obey the commaundement of Christ The Lord remitteth the debtes that we are not able to pay and will we require the vtmost farthing He forgiueth ten thousand Talents and will not we forbeare an hundred pence It is the Maister and Lord of all that is so mercifull and shall the Seruant be so cruell and hard-harted to his Fellow-Seruant Let vs take heed least our mallice and vnmercifulnesse vnto others do cry out for vengeance against vs and shut vp the mercy and compassion of God toward vs rendering seauen folde into our bosomes and barring vs from any accesse to the Throne of his Grace For if we forgiue not men their trespasses our praiers shall be abhominable our religious exercises shall be turned into sinne and our offences shall not be forgiuen i Three profitable Meditations To conclude let vs consider these three pointes First that no Man can offend vs as we daily offend God in thought word and deede Secondlie that we may fall and perhaps haue fallen already into the like offence that we blame and reprooue in others Thirdly we would be greatly greeued not to be respected and releeued in the bitternesse of our hearts therefore we should regard the sorrow and supplication of others crauing mercy and commiseration at our handes If we suffer our Bretheren to call to vs and we be deafe stopping our cares against them we greatly deceiue our selues if we thinke to finde the Lord other-wise minded toward vs. Thou therefore receiue him that is mine owne Bowels He calleth Onesimus his Bowels or Entrals being nothing of Kinne to him in the Flesh in respect of his earnest and feruent loue that he beareth to him in Christ beeing a true professour of the Faith He knew well the leud disposition of Seruaunts for the most part in those dayes as the Maisters were cruell to them so they were vnfaithfull to their Maisters It was found commonly true by common experience which churlish and couetous Naball spake falsely of Dauid 1. Sam. 25 10. Who is Dauid And who is the Sonne of Ishai There be many Seruant now-a-daies that breake away euery Man from his Maister The like we see in the Seruants of Shemei 1. King 2 39. Who fled away from him to Gath. It was therefore a rare thing and consequentlie more wonderfull to find a man of this quality so well qualified and a man of so bad note to be so notable which made the Apostle so earnest in speaking for him and in commendinh of him For nothing could haue beene said more effectuall to pacifie the wrath and to mollifie the heart of Philemon in as much as he inferreth that if he would not be appeased at his request he had raged by this meanes on the very bowels of Paule Behold therefore in this place the coniunction of two heauenly vertues in the Apostle to wit Humility and Loue that it is hard to say which was the greater so that he was not ashamed to receiue as into his Bosome and Bowels a base Bond-slaue and besides a Theefe and a Runna-gate to the end he might protect and defend him from the displeasure of his Maister And doubtlesse if the conuersion and turning of man vnto God were as highly prized and worthily esteemed of vs as it ought to be wee would louingly tender and charitably embrace and such as we see truely without hypocrisie conuerted vnto God Doctrine 4. Our loue to to the Saints especially such as haue beene
the knowledge of the Gospell the name of God and his Doctrine is blasphemed and euill spoken of Likewise speaking of beleeuing Wiues that haue vnbeleeuing Husbands he putteth them in minde of subiection to the end that by their holy conuersion they may winne their husbandes to embrace true Religion To this purpose the Apostle Paul teacheth seruants to be obedient to them that are their Maisters according to the flesh and chargeth them z Col. 3 22 23 that whatsoeuer they do they do it heartily as to the Lord and not to men Seeing therefore that God is the authour of order not of confusion seeing Christ came not to abolish but to establish the Lawe and lastly seeing the Gospell teacheth subiection and doth not release or acquite any of their duty it followeth that the gospel doth not bring in parity and equality among al the Mother of al mischiefe but discerneth and distinguisheth of the Callings of men it doth not giue liberty to peruert all order it maketh not Seruants to be Maisters and Maisters to be seruants but directeth euery one to keepe his place and to abide in his vocation Vse 1. Seeing this is the honor commendation of the gospel let vs see what Vses arise from the knoledge of this point First of al we conclude from hence necessarily that it hath alwaies bin a lying deuise and diuellish slander to Christian religion to be the author and fauorer of carnal liberty and to Christian professors to be enemies to states and commonwealths to magistrats lawes ciuil ordinances This hath alwaies bin the accusation of slāderous tongs to brand the Gospell as the breeder and bringer in of all vprores and conspiracies yet there is no Doctrine vnder the Heauen that lesse deserueth to bee defamed For the Gospell was a friend to Princes when Princes were enemies to the Gospell it teacheth to be subiect vnto them to pray to God for them to obey all their godly constitutions and therefore it is the Father of lies and enemy of al truth that hath sought to disgrace discredit the holy truth of God and such as in truth do embrace it Hee seeth and perceiueth that if the Gospel stand his kingdome must fal if the Gospel florish his kingdome must decay Hence it is that the church people of God haue in al ages and times of the world bin accused of rebellions treasons seditions insurrections many other greeuous impieties Heerof the scripture experience affoord plentiful examples In the book of Ezra the enemies accuse the guiltles Iewes z Ezra 4 15. 1 King 18 17. Ester 3 6. to be a rebellious people that they haue of old bin alwaies giuen to sedition Ahab burdeneth Elias that it was he his fathers house that trobled Israel Haman suggesteth vnto the king against the Iewes that their lawes were diuers from al people that they did not obserue the kings lawes and therfore it was not for the kings profit to suffer them The Apostles are accused to be authors of sedition troublers of cities raisers of tumults causers of rebellion breakers of lawes and teachers of ordinances not lawful to receiue they said of them b Acts 16 19 20. and 24 5. These men that are Iewes trouble our City they preach ordinances which are not lawful for vs to receiue neither to obserue seeing we are Romans Where we see they couer their couetousnesse with a shadowe pretence of standing against innouation but they discouer the hollownesse hypocrisie of their harts when they ioyn trobling of the state and preaching of the gospell together Whereby it appeareth that their troubling of the city was nothing els but because they preached the word which the deuill his instruments could not beare and abide Paule is accused by Tertullus to be a pestilent fellow and a moouer of sedition among all the Iewes thoroughout the world and that he taught al men euery where against the law of Moses And no maruel for thus they dealt with the son of God when he taught the truth without mixture of error and without respect of person he was accounted accused not onely to be a Sorcerer a Samaritan a Drunkard a glutton a deceiuer a deuil c Luke 23 2. but an enemy to Caesar and a troubler of the publick peace Now al these things being considered let vs remember what the Lord Iesus sayth to vs d Iohn 15 20. The seruant is not greater then his maister if they haue persecuted me they will also persecute you The heathē after Christs time cried out against the christians that they were the authors and causes of al publick plagues calamities that fel vpon kingdoms countries If Nilus flowed not ouer the fields if the heauen stayed if the earth quaked if famine encreased if the pestilence continued by and by the poor Christians as the sheep of Christ were cast vnto the lyons They charged them to make priuy conspiracies e Euseb lib. 5. cap. 11. Tertulli in Apologel Cyprian contra Demetrian to deuise secret counsels against the commonwealth to murther children to feed themselues with mans flesh and to practise all Iniquity they were so blinded that they could not perceiue that their Idolatries brought Gods iudgments Thus we see how the church hath lien open to all false surmises and suggestions of sedition But what can be immagined more vniust or vetrue If there be any peace in this world in any lande it is for the Gospels sake and it commeth through the bountifulnesse of God for his peoples sake that call vppon him Neuerthelesse as the Gentiles dealt with the Iewes and Christians from time to time so doe the wicked in these dayes with the godly they lay to their charge that they keep no lawes that they disobey Princes that they are seditious and tumultuous and enemies to the State If we see or heare the Saints of God thus handled and euilly intreated we must know that this is an olde deuise of the deuill practised against the Prophets against Christ against the Apostles and against all true Christians euen from the beginning And let this serue to comfort vs when wee finde such slaunderous imputations and accusations layde to our charge considering that thus they haue reuiled and railed vppon the Seruants of GOD that haue beene before vs in all times and that wee haue Christ Iesus the witnesse of our innocency who if not in this life yet in the life to come will reueale the thinges that are hidden in darknesse and bring to light the things that are couered In the mean season we must remember f Math. 5 11. that they are pronounced blessed that are reuiled and persecuted for righteousnesse sake and wee must labour to conuince them not so much by words as by deeds g Demosth de corona answearing the falshood of their slanders by the vprightnesse of our liues which shal be able to speak
earth and licke vp the dust of thy feet That is they shall reuerence and serue Christ and his Church and they shall account it no dishonour vnto them to do any good to the Saints All these Testimonies serue as so many proofes to witnesse this truth that wee must account this our condition that we are all as Seruants to doe seruice to our Brethren and to imploy our selues and best endeuours to do them good according to their wants Reason 1. The reasons follow which will cause this Doctrine to sinke deeper into vs and make the truth appeare without all gaine-saying First whatsoeuer gifts are bestowed vppon vs to this end they are bestowed to profit with all to helpe one another and to edifie that body whereof we are members We are all Fellow-members of one body and therefore are bound to releeue and refresh our Brethren Euery member serueth one another are for the whole Nature it selfe in other things teacheth vs this duty The Sunne as the eye of the World shineth not for it selfe it yeildeth not heat for it selfe but for others The clouds which are as the bottels of heauen do not drop down raine for themselues but for others The earth which is as the Mother of these inferiour things bringeth forth Hearbs and Grasse and Fruit and Corne for the vse of man and not for it owne benefit This comparison drawne from the members of the body seruing one another and euery one caring for the whole is often vrged by the Apostle He teacheth that p Rom. 12 4 5. and 1 Cor. 12 20 25 26. As wee haue many Members in one Bodie and all Members haue not one office so we beeing many are one Bodie in Christ and euerie one one anothers Members And in another place There are many Members yet but one Bodie the Members should haue a care one of another least there should be any diuision in the Bodie Therefore if one Member suffer all suffer with it if one Member be had in honour all the Members reioyce with it If then one of the Members of our naturall body be ready to doe seruice to the other to the whole it should be our care to do the like that are of the Mysticall body of Christ Iesus from whom as from the head we receiue all influence of spirituall grace necessary to saluation Reason 2. Secondly it is our duty to follow the example of our Lord and Maister Christ Iesus he came to serue not to be serued to Minister not to be ministred vnto to redeeme not to rule This our Sauiour preached to his Disciples when they began to thinke of Lordship and to disdaine one another q Mar. 10 43 44. Whosoeuer will be great among you shall be your Seruant and whosoeuer will bee cheefe of you shall be the Seruant of all for euen the Son of man came not to bee serued but to serue and to giue his life for the ransome of many Where hee sheweth that the way to true honour is to serue so that the greater seruice we doe to the Brethren the greater honour we shall receiue at the handes of God The greater our seruice is the greater shall be our reward when euery one shall receiue according vnto his work This we see farther strengthned vnto vs in the example of Christ who humbled himselfe to wash his disciples feete and to wipe them with a Towell being washed and saide vnto them r Iohn 13 4 12 13 14 15. Know ye what I haue done vnto you Ye call me Maister and Lord and ye say well for so am I if I then your Lord and Maister haue washed your feet ye ought also to wash one anothers feete for I haue giuen you an example that ye should do euen as I haue done to you the Seruant is not greater then his Maister nor the Ambassadour greater then he that sent him We are taught to set Christ the most absolute example before our eyes to learne humblenesse of minde and the duty of seruice one to another we must consider him in his glory and in his humilitie First in his glory as our King as our head as our Lord and as our Maister then in his humility as abased and humbled in our Flesh vnto death euen to the death of the Crosse When we haue done this then we are thus to reason with our selues hath Christ in his great glory cast downe himselfe for my sake and ought not I if I were the highest vpon earth stoope downe to my equals Ought not I that am his Subiect his body his Disciple his Seruant to serue the necessities of my Fellow-seruants Thus the Apostle commending Loue to the Saints and meeknes of minde leadeth vs to Christ Å¿ Phil. 2 4 5 6 Looke not euery man on his owne thinges but euery Man also on the thinges of other Men let the same minde be in you that was euen in Christ Iesus who being in the forme of GOD thought it no robberie to be equall with GOD he made himselfe of no reputation he tooke on him the forme of a Seruant hee humbled himselfe and became obedient vnto the death If then we looke vnto Christ Iesus the Authour and Finisher of our Saluation we haue him as a perfect example without blemish and as a pure Glasse without staine to looke vpon who in the greatest glorie hath shewed the greatest abasement in the greatest honor he hath set before vs the greatest humility Reason 3. Thirdly true Religion consisteth in ministring to the Saints in helping and succouring of the poore in imploying himselfe to the good of others as a Candle that spendeth wasteth it selfe to giue light to them that are in the house It consisteth not in bare knowledge but in practise not in an idle Faith but in the fruits of loue This the Prophet Esay sheweth and sets down t Esay 58 10. If thou poure out thy Soule to the hungry and refresh the troubled soule then shal thy light spring out in the darkenesse and thy darkenesse shall be as the noone day And the Lord shall guide thee continually he shall satisfie thy Soule in drought he shall make fat thy bones so that thou shalt be like a watered Garden and like a Spring of Water whose Waters faile not Meaning that they which releeue the poore and comfort such as are comfortlesse their light shall neuer bee put out but shine for euer God will be their comfort in the day of trouble and he will recompence aboundently their good workes Seeing then the giufts u 1 Cor. 12 7. that we haue are giuen to euery man to profit his Fellow-members withall seeing we are to tread in the steps of our blessed Sauiour Iesus Christ and seeing the truth of Religion standeth in the fruits of loue we may conclude necessarily the former Doctrine that we ought to account it no disgrace vnto vs to abase our selues to do seruice and to Minister
Lord The order of the words IN the words going before we haue already handled the remoouing of the first Obiection which ariseth from Paules sending of Onesimus back againe to his Maister The next Obiection is touching his departure from his Maister mentioned in these two Verses wherein hee both aunsweareth the Obiection maketh a newe reason and seeketh to extenuate the displeasure that Philemon hadde conceiued against him The Apostle aunswereth heere in this place that Obiection which might bee made and mooued from the former matter of this suit Hee hath intreated Philemon as we haue heard to receiue Onesimus he might hereunto haue said But why should I receiue him Shall I entertaine a Runna-gate Seruant a base Varlet that hath wasted and purloyned my goods and sought to vndoe me If hee were well with mē why did he depart from me If not well why will he returne to me againe Hee that is once euill is alwaies presumed to be euill Answere This is the Obiection whereunto the Apostle maketh a double answere as he did before first by way of granting and yeelding to Philemon secondly by a kind of correcting his former grant The granting is I confesse and acknowledge willingly that hee departed from thee and would not tarrie with thee The correcting is though he did depart it was not for euer it was but a very short time as thou seest So then the answer is from the adioynt of time he went from thee for a little season which is not barely set downe but with an illustrastion added vnto it from the ende That thou shouldst receiue him for euer which also is enlarged by a comparison from the greater Not so much as a Seruant but as more then a Seruant The latter part of this enlargement being the second part of the comparison is declared by the speciall A beloued Brother more then a Seruant for a Brother carryeth with it a better respect and a farther regard then the name of a Seruant This also is enlarged by a comparison from the greater to the lesse especially to mee which comparison also is amplified by another from the greater how much more to thee which is farther strengthned by a diuision or distribution of the Subiect shewing wherein he was more bound to Philemon then to Paul himselfe Both in the flesh and in the Spirit Thus we haue seene the resolution of these Verses The meaning of the wordes and the order which is propounded in them Now let vs see what are the points that require interpretation First he saith He departed he vseth a kind of diminution called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a qualification of his fact and fault committed against his Maister For he vseth a more gentle and friendly word to lessen the offence that it might not appeare to Philemon so great as it was calling his running away a departure from his Maister Now the Apostle saith It may be that he departed or peraduenture he departed The word vsed in this place is also found Rom 5 8. where he saith a Rom. 5 8. Doubtlesse one will scarce dye for a righteous man but yet for a good man it may be that one dare dye Properly b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it signifieth quickly or speedily or hastily but that signification cannot fitly agree to these places and therefore it must be turned and translated It may be he departed Where the Apostle doth not speake of this secret worke of God precisely and peremptorily but with an exception or limitation warily and reuerentlie least offence should be taken and encouragement giuen thereby to the committing of euill For if he had said simply and absolutely he departed for this end and he fled away that he might be conuerted other Seruants might haue beene emboldned in wickednesse and haue pretended the same cause and haue runne away from their Maisters who beeing asked the cause why they tooke them to their heeles would readily answere It was that I might be conuerted to the Faith as Onesimus was hee ran away from his Maister and was saued I ranne away also that I might be saued So then the Apostle by this word noteth out the speciall prouidence and meere goodnesse of God ordering and gouerning this Fact which is not to bee drawne into a generall practise In the next place he addeth For a season the word signifieth for an houre that is for a small time euen so much as Onesimus was trauailing from Colosse to Rome from his Maister to Paule by whom being conuerted he was immediatly sent backe which was no long time but a very little while euen as it were an houre in comparison both of the time that he before had beene with him and of the time hee was like to stay with him hereafter Wherein also he seeketh farther to lessen his fault offence by the circumstance of the time as if he should say If he had beene from thee any long time or that thou hadst missed him many yeares thy wrath might be harder to be appeased but he hath beene from thee a small time it is but as it were one houre and therefore haue patience toward him especially considering by his absence thou shalt gaine this that he shall neuer depart from thee hereafter but remaine faithfull profitable vnto thee many yeares Thou maist well beare the lacke of him one houre seeing thou shalt thereby get the aduantage of many months and yeares Therefore he addeth That thou shouldst receiue him for euer that is all the dayes of his life vnto his death Thus the phrase is taken in sundry places of the Olde Testament c Gene. 17 7. when circumcision is called an euerlasting Couenant the Passe-ouer is commaunded to bee kept holy by an ordinance d Exod. 12 14 for euer whereby hee meaneth a long time euen vnto the comming of Christ in the flesh So if a Seruant would not go away from his Maister because he loued him and was well with him the Maister should take an Aule and pierce his eare through against the doore and he shall be his seruant e Deut. 15 17. for euer that is to the yeare of Iubile So in this place the Apostle saith Philemons Seruant should remaine with him for euer that is a long time euen so long as hee should liue vpon the face of the earth Lastly when Paule saith hee must be beloued In the Flesh and in the Lord he meaneth both in thinges appertaining to this life and the life to come In the Flesh in regard of his seruice which he shall performe to his Maister in matters belonging to this Mortall life In the Lord in respect of the common faith in Christ This is the meaning of the words in this diuision wherein as we noted before howsoeuer the Apostle doth purposely answere an obiection yet in this answere also he propoundeth two new reasons to moue Philemon to receiue his seruant One is in the 15. verse taken
from the secret worke of Gods prouidence which may be thus concluded If the prouidence of God haue gouerned his departure that by occasion thereof he is changed for his good and for thine that he might bee saued and thou better serued then receiue him againe vnto thee But the prouidence of God hath guided his departure c. Therefore receiue him againe vnto thee The second reason is contained in the 16. verse because Onesimus of a Seruant is m●de a Brother to Paule much more to Philemon and therefore to be loued exceedingly being bound by a double band to wit in the Flesh in the Faith In the Flesh as a Seruant In the Faith as a Christian whereas Paule had onely one cause to loue him namely the common Faith This reason may be thus framed If Onesimus of a bad Seruant be made a good Seruant yea more then a Seruant euen a Brother much to be loued then receiue him But Onesimus is become more then a Seruant Therefore receiue him Thus we see how the Apostle intermingleth Reasons with Obiections and Obiections with Reasons So then according to the former order and Interpretation of the words the summe of them is thus much in effect But thou will say vnto me He ranne away from me I graunt indeede and cannot deny but that his purpose was wicked and I acknowledge the cause that mooued him to leaue thee and to forsake thy house to be very leud to wit the feare of punishment for his offences but looke looke I say vnto the end purpose and counsell of God in his departure from thee which appeareth to be farre from the drift and intent of Onesimus to wit by his flight to bring him to Rome by bringing of him to Rome to direct him to me in prison by directing of him to me to conuert him to Christ and by conuerting of him to Christ to change him from a bad and leud to a faithfull and profitable seruant What said I a Seruant nay a degree higher euen a Brother Consider therefore I pray thee how many waies thou art to respect this my sonne Onesimus and to accept of him For in that he is now ioyned to thee in the common fellowship of the Faith through the great mercies of God in Christ thou art bound to regard him hence-forth not as an ordinary Seruant but as a deare Brother in Christ equall with thy selfe in the Couenant of grace and the inheritance of eternall life withall remember how many waies he is ioyned to thee rather then to me He is for the common faiths sake deare I confesse to me and tenderly beloued but he is bound to thee by two bands first in respect of the flesh in that he is of thy charge and family he is thy Seruant and an helper of thee in the meanes of thy outward maintenance and withall in the Lord Iesus our common Maister hee is thy Brother and fellow-heire of the same promises being together with thee a member of his body Now the more waies we are bound to any the more we should regard them he is deare indeede to me but he is neerer to thee then me and therefore he ought to be much dearer to thee in regard of this coniunction betweene you Diuers points to be obserued From these verses diuers worthy considerations doe arise which are not vnprofitable to be obserued of vs. First marke that the Apostle entitleth the shamefull running away of Onesimus the Seruant of Philemon by the Name of a departure If we will speake properly a departing is one thing a running away is another thing For albeit euery one that runneth away departeth yet euery one that departeth runneth not away from his Maister because he may depart by consent either hauing leaue and licence or that the time of his seruice is expired So a little before verse 11. he called him Vnprofitable whereas hee might lawfully haue giuen him an harder Title This was not done in regard of the offence because it was small but in regard of his repentance because it was great So he speaketh afterward ver 18. If he haue hurt thee or if he oweth thee any thing whereas he might haue saide he had robbed him and stolne his goods from him declaring that we should deale friendly and fauourably with those that are truely conuerted to God we are not to augment and agrauate a Penitents offences but to bee gentle and mercifull toward him as often as we make mention of him Such as haue repented are by all meanes to be fauored we cannot be of too milde a spirit toward them Secondly in the Apostles answere to Philemons obiection we may mark that we are bound to forgiue and forget the iniuries and offences done vnto vs when once God hath forguien and couered the sinnes committed against him and receiued the Sinner that repenteth to mercy when God maketh all thinges turne to our good that loue him and thereby recompenceth by a double benefit the losse and damage that we haue sustained Thirdly we may obserue that Christian Religion doth more strongly bind all persons to their particular callings and maketh the knot greater then it was For that which hee speaketh heere of a Christian Seruant euen a Brother is true of all callings in the Family and Common-wealth For as a faithfull Seruant is more then a bare Seruant so a Christian King is more then a King a Christian Maister is more then a Maister a Christian Father is more then a Father a Christian Husband is more then an Husband so on the other side a Christian Wife is more then a Wife a Christian Subiect is more then a Subiect and so of all the rest Great is the Dignity and preheminence of our Christian calling f Col. 1 13. which as the Apostle speaketh is a translating of vs from darkenesse into the Kingdome of Christ Iesus so that it is a royall prerogatiue which they want that are vnbeleeuers Fourthly the Apostle notwithstanding the great account hee maketh of this Seruant doth not deny subiection to his Maister nor exempt him from the condition of a Seruant but he addeth More then a Seruant He saith not hee is no more a Seruant but hee is more then a Seruant so that our Christian g 1 Cor. 7 20. calling doth not abolish pollicy and politique Constitutions and Domesticall gouernment but rather doth strengthen and sanctifie them He that is called to the truth being a Seruant must not bee discouraged and discontented but reioyce in this that he is the Lords Free-man Fiftly when he stileth him A Brother he doth after a sort signifie he is equall vnto him For albeit in the Common-wealth and priuate Family it be necessary that some should be Superiours and others Inferiours and that this disparity and in-equality among men be the ordinance of God yet in the Kingdome of God and in Christ Iesus there is no distinction h Gal. 3 28 Col. 3 11. There is
neither Iew nor Graecian there is neither Bond-man nor Free-man there is neyther Male nor Female for we are all one in Christ Iesus When God will punnish sinne and the breach of his Law he doth it without respect of persons Such as are in greatest Dignity and highest place of authority vppon the earth are subiect to sicknesses to diseases to death so that as the i Psal 82. 7. Prophet saith Ye Princes shall fall like others That which God laide in the beginning vpon mankind k Ge. 3 19 16 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eate thy Bread vntill thou return to the Earth And to the Woman he said I will greatly increase thy sorrowes and thy conceptions so that in anguish thou shalt bring forth Children What Man or what Woman can free themselues from this burthen or deliuer themselues from this punnishment We see the high subiect vnto them as well as the low the rich as well as the poore the Prince as well as the people So on the other side when God will bestow the graces of his Spirit that accompany saluation hee distributeth them according to his pleasure and respecteth not the outward person hee maketh no difference betweene Bond and Free betweene Maister and Seruant but giueth where it pleaseth him which serueth to teach patience and contentation to those that liue in lower places God looketh vpon them when he passeth many times by those that l Luke 1. are greater in the world yea he filleth them when he sendeth the other empty away Sixtly we may obserue that he ioyneth loue with Christian Brotherhood and calleth Onesimus A beloued Brother not onely a Seruant not only a brother but a Brother deare and beloued signifying therby that where a Christian calling is found there Charity and Loue is as a due debt required so that if any man be conuerted to become a true Christian indeede thereby is made our Brother who before was a Christian only in Name naked profession euen for this cause we are bound to embrace him with the greater loue Euery man in his order to be loued euen he that is no Christian if it be Turke or Infidell but whosoeuer is a right Christian not onely in title but in truth must more specially bee loued of vs and be deare vnto vs who is neerely ioyned vnto vs as a member of the same body with vs and is to be esteemed of vs not so much another man from vs m Ephe. 2 15. as one and the same man with vs. He that is out of Christ is another from vs he is diuers to vs and yet is to be loued as a man as one that beareth the Image of God Lastly obserue that the more causes there are of loue and coniunction one with another the deerer and deeper ought our loue to be There are many degrees of vniting vs together now the more there are the more degrees should there be of loue betweene vs. The coniunction betweene the Maister and the Seruant in the priuate society ought to be a cause of mutuall loue but when to this naturall respect there is added a spirituall fellowship and communion in Christ whereby the Seruant becommeth more then a Seruant euen a Brother with his Maister this requireth a farther degree of loue in them one toward the other Thus we see sundry obseruations and all very profitable offered to our considerations out of these words we cannot stand vpon them all and therefore we will onely select some of the prinpall and cheefest of them Verse 15. It may be that he therefore departed for a season that thou shouldst receiue him for euer In these words we see how he goeth about to mitigate the wrath and displeasure of Philemon by teaching him to consider that those thinges which were done peruersely and corruptly are by the direction and determination of God turned to another end For a ioyfull end and good issue in euils is as it were a remedy offered vnto vs by the hand of God to blot out offences Paule therefore admonisheth Philemon that he ought not now to be so greatly offended at the flight and running away of his Seruant because it fell out to be the cause of good not to be repented off So then he warneth that this departure of Onesimus from his Maister is not to be waied and pondered by his purpose and meaning but by the end euent which was most wholesome and profitable For by this meanes hee was brought to the Apostle and by hearing of him was instructed in the way of saluation to the end that afterward he might bee made more diligent and faithfull to his Maister Whereby we see that when he saith Therefore hee departed for a season that thou shouldst receiue him for euer It is not to be referred to the purpose and intent of Onesimus flying away who had no such thought or determination euer to come backe to his Maister againe much lesse to come backe better or a beleeuer but it hath relation to the prouidence of God disposing of his fault and flight to a good and gratious end Doctrine 1. All things euen sin it selfe are turned by the prouidence of God to the good of the elect Heereby we learne for our instruction that all things euen sinne it selfe are by the high prouidence of God turned to the good of the elect Such is the infinite wisedome and power of God that he bringeth euill to a good end We see in this place how the Apostle maketh the prouidence of God to turne the sinne of Onesimus to good and to the benefit of himselfe and many others For by running from his Maister he came to Rome by comming to Rome he lighted vpon Paule by falling into his company he heard the Gospell preached and by hearing the word he was conuerted which had not fallen out if he had not departed so that his stealing and running away turned by the goodnesse of God to his great benefit So the sinne of Adam turned to the greater gaine and glory of the elect To this purpose wee may profitably consider the vile and villainous act of Iocobs Sonnes against their Brother Ioseph n Gen. 45 5. Acts 7 13. who considereth that it was done by the maruailous prouidence of God that being sold for a Bond-slaue he might be aduanced to that honour and Dignitie whereby he might nourish both his Father and Brethren in the years of Famine therefore he said vnto them when he made himselfe knowne Be not sad neither grieued with your selues that ye sold mee hither for God did send me before you for your preseruation The like we might say of the crucifying of the Lord of Life he was deliuered into the handes of Sinners through the Treason of Iudas and other wicked and curssed Instruments for Iudas betrayed him the Iewes accused him and Pilat iudged him whereof the Apostles say Actes 4. o Act. 4 27 28 Doubtlesse against
serueth greatly to comfort vs both in prosperity and aduersitie and that for the time to come wee should repose our whole hope in God For seeing all thinges come to passe by the prouidence of God so that not so much as sinne it selfe is committed without his will it is a great comfort many waies to Gods Church and chosen Children Wee know that hee can moderate and will moderate the rage of the Deuill and the mallice of wicked men that they shall not hurt or hinder their Saluation For the Deuill is the Lordes Seruant or slaue to worke his will albeit he do it vnwillingly and by compulsion The Prophet Dauid saith c Psal 16 8. The Lorde is at my right hand therefore I shall not slide And when his Souldiers were purposed to stone him to death he was in great sorrow and heauinesse d 1 Sam. 30 6 But he comforted himselfe in the Lord his GOD. If then we cast vp our eyes and behold the prouidence of God euermore watching ouer vs wee shall not doubt of the loue and goodnesse of God nor of deliuerance to come from his hand albeit we see no ordinary meanes but all thinges goe a contrarie way This made the holie Man Iob say e Iob 13 15. Though the Lorde would kill mee yet will I trust in him And the Prophet f Psal 23. Though thou cast me into the place of Dragons and into the shaddow of death yet will I feare none euill The church being in great perplexity and danger in the daies of Mordecay he was not without comfort he liued not without hope hee ceased not to vse lawfull meanes for the deliuerie of it he was not at his wits end nor dispaired of an happy issue because his heart was grounded and established in the Doctrine of Gods prouidence as appeareth by his wordes to Ester g Est 4 13 14 Thinke not with thy selfe that thou shalt escape in the Kinges House more then all the Iewes for if thou holdst thy peace at this time comfort and deliuerance shall appeare to the Iewes out of another place but thou and thy Fathers House shall perrish and who knoweth whether thou art come to the Kingdome for such a time Againe this prouidence of God in euery thing teacheth contentation of minde in euery estate yea in aduersity when we lie vnder the Crosse so that all thinges goe against vs forasmuch as Gods prouidence hath appointed vs our lot and portion When we liue in peace and haue abundance of outward meanes to maintaine vs as plenty riches health pleasure friends libertie and such like we must remember from whom they come and so be put in mind to be thankfull for them because they come not to vs by chance but by Gods prouidence so that we must not barely looke vpon them nor wholely rest vpon them but behold his goodnesse and blessing in them For if wee consider that all prosperitie commeth from him as Meate Drinke ease peace and all plenty who is not pricked forward and stirred vp vnto Thankesgiuing towards so louing and bountifull a Father Hence it is that the Apostle saith h 1 Thes 5 18 In all thinges giue thankes for this is the will of God in Christ Iesus The Prophet Esay complayneth of the vnthankefulnesse of the Iewes towards GOD i Esa 1 4 5 6 7 I haue nourished and brought vp Children but they haue rebelled against mee the Oxe knoweth his Owner and the Asse his Maisters Cribbe but Israell hath not knowne mee my people hath not obeyed mee The Prophet Dauid dealt otherwise and behaued himselfe with greater dutie teaching vs all what to doe when hee saith k Psal 116 12 What shall I render vnto the Lord for all his benefits toward me I will take vp the cup of saluation and prayse the name of the Lord. But when these outward things whereby life is maintained do faile vs we must not faile to remember whence famine warre pestilence sicknesse trouble and affliction come that there is no euill in the City which the Lord hath not done Moreouer let vs depend vpon him for the time to come assuring our selues that he will not leaue vs nor forsake vs. He giueth vs euery day experience of his mercies so that by remembrance of benefits receiued from him wee cannot doubt of his fauour toward vs. Lastly this should bee a very strong reason vnto vs not to be vnmeasurably dismayed nor excessiuely offended when offences and great euils breake out among vs as oftentimes it falleth out whereby many are ready to shrinke backe and others are much disquieted to see the Church of God so troubled We are not to thinke it strange or to forsake the faith through these scandals for God would not suffer any euill to come to passe vnlesse out of that euill hee were able to bring good and out of that sinne to bring forth righteousnesse to the glory of his great name and for the saluation of his deere Church Hee would neuer haue left Adam vnto himselfe if he had not determined out of his fal to gaine praise to himselfe and to prouide better for his people It is necessary that offences come but woe to that man by whome they come Let vs not therefore fret our selues because of the wicked men neyther be enuious for the euill doers for they shall soone be cut downe like grasse and shall wither as the greene hearbe And we must rest and be resolued assuredly that God dooth not allow or fauour their sinne nor purposeth to free them from the guilt and punnishment of sin howsoeuer he turneth their wicked purpose to a good end For sinne l 1 Iohn 3 4 Iohn 8 44. is the transgression of his Law But God neuer swarueth nor stayeth from the strait rule of his owne will neither putteth wickednes into man but as the earth affoording sap and moysture as well to the euill trees as the good cannot be reproued because the cause why the euill trees bring forth euil fruit is of themselues and their owne nature or as the Sunne that rayseth euill smels and noysome fauors from vnsauoury puddles cannot iustly bee found fault withall because the reason thereof is not in the Sun beames but in those corrupt places euen so when God disposeth to good endes the sins of men that proceed from the instigation of the Deuill and abide in the vngodly themselues he cannot be called the cause or author of sinne although by his prouidence he moueth all thinges yea euen the vngodly that are not able to moue or remoue themselues Vse 3 Lastly seeing Gods prouidence extendeth to euery thing that is and disposeth it according to his owne pleasure it directeth vs in our obedience putteth vs in mind of a Christian duty namely to be patient in al aduersity If we consider that nothing can befal vs but that which is sent by the fatherly wil and counsell of God who hath alwaies iust
147 8. 136 25. and 33 16. and 75 7. Iob. 37 5 6. so that a drop of rain doth not fall a puffe of wind doth not blow a clap of thunder doth not sound a flash of lightning doeth not shine an Arrow of famine cannot flye a plague of pestilence cannot destroy a iudgement of Warre cannot arise without his appointment we shal neuer be thankfull for his benefits we shal neuer be patient in troubles wee shall neuer conceiue hope of deliuery out of our aduersities And thus much of Gods prouidence in the departure of Onesimus out of the house of Philemon which beeing euill God turned it to good as well of him that departed as of him from whom he departed That thou shouldest receiue him for euer Heere we see that the Apostle to a losse of small continuance opposeth a perpetuall vse that the Mayster should gaine of his seruant For to perswade him to patience in regard of his losse and hinderance and to preuaile with him to be reconciled toward him that had so offended him and caused his losse he doth assure him of gaine aduantage namely that his short departure should recompence him sufficiently with a continuall possessing of him beeing assured to retaine him for euer Doctrine 2. God taketh from his Seruants outward commodities to bestow vpon them greater We learne from hence that God doeth oftentimes take away from his seruants many outward and earthly commodities to the end hee might bestow vpon them both mo and greater blessings When the Mother is determined to weane her childe and take away the brest from him it is not to famish him but to giue him a dyet and food that is fitter for him So when it pleaseth God to deny to his seruants such blessings as they desire he recompenseth the wants of them with benefits of a more high and heauenly nature This we see in the example of Abraham when he was sent by the calling of God out of his Countrey from his Kindred y Gen. 12 2. and Fathers house there was giuen to him and his posterity the whole Land of Canaan yea God entered into a Couenant with him to be his God and to acknowledge his posterity to be his people so that albeit he wanted the pleasure of his Countrey and the delight of his Kindred yet he gained the friendship and fauour of GOD by obeying his calling and commandement We see this in Iacob he was robbed of his sonne Ioseph by the treachery of his sons and liued a long time without him whom he so much desired yet in the end he beheld him in glory and dignity and blessed him his posterity We see the same in Ioseph himselfe he was cast out of his Fathers house by his brethren hee was solde into the hands of strangers he was cast into close prison he endured many slanders z Gen. 37 28 troubles and crosses that fell vpon him but he bare them patiently by Faith and in the end he was deliuered and became Ruler ouer the Land of Egypt He wanted his Father and his Father wanted him for a season but in the end they were restored either to other with full aduantage Let vs set before our eyes the example of Iob he lost his Goods his Children his Seruantes his Cattle he became poore and yet was patienr a Iob. 41 10. Iames 5 11. and in the end God made an happie yssue of all his afflictions so that hee had them doubled and restored vnto him two fold Our Sauiour Christ beateth vpon this point teaching his Disciples b Math. 19 29 Mar. 10 29 30 Whosoeuer shall forsake houses or Bretheen or Sisters or Father or Mother or Wife or Children or Lands for my Names sake hee shall receyue an hundred fold more and shall inherit euerlasting life For when Peter said to the Lord Loe we haue forsaken all and followed thee Christ answered him Verily I say vnto you there is no man that hath forsaken Lands or house c. for my sake and the Gospels but he shall receiue an hundred fold now at this present houses and brethren and Sisters and Mother and Children and Lands with persecution in the world to come eternall life This appeareth farther vnto vs in the Parable of the rich Glutton and poore Lazarus c Luke 16 20. one of them was clad in Purple and fared deliciously euery day the other lay at the rich mans gate who was not admitted to his Table and continued without the doores who was not admitted into his house God denied vnto him the blessings of this life but he gaue him the riches of faith and receiued him into eternall glory All these places of Scripture and examples of the godly teach vs that God denying vnto his Children the things of this life doeth it not because hee hateth their personnes or enuyeth their good or purposeth their destruction but rewardeth the lacke and losse of bodily things with spiritual of earthly thinges with heauenly of transitory thinges with eternall of lesser thinges with greater Reason 1. Thus the Doctrine is made plaine by these testimonies but will bee made much plainer if we consider the Reasons following First the loosing of these outwatd things for a good cause is as the seede season when wee sowe our Corne looking for a plentifull Haruest as an after blessing There is that scattereth and more is encreased as the wiseman speaketh So the scattering away and loosing of the commodities of this life and the pleasures thereof when God requireth it at our hands and calleth for it shall be no losse but a gaine no hinderance but a benefit no pulling of vs down but a setting of vs vp no vndoing of vs but an enriching of vs for euer This is it which the Psalmist setteth downe speaking of the returne of the people out of captiuity d Psal 126 1 5 6. They that sow in teares shall reape in ioy they went weeping and caried precious seede but they shall returne with ioy and bring their sheaues Where hee compareth the people going into captiuity to needy Husbandmen who cast into the ground for seede that which was left them for succour and sustentation of their life and returning out of captiuitie to reapers which reioyce at the abundance of encrease which they finde as if hee should say the Iewes who were sad and heauie when they were carried Captiues into Babylon shal bee ioyfull when they obtaine the fruite of their hope which is a glorious deliuerance Reason 2. Secondly God is our exceeding great reward with whom it is an easie thing to blesse and encrease to restore and multiply the good things giuen vnto vs. When God would comfort Abraham whom hee had brought out of Vr of the Caldees to dwell in the Land of Canaan he said vnto him e Gen. 12 2 3. I will make of thee a great Nation and will blesse thee and make thy name great and
and feature of the body but looketh vpon the grace and garnishing of the heart so that albeit we be euery way deformed yet if we be thoroughly reformed in the inner man we shall bee accepted before him a thousande times more then such as haue the greatest Ornaments of the body but haue nothing to decke and adorne the soule It may be he departed for a season Note heer how the Apostle describeth the sinne of Onesimus committed against his Maister he doth not aggrauate and exaggerate his offence with big swelling words to shew the greatnes of his sin but doth lessen it by gentle mild termes wherby he calleth it His running away he nameth a departing his absence from his Maisters house seruice the missing of him as it were an hour This the apostle speaketh c Theophyl in Philem. not so much to asswage the anger of Philemon prouoked thorough the offence of his seruant as to testify his vnfaigned repentance wherby he had buried and blotted out the wickednes which he committed by running from his Maister by robbing of him Doctrine 3. The fals and sins of our brethren that repent are not to be encreased and amplified with odious extream words We learne heereby that the fals sins of our brethren that repent are not to be increased with odious and extreame words Whensoeuer I say we see the fruits of vnfained repentance in any of our brethren that haue falne into sinne and beene ouertaken through the weaknesse of the flesh wee are to binde vp their woundes as carefull Surgeons and to comfort them with the sweet promises of the Gospel not to reuile them or raile at them or reproach them for their former falles we must not speake the most or the worst or the hardest of them but in mildnesse of spirit mollifie the greatnesse of the sinne what we can This Doctrine is made euident vnto vs by many testimonies and examples in the word of God When Ioseph saw his f Gen. 45 5 8. Brethren sad and greeued with themselues because they had solde him into Egypt hee comforteth them with the prouidence of God whose worke it was to haue him sent and sold into the hand of strangers Now then you sent me not hither but the Lord who hath made me a father vnto Pharaoh Lord of all his house and Ruler throughout all the land of Egipt This we see in the Lord himselfe toward Iob who reproued him for much weaknesse that he had shewed in the combat and tentation yet g Iob. 39 37. and 42 6. when he had repented in dust and ashes and laid his hand vpon his mouth the wrath of the Lord was kindled against his three friendes because they had not spoken of him the thing that is right like his seruant Iob. The like practise appeareth in Nathan toward Dauid whom he reprooueth first couertly and closely vnder a parable then openly and euidently he chargeth him with adultry and murther together with great vnthankfulnesse toward God that had bin so gracious to him but when he repented and humbled himselfe vnder the stroke of the two-edged sword of Gods word saying h 2 Sam. 12 13 I haue sinned against the Lord the Prophet doth no more vpbraid him with those foule and filthy sinnes of committing Whoredome and shedding of blood but said vnto him The Lorde also hath put away thy sinne thou shalt not die Thus did Christ our Sauiour deale with the woman taken in adultery euen in the verie acte brought before him by the Scribes and Pharisees he preached vnto her the Gospell vpon her repentance i Iohn 8 11. I do not condemne thee Go and sinne no more The like we see in the Apostles dealing with the incestuous Corinthian before his conuersion the Apostle chargeth him with fornication k 1 Cor. 5 1 and 2. Cor. 2 6 7. and Such fornication as is not named among the Gentiles that one shoulde haue his Fathers wife and reprooueth the whole Church that they had not put him away from among them yet when he had confessed his sinne and testified his repentance by his vnfaigned sorrow for his sinne the Apostle would haue his sinne forgiuen and his person comforted Least he should be swallowed vp with ouermuch heauinesse Likewise remembring the Corinthians what they were in the time of their ignorance Theeues Oppressors Fornicators Idolaters Drunkards Railers riotous persons by their conuersion to the Gospell and Faith in Christ they were changed to a better life and so could no longer be charged by such sins l 1 Cor. 6 11. Ye are washed ye are sanctified ye are iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus by the spirit of our God Whereby we see this truth plainly prooued vnto vs that it is our duty not to aggrauate and amplify the sins of such as haue repented them of their sinnes Reason 1. To this duty we shall be better directed and strengthned in the truth of it if we marke the reasons For first we are not to encrease in wordes the sinne of a penitent person because loue worketh softnesse and gentlenesse in vs a care of the good name of our Brother and banisheth all euill surmises suspitions from vs. Hence it is that the Apostle saith m 1 Cor. 13 4 Loue is patient When Peter exhorteth vs that aboue all things we should haue feruent loue among vs to the end he may confirm his exhortation and shew that there is nothing more profitable vnto the faithfull then to maintaine mutuall Charity hee bringeth this reason n 1 Pet. 4 8 Prou. 10 12. For Loue couereth the multitude of sins If this loue rule in our harts remaine among vs one towards another it bringeth excellent benefits and we auoid inumerable euils But if hatred beare sway men in byting and tearing one another are ready to consume one another to reproch and detract one from another to slander and defame to strike and quarrel one with another without measure or mercy Reason 2. Secondly we are not alwayes to vpbraid our Bretheren and cast them in the teeth with their former fals because wee must account it sufficient that they haue beene checked and teproued by vs or by the mouths of many witnesses The nature of God himselfe is gentle toward vs o Ps 103 9 10 that hee will not alwayes chide nor keepe his anger for euer So ought we to deale one toward another For if he doth not deale with vs after our sinnes nor reward vs according to our iniquities we should haue compassion one toward another If he know whereof we are made and remember that we are but dust we must also learne that we haue all neede to be forgiuen as there is no man but desireth to be forgiuen If then it be auaileable to our Bretherens good to haue them reproued wee ought not to proceede to reuiling of them and rayling vpon them for
the weakenesse to asswage the sorrow to beare the infirmitie and to releeue the misery of our Brother It is the manner of vngodly persons to make it their daily sport in their deuillish meetings to insult ouer him and to leape vpon his backe with all the reproach and infamy that they can deuise to lay vpon him But it skilleth not what such foule mouths do vtter they shall one day reap the reward of their mallice and the penitent person that holdeth his peace shall find in the end the fruit of his patience Vse 3. Thirdly it teacheth vs for our obedience to repent betimes and not to delay the time thereof but while the acceptable season is to bring forth the fruites of amendment of life For seeing wee are not to make the most or speake the worst of the fals of our penitent Bretheren it serueth as a good encouragement and a profitable inducement to leade vs and guide vs vnto true repentance that so our sinnes may be put away Sinne is as a most filthy Leprosie but when we repent we are cleansed of that Leprosie It is as vnsauory Dung that stencheth the earth and the euill sauour thereof ascendeth vp to Heauen but when we repent we smell pleasantly as a sweet perfume in the Nosthrils of God It is as filthy Mire that soyleth the Soule corrupteth the Body and spotteth the Garment but when wee repent the staine and blemishes of sinne are put out of his sight and blotted out of his remembrance For when God forgiueth iniquity transgression and sin r Mich. 7 19. Ier. 31 33 34. he throweth it into the Sea into the bottome of the Sea that it may neuer arise againe to our confusion and condemnation and hee remembreth it no more As farre as the East is from the West Å¿ Psal 103 12. and 32 1 2. so farre hath he remooued our sins from vs as the Prophet speaketh so that they are so far taken out of his sight that they and we shall neuer meet together He couereth them and will not impute them vnto vs t Col. 1 21 22 So that we which were in times past strangers and enemies are now reconciled beeing made holy and vnblameable and without fault in his sight If then God doe couer them when we repent who are we that goe about to vncouer them If he doe not impute them why should we lay them to their charge who haue a discharge from God who hath cancelled the band and hand-writing that was against them If God haue washed and wiped away the filthinesse of them why should any man cast the mire of them in their faces againe The most expert and excellent Phisitian cannot cure a deep wound a festered sore but some scarre will remain and some print in the flesh is left behinde but God so healeth our infirmities that he taketh away the staine the guilt and the punishment that no token no marke no signe of his wrath and indignation euer appeareth to appall vs or dismay vs. This is the great loue and vnspeakeable mercy of God toward the broken heart and contrite Spirit He that hath beene an Adulterer and hath repented of his vncleannesse is no Adulterer He that hath beene a Drunkard and repenteth of the beastlinesse and abuse of the good Creatures of GOD is no longer a Drunkard He that hath beene an Enemy and hinderer of Gods word and now loueth it aboue Siluer and Gold is no more an enemy but a friend of the Gospell He that hath beene a Swearer and Blasphemer and repenteth of his blasphemies is not a blasphemer He that hath beene a prophaner of the Lordes Sabbaoths and now is carefull to sanctifie them and spend them in holie exercises is no longer a prophane person True it is these men haue beene such but when they see their sinnes hate them forsake them are greeued for them and are departed from them true repentance is as the Fullers Sope to wash them and to make them whiter then the Snow We must therefore make a great difference betweene that which they haue beene and that which they are Shall we say that he who is come to mans estate and hath put away childishnesse is still a Babe and Suckling as Infant and Child because once he was so Or shall we say that hee who is made a Free-man and had serued out his Prentishippe is a Bond-man still and vnder the iurisdiction of another because that once he was so In like manner shall wee change our Bretheren to be Children in knowledge to be the Seruants of sinne and Bond-slaues of Sathan because they were so in the time of their ignorance before God gaue vnto them repentance that they might come out of these snares wherein they were holden Captiues Nay I will say more whosoeuer reuileth and reprocheth him with his Adultery Idolatry Blasphemy Drunkennesse or Prophanesse that hath fallen into these offences but dwelleth not nor delighteth in them is a malicious enemie a false accuser a slanderer and lyer against his Brother The Apostle Peter u Math. 26 69. denied his Maister as we shewed before he forsware him and curssed himselfe if he knew the Man which he did through feare to saue his life But because he went immediatly out of the High-Priests Hall and wept bitterlie did any of the rest euer vpbraid him and reproach him with Apostacy with swearing with curssing with his infirmitie and presumption All they therefore are led by another Spirit then the Disciples were who despightfullie cast them in the teeth with their sinnes which are more odious and greeuous to them then to those that set them afoote and blaze them abroad to their disgrace This is a great comfort and bringeth wonderfull peace of conscience to all those that truely repent of all their sinnes past which they haue followed with greedinesse seeing that as God forgiueth them so he will not haue others to charge them with them For if the Lord and Maister of vs all remit them we are not to charge our fellow-Fellow-Seruants with them If the Prince forgiue vpon the sorrow and submission of his Vassall the Treason intended against his person shall the subiect dare to call him Traytor seeing the Princes pardon is the Subiects protection and discharge If the Father forgiue the Childe his disobedience x Luke 15 29. shall the rest of his Brethren speake euill of him and alwaies keepe it in fresh remembrance If these thinges were duelie regarded and rightlie considered of vs we would not lye one houre in our sinnes but make hast to be reconciled vnto God that so we may abolish the guiltinesse and greeuousnesse together with the infamy of them Hence it is that the Apostle saith y Rom. 6 19 20 21 22. As ye haue giuen your members seruants to vncleannesse and to iniquitie to commit iniquitie so now giue your members seruants vnto righteousnesse in holinesse for when yee were the Seruants of sinne yee
were freed from righteousnesse What fruit had ye then in those things whereof yee are now ashamed For the end of those thinges is death but now being freed from sin and made Seruants vnto God ye haue your fruit in holinesse and the end euerlasting life Where he teacheth that such as continue in their sinnes are as dead trees or as rotten branches that bringeth forth no fruit but they that are made free from sinne are made the Seruants of righteousnesse The Tree that hath a long time brought forth no fruit when once it beginneth to bring forth good fruit cannot be called an euill tree The ground that beginneth to yeelde plentifull encrease cannot be called barren whatsoeuer it hath been in times past So is it with euery one of vs we are accounted Trees of righteousnesse and fruitfull ground so soone as we lay aside the vnsauory fruits of wickednesse Wherefore whensoeuer we heare the taunts and reproaches of vncharitable men cast out against vs for such sinnes as we haue long agoe left let vs not be greeued at them nor sorrowfull for them nor seeke reuenge against them but rather comfort our selues in this both that God hath giuen vs repentance to see and forsake our sinnes which before we made our chiefest pleasure and that he hath pardoned them in his Sonne and will neuer lay them to our charge so that he accounteth them as if they had neuer beene committed and accepteth of vs as if we neuer had offended him As for the vngodly that haue sinne raigning in them and neuer truely repented of heir sinne they may and ought to be charged with their sins and as we find them in the present time to be so we may iustly account of them so we may truelie call them and so we may censure them and pronounce of them For as it is lawfull to call a Spade a Spade so he that is knowne to liue still in Adultery may be named and noted to be an Adulterer and a filthy liuer He that maketh a continuall practise of drunkennesse and is resolued to remaine in it may be called a drunken beast a drunken sot a drunken companion and we need craue no pardon if we giue him that stile He that regardeth not the hearing of Gods word but liueth in open contempt of God and of his ordinances may be iustly branded with the reproach of his sinne and may be called the enemy of all righteousnesse and the Childe of the Deuill We know that Iudas through couetousnesse betrayed his Maister and when hee had done he dispared of pardon and hanged himselfe the reproach of this fact and offence remaineth to this day and shall neuer be blotted out but he is called Iudas the Traytor and Sonne of perdition Math. 10. 4. Actes 1. 16. 17. And thus the case standeth with all other vnrepentant Sinners that vse not the remedy appointed of God to bring them out of the state of damnation into the way of saluation Hereupon we see the Prophet Esay Chap. 1. calleth them z Esay 10 4 10. and 57 3. the Princes of Sodome and the people of Gomorah a sinfull Nation a people laden with iniquity a seed of the wicked corrupt children Witches Children the seed of the Adulterer and of the Whore Christ calleth the Pharisies a Math. 3 7. Iohn 8 44. a brood of Vipers blind Guids Hypocrites such as were of their Father the Deuill This appeareth in the Psalme where the Prophet speaking of such as hated to be reformed and cast the words of God behind them saith b Psal 50 18 19 20 21 22. When thou seest a Theefe thou runnest with him and thou art partaker with the Adulterer thou giuest thy mouth to euill and with thy tongue thou forgest deceit thou sittest and speakest against thy Brother and slanderest thy Mothers Son these things hast thou done and I held my tongue therefore thou thoughtest that I was like thee but I will reproue thee and set them in order before thee O consider this ye that forget God least I teare you in peeces and there be none that can deliuer you Where we see he layeth to their consciences their sinnes and applyeth vnto them the iudgements of God that did hang ouer them so that thereupon he calleth them to serious and earnest consideration of their former workes thereby to draw them to repentance Diuers sorts of men are reproued Heereby are reprooued diuers sortes of euill and corrupt minded men First such as aggrauate and augment the sinnes of the godly and make those that are no sinnes to be taken for sins and such as are lesser to seeme the greatest of all These are they that broach and belch out of their enuious hearts and filthy mouths and stinking breathes all the venome that lyeth hidden within them against the godlie when they can espy any of them who haue their weaknesse as other men and being left vnto themselues cannot but fall to be ouertaken with the frailty of the flesh Oh say they these are the holie men these are the holie Brethren these are the godly folke see see what they are none are worse people then they These men haue quicke eies to see their sins but they are blind and cannot see their repentance They know what they haue committed but they are ignorant and will not know that their sins are remitted and that whatsoeuer the Son of God remitteth ought not to be retained and remembred of the Sons of men It is no disgrace to a man to haue beene wicked and infamous for his offences if he be throughlie changed and altered for their reformation giueth them more grace and honour with God and all good men then their former life doth shame and discredit The Apostle saith c Act. 17 30 31. The time of this ignorance God regarded not but now he admonisheth all men euery where to repent because he hath appointed a day in which he would iudge the World Secondlie they are reprooued that lessen the sinnes of the impenitent and mollifie them with gentle Plaisters thereby hartning and hardning them in their sinnes thereby fawning vpon them and flattering them in their wickednesse They are men of the prophane World like themselues and therefore their sinnes shall bee no sinnes and their great sinnes are little motes that cannot be seene It hath alwaies bin a d Thucid. lib. 3. Plutarch in Solom Ouid. Nominibus mollire licet mala practise and ancient custome among euill Men to lessen odious vices to abate them with softer and milder tearmes and that fraude and fashion was neuer neuer more frequent then where the vice was most common Thus it is when Theeues are called Taking-men Couetous persons Thrifty-Liuers Thus Adultery is accounted but a tricke of youth fighting and quarrelling is named man-hood drunkennesse is reputed good fellowship and Drunkards the onely good fellowes Thus is sinne extenuated and diminished by those that know not the Nature of sinne and
therefore seeke to blaunch the foulenesse and filthinesse of it to which they are so continuallie accustomed But howsoeuer these men account of sinne and whatsoeuer they call it they shall find that the lessening of it is the way to encrease it and the diminishing of it is the meanes to make it greater If we would haue our sinnes and offences not to come into account we must forsake them and repent of them Thirdlie it reprooueth such as disclose and reueale a Penitents confession When our Brethren in the anguish of their Soules and in a feeling of the horror of sinne haue sought peace and comfort at our handes and haue discouered their offences that trouble them to vs as the sicke man doth his disease to the Physition that hee may bee healed it is our dutie to comfort them not to disgrace them to conceale them not to reueale them to hide them not to publish them and blaze them abroad to their disgrace and discredit True it is when euill is opened vnto vs e Alexand. Hal. part 4. Quest 28. membr 2. art 2. Siluest in Confess 3. nume 2. not past or present but to be done afterward as if a man confesse his determination and resolution to commit Murthers we are not tied to couer and conceale it but are bound to manifest and make it knowne This sheweth the wonderfull abuse of the Church of Rome committed in holie thinges and thinges supposed by them to be holie The Sacrament of the Lordes Supper is most horribly prophaned of them which being instituted in remembrance of the death of Christ to assure vs of our spirituall communion in him and of our spirituall nourishment from him is often receiued of them to combine them together in wickednesse and to take securitie thereby one of another not to reueale the Treasons and Conspiracies that are plotted among them Thus it is in the supposed Sacrament of Pennance when they would reueale the hidden mischeefe and poysons of their hearts to the Priestes and Iesuits their Confessors they will seeme to doe it by way of confession that so it might be as it were locked vp and sealed with this Seale as a secret neuer to bee disclosed and discouered Thus is confession become nothing else but a couer of Treason and Rebellion But when our Brethren being afflicted in Conscience and wounded with the Darts of Satan and the poyson of sinne shall accuse themselues and confesse some haynous sinne committed that lyeth heauy vpon them and can find no comfort in concealing of it but greater horror thereby are brought to the gates of Hell and like to be swallowed vp in despaire when they shall I say confesse to the glorie of God and the shaming of themselues the wickednesse of their hearts and handes we are not to vtter it to others to their disgrace but by all meanes we can to couer it in secret and silence For as we f Iam. 5 15. are to acknowledge our faults one to another and to pray one for another so we are in loue to conceale the falles one of another and not to open them in choller and mallice to their reproach Lastly this reproueth our remisnesse and wretchlesnesse in dealing with recusant Papists the members of the Pope and Popish Church who because we would not offend them we speake of them honourably and giue them the Name of Catholikes and honour them with the Title of the Church whereas wee should giue them their right and call them by their propper Names of Idolaters and enemies of the Grace of God and disturbers of the State We haue many among vs that are ready to ioyne with them and to giue them the right hand of fellowship who can bee content to mingle together God and Baall Christ and Beliall light and darkenesse the Temple of God and an Idoll But as we beleeue the High-priest of Rome to be the very Anti-christ described in the Scripture so we also hold that the Church of Rome is a false and Bastard-Church and no true Church of Christ Iesus who not onely haue shaken but razed downe the very foundations of Religion maintaining the worshipping of Images and the merrits of workes by making a mocke of Christes merits and satisfaction by deuising other Mediators and by presuming to offer him vp an vnbloody Sacrifice to God the Father Let vs not therefore halt betweene g 1 Kin. 18 21 two opinions nor go about to reconcile those thinges which can neuer hold or hang together The false Apostles would ioyne the Law and the Gospell together the workes of the Law and the grace of Faith in the matter of Iustification which can neuer be the one destroying and pulling down the other because h Rom. 11 6. if it be of grace it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace but if it be of workes it is no more grace or else were worke no more worke So we haue those that dreame of an vnion between Christ and Antichrist but if the Lord be God follow him if Baall be he then goe after him No man can serue both these Maisters so contrary one from the other so that whosoeuer cleaueth to the one forsaketh the other Verse 16. Not now as a Seruant but aboue a Seruant euen as a Brother c. Heere is a singular commendation of Onesimus expressed by many steps and degrees the one ascending and climbing aboue the other He was not onely as a Seruant but aboue a Seruant not onely as a Brother but a beloued Brother not onely deare to Paule but much more to Philemon himselfe This is so much the more worthy praise and commendation nay of wonder and admiration as the disposition of Seruants in those times was lewd and licentious who albeit they had good and godly Maisters yet they were light-fingered and light-footed and vpon euery occasion they were apt to run away from them i Gen. 16 6. as appeareth in Hagar that liued in the house of Abraham when Sarah began to deale roughly with her immediatlie she fled from her Seeing therefore it was so rare a thing among those kinde of men to finde any well minded and disposed the Apostle maketh the more account of him and would haue his Maister to make account of him As if he should reason thus Him who in Christ Iesus is become thy Brother thou oughtest carefully to tender and dearely to loue But Onesimus is now by his vnfained conuersion become thy Brother Therefore receiue him Heere we see the Apostle reasoneth for Onesimus to haue him receiued and respected aboue an ordinary Seruant because hee was truely conuerted and had in him a good measure of Grace and was become a true and sound Christian Doctrine 4. The more grace appeareth in any the more should they be tendered and regarded of vs. We learne from hence that the more Grace appeareth in any the more should they be tendered and regarded of vs whether
least member of the body is honoured and not despised cherrished and not contemned tendered and not abhorred of vs. So it ought to be in the members of Christs body which are all deare to him which hee bought with an equall price and therefore ought to be deare vnto vs if wee beleeue our selues to haue our part and portion in his body Notwithstanding if thorough the pride contempt disdaine and vnthankfulnesse of men we finde our selues little regarded made as a foot-stoole for men to tread and trample vpon as a ball to spurne at with all reproach and so scorned for our well dooing let vs not be dismayed with this dealing but consider that the poor seruants of God haue tasted of the like measure that haue gone before vs so that wee are not the first that haue beene thus vsed and we are not like to bee the last that are in this sort to be abused Marke a little how it fell out with Ioseph one that performed the best seruice and yet one that receiued the worst recompence When he was broght downe to Egypt and bought and sold as a slaue p Gen. 39 1 2 4 5 20. or as Oxe in the Market from one to another at length he came vnto the hands house of Potiphar whom he serued faithfully so that the Lord was with him and made all that he did to prosper in his hand his Maister put all that he had in his hande and made him Ruler of his house neuerthelesse not long after thorough the false suggestion of his Mistris and the hasty and ouer-rash credulity of his Maister his good seruice was forgotten he is cast in prison and lyeth bound in setters The like wee might say of Iacob who serued for his wiues in the house of Laban Who could do better seruice or who could shew himselfe a more painfull and profitable seruant then he had done Hee speaketh it before Labans face and doth not whisper it behinde his backe hee auoucheth it before him that he might take exception to it if he had ought to obiect against it q Gen. 31 39 40. Whatsoeuer was torne of Beasts I brought it not vnto thee but made it good my selfe of mine hand didst thou require it were it stolne by day or stollen by night I was in the day consumed with heate and with frost in the Night and my sleepe departed from mine eyes This duty and diligence did he perform and yet what was the wages of the woorke and the recompence of his labors It followeth in the next wordes r Verse 41. I haue beene twenty yeares in thine house and serued thee fourteene yeares for thy two daughters six yeares for thy Sheepe and thou hast chaunged my wages ten times Thus we see how good and gracious seruants haue bin serued in former times before vs and what hard measure hath bin rendred and repayed vnto them The examples of the Israelites is fit to be thought vpon and worthy to be considered in this case when they soiourned and serued in the land of Egipt according as the Lord fore-shewed vnto Abraham Å¿ Gen. 15 13. Know for a surety that thy seede shall be a stranger in a Land that is not theirs foure hundred yeares and shall serue them and they shall intreat them euill They neuer plotted any rebellion or attempted act of hostility against them but serued their taske-maisters that oppressed them and laboured in making bricke and gathering straw and finishing their taske yet they were blamed and beaten and laden with many sorrowes Let vs therefore by all these examples be encouraged and know that nothing can happen vnto vs which hath not fallen out to others that haue liued before vs who haue done as good and faithful seruice to their superiors as we haue done or can do and yet haue beene euilly entreated and wrongfully pursued and cruelly handled and vniustly rewarded Let vs not suffer for euill doing t 1 Pet. 4 15 16. 2 19 20 and as euill doers but let vs suffer as Christians that so God may be glorified and we not ashamed of our afflictions For this is thanke-worthy if a man for Conscience toward God endure greef suffring wrongfully it is acceptable before him is respected of him albeit among men it go away vnrewarded We herd before of the good seruice of Iacob of Ioseph of the Iewes of Iacob toward Laban of Ioseph toward Potiphar of the Iewes toward the Egyptians and how euilly they were rewarded and recompenced of their cruell and couetous Maisters But they knew they serued a better Maister in Heauen who would not suffer them to want the fruite of their labors nor to loose the worke of their hands Hence it is that he encreased Iacob in substance hee brought Ioseph out of prison he gaue the Israelites fauour in the eyes of the Egyptians that gaue them Iewels of Siluer and of Gold and sent them not empty away Thus will God deale with vs if we suffer with patience and will honor them that are carefull to honor him Aboue a Seruant euen as a Brother beloued We heard before howe the Apostle commendeth Onesimus to his Maister that he was to be receiued of him not so much as a seruant as one that was more then a seruant that is not an Infidell but a Christian This point is in these words declared by the speciall or by a word of Relation a beloued Brother which was more then a simple seruant For if he had any vnbeleeuers that were not of the houshold of Faith either borne in his house or bought with his money they were his seruants but they were not beloued Brethren But this man conuerted to the Faith was aboue the ranke and degree of such persons hee was both a Seruant and a Brother True it is there was great difference betweene Philemon and Onesimus betweene the Maister and Seruant in things of this life one was Superior the other Inferior one was to command the other to obey one was to rule the other to be subiect in the Lord yet wee see how the Apostle in this place is not affraide to call Onesimus his Maisters Brother and would not haue the Maister ashamed to acknowledge it in words to shew it in his practise This is not spoken as if they were naturall Bretheren in the flesh and descended of one Father according to the common generation of the rest of the sonnes of men but they were Brethren in Christ partakers of the common Faith equall in the participation of heauenly graces alike in the fauour of God one not dearer to him then another Hence it is that the Apostle before Verse 7. and afterward verse 20. calleth Philemon his Brother in Christ though he were his sonne in the Gospell because hee had begotten him vnto God by the immortall seede of the word u Verse 19. as wee shall see in the words following where he challengeth as his own and as a
due debt vnto him whatsoeuer Philemon had Doctrine 5. Althogh christian religion do not take away the degrees of persons yet it maketh vs all equall in Christ From hence wee learne that wee are all of vs equall before God and our Brethren in Christ Iesus our Lord. Although Christian Religion doeth not take away the difference of persons and conditions before men but aloweth some to be high and some low some aboue and others beneath some to be Maisters and others to be Seruants yet it maketh vs alike and equal before God inasmuch as it causeth vs to be brethren in Christ This truth hath plentifull confirmation out of the books of Moses where al the Iewes of what quality and condition soeuer they were are oftentimes called brethren The poore are named the y Deut. 15 7 2 11 12. 17 20. Brethren of the rich the Debter is called the Brother of his Creditor the Seruant is Brother to the Maister the King set ouer them must not lift vp his heart aboue his Brethren This is it which Dauid confesseth in many places of the Psalmes z Psal 22. 22. and 22 8 9. I wil declare thy Name vnto my Brethren in the middest of the Congregation I will praise thee And in the 122. Psalme hee wished prosperity and would procure the good of Gods house for his Brethrens and Companions sake Where wee see that albeit he were the King of Israell and sate in the throne of glory and seat of dignity aboue them yet he refuseth not to cast himselfe into a common condition with others and to giue them the honour of his brethren This is it which the Prophets teach euery where a Ier. 31 34. They shal teach no more euery man his neighbor and euery man his Brother saying Know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them vnto the greatest of them saith the Lord. This is it which Christ speaketh to his Disciples b Math. 23 8. Be not ye called Rabbi for one is your Doctor euen Christ and all ye are Brethren The like precept the Apostle enioineth and the same rule he deliuereth to the Romans chap. 12 16. Be of like affection one toward another be not high-minded but make your selues equall to them of the lower sort be not wise in your selues And to the Phillippians Chap. 2 3. Let nothing be done through contention or vaine-glory but that in meekenesse of mind euerie man esteeme other better then himselfe Againe to this purpose hee writeth to the Galathians c Gal. 3 27 28 All yee that are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ there is neither Iew nor Grecian there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female for ye are all one in Christ Iesus All these Testimonies of the Old and New Testament do fully and euidently teach vs that howsoeuer the Gospell permitteth and prescribeth the differences and degrees of persons that some be Lords and others beare themselues as seruants yet it alloweth and maketh them to be equal in Christ to be brethren and Sisters in the common faith all members of Christ all pertakers of the same hope al heires of the same kingdome Reason 1. And what can be more plaine then this principle First it is the nature property of God to accept no mans person An high place a noble byrth a comely personage are much respected amongst men and such persons are highly aduanced and preferred But it is not so with God for in his election of vs to life in his calling of vs in his iustifying of vs in his sanctifyeng and sauing of vs he respecteth not whether we be high or low rich or poor learned or vnlearned he chooseth he calleth he iustifieth he sanctifieth he glorifieth the bond as well as the free the low as well as the high the Seruant as well as the Maister This is it which the holy man Iob setteth down d Iob 34 18 19. Wilt thou say vnto a King thou art wicked Or to Prince ye are vngodly How much lesse to him that accepteth not the rich more then the poore for they bee all the workes of his hands To this purpose the Apostle Paule speaketh e Rom. 2 9 10 11. Gal. 2 6. Act 10 34 35 Deut. 10 17. 2 Chro. 19 7. Prou. 24 13. To euery man that doth good shall be glory honour and peace to the Iew first and also to the Grecian for there is no respect of persons with God Likewise the Apostle Peter teacheth this in the Sermon that hee preached vnto the Gentiles Of a truth I perceiue that God is no accepter of persons but in euerie Nation hee that feareth him worketh righteousnesse is accepted with him Seeing then this is the Nature of God that he regardeth not the outward apearance and countenance of men we must know that he respecteth all as equall and alike Reason 2. Secondly Christ Iesus accepteth all that beleeue in him as his Bretheren and members of his body euen flesh of his flesh bone of his bones This is it which he speaketh to Mary Magdalen after his resurrection when he had appeared vnto her and manifested himself vnto her f Iohn 20 17. Go to my brethren and say vnto them I ascend vnto my Father and to your Father and to my God and to your God Where he sheweth that God is a common Father that all the godly are as brethren one to another Likewise the Apostle writeth to the Hebrewes g Heb. 2 11 12 He that sanctifieth and they that are sanstified are al of one wherefore he is not ashamed to call them Brethren saying I will declare thy name vnto my Brethren in the midst of the Church I will sing praises to thee The Lord Iesus is infinitely aboue vs h Phil. 2 6. who being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equall with God and we are poore wretched and miserable men yet he is ashamed of no man except we first bee ashamed of him He will deny no man he will reiect no man except wee first do deny and reiect him If then Christ do vouchsafe to account and accept vs as his bretheren we must needs acknowledge an equality and brotherly fellowshippe among all the faithfull that are in Christ Reason 3. Thirdly all the godly that are truly regenerate are adopted to the hope of the kingdome of glory and are redeemed by the blood of Christ It is not Gold or Siluer or Pearles i Psal 49 7. 1 Pet. 1 18. or the treasures that are in the world could pay a price sufficient to redeeme and ransome our soules it is the precious blood of Christ alone that must purchase our peace as of a Lambe vndefiled and without spot Now he came into the world to seeke and to saue that which was lost he came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance How meane
hath made our brethren not to shew more mercy to our Cattle for our commodity sake then to man made after the Image of God for his sake To conclude let vs from this Christian equality learne Christian mercy and know the estate of them that suffer any kind of misery For what is the cause that we tyranize ouer those that are our Inferiors but because we forget that we are their bretheren and that in this respect they are equall vnto vs Vse 3. Thirdly this Title of Brethren communicated to all the faithfull serueth as a comfort and consolation to all Inferiours and to teach them this dutie that they ought not to grudge or to bee greeued that they are placed in a lowe estate as though they were therefore lesse esteemed and regarded of God For seeing God hath thus farre prouided for them to call them their Bretheren and to make them equall with those of greater Callinges they are to bee contented with their places It is a great Honour to be so greatly in his fauour and to bee so highly regarded of him who reiecteth no man for his poore degree for his low estate for his meane condition This is it which the Apostle Paule setteth downe 1. Cor. 7 21 22. Art thou called being a Seruant Care not for it but if yet thou maist be free vse it rather for he that is called in the Lord being a Seruant is the Lords freeman Likewise also be that is called beeing free is Christs Seruant Where he sheweth that no mans poore calling should be his discouragement but this must be his comfort and bring peace vnto his soule that if hee be a true beleeuer although he be mans seruant yet he is Gods free man And whomsoeuer the sonne b Iohn 8 34 36. maketh free he is free indeede For wee must know that whosoeuer committeth sinne with greedinesse and draweth iniquitie as with Cart-ropes he is the seruant of sinne though he were the Maister of a family or the Ruler of a kingdome And on the other side whosoeuer is freed from the bondage of sinne and the slauery of the Deuill he is a right free-man although he be a Captiue a Prisoner or a Seruant If wee haue our part in Christ we haue our part in this comfort seeing the Seruant is saued as well as ●…e Maister if he beleeue Furthermo●… we must consider these two thinges both that whatsoeuer our calling be wherein we abide whether it bee high or low wee haue it from God we are alotted vnto it by his appointment and that hee seeth it and knoweth it to be the fittest place and best calling for vs vnder the Heauens For he respecteth in all his purposes his owne glory and our profite If he saw any condition of life to be better for vs or a meanes to further vs in our holy faith and saluation he would not keepe vs from it he would not deny it vnto vs he would not restraine vs of it It is a spice of the Deuils poyson which he inspired instilled into the minds of our first parents to conceiue hardly of Gods dealing toward vs as if of malice or enuy he had helde vs from the greater good and bestowed vpon vs the lesser He came to them in the Garden and told them c Gen. 3 5. That God doth know that when they should eate of the tree of knowledge of good euill in the middest of the Paradice of God their eyes should be opened and they should be as Gods knowing good and euill So when we grow discontented and dislike our callings which God hath appointed vnto vs we begin to be inueigled by the subtilty of Satan and shal be alwaies aspiring higher then God hath iudged to be meet for vs. Let this serue vs suffice vnto vs that how lowe soeuer in our owne eyes and little in the eyes of others our condition is yet God hath made them equall with vs and vs Brethren with them to our great and endlesse comfort This is that vse which the Apostle maketh to encourage and strengthen seruants in their duties d Ephes 6 5 6 7 8. Seruants be obedient vnto them that are your Maisters according to the flesh with feare and trembling in singlenesse of your hearts as vnto Christ Not with seruice to the eie as men pleasers but as the seruants of Christ doing the will of God from the hart with good will seruing the Lord not men And know ye that whatsoeuer good thing any man doth that same shall he receiue of the Lord whether hee be bond or free Whereby he declareth that the obedience of such as are bond is no lesse acceptable to god then the obedience of such as are free he looketh not so much to our persons as to our actions nor so much to our actions as to the manner of our doing of them Hee liketh and alloweth that which is done of the seruant as well as that which proceedeth from the Maister and he that is of low degree pleaseth God in the duties of his calling as well as the man that is of greatest reputation in the world and highly magnified for his Riches and Honors Vse 4. Lastly seeing God respecteth all alike and hath made all as one and as Brethren that are in Christ it serueth as a reproofe and threatning and terror to all drowsie and secure persons that thinke they shall escape the iudgments of God for their high places There is no difference with God there is no inequality with Christ to them that are in Christ high and low are all alike with him None are saued for their highnesse none are condemned for their lownesse Christ Iesus accepteth no man for his glory he reiecteth no man for his ignominy Let vs therefore not beare our selues bold and confident vpon our outward excellency but stand in feare of his iudgements and prepare our selues with all reuerence and diligence that we may bee found worthy to stand before the great God in that great day of account For wee must z 2 Cor. 5 10. all appear before him when he will iudge euery man according to his works When we shal come personally before his Throne of glory and seat of iudgment hee will haue no respect to the Noblenesse of our birth to the greatnesse of our learning to the beauty of our faces to the strength of our bodies to the largenesse of our liuings to the aboundance of our Riches or to any outward priuiledges and dignities of our persons Then shall all flesh be gathered together from the foure windes and stand before the Iudge of all the world God will respect vs as we are not as we appeare to be not as others haue accounted of vs but as he shall manifest vs to haue bin when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed and hidden things shall bee reuealed Then must euery man answere for himselfe and plead guilty or not guiltie when no
pretenses or excuses or delayes shal auaile vs. Then shal the poore begger appeare without his rags the rich Glutton without his Robes Couetous Indas without his bagges Crafty Gehazi without his money Proud Haman without his Honor Aspyring Absolon without his Ambition Murthering Caine without his Weapon Cunning Achitophell without his Pollicy The Kings of the earth must lay downe the glory of their Crownes and the dignity of their Scepters the Nobles must renounce the Ensignes of honor and all persons must set aside outward respects of honor and dishonor of glory and shame of fauor and contempt Neuerthelesse it is to be obserued that albeit these men must stand before the throne of God without these respects that they made their chiefest felicity yet they shall not appeare without their cruelty bribery treachery blasphemy couetousnes such like impiety for their euill works shal follow them cleaue fast vnto them Let vs therefore neuer think to escape when we shal com naked before the eternal Iudge as euer we came into the world more naked then we departed out of the world for wheras some haue their Coffins to couer them others their Tombs to beutify them and all men their winding sheets to wrap their Carkasses in whē the Lord shal descend with thousands of his Angels they shal not haue a rag or a poore fig-leafe to hide their shame Let vs seek while we haue time to put on Christs righteousnesse as a Garment that we may be able to stand before the sonne of man and receiue the glory prepared for vs before the foundations of the earth were laide Specially to me how much more then vnto thee both in the flesh and in the Lord. We haue heard how the Apostle accounteth and how he would haue Philemon account of Onesimus to wit aboue a Seruant euen as a beloued Brother In these words he vrgeth him farther and sheweth that hee had more cause to respect him and greater reason to loue him then himselfe had because he was ioyned to him by more bands whereof two he nameth one of the flesh as being his seruant the other in the Lord as being his brother Paule was mooued to respect him onely in regarde of the common fayth and therefore he saith if he were not so much a Seruant as a Brother to him much more hee ought to bee so to his Maister not because hee was his seruant as other seruants are but because he was the Lords seruant so that hee was bounde to loue him both for the Lordes sake and for his owne sake Doctrine 6. The more bands reasons are giuen vs to care for any the more we are bound to care for him Heereby there is offered to our considerations this Lesson to bee learned that the more bandes and reasons are giuen vnto vs of God to care for anie the more wee are bound to care for him and to respect him A professor of the Gospell is more to be regarded then he that is wirhout One of the same Nation more then a stranger one of our own Kindred more then another farther from vs a Neighbour more then one that dwelleth manie Miles from vs one of a mans house more then him that is out of his house a Kinsman conuerted to the faith becom a true and perfect Christian more then a Kinsman not conuerted A Child that hath the sparks of grace in him more then a Childe voyde of them a Seruant fearing God more then a Seruant in the same family that doth not feare God nor regard his worde nor make Conscience of the meanes of his saluation Abraham loued Isaac the sonne of Promise hauing more graces in him f Gen. 21 9 10 14. 25 5 6. more then Ishmael the son of the bond-woman and a scoffing wretch and more then all the Sonnes of Keturah to whom he gaue guifts and sent them away Wee see this in the dealing of Abraham toward Lot his Nephew he would suffer no contention to rest among them and when he heard he was taken prisoner he would not haue stirred for the wicked sinners that dwelt in Sodome but hee armed his seruants to recouer him out of the hands of his enemies This is it which Salomon teacheth g Prou. 27 10 Better is a Neighbor that is neere then a Brother farre off The Apostle teacheth this truth when he giueth this precept While wee haue time let vt do good to all men h Gal. 6 10. but especially to them which are of the houshold of faith And in another place i Tim. 5 4. If any Widdow haue Children or Nephewes let thē learne first to shew godlinesse towardes their owne house and to recompence their Kindred To this also we are directed in the fift Commandement when we are commanded to Honour Father and Mother Wherby appeareth the truth of this doctrine that it standeth with Gods ordinance to haue the most care of those and to shew the greatest fruits of loue vnto them to whom wee are bound in the greatest and neerest bands Reason 1. The Reasons being wisely considered will make this plainely to appeare vnto vs. It is a generall sentence deliuered by Salomon in the booke of Ecclesiastes k Eccl. 4 9 10. Two are better then one and a threefold Cord is not easily broken Wheresoeuer there are stronger Cordes to tye vs and moe bandes to ioyne vs together our Loue ought to bee the more greater one towardes another Manie stickes make the greater Fire and many stringes the better Musicke Reason 2. Secondly it is a thing verie well pleasing in the sight of God to consider what meanes he hath affoorded to encrease mutuall loue and societie one with another This is the reason vrged by the Apostle to perswade the Children and Nephewes of poore Widdowes to take care for their Parents according to their ability l 1 Tim. 5 4. Because that is an honest thing and acceptable before God Now we are bound vnto them by many effectuall Reasons as it were with barres of Iron and bandes of Brasse to nourish those that haue nourished vs that haue fedde vs that haue cloathed vs that haue begotten vs and brought vs into the world so that wee must acknowledge it both right and reasonable Reason 3. Thirdly such as breake these bands cast away these Cords from them do set themselues against the Doctrine of Christ and may be sent to schoole to the Infidels nay to the brute beasts which are not voide of a certaine naturall affection This the Apostle teacheth m 1 Tim. 5 8. If there be any that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold he denieth the faith is worse then an Infidell For howsoeuer they professe the Faith in words yet in deede and in truth they deny it But God is delighted with our workes not with our words and looketh vpon the substance not the shewe of our Religion
our mouths to instruct them we shall haue deafe Children and deafe Seruants that will stoppe their eares against all good admonition that is offered vnto them If we be bound in a double Band common and speciall and doe performe a single dutie vnto them it will follow that as they owe vnto vs a two-folde dutie generall and particular the generall of all mankinde the particular of Seruants they will perform● a single and maimed and vnperfect seruice Thus much shall suffice for this Doctrine and diuision 17 If therefore thou account our things common Receiue him as my selfe The order of the words HItherto we haue spoken of the former reason drawne from the Apostles action of sending him backe to his Maister together with the conuincing and confuting of the two obiections that might be made against the receiuing of him one touching the retaining of him with himselfe the other touching the Seruants departure from his Maister Now followeth the second reason of the second sort taken from the person of Paule and it is of his communion with Philemon and the participation of the same heauenlie guifts and graces with him This reason is first handled and then another Obiection is preuented The reason is in this 17. Verse the preuention is the two next following to wit the 18. and 19. Verses This reason heere vsed is breefely propounded and yet nothing is omitted which may carrie any force of Argument to perswade and asswage Philemon For he inferreth out of the former wordes wherein he hath commended Onesimus not so much to be accounted as a Seruant as to be receiued as a Brother that hee is worthy to be forgiuen and withall he insinnuateth and signifieth that hee was necessarilie ioyned with him in these bandes of mutuall loue that hee could not be separated and deuided from him whereby it must come to passe that one of these will followe eyther thou must loue vs both or else for euer refuse vs both If thou hate him thou canst not loue me or if thou loue me thou must not hate hate him This reason is thus framed If we haue fellowship together in all common blessings then receiue him But we haue fellowship together in all common blessings Therefore receiue him The first proposition of this reason is in the beginning of this verse If therefore thou account our things common receiue him The conclusion is amplified and made manifest by a comparison of the like Receiue him as my selfe The meaning of the words Thus much of the Method now let vs see somewhat concerning the meaning of the words which are few and not hard When the Apostle saith If thou account our things common the words in the originall are If thou haue mee a Fellow or partaker that is One in common with thee whereby he expresseth his singular affection to this poore fugitiue Seruant and maketh his cause and this request all one so that to reiect him was as much as if he reiected Paule and on the other side to embrace and receiue him is accounted by him as done to himselfe Againe when he craueth to haue him receiued by receiuing we must vnderstand not onely the entertaining of him into his seruice and the taking of him home into his house but therein also he requesteth of him to forgiue him his offences committed against him and to think well of him as of a Brother in Christ Lastly when he addeth As my selfe he meaneth louingly friendly hartily as thou wouldst doe me if I came vnto thee As if he should haue said seeing no man denieth to his companion and familiar friend any thing that is honest and iust it cannot stand with that loue and familiarity that hath euer beene betweene thee and me to deny me this reasonable request but we haue beene and are most deare and inward friends communicating one with another all good things so that I haue accounted thee another my selfe and thou hast accounted me another thy self and therefore I doe not doubt but thou wilt receiue him againe into thy fauour as if he were another Paule or as a member of his body Sundry obseruations arising out of this Verse This is to be marked and considered concerning the meaning The words in this verse are not many but the obseruations are not few that might be concluded and collected out of the same First of all many may maruaile that the Apostle is so earnest vehement and importunate for a Seruant and especially for such a Seruant Surely feare of hard and seuere dealing might haue moued Onesimus to distrust and despaire and therefore he vseth all meanes to hold him vp to cherrish his faith and to further the good work begun in him being as yet a young plant a new conuert as a ioynt newly restored and hauing yet a tender conscience whereby he prouoketh vs and all others to seek tenderly the vpholding maintaining confirming and comforting such as haue giuen witnesse of their true repentance not to quench the smoaking Flaxe nor to breake the bruised Reed For seeing we are with all mildnesse to receiue vnto vs such as are weake in the faith woe vnto them that stay them that are comming forward and lay stumbling blockes in their way to bring them backe and to cause them to returne to their vomit with the Dog and to the wallowing in the mire like the Sow that was washed And seeing the sinner is thus to be helped which hath approued his conuersion vnto vs that we are to make intercession vnto others to obtaine pardon for the penitent we are admonished that they are much more fauourably handled and carefully to be receiued and gently to be remitted by our selues Secondly we see that to the old request he addeth a new reason for we shal neuer finde in this Epistle his petition barely and nakedly propounded He hath vsed diuers Arguments before to perswade Philemon yet heere we haue another annexed to moue him to grant it without denyall or resistance This giueth instruction to the Ministers of the Gospell to teach the truth soundly and substantially as that the consciences of the people may be wel grounded and throughly setled therein When matters of weight and importance are in question they must not deale rawly they must not vse weake proofes and vnsufficient reasons whereby men may be rather hardned in their errors then helped out of their errors Thirdly the Apostle doth not simply say If our things be common as hee might haue done but if thou account them common and vs to haue a communion betweene our selues declaring thereby that it is not enough to know a truth vnlesse we also yeeld vnto it as vnto a truth It is one thing to know what is good and another thing to embrace it in our practises It is one thing to know what is euil and another to refuse it in our actions We must labor not onely to haue our minds cleered our vnderstandings and our iudgments rectified to see
the truth but to haue our harts and affections sanctified to follow it It behoueth therefore not to rest our selues satisfied with generall notions but so to ensue after them as that we make speciall application of thē Dauid in general knew that Adultery was euill Noah knew that drunkennesse was beastly Peter knew the denying of his Maister was fearefull yet in the brunt of tentation though the minde had knowledge of it the affections would not refuse it but yeelded as a Cittie besiedged by an enemy Fourthly the Apostle putteth Philemon in minde that seeing there was so neere a coniunction between them twaine that they were become as it were one man and had one minde in two bodies it followeth that whatsoeuer was ioyned to one of them ought of necessity to bee ioyned to the other Whereby we see that such as are our friends ought to be also the friends of our friends that is of those that are ioyned vnto vs. Philemon was the friend of Paule and therefore if Onesimus were the friend of one he must needes be the friend of the other Paule and Philemon were as two Brethren if then Onesimus were the Brother of Paule he ought also to be accounted the Brother of Philemon and therefore he would haue him receiued as himselfe It is no true friendshippe when one taketh profession to loue another man and yet hateth him which is his cheefest and dearest friend for if indeede we loued him we would for his sake loue the other that loueth him This we see in the couenant made with Abraham n Iam. 2 23. who is called The friend of God whereby it appeareth o Gen. 12 3. that the Lord promised to be a friend to his friends and an enemy to his enemies Fiftly in the amplification of the conclusion he addeth As my selfe thereby shewing that he would haue him regarded no otherwise then himselfe Whereby we learne that our loue to the Brethren ought not to be in word or in tongue or in shew but in deed in truth and in hart This is Christian loue this was in Christ toward vs and this should be in all of vs one toward another 1. Iohn 3 18. Rom. 12 9. 1 Pet. 4 8. These particular obseruations and sundry others might be stood vpon and farther enlarged but I haue only pointed them out and will leaue them to your farther consideration I wil onely stand vpon the Doctrines that are more principally intended and more particularly purposed which consist in the strength of the reason and in the truth of the words in themselues considered If thou account our things common receiue him as my selfe This reason is drawne from the working cause Where to moue Philemon to graunt his petition he alleadgeth the communion that was betweene them If I bee partaker with thee and thou with mee of the common benefites so that the same thing which is mine is thine and the same thinges which are thine I may account mine thou being my Friend canst not deny to loue and receiue him that is my Friend Indeede if we had onely a priuate respect vnto our selues so that my things were mine owne and not thine and thy things were thine owne and not mine thou mightest deny me my request but seeing thou art another my selfe and deare vnto me as mine owne soule it is a forcible reason to stirre thee vp both to heare and graunt that which I desire and request of thee Doctrine 1. The consideration of the cōmunion one with another ought to moue vs to regard one another From hence we learne that the consideration of the mutuall coniunction that we haue one with another giueth vs an interest one in another and ought greatly to moue vs to heare and regard each other So then the acknowledgement of our communion ought to stirre vs vp to haue such a care one of another that nothing requested vpon good ground should be denyed This is it which the Father of the faithfull calleth vnto Lots remembrance p Gene. 13 8. Actes 7 26 Let not vs striue for we are Brethren So dealeth Moses toward the Israelites he shewed himselfe vnto them as they stroue and would haue set them at one againe saying Sirs ye are Brethren why doe yee wrong one to another The Apostle telleth the Ephesians that they were as one Body and one Spirit they had all one Faith and Baptisme and hope of saluation q Ephe. 4 3 4. and thereupon perswadeth with them to endeuour to keep the vnitie of the Spirit in the Bond of peace Thus he teacheth the Corinthians r 1 Cor. 12 13 By one spirit we are all baptized into one body whether we be Iewes or Grecians whether we be bond or free and haue been all made to drinke into one spirit so that the gifts giuen vnto vs are giuen to profit withall The Apostle Iohn speaketh to this purpose Hereby haue we perceiued loue that he laid downe his life for vs therefore we ought also to lay downe our liues for the Brethren This appeareth in the practise of Christ ſ Iohn 11 11. he said vnto his Disciples Our friend Lazarus sleepeth but I go to wake him vp Where we see he maketh the friendship that was betweene them a motiue to go to Bathania to raise him vp from the dead This is offered also vnto vs in the parable propounded by Christ Which of you shall haue t Luke 11 5. a friend and shall go to him at midnight and say to him Friend lend me three loaues c. declaring thereby that he which hath a friend indeed resteth vpon him and is bold with him in the time of his necessitie Al these places and examples teach vs to be ready to performe all duties of loue and kindnesse one to another seeing there is or ought to be a common fellowship among vs. Reason 1. The reasons of this truth are very plaine and apparant For first of all we haue all of vs one common Father we are al his children we haue one common Maker we are the worke of his hands If then we be so neerely tied so closely linked yoked one to another we ought to haue a great care and respect one of another This is it which Iob considered to moue him to mildnesse toward his Inferiors u Iob 31 15. He that hath made me in the wombe hath he not made him Hath not he alone fashioned vs in the womb Where he sheweth that the Maister and the Seruant haue one and the same Creator so that they are so straightly ioyned together as that they are bound to bee beneficiall one to another To this purpose Salomon saith x Prou. 22 2. The rich and the poore meet together the Lord is the maker of them all that is they liue together in a common fellowship and one standeth in need of another Reason 2. Secondly as we haue one common Father so we haue one head and
the fatherlesse did partake thereof he saw not any perrish for want of cloathing or any poore without couering he made not Gold his hope nor said to the Wedge of Gold Thou art my confidence he was the eyes to the Blinde and the Feete to the Lame he was a Father vnto the Poore and when he knew not the cause he sought it out diligentlie Heere is a worthy president set before vs and a pure Glasse to looke vpon wherein wee may see cleerelie into the Communion of Saints what it is and how it is to be practised Let vs euermore haue this as a Table painted before our eyes and ioyne with our knowledge obedience remembring that God is loue and he that dwelleth in loue dwelleth in God and God in him 18 If he hath hurt thee or oweth thee ought that impute thou vnto me 19 I Paule haue written this with mine owne hand I will recompense it albeit I doe not say to thee that thou owest moreouer vnto mee euen thine owne selfe The order of the words HItherto we haue spoken of the reason in the former Verse Now we come to the remoouing of another Obiection which the Apostle preuenteth in these two Verses which seemed to stand in his way hinder the obtaining of his request Obiection For Philemon might haue said Thou intreatest me for a Seruant that hath beene iniurious and hurtfull vnto mee wasting and misspending my goods and hindering much mine outward estate therefore I must intreate thee to giue me leaue to punnish him according to his deseruings and to recouer as I can my dammage inferred by him How then can I receiue him that hath hurt me and robbed me and is in my debt Answere To this Obiection of Philemon let vs consider the answere of Paule which he doth make two wayes first by a concession then by a correction as we saw before in remoouing the former Obiections By concessions or by way of graunting impute it to me require it at my hands and lay it vpon my accounts This first answer is confirmed strengthned by an humain testimony I Paule haue written it with mine owne hand I haue not set to my marke and vsed the hand of another Obiection This Argument also hath the force of another secret Obiection for Philemon might haue said Thou promisest faire and vndertakest much thou offerest thy selfe to vndergoe the debt in word onely but I require some better assurance and some stronger euidence Answere To this Paule answereth If thou refuse to take my bare word and naked promise thou shalt haue more For behold I doe not request it without script or scrole I haue written it with mine owne hand take this as a Bill or Obligation of my hand-writing that I will well and truelie satisfie content and pay or cause thee to be well and truelie satisfied contented and paid whatsoeuer hee oweth thee Loe I binde my selfe firmelie vnto thee by these presents which shall be thy warrant that the debt shall be fullie and wholie discharged without any fraud or delay The reason may be thus concluded If thou haue a Bill or Band of my hand to shew for his debt then doubt not of the payment of it But thou hast a Bill or Band of my hand Therefore doubt not of the payment of it The correction of his former offer to satisfie the debt followeth which is the second part of the answer Albeit thou owest to me thy selfe As if he should say that which I haue promised to discharge I am ready to performe I will pay thee euerie penny And yet why doe I say I will pay thee Forasmuch as thou art in my debt and owest more to me then he doth to thee he oweth thee a little Siluer but thou owest me thine owne Soule Seeing thou art so much indebted vnto me and that I may iustlie claime from thee and challenge at thy handes thine owne Flesh which art in a speciall regard bound vnto me in all that thou hast it is no great matter for thee to remit a little Money or Money-worth that thou mayst otherwise require from him This is amplified by an Ironicall passing ouer of the matter and yet by a certaine Rhetoricall Elegancy hee vttereth it and calleth Philemon to acknowledge it He seemeth to be willing to forget it and yet he would haue him to remember it A like speech vnto this the Apostle vseth 2 Corinth 9. 4. I haue sent the Brethren that ye may be ready least if they of Macedonia come vnto me and finde you vnprepared we that we may not say you should be ashamed in this my constant boasting Where he sheweth that hauing boasted among the Brethren of the forwardnesse of the Corinthians if they should be found vnprepared he will not say that themselues should be ashamed but he meaneth that they should consider of it and confesse it This reuocation or denying g Which the Rhetoricians call Apophasis to expresse in word that which he was willing another should vnderstand may be thus concluded in forme of an Argument If the case stand thus betweene thee and me that thou owest vnto me thy very selfe Then much more thou maist forgiue thy Seruant this debt for my sake But the case standeth thus betweene thee and me Therefore thou maist forgiue him for my sake The meaning of the wordes Thus much concerning the order of these two Verses in this diuision wherein we see how in answering he argueth and in conuincing he replyeth and proceedeth to defend his cause Now let vs see the meaning of the words so far as they require opening and Interpretation First when he saith If he hath hurt thee or owe thee ought These generall words may be applied to any wrong or damage or In-iustice signifying thereby the Theft that Onesimus had committed but mitigating it by a more gentle tearme For hereby we may gather that he had robbed his Maister as the common fashion and vsual manner of those is that run away Such as are determined to go from their Maisters to betake themselues to their heeles wil not go away empty but purloyne what they can and yet the Apostle diminisheth the enuy of the crime chusing to vse such wordes as eyther betoken a small fault or containe no fault at all Hence it is that he saith If he owe thee any thing For there was not any ciuill contract or bargaine betweene them in as much as there could be no such buying or selling or changing betweene the Maister and his Seruant as the condition of Seruants was in those times whereof we haue spoken before Obiection Wherefore we see that they are deceiued that think it cannot be gathered out of this place or from this Epistle that the Seruant had robbed his Maister both because he is not directlie charged with theft and because the Apostle onely speaketh by supposition If he haue hurt thee Answere I answere
louing and friendly exhortations then by seuere threatnings denounced against them They are indued with Gods spirit which is a Maister to teach them worketh in them the wil and the deed Of vnwilling they are made willing of tough rough hewen they are made pliable and apt for the building of stubborn they are become obedient ready to learn They are as good schollers in the school of Christ who feare more the displeasure of their Maister whom they loue and who loueth them then the suffering of many stripes and strokes giuen vnto them This is a true note to know the disciples of Christ from al others Euill men abstaine from sin for fear of the punishment for feeling of iudgment so that if there were no threatnings denounced no curses annexed no plagues and torments feared they would grow worse and worse quickly fill vp the measure of their iniquity Fourthly we may gather heereby that pollitick order is not ouerthrown by the Doctrine of the Gospell neither is the right and authoritie of Maysters ouer their seruants abrogated by the faith of Christ For Philemon was not an Infidell or vnbeleeuer d Verse 1. but a fellow-helper with Paul yet rule ouer his seruants is not denied him nor taken from him but hee is onely bidden to receiue him curteously and to pardon him mercifully yea Paule as we see doth humbly beseech him that hee may obtaine and retaine his former place and doth not straitly command him to discharge him of his seruice This iurisdiction standeth by good warrant of the Lawes of God and Men but of this wee haue spoken more at large before in the 12. Verse of this Epistle Fiftly we see the Title againe repeated that he giueth to Philemon when he calleth him by the name of his Brother Thus he called him before verse 7. and so he esteemed of Onesimus verse 16. VVhereby wee see that all men made members of Christ and engrafted into his body are become as faith Brethren one to another Thus doth the Apostle call this Onesimus e Col. 4 9. A faithfull a beloued Brother who is as one of them that were chiefe in the church The consideration heereof ought on the one side to pull downe our proud Feathers and make vs equall with them of the lower sort and on the other side to make vs loue one another not with dissimulation but with brotherly loue not in word onely but in truth as members of one body and as brethren of one father Sixtly he continueth his humble supplication for Onesimus which sheweth that they are farre from true repentance that doe excuse or defend or deny their faults and offences For hee that i Prou. 28 13. hideth his sinnes shall not prosper but he that confesseth and forsaketh them shall finde Mercie When Onesimus did see so famous an Apostle of Christ so carefully to intreate for his cause he ought much more to be humbled with a feeling and remembrance of his former offences thereby to mooue the minde of his Maister to gentlenesse and moderation Lastly obserue out of this place that albeit we doubt not to obtaine that which we desire but are assured to inioy that which we ask yet we must deal earnestly and effectually both in regatd of the matter it selfe for in a waighty and necessary cause we ought not to proceed slenderly and in respect of the nature of men who many times are dull to conceiue and slow to graunt that which we craue There is no man so quick of pace but needeth to haue the spurres clapped to his sides now and then No man runneth so swift a pace but sometimes wanteth exhortations consolations reprehensions admonitions threatnings and such like encoragements We haue not yet attained vnto perfection so long as we liue we must be Schollers in Christes schoole and as it were proceed from step to step Thus much breefly touching the generall Obseruations Now let vs come to the handling of the perticuler Doctrines Yea Brother let me obtaine this fruite By this conclusion it may appear that albeit Onesimus had robbed his Maister and run away with a great part of his substance yet hee had spent all as it often falleth out with ill-gotten goods and then being beaten with his owne rod as the k Luke 15 17. prodigall sonne and brought to necessity tasted of the sweete fruite of the Ministery of the blessed Apostle Hence it is that he vrgeth so earnestly and presseth Philemon so exceedingly to remit the debt to forgiue the hurt he had receiued by his naughty seruant as being no way able to satisfy him nor by any means heereafter being likely to satisfy him For if any ability had bin in him to make satisfaction there had bin no place for pardon and remission nor for Paules vndertaking of the debt If we by fraud and stealth by iniury and iniustice possesse the goods of other men we are commanded to make actuall and reall restitution The word of God teacheth vs directly that such as detain the goods of other men l Leuit. 6 1 7. Math. 5 23 24 Numb 5 6 7. are vnmeet for his worship vnfit for his seruice Againe such as with-hold them from the right owners m Eze. 18 15 33. shall die in their sins and not haue pardon before restitution when God hath enabled them thereunto But if we do keep backe from them their owne n August epist ad Maced our repentance is not conscionable but counterfet Heerby it appeareth that Onesimus was not able to pay vnto his Maister such things as he had taken away for otherwise it had bin an vnreasonable request to haue a debt pardoned which might be restored For that which any man doth vniustly detaine is none of his but that persons from whom it is detained So then this being the poore seruants condition that he had left nothing of all that which he had taken away as commonly goods euilly gotten are euilly spent the Apostle craueth pardon Doctrine 1. No mā ought to be eager extreame in exacting debts dues from the poore and needy From hence we learne that wee ought not to bee eager and extreame in vrging and exacting debtes from the poore and needie but rather be readie to remit releeue or at least to forbear what we may and are inabled to do Heerunto commeth the precept deliuered in the law of Moses o Deut. 15 2 Euery creditor shal quit the loue of his hand which he hath lent to his neighbor he shal not ask it again of his neighbour nor of his brother for the yeare of the Lords freedom is proclaimed Where he teacheth that mercy should be shewed to their brethren in necessity that they ought not to be hasty in calling for the things that are due to thē but rather to giue farther day respit So afterward Verse 7. If one of thy Brethren with thee be poore within any of
the little light of Grace and spark of Faith that was in them did so shine and breake out into such a flame that they were not ashamed to professe themselues to be his Disciples when the rest forsooke him they begged his body of Pilate they wrapped it in linnen cloaths with Myrrhe and Alloes and sweet Odours and bestowed the honour of buriall vpon him Thus it falleth out oftentimes that they which are first are last and the last are first We know not what stormes and Tempestes hang ouer our owne heades and what perillous times may come vppon vs we know not what weaknesse wee shall shew in them howe great the Rebellion of the Flesh will be and what comfort wee shall want our selues The Prophet pronounceth him l Psal 41 1. Blessed that iudgeth Wisely of the poore and promiseth that the Lord shall deliuer him in the time of trouble If wee haue any feeling of this happinesse or haue anie Faith in our hearts touching this promise let vs make it manifest by seeking the good of our weake Bretheren It is an hiddeous and horrible cruelty and out-rage by our want of mercy and of feeling their infirmities to hinder the saluation of any one for whom Christ died Hence it is that the Apostle saith Rom. 15 2 3. Let euerie man please his Neighbour in that which is good to edification for Christ also would not please himselfe but as it is Written The rebukes of them that rebuked thee fell on me It cost a great price to Redeeme a soule and to bring it from Death to Life from Hell to Heauen and therefore we must vse all meanes wherewith the Lorde shall enable vs to comfort such as are Comfortlesse by the Comfort where-with wee our selues are comforted of God There is no Man but desireth to finde Peace and Comfort in him-selfe What is this life of ours without it If a man should liue many thousand yeares vpon the face of the earth and haue experience of nothing but sorrow anguish misery and vexation of Spirit so that hee could feele no quietnesse no rest no consolation no tranquility in these daies of his Pilgrimage would he not desire to be out of such a life and preferre death before it Do we then wish for peace And would we finde comfort The greatest comfort in the World that can come vnto vs and refresh and cheere vppe our Soules is to winne and saue Soules Blessed are we if we haue beene Instruments to gaine but one Soule vnto God It is the greatest gaine it is the best Traffique it is the sweetest Marchandize It shall be said vnto vs in the last day Thou good and faithfull Seruant well done thou hast beene faithfull ouer little I will make thee Ruler ouer much enter into thy Maisters ioy Let vs set this before our eyes and consider before hand the price of the reward when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. Vse 3. Lastly seeing God hath such a care of them that are weake that he would not haue them cut off but cared for of all men this ought to serue as a notable encouragement vnto them to labor to grow in Grace and to encrease more and more that they may proceede from strength to strength and so come to a perfect man in Christ Iesus True it is there are degrees of Faith all haue not one measure of Grace and yet the least measure if it be but as a graine of Mustard-seede is of power to saue our Soules If there be wrought in vs by the sanctifying Spirit of God the beginnings and seeds of Faith to wit an humbling of our selues vnder the burthen of our sinnes an acknowledgement and feeling that we stand in neede of Christ an hungring and longing desire to be made partaker of Christ and all his merrits and a flying to the Throne of Grace from the sentence of the Law troubling the conscience trembling vnder the same if these preparations as it it were ploughings vp of the furrowes of our hearts be found in vs God will not cast vs away but make this weake measure of Grace to be effectuall to saluation This is a sweete comfort to all saint hearts that are euery foot like to sinke downe and as it were to giue vp the Ghost This ought to be a forcible meanes to work thankfulnesse in them when in the examination of their hearts they shall finde the least measure of Grace setled in them and know their mercifull Father willing to acknowledge it to accept it and to reward it Not that we should flatter our selues in our wantes or content our selues in our weakenesse to stand alwaies at one stay but heereby to be brought forward in well-doing and to runne the race with all cheerefulnesse that is set before vs. This a notable signe of a true and sincere hart when we feele our strength to come euery day vnto vs and an accesse to be added to our former course For if we desire to be better and better and deale as men that runne in a race who stand not still in the mid-way but presse with might and maine to the marke this is an infallible note of a sincere heart This is it which the Apostle testifieth Phil. 3 14 15. Bretheren I count not my selfe that I haue attained to it but one thing I doe I forget that which is behinde and endeuour my selfe vnto that which is before And follow hard toward the marke for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus It is the goodnesse of God to accept the small measure of Faith that we bring vnto him This graunteth not liberty vnto vs to doe nothing to stirre neither hand nor foote or to content our selues that we go not backward For we must all know and vnderstand that the beginnings of grace are deceitfull and counterfeit vnlesse there be a growth and encrease The kingdome of Heauen is like to q Math. 13 31 33. a graine of Mustard seed which at the first is so small and little that it is scarse discerned but after that it is cast into the ground of a prepared and purified heart it rooteth deeply it groweth speedily it spreadeth exceedingly It is like vnto Leauen which a woman taketh and hideth in three peckes of Meale till all be Leauened The Maister deliuering his Talents vnto his seruants that he had called saith vnto them Occupy vntill I come he doth not bid them hide them in the earth Luke 19 13. Hereunto commeth the exhortation that Paule giueth vnto Timothy who had greatly profited in godlinesse and was brought vp in the vnderstanding of the holy Scriptures from a childe Chapter 1. r 2 Tim. 2 6. I put thee in remembrance that thou stirre vp the gift of God which is thee by the putting on of mine handes The word is a borrowed speach from the fire which must bee euermore kindled and kept with a new supply from going out
A COMMENTARIE VPON THE EPISTLE OF SAINT PAVLE TO PHILEMON Wherein the Apostle handling a meane and low subiect intreating for a Fraudulent and Fugitiue Seruant mounteth aloft vnto God and deliuereth sundry high Misteries of true Religion and the practise of Duties oeconomicall Politicall Ecclesiasticall As Of Persecution for Righteousnesse sake Of Christian Equity and Moderation Of Gods free Grace forgiuing offences Of Houshold Gouernment and priuate possessions Of the Conuersion of Sinners and Communion of Saints Of Faith and good workes Of Friendship and Suretiship Of Prayer and Hospitality Of the Gospell and Almes-deedes Of Gods Prouidence And of the force and fruit of the Ministery ¶ Mouing all the Ministers of the Gospell to a diligent labouring in the spirituall Haruest and the people to a conscionable attending to the word of Saluation as to Gods high and holy ordinance for our conuersion with assured hope of his wonderfull blessing vpon the sound Preaching of the one and the sauing hearing of the other Written by WILLIAM ATTERSOLL Minister of the word of God at Isfield in Sussex Luke 17. 3. ¶ Take heede to your selues if thy Brother trespasse against thee rebuke him and if he repent forgiue him ¶ Printed at London by William Iaggard 1612. TO THE RIGHT WORshipfull Sir THOMAS PELHAM Baronet encrease of GRACE in this life and eternall GLORIE in the life to come AGesilaus King of Lacedemon when one praised a certaine Orator that he could stretch out small matters at large and length and amplifie them with many words both fitly and fully answeared him But I cannot a Plut. Apotheg thinke him a good Shoo-maker that would put a great and wide Shoo vpon a slender foote There be many I feare who considering the shortnesse of this present Epistle and comparing it with the largenesse of my Exposition will bee ready to suppose and surmise through the fore-stalling of their preiudicate Opinion that to a little Citty I haue set vp wide Gates and to a slender body haue fashioned a wide Garment both which are faulty and vnfit But if these partiall Iudges would weigh the cause aright in iust and equal Ballances without the corrupt affections of Malice or Enuy I doubt not but they will rather thinke that to a great Foot I haue fitted and applied a little Shoo. For this Epistle Written to Philemon though it be short in words and comprehended in a little compasse yet if wee regard and respect as we ought to do either the pithy and profound substance of the matter or the cunning or rather curious Art of Paul the writer or the great and glorious Maiesty of God the Endighter which shineth and sheweth it selfe euen in the least things we shal be constrained to confesse that this is a right great Epistle and as b Macrob. comment in Som. Scipion. lib. 2. cap. 5. one saith in another case Verborum parua sed rerum foecunda and the Interpretation of it very breefe both in regard of the Worthinesse of the Argument and the Wisedome of the Spirit that appeareth therein A Diamond may be little yet it is of great price The eye is small yet it seeth farre The heart is little yet is it the life of the body It pleaseth God to shew forth the greatnesse of his power in the least works of his hands And as Merchants that cast Accounts c Vellei Pateri hyster lib. 1. comprize greater summes in shorter roome so doth the Apostle handle most weighty Matters Mysteries within the slender compasse of a few Verses that we should rather weigh the worke then number the words He seemeth no where to reason more exquisitely and to deale more pregnantly then in this place Euery word almost hath the force of a Motiue and seasoning his cause with Wisedome and his doings with Art he so creepeth into Philemons bosome and closeth with him at a suddaine that by no meanes hee can start from him Sometimes by louing Titles Sometimes by Artificiall insinvations Sometimes by fauourable preuenting of Obiections Sometimes by Rhetoricall perswasions Sometimes by earnest Preparations Sometimes by Charitable Mittigations Sometimes by strong Obligations Sometimes by deepe Protestations Sometimes by fit Reuocations and sometimes by forcible Arguments as it were by so many courteous Congies and vehement Adiurations hee dealeth and preuaileth in such sort with him d Liuy histor lib. 45. as Popilius the Romaine Ambassador against Antiochus King of Syria who hauing deliuered his message from the Senate made a circle about him with his rod and charged him to put off all delayes and giue him present answere before hee departed out of it Thus doth the Apostle lay his Net and cast his Chaine about Philemon that he hampereth him fast and holdeth him close before he is aware of any such matter This Philemon to whom the Epistle is directed was a Wealthy man a Cittizen of Colosse the Host of the Church who had a Seruant named Onesimus he hauing pilfered and purloyned some of his Maisters goods fled away from him and the Church that was in his house For whatsoeuer the care and diligence of the Gouernors be lewd persons do oftentimes shroud themselues vnder their Roofe But comming to Rome no better then a fugitiue hee heard Paule preach the Word which is as e Ier. 23 29. an Hammer to breake in pieces the stony hearts of vnregenerate men and f Rom. 1 16. the power of God to saluation to all that beleeue so that he acknowledged the falt he had committed and desired to be reconciled to his Maister whom hee had offended He being thus gained to the Faith g Gualt hom 1. in Philemon and kindely and courteously entreated by Paule Who becommeth all thinges to all men h 1 Cor. 9 22 that by all meanes he might saue some is by him sent back with these Letters of Commendation and intercession for him pleading his cause as it were at the barre effectually crauing pardon for him earnestly and teaching i Gualt hom 2 in Philemon thereby that no man albeit of the lowest sort and condition truly repenting ought to be despised and contemned He went away Vnprofitable he returned Profitable he went away k Gualt hom 5 in Philemon Peruerted he returned Conuerted hee went away a Seruant he returned a Brother Before he heard Paule preach hee was a Theefe but when he had heard him he became as his Naturall Sonne l Phile. ver 10 as he is not ashamed to call him and account him in this Epistle Question Vpon this occasion of this Seruants flying away and be-taking himselfe to his heeles a question may be demanded which also of some m Paraeus in Genes cap. 39. is handled whether it bee lawfull for bond-slaues that are bought with money such as the state of Seruants in those daies for the most part was to runne away from their Maisters forasmuch as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 7 21. If thou mayest be free
vse it rather Where he willeth them to prefer freedom before bondage and to be their owne men rather then anothers and to be at liberty rather then to be Seruants to the Honour and Humour of other men Answere I answere such practise is not to be any wayes allowed vnlesse they be oppressed with beastly and intollerable Tyranny and bee denied meate and maintenance whereby life is to be sustained For then their Maisters that haue payed n Terent. in Andr act 1. scen 1 a price for them should bee defrauded the Couenant or promise that themselues haue passed should be disanulled and themselues beeing taken should thorough their owne misdemeanor be more cruelly handled and kept in harder straighter durance We see when Ioseph was sold by the Treachery of his enuious Brethren and thereupon carried farre from o Genes 39 1 his Fathers house he behaued himselfe with all Modesty and Meeknesse he endured the crosse with all patience being laide in fetters where p Psal 105 18 the Iron entred into his soule he neuer attempted to make a wilfull escape or to break open prison albeit it had been no hard matter to do it least while he thought to auoid the smoake he should fall into the fire like vnto Espops Fish who being in the pan leaped vpon the coales The Israelites when they were holden in q Exod. chap. 1 and 2. Egypt in bondage and great slauery neuer offered to make resistance but waited with all long suffering vntill God sent Moses and Aaron to worke their deliuerance The Doctrine of the Popish School-men alloweth in their deciding of cases of conscience such as are vniustly and wrongfully imprisoned to escape for their liues if they can and according to this determination is the practise of the Papists But this is no better then to resist the Magistrate r Rom. 13 2. vvhich is the Ordinance of GOD Rom. 13. The Apostles being clapt vp in prison neuer sought occasion and opportunity to deliuer themselues vntill God and Man deliuered them and brought them forth and sometimes ſ Acts 5 19. 12 7 8. the Lord sent his Angell from Heauen to open the prison doores and to smite off their chaines and to free them from the rage of their enemies The Apostle Peter warneth Seruants to bee subiect to their Maisters with all feare not onely to the good and courteous but also to such as are froward and he giueth this Reason t 1 Pet. 2 19. For this is thanke-worthy if a man for Conscience toward God endure greefe suffering wrongfully Wee must commit our selues and our causes to God and take heede we vse not vnlawfull meanes to set our selues at liberty Now concerning the counsell and direction of the Apostle he perswadeth no liberty but such as is lawfull euen to free themselues from thraldome by all good and honest meanes onely that God shall put into their heads and hands For when Seruants were bought and sold as Villaines nay as brute Beasts in the Market and while their Maister had power ouer them of life and death hee would haue all such as are vnder the yoak u 1 Tim. 6 1. Count their Maisters worthy of all Honor that the name of God and his Doctrine be not euill spoken of When Paule and Silas were committed to close prison as they sung Psalmes to God x Act. 16 25 26. suddenly there was a great Earth-quake and the Foundation of the Prison was shaken by and by all the doores opened and euerie Mans bandes were loosed so that they might without knowledge or disturbance of any haue escaped and gone their wayes but being committed by authority they remained as lawfull prisoners without euasion These thinges heere briefly touched are largely intreated of in this Commentarie touching the penning whereof to leaue mine owne Labors to the Iudgement of the indifferent Reader I cannot deny but doo ingenuously confesse that I haue benefited my selfe and do desire to benefit others by other Authors both Olde and New whom I haue searched and perused through whose trauailes I haue bin guided and directed in the way and by whose eyes I haue seene into many particulers heere discussed Concerning the ancient Writers that haue the grayest haires I cannot passe ouer Chrysostome and Theophylact both Greeke Writers Concerning the Moderne and later Caluine Beza Illyricus Rolloc Piscator Hunnius which for Honors sake I name remember Among whom some haue written shorter Annotations others haue written fuller expositions and al of them haue yeelded some matter and stuffe toward the erecting of this building Neither is this any shame or reproach to acknowledge y Prolog in Adelph but rather a fruit of Iustice and Equity to giue to euery one his owne Let no man therefore obiect that I haue thrust my Sickle into another mans Corne or put mine hand into another mans Coffer or ploughed my ground with another mans Heifer or set to sale other mens goods as mine owne much lesse vpbraide with contumely and contempt z Horat. lib. 1. epist 3. the saying of the Poet Si forte suas repetitum venerit olim Grex anium plumas moueat cornicula risum Furtiuis nudata coloribus that is If euerie Fowle shall fetch her plumes againe The Naked Crow shall stript of all remaine The Wiseman teacheth a Eccle. 1 9 10 There is no new thing vnder the Sun is there any thing whereof one may say Behold this it is new It hath bin already in the old time that was before vs. The Heathē man saw this could say Nihil est iam dictum quod non sit dictum prius that is There nothing is or saide or seene Before our times that hath not beene The Apostle writing to the Corinthians saith b 1 Cor. 3 22. All things are yours whether it be Paules or Apollos or Cephas c. all are helpes allowed and appointed vnto vs to bring vs vnto Christ It is no small comfort to Trauellers c Bucan praef in Institu Theolog to tread and trace the footsteps of such as haue walked the right way before them In like manner it is no small profit and pleasure to me grounded vpon the euidence of the trueth to haue followed the examples of learned and approoued Authours that haue laboured faithfully in the Vineyard of the Lord and lighted a Candle vnto others This Exposition such as it is I presume to offer vnto your Worship not fearing your Iudgement in the allowance nor doubting of your fauour in the acceptance thereof and therefore grounding my selfe vpon it I regard not the censure of Carpers and Cauillers who haue nothing to grace themselues but by seeking the disgrace of others nor yet any thing to raise themselues a great name but by taking away others good name so that as one saith well d Scaliger exercit in fine Ex alieni nominis ruina gradum sibi faciunt ad gloriam
to the Hebrews exhorteth thē e Heb. 13 17. To obey them that haue the ouer-sight of them and to submit themselues because they watch for their soules as they that must giue accounts that they may doe it with ioy and not with griefe for that is vnprofitable for them Secondly it teacheth them to account them worthy of their hire and wages to esteeme them worthy of double honor It is a grieuous and a f Iam 5 4. crying sin to keep back the labourers wages to diminish it to grudge at it and to take it to thēselues and it calleth for vengeance entreth into the eares of the Lord of hosts The Ministers are the Lords labourers and workmen hired to labour in this Vineyard to sow to plant to water to prune to dig he hath appointed to them their portion for their maintenance if this therefore be detained from them by In-iustice it cryeth vnto God and bringeth oftentimes his curse vpon vs both in spirituall and temporall thinges In spirituall thinges because he dealeth with vs in heauenly thinges as wee deale with his Ministers in earthly thinges If we detaine from them their maintenance hee will detaine from vs his blessing If we be sparing in giuing them their hire he also will be sparing in bestowing vpon them his graces As we sow so we shall reape In temporall things because God promiseth a blessing to such as pay the Lord his due and threatneth to cursse them that spoile him in his Tithes and offerings This we see in the Prophet Malachi c Mal. 3 8 9 10. where God complaineth of their spoiling and defrauding of him he saith Yee are curssed with a cursse for ye haue spoiled me euen this whole Nation bring ye all the tithes into the Store-house that there may be meate in mine House and prooue mee now heere with saith the Lord of Hoastes if I will not open the Windowes of Heauen vnto you and poure you out a blessing without measure If then wee desire the blessings of God to come vppon vs in spirituall graces or in earthly thinges wee ought not to with-hold the Labourers wages that plough vp our fallow groundes and Till our barren hearts It is a worthy exhortation which the Apostle giueth to the Church of the Thessalonians touching their Ministers d 1 Thes 5 12 We beseech you Brethren that ye acknowledge them which labour among you and are ouer you in the Lord and admonish you that yee haue them in singular loue for their workes sake For seeing the true Pastours of Christ bestowe their labour among vs and consume themselues as the Candle to giue light to others wee ought to shew the bowels of loue and compassion toward them wee ought not to bee wanting vnto them in the fruites of our loue And to the Church that is in thine House c. Hitherto wee haue handled the third person written to namely Archippus together with the description of him to be a Souldier of Christ and a Fellowe-Souldier with the Apostle Now wee are to proceede to the fourth and last which yet remaineth which is a ioyning of many persons together for hee addeth to the former The Church which is in thine House He adorneth the Household and Family of Philemon with the Honourable and renowned Title of a Church This serueth to commend as well Philemon the Maister who had instructed his Family in the Doctrine of godlinesse as also the Houshold it selfe which had beene taught and trained vp by him We see heere a priuate House is called a Church For seeing where two or three are gathered together in the name of Christ e Math. 18 20 he is there in the midst of them euery assembly or meeting of the Saints is called not vnfitly by that Name Philemon to his perpetuall commendation had by his care and industry made of his house a little Church instructing guiding gouerning framing and ordering them in the knowledge and feare of God Doct. 8. It is the duty of all householders to teach their Families We learne from hence that all Housholders ought to prepare instruct and order their Families in the knowledge of God and obedience of godlinesse that the house of the Maister may be the Church of God And that it is the duty of all such as haue the gouernment and ouersight of others to see thē taught and instructed in the waies of God it appeareth by many precepts and examples set forth vnto vs in the Scriptures This is it which Moses gaue in charge to the Israelites f Deut. 6 8 11 19. and 4 10 11. Ye shall lay vp these my words in your harts and in your soule and binde them for a signe vpon your hand that they may be as a frontlet betweene your eies And ye shall teach them your Children speaking of them when thou fittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way and when thou lyest downe and when thou risest vp So the Prophet speaking of the great workes of God wrought for the safety of his people the ouerthrow of their enemies declareth g Psal 78 4 5 6. How he establed a testimony in Iacob and ordained a Law in Israell which he commaunded our Fathers that they should teach their Children that the posterity might know it and the Children which should be borne should stand vp and declare it to their Children that they might set their hope on God and not forget the workes of God but keepe his Commaundements This it is which Salomon speaketh Prouer. 22. 6. d Pro. 22 6. Teach a child in the Trade of his way and when he is old he shall not depart from it Heereunto also agreeth the saying of the Apostle e Ephe. 6 4. Ye Fathers prouoke not your Children to wrath but bring them vp in instruction and information of the Lorde Now as we haue seene sundry precepts pressing vs to the performance of this dutie so wee haue many examples of the godly that haue put it in practise and gone before vs in their obedience Abraham the Father of the faithfull is commended of God for his care and conscience this way Gene. 18. 19. where he saith f Gen. 18 19. I know him that he will commaund his Sonnes and his houshold after him that they keepe the way of the Lorde to doe righteousnesse and iudgement Iob is reported to haue sanctified his Children when the daies of their banqueting were gone about g Iob 1. 5. Hee rose vp early in the Morning and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all Cornelius a Captaine of the Italian band feared h Act. 10 2. ●od with all his Houshold The Parents of Timothy his Grand-mother and Mother brought him vp in the knowledge of the Scriptures of a Child i 2 Tim. 1 5. and 3 15. Which are able to make vs wife vnto saluation through the Faith which is in Christ
were filled with the Spirit of God in wisedom in vnderstanding in knowledge and in al workmanship If couetousnes be the cause of placing such blind guids which is as great an ouer-sight as to set a blind man to be a Watch-man or a dumb man to be a Messenger or a Lame man to be a Post or a deafe man to bee a Iudge we must obserue that the Lord compiaineth in the Prophet n Mal. 3 8. that he was spoyled and robbed when the Tithes and offerings were taken away from the true vse and from the right Owners and therefore would visit it with a greeuous plague and heauy iudgement The Iewes in the Gospell alledge it vnto Christ as an Argument of loue to them and their Nation that the Centurian whose Seruant was sicke o Luke 7 5. had built them a Synagogue so that on the otherside they would haue branded him with the note of hating them and their Nation if he had spoiled the Synagogue or taken away the priuiledges belonging vnto it The Prophet Dauid as we heard before would not drinke p 1 Chron. 11 16. of the Water of Bethleem because it was gotten with the danger of some few mens Temporall liues Ought not this to teach a great conscience to euery one to take heede that he doe not eate and drinke that which hazzardeth the Soules and bodies of many of their Brethren and to make them afraid to cloath themselues and their families by leauing the people naked to their enemies to be a pray vnto them and to be destroyed by them It is noted as a thing worthy of note and memory q Possid in vita August 10. 24. in the life of S. Austine that he sharpely rebuked and reproued a Gentleman in his time for re-calling and taking away his owne guift which before he had giuen to the maintenance of his Church how much more would he haue beene offended if he had liued in our daies wherein many are as friendlie and fauourable to the Ministery as the East wind is to the fruits of the earth how much more seuerely would hee haue censured those Caterpillers and Cormorants that take away by iniurious customes and corruptions the maintenance of the Church which neither they nor their Fathers haue giuen The ancient Romaines by the light of Nature as Liuy r Decad. 5. lib. 2 testifieth disliked and checked Qu. Fuluius Flaccus because he had vncouered a part of Iunoes Temple to couer another Temple of Fortune with the same Tiles they tolde him that Pirrhus or Hanniball would not haue done the like and that it had bin too much for him to haue done it to a priuate Cittizens house being a place farre inferior to a Temple and in conclusion forced compelled him to send home those Tiles againe by a publike decree of the Senate Let those things be duely waied and make these men ashamed to come behinde the Heathen who did more to their Idols then they will doe for the honour of the true God If they be not hewen out of Oakes and haue hearts of Flint let them open their eyes and behold the oppressions of the Church and the pulling away in whole or in part the prouision appointed for the Pastor whereby it commeth to passe that many places want the preaching of the Word and many Soules perrish for the want thereof When the Å¿ 1 Sam. 6 3. Philistims sent home Gods Arke from them they sent it not backe empty they returned it not without a guift When Zaccheus repented of his iniurious dealing t Luke 19 8. hee offered to restore foure-folde If these Church-pollers who haue robbed the Church and enriched themselues with the spoiles thereof will not restore that which they haue wrongfully taken and make vp the breaches which they haue wastfully made beeing without the feare of God and any fruit of true Religion they shall in the end receiue iudgement according to their workes and in the meane season their owne consciences shall sting and torment them It goeth indeede hard with the poore Church that is oppressed and it groneth and sigheth vnder the burden of her oppression yet in the end when the Lord cheefe-Iustice of Heauen and Earth shall pronounce sentence against them it shall bee knowne that they who oppresse others do u August epist 211. more hurt themselues then those whom they oppresse in as much as the sorrow and smart of the oppressed haue an ende but the woe and torment of the oppressour shall be euerlasting because he heapeth vnto himselfe wrath against the day of wrath and of the declaration of the iust iudgement of God 11 Which in times past was to thee vnprofitable but now very profitable both to thee and to me 12 Whom I haue sent againe thou therefore receiue him that is mine owne Bowels The order of the Words HItherto we haue heard the cheefe matter of this Epistle propounded and amplified Now let vs see how it is proued and confirmed The matter handled is that Onesimus should be receiued and entertained againe by his Maister This is first strengthned and then concluded To effect his purpose Paule draweth diuers reasons some taken from Onesimus others from the Apostle himselfe From Onesimus in the eleauenth verse because he should find him very profitable and seruiceable which is amplified by the contrary albeit he haue beene vnprofitable and vnthrifty vnto thee The reason may be thus framed If he will proue profitable vnto thee then thou oughtest to receiue him least thou be found an enemy to thine owne profit But he will proue profitable vnto thee Receiue him therefore This hath included in it the force of a close and secret Obiection Obiection For Philemon might obiect I haue found him hurtfull why then should I receiue into my House as a member of my Family that Seruant which will cause more harme then bring profit I haue had experience of the damage that he hath done me what homage he will doe me I know not Answere To this the Apostle maketh a double answer first by graunting then by correcting that which he had graunted and both waies by comparing the time past with the time present the time before he embraced Religion with the time of his conuersion as if he should say true it is and I grant he was once vnprofible to thee for while he was vnfaithfull to God he could do no faithfull seruice vnto thee but why dost thou vrge the time of his ignorance And why dost thou consider so much what he hath beene For now hee is become a new man he hath tasted of the true Religion he hath learned to know God to know himselfe to know thee and to know me To know God his mercifull Creatour to know himselfe a wretched Sinner to know thee his louing Maister to know me his spirituall Father whereas in former times he was ignorant of all these As he regarded not to know
God so hee could not regard thy good but now thou shalt receiue a new Onesimus a new Seruant a new man the same in substance but renewed in quality and altered from the Crowne of the head to the sole of the foote He was not before so vnprofitable but now thou shalt finde him as profitable vnto thee as I haue found him both diligent and dutifull vnto me in my bonds and imprisonment The reasons taken from the Apostle himselfe are of two sorts first from his action of sending him secondly from the Communion and fellowship which Paule had with Philemon The first touching his present sending of his Seruant backe is propounded and then the obiections that might be alleaged are preuented The reason may thus be concluded If I haue sent him backe againe then thou oughtest to receiue him at my hands But I haue sent him backe againe vnto thee Verse 12. Receiue him therefore The meaning of the wordes This is the reason the preuenting of the Obiections is in the three Verses following which come afterward to be considered This is the order of the words it remaineth breefly to vnfolde the meaning Interpretation of thē When he saith of Onesimus That he was in times past vnprofitable he meaneth in the time of his ignorance before his conuersion before his calling by the preaching of the Gospel and before he came to the knowledge and vnderstanding of true Religion By Vnprofitable we must vnderstand leud vntrusty vnfaithfull stubborne dissolute and euery way carnall Againe when he saith But now he meaneth since his conuersion and since a new-birth was wrought in him he is made Profitable that is honest helpfull dutifull faithfull seruiceable so that he opposeth and compareth the State and condition of Regenerate Onesimus with the State and condition of vnregenerate Onesimus and maketh the one contrary to the other When he willeth Philemon to receiue him he meaneth to grace and fauour forgiuing and forgetting his former faults and bad dealing Lastlie when he calleth Onesimus his owne Bowels he meaneth as deare to him as his owne Bowels who although he were a poore Slaue and abiect Seruant by calling and a Fugitiue and Runna-grate by his former condition yet now greatly beloued of the Apostle euen as himselfe As if he should say If thou louest mee account of him no other-wise then thou dost of me entertaine him as mine owne heart receiue him as my Sonne and as if hee were begotten of mine owne bowels Diuers pointes to be obserued In these two Verses containing two reasons to perswade Philemon to receiue his Seruant being made much better by his departure from him wee are to obserue diuers pointes woorthy of our diligent obseruation and of our carefull consideration First we are to marke how the Apostle speaking of the offence of Onesimus and of his former State before his conuersion doth mittigate the greatnesse of his sinne by the mildenesse of the word For whereas hee might haue called him a Theefe a Rogue and a Runna-gate he dooth allay it and expresse it vnder a gentler Name as we shall see better afterward to teach vs that when we haue to do with Sinners that are conuerted vnto Christ truely and haue repented of their sinnes vnfainedly we should deale fauourably with them we should not racke and stretch their offences but after a sort couer them with the cloake of charity and bury them in the Graue of forgetfulnesse Secondly we may obserue how the Apostle speaking of his Conuersion and Regeneration doth set it out to the full not onely that Philemon should be perswaded but that Onesimus might be comforted Wherefore he doth not onely say that he was become profitable but very profitable or exceeding profitable And he addeth not onely very profitable to Philemon but to himselfe euen to them both whereof Paule had experience already Philemon should haue heereafter which teacheth vs to vse all good and louing meanes to strengthen such as are newly conuerted and to remember for their comfort and encouragement such good thinges as appeare to haue beene in them not to diminish or lessen them but fully to expresse and declare them to others that God may be glorified in their calling and they themselues may be strengthned in all well doing Thirdlie we see in the strength of the first reason that men are greatly moued to doe any thing by hope of receiuing profit and commodity It is an Argument not onely to induce prophane and vngodly men to commit wickednesse but to perswade the godly and faithfull to follow holinesse of life Whatsoeuer is offered vnto vs vnder the Title of profit doth carry with it a certaine force and power to lead vs to the practise of it whereby we ought to learne that in moouing men to well doing wee may lawfully lay before them the hope of Heauen and assurance of profit yea all men for their better encouragement in the workes of godlinesse may haue respect to the profit of their labour and the recompence of reward True it is the glory of God and the discharge of our dutie ought to be the principall meanes to moue vs but the consideration of our owne profit should not be neglected Hence it is that the Apostle x Tit. 3 8 9. mouing all that haue beleeued to be carefull to shew forth good workes addeth These thinges are good and profitable vnto men on the other side remoouing them from foolish questions and Genealogies and contentions and brawlings about the Law he concludeth for they are vnprofitable and vaine So the Apostle declaring the wonderfull Faith of Moses who refused to be called the Sonne of y Heb. 11 26. Pharoahs Daughter chose rather to suffer aduersity with the people of God and esteemed the rebuke of Christ greater riches then the treasures of Aegipt sheweth that he had respect to the recompence of the reward Fourthly Paules sending is made a reason for Philemons receiuing and he concludeth that he is to bee receiued of his Maister because hee is sent backe by Paule himselfe For seeing Onesimus returned not of his owne accord or through compulsion of others or through danger of law or through feare of punishment but by the purpose and appointment of Paul and came not againe empty but laden with letters of commendation it serueth highly to set forth the matter To present himselfe in this sort before his Maister by the direction and aduise of Paule was more then if he had returned of his owne head and it was more effectuall to mooue Philemon to receiue him which teacheth vs that the authour and perswader of any iourney or embassage doth serue greatly to commend the iourney and to set forth the embassage it selfe and therefore a message sent from a faithfull and good man is not lightly to be passed ouer or rashly to bee contemned or vnreuerently to be receiued of him to whom it is sent Lastly we are to obserue the tender and inward affection