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A89915 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of writers, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seuen yeeres weeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1617 (1617) STC 4217; ESTC S107140 703,811 512

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the renuing of the minde with knowledge and of the whole man with the image of Christ v. 10. Verse 10. Thirdly God is no accepter of persons without grace he will respect none and with it he will disregard none for with him there is neither Graecian nor Iew circumcision nor vncircumcision Barbarian Scythian bond free Christ is all in all things v. 11. Verse 11. Hitherto of the second thing needfull to holy life viz. the mortification of vices The third followes viz. the exercise of holy graces and duties from v. 12. to 18. and here the rules concerne either 1. the matter of holinesse v. 12. to 16. or the meanes of holinesse v. 16. or the end of holinesse v. 17. For the first he giues in charge nine graces but first proposeth three motiues 1. the election of God as the elect of God 2. their sanctification holy 3. the loue of God to them and beloued The graces are of three sorts some of them haue their greatest praise in prosperitie viz. mercy kindnesse meeknes humblenes of minde some of them concerne the times of aduersitie principally viz. long-suffering and clemencie in forbearing and forgiuing v. 12.13 Verse 12.13 Some of these graces ought to raigne at all times these are three First Loue which is set out both by the dignitie of it aboue all put on loue and by the vse of it it is the bond of perfectnesse v. 14. Verse 14. Secondly Peace amplified by the author of God by the power of it let it rule and by the seat of it in your hearts to which he exhorts by two reasons 1. from their vocation to which ye are called 2. from their mutuall relation as members of one body v. 15. Verse 15. The third is thankfulnes or amiablenesse v. 15. Thus of the matter of holinesse The meanes followes which is the word The exhortation to the vse of the word 1. concernes the word in generall 2. the Psalmes in speciall For the first he propounds three things 1. the author of it the word of Christ 2. the manner of entertaining the word let it dwell in you plenteously in all wisedome 3. the end or vse it should be put to viz. to teach in what we know not and to admonish in what we doe not The second part concernes the Psalmes in particular where he sets downe the sorts Psalmes Hymnes and spirituall songs and the right manner of singing of Psalmes singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. Thus of the meanes of holines v. 16. Verse 16. The third thing is the end which is considered two waies First Verse 17. as the end of intention that wee aime at and so hee exhorts to it in these words whatsoeuer yee doe in word or deed doe all in the name of the Lord Iesus 2. as the end of consummation that finisheth our workes and so they must giue thankes to God euen the Father by him And thus of the rules of holy life that concerne all men as they are Christians Now follow particular rules fitted for particular callings and that in the familie In the familie there are three couples Wiues and Husbands Children and Parents Seruants and Masters and to these he giueth rules distinctly First the Wiues dutie is laid downe and inlarged laid downe in these words Wiues be subiect to your Husbands inlarged first by a reason it is comely 2. a limitation in the Lord v. 18. Verse 18. Secondly The Husbands duty is propounded 1. by exhortation Husbands loue your Wiues 2. by dehortation be not bitter to them v. 19. Verse 19. Thirdly The dutie of children is laid downe in these words Children obey your Parents and amplified 1. by the extent in all things 2. by reason for this is well pleasing to the Lord v. 20. Verse 20. Fourthly The duty of Parents is exprest by dehortation Verse 21. in these words Parents prouoke not your children to anger and confirmed by a reason taken from the ill effect lest they be discouraged Fifthly In setting downe the duty of Seruants there is first the exhortation v. 22.23 the reasons v. 24.25 Verse 22.23.24.25 The exhortation is both briefly laid downe in these words Seruants be obedient to them that are your Masters and explicated 1. by prouisoes about their obedience 2. the manner how they must obey The prouisoes are two one restraines Masters they are their seruants but according to the flesh the other extends the dutie of seruants they must obey in all things The manner how they must obey is set downe first negatiuely not with eye-seruice not as men-pleasers secondly affirmatiuely and so they must obey 1. With singlenes of heart 2. With feare of God 3. Heartily as to the Lord. The reasons are two first from the certaine hope of reward from God v. 24. Secondly from the certaine vengeance of God vpon them that doe wrong THE METAPHRASE vpon the third CHAPTER VERSE I. IF ye then be risen vvith CHRIST seeke those things that are aboue vvhere CHRIST sits at the right hand of GOD. HItherto you haue beene taught exhorted and dehorted in matters that concerne faith and opinions Now it followeth that I should stirre you in such things as concerne your carriage both generall as you are Christians and particular as you are of seuerall conditions of life And the first thing you should be carefull of in the right order of your liues is to raise vp your thoughts and affections to the studie and contemplation of heauenly things for hereby you doe effectually proue that you are risen vp in the first resurrection with IESVS CHRIST And heauenly things are aboue and therefore for their worthinesse fitting your contemplation and for their difficultie they cannot be reached without seeking and diligent studie and inquirie Besides is not CHRIST aboue your Head and Sauiour and where should your hearts be but where your treasure is yea where CRIST is there in singular glorie aduanced aboue all men and Angells next in glory and power to GOD himselfe ô then how should your mindes runne vpon him and to contemplate of these things is to ascend after him Verse 2. Set your affections on things vvhich are aboue and not on things vv ch are on the earth And when I exhort you to seeke the things that are aboue my meaning is that you should studie about them and with all wisedome raise vp not your thoughts onely but your affections also to the loue of heauenly things and this you cannot doe vnlesse you withdraw your affections from things on earth whether they bee traditions or worldly things or the workes of the flesh Verse 3. For ye are dead your life is hid vvith CHRIST in GOD. Now there are excellent reasons by which I may briefly stir you vp hereunto both from the consideration of your present estate in this world and from the meditation of your future condition in the day of CHRIST
a quarrell to another euen as CHRIST forgaue you euen so doe yee Verse 14. And aboue all these put on Loue vvhich is the bond of perfectnesse Verse 15. And let the peace of God rule in your harts to the vvhich also yee are called in one body and be thankfull And sixtly Clemencie which stands in two things in forbearing and forgiuing Forbearing in respect of wrongs and infirmities and forgiuing freely one another And this forgiuing must be extended to euery man and it must be as Christ forgaue vs and that is though they be our inferiors though they haue done vs great wrong so as we forget aswel as forgiue But seuenthly aboue all other be sure you cloth your selues with loue for this will knit vs together perfectly and by this all the Saints and all the graces of the Saints tend vnto perfection Eightly Get the peace that peace I meane that GOD only giues and let it rule and preuaile with you and if you cannot be at peace in your life yet let it be in your hearts still how vnreasonable soeuer men be and the rather should you be carefull hereof both because you are called of GOD to it and besides you are all members of the same body Lastly adde vnto all these amiablenes and thankfulnes one to another And thus of the matter of holinesse Now I must also stirre you vp to a due respect of the meanes of holines which is the word Verse 16. Let the vvord of CHRIST dvvel in you richly in all vvisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymmes and spirituall songs singing vvith grace in your hearts to the LORD And so both the word in generall and the Psalmes in speciall For the word in generall you must remember it is the word of CHRIST both as the subiect and the cause of it and you should neuer be satisfied till you grow familiar and plentifull in it through the daily vse of it both in your hearts and houses also and that with all iudgement and discretion not seeking or vsing it coldly peruersly carnally or indiscreetly and this word you must imploy both to teach you and one another what you know not and to admonish you and other for what you doe not And in speciall be carefull of the Psalmes remembring that they also are the word of CHRIST and the rather considering the exquisite variety of sweet matter in them but in singing obserue these rules First exercise the graces of the heart according to the matter of the Psalme Secondly doe it with attention and vnderstanding Thirdly respect GODS glory in it and his holy presence Lastly be carefull of the end of all your actions Verse 17. And vvhatsoeuer yee shall doe in vvord or deede doe all in the name of the LORD IESVS giuing thanks to GOD euen the Father by him Verse 18. Wiues submit your selues to your Husbands as it is comely in the LORD Verse 19. Husbands loue your Wiues and be not bitter vnto them Verse 20. Children obey your Parents in all things for this is vvell-pleasing to the LORD Verse 21. Fathers prouoke not your children to anger lest they be discouraged Verse 22. Seruants be obedient vnto them that are your Masters according to the flesh in all things not vvith eye-seruice as men pleasers but in singlenesse of heart fearing GOD. Verse 23. And vvhatsoeuer yee do do it heartily as to the LORD not vnto men Verse 24. Knovving that of the Lord ye shall receiue the revvard of the inheritāce for ye serue the Lord Christ Verse 25. But he that doth vvrong shall receiue for the vvrong that he hath done there is no respect of persons both that all be done to the glory of GOD in CHRIST all I say both in word and deed beginning with calling on the name of CHRIST and ending with the sacrifice of thanksgiuing which must be offered vnto GOD in the mediation of CHRIST aswell as your prayers Thus I haue briefly laid before you the rules that concerne holinesse as you are Christians in the generall Now I thinke it meete to propound some duties that are more particular and I will onely instance in the familie and there I begin with Wiues whose word is be subiect an epitome of their duty and a thing GOD most stands vpon and which Women most faile in And great reason for here lieth the true comelinesse and beauty of a Wife t is not in her face and garments but in her subiection to her Husband And the rather should you be subiect because GOD hath prouided you shall not be pressed but in the LORD not in any thing against the word Now for Husbands their word is loue as that GOD most stands vpon and they most faile in And in particular I giue them warning to looke to one vice aboue many and that is that they be not bitter to their Wiues And for children their word is obedience and they must know that GOD so inioynes it that he will haue it done throughly they must obey in all things and submit their wills and desires to their Parents For this is a thing that will not only keepe and increase their Parents loue to them but it is also wondrous well-pleasing to GOD himselfe Parents also must take heed they sin not against their children not only by too much indulgence but also by prouoking them and that not onely to sin but to passion by vniust precepts or contumelies and disgraces or hard vsage or immoderate correction and that as for other reasons so lest they be discouraged either from loue of well-doing or of obeying them You that are Seruants must also with great care attend your duties your word also is obedience and the rather because your Masters haue authoritie but onely ouer your flesh not ouer your consciences but in your obedience see to it it be in all things that concerne the subiection of the outward man But let not your seruice be onely when your Masters looke on or fitted onely to please men but obey euen in the singlenesse of your hearts as in GODS presence where you should feare to displease Neither let what you do be done out of a slauish feare but from the heart with all willingnes as doing therein seruice to GOD and not to men only Knowing infallibly that if men would not reward you for your paines faithfulnes yet GOD will who will not vse you as seruants but prouide for you as sons and heires to him For in all this labor GOD accounts you as the seruants of Christ and will reward all as if all had bin done to him And contrariwise he that doth wrong be he Master or Seruant shall receiue of the LORD for the wrong that he hath done for GOD is no accepter of persons CERTAINE OF THE choisest and chiefest points handled in the third CHAPTER A Threefold resurrection fol. 2. How a man may know whether he be risen with Christ fol.
Thirdly what is not forbidden in these words Parents prouoke their children first by word secondly by deed 1. By word three waies First How parents prouoke their children both by vvords and deeds by burthening them with vniust and vnmeet precepts Secondly by pursuing them with contumelious words especially when they be alwaies chiding and rating of them Thirdly by disgracing of them to others before their face or behinde their backes 2. By deedes fiue waies First by carelesse education for though children find not fault with this at first yet when they come to be of yeeres and finde their owne vnfitnesse for calling or society c. then they fret against their parents neglect Secondly by discourtesies and vnkind vsage of them when they be grown to be of yeeres Thirdly by vniust dealing about their marriages when either they restraine them of marriage when they haue a calling to it and a liking of meete person and thus they prouoke them to incontinency or when they compell them to marry when they haue no calling nor liking and thus they prouoke them to discontent Fourthly by indiscreet and immoderate passion and seuerity in correcting them Fifthly by vniust restraints either of present necessaries of food and raiment Math. 7.9.10 1 Tim. 5.8 Prou. 13.22 or in not saying vp for them 1 Cor. 12.14 Secondly that parents may not prouoke their children 1. They must begin betimes to teach them their duties for ignorance is waiward 2. they must sow the seedes of piety and godlinesse in their hearts as they draw out reason by degrees so there is a conscience euen in children as well as reason if it were informed and conscience would make them not onely religious to God but dutifull to parents 3. They must not giue their children too much libertie at the first for if they doe then will iust restraint afterwards be prouocation 4. They must pray for them to God many pray for children and so for their being that afterwards neuer pray to God to guide their hearts and so for their well being 5. They must in generall striue to teach or guide them by incouragements and allurements correction is not as diet but as Phisicke and thus recreation is not to be denied them Zach. 8.5.6 If nothing else will restraine passion in children they must impose silence vpon them he that imposeth silence on a foole mittigateth anger Prou. v. 26. 3. This dehortation hindreth not but that parents may 1. Rebuke their Children 2. Correct them Prou. 13.24 and 22.15.17 and 29.15.17 and 23.13 and 25.14 and 19.18.19 Thus of the dutie Children viz. All children sonnes and daughters in law as well as naturall children and these are prouoked 1. By groundlesse iealousies and suspitions testified by secret listning questioning and enquiring enuiously after euery thing they do or say 2. By suffering seruants to vexe or molest them 3. By euill reports of them 4. By giuing euill counsell or reporting of faults to the Sonne against his wife or to the daughter against her husband to make debate is ill in any but much worse in parents This of the parties to whom they owe this dutie Lest they be discouraged the reason followes There are many reasons why parents should be carefull by all meanes to keepe anger out of their Children 7. Reasons to preuent anger in children 1. Wise men and godly men can scarce gouerne this affection without sinning Psalm 4. much lesse children 2. Anger is a great prouoker of Gods anger it breedes a guiltinesse of Gods anger Math. 6.3 It lets in the Deuills Eph. 4.26 and vsually Sathan in the times of these passions sowes the most hellish seeds and stirs most impious thoughts in them 4. It may bring them into great mischiefe in time Prouerb 28.18 5. It is a great let to sound instruction and knowledge Eccles 7.11 Prouerbs 14.29 6. The angry person is vsually suspitious and so vnfit for society with men Prou. 1.22.24 yea it is a great hinderance both to the profit of the word Iam. 1.21 and the power and successe of praier 1 Tim. 2.8 7. Some times this rage in young persons is not to bee cooled but with bloud as in Caine. But to omit the reasons here parents must not prouoke their children lest they be discouraged Concerning discouragement in generall we must know that it is a great sin to discourage others and a great hurt to be discouraged the people must not discourage their Teachers Heb. 13.17 those that are in authoritie must not discourage such as are faithfull and desirous to approue their feare of God and to discharge their duties Gouernours in the familie must not discourage seruants or children in their good beginnings and desires after good things 1 Thes 5.14 Againe this is a Christian mercy compassion to comfort and incourage the feeble and lastly Gods fainting children should be admonished to be of good comfort and to strengthen their weary knees 2 Cor. 13.11 Esay 36.3.4 Concerning the discouragement of children Christian parents should be carefull for they may be discouraged 1. From the seruice of God when they shall see carnall men vse their children better then they that make such a profession of piety 2. From the capacitie and desire after the vndertaking of the knowledge or exercise of great things discouragement breakes their spirits and makes them pusillanimous 3. From the hope to please and so from the confidence of the parents loue and then at length from the very meanes of pleasing either by honour or obedience This of the duty of parents and children The third couple in the familie are seruants and masters The duty of seruants is set downe verse 22.23.24.25 VER 22. Seruants be obedient to them that are your Masters according to the flesh in all things IN all the words that concerne the dutie of Seruants I obserue 1. An exhortation vers 22.23 2. Reasons vers 24.25 The exhortation is two waies to be considered first as it is breifly set down here is first the parties exhorted Seruants Secondly the duty wherewith they are charged be obedient thirdly the persons to whom to your masters 2. Secondly as it is explicated in the explication I consider 1. The prouisoes about their obedience 2. The forme or manner how they must obey The prouisoes are either for limitation to curbe Masters they are to obey according to the flesh the soules and consciences are not in bondage to men or for extent to seruants they must obey in all things The manner how they must obey is set downe 1. Negatiuely not with eye seruice 2. Not as men pleasers 2. Affirmatiuely with singlenesse of hart 2. with feare of God 3. heartily as to the Lord. The reasons are 1. from hope of reward wages from God v. 24. 2. From the certain vengeance of God vpon them that do wrong v. 25. This is the order of the words From the generall consideration of all the words I obserue 5. things 1. That
seruants are to be instructed out of the word 5. Things generally obserued which reprooues Masters that restraine seruants from hearing the word in Gods house and open not the booke of God to them in their owne houses 2. A question may here be mooued why should the duety of seruants be thus largely in so many words set downe Answ 1. Because vsually men shew lesse compassion to seruants therfore God takes the more care of them many men will haue some care of their children to see them taught in some manner but their seruants they wholly neglect Therefore God who is a Father to seruants as well as children prouides large instruction and comforts for seruants if they will come to his booke to be taught 2. The carefull Apostle saw that in the first conuersion of men from Gentilisme to Christianitie there was greatest danger of disorder scandall in seruants partly out of wearinesse of their bondage and seruile condition partly because men would lesse spare to tell of their faults therefore the Apostle as most fearefull of them spends many words in the teaching and incouraging of them 3. We may note here the candor of the Apostle he doth freely deliuer his mind in the behalfe of seruants with a full vent of words with great care without holding backe any thing that belongs vnto them He was not of the mind of most Preachers now adaies that hold the discourse of family duties especially of seruants too base a subiect for their wits and learning to be imploied in neither was the Apostle of the humour of Lawyers that seldome speake much but for great men or when they may haue great gifts the Apostle speaks as much for a seruant that could do nothing for him as for the Masters 4. In laying downe his speech to seruants he both teacheth and comforteth them but for order he first teacheth them and as any is more ignorant this course is more needfull to be held the common people should be in this manner dealt withall they must first be rebuked conuinced exhorted taught and then meet comforts to be applied and not before Lastly the scope and drift of the Apostle in all these words is to keepe Seruants in order and that first to hold seruants in obedience that none vnder colour of liberty in Christ should breake vp their subiection to their Masters He was no Anabaptist Secondly to meet with the faultie obedience of such seruants as were resolued to stay in seruice Hee meeteth here with fiue faults in seruants Fiue faults in Seruants 1. The first fault in Seruants is halfe seruice or to obey in what they list this he correcteth when he saith in all things 2. The second fault is eye-seruice 3. The third fault is prophanesse most seruants neuer respect piety and Gods feare but onely to please their Masters this hee meeteth with when he saith not as men pleasers but fearing God 4. The fourth fault is hypocriticall seruice this he meeteth when he addeth in singlenesse of heart 5. The fifth fault is basenesse of minde and discouragement this he would preuent in the two last verses Thus of the generall Seruants The Seruants in the Apostles time were for the most part bondslaues bought and sold as beasts and their Masters were Infidels and cruell to them and yet many of these Seruants were conuerted to the faith of Christ Where we may learne that mens slaues may be Gods seruants hee hath his elect among these the deare children of God in this world may bee abased to most vile misery and a most seruile condition The Vses are First to shew that felicitie is not in outward things for Gods seruants that had attained the chiefe good yet were in most base condition in respect of the things of this life Secondly to teach vs patience in lesser crosses whatsoeuer thou art yet thou art not a bondslaue therefore bee patient such as haue beene deare in Gods sight haue beene worse vsed then thou art Thirdly to teach vs compassion to the baser sort of men for Gods elect may be among these Lastly this is a great comfort to the abiect But howsoeuer bought seruants were most vsuall in the Apostles time yet hired seruants were vsed then too and are here meant aswell as the other yea all seruants though they were nobles seruing in Princes Courts are tied to the duties generally here required And as any seruants haue more knowledge and doe professe sinceritie in religion they are the more tied to bee carefull seruants to men they should not onely be better men and women but better seruants also Thus of the parties exhorted Be obedient Here I consider 2. things 1. That they must obey they must approue themselues to their Masters not by wearing their cloth or cognisance or by words and complements but by painefull and carefull obedience 2. How they must obey and that may be opened thus First with reuerence with all honour 1 Tim. 6.1 both internall 4. Things in the manner of seruants obedience with high account and estimation of their Masters and externall with reuerent words and behauiour Secondly with all feare 1 Pet. 2.18 Ephes 6.5 and this they should shew first by auoiding what might offend Secondly by not answering againe Thirdly by a holy endeauour to please them Tit. 2.9 Thirdly with subiection to rebukes 1 Pet. 2.11 2. to correction 1 Pet. 19.20 3. to their restraints first in respect of diet they must not be their owne caruers Secondly in respect of place they must keepe the bounds of the Familie and not at their pleasure be gadding out either by night or day vpon any pretence without leaue Thirdly in respect of companie they must bring none into the Family that are lewd persons or of what sort soeuer against the liking of the Master nor may they keepe company abroad to the iust offence of their Masters Fourthly in respect of apparell though they haue neuer so good meanes yet they must bee attired as becommeth Seruants And this subiection also they should shew in a ready acknowledgement of their fault when they vnderstand it It is a great fault in Seruants that though they vnderstand yet they will not answere First acknowledge and giue glory to God and submit themselues to their masters Pro. 29.19 4. Withall good faithfulnesse Tit. 2.10 this faithfulnesse is required 1. In respect of the goods of the family and thus they must shew their faithfulnesse in not daring to purloyne the least penny from their Masters no pickers Tit. 2.10 2. It is not enough that they are true but they must bee thriftily carefull to see that nothing be spoiled or lost or miscarry any way by their default and negligence this was the great testimonie of Iacobs faithfulnesse Gen. 31.36 2. In respect of secrets they must keepe the secrets of the Master and of the family yea and of the trade and calling to 3. In respect of the businesse of the family and here
their faithfulnesse standeth in two things 1. In diligence of labour hee is not a faithfull seruant that eats the bread of Idlenesse as many seruing-men do that can tell of no calling but attendance 2. In trustinesse and in this seruants must be faithfull two waies first in their care to see their Masters directions executed in the familie as if they had beene present secondly in their speedy dispatch of busines abroad a sloathfull messenger is an exceeding prouocation to them that send him and it is a wretched fault in seruants when they are sent forth of the familie about businesse they cannot find the way in againe in any due time Thus of the dutie to which they are exhorted To them that are your Masters They must be subiect and obedient to all Masters indefinitely without difference of Sexe and so to the wife or widdow 1 Tim. 5.14 Pro. 31. or of condition they must bee obedient to the poorest as well as the rich Thus of the laying downe of the exhortation The explication followes and first of the prouisoes According to the flesh These words may be referred to Masters and then the sense is this that seruants must be obedient euen to such Masters as are fleshly and carnall men they must obey though their Masters be Ethnikes or prophane persons it is a great praise for a seruant to men to bee Gods seruant also but it is a greater praise to be a religious seruant of an irreligious Master to feare God in a prophane house 2. To seruants and so they are a limitation they are subiect onely in respect of their flesh and bodies and so here is two things to be obserued The one exprest the bodies of seruants are in the power and at the disposing of the Masters and therefore seruants must learne to subiect their flesh to their Masters both commands restraints and corrections The other implied the soules of seruants are not in the power and at the disposing of Masters their spirits are free nor Master nor King can command the conscience Vse is first for reproofe of such seruants as giue more to their Masters then is due thou oughtest to be of the same calling trade labour c. that thy master is of but thou art not bound to be of the same religion or humour with thy Master It is a great fault not to giue the body to thy Master but a great fault also to giue both body and soule to bee at his disposing both are extreames Secondly should seruants feare their Masters because they haue power ouer the flesh how much more should we feare God that hath power to destroy both soule and flesh in hell Math. 10. Thirdly this may be a great comfort to a seruant thy soule is as free as the soule of him that sits on a throne thy seruice in the flesh derogates nothing from the libertie of Christ in thy heart Thy best part is free In all things Seruants must obey in all things euen in things that bee against their credit profit liking ease c. There is a great sturdinesse in many seruants either they will not doe somethings required or not at the time when they are bidden or not in the manner but as they list these courses are vile and here condemned Ob. Obiect But vnlawfull and vnmeet things are required Sol. I answer that in cases of this nature three rules are to be obserued by inferiours First If the matter required be only inexpedient and vnmeet thou must obey neither doth this rule let but that seruants or inferiours may vse all humble and lawfull meanes to preuent vnmeet things Secondly thou must be sure it be sinne that thou refusest thou must not disobey vpon conceit or coniecture nor vpon thine owne humour and opinion but it must appeare by the word of God to bee a sinne or else thy coniectures are no ground of disobedience if thou must needs doubt on both sides it is better doubt and obey then doubt and disobey Thirdly when it is apparant to be impious and sinnefull that is required yet thou must looke to the manner of disobedience thou must yeelde thy selfe to obey by suffering yea it is a wretched fault in seruants or inferiours that are vrged to vnlawfull things to refuse with sturdie and insolent and prouoking words or behauiour God frees thee from disobedience in act but he frees thee not from reuerence and from an holy estimation and humble demeanour The vse is for great reproofe of seruants both indiscretion and stubbernes and withall it chargeth masters they must not require their seruants to lie and sweare in their shops onely to please and profit them nor may they make their seruants breake Gods Sabbaths to satisfie their wils Obiect But are they not required to obey in all things Answ They are but before he saith according to the flesh in labour not in sinne and after he saith they must so please men as they feare God too Thus of the prouisoes The forme of their obedience is set downe First negatiuely not with eye-seruice not as men pleasers Secondly affirmatiuely 1. With singlenesse of heart 2. Fearing God 3. Heartily Eye-seruice Some take it thus not with outward seruice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not onely doe the Labour of the body but bring the care prouidence affection of the heart or thus be obedient to your Masters and let not your eye bee onely vpon your Masters but vpon God the great Master of all Masters and men But I thinke the proper meaning of the word is not with eye-seruice that is not onely in the presence of your Masters not onely when their eye is vpon them so that he meets with the wretched faultinesse of such seruants as when their Masters backes are turned neglect their labour fall to loitering or get them out of the doores or which is worse fall to wantonnesse drunkenesse filching smiting of their fellowes and quarrelling these seruants shall haue their portion at the day of Christ Math. 14.48 and if eye-seruice be concondemned what shal become of such seruants as are not good no not so long as their Masters are by them Not as men pleasers Obiect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is it a fault for seruants to please their Masters Answ No it is not for they are commaunded to please in all things Tit. 2.9 But two things are here condemned First so to please men as neuer to care for pleasing God so to attend a corporall seruice as not to care for the sauing health of their soules this is prophannesse Secondly such seruants are here taxed as seeke by all meanes to please their masters but not to profit them such are they that are flattering soothing persons that serue their Masters onely with faire words but else are emptie persons such or rather worse are they that apply themselues to their Masters humors to feed them with tales or praising their ill courses and counsels or executing their sinfull
though he vsed it not hee is not tossed with distracting cares 7. He cannot abide mixtures in the worship of his God he is neither Idolatrous nor superstitious nor humerous 8. Good successe in grace and innocency makes him more humble and fit to grieue for sinne and feele the waight of it he struggles as much against spirituall pride as against other sins 9. He doth not allow himselfe to murmure nor repine either through infidelity at God or through grudging enuy at men or distresse himselfe with vaine feare about how he shall doe hereafter 10. He is harmelesse desirous so to liue as he may wrong none in worldly matters nor offend any in matters of religion 11. He makes conscience of lesser sinnes as well as greater this is his godly purenesse 12. He is blest of God after some progresse in piety with two singular fauours First he discerneth things that differ Secondly he hath the power quietnesse and ioy of a good conscience Here also may be gathered negatiue signes they are not single hearted First that are hypocrites taken vp about the gilding of the outside Secondly that will serue God but at some times 3. That are skilfull in sinne to commend it or impudent to defend deny or extenuate it Fourthly that are of a guilefull and fradulent disposition Fifthly that are eaten vp with worldly cares Sixthly that are scandalous yea some of Gods children may hang downe their heads vnder the feare that their hearts are not so single as were meete by reason of their spirituall pride the raging muddinesse of iudgement and the vnrest of the heart and conscience Thus of singlenesse of heart in Gods seruants Mens seruants shall approue themselues to be single hearted 8. Signes of a single hearted seruant 1. If they can honour and obey poore Masters as well as rich 2. If they can be carefull to serue and profit with all heedfulnesse and loue froward Masters as well as the courteous 3. If they can obey for conscience of Gods command though they haue no hope of reward from men or conceit nor feare of shame or punishment 4. If they be as good within as without serue with pure intention 5. If they will bee diligent in the Masters absence aswell as in his presence 6. If they will be true in the least penny not touch their Masters goods to purloine it though they might secretly helpe themselues 7. If they will labour when they might be at rest 8. If they will restore what they haue ill gotten or if they be not able will humble themselues by acknowledgement though none were able to accuse them Vse is for incouragement to all seruants and Iourney-men to get and expresse this vprightnesse and singlenesse of heart for better is the poore that walketh in his singlenesse of heart then he that abuseth his lips and is a foole Prou. 19.1 Yea we should all take heed that Satan beguile vs not from the simplicitie that is in Christ Iesus Thus of singlenesse of heart Fearing God The second thing required in the manner of their obedience in the feare of God Of the feare of God in seruants The feare of God in a Seruant must haue foure things in it First a not guiltinesse of the common vices of seruants as swearing whooring stealing gaming c. Secondly they must feare Gods presence euen doe their businesse faithfully not because the eye of their Master but of God is vpon them this is one part of their feare of God Thirdly they must pray daily to God for their Masters and the family and for good successe vpon their owne labours this prooued that Abrahams seruant feared God Gen. 24. Fourthly they must be religious in the generall duties of piety to God as well as in the particular duties of seruice to their Masters they must so serue men as they feare God also Vses First for Seruants and then for Masters Seruants must learne to doe all their labour fearing God euen that God 1. That set them in that calling 2. Whose eies alwaies behold how they discharge their duty in their calling and in as much as the feare of God is made the ground here of other duties they should learne to be the better seruants to men because they feare God Masters also must learne first what seruants to chuse not such onely as will doe their worke but such as feare God also and if they haue failed in that they should labour now to beget and nurse the feare of God in the seruants they haue for Gods feare would make their seruants more dutifull to them besides the reason why their seruants fall to whoring stealing vnthriftinesse c. is because the feare of God is not in them What masters must doe to get the feare of God into their seruants Quest But what should Masters do that their seruants might feare God Answ Foure things First they should pray and read the Scriptures in their houses and Chatechise their seruants Secondly they should bring them to the publike preaching of the word Thirdly they should giue them good example themselues Fourthly they should restraine them from prophane company and incourage them and allow them liberty at conuenient times to conuerse with such as feare God Thus of the feare of God VER 23. And whatsoeuer ye doe doe it heartily as to the Lord and not vnto men THe third thing required in their obedience is that they doe it heartily in this Verse is the manner of the dutie and the inducement thereunto Heartily Ex animo The obedience of Seruants should be a hearty obedience the Apostle will not haue only feare of God but loue of the Master their obedience must beginne at heart not at hand or foot if the heart be not with their obedience the Master may haue their labour and that he hath of the Oxe but such seruants lose their labour Quest What is it to obey Ex animo Answ It is to obey voluntarily and out of a heart and affection rightly ordered but especially it is to obey out of a iudgement well informed 8. Obiections of Seruants ansvvered The vse is therefore to vrge them to doe it and here I would consider of the obiections of Seruants why they cannot obey Ex animo Obiect 1. Bondage is against nature Sol. It is against nature as it was before the fall but not as it is now since the fall Ob. 2. But Christ hath made vs free Sol. Free in soule in this life not in body till your bodies be dissolued or till death Ob. 3. But my Master is froward Sol. Yet thou must be subiect 1 Pet. 2.18 Ob. 4. But he doth not only giue ill words but blowes Sol. Perhaps it is needfull for a seruant will not be corrected by words Prou. 29.19 Ob. 5. But he correcteth me vniustly Sol. First who shall iudge this shall seruants themselues Secondly it is acceptable if for well doing and for conscience thou endure to be buffeted
c. 1 Pet. 2.19.20 Ob. 6. But my Master is not only a froward man but a wicked man and an enemie of Christ Sol. Yet thou must honour and obey him willingly 1 Tim. 6.1.2 Ob. 7. But I am an hired seruant not a bought seruant Sol. Indeed Masters haue not that power ouer them they haue ouer bondslaues but yet all seruants are here bound to obey heartily Ob. 8. But vnmeet things are required Sol. Discerne things that differ but yet obey in all things All thi● reproues grudging and slow and stubborne seruants Whatsoeuer yee doe Not only faire easie cleanly and best sort of workes are to be done willingly but all or any kinde of labour whatsoeuer though neuer so base or vile As to the Lord and not to men Doct. Seruants in obeying their Masters serue the Lord. The vse is both for instruction of seruants and for comfort For instruction they must serue their Masters as they would serue the Lord with all faithfulnesse diligence willingnesse prouidence conscience c. For comfort and encouragement also is this doctrine and that three wayes First here is a limitation they must doe no seruice to men that is against the Lord. Secondly art thou a seruant care not for it thou art Christs freeman Thirdly let not the basenesse of thy worke discourage thee for in seruing thy master thou seruest God as well as if thou wert preaching or praying c. When the Apostle saith not vnto men wee must vnderstand not principally or only Thus of the exhortations The reasons follow VERS 24. Knowing that of the Lord yee shall receiue the reward of the inheritance for yee serue the Lord Christ IN this verse seruants are perswaded to obedience by a reason taken from the retribution or reward of their seruice and the matter of the verse is comprehended in this Syllogisme What faithfull men soeuer serue Christ and doe their dutie to him faithfully and cheerefully shall receiue of Christ the reward of inheritance But you Christian seruants when you performe your obsequious obedience to your Masters serue the Lord Christ Ergo you shall haue the reward of the inheritance Knowing Doct. Seruants may and ought to know and be assured of their owne saluation Vse is for confutation of Papists and vnsound men that denie certaintie of saluation for if seruants that haue not the greatest wits or knowledge that are imploied about small businesses that haue not so much libertie nor learning as other men c. yet may be assured not by coniecture or hope but by certaine knowledge by most vndoubted faith then what colour of reason can there be why other Christians the Lords people should be denied this knowledge and therefore in the second place it should teach vs to make our calling and election sure Reward Doct. The workes euen of seruants shall be rewarded Vse is for the comfort of seruants and for reproofe of the vnbeleefe that is many times in Gods children doubting of Gods acceptation of their praier and holy endeuours Shall the base and secular workes of mens seruants bee rewarded and the great workes of pietie in Gods seruice not be regarded Of the Lord. God will be pay-master vnto seruants and in that they are turned ouer to God for paiment it implies that the most masters are carelesse and vnmercifull and this they are not only in with-holding conuenient food and raiment but in sending their seruants after long time of wearie labour out of their families emptie and without meanes to liue in the world Reward of inheritance Two things are here affirmed of heauen First it is a reward and so free Secondly it is an inheritance and so sure There are foure vses may be made of this Doctrine 1. Wee should much loue esteeme and desire heauen it is the reward of God Princes giue great gifts but Gods least gift must needs be glorious 2. Wee should learne to be liberall as God is liberall giue freely giue largely 3. Here is a plaine confutation of the merit of heauen for heauen is an inheritance now the sonne doth not inherit the fathers lands hee hath not his lands in measure according to his deserts for most an end the land is purchased before the sonne be borne much lesse can we merit heauen and the rather because we cannot alleadge so much as this we came out of the loynes of the father seeing we are children but by adoption For yee serue the Lord Christ Doct. Christ is the chiefe Lord and therefore masters should be well aduised how they vse their seruants for they are Christs seruants and seruants should be carefull how they obey their masters for they must account to this Steward Thus of the first maine reason VERS 25. But he that doth wrong shall receiue for the wrong that he hath done and there is no respect of persons SOme take this twentie fiue verse to be a conclusion of the whole Doctrine before concerning Familie-duties as if hee would signifie that he would not haue this doctrine of houshold gouernment more contemned then the doctrine of piety or righteousnesse for whatsoeuer wife husband childe father or seruant shall doe wrong in the neglect or breach of these commandements for the familie shall bee sure to receiue for the wrong hee doth at Gods hand without respect of persons Some vnderstand the verse as a threatning to seruants if they doe any way wrong their masters But the commonnest interpretation is meetest viz. to vnderstand it as a reason taken from the certaine vengeance of God against all masters that wrong their seruants and so is the second maine reason to vrge their obedience In the verse I likewise obserue 7. Doctrines 1. Masters must account to God for all the wrong they doe to their seruants in word or deed 2. All Masters shall be punished of God that doe wrong if they repent not though they were otherwise neuer so great yea though they were neuer so good or righteous men for if good men wrong their seruants God will requite it and chasten them for that as well as for other sinnes 3. The soueraigntie of disposing an exact full and finall vengeance belongs to God only men administer only a part or drop of it 4. God will rise vp in the defence of the poorest and meanest Christians to right their wrongs 5. Seruants may not right their owne wrongs and returne words for words or blowes for blowes but commit that to God 6. Seruants must bee subiect not onely to the curteous and iust but to the froward and iniurious masters Lastly God is no respecter of persons or faces hee cares no more for the master then for the man all are one in Christ Iesus there is neither bond nor free Iew nor Grecian rich nor poore but Christ is all in all things as is before declared Verse 11. Thus of the duties of Seruants Thus also of the Doctrine of the third CHAPTER THE LOGICALL ANALYSIS OF the fourth Chapter THE first
202 CHAPTER IIII. VERSE I. Ye masters doe that which is iust and equall vnto your seruants knowing that yee haue also a master in heauen THis verse belongs vnto the doctrine of houshold gouernment and containes 1. the dutie of masters 2. the reason knowing c. In the dutie 1. the parties charged ye masters 2. the dutie required doe that which is iust and equall 3. the persons to whom it is to be performed vnto your seruants Masters All masters are charged without difference yea the wife as well as the husband by a Synecdoche the greatest as well as the meanest and the poorest must deale iustly as well as they that haue more meanes c. Doe that which is iust and equall Doctrine from the coherence That God that promiseth eternall things will prouide temporall things also In the former chapter God promised the reward of inheritance for seruants here he takes order for their well being in the world charging masters to see that they be vsed iustly and equally Iust Masters must doe iustly and shew it 1. generally Hovv masters do that vvhich is iust by not requiring vniust things of them and by chusing such seruants as are iust into the familie a Psal 101.6 lest by bringing in lewd seruants the rest be infected For if it be a great iniustice to bring in an infectious seruant that hath the plague vpon his body and to appoint him to worke among the rest of his seruants that are free from the disease then it is much more vniust to bring in lewd seruants that haue the plague sore of sinne running vpon them for the presence and counsell and example of lewd sinners is of more power to infect a sound soule than is a plaguie man to poison the sound body of others 2. More particularly masters must doe that which is iust 1. to the soules 2. to the bodies of their seruants They must deale iustly with their soules by helping them to grace if it be possible but at least by bringing them to the publike meanes of grace and by priuate training of them vp in Gods feare by praier and instruction The iustice they owe vnto their body may be referred vnto three heads for either it concernes their maintenance and so they must giue them their portion of b Pro. 31.15 food conuenient for them or it concernes their wages and so they must giue the wages proportionable to their worke and that in due time and without defrauding them of any part of it or it concernes their punishment and so the iustice of the master must be shewed both in this that hee will punish their open disorders as also that he will doe it with instruction moderation and to profit them and the whole familie Masters doe vnequally 7. vvayes Equall Masters must not onely deale iustly but they must deale equally with their seruants And masters deale vnequally many wayes 1. When they require inconuenient things for though the seruant must obey yet the master sinnes in requiring vnequall things 2. When they impose more worke then they haue strength to doe 3. When they turne them away when they are sicke for it is equall that as thou hast had their labour when they were well so thou shouldest keepe them when they are sicke 4. When they restraine them of libertie for their soules If thou haue the worke of their bodies it is equall that thou take care for their soules and if they serue thee six dayes it is very equall thou shouldest proclaime libertie to them to doe Gods worke on the Sabboth day 5. When they restraine and with-hold their meat and wages 6. When they send them out of their seruice empty after many yeeres bondage and not prouide that they may haue some meanes to liue afterwards To conclude it is not equall for the master to heare euery word that men say of his seruants b Eccles 7.23 nor is it meet they should bring vp their seruants delicately c Prou. 27.23 nor yet that they should leaue their callings and the whole care of their businesse to their seruants but they ought diligently to know the state of the heards themselues d Prou. 27.23 Thus of the duty The reason followes Knowing that yee haue also a master in heauen Here are foure Doctrines to be obserued 1. That there is no master but he is a seruant and therefore as hee would require his worke to be done by his seruant so hee should be carefull himselfe to doe Gods worke to whom he is a seruant 2. That Gods maiestie and mans authoritie may well stand together Christ and Caesar can well agree Mans gouernment in a familie and Gods gouernment in the world are not opposite one to the other 3. Ignorance of God and the accounts must be made to God is the cause of that securitie insolencie and crueltie that is in men 4. That it is ill to vse seruants ill it will be required if they be wronged Thus of the reason VERS 2. Continue in praier and watch in the same with thankesgiuing IN this verse with those that follow to the end of the chapter is contained the conclusion of the whole Epistle This conclusion containes matter of exhortation to verse 7. and matter of salutation verse 7. to the end The exhortation may be three wayes considered 1. As it concernes praier vers 2.3.4 2. As it concernes wise conuersation vers 5. 3. And as it concernes godly communication vers 6. Concerning praier two things are to be obserued 1. How we must pray or the manner 2. For what or the matter In the manner three things are required 1. perseuerance 2. watchfulnesse 3. thankefulnesse vers 2. In the matter is further added 1. the persons for whom praying also for vs 2. the things for which that God may open c. vers 3.4 Continue in praier The doctrines implied in these words are foure Of continuance in praier 1. That our mortall condition is a condition of singular vanitie in that the best of Gods seruants are euer wanting something 2. That long praier of it selfe is not blame-worthy Christ continued all night in praier 3. That praier is of perpetuall vse in the life of a Christian 4. That to pray by fits is not Gods ordinance neither that he requires nor that he will accept The doctrine exprest in these words is threefold 1. That we must hold out and pray still 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and neuer giue ouer praier till we giue vp our soules into Gods hands 2. That wee must pray vpon all occasions for health wealth successe in our callings preseruation of our estates the blessing of God vpon the word Sacraments reading c. for pardon of sinne saluation of our soules euer stretching out our desires to all the opportunities and callings to praier 3. Wee must be instant in praier set all aside for praier wait vpon it for so the word is rendred to wait Act.
verse of this Chapter Verse 1 belongs vnto the speciall rules of the former Chapter and contains the dutie of masters and the reason of it Their dutie in these words Ye masters doe that which is iust and equall to your seruants The reason in these words knowing that yee also haue a master in heauen In the second verse and so to the end of the chapter is contained the conclusion of the whole Epistle This conclusion containes 1. matter of exhortation to v. 7. 2. matter of salutation from v. 7. to the end The exhortation may be 3. wayes considered first as it concernes praier v. 2 3 4. secondly as it concernes wise conuersation v. 5. thirdly as it concernes godly communication v. 6. Concerning praier two things are to be obserued Verse 2 1 the manner 2 the matter In the manner 3 things are required 1 Perseuerance 2 Watchfulnesse 3 Thankfulnesse v. 2. In the matter consider 1 the persons for whom Verse 3. 4. Praying also for vs 2 the things for which that God may open c. These things are 1 briefly laid downe that God would open to vs a dore of vtterance or 2 more fully explicated 1 By the subiect to speake the mysterie of Christ 2. By a reason For which I am in bands 3. By the end That I may vtter it as becommeth mee to speake verse 3.4 Wisdome of conuersation is propounded with limitation to the respect of some person viz. them that Verse 6 are without verse 6. In that part that concernes gracious communication there are two things 1. The precept Let your speech c. 2. The end of the precept that ye may know how c. In the precept note first the properties of speech 1. gracious 2. powdred with salt secondly the continuance viz. alwayes Thus of the exhortation The salutation followes from v. 7. to the end where obserue 1. a narration as an entrance 2. The salutations themselues Verse 7. 8. The narration is in verse 7.8.9 and it concernes first Tichicus v. 7.8 and Onesimus v. 9. Concerning Tichicus there are two things First his praises with relation to all Christians a beloued brother or to Christ a faithfull minister or to Paul a fellow-seruant Secondly the end of his mission which is threefold First to declare Pauls estate Secondly to know their estate Thirdly to comfort their hearts Verse 9 Concerning Onesimus there is likewise first his praises in relation to all so he is a brother faithfull beloued relation to them he is one of them Secondly the end of his mission is to make knowne c. v. 9. Verse 10 The salutions follow and they are first signified secondly required the signified salutations are from verse 10. to 15. the other from verse 15. to the end The salutations signified are from six men three of them Iewes viz. Aristarchus Marcus and Iesus v 10.11 and three Gentiles Epaphras Lucas Demas v. 12.13.14 Verse 11 The Iewes are described first by their names secondly by their country they were of the circumcision thirdly by their praises so for what they were to the whole Church labourers fellow-workers to the kingdome of God or to Paul and so they were to his consolation v. 11. The salutations of the Gentiles follow whereof the Verse 13 first is of Epaphras who is described first by his office a seruant of Christ secondly by his relation to them hee is one of you thirdly by his loue to them shewed by his striuing in praier for them fourthly by his zeale not onely for them but the neighbour Churches vers 13. Thus of the salutations signified The salutations Verse 15. 16. required follow and those are either particular verse 15 16 17. or generall verse 18. The particular salutations concerne either the Laodiceans Verse 17 verse 15 16. or the Colossian Preacher who is not only saluted but exhorted verse 17. The generall salutation hath in it first a signe The Verse 18 salutation by the hand of me PAVL Secondly a request remember my bands Thirdly a loue Grace be with you Amen verse 18. THE METAPHRASE vpon the fourth Chapter VERSE 1. YE masters do that vvhich is iust and equall vnto your seruants knovving that ye haue also a Master in heauen MAsters also must doe that which is iust vnto their seruants both for their soules and for their bodies also in diet wages or correction and that which is equall both while they stay with them in allowance of recreation and respect of their weaknesse and sicknesse and when they goe from them not to let them goe away emptie knowing that they themselues are seruants vnto GOD who is in heauen and will call them to accounts Vers 2. Continue in praier and vvatch in the same vvith thanksgiuing To conclude I returne againe to all sorts of Christians and exhort them to three things principally the first is about praier the second is about their carriage the third about their speeches For their praiers there are three things exceeding necessary perseuerance and Christian watchfulnesse and thankesgiuing for the graces and blessings they doe receiue Vers 3. Praying also for vs that God may open vnto vs the doore of vtterance to speake the mysterie of Christ vvherefore I am also in bonds Vers 4. That I may vtter it as it becommeth me to speake Remembring vs also in their praiers that GOD would open vnto vs a doore of vtterance with libertie courage power and good successe to breake open the mysterie of the Gospell of CHRIST for which I am now in prison That I may so speake of those dreadfull secrets that I no way derogate from the maiestie of them or that trust that is committed to me or expected from me Thus of what I would specially commend to you about praier Now for your carriage Verse 5. Walke vvisely tovvards them that are vvithout and redeeme the time I would haue you especially looke to your selues in respect of your behauiour before or amongst the wicked who are not of GODS familie and strangers from the life of GOD it were an admirable thing to carry your selues in a wise and discreet manner towards them Hence and by all other wayes shewing your sel●● to be skilfull Marchants in redeeming the time which hath beene lost Vers 6. Let your speech bee gracious alvvaies and poudred vvith salt that yee may knovv hovv to ansvver euery man Vers 7. All my state shall Tichicus declare vnto you vvho is a beloued brother and faithfull Minister and fellovv seruant in the Lord. Vers 8. Whom I haue sent vnto you for the same purpose that hee might knovv your estate and comfort your hearts Vers 9. With Onesimus a faithfull and beloued brother vvho is one of you they shall make knovvne vnto you all things vvhich are done here Ver. 10. Aristarchus my prison-fellovv saluteth you and Marcus Barnabas sisters sonne touching vvhom yee receiued cōmandements If he come vnto you receiue him Vers 11. And Iesus
turning men from prophanesse the Gospell doth not worke vpon all promiscuously And Nymphas This Nymphas was not a woman as Ambrose and Dionisius and Catharinus and the glosse would haue it for it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the end of the verse his house not her house This Nymphas it seemes was some eminent Christian whom Paul would specially honour before the congregation and so it shewes that a speciall respect should be had of such as did excell in gifts amongst such as professe the sinceritie of the Gospell And the Church that is in his house By the Church hee meanes those in the houshold that feare God whether they were women or children or seruants Now here first I consider of these persons and then of the title the Apostle giues them in calling them a Church In that the Apostle thus with honor remembers the houshold of Nymphas it shewes his singular vprightnesse in that he can respect grace in whomsoeuer hee finde it hee loues a good seruant as well as a good master and can commend good order in an houshold as well as in a congregation This should teach vs not to haue the grace of Christ in respect of persons and hereby also we may trie our loue to Gods children by examining our selues whether wee can loue such as can neither profit or pleasure vs nor grace vs in the world And this may be a great incouragement to the young and meaner sort in that they may perceiue from hence that if they get true grace they shall be respected both of God and good men Now in that the Apostle cals this houshold a Church wee may note A religious familie is a little Church The vses of it that a religious and well ordered familie is as it were a little Church Here in one familie is prescribed what all families should bee this familie is called a Church because his people were godly and the word of God was read there and praiers made to God and Psalmes sung and the younger sort were catechized and instructed Now doe we learne from hence that our houses are Churches Then these things will follow 1. That Gods worship and pietie must be set vp in them 4. Orders in the familie How can they be Churches of God if God be not serued in them 2. All must be done therein order and quietnesse and silence for so it is or should be in the Church 3. Euill persons that are incorrigible must not dwell there but must be cast out Psal 101. 4. The husband or master of the familie must dwell there as a man of knowledge and wiues children and seruants must obey as the Church doth Christ Againe are our families Churches Why then religious families are in a happie case for then God himselfe will dwell there so as a stranger comming to such places may say as Iacob did of Bethel surely God is in this place Lastly should our families be Churches Oh then woe vnto the world of prophane housholds Should a Church be without sacrifice and can their families escape Gods wrath seeing there is neither praier nor pietie in them but in stead of Gods seruice there is cursing and swearing and lying and chiding and filching and whoring and railing and fighting and what not The most families are very cages of vncleane spirits where not God or good men but very deuils dwell they are very sties of vncleannesse and vnholinesse Thus of the 15. verse VERS 16. And when this Epistle is read amongst you cause it to be read also in the Church of the Laodiceans and that you likewise reade the Epistle from Laodicea THese words containe a direction for reading 1. of his Epistle and that both priuately and publikely 2. of an Epistle from Laodicea Of reading the Scriptures In the generall we may obserue that the Scripture may be read it is mens dutie to doe it t is a flat precept Search the Scriptures Ioh. 5.39 And this may euidently reproue the prophane neglect of the most herein in this great light Many are so drowned in carelesnesse that they haue not yet so much as a Bible in their houses and others though for their credit sake they haue gotten them Bibles yet they reade them not This Epistle In that this Epistle may not be neglected but must be read it shewes that whatsoeuer is reuealed to the Church to be a part of the word of God it must be read so soone as this Epistle is written it must bee read of all Christians which shewes that euery part of Gods word is to be read Now for the persons that must reade the Scriptures it is here set downe indefinitely of you meaning of all sorts of people which is in other parts of the word of God distinctly expressed For 1 Tim. 4.13.15 Ministers must reade the Scriptures and Deut. 17.19 it is required also of Kings and Magistrates also none are too good or too great to be imployed herein young men must studie in the word Psal 119.10 so must women also Act. 17.12 Priscilla was ripe in the knowledge of the Scriptures able to instruct others Act. 18 27. What should I say Euery good man must reade the Scriptures Psal 1.2 The vse may be to stirre vs vp to doe it and to doe it constantly for the same word of God that requires it to be done shewes it should bee done frequently we must reade all the dayes of our life Deut. 17.19 and that daily Act. 17.11 day and night Psal 1.2 they reade 4. times a day Nehem. 9.4 The profit of reading the Scriptures And the rather should we be excited to this daily reading of the word considering the profit comes thereby it would exceedingly comfort vs Ro. 15.4 It would be a lanterne to our feet and a light vnto our pathes Psal 119. The word is the sword of the spirit Eph. 6. and how can wee resist tentations with It is written if we reade not what is written and without reading we can neuer be expert in the word of righteousnesse thereby we are made acquainted with the mysteries of the kingdome and come to vnderstand all the counsell of God it will teach vs the feare of the Lord and keepe that our hearts bee not lifted vp Deut. 17.19.20 Quest But what should be the reason that many get no more good by reading the word and cannot finde any great profit in their reading The causes vvhy so many profit not by reading the vvord I answer diuersly 1. Some men are poisoned with the inclinations of Atheisme and securitie they come to the word to obserue it not to let the word obserue them 2. Many seeke not a blessing by praier whereas it is certaine the flesh will not of it selfe sauour the things of the spirit 3. Men bring not an humble and meeke spirit whereas vnto the fruitfull meditation of the word a heart quiet and patient and a minde free from pride and passion is requisite Psal 25.9
20. 2.19 of Ministers and people with their duties chap. 1.25.28 2.1 and in diuers other places Thus of the subiect also The degrees of grace in the third estate are 1. vocation 2. faith 3. remission of sinnes 4. sanctification of vocation chap. 3.15 of faith chap 1.4.23 2.12 of remission of sinnes chap. 1.14 2.13 of sanctification in both parts both mortification chap. 3.5.8 and viuification chap. 2.13 3.10 Thus of the estate of grace The fourth and last estate of man is the estate of glorie which stands of three degrees 1. resurrection 2. the last iudgement and 3. life eternall of resurrection chap. 1.18 of the last iudgement and eternall glory chap. 3.4 And thus of the first part of the patterne of wholesome words and that is faith now followeth the second and that is loue Loue comprehends all the duties we owe to God or men as being the bond of perfection which ties together all holy seruices Loue must bee considered both in the adiuncts and in the sorts of it The adiuncts are constancie wisedom zeale care to auoide offences and the like of loue in generall chap. 1.4 2.2 3.14 of constancie ch 2.6 of zeale chap. 4.13 of wisdome and care to auoide offences chap. 4.5 thus of the adiuncts The sorts of works comprehended vnder loue are two chiefly 1. works of worship 2. workes of virtue The works of worship are either internall onely or externall and internall also The internall are the acknowledging of God the loue of God the feare of God the trust or hope in God and which floweth from thence patience of the acknowledgement of God chap. 1.9 10. of the loue of God chap. 1.8 of the feare of God chap. 3.22 of the hope in God chap. 1.5 of patience chap. 1.11 The workes of worship that are both externall and internall are praier and thankesgiuing of prayer chap. 4.2 3. of thankesgiuing chap. 3.17 Thus of workes of worship Workes of virtue either concerne our selues or others the workes that concerne our selues are chiefly two the studie of heauenly things and temperance Temperance containes chastitie and sobriety in the vse of all sorts of earthly things of the studie of heauenly things chap. 3.1 2. of chastitie ch 3.5 of sobriety ch 3.2 Thus of vertue that concernes our selues Works of virtue towards others are chiefly nine Mercy curtesie humilitie meekenesse long-suffering clemencic peaceablenes thankfulnes and iustice of the first eight of these chap. 3.12 to 16. Now Iustice is either publike or priuate publike Iustice is in Magistrates of which chap. 2.5 priuate Iustice is either commutatiue in bargaining or distributiue in giuing that which is right to euery one according to his degree and so distributiue Iustice is either ciuill or oeconomicall Priuate Iustice in ciuill conuersation with men abroad is either to Magistrates of which chap. 1.5 or to all men and so consists of truth and faithfulnes with sincerity and obseruance oeconomical Iustice is that which concernes the houshold and so containes the duties of husbands and wiues children and parents seruants and masters of which chap. 3.18 to the end with the first verse of chap. 4. Thus also of Loue. Thus I haue shewed the excellent compleatnes of this worthy scripture it remaines that I declare some of the reasons that haue emboldned me to make choice of your Honors names for the dedication of my exposition vpon this scripture Three things swaying Godly men in like case haue compelled mee protection obseruance and thankfulnes the preaching of this doctrine as by the mercy of God it wrought abundant consolation and comfortable reformation in many hearers so did it seldom rest from the assaults and calumnies which one while prophanenesse another while enuie powred out vpon it Great cause there is therfore that it comming out now to a more publike view should seeke shelter and of whom should I seeke it or hope for it sooner then of your Honors who are pleased by your daily countenance to assure me a iust patronage For the second to omit the high reputation which the religious eminencie of both your ancestors hath set your Honors in and the praises of many singular endowments and gifts in which you doe worthily excell there are two things wherein your Honors daily winne a great increase of obseruance the one is pietie towards God the other mercie towards the poore The loynes of the poore daily blesse your Honors and their mouthes daily pray for you Your piety is many waies exprest to omit many vndoubted proofes of it your Lordship hath much confirmed the perswasion of your religious disposition by your daily and affectionate respect of the word of God and praier in priuate since the Lord hath made you lesse able to resort more frequently to the publike assemblies And Madam what thanks can wee euer sufficiently giue vnto God for that rare and worthy example with which your Ladishippe doth comfort and incourage the hearts of many in your care of Gods sabaoths in your neuer-failing attendance vpon the ordinances of God with the congregation morning and euening not only in your owne person but with your whole familie For the third I doe ingenuously professe before God and men that I hold my obligation vnto your Honors in the iust debt of seruice and gratitude to be so great as the labour here imployed is no way answerable to a meete discharge no though it had bin taken only for your Honors vse for to omit the debt which I am in for a great part of my maintenance and that singular incouragment I reape daily in your Honors respect of my ministerie what thankes can euer be sufficient or what seruice can euer be enough for that incomparable benefit which I haue and shall euer esteeme the greatest ou●w●●● bless●●g did euer befall mee and which Madam by your H●●●●s singular care and furtherance after an admiral 〈◊〉 ●an●●r I obteined I meane the cleaning of my reputation from the vniust aspersions of my aduersaries and that by th● mouth and pen of the Lords annointed my most dread Seueraigne whom the God of heauen with all abundance of royall and diuine blessings recompence in all earthly felicitie and eternall glory And the same God of Peace and Father of mercies sanctifie your Honors wholy that your whole spirits and soules and bodies may be preserued blamelesse vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ faithfull is hee that hath called you who also will doe it And I doubt not but God that hath inriched your Honors with the true grace that is in Iesus Christ will daily winne vnto you increase of honor from your perseuerance in well-doing so as thanksgiuing for your sakes shall bee abundantly giuen vnto God by many Thus in most humble manner crauing your Honors acceptance and patronage of this worke I end and shall reioyce to remaine Your Honors Chaplaine to be commanded in all seruice NI BYFIELD THE ARGVMENT OF this Epistle to
the Colossians THere are foure principall Parts of this Epistle 1. the Proaeme 2. Doctrine of Faith 3. Precepts of life 4. the Epilogue or Conclusion The Proaeme is exprest in the first eleuen Verses of the first Chapter The Doctrine of Faith is exprest in the rest of the Verses of the first Chapter and the whole second Chapter The Precepts of life are set downe in the third Chapter and in the beginning of the fourth And the Epilogue is in the rest of the verses of the fourth Chapter The Proaeme containes two things First the Salutation vers 1 2. and secondly a Preface affectionately framed to winne attention and respect wherein he assures them of his singular constancie in remembring them to God both in Thanks-giuing for their worthy Graces and the meanes thereof v. 3.4 5 6 7 8. and in earnest Prayer for their increase and comfortable perseuerance in knowledge and the eminencie of sinceritie in holy life vers 9.10.11 The Doctrine of Faith he expresseth two waies first by Proposition secondly by Exhortatiom In the Proposition of Doctrine hee doth with singular force of words and weight of matter set out both the worke of our Redemption v. 12.13.14 and the person of our Redeemer and that first in his relation to God verse 15. then in relation to the World verse 15.16.17 and thirdly in relation to the Church both the whole in generall verse 18.19.20 and the Church of the Colossians in particular vers 21.22 And thus of the Proposition Now his Exhortation followes from the 23. of Chap. 1. to the end of Chap. 2. and therin be both perswades and disswades he perswades by many strong and moouing Reasons to an holy endeauour to continue and perseuere with all Christian firmenesse of resolution in the Faith and Hope was alreadie begotten in them by the Gospell and this is contained in the seauen last Verses of the first Chapter and the seauen first Verses of the second Chapter Hee disswades them from receiuing the corrupt Doctrine of the False Apostles whether it were drawne from Philosophicall Speculations or from the Traditions of men or from the Ceremoniall Law of Moses and hee proceedes in this order first hee layes downe the matter of his Dehortation Chap. 2. verse 8. then secondly hee confirmes it by diuers reasons from vers 9. to 16. and lastly he concludes and that seuerally as against Mosaicall Rites vers 16.17 against Philosophie vers 18.19 and against Traditions verse 20. and so to the end of that Chapter Thus of the second part Thirdly 3 The Precepts of life in giuing Precepts of life the Apostle holds this order first hee giues generall Rules that concerne all as they are Christians then hee giues speciall Rules as they are men of this or that estate of life The generall Rules are contained in the first seauenteene Verses of the third Chapter and the speciall Rules from the eighteenth Verse of the third Chapter to the second Verse of the fourth The generall Rules hee reduceth into three heads viz. first the Meditation of heauenly things vers 1.2.3.4 secondly the mortification of vices and iniuries vers 5. to the 12. thirdly the exercise of holy Graces a number of which hee reckoneth both in the kindes meanes and ends of them from vers 12. to 18. The particular Rules concerne principally houshould gouernment for hee sets downe the dutie of Wiues vers 18. of Husbands vers 19. of Children vers 20. of Parents vers 21. of Seruants vers 22.23.24.25 and of Masters Chap. 4. vers 1. The Epilogue or Conclusion 4 The Epilogue containes in it both matter of generall Exhortation as also matters of Salutation The generall Exhortation concernes Prayer vers 2.3.4 wise Conuersation vers 5. and godly Communication vers 6. Now after the Apostle hath disburdened himselfe of those generall cares then hee taketh liberty to refresh himselfe and them by remembring certaine that were deare both to him and them And first hee makes entrance by a narration of his care to know their estate and to informe them of his To which purpose hee sendeth and praiseth Tichicus and Onesimus vers 7.8.9 The Salutations then follow and they are of two sorts for some are signified to them some are required of them Of the first sort hee signifies the Salutations of six men three of them Iewes and three Gentiles vers 10.11.12.13.14 The Salutations required concerne either the Laodiceans vers 15.16 or one of the Colossaean Preachers who is not onely saluted but exhorted vers 17 And then followes the Apostles generall Salutations to all in the last Verse THE PLAINE Logicall Analysis of the first Chapter THis CHAPTER stands of three parts a Proaeme a Proposition of Doctrine an Exhortation to constancy and perseuerance The Proame is continued from vers 1. to 12. the Proposition from vers 12. to the 23. the Exhortation from ver 23. to the end The Proaeme is intended to winne attention and affection and stands of two parts the Salutation and the Preface The Salutation is contained in the two first Verses and the Preface in the third Verse and those that follow to the twelfth In the Salutation three things are to be obserued first the Persons saluting secondly the Persons saluted thirdly the forme of the Salutation it selfe The Persons saluting are two the Author of the Epistle Verse 1.2 and an Euangelist famous in the Churches who is named as one that did approue the Doctrine of the Epistle and oommend it to the vse of the Churches The Author is described first by his Name Paul secondly by his Office an Apostle which is amplified by the principall efficient IESVS CHRIST and by the impulsiue cause the Will of God The Euangelist is described first by his Name Timotheus secondly by his adiunct Estate a Brother Thus of the Persons saluting The Persons saluted are described first by the place of their abode and so they are the Citizens and inhabitants of Colosse secondly by their spirituall estate which is set out in foure things 1. They are Saints 2. They are faithfull 3. They are Brethren 4. They are in CHRIST The forme of the Salutation expresseth what hee accounteth to be the chiefe good on earth and that is Grace and Peace which are amplified by the Causes or Fountaines of them from God our Father and from our Lord Iesus Christ Thus of the Salutation In the Preface the Apostle demonstrateth his loue to them by two things which hee constantly did for them hee prayed for them Verse 3. and hee gaue thankes for them and this hee both propounds generally vers 3. and expounds particularly in the Verses following In the generall propounding three things are euidently exprest first what he did for them hee gaue thankes hee prayed secondly to whom euen to God the Father of our Lord Iesus thirdly how long alwaies that is constantly from day to day Verse 4.5 Now in the Verses that follow he expounds and opens
without shewing extremitie r Math. 5.25 18.15 Rom. 12.18 1 Cor. 6.5 Gods people haue cause to be ioyfull Ioyfulnesse A Christian estate is a ioyfull and comfortable estate Sauing knowledge makes a man liue ioyfully and comfortably True ioy is one of the fruits Gods Spirit beareth in the heart of a Christian yea it is a chiefe part of that kingdome that God bestoweth on his people on earth None haue cause of ioy but the children of Sion and none of them but haue great reason to shout for ioy to reioyce and be glad with all their hearts ſ Zeph. 3.14 Zeph. 3.14 Is it not a great Mercy to haue all the iudgments due vnto vs for sinne taken away and the great enemy of our soules cast out Is it not a great honour that Iehouah the King of Israel should be in the middest of vs and that our eyes should not see euill any more What sweeter encouragement then that the Lord should cause it to be said vnto vs feare not and againe Let not your hands be slacke If we haue great crosses enemies dangers wants temptations c. wee haue a mighty God if there be none to helpe vs he will saue yea he will reioyce to doe vs good yea he will reioyce ouer vs with ioy yea he so loues vs that he will rest in his loue and seeke no further Shall man be sorrowfull when God reioyceth Shall the Lord reioyce in vs and shall not we reioyce in God t Zeph. 2.14 c. c. And if these reasons of ioy be contayned in one place of Scripture how great would the number of reasons grow if all the Booke of God were searched such a ioy and contentment is the ioy of Christians that crosses cannot hinder it Life is not deare to a childe of God so that he may finish his course with ioy u Acts 20.24 They suffer the spoyling of their goods with ioy knowing that in heauen they haue a more enduring substance x Heb. 10.34 Yea in many crosses they account it all ioy to fall into tentation y James 1.2 They seeme as sorrowfull when indeed they are alwayes reioycing z 2 Cor. 6.10 Quest What might we doe to get this constant ioyfulnesse and vnmoueable firmenesse and contentment of heart Quest Ans In generall thou must bee sure to be Gods seruant a Esay 65.13 14. Ans a man iustified and sanctified b Jer. 33.8 Esay 61.10 12.5 thou must know that thy name is written in the Booke of life c Luk. 10.20 What wee must doe that we might get constant ioyfulnesse of heart which cannot be without Faith d 1 Pet. 1.8 Phil. 1.25 Rom. 15.13 12. In particular there are many things which haue a sure promise of ioy and comfort annexed to them First thou must lay the foundation of all eternall ioyes in godly sorrow for thy sinnes Iohn 16.20 Mat. 5.4 Psal 126 5.6 Secondly thou must hang vpon the breasts of the Church viz. the Word and Sacraments continually with trembling and tender affection wayting vpon the word of God the Law must be in thy heart thou must buy thy libertie herein at the highest value Esay 66.2.5.11 and 51.7 Mat. 13.44 Thirdly in thy carriage thou must be a counsellor of peace Prou. 12.20 and liue in peace as neere as may be 2 Cor. 13.11 Fourthly take heede thou be not insnared with grosse sinne Prou. 29.6 Fiftly wouldest thou reape ioy sow good seede to bee much in well-doing procures as a blessing a secret and sweet gladnesse vpon the heart of man a barren life is an vncomfortable life Many would reape that will not be at the paine to sow Iohn 4.36 Gal. 6.7 8. He that vseth his Talents to aduantage enters into his Masters ioy a ioy liker the ioy of God then man meeter for the Master then for the Seruant yet such a Master wee serue as will crowne vs with this ioy Mat. 15.21 Sixtly be constant beare fruit and get the knowledge of the loue of Christ and abide in it Iohn 15.10 Lastly in the 2 Thes 5.16 to 24. there are seauen things required in our practise if wee would alwayes reioyce 1. We must pray alwayes if we be much in prayer wee shall be much in ioy 2. Wee must in all things giue thankes a heart kept tender with the sense of Gods mercies is easily inflamed with ioyes in the Holy Ghost 3. We must take heed of quenching the Spirit when a man puts out the holy motions of the Spirit hee quencheth his owne ioyes 4. We must by all meanes preserue an honourable respect of the word publikely preached despise not prophecying 5. And whereas there be some things we heare doe specially affect vs and concerne vs wee must be carefull with all heedfulnesse to keepe those things whatsoeuer wee forget try all things but keepe that which is good 6. In our practise wee must not onely auoyd euill but all appearance of euill else if wee disquiet others with griefe or offence of our carriage it will be iust with God we should finde little rest or contentment in our selues Lastly wee must endeauour to bee sanctified throughout inwardly and outwardly in soule body and spirit hauing respect to all Gods Commandments and retayning the loue of no sinne so shall wee reape the blessing of all righteousnesse and procure to our hearts the ioyes that are euerlasting Hitherto of the Preface Verse 12 Giuing thankes vnto the Father which hath made vs meete to bee partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light HItherto of the Exordium of this Epistle as it contained both the Salutation and Preface The second part both of the Chapter and Epistle followeth The order of this second part of the Epistle and is contained in the 12. Verse and the rest to the 23. And it hath in it the proposition of Doctrine This Doctrine propounded stands of two parts for it concerneth eyther the worke of Redemption or the person of the Redeemer The worke of Redemption is considered of in the 12.13 and 14. Verses the person of the Redeemer is entreated of from Verse 15. to the 23. The worke of Redemption is two waies considered of first more generally in the 12. Verse secondly m●re particularly Verse 13.14 In the worke of our Redemption as it is propounded in this Verse three things are to be obserued 1. The efficient cause God the Father 2. The subiect persons redeemed vs. 3. The Redemption it selfe as it is either in the inchoation and first application of it on earth and so it lyeth in making vs fit or in the consummation of it what it shall be in the end and so it is praised first by the manner of tenure inherit secondly by the adiunct companie Saints thirdly by the perfection of it in light Giuing thankes The blessings of God vpon euery true Christian are such as they require continuall thankefulnesse to
1.14 Thirdly with the seede of Abraham the Iewes the partition wall is broken downe r Esay 2.15 Fourthly with Gods Ordinances God creating peace or els the Word would alwayes bee goring and smiting with the stroakes of warre and words of vengeance ſ Esay 11.4 57.19 Fiftly with the godly t Esay 11.6.7 Sixtly with all Creatures u Iob 5. Heb. 2.18 Psal 91.13 Onely there can be no peace first with the Powers and Principalities for after the two strong men haue fought there is no more peace x Ephes 6.12 secondly with the World the World hath hated the Master and therefore the seruants may not looke for better entertainment y Iohn 15.8 3 The effects of this peace 3. The effects of this peace which are principally two first the restitution of soueraignty and dominion ouer the Creatures secondly the safety of the Christian in all estates for from this peace flowes great securitie and protection euen to the poorest Christian either from or in dangers z Iob 5.15 c. 4. What we must do to attaine the sense of this peace 4. That wee may attaine the sense of this peace wee must bee reconciled to God a Hos 2.18 we must be sincere worshippers b Hos 2.17 we must keepe vs in our wayes c Psal 91.13 wee must get a meeke and quiet spirit d Psal 37.12 wee must in nothing bee carefull but in all things shew our requests vnto God e Phil. 4.7 wee must loue God and shew it by the loue of the knowledge of his Name f Psal 91.14 Vses Vses First Gods Children should know this priuiledge for themselues it will be a preseruation against sinne 2. Hence wee may gather the miserie of all carnall persons that are not reconciled to God They want the potection of Angels they are vnder the gouernment of the God of this world the Creatures are armed against them they are stript of the royall priuiledges arising from the communion with Saints yea God fights against them in and by themselues as by terrours of conscience and by vnquiet affections and passions giuing them ouer to an vnruely heart What are Enuy Malice Lust and Rage but so many weapons to fight against the soule Yea God fights against the sinner by the deadnesse of his heart which both affamisheth the soule in spirituall things and takes away the contentment of outward things By the bloud Heere he notes how wee are reconcililed viz. by the bloud of Christ this is that bloud of sprinckling g Heb. 1● 24 the bloud of the immaculate Lamb h 1 Pet. 1 19. the bloud of the euerlasting Couenant i Heb. 13 20. Christs owne bloud k Heb 13 12. The fruits effects of Christs blood Many are the fruits and effects of the bloud of Christ 1 We are elected through it l 1 Pet 1 2. 2. It ratifies the Couenant of God m Luke 22 20. Heb 9 18. 3. It is that Reconciliation iustifying vs from our former sinnes n Rom 3 25. 5 9. Ephes 1 7. 1 Ioh 1 7. Reuel 7 14. 4. It ioynes Iew and Gentile together in one Citie yea in one house o Eph 2 13 c 5. It purgeth the Conscience from dead workes p Heb 9 14. 10 4. 6. It turnes away wrath and saues vs from the destroying Angell q Heb. 11 18. 7. It makes Intercession for sinnes after Calling r Heb 12 24. 8. It makes perfect in all good workes ſ Heb 13 20. 9. By it the Faithfull ouercome the Dragon t Reuel 12 11. and Antichrist u Reuel 19.23 Lastly it opens the Holy of Holies and giues vs an entrance into heauen x Heb 9 7. 10 19. The Vse is first to teach vs to take heede of sinning against the bloud of Christ for if it be thus precious it must needes diffuse a horrible sinne-guiltinesse vpon such as transgresse against it If Abels bloud wronged cryed so fearefully and the bloud of Zacharias what shall the bloud of Christs doe y Mat 23 30 35. Luke 11 50. How many wayes men sinne against Christs bloud And men sinne against Christs bloud 1. By resisting the meanes of application of Christ crucified 2. By prophane Swearing and Cursing 3. By ascribing remission of sinnes to the workes of the Law z Rom 3 20 24 25. 4. By committing the sinne against the holy Ghost * Heb 10 26.29 5. By returning to the lusts of our former ignorance a 1 Pet 1 14. 6. By prophane and vnworthy receiuing of the Sacraments b 1 Cor 11. And in the Sacraments men offend against the bloud of Christ Vses First when they come to it with an opinion of reall presence either by Transubstantiation or Consubstantiation for thereby they deny the truth of the bloud of Christ by consequent and open a gap to the adoration of Christ in or before Bread or Wine Secondly when men vse the Sacraments but as bare signes not discerning spiritually the presence of the Bloud and Body of the Lord. Thirdly when men come thither vnbidden being not called nor within the compasse of the Couenant by conuersion Fourthly when men come to eate this Lambe but without the sowre hearbes of godly Sorrow for their sinnes and Repentance Fiftly such as come without Faith by which they lay holde on Christ and Loue by which they are ioyned to Christians Thus of the first Vse Secondly the consideration of the dignitie of Christs bloud should teach Christians to esteeme their new birth It is better to bee borne of the bloud of Christ then of all the blouds of men c Ioh 1 13. seeing by his bloud wee haue the attonement wee should reioyce in God d Rom 5 11. and comfort our selues in this great prerogatiue that our many sinnes and infirmities are done away in the Intercession of Christ his Blood speaking better things then the Bloud of Abel e Heb 12 24. Thirdly wee should neuer bee much perplexed for the ordinary troubles befall vs for if wee looke vpon the Authour and finisher of our Faith hee endured the shame and contradiction of sinners yea and shed his bloud too whereas we haue not yet resisted vnto bloud f Heb 12.2 4. Fourthly it should enflame vs to a desire of all possible both Thankefulnesse giuing glory to him that shed his bloud for vs g Reu 1 5. and Obedience striuing to walk worthy of the effusion and application of such precious bloud h Heb 13 20. striuing after perfection in all well-doing Of his Crosse It was needfull our Sauiour should be vpon the Crosse that so hee might bee the accomplishment of what was signified by the Heaue Offering and the Brazen Serpent and that so hee might beare the speciall curse of the Law for vs of all deathes the death on the tree beeing by
can they be stirred with the foure last things This shewes as mans misery and death in sinne so the wonderfull mercy of God in forgiuing such sins It is a comfort that sinnes of set knowledge may bee forgiuen And hence may be gathered a difference betweene the sinnes of the regenerate Plena voluntate and the sinnes of the vnregenerate for the godly sinne not with a full minde they are not set in euill sinne rebels in them but not raignes Lastly this may let vs see how little cause wee haue to stand vpon our mindes or reason or naturall parts in matters of Hope and Saluation In euill Workes If the dependance and the words themselues be duely considered wee may here gather fiue things First that the euill workes of the sinner cause the strangenesse and enmitie aforesaid Secondly that a wicked man can like himselfe well enough though his very workes and outward behauiour be euill He can blesse himselfe in his heart when his iniquitie is found worthy to be hated a Psal 36.2 Thirdly that where the life is euill the minde is euill the heart cannot be good where the workes are nought Fourthly that hee that allowes himselfe in one sinne will pollute himselfe with many sinnes Workes Fiftly when God lookes vpon the workes of euill men they are all euill Note note a difference if the carnall man looke vpon his owne workes they are all good if a godly man looke vpon them they are partly good and partly euill but if God looke vpon them they are all nought because his person is nought his heart is nought his end is nought the manner is nought c. Hitherto of their miserie both as it is propounded and expounded Quest A Question may be asked how it comes to passe that men haue so little sense of their miserie Ans and are so loath to take notice of it For answere hereunto wee must vnderstand that this comes to passe because the God of this world hauing possession blindes their eyes and men doe not examine themselues-before the Law of God And they are with-drawne by the deceitfulnesse of sinne which in particular they haue allowed themselues in neither doe men remember their latter ends or the Iudgement of God before their death Their eyes are not annointed with eye-salue a number haue not the word to direct them and some are deceiued by false Teachers which cry peace peace where there is no peace And the most are deceiued with false opinions and conceits for eyther they thinke that such like places as this are true of Gentiles and not of them whereas vnregenerate Israel is as Ethiopia vnto God Amos 9.9 or they feare that this knowledge will make men melancholy Yea some are so foolish they say this course driues men out of their wits thus Paul is mad and Christ hath a Diuell or they thinke late Repentance will serue the turne and then they may haue time enough to consider Thus of their miserie Verse 22. In that Body of his Flesh to present or make you holy and vnblameable and without fault in his sight IN this Verse the remedy of their miserie is set downe where obserue first the Meanes secondly the End The Meanes is by that body of his flesh through death the End is to present vs c. In that body of his flesh through death Heare are two things 1. the Nature of Christ 2. the Sufferings of Christ But first in the generall I obserue two Doctrines First there is no remedy for the sinner but the death of his Sauiour how foolish mankinde hath beene distracted about the cure for their miserie is lamentable to consider Adam gets Figge-leaues and Israel a foolish Couer a Esay 30. As for Death and Hell men are at a poynt they haue made a couenant with them Or they thinke they are helped of their misery if they can forget it they can blesse their hearts that they will not feele the smart of any curses b Psal 36.2 Deut. 29.19 or they will make satisfaction the sonnes of their bodie shall serue for the sinnes of their soules c Mich. 6. or else the Temple of the Lord their going to Church must make God amends d Ier. 7. Others couer all with the garments of their owne ciuill righteousnesse others put their trust in the wedge of gold and say to it thou art my confidence But vnto vs there is no name by which we can be safe but the name of Iesus Christ Hee must rescue vs that first created vs hee makes vs partakers of loue that was the Sonne of Gods loue hee makes vs adopted sonnes who himselfe is Gods naturall Sonne Secondly It is profitable to bee much in the meditation of Christs sufferings that it might sincke into our minds that we must goe out of ourselues for happinesse and such meditations open a way to godly sorrow e Ezec. 12.12 They tend to the mortification of sinne and they encline the heart of a Christian to bee willing to suffer with him for hee suffered as the Master wee are but Seruants hee suffered for others sinnes The good that comes by meditating of Christs sufferings wee deserue more then wee can suffer by our owne sinne Hee suffered all sorts of crosses and infinite much we suffer but light affliction And the thought of his sufferings may make vs willing to contemne the world seeing heereby wee discerne that his kingdome is not of this world Yea wee owe vnto Christ the remembrance of his sufferings It is a small thing he requires of vs when he wils vs to thinke on him often what he hath endured for vs. In that body of his flesh These words note Christs Nature yet wee must consider which Nature in Christ there were two Natures in one person personally vnited his diuine and humane Nature His diuine Nature was from Eternity Immutable Immortall Impassible His humane Nature was conceiued and borne in time Mutable Mortall Passible one and the same without time begotten of the Father the Sonne of God without Mother and in time borne of the Virgine the Sonne of Man without Father Sonne to both Naturall and Consubstantiall These Natures are in one person for that God and Man might become one in Couenant one is become God man in person These Natures are personally vnited this vnion is personall but not of persons and it is a vnion of Natures not naturall In these words the Apostle speakes of the Nature assumed viz. his Humane Nature And there are two things to bee noted in these words First that hee saith that body not the body Secondly that hee saith not simply his body but that body of his flesh That body Heere hee poynts out a speciall excellency in the body of Christ aboue all other bodies in Heauen and Earth Christs body more excellent then all other bodies for his body was without sinne formed by the ouershadowing power of
sinnes are from the flesh yea if the flesh did not by defect action approbation or consent giue way to sinne the Deuill and the world could fasten no sinne vpon vs. Diuers persons should be informed herein when they fall into grieuous euill they cry out of their ill lucke or of ill counsell or ill company or of the Deuill but they should indeed cry out of their owne ill nature for the rest could not haue hurt them but by the wickednesse of their owne disposition and we should all grow suspitious of the flesh and his motions reasons desires c and in time to mortifie her with all her lusts Bodie of sinnes He saith not onely that there are sinnes in the flesh but a body of sinnes that is a huge masse or lumpe of sinnes linked together as the members of our bodie are The sins of the fleshly may be called a body in diuers respects 1. In respect of that harmonie and vnion of sinnes one with another in practise so as if one sinne be practised many will accompanie it as in Adams sinne the sinne was to eat the forbidden fruit but that would not be alone but was attended with doubting of Gods word with faith in the deuill with most inordinate pride or desire to be like God with discontentment with their present condition with vile ingratitude with apostacie from all righteousnesse with prophanation of the sacrament with wilfull murther of all their posteritie and euill concupiscence Cain was angry that God did not accept his prophane sacrifice but would this sinne be alone no for there followes it the hatred of his brother the falling of his countenance the reiecting of Gods admonition coloured hypocrisie murther and blasphemie When desire of gaine infects the hearts of Trades-men we see by experience it will not be alone a number of transgressions growes with it as loue of the world more then God neglect of sinceritie in the vse of Gods ordinances swearing breach of Sabboth rigorous dealing with inferiours vnmercifulnes to the poore selling by false weights and measures vsurie if not otherwise yet in selling time deceit lying oppression by ingrossing of wares or incroaching vpon the trades of others 2. In respect of vnion in continuance after they are committed thy sinnes committed vanish not but by adding sinne vnto sinne thou makest vp a very body of sinne and so in Gods sight they stand compacted together as the very limbes of a monster 3. These sinnes may be called a body because they are committed by the body as the externall meanes of them 4. The masse of sinne in the fleshly man may be called a body of sinnes for that it hath many things like vnto the body of man or many comparisons may be taken from the body of a man to expresse the sinnes of the flesh As the body of man is a faire substance made of base matter so sinne in it selfe is most vile Similes though it be coloured ouer by the deuill or the world with the faire proportion of profit or pleasure And as there be many members in the body so there are in the sinne of the fleshly man as some members in the body are outward some inward so are our sins As men would be ashamed of their bodies were it not for their clothing especially if there be any deformitie so would men of their sinnes were it not for their great places or faire excuses and wretched shifts they haue to hide their deformities And as the body of the prisoner in a dungeon is alike a true body with his that sitteth on the throne so sinnes that are secret that are neuer so closely committed are sinnes as well as such as are openly done As his body is a true body that yet wants a legge or an arme so it is in some though they be not murtherers or adulterers yet they may haue a bodie of sinne in them As the naturall bodie cannot liue if you take away foode and clothing so neither would sinne if we did not loue it approue it defend it excuse it and if wee take away carnall reason and ill companie And as the bodie of Princes is better clad then the bodies of poore men yet it is alike a bodie of clay and corruption so are the sinnes of great men though men doe not speake so openly of them Vses Now for vse of all First here we may see a difference between the sinnes of the regenerate and the sinnes of the vnregenerate in the godly after calling there is not a bodie of sinnes the nest of sinne is scattered sinne is not in his full strength he doth not giue his members as seruants to vnrighteousnes Secondly here men may try the truth of their repentance that is not true repentance that mortifies some one or few sinnes but that which mortifieth a whole bodie of sinnes Thirdly this shewes the greatnes of Gods mercies that can forgiue or take away a whole body of sinnes and transgressions Lastly this may be a great comfort to afflicted consciences that cry out of the multitude of their sinnes if thy sinnes were as many as the ioynts of thy body and as strong as the body of Goliah yet the Lord can forgiue and true repentance will pull them downe This is the matter to be mortified the manner followes How sinne must be put off Put off Sinne must be put off as the begger puts off his raggs and as the Master puts off his false seruant and as the porter puts off his burden and as the husband puts off his vitious wife and as the serpent puts off his skin 4. Things in mortification There are foure things in mortification distinct The first is the dislike of sinne the second is the confession of sinne the third is the godly sorrow for sinne the fourth is forsaking of sinne this last is here meant by putting off of sinne and this the Lord stands vpon as a thing he will neuer dispense with the want of it as these places shew Prou. 28.13 Esay 55.8 Ier. 7.3 4. Esay 1.16.17 Psal 199.9 Ephes 4.22 c. 1 Pet. 4.1 2 3 4. Ezech. 18.33 and there are exceeding comfortable promises made to such as are vpright in the desire and indeuour hereof Prou. 28.13 Esay 55.8 27.9 Ioel 2.12 13. Esay 1.18 What the flesh doth in the godly Quest But can the flesh be so mortified and sinne so put off that it shall cease to be any more in this life Answ No for euen in the children of God the flesh will raise infirmities it will let the vnderstanding it will be framing euill thoughts it will lust against the spirit it will not alwaies allow what good is done or to be done it will present euill when good is to be done it will rebell against the law of the minde yea sometimes the soule of the poore sinner is led captiue for a time by his imperious flesh When sinne is put off Q. But how can
of our friends we burie them in hope they shal rise againe And secondly we mourne because we must part with them but both these must be denied here It is the propertie of the wicked to part with their sinnes with sorrow because they must leaue them or else with hope that at length they may returne to them againe Note this rule But let all such as feare God be otherwise minded especially let vs learne from this comparison of buriall to aduantage our selues in what we may in mortification Similitudes if the master be buried we know all his seruants will attend the funerall so is it with vs in the mortification of sinnes if we light vpon the master sins and drag them to the graue we shall be sure of all the attendants they will follow to the funerall The Iewes manner was to burie with odours so should we our odours and sweet smelling prayers offered vp in the mediation of Christ And howsoeuer this worke may seeme difficult yet God many times strangely relieues our infirmities After Iezabel was cast downe and dead they had not been long within but sending out to burie her they found nothing but the skull and her feet and the palmes of her hands so many times would it be with vs if we cast downe the Iezabels our sinnes when we come to finish our mortification we may by the strange helpe of God finde the bodie of the master gone we know not how so as we shall not be troubled vnlesse it be with some skull or feete or palme of sinne But certainely though this kinde of buriall be somewhat difficult yet it is the true buriall place of Kings the most noble funerall that can be Thus of the first effect The second is in the next words How many vvaies Christ raiseth men vp In whom ye are raised vp together Christ is said to raise men vp diuers waies 1. When he awaketh men out of their naturall Lithargie or spirituall sleepinesse and securitie in matters of religion thus Ephes 5.14 2. When hee brings forth the minde of man out of the dungeons of ignorance and shewes them the light Esay 60.1 2. 3. When he cures men of discouragements and discomforts vnder their crosses Psal 41.10.6 4. When he recouers the Church from securitie or relapses either ordinarie or extraordinarie Cant. 2.10.11 c. and 5.3.5 Prou. 24.15 16. 5. When he incourageth men to holy duties A fourefold resurrection Cant. 7.12 but principally there is a fourefold resurrection The first is out of desperate crosses Esay 26.19 The second is the lifting of men vp to some speciall callings in the Church Matth. 11. The third is the resurrection of our bodies at the last day And the last is the resurrection of the soule vnto holy graces and duties this is called the first resurrection and is meant here in this place and Rom. 6.4 but most vsually we say there is a twofold resurrection the one from the corruption of the flesh the other from the corruption of sinne this latter is here meant and this belongeth to viuification Now this first resurrection must be considered either in it selfe or in the vnion or relation of it In it selfe and so there is a double resurrection First the resurrection of graces The resurrection of graces secondly the resurrection of duties For the first there are certaine graces which are not in the heart of man by nature which by the mighty power of Christ are wrought in the hearts of such as are truly conuerted A resurrection of 13 graces in a childe of God and are actually the members of Christ As first a holy inquirie after God Hos 3.5 Ier. 50.4 Secondly a holy wisdome in spirituall things Iam. 3.17 Thirdly a liuely faith in the fauour of God in Christ Fourthly a holy delight and meditation in the word of God Psal 119.10 11.128 and 27.4 Fiftly a liuely hope of an eternall inheritance 1 Pet 1.3 Sixtly a holy loue of Gods children 1 Ioh. 3.14 such as is required Ro. 12.9 10 11. Seuenthly godly sorrow for sinne 2 Cor. 7.10 Eightly vnspeakable and glorious ioy euen in affliction Rom. 5.2 1 Pet. 1.7 8. Ninthly a holy contentempt of the world and sinne and sinnefull persons Psal 15.4 1 Ioh. 2.19 Tenthly a holy reuerence and feare of God and his goodnes Hos 3.5 Eleuenthly a holy zeale and feruencie of affections especially in the seruice and worship of God Twelfthly a holy loue euen of enemies And lastly a holy desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ Now for the effecting of these the spirit of Christ is called in respect of his wonderfull working the spirit of God and of glory g 1 Pet. 4.14 the spirit of power of loue and of a sound minde h 2 Tim. 1.7 The spirit of praier or deprecations i Zach. 12.12 And the spirit of reuelation k Ephes 1.18 The resurrection of duties in a childe of God of diuers sorts in vvhich he differs from the vvicked Thus of resurrection of graces Now concerning resurrection of duties We must know that there are diuers duties which the naturall man will neuer be brought vnto in which lieth the very power of godlinesse and the experience of all sound and sauing consolation Now these duties may be three waies considered 1. As they respect holy life in generall 2. As they respect piety to God 3. As they respect righteousnesse to men For the first there are foure things wherein the liues of Gods children differ from all others 1. In the manner 2. In the matter 3. In the meanes 4. In the ends of holy life For the manner three things are eminent 1. That they are deuoted and consecrated to holines l Reuel 12.1 2. That they delight and loue to be Gods seruants m Esay 56. 3. That they haue their conuersation in simplicitie and godly purenesse n 2 Cor. 1.12 11.3 For the matter they haue respect to all Gods commandements * Psal 119.31 and do indeuour after inward holinesse o Matth. 5.6 as well as outward besides they liue by faith p Rom. 1.16 in some measure which is a way of holinesse altogether vnknowne in the practise of wicked men And for the meanes of holinesse the godly haue a recourse to a threefold fountaine of sanctitie with such a sinceritie and constancie as no wicked man can attaine it viz the word q Psal 1.2 Luc. 8.15 prayer r Gal. 4.6 and the Sabboth Å¿ Esay 56. And for the end of their obedience their praise is of God and not of men hauing a maine respect alwaies to exercise themselues so as they may haue a conscience voide of offence towards God or towards men u Act. 24.16 t Rom. 2.26 Thus of holinesse of life in generall Now in respect of piety to God it is a very resurrection through the power of Christ to bring a man to
3. T is as easie to reuiue a dead man as perswade a carnall man fol. 4 Eight sorts of things that are aboue fol. 4 A fourefold presence of Christ fol. 6 Of Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father fol. 6 Three benefits come by tender affections fol. 8 Three sorts of things called things on earth fol. 8 Eight reasons in generall to disswade from affecting earthly things fol. 9 Salomons reasons against the loue of earthly things fol. 10. 11 Christs reasons fol. 12 The faithfull are dead three waies fol. 13 The life of Christians is hid in diuers respects fol. 14 Who may say Christ is their life fol. 16 Of the appearing of Christ fol. 16 Six appearings of Christ. fol. 16 Threefold iudgement fol. 16 Who shall iudge who shall be iudged where the iudgement shall be and when fol. 17 The signes of the second comming of Christ fol. 18 The forme of the last iudgement the preparation of the Iudge the citation resurrection collection and separation of the iudged the law and euidence by which men shall be iudged and the sentence and the fiue consequents of the iudgment with the vses fol. 19. to 22 What we must doe that we might be assured of the glory of heauen fol. 26 How long we must continue our sorrowes in mortification fol. 29 Why sinnes are called members fol. 30 Reasons against whoredome fol. 31 Seuen kindes of vncleannesse besides whoredome fol. 33 Remedies against vncleannesse fol. 34 The causes and occasions of lust fol. 35 What couetousnes is and the effects of it 36. 37. the signes of it 38. remedies against it fol. 39 Gods wrath vpon vncleane persons fol. 41 Iustice in God considered foure waies fol. 42 The fearefulnesse of Gods wrath set out fol. 43 The signes of Gods wrath the meanes to pacifie Gods anger and how we may know that God is pacified fol. 44. 45. 46 The markes of a childe of disobedience fol. 47 Difference betweene Gods anger towards the godly and the wicked fol. 48 The profit of remembring our naturall miserie fol. 49 A fourefold life fol. 51 How we may know when sinne is aliue and when it is dead fol. 51 A man neuer truely repents till he indeuour to be rid of all sinne and motiues fol. 53 Anger indifferent laudable vitious 54. Degrees of vicious anger reasons and remedies against it fol. 55. 56 Malice and the degrees and kindes of it 57. Reasons and remedies against it fol. 57. 58 Of blasphemie the kindes of it and reasons against it fol. 59. 60 Against filthy speaking fol. 61 Of lying reasons against it and questions answered fol. 61. 62 What the old man signifieth and why corruption is called the man and why the old man 63. 64. and what the workes of the old man are the old man is put off six waies fol. 64 The necessitie of the new birth fol. 66 Of the renouation of the creature in foure things and of the obedience in three things fol. 66 Rules for attaining of true knowledge fol. 67 Of the image of God in Christ in the Angels and in man 68. with their difference at large fol. 68. 69 How Christ is all in all and the comfort of it fol. 72. 73 The kindes and signes of election fol. 74 How many waies the elect are holy fol. 75 Fiue properties of Gods loue fol. 76 The kindes of mercy fol. 77 Motiues to mercy Rules how to shew mercy fol. 78 True Christian curtesie fol. 79 What humblenesse of minde is negatiuely and affirmatiuely fol. 80 Motiues to humblenesse of minde and of diuers sorts of pride fol. 80. 81 Of Christian meeknesse fol. 81 Of Long-suffering fol. 81. 82 Of forbearance the kindes and motiues and rules for the practise of it fol. 82. 83 Of forgiuing diuers questions fol. 84 To forgiue as Christ forgiues hath fiue things in it fol. 85 How loue is aboue all vertues fol. 85 The sorts and signes of loue fol. 86 Loue is the bond of perfection three waies fol. 87 Of Peace it is threefold fol. 87 How it is of God and when it rules and what we must doe to get it fol. 88 What is required in performing thankefulnes to men and what in receiuing it fol. 90 The Scripture is the word of Christ in foure respects fol. 92 Men sinne against the word six waies fol. 92 Women must seeke knowledge as well as men fol. 94 The vse of Scripture in our houses fol. 94 Of the wise vse of the word fol. 95 What we must doe that the word may dwell plenteously in vs and how we may know it doth fol. 98 Who may admonish or be admonished 99. Rules to be obserued in admonition fol. 100. What meant by Psalmes hymnes and spirituall songs and rules in singing of Psalms fol. 101 Vnto the goodnes of the action the goodnes of the end is required fol. 102 Things are done in the name of Christ foure waies fol. 103 Six reasons why Gods children should be more carefull of their words and deeds then others fol. 104 Of giuing thanks to God fol. 105 Of the gouernment of a familie the authoritie antiquitie and vtilitie of it fol. 107. 108 Foure things in a holy liuing together in a familie fol. 108 Six things in houshold piety fol. 108 Fiue things required in the labours of a familie fol. 109 The dutie of Wiues fol. 110. 111. 112. 113 Why subiection is rather named in the Wiues dutie fol. 111 Fiue things in the Wiues subiection fol. 111 Six waies Wiues must honour their Husbands fol. 111 Foure waies Wiues shame their Husbands fol. 112 Fiue waies Wiues shew faithfulnesse fol. 112 Six waies Wiues shew feare fol. 112 Six rules for Wiues workes fol. 112. 113 What Wiues are not bound to fol. 113 What they must doe that they may performe subiection fol. 113 The Wiues comelinesse in three things fol. 114 Husbands shew their loue foure waies fol. 116 Six waies Husbands honor their Wiues fol. 116 Seauen reasons why men must loue their Wiues fol. 117 Husbands obiections answered fol. 117 Causes why men loue not their Wiues fol. 117 Of bitter Husbands fol. 118 Foure rules for curing this bitternesse fol. 118 The dutie of children fol. 121 Childrens obiections answered fol. 122 Reasons of their obedience fol. 123 The dutie of Parents fol. 124. 125 How Parents prouoke their Children fol. 126 Seruants dutie fol. 128. 129. 130. c. Fiue faults in Seruants fol. 128 Foure things in the manner of Seruants obedience fol. 129 Six waies to know singlenesse of heart fol. 132 Twelue signes of a single hearted man fol. 133 Eight signes of a single hearted Seruant fol. 133 Of the feare of God in Seruants fol. 134 What Masters must doe to get the feare of God into their Seruants fol. 134 Eight obiections of Seruants answered fol. 135 CHAPTER III. VERSE I. If yee then be risen with Christ seeke those things that are aboue where Christ sits at the right hand of God HITHERTO of
Christian doctrine The Coherence now followeth Christian life The Apostle hath before discoursed of matters of faith now hee intends to entreat of matters of life The diuision of the Chapter and to prescribe rules of conuersation And these rules belong either to our generall calling as wee are Christians or to our patticular callings as wee are people of such or such condition or state of life The generall rules are set downe from the first verse of this Chapter to the eighteenth and the particular rules begin at the eighteenth verse and continue to the second verse of the next Chapter The rules of the first kinde may be referred to three heads for either they concerne first the meditation of heauenly things or secondly The subdiuisions the mortification of vice or thirdly the renouation of life The meditation of heauenly things ir vrged from v. 1. to the fift the mortification of vice is vrged from v. 5. to the tenth Renouation of life is generally layd down v. 10.11 and more specially opened v. 12. to the eighteenth The exhortation to the care and study of heauenly things is thus digested First it is expounded v. 1. Secondly it is illustrated v. 2. Thirdly it is confirmed by motiues and reason v. 3.4 And thus for the order of the whole Chapter and the generall frame of this first part Before I open the words more particularly there are diuerse things may be noted from the coherence and dependance of these words 4 Doctrine from coherence vvith former chapters with the Chapter before and the matter following in this Chapter From the coherence with the former Chapter I obserue these things First that there can bee no holinesse of life without faith and therefore the Apostle first instructeth them in matters of faith It is a true rule whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne and may be extended further then things indifferent while we are out of Gods fauour a Rom. 14.23 and know not our reconciliation and iustification in Christ our best actions are but faire sinnes For without faith it is vnpossible to please God b Heb. 11.6 Secondly that the terrestriall blessednesse of man is in respect of sinne two wayes principally assaulted First with errors in opinion Secondly with corruptions in manners And against both wee should learne from the Apostle in the latter part of the former Chapter and the first part of this to bee armed and furnished with holy directions and meditations Thirdly that these men that are so superstitiously earnest and so zealously forward for ceremonies and the traditions and obseruations of men whatsoeuer they protest or pretend or seeme to be are indeed voyd of true deuotion and feruent affection to heauenly thingsc. Doct. 1 Fourthly that hee that is by faith made a new creature must resolue to be at Gods appoyntment for his whole carriage in his generall and particular calling d Ephes 2.10 Doctrines frō the coherence in this Chapter Thus of the coherence with the former Chapters From the order of doctrine in this Chapter two things may be noted First that before a man can be good in his particular calling hee must first be good in his generall thou mayst bee painefull and diligent but thou canst not be euery way a faithfull and sound hearted husband wife seruant childe c. till thou bee a good man or good woman in respect of grace and godlinesse And therefore wee should first seeke the righteousnesse of Gods Kingdome and it may serue for direction vnto such as chuse wiues or seruants or the like if they bee not faithfull to God how canst thou bee assured they will prooue faithfull to thee moreouer wouldst thou haue thy seruants or children to bee amended then bring them to the powerfull preaching of the word and call vpon them to get into the fellowship of the godly that they may learne to bee good abroad in matters of religion and then thou mayst hope to finde them by proofe and daily experience trusty and faithfull in thy Doct. 2 businesse Finally this reproues both the sinfulnesse and folly of many carnall parents and masters they neuer care so their seruants doe their worke though they altogether neglect Gods worke And many times they restraine their seruants and children and will not let them heare sermons or come into godly companie as if that were the way to make them idle and carelesse whereas we see the cleane contrary to be true Secondly that men are neuer likely to hold out and prooue sound in the reformation and new obedience of their liues till they fall in loue with heauenly things and grow in some measure weary of the world and the things thereof 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thus of the generall obseruations from the twofold coherence Now followeth the particular opening of the words In the proposition of the exhortation to the studie of heauenly things layed downe in this verse two things are to bee considered first what or the dutie required viz. seeke those things which are aboue secondly why or the reasons to enforce the dutie and they are foure First ye are risen with Christ in the first resurrection Secondly these things are aboue and not attained without seeking or studie Thirdly Christ is aboue in his bodily presence Fourthly Christ sits at the right hand of God exalted in the glory of his father each of these strongly conclude the exhortation as will further appeare in the particular handling of them If yee be risen with Christ A threefold resurrection There may bee conceiued to bee a threefold resurrection of a Christian The first is sacramentall And thus we rise againe in baptisme The second is corporall c R●uel 2.9 What the first resurrection is and so wee shall rise againe in the day of Iesus Christ in our bodies out of the dust of the earth The third is spirituall and so wee must rise in this life in soule from the death of sinne or else we shall neuer bee deliuered from the second death of this spirituall resurrection called elsewhere the first resurrection he heere entreats And it is a worke of the spirit of grace deliuering vs from the power of sinne by which wee are quickned to the heauenly desires and endeauours of holy life by the vertue of the resurrection of Iesus Christ applyed vnto vs by faith in the effectuall vse of Gods ordinances It is a worke by which wee grow conformable to Christ being risen againe f Rom. 6.4.5 by which also wee taste of the powers of the life to come and are borne againe to a liuely hope of an eternall and incorruptible inheritance g 1 Pet. 1.3.4 the earnest of which wee haue receiued and shall shortly receiue the whole possession purchased h Eph. 1.14 though for a time we be absent from the Lord. This first resurrection carieth with it a similitude or resemblance of Christ rising againe so as euery Christian
his exceeding great reward c Gen. 15.1 The third preseruatiue is the daily practise of pietie If we would seeke the kingdome of God first both in the first part of our life and in the first part of euery day of our life as well in our houses as in Gods house these religious duties constantly performed would be a great and continuall helpe against worldly cares they would cleanse our hearts of them and daily prepare our hearts against them But how can it be otherwise with a man then it is They must needs liue and die the drudges of the world seeing they haue no more care of holy duties at home or abroad they liue like swine without all care of any thing but rooting in the earth The fourth preseruatiue is the due preparation for Christs second comming For when our Sauiour Christ had dehorted men from the cares of this life he adioynes this exhortation Let your loines be girded about and your lights burning and ye your selues like vnto them that wait for their master when he will returne from the wedding that when he commeth and knocketh they may open vnto him immediately blessed are those seruants whom the Lord when he commeth shall finde waking c. One great reason why couetous men doe so securely continue in the immoderate cares for this world is because they doe so little thinke of death and iudgement Whereas on the other side Christians doe with some ease withdraw their hearts from the world when they haue inured themselues to die daily by the constant remembrance of their latter end and by holding fast the euidence of faith and hope waiting when Christ will call for them The fift preseruatiue is to shun the meanes and occasions of couetousnesse And to this end it is good not to conuerse much with couetous persons or to get our selues libertie to conceiue the hope of any long prosperitie and rest in the world and generally we should labour to obserue our owne hearts and other mens liues and what we finde to be a meanes to kindle or inflame couetous desires that wee should auoid and betimes set against it or mortifie it And thus farre of couetousnesse And thus also of the catalogue of sinnes from which he doth disswade The reasons follow VERS 6. For the which things sake the wrath of God commeth on the children of disobedience VERS 7. Wherein ye also walked once when ye liued in them THese words containe two reasons to enforce the exhortation in the former verse The one is taken from the euill effects of the former sinnes vers 6. The other is taken from their owne experience while they liued in the estate of corruption vers 7. In laying downe the reason from the effect two things are to be noted First what sinne brings viz. the wrath of God Secondly vpon whom viz. vpon the children of disobedience Before I come to intreat of the wrath of God apart I consider of it as it stands in coherence with the former reason For in these words we are assured that man liuing and continuing in filthines and couetousnes shall not escape Gods wrath for they incurre both his hatred and his plagues both which are signified by the word wrath Gods wrath vpon vncleane persons And if any aske what plagues filthy persons and couetous persons shall feele I answer briefly and distinctly that neither of them shall scape Gods wrath as the Scriptures plentifully shew The filthy person brings vpon himselfe Gods curse temporall corporall spirituall and eternall Temporall for whoredome and any kinde of vncleannesse brings vpon men many temporall plagues in their estate the fire of Gods iudgements consuming many times their whole increase as hath beene shewed before Corporall for God many times meets with the sinnes of the body by iudgements vpon the body so that many filthy persons after they haue consumed their flesh and their body by loathsome diseases which follow this sinne in the end say with the foolish young man Oh how haue I hated instruction and despised correction d Pro. 5.11.12 Now I am brought almost into all euill in the middest of the assembly Spirituall for vncleannesse breeds in many a reprobate sense e Rom. 1.24.29 c. and finall impenitencie Many also for their filthinesse are pursued with secret and fearfull terrors of conscience and sometimes phrensie and desperate perturbations Eternall for the adulterer destroyes his owne soule and is shut out of the kingdome of heauen as hath beene also before declared Neither let the couetous person thinke hee shall speed any better for God hates him wonderfully And therefore the Prophet Ezechiel saith that the Lord smites his fists f Ezech. 22.13 at the couetous which is a borrowed phrase to expresse most bitter and sharpe threatnings Now lest the people should obiect that those were but great words the Lord would not doe so they would deale well enough with the Lord he preuenteth it and saith Can thy heart endure Vers 14. or can thine hands be strong in the dayes that I shall haue to doe with thee I the Lord haue spoken it and will doe it Let couetous persons without further enquirie assure themselues that couetousnesse is a maine cause of all the euils are vpon them or theirs and besides they may be assertained that all the seruice they doe to God is abhorred and meere lost labour It were to no purpose if they would bring him incense from Sheba and sweet calamus from a farre countrey their burnt offerings would not bee pleasant nor their sacrifices sweet vnto him g Ier. 6.13.20 Ob. But couetous persons are of most men so well furnished that there is not that meanes to bring them to any great hurt Sol. The Prophet shewes that God can lay a stumbling blocke before them and father and sonne together may fall vpon it and neighbour and friend may perish together h Ier. 6.21 The Lord hath meanes enough when men little thinke of it to bring downe rebellious sinners Ob. But wee see couetous persons and wealthy worldlings scape the best and longest of many others Sol. The Prophet Amos saith Amos 8.5 6.7 the Lord hath sworne by the excellencie of Iacob will neuer forget any of their workes Though the Lord may deferre yet certainly hee will neuer forget and therefore they are not a iot the better for scaping so long But howsoeuer they might escape outward iudgements yet they may be infallibly sure they haue sinned against their owne soules k Hab. 2.10 and that they shall know in the day of their death their riches shall not then profit them when the Lord taketh away their soule l Iob 27.8 he that is a great oppressor shall not prolong his dayes m Pro. 18.16 for he that getteth riches and not by right shall leaue them in the midst of his dayes and at his end shall be a foole n Ier. 17.11 How horrible then shall
aske it of him Thirdly if the contention be yet secret follow Salomons counsell say nothing of it to others but debate thy cause with thy neighbour himselfe and discouer not thy secret to another c Prou. 25.4 peace might soone be made with many men if the discord were not made so publike Now for auoiding of contention and malitious discords there are diuers rules of great vse I. Meddle not with the strife that belongs not to thee d Pro. 26.17 II. Contend not with fooles thou shalt neuer haue done if thou meddle with foolish persons for whether they rage or laugh there is no rest e Pro. 29.9 III. Let nothing be done through vaine-glory f Phil. 2.3 IV. Speake euill of no man g Tit. 3.2 V. Be courteous and tender-hearted h Eph. 4.31 32 VI. Wrong no man but follow that which is good both amongst your selues and towards all men i Thess 5.11 Lastly pray for a couering loue for hatred stirreth vp strife but loue couereth all sinne k Pro. 10.12 The vse of all this may be both for reproofe for instruction For reproofe of many men that are fearefully sowred with this leauen they doe not onely let the Sunne goe downe vpon their wrath but they let the Sunne goe his whole course and can finde no time from the one end of the yeere vnto the other to compound and lay aside their discords Nay so hath malice seated it selfe in some dogged and spightfull natures that it seemeth to proclaime it will neuer loose possession till the deuill the father of malice hath full possession both of soule and body But let euery godly minde be perswaded to auoide this monstrous sinne yea let vs striue to auoide the very beginning of it or if nature haue such corruption that for the present we cannot get our hearts rid of all secret poyson of dislike let vs be sure we be but children in malitiousnesse it is a monstrous wickednesse to haue a head that is exercised to strife and a heart that hath a kinde of sinfull dexteritie in framing and plodding for malitious courses And thus much of malice Cursed speaking The word in the originall is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blasphemie Now blasphemie or cursed speaking it is a sinne either against piety or against righteousnesse As it is against piety it is blasphemie to reproch or reason against the person or nature of God or against the prouidence and works of God or against the worship of God and the meanes thereof and so it is cursed speaking and a kinde of blasphemie to repine at Gods works m 1 Cor. 10.10 to reproch Gods sabboths n Lament 1. or messengers o 1 Cor. 16.16 or his word Also there is a cursed speaking which is against righteousnesse in the second table and thus it is cursed speaking When subiects curse the King p Eccl. 10. vlt. When Masters threaten their seruants q Ephes 6.9 When Parents prouoke their children r Ephes 6.4 When Husbands are bitter to their Wiues ſ Colos 3.19 When wiues brawle and chide with their Husbands t Pro. 25.24 When great men lord it ouer the poore u Prou. 13.8 and the like Cursed speaking is either before the face and so it is strife of words or behinde the backe and so it is backbiting or whispering * 2 Cor. 12.20 It is cursed speaking to mocke and scorne it is cursed speaking to iudge and censure it is cursed speaking to slander and disgrace it is cursed speaking to be euer complaining in all places Finally it is cursed speaking when men speake euill of any man and there is a speciall kinde of it in speaking euill of godly men and this properly is blasphemie in the second table for the Lord for the honor he beares to his people is pleased to afford the name of blasphemie to their reproches as importing that he takes it as if he were reproched himselfe We should all of vs take heede of cursed speaking of what kinde soeuer for it ariseth of ill causes as enuie or malice and it hath effects for it is certaine thou werest as good pierce others with a sword as smite them with thy tongue And therefore a bitter and cursed tongue is often compared in the scripture to the stinge of adders and to a sword yea a sharpe sword to a razor and to arrowes and the like besides the hurt it doth to thy selfe for if thou bite and deuoure take heede thou be not deuoured x Gal. 5.15 And it is iust with God thou shouldest be iudged and censured that accustomes thy selfe to iudge and censure y Matth. 7.1 And though thou speake euill neuer so secretly yet God doth many times wonderfully discouer the shame of it before others and if man would not iudge thee for thy euill tongue yet it is certaine God will z Jam. 5.9 And it is many times seene that men and women of distempered and spightfull tongues are made a very abhomination amongst men a Prou. 24. so as all men are weary of them and shun them Lastly scornefull and cursed speaking proues a notable hinderance to the successe of the word b 1 Pet. 2.1 2. and that these kinde of people might obserue when they come to heare they receiue not a blessing and why but because blessing is so farre from their lips as they loued cursing so it commeth to them The vse of all may be to exhort vs to put away far from vs a froward mouth and peruerse lips c Prou. 4.24 and that nothing be done through strife but rather that all things be done without murmuring or reasonings or brawlings or reuilings And herein such as feare God should striue to giue good example seeing they are as lights in the middest of crooked and peruerse people Q. Quest But what are the remedies of cursed speaking Answ Answ If we haue sinned through bitternesse Remedies we should obserue two rules 1. Let thy owne words grieue thee d Psal 56.5 that is labour by prayer and godly sorrow to beate downe the power of they peruersnesse without defending excusing or extenuating of thy frowardnesse 2. Keepe thy heart with all diligence e Prou. 23.24 Looke to the first risings of thy passions For bitternesse is first in the heart before it can come into the tongue Now for preuenting of euill speaking in others the only rule is to giue them no occasion either by words or iniurious and wicked life Ob. Obiect But they will raile and reuile without a cause Answ Answ Then obserue these rules 1. Betake thy selfe to prayer so did Dauid f Psal 104.2 3 4. 2. It is good oft-times to be as deafe man that heareth not g Psal 38.13 14 3. Be sure thou be carefull thou wrong not the names of others else though thou be innocent in the things imputed yet thou art iustly
foure things that are requisite especially to the good estate of the house First the constant practise of pietie and priuate worship Secondly the right order of imploiment in the mutuall labours of the familie Thirdly houshold discipline or reformation Fourthly hospitalitie or a right respect of strangers 6. Things in houshold pietie For the first the pietie that is to be practised stands of 6. parts First praier and thanksgiuing to God Men must pray euery where d 1 Tim. 2.8 our meats and callings must be sanctified by the word and by praier e 1 Tim. 4 4. thus Dauid praied morning and euening and at noone f Psal 55.18 so Daniel yea it is a brand of prophane and abhominable persons they call not vpon God g Psal 14.4 Yea those families are in great danger of his wrath that call not vpon his name h Ierem. 20. Secondly holy conference betwixt the members of the familie as betweene husband and wife i 1 Pet. 3.7 and betweene father and children k Deu. 6.21.22 Thirdly singing of Psalmes l Coloss 3.16 Ephes 5 20. Fourthly repetition of doctrine publikely taught examining it by the Scriptures alleadged as did the Bereans m Act. 17. Fiftly fasting vpon extraordinary occasions is very plaine Zach. 12.16 Lastly the parents instruction Psal 78.2.3.4 Deut. 6.6 Quest But what things may be taught in the familie What things may be taught in the familie Answ First the common grounds of Gods seruice and worship this is to teach them to feare God Secondly the meaning of the Sacraments n Exod. 12.25.26 13.14 Thirdly the Law o Deut. 6.6 that is the common grounds of honestie and vice teaching to loue such and such vertues and hate such and such vices Fourthly the vse and consideration of Gods great iudgements therefore God will tell Abraham of the destruction of Sodome because he will make vse of it in his familie Fiftly the report of Gods great workes of old p Psal 78.2.3 Sixtly to hope in God acquainting them with their naturall miseries and training them vp by warning them to take heed of the common presumptions of the wicked and by distilling into them the grounds of practise and promise concerning Gods mercy to their soules and their last saluation Seuenthly we should acquaint our housholds with the generall course of the Scriptures thus Timothie knew the Scriptures of a childe q 2 Tim. 3.15 for an exact knowledge of all Scriptures was impossible for a child to attaine Lastly the things receiued by publike doctrine should be inforced and kept a foot in the familie if any passe these bonds they intrude vpon the Ministers office and ought to feare Vzzahs curse and therefore as men should instruct and so auoide the common prophanenesse of the world in neglecting Gods ordinance so they should be wise to sobriety and keepe themselues in all feare and humilitie within their owne line and measure Thus of Piety The second thing required is a holy order of imployment in all the members of the familie in their mutuall labours for the good of the outward estate of it r Gen. 3.19 1 Cor. 7.20 Fiue things required in the labours of a familie vnto the orderly performance of the labours of a familie fiue things are required First diligence Secondly peace else all sacrifice is in vaine Prou. 17 1. Thirdly prouidence it is not the hand of the diligent but his thoughts that bring abundance care is required not the care for successe for that is condemned Matth. 6. but the care for the dutie Prou. 21.5 Fourthly retyrednesse they must keepe at home Seruants must not be stealing out of the familie without leaue nor Masters leaue their standings Keepe thy foot from thy neighbours house Prou. 25.17 If a man cannot be found in the place of his labour he is like a bird that wandreth from his nest Prou. 27.19 Fifthly frugalitie in liuing within their compasse and not spending aboue their meanes they must make their lambes serue for cloathing and the goates for rent or hire of the field and the milke of the goates must be sufficient for them and their families and for the sustenance of the maides Prou. 27. vlt. It is not a good rule to make reason iudge of their needes or to propound vnto themselues I will spend no more but what I neede but they must looke to their meanes to spend according to that for ordinarily there is not so litle comming in but God can make it suffice or will himselfe send them supply The third thing required is domesticall discipline Thus Iacob searcheth his house purgeth it of all idols and superstitious monuments admonisheth his people of the feare of God Gen. 35.2 3. Thus Iob sacrificeth for his children Iob 1.5 Thus Dauid will ridde his house of slanderers lyars apostates c. And so should we see to the reformation of abuses by admonition rebukes correction or complaints to the Magistrate or Elders of the Church the Father in his house is the keeper of both Tables The fourth thing is the right order of hospitalitie and respect of strangers and it stands in two things First in seeking by all meanes to bring Gods ministers or seruants into our house Å¿ Heb. 13.2 1 Pet. 1.8 that they might helpe vs and as it were blesse and perfume our houses by their praiers counsell comforts admonitions c. Rom. 1.11 Secondly in prouiding that no strangers be admitted or permitted that will hinder Gods worship or any way the good of the familie they must not be within our gates that will not ioyne with vs to sanctifie the Sabboth in our dwellings Exod. 20. Yea if they be disordered persons wee should vse them as the false Prophet that they may say thus was I wounded in the house of my friend Zach. 13. The Vse is First against the Papists and that principally two waies First in that they forbid mariage and so hinder the erecting of families to God Secondly in that they forbid knowledge to Lay-people and so hinder the good gouernment of the Familie Secondly against great abuses euen amongst vs. There is that open prophanenesse in the most houses that if they searched with lights there would no prayer reading of scripture holy conference singing of Psalmes or instruction be found there but without light men may finde their houses full of swearing deceit lying false measures and weights and all kinde of filthines to the singular detriment of the familie for hence it is that many families doe in vaine rise earely and goe to bed late and eat the bread of painfulnesse and sorrow for God for these sinnes will not build the house Sometimes this is plagued by open iudgements sometimes Gods curse secretly like a moath ears downe the prosperitie of the house But alwaies all such families are very hatefull to God euen like the dens or cages of wilde beasts Secondly it may humble the
c. and corporall in feeding clothing visiting c. Generally our time should be spent in well-doing Gal. 6.9 And as for time for world businesses we should obserue the Apostles rule They that haue wiues should be as they that haue none and they that weepe as though they wepe not and they that reioyce as though they reioyced not and they that buy as though they possed not and they that vse the world as though they vsed it not for the fashion of the world goeth away 1. Cor. 7 29.30 The vse of all is for reproofe of the most of vs for some of vs sinne against the seasons and opportunities of Gods grace some against the very space of time Men transgresse against opportunitie two waies first by ignorance of the signes of the seasons Matth. 16.3 secondly by a wilfull neglect of the opportunitie of grace when we haue them There are many things might moue vs to redeeme the time in this respect Motiues to redeeme time 1. We haue our times appointed and the bounds of our habitation assigned Act. 17.26 2. The times will not bee alwaies faier there are perillous times times of sorrow anguish sicknes tentation want losse feare perplexitie yea wee may purpose promise expect time of healing and curing when we shall be deceiued and finde a time of trouble Ier. 14.19 Besides Christ in the opportunities of grace is but a litle while with men There is a prime of mans life yea a prime of euery mans ministerie Ioh. 7.33 Further the kingdome of God in the mercies of it may be wholly taken away if we bring not fruit in time of fruit Matth. 21.34.41 Lastly this is a very prouoking sinne for if God giue a space to repent and men will not know the day of their visitation most an end God casts such into a bed of affliction after they haue stretched themselues vpon the bed of securitite Reuel 2.21.22 Luk. 19.43.44 Yea many of Gods children are greatly to blame in neglecting the opportunities of assurance of grace and therefore because they are so carelesse in making their calling and election sure this forsaking of the promise of God is scourged afterwards with comfortlesse sorrowes arising from such a sense of their corruptions as makes them for a long time seeme to be depriued of all grace and mercy Heb. 4.1 Againe many men sinne egregiously against the very space of time in that they haue much leisure and time and fill it vp with litle or no good imploiment Their estate that haue meanes to liue without labour is vsually accounted an estate of great ease and happinesse But in deed it is an estate of much danger for the men that abound in time without imploiment are liable to many temptations and lusts besides they are subiect to almost continuall hardnesse of heart and deadnsse of spirit for it is the labouring seruant that enters into his masters ioy Adde that men that abound with leasure are easily drawne by the inticements of ill company and much intangled with the sports and pleasures of the world Sometimes such persons grow into great habit of suspitiousnesse waiwardnesse filled with wordly passions and discontentments sometimes they prooue great medlers in other folkes businesse The remedie for these persons whether men or women is to exercise themselues in some kinde of profitable imployment and to labour so as some way to see the fruit of it to eat their owne bread but especially they should bee abundant in the worke of the Lord they should double their imployment in reading hearing conference mortification mercy c. Thus of wise conuersation Let your speech be gracious alwaies and powdred with salt that yee may c. Godly communication is here exhorted vnto and for order here is a precept Let your speech c. 2. the end of the precept that yee may know c. In the precept concerning our speech obserue first the properties of speech which are two 1. they must be gracious 2. powdred with salt And then note the continuance how long the precept is in force and that is alwaies In generall we so heare that we must looke to our words aswell as our workes and therefore they are farre wide that say their tongues are their owne who shall controule them Psal 12.4 From Coherence I obserue that he walkes not wisely that talkes not wisely for euill words corrupt good manners neither may he be accounted an honest man of life that is an euill man in tongue The vse is for tryall for if God make vs new creatures he giues vs new tongues and if he turne the people to him by true repentance Note he doth returne vnto them a pure language Zeph. 3.9 and therefore if any man seemeth to be religious and refraineth not his tongue this man religion is in vaine Let It is not arbitrarie we may looke to our words if we will but it is a flat precept and so a matter indispensible Your God is no respecter of persons he forbids vngracious wanton and idle words in Gentlemen and Gentlewomen aswell as in poore men and labourers he dislikes it in Masters and Parents aswell as in children and seruants it is as ill for the Master to spend his time in idle talke c. as for the seruant Gracious Our words may be said to be gracious three waies Obseruations concerning gracious speech 1. If we respect the cause 2. If we respect the subiect 3. If we respect the effect In respect of the cause good words are well said to be gracious First because they flow from the free grace of God without our merit for wee doe not deserue so much as to be trusted with one good word Reason yeelds vs conceits and nature an instrument to speake by Note but it is the God of nature that of his free grace giues vs good words Secondly our words ought to proceed from some grace of God in the heart as from knowledge faith ioy sorrow loue feare desire c. and in this sense when they are in the tongue carry still the name of the fountaine whence they flow Againe our words must be gracious in respect of the subiect the matter we must talke of must be of good things or religious matters words of instruction comfort faith hope c. but especially our words should be seasoned with the daily memorie and mention of Gods grace to vs in Christ a Psal 40.21 Thirdly our words ought to be gracious in respect of the effect such as tend to build vp and minister grace to the hearers b Ephes 4.29 yea gracious words are faire words and faire words are first gracefull words words of thankfulnes 2. Inoffensiue words not railing bitter slandering blasphemous or filthy words nay not iesting words that are intended to prouoke irritate disgrace and bite 3. Seasonable words c Pro. 15.23 4. Wholesome words not filthy rotten communication d Eph. 4.29 Vse Vse is for
mindes these seruants are many times the firebrands of contention alienate parents from their children friend from friend and keepe malice on perpetuall foote these are here rebuked But let vs consider further is this such a fault in poore seruants that can pretend many things to be men-pleasers how foule a vice is it in freemen that are in no wants or restraint how hurtfull is it to be a man-pleaser in the Courts of Princes and in the houses of Nobles how detested a vice is it in such as are Magistrates and publike states And is it nought in the Court and Countrey certainely it is much more vile in the Pulpit and in Churchmen and euen the greater they are the worse and more abominable is their soothing and daubing Thus of the negatiue In the affirmatiue are three things and the first is singlenesse of heart In singlenesse of heart Concerning singlenesse of heart I consider it two waies 1. In the generall as it is in Gods seruants 2. In speciall as it is in mens seruants Singlenesse or sinceritie of heart as it is in Gods seruants I consider of in two things 1. In the nature of it 2. In the signes of it Singlenesse of heart may be discerned by the contrarie to which it is opposed 1. As it is opposed to hypocrisie a sincere hearted man is no hypocrite and shewes it three waies Hovv to knovv singlenesse of heart by 6. things to vvhich it is opposed First hee had rather be good then seeme so as in case of almes Rom. 12.8 compared with Math. 6.2 so in the practise of piety he had rather haue grace and sound knowledge then an emptie shew of it Secondly he will serue God at all times as well as at one time it is a note of an hypocrite that he will not pray at all times hee will serue God when he is sicke but not when he is well Iob. 27.7.8.9 So it is vile hypocrisie to come to Church in Lent to heare Sermons but neuer come there or but seldome all the yeere after Thirdly he minds inward secret domesticall holinesse and piety as well as outward open and Church holinesse hee is an hypocrite that kneeles downe when he comes into the Church and neuer praieth in his family at home It is vile hypocrisie and palpable in such men as haue knees of praier when they first come vp into the pulpit and no words of praier when they are risen vp to speake for or to Gods people 2. As it is opposed to fleshly wisedome 1 Cor. 1.12 There is a threefold wisedome of the flesh that batters and keepes out singlenesse and sinceritie of heart 1. The first is a reaching after priuate ends in publike imployments as preaching for gaine 2 Cor. 2.17 2. The second is a cunningnesse in committing or hiding sinne It is sincerity to be wise to doe good and simple concerning euill to be a bungler in acting it and to haue nothing to say in defence of it when it is done Rom. 16.19 3. The third is fraud shifting subtiltie and guilefull and deceitfull dealing in mens course for the things of this life Thus Esau is a wild and cunning man able by reason of his craft and subtiltie to liue in a wildernes but Iaakob is a plaine man a single hearted man he can make no shift to helpe himselfe in earthly things by fraud or craft but is open and plaine in all his dealings for the world but a man of great reach for matters of his soule This is a patterne of true singlenes simplicitie and sinceritie 3. As it is opposed to a double heart opposed I say to a heart and a heart and a double hart is either a wauering heart or a diuided heart men haue a double heart that wauer and are tossed with vncertainties such as are now for God and godlinesse and shortly after for sinne and the flesh now are resolued to leaue such a fault as perswaded it is a fault and by and by they will to it againe as perswaded it is not a fault here is no singlenesse of heart And thus the heart is double in respect of times it is double also as diuided in respect of obiects I instance in two things first in matter of worship the people that came to inhabite Samaria had a diuided heart for they feared the God of the Countrey because of the Lions and they feared the gods of the nations also 2 King 17.33 Such are they that feare Gods threatnings in his word and feare the signes of heauen too Secondly our Sauiour instances in matters of the world The minde which is the eie of the soule cannot be said to be single when it is distracted men cannot serue God and Mammon Math. 6.21.22.23.24 4. As it is opposed to spirituall pride a single heart is an humble heart as Iob sheweth Iob. 9.15.16 and sheweth it selfe in two things First that if God send crosses it will not answer or iustifie it selfe but make supplication and so acknowledge Gods loue as withall it will confesse that God doth iudge them for their corruptions Secondly if the sincere hearted man pray to God and the Lord be pleased to answer him by vnutterable feelings euen by the witnesse of the spirit of adoption yet hee will be so farre from spirituall pride and conceitednesse that fearing before Gods mercies he will be as if he beleeued not that God had heard his voice 5. As opposed to perturbation and disquietnes of the heart arising either from the cloudinesse and muddinesse of the Iudgement not able to discerne things that differ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 1.10 or from the vnrest of the conscience shewed by hourely or frequent checkings 2 Cor. 1.12 or from the infidelity or grudging or distrustfulnesse of the heart Act. 2.46 6. As opposed to offensiuenesse and so the single harted man is neither offensiue by wrongs nor by scandals in respect of wrongs he is innocent as the doue he is no horned beast to pelt and gore others 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Math. 10.16 and in respect of scandals hee is desirous to liue without blame from those that are without or griefe to the faithfull Phil. 2.15 1.10 Out of this may be gathered 12. Signes of a single hearted man the signes or properties of a single or sincere hearted man 1. He had rather be good then seeme to be so 2. He striues to be good in secret at home in heart as well as openly and abroad 3. He serues not God by flashes or fits but is constant and will pray and serue God at all times 4. He is a plaine man without fraud and guile in matters of the world he loues plainnesse and open dealing yet he is not simple for in matters of his soule he is of great reach and forecast and discretion c. 5. He is a bungler in sinne he knowes not the methode of Sathan 6. Hee dotes not vpon the world he can vse it as