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A45335 A practical and polemical commentary, or, exposition upon the third and fourth chapters of the latter epistle of Saint Paul to Timothy wherein the text is explained, some controversies discussed, sundry cases of conscience are cleared, many common places are succinctly handled, and divers usefull and seasonable observations raised / by Thomas Hall ... Hall, Thomas, 1610-1665. 1658 (1658) Wing H436; ESTC R14473 672,720 512

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on Baal Hos. 2.8 with the Israelites they turn their jewels into an Idoll and then dance before it and worship it Iesurun when fat and full kicks at the God which fed him Deut. 32.15 like Mules which being filled with their dammes milk matrem calcibus petunt fall to kicking the damme that fed them The Hebrewes have a Proverb In fontem ex quo semel bibisti ne projicito glebam much lesse in fontem ex quo semper God is our Creatour Preserver Father and Friend and therfore they do very foolishly who do thus ill requite him Deut. 32.6 Take heed therefore of this Spunge of the Devill as Austin calls Ingratitude wherewith he wipes all the favours of God out of our soules 5. Unthankfullness stops the Current of Gods mercies and provokes the Lord to strip us of all Solomon forsakes the God of his mercies by it he lost ten parts of his Kingdome and had adversaries ever after 1 Kings 11.9 Hezekiah when recovered rendred not according to mercy received therefore wrath came upon him from the Lord. 2 Chron. 32.25 It maks the Lord to repent of the blessings he hath given us 1 Sa. 15.11 It made David repent of his care in protecting the flocks servants of ungrateful Nabal from violence 1 Saw 25.15.16.21 22. In vain have I kept all that this fellow hath since he requites me evill for good I le destroy all that belongs to him So saith God in vain have I saved such a man from the Sword Plague Famine therefore I will now destroy him utterly for his rebellion God cannot endure these Sepulchra beneficiorum these unthankfull buriers of his benefits 6. 'T is a sad aggravation of mens sins This makes the sins of the Saints so exceeding sinfull because they are committed against the greatest Light and Love God Registers all the mercies which he bestowes on us and when we sin against them we shall be sure to hear of it 2 Sam. 12.7 8 9 10. 'T is a sinne that levens and sowres our other sins and makes them farre more loathsome It stops mens mouthes and makes them excuselesse so that they have nothing to say for themselves Ezra 9.9 10. when he had set forth what God had done for them and how they had rebelled against him he cries and now Lord what shall we say after all this q. d. We have nothing to say for our selves since we have again forsaken thy commandements notwithstanding all thy mercies and deliverances given to us this brought ruine on them V. 13 14. 7. Idolaters will rise in Judgement against such if they will praise their dung-hill-Gods shall not we praise the living God Iudg. 16.23 8. Unthankfull men are unfit for Heaven for there the Saints do nothing but sing Hallelujahs and praises to their God for ever Revel 5.12 13. Luke 2.13 This is one of the crying sins of England Ingratitude both to God and man never raigned nor raged more amongst us then at this day As the Lord loads us with mercies so we load him with our Apostasies No Nation under heaven so beloved as we and no Nation under Heaven that have worse requited his love 'T is a Miracle of mercy that he yet continues his mercies to us and that he hath not long agoe stript us naked as in the day when we were born Let it therefore repent us of our unkindnesse to our good and gracious God and for the time to come let us expresse our Thankfulnesse in Reall obedience We have nothing else to give unto God but Thanksgiving that is his Rent and due Psal. 29.2 and 50.14 every honest man will pay his Rent onely take heed that you pay it not to a wrong Land-Lord ascribe not the glory of what you are or have to your selves or to the Creature all must be given primarily to God 't is true we may thank and pay the messenger but not like the Doner Cant. 8.12 the Keepers of the Vine-yard have two hundred but Solomon himself hath a thousand Secondarily we may give Thanks to Gods Instruments whose hearts he moves to help us Thus David first blesseth God and then Abigail 1 Sam. 25.32 33. 'T is the Almes if I may so say which we give unto God in all other things God blesseth us but in Thanksgiving we bless God Psal. 50.22 Iames 3.9 God blesseth us Imperatively we bless him Optatively when we desire and endeavo●r to set forth his promises This is the way to increase and preserve our blessings both Temporall and Spirituall and if we merit in any duty 't is in Thanksgivings He that gives Thanks for an old mercy makes way for a new one This is more pleasing unto God then all legall Sacrifices Psal. 50.8 and 69.30 31. 'T is one of the most excellent parts of Gods worship whereby we do in a speciall manner glorify him Psal. 50. ult yea in some respects God hath more glory from the Saints on Earth then from the Saints in Heaven for they praise him without opposition in the middest of his friends but we praise him with much danger and difficulty in the middest of his enemies This is the end of our Creation Prov. 16.4 Isay 43.21 every member every sense every faculty of soul and part of our bodies calls for Thankfulnesse Quot membra tot ora Had we but wanted a Legge or an Arm or an Eye we should know the price of that mercy 'T is the end of our Predestination Ephes. 1.11 12. The end of our Redemption Isay 51.11 Luke 1.74 The end of our Adoption Ephes. 1.5 6. In a word 't is the end of all Gods Mercies that we should praise him for them Psal. 50.15 Quot beneficia tot ora When the Lord had delivered Israel out of Egypt he makes it an Argument to quicken them to obey all his commandements Exod. 20.2 when the Lord plants his Vine-yard in a very fruitfull hill then he expects the pleasant Grapes of Thankfull obedience Isay 5.1 2. Even the Devill could say Iob had good Reason to expresse his Thankfulnesse in serving God who had made the hedge of his protection round about him Iob 1.9 Rule 8. See to the manner of your Thanksgiving God loves Adverbs better then Adjectives he regards not so much quàm bonum sed quàm bene A good dish may be marred in the Cooking and a good Duty spoyled for want of a right performance He then that would give Thanks unto God rightly Must do it 1. Cordially 2. Zealously 3. Chearfully 4. Speedily 5. Beleevingly 6. Humbly 7. Holily 8. Considerately 1. We must praise God cordially not cursorily or customarily in a verball formall way but as God blesseth us Really so our praise must be Reall and sincere God is a Spirit and will be worshipped in spirit Hence David calls on his Soul to praise God Psal. 103.1 and the Virgin Mary not only with her soul but with her Spirit i. e. with her understanding which
gather themselves together against the Church of God with an intent to ruine and rase it even to the foundation these are their thoughts I but they know not my thoughts saith God why what were Gods thoughts Why his thoughts were to make their rising against his people to be their ruine their own counsels to be their own confusion Micah 4.11 12 13. They shall be gathered together as sheaves in the floor arise and thresh O daughter of Zion q. d. Thy enemies thought to come to thresh thee but thou shalt thresh them The work of God in all ages hath been carried on by weak means The Apostles many of them Illiterate fisher-men Luther a Monk King Edward the sixth a Child Queen Elizabeth a Woman no matter how weak the Instrument be if God be the Agent The Brethren 4. Observation 4. All the faithful are Brethren in Christ. In Scripture we read of three sorts of Brethren 1. By Race 2. By Place 3. By Grace 1. By Race such as descend from the same father and mother so Iacob and Esau were brethren and sometimes kinsmen called Brethren as Lot and Abraham 2. By Place such as are of the same Nation thus the Jews called one another Brethren Deut. 23.20 3. By Grace and that Common or Special 1. Common in respect of Creation and so all men are Brethren Gen. 9.5 2. Special in respect of Adoption and so all Believers are Brethren Rom. 1.13 and 8.12 and 12.1 Phil. 1.14 and 4.21 1 Thes. 1.4 and 2.2 1. Iames 1.2 This must needs be so for they have the same God for their Father the same Church for their Mother the same House for their dwelling the same Inheritance for their portion They speak like one another and are cloathed like one another They fight against one common enemy they walk in one path and eye the same Objects Let us then love like Brethren let it not be Verbal but an Affective and Effective love both in heart and deed Rom. 12.10 Heb. 13.1 1 Pet. 2.17 We should part with some of our right for Peace and there should be no contention between us for we are Brethren Gen. 13.8 1 Cor. 6.5 6. We should Sympathize like Brethren a Brother is or should be a second-self We should bear each others sin and sufferings if children of the same Family see one of their fellowes beaten all the rest of the little ones fall a crying about him So should we weep with them that weep and remember those that are in bonds since we our selves are subject to the same afflictions Heb. 13.3 VERS 22. The Lord Iesus Christ be with thy Spirit Grace be with you Amen THE Apostle having finisht his Salutations cometh now to conclude his Epistle with a Comprecation and an Apostolical benediction 1. Of Timothy in particular He prayes that the Lord may be with his Spirit q. d. Be not sad at my departure for though I must leave thee yet the Lord shall be with thee and uphold thee with his Grace 2. He prayes for the rest of the Brethren with him and commends them to Gods grace Grace be with you .i. with you all as it is Heb. 13.25 This is Pauls conclusion written with his own hand in all his Epistles to prevent false Coppies 2 Thes. 3.17 3. He ratifies and seals up all with that concluding Particle Amen Of which see more V. 17. Observations 1. Our special desire should be that God would be with the Spirits of his people By Spirit here is meant that noble faculty of mans Soul called the Understanding or the Mind with the most inward cogitations thereof Luke 1.47 My Spirit rejoiceth in God my Saviour .i. My Understanding in the apprehension of this great mercy stirs up all the rest of the powers of my Soul to glorifie God We should pray that God would direct our Spirits in thinking devising judging chusing refusing loving hating Generally that the Lord would lead us by his Spirit as his children inclining our hearts to that which is pleasing in his sight So praid David Psal. 143.10 and Paul Ephes. 3.16 17. This inward presence of Christ with the Spirits of his people is one great part of the reward of their love and obedience to him Iohn 14.21 23. This comforts them under the cross and assures them of their Salvation We should therefore alwayes pray that Christ by his Spirit would be present with our Spirits and that we may so live that he may delight to dwell in us for if he be not with us sin and Satan will soon prevail against us We should therefore labour to find and feel this special presence of Christ in our hearts that we may rejoice in it and lament its absence without it we can do nothing nor understand any thing in the mysteries of Religion for the wisdom of the flesh is not onely an enemy but enmity it self against God Rom. 8.7 The natural man for want of the Spirit of God perceives not the things of the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2.14 Grace be with you Thus he begins and thus he ends with Prayer for Grace .i. for the free favour and love of God and all other spiritual blessings which accompany it as Pardon of sin Sanctification and Glory 2. Observation 2. Gods favour and grace is principally to be sought even above and before all other things The Apostle doth not say Riches be with you Honours be with you or the favour of men be with you But Grace and Gods favour be with you So in all his Epistles he puts Grace first and Peace which denotes Temporal blessings last Rom. 1.7 Colos. 1.2 Rev. 1.4 Numb 6.25 Psal. 4.6 7. Matth. 6.33 In the Lords Prayer we first beg for spirituals and have six Petitions for that and then for temporals Amen .i. So it is or so let it be or so it shall be 3. Observation 3. What is prayed for must be believed and earnestly desired So much this word Amen implyes They sin then that pray without any understanding fervent desire or belief of what they pray for POST-SCRIPT The second Epistle unto Timothy ordained the first Bishop of the Church of the Ephesians was written from Rome when Paul was brought before Nero the second time THese Post-scripts are no part of the Text neither was this added by the Apostle for it contradicts the Text. The Apostle calls Timothy an Evangelist 2 Tim. 4.5 and the Post-script makes him a Bishop The Evangelists were not tied to personal residence in one place as Bishops and Pastors were but they were to go from place to place to confirm the Churches planted by the Apostles Beza observes that this first clause doubtless is spurious it is not extant in divers old coppies and which is much the Vulgar Latin omits it So do the Syriack and Aethiopick Versions So that this is but a very sorry foundation to build the Divine Right of Episcopacy upon FINIS
when renewed is the most noble sublime and choycest part of man not only her Tongue or Hand but her soul yea her spirit shall praise him Luke 1.46 47. The Spirit is more then the Soul Hence some by soul would have the Inferiour part of the soul to be meant as the sensitive powers common to us with bruits which respects naturall things And by Spirit the Superiour faculty of the Soul the Rationall part especially when enlightened and renewed by the Spirit of God which respects divine and spirituall things So the Apostle distinguisheth between soul and spirit 1 Thes 5.23 2. Zealously and Transcendently with the highest intention of affection As God is the most High so our Praise must be answerable We must extoll and exalt his Name Isay 25.1 as the Angels in heaven do though not in Equality yet in Conformity and Similitude Hence the Saints call up all the Powers of their soules to this work and make new songs of praise Exod. 15. Psal. 69.30 See how Deborah rowseth up and quickens her self that she might the better quicken others Iudg. 5.12 The reiteration of the words do shew her earnest affection to the work 3. Speedily without delay so soon as ever we recive a mercie we should presently give Thanks So did Deborah Iudg. 5.1 the same day that she received a victory the very same day she sings praise We may begin too late we cannot begin too soon As God loads us daily with mercies so we should daily praise him Psal. 68.19 20. 4. Voluntarily freely chearfully all Gods people are Voluntiers Psal. 110.3 it 's no service that is not Voluntary compulsive Praise is no Praise 'T is for beasts to be driven against their wills aguntur non agunt As in alms God loves a chearfull giver so in this Spiritual alms God would have our praises flow as water from a spring freely not as fire from a flint with much hammering and striking 5. Beleevingly and in faith As our Prayers so our Praises must be put up in the Name of Christ he must sweeten our odours with his incense Revel 8.3 he is that golden Altar which sanctifieth all our services Colos. 3.17 Ephes. 5.20 givnig Thanks unto God alwayes 1. Habitually and dispositively our hearts should be kept in such an holy frame that on all occasions we should be ready to praise God 2. For all things that God shall send on us or ours for prosperity and adversity for sicknesse and health for poverty and plenty what ever God doth with us we must Thank him 3. In the Name of Christ these calves of our lips must be offered on this Altar Hos. 14.2 6. Humbly none can give Thanks Rightly but he that gives Thanks Reverently Heb. 12.28 our very rejoycing must be mixt with trembling Psal. 2.10 make a man first Humble and he 'l soon be Thankfull as we see in Iacob Gen. 32.10 and the Prodigall Luke 15.19 he counts it an honour to be Gods hired servant Such a one looks upon all as mercy no merit Hence when the Lord would make men truly Thankfull he sets before them their misery Ezek. 16. and commands the people of Israel to keep the feast of Booths in remembrance of their misery in Egypt Nehem. 8.17 and to remember that their Father Iacob was a poor perishing Syrian Deut. 26.5 they must acknowledge the meanness of their Originall that they might the better magnify Gods goodness and free Grace in raising them 7. Holily from a pure heart Praise is unse●mly in the mouth of sinners Their sacrifices are an abomination to God 'T is in Sion and not in Babylon that praise waits for him Psal. 65.1 'T is only Saints that are called to this work Psal. 33.1 and 145.10 they have speciall mercies as Justification Sanctification Salvation c. and therefore it much concerns them to be Thankfull 8. Considerately We must weigh and ponder all circumstances as spices pounded smell more sweetly Hence David descends to particulars Psal. 136. per totum 1. Consider the freeness of Gods mercy when thou wast dead in Trespasses and sins and hadst no eye to pity thee nor loveliness in thee yet then God spread his skirt of love over thee and said Live 2. Consider the fulness of Gods mercies They are for number numberless Psal. 139.17 18. Mercies to soul to body in estate in the Church and in the Common-wealth c. Meditation on these things will be like oyle to the Lamp it will inflame and inlarge our hearts it will sweeten mercies to us Psal. 104.33 34. and strengthen us in Gods way Neh. 8.10 Since this duty is so highly pleasing unto God be much in it The repetition of the Act will intend the Habit and therefore be practising it on all occasions Hast children give Thanks for them Gen. 29.35 Hast victory over thy enemies give Thanks for that 2 Sam. 22.1 Hast good success give Thanks for that Gen. 34.48 He that would see more for Thanksgiving may peruse Mr. Sam. Wards Serm. on 1 Thes. 5.18 and Mr. Bridge on the same Text. Mr. Ieanes Thanksgiving Serm. for Taunton D. Holseworth on Hos. 14.2 Mr. Gataker on Gen. 32 10. Church his Treasury p. 318. D. Spurstow on the Promises chap. 20. 8. Vnholy Fitly hath the Apostle yoaked these two together Unthankfull Unholy seeing every act of Unholinesse hath much Unthankfulnesse in it every sinne we commit against God is a Transgression not onely of the Law of Holinesse but also of the Law of love and kindnesse there is much ingratitude in sin An unholy man is a profane man one that slights God and his wayes one that savours not spirituall things but is wholly addicted to the world and its pleasures preferring these Earthly and Temporall things before Eternall Now this Unholiness and Profaneness is twofold 1. In Doctrinalls 2. In Practicalls 1. In Doctrinalls In the last dayes men shall publish unholy Doctrines and profane Principles Profane men will invent profane Tenets and profane fables which the Apostle commands us to shun 1 Tim. 4.7 6.20 what profane doctrines are publisht in our days who lists may see in Mr. Edwards his Gangreen 1. Part. p. 15. c. Edit 3. and London Ministers Testimony and Mr. Bartlets Balsom in fine 2. In the last dayes men will be profane in Practicalls No true piety will appear in their lives but they will be full of Pride Self-conceit Covetousness Hypocrisy Malice and all Unrighteousness They will violently rush into sin without any Fear of God or Reverence to man Hence the Apostle rangeth profane persons amongst the vilest sinners 1 Tim. 1.9 10. 3. Such as rend the bowels of their Mother that bare them these are impious and profane in S. Austins judgement 4. A prophane man most properly is one that lightly esteems the holy things of God one that slights God his Sabbaths Sacraments Servants Ministers and all Gods holy things In a word he is
or Tittle of Gods word shall perish Mat. 5.18 Hence it 's called a more sure i. e. a most sure word 2 Pet. 1.19 'T is a certain infallible word it hath been often tried yet never failed nor deceived those that trusted in it Psal. 12.6 we love faithfull friends and such as will stick to us in our misery oh then love the faithful and sure word of God which will never leave you nor forsake you but in the very pangs of death will minister strong consolation to you 'T is in the word that we find the everlasting Covenant even the sure mercies of David i. e. of Christ who in respect of the flesh descended from David Isay 55.3 there we find by whom our sins are pardoned our Natures healed our Soules are saved these are called sure mercies 1. In respect of performance they are as sure as if already done 2 Sam. 23.6 2. Sure in respect of continuance they shall never be taken away his mercy endures for ever Once adopted justified fanctisied and for ever so 2 Sam. 7.13 Iohn 13.1 Let us not then sit down content with those low perishing uncertain things but get interest in those sure desireable and soule-satisfying mercies Pray with Saint Au●l●● Da mihi nummum nunquam periturum Lord give me those riches which will never perish 4. It maketh the simple wise and that to salvation Many that are sensible of their ignorance and simplicity are discouraged from reading the word when the promise runs to such as being sensible of their own silly bruitish condition and come with humble tractable teachable hearts that they shall be taught wisdom Prov. 1.4 and 19.4 Psal. 119.130 and become wiser then the ancient who by their long experience oft times get much wisdom 2. Wiser then their Teachers who usually excell their Schollers 3. Wiser then their enemies who yet by their continual diving and searching into the wayes of their opposites grow very subtle and cunning Psal. 119.98 99 100. 5. The word of the Lord is right and strait having no crookednesse nor perversenesse in it Wicked men go about and fetch a compasse in wayes of sin but the godly run the way of the plain and out-run them as Ahimaaz did Cushi 2 Sam. 18.23 6. It breeds joy in every soul that orders his life according to it V. 8. the godly find 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 somewhat of kin to them in the word which makes them delight in it Though the wicked can find no joy there yet an upright-hearted David finds it sweeter then hony and more pretious then gold they are even the joy and rejoycing of their hearts Psalm 119.111 this breeds solid serious substantial spiritual joy in the deepest afflictions and tentation Psal. 119.92 I had perished in my affliction unlesse thy Law had been my delight It was not onely delightfull but even delight in the Abstract yea delights in the Plurall number he found delight upon delight i. e. great and sure delight in Gods word It upholds the heart from sinking under affliction 'T will make a Paul and Silas sing Psalmes in prison when Creature-comforts faile yet faith can feed upon the Promises Habbak 3.17 Hebrews 13.5 The word affords us presidents of greater trialls then ever yet we have undergone and so comforts us in our distresses Do thy children rise against thee so did Davids Do Princes speak against thee and thy famliar friends betray thee so did his Psal. 55. Hast lost all so did Iob. Art cast into some loathsome prison so was Ieremy c. besides the word comforts us by shewing how all things work together for good unto us Rom. 8.28 and that God afflicts us for good ends 7. 'T is pure not onely formaliter in se being free from all the dross and dregs of sin a corruption but effectivè because 't is a special meanes to purify and cleanse us Iohn 17.17 Purity is or at leastwise ought to be the Object of our love God is pure his word is pure his works are pure and therefore do the Saints love them so did David Psalm 119.140 thy word is very pure What followes therefore doth thy servant love it 8. It enlighteneth the eyes V. 8. 't is a light and a lamp to us Psalm 119.105 to have our bodily sight restored is a mercy but to have our dark understandings enlightened to see the deeps of our misery and the riches of Gods mercy this is the mercy of mercies Now the word is the meanes by which the spirit conveighs both sight and light to us by it he calls us out of our dark and doleful condition into marvellous light 1 Pet. 2.9 The light of the Sun is a pleasant thing but oh how sweet and pleasant is this spiritual light which leads us to eternal happinesse naturally there is a Vaile over all our hearts and therefore before we read we should beseech the Lord to remove the Vaile else we shalll never see the divine and supernatural mysteries of Gods Law Psalm 119.18 9. The fear of the Lord is clean V. 9. The world is called the feare of God effectivè from the effect of it because it both teacheth and worketh in us the true fear of God 'T is clean 1. in se it hath no sin nor approbation of sin in it 2. Quoad nos 't is a meanes to make us clean helping to purge out that froth and filth of sin which makes us loathsome to God and his Saints 10. 'T is eternal and perpetual the Lawes of men are changed and abrogated but the Law of God is like God himself it endures for ever maugre the malice of all opposers The grasse may wither and the flower fade but the word of the Lord abides for ever Psal. 119.89 Isay 40.8 1 Pet. 1.24 25. We use to prize durable things lasting cloaths and long enduring Leases men desire oh set your hearts on Gods word which endures and will make you endure for ever if you obey it 1 Ioh. 2.17 11. 'T is not only true but Truth it self V. 9. Iohn 17.17 the judgements of the Lord are Truth He calls Gods word by the name of judgements either because in it God denounceth judgements against wicked men or else because we must judge of our actions according to this Rule There 's no fraud nor falshood in them therefore they are called by way of Eminency The Scriptures of Truth Dan. 10. ult Colossians 1.1.5 As God is Truth so is his Word He is not like man that he should lye Not a Threatening in the Scripture but shall fall on the wicked and not a blessing promised but shall be fulfilled to the righteous 12. 'T is Righteous altogether as God is just and righteous so is his word Rom. 7.14 the Law is holy just and good three Epithets which can be applied to no Law but Gods only There 's no unrighteousness nor injustice in them Mens Lawes oft times are harsh hard
Court and the Martyrs wander up and down in Sheep-kins and Goat-skins being destitute afflicted tormented Heb. 11. Grant but this and then Cain need not fear to kill his brother Saul to persecute the Church Herod to kill the Saints Who will study to keep Gods Commandements or make any conscience of his wayes As for ourselves let us abhor that desperate Opinion which openeth the flood-gates to all villanies and abominations The broachers and obstinate defenders of such Tenents should die without mercy Zach. 13.3 And if the murderers of mens bodies must die for it then such murderers should die some remarkable death for as there are no mercies like soul mercies so there are no murders like these 2. The Immortality of our souls should make us have a special care of them we should see to them diligently Deuteronomy 4.9 Nature teacheth us to look to our bodies but grace to our souls The soul is the man and if that be lost all is lost but if you have a care of your souls God will have a care of your bodies If the Mid-wives fear the Lord he will provide them houses Exodus 1.21 If Solomon seek soul mercies God will cast in Temporal blessings into the bargain 1 Kings 3.12 There are many sicknesses now abroad the way to remove them is to cleave to the Lord and serve him with all our souls then he hath promised to bless our Land and to take all sickness from amongst us Exodus 23.25 Solomon telleth us that the soul is a precious thing Proverbs 6.26 and a wiser then Solomon hath told us that One soul is more worth then all the ●orld Matthew 16.26 Ten thousand worlds could not ransome one soul. Nothing but the precious blood of Christ who was God and Man could do it 1 Pet. 1.19 We see how careful men be for their bodies to feed them when hungry cloath them when naked Physick them when sick and arm them against dangers but the soul the immortal soul lieth starved naked sick and unarmed most with Martha carke and care for the body but few with Mary see to the better part We see how highly men prize their Natural Lives Skinn for skinn and all that they have they will give for them Iob 2.4 Offer a man all the World for his life and he can readily answer what will this profit me when I am dead but offer the same man a little gain honor pleasure for his soul and he 'l part with that for it Esau sold his soul for a mess of pottage Iudas his for 30. pieces of silver the Prodigal his for husks and the worldling for meer vanity drowns his soul in perdition 1 Tim. 6.9 Let us from time to come set a higher price on our souls let us so pray so hear so live as those that believe that our soules are immortal 'T is true we must have a moderate care of our bodies 1 Timothy 5.23 but the welfare of our soules must be chiefly regarded Matth. 6.33 Iohn 6.27 'T was an high commendation of Gajus when the Apostle wisheth he might be in health and prosper even as his Soul prospred 3 Iohn 1.2 I see more in Mr. Calamies Sermon at R. Bolto●s Funeral and Mr. Ambrose his Prima 2 P. p. 61. c. See 20. Reas. for the Souls Immortality in Mr. Baxters Saints Rest. P. 2. c. 10. S. 1. p. 298. Norton Orthodox Evangel c. 15. D. Arrowsmith Tactica S. l. 3. c. 3. S. 12. Prideaux Fascicul p. 315. Calvin de Psychopannychia inter Opuscula contra Libertinos cap. 22. Observation 5. 5. The death of the Martyrs is a most pleasing Sacrifice to God The obedient life and death of all Gods Saints is very pleasing to him Psal. 116.15 but the death of Martyrs who do actually seal to his truth with their dearest blood is a most deligthful sacrifice to him How vilely soever the world esteems of their sufferings yet they are precious in Gods eye and their blood shall pay for it who have made themselves drunk with the blood of his Saints Isay 63.13 Rev. 17.6 When ever therefore the Lord shall call for our lives especially by way of Martyrdom we should cheerfully offer them up in sacrifice to God rejoicing that we have a life or any thing of worth to loose for him We should be holily prodigal of our lives in Gods cause so were the Martyrs and so was Paul he did not value his life when he came to part with it in this kind Acts 20.24 Neither should we mourn inordinately moderately we may as they did for Steven Acts 8.2 for such as dye in the cause of Christ nor yet hinder our Relations in such resolutions but say The will of the Lord be done rejoicing that we have any children or friends that are worthy of so great an honour Observation 6. 6. The death of the Martyrs doth confirm the truth The Church is Gods garden and t is watered and enriched by the blood of Martyrs By sealing the truth with their blood and not loving their lives unto the death the weak are strengthened and the strong confirmed and though they be dead yet their Testimony speaks Heb. 12.4 they conquer even when they seem to be conquered and Chri●● is magnified by their death as well as by their life Phil. 1.20 Caut. Not that the sufferings or constancy of the Martyrs is the foundation of our Faith but God hath ordained it as a means to strengthen it VERSE 7 8. I have fought a good fight I have finisht my course I have kept the Faith V. 7. Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of Righteousness which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall give me at that day and not to me onely but unto them also that love his appearing THE Apostle being come to the end of his race he looks about him he looks downward backward upward 1. He looks downward into the grave v. 6. whither he was going and there he sees comfort his death was a pleasing sacrifice to God and a friend to conveigh him to his fathers house 2. He looks backward and views his well-spent life with joy and comfort and in an Holy gloriation breaks forth I have fought the good fight c. A Soul that hath made its peace with God may with comfort and confidence look death in the face and say with good old Simeon Lord now let thy servant depart in peace 3. He looks upward and there he sees Heaven prepared for him v. 8. So that in these two verses we have Pauls work and Pauls wages we see what he did for God and what he expected from God Objct. But doth not this savour of vain-glory and Spiritual Pride Answer Not at all for the Apostle speaks not this Proudly or Thrasonically as if he had merited any thing at the hand of God for he testifieth against this in all his writings especially in Rom. 4. and Phil. 3. and tells us
cinerescunt touch them and they fall to ashes True humility is a holy spiritual supernatural grace 't is a brokennesse of heart for sin as 't is sin Quia offensivum Dei aversivum à Deo because 't is offensive to God These empty soules God fills full of spiritual blessings for as in Nature there is no Vacuum so neither doth grace admit of any 2. 'T is the conserver and keeper of all Grace We lay up the richest Wines in the lowest Cellars and God lays up the choycest mercies in the lowest hearts The lowest combes are fullest of honey 'T is a rich Treasury and Store-house of Vertue every grace hath some mixture of humility there 's no Theologicall grace can be separated from it This keeps the soule free from the dint of Satans darts as the low shrubs are from the violent gusts of winde which shake and rend the taller trees These are not affected with Satans proffers nor terrified with his threatenings so that he can hardly fasten a Temptation on such I have read of one that seeing a Vision many snares of the Devill spread upon the earth he sate down and mourned and said within himself Quis pertransiet ista● who shall pass through these whereunto answer was made Humilitas pertransiet Humility shall pass through them 3. It makes us conformable to Christ our head who from his birth to his death from his cradle to his cross was even compounded of humility He hath set himself before us as our Pattern and commands us to learn Humility of him Mat. 11.29 we cannot write after a better coppy 4. 'T is the Path-way to Peace both Externall and Internall As Pride breeds contention and disquietment So humility quiets and composeth the soul and makes it with a holy silence to bear those losses crosses reproaches which would break the back and braines of a pround and wicked man As Wool by its yeelding and softness doth dull bullets and break their force so by stooping to God and man we pacify wrath He is so little and low in his own eyes that he cannot fall much lower Christ tells us that he that learns of him this Lesson shall find rest for his soul though he may have trouble without yet he shall have Peace within Mat. 11.22 5. It helps to prolong our dayes Impatience and fretfulnesse breed diseases and shorten mens lives but Humility Meeknesse and quietness are a meanes to prolong them as we see in Moses one of the meekest men in the world who lived 120. yeares his eye was not dimme nor his naturall strength abated Deut. last 7 God hath promised long life to such Prov. 32.4 and Hypocrates observes that Gall-less creatures live long 6. T 's the ready way to Exaltation and Honour Mat. 23.12 He that humbleth himself shall be exalted 'T is not he that is humbled against his wi●l as Pharaoh Ahab and the Israelites were but he that freely humbleth himself for many are humbled which yet are not humble there may be Humiliation without Humility mens estates may be broken yet their hearts unbroken humbled they may be in body yet high in soule Many make it their study how they may rise and get promotion behold the way humble your selves and you shall be exalted even to Honour here if God see it good for you As Ioseph Nehemiah David Daniel the Lord sets humble Mordecat in Hamans stead and humble Eliakim in proud Shebna's stead Isai 22.15 16 20 21. if men would but take this course it would save them much trouble and travell with chargeable expences However it would bring them to Grace and Glory which is the highest and best preferment 1 Pet 5.5 There is no entrance into the Temple of Honour but by the gate of Humility for as Pride goes before a fall so before Honour is Humility Prov. 15. ult and 18.12 and 22.4 God pulls down the high and haughty but he exalts the lowly and meek Luke 1.51 52. all the world cannot pull down an Humble man because God will exalt him and all the world cannot exalt a proud man because God will pull him down if then you will build high be sure to lay your foundations low 7. The humble soul is Gods House where he delights to dwell 't is domicilium Spiritus Sancti the Temple of the Holy Ghost Isay 57 1● God hath but two Thrones the highest Heavens and the lowest Heart God over-looks the frame of Heaven and earth to look on a poor humble broken heart Isay 66.1 2. The Heaven is my Throne and the earth my foot-stoole But to him even to him will I look c. q. d. 'T is true those are my creatures I made them yet do I over-look all these to look on a truly humbled soule not with a bare look of intuition or generall prudence but with a look of favour and an eye of approbation complacency and delight Though the Lord be the most High yet hath he respect to the lowly Psal. 138.6 these are Gods Jewels and as we prize one jewell above 10. thousand peebles so God esteems one humble Moses above 10. thousand other men The lower we are in our own eyes the higher we are in Gods These are Gods Glory Isay 4.5 they give all Glory unto God and therefore God loves to exalt them to Honour 8. These are Gods Schollars whom he hath promised to direct and teach Psal. 25.9 these are of his privy Counsel to them he reveales the secrets and mysteries of salvation as Abraham Lot David Daniel with these he familiarly walks Micah 6.8 He that is most humble sees most of heaven He that lyes in the low pits rnd caves of the earth beholds the starres when those that walk on the tops of mountains discerne them not The proud God leaves to themselves to be s●ared in their own imaginations Luke 1.51 Had we less pride and more Humility we should have less Error and more Truth This is a comely Grace both in Speakers and Hearers How many that have affected Metaphysical speculations and high-spun Notions have fallen into the pit of Sinne and Heresy 9. These are the only prevailing people with God These are fit to lye in the gap and to intercede for a Nation The prayers of one such a meek Moses Samuel Iob c. may preserve a Nation from ruine Iob 22.30 't is their prayers which he hath promised to hear 1 Chron. 7.14 Psal. 10.17 God will have communion with none but such We must humble our selves if we will walk with him Micah 6.8 10. Such are sure of protection especially in times of common calamity Ezek. 9.4 when wicked men are broken and cast down thou shalt say there is lifting up and God will save the Humble man Iob. 22. 29. the bending reed is preserved when the stubborn Oakes are pluckt up by the Roots Sic ventos vincit dum se submittit arundo In pulsu quorum robora celsa cadunt
conviction 'T is infinite patience that the earth doth not open her mouth and swallow them up alive and if the rocks rent the fonndations of the earth were moved and the Sun hid its self when Christ was crucified and blasphemed by many that knew him not Oh how doth the whole Creation groan under the burden of such as crucify the Lord afresh and wittingly and maliciously put him to an open shame 4. It doth exceedingly debase a man and makes him viler then the vilest creature that we tread under our feet for they in their kind praise God and shew forth the Wisdome Power and Goodnesse of their Creator But the Blasphemer dishonours him in all his Attributes 5. 'T is a most unprofitable sin other sins have some seeming pleasure and profit to allure but what pleasure or profit can it be to rage against the Just and Great God 6. Such are guilty of a most pestilent scandal they grieve the godly harden the wicked offend the weak who are quickly turned out of the way and become an ill example to their children who like soft wax are ready to be framed to any thing like Spunges which suck up any water that comes near them Now Woe unto them by whom Scandalls especially Blasphemous Scandalls come Matth. 18.6 7. 7. 'T is a sin which makes men most like to the damned in Hell As the Saints in Heaven being filled with joy shall Vocally sing the Praises of their Redeemer so the damned in hell being filled with the wrath of God shall Vocally blaspheme him Hell is full of blasphemy 'T is the very work of the damned to lye under the intolerable wrath of God continually blaspheming him He that accustomes himself to such language here let him take heed that he be not put for ever to sing it there and if the wicked that in this world do but taste of the cup of Gods wrath yet blaspheme him for their torments Revel 16.9 how will they be filled with blasphemies when they shall be filled with the wrath of God for ever Lastly as 't is the greatest sin so it makes men obnoxious to the saddest judgements of God and severest punishments of the Magistrate when a man shall directly and purposely speak reproachfully of God denying him in his Attributes or attributing that to him which is inconsistent with his Nature this is called direct and immediate blasphemy and if it be acted not out of Infirmity of nature the person not being distempered with sicknesse melancholy or madnesse but out of Malice Deliberation and Obstinacy then the party is to dye without mercy Lev. 24.13 14 15 16. this was no judicial Law peculiar only to the Jews but it being of the Law of Nature is an Universall Law for all Nations He who ever he be that shall directly and obstinately blaspheme the Name of the Lord shall surely dye Hence wicked Iesabel that she might stone Naboth to death proclaimes him a blasphemer 1 Kings 21.11.14 this stoning endured till Christs time as appears by their stoning of Steven Acts 7. now if every direct and obstinate blasphemers should be stoned to death in England what showres of stones would there be in all parts of the Land and if Nebuchadnezzar a Heathen by the Light of Nature could make a Decree That who ever blasphemed the God of Heaven or spake any thing amisse concerning him should be cut in pieces and his house be made a Dung-hill Dan. 3 29. how much more ought Christian Magistrates to make severe Lawes for the punishing of such high offenders lest as their light and charge is greater so they suffer double punishment We see how carefull Magistrates are to punish Thieves and Murderers of men and shall Spirituall Theeves who rob God of his Honour deny his Being and since they cannot kill him yet will smite him with their Tongue be suffered to go unpunished We see how tender great men are of their own Names Honours Priviledges and Lives if any oppose them he must dye for it and shall he that abuseth and blasphemeth the King of Kings not dye the death Surely as this is the greatest sin so it should be punisht with some eminent and remarkable punishment This Hellish sin defiles the land and cannot b● purged away but by the death of the Blasphemers Impunity breeds Blasphemy and all manner of sin Eccles. 8.11 Paul must excommunicate such 1 Tim. 1.1.20 and the Magistrate must cut them off Levit. 24.6.16 Dan. 3.29 and when men cannot or will not punish them God takes the sword into his own hand He cut off blasphemous Sennacher●b with one hundred fourscore and and five thousand men 2 Kings 19.35 Blasphemous Arrius voyded his bowells and so died The Syrians blaspheming the God of Israel and calling him the God of the Mountains and not of the vallies many thousands of them fell by the sword 1 Kings 20.29 30. and if the Lord be thus terrible in the Camp of the Assyrians for blasphemy where will blasphemous Christians appear who sin against greater Light and greater Love Caution Yet every unadvised speech or act against God doth not presently denominate a man a Blasphemer There be may blasphemy in what is spoken and yet the person speaking not to be a blasphemer Iob and Ieremy spake many things unadvisedly when under a tentation yet blasphemed not Blasphemy properly taken is ever joyned with an intent to cast reproach upon God As every one is not a lyar that telleth what is not true but he that telleth an untruth knowing it to be an untruth with an intent to deceive and wrong others so he that thinks or speaks a thing unbecoming God with an intent to reproach or slander God and his wayes This is Blasphemy directly against God 6. Disobedient to Parents 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Parentibus non obedientes Next unto God our Parents are to be loved and obeyed he that dares blaspheme the one will never fear to abuse the other he that dares revile his Heavenly Father will not stick to rebell against an earthly one Hence Haters of God and disobedient to Parents are yoakt together in the same Predicament Rom. 1.30 This is a branch of pride 't is that which makes men so refractory and rebellious that no perswasions of their superiours can work upon them nor any intreaties winne them to obedience The words are indefinite and equivalent to an Universall In the last dayes men shall be disobedient to Parents in the Plurall number viz. To Parents Naturall Politicall Spirituall Domesticall 1. In the last dayes men shall be disobedient to their naturall Parents of both sexes Father and Mother Thefe especially are here implyed in the word Parents though I shall not exclude the latter since the Character in its fullest Latitude suits so fully with our times 1. Was there ever more contempt of Naturall Parents is not the complaint generall that the youth of our age is
the same place or like a Picture that growes not but is the same now that it was twenty yeares agoe Such barren trees are nigh to cursing Luke 13.9 and such unprofit able learners are left by God justly to the power of seducers as malefactors are to Jaylors This is the true cause of all those Errors and Sins amongst us Psal. 95.10 Ier. 9.3 Matth. 22.19 As for our selves let us enquire for the good way and when we have found it sit not still but be walking from knowledge to knowledge from grace to grace and from strength to strength till at last wee come to our Celestiall Sion 3. Since seducers are so ready to seduce women how carefull should that Sexe be to shunne conversing or disputing with them When Eve once fell to disputing and questioning the Truths of God the Devill soon overcame her and was too subtle for her Genes 3.1 do not therefore tempt the Lord by entertaining disputes with Serpentine disputants for though every one be bound to make an open and sincere profession of the truth yet to be able to defend it against a subtle adversary and to answer their Cavills is a gift that is given but to a few Let every one know his own strength and if he be wise keep within his onw bounds 4. Since women oft times are Satans Instruments by which he seduceth many take heed of women let not those Syrens enchant thee so as to leap into the depths of errours Consider how many of thy betters have fallen by them Adam at first the best man Solomon the wisest David one of the holiest and Sampson one of the strongest all deceived by women and at this day how many wise and seemingly holy men have been drawne aside to errors by their wives Stop then thy eares against these allurements and in this sense be as the deafe adder which stoppes his eare against the voyce of the Charmer charme he never so wisely Whosoever they be that seek to draw thee from thy God let thy heart and thy hand be against them Deuteron 13.6 8 9. VERSE 8. Now as Jannes and Jambres withstood Moses so did these also resist the Truth men of corrupt minds reprobate concerning the Faith THe Apostle proceeds in describing the false Prophets of the last times that we may the better know them he tells us they are such 1. As oppose the truth and the Preachers of it As Iannes and Iambres the worlds wise men withstood Moses so did these also resist the truth They do not onely catch at silly women but they strike at the Shepherd that so the flock may be scattered They oppose Moses and Aaron the messengers of God whom he sent to publish his truth to his people Yea they resist the very truth it self which is worse then to resist the persons that bring it The Series of the Speech seemed to require that the Apostle should have said as Iannes and Iambres resisted Moses so do these resist Vs but he alters his stile and sayes more Emphatically they resist the Truth implying that the opposition is not so much against the Preachers as against the truth they preach and by consequence against God who is the first Truth and at whose command they publish it Exod. 16.8 Neither is it a frigid infirm resistance but a violent vehement opposition springing from malice and rancour which makes them resist the truth 1. With their Lyes Tyranny and cruell Persecution 2. By Flatteries false Miracles and Sophistry they cunningly undermine the Truth Thus Iannes and Iambres do the same things by slight and art which Moses did in Reality another man would have much adoe to distinguish between the Serpents of Moses and those of the Magicians they were so like Exod. 7.11 Quest. Some may demand who this Jannes and Jambres were and how the Apostles came by their Names Answ. They were two of the chief Magicians and Egyptian Sorcerers who by the appointment of Pharaoh opposed Moses and Aaron in the Miracles which they wrought that they might obscure the glory of God and delude the people they working Miracles seemingly by sorcery and the help of the Devill which Moses did really by the power and finger of God 2. As for their Names they are not to be found in the Old Testament nor in the story to which the Apostle alludes Exod. 7.11 Neither is it probable that the Apostle came to the knowledge of them by Extraordinary Revelation as some imagine since the bare knowledge of the Names of these Magicians is of so little consequence and not necessary to salvation 3. They might be taken out of some ancient record of the Jewes then extant as divers other things mentioned in the New Testament were e. g. Moses his education in Egyptian Learning and his age of 40. yeares when he went to visit his Brethren Acts 7.22 these are not recorded in the Old Testament but are found in Midrash Rabbi Berischith So Iude 14. maketh mention of a prophesy of Enoch which yet is not extant in the Old Testament So Heb. 11.21 12.21 So that here is no ground for those Numberless number of old mouldy foolish superstitious Popish unwritten Traditions and that not onely in matters of Rite and History but of Faith and Manners also which tend to the perplexing but not to the quieting of the soul. 2. They are men of corrupt minds and judgements their understandings are so perverted and blinded with corrupt and sinful affections that they can neither apprehend nor judge rightly of any thing according to the truth their minds go a whoring after lying vanities and then no wonder if they forsake their own mercies The Understanding is the Eye and guide of the Soul it s the noblest part of Man if it be corrupted the Man 's undone Psal. 14.3 3. See what followes concerning the faith reprobate This is the fruit of a corrupt mind they cannot receive nor perceive the truth they have lost all sound judgement in things pertaining to the faith they oppose the light which shines into their minds and with violence rush into sinne as the horse into the battle This brings Gods sore judgement on them so that he rejects and forsakes them and gives them up to a reprobate mind Ier. 6.30 Rom. 1.28 insomuch as they that would not receive the truth for the truths sake in love but unthankfully reject it now shall not receive it and as 't is their sin that their understanding is corrupt and they will not see So now it shall be their punishment that they shall not approve of the faith and thus they reject it still actively and are actually reprobate to every good work Titus 1.16 not knowing how to goe about any thing that is good Such corrupt Teachers we must shun and reject least we be corrupted by them so much the word implies saith Beza yet must we not cast off rashly all those as absolute
Christ then when he was on the Crosse. Nor to Ioseph and Peter then when they were in prison When trouble is near God is never far off hence the godly use this as an Argument Be not far from us for trouble is at hand 2. When the enemy is most high and insolent when he begins to triumph blaspheme and rage his fall is near Iob 20.5.22 Psal. 12.3 4 5. and 37. 1 2. 8 9 10 20 35.36 and 94. 2 3 4 5 23. Rev. 20. 8 9. Isay 29.7 8. and 30.13 when Sennacherib began to blaspheme God cuts him off when none else could or would do it When all creature-comforts faile in point of Prudence and cannot advise and in point of Power and cannot help when Parliament upon Parliament is broken and the floods of Heresie increase then God appeares Hereticks are grown to a great height of Pride and Impudence they doe not onely Preach but Print their blasphemy a signe their end is near Smoak the higher it ●iseth the sooner 'tis scattered Psalm 68.1.2 As a beggar dreams he is a King and rich but when he awaketh he seeth it was but a delusion so these may dream of Kingdomes Honours and a fif●h Monarchy and reigning here a thousand years in carnal delights but when God ariseth they 'l see these were but dreams Fear not then the power and pomp of prosperous wicked men Psalm 49.16 God hath a thousand wayes to cut them off he can drown Pharaoh hang Haman smite Herod and make Ierusalem a cup of poyson a burthensome stone a torch of ●ire to consume all that oppose her Zech. 12.2.3 6. In patience therefore po●sesse your souls for yet a little while and he that shall come will come i. e. He will not delay his coming but in due time and in the ●ittest season will deliver Is●ael from his enemies They shall fall 1. Irrecoverably 2. Easily 3. Suddenly 4. Surely 1. Ungodly men shall fall irrecoverably they shall fall and never rise up again Proverbs 28.14 They shall be broken with a rod of Iron and dasht in pieces like a Potters Vessel Psalm 2.9 If a bar of Iron ●all on earthen pot it breaks it all to pieces so as it cannot be sodered together again as a pot of gold or silver may 2. Easily with a word of his mouth Psalm 44.4 God can speak them into confusion and turn them into nothing He beholds all Nations as a drop they are purum nihil compared to him He can with more ease destroy them then we can crush a Moth in our windowes or tread a worm under our feet Those that will not bend to Christs Scepter must be broken Psal. 2.9 a bar of Iron easily breaks an earthen pot 3. Suddenly in a moment when they promise themselves victory and success and cry Peace Peace then comes sudden and swift destruction Ps. 73.19 when they least think of judgement then comes fear and sudden desolation which like a whirlwind speedily terribly irresistably carries all before it Prov. 1.27 How suddenly was Sisera slain by Abimelech by a piece of a milstone Herod in the midst of his pomp by an Angel and Senacheribs great Army of an hundred fourscore and five thousand men destroyed by one Angel in one night 2 Kings 19.35 4. Surely they shall not escape there 's no flying when God persues Amos 9.1 2 3 4. If God be against us all the Creatures are against us 't is not Heaven nor Hell Sea or Land Heighth nor depth that can shelter us from his wrath Some God destroyes by the sword such as escape the Sword the Pestilence shall slay them and such as escape the Pestilence the Famine shall devour and if any wicked man should escape punishment here yet he is sure to be met withall in another world 2. Observe That false Prophets and Hereticks are fools and madmen The word in the Original will bear both and if false doctrine and heresie be folly and madness then by an Argument ab abstracio ad concretum false Teachers and Hereticks must needs be fools and mad-men or mad-fools However the blind world may admire such and cry them up for Learned Wise-men yet in Gods eye and in the esteem of all such as are truely godly they are no better then fools and mad-men that have lost their wits and are besides themselves 1. They are fools for they forsake the Fountain of living waters to go to broken Cisterns of mens inventio●s which can yield them no refreshing in times of trouble They prefer Chaff before Wheat Ceremonies before Substance Dross before Gold Drunkenness before Light and False-hood before Truth They trade in sinne and so are the worst of fools of all fools none so vile as the sinful rebellious fool Sinners and fools are Synonyma's in Scripture language Proverbs 1.7 and 10.23 and 12.15 and 14.9 Titus 3.3 Hence 't is that covetous worldling are called fooles Luke 12.20 because they prefer Counters before Gold Earth before Heaven and Temporals before Eternals Such a fool is the voluptuous man who for a little momentany pleasure here will run the hazard of Eternal pain Proverbs 7.21.22 23. and is not the Idolater a fool who worships Gods of wood and stone which follows lying vanities and so forsakes his own mercies Are not the persecutors of Gods people fooles which heave at a burthensome stone that will recoil on them and crush them to pieces Zech. 12.2 3. Hence 't is that the wise counsellours of Pharaoh are called fools Isay 19.11 God befools them in their plots against his people Iob 12.17 and 5.12 So Atheists are called Fools Psalm 141. and ungratefull persons who sin against the God of all their mercies are called fools Deuteronomy 32.6 yea when Gods own people for want of watchfulness fall into sin it s called foolishnesse 2 Samuel 24.10 Psalm 38.5 None are truely wise but gracious men that can part with all for Christ Matthew 13.45 The world is apt to call and count such precise fools 1 Cor. 4.10 but God calls them wise-men Proverbs 17. Iob 28. ult He is the wisest man Who takes the Shortest way Who takes the Safest way Who takes the Fairest way Now gracious men 1. Take the shortest and the nearest way to Heaven they tread the Path of Holiness which is the direct way to Happiness 'T is said of Ahimaaz that he ran the way of the plain and so out-ran Cushi 2 Samuel 18.23 Hypocrites and wicked men go about in the crooked paths of sin Psalm 125. ult but the godly goe the way of the plain and so out-run others Qui vadit planè vadit sanè 2. He 's the wisest man who takes the safest and the surest way The way of sinne is beset with many dangers and can assure us of nothing but misery and ruine But the Path of Piety brings assured peace and comfort Proverbs 11.18 To him that worketh righteousness shall be a sure reward Isay 64.3 not to him that doth a
of David the constancy and piety of Daniel nor of the Faith of those Martyrs Heb. 11. if they had not been tryed 2. 'T is but to purge us and try us not to destroy us Isay 27.9 Iames 1.2 3. 1 Pet. 4.12 3. To wean us from the world the Lord layes wormwood upon its breasts Luther for a time found some reluctaucy in him to that Petition Thy Kingdome come but after that God had tossed him up and down with the waves and tempests which he met with from the world Then no Petition was more welcome to him 4. For the fuller discovery of the cruelty and malice of wicked men that all the world may see and say The Lord is righteous in their ruine Vse 1. If God be the help and deliverer of his people then woe to those who hurt them if he be the preserver of men Iob 7.20 then woe to those who are like their father the Devill who is Abaddon and Apollyon the destroyer and devourer of men Revel 9.11 2. Hath God delivered thee kisse not thine own hand do not sacrifice to thine own net but give all the praise to the God of thy salvation Ionah 2.9 say with the Church not unto us c. Psal. 115.1 3. As we must praise him for deliverances past so pray to him for deliverance out of trouble Whither should we go for water but to the Sea or for light but to the Sun or for help but to the God of all help If he but speak the word he can command deliverance for us Psal. 44.4 for 1. He 's an Omnipotent Helper ther 's nothing too high or too hard for him The sons of Zervial may be too strong for us but not for him He beholds all nations as a drop c. Isay 40.15 17. 2. He 's an Omnipresent Help the eyes of his providence run to and fro through the whole earth in defence of his people 3. He 's an Omniscient Help though we know not how to help our selves yet he knowes how to deliver his 2 Pet. 2.9 he knowes the fittest manner time and season for our deliverance when 't will be most for his glory and our good Rules 1. If we expect help and deliverance from God we must be such as Trust in him Psal. 37. ult he 's the Saviour of all men by a common providence but his special providence extends onely to such as believe 1 Tim. 4.10 such need not fear what man can do unto them Isay 12.2 Iehosaphat that trusted in the Lord when a great Army came against him was delivered from them 2. We must be sincere and righteous men Prov. 18.10 2 Pet. 2.9 when a mans heart is upright and his conversation pure God hath a special eye on such 1 Pet. 3.11 12. God will be a terrour to the wicked but a strong Tower to the Righteous Deut. 4.3 4. Zeph. 2.3 3. We must be poor in spirit and sensible of our own wants that we may go out of our selves and rest solely on God He gives power to the faint Isay 40.29 and saves such as have no power Iob 26.2 and when we are children without a father then Christ will be a Father to us Iohn 14.18 he will not leave us Orphans or fatherlesse to such the promise runs Hos. 14.3 Iob 3.15 Zeph. 3.12 4. We must be such as mourn for the sins of the times God marks such in mercy Ezek. 9.4 he hath a Zoar for Lot whose soule was vexed with wicked Sodomites a grave for mourning Iosiah to hide him in from evills to come Iob 14.13 VERSE 12. Yea and all that will live godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution THe Apostle proceeds ab Hypothesi ad Thesin having mentioned his own persecutions he now comes to application Every man can say in Thesi he must expect persecutions afflictions c. and 't is good for us but when we descend ad Hypothesin from Generalls to particulars and tell men that even they must undergoe persecutions this sounds harsh and is a hard saying The Apostle therefore the better to animate Timothy and all the faithful against persecutions he tells them 't is no new thing but the common lot of all the godly and therefore he speaks emphatically 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 praeterea omnes q. d. 't is not onely my lot to be persecuted but all the Saints that have gone before me yea and all that shall come after me must certainly expect persecution The way to heaven is not strawed with roses and carnal delights but 't is beset with many dangerous tentations and difficulties Matth. 7.14 He that will be Christs must take up his Crosse Christ and the Crosse are inseparable We must have fellowship with him in tribulation if we expect to raign with him in glory Rev. 1.9 I shall explicate the words in the opening of the Doctrine Hence observe All those that shew forth the power of Religion in a holy conversation must certainly look for persecution 1. I say All without exception be they high or low learned or unlearned qui conatur excipere conatur decipere if they walk in the power of Religion must expect persecution Isay a learned holy man and of the blood-royall yet was sawen asunder David a man after Gods own heart a King a man of rare accomplishments a man of men an expert souldier a sweet Musitian an amiable mercifull upright man yet how was he pursued by Saul reviled by Shemei molested by Absolom c. seldome at rest The better the man the sooner persecuted the Devill shoots his arrowes at the whitest marks 'T is the innocent upright man he and his Agents ayme at Psalm 10.8 and 37.14 Revel 7.9.14 innocent Abel is persecuted by wicked Cain 1 Iohn 3.12 Isaack by Ismael Gal 4.29 Paul by Jewes and Gentiles and Christ himself by Scribes and Pharises who sought sometimes to catch him Iohn 7.30.44 and anon to kill him Iohn 5.16.18 and 8.59 Luke 4.29 and 13.31 This is a part of that Crosse which every disciple of Christ must carry Matthew 16.24 1. He must take it up viz. cheerfully God loves a cheerfull sufferer as well as a cheerfull doer It must not be thrown upon us against our wills but it must be willingly taken up 2. His Crosse i. e. that Crosse whatever it be which God hath allotted us it must not be a Cross of our own making but of Gods allotting 3. His Crosse i. e. the greatest trialls he must not onely undergoe lesser trialls for Christ but if he call him to the death of the Crosse which was the most bitter and accursed death he must not refuse it This is that badge and cognizance by which the Church is distinguisht from all other societies Isay 54.11 Oh thou afflicted and tossed with tempests God feeds his people with the bread of Teares they are the Saints diet Psal. 80.5 this is that cup which all believers must drink off and that Baptisme
Lamb for Meeknesse yet is he a Lion for Power and though he may suffer his people for a time to lie Inter oleros so the Septuagint read it as we Clergy men now do amongst the pots yet they shall overcome by the bloud of the Lamb Revelations 12.11 the sons of Zerviah may be too strong for us but not for him Ier. 50.33 34. be they Kings that oppose his Church Christ hath said He will wound even Kings in the day of his wrath Psal. 110.5 3. If Christ be God then extol and exalt him according to his excellent greatness 1. Exalt him in your judgements have high apprehensions of him in your judgements esteem him the fairest of ten thousand Christ must be admired now as well as hereafter of all that do believe 2 Thes. 1.10 esteem his wayes the best wayes his comforts the sweetest comforts his Rewards the highest rewards and his People the happiest People 2. Exalt him in your Affections seeing he is God love him as God with a transcendent Love we must not love him with a low common sensual Love as we love a Beast such love is hatred and contempt in his esteem but we must love him Appretiativè Intensivè Affectu Effectu with the highest intention of Affection as the dearly beloved of our souls Our love to Christ must in some measure resemble Christs love to us now his was transcendent love to us Rom. 5.7 8. and so must ours be to him They love not Christ who love any thing more then Christ they love him not at all who doe not love him more then all 2 It must be Real love Many will complement with Christ bow their knee or put off the hat to the Name of Jesus or keep a riotous Feast for him or rather for themselves Zach. 7.6 Christ is never less thought of then at Christide he hath more dishonour done him in those twelve daies then in all the twelve moneths of the year besides looke on mens Actions and you would think they were keeping a Feast to Bacchus or some Heathenish God to Iove rather then to Iehovah We see shadowes but where is the Reality of your Love what do you more then others where is your zeal your mourning for the dishonours done to Christ your readinesse to doe and suffer for him The woman that loved Christ bestowed a box of precious oyntment on him Matt. 26.7 Peter that loved Christ fed his sheep 3. It must be an Vnited collective love we must love him with all our souls and all our affections together As all the Rivers run into the Sea and meet in one Ocean so all a Christians affections should meet in Christ who is the center and resting place for the soul. United love is very strong the Sun-beams when contracted and meet in a Burning Glass are of great force and strength 4. It must be Spiritual as Christs Beauty and Excellencies are spirituall such must our love be it springs from spiritual Principles and hath spiritual ends 5. It must be Conjugal Love which is or ought to be the strongest Love Prov. 5.18.19 the Spouse of Christ must be sick and transported with love Cant. 2.5 and 5.8 6. It must be a Chaste Love a true Spouse loves none like her own Husband though she have many friends yet she hath but one Beloved one Husband so the Saints are chaste and have not their hearts divided between Christ and the World or between him and sin It is not Harlotry love that can love many at once hence the Saints are called Virgins Cant. 1.3 Rev. 14.4 for their spiritual chastity because they are not defiled with the corruptions of the world 7. It is a Rational Love there is all the reason in the world why we should love Christ best 1. If we consider him in himself he is God blessed for ever Romans 9.5 and whom will you love if you love not God 2. If we consider the Proximity of his Nature he is flesh of our flesh he is Goel propinquus noster our near kins-man Iob 19.25 3. If we consider him in Reference to his people they have the most engagements of all people in the world to love him all he did and suffered was for them they have received most from him and therefore he may in equity expect most from them 4. Consider him in his Relations they all call for our love All Rezelations meet in him Eminently 1. He is our Father Isay 8.18 and whom should children love like their Father 2. He is our Redeemer from how great misery to how great mercy hath he exalted us of Canaaites he hath made us Israelites of sinners he hath made us sons of foes he hath made us friends and of heirs of hell he hath made us heirs of heaven 3. He is our Brother Hebrewes 2.11 our Husband our Lord and Master Now a Brother will love a brother a Wife her Husband a Servant his Master but when all these Relations shall meet and concenter in one person how great must that love be 5. Consider the Excellencies that are in Christ and so he 〈◊〉 the most lovely and desireable Three things make one lovely Fulness Fairness and Constancy Now all these are in Christ in an eminent manner 1. Fulness and riches have an Attractive inviting Vertue in them all men desire fulness the Drunkard loves to fill himself with strong drink the Worldling loves full Barns the Voluptuous man his fill of Pleasures yet all this fulness is mere emptiness compared with Christ. In him onely is Real fullness and satisfaction to be found 2. He is absolutely the most fair and beautiful in respect of his transcendent purity he is fairer then the children of men Psalm 45.2 He is a Sun for Light Lustre Mal. 4. a Lilly for Beauty a Rose for sweetness a Lamb for meekness Bread for support Water for refreshing Milk for nourishing and Wine for comforting Isay 55.1.2 3. 3. He is a constant Friend the World is off and on and forsakes us in our greatest straits but Christ will never leave his People he will guide them with his Counsel till he bring them to Glory Lastly Consider our love 't is the best thing that we can give unto Christ 't is indeed the man it denominates a man that we are that we love most Affectus Virum indicat If a man love pleasures most then be is a voluptuous man if the World a worldling Christ I am sure hath best deserved our love and hath payed dearest for it if any can shew better Title to it let him take it It should deeply humble us to consider how there is none less beloved then Christ who yet hath best deserved our love Every one hath his beloved the Drunkard hath his beloved cups and queans the Worldling his beloved bags and barns onely Christ lies unregarded by the most of men Of all Evils the evil of sin should most affect us and
said of one that preacht before him of death this man saith he preacheth of death as if 't were at my back So Ministers should preach so powerfully of judgement as if 't were at mens backs ready to arrest them This Christ himself expresly commands us to preach unto the people Acts 10.42 As they should desire to hear of that day that so they might be kept in a continual preparedness for it so we should delight to be setting it forth in its lively colours for the comfort of the godly and for the converting if it may be of others for if this will not work nothing will if the terror of this day will not awaken thee thy case is dreadful and desperate The hearing of this day made a Felix to tremble and if thou be not past grace it will make thee to tremble When Solomon would fright young men from their sinful pleasures he tels them of a stinging But. Eccles. 11.9 but remember that for all these things he will bring thee to judgement If our heart be not harder then the Adamant the remembrance of this day will quicken us to amendment And this is the reason why Gods servants in all ages have been so careful to mind people of this day Enoch of old prophesied of it Iude 14.13 so did Moses Deut. 32. and David Psal. 96. ult and Solomon Eccles. 11.9 and Daniel 7.13 14. and Ioel 3. and Malachy 3. and 4. and Christ Matth. 24. and 25. and Paul Rom. 14.10 1 Cor. 4.3 4. and Iude 6. and Iohn Rev. 1.7 and 20.12 So that this is no such Legal Doctrine as some Illegal and Lawless Atheists do imagine for Christ Paul Peter Iohn c. that were Evangelical Preachers oft treated of it yea before ever the Law was publisht by Moses this Doctrine was preacht presently after the fall by Enoch Jude 14. 3. It must quicken Iudges and these in authority to execute righteous judgement remembring that they judge not for men but for the Lord whose Vice-gerents they are and to whom they must shortly give an account He judgeth among the Gods by discerning whether their judgement be right or not 2 Chron. 19.5 6 8. He is with them in the judgement though Iehoshaphat could not ride circuit with them yet God did he is with them not onely by way of assistance and protection but also by way of observation he takes notice of every sentence that passeth and will bring it again to judgement for one special end of that great day is judicare non judicata malè judicata To punish those sinners which have escaped unpunisht here and to rectifie the unrighteous judgments of the world Let there be no partiality bribery oppressing of the fatherless and the widow but hear both sides patiently fully indifferently so acting and so judging as remembring that you your selves must ere long be judged See more in M. Clerks Mirrour cap. 74.75 M. Gataker Ser. on Psalm 82.6 7. p. 71 c. M. Henry Smiths Ser. on Psalm 82.6 p. 336. M. Sam Wards Ser. on Exod. 18.21 p. 395. M. Strong 31. Ser. p. 389. and 623. Let every one watch and prepare for this day let the thoughts of it sleep with us and wake with us rise with us and rest with us and be familiar with us think you hear that voyce sounding in your ears Come give an account of your Stewardship for thou must be no longer Steward Put not the remembrance of that day farre from your souls least you draw neer to the seat of iniquity Amos 6.3 Most certain 't is that the day of the Lord will come but when we know not 2 Pet. 3.10 Hence he 's said to come as a thief in the night 1 Thes. 5.2 1. Secretly suddenly terribly and unexpectedly blessed therefore is he that teacheth Mark 13.35 36 37. Rev. 16.15 We should shun those sins which breed security as drunkenness gluttony and. the cares of the world Matth. 24.38 39 42. Luk 21.34 God hath hid this day from us that we might be prepared every day Let 's get the Oyl of grace in our Lamps that we may be ready when ever the Bridegroom shall come Be much in works of piety and mercy get your souls cloathed with Christ and his righteousness which onely can shelter you from wrath to come and make you stand with comfort and comfidence in that day Let 's realize that day to our selves if we were sure the day of judgment should be the next week what a strange alteration would it make in the world how would men sleight these worldly things as fine houses fine apparels fine fare c. which now they doat on Then they would fast and pray weep and repent Why this day may be the day of thy particular judgement and therefore whilst 't is to day we should do these things Now let 's deny our selves follow the Lamb whithersoever he goes part with all for Christ take him on his own Termes and give him no rest till he have assured thee by his Spirit that thy sins are forgiven thee and then you may bid that day welcome and rejoyce in the thoughts of it 1 Iohn 2.28 Walk exactly and sincerely before God now live soberly righteously religiously do all as for Eternity Xeuxies being asked why he was so curious in his painting answered Quia Aeternitati pingo 't is for Eternity said he So should we be exact in our walking and working in our doing and suffering remembring 't is for eternity None can dwell with that devouring fire but he that walketh uprightly Isai. 33.14 15 16. To such as faithfully discharge the duties of their callings this will be a day of blessing Luke 12.43 and of comfort Isai. 38.3 2 Cor. 1.12 1 Iohn 3.21 We should therefore get and keep a good conscience which will be a feast to us especially at that day Acts 23.1 and 24.16 Whilst 't is called to day then let us return and cause others to return and so fly from the wrath to come preventing it by judging our selves and setting up a Judicatory in our souls examining arraigning inditing and condemning ourselves for our sins and then will Christ acquit us if we humble our selves he will exalt us if we remember our sins he will forget them if we take an holy revenge on ourselves we shall prevent his vengeance The serious remembrance of this day hath a great influence on our lives and therefore 't is good to possess our minds with the truth of it and our hearts with the terrour of it that it come not upon us unawares If this Principle were truly beleeved oh what holiness humility fear Rev. 14.7 Patience in suffering Iames 5.8 Constancy in well-doing 2 Pet. 3.11.14 and contempt of the world and weanedness from these low things which must then be consumed with fire 2 Pet. 3.10 11. Would it work in us At his Appearance and his Kingdom Hence Note That the second coming of Christ will
those that are cloathed in scarlet are tainted with this du●ghil disease the Oaks of Bashan and the Cedars of Lebanon are become as so many Reeds shaken with every blast of strange Doctrine and every N●vel opinion is ready to transport them from the Truth to Fables 'T was Iohn Baptists glory and 't will be ours to be no such Reeds Matth. 11.7 An Itch of Popularity and applause they long to be in Print when they have been in travel with their New-notions they are even sick till they be publisht to the world They love to have it said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this is he that is in Print against Infant-Baptism against Magistracy against Ministery against the Trinity c. It 's pitty but some were better physickt for this Itch. Others have an Itch to be in the Pulpit and must in all hast be Teachers of others before they have learned themselves These would have some salt throwen on their Itch. 5. An itch after smooth pleasing preaching These itching ears love flattering Pr●●chers Isai. 30.20 They love to be clawed They have Musical-ears the Prophet's eloquence may delight them as some pleasing song but his wholesom direction they will not follow Ezek. 33.31 32. Plain-preaching is too harsh for their dainty ears they cannot endure to have those courses contradicted which they have pitcht upon and to which they have addicted themselves Neither can they endure to hear any one man long they must have an heap of Teachers They love to hear high-flowen-notions that they may discourse above the rate of their neighbours their curious Palats disrelish common food Priviledges when preacht please them but positive duties distast them These are high in their Notions but low in their practicals like children that have the Rickets grow in the head wither in the feet 6. An Itch of disputing We have many that love to question everything but they beleeve nothing They desire rather to dispute well then to live well This is the scab blemish of our age This Itch of Disputing hath almost destroyed all the Power of Godliness When men fall to wrangling they deal but truth as I have read many Suitors did by a Virgin one would have her another would have her tell at last they had pulled her all to pieces Luthers prayer therefore shall be mine From frivolous fruitless controversies good Lord deliver us Whilst men spend their strength and time about mint and cummin the weighty matters of the Law lye unregarded Better want a disputative-knowledge then that savory sanctifying affective-knowledge which will enable to die for the Truth though we cannot dispute for it 'T is holiness and obedience not disputing and wrangling which is the way to happiness 'T is well observed by one that disputations in Religion are sometimes necessary but alwayes dangerous drawing the best spirits into the head from the heart and leaving it either empty of all or too full of fleshly zeal and passion if extraordinary care be not taken still to supply and fill it anew with pious affections towards God and loving towards men 7. A quarreling contradicting itch which like a tetter the more it is rubbed the more it spreads it self They have critical ears they come to arraign the Minister at the Bar of their own judgment to judge that word by which they must be judged These come not to practice the Sermon but to quarrel with the Preacher Salamander like they love to live in the fire of contention God loves not saith Luther such Curists and Quaerists i. Such as are alwayes to their Cur why is it thus and thus and their Vtrums whether it be so and so We must believe and obey but not reason with God about his Commands there must be a quiet resignation of our wills to Gods Will. Thologia nostra est Pythagorica God hath said it and that 's sufficient to quiet a gracious soul. Fides est quietativa non disputativa Faith quietly and readily obeyes it doth not dispute Gods Command A beleever is not quarreling when he should be doing his duty It 's a good sign we are sincere when we do all things without murmuring and quarreling Philip. 2.14 15. We should therefore cast off all wranglings about toyes and trifles about niceties and novelties about things whereof we can neither have proof nor profit The cure of this Itch is 1. To acquiesce in the pure Word of God without any hunting after Novelties and Curiosities Love the Law and then ye will neither forget nor forsake it to follow Fables The root of Apostasy is want of affection to the Word when men serve not God with gladness of heart in the aboundance of spiritual mercies but grow weary of truth loath this Heavenly Mannah then 't is just with God to give them up to strong delusions to believe lyes Iob 12.16 Ezek. 24.4 9. 2 Thes. 2.11 When men will not be servants to Truth 't is just with God that they should be slaves to sin and error and when they will not serve God in the enjoyment of Ordinances they should serve their lusts in the want of them Amos 8.11 2. Take heed 1. Whom ye hear 2. How ye hear 1. Take heed whom and what you hear Faith comes not by hearing every Self-called-speaker but by hearing sent Teachers Rom. 10.14 15. Such as have Itching-ears love to hear all men many times grow out of love with all so that they can endure to hear none long If the Devil but can set the Itch upon thee of hearing New-teachers he 'l soon draw thee to believe lyes and fables His great design is to undermine the Ministery and steal peoples hearts from them if the Wolves but can get the Sheep from the Shepheards they will soon devour them If then you love your souls love your faithful Pastors and stick to them 2. Take heed how you hear as all the senses must be guarded so must this set a Watch-man on it and take heed how see to the manner as well as to the matter of your hearing Luke 8.18 The ear is an honourable part 't is sensus disciplinae the sense which conveighs instruction into the soul. For delight 't is an excellent sense therefore the ears are called the daughters of Musick Eccles. 12.4 By it Faith which is the Grace of graces is conveyed into the soul. Rom. 10.17 Faith comes by hearing and not by seeing Labour then for an intelligent obedient circumcised mortified ears which is a choice mercy Matth. 13.16 23. Rom. 2.29 To this end we must hear the Word 1. Preparedly 2. Attentively 3. Intentively 4. Retentively 5. Understandingly 6. Discreetly 7. Beleevingly 8. Reverentially 9. Affectionally with Love Desire Joy 10. Obedientially 1. There must be preparation before we hear and that not onely habitual but an actual washing of our hearts and hands before we come to Gods Altar Psal. 26.9 Ezra 7.10 Iob 11.13 14. Eccles. 5.7
mention not Vain-gloriously but Thankfully against both men and devils and beastly Barbarians I have contended for the Gospel constantly and couragiously My life is a race and I have run my course even to the very goal in despight of all opposition I have maintained and defended the truth of Christs Gospel inviolably according to my Christian profession and office Apostolical and now from henceforth I comfort my self with the expectation of that crown of immortality which upon the gracious promises of a righteous God is laid up for me and not for me onely but for all the faithful who love Christ and long for his coming Observations 1. 'T is lawful sometimes to speak of those gifts and graces which God hath given us that we may comfort and quicken others by our example But of this see the Observations on chapter 3.10 2. The sweetest songs of the Saints have been towards their last ends The sun shines sweetliest when it is setting the wine of the Spirit is strongest in the Saints when they are drawing to an end His motions are quickest when natural motions are slowest as we see in Moses his Swan-like Song Deut. 31. and 32. and 33. and David how sweetly doth he sing a little before he dies of Gods mercies to himselfe of the covenant of free Grace which God had made with him and his judgements on the sons of Belial 2 Samuel 23.1 to 8. Ioshua dying how sweetly doth he exhort the people to obedience by setting before them the mercies of God Ioshua 24. All Christs sayings are excellent but none so sweet and comfortable as those which he delivered a little before his death His last Sermon and Prayer how sweet are they Iohn 13.14 15 16 17. Iacob dying how sweetly doth he bless his sons Gen. 49. Steven dying prayes for their life who put him to death so did the Martyrs Doctor Prestons last Sermons were on the Attributes Doctor Sibbs his last Sermons on that comfortable Text Iohn 14.1 and Master Robert Boltons on the Joyes of Heaven Wicked men when they die they set in a Cloud and like the going out of a candle they leave a stench behind them as their bodies so their names rot and stink when they are dead and gone As wicked men grow worse and worse and their last dayes are their worst so good men grow better and better and their last dayes are their best having hut a little time to live in the world they are willing to leave it with a good savour Observation 3. 3. The sweet resent which a good Conscience hath of a well spent life is matter of singular comfort and rejoycing in death The Apostle was now near to death and what doth he rejoyce in why 't is in this that by the assistance of Christ he had fought a good sight and finisht his course and therefore he had hope as the righteous have even in death Proverbs 14.32 Elijah that had been zealous for the Lord of Hosts can with comfort desire the Lord to to take his soul 1 Kings 19.4.10 Hezekiah that great reformer when he heard that he must die yet comforteth himselfe with this that he had walked before God in sincerity and singleness of heart Isay 38.3 this upheld Iob in the middest of all his trials Iob 27.5 6. This comforted the Apostles when they were in deep distress 2 Corinthians 1.12 This is our rejoycing the Testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our conversation in the world Not that the conscience of our sincere walking is the Deserver but the Assurer of our salvation Well-doing may Evidence to us our Election though it cannot Merit it 2 Peter 1.10 Men of good consciences sit at a continnal Feast Proverbs 15.15 a good heart or a quiet merry heart as some Translations render it Is not may be or shall be hereafter but is already a reall Feast and hereafter shall be consummate 'T is not a dead Ignorant secure benummed erroneous seared Conscience but it is an inlightned inlivened renewed pure conscience which is purged from the guilt of sinne by the blood of Christ and delivered from the Tyranny of sinne by the Spirit of Christ This this onely is a good Conscience This puritie of Conscience breedeth Peace and Peace breedeth Joy and Spirituall Mirth this reconcileth those Translations which render it a quiet or merry heart which is true in respect of the effects and fruits of a good conscience Now this good conscience is called a Feast 1. Because at a Feast there is variety of dainties and dishes abundance of cates and delicates 't is not a Feast without variety and plenty and more then ordinary fare So at this Feast there is great variety 1. Here is Ioy this is most sutable and seasonable at a Feast not a carnal sensual external inferiour joy but a spiritual supernatural Holy Heavenly solid serious well-grounded durable Joy which none can take from us Iohn 16.22 They rejoyce in the Lord alwayes Psalm 33.1 Philip. 4.4 yea even in Tribulation Romans 5.3 Iames 1.2 and that with a superlative transcendent Joy hence called Ioy unspeakable and glorious 1 Peter 1.8 and compared to Joy in Harvest when the husbandman after long toyl reapeth the fruits of his labours Isay 9.3 yea it surpasseth that joy Psalm 4.7 it mortifieth our delights to these low things makes us to rejoyce in them as though we rejoyced not 1 Cor. 7.31 Lo this is the first dish which is served in at this Royal Feast Matthew 13.44 Acts 16.34 and therefore it is called by a special propriety the joy of Gods people Psal. 206.5 2. At this Feast here is Peace not a Fading unsetled transitory Peace such as wicked men have but 't is a well grounded and a well bottomed Peace 't is built on the Word and it's foundation is laid in Humiliation it had a storm before it came to this calme 2. 'T is not an ordinary but a transcendent Peace such as passes all human understanding Phil. 4.7 mans wit cannot sufficiently conceive it nor value it according to its worth To have Peace with men and Angels is a mercy but when the soul lieth groaning under the sight and sense of sinne then for the Spirit to speak Peace to us to assure us that God in Christ is reconciled to us this is a mercy of mercies David had this Peace and therefore he fears not though ten thousand should compass him about Psalm 3.6 Peter that was in great danger of his life yet having a good cause and a good conscience he sleeps in Peace Acts 12.6 3. 'T is an everlasting peace Christ hath bequeathed it to his for ever Iohn 14.27 Peace I leave with you my Peace I give you The Lord hath bound himself by Covenant to continue it it is more firme then the pillars of the Earth or the Poles of Heaven Isay 54.9 The mountains shall depart and the hills be removed but my
Gods 1 Pet. 1.5 and so it is safer then Adams was in the state of Innocency 3. It may comfort us in respect of the Nation though we be a sinful rebellious people a Nation unworthy to be beloved by reason of our Apostasy unfruitfulness unthankfulness and unanswerable walking to the light and love which God hath shewed us yet as he saved Israel with a Notwithstanding all their ingratitude and disingenuous walking towards him Psal. 106.8 So we have hopes that for his own Names sake he will save ungrateful England No Nation under Heaven hath such cause to admire free-grace as we have The Lord hath made us wait on him in a way of mercy when for our great provocations he might have made us wait on him in a way of Judgment We have great reason to serve him with gladness in the aboundance of all things since he might justly have made us serve him with sadness of heart in the want of all things He hath made us the Head of the Nations when he might for our abominations have made us the Taile he hath set us above in Victories and successes at Sea and Land when he might justly have set us beneath Well let these mercies improve our Graces and not our Vices least the Lord consume us after he hath done us good and as he hath made us famous for blessings so he make us infamous for our abuse of them to all generations I●sh 24. ●●0 If we still do wickedly what can we exspect but that we and our Rulers should perish 1 Sam. 12. ult Oh then let the remembrance of Gods free-grace and mercy Humble us nothing melts the heart like this when the Soul considers how God hath pardoned his sins washt him and cleansed him who was a poor loathsom polluted wretch quickned and revived him who was dead in sin nothing works such an absolute and strong aversation of the heart from sin and fortifies it against it as the remembrance of this free love doth This makes a man even to loath and abhor himself for his disingenuous carriage towards God Ezek. 6.9 and 16. and 20.43 44. and 36.31 This makes the soul to say as Mephibosheth said sometime to David 2 Sam. 9.8 and 19.28 All my Fathers house were but dead men before my Lord the King yet didst thou set thy servant to eat bread at thy own Table At that day Observation 9. 9. The day of Judgment is a signal remarkable day It is That day of dayes that great and glorious day of the Lord when Christ shall come in flaming fire attended with all his Holy Angels to execute vengeance on all his enemies hence the Scripture puts an Emphasis on it That day .i. that great and terrible day to the wicked Iude 6. when Angels and men shall be brought to the bar and the great ones of the world who have judged others must now be judged themselves That great and comfortable day to all the Saints when Christ will own them with an E●ge before men and Angels but of this before V. 1. Observation 10. 10. The full reward of Gods servants is reserved till the last day 'T is at that day the day of judgement when Gods Pauls be fully rewarded 'T is true the righteous have some gleanings here some clusters of Grapes they have before they come to their Celestial Canaan and as soon as ever their souls depart they be in bliss but their full reward and blessedness is reserved for the last day 2 Cor. 5.10 Hypocrites are all for present reward they must have it here and they have it out and out they must expect no more Matt. 6.2 But a gracious soul looketh for his reward herefter he expects his recompence at the Resurrection of the just Luke 14.13 14. This then must comfort us against the base usage of an ungrateful world here many times Labans of the world change our wages ten times Genesis 31.7 Aye but remember great is your reward in Heaven 'T is not in this day but at that day which we must look for our full reward Here is the place of fighting Heaven is the place of rewarding The Butler may forget Ioseph men may forget our kindness yea and the Saints themselves may forget what they have done but God is not unrighteous to forget our labour of love Heb. 6.10 Never any lost by serving God not onely For but In the very keeping of his Commandements there is great reward Psalm 19.11 Prov. 3.16 17. Secret Obedience at that day shall have open recompence Matth. 6.6 and the least service shall not lose its reward Mal. 1.10 Matth. 10.41 42. Be it but a cup of cold water yet if it be given in sincerity it shall be surely rewarded Water is a common Element and cold water costs us no charge to heat it yet this almost undiscernable Charity shall in no wise loose its reward 't is a Meiosis i. it shall be fully and surely rewarded And because we are hardly brought to believe this our Saviour useth a double Negative and to put yet further past doubt he addeth a Verily a note of asseveration to confirm it He that receiveth a Prophet shall have a Prophets reward i. the Prophet shall teach him the Truths of God and instruct him in the way of life 2. After this life God will give him the reward of the Prophets in Glory Gaius lost nothing by entertaining Iohn nor the Shunamite and Widow of Sarepta by loving Prophets Yea he that receiveth a Righteous man though no Minister of Christ yet receiving him because he is Righteous and for the Truths sake shall not miss of a reward yea he that shall shew the least kindness to one of Christs little ones so the Saints are called 1. Because they are a little little flock Luke 12.32 2. Because they are little in their own eyes 3. And most genuinely because they are accounted as Abjects and little set by in the world 4. They are beloved of God as little ones are of their Parents they shall surely be rewarded Now if such small works of mercy be thus rewarded what shall be given to those who are magnificently liberal for Christ and give as Arannah to David as Kings unto the King 1 Samuel 24.23 If water be thus rewarded what may we expect for our blood that is shed in Christs cause and if cold water from the Spring which can hardly be called ones own be thus recompensed what may we expect for warm water from our browes and bodies in sweating and labouring for the Church of Christ There is not a man that serveth God faithfully but he shall be rewarded fully Numbers 14.24 If Cornelius pray and give Almes they come for a memorial and standing Monument before the Lord Acts 10.4 God hath a Book of remembrance for all that we do Mal. 3.16 or suffer for him our tears flittings when driven from our habitations by wicked