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A09383 A commentarie or exposition, vpon the fiue first chapters of the Epistle to the Galatians: penned by the godly, learned, and iudiciall diuine, Mr. W. Perkins. Now published for the benefit of the Church, and continued with a supplement vpon the sixt chapter, by Rafe Cudworth Bachelour of Diuinitie Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Cudworth, Ralph, 1617-1688. 1604 (1604) STC 19680; ESTC S114465 595,047 756

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stand before me Ierem. 15. 19. God reueales his secrets to the Prophets his seruants Amos 3. 7. Lastly fearefull iudgements of God belong to Ministers of wicked liues Destruction befalls the sonnes of Eli and their families because they by leud example made the people of God to sinne 1. Sam. 2. 24. The like befell the sonnes of Aaron for their presumption Againe all superiours are warned to goe before their inferiours by good example When Moses went into Egypt to be the guide of the Israelites the Lord would haue destroied him by reason of the bad example in his owne familie namely the vncircumcision of his child Dauid for his euill exāple whereby he caused the enemies of God to blaspheme is punished and that after his repentance that men might see in him an example of Gods iudgement against sinne 2. Sam. 12. 14. Here againe we see that the consent of many together is not a note of truth Peter Barnabas and the Iewes all together are deceiued and Paul alone hath the truth Panormitane saith that a laie-man bringing Scripture is to be preferred before a whole Councell Paphnutius alone had the truth and the whole Councell of Nice inclined to errour 14 But when I saw that they went not with a right foote to the truth of the Gospel I said to Peter before all men If thou beeing a Iew liuest as the Gentiles and not like the Iewes why constrainest thou the Gentiles to doe like the Iewes In these words Paul sets downe the reproofe of Peter and the whole manner of it In it many points are to be considered The first is the time of this reproofe and that was so soone as Paul saw the offence of Peter Here we learne that we must resist and cut off the first beginnings of temptation of sinne and of superstition because we are prone to cuill and therefore if it once set footing in vs it will take place The second point is the foundation of the reproofe in these wordes when I saw and that is a certen knowledge of Peters offence Here we are to take notice of the common fault and that is that we vse to censure and condemne men specially publike persons vpon suspitions and coniectures and heare-say Whereas we should not open our mouthes to reprooue till we haue certen knowledge of the fault Moreouer publike persons as Magistrates and Ministers haue their priuiledge that an accusation is not to be receiued against them without there be a proofe by two or three witnesses 1. Tim. 5. 20. The third point is the fault reprooued which is here expressed by an other name not to walke with a right foote to the truth of the Gospel that is not to conuerse with men and to carrie himselfe so as he may be sutable to the sinceritie of the Gospel both in word and deede Here is a notable dutie set downe for all men To walke with an euen foote according to the truth of the Gospel and this is done when in word and deede and euery way we ascribe all the good we haue or can doe to grace to mercie and to Christ when againe in word and deede and euery way we giue all thanks to God for grace and mercie by Christ. Here two sorts of men are to be condemned as haulters in respect of the truth of the Gospel The first are Papists who ioyne Christ and workes in the cause of our iustification and saluation The second are carnall Protestants and all other sorts of men that professe the name of Christ and withall challenge to themselues a libertie to liue as they list For they walke contrarie to the Gospel disioyning iustification and sanctification faith and good life remission of sinne and mortification This is the rife and common sinne of our daies We are light in the Lord but we walke not as children of light We are content to come to the marriage of the kings sonne but we come not with the marriage garment It is to be feared this very sinne will banish the Gospel and bring all the iudgements of God vpon vs. Let vs therefore repent of our vneuen and haulting liues and preuent the Lords anger by walking worthie the Gospel of Christ. It will besaid how must we performe this dutie Ans. Two rules must be remembred The first is that we must haue and carrie in vs a right heart For the want of this was Simon Magus condemned Act. 8. 21. A right heart is an humble and an honest heart The humble heart is when in the estimation of our owne hearts we abase our selues vnder all creatures vpon earth and that for our offences when againe in the affection of our hearts we exalt the death and blood of Christ aboue all riches aboue all honours aboue all pleasures aboue all ioyes and aboue all that heart can thinke or tongue can speake The honest heart is when we carrie and cherish in our hearts the setled purpose of not sinning so as if we sinne at any time we may in the testimonie of a good conscience say that we sinned against our purpose The second rule is that we must make straight steppes to our feete Hebr. 12. 13. And that is done when we endeauour to obey God according to all his commandements Psal. 119. 6. and also according to all the powers of the inward man that is not onely in action but also in will affection and thought Let vs also applie our hearts to the doing of this least if we come to the marriage of the kings sonne without the garment of a right heart and life we heare the sentence Binde them hand and foote and cast them into vtter darknes there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth The fourth point is the place of reproofe before all men for they that sinne openly to the offence of many are openly to be reprooued 1. Tim. 5. 20. The fifth point is concerning the reasons which Paul vseth for the restraining of the sinne of Peter The first is set downe in the 16. verse If thou beeing a Iew c. Here the meaning of some words are to be opened To Iudaise or to liue as a Iew is to obserue and that necessarily a difference of meates and times according to the ceremoniall law of Moses To Gentilize or to liue as a Gentile is to vse meats and drinks and times freely without difference Peter is said to compell the Gentiles to Iudaise not by teaching of any doctrine for the Apostles neuer erred in teaching and deliuering any thing to the church of God this is a principle therefore he constrained them by the authoritie of his example whereby he caused them to thinke that the obseruation of the Ceremoniall law was necessarie The first reason then is framed thus If thou beeing a Iew vsest to liue as the Gentiles thou maist not by thy example compell the Gentiles to Iudaize in the necessarie obseruation of ceremonies but thou beeing a Iew vsest to liue as the Gentiles
will be iustified by one act of the law is bound to performe the rest for his iustification Abolished from Christ that is Christ is become an idle and emptie Christ vnto you Whosoeuer are iustified by the law that is are of opinion that they are to be iustified by the workes of the law For indeede a sinner cannot be iustified by the law but onely in his owne false opinion Grace that is the loue and fauour of God The resolution The third verse is a confirmation of the reason in the second verse and it may be framed thus He which is bound to keepe the whole law hath no part in Christ he which is circumcised is bound to keepe the whole law therefore he which is circumcised hath no part in Christ. The 4. verse is a repetition of the second verse with a declaration therof for he shewes what he meanes by circumcision namely iustification by circumcision and consequently by the whole law And therefore when he had said If ye be circumcised he changeth his speach saying Whosoeuer is iustified by the law Againe least men might thinke it a small matter to be abolished from Christ he shewes that it is indeede to fall from grace The vse These verses are as it were a thunderbolt against all Poperie And first of all I vrge the argument of Paul against the Popish Church and against the Popish religion If ye be iustified by the law ye are abolished from Christ and fallen from Christ. Answer is made that the words are to be vnderstood of such workes of the law as are from nature and goe before faith and not of such workes as are from grace and follow faith for such workes they say are from Christ and stand with him I answer the words of Paul are to be vnderstood of all workes of the law whether they be from nature or from grace For this Epistle of Paul was written about sixe yeares after the conuersion of the Galatians therefore they were and had bin long regenerate persons now men regenerate looke not to be iustified by works of nature but by good workes which are workes of grace And Paul saith Eph. 2. 10. We are not saued by workes which God hath ordained that we should walke in and these are the best workes that are or can be Againe Tit. 3. 5. Of his mercie he saued vs and not of workes of righteousnes By this text we further see that we and the Papists differ not about circumstances vnlesse Grace and Christ be circumstances Againe we see that the Church of Rome is indeede no Church because by maintaining iustification by works it is abolished from Christ and fallen from grace Againe I vrge Pauls argument against them on this manner He which is debter to the whole law hath no part in Christ he which is iustified by workes is debter to the whole law therefore he which is iustified by workes hath no part in Christ Let them answer if they can I turne the same argument another way thus He which is iustified by workes is bound to keepe the whole law but no man can keepe the whole law therefore no man can be iustified by workes They answer to the minor by making a double fulfilling of the law one for this life the other for the life to come and both in their kind perfect The fulfilling of the law for the time of this life they say it is to loue God aboue all creatues in truth and that he which doth thus much fulfills the law and is no offender Hereupon they inferre that works may be answerable to the law and be opposed to the iudgement of God And for this doctrine they alleadge S. Augustine I answer againe that Paul in this place takes it for a confessed truth that no man can fulfill the law and he vrgeth it as a great inconuenience that any man should be bound to keepe the whole law And before he hath said He which is of the workes of the law is cursed Gal. 3. 10. which could not be if there were a fulfilling of the law for the time of this life As for Augustine it is true he makes two fulfillings of the law and one of them for the time of this life but this he saith is imperfect and this imperfection he makes to be a sinne whereas the Papists of our time teach that men may fulfill the law for the time of this life without sinne Where Paul saith If ye be circumcised marke how the false Apostles abuse circumcision It is by diuine institution a seale of the righteousnes of faith and they make it a meritorious cause of saluation It is indeede rather Gods worke then our worke and they make it their owne worke and that meritorious before God Like doe the Papists at this day Baptisme is a signe and seale of Gods mercie by diuine institution and they turne it into a physicall cause which containes and conferres grace In like sort they turne the workes of the spirit almes praier fasting contrition yea their owne traditions confession satisfaction and such like into meritorious causes of iustification and life And this is the fashion of deceiuers to retaine the names of holy things but not to retaine the right vse of them As here we see Circumcision was an obligation to the keeping of the whole law in the old Testament so is baptisme in the new an obligation or bond whereby we haue bound our selues to liue according to all the lawes of God Matth. 28. 19 20. This discouers the Atheisme and vnbeleefe of persons baptised in these our daies for few there be that thinke vpon and performe this obligation We are further to obserue the condition of the law It is wholly copulatiue All the parts of it are linked one to another He that is bound to one commandement is bound to all he that keepes one indeede keepes all he that breakes one in respect of the disposition of his heart is a breaker of all Iam. 2. 10. he that makes no conscience to keepe some one commandement if occasion be offered will breake any Hence it followes that true regeneration is that which is a reformation and change according to the whole law of God and containes in it the seedes of all good duties Christ saith He that is washed is all cleane Ioh. 13. 10. Iosias turned to God according to the whole law Zacharie and Elizabeth walke in all the commandements of God without reproofe Luk. 1. Dauid saith He shall not be confounded when he hath respect to all the commandements of God Psal. 119. 6. On the contrarie he which hath many excellent things in him if he liue in the manifest breach of some one commandement is sound in none nay indeede he is guiltie of all Herod did many good things and yet all was nothing because he liued in incest Mark 6. 20. The deuill is able to bring a man to perdition as well by one sinne as by many Whereas Paul saith
by good example and by gratious speeches seasoned with salt c. as Barnabas did who comming to Antioch and seeing the grace of God that was giuen them was glad and confirmed them therein exhorting them that with purpose of heart they would cleaue vnto the Lord. Act. 11. 22. and for this cause as I take it it is added v. 23. that he was a good man and full of the holy Ghost and faith The Vniting goodnes is likewise to be practised in setting men at Vnitie in reconciling those that are at variance in making peace and amitie where there is nothing but enmitie and dissention for for this cause Christ calleth peace-makers the children of God Matth. 5. 10. because herein they liuely resemble the goodnes of God their heauēly father as any sonne doth resemble any qualitie or propertie in his naturall father for he maketh men to be of one minde in one house Psal. 67. The Communicating goodnes beeing especially vnderstood in this place hath foure degrees First for temporall things we must communicate to the necessities of the Saints Rom. 12. 13. And for spiritual blessings we must remēber the saying of Peter Let euery man as he hath receiued a gift so minister the same vnto others as good disposers of the manifold grace of God 1. Pet. 4. 10. Secondly we must be plentifull in the workes of mercie not contenting our selues with this that we are beneficiall to some in releeuing them in their wants and necessities but we must be rich in good workes 1. Tim. 6. 18. Charge them that are rich in this world that they be not high minded that they doe good and be rich in good works readie to distribute and to communicate We must be like Tabitha or Dorcas who cloathed the poore with the garments which shee made at her owne proper cost and charges Act. 9. 39. and for this cause the holy Ghost giueth this testimonie of her that shee was rich or full of good works almes which shee did v. 36. like to the vertuous woman Prou. 31. 20. who openeth the palme of her hands to the poore and stretched out her hands to the needie like Iob of whome it is said that the loynes of the poore blessed him Iob. 31. 20. Thirdly we must be much in goodnes as the Scripture speaketh of God that is abundant in goodnes in communicating vnto others abundantly those blessings which the Lord hath stored vs withall not onely in louing our brethren for which the Thessalonians are commended that their loue one towardes another did abound but in a liberall supplying of their wants as Paul exhorts the Corinthians that as they did abound in faith and loue so they would abound in rich liberalitie 2. Cor. 8. 7. as good Obadiah did in spending his liuing and venturing his life in hiding an hundred of the Lords Prophets from the furious rage of wicked Iesabel 1. King 18. 13. Lastly we must be exceeding or superabundant in goodnes in exceeding measure if it may be in doing good like the poore widow who had rather want her selfe then be altogether wanting in contribution to the treasurie of the Lords Temple and therefore though it was but two mites which shee cast into the Corban yet Christ preferred it before all the rich mens offerings beeing put together in that they gaue of their superfluitie but shee of her penurie cast in all that shee had euen all her liuing Luk. 21. 4. It is well said by S. Ambrose We must releeue the wants of others according as we are able and sometime euen aboue our abilitie as Paul witnesseth of the Corinthians to their great commendation that to their power beyond their power they were willing 2. Cor. 8. 3. Further in doing good we must obserue these rules I. We must doe good of that onely which is our owne for we may not cut a large and liberall shine of another mans loafe as the common saying is we may not steale from one to giue to another or deale vniustly with some that we may be mercifull to others or robbe Peter to cloath Paul The Lord abhorreth euen burnt offering if it be of that which is gotten by rapine and spoile Esa. 61. 8. and hence it is that Dauid would not offer burnt offering without cost of that which was not his owne 1. Chron. 21. 24. II. We must doe good with chearefulnes and alacritie for God loueth a chearefull giuer 2. Cor. 9. Ambrose saith fitly and finely to this purpose Well-doing ought to proceede from well-willing for such as thine affection is such is thy action Therefore if we giue we must doe it freely otherwise it is no gift for what more free then gift therefore we may not play the hucksters in doing good for that doth most blemish the excellencie of the gift for as Lactantius saith Danda beneficia non foeneranda III. We must so doe good as that we doe not disable our selues for euer doing good but may continue in well doing and as the Psalmist speaketh bring forth more fruit in our age Salomon commands that the streames of our wells should flow to others yet so as that the fountaine be still our owne Psal. 112. 5. A good man is mercifull and lendeth and will guide his affaires with iudgement that is he will so discreetly dispose and order all his actions as that he will keepe himselfe within his compasse so beginning to doe good as that he may continue therefore the wise man saith In the house of the wise there is a pretious treasure and oyntment but a foolish man deuoureth it Prou. 21. 20. All the disciples that were at Antioch sent succour to the brethren which were in Iudea in the great famine that was in the time of Claudius Cesar yet euery man according to his abilitie Act. 11. 29. for according to Pauls rule we must not so giue that others be eased and we our selues pinched 2. Cor. 8. 13. IIII. We must doe all the good we can possibly within the compasse of our callings and hinder all the euill It will be said God whose example we are to follow doth not all the good he can neither doth he hinder all the euill Therefore we are not bound to doe all the good or preuent all the euill we can I answer in this particular we are not to imitate the example of God and that for three causes First because we are subiect to the law Thou shalt not doe euill that good may come of it Rom. 3. 8. whereas God is not bound nor subiect to any Law no not to his owne law but is aboue it and hath power to dispence with it Secondly because he is able to draw good out of euill light out of darknes which we cannot doe Thirdly because God is the Generall good we particular Now there is great difference betwixt these two for it belongs to the nature of the particular good to procure all the good
without repentance in the counsell of seperation and in the pleasure of God Thirdly by obseruing well this order we may attaine to the assurance of our election For if thou hast beene called and hast in trueth answered to the calling of God by obedience thou maist assure thy selfe of thy seperation from the womb to euerlasting life because this order is as it were a golden chaine in which all the linkes are inseperably vnited Lastly the consideration of this order serues to mortifie the pride arrogancie of our hearts in that it ascribes all to God and nothing to man in the cause of saluation Read Ezech. 16. 63. Againe by the consideration of these 3. causes we gather that God hath determined what he will doe with euery man and that he hath in his eternall counsell assigned euery man his office and condition of life For there is in God a pleasure whereby he may doe with euery man what he will And by his eternall counsell he seperates euery man from the very wombe to one calling or other and accordingly he calles them in time by giuing giftes and will to doe that for which they were appointed And this I vnderstand of all lawfull callings in the familie church or common wealth Thus Christ was called from the wombe and set apart to be a mediatour Isai. 47. 1. and Iohn 6. 27. Ieremie to be a prophet Ierem. 1. 5. Christ is said to giue Apostles Prophets Pastors teachers Eph. 4. 11. God sent Ioseph vnto Egipt to be the gouernour thereof and a releeuer of Iacobs familie Gen. 45. In this regard the Medes and Persians are said to be the sanctified ones of God Isai. 13. 3. and the men of his counsell Isa. 46. 11. The vse Hence we are all taught to walke in our callings with diligence and good conscience Because they are assigned vs of God Hence we are taught to yeeld obedience to our rulers teachers because they that are our rulers and teachers were seperated from the wombe to be so and that by God himselfe without the will of man Hence we may gather assurance of Gods protection and assistance in our callings for in that he hath appointed vs our callings he will also defend vs in them 2. Cor. 3. 46. Isay. 49. 2. Hence we may learne patience and contentation in all the miseries and troubles of our callings for in what calling soeuer thou art thou wast ordained to it by God from thy mothers wombe Thinke on this Hēce we learne thankfulnes to god because our calings giftes and the exequution of our callings is wholy of God and this Paul signifies when he saith that our seperation to our offices and callings was from our first conception Hence we learne to depend on Gods prouidence for the time to come For if he prouided our callings when we were not he will much more aide and blesse vs in them now while we haue a beeing Read Psalme 22. 8. 9. Poore parents that cannot leaue landes and liuings to their children after their decease let them comfort themselues in this that there children are from their mothers wombe seperated to some good office and condition of life by the wisdome of God and that a good office or calling is better then land and liuing Thirdly it appeares hence that the time of all euentes is determined in the counsell of God For God determines with himselfe the time in which he will call and conuert Paul By this we are taught in our praiers not to limit God to any time for the accōplishment of our requests for the disposition of time is his and that is to be left to his wisdome Againe in our afflictions and temptations we may not make hast for helpe and deliuerance before the time but waite the leasure of God who hath decreede the time of deliuerance He that beleeues makes no hast Isai. 28. 16. Habacuk must waite because the vision is for a time appointed Hab. 2. 1. Dauids eyes and strength failed in waiting on God Psal. 69. 3. Daniel waites on God 70. yeares and then praies for deliuerance out of captiuitie the time beeing expired This serues to discouer the wickednes of them that beeing in any kind of miserie cannot staie the leasure of God till he deliuer them by good meanes but they will haue present remedie though it be from the deuill and if helpe cannot be had when they desire they presently make away themselues The second point is the Forme of the calling or conuersion of Paul in these wordes to reuele his sonne in me that is to teach me the doctrine of the redemption of mankind by the sonne Iesus Christ. Here I consider to whome reuelation is made and how For the first reuelation of the sonne is made to cruell and persequuting Paul a desperate sinner Hence euery man can gather that God hath mercy for great and notorious offenders as for Paul and such like and the collection is good For God is much in sparing Isai. 55. 7. And yet here it must be remembred that all desperate offenders shall not finde mercie vnlesse they be great in their repentance as God is great in mercy For Gods mercy hath a double effect in vs one is remission of sinne by the imputaton of the merit of Christ the other the mortification of originall sinne by his efficacie And these two be inseperable as we see in Paul on whome God shewed great mercie whose repentance also was notable As the woman Iohn 7. had many sinnes forgiuen her so shee loued much v. 47. By this we see the great and common abuse of the mercy of God Men euery where presume vpon the greatnes of gods mercie and they make Christ a packe-horse lading him with their burdens and there is little or no amendment of life The manner that God vsed in reuealing the sonne to Paul stands in two things Preparation and Instruction Preparation is a worke of God whereby he humbled Paul subdued the pride and stubbernenesse of his heart and made him tractable and teachable This humiliation is outward or inward The outward was partly by lightening from heauen that cast him to the earth and made him blinde and partly by a voice reproouing him Saul Saul why persecutest thou me The inward humiliation was in a sight and horrour for his sinnes The sinnes that God reuealed to him are these the first was an height of wickednesse that in persecuting the Church he made warre euen against God himselfe Secondly God made manifest vnto him the meaning of the tenth commandement and that secret lust without consent of will was sinne Rom. 7. 7. And thus the lawe killed him that was aliue in his owne opinion when he was a Pharise The instruction whereby God taught the same to Paul hath two parts The first is the call of God whereby he inuites Paul to become a member of the sonne of God And this he did first by propounding vnto him the commandement of the
will to beleeue with an honest heart desire to be reconciled to God and constantly vse the good meanes to beleeue For God accepts the will to beleeue for faith it selfe and the will to repent for repentance The reason hereof is plaine Euery supernaturall act presupposeth a supernaturall power or gift and therefore the will to beleeue and repent presupposeth the power and gift of faith and repentance in the heart It may be obiected that in the mindes of them that beleeue in this manner doubtings of Gods mercie abound Ans. Though doubtings abound neuer so yet are they not of the nature of faith but are contrarie to it Secondly we must put difference between true apprehension strong apprehension and strong apprehension If we truly apprehend though not strongly it sufficeth The palsie-hand is able to receiue a gift though not so strongly as an other The man in the Gospel said Lord I beleeue helpe mine vnbeleefe Mar. 9. 24. that is helpe my faith which by reason of the smalnes thereof may rather be called vnbeleefe then faith This is the common faith of true beleeuers For in this world we rather liue by hungring and thirsting then by full apprehending of Christ and our comfort stands rather in this that we are knowne of God then that we know God The highest degree of faith is a full perswasion of Gods mercie Thus saith the holy Ghost that Abraham was not weake through vnbeleefe but strong in faith Rom. 4. 20. But wherein was this strength In that he was fully perswaded that God which had promised would also performe it This measure of faith is not incident to all beleeuers but to the Prophets Apostles martyrs and such as haue beene long exercised in the schoole of Christ. And this appeares by the order whereby we attaine to this degree of faith First there must be a knowledge of Christ then followes a generall perswasion of the possibilitie of pardon and mercie whereby we beleeue that our sinnes are pardonable An example whereof we haue in the prodigall child Luk. 14. 18. After this the H. Ghost worketh a will and desire to beleeue and stirres vp the heart to make humble and serious inuocation for pardon After praier instantly made followes a setling and quieting of the conscience according to the promise Math. 7. 7. Knocke it shall be opened seeke ye shall finde aske ye shall receiue After all this followes an experience in manifold obseruations of the mercies of God and loue in Christ and after experience followes a full perswasion Abraham had not this full perswasion till God had sundrie times spoken to him Dauid vpon much triall of the mercie fauour of God growes to resolution and saith Psal. 23. 6. Doubilesse kindnes and mercie shall follow me all the daies of my life This distinction of the degrees of faith must the rather be obserued because the Papists suppose that we teach that euery faith is a full perswasion and that euery one among vs hath this perswasion Which is otherwise For certentie we ascribe to all faith but not fulnes of certentie Neither doe we teach that all men must haue a full perswasion at the first The vse If that be the right faith which apprehends and applies Christ vnto vs then is it a poore and miserable faith of the Papist to be baptized and withall to beleeue as the church doth when it is not knowne what the Church beleeues Of the same kind is the faith of the multitude amōg vs whose faith is their good meaning that is their fidelitie and truth in their dealings Lastly if that be faith which truly apprehends Christ there is little true faith in these last daies For though the merit of Christ be apprehended by faith yet is not the efficacie of his death and that appeares by the bad and vnreformed liues of them that professe the Gospel Indeede many say they haue and euer had a strong perswasion of Gods mercie but in the most of them it is but a strong imagination for their faith was conceiued without the word praier sacraments and it is seuered from Good life We are then all of vs carefully to seeke for this true and liuely faith And the rather because faith and repentance are possible to all that by grace doe will it Nay they which will to beleeue and repent haue begunne to beleeue and repent God accepting the will for the deede Luk. 11. 13. And hauing attained to a measure of true faith we must goe on and seeke to iustifie our selues but yet as S. Iames teacheth c. 2. iustifie our faith by good workes and then shall our faith be a meanes to iustifie vs in life and death The second point to be considered concerning faith is the manner how it iustifieth The Papists teach that it iustifieth because it stirreth vp good motions and good affections in the heart whereby it prepareth and disposeth man that he may be fit to receiue his iustification againe because it beeing an excellent vertue meriteth that God should iustifie But this is false which they say For if faith iustifieth by disposing the heart then there must be a space of time betweene iustification and iustifying faith but there is no space of time betweene them For so soone as a man beleeues he is presently iustified For euery beleeuer hath the promise of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting Againe in the case of iustification Paul opposeth beleeuing and doing faith and workes of the law faith therefore doth not iustifie as a worke or as an excellent vertue bringing forth many diuine and gratious operations in vs. Nay the proper action of faith which is Apprehension doth not iustifie of it selfe for it is imperfect and is to be increased to the ende of our daies Faith therefore iustifieth because it is an instrument to apprehend and applie that which iustifieth namely Christ and his obedience As the Israelites stung of fierie serpents were cured so are we saued Ioh. 3. 16. the Israelites did nothing at all but onely looke vpon the brasen serpent so are we to doe nothing for our iustification and saluation but to fixe the eye of our faith on Christ. The bankrupt paies his debt by accepting the paiment made by his suretie It is the propertie of true religion to depresse nature and to exalt grace and this is done when we make God the onely worker of our saluation and make our selues to be no more but receiuers of the mercie and grace of God by faith receiuers not by nature but by grace reaching out the beggers hand namely our faith in Christ to receiue the gift or almes of mercie The last point is that faith alone iustifieth For here Paul saith that we are iustified by faith without the workes of the law and that is as much as if he had said by faith alone Some Papists to helpe themselues translate the words of Paul thus Knowing that a man is not iustified by the workes of
the law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if not by faith that is except faith goe withall then if faith be ioyned with workes say they workes iustifie I answer that this manner of translation corrupteth the text For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must here be translated but as appeares by the wordes following We haue beleeued in Christ that we might be iustified by faith in Christ without the workes of the law We cannot doe more in the curing of our spirituall diseases then in the curing of the diseases of our bodie of which Christ saith Onely beleeue Mark 5. 36. When Abraham abounded both in faith and works Rom. 4. it is said that he was iustified by faith without workes This doctrine is of great vse First we learne hence that a man is iustified by the meere mercie of God and that there is excluded from iustification all Merit of congruitie all meritorious workes of preparation wrought by vs all Cooperation of mans will with Gods grace in the effecting of our iustification Secondly we learne that a man is iustified by the meere merit of Christ that is by the meritorious obedience which he wrought in himselfe and not by any thing wrought by him in vs. Here then our merits and satisfactions and all inward iustice is excluded from the iustification of a sinner To this end Paul saith that we are iustified freely by the redemption that is in Christ Rom. 3. 24. that we are made the iustice of God in him and not in vs. 2. Cor. 5. 21. that he gaue himselfe to deliuer vs Gal. 1. 4. that he hath purged our sinnes by himselfe Heb. 1. 3. and not by any thing in vs. Hence it appeares that the Papists erre and are deceiued when they teach that Christ did merit that we might merit and satisfie for our selues for then we should not be iustified by our faith alone Thirdly hence we learne that a sinner is iustified by meere faith that is that nothing within vs concurres as a cause of our iustification but faith and that nothing apprehends Christs obedience for our iustification but faith This will more easily appeare if we compare faith hope and loue Faith is like an hand that opens it selfe to receiue a gift and so is neither loue nor hope Loue is also an hand but yet an hand that giues out communicates and distributes For as faith receiues Christ into our hearts so loue opens the heart and powers out praise and thanks to God and all manner of goodnes to men Hope is no hand but an eye that wishly looketh and waiteth for the good things which faith beleeueth Therefore it is the onely propertie of faith to claspe and lay hold of Christ and his benefits It is obiected that true faith is neuer alone I answer thus Faith is neuer alone in the person iustified nor in godly conuersation but is ioyned with all other vertues Yet in the act and office of iustification it is alone The eye in the bodie is not alone beeing ioyned with all other parts hand foote c. neuerthelesse the eye in seeing is alone For no part of the bodie seeth but the eye Secondly it may be obiected that beeing iustified by faith alone we are saued by faith alone and so may liue as we list I answer faith must be considered as an Instrument or as a way If it be considered as an instrument to apprehend Christ to our saluation we are onely saued by faith on this manner Yet if faith be considered as a way we are not onely saued by faith For all other vertues and workes are the way to life as well as faith though they be not causes of saluation Thirdly it is obiected that not onely faith but also the sacraments serue to applie Christ I answer they are saide to applie in that they serue to confirme faith whole office is to applie And here let vs take notice of the errour of the Papists who teach that our satisfactions serue to applie the satisfaction of Christ and the sacrifice of the Masse to applie the sacrifice of Christ vpon the crosse whereas nothing indeede applies but faith In the sixt place we are to consider the kindes of iustification The Papists make two one when a man of an euill man is made a good man the second when a good man is made better and this they say is by workes But it is false which they teach For the Iewes which were borne an holy and peculiar people to God by meanes of the couenant were iustified as Paul here saith by faith without workes Againe he saith that the very ende of our beleeuing is that we may be iustified by faith without workes Therefore there is one onely iustification and no more and that by faith without workes The seuenth point is the ground of this doctrine of iustification by faith without workes And it is laid downe in the end of the 16. verse No flesh shall be iustified by the workes of the law And this ground is taken as I suppose from Psalme 143. v. 2. It may be alleadged that Dauid saith thus No flesh shall be iustified in thy sight and that the other words by the workes of the law are not expressed I answer that the Apostles and Christ in citing places of the old Testament applie them and expound them and hereupon sometime adde words without adding to the sense Moses saith Him shalt thou serue Deut. 6. 16. Christ alleadging the same wordes saith Him onely shalt thou serue Math. 4. 10. Dauid saith Sacrifice and burnt offering thou wouldest not but mine eares hast thou pearced Psal. 40. 7. the author to the Hebrewes citing this text saith Sacrifice and burnt offering thou wouldest not but a bodie hast thou fitted me Heb. 10. 5. And thus the pearcing of the eare is explaned For indeede it signifies to be made obedient and to this ende was a bodie giuen to Christ that he might obey his fathers will The eight and last point is the practise of them that are iustified and that is to beleeue or put their trust in Christ. Trust in the Lord saith the Prophet and ye shal be assured 2. Chron. 20. 20. And Salomon saith Roll your care on the Lord Prou. 16. 2. By meanes of this faith the heart of the righteous is fixed and stablished Psal. 117. 7 8. For the better practise of this dutie two rules must be remembred The one is that faith and the practise thereof must raigne in the heart and haue all at command We must not goe by sense feeling reason but we must shut our eyes and let faith keepe our hearts close to the promise of God Nay faith must ouerrule nature and command nature and the strongest affections thereof Thus Abraham beleeued against hope and by faith was content to offer his naturall and onely begotten sonne Hebr. 11. If faith ouerrule nature then much more must it haue all the lusts and corruptions of nature at command The second rule is
appearance of humilitie Col. 2. 23. And the true worshippers of God in the new Testament worship him in spirit and trueth Ioh. 4. v. 24 The fulnesse of time or the full time is that time in which the captiuitie of the Church endeth and her libertie begins This time was ended 4000. yeares from the creation and it is called a full time because it was designed and appointed by the will prouidence of the heauenly father For he is Lord of time and all seasons are in his hand and his will or prouidence makes times fit or vnfit Marke then that is the onely full and fit time for the inioying of any blessing of God which he by his prouidence appointeth This must teach vs when by praier we aske any good thing at Gods hand not to prescribe any time vnto God but to leaue it to his prouidence Againe if thou liue in any miserie waite on the Lord and be content For that is the fit best time of thy deliuerāce which God hath appointed Lastly thou must be admonished to pray to god for grace and mercie and to turne to him this daie before to morrowe For this is the time which God hath appointed for these duties this is the day of grace and therefore the onely fit time Heb. 3. 7. Psal. 32. 6. Thus much of the similitude nowe I come to the first reason whereby Paul confirmes his maine argument Christ hath purchased and procured your libertie therefore the time therof is come and past For the better clearing of this reason Paul sets downe the waie and order which was vsed in procuring this libertie And it containes fiue degrees The first is the sending of the sonne the second his incarnation the third his subiection to the law the fourth our redemption from the laws the fift the fruition of our adoption v. 4. 5. The first the sending of the sonne is in these words In the fulnesse of time God sent forth his sonne That we may attaine to the sense of this great Mysterie sixe questions are to be propounded The first is what is meant by God Answ. The father the first person Eph. 1. 3. Blessed he God the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ 2. Cor. 1. 3. and Ioh. 20. 17. And he is called God not because he partakes more of the godhead then the sonne or the h. Ghost but because he is the first in order of the three diuine persons and he is the beginning of the sonne and the H. ghost and hath no beginning of his own person because he doth not receiue the godhead by communication from any other In this respect he is called God more commonly then the sonne or the holy Ghost The second question is How the father sends the sonne Answ. By his counsell and eternall decree whereby the sonne was designed to the office of a Mediatour and consequently to become man Act. 2. 23. And thus is he said to be sealed of the father Ioh. 6. 27. and to be sanctified and sent into the world Ioh. 10. 36. And therefore this sending implies no alteration or change of place The third question is whether the sonne was sent with his owne consent or no Ans. Yea the decree of the father is the decree of the sonne and the holy Ghost because as they are all one in nature so are they all one in will All the persons then haue a stroke in this sending yet for orders false the father is said to send because he is first The fourth question is how the father can send the sonne considering they are both one Ans. In the doctrine touching the Trinitie Nature and person must be distinguished N●ture is a substance common to many as the Godhead A person is that which subsisteth of it selfe and hath a proper manner of subsisting as the father begetting the sonne begotten the H. Ghost proceeding Now the father and the sonne are one indeed for nature or godhead but they are not one for person Nay thus they are really distinct The father is not the sonne nor the sonne the father And thus doth the father send the son The fift question is why the sonne is so called Ans. Because he was begotten of the father by a perfect and eternall generation not to be vttered of man or conceiued And we must be warned not to conceiue it in any carnall or humane manner For an earthly father is in time before his sonne and the sonne after but God the father and the sonne are coeternall and not one before or after the other for time An earthly father is forth of the sonne and the sonne forth of the father but God the father is in the sonne and the sonne in the father An earthly child is from his father by propagation but the sonne is from the heauenly father not by propagation but by communication of substance Lastly the heauenly father begettes the sonne by communication of his whole substance and so doth no earthly father The last question is whether the Sonne be God For it is here said God sent his Sonne Ans. He is God For he that is sent forth from God was before he was sent forth And the sonne is said to be sent forth because he was with God the father before all worlds Ioh. 1. 1. and because he came from the bosome of his father v. 18. Obiect I. The sonne is sent of the father and he that is sent is inferiour to the father and he that is inferiour to God is not God Ans. Two equalls by common consent may send each other and therefore sending alwaies implies not inequalitie Againe inferioritie is of two sorts inferioritie of nature and inferioritie of condition The first doth not befall Christ because for nature he is one and the same with the father The second agrees vnto him because of his owne voluntarie accord he abased himselfe and tooke vpon him the shape of a man Phil. 2. 5. Obiect II. God hath his beginning of none the sonne hath his beginning of the father therefore he is not God Ans. The sonne in respect of his person is of the father but in respect of his godhead he is of none The sonne of God considered as he is a sonne is of the father God of very God But considered as he is God he is God of himselfe because the godhead of the sonne is not begotten more then the Godhead of the father Obiect III. The sonne was made Lord in time Act. 2. 36. therefore no God Ans. Christ as he is the sonne of God was not made Lord in time but is by nature an eternall Lord as the father And he is said to be made Lord in respect of his condition as he is God-man and that in time in respect of both his natures In respect of his manhood because it is receiued into the vnitie of the second person and exalted to the right hand of God in heauen In respect of his Godhead the maiestie and Lordship
to forsake wife and children house and land for Christs sake If we haue not the command of our selues in a trifle we may neuer hope for it in waightie matters V. There are dangerous effects of drunkennes First it destroies the bodie For it inflames the blood with an vnnaturall heate and this vnnaturall heate ingenders vnnaturall thirst which ingenders immoderate drinking whence comes dropsies consumptions all cold diseases and death Secondly it hurts the minde for the spirits of the heart and braine beeing the immediate instruments of the soule are by drinking distempered and inflamed and hereupon arise wicked imaginations disordered affections And thus the deuil in the roome of Gods image sets vp his owne image and makes the minde a shoppe of all wickednesse Thirdly the vile imaginations and affections that are in men when they are drunke remaine still in them when they are sober so as beeing sober they are drunke in affection In fauour of drunkennesse it is alleadged that Noahs drunkennes is remembred in scripture but no where condemned Ans. While Moses sets downe the foule effects that followed Noahs drunkennesse he doth indeede condemne it Secondly his example is noted in scripture as a warning to all ages following Thirdly his sinne may be lessened though not excused because he had no experience of wine Obiect II. Ioseph and his brethren did drinke and were drunke together Gen. 43. v. last Ans. The meaning of the text is that they dranke liberally or that they dranke of the best together For the word shakar signifies not onely to be drunke in drinking but also to drinke liberally or to drinke of the best drinke Hag. 1. 6. Obiect III. Learned Phisitians as Rasis Avicenna and others teach that it is greatly for health to be drunke once or twice in a moneth Ans. As learned as they teach the contrarie And we may not doe any euill or sinne against God for any good to our selues Obiect IU It is said to be neighbourhood and good fellowshippe Ans. It is drunken fellowship The right fellowship is in the doctrine of the Apostles praier Sacraments and the workes of mercie Thus much of the works of the flesh Now follows the punishment of thē of which I cōsider three things First a Premonition in these words whereof I tell you before as I also haue told you before Secondly the designment of the punishment in these words shall not inherit the kingdome of God Thirdly the designment of the persons in these words They which doe such things In the Premonition is set downe the office of all Ministers and that is often to forewarne the people of the future iudgements of God for their sinnes Mich. 3. 8. Isa. 58. 1. And this may easily be done For they may know the sinnes of men by experience and the iudgements of God due to euery sinne they may finde in the word of God Againe all people are warned by this often to meditate of the future iudgements of God Thus did Dauid Psal. 119. 120. and Paul who knowing the terrour of the Lord was mooued to doe his dutie 2. Cor. 5. 11. The old world neuer so much as dreamed of gods iudgements before they came vpon them and so they perished Matth. 24. 39. The punishment of these sinnes is not to inherit Gods kingdome Gods kingdome sometime signifies the regiment of God whereby he rules all things in heauen and earth More specially it signifies a state or condition in heauen whereby God and Christ is all things to all the Elect. 1. Cor. 15. 28. And thus it is taken in this place And an entrance or beginning to this happie estate is in this life when men in their consciences and liues are ruled by Gods word and spirit It must here further be obserued that not to inioy the kingdome of God is to be in torment in hell because there are no more but two estates after this life and therefore to be out of heauen is to be in hell The vse I. This must teach vs aboue all things to seeke Gods kingdome and to establish it in our hearts and that we shall doe if we know the will of God and yeeld subiection to it in the duties of repentance faith new obedience II. The kingdome of God comes by inheritance therfore there is no merit of Good workes The persons which are punished are such as are doers and practisers of the works of the flesh Marke the words not such as haue bin doers but such as are doers The word signifies a present and a continued act of doing amisse The vse Here is the difference betweene the godly man and the vngodly The godly man falls into the workes of the flesh and beeing admonished thereof he repents and recouets himselfe he doth not stand in the way of sinners though sometime he enter into it Psal. 1. 1. The vngodly man when he falls lies still in his sinne and heapes sinne vpon sinne and makes a practise of euill I. Warning They which are priuie to themselues of any of the former workes of the flesh must bewaile their offences and vtterly forsake them For if we be found doers of any one worke of the flesh there is no hope of saluation II. Warning They which haue turned vnto God from the works of the flesh must be constant and take heede of going backe least they loose the kingdome of God 22 But the fruit of the Spirit is loue ioy peace long-suffering gentlenes goodnes faith 23 Meeknes temperance against such there is no law For the better obseruing and the more easie vnderstanding of the rule in the 16. v. Walke in the spirit Paul here sets downe a Catalogue of the works of the spirit In the Catalogue I consider three things the propertie of the workes of the spirit in these words The fruit of the spirit the kinds of works and they are nine the benefit that comes by them in these words against such there is no law The fruit of the spirit It is the propertie of the workes of Gods spirit in vs to be called the fruits of the spirit And by this much is signified namely that the Church is the garden of God Cant. 4. 16. that teachers are planters and setters 1. Cor. 3. 9. that beleeuers are trees of righteousnes Isa. 61. 3. that the spirit of God is the sappe and life of them and good workes and vertues are the fruits which they beare In that the works of the spirit are called fruits therof hence it followes that there are no true vertues and good affections without the grace of regeneration The vertues of the heathen how excellent soeuer they seemed to be were but shadowes of vertue and serued onely to restraine the outward man and no further Againe here we see the efficacie of the spirit which makes men fruitful or bearing-trees of righteousnes Psal. 1. 3. yea trees that beare fruit in their old age Psal. 92. 14. Here we haue cause to cast downe our selues For
seedes but seeds are the proper cause of the fruite therefore good works are the proper cause of eternall life not faith only So that as there is a hidden vertue in the seede to bring forth fruit so is there a dignitie in good workes to merit eternall life Ans. First as in a parable so in a similitude whatsoeuer is beside the scope and drift thereof as this their dispute is prooueth nothing The scope of the similitude is this that as he which soweth wheate shall reape wheate so he that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reape life euerlasting and as he that soweth tares shall reape nothing but tares so he that soweth to ●he flesh the cursed seedes of a wicked life shall of the flesh reape nothing but corruption and as he that soweth plentifully either of these shall reape a plentifull haruest of either of them so he that sowes the seede of a godly or wicked life in plentifull manner shall reape a plentifull increase either of miserie or felicitie When the Papists therefore reason thus Seedes are the cause of the fruit and haue in them a hidden vertue whereby they grow and bring forth fruit therefore good works are the proper cause of life and haue a dignitie and excellency in them whereby they are worthie of eternall life they misse of the drift and intent of the Apostle and so conclude nothing Besides this their collection and discourse is contrarie to their own doctrine For they teach that good works are meritorious by merit of condignitie which may be vnderstood 3 waies either in regard of the dignitie of the worke alone or in regard of the promise of God alone and his diuine acceptation or partly in regard of the dignitie and excellencie of the worke partly in regard of the promise of God Now albeit some of them hold that good workes doe merit in respect onely of Gods promise and mercifull acceptation as Scotus Ariminensis Durandus Uega Bunderius Coster and the like others in respect partly of their owne worthines partly of Gods promise and acceptance as Bonaventure Biel Driedo lingius Iansenius Bellarmine c. it beeing the common receiued opinion among the Schoolemen as B 〈…〉 ldius witnesleth yet no●e of them excepting onely Caietan affi●●e that they are meritorious onely in regard of the dignitie of the worke which notwithstanstanding the Rhemists and others labour to prooue out of this similitude vrging the analogie betwixt seede and good workes contrarie to the current and streame of their owne Doctours Thirdly I answer that good workes are seedes yet faith is the roote of these seedes and in that good workes are made the seedes of eternall life it is to be ascribed to Gods mercifull promise not to the merit of the worke for in that we or our workes are worthie of the least blessing it is more of Gods mercie then our merit Fourthly the Apostle sheweth onely who they are that shall inherit eternall life and the order how life is attained but not the cause wherefore it is giuen It will be said not onely the order but the cause is set downe as it may appeare by the antithesis for as sowing to the flesh is the cause of destruction so sowing to the spirit is the cause of eternall life Ans. It is true in the one but not in the other For first sinnes or workes of the flesh are perfectly euill as beeing absolute breaches of the law and deserue infinite punishment because they offend an infinite maiestie whereas workes of the spirit are imperfectly good hauing in them wants and imperfections there beeing in euery good worke a sinne of omission comming short of that perfection that is required in the law they beeing good and perfect as they proceede from the spirit of God imperfect and vicious as they come from vs. Euen as water is pure as it proceedes from the fountaine but troubled as it runneth through a filthie channell or as the writing is imperfect and faultie as it comes from the yong learner but perfect and absolute as it proceedeth from the scriuener which guideth his hand So that if God setting aside mercie should trie them by the touchstone of the word they would be found to be but counterfeit And if he should waigh them in the balance of his iustice they would be found too light Secondly there is a maine difference betwixt the workes of the flesh and the works of the spirit in this very point in that the workes of the flesh are our owne workes and not the works of God in vs and so we deserue eternall death by reason of them they beeing our owne wicked workes whereas good workes proceede not from vs properly seeing we are not sufficient of our selues to thinke any good thing as of our selues 2. Cor. 3. 5. but from the spirit of God who worketh in vs both the will and the deede and are his works in vs therefore beeing not ours we can merit nothing by them at the hands of God Thirdly obserue that it is not said he that soweth to the spirit shall of that which he hath sownercape life euerlasting but shall of the spirit reape life euerlasting Where we see the Apostle attributes nothing to our workes but to the grace of Gods spirit Lastly Rom. 6. 23. the holy Ghost putteth manifest difference betweene the works of the flesh of the spirit in respect of merit when he saith The wages of sinne is death but eternall life is the gift of God He saith not that eternall life is the reward of good workes but the gift of God now in the reward of sinne there is merit presupposed in the gift of eternall life nothing but grace and fauour Obiect II. God giueth eternall life according to the measure and proportion of the worke v. 7. As a man soweth so shall he reape 2. Cor. 9. 6. He that soweth sparingly shall reape sparingly and he that soweth liberally shall reape liberally 1. Cor. 3. 8. Euery one shall receiue his proper wages according to his owne labour Therefore in giuing eternall life he hath no respect of the promise or compact but of the dignitie and efficacie of the worke Ans. Fulnes of glorie called by Schoolemen essentiall glorie is giuen onely for the merits of Christ in the riches of Gods mercie without all respect of workes Accidentall glorie when one hath a greater measure of glorie an other a lesse as when vessels of vnequall quantitie cast into the sea are all filled yet some haue a greater measure of water some a lesse is giuen not without respect of works yet so as that it is not giuen for workes but according to workes they beeing infallible testimonies of their vnfained faith in the merits of Christ. If it be said that eternall life is giuen as a reward meritoriously deserued by good works because it is said Come ye blessed for I was hungrie and ye gaue me meate Matth. 25. I answer it is
temple And thus hoping that these respects may entreate for a friendly acceptance at thy hands and that thou wilt afforde mee thy good word for my good will and a fauorable construction for my paines I commend it to the blessing of the Almightie and thee to his gratious protection vnfainedly wishing to thee as to my selfe the mercie of God in Christ Iesus August 10. Thine in the Lord Iesus R. C. Faults escaped in some copies are thus to be corrected Pag. lin Fault correct 25 30 building binding 70 28 degree decree 86 27 Christin Christian ibidem   refuse refused 105 4 Prov. 14. 24. 136 3 seach search 153 4 7 47 164 25 begunne beginne 176 24 happily haply 241 5 reuealed conceiued 360 33 it is 402 1 come came 440 16 maginations imaginatiōs 461 29 foole foote 469 23 notes motes 472 38 Recidauation Recidiuatiō 473 7 the thiefe thiefe 478 30 Quaerenda Qu●rendo 480 17 Supposes Supposals 482 25 perfunctorie defunctorie 482 37 th● the 490 38 heard hard 505 36 thought though 556 23 equall equall 559 26 our an 585 8 see seeing 612 3 Peter Peters 647 14 o other In the Epistle to the Reader for hath read haue CHAP. 1 THE EPISTLE OF S. PAVL TO THE GALATIANS The Argument TWo things are generally to be considered the occasion of this Epistle and the Scope The occasion that mooued Paul to write this Epistle was because certen false-Apostles slaundered him both in respect of his calling as also in respect of his doctrine teaching that he was no Apostle and that his doctrine was false And by this means they seduced the Churches of Galatia perswading them that iustification and saluation was partly by Christ and partly by the Lawe The Scope of the Epistle is in three things First the Apostle defends his calling in the first and second chapters Secondly he defends the truth of his doctrine teaching iustification by Christ alone And vpon this occasion he handles the greatest question in the world Namely what is that Justice whereby a sinner stands righteous before God in the 3. and 4. and in the beginning of the fift Thirdly he prescribes rules of good life in the fift and sixt chapters 1. Paul an Apostle not of men nor by man but by Iesus Christ and God the father who raised him from the dead THe Epistle hath 3. parts a Preface an Instruction and the Conclusion The preface is in the fiue first verses and it hath two parts an inscription and a Salutation The inscription sets downe the persons that write the Epistle and the persons to whome it is sent The persons that write are two Paul the Brethren Paul is mentioned in the first verse In which in comely and decent manner he commende himselfe to the Galatians by his office and function as Apostle that is one called to be a planter and founder of the Church of the newe Testament among the nations And because the title of an Apostle in generall signification may agree to all teachers therefore he goes further and sets downe the cause of his Apostleship And first he remooues the false causes in these words not of men that is not called by men as by Authors of my calling or not called by the authoritie of men And in this Paul opposeth himselse to the false-apostles who were called notby God but by men Againe he saith not by man that is not called of God in and by the ministerie of any meere man And in this Paul opposeth himselfe to all ordinarie ministers of the Gospell whatsoeuer who are called of God by man This done he propounds the true cause and author of his Apostleshippe of whome he was called immediately Against this it may be obiected that Paul was ordained to be an Apostle by the imposition of hāds of the Church of Antioch I answer that this imposition was rather a confirmation then a calling Secondly they of Antioch had not imposed hands on Paul but that they were commanded by the spirit of God Further Paul addes that he was called by Christ and God the father for three causes The first was to signifie the consent of will in the father and Christ. The second was to teach vs howe we are to conceiue of God namely that he is the Father and Iesus Christ and the Holy Ghost for the Godhead may not be conceiued out of the trinitie of persons The third is because the father is the fountaine of all good things that come to vs by Christ. Lastly he sets downe the effect or action of the Father who raised him from the dead and that for two causes One was to prooue Christ to be the naturall sonne of God for he professed himselfe to be so and that was one cause why he was crucified and put to death Nowe when he was dead if he had not bin the sonne of God indeede he had neuer risen againe but had perished in death And in that the father raised him againe to life he gaue testimonie that he was his own naturall sonne And therefore Paul saith that Christ was declared to be the sonne of God by the resurrection from the dead and he applies the words of the Psalme thou art my sonne this day haue I begotten thee to the time of Christs resurrection Againe Paul mentions the resurrection of Christ to note the time of his owne calling for though the rest of the Apostley were called when Christ was in the estate of humiliation yet Paul was called afterwards when Christ was entred into his kingdome and sate at the right hand of his father The vse First whereas Paul in the very fore front of his Epistle beginnes with his owne calling I gather that euery minister of the Gospell ought to haue a good and lawefull calling A man cannot preach vnlesse he be sent Christ tooke not vnto him the office of a Mediatour till he was called and sent of the Father Therefore the opinion of the Anabaptist is foolish and phantasticall who thinke that euery man may preach that will without any speciall calling They alleadge that the house of Stephanas ordaine themselues to the Ministerie of the Saints Answer the meaning of the place is not that they called themselues but that they set themselues apart to the ministerie of the Saints in the purpose and resolution of their owne hearts Againe they alleadge that all Christians in the newe Testament are Kings and Priests and the office of the priest is to teach I answer all are priests in that they are to offer themselues in sacrifice to God and to teach priuately within their places and callings as the master his seruants the father his children c and to make a confession of their faith when they are called so to doe Thirdly they alleadge that the power of the keies is giuen to the Church I answer it is indeed yet so as the vse and administration thereof belongs to the Ministers alone in the
of pardon before all worlds the promise of pardon in the beginning of the worde The seed of the woman c. The procurement of pardon vpon the crosse and the donation or the giuing of the pardon This donation is an action of God whereby he giues and communicates Christ vnto vs and applies to our consciences the remission of our sinnes In this donation there is required a hand to giue and a hand to receiue The hand of God whereby he giues is the word preached and the sacraments the hand to receiue is our faith The giuing of pardon is necessarie for though sinnes be pardoned in the decree of God by his promise in the word and by procurement vpon the crosse yet pardon is no pardon to vs till it be giuen vnto vs by God Furthermore this giuing is not altogether at one instant but it beginnes in the conuersion of a sinner and is often iterated in the vse of the word and sacraments to the death Paul wils the Corinthians reconciled to God still to be reconciled 2. Cor. 5. 21. And we are taught euery day to pray to God to giue vs the pardon of our sinnes This giuing is twofold conditionall and absolute Conditionall when God giues the pardon of sinne vpon condition Thus in baptisme and in the first conuersion of a sinner all sinnes without exception are pardoned yea future sinnes yet not simply whether a man repent or no but vpon condition of future repentance The absolute donation is when a man repents or renewes his repentance for then the pardon of sinne is simply and fully without condition applied and reuealed to the conscience When Dauid confessed his sin Nathan in the name of the Lord saith Thy sinne is forgiuen thee 2. Sam. 12. Now then to come to the point the child of God hath pardon of his fall in respect of the decree to pardon in respect of the generall promise of pardon in respect of the procurement of pardon in respect of the conditionall donation of pardon which is made in baptisme and he may be said to want pardon in that the pardon of his offence is not fully and absolutely giuen him till he recouer himselfe and renewe his repentance If it be here demaunded what the childe of God askes when he praies for pardon day by day I answer he praies for two things First that God would continue to shew his fauour and to impute the merits of Christ vnto him wheras he for his part by his offence deserues to be depriued of all fauour Secondly he asks the giuing of the pardon that is that God would certifie his conscience thereof The vse Seeing the intent of the Deuill and wicked men is to destroy the saith as it appeares in this place and in the first temptation wherewith Satan assaulted Christ Math. 4. we must haue a speciall care of our faith And first we must looke that our faith be a true faith least we be dece●ued as the foolish virgins Secondly we must keepe and locke vp our faith in some safe and sure place namely in the store house or treasurie of a good conscience 1. Tim. 1. 19. Thirdly our care must be to increase in faith that our hearts may be rooted and grounded in the loue of God And for this cause we are to make continuall experiences and obseruations of the loue of God toward vs and to laie them all together and to build a ioyfull conclusion therevpon The third answer of Paul is And they glorified God for mee that is the churches of Iudea when they heard of my calling conuersion they considered therein the power the goodnes and the mercie of God and with ioy they gaue him thankes for it In this practise of the church we learne that our dutie is to sanctifie glorifie the name of God in euery worke of his And this sanctification hath 2. partes The first is the consideration of the diuine vertues that shew themselues in euery worke of God as his wisdome power iustice mercie prouidence presence c. The second is praise and thanks giuing to God for the same And this practise must be inlarged to all his workes without exception to his iudgements as well as to his workes of mercie Therefore we are commaunded in persequution to sanctifie God in our hearts 1. Pet. 3. 17. And Moses because he failed in the doing of this duty was barred the land of Canaan Num. 20. 12. In England god hath wrought his wonderous workes among vs. He hath giuen vs peace and protection against our enemies with the Gospell for the space of 40. yeares and more And our dutie is to glorifie God in these workes of his but alas we doe it not For the Gospell of saluation is little regarded of the most and little obedience is yeelded to it This neglect of ours in glorifying praising of God is a great sinne and it standes vs in hand to repent of it betime least God take away his word from vs and leaue vs to strange illusions to beleeue lies Again here we see what is the right maner of honouring of the Saints and that is to glorifie God in them and for them As for religious worship of adoration and inuocation it is proper to God and the Saints desire it not Reuel 22. 9. CHAP. II. 1 Then 14. yeares after I went vp againe to Ierusalem with Barnabas and tooke with me Titus also 2 And I went by reuelation and communicated with thē of the Gospel which I preach amōg the Gentiles but priuately with them that were the chiefe least by any meanes I should runne or had runne in vaine IN this chapter Paul proceedes to iustifie and defend his immediate extraordinarie calling And this whole chapter seemes to depend on the last wordes of the former chapter against which the Aduersaries of Paul might happily obiect on this manner Though the Churches of Iudea glorifie God for thee yet will not the Apostles doe it because thou teachest otherwise then they teach To this obiection Paul makes a double answer in this chapter The effect and summe of the first is this I went vp to Ierusalem I conferred with the Apostles there I had their consent and approbation And the answer containes three parts The first of Pauls iourney to Ierusalem in the first verse the second of his conference with the Apostles in the 2. verse the third of the approbation which they gaue him from the 3. v. to the eleuenth In his iourney I consider foure things The first is the Manner of his iourneying in these wordes I went vp or ascended to Ierusalem And this he speakes because Ierusalem was placed and seated vpon a mountaine and compassed with moūtaines Psal. 125. or againe in respect of the dignitie and excellencie of the place as we in England are said to goe vp to London from all the parts of the land because it is the cheife citie The second thing to be considered in the iourney
couenant they are children of God and originall sinne which is in them is couered from their first beginning and not imputed to them The vse There was no absolute necessitie of circumcision For they which died before the eight day were borne holy and consequently in the couenant and therefore might be saued And thus Baptisme was not of absolute necessitie for the children of beleeuers are borne holy and Christian and therefore dying in the want of baptisme may for all that be saued The seale of the couenant is not of like necessitie with the couenant it selfe Secondly here we learne that it is not the act of baptisme to conferre the first grace but onely to confirme and seale it vnto vs. Adoption and life beginnes not in baptisme but before If the roote be holy the branches springing thenee are holy We are borne Christians if our parents beleeue and not made so in baptisme Lastly if we be borne holy it is our shame that we haue made no more proceeding in holines then we haue done the most remaine ignorant and vnreformed and they of the better sort either stand at a stay or goe backward The second point is concerning Iustification in the 16. v. of which sundrie things are there propounded And first I will beginne with the name The word Iustifie is borrowed from courts of iudgement and signifies a indiciall act Otherwhiles it is put for the action of the iudge and then it signifies to absolue or to pronounce innocent Thus Paul saith Act. 13. 39. That we are instified from all things from which we could not be iustified by the law of Moses that is absolued or cleered Againe he opposeth iustification to accusation and condemnation Rom. 8. 33. Now the contrarie to condemnation is absolution Sometimes againe the word iustifie signifies the act of the partie iudged or of the witnesses and then it imports as much as to giue testimonie or to declare and approoue Thus Iames saith Abraham was iustified by workes chap. 2. v. 22. that is declared and approoued to be a iust man by workes In the former signification is the word vsed where the holy Ghost deliuereth the doctrine of iustification as in this place The vse Here we see how to distinguish betweene Iustification regeneration and renouation Regeneration is vsually in scripture the change of the inward man whereby we are borne anew Renouation is the change both of the inward and outward man that is both of heart and life Iustification is neither but a certaine action in God applied vnto vs or a certaine respect or relation whereby we are acquit of our sinnes and accepted to life euerlasting Secondly we must here note that the Teachers of the Church of Rome mistake the word Iustification For by it they vnderstand nothing els but a physicall transmutation of the qualitie and disposition of our hearts from euill to good And by this mistaking they haue made a mixture or rather confusion of law and Gospel Thirdly here we see what is to be the disposition of the partie iustified for by the consequent we may learne the antecedent A man therfore that would be iustified must come before the iudgement seat of God and there must he plead guiltie and be his owne aduersa●ie condemning himselfe and beeing pressed with the terrours of the law he must flie and make his appeale to the throne of grace for pardon in Christ and then he shall be acquit or iustified from all sinner Thus much doth the word 〈…〉 stifie import Thus came the Publican before God Luk. 18 when he said Lord be mercifull to me a sinner and departed iustified Thus in the sift petition we are taught to come euery day into the presence of God and to acknowledge our debts and to vse the plea of mercie saying Forgiue vs our debts The second thing to be considered is the subiect of iustification or the person to be iustified and that is man generally signifying that a Man is iustified The holy Ghost speaketh thus generally for two causes The first is because all men without exception haue need of iustification euen they which are regenerate Rom. 3. 23. And in this place Paul saith that he and Peter and the rest haue beleeued in Christ that they might be iustified by faith Here we are to take notice of the miserable condition of prophane and secure Epicures who neuer so much as dreame of any iustification The second reason is because God communicates the benefit of iustification generally to all sorts of men and this he doth in the Ministerie of the word in which he beseecheth men to be reconciled to God 2. Corinth 5. v. 21. This must be an inducement vnto vs to come vnto Christ humbling and iudging our selues that we may be iustified God himselfe from heauen vseth reasons vnto vs daily to mooue vs to the practise of this dutie What meane these gratious and continuall preseruations of Prince and people Church and land By them we see it is the good pleasure of God to giue vs a time to seeke his kingdome and righteousnes wherefore let vs not neglect the day of visitation but take the time while it serues that we may turne vnto God and be accepted of him and escape the woe pronounced vpon Corazin and Bethsaida The third thing to be considered concernes things excluded from iustification as false causes namely the works of the Law Here it may be demanded what works are meant I answer first not onely workes of the Ceremoniall but also of the morall law For all men know that ceremoniall actions are of no vse vnlesse they be ioyned with morall duties of loue and mercie And if Paul meant onely Ceremoniall workes he needed not to haue made so long a discourse against iustification by workes for he might haue ended the whole matter in a word or twaine by shewing that the ceremoniall law was abrogated by Christ. Secondly I answer that not onely workes done before faith are excluded but also workes that follow faith and are done in the estate of grace For Paul here reasons thus If no flesh be iustified by workes then not we beleeuers but no flesh at all is iustified therefore not we beleeuers Dauid Psal. 143. reasoneth on the same manner No flesh shall be iustified in thy fight therefore I cannot though otherwise I be thy seruant in keeping thy commandements When Abraham was the father of all the faithfull and was come to the highest degree of faith and abounded in good workes yet was he not then iustified by workes Rom. 4. 1 2. Paul kept a good conscience before God and men Act. 23. and yet was he not iustified therby 1. Cor. 4. 4. And he saith that we are not saued by the workes which God hath ordained that we should walke in Eph. 2. 9 10. And the workes that God hath ordained for vs to walke in are the best workes of all euen workes of grace Againe he saith that we are not saued
by workes of mercie Tit. 2. 5. It may be obiected that there is a Cooperation of works and faith I am 2. 21. I answer that this Cooperation is not in the act of iustification nor in the worke of our saluation but in the manifestation of the truth and sinceritie of our faith without hypocrisie And for the declaration and approbation of this faith and workes ioyntly concurre Here then we see it is a pestilent and damnable doctrine of the Papists when they teach iustification by the workes of the law Let vs here be warned to take heede of it The fourth point is the Meritorious cause of our iustification and that is Christ. Here it may be demanded what is that thing in Christ by and for which we are iustified I answer the Obedience of Christ Rom. 5. 19. And it stands in two things his Passion in life and death and his Fulfilling of the law ioyned therewith For by faith the law is established Rom. 3. 31. Christ was sent in the similitude of sinnefull flesh that the rigour of the law might be fulfilled in vs Rom. 8. 4. and Christ is the perfection of the law for righteousnes to all that beleeue Rom. 10. 4. He that doth not fulfill all things contained in the Law is accursed Gal. 3. 10. Seeing therefore we cannot performe the things contained therein by our selues we must performe them in the person of our Mediatour who hath satisfied for the threatnings of the law by his passion and hath fulfilled the precepts of the law by his obedience in all duties of loue to God and man We owe to God a double debt One is that we are to fulfill the law euery moment from our first beginning both in regard of puritie of nature and puritie of action And this debt was laid vpon vs in the creation and is exacted of vs in the law of God The second debt is a satisfaction for the breach of the law For this double debt Christ is be become our Suretie and God accepts his obedience for vs it beeing a full satisfaction according to the tenour of the law For the better conceiuing of this obedience foure questions may be demanded The first is when this obedience beginnes and ends Ans. Satisfactorie obedience performed by Christ beginnes in his incarnation ends in his death Christ saith Ioh. 4. 34. It is my meate to doe my fathers will and to finish his worke But when was it indeede finished A little before his passion he said Ioh. 17. 4. I haue finished the worke which thou gauest me to doe Againe in the surrendring of his soule he saith It is finished Ioh. 19. 30. S. Paul saith Christ was obedient to the death of the crosse Phil. 2. 8. The triumph of Christ beganne vpon the crosse Col. 2. 15. and he could not triumph before he had made a full and perfect satisfaction for vs. When Christ had procured deliuerance from hell and Right to life euerlasting he there made a perfect satisfaction for vs to the iustice of God And this he did in his death vpon the crosse For by the death of the Mediatour we receiue the promise of euerlasting inheritance Heb. 9. 15. and with one oblation vpon the crosse he perfected them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. and they cannot be perfected without the perfect obedience of Christ. Christ rose from death and ascended into heauen in our roome and stead and this he could neuer haue done vnlesse he had made a perfect satisfaction in death Here it may be asked If satisfactorie obedience end in the death of Christ to what vse serue the resurrection and ascension of Christ and his fitting at the right hand of the father Ans. They serue also for our iustification but after an other sort For they serue to applie communicate to vs and to put vs in possession of the benefits which Christ hath procured for vs and purchased by his death S. Paul saith He as●●nded to giue gifts 〈◊〉 and to fill all things Eph. 4. 8. 10. And Christ saith When I am exalted I will draw all men to me Ioh. 12. 32. And he liues for euer to make intercession● for vs. Heb. 5. 27. The second question is how Christ could obey beeing God and satisfie for vs beeing man Ans. Christ must be considered not meerely as God or as man but as God-man or Man god For the Godhead doth not redeeme vs without the manhood nor the manhood without the Godhead Neuerthelesse Christ as God and man may both obey and satisfie For as there are in Christ two natures so there are two distinct operations of the said natures And as the said natures vnited make one Christ so the operations of the natures concurring and beeing vnited in one make the compound worke of a Mediatour Therefore the Obedience of Christ beeing the worke of a Mediatour hath in it the operations of both natures The practise exercise or exequution of obedience is from the manhood therfore it is said that Christ bare our sinnes in his bodie vpon the crosse 1. Pet. 2. 24. that he suffered in the flesh 1. Pet. 4. 1. that he made a liuing way by the vaile of his flesh Heb. 10. 20. that we are reconciled in the bodie of his flesh Coloss. 1. 22. Obedience i● properly a subiection of the will in reasonable creatures to the will of God now the will of the Godhead of Christ admits no subiection to the will of God because the the will of the Godhead or of God is one and the same in all the persons Christ therefore yeeldes subiection onely in respect of the will of the manhoode in which he performes obedience Moreouer the operation of the Godhead is to make the saide Obedience meritorious and satisfactorie for all that shall beleeue In this respect Paul saith God was in Christ reconciling the world vnto himselfe 2. Cor. 5. 18. and that God shedde his blood Act. 20. 28. namely in that nature which the sonne of God assumed Hence ariseth the value price and dignitie of the obedience of Christ. The third question is how the Obedience of Christ should be made ours Ans. By the freedonation of God For Christ is really giuen vnto vs in the word and sacraments and consequently the obedience of Christ is made ours euen as when a peece of ground is made ours the commoditie thereof is ours also The fourth question is how the obedience of Christ should be our iustice Ans. It is not our iustice in naturall manner for then it should be in vs but by a diuine and supernaturall manner namely by Gods Acceptation in that he accounts it ours euen as truly as if it were in vs. And because God accepts it for ours it is ours indeede for his willing and approouing of any thing is the doing of it and he calls the things that are not as if they were Thus we see what the Obedience of Christ is And here two errours must be auoided The
that when we know not what to doe by reason of the greatnes of our distresse we must then fixe our hearts on Christ without seperation He that climes vp a ladder or some steepe place the higher he goes the faster he holds 2. Chron. 20. 12. Iob. 13. 12. Hence is true comfort Psal. 27. 13. 17 And if while we seeke to be made righteous by Christ we our selues are found sinners is Christ the minister of sinne God forbid For the better vnderstanding of the latter part of this chapter it must be obserued that Paul directs his speach not onely to Peter but also to the Iewes that stood by beeing maintainers of iustification by the law Some thinke that in this verse Paul makes an obiection in the person of the false Apostles on this manner If we be iustified by Christ alone without the obseruation of the law then there is no difference betweene vs Iewes and the Gentiles but we are as deepe sinners as they and if this be so then Christ is the minister of sinne And then they say to this Paul answers God forbid But I somewhat doubt whether this be the sense of the words because Paul doth not make a direct confutation of this obiection in the words following Therefore I rather suppose that Paul continues his former speach euen to the ende of the chapter and that in these words he vseth a third reason to disswade Peter from haulting betweene the Iewes and Gentiles And the reason will the better appeare if we search the meaning of the words If while we be iustified by Christ that is by faith in Christ without the workes of the law We are found sinners that is found in our sinnes not fully iustified but are further to be iustified by the workes of the law Is Christ the Minister of sinne that is doth it not hence follow that Christ ministred vnto vs occasion of sinne in that he hath caused vs to renounce the iustice of the law God forbid that is ye doe all hold it with me as a blasphemie that Christ should be the minister of sinne The argument then is framed thus If beeing iustified by Christ we remaine sinners and are further to be iustified by the law then Christ is the minister of sinne but Christ is no minister of sinne therefore they which are iustified neede not further to be iustified by the law The vse First we learne hence that it is a blasphemie to make Christ the minister of sinne who is the minister of righteousnes yea iustice it selfe Isa. 53. 11. Dan. 9. 25. He brings euerlasting righteousnes Ioh. 1. He is the lambe of God that takes away the sinnes of the world Of this all the Prophets giue testimonie Act. 10. 43. Therefore Atheists are no better then deuills that recken him among the false Prophets of the world And many of them that professe Christ are greatly to be blamed that make Christ the greatest sinner in the world because Christ died for them therefore they prefume of mercie and take libertie to liue as they list Againe Paul here teacheth that they which are iustified by Christ are perfectly to be iustified and neede not further to be iustified by any thing out of Christ as by the workes of the law It may be obiected that they which are iustified feele themselues to be sinners Rom. 7. 14. Ans. The corruption of original sinne is in them that are iustified yet is it not imputed to them by God and withall it hath receiued his deadly wound by the death of Christ. Therefore they which are iustified are not reputed sinners before God Againe it may be obiected that they which are iustified must confesse themselues to be sinners to the very death Ans. Confession of sinne is not a cause but a way for the obtaining of pardon Prou. 28. 14. 1. Ioh. 1. 9. The vncouering of our sinnes is the way to couer them before God The sinnes therefore of men iustified vpon their humble and serious confession are not sinnes imputed but couered Vpon this doctrine it followes that there is not a second iustification by workes as the Papists teach For he that is iustified by Christ is fully iustified and neede not further be iustified by any thing out of Christ as by the law Againe the same persons teach that our sinnes are done away by the death of Christ and we iustified in our baptisme and that if we fall and sinne after baptisme we must doe workes of penance that we may satisfie Gods iustice and be further iustified by our works and sufferings But then by their leaues after we are iustified by Christ we are found sinners and we are further to be iustified by our owne workes Now this is the point which Paul here confuteth Againe by this doctrine we learne that Christ alone is by himselfe sufficient for our iustification In him saith Paul are we complete Col. 2. 14. He is a well of grace and life neuer dried vp Ioh. 4. 14. Thirdly we must content our selues with him alone and with his obedience for our iustification despising in respect of him all merits and satisfactions done by man Lastly here we see what must be the care of men in this world namely to seeke to be iustified by the faith of Christ. It was Pauls principall desire to be found in Christ hauing not his owne righteousnes but the righteousnes which is by the faith of Christ. Phil. 3. 10. The like desire should be in vs all 18 For if I build againe the things which I haue destroied I make my selfe a transgressour By things destroyed Paul meanes the workes or the iustice of the law as appeares by the next verse following where rendering a reason of this he saith by the law I am dead to the law These words depend on the former thus Paul had said before that Christ was not a minister of sinne vnto vs and here he prooues it thus He that builds the iustice of the law which he hath destroied is a minister of sinne or makes himselfe a sinner but the Iewes and Peter by his example build the iustice of the law which they haue destroied and so doth not Christ therefore the Iewes and Peter make themselues sinners and Christ doth not make vs sinners Here let vs obserue the modestie and meeknes of Paul The things which he speakes concerne Peter and the Iewes yet least he offend them he applies them to himselfe This care not to offend was in Christ who was rather willing to depart frō his right then to offend Matth. 17. 27. And Paul biddes vs please all men in that which is good Here againe it is Pauls doctrine that we make our selues offendours when we build that which we haue lawfully destroied Thus Teachers are great offenders when good doctrine is ioyned with bad conuersation For good doctrine destroies the kingdome of darknes and bad conuersation builds it vp againe Thus rulers are great offenders when good counsell and bad example
therefore to liue in the flesh is to liue a naturall life by eating drinking sleeping Further Paul saith that liuing in the flesh he liued by faith and for the better conceiuing of this two questions may be demanded The first is Why a beleeuer is said to liue by faith Ans. There be two causes First faith is an Instrument to vnite vs to Christ and by meanes of this vnion we receiue life from Christ for Christ dwells in our hearts by faith Eph. 3. 17. Secondly faith is a Guide to order and gouerne temporall life in all good manner according to the will of God And this faith doth by a diuine kind of reasoning framed in the mind whereby it vrgeth and perswadeth to good duties Rom. 6. 11. The second question is How men liue by faith Ans. The child of God liues a double life in this world a spirituall and a temporall The spirituall stands specially in three things Reconciliation with God renouation of life and good workes Now in our Reconciliation with God we liue in this world onely by faith For we haue and enioy pardon of sinnes imputation of iustice and acception to life eternall onely by meanes of our faith Rom. 4. 4. 5. 1. Againe in the renouation and change of our liues we liue by faith For our faith in Christ purifieth our hearts Act. 15. 9. partly by deriuing holines and puritie from Christ vnto vs who is our sanctification and partly by moouing and perswading of vs to holines and newnes of life 1. Ioh. 3. 3. Lastly in the doing of euery good worke we must liue by our faith For first there must be a generall faith that the worke in his kind pleaseth God Rom. 14. 25. Secondly iustifying faith must giue a beginning to the worke I beleeued therefore I spake Psal. 116. 12. Thirdly after the worke is done faith must couer the defects thereof that it may be acceptable to God Heb. 11. 5. Temporall life stands in cares or miseries and miseries are outward afflictions or inward temptations And in all our worldly cares we are to liue by faith For our care must be to doe our office and the labour of our calling with all diligence This beeing done we must there make a pause and for the successe of all our praiers and labours we must cast our care on God 1. Pet. 5. 7. Likewise in our afflictions we are to liue by faith For our faith is to assure vs that God according to his promise will giue a good issue 1. Cor. 10. 12. And though all temporall things faile vs it makes vs retaine the hope of mercie and of eternall life Thirdly it makes vs waite Gods leisure for our deliuerance Isa. 16. 28. Lastly in our Temptations we are not to liue by feeling but by faith yea against feeling to rest on the bare promise of God when we feele and apprehend nothing but the wrath of God And thus we see how the beleeuer liues by his faith in this world It may be said What is the faith we liue by Answer is here made It is the faith of the sonne of God And sauing faith is so called because Christ is not onely the Author of it and the obiect or matter of it but also the Reuealer of it For there was a certaine faith in God which was put into the heart of man in the creation which also the morall law requireth but this faith in the Messias was not knowne till after the fall and then it was reuealed to the world by the sonne of God Againe it may be saide What is this faith of the Sonne of God Answer is here made A faith whereby I beleeue that Christ hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me These words then thus explaned are an answer to an obiection which may be framed thus Why shouldest thou say that thou liuest not but that Christ liueth in thee considering thou liuest in the flesh as other men doe Answer is made Though I liue in the flesh yet I liue by the faith of the sonne of God The vse Here first of all they are to be blamed that liue by sense like beasts beleeuing no more then they see and trusting God no further then they see him For if a man whome we see and know make a promise to vs we are comforted yet if God who is inuisible make in his word farre better promises as he doth we are not in like sort comforted Againe we put too much confidence in meanes If we haue good callings house land liuing we can then trust in God but when meanes of comfort faile we are confounded in our selues as if there were no God We are like the vsurer who will not trust the man but his pawne euen so we trust not God vpon his bare word without a pawne If he come to vs with a full hand and with the pawne of his good gifts and blessings we trust him els not Againe they are to be blamed that liue onely by the guidance of reason For many dispute thus I deale truly and iustly with all men and liue peaceably with my neighbours therefore God will haue me excused But there must be a better guide to euerlasting life namely faith in Christ els shall we misse of our marke Thirdly they deceiue themselues that thinke they may liue as they list and call vpon God when they are dying and so die by faith It is well if they can die by faith but that they may so die they must liue by faith Lastly they are to be blamed that spend their daies in worldly cares so as no good thing can take place This is the life of infidels And where true faith raignes it cuts off the multitude of cares and makes vs cast them on God Moreouer here we see what we are to doe in perilous times as in the time of plague famine sword when present death is before our eyes we must then liue by faith When Noeh heard of the flood he prepared such meanes as faith would affoard for the sauing of himselfe and his familie Abraham Isaac Iacob by faith liued as pilgrimes in a strange land and were content Moses left Pharaos court and feared not the wrath of the king because by faith he saw him that was inuisible Hebr. 11. 27. Dauid in the feare of present death comforted himselfe in the Lord his God 1. Sam. 30. 6. When Iehosaphat knew not what in the world to doe he lift vp the eyes of his faith to the Lord. 2. Chron. 20. 12. Christ in his agonie and passion of the crosse by faith commended his soule into the hands of his father Of the Saints of the New Testament some were racked some were stoned to death and that by faith Heb. 11. 36. We must therefore all of vs learne to liue by faith and for this cause we must acquaint our selues with the word and promises of God and mingle them with our faith els shall the life of a man in
seemes there was more time betweene the promise and the law Ans. The meaning of Moses in this place is thus much that the dwelling of the children of Israel while they dwelt as pilgrims was for the space of 430 yeares and that in ●art of this time they dwelt in Egypt as strangers The words may thus be translated The dwelling or Peregrination of the children of Israel in which they dwelt in Egrpt was 430 yeares And this peregrination beginnes in the calling of Abraham and endes at the giuing of the law In Pauls example we see what it is to search the Scriptures not onely to consider the scope of whole bookes and the parts thereof but to ponder and waigh euery sentence and euery part of euery sentence and euery circumstance of time place person This is the right forme of the studie of diuinitie to be vsed of the sonnes of the Prophets The second reason vsed by Paul is in the 18. v. it may be framed thus If the law abolish the promise then the inheritance must come by the law but that cannot be He prooues it thus If the inheritance of life eternall be by the law it is no more by the promise but it is by the promise because God gaue it vnto Abraham freely by promise therefore it comes not by the law The opposition betweene the law and the promise shewes that Paul in this Epistle speakes not onely of the ceremoniall but also of the morall For the greatest opposition is betweene the morall law and the free promise of God Let vs againe marke here the difference betweene the law and the Gospel The law promiseth life but to the worker for his works or vpon condition of obedience The Gospel called by Paul the promise offers and giues life freely without the condition of any worke and requires nothing but the receiuing of that which is offered It may be obiected that the Gospel promiseth life vpon the condition of our faith Ans. The Gospel hath in it no morall condition of any thing to be done of vs. Indeede faith is mentioned after the forme and manner of a condition but in truth it is the free gift of God as well as life eternall and it is to be considered not as a worke done of vs but as an instrument to receiue things promised This difference of the law and the Gospel must be kept as a treasure for it is the ground of many worthie conclusions in true religion And the ignorance of this point in the Church of Rome hath bin the decay of religion specially in the article of Iustification Thirdly we must here obserue the opposition betweene the Law and the free promise of God in iustification of a sinner For if life come by the law it comes not by the promise saith Paul And Rom. 4. 14. If they which are of the law are heires the promise is of none effect By this we see the Church of Rome ouerturnes and abrogates the free promise of God For they of that Church teach that the first iustification is by meere mercie and that the second is by the workes of the law But the law and the promise cannot be mixed together more then fire and water the law ioyned with the free promise disanulls the said promise Lastly in that Paul saith God gaue and freely bestowed the inheritance by the promise it must be considered that this Giuing is no priuate but a publike donation For Abraham must be considered as a publike person and that which was giuen to him was in him giuen to all that should beleeue as he did Art thou then a true beleeuer doest thou truly turne vnto God here is thy comfort the inheritance of eternall life is as surely thine as it was Abrahams when he beleeued For thou art partaker of the same promise with him and when God gaue him life he gaue thee also life in him Againe persons backward and carelesse must be stirred vp with all diligence to vse all good meanes that they may beleeue truly in Christ and truly turne to God For so soone as they beginne to beleeue and to turne vnto God they are entred into the condition of Abraham and if they continue they shall sit downe with Abraham Isaac and Iacob in the kingdome of heauen and after this life they shall rest in the bosome of Abraham For that which was done to Abraham shall be done to all that walke in his steppes 19 Wherefore then serues the law it was added because of transgressions vntill the seede was come to which the promise was made and it was ordained by Angels in the hand of a Mediatour 20 Now a Mediatour is not of one but God is one Paul hath prooued before that the law doth not abolish the promise his last reason was because then the inheritance should be by the law which cannot be Against this reason in the 19 and 20 verses there is an obiection made and answered The obiection is this If life and iustice come not by the law the law then is in vaine And this obiection is expressed by way of interrogation Wherefore then serues the law The answer is in the next words It is added for transgressions that is for the reuealing of sinne and the punishment thereof and for the conuincing of men touching their sinnes Rom. 3. 19 20. Moreouer Paul sets downe the time or continuance of this vse of the law when he saith till the seede came to which the promise was made that is till Christ come and accomplish the worke of mans redemption Here two questions may be demanded The first is whether the law serue to reueale sinne after the cōming of Christ For Paul saith it is added for transgressions till Christ. Ans. The law serues to reueale sinne euen to the end of the world yet in respect of the legall or Mosaicall manner of reuealing sinne it is added but till Christ. For the law before Christ did conuince men of sinne not onely by precepts and threatnings but also by Rites and Ceremonies For Iewish washings and sacrifices were reall confessions of sinne And they were an handwriting against vs as Paul saith And this manner of reuealing sinne ended in the death of Christ. Col. 2. 14. Againe the Ministerie of condemnation which was in force till Christ at his comming is turned into the Ministerie of the spirit and of grace 2. Cor. 3. 11. For vnder the law there was plētifull reuelation of sinne with darke and small reuelation of grace but at the comming of Christ men saw heauen opened and there was a plentifull reuelation of sinne with a more plētifull reuelation of grace and mercie And in this respect also the law is said to be till Christ. The second question is whether the seede of Abraham were before Christ or no Ans. All that followed the steppes of Abrahams faith before Christ were his seede Yet were they not that seede that is the principall seede who is Christ who is the seede
if he fall into any offence of frailtie yet doth he not make a practise of sinne as the wicked and vngodly doe It may be saide the Galatians and all the Galatians are the children of God but what is that to vs Ans. They among vs that professe true saith in Christ with care to keepe good conscience are likewise to hold themselues to be children of God He beleeues not the Gospel that doth not beleeue his owne adoption For in the Gospel there is a promise of all the blessings of God to them that beleeue and there is also a commandement to applie the said promise to our selues and consequently to applie the gift of adoption to our selues When we are bidden to say Our father we are bidden to beleeue our selues to be children of God and so to come vnto him Therefore with Paul I say that all we that truly beleeue in Christ and haue care to lead a good life all I say are indeede the children of God The vse Comforts arising by this benefit are many First if thou be Gods child surely he will prouide all things necessarie for thy soule and bodie Math. 6. 26. Our care must be to doe the office and dutie that belongs vnto vs when this is done our care is ended As for the good successe of our labours we must cast our care on God who will prouide that no good thing be wanting vnto vs. Psal. 34. 10. They that drowne themselues in worldly cares liue like fatherlesse children Secondly in that we are children we haue libertie to come into the presence of God and to pray vnto him Eph. 3. 12. Thirdly nothing shall hurt them that are the children of God The plague shall not come neere their tabernacle they shall walke vpon the lyon and the aspe and tread them vnder foote Psal. 91. 13. All things shall turne to their good Rom. 8. 28. And the rather because the Angels of God pitch their tents about them Lastly God will beare with the infirmities and frailties of them that are his children if there be in them a care to please him with a Purpose of not sinning Malach. 3. 7. If a child be sicke the father or mother doe not cast it out of dores much lesse will God The duties First if ye be Gods children then walke worthie your profession and calling Be not vassalls of sinne and Satan carrie your selues as kings sonnes bearing sway ouer the lusts of your owne hearts the temptations of the deuill and the leud customes and fashions of this world When Dauid kept his fathers sheepe he behaued himselfe like a shepheard but when he was called from the sheepefold and chosen to be king he carried himselfe accordingly So must we doe that of children of the deuill are made the children of God And if we liue according to the lusts of our flesh as the men of this world doe whatsoeuer we professe we are in truth the children of the deuill Ioh. 8. 44. 1. Ioh. 3. Secondly we must vse euery day to bring our selues into the presence of God and we must doe all things as in his sight and presence presenting our selues vnto him as instruments of his glorie in doing of his will This is the honour that the child of God owes vnto him Mal. 1. 6. Thirdly our care must be according to the measure of grace to resemble Christ in all good vertues and holy conuersation For he is our eldest brother the first borne of many brethren and therefore we should be like vnto him 1. Ioh. 3. 2 3. Fourthly we must haue a desire and loue to the word of God that we may grow by it in knowledge grace and good life For this is the milke and foode whereby God feedes his childrē 1. Pet. 2. 2. Such persōs thē amōg vs that haue no loue or liking of the word but spend their daies in ignorāce securitie shew themselues to be no children of God The child in the armes of the mother or nurce that neuer desires the brest is certenly a dead child Lastly we must put this in our accounts that we must haue many afflictions if we be Gods children for he corrects all his children And when we are vnder the rodde of correction we must refigne our selues to the will and good pleasure of God This is childlike obedience and this must be done in silence and with all quietnes then God is best pleased The internall meanes of Adoption is Faith in Christ. And for the better conceiuing of it three questions are to be propounded The first what a kind of faith is this Ans. A particular or speciall faith and it hath three acts or effects The first is to beleeue Christ to be Jesus that is a Sauiour the second is to beleeue that Christ is my or thy Sauiour the third is to put the confidence of heart in him When Thomas felt the wounds of Christ he said My Lord and my God and thereupon Christ said Because thou hast seene thou beleeuest Ioh. 20. 29. Here marke that to beleeue Christ to be my Christ is faith Against this speciall faith the Papists obiect three arguments The first is this Euery speciall faith must haue a speciall word of God for his ground but there is no speciall word that thy sinnes or my sinnes are forgiuen by Christ therefore there is no speciall faith Ans. We haue that which in force and value is equiualent to a speciall word namely a generall promise with a commandement to applie the said promise to our selues Secondly I answer that the word and promise of God generally propounded in Scripture is made particular in the publike Ministerie in which when the word is preached to any people God reueales two things vnto them one that his will is to saue them by Christ the other that his will is that men should beleeue in Christ. And the word thus applied in the publike Ministerie in the name of God is as much as if an Angel should particularly speake vnto vs from heauen The second Argument Speciall faith say they is absurd because by it a sinner must beleeue the pardon of his sinnes before he hath it in as much as faith is the meanes to obtaine pardon Ans. The giuing and the receiuing of pardon and faith are both at one moment of time for when God giues the pardon of sinne at the same instant he causeth men to receiue the same pardon by faith For order of nature faith goes before the receiuing of the pardon because faith is giuen to them that are to be ingrafted into Christ and pardon to them that are in Christ for time it doth not and therfore this second argument is absurd The third Argument The full certentie and perswasion of Gods mercie in Christ followes good conscience and good workes and therefore faith followes after Iustification Ans. There be two degrees of faith A weake faith and a strong faith A weake faith is that against which doubting much preuailes in
which there is a sorrow for vnbeleefe a will and defire to beleeue in Christ with care to vse good meanes and to increase in faith Strong faith is that which preuailes against doubting and it is a full perswasion or resolution of the loue and mercie of God in Christ. This second degree of faith follows iustification vpon the obseruation and experience of the prouidence and goodnes of God but the first degree of speciall faith before named for order goes before iustification and for time is together with it The second question is when faith beginnes first to breede in the heart Ans. When a man beginnes to be touched in his conscience for his sinnes and vpon feeling of his owne spirituall pouertie earnestly hungers and thirsts after Christ and his righteousnes aboue all things in the world Christ saith I will giue to him that thirsteth of the well of the water of life freely Reuel 21. 6. This promise declares that in thirsting there is a measure of faith To eate and drinke Christ the bread and water of life is to beleeue in him and to hunger and thirst hauing as it were a spirituall appetite to Christ is the next steppe to this eating and drinking Therefore this must be remembred that professours of the Gospel yea teachers of the same that want this sense of their vnworthines and this thirsting are farre wide what gifts soeuer they haue For they are not yet come to the first steppe of true faith The third question is how faith in Christ is reuealed in the heart Ans. It is not faith to conceiue in minde a bare perswasion that Christ is my Sauiour and thereupon to thinke to be saued But faith in Christ is conceiued in the spirituall exercises of inuocation and repentance When I see mine owne sinnes and Gods anger against me for them by the law when I see mine owne guiltines I draw my selfe into the presence of God making confession of mine offences and praier for the pardon of them and in this praier I striue against mine vnbeleefe I will desire and endeauour to assent to the promise of God touching forgiuenes and withall I purpose with my selfe to sinne no more This is my daily practise and thus is faith truly conceiued and confirmed Againe faith is conceiued in the vse of holy meanes namely the Preaching of the word and Sacraments For in hearing receiuing the Lords Supper to meditate vpon the promise of mercie and in meditation to applie the said promise to my selfe is the right way to conceiue true faith Therefore it must be remembred that faith conceiued without the exercises of inuocation and repentance or conceiued without the vse of the word and Sacraments as commonly it is is not true faith but an Imagination or fiction of the braine which will faile in the ende The third point to be considered is the signe or the outward meanes of Adoption and that is Baptisme It may be demanded how Baptisme can be a marke or signe of the child of God considering all sorts of men are partakers of it Ans. Baptisme alone is no marke of Gods child but baptisme ioyned with faith for so must the text be conceiued All ye Galatians that beleeue are baptised into Christ. For Paul had said immediatly before Ye are the sounes of God by faith Againe the Scripture speaking of baptisme comprehends both the outward and the inward baptisme which is the inward baptisme of the spirit Math. 3. 11. and 1. Pet. 3. 21. And thus is baptisme alwaies an infallible marke of the child of God It may further be demanded what are the markes of the inward baptisme Ans. The new birth whereby a man is washed and cleansed by the spirit of God hath three speciall markes The first is the spirit of grace and supplications Zach. 12. 10. that is the spirit of regeneration causing men to turne to God and withall to make instant praier and supplication for mercie and forgiuenes of sins past The second is to heare obay the voice of god in all things Ioh. 8. 47. 10. 27. The third is not to sin that is not to liue in in the practise of any sinne after this new birth is begunne 1. Ioh. 3. He that is borne of God doth not commit sinne He may faile in this or that speach and doe amisse in this or that action but after his calling and conuersion the tenour and course of his life shall be according to the commandements of God And this is a speciall marke to discerne the inward baptisme Some alleadged that hauing long agoe beene baptised with water yet they feele not the inward baptisme and therefore they feare that they are not the children of God Ans. If there be in thee a sorrow for thy corruptions and sinnes past if thou hast a purpose to sinne no more if thou auoidest the occasions of sinne and fearest to offend if hauing sinned thou liest not in thy sinne but recouerest thy selfe by new repentance thou art verily borne of God and baptised with the baptisme of the holy Ghost Others alleadge that although they haue bin baptised yet they feare they haue no faith and therefore they thinke they are not the children of God Ans. If there be in thee a sorrow for thine vnbeleefe a will and desire to beleeue and a care to increase in faith by the vse of good meanes there is a measure of true faith in thee and by it thou maist assure thy selfe that thou art the child of God Others againe alleadge that they haue long made praier vnto God and that according to his will and yet their praiers haue not bin heard and therefore they often doubt they are not Gods children Ans. If thou canst pray though thy praier be not heard according to thy desire content thy selfe For the praier of the heart is the marke of the spirit of adoption Rom. 8. 16. 26. And by it thou maist know that thou art the child of God Thus then we see what is the infallible marke of the child of God namely baptisme ioyned with true faith in Christ or the outward baptisme ioyned with the inward baptisme of the spirit The vse Many auouch the present Church of Rome to be the true Church of God and that because they say in it there is true baptisme which is a marke of the church of God But they are deceiued for baptisme in the church of Rome is seuered from true faith or from the Apostolike doctrine and the outward baptisme is seuered from the inward baptisme For they of that Church ouerturne iustification by the meere mercie of God which is the principall part of the inward baptisme Againe the ten Tribes retained circumcision after their Apostasie yet for all that condemned to be no people of God Ose. 1. 9. The light in the lanthorne pertaines not to the lanthorne but to the passengers in the streete euen so the Confession of faith in the Symboll of the Apostles and
righteousnes and iudgement and then he will bring vpon them all that he hath spoken Gen. 18. 19. to the Israelites he saith that they must turne and obay and then he will make all his promises and couenants good Deut. 30. 1. 6. and Isa. 1. 16 17 19. To the Iewes Peter saith Repent first and then they shall be baptized for the remission of sinnes Act. 2. 38. 42. And Philip saide to the Eunuch If thou beleeuest with all thy heart thou maist be baptized Act. 8. 37. The vse By this order we see that the commandement to beleeue and to repent is more large and generall then the promise of mercie in Christ. For the commandement is giuen to all hearers to turne and beleeue and the promise is made onely to such hearers as doe indeede turne and beleeue therefore it is a falshood to imagine that the promise of saluation belongs generally to all mankind Againe by this order it appeares that Repentance belongs to baptisme and it is one of the first things that are required and therefore it is follie to make Repentance a distinct meanes of saluation and a distinct sacrament from baptisme Thirdly if it be demanded why so many persons that haue bin baptized liue for all this as if they had not bin baptized in the common sinnes of the world like prophane Esaus and yet doe comfort themselues in their baptisme Ans. They doe not know and consider the Order which God vsed in couenanting with them in baptisme but they deale preposterously ouerslipping the commandement of repenting and beleeuing and in the first place lay hold of Gods promise made to them in baptisme This is the cause of so much prophanesse in the world Againe there be many persons that haue bin baptized who neuertheles cannot abide to heare and read the word of God and the reason is because they obserue not the order of their baptisme first of all to become disciples and then to lay hold of the promises of God They likewise are to be blamed that bring vp their youth in ignorance For they are baptized vpon condition that they shall become disciples of Christ when they come to yeares of discretion And they are by this meanes barred from all the mercies of God for we must as good disciples obay the commandement that biddes vs turne and beleeue before we can haue any benefit or profit by any of the promises of God Lastly we are here taught in the working of our saluation to keepe the Order of God which he hath set downe vnto vs in baptisme which is first of all to turne vnto God according to all his lawes and secondly vpon our conuersion to lay hold of the promises of God and the confirmation thereof by the sacraments Thus shall we find comfort in the promises of God and haue true fellowship with God if we beginne where he beginnes in making of his couenant with vs and end where he ends And this we must doe not onely in the time of our first conuersion but also afterward in the time of distresse and affliction and at such times as by frailtie we fall and offend God In a word if for practise we alwaies keepe our selues to this order we shall find true comfort in life and death It followes Baptizing them into the name or in the name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost These words signifie first to bap tize by the commandement and authoritie of the Father Son and holy Ghost secondly to baptize by and with the inuocation of the name of the true God Whatsoeuer ye doe in ward or deede doe it in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ that is by the in vocation of the name of Christ. Col. 3. 17. Thirdly to baptize in the name c. signifies to wash with water in token that the partie baptized hath the name of God named vpon him and that he is receiued into the houshold or familie of God as a child of God a member of Christ and the temple of the holy Ghost Thus Iacob faith in the adoption of Ephraim and Manasses Let them be mine and let my name be called vpon them Gen. 48. 5. 16. And Paul saith that the Corinthians might not be named and distinguished by Paul Cephas Apollos because they were not baptized into their names but into the name of Christ. 1. Cor. 1. 13. And this I take to be the full sense of the phrase Here we see what is done in baptisme the Couenant of grace is solemnised betweene God and the partie baptised And in this couenant some actions belong to God and some to the parties baptised Gods actions are two The first is the making of promise of reconciliation that is of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting to them that are baptised and beleeue The second is the obsignation or sealing of this promise and that is twofold outward or inward The outward seale is the washing by water and this washing serues not to seale by nature but by the institution of God in these words baptize them c. and therefore Paul saith cleansing the Church by the washing of water in the word Eph. 5. 26. The inward sealing is by the earnest of Gods spirit Eph. 1. 13. The action of the partie baptized is a certaine stipulation or obligation whereby he binds himselfe to giue homage to the Father Son and holy Ghost This Homage stands in faith whereby all the promises of God are beleeued and in Obedience to all his cōmandements The signe of this obligation is that the partie baptized willingly yeelds himselfe to be washed with water It is not saide in the name of God but in the name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost to teach vs the right way to know and to acknowledge the true God This Knowledge stands in sixe points all here expressed The first is that there is one God and no more For though there be three that are named yet there is but one name that is one in authoritie will and worship of all three And elswhere men are said to be baptized into the name of the Lord. Act. 10. 48. The second is that this one true God is the Father Sonne and holy Ghost A mysterie vnsearchable The third that these three are really distinct so as the Father is first in order the Sonne the second and the holy Ghost not the first or second but the third The fourth is that they are all one in operation Ioh. 5. 19. and specially in the act of reconciliation or couenant making For the father sends the sonne to be our Redeemer the sonne workes in his owne person the worke of redemption and the holy Ghost applies the same by his efficacie The fift is that they are all one in worship for the Father Sonne and holy Ghost are ioyntly to be worshipped together and God in them The last is that we are to know God not as he is in himselfe but as he hath reuealed himselfe vnto vs in
thy selfe vnder the curse of the law and for thine offences by it bound ouer to euerlasting death If thou should est be proclaimed an Outlaw or a writ of rebellion should be serued on thee it would make thee at thy wits ende Now behold the law proclaimes thee a traytour and rebell against God through heauen and earth The law shuts heauen against thee it sets hell and death wide open for thee and it armes all the creatures of God against thee Therefore it stands thee in hand to looke about thee and to flie from the sentence of the lawe to the throne of grace for mercie and forgiuenes It hath bin the fashion of all holy men to acquaint themselues with this one lesson that they were by nature vnder the law specially then when they were to humble themselues in the presence of God Daniel in his praier ascribes shame and confusion to himselfe Dan. 9. according to the voice and crie of the law and the prodigall sonne confesseth that he had sinned against his father and against heauen and that he was vnworthy to be accounted a child of God according to the law iudging and condemning himselfe The third point is what is the price wherby men are bought or redeemed from vnder the law Ans. The obedience of the Sonne whereby he stood in subiection to the law for vs as Paul signifies in the words immediatly going before It may be said how can the obedience of one man be a price of redemption for an other I answer we must consider Christ not as a meere man but as God-man and by this meanes his Obedience is of infinit merit and efficacie Againe we must consider him not as a priuate but as a publike person representing all the Elect in his obedience to his father And by this meanes his Obedience ferues for all that beleeue in him Againe it may be alledged that the law saith Thou shalt loue thou shalt not lust c. And the soule that sinnes that soule shall die Ezech. 18. 20. And a man shall not redeeme the life of his brother Psal. 49. 7. Ans. The law requires that euery man performe obedience and make satisfaction in his owne person and the law knows no other obedience But this must be considered that the law is but one part of the reuealed will of God and that the Gospel is an other distinct part reuealing more then the law euer knew And the Gospel teacheth a Translation of the law in respect of obedience from our persons to the person of the Mediatour and thereby it addes an Exception to the law The fourth point is who are partakers of this Redemption Ans. They which see and feele and bewaile their condition that they are vnder the law and flie from the sentence thereof to the throne of grace for mercie Christ came to saue sinners Matth. 9. that is such as are conuicted by the law and know themselues to be sinners He offers ease to them that trauell and are heauie laden Matth. 11. 28. He preacheth deliuerance to captiues Luk. 4. 18. Here we are to bewaile the miserie of our people that know not themselues to be vnder the law nay they loue and delight to be vnder it For they alleadge for themselues that they say their praiers duly and truly that they meane well to God-ward and deale truly with men and therfore they thinke God will haue mercy on them and haue them excused for all their offences The last point is what benefits arise of this deliuerance from vnder the law Ans. They which turne to God and beleeue in Christ reape foure benefits hereby The first is that no sinne shall haue dominion ouer them Rom. 6. 14. Here marke by the way that they which are in Christ cannot wholly fall from grace For they which wholly fall away are vnder the dominion of sinne The second is that God will accept the indeauour to obay for obedience because they are freed from the rigour of the law Read Malac. 3. 17. The third is that they haue libertie to liue and serue God without feare of damnation or any other euill Luk. 1. 74. The last is that afflictions cease to be curses and are turned to blessings and for this cause they are delaied and qualified for the good of them which are afflicted Psal. 89. 32. J will correct them that offend with a rodde but I will not take my mercie from them Prou. 3. 11. Grieue not for the correction of the Lord for he loueth whome he correcteth Ierem. 10. 24. Correct vs in iudgement and powre forth thy wrath vpon the nations that haue not knowne thee This must teach men that professe or teach Christ not to be discouraged when they are abused railed on slaundered or cursed For if they be from vnder the law and so from vnder the sting of a guiltie conscience nothing shall hurt them They must be content for a while to suffer the snatches and bitings of the deuill for in the ende his head shall be bruised in peeces To ende this point it may be said if we that beleeue be not vnder the law then we may liue and die as we list Ans. We are free from the law as a yoke but not free from it as it is the rule of obedience and good life And because we are freed from the bondage of the law therefore we must be a law to our selues we must be voluntaries Psal. 110. 4. without constraint freely yeelding subiection to the will of God and not for feare of hell and the last iudgement The third and last degree is the Fruition of adoption in these words that we might receiue the adoption of sonnes Here two questions are to be considered The first is How the Church of the new Testament is saide to receiue the adoption which was before receiued in the old Testament Ans. In scripture a thing is often said to be done when it is done more fully and plentifully Christ tells Nathanael that he shall see heauen open Ioh. 1. 51. that is more plainly opened For it was not shut in the old Testament And the holy Ghost was not yet Ioh. 7. 39. that is in the full measure And the way into the Holiest was not open while the Tabernacle was standing Hebr. 9. 8. that is plainly made manifest And in this place Beleeuers of the new Testament receiue the Adoption because they receiue it in a more full and plentifull manner in that the spirit of children is powred forth vpon them in larger measure whether we regard Illumination or the gifts of regeneration This must teach vs that liue in these latter daies to put on the condition of sonnes and daughters of God in reuerence obedience and thankefulnes Butalas among the multitude it is farre otherwise For the most liue euen as Atheists in ignorance according to the lusts of their owne hearts The faith and repentance which they professe is but Ceremoniall faith and Repentance The second question
gift of illumination faith regeneration life sense and motion are the gifts of the spirit and so are ciuill vertues but the sending of the spirit is onely in respect of such gifts as are bestowed in the Church in the receiuing of which the spirit is acknowledged The place or mansion of the spirit is the heart that is the minde will and affection The heart is the very sinke of sinne yet that doth the spirit choose for his abode Hence we learne 1. That the beginning of our newe birth is in the heart when a newe light is put into the minde a newe and heauenly disposition into the will and affection 2. The most principall part of our change or renouation is in the heart where the spirit abides The end of all teaching is loue out of a pure heart good conscience and faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1. 5. 3. The beginning and principall part of Gods worship is in the heart He that serues God in the righteonsnesse of his heart in peace and ioy in the Holy Ghost is accepted Rom. 14. 17. 4. In our hearts no wicked or carnall thought will desire or lust must raigne but onely Gods word and spirit For thy heart is the house where the spirit dwels and he must be Lord of his owne house 5. Aboue all things keepe watch and warde about thy heart and fill it with all good cogitations desires that it may be a fit place of intertainment for the spirit who is as it were an Embassadour sent from the great God vnto thee The last thing is the office of the spirit which is to make beleeuers Crie Abba Here I consider 4. things 1. The meanes whereby this Crie is caused 2. The nature of it 3. To whome it is directed 4. The manner of direction For the first in the effecting or causing of this Crie there are 4. workes of the spirit The first is Conuiction when a man in his iudgement and conscience is conuicted that the scriptures of the Prophets and Apostles are indeed the word of God To this purpose there are many arguments which nowe I omit This conuiction is a common worke of the spirit yet necessarie because much Atheisme lies lurking in our hearts which makes vs call into question euery part of the word of God The second worke is Subiection whereby a man conuicted that the scripture and euery part of it is the word of God subiects himselfe in his heart to the commandement of God which bids him turne to God and beleeue in Christ. And this second is a worke of the spirit of grace proper to the elect The third is the Certificate or testimonie of the spirit which is a diuine manner of reasoning framed in the mindes of them that beleeue and repent on this manner He that beleeues and repents is Gods child Thus saith the Gospel But I beleeue in Christ and repent at the least I subiect my will to the commandement which biddes me repent and beleeue I detest mine vnbeleefe and all my sinnes and desire the Lord to increase my faith Therefore I am the child of God This is the practicall syllogisme of the H. Ghost It is the testimonie of the spirit that we are the sonnes of God it is the earnest of the spirit and the seale whereby we are sealed to the day of our redemption and it containes the certentie ofspeciall faith The fourth thing that followes vpon this Testimonie is Peace of conscience Ioy and affiance in God And from this affiance comes the crying here mentioned whereby euery true beleeuer with open throat as it were cries vnto god the father This doctrine is of great worth it is the hinge vpon which the gate of heauen turnes and therefore to be remembred The vse By this we see a manifest errour in the Popish religion which teacheth that we can haue no other certenty of our saluation in this life but that which is probable or coniecturall that is a certentie ioyned with feare suspicion and some doubting Certentie in respect of God that promiseth feare doubting in respect of our owne indisposition But this doctrine is false For they which are Gods children receiue the spirit crying Abba and this crying argues affiance or confidence in God By faith we haue confidence in God and entrance with boldnesse Eph. 3. 11. and boldnesse is opposite to feare and excludes doubting in respect of our selues Againe by this doctrine we see it is ordinarie and possible for all that beleeue and repent to be certainly assured that they are the children of God For if they haue the spirit of God crying in them as all Gods childrē haue they cannot but perceiue this crie and withall they haue the testimonie of the spirit in them which is the ground of this crie Rom. 8. 16. And seeing this is so we must be admonished to vse all meanes that we may be assured that we are the children of God 2. Pet. 1. Giue all diligence to make your Election sure Paul bids rich men lay vp a good foundation against the time to come 1. Tim. 6. 18. And this foundation must be laide not in heauen but in the conscience God of his mercie hath made a couenant or bargaine with vs that beleeue and repent in this bargaine he hath promised to vs pardon of our sinnes and life euerlasting let vs then neuer be at rest till we haue receiued earnest from the hand of God and haue his promise sealed vnto vs by the spirit in our hearts You will say what shall I doe to be assured that I am Gods child Ans. Thou must examine thy selfe of two things The first is whether thou art conuicted in thy iudgement that the Scripture is indeede the word of God if thou art not yet conuicted then inquire and vse meanes that thou maist indeed be conuicted otherwise all is in vaine Secondly inquire whether thou dost indeed and in good earnest submit and subiect thy will to the cōmandement of God which bids thee beleeue in Christ and turne vnto God For if thou canst say that thou dost will to beleeue and will to repent if thou shew this will indeede in the vse of good meanes if thou condemne and detest thy vnbeleefe and all other thy sinnes thou hast receiued the earnest of the spirit and thou art indeede the child of God And this assurance shall be vnto thee of great vse For it will make thee reioyce in afflictions and it will worke patience experience hope Rom. 5. 5. It will make thee despise this world it will take away the feare of death and kindle in thy heart a desire to be with Christ. Touching the nature of this crie it stands in the desires and groanes of the heart directed vnto God And these desires may be distinguished from all carnall desires by three properties First of all they are in the hearts of them that are turned to God or at the least beginne to turne vnto him For God heareth
Sina came from mount Sina where the law was deliuered to the Israelites And gendreth to bondage that is it makes all them bondmen that looke to be iustified and saued by the works of the law For Agar or Sina here the translatours are deceiued supposing that mount Sina had two names Agar and Sina but this opinion of theirs hath no ground and the words are thus to be read Agar is Sina Here Agar signifies not so much the person of Abrahams handmaid as that which is said in the former historie of Agar For the words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Sina must be considered as a place where it pleased God to publish the law And the wordes thus considered haue this sense Agar is Sina that is Agar figures Sina two waies First in condition for as Agar was a bondwoman so Sina in respect of the law was a place of bondage and in this respect also it is called Sina of Arabia which was a desart out of the land of Canaan Secondly in effect for as Agar bare Ismael a bondman to Abraham so Sina or the law makes bondmen And it answereth Sina answereth to Ierusalem that is as Agar figures Sina so Agar figures Ierusalem and by this meanes Sina and Ierusalem are like and stand both in one order Now Agar figures Ierusalem two waies in condition and effect In condition for as Agar was a bondwoman so Ierusalem or the nation of the Iewes refusing Christ and looking to be saued by the law are in spirituall bondage In effect for as Agar brings forth Ismael a bondman so Ierusalem by teaching the law makes bondmen Therefore Paul saith in the last place of Ierusalem and shee is in bondage with her children The vse These things are said by allegorie Here the Papists make a double sense of scripture one literall the other spirituall Literall is twofold Proper when the words are taken in their proper signification Figuratiue when the holy Ghost signifies his meaning in borrowed tearmes Spirituall senses they make three One allegoricall when things in the old testament are applied to signifie things in the new testament The second is Tropologicall when scripture signifies something touching manners The third is Anagogicall when things are in scripture applied to signifie the estate of euerlasting life Thus Ierusalem properly is a citie by allegorie the Church of the new Testament in a tropologicall sense a state well ordered in an anagogicall sense the estate of eternall life These senses they vse to applie to most places of the Scripture specially to the historie But I say to the contrarie that there is but one full and intire sense of euery place of scripture and that is also the literall sense sometimes expressed in proper and sometimes in borrowed or figuratiue speaches To make many senses of scripture is to ouerturne all sense and to make nothing certen As for the three spirituall senses so called they are not senses but applications or vses of scripture It may be said that the historie of Abrahams familie here propounded hath beside his proper and literall sense a spiritual or mysticall sense I answer they are not two senses but two parts of one full intire sense For not onely the bare historie but also that which is therby signified is the ful sense of the h. G. Againe here we see the scripture is not onely penned in proper tearmes but also in sundrie diuine figures and allegories The song of Salomon is an Allegorie borrowed from the fellowshippe of man and wife to signifie the communion betweene Christ his Church so is the 45. psalme The booke of Daniel and the Reuelation is an allegoricall historie The Parables of the old and new Testaments are figures or allegories When Dauid saith Psal. 45. 4. Ride on vpon the word of truth meeknes and iustice he describes a Princes charriot by allegorie The Guide is the word the horses that draw it are three Truth meekenes iustice And thus the throne of God is described by like allegorie Psal. 89. v. 14. the foundation of the throne are righteousnes and equitie the maine bearers to goe before the throne are mercie and truth It may be demanded when doth the scripture speake properly and when by figure Ans. If the proper signification of the words be against common reason or against the analogie of faith or against good manners they are not then to be taken properly but by figure The words of Christ Ioh. 15. 1. I am the true vine my father is an husband man If they be taken properly they are absurd in common reason therefore the words are figuratiue and the sense is this I am as the true vine and my father as an husbandman The wordes of Christ Take eate this is my body 1. Corinth 11. vers 24. taken properly are against the articles of faith He ascended into heauen and sits at the right hand of God And they are against the sixt commandement Thou shalt not kill And therefore they must be expounded by figure thus This bread is a signe of my bodie The like is to be said of other places they must be taken properly if it be possible if not by figure Here then they are to be blamed that make the vse of Rhetoricke in the Bible to be a meere fopperie For to this purpose there is a booke in English heretofore published As also they of the familie of loue are iustly to be condemned who in another extremitie turne all the Bible to an Allegorie yea euen that which is said of Adam and of Christ. They are two Testaments they are that is they signifie and so Agar is Sina a mountaine in Arabia that is signifies Sina Thus the Rocke in the wildernes is Christ 1. Cor. 10. 4. that is figures Christ. Like to this is the Sacramentall phrase This is my bodie that is to say this bread signifies my bodie Great is the madnes of men that hence gather Transsubstantiation or the real conuersion of bread into the bodie of Christ. They might as well gather hence the conuersion of Agar into mount Sina The two Testaments are the Couenant of workes and the Couenant of grace one promising life eternall to him that doth all things contained in the law the other to him that turnes and beleeues in Christ. And it must be obserued that Paul saith they are two that is two in substance or kind And they are two sundrie waies The law or couenant of workes propounds the bare iustice of God without mercie the couenant of grace or the Gospel reueales both the iustice and mercie of God or the iustice of God giuing place to his mercie Secondly the law requires of vs inward and perfect righteousnes both for nature and action the Gospel propounds vnto vs an imputed iustice resient in the person of the Mediatour Thirdly the law promiseth life vpon condition of works the Gospel promiseth remission of sinnes and life euerlasting vpon condition that we rest
our selues on Christ by faith Fourthly the law was written in tables of stone the Gospel in the fleshie tables of our heart Ier. 31. 33. 2. Cor. 3. 3. Fiftly the law was in nature by creation the Gospel is aboue nature and was reuealed after the fall Sixtly the law hath Moses for the mediatour Deut. 5. 27. but Christ is the mediatour of the new testament Heb. 8. 6. Lastly the law was dedicated by the blood of beasts Exod. 24. 5. the new Test by the blood of Christ. Heb. 9. 12. Here then falls to the ground a maine pillar in Popish religion which is that the law of Moses and the Gospel are all one law for substance and that the difference lies in this that the law of Moses is darke and imperfect and the Gospel or the law of Christ more perfect because he hath as they say added Counsells to precepts Againe the law they say without the spirit is the law properly and with the spirit it is the Gospel But all this is false which they teach For the two Testaments the law and the Gospel are two in nature substance or kind and the difference lies not in the presence or absence of the spirit And whereas the Papists make two iustifications the first meerely by grace the second by workes besides the two Testaments they must establish a third Testament compounded of both and it must be partly legall and partly Euangelicall otherwise the twofold iustification cannot stand For the law propounds onely one way of iustification and the Gospel a second The doctrine therefore that propounds both is compounded of both God did not approoue the polygamie of Abraham yet doth he vse it to signifie the greatest mysterie of our religion Here we see a great point of the diuine prouidence of God who ordereth and vseth well the things which he doth not approoue This is the foundation of our patience and a meanes of true comfort Ioseph thus comforts himselfe and his brethren that God ordered and disposed their bad enterprise to his and their good Gen. 45. 6 7. Here againe Paul sets downe two properties of the Testament of workes or of the law The first is that it came from mount Sina And here lies the difference betweene the law and the Gospel the law is from Sina the gospel from Sion or Ierusalem For there it was first to be preached and thence conueied to all nations Mich. 4. 1. Ezech. 47. 1. The second propertie of the law is that it gendreth to bondage because it maketh them bond men that looke to be saued and iustified thereby And this it doth by reuealing sinne and the punishment thereof which is euerlasting death and by conuincing all men of their sinnes and of their deserued condemnation In this respect it is called the ministerie of death 2. Cor. 3. 6. and Paul saith that after he knew his sins by the lawe he died and the lawe was the meanes of death vnto him Rom. 7. 10. Here is another difference between the law and the Gospel The lawe genders to bondage the Gospell genders to life For it is an instrument of the spirit for the beginning and confirming of our regeneration and saluation and so is not the law which is no cause but only an occasion of the grace of God in vs. Where as Ierusalem that now is is said to be in bondage as Sina and Hagar It is to be obserued that there is no Church in the world nor people which is not subiect to Apostasie For God had made great and large promises to Ierusalem Psal. 122. and 132. and yet for all this Ierusalem by refusing Christ and by establishing the iustice of the lawe is comne into bondage and depriues herselfe of the inheritance of eternall life Therefore it is a falshood which the Papists teach that the infallible assistance of the spirit is tyed to the Chaire and Consistorie of the Pope so as he and consequently the Church of Rome cannot erre Here againe we see what may be the future condition of England For it may be said of it hereafter England that now is is not that which it hath bin namely a maintainer of the Gospell of Christ. Therefore we must not be high minded but feare and now take heed of the first beginning of apostasie The holy Ghost Heb. 3. 12 13. set down the degrees thereof and they are fiue in number The first is the deceit of sinne the second is the hardening of the heart after men are deceiued by sinne the third is an euill heart which growes vpon hardnesse of heart the fourth is vnbeleefe whereby the word of God is called in question and the trueth thereof and after vnbeleefe followes a departure from God and Christ. That this may not be we must carefully avoid all the deceits of sinne as namely couetousnes ambition lust c. Againe as Agar figures the lawe so doth Ismael all iusticiaries that looke to be saued by the law Here then we see the condition of the world the greatest part whereof are Ismalites For the Turke and the Iewe looke at this day to be faued by their workes The Papist ascribes his conuersion not wholly to grace but partely to grace and partly to nature or the strength of mans will helped by grace And thus are they borne after the flesh as Ismael was And our common people though in shew they professe reformed religion yet indeed a great part of them are Ismaelites For they looke to be saued by their good seruing of God and by their good deeds and they little thinke on Christ and his merits And thus they depriue themselues of all title to eternall life Therefore it stands them in hand to condemne nature and the strength thereof and to renounce their owne workes and to rest onely on the promise of mercie for eternall saluation thus shall they be the children of the promise and heires of God Lastly in that Ierusalem is in bondage like Agar or mount Sina we see how vaine are the pilgrimages to the holy land how needlesse were the warres made for the recouery thereof 26. But Ierusalem which is aboue is free which is the mother of vs all Here Paul shewes what is figured by Sara namely the new Ierusalem which is the Catholike Church Heb. 12. 22 23. Reuel 21. 2. And it is here so tearmed because Ierusalem was a type thereof in sixe respects First God chose Ierusalem aboue all other places to dwell in Psal. 132. 13. And the Catholike Church is the companie of predestinate chosen to be a particular people to God Secondly Ierusalem is a citie compact in it selfe by reason of the bond of loue and order among the citizens Psal. 122. 3. In like sort the members of the Catholike Church are linked togither by the bond of one spirit Thirdly in Ierusalem was the sanctuarie a place of Gods presence and of his worship where also the promise of the seed of the woman was preserued
be brethren or consider not that they haue to deale with their brethren as Iosephs brethren who considering him as an enemie said one to another Behold this dreamer commeth come therefore let vs kill him Gen. 37. v. 19 20. But when they consider him as their brother they say Come and let vs sell him to the ●shmeelites and let not our hands be vpon him for he is our brother and our flesh v. 27. The second reason is in these words Considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted And it is taken from the consideration of our owne estate that we are subiect to fall into and to fall in temptation as well as others and therefore we ought to deale with them in all meekenes as we would be dealt withall in the like case The words are laid downe by way of admonition or aduise and they carrie a double sense either thus Considering thy selfe that is looking to thy selfe lest thou also be tempted that is least thou offend and sinne in beeing too seuere a censurer of thy brother in reproouing sinne with sinne Or thus Consider thy selfe that is thine owne frailtie how thou maiest ea●ily be ouertaken with the same the like or a greater sinne seeing thou maiest be taken in the deuils snare and deceiued with his pleasant baites as well as he was therefore deale as mildely with him as thou wouldest others should deale mercifully with thee Here Paul forbiddeth vs not to consider the actions of our brethren for we are to consider one another First that we may auoid the contagion of euill example Marke them diligently which cause diuision and offences and auoid them Rom. 16. 17. Secondly that we may be able to reprooue and censure them Consider the matter consult and giue sentence Iudg. 19. 30. Thirdly that we may follow their good example Looke on thē which walke so as ye haue vs for example Philip. 3. 17. Let vs consider one another to prouoke vnto loue and to good works Hebr. 10. 24. But he would haue vs especially to consider ou● selues that by the consideration of our owne weaknesse we might learne more mildnes towards others in our reproofes for seeing we stand in neede of mercie we ought to deale mercifully and seeing God forgiueth vs innumerable sinnes we ought to forgiue seauen times yea seauentie times seauen times seeing he forgiueth vs tenne thousand talents we ought to forgiue a hundreth pence Matth. 18. 32 33. Obiect The Pharisie considered himselfe when as he said Lord I thanke thee that I am not as other men thus and thus or like this Publican Luk. 18. 11. and yet he is reprooued by our Sauiour Christ. Ans. True it is for he onely considered his owne supposed vertues which he should not haue considered but forgotten though they had beene true vertues indeede according to Christs precept Mat. 6. 3. Let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doth and Pauls practise Phil. 3. 13. I forget that which is behinde And neuer so much as lightly considered his owne sinnes which Paul here would haue vs to consider and therefore he is reprooued Paul would haue vs consider our selues because the serious consideration of our owne weaknes will mooue vs to practise this dutie of meeknes for as we helpe vp those that are fallen releeue the distressed pitie the afflicted burie the dead c. because we consider our selues in them that their case may be ours So we ought to restore those that are fallen in all meekenes because we may fail and be ouertaken as well as they the rather because God himselfe in correcting and reproouing vs doth descend to our weaknes and considers that we are but flesh and a wind that passeth and commeth not againe Psal. 78. 39. and Christ became like vnto vs in all things and was tempted in like sort yet without sinne that he might be mercifull and a faithfull high Priest and might be touched with a sense of our infirmities Heb. 2. 17 18. and 4. 15. Obiect He therefore that knowes assuredly he cannot be ouercome by temptation is not to reprooue in the spirit of meeknes Ans. No man is sure and therefore no man can be secure Againe though a man know he cannot totally nor finally fall away yet seeing he doth finde by experience that he cannot ouercome without much adoe without much striuing and wrastling nay oftentimes not without resisting vnto blood he ought to vse more meekenes and mildnes considering with what difficultie he ouercame our Sauiour Christ learned by experience how hard a thing it was to ouercome temptations that he might haue a fellow feeling of our infirmities Therefore spirituall men must remember that they were once carnall euen babes in Christ those that are strong must consider that they were once weake old men that are graue and staied must call to mind that once they were in the heat of their youth and what difficulties encountred them and with what contention they passed the vanitie of that age and so they shall the better reprooue others in the spirit of meeknes if they looke themselues in the glasse of their example this is Pauls reason why we should shew all meekenes to all men because we our selues were in times past vnwise disobedient c. Tit. 3. 2 3. Lastly marke here how Paul changes the number for hauing said ye that are spirituall restore c. in the plurall number here he saith considering thy selfe in the singular and not your selues lest thou also be tempted and not you which he doth not through rudenesse of speech as some of the ancient Diuines haue thought but with great iudgement he vseth a familiar Hebraisme changing the number First to giue the greater force and to set the sharper edge vpon his admonition For that which is spoken to all is spoken to none Secondly to shew how hard a thing it is for a man to consider himselfe It is naturall for men to spie notes in other mens eyes and not to perceiue beames in their owne Matth. 7. 3. to looke outward at others not inward at themselues Like Plutarchs Lamiae or fayries which carried their eyes in their heads when they went abroad but when they came home put them vp in a boxe In doing good and beeing beneficiall we must not so much consider our selues Philip. 2. 4. but in iudging and reproouing we ought to beginne with our selues For the better vnderstanding of the doctrine of brotherly correction and Christian reproofe I will handle these foure questions I. who are to be reprooued II. for what III. by whome IIII. in what manner I. Who are to be reprooued Ans. All that are brethren for so our Sauiour Christ saith If thy brother sinne against thee reprooue him Matth. 18. 16. And S. Paul saith Brethren if any man c. The name Brethrē is takē foure waies in Scripture as Ierome hath well obserued against Helvidius I. for those that are brethren by nature as Iacob and Esau the
Achan sinned and the people fell slaine before the men of Ai therefore euery man doth not beare his owne entire burden The like may be said of the children of the Sodomits and of the first borne of the Egyptians who bare the burden of their parents sinne Ans. The people were punished for their owne sinnes and so was Dauid albeit not in his owne but in their persons for God punished him in his kind in destroying the people with that fearefull plague in whose great multitude he had gloried so much Indeede their punishment was occasioned by his sinne but caused by their owne for no man though neuer so holy is without sinne and therefore none but deserue punishment nay it is Gods mercie that we are not consumed Lam. 3. 22. And albeit all the infants perished in the Deluge and in the ouerthrow of Sodome and Gomorrha which could neither imitate nor approoue the actions of their forefathers yet their death was deserued For though infants be truly called innoc●●ts in regard of actuall sinne yet they are not innocents in regard of originall for from the wombe they carrie a woluish nature which prepares them to the spoile though they neuer did hurt the Scorpion hath his sting within him though he doe not alway strike and though a Serpent may be handled whilst the cold ●ath benummed him yet when he is warmed he will hisse out his venomous poison Mans practise doth cleare God of vniustice in this behalfe in killing the young cubbes as well as the old foxe the wolues whelps as well as the damme Albeit if we speake of their finall estate and come to particulars we are to leaue secret iudgements to God The example of Achan is more difficult seeing that for his sinne 36 of the people were slaine Iosh. 7. 5. and his whole familie rooted out v. 25. who were not consenting to his fact nor guiltie of his sinne Yet something may probably be said in this case First that they were guiltie of this his sinne in part in not punishing theft so seuerely as they ought to haue done which was a meanes to embolden Achan to steale the execrable thing Secondly that priuate good must yeeld to the publike as the life of euery particular person to the generall good of the whole Commonwealth thus souldiours in the warres redeem the publike peace by the losse of their own liues now the manifestation of the glorie of the wisdome power and iustice of God is the publike good of the whole Church therefore mens priuate good euen their liues must giue place to it especially considering he neuer inflicts temporall punishment for the publike good but he respects therein the priuate good of his Elect whome he corrects in iudgement not in ●urie Thirdly howsoeuer Achan did beare the burden of his owne sinne this iudgement might be inflicted vpon them for their good for temporall punishment yea death it selfe is sometimes inflicted for the good of those that are punished as we see in the children of the Sodomits many whereof no doubt were taken away in mercie lest malice should haue changed and corrupted their minds and sometime for the terrour of others to be a warning peece to make them take heede and sometime for both as it may be it was in this particular Fourthly sinne committed by a particular man that is a member of a politike bodie doth after a sort belong to the whole bodie thus the Lord saith that blood defileth the land which cānot be clēsed of the blood that was shedde therein but by the blood of him that shedde it Numb 35. 33. And thus Achans sinne though not knowne to the people made the whole armie guiltie before God till he was put to death Iosh. 7. 11 12. Lastly if the tithing of an armie for the offence of some fewe haue beene thought lawfull and iust why should the death of 36 men seeme vniust for the sin of Achan especially considering it was to make the people more prouident to preuent and take heede of the like euill If these reasons satisfie not yet let vs rest in this that Gods iudgements are often secret but alway iust See August lib. quaest in Iosh. q. 8. and Calvin in 7. cap. ●osh Obiect UII If euery man must beare his owne burden Dauid shall as well beare the burden of his murthering Vrias by the sword of the children of Ammon as Saul the murthering of himselfe with his owne sword Peter his denying Christ as Iudas his betraying him c. Ans. By the sentence of the Law euery one is to beare his owne burden and to satisfie for his owne sinne in his owne person but the Gospel the second part of Gods word makes an exception which is that they which haue their sinnes set vpon Christs reckening shall not giue account for them againe and those that haue the burden of them laide vpon his shoulders who hath borne our sinnes in his bodie vpon the crosse 1. Pet. 2. 23. shall not beare the burden of them themselues at the last iudgement Therefore true beleeuers which haue Christ their suretie satisfying the rigour of Gods iustice for them shall not answer or satisfie forthē themselues for they are freed by him from a threefold burden First frō the burden of ceremonies so consequently of humane lawes and ordinances which were a yoke as Peter saith which neither we nor our fathers were able to beare Act. 15. Secondly from the burden of miseries and crosses which befall men in this life He doth ease vs of this burden by his word and spirit either in remoouing them away Psal. 81. 7. or in giuing strength and patience to beare them 2. Cor. 12. 9. or in mitigating proportionating them to our strength 1. Cor. 10. 13. Thirdly from the burden of sinne as well originall as actuall in beeing made sinne that is accounted a sinner and made a sacrifice for sinne for vs as also by easing them that are heauie laden in pacifying the perplexed conscience Matth. 11. 28. It will be said if Christ beare the burden of our sinnes euery man shall not beare his owne burden Ans. Both be true and may well stand together for Legally euery man is to beare his owne burden the Law requiring personall obedience or satisfaction or both Euangelically Christ our suretie doth beare the burden of them and satisfie the iustice of God for them 1. Pet. 2. 23. Use. Hence we learne first that no man can pay a ransome for his brother or redeeme his soule from death or satisfie the iustice of God for his sinne seeing that euery man by the tenour of the Law is to beare his owne burden and by the Gospel none can be our suretie but Christ. Secondly here we see the nature of sinne that it is a burden to the soule for it is heauier then the grauell of the earth and the sand of the sea It is a burden to the wicked Angels for it waighed them frō the
neighbour let my wife grind vnto another man and let other men bow downe vpon her Iob 31. 10 11. Use. First here we see the iustice of God in awarding the last sentence nay his bountie and seueritie his bountie in recompencing men aboue their deserts his seueritie in punishing sinners according to their deserts For as he will denie any thing in iustice that denied to Diues a droppe of water to coole his tongue Luk. 16. 24. 25. so he will recompence any thing in mercie that will recompence a cuppe of cold water Math. 10. 42. This integritie in iudgement without partialitie is signified by the white throne Reu. 20. 11. and it serues as a patterne and example for all Iudges and Magistrats to follow in laying iudgement to the rule and righteousnes to the ballance Esa. 28. 17. that is in hearing causes indifferently and determining equally examining them as it were by line and square as the mason or carpenter doth his worke The Grecians placed Iustice betwixt Leo and Libra thereby signifying that there must not onely be courage in executing but also indifferencie in determining The Egyptians expresse the same by the hieroglyphicall figure of a man without hands winking with his eyes whereby is meant our vncorrupt Iudge who hath no hands to receiue bribes nor eyes to behold the person of the poore or respect the person of the rich And before our tribunalls we commonly haue the picture of a man holding a ballance in one hand and a sword in the other signifying by the ballance iust iudgement by the sword execution of iudgement For as the balance putteth no difference betweene gold and lead but giueth an equall or vnequall poise to them both not giuing a greater waight to the gold for the excellencie of the mettall because it is gold nor a lesse to the lead for the basenes of it because it is lead So they were with an euen hand to way the poore mans cause as well as the rich But it is most notably set out by the throne of the house of Dauid mentioned Psal. 122. 5. which was placed in the gate of the citie towardes the sunne rising in the gate to signifie that all which came in and out by the gate of the citie might indifferently be heard the poore as well as the rich and might haue accesse and regresse too and from the iudgement seate Towards the rising of the sunne in token that their iudgement should be as cleare from corruption as the sunne is cleare in his chiefest brightnes Secondly this confutes the common opinion of the Schoolmen who as they truly affirme that God rewardeth his Elect supra meritum aboue their desert so they erroniously teach that he punisheth the reprobate citra condignum lesse then they haue deserued For God powreth vpon the wicked after this life the full violls of his wrath punishing them in the rigour of his iustice without all mercie not onely according to their works in regard of the nature and qualitie but in respect of the measure and quantitie Lastly this doctrine seriously considered and thought vpon that we shall drinke such as we brew reape such as we sow and that men shall haue degrees of felicitie or miserie answerable to their workes answerable to the kind of their worke to the quantitie and qualitie thereof will make vs more carefull to auoid sinne and to be more plentifull in good workes then if with the Papists we should teach iustification by workes Againe in that euery one shall reape as he soweth that is shall be rewarded not according to the fruit and successe of his labour but according to his labour be it more or lesse better or worse it serues first of all to comfort the ministers of the word which are set ouer a blinde ignorant people who are alwaie learning and neuer come to the knowledge of the 〈…〉 th they must not be discouraged thogh after long teaching there be little knowledge or amendment after much paines 〈◊〉 little profiting but rather a coldnesse a backewardnesse a decl●ning in all sorts and degrees They must remember that if their Gospell beeing deliuered with such simpheitie with such assidu●tie with such euidence and demonstration of the spirit be h●d at is hid to them that perish in whome the God of this world hath blinded the mindes of the infidells that the glorious Gospel of Christ should not shine vnto them 2. Cor. 4. 3 4. Besides let them consider that though they seeme to labour in vaine to spend their strength in vaine and that their words take no more effect then if they were spoken in the winde yet that their iudgement is with the Lord and their worke with their God Isa. 49. 4. remembring that God wil giue to euery man according to his worke according to the kind the quantitie the qualitie thereof and not according to the fruit or successe of his worke It may serue also as a cordiall to euery man that is painfull faithful in his calling thogh neuer so base seruile as to a shepheard which watcheth his flock or a poore drudge that attēds vpon his masters busines he is to cōfort himselfe with this that though he see no great good that comes by his labour and trauel yet if he be obediēt to him that is his master according to the flesh in all things not with eye-seruice as men-pleasers but in singlenes of heart seruing God and whatsoeuer he doth doing it heartily as to the Lord and not to men let him know and assure himsel●e that of the Lord he shall receiue the reward of inheritance Coloss. 3. 22 23 24. And the promise is more generall Eph. 6. 5. Know ye that whatsoeuer good thing any man doth the same shall he receiue of the Lord whether he be bond or free It serueth further as a comfort against inequallitie whereas the wicked flourish in all manner of prosperitie and the godly lie in contempt and miserie for the time shall come when euery one shall reape euen as he hath sowne When God will punish the sinnes of the reprobate with eternall torment according to their deserts and crowne the good workes of his seruants with an eternall waight of glorie aboue their desert for pietie shall not alway goe vnrewarded neither shall impietie alway goe vnpunished for as the Psalmist saith The patient abiding of the righteous shall not perish for euer And againe doubtles there is a reward for the righteous doubtlesse there is a God that iudgeth the earth Againe this condemneth the damnable opinion of Atheists who thinke all things come to passe by nature or fortune and that doomes day is but a dreame and that sticke not to say It is in vaine to serue God and what profit is it that we haue kept his commādements and that we haue walked humbly before the Lord of boasts as though good workes should neuer be rewarded nor sinne punished albeit the Lord hath said Behold
mercenarie hireling to looke for reward I answer it is the propertie of a hireling to looke onely or principally for his hire either not minding the glorie and honour of God or lesse respecting it then his owne priuate aduantage so that when the hope of his gaine is gone he leaueth his charge and flieth away like the Popish Monks who were right hirelings indeede for they minded nothing but their owne commoditie according to the old saying No penie no Pater noster But to looke to the recompence of reward in the second place after the glorie of God the performāce of our dutie and discharge of a good conscience is no propertie of a hireling seeing God hath promised to giue to them which by continuance in well doing seeke glorie and honour and immortalitie eternall life Rom. 2. 7. By this that hath beene said we may see the impudencie of the Rhemists who in their marginall notes vpon Luk. 14. 1. Ebr. 11. 26. and Apoc. 3. 5. doe notably slander vs and our doctrine in auerring that we teach that no man ought to doe good in respect of reward the like may be said of Cardinall Bellarmine Bintfeldius and others For this is our constant doctrine that we may and ought to stirre vp our dulnes to all chearefulnes in the discharge of our dutie by setting before our eyes the reward which is promised Yet so as that we ought not onely nor principally to respect the reward for the zeale of Gods glorie the care and conscience we haue to discharge our dutie ought rather to mooue vs to be plentifull in good workes in lue of thankfulnes vnto God for the riches of his mercie then the greatnes of the reward seeing we ought to do our dutie though there were no heauen no hell no reward no punishment no Deuill to torment no conscience to accuse the very loue of God ought to constraine vs. 2. Cor. 5. 14. And here we must with thankfulnes acknowledge the endles loue and mercie of God towards vs seeing that when he might exact strict obedience without any promise of recompence for our labour nay when he might shiuer vs in pieces with his yron scepter yet as Abashuerosh did to Queene Esther he holdeth out his golden scepter vnto vs in the preaching of the word that we might lay hold of it and by it apprehend eternall life Yea it pleaseth him to winne vs by gifts to incite vs by rewards to allure vs by promises in giuing his word that if we giue we may looke to receiue though not for our merits yet through his mercy if we bestowe transitorie goods we shal receiue a durable substance If a cuppe of cold water Gods kingdome Matth 10. 12. The second generall point is the circumstance of time when we shall reape to wit in due time This due time may be vnderstood in part of this life for godlines hath the promise of this life as well as of the life to come and the works of mercie haue beene euen in this life recompenced to the full The widow of Zanepta for entertaining the Prophet Eliah was miraculously sustained in the dearth the meale in her barrell did not wast and the oyle in her cruise did not diminish 1. King 17. 16. And so the Shunamite for the like kindnes shewed to the Prophet Elizeus beeing barren obtained a sonne and when he was dead shee obtained him to life againe 2. King 4. as the widow of Sarepta did hers at the praier of Eliah 1. King 17. 23. Foras God doth alwaies giue to his children in this life the first 〈◊〉 of his spirit so he doth often giue them the first fruits of their labours as a tast of their future felicitie and an earnest of that happines which after they shall fully enioy Our Sauiour Christ saith he will reward them an hundred fold in this life Matth. 19. But this due time is properly meant of the life to come which hath two degrees the first is at the day of death when the soule entreth into happines the second at the day of iudgement when both soule and bodie beeing reunited shall be put in full possession of eternall glorie and felicitie for then they shall be rewarded according to their workes not so much as a cuppe of cold water which they haue giuen to releeue the Saints of God but shall be recompenced to the full Matth. 10. 42. Use. Seeing God hath set downe a set and certen time when we are to reape it is our dutie with patience to expect it as the husbandman doth who hauing sowed his field doth not looke for a croppe the next day or weeke or moneth but patiently expecteth the haruest that he may receiue the pretious seede of the earth For he is too vnreasonable who hauing sowed in September looketh for a croppe in October he must waite for the moneth of August till the haruest and in the meane time indurestorme and tempest winde and weather snow and raine haile and frost So we must sow our seede and sow plentifully still expecting the fruite of our labour with patience till the great haruest come the great day of retribution in which God will seperate the wheat from the chaffe gathering the one into his garners and burning vp the other with vnquenchable fire Matth. 3. 12. Let vs consider the example of God who doth patiently expect and as I may say waites our leisure when we will turne vnto him that he might haue mercie vpon vs. Esa. 30. 8. he waiteth at the doore of our hearts and standeth knocking to be let in Apoc. 3. 20. nay he calleth vnto vs standing without Open vnto me my sister my loue my doue my vndefiled for my head is ful of dew and my lockes with the droppes of the night Cant. 5. 2. Wee vnto thee Ierusalem will thou neuer be made cleane when will it once be Ier. 13. 27. More particularly Gods wayting and expecting is set downe in Scripture by sundrie degrees First he waiteth all the day long Esa. 65. 2. I haue stretched out my hand all the day long to a disobedient and gainsaying people Secondly fourtie daies together Yet fourtie daies and Niniue shall be destroied Ion. 3. 4. Thirdly all the yeare long as the husbandman doth I looked for grapes and loe wild grapes Esa. 5. 4. Fourthly he expecteth our amendement many yeares together Luk. 13. 7. Behold these three yeares haue I come and sought fruit on this fig-tree and find none Fifthly the Lord suffered the manners of the Israelites fourtie yeares in the wildernes Psal. 95. 10. Act. 13. 18. Sixtly the long sufferance of God as Peter saith 1. Epist 3. 20. did patiently expect the conuersion of the old world all the while the Arke was in preparing for the space of an hundred and twentie yeares Seuenthly he expected the Canaanits and Amorits for the space of foure hundred yeares yea he suffered all Gentiles to wander in their owne waies and in the
life or in respect of the intention of our loue in hauing a greater desire of the good of some then of othersome and thus we are not bound to loue or to doe good to all alike For as S. Barnard saith Meliori maior affectus indigentiori maior effectus tribuendus This doctrine inuested with the former examples may shame the base seruile and beggerly liberalitie of the common sort of men which professe the Gospel whose hands are tied to their purses and their hearts locked to their chests who are so extremely miserable that they neither doe good to others nor yet to themselues Secondly it condemneth them which are so vnnaturall that they forget all dutie to their kinred and acquaintance in the flesh Thirdly those who will doe good to none but to those that haue done good to them this is right the Pharisies righteousnes to loue our friends and hate our enemies the goodnes of the Publican to lend to those of whom they look for the like Lastly those who are so full of the poison of malice and reuenge that beeing once incensed they can neuer be appeased till they crie quittance with those that offend them The third thing to be considered in the words is the circumstance of time we must doe good to all while we haue time Here sundrie points are to be obserued I. If we must doe good while we haue time we must make a holy and profitable vse of our time the rarest iewell and greatest of all earthly treasures because time will not alway last and therefore we must take time while it is time seeing time and tide will tarie for no man Let vs consider what a shame it is that the children of this world should be wiser in their generation then we who professe our selues to be children of light The mariner or sea-faring man who obserues wind and weather taketh the oportunitie of the time the trauailer or way-faring man takes day before him and trauaileth while it is light The smith striketh the yron while it is hot for when it is cold it is too late to strike The Lawyer taketh his time to wit the Terme time for the intertaining of his clients and following of his suits for when the Terme is ended his time is gone Now it is alway Terme-time with Christians euery present day euen this present time is their Terme-time therefore if we will not shew our selues more carelesse negligent nay more absurdly foolish or desperatly madde then all men we must take the opportunitie that is offered to do good and vse the pretious time which God in mercie affordeth vs to his glorie our comfort and the good of others Time and opportunitie of doing good is hieroglyphically resembled by the head of a man that hath locks of haire before which a man may take hold of but hath none behind whereby is signified that when opportunitie is past there is no possibilitie left to doe good We must not therefore let slippe any good occasion but take hold of it at the first when it is offered Hence it is that the Apostle Eb● 3. 13. biddeth vs exhort one another daily while it is called to day And the wise man Prou. 3. 28. Say not to thy neighbour goe and come againe and to morrow will I giue thee if thou now haue it For he may die and so cannot come againe or by thy delaying of him may be discouraged from comming or thou maist be hardened against him or maist with the rich man in the Gospel be suddenly taken away from thy riches or thy riches taken from thee Our Sauiour biddeth vs walke in the light while we haue light Ioh. 12. 35. II. If we must doe good while we haue time we must obserue the Apostles golden rule Eph. 5. 16. Redeeme the time which is nothing els but so to employ it and vse the benefit of it as that we suffer it not to slippe away from vs without fruit or profit either for sloth and idlenes or by reason of vaine and transitorie pleasures or other occasions of this life but to gaine that time we formerly lost by negligence with double diligence yea to redeeme it with the losse of our ease our pleasures our profits And we shall the better practise this dutie if we consider that time is short pretious irrevocable it is short and therefore to be guided by diligence it is pretious and therfore to be redeemed by an high estimate and account of it in not beeing too lauish of it in bestowing it vpon our friends not vpon our enemies in placing it as a Iewell in our golden age and wearing it in our newe garments the robes of Christ his righteousnes and not as a pearle in a swines snowt in the rotten ragges of sinne and wickednes Lastly it is irreuocable and therefore it is to be redeemed by taking the opportunitie thereof III. Paul commaunding vs to doe good while we haue time would haue vs know times and seasons to obserue the shortnes of time to number our daies that we may applie our hearts to wisdome The not knowing and obseruing of time is a sinne much inueighed against by our Sauiour Christ Matth. 16. 3. O hypocrites you can discerne the face of the skie and can ye not discerne the signes of the times Luk. 12. 56. why discerne ye not this time the Lord doth preferre the very bruit beasts before his people because they know their appointed times and seasons whereas his people knew not the time of mercie and grace which was offered vnto them Euen the storke in the ayre knoweth her appointed times the turtle and the crane and the swallow obserue the time of their comming but my people knoweth not the iudgement of the Lord. Ier. 8. 7. And Christ threatneth Ierusalem that one stone should not be left vpon another because they knew not the time of their visitation Luk. 19. 44. And verily of all follies and ignorances this is the greatest not to know the day of our visitation the acceptable time the day of saluation when God offereth mercie by rising earely and calling vs by the ministerie of his word and stretching out his hands all the day long Rom. 10. v. 21. For if he stand at the doore of our hearts and knocke by the sound of his word outwardly by the motion of his spirit inwardly by his threatnings by his promises by his iudgements by his mercies by his tolerance and long suffering and yet for all that we will not open nor listen vnto him we shall stand with the fiue foolish virgins and knock at his mercie gate and say Lord Lord open vnto vs when it will be too late when heauen shall be shut against vs. Matth. 25. 11 12. For for this cause among others they are called foolish virgins because they considered not the time of the bridegroomes comming Here it will be saide obseruing of time is forbidden Gal. 4. 10. Ye obserue daies and
els but to haue the faith of our Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons Iam. 2. 1. The second conclusion is that the new creature is the onely thing that is acceptable to God Circumcision c. ●●aileth nothing but a new creature By the new creature the Apostle vnderstandeth the image of God or renouation of the whole man both in the spirits of our minds and in the affections of our hearts which is also called the new man We shall the better conceiue it by the contrarie namely by the old man which is want of knowledge in the minde and delight in ignorance want of subiection and conformitie in the will and rebellion withall want of holines in the affections and pronenes to euill The new man then is the restoring of all these defects For the vnderstanding hereof consider that there are three things in the soule The substance of the soule the faculties or powers of the soule and the qualities of these faculties Now neither the substance nor faculties are lost by the fall but onely the qualities of the faculties as when an instrument is out of tune the fault is not in the substance of the instrument nor in the sound but in the disproportion or iarre in the sound therefore the qualities onely are renewed by grace These qualities or habits are either in the Vnderstanding or will and affections The qualitie in the vnderstanding is knowledge Coloss. 3. 10. Ye haue put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him In the will and affections they are principally two righteousnes and holines both which are in truth and synceritie without all hypocrisie Eph. 4. 24. Put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnes and true holines where holines and righteousnes are opposed to concupiscences and lusts of the old man Truth which hath relation to both to spiritual guile and dissimulation so that each of these qualities haue two parts a want of the contrarie euill and a positiue qualitie or habit of goodnes Holines respecteth god and containeth all duties of pietie contained in the first table Righteousnes respects man and the creatures and compriseth all the duties enioyned in the second table Truth respecteth the manner how both the former are to be practised viz. with an vpright and sincere heart free from all hypocrifie and deceit These three making a perfect harmonie in all the faculties of the soule Holines performing all the duties of pietie righteousnes the duties of humanitie truth seasoning both the former with sinceritie But may some say how is the new creature opposed to all externall things or said to be of any force in the kingdome of Christ seeing it is not auaileable to iustifie a man before God ' beeing stained with manifold imperfections For answer whereof we are to know that outward things are sometime opposed to Christ and his righteousnes as Coloss. 3. 11. There is neither Iew nor Grecian circumcision nor vncircumcision c. but Christ is all and in all things sometime to faith as Gal. 5. 6. Neither circumcision auaileth any thing nor vncircumcision but faith which worketh by loue sometime to the new creature or sanctification as in this place and 2. Cor. 7. 29. Circumcision is nothing c. but the keeping of the commandements of God But the sense is all one for they are opposed to Christ as to the matter of our iustification to faith as to the instrument apprehending it to the new creature as to the signe of them both Further whereas both here and 2. Cor. 5. 17. the image of god is called a new creature or as it is in the original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a new creation the meaning is not that either the substance or faculties of the soule are created a new but that the worke of regeneration is wholly to be ascribed to God alone not as though we were stocks or stones without life or motion but because God doth create these new qualities in vs quickning vs when we were dead in sinne and working in vs both the will and the deede Philip. 2. 13. If regeneration then be a new creation it must needes follow that before our conuersion we were not onely dead but euen flat nothing in godlines and grace By which we see what to iudge of the Semi-pelagian heresie which teacheth that a man by an internum principium may dispose himselfe to will that which is truly good and that man is not starke dead in sinne but onely sicke or wounded and halfe dead as the man which fell among theeues Luk. 10. or as a prisoner that is shackled and manackled who can walke of himselfe if his fetters be taken from him so we if Christ loose the chaines of our sinnes haue power of our selues to mooue our selues Which doctrine we know is most iniu●ious to the mercie of God and most derogatorie to the merits of Christ seeing it makes him in the worke of our saluation to be but causa removens prohibens which as Logicians teach is but causa sine quâ non which in truth is no cause at all So that they make themselues their own Sauiours and Christ to be but an instrument whereby they saue themselues for if he doe but remooue the impediment they without any more adoe are able to mooue and act themselues When as the conuersion of a sinner is as great a worke as the creation of heauen and earth for Paul calleth it here a new creation Nay here is a greater power required if I may so speake then that whereby the world was created For though an infinite power be required as well to the creating of the great world as the recreating or regenerating of the lesse world as our Sauiour Christ signifies Mark 2. 9. Whether is it easier to say to the sicke of the palsie Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee or to say Arise take vp thy bed and walke yet the holy Ghost seemeth of the two to make it more difficult to create a new hart then a new world in that speaking of the creation of the world he saith it was made by the word of God By the word of the Lord were the heauens made Psal. 33. 6. or by his fingers when I consider the heauens the workes of thy fingers Psal. 8. 3. or by his handes Psalm 102. 25. The heauens are the workes of thy hands But the redemption of man and the conuersion of a finner is said to be wrought by the arme of God Marie in her Magnificat saith He hath shewed strength with his arme Luk. 2. 51. nay he was faine to set his side to it and it made him shed many a teare and sweat as it were drops of blood trickling downe to the ground Luk. 22. 44. Before our conuersion we are like the drie bones Ezek. 37. for as when the winde of God came vpon them bone came to bone and were ioyned with sinews and couered with
and Iudiciall law 230. 231 And how farr forth they are all abrogated ibid. Two notes whereby a Iudiciall Law may be discerned to be Morall 232. 30. What is our guid the Lawe beeing abrogated vide guide The Law cōsidered 2. waies 288. 22 The Law is a yoke 3. waies 288. 28 A treatise of beeing vnder the Lawe and redemption from it 288. 20 Our libertie by Christ frees vs from the Lawe three waies 272. 8 The fulfilling of the lawe in this life is imperfect 377. 4 The true difference betweene the lawe and the Gospell in 7. things 347. 23. The false difference confuted 348. 1 How the whole lawe is fulfilled in the loue of our neighbour ' 405. 15 Transgression of the Law twofould 419. 19. Wherein the law and the Gospell agree vide Gospell By our faith we doe not abrogate the lawe but establish it in two respects 498. 1 Wherein the lawe and Gospel differ vide Gospel No man in this life can fulfil the law prooued by foure Arguments 499. 17. The Lawe is said to be fulfilled three waies 503. 35 Fulfilling of the lawe taken two waies 504. 5 League with the Deuill twofould 429. 20. The lawe hath a three fould vse though it cannot be fulfilled 504. 18. Why men are so cold in liberalie 555. 9. 5. Rules for the vse of liberty 402. 2 Christian libertie abused 3. waies 400. 17. What is the abuse of liberty where it is to be found and what is the right vse of it 400. 12 Fiue degrees in the way and order vsed in procuring our libertie by Christ. 278. 35 A treatise of libertie by grace 366. 1● What is the authoritie of it the persons to whome it belongeth and our dutie touching this libertie ib. Of the parts of christian libertie 366. ●4 Magistracie and Christian libertie may stand together 369. 5 Christ procures libertie by two meanes 370. 29 Popish religion is flatt against Christian libertie and that two waies 372. 7. Our libertie frees vs from the Lawe three waies 372. 8. Our life ought to be a pilgrimage 351. 16. There is a naturall and spirituall life 138. 20. There are 3. degrees of life 140. 24 The spirituall life standes especially in three things 149. 26 Life is created or vncreated created is naturall or spirituall 452. 35 Two degrees of spirituall life 453. 1 In what sense life eternal is a reward 570 11. What resemblance it hath with a reward ibid. 20 Of our limitations of Opinion and affection 353. 23. Long suffering what and the mane● to vse it 445. 2 Selfe-loue vide Ouerweening Of louing our Neighbour vide Neighbour Of mutuall loue betweene Pastor People 320. 27 How faith workes by loue 383. 13 The vse of loue though it doe not iustifie 385. 13 What the loue of our Neighbour is 403. 12. What is the vse of Loue. 403. 29 Sixe sortes of men liue in the breach of the rules of Loue. 404. 1 How loue is a fruite of the spirit 443. 27. Loue followes faith and regeneration therefore the first act of loue is not by nature as the Papists teach 443. 29 The loue of God what 443. 40 Three especiall signes whereby it is discerned 444. 1 The Loue of our Neighbour what ibid. 12. Why the Loue of our brother is called the loue of Christ rather then of nature of God or of Moses 494. 8 The grounds of Loue three 593. 12 The Loue of our Brethren greater or lesser two waies 597. 15 How we must loue all men alike how we may not ibid. 18 How farr doth the child of God proceede in the lustes of the flesh 414. 33. Fiue degrees of lusts 414. 36 The lusts of the flesh hath two actions vide Flesh The lusts of the spirit hath two vide spirit Lust after Baptisme in the regenerate is a sinne 419. 2 Lusts what 450. 33 What a lye is and whether a sinne or no 62. 23. 64. 10 Difference betweene a lye and a Parable 63. 7 And betweene a lye and the concealement of a thing 63. 13 Betweene Lying fayning 63. 26 Reasons against lying 447. 26 M Whether Magistrates be necessarie in the societies of Christians 268. 23. Magistracie and Christian libertie may stand together vide libertie How the lawe of the Magistrate makes an indifferent thing to be necessarie 369. 37 Mariage what it is 341. 40 Mariage noe sowing to the Flesh as Tacianus the Heretique and Syritius the Pope would haue it but to the spirit 563. 19 By Markes what is signified 648. 9 Markes of Christ of two sortes ibid. 20. Visible or inuisible Outwart or inward typicall or reall ibid. 34 Reall markes double either in his natural body or mysticall 649. 1 How the markes in his natural body doe differ from those in his mististicall body ibid 19 VVhat vse to be made of Pauls markes 650. 2 The makes of the Fratres flagellantes to be derided ibid. 25 Legaces giuen to the maintenance of the Masse may be applied to the maintenance of the true worship of God 208. 9 The difference of Meekenes and long suffering 448. 1 VVhat meekenes is 464. 30. 465. 29. The effects of it ibid. 34 Motiues to Meekenes 465. 10 How there is but one Mediator 217. 32. How Moses was a Mediatour 219. 23. How we are to put affiance in men 392. 32. VVe serue God in seruing of men 406. 5. How men are nothing of thēselues 506. 1. 25. Men naturally thinke too well of themselues 507. 8 How we are to please men and how not 515. 32 Herein sixe cautions to be vsed 516. 3. Gods mercie great to sinners 49. 26 It hath a double effect in vs. ibid. 33 It is much abused and how 40 By mercy what is vnderstood 645. 7. All Merits and satisfactions for sinnes are to be reduced to the person of Christ and if there be no humane satisfactions nor meritorious workes 14. 24 Merit of condignitie may be vnderstood three waies 565. 16 VVhat Papists hould merit of good workes in regard only of Gods promise and diuine acceptation and what in respect partly of their owne worthines partly of Gods acceptance and what onely in regard of the dignitie of the worke 565. 20 Ministers must deliuer nothing of their owne 6. 10 Ministers which are to be teachers must first be taught 38. 3 They must be taught by men where reuelation is wanting 38. 22 Ministers are pillers and how with the vse of it 97. 1 Ministers of the word must of necessitie ioyne with good doctrine the example of good life 109. 5 What kind of men Ministers ought to be 318. 16 Ministers duty specially to reprooue 477. 37 Ministerie is painfull like the trauaile of a woman 334. 12 The dignitie of the Ministerie 334. 26. Ministers must temper their giftes to their hearers 338. 37 Ministers subiect to slanders 394. 37. Whether a Minister may not conceale the truth some time 395. 31 Ministers liues should be reall Sermons 623. 30
preparemen to their iustification 11. 13. How our workes are said to please God 191. 19 The workes of the regenerate are mixed and sinnefull and in the rigour of iustice deserue damnatiō ergo no iustification by workes 515. 9. The benefit of approouing of our workes 515. 9 How we may aprooue our workes three rules 515. 16 Whether we may not approoue our workes or actions to men and if we may how farre forth 515. 29 Infants haue no good workes 553. 8. Gods reward shall be according to the quantitie and qualitie of the workes and what may be gathered from thence 555. 25 How Lazarus and the theife on the crosse had good works 553. 27 Workes and laboures of men may differ three waies and what they be 556. 37 Vses that God rewardeth men according to their workes 559. 560 561. 562. Workes though they be seedes yet are they no causes of eternall life 564. 565. 31. That workes are seedes of eternall life it is gods mercie and not the merit of the workes 565. 35 Workes of the flesh perfectly euill and why 566. 5 Good works perfect as they are of god imperfect as they are of mē 566. 12. Reasons why the workes of the spirit are not the cause of eternall life as well as badd workes are the cause of eternall destruction 566. tota pag. Obiections of the Papists to prooue workes the causes of eternall life answered Beginning at pag. 561 line 31. vsque ad pag. 572. Workes no cause of our reward but the measure 568. 2 Good workes make a man knowne to be iust but faith m 〈…〉 him iust 567. 32 Good workes are causes of eternall life not as meriting but as the kings high way 568. 25 How life eternall is promised to good workes how not 569. 6 The promise of reward vpon condition of performing the worke maketh not a meritorious worke 569. 29. Reward not due to workes of regeneration vpon compacte and promise the reasons why 569. 20. Good workes merit not eternall life though it be a reward of them page 569. in fine and page 570. 571. How life eternall is called a reward of good works 570. 11. 571. 5 That we may incite our selues to the dooing of good workes from the consideration of our heauenly reward sundrie reasons 579. 29. In dooing good workes we may respect the reward but not onely nor principally 581. 31 What should most of all mooue vs to doe good workes 581. 32 The loue of the world and of the truth cannot stand together 619 33. What is meant by the world and what it is to be taken out of the world 13. 37 Y Two kindes of yeelding 87. 18 Z Zeale what it is 45. 20 FINIS 2. Tim. 3. 16. 2. Pet. 1. 20. 1. Tim. 6. 20. Eph. 6. 17. Esa. 8. 20. Ioh. 5. 9. Mal. 1 2. Deut 6 8. Hugo de S. Vi●t de Script Scriptor ●●cris l●● 1. c. 1. Deut. 4. 2. Matth 5. 13. Psal 19. 10. Psal 119. 98. c. 2 Tim. 3. 15. Act. 2. 〈◊〉 Iam 1 21. Ier. 2. 13. Ferdinaud Vellosill Epis. Luc. in praef in aduer Schol. Theol Nec Script nec Doctores vel a limino solutaste Laert. de vit Philos. lib. 1. in Thal. Epist. ad Leander 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sleidan lib. 6. Coster Enchir. controvers c 1. Socrat. lib. 7. cap. 32. Sixt. Senens in praefat in Bib. 1. Tim. 1 4. Sixt Sen. Bibl. lib. 4. Tetrus Ximenes Episc. Cauriens a. Cor. 3. Non tam Commentarios quam indicie 〈…〉 lorum Hieron proam in 1. 〈…〉 m Esai 2. Tim. 3. 16. Symbolica Theologia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 argumentatiua Thom. 1. Cor. 1 ●3 Volusian ad Nicol. 2. 2. Pet. 3 16. Eccles. 〈◊〉 6. 2. Sam. 〈◊〉 30. Eph. 3. 4. o In his Prophetica Gal. 6. 〈◊〉 Phil●m v. ●8 Ioh 5. 35. Ioh. 2. 3● Rom. 1. 5. Act. 13. 33. Rom. 10. 14. 1. Cor. 16. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apoc. 5. 10. Math. 9. 38. Eph. 4. 11. Act. 20. 28. Psal. 105. 15. Rom. 8. 28. Rom. 〈◊〉 Lev. 10. 1. 2. Reg. 16. 11. Rev. 2. 24. Deut. 22. 9. 2. Tim. 4. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 o Praeter quam Contra Petilian l. 3 c. 6. o Non aliud quid amp 〈…〉 us Debono viduitatis c. 1. Math. 5. 48. Iob. 13. 15. v. 26. Term 25 de verbi Apest. Theodoret. bist lib. 4. c. 16. Luk. 10. 16. o I learned nothing or I was not taught o ' Simulatè non verè Matth. 11. 1● Luk. 10. 18. 〈◊〉 Cor. 10. 4. Homil. 2. in Act 〈◊〉 Ioh. 3. 9. Germ. ad mil. Temp. c. 11. Epist 190. o Cr●dere Fac 〈…〉 Aug. de ●●pt concup l. 1. c 33. ad Bon. l. 〈◊〉 c. ●3 o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thom. Summ. p. 〈◊〉 q 62. art 4. Bellar. de Sact. l. 2. c. 11. De consid ad Eugen. Vxor materfamilias Vxor Vsuaria o ●us●in in q●●st Act. 12. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Traef lib. 8. de bello Gall. Sanos homines à scribendo d●terruit 〈…〉 c. ad Bru●ū Sue●on in C●s. cap. 56. Michael de Montaign in his Estayes the 5 6 7 8. Ethic. lib. 4. c. 3. 1. Macchab. 1. 60. Confess lib. 8. cap. 12. Act. 8. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Anchorat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist. Rhet. ad Th●●d lib. 〈◊〉 c●p 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O 〈…〉 Hierom in hunc loc●m Gen 49. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 4. 9. Philip. 2. 4. de verb. dom ●orm 16. Muff●t Aut●umus a●t ●uimus vel po 〈…〉 es●e quod hi●●st 2. Tim. 4. 2. De verb. Dom. se 〈…〉 16. v. 15. Me 〈…〉 s est v● pe●eat●nus q 〈…〉 m 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ero● Act. 24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 17 Rom 14. 1. and 15. 1. Prou. 19. 11. 〈◊〉 Po● ●5 Duro con duro no● fa bon 〈…〉 o. August ser● 21. de verbi Apost 〈◊〉 hun● locu●●x August 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 13. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophylactus Sic Hugo de S. Victor lio quast in Epist. ad Rom q. 308. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●omes 〈◊〉 Rom. 7. 23. Exod. 20 Deut. ●8 Deut 13 Rom. 8. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damaseenus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutarch in Alexandro Phil. 2. 3. Phil. 2. 10. v. 11. Psal. 8. 4. o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Math. 5. 16. Rom. 12. 17. Ioh. 5. 41. o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 24. 26. Onus rationis ●●dden ●ae●onus inf●●mitatis participandae August contra ●cript Petil. lib. 3. Beda Lumbard i● hunc ●ocum Hugo d● S. Victor in 〈◊〉 qu●st 58. In se●●inali principio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Decima●io ●x●rci●●s 2. Cor. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉